anaheim-gazette 1912-01-18
Searchable text
ROBBERS DROP BAG OF GOLD
Billy Hall Takes Hand in Shooting,
Billy Hall Takes Hand in Shooting,
Bank robbers blew open the vault and safe of the State bank of Newport at 2:30 o'clock Saturday morning, fought a gun battle with William Hall and Charles Grau and got away with $599.10, leaving behind $2600 they had sacked to carry away. One of the robbers left a trail of blood from a load of bird-shot fired into him by Hall. Bradley Kemble, a fisherman, mistaken for a robber, is in the Santa Ana hospital with about 150 shot in his body from charges fired at him by Hall.
The robbers escaped in a rig stolen from G. H. L. Ghriest of Newport Heights, which they drove like mad to Olive, a distance of eighteen miles, where the rig was abandoned and the robbers separated and disappeared in the brushy hills along the Santa Ana canyon.
Their well-planned robbery was frustrated in part by the intuition, and quick ear of a woman, Mrs. William Hall. She was awakened by a muffled explosion. Half asleep she beard another. She awakened her husband and the suspicion that something was wrong became a certainty when a third heavy noise boomed in from the direction of the bank, about a block away.
Hall, who lives over his saloon, awakened his bar-keeper, Charles Grau, and, Hall dressed only in a nightshirt and pants, and Grau with a bathrobe over his nightshirt, went forth in their bare feet, each armed with pump-guns. Approaching the bank they saw a light in the transom. Hall fired a shot through the transom, and instantly the battle began.
One robber was in the bank, another was stationed behind the bathhouse 150 feet from Hall. The third that held the insurance, arrived.
The count was made at noon and it was found that $240 in gold and $359.10 in silver was missing. The casualty company at once adjusted the loss in money and paid $685 for the safe. It will pay all damage to the building. It took away $125 in currency, torn into pieces by the explosion.
A blood trail led to a place where a horse had been standing. It was later found that the rig was the one stolen from Ghriest.
Officers traced this rig to Olive, where the rig was abandoned.
In 1906, the State bank at Newport was robbed in exactly the same manner. That time the robbers got away without a fight with $1300 in coin, after damaging the bank property $1600 with explosives.
The officers believe that the robbers are three men who have been hanging around there for three days. Where the buggy stood an empty meat can was found. The can was sold to the men at Erickson's store the night previous. Erickson remembers that one of the men had a white eye. One was big and had a black mustache, the other middle-sized, with a light mustache, the third small, round-faced and smooth shaven.
Kemble was taken to Santa Ana by physicians, who said the outcome cannot be told for a day or two.The shots range from the neck to the knees. But a portion of the shot were removed.
AMERICA'S GREAT CANAL
Panama and Erie Have Each Required the Removal of About the Same Quantity of Earth
The total excavation, dry and wet, for the Panama canal as originally planned was estimated at 103,795,000 cubic yards, in addition to the excavation of the French companies. The ing influence over and marshy and have been transferred tributary to it and wholesome and flower garden."
awakened his bar-keeper, Charles Grau, and, Hall dressed only in a nightshirt and pants, and Grau with a bathrobe over his nightshirt, went forth in their bare feet, each armed with pump-guns. Approaching the bank they saw a light in the transom. Hall fired a shot through the transom, and instantly the battle began.
One robber was in the bank, another was stationed behind the bath-house 150 feet from Hall. The third was around on Ocean avenue.
The man behind the bath-house opened fire with a revolver, and fired five shots. Hall crouched behind a drum of gasoline, and gave back shot for shot, and Grau joined in.
Inside the bank, the robber had stowed $2600 in a horse's nosebag. Frightened by the shot, he drop ped the bag and at the same time his revolver went off. He ran from the back door of the bank toward his pal and Hall poured a load at him. The marks on the wall indicate that most of the shot took effect. This was on Twenty-second street. Though the man shot tripped over a wire, he ran on with his companion, back of the hotel to Twenty-third street, and thence to the railroad.
Then the third robber appeared in the action. Bradley Kemble, aged 23, a fisherman, thought the commotion was an alarm of fire, and he ran for the fire ahil. Suddenly from in front of him a man jumped up with revolver leveled at Kemble.
"You keep on running, and run damn fast," snarled the man. Kemble realized he had run into a bank robber, and he ran down Twenty-second street, coming in range of Hall. Thinking the man a robber, Hall yelled "Halt." Kemble had orders from one robber to run, and he thought the order to stop was from another. He ran on, and Hall fired two shots at him, and Kemble fell to the sidewalk, seriously wounded.
Five minutes elapsed and Grau and Hall laid low. They were joined by Reuben Shafer, a fisherman. Grau and Shafer thought to go to Kemble. As they stepped on the sidewalk at the back of G. A. Edgar's house, a man fired at them with a revolver at a distance of twenty feet, and missed. Grau and Shafer ducked into shelter, and the robber disappeared.
Efforts to notify Santa Ana were in vain. The robbers had cut all telephone and telegraph wires. A man rode to Harper's store two miles away and sent the alarm in to awakened his bar-keeper, Charles Grau, and Hall dressed only in a nightshirt and pants, and Grau with a bathrobe over his nightshirt, went forth in their bare feet, each armed with pump-guns. Approaching the bank they saw a light in the transom. Hall fired a shot through the transom, and instantly the battle began.
One robber was in the bank, another was stationed behind the bath-house 150 feet from Hall. The third was around on Ocean avenue.
The man behind the bath-house opened fire with a revolver, and fired five shots. Hall crouched behind a drum of gasoline, and gave back shot for shot, and Grau joined in.
Inside the bank, the robber had stowed $2600 in a horse's nosebag. Frightened by the shot, he drop ped the bag and at the same time his revolver went off. He ran from the back door of the bank toward his pal and Hall poured a load at him. The marks on the wall indicate that most of the shot took effect. This was on Twenty-second street. Though the man shot tripped over a wire, he ran on with his companion, back of the hotel to Twenty-third street, and thence to the railroad.
Then the third robber appeared in the action. Bradley Kemble, aged 23, a fisherman, thought the commotion was an alarm of fire, and he ran for the fire ahil. Suddenly from in front of him a man jumped up with revolver leveled at Kemble.
"You keep on running, and run damn fast," snarled the man. Kemble realized he had run into a bank robber, and he ran down Twenty-second street, coming in range of Hall. Thinking the man a robber, Hall yelled "Halt." Kemble had orders from one robber to run, and he thought the order to stop was from another. He ran on, and Hall fired two shots at him, and Kemble fell to the sidewalk, seriously wounded.
Five minutes elapsed and Grau and Hall laid low. They were joined by Reuben Shafer, a fisherman. Grau and Shafer thought to go to Kemble. As they stepped on the sidewalk at the back of G. A. Edgar's house, a man fired at them with a revolver at a distance of twenty feet, and missed. Grau and Shafer ducked into shelter, and the robber disappeared.
Efforts to notify Santa Ana were in vain. The robbers had cut all telephone and telegraph wires. A man rode to Harper's store two miles away and sent the alarm in to awakened his bar-keeper, Charles Grau, and Hall dressed only in a nightshirt and pants, and Grau with a bathrobe over his nightshirt, went forth in their bare feet, each armed with pump-guns. Approaching the bank they saw a light in the transom. Hall fired a shot through the transom, and instantly the battle began.
One robber was in the bank, another was stationed behind the bath-house 150 feet from Hall. The third was around on Ocean avenue.
The man behind the bath-house opened fire with a revolver, and fired five shots. Hall crouched behind a drum of gasoline, and gave back shot for shot, and Grau joined in.
Inside the bank, the robber had stowed $2600 in a horse's nosebag. Frightened by the shot, he drop ped the bag and at the same time his revolver went off. He ran from the back door of the bank toward his pal and Hall poured a load at him. The marks on the wall indicate that most of the shot took effect. This was on Twenty-second street. Though the man shot tripped over a wire, he ran on with his companion, back of the hotel to Twenty-third street, and thence to the railroad.
Then the third robber appeared in the action. Bradley Kemble, aged 23, a fisherman, thought the commotion was an alarm of fire, and he ran for the fire ahil. Suddenly from in front of him a man jumped up with revolver leveled at Kemble.
"You keep on running, and run damn fast," snarled the man. Kemble realized he had run into a bank robber, and he ran down Twenty-second street, coming in range of Hall. Thinking the man a robber, Hall yelled "Halt." Kemble had orders from one robber to run, and he thought the order to stop was from another. He ran on, and Hall fired two shots at him, and Kemble fell to the sidewalk, seriously wounded.
Five minutes elapsed and Grau and Hall laid low. They were joined by Reuben Shafer, a fisherman. Grau and Shafer thought to go to Kemble. As they stepped on the sidewalk at the back of G. A. Edgar's house, a man fired at them with a revoliver at a distance of twenty feet, and missed. Grau and Shafer ducked into shelter, and the robber disappeared.
Efforts to notify Santa Ana were in vain. The robbers had cut all telephone and telegraph wires. A man rode to Harper's store two miles away and sent the alarm in to awakened his bar-keeper, Charles Grau, and Hall dressed only in a nightshirt and pants, and Grau with a bathrobe over his nightshirt, went forth in their bare feet, each armed with pump-guns. Approaching the bank they saw a light in the transom. Hall fired a shot through the transom, and instantly the battle began.
One robber was in the bank, another was stationed behind the bath-house 150 feet from Hall. The third was around on Ocean avenue.
The man behind the bath-house opened fire with a revolver, and fired five shots. Hall crouched behind a drum of gasoline, and gave back shot for shot, and Grau joined in.
Inside the bank, the robber had stowed $2600 in a horse's nosebag. Frightened by the shot, he drop ped the bag and at the same time his revolver went off. He ran from the back door of the bank toward his pal and Hall poured a load at him. The marks on the wall indicate that most of the shot took effect. This was on Twenty-second street. Though the man shot tripped over a wire, he ran on with his companion, back of the hotel to Twenty-third street, and thence to the railroad.
Then the third robber appeared in the action. Bradley Kemble,aged 23,a fisherman,thoughtthecommotionwasanalarmoffire,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble.
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble.
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble.
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble.
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble."
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble."
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble."
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble."
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble."
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble."
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehadrunintoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleveledatKemble."
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"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhehad.runtoabankrobber,andheranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleduledatKeme
"Youkeeponrunning,andrundamnfast,"snarledtheman.Kemblerealizedhe Had runto abankrobber,and heranforthefireahil.SuddenlyfrominfrontofhimamainjumpedupwithrevolverleduledatKeme
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Reuben Shafer, a fisherman, and Shafer thought to go to Kemble. As they stepped on the sidewalk at the back of G. A. Edgar's house, a man fired at them with a revolver at a distance of twenty feet, and missed. Grau and Shafer ducked into shelter, and the robber disappeared.
Efforts to notify Santa Ana were in vain. The robbers had cut all telephone and telegraph wires. A man rode to Harper's store two miles away and sent the alarm in to Santa Ana at 3:30 o'clock.
Deputy Sheriffs Robert Squires and George Law and Constables C. E. Jackson and F. W. Heard were soon on the hunt in autos.
Examination of the bank showed it to have been wrecked. A bottle of nitroglycerine on the desk and two half-emptied bottles in the rear room were found. The robbers gained entrance by prying open doors with a pickaz and crowbar stolen from J. Landis's blacksmith shop.
The vault door was first broken open with the explosive. Then a tremendous charge was placed in the door of the Mosier screw-door safe, supposed to be burglar proof, and the door of the safe was smashed into a dozen pieces. A piece of it was shot through the vault door, closed to deaden the noise.
The money was thrown into a nose-bag, which was dropped by the robber when the glass of the transom came in with Hall's first shot.
Lew H. Wallace, cashier, allowed nothing to be touched until the detectives of the W. J. Burns agency, in charge of the American Bankers Association work, and representatives of the Maryland Casualty Company,
Dredging 57,676,700 cu. yds, earth excavation 54,989,000, rock excavation 10,806,000, embankment and back filling 9,454,300, total 132,927,300 cubic yards.
"The Chicago drainage canal," said its chief engineer, George M. Wisner, "was the greatest project of its kind in the world, until our Uncle Sam saw fit to dig the Panama canal. To date it has cost $70,000,000, and in the next ten years it will entail an expense of at least $50,000,000 additional. For eighteen miles of its course it was cut through solid rock. The canal required seven years to build and empties into the Illinois river. It is thirty-two miles long, 160 feet wide in its narrowest part and is twenty-four feet deep. It is of enormous utility outside of its sanitary character, for from it is generated the illuminating facilities of Chicago.
"In the next three years we will have 10,000 additional lights, so as to have an arc light at the corner of each street and at the end of each alley. The city gets a saving of $1,500,000 annually on this score, as the price of lighting has been cut from $87 to $38 per light.
"It is not only a great municipal enterprise, but it is of vast national importance, seeing that it is a link in the proposed inland waterways system from the Lakes to the Gulf. The cost of finishing the route from the terminal of the canal to St. Louis will be about $20,000,000. Not only Chicago, but the people along the entire length of the drainage canal have been blessed by its construction. It has exercised a purify-
ING influence over its entire course and marshy and unhealthy lands have been transformed until the region tributary to it has become sweet and wholesome and as pretty as a flower garden."
LIBERTY BELL
Offer to Transport It Without Cpst to San Francisco Fair
The school children of San Francisco and of California will not be called upon to contribute their nickels and dimes toward a transportation fund to bring the famous Liberty Bell to San Francisco for the Panama Pacific international exposition.
The Southern Pacific Company has made an offer to the exposition directors to transport the Liberty Bell from Philadelphia to San Francisco free of charge. The railroad offers to bring the bell out and to give it as much attention throughout the trip as is now given it in its present resting place in Philadelphia.
The state of Pennsylvania values the Liberty Bell as much as it does the history connected with it and the Southern Pacific officials are prepared to see that provisions are fully made for a company of Pennsylvania militia to guard the bell on its long trip across the continent.
The trip of the honored old bell that in 1776 announced the signing of the Declaration of Independence, will be a triumphal procession. At every station in the country where the train stops—and it will have to stop at nearly all of them—thousands of school children and their parents will gather to see the bell that tolled the greatest story that has ever been published in the United States. It is planned to erect a small belfry on a car and to hang the bell in that for the trip across the continent. United States history began with the tolling of Liberty Bell and there is not a native of this great and propagating farm in Balboa park where the exposition nurserymen are busy growing millions of trees, ferns palms and vines for decoration of the exposition grounds. One of the most beautiful of the buildings will be the forum, in imitation of ancient Greek and Roman auditoriums. Three sides will be open through which the sound of the concerts and the addresses of noted lecturers will reach the thousands of listeners seated on the grass and under trees, the whole to be shaded with beautiful and rare trees. A great organ is to be built into this forum; it will be the third building completed, according to the present plans. Over three thousand palm trees have just been planted in the canyons that lead up to the auditorium, over which the spectator may view the ocean, mountains and city, a vista that travellers say equals that at Naples, Italy.
ROSEBERRY LIABILITY LAW
What the Industrial Accident Board Has to Say on Subject
The Roseberry Liability Law is divided into two parts. Part one has to do with "liability for damages," part two with "liability for compensation," but part two does not propose to compensate injured employees fully for the injuries they have sustained, whereas the theory of damages is that there shall be a full recompense for all that the injured person has suffered. The word "compensation," was not fortunately chosen. It would have come nearer the idea to call such recompense as "compensation" affords, an "industrial pension." It was not the fault of Senator Roseberry that a more fortunate designation was not devised. The acceptance of that term because fixed years ago.
A concrete case may help to make this clear. A young man came into the office of the Industrial Accident Board with his left hand reduced to
FAIR WORK CAN BEGIN
First Installment of State's Exposition Tax is Paid In to the State Treasury
Sacramento, Jan. 12.—Rapid and substantial progress toward maturing the plans for the Panama Pacific international exposition to be held in San Francisco in 1915 has been assured through the payment into the State treasury of $851,449.24, representing the first installment of the $5,000,000 exposition tax. The figures were announced today by State Controller Nye, following the semi-annual settlement of county treasurers with the State.
This money has been raised by virtue of the bond issue authorized by the voters of the State. Each year for four years the State is required to raise $1,250,000, and to get that money this year the State Board of Equalization levied a tax of 5 cents on the $100 on all taxable property, including railroads and corporations.
State Comptroller Nye estimates that the first installment represents about two-thirds of the total tax for the year, and on this basis he places the total installment for the first year at $1,277,175.86, or approximately $27,000 more than is required. At all events the 5 cent tax insures the full amount of the first year's installment.
This first installment of more than $800,000 will be available for the use of the exposition directors immediately, and with this working capital it is expected that they will be able to go ahead with their work with a vim. Heretofore what money has been put up has been raised by the directors from their own pockets. They will now be reimbursed for what money they have spent, by filing the pro per claims with the state board of control.
Compensation: under this law would have allowed him 65 per cent of the difference between what he was able to earn before he was hurt and what he "in the exercise of reasonable diligence, probably will be able to earn, the same to be fixed as of the time of the accident."
Berry law, to help the injured over their immediate adversity and give them time to re-establish in some other line of earning power. The only way to secure full compensation for an injury is to sue for it at law, and that suit must be based on the accident being the fault of some one other than that of the person injured.
STATE POWER SITES GRABBED
Startling Assertions Made by Sacramento Expert
Ninety-five per cent of the water power locations in the State of California are not made in good faith nor with the intention of developing energy, according to a statement made at Sacramento by Horace T. Jones, special agent for the Conservation Commission and the conservation board of water power control.
More than 3000 water-power locations have been investigated by the commission and board, and a starting condition has been disclosed.
Valuable water-power sites are being held by the "man-and-a-wheel-barrow" method, and as a consequence development of the power resources of the State is retarded.
Filings are made according to Mr. Jones for the sole purpose of speculation.
The locators of power sit on the locations and wait for some company or interest to come along, and then they cinch the victim, who is out for power with the intention of developing it and turning it into commercial uses.
"Development consists largely," says Jones, "of trails and cabins put up and surveys. Everything is done by the speculator in water rights that can be done easily and without much outlay.
"The usual custom is to have one or two men, with a wheel-barrow or a pick and shovel, stay on the site until it can be ascertained whether..."
EQUALS SIGHTS AT NAPLES
View of Mountains and Ocean At San Diego Fair
San Diego, Jan. 17.—It is with a good deal of pride that San Diego is showing visitors progress on the buildings of the Panama-California exposition, to be held in this city throughout the year 1915. Workmen are busily engaged on the first building, which has just received the roof and is to be completed this spring. It is to be used as the general offices of the exposition company and stands on an eminence in Balboa park almost in the center of the city of San Diego. From its roof one can see a vista of land and sea, 50 miles in all four directions, the purple mountains of Mexico to the south, the Pacific ocean to the west, the Sierras to the east and the coastline to the north.
Workmen also are working on the west entrance, where will be built a memorial arch which the Masonic bodies of the State of California will dedicate next April.
One of the sights of San Diego this winter are the flower gardens
Compensation: under this law would have allowed him 65 per cent of the difference between what he was able to earn before he was hurt and what he "in the exercise of reasonable diligence, probably will be able to earn, the same to be fixed as of the time of the accident." Sixty-five per cent of $15 is $9.75, the amount he would receive per week under "compensation," not for the rest of his life, but only until it had consumed three years average annual earnings. At $27 per week this man would have earned $1350 per industrial year or $4550 as the maximum amount he could receive. Is that a compensation for the injured? Assuredly not, and it does not pretend to be.
What the compensation provisions of the Roseberry law undertake to do is to enable an injured employee to tide over his period of keenest adversity until he can develop an earning capacity in some other line. In the case under consideration if it be assumed that he will be able to earn $12 per week instead of $27, the $9.75 he would receive from his old employer would last him, approximately, 415 weeks or about eight years, by which time he will doubtless be able to keep himself and his family above the poverty line without this aid inasmuch as he will have developed an earning capacity sufficient for his needs.
That, then, is the purpose of the compensation provisions of the Rose-
DO YOUR Phone, Home 2161
PLUMBING
guaranteed. Prices reasonable. See me before letting your next contract.
F. H. GARRISON
BUY
A Rebuilt, Guaranteed PREMIER
These Cars have all been thoroughly over-our shop with new parts where needed fitted and newly equipped. They contain material and will last longer and give greater than any new car of the same price.
OR 7-PASSENGER
$50.00 to $2,500.00
These are bargains. Also one Auburn, one in and one Reo.
We must close these out at once on account stock arriving.
PREMIER MOTOR CAR CO.
L. H. SCHWAEBE, President.
679, F2664 1127 S. Olive St Los Angeles, Cal.
SCHNEIDER BROTHERS
Successors to
F. W. FLEISCHMANN
City Meat Market
FRESH AND CURED MEATS OF ALL KINDS
FRESH BUTTER
WHY Don't You Buy the Best?
We carry in stock at all times nearly every make of Standard Whiskies, Wines, Brandies, Gins and Beers. Remember we are headquarters for the famous Cordova Wines and Brandies.
SWOPE BROS.
California Wine
J. W. Dickenson
GARAGE
Agent for
The OAKLAND
All kinds of Auto Supplies
Repair Work.
Anaheim :: California
J. L. BEEBE, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office and res. cor. Center and Palm Sts
Office hours: 2 to 4,7 to 8 p.m.
Both Phones. ANAHEIM, CAL
Commercial Hotel
FIRST-CLASS DINING ROOM
AND BAR
Handsomely Furnished Rooms
Everything neat and clean
A home for the Traveling Public
A trial will convince.
JOHN ZIEGLER, Manager
W. Harold Wickett, M. D.
Res. Phones, Main 8X3, Home 863.
Herbert A. Johnston, M. D.
Res. Phones, Main 82, Home 862.
Drs. Johnston & Wickett
Office Hours, 11-12, 2-4, 7-8
Office Phones, Main 81, Home 861.
Offices, 310 S. Los Angeles Street.
BUILT OF QUALITY
is the popularity of our lime, cement,
plaster, brick, sand and other materials
with experienced builders. They buy
from us because they know that they are
sure of a square deal and the best materials. You can do no better than to follow their example. They wouldn't buy
here unless it was to their advantage to
do so.
Griffith Lumber Co.
South Los Angeles St.
NEAR SOUTHERN PACIFIC DEPOT
GEO. C. BRYAN, M. D.
Successor to the late Dr. Rich,
FULLERTON, CALIFORNIA
OFFICE HOURS—
10 to 12 a.m; 2 to 4 p.m.; 7 to 8 p.m.
Phones, Pacific 45; Home 62.
Phones, Main 114J
Home 140l
DR. JOHN H. BOEGE
DENTIST
A trial will convince.
JOHN ZIEGLER, Manager
W. Harold Wickett, M.D.
Res. Phones, Main 8X3, Home 863.
Herbert A. Johnston, M.D.
Res. Phones, Main 82, Home 862.
Drs. Johnston & Wickett
Office Hours, 11-12, 2-4, 7-8.
Office Phones, Main 81, Home 861.
Offices, 310 S. Los Angeles Street.
Dr. W. S. McFarlane
VETERINARY SURGEON AND DENTIST
Diseases of Horses, Cattle and Dogs a specialty ...
Office and Hospital corner of Oak and Lemon streets
Phones—Home 1253; Pacific 424 ANAHEIM
LEONARD EVANS
Attorney-at-Law
Special Attention Given Probate Matters
Notary Public. 105 E. Center St.
Pacific Phone 246J Anaheim, Cal
W. E. Cooper A. Shriner
THE NATIONAL MARKET
No. 107 W. Center St.
COOPER & SHRINER, Proprietors
The Best of Beef, Mutton and Pork,
Sausage, Ham, Bacon and Lard.
The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited.
GEO. C. BRYAN, M.D.
Successor to the late Dr. Rich,
FULLERTON, CALIFORNIA
OFFICE HOURS—
10 to 12 a.m; 2 to 4 p.m.; 7 to 8 p.m.
Phones, Pacific 45; Home 62.
Phones, Main 114J 29
Home 140l
DR. JOHN H. BOEGE
DENTIST
Office Mullinix Bl'dg. Hours, 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. 1 to 5 p.m. Evenings by appointment.
OLIVER HILL
City Livery Stables
Fashionable Outfits at Reasonable Rates.
Fall term now open. Enroll immediately. Five experienced instructors.
Attendance limited to 100. Tuition, including books, 40 weeks, $100. Tuition, including books, 80 weeks, $150.
J. W. McCormac, Pres't,
117½ E. SANTA ANA, CAL
H. V. Weisel Roger C. Dutton
WEISEL & DUTTON
Attorneys and Counselors at Law
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN PROBATE MATTERS
German Language Spoken
Notary Public 2d Floor Mullinix-oldg
Pacific Phone 1106 Anaheim, Calif