The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 24, 1949, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT <3 % THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1949 EMPIRE OFFERS “A[ASKA SHIP [MORE TALKS ARE |SENATOR HUFFMAN [: e’ ' ‘s ”viove| DULP MILL NEAR | xS s o Bys Hok, . Jack Dempeey ‘defeats Witlard. from Rupert, will be the center or|l d 1 PRIZES, LETTERS | SLATED IN DOCK | COMES BACK HERE | ot iom ot oo RINCE RUPERT v s o e s Land 700 : | % A great deal has happened to mill. Small logging operations have | 1] ' 0" STATEHOOD! SIRIKE HAWA" AFIER 30 Huffman since he left Juneau, and already started in this section and! Olllld una 1 '] YEARS the most importart parts of it are IS BEI“G BUII_T | Terrace is experienced a steady TR PR ‘r;;i\ordedw\;:wx brl‘:fly iln the 74R-49 growth in population. A weekly| IPSWICH, Mass, Aug 24—P—A ! HONOLULU, Aug. 24—(®—A Fed- | \[:.: 08 TNy MRS Already under construction nenr'newspflper The Omineca Herald,|700-pound tuna almost-too big for. $25 Each for Best Letter for GET HEARING ersl try to siogen pence alks. ua| VISIOF Played Baseball| whos who st mis taunily__ | Prince Rupert is the pulp mill be- | Was established there three weeks|their 15-foot outboard motorboat, . o the 116-day Hawaii waterfiont . wife; daughter Peg 21, graduate | \ng built by the Celanese Corpora-| ago. The Omineca Herald was was landed yesterday by two boys and Best Letter Against striks masked tim todsy swalting| WMl Douglas—Says JU- |5 Ohio State University: sem, Jin. | ton of America. Site of the mill| formerly located in Hazelton. using a borrowed line and 15 cents . SEATTLE, Aug. 24—(®—Reversing | the return of Harry Bridges. | ’ . my Jr., 13. 4 3 is Port Edward, which is 11 miles Sares worth of mackerel bait. Immediate Statehood |, “previous denial, the National| Leaders of his strikng Interna<| NEAU'S Face Is Lifted Y | from Rupert, and which was used| The pulp miil will use coai from| The fish, hooked by Peter Tyler, g Lator Relations Board Tuesday(tional Longshoremen's and Ware- They arrived In Juneau with|by the American Army during|the Telkwa region to steam heat|15, and Ellis Hodgkins, 14, both of Everyone has an answer to the ordered a hearing to determine|housemen's Union here said they| Remember the good season Doug- | Senator Huffman on the Baraof.| World War II as a transhipment their plant. A coal mine at Telk- Ipswich, was the largest taken this question of statehood for Alaska— whether there should be a collec- | would not meet with Federal Medi- |las baseball team had against all Huffman isn’t a member of the|point for suppHes to Alaska. | wa is scheduled to re-open soon.[seacon at Ipswich. for or against it tive bargaining election amonglator George Hillenbrand until|comers the summer of 19192 United States Senate at present. The pulp mill is scheduled to be| There is a large supply of bitum-; An adult fisherman helped them There are arguments on both | Alaska ship steward crews. Bridges arrives, probably tomortow.| genator James W. Huffm £ “But someone is going to run|in operation by 1951 and will em-|inous and sub-bituminous coal in|get the whopper ashore. an o6l goainst Bob Taft next fall in|ploy approximately 500 men. The| this area. | sides of the question, familiar to Tm- hearing, set for September Hillenbrand met with represen= Columbus, Ohio, does. . Mo | most who are interested in the |12, was the result of a new petition | tatives of the seven struck steve- Ohio,” he said last night. “It|plant will manufacture purified| { The odor.of musk still clung 0 Territory. and “new evidence” submitted by |doring firms yesterday. He is at<| When the Baranof docked last|Might.be me.” cellulose pulp which is used for| meq Applewhaite, who visited in|the rooms of the Empress Josephine Most Alaskans want statehood » Pacific Marine Stewards |tempting to find a new basis for|night, Senator Huffman stepped| Then he changea the cubjec ‘mmes and plastics. Total cost O“Jhneau last year with the Associat- |sixty years after her death in spite immedi- | Union, American Federation of | direct union-employer negotiations | ashore in Juneau for the first time| There wasn't anything but board {the mill will be approximately $35| .4 Boards of Trade, was elected |of washings and paintings. She lov- ately. Labor, Board spokesmen said. as suggested by Cyrus S. Ching,|in 30 years. He was surprised at|sidewalks in Juneau back in 1919, | Million. The company will utilize| yecently as a member of Parlia-|ed the scent and perfumed her frequently | Oiiicials of the Nationzl Union|Director of the U.S. Conciliation |the face-lifting which had taken|And Douglas was still acting uke‘mE hoyseshoe dock, which, was €on-| ..nt from the Skeena region. Ap-|rcoms with it constantly. and Stewards, | Service. | place during the time he ‘had been|a booming mine town, although|structed by the T. £. Army. | piewhaite, who is a Prince Rupert —_— A 52-inch pipeline 1s being con-| attorney, will leave for Ottawa| The number of U. S. forest fires dropped 13 per cent during 1948. eventually. Some want it Opinions on each side appear in the press. |of Marine Cooks ! Recently, most of the propaganda | Congress of Industrial Organiza-| Ching also invited both sides to|away: but the way he told about|the Treadwall Mine had caved m} on the question has been in favor |tions, which now has jurisdiction go to Washington or New York the Douglas team of 1919 showed Huffman had noticed a lot ox‘structed from Prudholm Lake to next month. of immediate statehood and the on ships in Seattle-Alaska trade,| where he would mediate if any| that was still as vivid a memory!things about Juneau as soon as|Pcrt Edward, a distance of 13| — press has been floocded with ex-|said they had not yet been notif.ed|peace try here fails. The last ne-ins it had been when he left the|he stepped off the Baranof. But|miles. Heavy rock work has start-‘ pressed opinions from various and|of the hearing gotiation effort here collapsed Fri- | Territory. there was one thing he hoped ed on the pipe line. At the present sundry interested persons. | The A. F. of L. group, affiliated day. | “On Easter Sunday, 1919, I play-|hadn't changed. | time there are 150 men employed | The Territory's statehood com-|with the Sailors’ Union of the| An employer spokesman said after ‘ed baseball on the Rhine,” he re-| “The fishing was great up here|by the company. | - ‘ H mittee meets in Juneau Monday. |Pacific, is composed of members| meeting with Hillenirand the com- lcafl!d “Machine-gun officer, 32nd | in those days; so was the hunting.” | Woman Mayor, Rupert | um 'ng ea Ing Here is an opportunity for any- who broke away from the C.LO.|panies' decision would not be made | Division. The Fourth of July I|He slapped his son on the should-| Prince Rupert now has’ a popu-‘ one in Alaska within the Empire’s union more than a year ago. until after Bridges talked with the | was playing with the Douglas team |er. “Going to shoot’a moose, Jim-ilaunn of 10,000 and has experien- . circulation area to express his| A previous petition for an elec- | mediator. in Sheep Creek Basin.” my?” he asked. |ced a steady growth during the cpinon on the sutject and to win | tion was denied by the labor board It was easy to see his thoughts| “Sure,” Jimmy said, matter-of-| past year. Two new schools are | oll Burners a prize. lon ground the Alaska ships were TALKS AGAIN DOOMED were back in 1919 just then. You | factly. ‘“Sure.” scheduled for construction to ac-| 3 The Empire would like the part of the coastwide bargaining HONOLULU, Aug. 24—®—A Fed- | know the way a man’s voice gets| The Huffmans are at the Baranof | commodate the growing population. | E opinions of its readers pro and con |setup and did not, alone, constitute eral attempt to get peace talks|when he's thinking that way It hotel during their visit here. | Mayor of Prince Rupert Is the Hon- Telephone—319 ng‘hls—Hed 730 as to whether the Territory should |a suitacle bargaining unit. going again here in the 116-day~old1‘gels low and you have to listen| — \mable Nora Arnold, one -of tbhe & z ' continue at present its l‘exnlmlul‘ —_— Hawaii dock strike appeared doom- |to him carefully. | Western United States contains| first women in British Columbia ”c form of government or request im- ed today. | “That was the day Dempsey de- | more than 66,000,000,000 feet d‘ to be elected to a top civic posi-| Hurn Much'"e Shflp, - mediate statehood. GE" MARV 'i.ARK The striking International Long- |feated Willard, Fourth of July, standing white fir sawtimber. |tion. ! Two prizes of $25 each w.ll be n shoremen’s and Warehousemen's| — ————-————mem———- - i o . awarded: | Union announced that leader Harry One for the best lotter in h\ox N (HlEF | Bridges had postponed indefinitely of immediate statehood. his return to Hawali from San One for the best letter on hc ARMY F|ElD FOR(ES Francisco. The union gave no rea- other side of the question son. There are no rules except The ILWU previously had said it The letters must be concise md WA“HINGTON Aug. 24— would not meet with Federal MEd-; to the point, limited to 200 words.| Gen. Mark W. Clark, one of the|iator George Hillenbrand until | No Empire employce may enter }'(up Generals ir. the last war, is| Bridges returned. | the contest. | the new Chief of Army Field FUTUC.L‘ The ILWU therefore was expect- Letters must be received by Sun-| Army Secretary Gray announced | ed to reject later in the day any day noon. ‘lo(lay that Clark, now Sixth Armylcmployer request to resume medi- They should be addressed to|Ccmmander at San Francisco,| ation here with Hillenbrand. That Judges, Statehccd Contest, Dzu]y‘Cd]lf, will succeed Gen. Jacob|probably means any new negotia- Alaska Empire, Juneau, Alaska. | Devers who is retiring n Septem- | tions will take place in New Yorki The Empi 'rves the 1.ght to | ber after 44 years on active duty. | or Washington. Bridges favors talks, publish any or all responses. Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer,|on the mainland. Judges will be announced tomor- | now Deputy Chief of Staff for‘l TOW. Plans and Operations, is going to Should there be fome obvious|California. to take over the Sixth An(horage Man ;o addition to rules that the judges|Army. wish to add to the above, they will | Clark at the end of the last war wed “ebl'iSka Glr' be announced tomorrow. was in command of the 15th Army Name, address, age and, though |Group in Europe. This group was it is not essential, length of resi- | composed of the U.S. Fifth Army| SEATTLE, Aug 24—M—A mar- dence in Alaska should accompany |and the British Eighth Army. Until|riage license has been issued here every letter. his return home to go to the west|to Archie H. Shassetz, 30, Anchor-'| Short notice, we'll admit, tut so|coast he was postwar U.S. Mili-| age, and Marjorie Pappas, 29, Blgl many have positive opinions on the | tary Governor in Australia. Springs, Neb. matter that it should not take long oz e — to put those opinons on paper in short and concise manner and address them to the Statehood Contest Judges, care Empire. Letters may be mailed to the| Empire, or left at the Empire office. | More tomorrow. m . Dean of American Music Critics Dies/| Elegant Accents fo Your Newest Autumn * Fashions! hy Vi e 5 e l.fii"'é-..?é; $4.00 and $5.00 at the age of 90 in Chlcs_go, He Wpa gieroan Dejulse, 8 sl artio Sleekly tailored — gentle and dressy. Calf, (By Associated Press) for the Chicago Herald-American 2 for more than 30 years before his| suede and fabrics. Newest box, shoulder retiement several years ago. | and satchel styles. You'll find them all in Devries was a close friend of | our new low, low priced group of Fall hand- many of the noted operatic stars| bags. Come choose today! and composers of the present and | past. Under the Japanese system of | computing ages, a system which will be discarded at the end of 1949, a baby is considered to be one year old at birth and another year is added to its age on the first day of the following January. RUMMAGE SALE Tenth and E Sts., Douglas, LD.S. | Chapel, Aug. 27. 281 3t . : ; " ¢ s ; L e Here is something new and tiner in beer — lighter, smoother, more refreshing. Enjoy it once and you’ll agree it’s the most delight- ful beer you've ever tasted. Beer in the Modern Manner... oNIo ADE IM ‘ . £ » ' SICKS’ SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. % SEATTLE, U.S. A. FRISKO JEE“S : f : . Unit of one of the Worlds Great Brewing Organizations THE ONLY GENVINE | - = ¥ MENS WEAR | Hud : . CASLERS uosaw DISTRIBUTED BY ODOM COMP ANY, 300 Colman Bldg., Seattle 4 South Franklin Street

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