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Los Angeles Herald from Los Angeles, California • Page 6

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6 THE RAILROADS. A Report of Passenger Rate Cutting. A Party of Excursionists Arrive From the East, Scalpers Said to Be Selling Santa Fe Tickets-Warships at San Diego. A New Train to Santa Monica. There is great agitation among the passenger agents of the various railroads, aa it was discovered yesterday that some scalpers were Belliug Santa Fe tickets east at a considerable reduction.

What the Southern Pacific and other lines are going to do about the matter could not be ascertained. WARSHIPS AT SAN DIEGO. Santa Fe officials were delighted yesterday when the news came that the Baltimore and Charleston had arrived at San Diego, and would remain there for some days. NEW SANTA MONICA TRAIN. The Southern Pacific company will inaugurate on Sunday a special train service to Santa Monica canon over thenew portion of the road The train will leave here at 10:30 a.

and returning leave the cation at 5:30. EXCURSIONISTS ARRIVE. A Phillip's excursion party arrived yesterday in charge of J. R. Kaler, composed of the following persons: M.

J. Clark and wife, Miss Alice Clark, Waltham, Mrs. W. P. Howland, Miss Ethel Howland, Lcs Angeles; Miss Edgerley, Eben Jordan, Oldtown, J.

0. Woodworth, J. C. Woodworth, Mrs. G.

Jack, Boston; Mrs. A.Hall, Miss J. Hall, E. G. Hall, M.

F. Hall, Bangor, S. Brackett, Mrs. S. Bracltett, George Spill, Boston; J.

W. Conneil, Montpieler, J. Lebby, Miss E.Coten, Miss A. Stockman, J. W.

Brown, Mr. Hackett, J. A. Kruger, Mrs. Kruger, P.

Drews, D. Donaghue, F. J. O'Keiffe, Miss Laura Love, A. Marchand, Mrs.

Marchand, Chicago; Miss H. M. Blakeslore, West field, F. Schnoff, Mrs. Scbnoff, Chicago; R.

E. Jenkins, Kansas Oity Mrs. J. C. Phillips, Miss Phillips, Peru, Mr.

and Mrs. W. Ellis, Miss P. Potter, Elmira, Rev. J.

M. Tompson, Chicago; J. Hale, P. Green, A. Small, Berton, C.

Saunders, L. Saunders. J. F. Saunders, F.

N. Saunders, Myrtle Saunders, Hettie Saunders, Mrs. Saunders, N. T. Saunders, C.

B. Saunders, Downing, Mr. and Mrs. C.T. Swartze, Marian Swartze, Chicago; Jes6ie Greyson, Rock Island, N.

Sharpless, Mrs. Sharpless, Mr. and Mrs. A. Sharpless, Mew York; C.

G. Hill, Ida Doodowitz, Chicago. The following is a list of the Judson excursion which arrived here yesterday afternoon: G. W. Carnes, Miss Lizzie Dee, Mrs.

M. Boyle and daughter. Miss Emma John McGee, W. F. Burrell, Joseph Kelly and wife.

Misa Kelly, H. Buchanan and wife, F. Goodrich and wife, C. Campbell, N. Campbell, Miss Croacher, M.

Cohen, Mrs. Jewett and daughter, J. Eastman and wife, L. Lauin and wife, M. Keating, F.

White, H. Joseph, F. L. Ellis, Miss A. tioff, Miss M.

Fuller, Bo3ton G. Hughes, J. W. Buckley, Providence, R. Miss H.

Smith, Bancroft, Mrs. N. Collins, Marshalltown, Mrs. H. Dorrance, L.

Smith, P. Smith, M. Schwartz, Miss C. Schwartz. A.

Kuppersmith, H. Heborger, Chicago; J. Nalberge, M. Bloom, Omaha; Miss L. Blodgett, J.

Sturtevant aud wife, Greenfield, E. N. Davis. Gardner, Miss L. Kelly, North Adams.

WEST AUSTRALIA. A Very Good Country to Keep Away From. Mr. John McCafferty, an old Californian and collector of Alaska during Cleveland's administration, is now in Los Angeles. For the past four years he has been traveling in Australia, and has made himself particularly familiar with West Australia, a country that has been extensively boomed of late years.

He has furnished the Herald with the following interesting summary of the results of his extensive observations in that much-advertised part of the antipodes Editors Herald: As many readers of your instructive newspaper might wish for reliable information concerning the agricultural, pastoral, mineral and other resources of Western Australia, I shall therefore, with your permission, them with a few items of a recent trip through that colony. Although there are patches of ground in Kimberley, in the far north division, suitable for vegetables, still when everything is duly considered farming there in no instance will ever pay a profit. From this point on and along the coast to latitude 28 degrees there may be found a few similar patches. Necessarily the belt of country between latitude 14 degrees and latitude 28 degrees is entitled to no further consideration as a farming range. The agricultural belt, therefore, such as it is.

begins at latitude 28 degrees. All the cereals produced in the colony are said to begrownsouth of that latitude, where the average yield maybe rated: Wheat, 14 bushels; barley, 17 bushels; oats, 20 bushels; maize, 15 bushels; potatoes, three tons hay, one ton; wine, 180 gallons per acre. As this belt of country at no time produced enough for home consumption, it can never be made to supply the wants of the increasing Inhabitants. That the situation may be more fully understood I shall assert that there iB not one acre of agricultural land in Western Australia which would be rated higher than farming ground in Southern California. The pastoral range trends irregularly along the coast, from latitude 14 degrees to latitude 28 a few patches further south.

The stat throughout the Kimberley district are Btocked with cattle and horses. Necessarily they are not yet overstocked; but aa there is no active market for the district, these squatters are making no fact the majority of them are carried on by the banks. Hanging to the uncertain edge of overdrafts must ever prove a precarious affair, and more so when situated like these poor, depraved squatters. The stations throughout the Northwest and Gasevyne districts are generally stocked with sheep and horses. Aa there is no market for either one or the other, these squatters exist entirely on the sale of wool, which, under favorable circumstances, barely tides them over the season.

I can safely assert that there is not one station in either of these two districts which would be rated fourth class in this country. Throughout that section it takes from ten to thirty acres of grass and top feed to carry a sheep through a year. The country is also poorly supplied with water, all of which is tainted, and the greater portion of which, for man and beast, is served from '-clay-pan" pools. And these stations up and along the "storm-washed" river channels are now fully stocked, many overstocked, and therefore are being fed entirely out. They are necessarily for sale at less than £1 per head, which includes the station.

The timber resources are loudly overrated. One could fancy from the tall talk of the West Australian boomer that the sandal wood, jarrah and kawaka trade would continue to flouriah for all time; yet, while the sandalwood trade was never more than a peanut business, it has nevertheless petered out owing to the want of timber. Although there is a large belt of jarrah and kawaka timber, still I am quite sure that owing to increased trade, twenty-five years herce the trade will no; give employment to 500 people. Of all the industries of the colony none accomplished more for the people than the pearl fisheries. But this business also dwindled to almost nothing; therefore the inhabitants along the west coast now mourn the departure of those rough, free and easy pearlers.

The mineral resources of the colony have also been wilfully, nay, cruelly misrepresented. In order to b9 fully understood, I must here say I have never considered a mine a dividendpayer until the original outlay for development and erection of reduction works been refunded, and, in this sense, though it is now fully thirtythree years since gold was discovered there, yet those West Australians have not developed one dividend-paying quartz mine. Since the year 1800, coal, copper, tin, silver aud gold have been discovered, but, reserving the alluvial patches, these mineral finds have merely developed into wiid cat operations. I may here add, I believe there will nevor be a dividend paying quartz mine developed in West Australia. It has never been, nor will it ever be, a profitable alluvial field, and as a proof thereof, about 10,000 ounces of gold were gathered in the Kimberley district, but at a cost of fully $2,500,000: 20,000 ounces have been taken from the Pilburra and Nullagin fields, which cost the mining element at least also 8000 ounces were collected from the Ashburton field, which cost the diggers $1,250,000.

Accordingly, 38,000 ounces of alluvial pold have been gathered since 1800, equal to $700,000, which, I regret to add, Co6t the general public fully $5,500,000. The recent discovery on the Murchison is not included; it is, however, a surface patch. Gathering gold in West Australia has, therefore, not been a very profitable operation. The population ot the colony may be put below 50,000, which is fully 20,000 in excess of the industries. There are about "000 inhabitants in Fremanth, which is a seaport; about 8000 inhabitants in Perth, which is the seat of government, the largest city in the colony, and which is located on the Swan river, seven milea south of Fremanth.

Tbe balance of the inhabitants of the colony are scattered from Wyndham, in the far north, to Albany in the south; and, I must here add, they ate the most vulgar, boorish and selfish English-speaking people I ever met; in fact, they are a reflection upon this age. The average summer temperature, which is our winter season, from latitude 28 degrees to latitude 14 degrees, ranges from 110 degrees to 130 degrees iv the shade. When the hot winds, inHect and reptile life are also taken into consideration, I fancy our "Native Sons" could never be induced to niike an excursion to that distant colony. Again, the imperial act granting constitutional government to that people is, strange as it may seem, in strict accord with the general characteristics of tbe colony, which must be designated scabby Fancy the political condition of the people when a squatter, holding 500,000 acres of a leasehold, and being the owner of 50,000 head of Bheep, horses and cattle, but, because he is not the owner of £500 worth of freehold property, he is not eligible to a seat in parliament; in fact, the imperial act was a scabby job in favor of the "six families" who have ruled the colony since the establishment of tbe first penal settlement, and who, through the aaid act, will continue in power for the next ten years. These are the people who control the Western Australian loan, who are building railways which will never pay a dividend, and who will necessarily grow financially fat at the expenee of the English subscriber.

John McCafferty. McNALLY'S WIT. He Turns the Joke on a Member of the N. 8. G.

YV. Everybody knows Anthony McNally, the big-hearted contractor and brick mason. McNally is always ready, day or night, to give his help and money to anything that will benefit or help advertise Los Angeles. On Sunday the Native Sons arrived and McNally was on hand as usual, whooping things up for the visitors. A member of the order who has been married about ten years, and knowing Mc- Nally quite well, sang out jokingly, "Say, McNally, what are you at now? You aint a Native Son of the Golden West." McNally, as quick as a flash, thought of Anthony McNally, and wittily replied "No, lam not, but I have raised a Native Son of the Golden West, which ia more than you have done." The jcker disappeared in the crowd.

Marriage Licenses. The county clerk yesterday issued marriage licenses to the following persons Luding Gossman, a native of Germany, aged 28, to Helene Wibbells, a native of Germany, aged 20. John D. Stults, a native of Massachusetts, aged 23, to Grace H. Fannington, a native of Massachusetts, aged 22.

Harry S. Pratt, a native of Massachusetts, aged 25, to Alice M. Clark, a native of Massachusetts, aged 28. William Hutable, a native of Illinois, aged 32, to Annie Horan, a native of Ohio, aged 31. To Sufferers From Weak Spine.

I'ersons suffering from weak back will takecomfort in reading the following letter from Mr. A W. Barrett of Osweco, N. "Ten years ago 1 was alllieted with a lame back. The pain was so severe that I could hardly walk or get about.

Hearing much said about Ai.lcock's I'okocs Plastekb, I applied two to the lower part of my spine. In a week I was very much better. I put on fresh plasters at the end of ten days, and two weeks afterwards found myself entirely well. If I get a very severe cold, I sometimes have a return of this weakness of the spine, liut Allcock's Plasters cure me in three or four days." Retiring from Business. Wall paper, mouldings, Lincrusta Walton, at cost, at W.

B. Stewart's, 238 South Spring. THE LOS ANGELES HERALD; WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 27, 1892- The Ceres Train Robbers Captured. Bucarro Bill and Bill Lucas the Men. Sheriff Gibson and Will Smith Run Them to Men Who Shot I on Harris Are Nabbed.

Detective Will Smith of the Southern Pacific railroad, with the assistance of Sheriff Gibson, has succeeded in locating a trio of the most desperate bandits that have ever figured in the criminal annals of the Pacific slope. The parties are now behind the bars of the jail in and Detective Smith will start after them at once. The parties are none other than the daring deeper adoee who held up the Southern Pacific express on the Southern Pacific road at Ceres station on Friday evening. Set tember 4th, last. The train robbery in question was one of tbe most daring in the history of such villainies.

The engineer and firemen were compelled to stop the train by masked men and then proceed in advance of the robbers to the express car where tbe bandits exploded a dynamite bomb for the purpose of breaking open the door. When the train men approached in the direction of the express car, the robbers opened fire with a shotgun, snooting Railroad Detective Len Harris in the neck, inflicting a dangerous wound, which for a long time kept him lying between life and death. Two masked men captured the engine by crawling over the top of the tender and covered the engineer and fireman with guns, compelling them to run the train out a mile and a half from Ceres, and stop at a lonely, deserted spot on the road. They then made Engineer Neff put out the headlight and procure a pick and go to the express car and attempt to open the express cardoor, which Express Messenger Reed, who was inside, pluckily refused to do. While they were at work there, Detective Len Harria sneaked up on the marauders and fired four shots at them, none of which took effect.

They returned the fire and Harris was shot in the neck and badly wounded. Two dynamite bombs were exploded under the car, tearing a ragged hole in the floor. Messenger Reed, who was inside, pluckily defended tbe car, and tbe train robbers, fearing the arrival of assistance, ordered the engineer and fireman to walk up the road, and then made good their escape. A reward of $3000 was offered by the Southern Pacific railroad for their capture. Since the date of the attempted train robbery Detective Will Smith has been on the hunt for the bandits, and the Btory of the numerous clues, the tangled mesh of circumstances which led to the tracking down of the perpetrators, would read like a chapter from the romances of Gabarion.

One of the men of tbe band of train robbers whom the trainmen and passengers got good glimpses of was described as being about 30 years of age, till and of sandy complexion, while the other was dark and of lesser height, with a peculiar, crooked finger. It was only recently that the unremitting efforts of Detective Smith were rewarded, and he ascertained beyond a possibility of a doubt that the parties described were none other than Bill Brown alias Bucaroo Bill, and Charles Bilinger alias Bill Lucas. These two men, it might be stated, are also wanted by Sheriff Saul, of Yuba county, on a charge of grand larceny. They atole two teams of horses in that county and sold one of them at Pasa Kobles. Brown is 30 years old, six feet high, sandy complexion, hazel eyes, sharp new beard, and has a scar halfmoon shaped on his cheek.

Bilinger is five feet ten inches high, dark complexioned, dark hair, brown eyes, weight 100 pounds and about 24 years old. The right index finger has been mashed, and is now much Bhorter than the corresponding one and is crooked. The two peculiar marks have been important factors in the capture of the men, and word has been received by- Detective Smith and Sheriff Gibson thaS they have been tied up safely in Tucsoa and the authorities there are now waiting the arrival of the shrewd and energetic detective to turn over the big game. The long search for these men, together with the procurement of the evidence necessary to fasten the crime on them, has been an almost superhuman undertaking, but Detective Staith has been equal to the requirements and deserves the most golden encomiums for making the most notable capture of criminals that has been made in this Btate for many years. Mr.

J. P. Blaize, an extensive estate dealer in Dcs Moines, lowa, narrowly escaped one of the severest attacks of pneumonia while in the northern part of the state during a recent blizzard, saya the Saturday Renew. Mr. Blaize had occasion to drive several milea during the storm and was ao thoroughly chilled that he waa unable to get warm, and inside of a hour after hie return he waa threatened with a severe case of pneumonia or lung fever.

Mr. Blaixe sent to the nearest drug store and got a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, of which he had often heard, and took a number of large doses, He the effect was wonderful and that in a short time he was breathing quite easily. He kept on taking the medicine and the next day was able to come to Dcs Moines. Mr. Blaize regards hie cure as Bimply wonderful.

50 cent bottles for sale by C. F. Heinzeman, 222 North Main, druggist. BEHIND BARS. Pioneer' moving" Room Npwell Mock.

4-21 CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. CONRAD BCHEKEK, otuand asphalt paving. 327 W. First at. 9-112 WANTS AND OTHER CLASSIFIED IDS.

Will be inserted In tho columns of the DAILY HERALD at Bo per line per day. 8)1 per line per month. Special rates for a longer period. fpgf- Persons wanting situations, help, or who wish to rent, buy or sell property, will do well to advertise in these columns. ENERGETIC YOUNG lishroan desires position as drummer or agent.

Address E. 8., box 20, this office. 4 2 I 7t HELP. A GOOD GIRL TO COOK AND do general housework. Apply 2424 Hopest, 4-23 7t NEEDING HELP Employment or any Information, adctross E.

NITTINGEB'a BUREAU; established 1880 Office, 8. Spring; residence, 451 8. Hope cor. Fifth, Los Angelas, Cal. Telephone 118 8-16 tf TANTED PATIENTS TO Healer, n.

Spring st. Rheumatism and paralysis a specialty. 6-20 7t TO CLEAN. INQUIRE boot-black, HoLenbcck Hotel. 427 1m 'ANTED TO FRAME, CHEAPest place at BURNS', 256 8.

Main st. 1-27-tf SPECIAL NOTICE. WE REPRESENT ONLY first-class companies, and insure property at the lowest possible rates. F. H.

PIKPKR A 10S Broadway. 4-24 tit I)TaRTTE3 DESIRING NICE OFFICE ROOMS, public hall, or nice residence lots at a very low figure, located in center of eitv, call st Room up stairs. Grand Opera House 4-24 lm TJ. CUDDY, GENERAL COMMISSION Agent. Real estate and loans.

Will negotiate loans, reat houses, manage property, make pay taxes, etc. References: Banks or business men of the c.ty. No. 801 N. Main Los Angeles, Cal.

4-19 lm MRS. LiR.IIUrCHEsON, MAGNETIC HEAL er. S. Spring St. 4-10 lm PASTURE FOR 200 OR 1 more animals.

Rates low. Apply at onco by matl to undersigned, 116 West First or at raueh, 3 miles north of Sunset, 12 miles west of Los Angeles. E. A. DeCamp.

4-6 lm 6 MAY PERsons having pledges in the Star Loin office, 300 North Main st. city, are hereby notified to redeem the same, or pay accrued interest thereon, or they will be sold. 3-30 lm lOSI OS ANgTuCsTIORAL FLO Wj ere, bouquets aud plants. 128 W. Second Los Cal.

HE GREAT INDIAN RHEUMATIC CURE is the greatest discovery made within the last 100 years iv pttent medicines. For sale by all leudtng druggists 10-17 91 12m LOS ANGELES OITY WATER Company will strictly enforce tho following rule: The hours for sprinkling are between 6 and 8 o'clock a. and 6 and o'clock p. m. For a violation ot the above regulation the watar will be shut off and a fine of $2 will be charged before water will beturned on again.

anl7-tf CHANCES. LOS ANGELES COUNTY, at a very low figure, a good hotel in tho country: no fogs: no sickness; an increasing respectable trade fills the house to its limit: extension and livery addition necessary; present proprietor retiring. J. RICHARDS, Room 6, 102 Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal. 4-26 141 AND BOARDING 1 house and lease, cheap; owner is obliged to sell on account of other business.

D. BUNCH, 118 8. ilroadway. 4-20 4t J-tOR nTcbTgROCERY BUSINESS, well located, and clean stock. Apply to HOWELL CRAIG.

132 S. Los Angeles st. 4-24 7t EBTAURANT FOR SALE if 2300 A finely furnished restaurant, with 12 neatly furnished rooms, bath, hot and cold water, up stairs: rent $30 per month: 5 years' lease; doing tslO to $50 a uay, which may be increased; in the best town in this county. T. J.

CUDDY, Com. Agent, opposite U. S. Hotel. 4-21 tf FOR SALE OR TO SOUTH Pasadena hotel and 'about 4 acres of improved land.

This property is situated sti miles from Los Angeles, in the city of South Pasadena, opposite the Santa Fe depot. Tho notel contains 40 sleeping rooms, and is piped throughout lor gas and Lot and cold water and fitted with electric bells. There ar 120 orange 44 apricot, 52 peach, 17 nectarine, 5 qnince, 3 almond, 37 apple, 3 plum, 3 prune, 3 fig and 6 loquat trees, and a smail vineyard, together with a beautiful garden of flowers and shrubs. For further particulars address or inquire of DR. H.

F. PITCHER, 17 N. Marengo Pasniens. Cal. 12m FOR FOR GRAND near Temple; 10 rooms; price, $25.

WM. 3. DeVAN, 211 First st. 4-27 5t FOR RENT HOUSE. FIRST and Flower electric cars pass door; view unsurpassed.

Apply 713 VV. First or at Wesley Clark's. 4-25 3t I- jIOR RENT HOUSEB ALL OVERTHE CIIY. 1 C. A.

Sumner 107 S. Broadway. 4 tf FOR FOR RENT FINE SUNNY ROOMS, FURnisbed. Hotel de Grenoble, 205 Afiso and Los Angeles sts. 3 30 lm FOR JLISCELLANEOUS.

FOR 'RENT-a' FINE AT Wiseburn station, on wide gauge San'aFe R. 12 miles frsm Los Angeles; capacity 100,000 sacks; new, clean and no weevil; good scales; fine point shipping barley; usually from ICO to 150 04)0 sacks of barley handled at this warehouse annually; weald give long lease. Apply to D. WlaE, North Main street 4-23 ist FOIb EXCHANGX. FOR ACRES ORANGE and walnut laud, with water, for first-class farm in Illinois.

Address room 3, Redick block, corner First am'- Broadway. 4-10 tf FOR LIVE STOCK. FOR FRESH MILCH COW; blooded stock. 1532 W. N.nth st.

OR FINE SORREL HOR 7 years old; weight about 1100 lbs. Inquire at 126 W. First Wilson block, room 15. 4-15tf LOST AND TOUND. SILVER WAICH AND GOLD chain, somewhere between Olive street and Bunkor Hill aye.

on Third St. Finder will receive a snitable reward by returning to thil office. 4-26 3t DENTISTS. to 124J4 South Spring street. All operations guaranteed perfect at greatly reduced prices.

Extracting and filling without pain. 4-15 Ira FR. CUNNINGHAM, DENTIST, moved to California Bank building, cor. Second and Broadway, rooms 1-2. 4-14, tf IW.

WELLS, COR. SPRING AND FIRST. Wllion Dlcck; take elevator; teeth flUed and extracted without pain a specialty. matl B. TUCKER, NO.

8, Spring it. 11-25-tf G. CUNNINGHAM, DENTIST, NO. 181 N. Spring rooms 1 and 2, Phillip! i block, Los Angeles, Cal.

mlstf R. G. KNEPPER, DENTIST, NO. 120 First it, old Wilson block. 8-31 tf R.

TOLHURBT, DENTIST, 108tf N. SPRING at roomp.e 7. extracting WINES AND LIQUORS. liqnor merchants, 131 N. Main Loi Angeles.

Cal. wines and brandies a specialty. Telephone 38. 23 tf VACHE A SUCCESSORS TO VAC HE Frerei A dealers In wines and liquors. Depot for the oolebrated brands of Brookside Vineyard.

Cor. Commercial and Alameda Los Angeles, Cal. Telephone 309. Extra Zlnfandol and Riesling at 50c per gallon 2-3 tf PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, ETC. block.

Tel. 347. Los Angeles. 11-22-tf BARGAINS IX REAL ESTATE. I7IOR LOT, 50x145, corner Log Angeles street, near Twenty first st.

E. G. TAYLOR. 214 N. spring street.

4 27 2t OR 8. FLOWER COTTAGE of 7 rooms, bath, etc: cheerful, new and convenient In all Its appointments. Inquire on premises. Also by same party, 08x 150 feet, corner Ninth and Brvant for $1000. 4-17 14t T7IOR SALE, OR 4 ACRES level, nrstelass, orange and walnut land; one mile from Anaheim, with water; will exchange for first class residence In the city, or Sood ranch.

Address lows 8. HH St. 4-10 tf CLASS 9 ROOM denre on Hill between Eighth aud Eleventh finest residence portion of Los Augcleo; will sell cheaper than anything of that kind ever offered on this street. Address room 8, Redlck block, corner First and llroadway. 4-10 tt MONICA.

NICK 0-ROOM house, half block from the beach; lot BO by 150, close to new Sauta Fo depot; will sell at a great sacrifice. Address 1030 3. Hill st. 4-10 tf $100 CAnH, BALANCE monthly payments. 8-room house, Leroy, near Main.

M. P. SNYDER, 139 8. Broadway. 4-10 lm OR BALE-I HAVE SOMETHING THAT you want; If you wish a home Los Angeles city, call and I will take you to it; I am not dead.

CHAS. VICTOR ALL, 223 West First street. 4-8 lm YOUR PROPERTY FOR 1 sale and exchange with CHAS. VICTOR HALL. West First st.

4-t 1 FOB JT wagon in good order; can drive single or double. Address G. 8., this office. 4-27 Tt FOR OUTFIT, MULTlplylng camera, etc. 612 Broadway.

P. O. Imilding. 4-24 it PERSONAL. age, steady in habits, well educated some means, would like to meet lady with some means: object, business and matrimony.

Address Bo 30, this office. 4 20 2t I)ROF. STEARNS, THK OLDEST ASTROLO-1 ger in the State, is at 423 S. Spring st. 4-10 tf 8.

SPRING ST. Mrs. M. B. Weeks-Wright.

4 19 tf I PERSONAL VERY BEST Southern California extra flour, brown lbs. white sugar, 17 lbs. $1.00: coal oil, 80c; gasoline, 86c: family lard, 8c; 4 boxes 25c; 3 cans Alaska salmon, 25c; 3 cans Ohio sweetcorn, 25c; 1 gallon Golden syrup, 30c: crushed Java, 20e. "RIGHT PLACE STORES," 001 aud 903 E. First and 100 to 106 N.

Vlgneist 3-13 tf I FRENCH TANSY WILL 1 And these wafers just what they need, and) can be depended upon every time to give relief, safe and sure. Send by matl, sealed securely. Price, $2 per box. Emerson Drag manufacturers San Jose, Cal and for sale only by GODFREY A MOORE, 108 S. Spring and H.

G. VOECKELL, comer Fifth and Main. 3-20 cod 12m NOW THY CARMKLO, the wonderful clairvoyant and card reader Tells your entire life. Valuable advice on busln-ss, love, ttc. Office hours, 10 to 5 and 7to 9.

No. 550 Soutb Hill, near rlxth, first flat. 4131 m. FRESH ROASTED COFFEE Jli Irom our new Giant coffee roaster. Java and Mocha, 35c lb; otber grades, 30c.

25c: sugars, brown. 23 lbs for white, 17 lbs germea, 20c; 6 lbs rolled oats, 25c: 4 lbs rice, 25c hominy, 25c; 3 pkts starch, 25c: 4 cans sardines, 25c; 3 cans asparagus, 25c; gallon cans apples, 20c; 13 lbs navy beans, 25cr 5 lbs layer raisins, 25c; 3 lbs prunes, 25c; can devilled ham, sc: 6 cakes pure glycerine soap, 25c; sack flour. I and hams, 13c; bacca, 12c; pork, 10c. "Economic" Stores, 305 S. Spring st.

PERSONAL BROS BAR Flour, 11.35; City Flour, Brown Sugar, 20 lbs Sugar, 17 lbs 1 boxes sardines, 25c; 3 cans salmon, 25c; 50 bars Soap, $1: eastern Gasoline, 85c, and Coal Oil, 85c; 2 lbs Corned Beef, 15c; Pork, 10c; Lard. 10 lbs, 85c: 5 lbs, 45c. 601 8. Spring corBi3th. 12-2 tf MRS.

PARKER. CLAIRVOY- am; consultations on business, love, marriage, disease, mineral locations, life reading, etc. Take Spring and Washington-fit. car to Vermont go south to Vine second nouse from Vermont aye. 1-27-tf EDUCATIONAL.

I)lANO LKSSONs" 25 CENTS EACH: Gprman method: experienced teacher; college training. Box Herald. 413 Im. UITAR TAUGHT BY PROF. ARKVALO: modern school; most rapid and easiest methods Studio, room IS, old Wilson block.

4-9 lm M. FORAN, LATE MEMBER OF THE Court Opera of Berlin, Metropolitan Opera House, N. etc. Voioo culture lor Opera, Oratorio and Concert. Pure School of Ballad Singing taught.

Complete Vocal and Dramatic Instruction from beginning to an artistic finish. Studio: Potomac Block 4-8 lm HE LOS ANGELES BUSINESS COLLEGE (Incorporated) and Southern California College of Law, 144 8. Main st. Write for catalogue. 8-16 91 1 yr EACHKRS' CLASS PREPARING FOB county examination.

Positions for governesses and teachers. S. Spring 12-25tf UDLAM SCHOOL OF ORATORY AND Arts, M.C.A. building. 7-8 tf OODBURY BUSINESS COLLEGE AND SHORTHAND, TELEGRAPHIC AND MANSHIP INSTITUTE 245 8.

Spring Los Angeles, Oal. The leading commercial school of Southern Caliivrnia. Day and evening For catalogue call at the college, or address HOUGH, FELKER A WILSON, 7-5 3m Proprlwt.ors. financial. money in any amounts on all kinds of personal propurty and collateral security, on pianos with out removal, diamonds, jewelry, sealskins, bicycles, carriages, libraries, or any property ol value; also on furniture, merchandise, ia warehouses: partial payments received, money without delay; private offices for consultation; will call if desired.

W. E. DeGROOT, Manager, rooms 2, 3 and 4, No. 114 S. Spring opposl adeau hotel.

7- 29 $1,500,000 to loan at b. q. lunt-s loan and insurance agency, 227 W. Second Adjoining Herald oflkea CHEAP MONEY. Agent for the GERMAN BAVINuS AND LOAN 800DITY, of San Francisco.

jut tf 6 PER CENT FIDELITY SAVINGS AND iOAN. Rooms, California Bank building. tf ONEY TO On mortgages; city property a specialty. Apply to MAIN-STR3ET SAVINGS BANK, l-SSOtf 426 So. Main.

ONEY LOANED ON REAL ESTATE, DlAmonds, watches, jewelry, pianos, seal, skins, live stock, carriages, bicycles and all kinds of personal and collateral aeonrtty. IXM 402 8. Spring, mlB-tf IF YOU WANT MONEY WITHOUT no commission, at prevailing rates of Interest, see Security Savings Bank, 148 B. Main it 8-1-tl BURGESS J. REEVE, ARCHITECT.

EBTABllshed for the past 10 y-ars in Los Angeles. Room 10 (second floor), Perret block, corner Spring and Third sts. 3-2 lv overs and finishers. of tbe City Steam Dyeing and Cleaning works and office have removed to 343 S. Broadway.

All work guaranteed iree fiom spots and streaks. 4-21 lm ARISIAN DYE-WORKS, 274 8. MAIN street. Best dyeing in the city. 1-13 tf ETROPOLITAN STEAM DYE-WORKS, 241 Franklin it Fine dyeing and cleaning.

1-18-tf ATTORNEYS. DX. TRABK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Fulton blk, 207 New High it, Los Angeles. 1-16 tf MARION BROOKS, LAWYBR. OFFICE: Rooms 28, 29.

30 and 31, Fulton block, near courthouse, New High st Telephone 981. 8-11 tf pany of Los V. W. cor. Franklin maAS ew High itraata, nU7U AMUSEMENTS.

OS ANGELES THEATER. TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 28TH. Hf LOS ANGELES ATHLETIC CLUB. HORIZONTAL BAR, FENCING, BOXING, WRESTLING, TUMBLING, CLUB SWINGING, AND GENERAL GYMNASTICS. NEW VIENNA BUFFET, 114 ami 11(1 street.

F. Kkrkow, Proprietor. Family Entrance. Family Departments. FREE REFINED ENTERTAINMENT AND CONCKRT Every evening from 8 to 12 o'clock.

T)ils week, appearance of MISS ANNIE ASHLEY, MR. CHAS. VAN, MISS ALICE EVANS, MR. J. LEONARD, And the New Vienna Buffet Orchestra.

MISS THKRKSB KEHRMANN, Directress. FINE COMMERCIAL LUNCH from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.. and from 5 to 7 p.m. A LA CARTE AT ALL HOURS.

The only place for imported Bavarian beeis on draught and Kerlin Weiss Beer; also Lemp'a Extra Pale and Buffalo. 4-3 lm rpCRNVEREIN HALL SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 30TH, RAND ASQU ERADE SPANISH FANDANGO! By the SOCIETY FROLIQUKB. Tickets, 60c. Grand March at 9 p.m. LOS ANGELES NATATORIUM Broadway, next to City Hall.

NOW OPEN FOR THE SEASON. WARM SWIMMING BATHS. Hot and cold baths for ladles and gentlemen, In porcelain tubs at all hours. Large dressing rooms in connection with ladles' baths W. J.

McCALDIN, 3-25 3m I'res't anil Manager. PHYJHCIANS. DR. WEST HUGHES, FORMER RESIDENT surgeon to the New York hospital. 175 N.

Spring at. Tel. 73. Residence, 607 W. Adams street.

12-9 6m RS. DR. WELLS REMOVED TO HER brick block, 127 E. Third bet. Main and Los Angeles; diseases of women, nervous, rectal, sterility and genl to-urinary disease! also electro therapeutics; hours, 10 to 4.

R. C. EDGAR SMITH. Established 1883. FEMALE AND RECTAL DISEASES A specialty.

Piles cured in from rive to fifteen days without the knife or detention from business. Office, corner Main and Seventh Robarts block. Tel. 1031. 9-11 tf KB BOCA LEE DORBJEY, M.

D. OFFiOM No. 107 N. Main St. Special attention given to obstetrics, diseases of women, especially nervous troubles and diseases of children.

Hours 9to 11 a. m. and 2t04 o. Telephone 613. je2-tl MRS.

DR. J. H. SMITH, SPECIALTY, MlDwlfcry. Ladles cared for during conflnetrtont at 727 BfHevue aye.

28 tf EXCURSIONS. I VERL AN I) EXCUR- I sions for the Bast every Tuesday via Denver and ILUUIII Rio Grande R. R. and Bur- I llngtnn Route. Tourist sleep lngcsrs, iIFMIB t.

h. duzan, 204 IMIIB aw Log Angeles, Cal. 4 1 3m iJAM N. OSBORNE, LIFE INSURANCE AND Ct Atlantic Steamship Agency, No. 227 W.

First st. Tickets to and from all points in irent Britain and Europe; lowest rates. 422 3m EXCURSION CAR the Santa Fo route, shortest through car line to the east; daily through trains to Chicago; special family tourist sleeping car excursions for Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago and New York personally attended through to Boston by Santa Fe excursion conductors. For cheapest tickets and full information apply to any agent Southern California Ry, and City Ticket Office Santa Fe Ron'C, 129 N.

Spring Los Angeles. PHILLIPS' EXCURSIONS VIA DENVSR AND Rio Grand" railway and tbe Great Rock sland route leave Los Angeles every Tuesday. Personal! conducted through to Chicago and Boston Office. No. South Spring St.

Itt ONOLULU B. RICE, SPBcial agent Oceanic 8. S. 00. Office: 124 W.

Second st; P.O. Box 1671. 12-4 tf AMwFs RAILWAY AND STEAMSHIP Ticket Agency, 115 8. Spring in front of the Wieland. Railroad tickets bought, sold and exchanged.

9-22 91 lyr C. JUDSON A EXCURSIONS EAST every Thursday via Salt Lake City and Denver. Tourist cars to Chicago aud Boston. Manager in charge. Office, 212 s.

Spring at. 6-1 tf LIVE STOCK. THE IMPORTED SHIRE STALLION "PREB-ent King" will stand for a limited number of marcs, besides those of his owners, for the searon of 1892, at tbe Rafael Ranch, Oarvanza, Cal. "Present King" was foaled in 1 1886 in Nottinghamshire, England, and took i several prizes at fairs in that country, one amongst them being the first prise as a foal at the Scottershow in 1886. He was brought the United states in ISBB, and has only been exhibited once, when ho took the first premium at the Los Angeles fair of 1889.

He stands 16 hands; is black with white spot on forehead: weight about 1300 pounds, He is entered in the English and American Shire Horse Stud his pedigrae includes a long list of prise winners. He is a very sure foal-getter, and a large band of his foals can be seen on ranch. Terms: $25 for tbe season, or $10 for single leap, payable at tine of service; mares taken at their owners' risk; the usual return privileges. For pedigree and further particulars, aoply to C. 8.

CAIXPBELL-JOHNSTON, San Rafael Ranch. Garvanza, Cal. 4-21 lm MANN A JOHNSON MACHINE blacksmith shop; Iron and brass casting, tools, models, patterns, pulleys, shifting, hangers, general repairing. Agents for Best's gas engine. Telephone, 902.

No. 534 S. I.os Angeles Los Angeles, Cal. 3-25 4m REDLANDS. You won't know what you have missed oa your trip to California.

The very best part of it; the most beautifnl views; something that you would never forget If you have any eye for beauty, If you stay away from Redlands. You can only see it and get the full benefit of it by taking a drive over the hills; at the same time you will see the oae place where the oranges were not hurt with frost this winter; where you can now get the finest oranges In California. The only spot where you wonld like, above all others, to havo a winter home. As I am constantly throwing money at these printers to Invite you to call and allow me the privilege of showing you the beauties of the place, you should certainly have no hesitation in doing it. A full llsl of property for sale.

If you care to look at it. Prices are still lower than any other place in California, with aa many advantages for growing oranges and lemons successfully. T. H. BHARPLEBS, Agent for Redlands Real Estate, 1-19est gtata st, near Hotel Windsor..

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About Los Angeles Herald Archive

Pages Available:
112,922
Years Available:
1873-1910