anaheim-gazette 1913-04-03
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BUILDINGS FOR EXPOSITION UNDER WAY
PALACE OF EDUCATION AND OTHER BUILDINGS TO BE CONSTRUCTED SHORTLY
SEVEN THOUSAND MEN WILL WORK ON BUILDING BEFORE THE SUMMER IS OVER
Dredges are now deepening the Yaht Harbor at San Francisco of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, in preparation for the incoming ships loaded with lumber for the palace of education and other exhibit buildings.
Silt is also being pumped from the harbor to fill in the open space between the piling and the shore line. A temporary plank road has been built through the exposition grounds and it is now possible for visitors to traverse the site from Van Ness avenue to the Presidio.
The progress of the world's fair is now visible. The work is farther advanced at the present time than at any other previous exposition two years before its formal opening.
The preliminary work includes the filling in of lands at Harbor View and the Presidio. The construction of a rock sea-wall; construction of the enclosing fence, 80 per cent complete; the erection of green houses and potting houses at the Presidio; the moving of buildings from the acquired site; the improvement of Fulton basin, now 90 per cent complete; the construction of roadways; the grading of sites for the various buildings; the installation of sanitary and storm sewer systems which of themselves gave no visible evidence of the enormous work already being accomplished.
Seven thousand men will be at work on the exhibits palaces of the exposition before the summer is over. As high as ten thousand men will be employed when the labor peak is reached. This number is exclusive of those who will be employed in the construction of state buildings and foreign pavilions. The states and foreign nations, it is expected, will conform to the pace set by the exposition company in the work of construction.
The plans of the magnificent courts, the designs for the imposing sculpture and the sketches of the mural paintings and decorations are nearing completion. Contracts for many of the groups of statuary and for many of the mural paintings have already been let to prominent artists and sculptors in San Francisco, New York and other cities of the United States. The direction of the color work has been entrusted to Jules Guerin, and Karl Bitter has charge of the sculpture.
One of the horticultural features at the exposition will be "California Canyon," which will be located between the Japanese gardens and horticultural building or north of Lombard street between Baker and Lyon streets.
It will be six hundred feet long and two hundred feet wide. It will be adorned with one thousand red woods, madrones, California lilac, manzanitas and California wild flowers.
A model of this beautiful canyon has been made by the landscape department which is in charge of John McLaren, landscape engineer. The landscape department has been extremely active during the past month. The nursery in Tennessee Hollow, which covers fourteen thousand square feet, is being used to great advantage. There are two hundred and fifty thousand small plants which have been raised from seeds and cuttings in the six green houses and this number is being rapidly increased every day.
O. K. FOR WEI
Residents of the district have filed a supervisors to open highway 40 feet Palm avenue and north to Short avenue one and a quarter sections 9 and 10 sections 3 and 4 lands of J. M. Ranward, W. B. Canfield, R. F. Frantz, Jo Hodson, R. W. Gehrig Mrs. P. M. Wheatham Union Oil Company Cheney.
Suits for divorce: the superior court Jones against The Hausen Station on
Contractor A. E. Daniel, who has been two well-pits for on the Gomber trail week abandoned open encountering too many was dug to a depth to a depth of 111 feet peared before the last special meeting o
The preliminary work includes the filling in of lands at Harbor View and the Presidio. The construction of a rock sea-wall; construction of the enclosing fence, 80 per cent complete; the erection of green houses and potting houses at the Presidio; the moving of buildings from the acquired site; the improvement of Fulton basin, now 90 per cent complete; the construction of roadways; the grading of sites for the various buildings; the installation of sanitary and storm sewer systems throughout the grounds; the preliminary work of installation of the high-pressure water system; the driving of piles for the freight ferry slips at the foot of Buchanan street, and the hundreds of other necessary undertakings.
A model of this beautiful canyon has been made by the landscape department which is in charge of John McLaren, landscape engineer. The landscape department has been extremely active during the past month. The nursery in Tennessee Hollow, which covers fourteen thousand square feet, is being used to great advantage. There are two hundred and fifty thousand small plants which have been raised from seeds and cuttings in the six green houses and this number is being rapidly increased every day.
Governor Tasker L. Oddie of Nevada has approved the bill for one hundred thousand dollars for that state's participation in the exposition.
Nevada was the second state to select a site at the exposition. This ad
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joins the Oregon state site. The Silver State plans to erect a handsome building and make a prominent showing at the coming world's fair.
O. K. FOR WEEK OF APRIL 3
Residents of the La Habra road district have filed a petition asking the supervisors to open and maintain a highway 40 feet wide, beginning at Palm avenue and Ocean, and running north to Short avenue, a distance of one and a quarter miles, south half in sections 9 and 10 and north half in sections 3 and 4. It will cross the lands of J. M. Randell, Rev. N. T. Edward, W. B. Canfield, William Espott, R. F. Frantz, John Leutwiler, Mrs. Hodson, R. W. George, Sargent Bros., Mrs. P. M. Wheatland, A. L. Steward, Union Oil Company and Wallace Cheney.
Suits for divorce have been filed in the superior court by Nannie Ramella Jones against Theophilus Jones.
Suit for divorce instituted by Jules Morel against his wife Lou Dorcas Morel, on alleged grounds of cruelty, was called before Judge West in the superior court at Santa Ana on Tuesday, and the application denied. It was contended by the plaintiff that his wife had filed suit for divorce from him, and in her complaint had made charges against him which were shown to have been untrue, and which had caused him great mental anguish. The wife's action had not been successful, and so the husband retaliated with suit against her. The Morels reside at Hausen Station on the P. E. line.
Contractor A. E. Morlea of San Gabriel, who has been engaged in sinking two well-pits for the water company on the Gomber tract east of town, last week abandoned operations because of encountering too much water. One pit was dug to a depth of 98 feet, the other to a depth of 111 feet. Mr. Morlea appeared before the board of directors at a special meeting on Saturday and ex-
ABALONE SUPPLY MAY BECOME EXTINCT
JAP DIVERS AT LAGUNA BEACH ARE SWEEPING BEDS OF LUSCIOUS MOLLUSK
PROF. EDWARDS MAKES INTERESTING OBSERVATIONS UPON THE SUBJECT IN REPORT
Japanese fishermen have been making such inroads into the abalone supply at Laguna Beach and other points along the Orange county coast that danger exists that this luscious mollusk may soon be exterminated. The Fish and Game Protective Association has taken the matter up and remedial measures will be asked of the legislature.
The abalone is a marine snail which is of great importance because of its beautiful shell, polished as an ornament or manufactured into many kinds of novelties and jewelry. Under our present laws the abalone is being terminated. If we are to save an industry capable of a development and expansion scarcely dreamed of by our citizens, we must enact laws that will do away with the piratical robbery of the sea and substitute therefor a protected aquaculture.
In the commercial fishery of abalones one or more crews are employed, generally made up of Japanese, but sometimes Chinese or American fishermen. The boat containing a crew is either rowed or driven by motor from the camp to the fishing grounds. The crew consists of the diver and his six assistants. When over the right bottom the diver is clothed with his suit, the helmet is screwed upon the shell by cutting away the large central muscle, the attachment of which to the shell forms the rough iridescent scar. The visceral mass and the mantle fringe are trimmed off from the muscle, which is then cut transversally into slices. Each of these small steaks is beaten four or five times with the flat side of a meat cleaver and when fried it is tender and delicious. The abalone is also made into a chowder.
“This mollusk may be shipped across the continent; for when individuals are placed one on top of the other, in a sort of living nest, they will survive for as long as six days without water, and seem to eat the organisms and organic slime covering the shells upon which they rest.”
Preparation of the Dried Abalone—The method of preparing and preserving the abalone in a dried state involves the following processes:
Gathered from the rocks by the diver; removal from the shell; salted for two or three days, in order to remove the pigmented mantle fringe and to preserve the meat; washed in tubs by means of wooden paddles; cooked for one half hour in water almost at the boiling temperature. This is said to give the desired round shape to the meat; laid in trays and placed on frames in the sunshine. The abalone is dried four or five days or even longer, according to the temperature. Cooked in water for the second time; about one hour. Smoked in charcoal smoke from 12 to 24 hours; placed in boiling water for the third time; mainly for rinsing; dried upon the trays for six weeks; a final cleansing bath in lukewarm water; shipped to market, having lost nine-tenthsof the original weight.
A camp of 14 Japanese fishermen gathers 30 tons or more of the fresh abalone in a month. When dried the meat brings from 12 to 14 cents a pound for the green and corrugated species, and from 8 to 10 cents for the black abalone. In 1870, at Avalon, the meat sold at 5 cents a pound. Most of the dried abalone goes to China and those finally sell them abroad.
Contractor A. E. Morlea of San Gabriel, who has been engaged in sinking two well-pits for the water company on the Gomber tract east of town, last week abandoned operations, because of encountering too much water. One pit was dug to a depth of 98 feet, the other to a depth of 111 feet. Mr. Morlea appeared before the board of directors at a special meeting on Saturday and explained his inability to complete the pit, which will be sunk to a depth of probably 120 feet. The water company will probably complete the contract.
If you want anything, get it through a Gazette classified.
In the commercial fishery of abalones one or more crews are employed, generally made up of Japanese, but sometimes Chinese or American fishermen. The boat containing a crew is either rowed or driven by motor from the camp to the fishing grounds. The crew consists of the diver and his six assistants. When over the right bottom the diver is clothed with his suit, the helmet is screwed upon the brass collar, the heavy lead breast and back weights are adjusted, and the air pump is manned. One man takes the diver's signal rope, another the hose from the air pump, and the diver, with a net attached to a rope and his "shucker" in hand, is assisted over the side, climbs down the short ladder, and then drops down through the water. If he finds the abalones plentiful, work is continued in water from 20 to 65 feet deep, in four hour shifts. The man on the boat with the signal rope in hand, follows the course of the diver by the constant stream of air-bubbles rising to the surface. When the kelp is thick one man has a knife on a long pole, with which he cuts the sea-weed and keeps the air-tube clear.
The diver finds it an easy task to detach the abalone from the rock if he pushes the "shucker" under the expanded foot before the animal is alarmed. If, however, the diver hesitates and the abalone contracts its muscular foot a powerful pressure is exerted. One or two cases have been reported of the drowning of Chinese fishermen, who having had their hands caught by the abalone were thus held until overcome by the rising tide.
Prof. Charles Lincoln Edwards, Ph.D., of the University of California, has following to say about his experiences with abalone fishing:
"I have gone down in a diving suit, in company with a Japanese diver; the sudden plunge to a depth of 60 feet gave me a number of unusual sensations, and an attack of caisson-sickness followed the submarine journey, but the experience was wonderful. The bottom of the sea seems made of grains of gold and silver, shimmering in the penetrating rays of sunlight. Upon the face of a precipice, large specimens of the green and corrugated abalones rest. The shell of each is covered with a luxuriant growth of algae, hydroids and tentacled tube-worms, which mask the creature from its enemies. All about are large fish which swim close and peer through the glass window of the helmet. An enormous stingray drifts indifferently by. One has a fellow feeling with do away with the piratical robbery of the sea and substitute therefor a protected aquaculture.
In the commercial fishery of abalones one or more crews are employed, generally made up of Japanese, but sometimes Chinese or American fishermen. The boat containing a crew is either rowed or driven by motor from the camp to the fishing grounds. The crew consists of the diver and his six assistants. When over the right bottom the diver is clothed with his suit, the helmet is screwed upon the brass collar, the heavy lead breast and back weights are adjusted, and the air pump is manned. One man takes the diver's signal rope, another the hose from the air pump, and the diver, with a net attached to a rope and his "shucker" in hand, is assisted over the side, climbs down the short ladder, and then drops down through the water. If he finds the abalones plentiful, work is continued in water from 20 to 65 feet deep, in four hour shifts. The man on the boat with the signal rope in hand, follows the course of the diver by the constant stream of air-bubbles rising to the surface. When the kelp is thick one man has a knife on a long pole, with which he cuts the sea-weed and keeps the air-tube clear.
The diver finds it an easy task to detach the abalone from the rock if he pushes the "shucker" under the expanded foot before the animal is alarmed. If, however, the diver hesitates and the abalone contracts its muscular foot a powerful pressure is exerted. One or two cases have been reported of the drowning of Chinese fishermen, who having had their hands caught by the abalone were thus held until overcome by the rising tide.
Prof. Charles Lincoln Edwards, Ph.D., of the University of California, has following to say about his experiences with abalone fishing:
"I have gone down in a diving suit, in company with a Japanese diver; the sudden plunge to a depth of 60 feet gave me a number of unusual sensations, and an attack of caisson-sickness followed the submarine journey, but the experience was wonderful. The bottom of the sea seems made of grains of gold and silver, shimmering in the penetrating rays of sunlight. Upon the face of a precipice, large specimens of the green and corrugated abalones rest. The shell of each is covered with a luxuriant growth of algae, hydroids and tentacled tube-worms, which mask the creature from its enemies. All about are large fish which swim close and peer through the glass window of the helmet. An enormous stingray drifts indifferently by. One has a fellow feeling with do away with the piratical robbery of the sea and substitute therefor a protected aquaculture."
In the commercial fishery of abalones one or more crews are employed, generally made up of Japanese, but sometimes Chinese or American fishermen. The boat containing a crew is either rowed or driven by motor from the camp to the fishing grounds. The crew consists of the diver and his six assistants. When over the right bottom the diver is clothed with his suit, the helmet is screwed upon the brass collar, the heavy lead breast and back weights are adjusted, and the air pump is manned. One man takes the diver's signal rope, another the hose from the air pump, and the diver, with a net attached to a rope and his "shucker" in hand, is assisted over the side, climbs down the short ladder, and then drops down through the water. If he finds the abalones plentiful, work is continued in water from 20 to 65 feet deep, in four hour shifts. The man on the boat with the signal rope in hand, follows the course of the diver by the constant stream of air-bubbles rising to the surface. When the kelp is thick one man has a knife on a long pole, with which he cuts the sea-weed and keeps the air-tube clear.
The diver finds it an easy task to detach the abalone from the rock if he pushes the "shucker" under the expanded foot before the animal is alarmed. If, however, the diver hesitates and the abalone contracts its muscular foot a powerful pressure is exerted. One or two cases have been reported of the drowning of Chinese fishermen, who having had their hands caught by the abalone were thus held until overcome by the rising tide.
Prof. Charles Lincoln Edwards, Ph.D., of the University of California, has following to say about his experiences with abalone fishing:
"I have gone down in a diving suit, in company with a Japanese diver;the sudden plunge to a depth of 60 feet gave me a number of unusual sensations,and an attack of caisson-sickness followedthe submarine journey,butthe experience was wonderful.The bottomoftheseaseemmadeofgrainsofgoldandsilver,shimmeringinthepenetratingraysofsunlight.Uponthefaceofaprecipice,大specimensofthegreenandcorrugatedabalonesrest.Theshellofeachiscoveredwitha Luxuriantgrowthofalgae,hydroidsandtentacledtube-wormswhichmaskthecreaturefromitseniemies.Allaboutarelargefishwhichswimcloseandpeerthroughtheglasswindowofthelhelm.Anenormousstingraydriftsindifferentlyby.Onehasafellowfeelingwithdoawaywiththepiraticalrobberyoftheseaandsubstitutethereforaprotectedaquaculture."
In this commercial fishery of abalones one or more crews are employed generally made up of Japanese but sometimes Chinese or American fishermen. The boat containing a crew is either rowed or driven by motor fromthecamptothefishinggrounds.Thecrewconsistsofthediverandhissixassistants。Whenovertherightbottomthediverisclothedwithhissuit,thehelmetis screweduponthebrasscollar,theheavyleadbreastandbackweightsareadjusted,andtheairpumpismanned。一人mantakesthediver'ssignaloftroverandhishosefromtheairpump,andthediver,以anetattachedtoaropeandhis"shuckerc"inhand,是assistedovertheside,climbsdowntheshortladder,andthendropsdownthroughthewater。Ifhefindstheabalonesplentifulworkiscontinuedinwaterfrom20to65feetdeep,intowhilehoursshiftsthediverbytheconstantstreamofair-bubblesrisingtothesurface。Whenthekelpisl厚onemanhasah knifeonalongpolewithwhichhecutsthesea-weedandkeepstheair-tubeclear。
The diver finds it an easy task to detach the abalone from the rock if he pushes the "shuckerc"undertheexpandedfootbeforetheanimalisalarmed。Ifhowever,thediverhesitutedofthediverbytheconstantstreamofair-bubblesrisingtothesurface。Whenthekelpisl厚onemanhasah knifeonalongpolewithwhichhecutsthesea-weedandkeepstheair-tubeclear。
The diver finds it an easy task to detach the abalone from the rock if he pushes the "shuckerc"undertheexpandedfootbeforetheanimalisalarmed。Ifhowever,thediverhesitutedofthediverbytheconstantstreamofair-bubblesrisingtothesurface。Whenthekelpisl厚onemanhasah knifeonalongpolewithwhichhecutsthesea-weedandkeepstheair-tubeclear。
The diver finds it an easy task to detach the abalone from the rock if he pushes the "shuckerc"undertheexpandedfootbeforetheanimalisalarmed。Ifhowever,thediverhesitutedofthediverbytheconstantstreamofair-bubblesrisingtothesurface。Whenthekelpisl厚onemanhasah knifeonalongpolewithwhichhecutsthesea-weedandkeepstheair-tubeclear。
The diver finds it an easy task to detach the abalone from the rock if he pushes the "shuckerc"undertheexpandedfootbeforetheanimalisalarmed。Ifhowever,thediverhesitutedofthediverbytheconstantstreamofair-bubblesrisingtothesurface。Whenthekelpisl厚onemanhasah knifeonalongpolewithwhichhecutsthesea-weedandkeepstheair-tubeclear。
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BAD CHECK PASSER EXAMINED
Theodore E. Brueckner, who is declared by 'the authorities' to be one of 'the most notorious bad-check passers' in 'the country,' was given his preliminary examination before Justice of 'the Peace Cox last week' and held in $2,000 bail to await trial in 'the superior court' on-the-charge-of having issued a non-fund check to H.H.Kelley'of 'the Cadillac garage' a few weeks ago.Bruceckner was arrested while he was traveling under 'the name' of J.T.Marshallman.At his examination he declared that his true name was Brueckner.He was without an attorney and made a feeble attempt to cross-examine 'the witnesses' who testified for 'the prosecution'.These witnesses were Mr.Kays,'an official' of 'the Park Bank of Los Angeles,' upon which institution 'the worthless check' was drawn; H.H.Kelley,'a garage director'; Charles Lowe,'an employee' of 'the garage' who accepted 'the paper'; and a young man named Walker who saw 'the check drawn' and given in payment for supplies purchased by 'the prisoner'.These included an auto tire,'inner tube,'jack and pump.'The check was for $84.
In Los Angeles Brueckner posed as W.B.Higgins.For more than a year and a half every detective agency in that city,'including 'the police,' searched day and night for him.
Brueckner first came under 'the observation' of 'the police almost three years ago,' when he lived at No. 615 New Hampshire street,'Los Angeles.He was arrested by a Harris detective for passing a small check on a South Broadway store.He presented it in payment for a pair of baby shoes.Bruceckner escaped prosecution because 'the clerk' was not positive in his identification.Some weeks later police detectives sent Brueckner to jail for six months for crooked check work
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bottom of the sea seems made of grains of gold and silver, shimmering in the penetrating rays of sunlight. Upon the face of a precipice, large specimens of the green and corrugated abalones rest. The shell of each is covered with a luxuriant growth of algae, hydroids and tentacled tube-worms, which mask the creature from its enemies. All about are large fish which swim close and peer through the glass window of the helmet. An enormous stingray drifts indifferently by. One has a fellow feeling with these denizens of the deep in the fascination of observing their behavior under natural conditions.
"The diver secures a net full of abalones, gives the signal, and the mollusks are hoisted aboard the boat and stowed below. I have seen the diver send the net up, filled with about 50 green and corrugated abalones, every six or seven minutes. During his shift below the diver gathers from 30 to 40 basketfuls, each containing 100 pounds of meat and shell, or altogether one and one half or two tons.
"Sometimes a crew is composed of six divers who work without diving suits up to a depth of 20 feet; some of them remain under water for as long as two minutes. These expert swimmers protect their eyes with glasses and wear cotton in their ears. They pry off the abalones with a 'shucker,' often filling their arms on the way to the boat. Every two hours they return to the launch to be warmed at the fire. It takes the united efforts of these six men to equal the catch of one diver in a suit.
"In the preparation of fresh abalone as food, the meat is removed from the day and night for him.
Brueckner first came under the observation of the police almost three years ago, when he lived at No. 615 New Hampshire street, Los Angeles. He was arrested by a Harris detective for passing a small check on a South Broadway store. He presented it in payment for a pair of baby shoes. Brueckner escaped prosecution because the clerk was not positive in his identification. Some weeks later police detectives sent Brueckner to jail for six months for crooked check work. Nothing was heard from Brueckner for several months after his release. Then saloons all over Los Angeles and some of the department stores complained to the police that a man giving the name of Higgins was stinging them with bad checks. For 18 months the man worked without falling into the many traps laid for him.
For better work and service send your laundry to the Anaheim Laundry Company
Under new management. Wagons call any place at any time.
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Thursday, April 3
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It may be early. But we have again purchased the entire line of samples from Simmon’s Hardware Co. at less than factory price, and give the public the benefit of our buy. Make your selection while the stock is complete.
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Own a Farm in Tulare County
Pay one-fourth cash ($700 to $1,000 on 20 acres), balance in 1919. Diversified crops are the farmer's safe-guard. Yields of $100 to $800 an acre are realized from brances, olives, peaches, figs, seedless grapes, melons, berries, Turkish tobacco, alfalfa, etc., etc.
The Orosi district is safe for oranges. The navel crop is shipped by December 15th.
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Finest of Wines, Liquors and Cigars, at Roman Wisser's Favorite - Saloon Schlitz Beer on Draught
"The memory of quality lasts long after the price has been forgotten."
"San Diego" beer is on sale in every cafe in the City of Los Angeles; in fact, it has taken the lead amongst high class beers.
All wholesale dealers in Anaheim sell it in bottles and the Germania Hall saloon has it on draught.
There will be no frost or failure for the housewife if you use Sperry's Best Family Flour. Include in your next order on your grocer a sack of Sperry Flour.
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Pianos! Pianos!
C. T. Webber & Son
HAVE several bargains in used Pianos,
taken in exchange for Player Pianos.
We have a few Pianos that we can sell for
$100, $125, $150; these pianos are fully
guaranteed by us. Suitable terms can be
arranged upon application. The public is
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C. T. WEBBER & SON
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West of Jansen's Bakery, Casson Building