OCR Interpretation


Los Angeles herald. [volume] (Los Angeles [Calif.]) 1890-1893, August 25, 1892, Image 4

Image and text provided by University of California, Riverside; Riverside, CA

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84025968/1892-08-25/ed-1/seq-4/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for 4

4
LOS ANGELES HERALD
pcblisbjd
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.
Joseph D. Lynch. Jam la J. ayirs.
AVERS & LYNCH, PUBLISHERS.
I Entered' at the poftofflce at Loa Angelea ac
second-class matter.]
DELIVERED BY CARRIERS
A.t Me Per Week, or SOc Per Month.
T2BMB BT KAIL, INCLCDING POSTAGEI
Daily Hebald, one year $S OO
Daily Hbbald, six months A 25
Daily Hbbald, three months 2 25
Daily Hbbald, one month 80
Witt kly Hebald, one yesr 2 00
Weekly Hbbald, six month* 1 00
Webxly Bzbald, three month* 60
Illustbatxd Hbbald, per copy 20
Office of publication, 123-225 West Second
street. Telephone 156.
Notice to Mall Subscribers.
The papers of all delinquent mail subscribers
to the Los Ancbles Daily Hebald will be
promptly discontinued her, after. No papers
will be sent to subscribers by mall nnlces the
same have been paid for in advance This rule
is inflexible. AVERS A LYNCH.
THVKSDAY, AUGUST »5, 180*.
India is supposed to have 300,000,000
population, and it cost $1,000,000 to take
the last census of that country, which
bad to be printed in seventeen different
languages.
A man was taken to San Quentin last
week with thirty-nine years' sentences
chalked up against him. By the time
he gets ont, people will be talking about
something else than the tariff.
These striking coopers who went into
a man's sbopß in Berkeley and damaged
his tools and engines, ought to be Bent
to the penitentiary, and it would not be
any great calamity if walking delegates
were sent along with them.
A taper says that Freeman, tbe his
torian, could address a Greek audience
in their own tongue, and so could Mr.
Gladstone. That's nothing. O'Donovan
Bossa and Sconchin Maloney could both
do the same thing, and cot half try.
Twenty-siy sailors on the whaling
ship Northern Light, of New Bedford,
are now in custody in a San Francisco
jail for refusing to Bail the ship back to
that port from Ounalaska. The ship is
about 60 years' old and leaks like a
eieve.
The blowing up oi a car laden with
steel ingots and consigned to the Carne
gie works at Homestead, was unworthy
of any good cause. It will be impossi
ble for Americans to sympathize with
those who resort to dynamite, the cow
ard's weapon.
It is estimated that there are 130,000
Chinese in America; and under the new
exclusion act, the internal revenue de
partment, is required to have a photo
graph of each yellow mother's gander of
them. What an album poor old Uncle
Sam will have, to be sure. The "rogue's
gallery," oi the New York police office,
will be nowhere in comparison.
Tub adjournment of the Santa Bar
bara convention, to reassemble in this
'icity on tbe 10th day of next month,
bodes no good to the party. The con
vention was called for Santa Barbara,
and shoul4 have made its nomination
there. Let us hope that sensible action
will be taken on the occasion of reas
sembling, aud the business dispatched
with promptness.
The little Express applies the term of
"blacksmith" to this office in a' way
that is inappropriate. Each of the
Hekald'B : owners served a full ap
prenticeship to "the art preservative"
at a period when five years waa the
term of service demanded by tbe typo
graphical unions at the East. When
the editor of the Express used to allude
to his imposingstone as "tbe anvil" this
paper pitied his verdancy and treated it
with the charity of silence.
The efforts of Mr. Hubert Howe Ban
croft to sell his alleged library to the
United States for a half million dollars,
will only provoke ridicule when the
proposition comes to a vote in congress.
There was once a historian, named Ban
croft, who waa secretary of tbe navy un
der Mr. Polk and other Democratic
presidents, but he is dead and "dead
men's clothes soon weaf out." There is
no sunehine in the shadow of a great
name. Hubert Howe Bancroft is as big
a literary quack as can be found in
America. A large number of his his
torical work, so-called, waß done by a
vagrant who sleeps on the sidewalks of
Portland, and who has forgotten more
about elegant writing than all the in
mateß of the "History building" ever
knew.
It is stated by those who are in a po
sition to know what they are talking
about, that the great railroad strike is
leading up to a famine in New York
City, because of the inability of the
railroads to get fresh supplies of provi
sions into New York. Of course, the
poorer classes are the greatest suf
ferers, as they are only able to lay
in their provisions from day to
day. The docks of Brooklyn, Jersey
City and the metropolis are crowded
with little urchins, trying to catch fish
enongh to atone tor the absence of meat
at home. Two weeks more of this bus
iness will see great suffering in the Em
pire city; and all because wages have
been reduced to enable railroads to pay
dividends on stocks watered up to six
times their actual value.
Whether tbe Examiner's recently
unearthed scandal really amounts to
anything, bo fai ac the defensive armor
of the new lighting shins is concerned,
time alone will tell. When that paper
caught hold of old John Roach's tinker
ing with the Dolphin and other veesels
of war, some people said it was a
'tempest in a teapot," while others de
LOS ANGELES HERALD: THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 25, 1892.
nounced it as "a scandalous attempt to
wreck the reputation of a representative
American mechanic." The Examiner
was right, and every steamboatman in
America knew it. A fair sample of
Roach's work was that wretched iron
coffeepot, the Alaskan, which foundered
near Coos bay in 1889. At that
time it was represented that there
was a frightful gale of wind raging, that
sunk tbe steamer. It so happens that
some of the shipwrecked crew were
picked up and saved by the crew of a
dredger, which was being towed from
San Francisco to tbe Columbia river.
Any man who has ever handled a steam
boat knows that a dredger or a pile
driver is the very meanest thing ever
handled at sea; and that if the Alaskan
had been properly built, the dredger
would have foundered first. We begin
to think the Examiner has some foun
dation for its charge against the Carne
gie works.
THE MEXICAN GRANT-HOLDERS ENEMY.
Probably there never was in America,
from the opening of the current century
to this very day and hour a class so op
pressed under a republican form of gov
ernment as the native population of
California, to whom graats were made
by the parent government of Mexico
prior to the treaty of Queretaro. By
the terms of that treaty the United
States government was to recognize and
confirm the validity of those grants in
and to tbe lands therein mentioned,
wherever the same were properly au
thenticated. The history of those grants
and their owners who were, for the most
part, wholly ignorant of American court
procedure, is a sad and pathetic picture.
Their cases were carried from court to
court till they were impoverished. First
went all their money; then tbeir flocks
of cattle were sold for less than half
their value, to keep up the incessant
strain of the courts; and finally, when
the lands were confirmed to them, their
substance was devoured in court costs
and lawyers' fees.
Suppose the government had Baid—
we will respect these grants just this
far. We will survey these lands and
sell them at $1.25 per acre just as we
sell all other public lands. But we will
reserve 25 cents per acre out of each sale
to cover the cost of Burvey, and pay the
remaining $1 per acre to the grant hold
ers. Such was Dr. Gwin's idea of the
case, but General Fremont who owned a
grant himselF, overruled him and Gwin
withdrew his bill.
A commission composed of J. D.
Thornton, Alpheus Felch and another
whose name is now forgotten, came out
here during Mr. Pierces administration,
to adjudicate on these claims. If the
claimants were dissatisfied with their
judgment, they had tbe right of appeal
to the United States district court,
whose judge up to a year ago was Ogden
Hoffman. As is well known to many of
our readers, Judge Hoffman made five
or six pilgrimages to the City of Mexico
in search of information that would en
able him to adjudicate more clearly upon
the most of these cases, but a few of
which ever went up to the supreme
court of the United States. Generally
speaking, they were all determined prior
to 1865, and since then have passed
through a dozen changes of ownership.
It was reserved for Attorney General
Miller, the former law partner of Benja
min Harrison, now president, to take
measures contemplating the reopening
of these land grants, until rebuked by
Senator Stanford, who told bim that
such procedure would make California a
Democratic state till the very crack of
doom. Tbe president, being a shrewd
politician, and not wishing to impair his
chances of re-election, ordered at once
that all proceedings in this line should
terminate. The grant holders of Cali
fornia, as well as those who have pur
chased from them, cannot afford to vote
the ticket of a party whose chief legal
officer has virtually declared that there
is no such thing in law as an innocent
purchaser.
THE BAY STATE FOR CLEVELAND.
Tbe Boston Post is an old-established
paper, and is addicted to conundrums.
About tbe time that the Kentucky reso
lutions of 1798 first appeared in print,
the Post gave its original conundrum:
"Why is an elephant like an oyster?
Answer: Because neither of them can
climb a tree." After nearly a century
of rest from such an arduous labor, the
same paper now asks, Why should Mas
sachusetts vote for Cleveland? But, in
total discordance with the former occa
sion, it fails to provide an answer to its
question.
We can tell the Post why Mr. Cleve
land should receive the electoral vote of
the old Bay state. It is because he is
candid, and has the courage of bis con
victions ; because he speaks and acts
without resorting to the employment of
conscience-keepers ; and because he was
manly enongh to prefer defeat to equiv
ocation. He treads no dark and devi
ous paths in his walk before tbe people
ef this country. Hia errand in life is an
honest one, and every citizen who
knows anything about the public affairs
of the Ration, knows just where Mr.
Cleveland stands upon every important
question and practical issue of the day.
How, then, can Grover Cleveland
hope to carry that state, whose electoral
vote has always gone Republican for
the past thirty-six years ?
For the simple reason that the peo
ple, of the old commonwealth are people
who read and remember what they
read; because there ie sufficient moral
courage yet left in the land of Daniel
Webster and Rufua Choate, to back np
a man whose candor is proverbial and
his integrity unquestioned; because pop
ular education has reached a higher
pitch in Massachusetts than in any
other state in the union; and because
the blood of Bunker Hill and Lexington
is not yet run out.
Massachusetts is the home of free
thought—it was the cradle of Wendell
Phillips and a score of other masterly
intellects, not excluding Prescott and
Bancroft among historians; Wendell
Phillips and Daniel Webster among
orators; Touro and Whittier among
.philanthropists; to say nothing of
George Peabody, Dr. Holmes and Starr
King. The cradle of free thought will
have a support for Cleveland that will
astonish the far west. She has elected
several Democratic governors, but this
time Cleveland will catch her maiden
Democratic electoral vote.
BRAVE BUT BOGUS BATTLING.
The Sham Fight at Camp Anacapa
Yesterday.
Camp Anacapa, Ventura, Cal., Aug.
24—A good deal of powder was burned
in camp this afternoon, when a sham
battle was fought, with Companies B
and F, as the defending force, and the
other four companies of the regiment as
the attacking force. Companies F and
B remained in camp, having the gatling
gun stationed in tbe rear and the ho
witzer stationed on tbe right near the
colors. The four companies forming the
attacking force left camp at 1 o'clock,
tbe defending force immediately forming
on the parade ground. At this juncture
tbe other companies of the attacking
force appeared on the railroad track in
large numbers, which so intimidated
the defeni-e that they drew bask, leav
ing their cannon unprotected, except by
the squad with it, which was soon over
come. As soon as tbecannon was captured
it was turned around and used with
great effect against the fleeing enemy.
The rest of the force had gotten into
camp aud formed in tbe rear of the can
non, while the two retreating compa
nies succeeded in getting under cover
and strengthening their position by
bringing up the Gatling gun.
A general advance of the attacking
force was then ordered, but they were
nnable to take the position of the de
fense, by reason of the vigorous firing of
the gatling gun, and were finally forced
to retreat.
The colonel's horse was shot, and there
were! make-believe killed and wounded
on both sides. The wounded were cared
for by the field musicians, who were de
tailed as litter bearers, and a field hos
pital was established under tbe care of
the hospital steward. The battle was
viewed by hundreds of interested spec
tators.
The Bhooting contest for the Ventura
cifzens' medal was continued today.
The match now lies principally between
Sergeant Case, with a score of 81; Pri
vate Splittstoeser, with a score of 81,
and Private Reilley, with a score of 86.
POLITICAL MATTERS.
TAX COtLKCTOK WHITNKVB AT-
Tft3ll*l' AT EXPLANATION.
Those Tax Receipts Cause Him to Cn
wlsely Rush iuto Print—A Report
tbat Mr. Blame is Com
ing—Notes.
The distressed Express comes to the
rescue of Tax Collector Whitney, and
with great ease plunges that excusing
officer deeper than ever into the inex
plainable. He is now in the same
depths aB the other official McGintys
exposed by the Herald.
Mr. Whitney makes a statement, after
a year's time, as to why last year, when
election wis a long way off, be awarded
the contract for the printing of the tax
receipts to Kingsley & Barnes without
asi leg for bids. He says, " — I bad no
time to look aronnd for bide." That is
his excuse. Will it go with the tax
payers?
This year Mr. Whitney thought it
prudent, election day approaching, and
having plenty of "time." to ask for bids;
the result was tbat the receipts were
printed on a superior quality oTpapor to
that used last year, and the cost to the
taxpayers Was less than half the amount
paid to Kingsley & Barnes.
Mr. Whitney takes the same line of
defense adopted by his confrere, Mr.
Ward, in the matter of awarding the
contract for the printing of the great
register to the distressed Express—that
is, that he had the power to do so. Like
Mr. Ward, he appears to be somewhat
morally myopic. The power to do a
thing does not make it right. It does
not excuse wasting the people's money.
Mr. Whitney, in his accusatory ex
cusing, says : "The law does not require
me to let tbe job on contract. I can
give it to whom I please.
fixed by tbe supervisors allow me to pay
$750 for this job. It was done by the
firm I gave it to for a little over $600."
He claims credit for getting the job
doncjor something like $150 less than it
might have cost, when as a matter of
fact, it should have cost $450 less! That
is a fine explanation is it not, Messieurs
the taxpayers of this county ? Does it
satisfy you? Is it business-like?
The Express refers to the article in
yesterday's Herald, on this subject,
under the heading "Blowing Away at
a Broken Reed;" that is correct, the
"broken reed" is Mr. Whitney.
He who excuses accuses, is a true
saying, for that is what the Express al
ways manages to do for every one of the
many unfortunate office-holders it has
attempted to protect.
BLAINE MAY COME.
There is a report that tbe Blame fam
ily has secured rooms at the Hotel Coro
nado for the fall, says the Examiner,
and that it is quite likely that the idol
of the California Republicans will be in
tbe state during the latter part of the
campaign. If such should prove to be
the case the state committee will make
an earnest effort to induce him to speak
at a half dozen different points before
the election.
It is understood tbat influential Re
publicans are in communication with
the plumed knight, and that he will be
urged to come out and obtain ocular evi
dence of his popularity in California.
In looking over the Ninth ward it will
be observed tbat there are more candi
dates to the square inch than can be
found in any other ward in Los Angeles.
There is Collins, for supervisor; Frame
and Reese, for the assembly; Richard
son and Rogers for constable; Cobb for
justice of the peace; Sonneman and
Ward for county clerk; Perry for sher
iff; Bull and Loomis, Campbell, Clark,
Irvin, Ferguson, O'Bryan for council
man, and Wirsching for supervisor; be
sides one candidate for mayor, one for
county auditor, in the person of Lopez,
and one for city auditor, Fred Teale.
Several more are talking of entering the
field for tbe various other offices. If
any other ward can show a more numer
ous gang for office, that ward can take
the bakery.
The People's party expects to control
tbe election of councilman in the Ninth
ward the coming fall, and also the elec
tion of mayor of the city. Tbe balance
of power is a nice thing for any party to
have.
FRUITS OF THE EARTH.
FINK SPECIMENS AT THE CHAMBER
OF COMMERCE.
Recent Additions to the Varied Show.
World's Fair Matters Making; Great
Progress — Donations
Received.
The exhibit of neighborhood products
nnder charge of the chamber of com
merce has been kept fairly well supplied
with fruitß and vegetables of late, but
the replenishments seemed not alto
gether satisfactory to Superintendent
Wiggins, in view of the fact that the
present is the harvest time of a large
proportion of Southern California pro
ducts. The superintendent, therefore,
took a little rustling tour to Beveral of
the neighboring towns the other day,
reminding fruit growers tbat a small
portion of the firstlings of the horticul
tural flock might well be dedicated to
increasing the _ attractiveness of the
chamber's exhibit. As a result, the
customary offerings have been supple
mented by many others, and a stream
of specimens has been pouring into the
exhibit ball during the past two days.
Among the noticeable donations re
cived yesterday were the following:
The Rosecrans ranch sends an exhibit
of Bartlett pears, Kelsey plums, Hunga
rian prunes, orange cling and Muir
peaches, all raised without irrigation, of
good size and unusually fine flavor.
Dr. B. B. Briggs, o"f La Cros-centa,
sends clusters of Bartlett, Flemish beau
ty and russet pears.
J. W. Cook, of Tropico, sends an ex-
Libit of white winter Pearmain apples.
Peter Mullen, South New Main street,
sends a number of lemon cling and
Crawford peaches, weighing three-quar
ters of a pound each.
L. S. Ottman, Fruitland, sends some
Crawford peaches weighing a pound
each.
These specimens have been put into
preserving fluid for exhibition at the
world's fair.
W. W. Blin, Duarte, sends in dusters
of French prunes and Kelaey plums,
which will also be preserved for exhi
bition at Chicago.
W.C. Andrus, Mr. Dole and Sheurman
Bros., Pomona, send plums, pears and
prunes.
' G. N. Lewis, Azusa, orange cling
peaches for world's fair.
J.F.Edwards provides the chamber
exhibit with the first large squash of the
season, his specimen measuring 6 feet 4
inches in circumference, and weighing
136 pounds.
J. F. Jenkins, city, Ponderosa tomatoes
of unusual solidity and regularity of
shape.
S. J. Coleman, Glendale, sends a num
ber of the finest Flemish Beauty pears
which have graced the exhibit tables
this season, each pear weighing three
fourths of a pound or more, and being as
smooth as wax.
Mrs. A. L. Hooper sends Crawford
peaches.
C. 0. Thompson, Pasadena, sends
some branches loaded with Hungarian
prunes as a sample of the crop raised in
his orchard. Mr. Thompson yesterday
shipped east five tons of these prunes,
and Messrs. Earl & Co., through whom
the shipment was made, assert that
they were the finest fruit their firm had
shipped this season, excelling in size
and quality the best product of the
northern section.
O. A. True, of Boyle Heigh Is, sends a
pie pumpkin weighing about 30 pounds.
18. F. Boone, Ramona, sends black
berries. The berries are few in number,
but every one is two inches long.
The chamber is now receiving appli
cations for space at the horticultural
fair, to be held under the auspices of
the chamber of commerce from the 3d
to the Bth of October.
world's fair notes.
The Committee having in charge the
matter of securing material for the local
exhibit at tbe world's fair, reports that
dried fruit is coming in in satisfactory
quantity, and of unexcelled quality.
Bliss brothers, of Duarte, send four
sacks; Becker brothers, of Lamanda,
one sack, and H. P. Phelps, of San Ga
briel, two sacks. This fruit will be re
sorted and placed in display boxes.
Fancy display boxes for dried fruit
were yesterday sent to Redlands, Pasa
dena and Sierra Madre, and two cases of
glassware, to be filled with fruit for ex
hibition at the world's fair, were for
warded to Piru city, Ventura county.
The Pomona board of trade has al
ready prepared a handsome display of
fruit in glass jars. The exhibit includes
pears and peaches weighing from one to
one and one quarter pounds each.
The demand for jelly and jam jars is
very much greater than the supply, the
secretary now having orders for thirty
five dozen oriental jars which have been
ordered. One case of glassware was re
ceived yesterday consisting of jars for
tbe jelly palace, which willjbe distributed
as soon as orders are received from the
jelly palace committee.
One of the attractions of tbe orange
grove at the world's fair will be an or
ange tree three feet high and three feet
across tbe head, bearing fifty-six or
anges. Tbe tree comes from the orchard
of A. O. Thomson, at Duarte.
The work of setting out a hundred
ornamental and shade trees, was yester
day completed at the state forestry sta
tion, at Santa Monica. The trees are
planted in boxes preparatory to ship
ment to Chicago, next spring.
The committee is anxious to obtain
samples of orange, lemon, olive and
almond wood, cut in sections four feet
long and six to eight inches in diameter.
Parties able to do so are requested to
send wood of this character to the
chamber of commerce. The committee
also requests samples of grains, which
will be properly prepared for exhibition,
and due credit given to donors.
W DELICIOUS
Flavoring
Extracts
NATURAL FRUIT FLAVORS.
Vanilla 01 Perfect purity.
Lemon ~ Of great strength.
9r ~ ' Economy In their use
RoseetCjrr plavor aa delicately
and ctoltolously aa the f reeh trmr>
THE COLUMBIA COLONY,
In Southern California.
6520 Acres of Land Offered by the Southern California Land
Company, 230 North Main Street, Adjoining
the First National Bank.
1630 Shares at $100 Each, in Installments of $5 per Month
Without Interest.
NOT fi LSND DISTRIBUTION, BUI AN INVESTMENT OF MONEY!
Each Share Will Earn 5 Per Cent rev Month on Each $100 for Five Years
From the Date of the First Subscription, and Has
the Best Real Estate Security.
BOOKS OF SUBSCRIPTION NOW OPEN.
wi,h\ X l eenhU^f £daDdthlrtyBbarC ' at?loseaCllwUlbu y bowler Ranch ol 6520 acres,
with the present improvements and the prospective Improvements to be made by the present
owners »• a cost to them ot $30,000. This splendid proporty la situated on the border line of
Tulare and Kern counties, four miles west of tu e Valley Road of ,he tiouthern Pacific Railroad,
and four miles north of the branch line to the oil wells, and twelve miles weft of the present
line to Ban Francisco. A survey of the Banta Fe line has been made through the western por
tion of this trace.
„ * e "' frult and vlne lan<l In 'f'e. m the heart of the artesian belt. To be subdi
vided into 40-acre tracts, including a townsite, with artesian wells and an irrigating canal of
twelve miles, broad avenues with trees, and water for conveyance to each subdivlr-ion. These
improvements to be paid for by the present owners, and are included in the contract of sale to
this company. For these lmprovem-nts $30,000 is set aside. Title perfect and undoubted.
*' 11 — :±..::. , - ....ggsst
OPENING OF THE CAMPAIGN
& ON THE PART OF
-)iTHE DEMOCRACY^
Under the instructions of the State Central Committee mass
meetings will be held in all the considerable cities and towns in
the State on
Saturflay EvenißS, Anpst 21, 1892.
Good speakers will address the people on the live political
issues of the day. The meeting in LOS ANGELES CITY will
be held at the Broadway front of the Courthouse, and will be
addressed by
HON. STEPHEN M. WHITE,
HON. R. F. DEL. VALLE,
HON. O. F. ORONIN, end
HON. GEO. S. PATTON.
Other speakers will be as follows:
AT PASADENA: Frank G. Finlayson and Gen. J. R. Mathews.
AT POMONA: C. F. Harris and J. R. Graff. v
AT LONG BEACH: W. A. Ryan and J. W. Mitchell.
AT REDONDO: Maj. W. R. Burke and Geo. W. Merrill.
AT SANTA MONICA: Col. J. J. Ayers and T. E. Gibbon.
AT AZUSA: Clarence A. Miller and W. S. Creighton.
AT VENTURA: Col. Messmore and H. D. Cassiday.
By order of the Auxiliary Committee of the Democratic
State Central Committee. GEORGE J. DENIS, Chairman.
W. U. MASTERS, Secretary.
THE JONES NATIONAL FENCE.
.NO g . , .8
FOR mß'fWi FUDGES
That will take up the slack, retain the crimp, and lock tho stay, preventing
sagging, and stock from spreading the wires.
THE COMING FENCE
Turns Chickens and Rabbits, as Well as Every Kind of Stock.
This Lock and Stay applied to either plain or barb wire makes a better fence, with posts 100
feet apart, than any other process with posts 6 feet apart, and is tbe cheapest, strongest and
most durable fence in existence. Samples of fence and gate on exhibition opposite new post
office. Investigate this see tern of fencing before using any other, and thus save money. Sup
plies end machines for making fences and using this patent Lock and Stay for sale by
J. Q. AVARS,
Owner of Patent for Southern California and Arizona, and General agent for Pacific Coast States
and Territories, 424 SOUTH MAIN BTREaT, LOS ANGELES, CAL.
AGENTS WANTED. suwem
HIGHLY IMPROVED
PAYING FARM FOR SALE!
Containing 62 acreß of land, all in high state of cultivation ; cottage
bouse, hard-finished, of seven rooms, bath and kitchen, together with
small cottage of three rooms for laborers; about four acres in bearing
Washington Navels; 5 acres English Walnuts; 5 acres Winter Ap
ples ; two artesian wells; about 3000 feet service pipe and hydrants.
First-class corn, alfalfa and orange land; all fenced and cross-fenced.
Apply at once to
JOHN DOLLAND,
8 . 10 . 1 m 115 South Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal
Fred. A. Salisbury
wood, coal~m7mmd CHARCOAL
AND THE CELEBRATED
CALEDONIAN COAL,
ALSO WELLINGTON COAL..
No. 345 South Spring Street. *Tel. 226.

xml | txt