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P Gt ot con s i in Design and An Excellent Selection to Choose From! 20c yard 36 inches in width J. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU »: f The W eather LOCAL DATA By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneam and vicinity, Snow tonight, Wadnesday snow easterly winds. beginning at 4 p.m, Jan. 3: and warmer; moderate south- Time INTRODUCING THE 1933 COTTON PRINTS FAST COLORS! w and Distinctive B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store Pattern ‘| mules match the cigarette case she @ |the heels of the shoes—always of - |finish and a brown pin seal bag By RITA FERRIS | | (Asgociated Press Fashion Editor) NARIS, Jan. 3. — A new “hand and foot” fad has swept the ranks of the Army of Chic. Smart Paris women are wearing shoes made of the same fabric and color as their handbags—whether they are leather, velvet or crepe,! The fad began when one young designer answered complaints of | her clients that “good bags and shoes were hard to find” by pro-‘ ducing sets of her own. Now the fad has spread until even milady’s, uses in her boudoir. | First Made of Pin Seal | THe first hand and foot Sets| iwere made of pin sefll-unusuafl{ fabric for shoes. Their designs/ | were plain and their colors sub-| 'dued. Their biggest news lay in a different fabric or shade from | the body of the shoe and always ! !matching a flip or frim on the .bs.g, Now they are a little gayer. Af brown wool ensemble goes to lunch | with a smart pump of dull brown\ |pin seal having a heel of brilliant trimnted the same way. A Red and Black Enssmble A slim black patent leather pump |banded with red lizard skin goes| jout to tea with a red and black | |bag which sets off a Llack crepe | ensemble. | Velvet slippers—the newest thing | in evening wear—are accompanied by little velvet bag o' nights, and | both are of the same color and tex- |ture as the flower tinted velvet |frock which goes with them. The hours when the smart Paris- |ian stays at home are brightened by a Chinese lounging suit and |mules of jade satin embroidered {in the lotus motive which have a |slender cigarette case to match n them. Shoes themselves have taken on new lines and leathers this year. Brilliant brown . lizard with a B leather heel, carpincho (wild South American pig) sports oxfords which |lace with thongs and slim velvet slippers irimmed with enamelled | kid are contributing new jdeas to| shoe chic. | | i Leaders Look to New Legislation, | Business for Aid, (Continued from Page One.ly NEW INCOME ~ TAX RATE IN ~ EFFECT NOW Are Greatly Per Exemptions Reduced While Cent Advanced | WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—The In- .’mlnded income taxpayers they will {have to pay greatly increased rates on 1932 incomes. sheep and lands, now more plen- |tiful on farms than for years,, probably will be low for another year. Poultry is the Only im-| !portant farm commodity that is bringing as much as it did before Ithe world war. | Although there is relatively lit-| tle change in world supplies except for their heavier concentration in ’normally deficit areas, the Amer- | lican farmer had & reduetion of /173,888,000 bushels in this year’s |total wheat yield, a reduction of | 14,369,000 bales in cotton and 570,- | /996,000 pounds in tobacco. | | Cotton Acreage Cut 1 | The cotton acreage has been |reduced 10,000.000 acres from the' \reoord planting and because of ternal Revenue Bureau today re- poor winter wheat condition some | - — private predictions say the Unit-| |ed States may not produce its! {own bread and seed in 1933, aska. westward. ¢ clear weather in the Int Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veiocity ‘Weather 4 pm. yest'y 2057 9 55 E 18 Clear 4 am. today 20.64 9 68 SE 8 Snow Ncon today 20.36 15 88 8 9 Snow CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS an: YESTERDAY | TODAY e sreirzam 5 Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. dam. Precip. 4am. ‘f“ Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather "; Barrow -18 -24 | -26 =30 4 0 Cldy % Nome -4 -6 | -12 -8 4 0 Clear Y9 Bethel 416 -16 -6 -12 24 0 Clear s Fort Yukon -50 -50 | -5¢ -54 o 0 Clear Tanana -20 -26 | =40 -840 0 0 Clear Fairbanks -38 -42 | -48 -48 0 0 Fogey Eagle -56 -56 | -58 -58 0 0 Clear ' Bt. Paul 22 20 52 18 30 Trace Snow “% Dutch Harbor P O e | SR GRS S ) Cldy Kodiak 22 18 | 16 20 10 02 Cldy Cordova 24 14 | 6 6 4 02 Cldy Juneau 12 9 | 7 9 8 Trace Snow Bitka 31 - | 20 — — 0 Cldy Keichikan 34 30 | 24 26 [ .02 Cldy Prince Rupert 34 34 | 28 30 4 04 Pt. Cldy Edmonton — - | -16 -16 4 01 Clear Szattle 42 40 | 36 38 18 .01 Cldy Portiand 46 42 i 38 38 8 04 Pt. Cldy $~ San Francisco . 52 52 46 46 4 22 Rain The ressure is low from Southarn Alaska to Puget Sound, and lowest in the Gulf of Alas‘kn and the Aleutian Islands, with gales south of the Gulf and Aleutians and snow flurries in Southern Al- The pressure is moderately high in Northern Alaska with for and on the Bering Sea coast. Tem- peratures have fallen throughout the Territory except from Kodiak the first $4,000 net incoms with 8 about equal to the average ex-! Match Your Shoes and Bag, Says Paris If You’d Be in Froni of Style Parade " Shoes and bags that match each cther and in turn match the color of the costume are Paris’s latost style of designs the brown seal. The bag and of black pin seal trimmed a black wool suit. es in Followsw .4 Banta Elena, last of the four Miss Eliso Grace of New York b; Nyew York, South America and Pacific Coast ports. The “Santa” ships were built under the Jones-White law by which Government loans are used to aid in the conmstruction of American merchant marine vessels. two ensembles chown at upper left featurs a white enamel clasp. th black Sisters Into Sea Jrace Line, taking the water at Kearney, N. Y., after being christ: holds down your fuel bill Carbonado has as much fuel value as many lump coals costing several dollars more per ton. And remember—for full heating satisfaction with a money-back guarantee, start your fire with INDIAN coal, and bank with CARBONADO. I ring. Vera Borea I The matching bag and shoe ] | I I I | I | They are made of cmble are fashioned worn with | | I I Carbonado holds the fire, and { the cther e antelope and are Buy the “Bargain Heating” coals NOW — at these LOW prices. If you ask HIM— O matter what coal you burn, ALWAYS bank r your fire with CARBONADO furnace coal. about i CARBONADO |} ‘ FURNACE COAL He will tell you that— INDIAN LUMP $14.50 per ton CARBONADO $16.00 per ton COMBINATION| $15.25 per ton Prices queted include delivery Phone 412 $50,000 Serial Bond . of new $5,000,000 sister ships of istensd . The new vessel will ply between Secured By { mightiest effort in a generation to! |rescue American farming from the | A The | jnfiuences that | The new rates are 4 per cent on 1932 reduction in wheat yield Was |qown and to restore to the farm ! family its proper share of the na- have dragged it} per cent for the remainder, after|Ports and further reduction in 1933 |tional income. | exemptions are deducted. (would make possible by 1934 the | He proposed Federal re-financ-| BUILDING in Juneau JACK PICKFORD /% Interes On YOUR Money . . . With Safety. The Unsold Portion of the THE ASSEMBLY COMPANY THE ASSEMBLY APARTMENT Issue “SUN TA % NNERS” WHILE AWAY HOURS R ris play -, “keeno” te pass the time y claim it beats snow-shoeing as a The old rates were 1% per cent on the first $4,000, 3 per cent for the next $4,000 and 5 per cent for the next $4,000 and so forth. The new law reduces cxemptions of a single person from $1500 to $1,000 and heads of families from $3,500 to $2,500 but credits for de- | pendants remains at $400 each. The reduction of the exemptions is expected to require approximate- ly 2,500,000 additional persons %o file returns. ALASKA CLOSES (Continue: from Page One.) 1981, tax payments not due until after the first of }m had been made amounting to about $37,000. Similar last December totaled less than $20,000. $500,000 By Maioh It is probablé that the treasury balance will have been' increased to about $500,000 by March 1. Last | vear the balance was $413.444.29 on that date. . ' There was a heavier réd salmon |pack in 1032 than in 1931, and !taxes from that source which normally arfe largely paid by March 1, or the middle of the | momh, probably will be larger than last year's receipts. Since the greater portion of the Territory’s revenuss i§ derived from the salmon industry, mostly from pack taxes, it 15 not pdssible to estimate with any degree of accu- Tacy the amount due from last year's operations, A CALENDAR YEAR WiTH S8 ° ?l:t :::“‘;? ‘:v;’zem;‘;;“‘:i"“ sme;mg of farm mortgages at lower D ol ”or":-{ b 3 rates of interest and for longer It R it whem“’“'lterms and stabilization of the dol- g Sredicted "t%xe by ~(lar at a price level which would % e of 20-lanaple debts to be paid in dollars l“fi“‘ Wh“-‘;‘ on American farmé of the same value of those bor- | ;Vgstthe advent of the next nn’--.,mwed,. Advocates of the voluntary doA! mestic allotment plan in a bl REDMAN GOES TO SEATTLE before the short session of Con-! FOR BRIEF BUSINESS TRIP gress said that if it passed and lescaped presidential veto there was a chance it would add $700,- 000,000 to —— - Enroute to Seattle on a com- binsd business vacation trip, H. C. | the annual income|Redman, formerly member of the| {from wheat, cotton, hogs tobaceo|local headquarters staff of the Fed- land rice. eral Agricultural Experiment Sta- Henry A. ‘Wallace, mid-west farm |editor who has been sucgested as PrPesident-Elect Roosevell's See- retary of Agriculture, said in sum- \ tions, visited friends here yesterday while the Northland was in port. Mr. Redman is now a resident of Sitka. DIES IN PARIS PARIS, Jan. 3.—Jack Pickford, actor, aged 36, Mary Pickford's brother, died today from multiple neuritis which affected a brain center. R DN e ITHACA, N. Y, Jan. 3.—Death today claimed Gen. Henry Harri- son Chase Dunwoody, aged 90 years, former Chief Signal Officer of the United States Army. LUDWIG NELSON | JEWELER 1 | i Is Now Being Offered in Denominations of $500 each. Description Folder Sent on Request. Bonds May Be Reserved by 5% Deposit. Making CALL OR PHONE THE ASSEMBLY CO. OFFICF (Old First National Bank Building) PHONE 28 A Local Investment Where You Can See Your Dollars Earn 7%. ming up organized agriculturd’s’ |view of 1933 prospects: i “The Democratic Administiragion a5 an almost superhuma before it. It must 1gwer tax?, ::: %9 Mg souhts Bf RN |structively and not destructively.[in inches were reported on the [Tt must work and lower tariffs,8round at various Alaskan stations (on industtial products and make|Monday afternoon, January 2: | arrangements to trade industrial|Bethel 1, Qapdons 8, Fagle 4, FAE products from abroad for our sur-|Panks 10, Fort Yukon 6, Juneau plus agricultural products, 4. “It must work out Ice on Chena Slough at Fair- making the tariff effective o Ru W T T Sl {ricultural commodities of which |there is an exportable surplus un- TAXIDERMY |til such time as the entire tapiff Have your prized trophies moune- - - ALASKAN SNOW COVER B, structure is made to serve the ed life size or heads. Guaranteed \T\Tsdt:ce of even-handed economic moth-proof. Birds mounted. Tan- ning. Rugs ‘made. Caps. Ladies’ neckwear. Write for price list. Percy Colton, Haines, Alaska. —adv. “It must take sound action on |the monétary system, not only |{from a national but also an in- ADVERTISE ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TQ YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 Austin Fresh Tamales Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:80. YOUR WANTS in, the WANT ADS in the EMPIRE |ternational view, and work out forward-looking measures to ad- just our entire social organiza- tion to the unemployment cauged by modern ‘machinery.” oty Critical Year Ahecad Wallace described 1983 as culture’s “most ecritical year ing the first six or eight mo of which there would be F of Expert* Window Cleaning Phone 485 Old Papers for Saie' ‘at" ST Empire’ Office