anaheim-gazette 1912-10-03
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WANT FLAGMEN AT DANGEROUS CROSSINGS
TRUSTEES REJECT PROPOSAL OF SWINGING BELL BY SOUTHERN PACIFIC OFFICIALS
EIGHT BUILDING PERMITS GRANTED AT THURSDAY NIGHT'S MEETING
Both the Santa Fe and the Southern Pacific railways will be compelled to maintain flagmen at the dangerous street crossings if the City Trustees adhere to their present determination of protecting traffic from the many trains passing on those roads. In response to previous action of the board the superintendent of the S. P. requested permission to install a swinging bell at the Los Angeles street crossing, but the board decided that this was little better than a stationary bell, and nothing but a signal man would be sufficient to protect the lives of the hundreds of people passing each day. The City Clerk was instructed to notify the companies to establish flag stations at once. The S. P. signified its willingness to do so but offered the bell at the Los Angeles street crossing as a substitute if acceptable, but the board decided that this was little better than a stationary bell, and nothing but a signal man would be sufficient to protect the lives of the hundreds of people passing each day. The City Clerk was instructed to notify the
SUES HALL FOR $10,000
Man Shot by Mistake in Newport Beach Bank Robbery
Bradley Kemble, a young Newport Beach fisherman, wants $10,000 because U. W. Hall mistook him for a bank robber and fired two loads of birdshot into him on the morning of January 13.
On Friday suit for $10,000 was commenced against Hall by Kemble. Williams and Rutan are attorneys for Kemble, whose complaint states that Hall "Willfully unlawfully, wrongfully and negligently" fired twice at Kemble, and 200 shot were deposited in Kemble's body and limbs. Kemble asserts that there still remain in his flesh 150 shot, that cause him much suffering and blood-poisoning.
It is asserted that before January 13 Kemble was earning $100 a month as a fisherman. For eight months he has been unable to follow his work. His surgeon's bill was $200, and he estimates that it will cost him $500 for surgical fees for the removal of the shot that are still in him.
Kemble alleges that he was a member of the Newport Beach fire department and was on his way to a supposed fire when he was shot, and that it was not due to any want of ordinary care on his part that he was shot.
Kemble's suit is based upon an exciting occurrence at Newport Beach. In the early morning of January 13 Hall's wife was awakened by the explosions of three bank robbers engaged in blowing open the safe of the State Bank of Newport. Hall, keeper of the saloon, aroused his barkeeper, and the two men went forth armed with shotguns.
From behind a gasoline drum, Hall opened fire on the bank. He wounded one robber as he was making his getaway. Kemble was awakened by the shots, and thinking there was a fire,
FOURTEEN FOR WOULD MURDER
MARCELINO ALMERAN FULL LIMIT OF HIS RASH A
SHOT MARSHAL KEMBL TWICE ON THE MOUNT JULY NINTH
Judge West on Thursday sentenced Marcelino Almeran who shot Marshal Keen morning of July 9th, to ten years in San Quentin penance is the extreme law, and Judge West is ing in a private convict was sorry he could not up for a longer period. Ed a plea of guilty Weing and asked for limme Judge West refused to answer, saying he wish the transcript of evidence converse with Kellen passing sentence. He lenberger and the latter Santa Ana Thursday.
After a brief conversion officer, Judge West came into court and passed him. The would-be nothing to say, and took stoically.
Almeras was in an alley in rear of Louie in company of two caroussing on the morn
Eight building permits, one of them within the fire limits, were granted, as follows:
Frame dwelling on Helena street; to Dr. W. S. McFarlane; cost $1,000.
To R. H. Deakins, garage on Adele street; cost $100.
To H. Caruthers, barn on Melrose street; cost $30.
To Charles Schultz, frame dwelling on Sycamore street; cost $1,200.
To Tobin & Schlatter, frame dwelling on North Olive street; cost $1,000.
To Mrs. Rosa Tessman, addition to frame dwelling on East Center street.
To Isabella Hahn, addition to residence on Los Angeles street; cost $300.
To Schneider Brothers, galvanized iron smoke house on Center street; cost $50.
The contract of J. F. Nenno, who for the past year has hauled away the street sweepings, having expired, three bids were received for the coming year, ranging from $50 to $105. The contract was let to H. Bennerscheidt, his bid being $105, which is $65 higher than the previous year.
A petition signed by F. J. Dubbel and others, asking that the Anaheim Union Water Company's ditch on the north side of Santa Ana street, between Olive and Melrose, be covered, was presented to the board, and a subscription sufficient to cover one-forth the cost, accompanied. In accordance with previous agreement with the water company the city pays one-fourth the expense and the water company the balance.
Residents on Pearl street were also present to petition asking that several inches of dust on that thoroughfare be eliminated with oil and two street lights installed. Both petitions were granted, one of the lights being placed at the corner of Pearl and West streets.
Ordinance No. 246, amending the plumbing ordinance, adopted several months ago, was passed by a unanimous vote, also the annual tax rate ordinance both of which will be found in the early morning of January 13 Hall's wife was awakened by the explorions of three bank robbers engaged in blowing open the safe of the State Bank of Newport. Hall, keeper of the saloon, aroused his barkeeper, and the two men went forth armed with shotguns.
From behind a gasoline drum, Hall opened fire on the bank. He wounded one robber as he was making his getaway. Kemble was awakened by the shots, and thinking there was a fire, got out of bed and ran for the fire hall. As he approached the bank, a bandit jumped up, pointed a revolver at him and told him to keep on running. Kemble kept on running. Hall seeing Kemble thought he was a robber. He ordered Kemble to stop, but Kemble kept going. Hall then fired twice and Kemble fell terribly wounded. The robbers made their escape. Several weeks afterward Bill Davis, credited with being one of them, was arrested at El Modena. Davis died at the county jail soon afterward of tuberculosis.
CALIFORNIA APPLE SHOW
Many Counties Preparing to Make Exhibits at Watsonville This Year.
Nineteen counties in the State already have signified their intention of exhibiting apples at the third California Apple Show to be held in Watsonville from October 7 to 12 and this exceeds last year's record by six counties, with prospects of several more entering before the show opens. The counties that will exhibit apples at Watsonville this year are Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Benito, Santa Clara, San Luis Obispo, Sonoma, Mendocino, Humboldt, Nevada, El Dorado, Mono, Inyo, Riverside, Siskiyou, San Diego, Los Angeles, Tuolumne, Modoc and Butte. Humboldt county has appropriated the sum of $1,500 for its exhibit. Tuolumne has a fund of $750, San Luis Obispo has $350 and other counties will be represented by attractive exhibits in neat booths. The arrangement of the exhibit space is such that no one particular exhibit will have any more advantageous location than the rest, some of the counties intend to install feature exhibits. Santa Clara, Monterey, Humboldt and Santa Cruz being in this class. Already 11 feature displays have been signed up and others will be entered within the next week.
YOUTHS WIRELESS OPERATORS
Santa Ana Boys Receive Messages From Ships Miles Away
There are three excellent wireless converse with Kellenberger passing sentence. He will lenberger and the lafter Santa Ana Thursday.
After a brief conversation officer, Judge West came into court and passed him. The would-be nothing to say, and took stoically.
Almeras was in an alley in rear of Louie in company of two or carousing on the morn when Kellenberger was their disturbance. Almera have been in the act of a watch from a Mexican who was in the outhouse Kellenberger approached Almeras issued thereafter at the officer and fire Two shots penetrated right lung, the third flew Kellenberger drew his was unable to use it, hitting temporarily paralysis wounds. Almeras ran alley for a hundred yards a fence and backtrackion of Lemon street thoroughfare he met bicycle. He took the way the lad and rode rapidly on street to Santa Ana he turned west on that He passed through Were proceeded to Buena P captured by Officer P mile beyond Buena Park made seven miles from the shooting. It was tha attempted assassination was finally caught. He of Lino Armendarez.
Kellenberger, covered was taken to a hospital was near death while taking table. The two beracted. Again that nine death and the follow again in a dangerous family was called to physicians fearing he survive. He rallied, he later being in the hospital covered sufficiently to He is again on duty.
The shooting of this created great excitement town. Sheriff Ruddoff telephoned and Deputy Sheriff Squires making a record run for One hundred men in scoured the country for the would-be murder Squires, Officers German tenet and the lad Sm wheel Almeras took f
Residents on Pearl street were also present to petition asking that several inches of dust on that thoroughfare be eliminated with oil and two street lights installed. Both petitions were granted, one of the lights being placed at the corner of Pearl and West streets.
Ordinance No. 246, amending the plumbing ordinance, adopted several months ago, was passed by a unanimous vote, also the annual tax rate ordinance, both of which will be found in this issue of the Gazette. Ordinance No. 249, prohibiting the sale by street vendors of meats, fruits, vegetables and other foodstuffs within certain prescribed limits, failed of passage owing to the absence of Mayor Nebelung. The vote on its passage was a tie, Trustees Gates and Cook voting no, while Stark and Hamler favored it. It will be reconsidered at the next meeting.
Chief of Police Kellenberger asked that he be given an assistant for office work during the tax collecting period as he would, otherwise, be compelled to handle two jobs at once, and public business, consequently, would be delayed. The Board granted him an assistant for the first ten days of October and November.
The City Clerk was instructed to advertise for 1,500 barrels of road oil, the bids to be opened October 24.
The West Anaheim Plumping Plant wants to connect with the municipal power house and purchase from $150 to $200 worth of juice per month. Superintendent Lewis announced that the plant could furnish the power at present but it would soon be taxed to full capacity if the rate of increase was maintained. The matter was laid over.
In the absence of Mayor Nebelung, Trustee Gates occupied the chair.
YOUTHS WIRELESS OPERATORS
Santa Ana Boys Receive Messages From Ships Miles Away
There are three excellent wireless stations in Santa Ana which are owned by boys none of whom are over 19 years of age and who have been their own instructors and manufacturers. These sets are home made with the exception of the telephone receivers.
There are probably a dozen stations in town and all are doing creditable work. Three stations are doing especially good work and have been hearing the wireless telephones at Long Beach and Watts for the last month and one of them heard one from San Francisco last winter. The voices and music come in with remarkable clearness. Besides this, two of these stations have held wireless telegraphic communications with Point Loma, Point Arguello, Mare Island, and probably 100 other land and marine stations. The U. S. S. Florida was heard last winter in the Atlantic ocean, and Norfolk, Va., Key West, Fla., Colon, Panama, Sitka, Alaska, Honolulu, H. I., and boats as far as 3,000 miles at sea were heard on various occasions. These boys have learned to operate their sets and recently two of them passed examinations and secured government certificates of skill in radio-communication.
The politicians all say their funds came from Sunday schools anxious to help on the Kingdom of Heaven, but it takes faith to believe it.
FOURTEEN YEARS FOR WOULD-BE MURDERER
MARCELINO ALMERAS GIVEN THE FULL LIMIT OF LAW FOR HIS RASH ACT
SHOT MARSHAL KELLENBERGER TWICE ON THE MORNING OF JULY NINTH
Judge West on Thursday morning sentenced Marcelino Almeras, the man who shot Marshal Kellenberger the morning of July 9th, to serve 14 years in San Quentin penitentiary. The sentence is the extreme penalty of the law, and Judge West is quoted as saying in a private conversation, that he was sorry he could not send the man up for a longer period. Almeras entered a plea of guilty Wednesday morning and asked for immediate sentence. Judge West refused to comply with his request, saying he wished to look over the transcript of evidence and also to converse with Kellenberger before passing sentence. He telephoned Kellenberger and the latter drove over to Santa Ana Thursday.
After a brief conversation with the officer, Judge West called Almeras into court and passed sentence upon him. The would-be murderer had nothing to say, and took his sentence stoically.
Almeras was in an outhouse in the alley in rear of Louie Kroeger's store in company of two other Mexicans carousing on the morning of July 9th.
MEN FIGHT AT SAN JUAN
Garage Man Fires Five Shots at Blacksmith
As the result of an affray at San Juan Capistrano in which George H. Marshall and Charles Free were the principals, Free is lying on a cot in the county jail with a bullet hole through his left thigh, and Marshall is at the mission town with a fractured skull, his condition being such that it was deemed unwise to attempt to remove him to a hospital.
The men quarreled and fought, with two or three witnesses to the encounter, and according to the best evidence available Marshall was the aggressor.
Free was brought to Santa Ana and placed in the county jail, where examination of his wound showed that the revolver bullet had inflicted merely a flesh wound, the ball going clear through the thigh without touching the bone. He is a blacksmith with a shop at Capistrano, and Marshall conducts a garage at the mission town, in a room of which building he lives and is said to have as a companion a woman who is not his wife.
Free says there had been rumors of an approaching raid of the blind pig district in Capistrano for several days, and some time previous to the fight, which occurred some nights ago, he was told the time had arrived for the coming of the officers, and just in a friendly spirit he started for Marshall's place to warn him of what was expected.
Marshall was sitting at the door of his garage, and when Free opened conversation by asking him if he had heard that a raid was expected, Marshall told him to keep away as he did not want him around the premises.
Marshall also told Free that the latter had been "talking to his girl," and Free replied that so far as he was in-
After a brief conversation with the officer, Judge West called Almeras into court and passed sentence upon him. The would-be murderer had nothing to say, and took his sentence stoically.
Almeras was in an outhouse in the alley in rear of Louie Kroeger's store in company of two other Mexicans carousing on the morning of July 9th when Kellenberger was called to quiet their disturbance. Almeras is said to have been in the act of forcibly taking a watch from a Mexican named Jocobo, who was in the outhouse with him. As Kellenberger approached the outhouse, Almeras issued therefrom, gun leveled at the officer and fired three times. Two shots penetrated Kellenberger's right lung, the third flew past his head. Kellenberger drew his revolver, but was unable to use it, his right arm being temporarily paralyzed from his wounds. Almeras ran east along the alley for a hundred yards, then leaped a fence and backtracked in the direction of Lemon street. On this latter thoroughfare he met a boy upon a bicycle. He took the wheel away from the lad and rode rapidly north on Lemon street to Santa Ana street, where he turned west on that thoroughfare. He passed through West Anaheim and proceeded to Buena Park. He was captured by Officer Phil Germann a mile beyond Buena Park after he had made seven miles from the scene of the shooting. It was three hours after the attempted assassination that he was finally caught. He gave the name of Lino Afmendarez.
Kellenberger, covered with blood, was taken to a hospital in an auto and was near death while upon the operating table. The two bullets were extracted. Again that night he was near death and the following day, being again in a dangerous condition, his family was called to his bedside, physicians fearing he could not long survive. He rallied, however, and after being in the hospital six weeks recovered sufficiently to be taken home. He is again on duty.
The shooting of this popular officer created great excitement throughout town. Sheriff Ruddock was immediately telephoned and he arrived with Deputy Sheriff Squires in 11 minutes, making a record run from Santa Ana. One hundred men in 30 automobiles scoured the country in all directions for the would-be murderer. Deputy Squires, Officers Germann, M. W. Martenet and the lad Smithburn, whose wheel Almeras took from him, drove to Buena Park to search West
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MEDICAL & SURGICAL STAFF
H. A. JOHNSTON, M. D.
J. L. BEEBE, M. D.
GEO. C. CLARK, M. D.
W. W. DAVIS, M.D., Pathologist.
PROF. FRANK BURGFELD,
Hydrotherapist
M. E. Beebe Business Manager; Miss L. Balfour, Assistant
He is again on duty.
The shooting of this popular officer created great excitement throughout town. Sheriff Ruddock was immediately telephoned and he arrived with Deputy Sheriff Squires in 11 minutes, making a record run from Santa Ana. One hundred men in 30 automobiles scoured the country in all directions for the would-be murderer. Deputy Squires, Officers Germann, M. W. Martenet and the lad Smithburn, whose wheel Almeras took from him, drove to Buena Park, after searching West Anaheim. A mile or two west of town they came upon the Mexican's bicycle track and followed it to the park. Here they asked concerning the Mexican and were informed he had passed through a half hour before. The officers made a quick run to the house of a Mexican a mile beyond the park, and as they approached, they saw Almeras entering. The officers quickly surrounded the house and Germann caught him as he was attempting to get away into a corn field. Throwing his gun down upon him, he commanded him to throw up his hands. Almeras complied. Germann took the Mexican's gun from his belt. Almeras was handcuffed and taken to the county jail. His revolver was found to have been reloaded. Under his shirt, strapped about his body, was a belt filled with cartridges.
"Mordecai Judson," roared Colonel White, who had been aroused in the middle of the night by a suspicious noise in his poultry house, "is that you in there, you black thief?" "No, sah!" humbly replied a frightened voice. "Dis is muh cousin, Ink Judson, dat looks so much like me and steals everything he kin lay his dog-gawn han's on. Ah's at home dis minute, sah, uh-sleeping de sleep o' de jest."
The state school fund apportionment to the high schools, separate from the distribution of the sum of $52,071, follows:
Anaheim High school, $1,170.44; Fullerton Union High school, $1,016.37; Huntington Beach Union High school, $842.42; Orange Union High school, $1,314.57; Santa Ana High school, $2,755.81.
The apportionment of money, $52,071, for the common schools, was made as follows:
Alamitos, $300; Anaheim, $5,100; Bolsa, $600; Buena Park, $600; Centralia, $600; Commonwealth, $366; Cypress, $300; Delhi, $600; Diamond, $300; El Modena, $1,200; El Toro, $300; Fairview, $600; Fountain Valley, $600; Fullerton, $2,700; Garden Grove, $1,800; Harper, $300; Huntington Beach, $1,800; Laguna, $300; La Habra, $600; Laurel, $600; Loara, $966; Lowell Joint, $171; Magnolia, $900; Newhope, $600; Newport, $300; Newport Beach, $600; Ocean View, $900; Olinda, $1,500; Olive, $600; Orange, $3,900; Orangethorpe, $600; Peralta, $300; Placentia, $1,200; Randolph, $600; San oaquin, $600; San Juan, $900; Santa Ana, $12,600; Savanna, $300; Serra, $300; Springdale, $300; Trabuco, $300; Tustin, $1,800; Villa Park, $600; Westminster-Chico, $900; Yorba, $600; Yorba-Linda, $300.
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THURSDAY, October 3
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF ANAHEIM
States Depository for the Postal Savings System
Surplus and Undivided Profits, $52,000
Resources over $700,000.00
Directors:
FRANK SHANLEY
A. S. BRADFORD
JOHN HARTUNG
SAMUEL KRAEMER
EDGAR. J. HARTUNG Cashier
City consistent with Sound and Conservative Banking
CENT PAID ON TIME CERTIFICATES
E COUNTY WINE CO.
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J. W. UTTER, M.D.
Office Hours, 2 to 4 p.m.: 7 to 8 p.m.
Phones: Pacific 151J; Home 1712
Office at Residence
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ANAHEIM, CAL.
LEONARD EVANS
Attorney-at-Law
Special Attention Given Probate Matters
Notary Public. 105 E. Center St.
Pacific Phone 246J Anaheim, Cal.
H. V. Weisel Roger C. Dutton
WEISEL & DUTTON
Attorneys and Counselors at Law
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Physician & Surgeon
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Commercial Hotel
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N. M. D.
D.
M. D.
D., Pathologist.
URGFELD,
st
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
S. KRAEMER, Pres.
W. M. WICKETT, Vice-Pres.
C. E. HOLCOMB, Sec'y-Treas.
J. L. BEEBE
H. A. JOHNSTON
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Miss L. Balfour, Assistant Secretary.
Phones, Main 135 R
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DR. JOHN H. BOEGE
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