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Kate Sessions' tree man, C. Arnholt Smith's repairman

Lake Elsinore's $26M lottery winner, the last vaquero, all alone in North County, San Diego's biggest cattleman,

The evergreen pear tree is an early bloomer, showing white blossoms now by the fountain in front of Reuben H. Fleet Space Theatre. - Image by Craig Carlson
The evergreen pear tree is an early bloomer, showing white blossoms now by the fountain in front of Reuben H. Fleet Space Theatre.

Beneath the Bunya Bunya

They lived on the ranch [Scripps Ranch] for six years. He supervised teams of men in planting thousands of eucalyptuses, all together about forty percent of those that were set out on the ranch. (A good deal of planting had gone on before he arrived.) They planted the slender, sky-lining lemon gums on the hills and canyonsides, and the thick, shaggy blue gums on the mesas where the chaparral had been cleared away.

By Joe Applegate, Feb. 17, 1983 Read full article

Tom Jones at his Mission Hills repair shop: clock radios, coffeemakers, water filters, vaporizers, humidifiers, computer manuals, an ice cream maker, an Electro-Lux vacuum-cleaner cylinder that is so old it looks like something from Jules Verne's imaginary sketchbook, electric frying pans, racks of extension cords, floppy disks, light bulbs, an electric hot-dog cooker.

C. Arnholt Smith's Vacuum Cleaner Fixer

"I had one lady bring in her shopping cart who said, This is too high for me. She wanted me to cut the handles down. I said, 'I really don't do that, but I'll do it. Just don't tell anybody.' Well, within a week, another lady came in with the same problem and said, 'So and so told me you did hers, so....' If I'd have charged them for the labor, it would have been more than the cart cost originally."

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By John Brizzolara, Aug. 7, 1997 Read full article

Frank Gagliardi: “I’ve dated a lot of girls, and you can’t tell if they like you or they like the money."

We are going to be happy now

One problem money has caused for Gagliardi is he can't trust women who seem to like him. "I've dated a lot of girls," he explains, "and you can't tell if they like you or they like the money. It's kind of screwed because you finally meet someone, and you think it's the one, and then you check up on them, and you find out that they are lying to you. It's terrible."

By Ernie Grimm, Dec. 11, 1996 | Read full article

Granville Martin. "I could tell time by the sun, and my belly told me when it was time to eat."

The Last Vaquero

I'd tell Mollie where I was gonna camp, and she'd pack the ol' mule and drag him around till I got to that camp, and she'd have it all set up. The camps were at different springs where you knew the water was good and there was a little bit o' feed for your horse. We'd sleep there under just a few blankets and quilts. It was really some beautiful country, and Mollie liked it.

By Neal Matthews, May 17, 1984 Read full article

"When the paper boy comes to collect he has to shout to Art over a shrieking Barbara Walters and a booming deadpan Harry Reasoner."

Whiskey and Water and the 11:00 News

He's not the only older person in the neighborhood who lives alone, and they all get together from time to time. But mostly they spend their evenings at home, separated by the habits and conveniences of their own houses. He has some friends who entered convalescent homes, but they had to sell everything they owned to pay for it, and then didn't get the prices they should have for land they'd owned most of their lives.

By Steve Sorensen, Jan. 27, 1977 Read full article

“See that skinny cow there? There’s something wrong with her — probably ate some nails or wire or something."

Cowboys, Cattle, and Time

This year he is a full month behind schedule. The market has been slow, a late-season heat wave made it inadvisable to ship the animals down to the Imperial Valley feedlots, delaying him further. Now it is almost December and there are cattle to be rounded up in Pine Valley, cattle to be brought down from the Laguna Mountains before the first snow, cattle to be tended in Jacumba and in the Campo Valley.

By Gordon Smith, Jan. 8, 1981| Read full article

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A world-class museum, best drinking, best eating, best shops, ups and downs of Del Cerro, parent-friendly playgrounds, peaceful, eaze-y feeling
The evergreen pear tree is an early bloomer, showing white blossoms now by the fountain in front of Reuben H. Fleet Space Theatre. - Image by Craig Carlson
The evergreen pear tree is an early bloomer, showing white blossoms now by the fountain in front of Reuben H. Fleet Space Theatre.

Beneath the Bunya Bunya

They lived on the ranch [Scripps Ranch] for six years. He supervised teams of men in planting thousands of eucalyptuses, all together about forty percent of those that were set out on the ranch. (A good deal of planting had gone on before he arrived.) They planted the slender, sky-lining lemon gums on the hills and canyonsides, and the thick, shaggy blue gums on the mesas where the chaparral had been cleared away.

By Joe Applegate, Feb. 17, 1983 Read full article

Tom Jones at his Mission Hills repair shop: clock radios, coffeemakers, water filters, vaporizers, humidifiers, computer manuals, an ice cream maker, an Electro-Lux vacuum-cleaner cylinder that is so old it looks like something from Jules Verne's imaginary sketchbook, electric frying pans, racks of extension cords, floppy disks, light bulbs, an electric hot-dog cooker.

C. Arnholt Smith's Vacuum Cleaner Fixer

"I had one lady bring in her shopping cart who said, This is too high for me. She wanted me to cut the handles down. I said, 'I really don't do that, but I'll do it. Just don't tell anybody.' Well, within a week, another lady came in with the same problem and said, 'So and so told me you did hers, so....' If I'd have charged them for the labor, it would have been more than the cart cost originally."

Sponsored
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By John Brizzolara, Aug. 7, 1997 Read full article

Frank Gagliardi: “I’ve dated a lot of girls, and you can’t tell if they like you or they like the money."

We are going to be happy now

One problem money has caused for Gagliardi is he can't trust women who seem to like him. "I've dated a lot of girls," he explains, "and you can't tell if they like you or they like the money. It's kind of screwed because you finally meet someone, and you think it's the one, and then you check up on them, and you find out that they are lying to you. It's terrible."

By Ernie Grimm, Dec. 11, 1996 | Read full article

Granville Martin. "I could tell time by the sun, and my belly told me when it was time to eat."

The Last Vaquero

I'd tell Mollie where I was gonna camp, and she'd pack the ol' mule and drag him around till I got to that camp, and she'd have it all set up. The camps were at different springs where you knew the water was good and there was a little bit o' feed for your horse. We'd sleep there under just a few blankets and quilts. It was really some beautiful country, and Mollie liked it.

By Neal Matthews, May 17, 1984 Read full article

"When the paper boy comes to collect he has to shout to Art over a shrieking Barbara Walters and a booming deadpan Harry Reasoner."

Whiskey and Water and the 11:00 News

He's not the only older person in the neighborhood who lives alone, and they all get together from time to time. But mostly they spend their evenings at home, separated by the habits and conveniences of their own houses. He has some friends who entered convalescent homes, but they had to sell everything they owned to pay for it, and then didn't get the prices they should have for land they'd owned most of their lives.

By Steve Sorensen, Jan. 27, 1977 Read full article

“See that skinny cow there? There’s something wrong with her — probably ate some nails or wire or something."

Cowboys, Cattle, and Time

This year he is a full month behind schedule. The market has been slow, a late-season heat wave made it inadvisable to ship the animals down to the Imperial Valley feedlots, delaying him further. Now it is almost December and there are cattle to be rounded up in Pine Valley, cattle to be brought down from the Laguna Mountains before the first snow, cattle to be tended in Jacumba and in the Campo Valley.

By Gordon Smith, Jan. 8, 1981| Read full article

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The latest copy of the Reader

Please enjoy this clickable Reader flipbook. Linked text and ads are flash-highlighted in blue for your convenience. To enhance your viewing, please open full screen mode by clicking the icon on the far right of the black flipbook toolbar.

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A rope course designed to resemble the Giant Dipper at Belmont Part

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