Newspaper Page Text
6 LOS ANGELES DAILY HERALD BY THE HERAUD COMPANY. nWNK (1, FTNLATSON PrnM«al ROBT. M. ton O«n«ml WiMIM OLDEST MORMNO PArER IN LOS ANGELES. Founded Oct. 2, 1873. Thlrty-iecond Year. Chamber of Commerce Building. TKtßPHONgfl— ftiniwt, Pt«»« 11. Hem*. The H«Mid. Th* onir r>»mocr»«l8 n«w«pxp<r In Southtrn c*llfornl» r»e»l»« tna- th« foil AMoel*t*il Press report*. NEWS BKHVICE— Membor of thu Asanetaied Press, reoehrlnj I It* full report, «v»r**in« 2S.no« word* a d»r. ■ • EASTERN AGENTft— Bmlth A Thompion. P«tl«r Btfldtns. K*w Tnrki Trlbun* Building. Chicago. • CIRCULATION SWORN DAILY AVERAGE FOR OC f\t(\ FEBRUARY , SUNDAY EDITION.. , 31,410 RATEi OF SUBSCRIPTION. WITH SUNDAY MAOAZINBi Dully, br cnrrlnr. per month • '.'I! Dally, by mall, thrco month! l-»* r»nily. by mall, nix month! »••• Dally, by mall, en* jreur »■•» foniiiiy Herald, by mall, 07.3 year. I.JW W— kly Herald, by null. on» year »•»» Entered at Po»tofflfl», I.o» Angeles, a« geeond-Blats Matter.' ' TUB HERALD IN SAN FRANCISCO— Lot Anzelc* and Southern California vUltor* to Ean Franolsoo will find Th* n«rald on «»!• dally at the «•»■« ttanda In th* Palac* and St. Franol* hotel*, and for sal* at Cooper A Co., 846 Market; at New* Co.. 8- P. Ferry, and en th* utreeta by Wheatley. . THE HERALD'S CITY CIRCULATION . The Herald's circulation in the city of Lea Angelea Is larger than that of the Examiner or the Express and second only to that of the Time*. ' • Two more students of the Ascot school of crime have been brought to book, this time for passing fraud ulent checks. But the school still flourishes. That much married man, Hoch, denies that he had a wife in Utah. He seems sensitive about his claim to being merely a matrimonial amateur. The water department report for February shows $26,811 of receipts in excess of expenses. Why not cut the lighting knot with the same knife that settled the ■water service tangle? Arkansas newspapers point with manifest pride to the fact that a man was hanged in that state recently for killing a sewing machine agent. It is claimed that even a book agent may now travel in the state with comparative safety. Oklahoma is in angry mood because its statehood aspiration is blasted, at least until next winter. It does seem cruel to the'average Oklahomaite to be thus disappointed, after having agreed to accept the prohi bition condition to "swear off." The agricultural department reports that the winter has been ideal for the wheat crop. John W. Gates is tatisfled also that the financial crop from the wheat corner is ideal, if we may believe the report that he -cleaned up $6,000,000 from it. A bill has passed the assembly providing for another justice of the peace in Los Angeles county. Another justice would obviate much inconvenience on the part of candidates for matrimony by judicial process, who now have to stand in line awaiting their turns. ■ : i''2:f. j ln a recent address a. Los Angeles woman declared that "the crying mistake of the age is the distrust felc for public officials." She might have alluded to the trustfulness of some officials, such as the state senator who told the man with the boodle just to "drop it ln my coat pocket." * ' ,- The inauguration yesterday was conventional and the only unusual feature in connection with it was the parade escorting the president from the capitol to the White House. The many unique features In the pageant made it a spectacle never to be 'forgotten by those who witnessed It. Yesterday Thedore Roosevelt passed from the status of a president of the United States as the result of an accident to that of a president elected by the largest plurality of votes ever cast by the American people. He also is the youngest, the richest and the most "strenuous" of all the presidents. A wild rush for state and county work jobs may be expected if a bill reaches enactment which went through the senate by a vote of 23 to 5. It provides for a "minimum wage scale of $3 a day on all state and county work." That covers 'unskilled labor, oi course, including some of the kind that abhors work. The passage of the Espey anti-pool Belling bill by the assembly and the anti-prize fight bill in the senate was the most commendable day's work of the legislature during the present session, barring the expulsion of the senatorial boodlers. Neither of the said bills is "out of the woods" yet, however, and exultation over their success thus far would be premature and possibly re grettable. THE NEW FISHING LAW ■ A bill passed by the legislature at the instance of the fish commission, chiefly, makes important pro vision for the preservation of both fresh and salt water fish in California waters. The closed season for trout tinner the new act la fixed between November 1 and April 1. No trout may be taken except with hook and line and no one person is allowed to catch more than fifty in one day, with a maximum weight of twenty-five pounds. Probably oine-tenths of amateur trout fishermen would.be quite willing, after some experience, to compromise on a large discount from the legal allowance. The law makes it a misdemeanor to "catch striped bass less than three pounds in weight." Just how the angler is to determine whether the nibble at his hook tips the scales at three pounds or less is not explained in the law. The close season for black baris Is between January 1 and June 1, and It is forbidden to catch such flsh at any time except with hook and line. The wholesale destruction of young fish by seines Is prohibited thus: "Every person who catches young flsh with a seine and doea not immediately return them to the water alive Is guilty of a misdemeanor, and sub ject to a fine of pot less than ?20 or Imprisonment not less than twenty and not more than 100 days, or both." , Provision is made for the further protection of lobsters, crawfish, shrimp, crabs, sturgeon, abalones, etc. The law is very stringent in respect to the lia bility of transportation companies, making them equally guilty with first offenders if they carry fish taken in violation of the law. The act as it stands is the outcome of a long contest and th« sift lug down of several bills considered in legislative committees. LOS ANGELES HERALD: SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 5, 1905.' PART .111. THE INAUGURAL ADDRESS The < presidents Inaugural address Is characteristic of. its Author In style, but Is more concise than the average of his state papers. lie WAstes but little npace In telling his countrymen what they already know about the greatness and Rlory of the republic. On the contrary, he quickly settles to the point of warning the people concerning the re sponsibilities and dangers of the future. He reminds them, with regard to present conditions, that "never before have men tried so vast and formida ble an experiment as that of administering the affairs of a continent under the forms of a democratic repub lic." j He might properly have said, Instead of "con tinent," almost a hemisphere, for we have practically reached that scope under the later Interpretation of the Monroe doctrine, with its accepted responsibility at home and Us recognized obligations abroad. But there Is nothing In the present situation, nor In the possible problems of tho future, that causes even a moment of distrust ln the mind of Theodore Roosevelt. Alluding to the "splendid heritage" left by the fathers and defenders of the republic, he declares that "we In our turn have an assured confidence that we shall be able to leave this heritage unwasted and enlarged to our children and our children's children." And to ,do so, he says, "we must show, not merely ln great crises but in the everyday affairs of life, the qualities of prac tical Intelligence, of courage, of hardihood and endur ance, and above all the -devotion to a lofty Ideal, which made great the men who founded this republic in the days of Washington, which made great the men who preserved this republic In the days of Abraham Lin coln." ' i No other American president was inaugurated In circumstances more auspicious for the future glory of the republic than those attending the inauguration of the thirtieth president — Theodore Roosevelt. SPRING AT THE SEASIDE March ln Southern California is climatically similar to May In the eastern states. There Is an average rainfall of about three inches during March in this section, but the precipitation usually is ln the nature of warm spring showers. All the features of spring appear fully two months earlier here than they do in the east, not even excepting the crop of spring poems. In one noticeable respect the Southern California spring is ln evidence much more than two months be fore its arrival in the east. That Is the feature of preparation for the early summer season at the sea side. On the Atlantic coast the general work of restora tion at the ocean resorts does not begin until May, and the public places 'are not open for the reception of guests until the latter part of June. Here on the Pacific coast, in the vicinity of Los Angeles, the finishing touches already are being put on the Improvements at the various seaside resorts. Even in the early days of March the warm sunshine induces thoughts of an outing down by the ocean, where the exhilarating sea breeze acts as an early spring tonic. And, strange as it may seem to the newcomer who is unfamiliar with the conditions, a spurt in bathing suit costume, with a swim or douse ln the surf, is as pleas ant now In respect to temperature as it will be four months hence at the Atlantic resorts^ What may be called the summer season in this section of the Pacific coast begins in March. . It is not easy to draw a line of/ seasonal periods at our coast resorts for the reason that there is no time in the year when they are not enjoyable. They are not merely visited by great crowds of people in July, August and a few days in September and then abandoned -absolutely the rest of the year. The seaside summer season begins here with the slackening of the so-called rainy season in this month, and It lasts until the coming of the next rainy season, usually about the beginning of December. During the whole of that long ' Period there is rarely a day when an outing on the beach is not delightful. The. various ocean resorts near Los Angeles will be found more Inviting this season than they ever have been before. Within the last three or four years the older ones have been jn strenuous competition, each striving to be more attractive and inviting than the rest, with the object of securing the lion's share of public patronage. ♦ And those older ones have been obliged to hustle in true California style to hold their ground against the several new resorts that have sprung up to claim public attention. The great rivalry among the various attractions that dot the coa6t line from Santa Monica to Newport Beach has resulted In • vast improvements during the last few months. The throngs ,of people who soon will begin to flock to the coast will find this season a marked change in many features of public catering as compared with the offerings in former years. The Pacific coast beach near Los Angeles is the finest in the world, ac cording to the consensus of opinion expressed by com petent judges, and its artificial attractions are more com plete now than they ever were before. * ■ THE CZAR'S PITIFUL PLIGHT The most pitiable creature in the eyes of the world today is the emperor of Russia. His rescript to the minister of the interior and his manifesto to the Rus sian people Indicate his utter. helplessness. The two documents show how completely ho is cowed by the imminent danger to his dynasty. Recog nizing the 'force of advanced public opinion in his coun try, he makes a pretense of concession to the people, which fs really only as chaff In the wind. He will con vene an assembly of "selected" representatives of the people to consider public affairs, the selection being made by the bureaucracy. That la all the people get iv answer to their demand for popular representation in the government. On the other hand, he declares that the war with Japan must continue in order to main tain "Russia's aspirations in the far east." -:'-V It looks as if the czar had missed the only opportu nity for quieting his people and avoiding the most seri ous convulsion in the whole history of the empire. The great mass of the Russian people had been led to be lieve that their emperor, whom they seem to love per sonally, was about to grant the boon of participation in the government. But he has practically | turned a deaf ear to their appeal. 'They aßked for bread and have been given a stone. The situation in Russia 1b more critical now than it has been at any time since the beginning of tho war with Japan. The foundation of the empire has not been bo weak as it Is now since the first Romanoff became emperor. Complete defeat of the czar's splen did array in Manchuria, which seems inevitable, follow ing the denial of the popular appeal, Is almost Bure to arouse the Russian nation to the pitch of revolution. And yet the czar Is more sinned against than sin ning. It Ih not from the heart that the mouth speaketh in denial of the piteous appeal of hie paople. He knows by the experience of his predecessors that he dare not go counter to the will of the powerful bureaucracy, In whose bands be is virtually as J'clay in the hands of the potter.' i' . ,/■'.'. ON THE GIANT'S TRAIL A MINE OF WEALTH IS LOS ANGELES Prominent Men Who Have Become Rich From Small Beginnings in Southern California , " During a Quarter of a Century Written for The Herald by Col. Joseph D. Lynch ' The existence of thirty-one trust, savings and commercial banks In Los Angeles, ' many of them with colossal capitals, deposits and surpluses, Indi cates a very flourishing condition of the finances of this extreme southern corner of the United States. The truth is that at nearly every stage of its history the/c has always been a suggestion of the dabbling in large sums of money #in the Angelic city. Even when the city of the Queen of the Angels •was an old fashioned Spanish pueblo the rattle of dingbats could be heard hereabouts in lively cadences. Long before our city became great, old John Temple had financed the government at, the City of Mexico and the father of ex-Sheriff Martin Aguirre, an elegant Spaniard born in old Spain, had buttressed the Roman Catholic church of the Golden state when Mexico defaulted on the Pious fund, which Diaz has since made good to the,. United States through The Hague tribunal and which has been paid over to Archbishop Rlordan. Away back, forty years and more ago, there were plenty of rich men in Los Angeles — rjeh as richeß were then counted. Some of them are living now, a few are lately dead, and the'de scendants of others, though to a slight extent, are still with us and still rich. In a review of some of our early rich men we must still . take note of the lumber millionaire, J. M. Griffith. Al though this gentleman has encountered physical casualties enough to kill half a dozen ordinary men, he Is still hale and hearty. He has some signs of the vagary which occasionally carries a man near and at rare intervals beyond the century marli. His last accident, which might have broken his neck, which happened up at San Bernardino some years ago, in stepping from a railway .platform in the dark, seemed Blmply to have rallied his vitality, and he daily appears at the lumber, yards of J. M. Griffith & Co. as full of busi ness ns in his green und salad days. In the old days— away, ! way back— the firm of Griffith & Tomllnson counted for much In the business affairs of San Pedro and Los Angeles. They were the great rivals of Gen. Phlneas Banning* who is today represented by. the Ban ning boy's, Capt. William, Hancock and "Joe," or the "Judge." In those old days Griffith & Tomllnson had a stage and transportation line running from Wilmington to Los Angeles and even to Yumai ■ Those were homerlc times. Gen. Banning had come on here from Wil mington, Del., whence the genesis ,of our town of Wilmington, our subsidiary port of San Pedro, He built himself a great mansion near his town in which was the center of more hospi tality than has ever been dispensed in Bouthern California, unless Dan Freeman's at the Centlnela became the exception, in later days. In thosu good olcTtlmeu a hot 'rivalry existed between Gen. Harming and Grlffth & Tomllnßon. Beginning with one steamer a month the ocean traffic gradually grew to two, three and four. Never wai there on the face of the globe a livelier competition than existed between those two transportation com panies. The Los Angeles headquarters of the Griffith & Tomllnson line were at the Lafayette hotel' and those of the Banning line at the St. Charles, nearly opposite, on Main street, where they stand now. Miracles of bronco gpe«d. would be performed on those trips and' for long' distances bronco «,eedl» the finest In th« world... Old John Reynolds would land in Main street whipping up the Banning stage us though the fate of worlds were in the issue, while some equally reliable and husky John of the rival line would hug Jils flanks, now one ahead and now the other, the excitement as great as that shown in a race between, steamers on the Mississippi rtjer, and eternally renewed on the arrival of the 'Frisco boat. These perennial strug gles were the great excitement of the day in Los Angeles, outside of the "man for breakfast," which was such a frequent incident here in those days, or the exploits of some perfervid gam bler or desperado who started in to shoot up the town. The last of these prehistoric charac ters, J. M. Griffith, Is a millionaire, has a number of enterprising sons, a daughter who is the wife of J. A. Graves, the noted lawyer and first vice president of the Farmers & Merchants' bank, and perhaps some other children. The children of Gen. Banning are wealthy and his boys have a down right commercial geniuß, liable to push fortune to the extreme standard of greatness. ,: i,;' Growth of Great Fortunes The growth of fortunes in Los An geles county has something of the romantic about It and sometimes even of the< incredible. Anyone desirous of particularizing what has been done here In the way of acquiring wealth would .undoubtedly pick out 1.. W. Hell man, the president, of the Farmers and Merchants' National bank of Los Angeles, of the Nevuda Na tional bank and Wells, Fargo & Co.'s National. bank of San Fran cisco and of many other banks in the stnteß of Oregon, Washington and else where.- Hellman is more than twenty years -younger than Cornelius Van derbilt when that financial^ athlete died. Should he live as long^as Van derbllt he will accomplish wonders. He has already done great things.' I have often been asked how much Isalas W. Hellman is worth. Of course I don't know, but I know enough to place the figure at a large sum. The way people are estimated, without any of the accuracy oi an assessor, I should say that $20,000,000 Is not an ex treme figure. AVithout having verified It, I should say Wat he und H. H. Huntlngton and E. J. Baldwin are the three largest taxpayers in Los An geles county, counting his corporation wealth In with Huntington's roster. Hellman came to Los Angeles prac tically without a dollar, and his career Cf acquisition has been marvelous. He owns property everywhere, in city and county. . ",■'■' ' Take one Instance of hla fortunate | real estate* investments. I. \V. Hell man, John and Jotham Blxby bought the Alamltos ranch, for which they paid $121,000. They own an equal In terest and have Bold gome portions of It. . What they' retain Is probably worth ?5,000,000. The Bixbya besides own the Oerrltos ranch, these two properties alone muking them among the wealth lest retiidents of Southern California. Mr. Hellman has not only made untold mil lions in real estate, but he has 11k ured In coloasul transactions In con nection with H. E. Huntlngton and through his Union Trust company of Ban Francisco and .other agencies. Hla connection! by marriage and builn.eis In the city of New York and elsewhere give him the premiership of the const in all mutters of finance,. ■ His. sod. lonian W., jr., la a chip or the old — Philadelphia Record. block and bids fair to follow creditably In his father's footsteps. One of the richest men who ever figured In Southern California was old Don Abel Steams. The Laguna rancho, which comes up to the verge of the city on the south, is one of the many valuable properties which he early ac quired. He was possessed, to employ an Irish euphemism, of "lnshlnß and lavlns" of fine real estate, reaching down to the San Diego line. He was hit hard by the drouth of the early sixties, and was obliged to sell much of his holdings, amongst the rest the Steams ranchos. He was a sturdy New Englander, and died leaving an enormous estate, barring drouth draw backs. He married one of the beauti ful Bandini girls, to whom he devised It all, and which made her; later known as Mrs. Arcadia B. de Baker, for years one of the heaviest taxpayers of Southern California. The Flints picked up in those days the magnificent San Joaquln rancho, embracing (105,000( 105,000 acres of the finest lands in Los Angeles county, which now form a portion of Orange county. They still own the major portion of that princely estate, which is still, in creasing immensely In value, and on portions of which cities are being built. In the days in which Los Angeles was. a pueblo of five thousand people, F, T. F. Temple was one of the wealth iest people of Southern California. If any Angeleno had been told that this gentleman would have lived to im poverish .himself he would have been laughed at. for his pains. In addition to the Temple block, he owned much property in the city, the Puente, La Merced, the San Felipe Lugo and many other valuable properties, in all at least three million dollars' worth, In those days a large sum! In the Early Seventies _ 111 the opening days of. the seventies Prudent Beaudry was one of the rich and most enterprising men of Los An geles. It may be said without exag geration that this enterprising Can adian created the hill portion of the city, beginning with "the Bellevue Ter race and running by Bunkerhill ave nue and the Sisters' hospital to the Beaudry reservoirs, including the cut ting through and grading of Temple street. In the latter work he was much assisted by an eccentric . character named J. W. Potts, who died poor, to the great regret of those who love en terprise. .- Governor John I, Downey was. a rich man of those days. I have !n a pre vious article explained how he came Into possession of the Santa Gertrudes ranch. He owned much property In the city, including the Downey block, which, is now being dismantled..^ Ho also owned Warner's ranch in San Diego, from which the Indians have lately been dispossessed by 'his nephew, J. Downey Harvey, who inherited it. Downey at that time, in conjunction with Hayward, ran a bank here. He afterward, with L W. Hellman, started the Farmers and Merchant s' v bank and was Its flrst president. The Temple & Workman bank was the, only other financial institution In Los Angeles. It disappeared at the close of 1875, and Its old quarters were occupied by the County bank, presided over for many years by Lob Angeles' , "grand old man," J. S. Slauson, later by Mr, Plator and lastly by T. L. Dugue, the latter gentleman administering its uftatrs until Its fusion with another Los An geles bank. ,';...; At that time it seemed good to Danker Patrick of Chicago, Banker Maybury of San Job? and Bankers IS. F. Spence and William Lacy of Sun Diego to start a new bank in Los An geles, under charge of the latter gen tlemen, Spence being elected president and Lacy cashier. They were finan ciers of the first grade; their bank was an Instantaneous success and has re mained so ever since. Mr, . Lacy was the brother-in-law of the celebrated composer of "The Mikado," Bir Arthur Sullivan, who, during his stay In Los .Angeles, frequently honored th« eanc turn or Tht Herftld with vl»H», He wh al«o the f«th«r of the L*ey Broth* er«, two of our mwt succeMful bu*l« ness men. When the new bank paid $500 a front foot for lt« quarters near the Farmers and Merchants' bank, Loi Angeles real estate was to have reached Itg perihelion. Two Fateful Years The year* 1874 and 1875 were fateful ones In the history of Loa Angeles. In the former year Senator John P. Jones mode hl» appearance. He at once pro« ceedf-d to Invest gome of his bonanza millions In the San Vlncente y Santa. Monica rnnehog, and he «et out forth* with to the building: of the Lab Anfrles A Independence railway, of which I have had something to say In past is flutg of The Herald. The field wbb by no means left to the Nevada senator. In 1876 B. J. Bald win — by many named "L^icky". Bald*, win— came down to Los Angeles with the idea of Investing some of his spare millions. As the story went, Baldwin linrl gold hla stock in the Ophlr mine for $5,400,000, one-third ln ensh and tha remainder In two notea "of' $1,800,000 ench, payable In »lx and, twelve months. While he was down here one of the notes was lout and there was n good deal of excited hunting around until It wag found. The first thing Baldwin did was to buy the Santa Anita ranch from the Newmnrku for gomethlng over $2Q0,000, which was a capital stroke, as It la probably the finest piece of prop erty in California. He next loaned P. P. F. Temple $250,000 to reopen hU bank, which stayed open for only a few weeks. Ag a result of thlg loan he gathered In the Temple block,- somg valuable property on the other side of Spring Btreet, the Puente, Merced and San Felipe Lugo ranchog, and heaven knows how much other valuable j real estate besides. With a most prescient sense of what he was doing he bought Capt. Hutchlnson's Cienega ranch for $60,000, or about $15- an acre.. E..J. Baldwin may have rightly earned the sobriquet of "Lucky;"\but In hU In vestments In Lob real estate hfi hns shown a keen business sense which haß rarely been surpansed. Luck may come and luck may go, but Los Angeles real estate goe« on ftrever In increment of values. It Is no exagger ation to say that whatever Baldwin's •real estate Investments ln Los Angeles may have cost him, they are worth ten times as much today. This so-called "lucky" man has diminished hla luck by too much devotion to litigation.: Talking about litigation, that re minds me. The last Mexican governor of California, Pio Pico, had, at various times set apart for himself real estate enough to satisfy even the maw of a Russian grand duke of the Serglus or the Vladimir gall. . He would probably have died with much of this If he could have controlled this passion. He sued his brother-in-law, Don Juan Forster, for the Santa Margarita ranch. "Plo," says Don Juan, "although I know you can't win that suit and have no title to the land, I will give you $50,000 If you withdraw the suit." No, he.would not hear of it, lost his suit and had to pay his lawyers besides— the Messrs. Glassell, Chapman & Smith and W. Jeff Gatewood of,San,Diego, ( who wire never accused* of working for their health merely. ] SMILES x She— lf you attempt to kiss me, I shall certainly scream for help. .- He— But I don't need any help.— Life.' Mlstr'ess— Don't deny it, Bridget; I saw you^permlt that policeman to kiss you last evening-. Bridget — Well, ma'am, ye wouldn't have me be locked up for resistin'.an officer, 'would ye? — Chicago News. : . '■ •' : r "Don't you think," asked Mrs. Old castle, "that everybody Is affected more or less by environment?" :. ) .", >; "Yes," replied Mrs. Packenham.V'lf. they're foolish enough to take , such things, but I always turn down my glass and never touch it."— Chicago Record-Herald. \ ' :■'•. Mrs. Blinks — John, when, we were first married you used to say grace at meals; you never do it now.' Mr. Blnks— Oh! But I'm 'not bo much' afraid of your cooking now!— Clev eland Leader. , ! • ...Not a Bazaar Is Off's Pharmacy — that's the idea, a PHARMACY where your wants are taken care, of by experts— promptly. Where you get what you call fo and no fake substitutions. PRICE ALWAYS, the lowest. Popular Preparations' Remember, you gat th*«« Item* l( you call (or them, not something else. ; ■ Cutlcura ...' ZOo Mermen's Talcum Powder l.io . Rublfoam . ... .\. ,'. .18e \ - J.yuns' Tooth Powder. .... ....150 i: I.yrtla B. Plnkham'» Compound.We ; Hindi' Honey and Almond .'. Cream .....;.40« Mquoxone 40cmid8Ac Leather Goods Bath Supplies In dainty and dn- Towels and rack*' slrft 1 1 c article*. bath mitts, soups, Hand baga, pursea brushes, ipr a y s and every other and every other leather specialty. item to make the I'retty line of chll- bath better, 'and dren's hand bag» at easy-to-pay-for as low as fiuv. prices. Ring us up— both phone*, Exchange 841. Quick delivery. Off. Drug 'Go. 1 ': Formerly SALE iA SON '; 214 South Spring Street