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PAGE FOUR 2 ' j TUESDAY AUGUST 27, 1946 || The Charles W. Carter | == | Y ) - —= ;dmzrmx but in proportion to its population the tiny ‘[ DH E H KASER Daily Alaska Emplre o e e the vt 91 i e ¥y | ; o pubisfied every evening except Sunday b3 the 200 of its inhabitants killd by enemy bombs from 20 Y E A RS A G 0 THE EMPIRE DENTIST Morluary ! EMPIRE PRINTING COM ) winter-of 3940, , Second and Main Sirects, Juneau, Alaska T e e B st ey A ey BLOMGREN BUILDING ; :xnv:;:u}\r"sl‘m:;!;ro - - S In France, the civilian air death toll is reporte | l Phone 56 Fourth and Franklin Sts. D AiE b, GARTER = % s Ohiitsr Rnd Sasinger Bt nearly 54,000, or almost as great as in England ; AUGUST 27, 1926 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P, M. PHONE 136 ,f;‘“?R‘Sy"ny_-Sf-.ErTiU R ol Bfil’?x',‘:fs"'fiffm: o R A TR e i Ui e ‘;r“‘l‘"l‘\‘l‘;‘fg . AUGUST 27 | By the end of the present season, 25 airplane landing fields would } in 1944, botn before and after the successfu e e Dera M. Poole e be constructed, mainly from Territorial funds made available by the c dB landings. Among Belglan civillans, the heaviest toll|, Ole Westby ®| 1925 Legislature, it was made known by Highway Engineer R. J. Sommers 3 Dilverst ¥ S 1:‘,“:.);"«:“ Douslas for $1.60 per monthi |inflicted by the Germans was by means of V-1 ancli e Eunice Anderson o | who returned here after threc months in the field. 'l:)hre Erwin Feed Co. il Bt g Co. i six months, one year, S1. { : n By mail, postege paid, at the following rates: | V-2 attacks in the winter of 1944-45. In the Antwerp e Mrs. Cliff Berg . e % | ftice h;::g%\f;sb::‘mmw Wholesale 805 10th St. 4 One sear. in advinos, $15:00; #ix months, In advanos, $1.0: |gpg Liege reglons, which hore the brugt of thesefe Frank L. Gourlay ®| Silk hosiery was advertised at $2.00 and $250 a pair. (Ladies, please| | HaAy GRAIN, CO. PHONE 216—DAY or-NIGHT | & r 4 favor if they will promptly notty | attg arly 5000 civilians were killed. In the|e® Howard G. Gross | : ! | , , COAL . | ota Offios of iy, Inflare oF irresulueity in the delivery | & tacks, nearly 5000 civiia {y Sainain Cl o | note: Eleven choices of color). | and STORAGE for MIXERS or SODA POP 01 af their papers. therlands, too, civilian mortality from bombing was | (-.] okl OS2 i ] RvissBoits; trave Office 00 Sumpees CEYe 1L .| lexceptionally high.. Nearly 80,000, lives were: last ij% bbbl ol The Rev. P. E. Baisler, organizer of the United Lutheran Church in| |~ 3 . s 940 3 Mrs. Henry A. Benson ! 3 . » OTE - | VANITY BEAUTY RS0 THEGLe 31 SXSISVeIY: QUIBen th kY iy fbr | T raRm Blone try 194 % Mrs. - . IK. Bagaie America, returned recently from a trip along the Alaska coast and| | CALIFORNIA news dispatches ummcf \o‘ it or nozbz;n;v-rd- As to the Allied countries in Eastern and Southern ® Heather Hollmann expressed that he was very optimistic over the material prospects of |hv‘ Ghocery nd Besl Skvked SALON paper and also the local news published | Europe, civilian air raid dead in those countries far |, Mrs. E. F. Rodenberg Interior and the outlook for building a strong organization for his church 478 . PHONES — 371 Cooper Building exceeded 100,000. Polish losses are placed at more| o 8§ | ehoc) ' - — o IONAL REPR High Quality Foods at “ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager than 50,000 and Russian losses at an even higher o @ ¢ ¢ @ »w s ¢ @ ¢ ¢ @ o T R Avenue Bldg § ; Moderate Price: s figure. The official estimate for Greece is 7,000 civilian | : William Sulzer, formerly Governor of New York and owner of con- | . _Opén Evenings _ Phone 318 | air deaths. Only fragmentary data are available on NORAH cAllS | siderable mining property in Alaska, was a southbound passenger on the | Yugoslavia, but in Belgrade alone more than 10,000 Northwestéra, Jones_stevens shop METCALFF, SHEET METAL people were killed in the air raids on Palm Sunday | e Y Heating—Airconditioning—Boat in 1941 | EARI_Y IODAY The Chamber of Commerce initiated a movement to secure a gridiron LADIES’—MISSES’ Tanks and Stacks—Everything There can be no doubt that the civilian air-raid | |to be used by small vessels. i READX-TU-NEAE in SHEET METAL losses in World War II, heavy as they were, would| oy oo "o oo Noral a- s 0 R ER Aok ot Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. | pale u:u]x mtmmf{xcum‘vf shln‘uld ]n major conflict :u.(un Hiived in:Sunssn drom iaRapvadieEs Weather repart: High, 50; low, 48 e R T | ] arise. n the face of this threaf it is imperative|;.ining at 7 o'clock and sailed for | T e e I " v |that the peoples of the world develop the necessary | vancouver at 8:30 o'clock. Passeng- : : ¥ by Femmer Transfer The Rexall Store political organization to maintain lasting peace. ers disembarking at Juneau were Dally Lessons In Engllsh L. ‘ Prom ‘Your Reliable Pharmacists o i ] e | pt Courteous Service it | P : Mis R Webh, Miss S Ashlcigh, W. L. GORDON }|1 sopen wanesovss BUTLER-MAURO | | Strategic Palestine M:I.\' P" Px_m_m" Mr., m"'i Mrs. J. C' I e s reed | Oil'~General Hauling DRUG CO. i Bl Millar, Mr and Mrs. S. Turpin, Mr, WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “I beg to say,” or “T beg| [Phone 114 Triangle Square (Washington Post) |and Mrs. H. Hogue, Florence Dow- to differ.” Say, “I beg LEAVE to say,” and “I beg PERMISSION to| 2 CIVILIAN DEATHS FROM BOMBS | Mr Churchill knew whereof he spoke when he ney s Wilscott, Mr. and Mrs. W. differ.” However, it is just as well to avoid the “begging” phrases. | ‘laSka Musi( Su ' HARRY RACE said that the world might think of Britain's partition|gtiliveil, E. Bledesvack and G, W.| OPTEN MISPRONOUNORD. Jocoss. Promounce jockos, both O's as pply Aerial bombardment in World War II, which |Plan for Palestine as motivated by strategic considera- | ptkinson Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Drugglst in NO, accent first syllable. ! reached its climax in the atomic bombing of Naga; \:;;:]:JAlel"]A‘(u: U]‘)‘lralx\:\“"‘ll‘hl: 3::\'\»'“‘\1\'?\1\‘11:1;[:1 {l’lfiwpll‘{rml:e:: S . mivuston,| OFTEN MISSPELLED: Bailiff; two F's. Pianos—Mausica) Instruments “The Squibb Store” 8 and Hiroshima, cost the lives of at least 1,200000 | \t"p;\ociine the Arabs 50 per cent, the British 3,,Ff:nk Davie Jim Notdale. C. Skuse.| SYNONYMS: Ignoble, base, mean, vile, low, disohnorable. | and Supplicr Where Pharmacy Is a 4 ans and possibly as many as 1,500,000 In World | o, cent; and, further, over-all authority would b"'Lomse Mack, Dr. and Mrs. A. W. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us Phone 206 Second and Seward Profession yar 1, only 5,000 civilians died in air raids. Ivested in the British. That the cemter of British|cameron and A.W.Cameron,Jr; to increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: | || =l 5 & The one atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, strategy in the Middle East has shifted to Palestine|yancouver: John Netterstad; and ILLUSION; an unreal or misleading image presented to the vision. HEINKE GENERAL 20TH CENTURY MEAT . where between 70,000 and 80,000 persons are estimated ‘)ms long been indicated. It is clear from s:ch mili- | {5 Prince Rupert: Edith Moore and “Psychologists recognize normal illusions, which are often not dis- REPAIR SHOP REET ry to have been killed, cost the n\'vs nlr :;ore :)ym??mnt\h:[‘ ‘c::I}mr:fl:\::::“:i:;m};su:l(;'\tlm:zl::;‘;gclnix;i.\:m;u:-:“:; Ruth B‘.mku TR uuguish’ible from hallucinatior Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burner Juneau's Most Popular 3 R the entire air death toll in World War I7 of #8Y @ 11 "yl " yand is intense. Doubtless these prepara- | Blacksmith Work “Maging® Piaoe # the other belligerent countries, with the exception of |f/% BOF B0 expadited by the diiblen to wind "p? WII_DES Go EASI i GENERAL REPAIR WORK Pl D A U Germany and, possibly, Russia. Nagasaki, where an- [, special status which the British enjoy in Egypt. ‘ MODERN ET I 0 U ETTE ROBERTA LEE Phone 204 929 W. 12th St. PHONE 202 other atomic bomb was dropped, raised the total of It had always been supposed that the school of FOR CONVENNON i e T —— civilian deaths from that weapon to between 105000 thought in Britain which insisted on the retention —— e oo i S and 120,000 Actually, the greatest loss of life In ajof the Palestine as the strategic center of the Middle| n;. and Mrs. Keith G. Wildes| Q. Is it all right for a man living on a small salary to say, “I don’t| “The Store for Men" single air raid in the entire war was that suffered East was headed by Mr. Churchill M. Churchill al- gro flying to Seattle enroute to play for money” when his hostess asks him if he plays bridge and e by Tokyo on March 9, 1945, when 85,000 civilians lost | ways has had an aptitude for politico-military strategy. wMuyrray Bay for a meeting of the Shebts ha abakes Wl Ba 00 high for Bim? | SAB'N’S their lives. Altogether, Japan’s total civilign losses ‘In his ,::;iwfax] wfmlhf,s slll::; “};’3; ?::d::t(i:mhrwhljz top 200 salesmen of the New York A Certainly 3 & | - H by bombing were 360,000 to 375,000, according to care- ;;’l:d']’;:f;‘:’mj:g j; ; :mmme; el bl ;}ifiu-j‘:;‘:ga:c; spg:::]par?gmmn{xar. @. It a blind date doesn’t turn out to be all a girl hoped for, must| | Front St—Triangle Bldg. vougb 107 Cherry St. ful estimates of the United States Strategic BombIng | ;.o 'y, jine with the new school of strategy in Britain | yive of the company hers, is 68th She make the best of the evening? OFFI Seattle 4, Wash Survey g , Which is wholly airminded. These strategists feel that on the list of top snldathen: A. Yes. If she takes a blind date, the girl should be pleasant and . Of the total civilian victims in World War II, | the preoccupation with Egypt and Palestine shows a| prom Seattle the couple will fly courteous, even if he isn't particularly attractive. 3 Walfleld's Dfllg Slo’e FOR at least two-thirds were nationals of the AXis coun- |lack of mental resiliency. In the war the Mediter- ', Chicago where they will vist Q. May a young person ask an alumnus of the school he is entering | | (p tries, with Germany far the heaviest loser and Japan | ranean was virtually closed to the British, and supplies a1 ang Mrs. Lance Hendrickson, to recommend him to a Bl anitss ormerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) Wall Paper the second. Germany’s losses were about 500,000 ac- [had to be routed around Cape of Good Hope. This former Juneauites. From Chicago AL o, not BVenMORE Ish vaiy Ehon. frisnd NYAL Family Remedies cording to the United States Strategic Bombing Sur-w“pe”f‘““‘_ it is cdntended, should undermine the (h. wildes will fly to Montreal and vey. Of German cities, Hamburg experienced the |fixed idea in traditional British minds that the Medi- | {hen take a steamer te, Murray B HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM IDEAL PAINT SHOP I T — Iabet intensive bombardment. | Aaeries of attackeby | Ceranean s Britain's Mle line. ; R IMRERE LG B 08 IR R SV by Fhone 040, Fred W, Wends A : i Moreover, with the development of speedy, safe'tpeir convention at the exclusive an JORDON S —— the Royal Air Force in July, 1943 brought death to|,,q pyjk transport by air, the real “line” to protect | yanor Richelieu, A. GO HUTCHINGS ECONOMY 60,000 persons in that city within the short period|ic the air route across Middle Africa. It was this THs - Wiges il hetien tip T et MARKET For the other Axis countries there are only frag- |many authorities, for the tumn of the tide at El it Ll 1 Wilchiis S8 Rwiliess of Bl NS uportant siversiof the Wolld? 5[ qn e ineta AC AT ¥t Regular Home Deliveries mentary figures, but the total losses of these countries | Alamein. From America supplies were rushed to Egypt A dvnntcglor B gEniine Sheryen et | | Locatsd in George Bros. Sto MONTHLY RATES % ¢ ¢ St W e o | which were vital to Montgomery’s success. The line| 3. What character in the Bible is known for his patience under | gt ge ‘ras. Stare 3 ran to tens of thousands, with Italy suffering the A 1 PHONES 553—92—95 it bl approximately Accra-Mombasa, and it is necessary tribulation? || — Phflne 114 » § 4 aok : } in order to control the Indian Ocean, the real link, 7 § ST At ; | On the Allied side Great Britain was probably the dcciding, £ s alibaca; A BRIy, Ittt ik 4. In what opera does the aria “Figaro” appear? - heaviest sufferer, next to Russia. More than 60,000 'y, wiggle and Far East. To these strategists Accra- e 5 ik hdhie brien QU slogan’ @ B.P.O ELKS English civilions were killed between March, 1940 | n\ombasa by air is the modern Mediterranean, though| Mr. and Mrs. William S. Hart, ANSWERS: ‘ Qe The Alaskan Hotel and March, 1945. Other parts of the British common- | they would keep a base in the eastern Mediterranean, residents of Sacramento, Calif., ar- 1. The Rhone, whose current ranges from six to 40 miles an hour. | | Meets every second and fourth wealth suffered civilian air raid lossses of varying | but at Cyprus, not Palestine. rived here on the Princess Norah 2. White; the amber-colored sherry has been cut with another{ Wednesday at 8 pm. Visiting Newly Renovated Rooms - Saturday night to spend ten days beverage. brothers welcome. E. C. REY- at Reasonable Rates "| w h' ' void of voluminous speeches, frills can only point the way. The ulti- of their summer vacation here. 3. Job. NOLDS, Exalted Ruler. W. H, e was Ing on and window dressing. The partici- mate solution must rest with the Following a visit in Fairbanks,| 4 Baumarchais' “Barber of Seville.” BIGGS, Secretary. PHONE SINGLE O pants will work instead of making people. by the Harts took the O’Harra bus to| 5. The war cry or gathering cry of th N MGITY'GO'ROlmd speeches. | Thats the story, Drew. I per- Whitehorse. From there they went '—w_ MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 JONPAD ey sonally hope that you will have by White Pass railroad to Skag- SECOND nd FOURTH UPHOLSTERY CO. f° (Contmued /rom Page One) PROGRESS BEING MADE |time to attend a few of our con-|way, and after a stop-over there, A COMPLETE JA“ITOB!AL SEBVIEE Monday of each month —_— ——| At this writing, we have already | ference sessions here in Washing- took the Princess Norah to Juneau. WINDOW AND RUG CLEANIN 1 in Scottish Rite Temple RE-UPHOLSTERING tional, work and recreational pro- accomplished the following: ton. They plan to leave Juneau some Plosts ot all kyyes cloansd, wased n"d' ‘:li;hed by el (jmc s beginning at 7:30 p. m. NEW FURNITURE THAAV el Sincerely, /time the latter part of next wesk. ’ s y ele s M. L. MacSPADDEN, gram. 1—The entire ficid of juvenile s el A% Tpressot they hve slavihigab tHS DAILY SERVICE ON ALL TYPES OF JANITOR WORK | ' | Phone 3¢ 122 2nd St. My first thought was that the'crjme has been divided into defin-| Gl A e Betanal Hotel | CALL 50—Lew Schaff d leavi Worshipful Master; JAMES W. Department of Justice could do its jie categories Attorney General. | Baranof Hotel + 90—Lew Schaffert and leave your number LEIVERS, Secretary. 1 1;1; mlersse m,; l[)(])otk “:.‘hea :L;u‘:;l‘z? 9 Pre-corference panels are (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC. 1946) e | ALASKA ELECTRONICS edera asis, 0K 2 g . irat S Ter—. \ S . meeting right now. For the first Silver Bow Lodge view that the Department's con=| ittt R 0 0L Ot ives A L e HOSPITAL NOTES : i @Nn. A 2, LO.OF, Sales and Service " cern was with the 16-1}ul\dregjé)§d“){ fednrel e ooty ena . its il | Meets each Tues- | | Expert radio repair withoat deiays) \[; teen-agers under federal jurisdic-|, . .¢e organizations are working| TIDE TABLE ®| St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday ad- if day at 8:00 P. M., 1. O. O. F. HALL.| |5 0. Box 2165 217 Beward i il ® |mitted Mrs. G. W. Hooker for sur- AUGUST 28 ®igery and Mrs. William Cope for ® Imedical attention. am., 184 ft. @ Charles Udey and Larry Cook that my attitude was 808 L‘smc!mns are placed on the scope | cancer with a mustard plaster. lof an individual panel, not on its I realized that )juvenile crime—|membership. PHONE 62 FLOYD HORTON, Noble Grand H. V. CALLOW, Secretary Visiting Brothers Welcome I ARE SAFE High ude x'-tjsn pre\'e?luon. lcoll:u'ul and fo(lj‘revl:-‘ 3—The goals of these panels have ;Cl'("";‘ :(i ;]T: ;?[_g fl :i;\:r[eem(;l;charged from St. Ann’s i BUY AND HOLD UNITED_STATES = n—could not be segregated to|pee - g i A 4L s VING been set. They are to complete de- (2 ' 8% 1o SAVING BONDS cither federal, state or communityiajled reports. A number of these | levels. It's a domestic issue that|pypers are now reaching comple- crosses state lines and community | gjon { boundaries right down to the home life of these erring youngsters. ACTION THE KEY The scope of this problem has, All of this preparation will stream been ably illustrated by the Feder-line and make easier the work of | ® charged from the Government Hos- ® 0000 e v e o epial 6 pm., -02 ft. ®| Tommy James of Juneau was dis- | DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN | via Pelershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle ELLIS AIR LINES ' 4 [ R B bank is pledged to conserva- al Bureau of Investigation. The the full conference in October. At| tive operation. The safety latest FBI statistics indicate that that time, the participants will al- _ACROSS 1 Aftectedly shy e i b D POS'TS FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE more 17-year-olds are arrested than so divide themselves into working I Hacks A0; Eenche primary consideration. In R e o RN bt e i il 5. . | b. Goddess of the 41, Musical in any other age group. Those un-'panels. They will have the task of! harvest instrument der 21 represent fifteen percent of | considering the reports. They may | ’EA gl\.xl‘l.:‘lg n‘a::‘l; ‘45 1“;:::1{;,;‘1?::’:‘:- addition, the bank is 2 mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation, which i IN THIS BANK Luciile’s Beauty Salon all murderers, fifty-one percent slter them, make additions, delete| 13 Period of time sories ) of all burglars, thirty percent of all sections or discard them in their| 1. Title aL-Athens 40 Mkt sures each of our depositors ARE SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS AND TYPES OF PERMANENT against loss to a maximum of $5,000. rapists. Arrests of girls under entirety. Only one ground rule has‘ 16. Acknowledge npty forms cighteen bhave increased 198 per- been set. Prior to adjournment,! 17. Country | /s o 18, Paleness cent since 1939. |each panel must bring out a final| 2, Warm: WAVES FOR ALL TEXTURES OF HAIR Phone 492 HAIR CUTTING Klein Bldg. FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS 50. Large serpent . Hindu queen . Female deer INSURED iien |report that reflects its indicated 32. Provided . Posaces P " w Dwell on Dillseed JUSTICE DEPARTMENT | opinion. The cumulative blueprint A . l(o]om ina TACKLES PROBLEM {will be published and distributed harem " " f___———_———r-—— . Lamb’s pen Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle In February of this year, we of on the widest possible basis. r name B 2 MOTOR REBUILD and MARINE szn“cn the Department of Justice decided| It is our aim that the arive | e O e ature 1. ParCi N I = iy to tackle the problem. We invited against juvenile crime will not end| 33 Ressution 62 Encountered crescent 1 t N ti l B nk ! : : ; : : Eitien aee 5. Risote en 3 [ LMK Firs ationa a , Machine Work — Welding a comparatively small group of with the National Conference (ox'i people—28 in all—to help us. They,the Prevention and Control of Ju-| came from federal departments, venile Delinquency. When the final state groups and private welfare session is over the pick-and-shovel | 3. 4. Impassive 6. Scent 6. 7 | ENGINE REBUILDING—HARDWARE of JUNEAU, ALASKA : 1012 West 10th Street PHONE 863 MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION . Animal's foot . Grammatical construction agencies. 4 twork will really begin. Delegates 8. Saucy Their revort was short and to the will be charged with organizing ! 9. Alack > point. The crux of their recommen- similar conferences wherever they 10. A“\Ys\:(\g{ the | ® dations was that teen-age crime are active. Specific projects may be — 11, ‘Cultired woman . ® must be attacked on the broadest delegated to individual organiza- y 19. About C. L. WINGERSON 1891—0ver Ha" a Cenlllry of Ballklllg—l%fi $ possible basis—all the way from tions which play a large part in . Conjunction as a paiG-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA $ " “00pers o ity life Spiral iy b4 and private organizations on a con- | the ball. In rural areas, a great .. § Present this coupon to the box office of the * H tinuous basgis. | portion of the work would fall to 3 X 4 And that’s what's going on right|farm groups. In all areas, the pe- - L4 CAPITOL THEATRE y ¢ now, Drew. |cutiarity of local conditions would | e and receive TWO TICKETS to see: ¢ The Department of Justice, in be the guide. . . . Seaweed " 71 Th B M B h d b collaboration with hundreds of pub-| You can understand, Drew, mm - 3 # YULANDA ANB ma mmr e L] e l.en s b4 lic and private agencies, has called we have undertaken quite a job be- | S 4 3 * a National Conference for the Pre- cause we have recognized juvenile! \\Wa t & - ‘Au‘u“un Federal Tax—12¢ per Person Ba 4 vention and Control of Juvenile delinquency as a grass-roots pro- - Lower g Wy z CAB cu b 4 Delinquency. The actual conference blem. We are all aware that an mfl. fl. -m Correct: cotlog, 4 ; . : will be a three-day affair on Oc- issue of such magnitude cannot be S i Pnonn l mn nnYAL nLu Oldest Ba-nk m AlaSka tober 21, 22 and 23. But the pre- solved by a single conference. But| FY and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and paratory work is already under way. we hope that inroads can be made. You see, this conference does not; I can't solve the problem—the follow the usual pattern of Wash- conference can't solve the problem ington “conferitis.” It will be de-'—laws can't solve the problem. I| " Heainy : RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. R WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! . roem COMMERICAL SAVINGS §