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W AR IR ) B 2 Y INFLATION Is Designed to Beat the DEPRESSIO You Can Beat UIT MICHAEL-STERNS Now The administration plans are to force commodity prices up Year-Round Both At This Suits From AND OTHER BRANDS Now $17.50 $22.50 to create buying power and stimulate business. Finished goods are bound to follow commodities up. You can get your suit now from the last stoek we Emugt’lf You'll save fmm the already low prices of the past season; save still m ore from future pric It will pay you to get your suit now. B. M. Behrends LOCAL HALIBUT FLEET IS HARD HIT BY ORDER Waters North to Cape| Spencer Light Will Close Midnight, August 25 (Continued trom Page One.) and E. W. Allen, lows: “Under authority of the conven- tion between the United States of America and the Dominion of Canada for the preservation of the halibut fishery of the Northern Pacific Océan and Bering Sea, and as provided by regulations effective | January 9, 1933, and amended June 14, 1933, the International Fisheries Commission has, determined upon' and has announced to the re- spective governments the date of August 25, midnight, as that upon which Areas 1 and 2 Secretary, fol- closed to all halibut fishing (“(((’]L that provided for in Article I of| the convention, | “The International Fisheries Commission has deemed that the limit set for the fishing season of 1933 will be attained on that date,| but calls attention to the fact that| the regulations in effect provide| that if, by voluntary curtailment| of landings, or otherwise it ‘shall | at any time become evident to the | International Fisheries Commission | that thé limit will not be reached by such date it may substitute another date’ (Section 2, Regula-| tions effective January 9, 1933, and amended June 14, 1933). “Area Number 1 is defined in these regulations as all conven- tion waters southeast of a line run- ning northeast and southwest)| through Willapa Bay Light on Cape Shoalwater. | “Area Number 2 is defined to include all convention waters off | the coasts of the Dominion of | Canada and of the United States| of American between Area 1 and| & line running south one-quarter east from Cape Spencer Light. “Reference should be had to a copy of the regulations for further | details regarding these lines.” } Aggregate Take Cited In justification of 1s arastic step, the Commission’s order was| accompanied by the following ex- planation: “The records of the International Fisheries Commission show that| for the period from February 1 to| July 29, 1933, the following amounts | of halfbut have been landed in the From Bill to Blll—-"Congrats” i Here are the new and retiring Grand Exalted Rulers of the B} as defined| national conyention in Milwaukee, Walter F. Meier, of Seattle in the said regulations shall be| Was elected to succeed Bloyd E. Thompson, head of the fraternat A for the past vear. various ports on the Pacific Coast: Area 2 Area 3 | 11,845,477 12,037,789 5,943,803 256,099 | Total 17,789,280 12,283,888 These figures are subject to rurthcr' corrections, and should be consid-| ered in the light of the early! commencement the 1933 season.! “For the corresponding period in' 1932, February 15 to July 31, the| follewing amounts of halibut were landed: U. S. Fleet Canadian Fleet Area 3 12,489,035 3,666,982 U. S, Fleet Canadian Fleet Total 13,868,607 These figures for both y been corrected for the made by the 1933 regulations 1 817 ars have in | the division line between Areas 2 and 3. “Acknowledgment is made of the assistance given by the Depart- ment of Fisheries, Canada, United States Bureau of Fisheries and United States Customs in the com- pilation of these totals.” -> | TO CONDUCT EXAMINATIONS | Dr. G. F,. Freeburger, of Free- burger and Kaser, dentists, left yesterday on the Norco for Ket- chikan, where he will conduct ex- aminations for the Board of Den- | tal Examiners. —————.——— Dally Emprie Wamt Ads Pay | to be change SZ-POUND KING IS . ... PREZE OF VUKOVICH One of the largest king salmon reported landed on, light tackle this season, was brought inm yesterday by Steve Vukuvich, of the Custodian's force at the Capl- tol, from Point, Lena Bewmch.. Stripping there algne in 2 skiff, Vukuvich landed the big fellow, weighing 52 pounds, after a strug- gle lasting one hour and 30¢' min- utes. The fish struck near Point Louisa and towed Steve and his boat to Point Lena beforé he was landed in the boat. ESTEBETH ARRIVES, . FROM SITKA ROUTE The motorship Estebeth, Capt. Bach, and Robert Coughlin, Pur+ ser, docked at the upper city float at 11 o'clock this morming from Sitka. Pasengers for Juneau were Mr. and Mrs. O. Smith from Hirst- Chichagof; Miss M. Peterson from Sitka; Max Behrman from Kim-+ | shan Cove, and F. Dupree, from Chichagof. I-_QUALIZATION BOA.D | IS MEETING TOMORROW | | The Equalzation Board will men in the City Counecil Cham- bers tomorrow afternoon from 2 \.o 4 o'clock and continue during | the same hours for the remainder of this wesk, IGY ST AT IS BIVEN ANOTHER FOUR-DAY LIFT E E Winga? A_nnounces‘ Extension to Aug. 10 —Extend Others (Continued i1vm Page One) neryiien reported the takes 1n-| creasing in inside waters. Pack fi- | gures for the Panhandle for last week will not be available for two or three days. Widgeont t6 Go South In line with the bureau's re- trenchment policy due to curtailed | appropriations for administrative expenses. this year, three vessels of its Alaska fleet are due here shortly enroute to Seattle. Th: | Widgeon, operating out of here, | will join them and be laid up for | the rest of the year, Mr. Wingard | said. The Eider and Kittiwake may reach port. tomorrow. The Wid- geon will proceed south with them. | The Scoter, which has just fin- ished the season in Bristol Bay,‘i has been ordered here. Pending| its arrival, the Widgeon will be | replaced by the Brant which will | remain in these waters until Sep- tember (1, at least. The Widgeon, Mr. Wingard said, |is the most expensive boat in the | fleet to' oerate, due to its high | consumption of gasoline. The Sco- | ter is a dissel-powered vessel and | operates much more inexpenscively. | | Capt. Clyde I. Bell, master of uhe‘ | Widgeon, will be transferred to t: coter for duty. The remaind T | of the crew on the Widgeon will be put on furlough. | Brings Speed Boat | Mr. - Wingard brought a new | speed boat north with him for fnsl! | | \ Vids patrol work in Southeastern Alas- ka for the remainder of the sea- son. It is a 26-foot open ccckpn‘ craft, powered with a 82- horse- power Chrysler engine capable of | making 25 knots at full speed. It has a self-bailing cockpit with the engine and forward quarter | | under cover, and sleeping quarters for the operator. It carries a small stove for cooking. Leaving Wrangell at 2 p. m. Sat- urday, Mr. Wingard came through Dry Pass to Petersburg, spent 40 minutes there and overtook the Brant, with several hours start on him, at Cape Fanshaw. He had dinner aboard then left it at Five Fingers Light. He inspected traps| | north from there and arrived in Juneau at 11 p. m. more than thres hours ahead of the Brant. This is the third of the same| type of vessel the bureau has put into service. One is being used in Prince William Sound and the other in Bristol Bay. They have given excellent satisfaction, he said. BUSY ON TRIPS {Tnjured Pérsohe Aéé Flown Here by Meyrmg— Parties Taken Out Pilot Gene Meyring took the | seaplane Baranof to Tenakee Sat- urday afternoon: and brought in Johnny John, fisherman of Angoon, who is now in St. Ann's Hospital with an injured leg. Later in the afternoon, the Bar- — e MRS.. TRIMBLE AND HER i DAUGHTER RETURNING H TO PT. BARROW HOME Mrs. John R. Trimble and daughter are passengers aboard| the North Star for Point Barrow | i where she is school teacher. The two came out of the Arctic settle- ment by airplane last spring and have been vlsmng in the States. 0 Theodore C, Haffenreffer, million- aire Boston brewer, and his wife are being guarded following threats of racketeers who attempted to extort $150,000 for protecting them from kidnaping. COL. LINDBERGH AND HIS WIFE IN GREENLAND Flying Pair, Engaged in Aerial Mapping, Make Another Hop “"SCORESBY SOUND, Grien- land, Aug. 7.—Col. Charles Lind- bergh and Mrs. Lindberg complet- ed the first west to east crossing of Greenland by plane last Sat- urday arriving here from Holstein- borg. The flying pair is engaged in mapping an- aerial route over the North Atlantic from America to Europe. BRIDGE PARTY IN HONOR OF VISITOR Miss Harriets Barragar enter- tained at a louncheon and bridg2 party this afternoon in honor of Miss Mary Lee Council, daughter of Dr. W. W. Council. Guests were Misses Jean Faulkner, Ailene Ann Goldstein, Esther Kaser, Eli- zabeth Kaser, Beatrice Mullen, Mary VanderLeest, Verna Hurley, Grace Vivian Davis, Anna Belle Simpscn, Carol Robertson, Mary Claire Hellenthal and Mrs. Elroy Ninnis, | :ano! went to Todd and Cosmos | Cove with Mr. and Mrs. Robt. W. | Bender, Miss Ireme Nelson and A. B. Hayes. At 8:30 o'clock in the evening the Baranof left, for Lake Hassel- borg with H. A. Patton and daugh- | ter, Marie Alfonso, E. Parsons and Winfield Pullen, Jr., on a fishing trip, returning to Juneau Sunday morning. Sunday thq Baranef went to Port Althorp and brought in W, M Robertson, American Can Company engineer and anIndian woman suf- fering from a broken leg. — (RIS GRAY IS HOME FOR BRIEF VACATION 1S TO RE Ufii Miss Iris: Gray, daughter of M. and Mrs. J. L. Gray, arrived from the South Sunday morning on the Noreo. Miss Gray iS a graduate of Oreé= gon State Collége at Corvallis, OrFe- gop, and the Cincinnati Conserv- atory of Musi¢, where she has been studying for the past year. While' at Oregon State College, she stud- died under Prof. and Mrs. Petrie of the Music Department, in both plano and. singing. = She accom: panied the Madrigal Club there for three years. i After graduating from Cincins nati Conservatory of Music in Juné of this year, Miss Gray returned te Corvallis, where she has sey- eral pupils, and where she expects to be connected with the Depart- ment of Music for the coming year. _Miss Gray plans to remain m Junemu visiting her parents for about & month, during which time she may give a concert here, and will return to Corvallis about the first of September. Bald Heads Laugh; . Haireut Price Up SPOKANE, Wash., Aug, 7-—Bald men can laugh. Spokane barber$ have raised the price of haif- cuts to 50 cents. The price for- merly ranged from 35 to 35 cents. ACROSS an:nderlnl . Poles Equilateral rectangle . Flight Center of a vheel 1 Earth: coms. form Mo ¥ ore rigorous + Object of intense devotion 34. Spli 8k Sour i el 52 Coynty in New S. Tt of & plant e o !&. P Bling game $0. Rail into 54. Remain long 5 der 58 I wil Pilotd 32, Suppited a fire with fuel 48. C 80. Nots Bt the » scale Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle [FIAIPISIRSIAINIC I TIOP] [EIO} ITAE VIEIRERUIVIA] INIO|S[E]| BEBIII(!HE D«uly Cross-word Puzzle 5. Asiatic native 6. Shouts / 7. Not so long 8. Symbol for tellurium 9. Edible seaweed Basketball team : . Ornamental border' . More unhappy . Huge waves . To one side Call forth . Nerve network Episties 35. Awards of Vi r . Bring to Hgh . Garm anianl . Unfasten : Fidw pigh 1. Héwn or ‘squared stone 4 2. Attendant ona &3 Knight , Cri 6. Cllm”len“ plant in tion irulent polson o] a: 55. SyHable of Pl i 3. Vessel for . cxltation washing 4. Sun god AsN lfifl — HE dREEEN maE AEEE BN ANEN S %Hllfl/%il M AR W ,ll/ '4 a.m. today 3. 8. DEPAR' oF &mwumm WEATHER BUREAU Weather By the U. 8. Weather Burean) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Juneaw and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., August 7: Rain tonight and Tuesday; moderate southeasterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. HumMity Wind valodl! Weather 4 pm, yest'y . 30.05 52 98 s Rain 3013 50° 2 s Cldy 3018 58 86 s Cldy CABLE AND RADIO REPOETS YESTERDAY | 5 Noon _today 12 TODAY Highest 4pm. temp. temp. ... 34 34 . 58 56 Lowest 4a.m. da.m. Precip. 4a.m. temp. temp; velocity 24hrs. Weathsr 40 10 Trace = Foggy 40 6 0 Clear 54 52 o i 0 Pt.Cldy 58 56 | 52 42 Cldy . 66 66 38 0 Clear 58 54 52 136 Cldy 62 62 48 .08 Cldy 50 50 46 Trace Cldy 54 52 48 20 Cldy 3 48 16 Rain Barrow Nome . Bethel ... Fort' Yukort Tanana Fairbanks Eagle St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka £ Ketchikan ... Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco 52 5 7% 72 8 58 1.05 1.00 34 04 0 o Cldy cldy Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy Clear Clear 58 60 8 2 8 62 0 Cldy — - The barometric pressure is ‘moderately low throughout Alaska except in the eastern portion of the Gulf of Alaska and the South- east. It is rising rapidly in the Aleutian Islands, falling rapidly at Kodiak and is lowest near the Alaske Peninsula with rain from Eastern Alaska to British Columbia. The pressure is moderately high from Hawaii to Southetast Alaska. The weather has cleared in the western Interior and is generally cloudy elsewhere. Temperatares fell yesterday in the eastern Interior. e SREEINITTRERTE TR BINRNR T —— AN INVITATION to dine well .nd rest well at Seattle’s most distinguished ad- dress. Here, you witl find all the modern hofel conveniences ne- cessary to your complete comfort and all those old fashioned ideas of friendliness and hospHality that are necessary to & good hotel well operated. ADOLPH SCHMIDT, Managing Director. Alaskan Headquarters—Ask for Perman:nt Rates. HOTEL NEW WASHINGTON Seattle’s Most Distinguished Address S ANEEIEEE IR E IR RN IRE RN R RAR SR AR LERE PR AT R N RRE AAR N RSANANS = e UNITED FOOD co. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Mesdts—Phote 16 : I(Ifif/p Cane Structural Keep your home in the_“Conifort Zone” in Winter — atid in Sumimer THOMAS HARDWARE Co. REMEMBER—IZU Annual Seutheasern Alaskd Fair, Jdriénd, September 13-14-15-16 Leader Department Store Stote Open Evenings GEORGE BROTHERS THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Setvices .{¢ You Begin and End at the Gm Plnk of Every Passenger: Boat ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter . Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30