The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 2, 1939, Page 8

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ihree Unions Hold Out for New Confracls Marifime Si?uéfion Com- plicated But Observers Doubt Trouble oct. 2 to ship AN FRANCISCO, Cal unions stil ¢ Un- Maritime the Dock T he Pacific all differ- a weeck e groups fol- horemen’s to continue demanded that settled within the other mari powerful L in agreeing REMEMBER . ... telegraphed or placed in Sears SAV consolidate There are no ext age, no money order or have to spend See how pressed A i e i it s Ty Needs at Your Fingertips! Orders of $50 or more phones, maited, person ar RADIOED to Seattle free of cha shipment YOU MONEY on every or Prices are so low you can buy more of the things you need for the money you $1.00 SPEND ONLY $1.00 and MAKE THIS TEST HAVE YOUR CLOTHES CLEANED THE TRIPLEX WAY We Apply HOLD CREASE to Your Clothes! $1.00—Ladies’ Plain Dresses—$1.00 $1.00—Ladies’ Suits—S$1.00 You can trust your Finest Fabrics fo TRIPLEX. They are given special attention and will be returned fo you per- fectly cleaned and restored fo-their original smarfness! PHONE 642 TRIPLEX. CLEANERS A THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 2, 1939. the old contracts indefinitely pend- ing negotiations. Sixty days’ notice must be given any strike or lockout Neutral waterfront doubted call not but by tt unions CARDINAL MUNDELIN STRICKEN observers that the three unions will ke if the ship owners do come to terms within a week the complicated to join other a str situation efusal was oir the head « sailors the that his group will Harry Lundeberg, s: consider that no contracts exist i Haad of Richest Diocese in 1appen Negotiations between employers Today in Bed (Continued from Page One) to the extension under way this week . > e will ge s before as a missionary LEGION AUXILIARY MEET At N FOR TOMORROW NIGHT ° . yeqrs Mundelein was Arch- bishop of Ch and he devel- New officers of the American gpeq the spiritual, charitable, civic Legion Auxiliary will be in charge unq cducational work of the church of the meeting tomorrow night at oy such a that the Holy 86 8 o'clock which will be held at the yiewed his labors with increasing Legion Dugout % During the session the report of the Alaska Department Secretary, Mrs. John Mc nick, will be heard 1l members are urged to attend favor. For several years the red hat had been forecast for him when he 1924, to receive it. At the same cere- mony was elevated Patrick John Haycs, Archbishop of New York and a classmate of Mundelein in youth Hcnored by Parade nal Mundelgin returned Card Ch! cme frem tens of thousands of per- ons and in a score of tongues. Fifty thousand persons marched in the processicn which escorted the city's first prince of the Catholic Church through streets lined by a million spectators. The Mayor of Chicago knelt to kiss the ring Pope Pius XI had bestowed. From the midst of all this pomp came the Cardinal’s message, urging the United States to take its place as leader of the nations in gentle- manly conduct and brotherly love. In Poison Plot \ At a banquet in 1924 honoring Cardinal Mundelein was perpetuat- a poison plot which shocked the aticn. Hundreds of civic leaders and Catholic laity, gathered about the tables of a downtown club, were stricken with illness. Poison was found in the soup, and the plot was traced to Jean Crones, anarchist chef. Several of those who partook died The Cardinal had not eaten much of the broth when the scheme was jiscovered, and he was not ill. Any- way, he remarked, he was “too hardy to poison.” A long search for Crones was futile. So far flung a program did Arch- bishop Mundelein undertake that it remained for him as Cardinal only to push it forward. Among his many ventures for the church in educa- tion, the establishment of St. Mary »f the Lake Seminary and Univer- Buy You Anything Need on Sears Easy Payments your bar- from this s Pick ains L At s Special Sale sity was notable. In the field of F poste Catalogue benev e he formed the Associat- C.OD. fees i ; ? ed Catholic Charities of Chicago, coordinating relief activities in the diocese. He launched the “Big Brother” movement to guide errant | boys. He promoted uniform instruc- tion on Catholic doctrine through- out the churches under his domain. At Eucharistic Congress His achievements were crowned " when the city of Chicago was host much longer they stay and hold their shape! | | ," TODAY! M THE TAILOR was summoned to Rome in March, | W | Here is an overall view sunk by a submarine. the first ever held in the United States. It brought to Chicago more than a million Roman Catholic from every nation for a gathering of con- secration and a devotional spectacle the like of which America had never een. Tc his high station he came from the Bewery district of New Yo where he was born on July 2, 1872 The same section of the city pro- duced Al Smith and Gene Tunney, the pugilist. He was one of nine chil- dren of ar early immigrant family, and his material grandfather was said’ to have been the first Union soldier killed at Fort Sumpter ir the Civil War. Buiided of Cathedrals Cardinal Mundelein’s career was cast almost entirely along«adminis- trative lines, Before he came to Chicago Le had wen attention in the east as a builc er of magnificent cathedrals. To that task he brought an unusual know- ledge of architecture But when he was greeted as Arch- bishop of Chicago he said: “I had rather lift up the poor and despair- ing to a beti happier life than rear the greatest cathedral in the world,” and in the years that fol- lowed he showed that executive ca- pacity could be directed as fruitfully along those lines as toward the rearing of great churches, Graduated Young Graduated at 17 from Manhattan College, the youngest student ever to receive a bachelor’s degree there, he entered St. Vincent's Seminary at Beatty, Pa., and then pursued his priestly studies in Rome. There he was ordained, and he returned to take charge of a Lithuanian church at Williamsburg, N. Y., after serving briefly as Secretary to Bish- op McDonnell. As rector of the Brocklyn Cathedral Chapel, Queen of the British airoraft carrier, Courageous, | The ship, built at a cost of §$10,000,000 in from abroad to meet a wel- in 1926 to the Eucharistic Congress, of All Saints, he build a magnificent French-Gothic church and school He became Chancellor in 1897 of the Brooklyn diocese. His interest in liturgical studies won r gnition in Rome and he was called to the Liturgical Academy in the Holy See. He received in 1908 the de- gree of doetbr of sacred theolc from the University of the Propa- inda at Rome. Honored When the Tnited States entered d War, the rescurce: hdiocese were turned to the aid. vation to the March 24, 1924, in | basilica of St. Peter’s Chur Rome, when Mundelein was a remarkably early age for such an honor. He took possession Rome of his titular church Sa Maria del Populo. At a Chicago reception upon hi of Cardinalate the came on in cta return, the Cardinal was present- ed by his people with a check for a million dollars for St. M of the Lake Seminary. At another gathering, with the foreign-born of many lands, bound together chiefly by the ties of a comman | faith, listening to his words, he said: “Our duty, yours and mine, is to keep the people of this nation one | and undivided to keep it far from | alien influence and to shield it against foreign propaganda; to re- pel from our midst those who would halt our progress, who would hamper our mission for peace, hap- piness, the prosperity of our people and our country.” Of prohibition he said as Card- inal: “It is a question the people themselves must meet and decide, and the churches should not in- fluence them one way or the other.” 1916, and completely renovized in 1928, carried generally a comple= Giant British Aircraft Carrier Courageous Sunk by Submafinc SUPREME COURIV sawn | | —_—“_—-——'——————'——-—'_‘;——-————— IS IN SESSION WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. The Unitéd States Supreme Court end- ed its four-month vacation today and met in brief session. Eight black-robed jurists took | their seats as bearded Chief Justice raent of 1,216 men, including the Royal Air Force personnel. ED GOLDWAITE, POSTMASTER AT SUMDUM, DIES Goldwaite, for years post- master at Sumdum, passed away late Saturday afternoon at the Wil- loughby Avenue home of Julius Heineman in this city. The old time Alaskan came to Ju- neau a few weeks ago from Sumdum and had been residing with Heine- man during his stay here. Well kn 1 throughout the Territory, Ed Goldwaite was postmaster at the Ed All Miembers of Local 203: Are hereby requested to attend the meeting MONDAY—TONIGHT—OCT. 2 VERY IMPORTANT! . The Negotiating Committee will have a COME EARLY so that the meeting may get under way prompily at 7 P. M. (Signed) Negotiating Committee. little Alaskan town when Sumdum was a thriving community. The remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary pending funeral arrangements. - SOME NATIVE MALES of South Africa work just long enough io buy a few wives and cattle. They| then cease, and their well-being/ depends on how well their wives work. - | Hungarian Goulash ‘ with [ BRAISED NOODLES [ | Baranof Tomorrow ! NOTICE! - full report to make. 4 ‘ the Right ombination of the Worlds Best Cigarette Tobaccos Copyrigh 1939, Licaatt & Myass Tosaccs Co V24 Ca//z/ I B —— e e Hughes pounded his gavel exactly | at noon. The only justice not participating was Associate Justice Pierce Butler, who is illl in a Washington hos- pital. The justices after a short cere- mony admitted more than a score of lawyers to practice before the nation’s highest tribunal. They then adjourned to go to work in executive sessions on more than 400 cases | filed during the summer. WHAT GIVES OLYMPIA ITS RARE FLAVOR? b 4 “Its the Water” A rare and special :{pa of natural brew- ing water, combined with skill and fine ingredients, has made certain European beers world famous for quality . . . Likewise, in America, our subterranean wells at Tumwater have made Olympia Beer internationally recognized for fine flavor, clean taste, con- stant purity and re. freshing goodness. Ouper “Its the Water™ OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY Olympia, Washington, U.S. A. « ! O FOR ' Mowrr Sirokive £2EASORE Chesterfield MAKE YOUR NEXT CHESTERFIELDS . THEY SATISFY At the Aquacade, ‘Show-Hit of the New York World’s Fair, has the call You see more Chesterfield smokers every place you go. That’s because Chesterfield’s Right Combination of the best home-grown and aromatic Turkish tobaccos is the only combina- tion that gives them a cigarette of real mildness with a different and better taste and a more pleasing aroma. PACK

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