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fur t as by » these cases at 5.75 and 6.50 locks and handles . . . needed conveniences. | fiteer at a time like this,” he de- clared. W| I- SUN 0FFERS The Government clearly {of a mind to permit profiteering,| cnuPERATIUN Tu}he said. Public opinion will pun- ish it. And decency itself demands there be none. Steamship Official Outlines Policies—Glasse Urges In his opinion, the NRA codes |can be made effective only through lar NRA Adoption | (Continued fro: a practical application of the Gold- en Rule. The formula is easily understood but harder to compound. It is difficult to put into practice. i'rhe instinct of self-preservation is | ed with that of self-sacrifice, the latter is the higher order things, and ‘'must prevail for cess of the present effort to re- of Page One) g Ve - store prosperity to the country. | talk, made an impressive plea for| 1y the acceptance of NRA codes, local adherence to the NRA code.|(ne longer view has to prevail. “It seems to me if any part of the The present sacrifice is required United States should respond 10/, tnag all will benefit in the end the NRA, Alaska, and particularly “We must be willing to go our- Juneau, should.” Juneau's present enviable posi- tion, due largely to the operations part of the way in the hole ‘der that the other fellow can |get part way out of the hole” he of the Alaska Juneau mine, Re | goceried peinted out, has been made pos-| FrA sible by “outside” money. “We| Humanity Before Profit | would not be so secure were it not, NOW is the time, he urged, to for the money from the outside|Put humanity before profits. Capi- that made its success possible.” |za] is worthy of protection and, so, The Federal payroll, he pointed|81s0, 1§ labor worthy of adequate Jout, is another source of local se-["““m for its effort curity that comes from the country| “I am not an alarmist, I hope” at large. Federal relief funds are|Dbe concluded. “But I believe if this still another| “Becausc of these|Whole effort fails, the security of and other factors we should be!our Government, of our whole so-| more than willing to help things|cial order hangs in the fire | along,” he asserted. | “Millions of law-abiding people - {the pinning their hopes on the men;:;:;i’o“n ’:}"’lh?‘p'fs:' three | PYesident. If that should fail, if vears is not a ‘normal c’C“m”mey lose that hope, it seems to decline in business than can belme that the very security of Gov- charted and analyzed, and one that ernment ,.Hnd the social order are can be cured by orthodox remedies, | 3¢ Stake. he asserted. There were two factors A New Definition that make it.different from those He ended by Biving a new defini- preceding it: First, the world is tion to the term “NRA.” Instead of broke; second, the introduction of National Recovery Act, it might mass mechanical production meth- | well mean “Neighbors' Reciprocity ods piled up great quantities of | Act.” It calls for friendly, neigh- manufactured goods while employ- | borly cooperation, he declared. An- .ment was lessened. ! swering the question when will it The recovery, he contended, must | succeed?,” he said. be preceded by a recovery of the| “When we form ourselves into a caliber of the people. Basic- | new religious awakening. It will things are wrong morally. come when we who are in churches live seven days each week as we 4 3 Issue of Clear LUGGAGE at the Old Low Prices — But You Must Hurry! Just when everybody needs luggage most, too! You'll SAVE on every piece you buy NOW. These are really smart cases in black and brown with strong beautifully lined and with all the THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1933. You'll Be Thrifty If You Buy That . . . New Coat Now! You can be in s $13.50 Others at $19.75 We couldn’t duplicate these stylish new fall coats for sev- eral dollars more. The newest of fabrics . . . luxurious .. boucles, pebbly woolens, tweeds and crepes rims . . in all the popular new colors and mixtures. to 44. are offered. You'll be capitivated as much by their styling The low prices don’t begin y the prices. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneauw’s Leading Department Store Dimond’s Letter Effictive A copy of Delegate Dimond’s is noh{ brief to the Secretary of the Treas- | ury urging a free gold market for gold producers was read by Secre- tary G. H. Walmsley. This, he de- Metzgar, General Superintendent of the Alaska Juneau Gold Min- ing Company, who was quoted as saying that it probably had more to do in getting the old regula- tions modified than anything else. “It is evident,” said President Jones, commenting on the brief, that Delegate Dimond is giving his best efforts for the benefit of the Territory. The Delegate pointed to the dis- advantages the gold miners are laboring under in the face of ad- vancing costs and a fixed price for the product while the embargo order of the President képt théth out of the world warket with their product. He pointed out the producers and the possiblé deleter- ious effect upon the whole goltl mining ifdustry. National NEHA Week / Secretary Walmsley said the Chamber had been advised that the week -beginning August 28 had been set aside for a NRA drive throughout the nation. Personal pledge cards will be distributed to consumers in addition to efforts being made to line up all indus- tries and business undgr the code. A letter was received from the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce expressing its appreciation for the courtzsies shown the annual Good Will Tour party of that orgahi- zation which visited here last month. Fifteen requests for inforrhation were received and answered by the Secretary's office during the past week. e JUDGE ARNOLD ON BRIEF Judge W. C. Arnold, United States Commissioner at Ketchikan, jon a plane that left here this lafternoon. | The issue involved is whether do on Sundays. self- or the interest of so-’ “The whole thing turns on the clety as a8 mhole shall be made moral caliber of the people. It re- ‘paramount. “ God help '-Ilelnolvee itself into the question of ‘And would or could pro--self or society.” . — ., — Daily Empire Want Ads Pay ¢ for as little as clared, had been praised by L. H.| handicaps this imposed on Alaska' VISIT HERE ON BUSINES_BI to $42.50 Sizes 14 to tell what real values BACK TO WATCH RUN CONDITION Business then Returns to Ketchikan Today After a few hours here attend- ing to necessary official matters, L. G. Wingard, Alaska Agent of the United States Bureau of Fish- eries, left By plane this afternoon for Ketchikan to keep in close ‘t«mh with the salmon run on the west coast of Prince of Wales Is- iland. He artived from Ketchikan by, plane yesterday evening. Due to lack of* fish in the wa- térs of the Southern, or Ketchikan, distriet, the. season was not ex- ‘téndbd Beyond last Tuesday evén- ing, Mr. Wingdrd said. The sea: |sor wis exteriied, however, in the + North Prinee of Wales Island dis- trict to next Saturday evening as conditions there were favorable. ! While l?qre be changed plans for thres"of tHe bureau's patrol | fleet. Instéadl Of sending the Crans| | and Teal onbto ?eamc direct, these SHipS will be kept in | Sout] Alaska waters for the present The Scoter, which had slatel to Be statibnéd here to | répldok the Widgeon, will continus !in Seattle. The Crane will remain {here and the Teal go on to Ket- chikan. Mr. Wingard will réemain in the southern end of the Division un- til- Saturday night and return here ion the Teal, he said > ' Golden Horn Span ISTANBUL.—Famed Galata bridge is t0 hav@® & rival over the Golds edr. One of the bids for the joB |by an Englisn firm propesed tb| TWo Cotites Here Overnight on| WRECKAGE 0F SHIPS STREW - COAST SHORES Many Communities Are| Cut Of—Hundreds of | Persons Marooned FISHERIES NEW DEAL PLEASING T0 EVERYBODY Bez Enthusiastic Over Poli- cies Inaugurated by Bell, Wingard Sl (Continued from Page One) e i passengers and crew and the| other had seven men aboard.| Death List Mounts | It is feared the death list m:li mount swiftly as calls came for |ing waters or floods resulting from record-breaking rains. Eight lives are known to have been lost in Virginia alone. | { Frantic Calls Frantic calls for Coast Guard aid| {reached various points from half‘ {a dozen Maryland towns where| { hundreds of families are marooned fand reported in deadly peril of the| hurricane racing far out of the| usual path. Coast Flayed The terrific gales have flayed th‘ coast from the Carolinas northward ibut Virginia has been perhaps the ]hardest hit. There waves have| ! hammered and wrecked beach re- !sorts, luxurious homes and cottages. Waterfronts are inundated. Are Cut Off Highways are flooded. Scores of communities are cut off by floods or communication fail- ure. Crops have been ruined. Rushes North Early today the storm was still sweeping north and whipped parts jof the New England States with | pales that erippled shipping and | menaced shore communities. Scheoner Ashore The four-masted schooner Kohle has been washed ashore and wreck- led near Virginia Beach but the \'rrew of 35 men aboard has been . |saved by the Coast Guard. { Other Coast Guard boats saved| 100 persons at Willoughby Spit {near Norfolk while still others pre- ;pared to assist a barge in distress off Cape Henry. | The Madison had her super- | structure carried away and had| |only one lifeboat saved. The liner i fought the storm and came into {port, nowever. | Hundreds Marconed | Hundreds of Marylanders are {marooned on second fioors as heavy rainfalls are being recorded all Jalong the coast and causing floods. | Twenty-seven men aboard a barge jon Chesapeake Bay were saved iwhen the barge began to sink. | 90-Mile Gale | A gale struck New York City and crashed windows but the wind subsided early today and people | onee more without it being shatch- led away. The Capital City struggled to recovery from the storm that brought unprecedented damage and threatens even more on the Po- |tomac when it reaches its full height. ISEVEN HALIBUTERS SE(L AT SEATTLE SEATTLE, Aug. 24 — Halibut schooners arriving today, catches land sales, follows ! Prom the Western banks—Sunde with 37,000 pounds, Addington with 125,000 pounds, both seiling for 8% land 6 cents a pound. From the local banks— with 28,000 pounds, selling for 8% and 6 cents a pound; Fairwa; |and 6 cenits a pound; Eureka with 11,000 pounds, selling for 8% and |8 cents a pound; Tillikum with 14,000 pounds, selling fof 9% and 8 eceiits a pound; Albatross with |3vm pounds of halibut ahd 3,000 | pounds of sable, selling for 131, 16 and 3 cents a pound. METCALF, JACKSON | FLY TO FISH BAY, Frank Metcall and John K. Jaekson, mining enginsets, left Ju- neau at 2 o'clock this afternoon in the l}ar_ano( for Fish Bay, on Chichagof Island, where they will survey mining properties. They iplan to return to Juneau early | next wesk. B, CHARLEBOIS LAID TO REST Flifietdl sérvices for Ismmeal Charlebois, 81, resident of Juneau| since. 1800, and veteran of the| g‘hmfi-}\fl:erlean War, were held| this ng from the Catholic| Church at 9 o'clock. The American Legion ritual was| used, with the color service and thé blowing of taps at the grave-, side as the easket was lowered. Pallbearers were Capt. J. M. Clark, Ralph Martin, J. Dolan, C.| 'W. Hawkesworth, C. E. Naghel, and D. Oliver. GIRL FOR STENDERS A sevén-pound baby girl was born arrived here yesterday evening DY en Hofh in d new “Gazl bridge”|to Mrs. Ernest Stender ai St plane from Ketchikan on a brief named in honor of Gazi Musta-|Ann’s Hospital this morning. Moth- business trip. He returned home pha Remal. It is to be built this|er and daughter are doing nicely. ———— !riproduce the London Tower|are held every week at Reno, Bridge for $3,000,000. aid from communities beset by rag- | |were able to draw their breath| Aloha i i with 22,000 pounds, selling for 8% ( (Continued from Page One.) been impossible to get the exten- ons that were granted to us,” he said Pleases Every One “Everyone connected with | industry is highly pleased with the néw deal in the fisheries,” he con- | tinued: “The Indians who have [been employed at Todd are par- | ticularly satisfied with the manner in which Commissioner Bell and Mr. Wingard are taking into con- sideration the human element. It has meant a great deal to them, and, in fact, to all of us during the season that has just closed.” Mr. Bez arrived early today from Todd with 7,000 fresh salmon which were turned over to the Juneau Cold Storage Company to freeze. They will be used in connection with lccal unemployment relief under the coming Winter. He will return to the plant late this evening. His pack, he said, will approxi- mate 68,000 cases of all varieties. | This is just 2,000 below the esti- mate he made last Spring for the season’s total. BOTH BARANOF AND CHICHAGOF MAKE FLIGHTS Pilot Meyring on Photo- graphic Work Trip to Fairweather Gen2 Meyring and the seaplane Baranof spent yesterday after- neon doing photographic work the Washburn-Fairweath for dition. Many views were taken | around the Fairweather range, un- til the work was interrupte darkness. Due to the late hour, Pilot Mey- ring was forced to remain at Port Althorp for the night. This morn- ing, he flew to Chichagof from Port Althorp and brought in Mr. {and Mrs. Harold Gallwas and Mrs. Duncan Ross to Juneau. Then he returned again to Chichagof for another load. At 2:30 o'clock this afternoon the Baranof started for Fish Bay with John K. Jackson, Frank Met- | calf, Elliott Fremming and Ray McCorm! Night Fiight Last night, Pilot Ellis brought in L. G. Wingard, Judge W. C. Ar- nold, A. Van Mavern, and Miss Ruby Apland from Ketchikan. This morning at 9:30 o'clock Pi- | 1ot Elis tock off in the Chicha- gof to make deliveries of 4,500 pounds of foodstuffs to various re- ter camps on Admiiralty flying to the inside lakes. On his return this afternoon at 2 o'clock, Ellis took L. G. Win- gard, Baxter Phelps and Judge W. C. Arnold to Ketchikan on the Chichagof. Island, the | lief camp building trails and shel- ¢ VELVET . . SATIN WOOL FABRICS Which Shall Y our New Hat Be? Jones-Stevens Shop SEWARD STREET NEAR THIRD ‘J. 8, DEFARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU | The Weather | By the U. 5. Weather Buroan) ' LOCAL DATA j Forecast for Juneau and vicinity. beginning at 4 p.m., August 24: Fair tonight and Friday; gentle variable winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humdity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y 3027 66 46 w 12 Clear 4 am. today . 30.23 48 88 w 2 Clear Noon today 30.16 64 64 w 13 Clear CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS | e — S | YESTERDAY | TODAY i #Highest 4p.m. | Lowest da.m. da.m. Precip. 4am. Statlon temp. temp. | temp. temp. veloelty 24hrs. Weathet Barrow 54 52 46 50 8 0 Cldy Nome 48 48 | 44 46 20 30 Cldy i Bethel 52 48 | 42 42 12 14 Clear Fort Yukon 66 66 54 54 12 0 Cldy | Tanana . 54 54 | 50 54 8 18 Cldy Fairbanks ... 68 68 52 52 4 0 Cidy Eagle 72 T2 | 44 44 8 0 Cldy St. Paul . 50 50 | 44 44 6 Trace Pt.Cldy Dutch Harbor 56 54 | 4 46 8 0 Cldy Kodiak 50 50 | 46 48 0 16 Pt. Cidy Cordova 52 52 | 50 50 4 54 Cldy Juneau 66 66 47 48 2 0 Clear Sitka 62 — | 42 — 0 0 Clear Ketchikan 4 70 | 48 48 4 0 Clear Prince Rupert 8 8 | 46 50 4 0 Clear Edmonton 58 58 | 40 40 4 0 Clear Seattle 88 86 | 60 60 0 0 Clear Portland 92 920 | 60 60 4 0 Clear San Francisco . 62 60 | 52 64 4 0 Cldy The barometric pressure is moderately low in extreme Northern Alaska and moderately high over Southern Alaska and the north- eastern Pacific Oecan, with showers in Western Alaska and the Gulf ,Of Alaska followed by clearing in portions of the Southwest. The | weather is cloudy in the Interior and clear in Southeast Alaska | Temperatures were slightly higher yesterday over most of the Ter- ritory. JUNEAU COFFEE SHOP Formerly Mrs. Hooker’s Coffee Shop Fried Chicken Dinner Tonight—85¢ BANQUETS—CATERING Helen Moder BUILDERS SUPPLIES It is our business to know how your home can be made more comfortable. We have many exclusive lines and can supply Firtex, Celotex, Sheetrock, Plywood and all of the Johns-Manville products. Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Millwork Mculdings Columbia Lumber Co. TELEPHONE 587 Successors Builders Supply Co. {" UNITED FooD co. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 Wool crepe with emart stitching. New visor effect. Velvet still queens it ever every othér hat fashion. I new high tur- bav. s o