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m\ P ‘ ! g ELLISON CASE NAME WORTMAN STARTS TODAY; AS TRUSTEE OF FOR MEN ONLY PIONEERS' HOME Court Exclu—d—e:CHildren——,Sitka Druggist Fills Vacan- Counsel Limit Jury | cy Left by Recent Death to Men Members [ " of J. B. McGrath E. Wortn Sitka busi- an former resident of has been appointed mem- excluded and bef sed of m With all minors the courtroom toda and entirely comp ecment of counsel, John . Board of Trustees of the was placed on trial before J Home, filling the vacancy jeath of James B. Mc- - o nder, in e Fede sodomy char sitka, it was an-{ the testimo by E. W. Griffin, would be vulgar and nece: ate the |Acting Gov The appointment use of obscene language, Judge was made by Gov John W. Troy Alexander directed the bailiffs to and telegraphed here from Ket- banish all persons under 21 years|chikan of age from the l;ou:n' mlwl u.‘n: Mr. Wortman, will J0h e the women members of the petit| Mb VOTRT o A oung. jury panel and those in the aud- jence an opportunity to retire est man to ever hold that office. = He was born on Douglas Island Aty Ak Obiatese, | about 36 years ago and is the first A jury was obtained Within a|g. . oiary’of the Board, if not the short time and an opening state-j . .5y pher of it, to be a native St made to the fury by Asst |TiSC PICIuOer 8. Attorney G. W. Folta by 11|Porn resident. George B. Grigsby, represent- | He resided in Douglas during his am ing the defense, waived making any | poyhood. He went to Chichagof statement. The Government’s main|from there and later moved toj witness, E. Torgerson, was on the|gitka. There he purchased the The jury is composed of B. A.|He is a Democrat af long standing Schow, J. G. Warner, George E.'committee. B ED I L and Jake Rice. It was expected | the case would be completed w(xlfl,\" | at 10 am. Wednesday. ous weapon, yesterday afternoon out malice on four counts. He|cargo of freight, the motorship| him. | this morning at 11:30 o'clock and the incident and didn’t know what | frejght 1t will leave from ihe his, with a rifle and later tried to | night for Treadwell where it will stand under cross examination when | sjtka Drug and Jewelry Company Havdahl, James McCloskey, John J.[and has segved for several years delson, Alfred Bonnett, Char and the other members of the petit changed his plea to guilty to point- changed the plea when the courl; zapora, Capt. Hugh McDonald and Anderson told the court he was|was at the Juneau Commercial he was doing. He took several|Goyernment dock, where lumber shoot up the Indian settlement at|pe ahout two hours. the noon recess was taken. | which he still owns and operates. Kesnakoff, J. H. Henderson, A. L.{as a member of the Sitka precinct Rice, Gus Schmitz, Fred L. Know! jury panel were excused to report Barney Anderson, troller, who i had pleaded not guilvty earlier in M A!L THIS A M | the term of assault with a danger- ] ' ing and discharging firearms wxlh-i With passengers and a general | made ready to draw a jury 1o Uy |y Mattson, purser, arrived in port highly intoxicated at the time of| gock all afternoon unloading shots at other trollers, friends of | win be unloaded, at 10 o'clock to- Tee Harbor last Spring. Sentence| o ho way north the motorship will be pronounced on him tomor-j ..yoq at Ketchikan, Hydaburg, e Craig, Klawock, Port Alexander, PR T Hood Bay, Tenakee, Hoonah and | > 86065 vvoe oo oldunau and on the way to Seat- | . AT T HOTELS @ !tle it will stop at Port Alexander, | #0000 0000w e o0 o0 Craig and Ketchikan. | Arriving here on the Zapora | Sk were: ‘F‘x'o{m Kl;«'oikA;l‘horxxas P‘S‘Iu | p | atovich; from Por lexander, Mr Gust Dahl, Taku; F. W. Grege.| ;4 wnps Isaac Puranen and Sparrow, Seattle; Robert Ball, city. ]‘:;;;Rh;{(.r.hrlg:]?enl‘:o:nah Mr. and Gastineau George Smith, city; Herb Kittils- by, Wrangell; Robert Cockburn. Daily Empirc Want Ads Pay. | 00000000000 0000000000006 * MEN’S FINE POLO i - (’COATS ! IN NEW FLEECES and TWEEDS e $14.95 $17.95 If yeu like soft fabrics they’re here in shet- lands, camel’s hair, Ilama and paca cloths. If you prefer the rough- er fabrics with more ) pronounced patterns we present Harriss and Scotch tweeds and Ban- nockburns. These coats are worth $30.00 on today’s market LEADER DEPT. STORE . George Bros. Store Open Evenings | laid s The new Turkey wangles ja Turkey Turns to Farm and Eactory First Decade Under Kemal Ends IS PLEASED. 2z from some of the traditicnal Mincr and the band of thic Istanbul cabaret, sitting beneath a p Pasha, syncopatcs merrily. The v violin, piano and women_singers are ated Turkish flute and mandolin-like “oute” are of the old regime. By PRISCILLA RING ANKARA, Oct. 31. — To carry to Turkey's millions of peasants the decade of reforms adopted for 2,500,000 urban dwellers and to map a “five year plan” for the nation's industrial development,are the two huge tasks now before Mustapha Kemal's government. As the Kemalist regime passed its tenth anniversary on October 29, urban Turkey, already modern- ized, was beginning to think of its country cousins, Schools Still Scarce When the reforms started, Tur- key had a population of 13,500,000 and now she has 17,000,000. Though the government has op- ened 2,650 new schools inten years 37,000 of Turkey's 40,000 villages lare still without a single school | or post-office, states the semi- official newspaper ‘“Vakit.” With the new Latin aiphabet and the obligatory ABC schools, il- literacy has decreased from 90 to 75 per cent, but the latter is still a big ratio for the government to tackle. By suppression of the tithe, and hortening military service, the republic softened two of the heav- iest burdens which the sultans had on the peasantry. Warfare against bandits by the Kemalist gendarmerie has brought a measure DEAN BOLTON - WITHSCHOOLS Chairman of U. of W. Ac- | creditation Committee Is | | Impressed with Alaska | | Dean Frederick Bolton, who spem‘ three days here inspecting the, Juneau Public Schools, expressed himself as favorably impressed by | the schools of the Territory, ac- cording to R. S. Raven, local su-| perintendent of schools. Dean Bolton is known as the | father of the department of edu- | cation at the University, and is {its former Dean. He is now pro- | fessor of Research in the depart- ment of education, ‘chairman of the Accreditation Committée of the University of Washington and | & member of the Northwest Asso-| | ciation of secondary and higher schools \ Impressed With College ) The well-known educator was well impressed by the Alaska Col- Jege and the interesting work that is being accomplished there. | In Juneau he spent most of his time in the local high school, | since high schools are more di- | rectly connscted with universities !than are elementary schools. ruments of Asia | Mustapha Kemal of Gazi ern; the hand drum, elabor- | of security to Anatolians unknown | for centuries. | Women Toil; Witches Spin But the government has not ye | been able to give them the prom- ised new day of enlightening and perity. | Several million peasant women | still labor in the fields with no | inkling of the freedom enjoyed by | women in towns and cities. 1 Despite the federal law against | sorcery, witch doctors still sca | ter disease and death in region | where government health insp:et- | ors have not penetrated. The government is sending 17 | schooi-teachers to the United State | this fall, ta bring back eastern | models of America’s “little red | school houses.” The building ot agricultural in- | stitutes is another step towards peasant advancement. | Rural Teachers Drafted | Still another is the completion of 1,500 miles of new railroads, de- signed to carry civilization to hid- den primitive corners of Anatolia. The government is requiring hundreds of young graduates of the state medical school at Istan- bul to take jobs as government doctors for three or four years doctorless districts of Anato | To the distant provinces, also, | it is sending graduatess of t ™ © 1933, LiceeTT & Myeas Tosacco Co, 5 | from teaching elsewhere. Addressed Students I Friday Dean Bolton addressed of | the high school students in assem- government new language school at Istanbul. Those who have re- vived certificates as teachers \elish, French, or German and ' D0W In his talk he emphasizzd » appointments o Anatolian|the great strides that had been wns, are fined $300 and bar eq | made in education in his life time. | In 1867, he said, the year that | Alaska was purchased, there were w;\l'fl’_m?;?:nlf;p ‘:":d";e‘;fm.rvvnbom one hundred high schools PR gy ) X Y!in the country. Now there are 25,- will go faster when Turkey com-|ggy pign schools, attended by a 7 hfl, second o d task, el b'lgmnd army of five million boys oration of an economic plan, o bej, g girls Dean Bolton also stress- "‘“l‘z?d \“[}lfn. definite time lim-, .4 tho advance that had bzen lke; Riigslwg L8, yiyiBans, in inventions, calling at- How to industrialize the country | made : tention to the development of in- and how to make agriculture more 3 osperous, are problems entrusted ventions and of luxuries that have i, | come parallel with the dzvelop- o ment of high schools and college: Walker D. Hines, war-time di-|p,oc0 jnclude the telegraph, tele- "';"“’I')‘” IJ 5. R};‘”?_*‘d“"_,“ Clh;" phone, electric railroad, electric '\)l B ‘s‘""“’“- '“0 ’; m“‘“"; lights, automobiles and airplanes Major Sommerwell of the S.| which have all come within the O. F. Gardner, agricultural |y ¢t ot il | lifet: adults living today. Matihew Van' Siflen, for-| iotime of 5 : | Dean Bolton predicted that the the U. 8. Bureau of oung people to whom he2 was Wash- | {a1king would see in their lifetimes inventions more wonderful than these. Mecte With School Board Army; expert; merly of Mines, and Sidney Pulge, ington oil r SPECIAL FERRY TONIGHT P | While in Juneau D:an Bolton There will be a special ferry!met with M. L. Merritt, Ralph E. ng Juneau for Douglas at 1:30| Robertson and Grover C. Winn, am. which will allow Dou members of the Juneau School patrons to attend the Hallowe'en | Board, and discussed matters per- Ball at the Elks' Hall tonight. adv.| tinent to education with them. - e He will make a full report on the Daily Empire Want Adc Tay. ) schools of the Territory, after he ette thats MILDER the cigarette that TASTES BETTER tlaé ‘pig.ar He left J the North- arrives in Seattle. neau southbound on | 1and. PUPILS OF MISS TODD ‘GIVE MUSICAL-TEA Five of the pupils of Miss Caro- line Todd gave an informal mus cal-tea in her studio on Gold Belt Avenue Sunday affernoon, October |29, which was enjoyed by parents | and friends of the participants. The program was as follows: Tapping Woodpecker. Gaynor Bennie Caldwell Little Almond Eyes.... % Arthur E. Johnstone Mary Tubbs Song of the Lark.. .. Tschaikowsky Curious Story. 15 Heller Ruth Allen ! Consolation . Mendelssohn Pas des Amphores. ...Chaminade Elizabeth Douglas Butterfly Markel Brillant Camp . Rheinhold Charles Tubbs After the program both tea and punch were served. —t———— Dogs Voice Complaint DENVER — A “terrible commo- tion” in the basement of St. Mark's Church, which neighbors reported, sent police on a hunt for vandals. Instead they found two police dogs that had fallen down an air “well” at the side of the building, and were complaining vigorously. IMR. AND MRS. KILROY | RETURN FROM EIGHT | DAY HUNTING TRIP | with an exciting story of their experiences during the severe storm |of a week ago while on a hunting | trip in the gasboat Rosita, which | belongs to Mrs. Ernie Martin, Mr. {and Mrs. W. E. Kilroy returned to Juneau Saturday night after be- ing gone for eight da Mr. and Mrs. Kilr alone on the gasboat, were hunting south of | Doty Cove when the storm struck ithm and managed to put into the | Cove where they were held storm- bound for four days while waves washed over the small craft and | the wind screamed overhead. Though there were plenty of deer on the shore, driven down by the snow and severe cold, that were within shooting distance, Mr. Kil- roy did not kill any as it would ! have been impossible to get them aboard in a small boat. However, they brought back several ducks to show for the trip. e SAM JUKICH IN ST. ANN'S FOR MEDICAL TREATMENT Sam Jukich, who entered St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday to re- ceive medical care, returned to his home this morning. He was suf- trouble, { { Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Here We Are With REAL RELIANCE COFFEE, a N ew Month 3 1b. cans ..85¢ (One of the best coffees on the market) FLOUR— R & W Best Blended Flour, 48 1b. sack . CAMPBELLS SOUP—AII kinds, per can 10¢ GALLON FRUIT and solid pack, gallon PRUNES—Large size, VEGETABLES— ....50¢ fresh pack, per Ib. 10c START YOUR NEW MONTH TODAY ! Bargains for GARNICK’S Phone 174 e | fering from an attack of stomach A st o - Ll | ! 1 i < ol b P P .