Real estate investor still has Tombstone dream
Ruben Suarez’ dreams are too tough to die.
The real estate investor owns the historic Bella Union at 401 E. Fremont St. and the Adobe Lodge Motel at 501 E. Fremont St. in Tombstone, and even though both of the businesses are forcibly up for sale because Suarez is in the midst of a bankruptcy proceeding, he still has his dreams.
Suarez, a father of three and Tucson native, said he was drawn to Tombstone because “the history thing kind of made my business judgments a little fogged. It was a little emotional thing. You can’t get emotional.”
Despite his problems, Suarez said he hopes to keep the Bella Union, which he called his second home and the gem of all his holdings, which also include a motel and bowling alley in Benson and various lots in Tombstone.


Like humans, rattlesnakes like the outdoors this time of the year.
Terry Abbott makes sure one of the goats at Lakota Ladies Haven gets plenty of loving. (Photo by Sam Sais/ASNS)[/caption]Ronald Campbell and Terry Abbott are always looking for more farm animals. The latest count at their Lakota Ladies Haven near Florence is eight chickens, one rooster, three goats, three dogs, four cats, two horses and a cockatoo.
Though it began more than 20 years ago as the pet project of two amateur scientists and at one time was run as a bed and breakfast, the San Pedro Valley Observatory just outside Benson has grown into an attraction that draws visitors from all around the world.