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CENTURY OF HOSE, pair NECKWEAR- 9 for RUCHING— _\(ll'{l LINENS— each PROG RESS SILK $1.00 White and Flesh, $1.00 Luncheon Cloths, Towels, -$1.00 RAYON AND I’\ISILY PRIN yard LACE 9 AND LI for PANEL each 'URTAI! Vl':cru and Lace, -$1.00 EN SCARF .$1.00 ~$1.00 KITCHEN APRONS— 3 for PRINT HOUSE l’\l\\l,» each PRINT DIMITY NIG lll‘(JOWNS% 1'&""] CHILDREN’S eac I] NEW TAMS AND BE each CHECKED (, 4 yards COLORED OUTING 5 s BLOLU yards RETS- SHAN FLANNEL— $1.00 VISIT OUR UPSTAIRS BARGAIN DEPT. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, BRIDGE NOVELTIES 1933, gl s gy $1.00 ,HEAVY TURKISH TOWE 5 packages pair MH\INs_ MEN'S WORK SOX—Cotton and Wool Mixture, 6 pair . MEN’S BROADCLOTH PAJAMAS MEN’S i suit ] y 1S—just lh(‘ each MER WEIGHT UNDER- kmd for w('llOOl BOYS’ SHIRTS—plain and fancy broadcloth, each - INFANTS’ SHOES AND SLIPPLK = pair BABY BLANKh 3 for RESTAURANT NAPKINS— dozen LINEN GLASS TOWELING— 5 yard ALUMINUM ThA KETTLES— each VISIT ()l/R lI’ST4IRb BARGAIN DEPT M. Behrends Co,, Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store RECALL MOVE IN MILWAUKEE LIVELY THING Politics Bubbling as Young Rival Hits Mayor's “Four Year Plan” (Continued irom Page One) Hoan has held fast preaching Socialism streets, building sewers and fos- tering éducation Year by year he grew mighti politically until a Socialist Mayor and a non-pari san Council to do him battle be: came fixtures in the political picture. In his seventeenth year as May- or-Hoan was returned to office in April, 1932, by the largest vote of his cgreer. For this term Mayor Hoan dis- closed a “four year plan” to set Milwaukee right amid the jumbled etonomic condition of the nation. To cut wages, he said, would be %o sink dzeper into the mire of the depression. He urged a six-hour workers, advocating a gener: to achieve it if neces: and advocated a temporary return hand labor, an emergency measure he admitted was a backward step The depression he described as “the agony of a dying system, the last gasps of capitallsm.” Then he set out to exccute his idea in municipal affairs. There was no reduction in sal- aries, and such savings as were achieved were devoted to creating more city work. Fortney Stark, secretary of the Wilwaukee Real Estate Board, issued persistent warnings that Mr. Hoan's “four year plan” took into account everybody but the tax- payer. Incomes dropped and soon there was an impressive list of persons who failed to pay their taxes. Stark’s appeal has been directed to the citizen who pays the bills. Mayor Hoan has taken no of- ficial notice of the recall move- ment—or the youth who aspires to the Mayoralty so long held by Socialists. Opposition, says the Mayor, has come from real estate interests which are “calight” with large im- proved subdivisions which they cannot sell now. m tax-] rflm improvements, he ided by real ‘and delinquen- | because the pay the his office, hile paving to day for 1 strike | operum i Milwaukee | | improved AMBULANGE OF JUNEAU PROVES HELP INNEED \Eight Emergency Calls An- swered in July by White Line Cab | Juneau's ambulance service has proved itself of great valye in many emergency cases where thers was no time to be lost in getting people under medical care. The White Line Cab Company‘;‘ ambulance answered eight calls| during the month of July, most of | them to take patients from boats | or airplane. Three were pneu-| monia cases, two were broken legs, | and one was an arm torn off at| the shoulder. Patients came from | Excursion Inlet, Big Port Walter, the Islander, Hoonah and Juneau. The ambulance is fully equip- ped to take care of the most ex- treme cases. It is heated for cold weather, is cooled in warm weather by an electric fan, and' is fitted with both hot and cold wa- ter. It carries a complete first aid kit, and has the latest model stretcher, adjustable to all positions, whi¢ch can be set upon a rubber-tired rolling car- riage. In most cases, three men go out on calls; and in all ‘cases, at least two, There are comfortable seats for doctors and nurses to ac- company the patients. The ambulance fills & great need in the community, and is instant- ly available in emergencigs such as accidents, fires, or sudden ill- ness. —-——e MISS NEVILLE RETURNING | Miss Ethel iveville, in charge of | the Firemen's Club, is returning to| Juneau aboard the Northland, due tomorrow morning, after a visit of several weeks with relatives in the south. | —— | DESTROYERS AT STEWART | Two Canadian destroyers, H. M, | C. S. Skeena and H. M. C. S. Vancouver are now at Stewart., The former carries 6 offigers and 133 enlisted men and the latter 5 officers and 96 men. ————— A BLESSED EVENT Is Coming e el HURT IN BLAS'I‘ Thomas Rovinson, miner, em- ployed at the Premier Mine in the Hyder District, was recently severely hurt in a bla‘sl by hurt- adv. ling rocks. el A BLESSED EVENT adv. | JEANNE IN PORT FROM TAKU RIVER WITH STRONG, BARR Taku riverboat Jeanne, own- nd operaled by Capt. William Strong, arrived in port this morn- ing at 10 o'clock and tied up at Keeney's float. The Jeanne is taking on supplies | and cargo and will leave Monday. She goes up the Taku river as far as Tulsequah. L. F."Barr was a passenger to Juneau on the boat. 'He i the pi- lot of Strong's flying boat Atlin, which is marooned on the Taku river with a damaged motor. While in Juneau Capt. Strong and Pilot Barr are arranging for the nec- essary parts to be shipped from | outside to repair the ‘plane. As| 9 . ‘d | repairs are made, soon as the parts arrive and the the pilot be- licyes that no trouble will be e perienced in taking off, as thepe is ample room on the river whete | the ship is down. PRINCE OF WALES T 0 MAKE SEATTLE Tlt.v After being idle for a year, Dr. L. P. Dawes' boat, Wales, 1§ preparing to leave Ju- | neau for Hoonah, Craig, Port Al- exander, Ketchikan and Seattle, picking up cargo. The Prince of Wales is due to leave tomorrow. Capt. Gus Romunseth will be in command, and William Snyder will be purser. D A BLESSED EVENT Is Coming - e — Daily Empire Want Ads Pay adv. | - [ the country and their families, the Prince of | 7 ALASKA SALMON PACK JUMPS T0 4,000,000 GASES Was Close to that Mark Last Salprda ht— Shortage, Pmk lgack Alaska's salmon pack to the even- ing “of August 5, last Saturday, for all districts aggregated 3.894,- cases, according to figures ‘made public today by Capt. M. J. O’Connor, Assistant Agent of the | United States Bureau of Fisheries. 1Red salmon predominated to that | date with 2,133,177 cases reported | The 'pink salmon pack was con- | siderably shart, ‘aggregating oniy 1,252,319 cases, about 700,000 cases less than had been packed on| August 8, 1931, the nearest date for which comparative figures are available. Will Prcbably Recover It is expected" that the apparent pink shortage will be largely over- come during the next three weeks in Southeast Alaska. The pink pro- ductiont in'the’ Panhandle districts | probably will be approximately nor- | Reds 10,569 8,217 4,084 15,937 11,843 3,353 10,915 Kings 408 63 3,622 Digtrict Southern Wrangell West Coast Icy Strait Western Eastern Yakutat Prince William Sound Resurrection Bay Cook Inlet Kodiak Chignik Alaska Peninsula— South Side North Side (final) Bristol Bay (final) | Copper River (final) 118 515 3,105 706 148 285 52,674 230 177,003 26,644 1,556,744 56,077 3,162 279 9,028 4,640 | is believed that the Commissioner | those in this vieinity, mal by the end of,the season. i The abnormal lateness «of the runs throughaut the ~ Southeast) rather than any shortage of is ascribed as the cause of pack to that time. Since last Saturday canneries drawing fish from Icy Strait have had 1 steadily inceasing packs. The sea-( n in the Icy Strait district was | extended until August 10, closing 6 p.m. yesterday. All fish in traps in that area must be removed by 6 p.m. tomorrow b The two canneries in the dis- trict have gear in the Western Dis= trict” and their seine the small the ust seoson 19, Extends Western District A supplementary regulation was issued by Commissioner Frank T. Bell Wednesday adding five days to the normal season in'the West- ern district. T will close it to commercial fishing on August 19, or a week from tomorrow night. While no additions have been made to the Southern, North and South Prince of Wales districts, it| will also grant them added time. The runs there are fully as late as and all of the canneries are behind their hg- ures for two years ago. The pack by districts Saturday night follows: to last Pinks Chums Colloes 216487 16,441 8306 118,667 11572 3,152 43861 7384 8,501 139,341 34586 5175 96,163 113,863 3,235 49996 22950 2,533 3,253 132 12 192,585 30956 7,208 68 5,049 29,975 9,002 125,738 371,159 17,004 418,208 28,397 1,581,108 16,552 3,467 3491 5,749 249,748 11,517 124952 98127 14964 1474 23,926 1,410 2,133,177 26,309 Totals MARTINS BACK, EASTERN TRIP Auend El ks Convention then Spend Six Days at Chicago Fair Ralph B. Martin, wife and ‘daugh;er Lois arrived in Juneau on the Prince Rupert. He was a delegate from the local lodge of | jthe B. P. O. E. to the National convention held in Milwaukee, consin, the middle of last month. Mr. Martin, says the convention was a wonderful success, attended ! by more than 3,000 delegates and representatives of lodges all over to | say nothing of nearly 15,000 Elks { who attended unofficially. | Meier's Visit | After some effort, the two dele- gates from Juneau were able to induce Walter F. Meier of Seattle, |the new Grand Exalted Ruler | elected at the convention, to make ;a visi{ here, and he is expected to | arrive next week. | Mr. Meier insisted, according to | - |Mr. Martin, that he did not want | ia banquet or any special enter- tainment for himself, but that he | days by Mr. 1,252,319 405,595 did want a big public meeting where anyone could auflnd Mr. Meler will be the first Grand Ex- alted Ruler to visit Alaska. The representatives of the var- jous lodges of the nation made a good showing for their communi- ties, and the general atmosphere of returning prosperity gave indi-, cation that a lessening of "econo- mic tension was being felt every- where. Six Days in Chicago | The Martins also took in the Century of Progress Exposition, spending six days in Chicago, where they were joined for two Martin’s brother, C. B. Martin, whom he had not seen for 15 years. They wer2 particu- larly impressed with the brilliant lighting effects which have been achieved by the designers of the buildings. They also visited relatives of Mrs. Martin in frichigan, and of Mr. Martin in Portland, Oregon, | before returning to Juneau. BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP Apartments FINALLY ON TAP! Made by one of the oldest brewers of DANCING LUNCHES (Believe me, they DRAUGHT know how) PLENTY FOR ALE} HOT MERCHANTS, LUNCH DAILY Hot Chili Tonight ‘.B Pflclfw Northwest. It Myst BF ‘Gapd! BOOTHS Chop Suey Saturday Night er P boats' cani fish in Chatham Strait waters until | == closes there on Aug-|#' 1 lumbm and clearing weather in the Interior. 39 moderabely high from Hawaii to Southeastern Alaska. The tempera- wu'rm sumu LB wmhgu‘g OF wm‘ m the U. 8. Weather Buream) LOCAL DlA‘l'A Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, bgz_in'n!nx at 4 pm, Al‘lnu't 11: Showers tonight and Saturday; gentle southerly winds. Barometer Temp. Hum'dity Wind Velocity Weathes 2000 57 89 8B 1 Rain 2998 54 9 Ccalm 0 Rain 3005 50 (18 s 12 Cldy CABLE AND RADIQ | “fll!y'l'l WEMA! ‘ mn 3 Eer;'m. fiu uhr- Wem‘.hu Eq‘heu 4p.m. temp. temp. Trace Cldy 0 Clear .38 36 60 60 62 & Cldy 70 66 Clear 72 70 Clear 64 Cldy 64 Clear 48 Cldy Cldy Cldy Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today Shuon Barrow . Nome v Bethel .._.:! Fort. Yukon Tanang . Fairbanks Eagle 8t. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince RulperL Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco 64 48 52 | B oo - g 58 o | w | 0| o B | 0 4 0 4 6 2 2 0 6 0 [ 4 6 4 0 4 6 0 0 0 Pt Cldy The barometric pressure is m)@erazely low throughout Alaska except 'in the Southesst Tt is lowest in’the central Interior, with moderate to heavy rains from the Gulf of Alaska to British Co- The pressure remains ture’ has tisen in the western portion of the Gulf of Alaska and has changed but little in other tflsmct.s ¥rs Low-Pricep! A GENERAL@ELECTRIC FOR ONLY $60.00 »w mogel gives you 100 percent General Electric Quality at the lowest 'price in G-E Washer hisiofy . . . Easy to operate, it will soon pay for itself out of savings in laundry bills. See it at our storg foday .« « OF 16t us demonstrate it in your home. $5.00 Down, - $5.00. Monthly FEATURES Alumioum Alloy Agitator Enatél Tub * . Alumxnum Lid fmnt{u-fmfi Motor Wateproof Cor Alaska Electric Light & Power Co, Juneau 6 Douglas 18 REMEMBER—The 12th Annual Southeastern Alaska Fair, Sept. 13, 14, 15, 16 DPDRAUGHT BEER | Equipment Block Tin Rubber Beer Hose Pumps Chromium Plated Beer Faucets Gas Regulators Double Distributor Valves . C]uonu;up Plated Picnic Outfits Complete We have in our organization Mr, Ahlerq, and Gee Bee, all old-time plumbers thorouzhly der.stan? the u;lst&llph on’ of 'Beer %qmpment and ‘handl ugtaolf n pipe. If you want a real good job installed as it should be Phope 84. RICE & AHLERS € Plumhings, Heating and Sheet Meta “We tell you in advance what the job will cost” Mr. Baker THE HOTEL QF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineav Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every m.;fiprryh‘ Boat, W LAWW QUALITY AND §E§V§CE TO YOUR mxmc Meadowbrook Bntte! sh T. PHONE 39 - denfie-—w gz”%