oc-plain-dealer 1924-06-16
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GROWTH OF LINAHEIM SHOWN BY CENSUS
Total for 1910 was ..... 2,628
For year 1920 was ..... 5,525
Today Estimated at ..... 12,000
Mall your Plain Dealer to Eastern friends. It may bring them to Anaheim, fastest growing city in Orange County.
PRICE Three Cents Per Copy $3 year in No. Orange-co.
TWO KILLED, MAN
Startling Contradictions in Test
DEAD MAN'S HAND FIRED 2ND GUN
Officers Had Testified Electric Current Had Been Switched Off
LOS ANGELES, June 16.—The limp hand of a dead man, one of the 48 bluejackets killed in the
Equal Rights Gets Smoker for Women
CHICAGO, June 16.—Equal rights for women took another step forward today when the Illinois Central Railroad attached to its St. Louis-Chicago daylight special a lounge and smoking car for women.
They may smoke there to their heart's content without fear of intrusion from men, railway officials stated. The car will be a regular part of the train in the future.
SLEMP WILL NOT QUIT, HE SAYS
I.W.W. GIVEN TAR PARTY
Issues Official Statement After Persistent Reports
WASHINGTON, June 16.—The dissension and internal warfare that broke out between President Caldwell's campaign manager
Officers Had Testified Electric Current Had Been Switched Off
LOS ANGELES, June 16—The limp hand of a dead man, one of the 48 bluejackets killed in the U.S. S. Mississippi, fired the second gun after the dreadnaught had sped to Los Angeles harbor with its dead and dying, injuring sailors and endangering the lives of hundreds of the passengers on the steamship Yale, it was shown conclusively in testimony given today before the naval board of inquiry probing the blast.
Faces of the members of the board of inquiry paled when the testimony was offered for it came in direct contradiction to testimony of navy officers to the effect that the electric current controlling the firing of the big gun was "dead" when the Yale was narrowly missed by a mysterious shot.
George Clarence Ogletree, seaman first class, member of the squad of reguarns which carried the dead gunners from turret No.2 on the ill-fated man-of-war testified the hand of a corpse he had in his arms struck the firing control switch which shot the second gun, seriously wounding several sailors standing on the bridge.
There followed a heavy shock and explosion which knocked him senseless, the seaman testified. When he recovered a few seconds later, an officer ran to the firing control and threw the safety switch.
Walter C. Ebel, turret captain, first class, corroborated Ogletree's testimony.
Rumors, widely circulated about the harbor, that the second gun which fired the second blast had been tampered with to "cover up" between the time the bodies were taken from the ship and examination of the Mississippi by navy board members, were strongly denied today by navy officers. They said the turret had been under heavy guard since the time of the first explosion.
GUARD BODIES OF BLAST VICTIMS
SAN PEDRO, June 16—Armed military and police guards stood watch in San Pedro today over the morgue where the bodies of the 48 gunners killed in the U.S. S. Mississippi explosion are resting, following storming of the morgue.
I.W.W.GIVEN TAR PARTY IN CANYON
Seven men, I. W. W.s, were taken Saturday night to Santa Ana canyon by men in the navy and tarred and feathered, passed thru Anaheim about 5 a.m.yesterday, according to Al Pape, private patrolman of the business district.
They had been picked up by some one in a Ford car and were on their way back to San Pedro or vicinity.
The I. W. W.headquarters were raided Saturday-night by a mob. Nine persons were taken to hospitals for treatment after the row. Two of them were small children, who had been scalded when a coffee urn upset. Another was a woman who is said to have fought the attackers.
The I. W. W.'s retaliated for the wrecking of their headquarters, part of the furniture of which was burned, by storming the nearby Cleveland undertaking parulors where the bodies of the dead in the turret tragedy aboard the Mississippi had been taken.
Captain Hagebaugh addressed the I. W. W.'s and told them he regretted deeply the raid and tar and feathering.
Deputy Sheriff Ed McClellan learned from O. E. Lemos, auto service man who lives near the spot, that the victims were made to remove all their clothes. Cold, but thin, tar then was spread and a quantity of feathers administered.
Lemos was attrated to the scene, he said, and saw what happened, but he soon was ordered to leave.
The officers found two five-gallon tar cans, four suits of underwear and other clothing. They also found a card marked,"Admission to the chamber of horrors, special entertainment."
WASHINGTON, June 16—The dissension and internal warfare that broke out between President Coilidge's campaign managers and advisers at Cleveland over the management of the national convention culminated today in O.Basecon Slemp, secretary to the president, issuing a formal statement denying he was contemplating resigning his post.
This statement was issued by Mr. Slemp at noon after reports were persistently circulated through Washington during the morning that Slemp had decided to quit.
No official statement was to be had at the White House concerning these reports until the conclusion of a conference between the president and his secretary after which this statement was made by Slemp:
"I am leaving this afternoon for Cincinnati to be present at an operation to be performed on my return is in a certain sense, or account of this, indefinite."
When I do return I expect to be actively associated in the campaign and in the present position which I have not resigned.
In all probability I will be on the advisory committee of the national Republican committee which will have the real management of the campaign."
Especial significance was laid on the sentence of Slemp's statement as indicating that his advisory committee and not William D. Butler, the Massachusetts capitalist, is to have the determining police in the management of the Republican congress.
This represents, in effect, a least a partial victory for the online Republican leaders who revolt at Cleveland and refused to follow Butler's leadership or take his orders.
Slemp was among those at Cleveland who rebelled at Butler's management and left the convention before the nomination of General Charles G. Dawes.
Slemp, according to persistent reports, returned from Cleveland prepared to resign if President Coilidge intended allowing Butler to latitude in the campaign that the New England mill owner exercised at Cleveland. It is understood he even put his resignation in writing.
GUARD BODIES OF BLAST VICTIMS
SAN PEDRO, June 16—Armed military and police guards stood watch in San Pedro today over the morgue where the bodies of the 48 gunners killed in the U. S. S. Mississippi explosion are resting, following storming of the morgue and threats to blow it up by alleged I. W. W. members.
Police and sailor guards were rushed to the morgue after police led by Officer W. L. Beard, had dispersed an alleged I. W. W. mob and frustrated a plot to blast the building.
The plot, according to police, was to average breaking up of a meeting Saturday night in I. W. W. hall, when 300 citizens and sailors wrecked the building. Six of the alleged radicals were beaten and then tarred and feathered.
The authorities said today the "radicals" and sailors had been warring for weeks, following the cutting of a sailor from the I. W. W. hall, because, it was claimed, he resented attacks on the American navy and the flag.
LOS ANGELES, June 16—Eighteen witnesses were examined when the naval board investigated the explosion which killed 48 blue jackets on the U. S. S. Mississippi resumed its sessions here today.
Eight witnesses from the U. S. S. Mississippi will be examined first so that the man of war may leave as soon as possible to undergo repairs at Mare Island Navy Yard, San Francisco Bay. The other witnesses are from the crew of the U. S. S. New Mexico, engaged in target practice with the Mississippi at the time of the explosion.
The high naval officers of the investigating board were confronted today with three possible theories for the blasting. First, that it was caused by a defective (Continued on Page Six)
GUARD BODIES OF BLAST VICTIMS
SAN PEDRO, June 16—Armed military and police guards stood watch in San Pedro today over the morgue where the bodies of the 48 gunners killed in the U. S. S. Mississippi explosion are resting, following storming of the morgue and threats to blow it up by alleged I. W. W. members.
Police and sailor guards were rushed to the morgue after police led by Officer W. L. Beard, had dispersed an alleged I. W. W. mob and frustrated a plot to blast the building.
The plot, according to police, was to average breaking up of a meeting Saturday night in I. W. W. hall, when 300 citizens and sailors wrecked the building. Six of the alleged radicals were beaten and then tarred and feathered.
The authorities said today the "radicals" and sailors had been warring for weeks, following the cutting of a sailor from the I. W. W. hall, because, it was claimed, he resented attacks on the American navy and the flag.
LOS ANGELES, June 16—Eighteen witnesses were examined when the naval board investigated the explosion which killed 48 blue jackets on the U. S. S. Mississippi resumed its sessions here today.
Eight witnesses from the U. S. S. Mississippi will be examined first so that the man of war may leave as soon as possible to undergo repairs at Mare Island Navy Yard, San Francisco Bay. The other witnesses are from the crew of the U. S. S. New Mexico, engaged in target practice with the Mississippi at the time of the explosion.
The high naval officers of the investigating board were confronted today with three possible theories for the blasting. First, that it was caused by a defective (Continued on Page Six)
WRITER ARRESTED
J. I. O'Donohoe, a writer, and Pedro Riges, and Jack O'Brien, actors, all of Hollywood, were pickled up yesterday by the Fulerton police on the charge of transporting liquor. They were released on a combined ball of $300, and cited to appear for a preliminary hearing on June 17.
BANDITS GET $8000
DETROIT, June 16—Four bandits this afternoon held up a payroll car of the Walker Sign Co., shot the driver, Kimmett Davis, in the arm, and escaped with $8,000 in cash and $16,000 in checks.
KUCHEL FINES FOUR DRUNKS $50 EACH
Four drunks were fined $ each today by Judge Charles Kuchel—Tony Ramerez, Joe Ames, Alex Celaya and Julio Mopez. Celaya was locked up under he could raise the money. Mezdez, because of his family, will let off.
May Be It Wasn't Chemical Cover That Made That Smell After All
No. Mabel, Fred Cowan of the Ideal Pool room, did not strangle any poor 'werrin' goll" and conceal her body in the rear of his auto. Humph-umph! You will have to guess again.
It's nothing but cow meat. Fred tells his small son, who quizzed him about the offensive odor which the car emits; somehow different from gas that investigation proved it only to be three misplaced, long-lost packages of meat. Fred like a duckful man, takes his meat home and places it on the kitchen table there are three other husbands somewhere in the vicinity of Anheim who do not Fred's cloacations are that the package were thrown in the wrong car it's too far from Thanksgiving expect a Salvation Army donation Fred dug a hole deep hole in back yard this morning buried superfluous packages...
FULL REPORT OF INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE—FIRST LEASED WIRE IN ANAHEIM
THE ORANGE COUNTY
lain Dealer
LEADING NEWSPAPER OF NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY
Anaheim, California, Monday, June 16, 1924
MANY HURT IN COUNTRY
in Testimony Before Naval Board I
EMP WILL QUIT, ESAYS
Official Statement After Persistent Reports
Count Broke, Can't Rejoin Rich Wife
BERLIN, June 16—Count Ludwig Salm Von Hoogstaeten, Austrian nobleman who married Miss Milicent Rogers of New York, heiress to a $40,000,000 Standard Oil fortune, is "broke".
The count's plight was revealed today by his friend, Mile. Lyia De Puzi, beautiful Hungarian moving picture actress. It is understood that the count wishes to follow his bride of six months to the United States, but is prevented by the temporary financial embarrassment.
"When he arrived in Berlin, Count Salm had money, but he spent it," said Mile. De Puttn. He first told me that he did not accompany the countess with her father, five weeks ago, because he wanted to remain in Europe to play tennis in the Olympic eliminations."
BATTLESHIP W. VIRGINIA AGROUND
Dreadnaught Had Pulled Anchor with Olympic Entries From Navy
WASHINGTON, June 16—The battleship West Virginia, one of the navy's newest dreadnaughts, and sister ship of the Colorado,
Defense Will Franks' Slave
CHICAGO, June 14—Loeb and Nathan Leopold slayers of Robert Frank, abnormal, according to primary reports of the first medical experts to test the young county jail.
They should not hang, opinion of these experts will be the ground work on the defense will build.
Dr. Karl Bowman, Bosthistian and ductless glapert, probably will be the first defense witness and will his findings from the exhibits he made on the county jail.
Instruments with names as the phrases which trial will make current hail
WOMAN SUES DENTIST FOR LARGE SUM
Dr. William A. Flood, Santa Ana dentist, today was sued by Helen Simons of Santa Ana, who asked 25,000 damages because of alleged neglect in the treatment of her teeth.
With an "impacted wisdom" tooth, the defendant, in her complaint, recited that she visited Dr. Flood Feb. 24. In attempting to extract the tooth the dentist crushed off the top of the tooth and left the root unmoved, she charged. In attempting to extract the root the dentist caused the crushed top of the tooth to become imbedded in her gum with the result that her jaw was fractured, she charged.
Miss Simons recited that she was not aware of conditions until seven weeks after the experience in Dr. Flood's office, when she secured an X-ray of her mouth.
Some Circulation Statistics:
Number of Homes Taking Plain Dealer 1209
Number of homes not taking Plain Dealer, but taking Bulletin, 171
Number of Homes Checked to date - - 1380
AGNOUND
Dreadnaught Had Pulled Anchor with Olympic Entries From Navy
WASHINGTON, June 16.—The battleship West Virginia, one of the navy’s newest dreadnaughts, and sister ship of the Colorado, went aground this afternoon in North Channel in Hampton Roads, according to a wireless message to the navy department.
No damage was done the vessel, the message said.
The skipper was waiting for high tide to see if the man, of war could be floated without the aid of a fleet of tugs.
The West Virginia had weighed anchor for France, whither it is taking the navy’s athletes to compete in the Olympic games.
The channel thru which it was passing is shallow at low tide.
THIEF KINDLY RETURNS TROUSERS
Fred Willis, 204 W. Center at, is minus $19.60 this morning. During the night an intruder entered his room and carried off his trousers containing that sum of money. He was awakened this morning by one of the roomers at that address who asked him if a pair of trousers lying at the foot of the stairs were his. The pocketbook sans the money was found in the back yard.
NAVY PAYMASTER BROUGHT TO TRIAL
SAN DIEGO, June 16.—Lieut. Ervine R. Brown, navy paymaster, was brot to trial before a general court martial at 10 a.m. today.
Brown is charged with having been $120,000 “short.”
In round figures $100,000 has been recovered by the navy. The paymaster’s wife returned $80,-000 in greenbacks without his knowledge, and some $20,000 was found in a safe deposit vault in Wyoming.
FOREST FIRE THreaten CAMPERS
LOS ANGELES, June 16.—Serious forest fire, which shortly after noon today enclosed Canyon, on the rear Lake Arrowhead, was late this afternoon to be thrush several canyons and threatening the lives of men and campers, according to motion received here from Bernardino.
Fanned by a brisk wind the fire was beyond all it was stated. A squad of cycle officers was rushed violently to stop all auto traffic on both sides of the road and other officers combed eagle-eyed canyons to warn cars rush to safety.
One hundred fire fighters a battle against the blaze on aeral hundred more were the fire this afternoon.
KEENAN TO REVEAL
LOS ANGELES, June 16. Frank Keenan, coelbrate and screen actor, whose less than two months ago audience at the Writer’s Hollywood while Keenan acted a dramatic role, is by a young Los Angeles Miss Margaret White, able to a well authenticated rea film colony today.
Keenan is now in Honors BRITISH PAYING
WASHINGTON-June Great Britain paid $68,655 its $4,600,000,000 debt United States today at
Some Circulation Statistics:
Number of Homes Taking Plain Dealer 1209
Number of homes not taking Plain Dealer, but taking Bulletin, 171
Number of Homes Checked to date - - 1380
ADELE STREET
House Number
Plain Dealer 423
No report 411
Plain Dealer 407
House Number
424 Apt. 1 Plain Dealer
Apt. 2 Plain Dealer
Apt. 3 Plain Dealer
Apt. 4 Plain Dealer
Apt. 5 Plain Dealer
Apt. 6 Plain Dealer
Apt. 7 Plain Dealer
Apt. 8 Plain Dealer
Apt. 9 Plain Dealer
Apt. 10 Plain Dealer
Apt. 11 Plain Dealer
Apt. 12 Plain Dealer
Apt. 13 Plain Dealer
Apt. 14 Plain Dealer
Apt. 15 Plain Dealer
Apt. 16 Plain Dealer
Apt. 17 Plain Dealer
Apt. 18 Plain Dealer
Apt. 19 Plain Dealer
Apt. 20 Plain Dealer
Apt. 21 Plain Dealer
Apt. 22 Plain Dealer
Apt. 23 Plain Dealer
Apt. 24 Plain Dealer
Apt. 25 Plain Dealer
418 Vacant
416 Vacant
412 Plain Dealer
408 Plain Dealer
406 Plain Dealer
404 No local paper
In the 400 block on North Los Angeles Street there are a total of 34 homes. The PLAIN DEALER IS TAKEN AND READ in 30 of these homes.
Now read the report of the homes which the Plain Dealer does not enter:
One no local paper, none take Bulletin, two vacant and one no report.
In the 60 districts checked to date there are 1380 local papers read, and The Plain Dealer is read in 1209 out of the 1380 homes, or $8 per cent.
Total number of homes taking local papers ... 1380
Number of Plain Dealers taken in the 60 districts checked ... 1209
Number of homes not taking Plain Dealer, but taking Bulletin, ... 171
Anyone interested, of course, can check up on the correctness of the above statements.
WATCH THIS SPACE DAILY
BRITISH PAYING
WASHINGTON-June Great Britain paid $68,655 its $4,600,000,000 debt United States today at the York Federal Reserve Bank.
The payments consisted of 000,000 in U.S. government curricules and the remainder cash.
Finland made a payout $134,325.
WATER AND POINT
ACT UPON BANK
Solemn Military Explosion
LOS ANGELES, June eenn military tribute with the memorial services he day for the 48 U.S.S.M. explosion victims, account plains made today.
This afternoon the body be removed to a field over the sea. There the flask caskets of the enlisted men placed in five rows and will rest the bodies of the officers.
Full crews from the Mississippi and New Mexico from seven other navy naughts will attend with the east officials of the navy Pacific coast.
Following the reading...
IN ANAHEIM
aler
COUNTY
PROGRESS OF ANAHEIM AS
TOLD BY BUILDING
Year Permits Total
1923 823 $2,269,271
1922 675 1,413,045
1921 564 1,253,870
1920 362 279,950
1919 174 464,509
Fair and warmer tonight and Tuesday.
COUNTY SUNDAY
Board Probing Gun Explosion
defense Will Attempt to Show Franks' Slayers Are Abnormal
CHICAGO, June 14.—Richard Webb and Nathan Leopold, Jr., members of Robert Frank, 13, are normal, according to preliminary reports of the first of several experts to test the youths at the county jail. They should not hang, is the union of these experts, which will be the ground work on which defense will build.
Dr. Karl Bowman, Boston psychiatrist and ductless gland expert, probably will be the first defense witness and will present findings from the exhaustive tests he made on the boys at the county jail.
Instruments with as strange times as the phrases which the real will make current have been used in the tests, which continued today. The metabolimeter, which measures oxygene concentration through re-breathing processes and determines the action of certain glands, has had its inning; today the plethysmograph will be brot out. It measures mental disturbances as a seismograph records earth disturbances. Loeb has accepted the tests with good nature. Leopold, the ego-centric, resents being made laughable in the eyes of the public.
"I would infer from reading the newspapers that Loeb and I are being trained like fleas to jump thru hoops for the entertainment of the curious," he said.
BOY'S HEAD IS NEARLY SEVERED
Child Crushed to Death
Beneath P. E. Car at Anaheim Landing
Traffic accidents in Orange-coast yesterday snuffed out the lives of two young people. One was Edward Breedlove.
FOREST FIRE THREATENS CAMPERS
LOS ANGELES, June 16.—A serious forest fire, which started shortly after noon today in Watanan Canyon, on the road to Lake Arrowhead, was reported late this afternoon to be raging and several canyons and was threatening the lives of northeast campers, according to information received here from San Bernardino.
Fanned by a brisk west wind, the fire was beyond all control, was stalled. A squad of motorcycle officers was rushed to the city to stop all automobile traffic on both sides of the blaze and other officers combed the forced canyons to warn campers to rush to safety.
One hundred fire fighters began battle against the blaze and several hundred more were sent to the fire this afternoon.
KEENAN TO REWED
LOS ANGELES, June 16.—Frank Keenan, celebrated stage and screen actor, whose wife died less than two months ago in the audience at the Writer's club in Hollywood while Keenan was enacting a dramatic role, is to marry a young Los Angeles woman, Miss Margaret White, according to a well authenticated report in the film colony today.
Keenan is now in Honolulu.
BRITISH PAYING UP
WASHINGTON-June 16.—Great Britain paid $68,655,000 on its $4,600,000,000 debt to the United States today at the New York Times.
OUTRACES STORK
A race to the County hospital against the stork was won by H. H. Dickey of Portland, Ore., and Mrs. Charles Wilson, a visitor at the Newport Beach municipal camp ground.
In the Santa Ana business section Dickey's speedometer registered 47 miles an hour. A few miles from the hospital Mrs. Dickey whispered something to her husband. The car leaped ahead.
"You see it is her seventh child and a girl," traffic cops were told. There wasn't any traffic ticket made out for Dickey.
SAVE YOUTHS AT NEWPORT BEACH
The lives of H. M. Woods and A. D. Grant, Hollywood youths, were saved by Elmer Catt and A. J. Robinson of Upland Sunday afternoon in the surf off Fifteenth-st. Newport Beach, after the pair had battled big odds in a long rip tide.
Catt-first noticed the two Hollywood boys to be in distress. They were about 100 yards out and floundering in the water. Catt and Robinson, who were at the Newport Beach municipal camp ground, went to their rescue. After obtaining a life-saving float they began to battle the waves. Caught in the trip tide, they were buffeted about for more than 20 minutes before they reached Woods and Grant, whose strength was fast waning.
All four were exhausted when they reached the beach.
READILY PAYS FINES
When Melville Hall, 35, said to be a prominent business man of Los Angeles, was fined $200 in the court of Justice of the Peace J. B. Cox Saturday afternoon, he not only paid his own fine from a $2500 roll but peeled off enough to pay the $200 fine of Elizabeth Monatt, 30, of Los Angeles, arrested with him at Anaheim Landing on a liquor possession and transportation charge, court officials said.
Traffic accidents in Orange-coast yesterday snuffed out the lives of two young people. One was Edward Breedlove, 16, of Corona, whose father carried in his arms the corpse, its head almost severed, from a place on the canyon road five miles east of Olive, to Anaheim hospital. Late yesterday./ The other was Sylvia Callahan, 4, of Long Beach, who walked onto the Pacific Electric tracks near Anaheim Landing. Death in both cases was almost instantaneous.
In the Breedlove car were the father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Breedlove, and the boy's sister, Dora Frances, 11. A car driven by C. H. Kidd, 55, of the Lennox hotel, Los Angeles, swerved into it and the youth was hurled through the windshield, his neck and face being horribly mangled.
Kidd, after receiving treatment, was taken to the county hospital. Later he was removed to the county jail pending inquest at Back's Terry & Campbell parlors at 4 p.m. today. Mrs. A. H. Brown, a passenger in the Kidd car, was hurt, but not seriously.
Witnesses said the Kidd car hit another on the road, then caromed in front of the Breedlove machine. A report at the sheriff's office, however, said the Kidd car's approach was not seen.
W. Scholtz, a passing motorist, took the Breedlove family to Anaheim. The father, clinging to the hope that the son's life might be saved, was pictured as entering the hospital with the boy in his arms, though life had passed some time before.
Accidents in other parts of the county proved less serious. There were three at Laguna Beach and near Capitrahoo, while other were in the west part of the county.
The Callahan child, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Callahan, 2715 Paradena avenue, Long Beach, was taken by death while on her way to a Long Beach hospital. Her parents were camping near the beach and the child wandered away.
Madlin Hitcher of Los Angeles was hurt in Orange-coast park when a car driven by Frank Tuttle of that city backed into the vehicle. Others hurt included Homer Taylor, Oscar Brinkley and E. Willis of Santa Ana, whose car was hit by Martin Hirschman.
BRITISH PAYING UP
WASHINGTON-June 16—Great Britain paid $68,655,000 on its $4,600,000,000 debt to the United States today at the New York Federal Reserve Bank.
The payments consisted of $19,000,000 in U.S. government securities and the remainder in cash.
Finland made a payment of 134,325.
WATER AND POWER ACT UPON BALLOT
SACRAMENTO, June 16—Submission to electors at the November election of the state water and power act, defeated at the last general election was assured today when initiative petitions were filed with Secretary of State Frank C. Jordan, carrying 79,017 names, nearly 3,000 more than the required number.
READILY PAYS FINES
When Melville Hall, 35, said to be a prominent business man of Los Angeles, was fined $200 in the court of Justice of the Peace J. B. Cox Saturday afternoon, he not only paid his own fine from a $2500 roll but peeled off enough to pay the $200 fine of Elizabeth Monatt, 30, of Los Angeles, arrested with him at Anaheim Landing on a liquor possession and transportation charge, court officials said.
BURRO RIDER HURT
Adolph Torres, 10, was severely hurt about the head in Silverado canyon yesterday when he fell off a burro, his foot catching in the stirrup. The boy was brought to Dr. J. W. Truxaw and, after receiving treatment, put to bed in the Anaheim hospital.
He is recovering.
LOCAL BOYS GRADUATE
James Tuma and Earl Bushard will graduate from the college of pharmacy, U. S. C., Wednesday. These ladrs are graduates of A. U. H. S., class of '22, and their many friends will be glad to learn of their good fortune.
SOLEMN MILITARY Tribute to Explosion Victims Tuesday
LOS ANGELES, June 13.—Solomon military tribute will mark the memorial services here Tuesday for the 48 U.S. S. Mississippi explosion victims, according to clips made today.
This afternoon the bodies will be removed to a field overlooking the sea. There the flag-draped kaskets of the enlisted men will be placed in five rows and in front will rest the bodies of the three officers.
Full crews from the U. S. S. Mississippi and New Mexico and men from seven other dreadnaughts will attend with the highest officials of the navy on the Pacific coast.
Following the reading of the naval funeral service, the mourning sailors will stand at solemn parade rest while the roll call of the living and the dead is made.
As the names on the rosters of the Mississippi and New Mexico are called, each man will step forward and answer, "here!" When the names of the dead gunners are reached, a friend of the man called and of the same rank will respond, repeating: "Died in the line of duty."
Los Angeles paid its tribute to the navy heroes today. Residents contributed hundreds of dollars to a fund for dependent relatives of the 45 bluejackets and in trucks loads tent floral tribute to cover their coffins.
MADAME BUDROW SINGS FOR ROTARY
Mrs. Manuela Budrow, at the request of members, favored Rotarians today with three soprano selections which provided a pleasant variation from the usual program.
Mrs. Budrow, who is a teacher at the Anaheim Conservator of Music, was accompanied by Earl Fraser. Both are of Santa Ana.
She sang the Babanera from "Carmen," Woodman's "Spring Song" and a song of her own composition "Will o' the Wisp."
Horace Benjamin presided in the absence of President Carl Leonard, who has gone to the annual international convention at Toronto, Canada.
Benjamin and Charles Grim were the chairmen of the day.
There was no outside speaker.
It was announced that the 100 per cent attendance were still being maintained.
BROOKINS TRIAL TO JURORS TODAY
The second trial of G. E. Brookins and Mrs. Addie Wiley, of Anaheim, was coming to a close at afternoon in Superior Judge D. Drummin's court.
Mrs. Wiley and Brookins, ed with a statutory offense for cross-examined closely by Deputy Dist. Atty. C. Nora regarding causes of the Civil Separation from her husband Elly Wiley and the detention which culminates rest by officers in port Beach.