![]() Doctors believed it would not inconvenience him for long. The Bullet entered his upper left arm and did not strike the bone or arteries. Officer Mahnke started in pursuit behind the policeman on seeing Lockneckar running away. The bullet struck a rock and glanced and struck officer Mahnke in the arm.” I went up to slap him with the gun when it went off. Locknear fell and then started to get on his feet to run again. A fellow ran out to stop him near Pine Street, and then another man Max Smith, I heard he was- caught him. ![]() “We took after him, and I fired a shot at the ground, thinking it would stop him. “Jack Hagerman hailed Marshall Meed to run as we reached Fourth street,” the marshal said last night in police court where Lockneckar was fined $5 and costs for resisting an officer and the same amount was placed against him for disturbing the peace. On September 1, 1916, a young man named Rudolph Lockneckar caused quite a disturbance on West Fourth street that included a sidestep into Maurice’s store:Ī chase down West Fourth street yesterday afternoon after Rudolph Lockneckar, a young Austrian of 714 Elm Street, who broke away from policemen at Harrison Avenue and Fourth resulted in the capture of the fleeing man, but also caused the accidental wounding of Probation Officer Julius Mahnke when an automatic revolver held by Marshal McEachern accidentally discharged and the bullet ricocheted from a boulder. Records show that Meyer and Frieda Horowitz married in Denver on April 9, 1916, as they had planned. The young couple will make their home at 213 W. The wedding will take place at the Phytion club hall, Fifteenth and Lawrence streets, Denver All friends are invited to come. Meyer Stager, clerk at Hyman Isaacs, left last night for Denver where on Sunday, April 9, he will be married to Miss Frieda Horwitz. The April 6, 1916, issue of The Herald Democrat announced: There is no record of Meyer for that year, but during 1915 he could be found working at the Arkansas Valley Smelter. They relocated to 220 Harrison Avenue the following year and stability prevailed until 1914, when Maurice opened his own clothing enterprise at 223 Harrison Avenue. The Stager boys lived as lodgers in the Flaks home at 203 Harrison Avenue next to the store. It was at this point that Maurice moved to Denver for two years and returned in 1910 with Hyman. Meyer’s name replaced Maurice's in the city directories of 1908 and in 1909 the clothing store’s name changed once more to Hyman Isaacs to reflect the name of its sole proprietor. Maurice reigned until the arrival of his brother Meyer from the old country in 1908. The year 1905 was also the last year that Maurice used the spelling Morris for his first name in the city directory coincidently his employer changed the storefront’s marquee to A. The next year the pair moved to 108 West Chestnut Street, and in 1905 another door down to 110 West Chestnut Street. Maurice shared lodgings at 209 West 3rd Street with Hyman Isaacs, whom he listed as the next of kin in his selective service registration in 1918. During June of 1903, Maurice attended Leadville’s Central School and participated in the athletic field day, and was also employed as a clerk by Isaacs & Mitgang clothiers on the 100 block of Harrison Avenue. ![]() They arrived on the shores of the United States separately: Maurice immigrated during 1902 at the age of sixteen, followed by his fifteen-year-old brother Meyer in 1908. The Stager brothers, Maurice and Meyer, were natives of Austria-Poland.
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