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(- PN J';§'_$-‘ “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,444 JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1946 = PRICE TEN CENTS 'MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS LEWIS CASE WILL GO TO HIG CHARGES IN (New Plan for D SHIP STRIKE ARE HUR[ED WASHINGTON, Dec. 6— The ‘Eurmu of Land Management, \with an eye to promoting Alaska's e |development, today simplified pro- H cedure leading to acquisition of land Stalling Methods Brought cecure teading o _Fai | The Bureau said that when a Up-fairbanks fo Send |, 2ttt Siemens 1ect |Alaska, only one member need go Mission fo Truman |t oo i e Heretofore, each prospective set- SEATTLE, Dec. 6—Ed Coester, tler, whether party to a group or evelopment who wish to take part in a com- munity development program in Alaska may choose a representative to select and examine land and pay fees. In order further to promote com- munity development of Alaska, the Bureau also has provided these new advantages in land acquisition 1. Groups may acquire land in areas contiguous to their proposed settlements, to guard against com- FOR (ONTROL;PEA(E_!ERMS Talks Siraigm)ut at Meet-|Satellite Treaties Virtually ' ing-Looks Right at | Complefed as Russia | Makes Concessions LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Dec. 6— { The United States made a direct] NEW YORK, Dec. 6.—After more BARUCH GIVES WAY uEAREolpms’;?eTm‘rs'_Subn&m Of Alaska Is Now Revealed A-BOMB PLANFOR SIGNING Urged by Patty in HEST COURT Talk at NW Mining Assn. Mesting EARLY RULING SPOKANE, Wash., Dec. 6—Low- | production will nct be more than| eredl ‘mintng | OAHRHISR {5 Klksba | $10,000,000" Court of Appeals fo Be By- was contrasted with a “boom™ in| Patty blamed the situation on a| 3 British Columbia and the Yukon | squeeze between the rising cost of | pflSSGd—NO Recession Territory of Canada in addresses labor and materials and the fixed! . . before the 52nd Annual Conven- | price of gold, $35 an ounce. He n Flght by GOV'. tion of the Northwest Mining As- | urged following the lead of Can- ———a sociation ada in two respects. WASE 3 i Frank W. Woodside, Vancouver, He said now was a strategic (;uvurn:\{zfflro” il chairman of the AFL Marine Trades not, had to make the expensive petition from outside speculative Council, today renewed charges preliminary survey trip in order to operations. that the Washington Waterfront take out new land, a Bureau 2. Arrangements may be made Employers Association was seeking to prolong the Puget Sound water-, front tieup by stalling methods. spokesman explained. Under the new regulations, groups of 10 or more veterans and others for government assistance in prep- aration of a community settlement program. | Gromyko, Too '[ By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER |appeal to Russia last night for than a year of conferences sharp- 'support of the American plan to time to work for a bill such as B. C., manager of the British Co- Coester's charges followed the Employers submissiocn of a new re- quest to striking AFL Checkers un- ion in lieu of a scheduled concilia- tion meeting. Spokesmen sald the request ask- ed Federal conciliators to obtain from the union instances of alleged lost work opportunities through the disputed hiring system. Coester declined to say whether the Employers’ demand would Le complied with. Merle G. Ringenberg, President of the Employers Association, said the Employers also requested a statement from the union as to the present practices of each employer in the employment of checkers which the union kelieves should ke retained. “The industry is convinced,” Ringenberg said, “because of tie- up it suifered before the strike be- gan that International Longshore- men Association officials are en- croaching on the management field with demands which amount to ‘make work’, the forcing of un- neecssary moge-o% the job. I sin- ply demands the samec protection from AFL checkers it has already received from CIO checkers. “The ILA officials claim they are equally convinced that the employ- ers are demanding an open shop and intent to take work opportun- ities away from union members. This in spite of the preference of employment clause in their con- tract with us and the grievance machinery, both of which afford full protection.” Mayor William F. Devin confer- red with a group of Alaskans to- day on the plight of the Territory and called for the immediate ship- ment of relief supplies north. “These can be shipped without prejudice to the rights of either party to the dispute,” he said. *“It is not only the humane thing to do, but it is also good business to retain the good will and confidence of the people of Alaska.” { FAIRBANKS TO APPEAL | ized teday by the Fairbanks Cham- ber of Commerce. Date of the expedition, in which all Alaska cities have been invited to join, was set for Dec. 14. ‘The flight was proposed after Stanley Tatom, Fairbanks equip- ™ ment dealer, returned from Seattle G€3th of Dr. Leo S. Rowe, Dirgct- with the report that the strike ch General of :l}v Pan-Amerlcan question “is too big for Seattle to Unicn, who was killed last night by cope with an Army automobile. The driver, >crporal Elmer Klavon of Bolling Field, is under technical arrest. WASHINGTON—A coroner’s in- quest is being held today in the REEF KNOT TO LOAD PORTLAND, Oregon, Dec. 6.— The steamer Reef Knot is to be NUWTON, Conn. — Four small moved to Terminal Number Four liildren died today when an early oday preliminary to taking on a ROiRing fire swept their home in :(,m,i cargo for Alaska. The Alaska Newten, Connecticui. The parents, Steamship Company is to open an M. and Mrs. Bdward Conger, were office at the terminal for receiving L“’;‘_‘,d "’"“'_“’]5' f‘“d were taken to cargo. It's expected that loading @ Bridgeport hospital will start Monday. WASHINGTON — CIO President Philip Murray today called on the American Federation of Labor, the Bretherhood of Railroad Trainmen and the Railway Labor Executives g v Kiddies Lose Lives wes' Alaska Blal Asscoiation to meet with bhim- to o ? plan ‘‘a. ccmmon: program of econ- . omic and legislative measures” to STDHIREOE, WEc. 05\ AU ek O] ahtAIABOE TaWaSTn the and mother prepared today to re- next Congress turn to Seattle with the bodies of two young children burned to death yesterday when fire destroy- ed the family home while the par- ents were shopping. The children were Sidnie Kay SAN FRANCISCO — Pan-Ameri- can World Airways announced to- day it is drawing up tentative edules, fares and {light frequen- Tudor, 16-months, and her brother, l:lvt V‘fm- illre‘tt,uon‘n:a:r.xer éert/lc; Casey Tudor, 3 years old. :\ ‘:f:l_\' he nited States an They had arrived here recently Australia. with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. B - 2 £ Tt Aian aldés broePomTis _VANGOUVER, B. C—A civilian family settied at nearby Mountain *'Plane piloted by J. M. Cox, Falr- View where the fathe® had cleared banks, Alaska, was reported missing the land and built the home almost‘wd“y on a three-hour flight from singlzhanded. | Vancouver to Dog Creek, in Cari- Leona Land, 13 months, also died P00 Vancouver authorities said in a fire in her parents’ home while+ COX tcok off alone in his mono- her mother was visiting a neighbor Plane yesterday afterncon and has 40 feet away. Two other children, 1ot been heard from since. 3 and 5, are recuperating ' from i smcke. Their father, Pfc. Leo Land,| OTTAWA—A former Premier of is stationed at Fort Richardson. It Alberta, Charles Stewart, died here is believed that the fire started today. Stewart was Canadian when the children lit birthday Chairman of the International candles. Clothing and bedding Joint Commission which settles caught fire. boundary and waterway disputes today asked the Su- preme Court to review the John L. jened by many bitter disputes be- | 3 e now in effect in Canada—the New % |control the atomic bomb and urged tWeen Russia and the Western pos iy e fl:,‘:z?”mf:: Mines Act which exempts all new g (ONteMpL case in the coal that the United Nations Atomic(Pdwers, the Council of Foreign jo i STH M an the two Mines from Dominion taxes during’ gy o 8IVe an early decision. Pnerg: fes G g Py~ 8 ps in the two "1 This move to by-pass the inter- |Energy Commission approve the{Ministers today counted the Eu arcas will surge into production |the first three years of produc- meqiate O o Plan before the end of the year. |rOBean satellite peace treaties vir- oo T R B0 BROIUBHON| o, o L oourt of Appedls was: ke Bernatd M. Baruch, taking speedy [Wigly completed . due matnly to . or (o0, W10 R ST Thg Lo advised. adoption of he Taat ooimen. WGl hUoN SRl acvantage of u clisnge in fhe So-{Eeping iaft-minute opoessions | T i v iiored areas o search| PROSReYIGRs | gribetake plan which|i. Wi Fri e hoats isgs [viet attitude as set forth carlier [bY, Soviet Minister V. M. Molotov. [ 10 [808fed arcas T he said is working out well iniipep o, Fresident Truman that | this week by Russian Foreign Min-! TFinal argresment on outstanding '~ "¢V G€POSits. British Columbia. b will Le 10 turning back in lister V. M. Molotov, looked straight |iSSUes was not reached however, Oiting a number of cases in “Many of the large Canadian| wpes iy . at Soviet Delegate Andrei A, until Secretary of State James F. Which new companies are having | : Upon obtaining Court of Appeals Gromyko in last night's Commis-{B¥Ines had reluctantly accepted a with old workings or where y prespectors as such—put them sion session and declared: proposal that Italy pay a total of the o il companies are turnin 5 | the payroll—send them into the “We seek especially the partici-|$360,000,000 in reparations — $35,- cut a good production, Woodside | fie1q and give them & cut on any- pation of the Soviet Union. We :000,0000 more than the Paris Peace stid the two areas will produce an ; thing worthwhile they discover.” Patty said “no one can deny that Alaska in the United States for the dis- covery of new mines but we just on | aren’t getting the prospectors into the hills”” He recommended that Conference estimated $70,250,000 worth by the end of this year. welcome the recent authoritative had recommended of ope statements of its highest rvpresen-‘ Today in a session scheduled for tatives. From these, we are justi- .4 p. m. the Big Four was due to fied in concluding that it no long- jclean up a number of relatively er regards the original American minor unsettled points and to act proposals unacceptable, as a whole |On a report from their Naval Com- or in their separate parts, as itsimittee presumably concerning the member of this body stated at an distribution of the Ttalian fieet :arlier meeting.” (among Italy and the victorious Al- Gromyko's only immediate com- |lied powers. ment was that the Commission: It was a Big Four Session last needed time to study the proposal. ;nixhz which finally swept away the Baruch made it clear the Unit- {last points of dispute of any con- ed States would accept nothing 'sequence and made it possible for less than agreement on its plan. diplumats participating in the Coun- “We welcome cooperation but we 'cil's work to predict that the treat- stand upon our basic principles ev-(ies for Italy, Rumania, Bulgaria, en if we stand alone,” he said. “We | Hunsiry and Finland would be alm ot an effective plan of con-|finally completed not Ilater than I and will not accept anything;Saturday afternoon. The Council less.” is then expected to move on to a | Baruch said these three elements ' preliminary discussion of a German | were inherent in any treaty that 'settlement Monday would be written: Here are the outstanding wake of the 54-hour AFL mass 1—The erection of an interna- |cisions made last night: strike, and some labor sources p: | | tional authority which shall effec-| 1. Reparations—Italy iS to DAy dicted that unrest might break out Profests of Alaska Shippel’s tively prevent the manufacture @ total of $360,000,000—$125,000,000 Ancther speaker, President of Alluvial Golds, Fairbanks, Alaska, said other hand that “Alaska should rcport a mineral production $50,000,000 to $100,000,000 annually ©f Alaska or the Federal Govern- but this has been a bad year for | ment when the 'next unemploy- mining in Alaska and the total ment cycle sets in PEACE AT OAKLAHD UNEASY: UNREST IS REPORTED SHOWING OAKLAND, Cal, Dec. 6—An un- easy peace settled over the Oak- land metropolitan area today in the * Ernest N. Pat- ty, RATE HEARING ISORDERED B COMMISSION de- again. and use of atomic bombs for war |t Yugoslavia, $105,000,000 to Greece, oy the 1000000 East Bay resi- Gefs ReSU“S—ChargES purposes, and which shall develop |$100,00,000 to Russia, $25,000,000 to dents who felt the paraly of | the of atomic energy for so- |Ethiopia and $5,000,000 to Albania. tno planget walkouts for two and Are Made cial gain. | Bulgaria is to pay a total of ; pai days, all was normal, Trains, 2—The right of free and full in-, $70.000.000. covering $25000,000 t0 yysees and clevators were operat-| ... ; ternational inspection in support of | Yugoslavia and $45.000,000 to Greec: ing, stores and restaurants were BRATTLE, DA fof. 7 pagss these purposes (now accepted by (50 that Greece and Yugoslavia will gne ~ construction work resumed ' B O onippers. & PRQs |Russia). feach receive $150,000,000 and newspapers appeared PR A T e 3—The definite agreement that| BYImes was the last of the four "0 UCRSPADUS WPREHEC - and unloading charges here once a treaty becomes effective |0 accept this distribution of re- s gt sl unrcasonable and ; ik [parations payments because of the taking stock of the surprise “set~ againsy Alaska traffic,” the Mari- providing for deterrents against of- ' Para pay 8 - 0 attacted DADWEBHE. Oty ] fenders and punishments for of- additional financial burden on Italy. tlement” effected between City time Commission has ordered fenders, there can be no veto to| 2 Compensation for Allied pro- Manager J“:m i Hx ,rx;mund o Tatigson hnd, il i ¢ | unions yesterday —morning, protect wilful violators, or to Perty destroyed in Italy—Italy is to hamper the operations of the inter- {Pay Allied citizens at the rate of national authority. {66 2-3 percent of value. = A e 3. Danube fessed they wi terms—or at terms. be set for January 7T AFL chiefs claimed Hassler prom- follows the filing by the ised that Oakland police no longer Steamship Company and tle confused at the geattle director, lack of specific id today. the | | - Navigation— Molo- contested for months, agreed to in- North- clude in the Balkan treaties a guarantee of free use of the Dan- did Sunday at mining companies actually employ pe: of | they be subsidized by the Territory oo an poun rmission, Justice Department at- ©ON torneys rushed to the nation’s high- st tribunal and filed a petition asking it to take over the case in- volving a paralyzing shutdown of soft coal production and spead it to is the most favorable area » final decision The petition was filed with the clerk of the Supreme Court only two hours after counsel for Lewis and the United Mine Workers fil- in the Court of Appeals notice of appeal from their contempt con- victions by District Judge T. Alan Goldsborough. ' The Justice Department’s petition fald the question for determina- tion by the high court was: “Did the District Court of the United States in this case have the power under the constitution: and statutes by fhe: isusace o a tem-~ porary restraining order to pre- vent irreparable injury to the people of the United States, to pravent in- terference with covereign functions of the United States and to pro- tect the District Court’s jurisdiction to decide qusstions of law and fact incident thereto?” Lewis and his Uni*sd Mine Work- ers today posted bond to meet the $3,510,000 in fires levied against them for contempt of court stem- ming from the coal striks. Meanwhile, the American people cgan to feel the impact of the coal tike even more keenly. A drastic posed increases in handling, loading embargo on freight shipments went are Into cffect this mornmg, along with discriminatory 81 embargo on all parcel post ship- ments more than weighing five And with Christmas just around €on- here within 30 days, G. H. Wagner, t/2 corner, there came a new wave of mass layoffs. Today the num- He said he understood it might ber of men and women forced out The order ©f Work in industries dependent on Alaska coal soared to 213,000, The government made ready to would escort strikebreakers as they land Transportation Company of a €lamp a new series of drastic re- Kahn's and Hast- tentative plan for taking over pri- Strictions on the people in a move Seattle-Alaska t0 save coal If the strike is still SOUTH ON BU ESS FfifiBAP;KS,mlzecws.;f\nt nerjgl SRS M‘ e o4 ;(l;eflt;:‘e: the United States and.’ AT VAN(OUVER IS ‘ube River. o, 1o “aemana” nat - presiden: HOLIDAY MESSAGES s 4 i Sedediion Truman authorize government-oper- | ated shipping to re-establish Alas- ka's supply lines, was being organ- THIS YEAR OVER ACS ST. PAUL—The Minnesota At- torney General's office has ruled that the city of St. Paul cannot; Cali- DESTROYED, FIRE ing’s department stores—the action vate operation of which led tc the mass strike's services January 1. |on next Monday, the dimout will start on Tuesday. | Under the plan, the companies be extended to all electric power But members of tne Retail Mer- said they would provide adequate l'gmpumss in the country which de- scrvice to Southeast and Southwest Pend on coal. That would apply Effective December 14, and con- legally declare an emergency and Nick Bavard, owner of the e AbMoe ALY BALY - AR oA perid u fornia Grocery and Meat Market, Lons ASSCciation sald the OtV Alaska, provided an over-all in- cChiefly to Florida, Georgia, North VANCOUVER, B. C, Dec. 6.—Six-;left by plane today for Seattle, to promise. They said he CT€ase of 35 percent in freight and Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, ty students and the teaching staff|make arrangements for chartering that city laws PAssenger rates be authorized. Tennessee and Mississippl. :escaped in night attire early today as a three-alarm fire virtually des- troyed Vancouver College, fashion-' able South Shaughnessy District Loys' residential school. Loss of and loading |for Juneau. Acting for several local mer- icha as well as in the interest cf the California Gf®cery, he ex- another supply ship The commission i also planning ing requests for certain rate Even more drastic measures may to hold hearings here January 7, be announced when President Tru- before Examiner F. J. Horan cover- Man goes on the air next Sunday in- night to present his views on the {approaches. Lavish spending for | gifts seems to have become a thing ! of the past, and the Good Time | | Charlies are checking up on their! the three-story structure and furn-!pects to charter the Robert Eugene, ishings was estimated at $200,000.]which has made several such t Students ranging in age from 13|to Juneau in the past months. & - ¢ creases between places in Alaska, coal situation to the American (ERDAN'ABRAMS SRS i, ‘FQODE‘ The President will speak BOUT EXPECTED (c serus SUSPENSIDN = moer mevworiar 0 ™ CF JONES ACT DURING > o {tinuing through New Years day, borrow money to meet demands of The washlnglon\hondny greeting message service striking school teachers. |will be available over the Alaska Communication system and Western NEW YORK — Surveys made Mel’ r Y' GO-ROIm {Union lines in United States. The throughout the country show the o I |symbol GTG will follow the wort; trend of the times as Christmas 3, S count in the check and date of Ly, DR HeON, |delivery will follow the symbol, but WASHINGTON — The Truman if date of delivery not shown, de- Aministration’s dilly-dallying over livery will be made on the holiday. conversion of the Big Inch and Regular nightletter rate will apply Little Inch pipelines to natural t0 GTG message over the Alaskal waiters are seeing something they gas is exactly like Herbert Hoov- Communication System and West- noped they had forgotten—the dime er's handling of the bonus army. ¢rn Union lines, although the word | tjp It all boils own to the problem nightletter vf'm nog appear in check. of looking ehead (some people call This service initiated to relieve [ARE SUCCESS, N. Y. — The it statesmanship). jcircuits as much as possible of ypited States disclosed today that When veterans began straggling °Xpected heavy holiday traffic, and it will back a site on the East into Washington in the summer 'O insure delivery at proper time. |coast for a permanent United Na- of 1932, Hoover did nothing about WA T tions headquarters. Russia yester- them. Soon he woke up to find B 'd EI t I day voiced objections to any con- about 20,000 veterans literally " e' e( S sideration of San Francisco. camped on the Nation's doorstep, T K’E’k s . finally hi to resort to bayonets, H d Sh —Greek charges o tanksyan:(i(}en. Douglas MacArthur onore ’ ower foreign-inspired guerrilla warfare to run them out of town. | In honor of bride-elect, Miss Nor- | within her borders threatened to- When Roosevelt came along later, ma Burford, a miscellaneous show- | gay to embroil the United Na- veterans still continued to enter €' Was given Wednesday evening|tions in another Eust versus West Washington. However, Roosevelt With Mrs. Ralph E. Randall and|flareup over the Mediterranean handled them as a day-to-day prob- lg’;e E“g;"e v:l:;‘id “Bntd“’“;:f:;- trouble spot. § » al 'S ere Vi - e o ey them eCUmate won by Mis. Albert Cooley and|BOARD OF DIREGTORS to Fort Hunt, Va. just south of Mré Raymsndechl\:ller. o ARC MEETING MONDAY iven al e jome 0! TS, t):zk ?: r::::xlr ht)l;el:s ;_efgie;‘;mgfi; Wood, the enjoyable affair was at-| Homer Garvin, chairman of the jobs were available. tended by the following guests in ' Juneau chapter of the American Likewise with the Govemmem‘s!addxtion to Miss Burford and L_he Red_ Cross, announced today a pipelines. Four years ago, when hostesses: Misses Marilyn Merritt, meeting of the Board of Dlrecto_rs they waere first built, it was well; Ruth Torkelson, Pat Nelson, Doris Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock in known that John L. Lewis was Cahill, Jerry Urban, Lorraine Sing- the City Hall Council Chambers. worried over the possibility that| €, Mrs. Norval Mathison, Mrs. All members are asked 'to at- they might be converted to natmalffleymond Schuller, Mrs. Alfred tend, as there are reslgnauons'to ' Zenger, Jr., Mrs. Albert Cooley, and be accepted, it is important that (Continued on Page Four) Mrs. Thomas Dooley. | these positions be 1illed, tional Brothers of the Roman Cath- olic institution led the students to safety wrapped in blankets after a woman passerby noticed smoke pouring from the building and turn- ed in the alarm. -, 'RAINBOW MEETING IS SCHEDULED SATURDAY The Rainbow Girls will hold a business meeting tomorrow after- noon at 2 o'cleck in the Scottish | Rite , Temple. All members are lurged to attend. O e SRS | 'PRINCESS LOUISE I ‘ DUE THIS EVENING | Canadian steamer F¥rincess Lou- lise is scheduled to arrive in port |tonight at 7:45 o'clock and will | sail for Skagway at 11:30 o’clock. 1 The steamer is due to return to ;Juneau, southbound, early Sunday morning. i i DU night club tabs. Furthermore, t0 19 vears, filed through the main ! door after being cut off from a, INCORPORATION fire escape by the flames. Instruc-| Alaska Co-operative — Shipping Ccmpany has filed pa s of in- lcorporation in the office of the | Auditor of Alaska. Incorporators ;are Cash Ccole, K. N. Neill and | Gordon ©. Wildes, all of Juneau. {Oricinal capital is set at $1,000, tand the place of business is Ju- ineau. - | PROPERTY SALES Four property sales were filed !the past week in the Recorder's foffice. The Board of National | Missions of the Presbyterian | Church sold property on 8th Street to Arthur H. Paulson, and bought Peter B. Oswald’s property at 9th and B Streefs in the Casey-Shat- ituck addition. The property of {Floyd R. Horton consisting of house and lot in Douglas was sold to Gerald M. Ferguson. Perry Beebe bought a strip of U. S. Survey 1964 land frcm Ethel Markel. —————— WASHINGTON — The Civilian Production Administration on Mon- day will issue an order extending the dimout to all areas of the i | i | 10 DRAW 17,000 NEW YORK, Dzc. 6 publicized Marcel Cordan, i'rench middleweight champion, opens a ¢ . T campaign designed to capture the Mceting of Chamber of Comm world 160-pound title when he Mmembers, Secretary W. Robe faces Georgia Abrams of Washing- Webb sent a telegram to Pres ten, a top contender, in his Ameri- Truman requesting suspension can debut tonight at Square Garden. Never knocked out, PRESENT SHIP STRIKE owing approval at Thursday's ie highly- the duration of the time strike or, present mari- never decis- quating the tele- joned and never knocked off his Bram, “to a definite date.that you 4° feet, the rugged French sailor from Select so that Canadian ships may Gar 12 PASSENGERS ARE FLOWN SOUTH BY PAA Pan American Airways Division t tock 12 passengers to Seattle yes- dent terday, as follows: Alphonse Rose, of Nora Madison Section 27 of the Jones Act for Ibach, Stanley Grummett. Eunice Turner, Winifred Ernest Jensen, Peggy Harris, Rene >ncer, Larry Ubaldo, Jerome Vi- ich, Joseph Von Rhode, Thomas on : rp B L Casablanca appears to have cap- CAITy much needed freight to Al-| ¢ tured the imagination of the fight @skan ports. CANVABSING , ROARD 16 g o T i TO MEET DECEMBER 11 fans who are expected to turn out 17,000 strong and make possible a Acting Gover; i1l sooogae. -0 STOCK QUOTATIONS |2 Sovermor Lew wiliams "Abram?. also ;m ex-x!nh:ru i —— Territorial Canvassing Board on Nl:r“-f:;it m?pu: :::ruu:: A0 of ho NEW YORK, Dec. 6 Closing December 11th in the office of the h‘ &" " el il A quotation of Alaska Juneau mine Secretary of Alaska. The meeting eap reaching for 3 s . stock today is 5%,, American Can will take place at 2 o'clock p.m. DY bis upest viotgry over SIUEEST arel” ‘anncondd | 30%. . Ourtis:|dnd will sommie e Bl i ot iacasr An 39%, s5-and will commence the canvass of Sy Wright 5%, International Harvester general election returns from the 697, Kennecott 48%, New York Second, Third, and Fourth Divis- Central 17, Northern Pacific U. S. Steel 71':, Pound $4.03 116, Sales today were 1,060,000 shares. Dow, Jones averages today CHICAGO—A southbound elevat- ed train was rammed by a south- bound North Shore Line train at an elevated station at the city lim- 21, ions. are| the The First Division has been canvassed. The Canvassing Board consists of Governor and Secretary of Nation where coal is used by pub-|its today and police reported that as follows: industrials 170.39, rails Alaska and the Collector of Cus- lic utilities, “several persons” were injured. 49.22, utilities 36.07. | toms,