The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 27, 1932, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1932. PASSENGER []N | EVANGELIST SEEKS HEA‘LVTHINVMANSIONNEARLAKE CURACAQ PUTS BULLET IN HEAD Body of Paul S. Dyer| Brought Here for In- | quest by Plane domest was at Big on the C! ou The Juneau Que " he steamship n Works at Salter: er is a worker at the { at Big Port Walter.| In opinion of officers of the Curacao, Mr. and Mr Dyer had scpa and his self-destruction | followed a futile effort on his part| part to effect a reconcillation. | The young man was accompan- | jed from Seattle by a daughter,|; n and the note left by Pauline Dyer, 3 or ars old. | She is in good custody Big Port Text of Statement Walter. Her welfar the subject| Tne captain’s statement to Mr. of inquiry in a message ""““"“iliu.\.ml follows: from her father’s parents, Mr. and| .« ywirelessed you this a. Mrs. S. B. Dyer of Seattle, Who|soiows: ‘Have man aboard are ‘well-b0-do. nshot wound. I alive Three Cfficers Present The despondent young man shot himself in the presence of the| .y paul S, Dyer, passenger Curacao’s captain, chief mate and|r.m geat with small daughter chief steward, after they tried 10|p.yline and thence to Tyee and persuade him to abandon the idea|yoiyrn to Big Port Walter while of suicide and after he had threa a'der considerable mental st cned them with his .32-caliber re-|¢.,m qomestic ouble had sh volver. himself through the head with He left a note saying he had 35 caliper revolver while in hi leng templated the deed. | stateroom. Immediately after the shooting,| «1 naq peen ashore checking and while the fatally wounded man| oo harring meal was still alive, Capt. John Ander-|ie 4aq to load to the son of the Curacao wirelessed tOifoing a note in my 1 price Howard, Juneau agent of the| or whion is attached h Pacific Steamship Company, Which| . 1 feared he intended to do h up and operates the vessel, asking that a| ., bodily harm I immed . airplane be sent to Big Port Wal-| ¢y)ieq for Mr. Anderson, Chief R fate and we procesded together Chichagof Is Chartered |to stateroom No. 1, but were un Mr. Howard chartered the Chi-| i S ek chagof, P Anscel Eckmann :md‘nvm_’ This room ba: Mechanic Gordon Graham, :n](l‘m‘(' door - with st v with the aircraft to the scene e Anda of the tragedy. Mr. Dyer ‘was .y 2 BAUIOIAIY. - By dead on the arrival of the plane. sitting in a chair in n the plan: return to Ju””"}wnh & revolver in his the body was taken to the Charles|on opening the door of W. Carter Mortuary. was confronted Mr. Howard, through the Seat- tle office of the Pacific Steamship Company, communicated with the| the room with the gun and told to clear out. Chicf Steward Interposes “Mr. D. C. Findlay, Chief Stew- dcad man’s parents and was re-| quested to send the body to Seat-| te. Members of Jury For the inquest this forenon, | Commissioner Sey summoned as Jurors: John W. Jones, George Jorgen- sen, Gabe J. Paul, M. H. Truesdell, {his mind was {and nothing ard then elected to try and speak with Mr. Dyer, but he replied that long since made up could dissuade him from his purpose and as Mr. Dyer was crowded close to the wall and in such a position that it was im- possible to grab him without dan- Frank H. Foster, H. O. Adams. Dr. H. C. DeVighne and Mr Howard were the only witnesses Dr. DeVighne, who had examined the remains, testified death had} resulted from a gunshot wound in| the right temple. | Capt. Anderson in a written| ststement to Mr. Howard had mis- tekingly set forth that the wound| was in the left temple. Mr. Howard read to the jury the statement written by Capt. An- Chocolate Peanut Bars A Full Pound for 25¢ BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS ANY TIME Phone 134 Free Delivery ger he could do nothing further. I had followed Mr. Findlay in a econd attempt to get the gun {from Mr. Dyer and had one foot in the stateroom when he fired a bullet into his left temple and slumped. in the chair at 10:40 a. m Mr. Dyer's wife is working at Big Port Walter in the saltery and from inquiry I have obtained the following information: His fa- ther's address is— S. B. Dyer, 2017 Latona Ave., Seattle. Furth that he had life insurance f | about | $4,000.00. Child in Goed Care l “We have landed the child, who laccompanied Mr. Dyer at Big Port Walter where she will be well |cared for. Mr. Dyer had a walle on his on containing $63.00 jwhich T have removed from his | person and am holding for dispo- sitioin. In the meantime Mr. Dyer | pa. $ed away at 1:20 p. m. ship’s ne and we are sending the body you for disposition. | Mr. Dyer's effects consisting of 1 black suitcase, I overcoat coat, 1 straw hat, also g | forward to you by airplane.” Mr. Dyer's note was addressed to the purser of the Curacao and as follows: Take care of my baby. There Pro ample funds in my bill fold | thank the officers, they have been | very kind and you have done mar- | vélous things for my baby and my- D | self. Yon tried to prevent this, bul my mind was made up long |bem:v— 1 am grateful.” Scandinavian-American DANCE A. B. TON HALL IGHT KRANE AND PETERSON Accordion Orchestra Admission, 50 cents Ladies Free Aimee Semple McPherson-Hutton, (inset) Los Angeles evangelist, in convalescing in this Moorish style mansion on a hill above Lake Elsinore, Cal. She has becn ill several months and suffered a fract- ured skull when she fainted and fell after hearing that a Los Angeles jury had decided against her hus- and, David Hutton, in a breach of promise suit brought against him. (Associated Press Photo) LEGENDARY OLYMPIC TORCH AFL AME 7 " Avsociated Press Phote Beacon for the Olympic Games in Los Angeles lighted for a try. | out. !t was extinguished and will be turned on at the opening cere- | mony of the Tenth Olympiad at Olympic Stadium. It stands 120 feet | above the ground and is fed by illuminating gas and will burn night | and day. 1 COURT ISSUES BARTLETT T0 BE ORDER TO SELL CHAMBER GUEST SURETY BONDS TOMORROW NOON Receiver of Hyder Bank Former LOJHolcl Man| Authorized to Sell $15,- | and Local Booster to Be | 000 of Bonds Held | Greeted by Chamber | es District| Glen C. Bartlett, former local In the Un Court here this morning, Judge hotel man and now Manager of Justin W. Harding signed an order the Frye Hotel of Seattle, will be | for the sale by Receiver Haddon he Bank of Hyder of $15,000 worth of securities deposited by that in- stitution to guarantee a cash de- posit of $10,000 by the Territory of Alaska. It is estimated that the bonds will bring about 50 per, cent of their face value. The bonds include Americanand 'a guest of the Chamber of Com- merce tomorrow, it was announced today by Secretary G. H. Walmsley. Mr. Bartlett with his wife and daughter arrived here yesterday for a week's visit with local friends. The Chamber’s Executive Board met yesterday in a special session with Christy Thomas, General Man- 41,000 SEALS ARE TAKEN T0 JULY 26TH BY BUREAU | i [About 2,000 Less than | Last Year — Operations | Continue Several Days | A total of 47,000 seals had been | aken on Pribilof Islands by the United States Bureau of Fisheries up to last Saturday evening, ac- cording to an announcement made ¢ yesterday by Henry O'™alley, ted States Commissioner of heries. This is 2,000 less than year, but sealing operations will continue for several days. There is no shortage in breed- ing males, the Commissioner was advised by Superintendent H. J. | Christoffers. Unfavorable weather ring the earlier weeks of the son hampered operation Commissioner O'Malley left here early this morning in the Brant a trip of a week or ten days. will visit Petersburg, Wran- U P | He the west coast of Prince of |Wales Island, and Ketchikan be-| | fore returning here. PR P T “0R, FULTON" * UNDER ARREST . AT KETGHIKAN Charge of Alleged Forgery | Is Placed Against ‘ Man by Police KETCHIKAN, Alaska, July 27.— A man giving his name as Dr. C. W. Fulton, which the police believe is one of many aliases, was ar- rested here Tuesday on a forger: charge just before sailitng for the south. It is alleged he duped Seattle newspaperman out of $50, representing himself as a Govern- ment doctor of Dillingham. Officers here said he admitted serving sentences as McNeil Island Prison on forgery and narcotic |charges under the name of John- il stone. MORE INFORMATION Deputy Marshal W. H. Caswell of Ketchikan, wired Marshal Al- {bert White today he had recognized IDr. Fulton a man who has H ved penal terms for forgery. Cas- |weil said he had brought about ‘Ius arrest in 1911 and was instru- {mental in sending him to McNeil |Island for a term of seven years as f |under the name of Johnson. Since that time, Caswell added, he had served another penitentiary term under the name of Dr. Webb, and later had represented himself as Dr. McGibbon. e REV. SAUNDERS RETURNS FROM MONTHS TRIP Wife of Presbyterian Clergyman Is Now Vis- | | | iting in Nebraska From a month’s vacation in the States, Rev. C. C. Saunders, pastor of the Northern Light Presbyterian |Church, has returned to Juneau. While away Mr. Saunders attended the meeting of the Washington- Alaska Presbyterian Synod at Cen- |tralia, Wash. Mr. Saunders was accompanied |by Mrs. Saunders. They spent most of the past month in Seattle. Just |before Mr. Saunders left Seattle |for Juneau, Mrs. Saunders went to Fairfield, Neb, to visit relatives of his. Her plans do not contem- plate returning to Juneau. Sanadian railway issues and one ager of the Seattle Chamber, and| M. Saunders will remain here ’il corporation conferred with him on bringing |Until September 1, when the re- Included in the list are $3,000 about closer relations between the |Si8nation of his pastorate takes n Missouri Pacific five per cent/slated for tomorrows luncheon gflfe‘“- He then will go to the | States. first and refunding mortgage, $4.-|two organizations. )00 Erie Railroad five per cent! There is only routine business refunding and improvement mort-|meeting which will be held as zage; $3,000 Shell Unien Corpora- usual at Bailey's Cafe at noon. ion; and the Canadian National — o — Railway Company's five per quaranteed bonds for $5,000. Cenl | win be different, with traps plased ito catch the ball of the long hitter P.G. A CONTENDERS [Misahi tho sopvare oo FACE TOUGHER FOE |““"“°d’ IN KELLER COURSEP“‘DW&*WE in his two starts over Sarazen has not been especially | Keller course, shooting a 295 last ST. PAUL, M , July 27.—Gene |Year, having trouble with his put- Sarazen’s bid for a grand slam in | ;olf honors for which pros are| Weather hereabouts thi Jligible, when he starts his tour|Das been ideal for goif courses, and 5f the Keller course in the P. G. A i“‘? "?li%h at Ke is real rough, Tournament August 30 to Septem- |10t burned-out turf such as greet- ed the golfers last year. A ball ser 4, will be over, around or| o) 4 hrough a new series of traps. into the rough today is almost sure to cost a stroke. The course over which Horton ——— season Smith carded a 278 in the St Paul open last year has been made, DAM MAKES RIVER COLD tougher for top-flight golfers by A ‘he installation of 32 new traps. I!| BAGNELL, Mo, 27— Swim- originally was designed as an in-|mers who used to u.\mfi \hems eresting layout but not too tough|seives in the Osage Rive fear the for the average player. |huge dam creal Last y r the smart boys were|QOgzarks has the Lake of the | The Presbyterian’s vacation |school will start Monday. Sunday church services will not be resumed until Sunday, August 7. S S e L Prof. William E. Duckering has been appointed head of the depart- ment of civil engineering and math- ematics at the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, suc- ceeding Prof. Rolland W. Chase, resigned. (Prof. Duckering is a graduate of the University of Wash- ington and has taught there and jat the University of British Col- umbia at Vancouver. —————— A bridge more than two miles long, expected to be the largest in Europe, has been authorized in spoiled their sport. taking advantage of hard-baked!The water, noy eased f;om the roughs to get long rolls and not at{pottom of the v reservoir, - Is all unplayable lies, This year it{io0 cold, No. 3.—His Anti-Jewish ADOLF HITLER- Germany’s Drive Question Mark EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last of three articles on Adolf Hitler. It relaies why a goodly section of German citi- zenry fears the possible acces- sion to power. By LOUIS R. LOCHNER BERLIN, July 27.—Of Germany's 63,000,000 inhabitants there is one element, comprising at least 500,- 000 which seems doomed to a per- iod of social ostracism, and treat-| ment as second class citizens if the July 31 elections give Hitler's nazis control of Germany. That element is the Jews. Anti-Semitism is a cardinal doc- trine in the creed of Adolf Hitler. “Juda verrecke” (“Perish the| Jews”) is as much of a slogan for wearers of the brown shirt as is “Down with capitalism” communists. On every nazi book stand one finds a pamphlet of 160 pages en- titled “Adolf Hitler’s Speeches.” It! begins with his platform utter- ances in 1922, a year before he| attempted his “beer cellar putsch”, in Munich. One of his first public addresses | was delivered while a world eco- | (nomic conference was meeting at! | | for | at Genoa in April, 1922. Speaking at Munich, Hitler warned that “de- mocracy is in principle not Ger- man, but Jewish.” He also claim- ed that “the Jews incited the broad | masses of the German people into ithe ‘November insanity’” (mean- ing the overthrow of the Hohen- jzollerns in November, 1918.) A few months later Walter| Rathenau, Germany's Jewish for- |eign minister, was assassinated and Hitler said the murder was due solely to the fact that the Jews i were undeservedly given positions lof prominence, On April 13, 1923, a whole speech | was devoted to the thesis that “the ! Jew and the world’s stock ex-| changes were responsible for the| world war.” | More recently Hitler has been' more moderate in his langunage. In private talks he even states| hat “decent Jews” have nothing | v fear. | In practice, however, the anti- | Semitism continues with nazi pres- | sure exerted in all directions. Even the Von Papen cabinet, close though it is to the nazis, was se- verely criticised when it appeint- ed a man of Jewish antecedents as chief of the government press department, and a half-Jew as un- der secretary of finance. The most recent example was furnished on 'June 24, when the Hitlerites introduced a bill in the Prussian diet demanding the pos- sessions of all east European Jews |who have entered Germany since August 1, 1914, be confiscated on the ground that Jews belonged to a race which does not work pro- ductively, but merely graps.” Another motion demanded the compilation of a list of all Jews employed in Prussian state operas and state theatres. The intention Special CHICKEN DINNER THURSDAY EVENING From 5:30 to 7 85¢ The Coffee Shoppe Mrs. Katherine Hooker pur Koqa/e | It S-L-I-D-E-S but the Knot Never Slips In the finest silks and smart- est colors that will be worn this season. And remember the SPUR ROYALE is guar- anteed to give unusual serv- ice. Come in and let us show you its unique patented con- struction that sleeps off wrinkles. $1.00, $1.50, $2.50 SABIN’S BOOTS—SHOES Everything in Furnishings for Men fl R v Il Fiery denunciaticn, especially of the Jews, is Adolf Hitler's chief stock in trade, bue he can take an opposite tack. Here he is shown campaigning for the July 31 elections, fragrant roses in his hand as he gives a paternal greeting to a toddler decked out in full Nazi regalia. e ma g = was obvious—to oust all Jewish ar-!Jewish antecedants, are viewing tists. {the growth of his party with gen- A German movie concern has uine alarm. dropped its Jewish stars because it fears that films in which they appear may call forth interrup-| Perseverance Rebekah Lodge 2- tions by the nazizs. |A will hold its regular meeting Thus, although Hitler himself is|Wednesday night at 8 o'clock Vis- not as rabidly anti-Semitic as he | iting members welcome. used to be, the half milllion Ger-| EDITH SHEELOR, mans who still cling to the Jewish | Noble Grand. faith, and untold Christians with | ALPHONSINE CARTER, - Secretary. ) | L r e e REBEKAHS ATTENTION adv. { | | = FRIENDLY |{ HAVE YOU TRIED FIVE | ke SHOES { MOSQUITO i DOPE? ‘ | IT°S THE BEST EVER 50¢ More than Two Million Men Wear Them Juneau Drug Co. “There Is No Substitute for QUALITY” Post Office Substation No. 1 PHONE 33 H. S. Graves The Clothing Man GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92—95 5 Fast Deliveries OPEN EVENINGS LOGANBERRIES FOR PIES Gallon cans, each .60 cents GARNICK’S—Phone 174 ELEVENTH ANNUAL Southeast Alaska Fair JUNEAU September 14,15, 16, 17 BIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER For premium list and further information communicate with W. S. PULLEN, Secretary

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