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_THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FR!DAY,‘;KUGU'ST 28, 1931. Eupid Her Coach EI_EVEN FINED .| FOR VIOLATING THE CAME LAW Game Wardens Secure| Convictions in Cases in West, Interior E, WONDERLY IS INJURED BY KNIFE CUT Speedy Beauty: Meat Cutter Severs Artery | of Thigh While Trimming Ham E. Wonderly, a t cutter in the Meat Com- ury from the noon hour busy trimming a when the knife slipped, cut- deep right Eleven cases involving violations of the Alaska Game Law have bee: reported to local headquarters of | the Alaska Game Commission, and | fines were imposed in each of | them. Ten originated on the Alaska | Peninsula and Kodiak Island, and | the eleventh in the interior. | Carl Loof was fined $100 for | *|taking game birds in Paviof Har- g|bor without an alien license. At | / Kodiak Victor Capili was fined $25 | o \ 7 ) S m those Dr. L. P. Da taken to St. Ann's Hospital for tr His case is reported laurels August 15 in competition with the fastest craft in i MISS PULLEN HERE BOUND FOR KODIAK M. Vircus, Larson Bay, was fined | Miss Mary Pullen, of Skagway, $25 for dealing in furs Without|arrived on the steamer Queen and having a dealer’s license. Johan E.|js the house guest of Miss Miriam Johnson, an alien, arrested at Pav- | McBride. Miss Pullen will leave lof Harbor, was fined $100 by the |on: the -steamer Admiral Watson "exch on two counts, shipping fur ; without making the required report,‘ | Dorothy Burns (above), pretty and possessing, as an alien, fire- | : 5 W young lady of Syracuse, N. Y. arms. Louie Censo, arrested at | ;2&,"’"8:‘8}:2, '&“&';o'éoléflgfi who_will soon become the bride|Larsen Bay, was fined $25 on & | pgee off Montauk Point, L. L., last DH REX swARTZ‘ of Vic Hanson, handsome head|gimilar charge and a shotgun pos- | 4 ' J Z y | such a pretty girl as Virginia Wol. .‘ known to S Evidently paid altlne' o}' el fi.)}x;l;;os;efiioge M‘ ford, Atlantl,g(‘}a., society bud and y| Dorothy is cpt pupil of|a similar weapon which ha % | speedbont_enthusiast, at the helm. | Suy ing. |used to Kill a red fox, and lost| ot Totsys il detend 'R | his gun and the fox pelt, | ‘an alien, was fined $25 for having a firearm without a license, and | the gun was seized. coach of the football team of coccoq g eoampanpligitoy . oty year and holder of the laj Tommy Gallagher [Larsen Bay, Governor Parks Appoints| AN 2 | of 68 miles an hour, is lucky. Yes, EX;:::?S “}{;"‘“s‘:,ys't at}i{ll]‘:t?gve‘:‘ Cleto Tuban, Larsen Bay, also| #ir, lucky. And why not, with was fined $25, for illegal purchase of a brown bear skin. Jose Caztro, Nome Physician to 1 acancy Mrs. Georgé Lott Sues for Divorce in Philadel- Dr. Rex W. Swartz, of Nome, has been apointed Assistant Territorial | Commissioner of Health for the o Cotit Commissioner at Unalaska for pos- | for Kodiak where she will teach Second Division, according to an phia LCourts |session of a firearm without hav- | gonoq), announcement made today by Gov | ing a licenss, John Olson, an R S METCALF COMES TO TOWN FROM FUNTER BAY WORK F. A. Metralf, who is engaged in surveying mining claims at Fun- George A. Parks. The Governor signed his commission yesterd: but made the appointment effe tive since August 12. PHILADELPHI1A, Penn., Aug. 28 |alien, was fined the same amount —George Lott, Davis Cup star and |for trapping in Pavlof Harbor with- | advertising man, has been made |out a trapper's license. Emil Isak- defendant in a divorce action by son, Paviof Harbor, an alien, was Dr. Swartz succeeds Dr. F. J.|his wife, Mrs. Abigail Steepleford |fined $100 for having - firearmster Bay for the Alaska Admiralty | O'Harra, who resigned earlier this|Allen Lott, with whom he eloped in | Without possessing a license. A.|Goiq Mining Company, came to summer after holding the office October. She is a debutante of E. White, Takotna, arrested by town last night on the gasboat Lou. | several years. The latter left the |1928. ‘Wardon Hallson, paid a fine of $25 He brought with him Lloyd Bayers for medical treatment. Bayers is !suffering from a slight attack of | appendicitis. Mr. Metcalf will re- Old papers at the Empire offica turn to camp Saturday. Territory and is now taking spe- | cial medical work in Philadelphia.| N Habib El Masri is the |son. - firs ptian girl to graduate from | 4t The Emplre. the American University at Cairo, T S for taking one beaver out of sea- - = R I e MEYRING SOUTH record | | district, shattered 200 windows and Two Good Eggs THIS MORNING FOR SEATTLE Pan American Airways Of-| ficial on Long Flight : ! to the Tropics [ The seaplane Sitka, Pilot Mey- ing, left for Seattle and wayports | | at 11 o'clock this morning with Q.| C. McDermond, of ‘the Pan Ameri- can Airways, Inc., and Mr. and | |Mrs. Carman, of the Alaska Wash- | ington Airways. The Petersburg, Pilot Bob Ellis, departed for Whitehorse at 11:15 o'clock this morning and was :x- pected back late this afternoon with |B. O. Smith and party. ELLIS RETURNS Pilot Ellis returned to Juneau |at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon, aft- |er an unsuccessful attempt to cross| |the coast range ehroute to White- horse. He found a low ceiling at White Pass, turned back and tried Chilkoot, finding conditions the same there. <He landed for a short time at Dyea, but a choppy sea compelled him to take off. ——— BOMB THROWN IN ST, Louis Pedestrian Injured—Many Windows Are Broken by Explosion ST. LOUIS, Aug. 28.—Explosion of a bomb, apparently thrown from an automobile in a downtown - Here's the fastest woman United States. Her name is Elew nor Egg, of Paterson, N. J. Wash, upsetting all the experts. - [ELKS ARE PLANNING FOR WINTER MONTHS The Juneau Elks will soon enter the winter program of weekly lodge ment entertainment. Beginning next Wednesday night, meetings will be held each week. The first session of this kind, Sep- together with a “feed.” The Purple Bubble Dance will be given September 26. The minstrel show, the first in six years, will be presented at the Coliseum theatre on Tuesday and Wednesday, October 13 and 14. —————— Turkey recently passed a law, effec- severely injured a pedestrian, Wil- liam Bommarito. The bomb was thrown of a cigar store. estimated at $3,500. in front The damage is RS tive in 1933, adopting ‘the metrig Old papers at Tne Emplre. Isystem of weights and measures; (r———— . — JAM for EVERYBODY LARGE JARS—ALL FRUITS ALNWAYTS Something New ° FRESH Chickens . . . Pound 30c DRY PICKED Broilers . . . . Pound 35¢ 1931—MILK FED Roasters, Pound 41c , EXTRA FANCY i T George Brothers FIVE DELIVERIES DAILY RO AR I 000000 O O | TELEPHONES 92 and 95 Kl flfllllflIllII!IIIIIHHI!III!I&HIIW!!_HIIIIIIIIIIIIIH{IIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIlIIlHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll"li.lillflHII“IIIIIIIIlflllmlllllllllflllilll"l il £ 45 Cents At GARNICK’S--Phone 174. Brothers Telephones 92 and 95 5 Deliveries Additional clerks have been added to our force to Answer the Demand of the Public WE WILL TRY IT Today’s Midnight Special AMOCAT FancyMaine Corn NUMBER 2 SIZE 3 for 48¢c Limit 6 cans to customer George Bros. in_the and she acquired the ch:mplonsh(p for the 100-yard dash at the recent A. A. U. meet at Jersey City. Miss Egg defeated the great Helen She is shown above in her kitchen, ¢ooking—by my halidom — an 5 EGG] gessions, general social and amuse- ' tember 2, will be a general gec-\ Women Have Views About FIRE FIGHTERS ARE ENCIRCLED, ; FOREST BLAZE,_fee! Form Bodies of Fo:r‘Men Are| to Be Obseryed Discovered—None | Throughout Nation ) Are Identified i MISSOULA, Montana, Aug. 28.— Regional headquarters received ad- vites That the bodies of four forest | fire fighters were *discovered yes- {terday west of Choteau. The bodies have not been identi- NEW YORK, Aug. 28—Women members of President Hoover's Un- employment Committee have defin- ite views about the form of relief that should be taken. ‘The women urged careful bud- geting, wiser economy and active cooperation of industrial leader- fied but it is assumed they are of | ships. four of five men missing in the ———————— area who apparently became cut| London, England, with a pop- off last Tuesday by the encircling ulation of 8202816, is the largest flames. city in the world. T T . SCHOOL DAYS Are Happy Days TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE i PRICES® 7, % /o %1y by BOYS’ SUITS $2.95 YOUTH’S SUITS . $6.95 | . RAINCOATS $2.95 | | SWEATERS . $1.25 TENNIS SHOES 99¢ PRINT DRESSES . . 75¢ COME AND LOOK! b LEADER DEPARTMENT STORE GEORGE BROS. Store Open Till 9 P.M. eviexie OO RO OCRER RO RN A comfortable pleasant place to obtain all your Beauty Aids. 1921 GRADUATE OF COSMETOLOGY AND HAIRDRESSING " e I have made a thorough study of hair and will cheerfully tell you the kind of Permanent Wave best suited to your type of hair. Consultation Free Phone for Appoingtment American Beauty Parlors \ ALSIE J. WILSON Valentine Bldg.