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4 Unique Type of Bungalows Which Adorn Foothill Section £~*" "■' " .~~- "" "" V-*v -.~ "^-k',T': rV 1 '"■V •■:■■> .\ *'"".* * ~7 t .>: :• ' ■ ■ ■■■■■■■.■■■..,:.-■ .-■. ■ ■ ■■■ ;■ ,--....- ■■'■■-•, •*.< . ■■■■ ■ ,-. ■■_ ■■', '■■■.■: ■> : £.■ \'.'\ '■ '■ -■ '■'■' ■■'".y.'y '■'■-, .: ' * \i"'' '■'• ■"V > -$: '• ''■■ "*•■■' ->rv ■"'.; '■' ■'' ■'. -• 'i: ■■■'■■ :,. ■" "i' i" .'.,'• :"j* '■' '■" -■■■*'<'■ *V* ■'' <■■ i .-• ■■■ "■ ■ .■■"■■■■"■■."•,■ ,■"./.■;■. ■■*■■,■■;■ :--\ >■ ■■;■..■.; :%••■ ■"■:.: '■"■.■ ■ ■ ■';' ■■■-■■■. ■ •.■ ■:■■■ ■■. , » ■, * ■■■ ■■...- :■ ,■ * _ ■-■ .■. ■:; .■ : fill Ife>ts?<- ■Jik < w» ■■■,■■■ ■■ ;;.i ■ l i l f.m«;.iii«ii l w t-'v■A ~Mjfs* to%*^--*& - u'^^ ■ ■"""- • - ■-* ■■■' -| SCENIC HOME SITES LATEST SHOW PLACE SALE OF INTEREST IN LOOK OUT MOUNTAIN Nebraska Man Pays $250,000 for Prop erty, and Company Plans Ex. tensive Improvements—New Tourist Hotel F. M. Rubli c. b retin d banker Omaha, Nebraska, has .iu.-t pun half thi stock of the Lookout -Moun tain Park Land and Water company; consideration, $250, I. This brines Mr. Rublee Into possession of one of the n c proper! les of Boutin m California, besides being combined with ■ subdivision proposition, one of the ' and most ttci es." Ible mountain subdivision! about Los Angelen Tins Iful park Is but a mile from the it city limits. Hollywood way, be ing up beautiful l.uin i canyon, i being rapidly Improved. The park has the unique distinction of belns: at the up canyon, and coi intaln rim that is a rim of Cahuenga valley. Mr. Rublee, !>• mc a man ot larre means, has already comi the In auguration of new Improvements on thi mountain rim. There will bo b pavilion built Immediately for thi Lommodatli n of the public, which will be followed at an early d tour ist hotel on one of the finest scenic hotel sites in the world. From the mountains is afforded n fiii' k'iew oi I. 1 n and 111. the Bi .More than a mile 1 of automobile road has bl en built. A vast sum ha , ent In the con bouli yard t mountain and around the rim. Now further lmpro\ ill be in augurated, BUILDING PERMITS Following are the building pprmits Jssucd since the last publication of the list and classified according to wards: Permit*! Value. Hocond ward 1 11,500 Third ward :'. 4,500 fourth ward ;; 41,600 Klftli ward T 9,675 Mvtli Marl - 1,500 Nlnt ward - 2,950 Totals IS fSI.STS South Park avenue, 6511—15. Wor rnnk. 111' i V'iiwt Sixly-.'-f -mid stroot. FOR LITTLE CHAPS ''"iff* MT V^/^/C^ "P CUTICURA SOAP And Cuticura Ointment are priceless in the Comfort they afford skin tortured and disfigured infants and chil dren in the treatment of ec zemas, rashes, itchings, irritations, chafings, chap pings, redness and rough ness. Peace falls upon distracted households when Cuticura enters. Depou: I-ondoo. V. Cnirtertouw Bq.; r»rte. 10. Rue de la CiJ«uai"! a'ArnlD. Au»tr»ll». It 'lc«n«* no* Sydney: ™<litt, I*. X P.UI. Calcutim: Chtt.. ironf Koat Hrug Co.:J»pan. Z. P. Manjyn, lAa., Toklo: Si Alrlc.v r-ennon. Ltd.. Cape Town, etc.i TJ.B *.. Potter PruK A- Chem. Corp.. Bol« Propi., 135 inbui A\- Moston. •**Poit-frr(», 32-pafe Culleura Hook, an Aurhor ttm un uij Qftii kfd Trutouut uf SSia aud Ildr, ;■: P. .1 Schute, builder; one-story ' residence, $1800. Forty-seventh avenue and Thirty first street—Wallace Holbrook, 2211 w psl Thirty-first street, owner and builder; alterations of residence, $300. Main street, 143 South—Joseph MHr zer, at lot, owner and builder; altera of building, $■-■ ■ Westlake ai i nue, 948 South Edith i: Vance, at lot, owner; <;. J. Lown, builder; story-and-a-half garage, $300. Hoiiy street and Hollywood avenue C D. Moreland, 112 West Twelfth i. owner; Eastern Building com pany, builder; one-story two-mom stoic building, $1500, Fifty-second street, .10 West—F. An- Thlrd street, owner; ,r. A, Kemp, buildi r; one-story five-room residence, I Twenty first street, ?A- East -A. M. Fisher, 2108 Santee street, owner and alti rations of residence, $500. i :h< ster pi o ■ E. L. I loheny, at lot, r; A. J. Otis, builder, one-story aviary building, $8' Bt. LOUil street, IWI Xorth —II O. •■ and builder; one story five-room residence, $1200 - Marino street, 2622- W. W. Paden, 420 Los Ancles Trust building, ov m r and builder: three-story nlnety seven-room apartment housi . $40,000 Castro stri t and Third avenue—W. \ Phillips, owner and builder; one gtorj Fifty-ninth place, 458 West—a. W. Alexander, 35" West sixtieth street. r and builder; one-story five-room $950, Bon sal I o avenue, 6804 —Mrs. Emma lot. owner and builder; one storj tive-room residence, $800. r . • ■ ond street. 1210 Wei I i ■ Schlezel, at lot, owner and bu one-story S JC-room residence. $2 st Andrews place, 523 North— Briggs Company, 801 story building, owner an( j ■ .ii. -story fiv< -room resi de!,. . Oxford avenue, 626 North—Same as abo i . .«.' Sixth street, 324S East—J. V. Brus ti !■ ■■.•i i»; Folsom street, owner; M. Mc ,;,... bull i ii tory five-room real •so. Forty-first street, 382 W< it—William c Keppli . 352 W< -t Forty-first r and builder, story-and-a-half room residence, $2750, GROWING ACTIVITY IN HOME BUILDING Modern Dwelling on Five. Acre Tract. Dormitory for L. A. Military Academy—s2s,ooo Home for H. Jevne The tabulated building permits in thi Issue show that home building is forging ahead .steadily. Scores of bungalows are in the list and many modern dwellings, each involving tha expenditure of thousands of dollars. Kuclid Martin will er( et a two-story, 45x56 feet, at Wilson and Loi Robles avenues, Hudson & Munsell nre the archlti Phineas N'owmark will erect a three- Story modern resiflei and a two story garage on the southwest corner of Catallna and Seventh street. The ground space covered will he 80x61 feet. Hunt, Eager & Hunt are the architects. Architect A. B Benton Ii preparing plans for a one and two-story dormi tory building to ii. erected at I.airds town for the I.os Angeles Military academy. [t will be a frame building with concrete foundation and shake exterior. The two-story portion "ill be 35x33 feet and the one-story part ir.xTn fpct. I! will a commodati about thirty studi in and will have bat hi . plumbing and electric Iring. Architect John Krempcl is preparing plans for an addition to be built to the residence of If. (J. fills at Wil shlra boulevard and Parkview avenue. It will be 2flx^s fee! and will I" 1 used as a. sun room. It will have cement plaster exterior, red clay tile roof, oak doors and a tile fireplace of sufficient sl/.e. to burn large logs. Architect I.osU-r s Moore is in par ing plans for a handsome two-story attic and basement rpKldencn to be creeled at Lincoln park, near South Pasadena; for K. C. Thompson. Mr. Thompson is a. recent arrival from-Al berta, Canada, and has purchased a live acre site, on a wooded hill over looking the ostrich farm, upon which to erect, his residence. The grounds are now being laid out and automo bile vo:i'!s constructed. The residence will lie 4'ix4fi feet, lid will contain ten rooms*. It will he of frame construc tion -uitit waterproof cement plaster: over metal lath on the exterior. it will have hardwood floors throughout and the interior finish will be mahog any on the fust floor >id white enamel on the second. The entire at tlo will also be finished for a billiard room and dancing floor. There will also be a bathroom Ith tile floor and wainscot and modern plumbing and electric fixtures. [t will also have two large cement porches, eon rite i ounda tlon and basement shingle roof, fur nace, etc. A garage will also be erected. The modern Bldonee in San Rafael 1 lelghts lor II Jovne «iil cost $25, --000. F. Ij. Uoehrig Is the Rrchttect. OH ,MAN, MAN Maud—Jark swears that h« would traverse PfHs just to look into my pye». KtliH - Hi call'-'l on you last nisht. an usual? M.'ivnl—Not ';i t niKht: he te]< phonfid nrw that It W*Wl ruining tuo luu-ii.—Boston, Transcripts LOS ANGELES HERALD: SUNDAY 31011NTNG, MARCH 20, 1010. li. »l(tni t by y« P ii TERMS BUILDING S.P. HUGE STEAL WRITER SAYS RAILROAD PRO MOTERS ROBBED NATION Claims Government Was Looted of Im. mense Sums of Money by Means of Clever Lobbying and False Reports NEW YORK, March 18.—In the light of thß ernment's prosi cutlon against the merger of the Union Pa cific and the Southern Pacific Railway companies an article by Charles Ed ward Russell in the forthcoming April number of Hampton's Magazine en titled "The Great Millionaire Mill." purporting to be the first real history of the Pacific system of railroads and the great fortunes built out of them. Is timely. Mr. Russell characterizes the buildins of the Central Pacific, now the Southern Pacific, as the great est steal ever perpetrated on the Unit ed States government. He chari that the four projectors of the road, Collis P. Huntington, Le land Stanford, Mark Hopkins and Charles Crocker divided among them gelvi in stock, land grants from the rnment, government bonds and bonds which the government guaran teed, and donatloni from California ntles the sum of $140,000,000, for which they did not pay one cent. The t< tal of the government subsidy which Huntlngton by clever lobbyln got from congress Mr. Russell declares was $60,000,000. H..\v the figures were Juggled to turn most of tills Immen le subsidy Into the pockets of the four promoters is ex plained by Mr. Uussell as follows: The bill provided that the i rnment B ] ov id issue to the road $1000 6 per cent bonds: for every mile in valley or level land, $16,000 in bonds; for every mile In the foothill*, $32,000 in bond and for every mile in the mountains, $48,000 In bonds. Mr Rus sell nlleges that the company charged the government at the mountain rate, $45,000 a mile, on thirtj miles of level, or nearly level, ground near Bacra mento, nd at the foothill rate. $32,000 b mile, for many miles of level build ing in the valley past of the Sierras. "This." says Mr. Russell, "Is the origin of the familiar Raying In Call fornln that the Central Pacific was the strongest corporation In the world, because it had moved the Bterra Ne vada mountains thirty miles. It not only made these charges, but collected for them, although Mr. Judah, the en gineer, refused to assi nt to the trans action." "Abating nothing of admiration, says Mr. Uussell, speaking of the com pletlon of the road, "for the physical performance, it is time now to reflect that it was also b monstrous triumph of greed, fraud and corruption that it might have been had at a fraction of Its cost to the public; and that it might very easily have been a blessing instead of a blight to that rl Ii coun try of which ii was statically called thp gateway. "For the gato wns quickly closed, and before it appeared the grim figure of Collis p, Huntinprton, one hand holding the key and the other stretched out taking toll. The phys ical ligure of Huntington Is no longer there, hut the gateway remains dosed, and before it are his successor.--, still busily iking toll. "How much, do you think. "From Hi' day the gate was erected and closed, d"wn to the present year, (list Mr. Huntinglon and his associates Hiid tin n their successors have taken and di\ Ided more th in $fino.onn.nno In unjust tolls, nil from the peoplfl of the United States, who so kindly erected the gate Horn their own high wny." In the course of hi article Mr. P.us snll describes \ Ivlrlly the rai i for a Junction between the Central Pacific and the Union Pacific, the roads now mptlnß to merge. "The act of 1864." he says, "had BUthorlzi d the Cent Pacific to build eastward to a junction witli the Union Pacifi rever that mlnht be. At first the four partners had HKHumi this junction would be far to the east ward, Blowing them good milage and many fat bonds, but the swift ad vance of the [Tnion Pacific began to annoy them, Rnd by 1867 they were thoroughly alarmed. The Union Pa cific .-...• approaching the mountains. i If ii should thread them first, the ntral Pacific would lose the fattest port of Its contract with the govern ment; also the best of the joint haul when ti:' 1 roads should be united. "There ensued the maddest chapter In all railroad history. The two roads entered Into a race, tearing Into the work before them regardless of any question of cost, working day and night with relay gangs. "It was the wild romance of railroad building. Winter enme on, the terrible Sierra winter with its phenomena] snow falls, but to the world's amazi ment Hie work w ver stopped. In t1" 1. dead of winter, rails, machinery, cars, even loeomottvi In pieces, were dragged hundreds of miles on wagons, traversing roads heavy and badly made, threatened with Imminent dls aster from the snow slides and tlie. storms." Talk about the present high cost of j living llnten to this: "Food, for men. and fodder_-for the l^fe^^^^^ Buy an Ideal Hor^^^g^ V«Fjf^^^^3r place in the Fashionable^^|jS|| f*^|EL^^pP^ Wilshire Boulevard District 1 -^B^ups^^ Absurdly Low Prices « ra a ft. I Van Nphs Avenue Bquam is positively tho last that's left nt really LOW PRICEi. 81nce « eS S jp«a the recent opening of this beautiful subdivision, sales havo been ircniPncl'iu: and a large a S 5 I In portion of the entire tract is now closed out. ' fl F II 1 Co out today and see the type of residential Improvements that surround Vnn Nest Aye- H H nue Square. Btudy tho strong location— note the superb sweep of mountain and valley M ■ IMIHH.J %gm i vistas. Note the type of building development that Is now being established on the. sub- H ■ "" I r™ a f» division. ( ii!ip;ire' Van X .-s Avenue Square prices with tho prices of anything else in lta M Eg H I II class In the city— Prom the standpoint of accessibility, improvements, environment, view, ale- ■ m V • W *M» vatlon, etc. Every lot will easily Increase in value 100 per cent during tho next 12 months. H p| Hut don't take, our word for it—go out today and let your own judgment decide for you. H I WILSISISB.E Lots $1 600 Up--One-Fifth Cash and One- j |Wl | I^rs Fifth in 6, 12, 18 and 24 Months I I DUULtVAIiI/ Prices Advance April Ist I I , _ii.i, j I * s%*T** Take Westlake Park car marked "4th and Oramercy" or "Melroso Avenue." Get off at Fifth ■ H |\I C^l Jli 1 treet, or at Wilton I'lace and Fourth itreel for branch offices, || I UUS »8W The McCarthy Company Walter J. McCarty I • I*ol N f *r<'.nl way, 829 TV, P« BtorjT Bldjf., M In the McCarthy Bldg-. sixth and Broadway H N AS94I, M 1202. Phones: F2lll, Itroadwuy 2730. M ..liiMiMi■u^m.'.M'^i-^,^- 11i.'..wi.>» CT^j» f iiL*wmi^-j'"'*m«ii'--mii niflmJ ' ll'll niTii"T r An*ro ' ...ir^nr horses reached fabulous prices. Oati were sold by the pound at l- to r> cents; hay was $100 a ton and some times $i^>; for teams the contractors juiUl $v' and $14 a day. "In April, 1869, they were almost within sight of the enemy's lines. Be-1 fore them was Ogden, the k"-i i of the i i c, In the great valley between the Rocky and the Sierra Nevada rai in the fury of competition both com panics far overshot the mark. The , Union Pacific had its graders one him dred miles west of Ogden; the Central Pacific had Iti advance lino forty miles beyond its track layers, only the iron actually put into position counted In j the race. "(in the last day. ten miles were laid: on April 28th they struck the Union Pacific line forty miles west of Ogden; and May 10th. they drove the golden spike that i • mented the two | roads. The Union Pacific had won ' by fifty-three miles. Subsequently! tii. Central Pacific bought of the I'nion , Pacific at a liiKh price th^ overlapping road." 1 Mr. RuMell .'il?0 klvps some interrst inff per»onal Btudlei of the four mnn bark of the Central Pacific, the "Big Four" as they came, to be known. Huntingtnn, the dominating: spirit, towering head and shoulders above the others in ability and force; Hopkins, the man of accounts and business sys tem; Leland Stanford, the polltlcan of the group, and Crocker, the practical railroad constructor. The article la the first of ii series on the history of thp Southern Pacific. 9—» — WILL WITHDRAW IMPERIAL TROOPS FROM SOUTH AFRICA Consummation of Union Will Result in New Scheme of Defense for White Men CAPE TOWN, March 10. It is gener allj assumed that the consummation of the Union will be followed by the gradual withdrawal of a large portion , r th* Imperial troops now statlonel in South Africa, and there is a g 1 deal of speculation as to the nature of the scheme of defense which it will iry for the new government ■ |se. The general belief is that some form of universal service will be adopted, in a country where a sparse white population is scatt red among a vastly iii«,re numerous savage or semi savage one, su< h s pi in certalnlj ms desirable. it j.- antlclpati S thai one of the fir-t duties "f the Union parliament will he to provide thai every white male shall lie trained to the use of arms. At the i . the sub-continent cannot af ford, and does not desire, to maintain n stand Ing army, with the possible ex i •■ a small force of artillery. This Indicates the adoption of him! of militia or landwehr .system. PAINTER'S LAST DIME PAYS FOR BIG DINNER ,\ wnll knnwn Columbus artist wax talking aboul 8 linif before he landed on tho wunny uld< of *h str< • I "Once," 'said tho artist, "I walked | nn a restaurant \\hi re a partition divided tho room part way. T!:c tables were on one side lillo a ipnß lunch counter ran the lenfitli of the room on the other side. ■■I % ill., ii in and sat down at one of the tables and ordered a dinner, .When it came and I had finished 11 I reached Into my pocket and drew my hand oul with only a ten-cent piece in it. I was RgliUftt. That ten-eenl piece was nil I i mill rake up aboul me. "For a moment I did not know what to do." "Well, what did you do?" a.sked the , listener. "Well, I pocketed the "5-cent cheek, walked around on the other side nf the partition and boughl a ham sandwich and a cup of coffee, rc,stinc ten cents. When I had forced It down, 1 walked j out as calmly as r could and handed i the cashier tho ten-cent check and my liist ilinir." The "pure food law" Is. dss'lgntd by thn government to protect the public from in jurious Ingredients in food! and drugs. It Is beneficial both to the public and to th» conscientious manufacturer. Ely's Cream Balm, a successful remedy for cold In th« I head and nasal catarrh, meets fully the re quirement! of the nsw law, and that fact is ' stated on every package. Jt contain* nono ■ of the Injurious drugs rtciuircd by the law to ba mentioned on tha label. prlo« 60 cent*. If you prefer to use an atomlier, ask for LitiuM Cream Balm. It has all the good qualities of the solid form of this remedy and will rid you of catarrh or liay fever. INo cocaine to breed a dreadful habit. No I mercury to dry out the secretion. Prlc» 75c, with spraying tube. All druggists, or mailed by Jfily Bros., 66 Warren sti-eot, New ! York. , 1.. —<• I <«v **cn*s _^ff&F*+^ '_gj«»~«v > .p7, rn n M | «*""»"» || In the center of Citrus Culture. Rialto, the \ &™zr^.- •-• , '" "■) I CIT>UJ I" '"Ts)i jj shipping point, has a record of over 1100 \. llnis^^ "y^^ -'$)50222&^ l^lij 1 II carloads of oranges as last year's output. \\ >— \jP^ '■ •^J^T^g W. ?'' '' ■ -^T// If This is why adjacent groves are selling \ X ' - ( .-.^^2|^S 3f^^ ~«^» / right along for $1500 and up to $2000 per \ g -'.'t". 'VHR^f i ™n"tr' Jff acre. Fontana Lands, are in a producing dis- iSr^lP^'^f^-^ S jy trict. You have only to walk over to your g -t^wr-- iW'ff^ -*^ Jr neighbors and see the fruit-laden trees, talk to I '*'->i3gf%&isit^^^ f^ ,^r lhe growers and become convinced that you can do J tf^^^p^^^^v (tmrnmm ust as well yourself on a Fontana 10, 20 or 40-acre fefeT^ Exceptionally Easy Terms to Buyers on Section Six *^^/ FONTANA'S LATEST OFFERING We nr<« JiiMt placing onr Section Sii on the mnrki't for I li« terms and Mill the terms on your purchase to your needs to fir.t time priulliallj. To show you that we wIU appreciate Jjl-J In setting Mail.tl BOW. If TOO «11l m.».. rlnht n Ihl- fin I lltrir \illl lirlp iih iiiuli-ruilli In ili»|it>sint.- "I th>, your Joining us now we have priced this acreage at *200, nnd balance quickly. We cannot promise to hold this aVai open it Is worth t'ioO, besides we are willing to waive our usual for an indefinite term, so sea us at once. Fontana Lands Adjacent to Great Industrial Enterprises Insuring Big Markets for Soil Products Kvirv buyer of .iliii>riiia lands muM. appreciate the great i be supplied. Adjoining orange |tr<i%p«i rnKf comparatively value of nearby markets. l'ontana is admirably situated. little, leaving iin-r n™ laixlH to furnish the great bulk of The great (Santa 1> shops and gigantic pre-coollng plant al these products. Han liernardlno, employing Ihouaanda of mem «'ol|on, wllli You should find a profit large enough in these small crops It! cement plaaU, big flour mill barley mills, marble and (o more thiui keep you, ami meet your puymrnts— hmltlfs the icranite t|iiarrip«: Kialto's shipping and packing house*, em- chance for extra work hereabouts Is In your favor If jniir ploying about ','"»0 people; nloomlngton, with olive mills and lands themselves <lo not keep you busy. No other tilrn- lands packing houses, and the great gangs of iiipii employed by offer as great opportunities to the beginner as here on l'on- Iliis company mean a market for small products which miv.l tana laiitl^. 54 SQUARE MILES OF MOUNTAIN WATERSHED. PURE WATER IN ABUNDANCE The ivater system for Tnntana lands In the best in S*»uih- One share of water stock irttfa every acre sold, and these crn California. The rights are perfect and attested hy title >>hiirf- are In demand by local ranchers at Sl.Vt per share, company. The supply Is ample, and coming from the inoun- making your land at 18200 per acre really only cost yon but tains insures, ■ gravity flow which delivers water under aufti- IM, We can prove the water problem lo your entire tatln- ifiit head to water every part of the lands. I faction. Fontana Development Co. Write or Call for Booklet b ontana Development Co. You vill bn int _ trd ln our mera . Los Angeles Office 602 South Main Street ture. it will give you a truthful de- Phone F3388. Ground Floor Pacific Electric Building. Fh"re7or an you. these°n Pci POo r; Office in Rialto, Riverside Avenue. f . a ii today. NTERESTING ROUTES TH TRAVEL^ Your Sunday Outing May Be Most Pleasantly Spent at REDONDO BEACH REGULAR CARS OF THE LOS ANGELES & REDONDO RY. FROM 2D AND SPRING STS., ON BROADWAY, SO. MAIN. SEVENTH ST. OR GRAND AVENUE EVERY FEW MINUTES. P*/\ THE REDONDO BEACH EXCURSION £/\ ■^ I If* Today and Every Day at 10:20 A. M. IP •^VfV^ OM SECOND AND SPRING STREETS V Thrn-.ijch Hrnn-hrir.ilunil. tlw Dairy »'arm», Pnulir.» Colonlrs, Ilarlr.r and firain Ftrld* and ThriTlng JlamlnU to <il(Ttnn-l.y-lbe-S IVwli*. fUdoßrlo 15<-»<'h and it» «u -prrh pleasure pnlurrn, Mnonntnnn Hra<h, tin Or«at I'owrr I'laot, Mammoth Bath Hour* and other imiiiln of lnt<*rrNt. SCHONEMAN-BLANCHARD CONCERT BAND Open-Air Attraction at 1 :30 P. M. ( HOTEL REDONDO—Open to the public under new progressive management. Splendid cuisine. HEPBURN & TERRY'S—Most novel dining room on the west coast, and the place of World Famous Fish and Chicken Din ners. Nothing in the west to equal this attraction. SPEND A RESTFUL, HAPPY SUNDAY AT REDONDO BEACH LOS ANGELES & REDONDO RAILWAY MAIN OFFICE 217 WEST SECOND STREET Santa Catalina Island —All Hotels Now Open Steamer Cabrillo Now Running, Con- ) Souther, n rac"lc 8:05 » -• _, . . »» i t\ •! > Salt Lake Ky 8:50 a. m. nectmg Trains Leave Los Angeles Daily \ rac lfl r E iectri o it, b-.u .. m. In making tho trip to Catalina Island It Is advisable to remain over at least one day and visit Seal Rocks, Moonstone Beach, taket stage ride to Pebble Beach, Summit or Eagle'a Nest, and enjoy a game of golf on to* celebrated Catalina links. Famous Marine Gardens Viewed Through Glass-Bottom Boats. Bannlnr Co.. 104 Pacific Klectrlo lildg.. Las Aneelm, Cal. Fbonei Main 44!)8j F637*. HOTELS-RESTAURANTS-RESORTS ; Roy's Restaurant 166 North Main Street Lunch from 11 to 2—4oc including wlno. Dinner from 6:30 to 60c. with wlno. ALA CABTH. v PART Tl HOTELS, RESTAURANTS, RESORTS CAFE BRISTOL For a menu that la unexcelled, music that charms and gervlco that leaves ru>thlni to ho desired go to the Bristol. Knlire lSanriiirnt II W. IlrMman llldg.. Fourth and Spring. If .you nunt t» cn.lciy a first-class business man'i Innrh or a ulie dinner or aftcr-tlie- Btet Kiipixr liy The Palace Corner I'lmt and Spring. A. JAHMKK, l'roprletor. i CANCER Cured wllhoui the knife. Three doctors. I Specialists. Hnventh yenr In Los Angeles. • Our offlco and sanatorium fitted for tha scientific tind effective treatment of cancer^ And tumnrs. Bpeolalltti of 40 years' experl ence In charge, who treat nil catos with the XKW <ii:KMA\ ItKMEIMKH. Breast tu mors removed In 7 days without surgical operation or pain; alno without removing any tissue. OUR NEW METHODS. FEE 110 any Bkin cancer; guaranteed. Pay whin cured. THE GERMAN REMEDY CO. Rooms 224 and 225 San Fernando Building 4th and Main Sti., i-o» Angeles, Cal. New BOOK FREE ■"kgJIPLf STOVCO'CJ?DII IB CHOpTEpiMU-9 jVsF Sa y«w>kMimwß«t,*UlMAlnriVclwsl I Sttfl BY PBWifiLSTS FVtttVKffiJS