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anaheim-daily-herald 1921-05-09

1921-05-09 · Anaheim Daily Herald · page 4 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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AMUSEMENTS IN ANAHEIM Tonight Fairyland—Pauline Frederick in "The Mistress of Shenstone." Grand—Sessue Hayakawa in "The First Born." Tent, Center and Emily, Chautauqua. Tuesday Fairyland—"Down Home." Grand—Mildred Harris Chaplin in "The Inferior Sex." Tent, Center and Emily, Chautauqua. MISS STOFFEL HOSTESS SATURDAY NIGHT The Stoffel home on North-Helena street was the scene of a delightful party Saturday night when Miss Helen Stoffel entertained in honor of a number of friends. The porch was decorated with Japanese lanterns and the rooms were decorated with streamers suspended from the chandelier. The dining room was decorated with the same color scheme and with little baskets at each end of the streamers marking the cover for the guests at the table. Sweet peas were artistically placed among the streamers. Games and dancing were the amusements of the evening, with delicious punch served during the period. A dainty luncheon was served at a late hour to Misses Alberta Oswald of Fulerton, Katherine Huarte, Cora Stoffel, Pet Huarte, Elizabeth Stoffel, and Messrs. Eddie Stoffel, Gordon Rayburn of Riverside, Ervine North, Earl McNuer of Whittier, Herman Huene-meyer, Arland McNue and the hostess. MISS AUSTIN IN RECITAL TONIGHT Miss-Luna Wellman presents Miss Florence Austin tonight in recital at the White Temple at 8:15. Miss Austin is an advanced piano pupil or Miss BRIDE AND GROOM TO BE HONORED Mesdames Ruth Ward K.-Boyd were hostesses; a delightful dinner given Miss Frances Schumach Scott, whose wedding was in June. The home was arranged with dainty Buds and white pinks. The table was graced with of the little buds with roses on the cover. The chairs were covered with pink cushions; subdued lighting effects; candles were at each end. Place cards with a bride were placed beside each seat of each guest. While the friends of macher were at the table originated by one of the girls and each one wished the groom to be many happy married life. After the gram of music was en-guests present were Miss Schumacher, Evelyn De O'Rourke, Carrie Lou Evett Fred Scott, Jinnnie B Schumacher, James F. Su-Welcome Ward. EPWORTH LEAGUE ENJOYING MOUNTAIN EXCURSIONS Under the good generosity and Mrs. L. E. Sutherland, bers of the Epworth Le M. E. White Temple, gave church at 9 o'clock Saturing and drove to Modjie. The boys enjoyed a gay ball before dinner. Then came the "eats." was told to appear down with a stick, where they juice, good sized steak. Our petizing odors floated on and each one was given fork, and all the sandwiches pickles, olives and pie for could possibly wish. After dinner everyone PH R. Anderson Contractor and Builder faction onomy Responsibility Value op Interest in You Card to Convenience daily Street Efficiency PAINTING APERING ROY A. TAYLOR All Work Guaranteed N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim —Phone 26— eave It to Moore” INSURANCE In All Its Branches NATHAN R. MOORE Center St. Phone 1 J. C. Bus Line ween Anaheim and HuntingBeach via. Garden Grove.. Daily Schedule 9:30 a.m. Lv. 4:30 p.m. 9:15 a.m. Ar. 4:15 p.m. Beginning May 1st 23 N. Los Angeles Street With Holditch FESSIONAL CARDS sica F. Raiche, M.D. specializing OBSTETRICS And Diseases of Women 18 First National Bank Bldg. Phone 649, Anaheim to local by appointment DR. G. A. NETH tructive and Electric Treatments ensured Drugless Practitioner at Center Street, Anaheim, Cal. MOTHER'S DAY AND BIRTHDAY SURPRISE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thierfelder were given a delightful surprise yesterday in honor of Mother's Day, and the birthday anniversary of Mr. Theirfelder by their children in Southern California. The guests brought the dinner for the occasion and arranged the table. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. A. L. McCall and family, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Guerin and daughter Velma, Mr. and Mrs. Lois Bholken and children, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. McGill, all of Los Angeles, Rev. and Mrs. J. B. Behrens of Long Beach, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Thierfelder, Mrs. O. E. Reidenbach and daughter Juita. hour to Misses Alberta Oswald or Fullerton, Katherine Huarte, Cora Stoffel, Pet Huarte, Elizabeth Stoffel, and Messrs. Eddle Stoffel, Gordon Rayburn of Riverside, Ervine North, Earl McNuer of Whittler, Herman Huene-meyer, Arland McNue and the hostess. MISS AUSTIN IN RECITAL TONIGHT Miss-Luna Wellman presents Miss Florence Austin tonight in recital at the White Temple at 8:15. Miss Austin is an advanced piano pupil of Miss Wellman and is very brilliant in her work. She will be assisted by Miss Ethel Evans, violinist and pupil of Harold Walberg, accompanied by Elba Badgley. The Following program will be given: Sonata, Op. 7, Beethoven. Violin, Gypsy Dance, Prinkaus. Little Bird, Grieg. Butterfly, Grieg. Solfeggietto, Bach. Bourree, Bach. Drifting, Friml. Elegie in C Sharp Minor, Nollet. Mountain, Brainard. Violin, Scenes de Ballet, d'Berlot. Tent at Sunset, MacDowell. To a Water Lily, MacDowell. Impromptu in C Sharp Minor, Rheinhold. This will be the first public recital of Miss August and her friends and music lovers are cordially invited to attend. RELATIVE HONORED WITH DINNER Mrs. E. R. Barnes gave an informal dinner yesterday in honor of her aunt, Mrs. D. B. Smith, who has just arrived from Oklahoma City to visit her sister, Mrs. Cochran, and other relatives. Mrs. Smith had not seen her niece for 20 years. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Bank Fuller of Long Beach, Miss Alna Barnes, Mrs. Cochran, Mr. E. R. Barnes, and the honored guest, Mrs. Smith. In the afternoon they motored to Laguna Beach to show Mrs. Smith one of the beauty spots of Southern California. MOTHER'S DAY AND BIRTHDAY SURPRISE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thierfelder were given a delightful surprise yesterday in honor of Mother's Day, and the birthday anniversary of Mr. Theirfelder by their children in Southern California. The guests brought the dinner for the occasion and arranged the table. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. A. L. McCall and family, Mr. and Mrs. A. B Guerin and daughter Velma, Mr. and Mrs. Lois Bholken and children, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. McGill, all of Los Angeles, Rev. and Mrs. J. B. Behrens of Long Beach, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Thierfelder, Mrs. O. E. Reidenbach and daughter Juita. hour to Misses Alberta Oswald or Fullerton, Katherine Huarte, Cora Stoffel, Pet Huarte, Elizabeth Stoffel, and Messrs. Eddle Stoffel, Gordon Rayburn of Riverside, Ervine North, Earl McNuer of Whittler, Herman Huene-meyer, Arland McNue and the hostess. MISS AUSTIN IN RECITAL TONIGHT Miss-Luna Wellman presents Miss Florence Austin tonight in recital at the White Temple at 8:15. Miss Austin is an advanced piano pupil of Miss Wellman and is very brilliant in her work. She will be assisted by Miss Ethel Evans, violinist and pupil of Harold Walberg, accompanied by Elba Badgley. The Following program will be given: Sonata, Op. 7, Beethoven. Violin, Gypsy Dance, Prinkaus. Little Bird, Grieg. Butterfly, Grieg. Solfeggietto, Bach. Bourree, Bach. Drifting, Friml. Elegie in C Sharp Minor, Nollet. Mountain, Brainard. Violin, Scenes de Ballet, d'Berlot. Tent at Sunset, MacDowell。 To a Water Lily, MacDowell。 Impromptu in C Sharp Minor, Rheinhold. This will be the first public recital of Miss August and her friends and music lovers are cordially invited to attend. RELATIVE HONORED WITH DINNER Mrs. E. R. Barnes gave an informal dinner yesterday in honor of her aunt, Mrs. D. B. Smith, who has just arrived from Oklahoma City to visit her sister, Mrs. Cochran, and other relatives. Mrs. Smith had not seen her niece for 20 years. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Bank Fuller of Long Beach, Miss Alna Barnes, Mrs. Cochran, Mr. E. R. Barnes, and the honored guest, Mrs.Smith.In the afternoon they motored to Laguna Beach to show Mrs.Smith one of the beauty spots of Southern California. MOTHER'S DAY AND BIRTHDAY SURPRISE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thierfelder were given a delightful surprise yesterday in honor of Mother's Day,and the birthday anniversary of Mr.Theirfelder by their children in Southern California. The guests brought the dinner for the occasion and arranged the table. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. A.L.McCallandfamily,Mr,andMrs.A.B.GuerinanddaughterVelma,Mr,andMrs.LoisBholkenandchildren, Mr,andMrs.R.E.McGillallofLosAngelesRev,andMrs.J.BBehrensofLongBeachMr,andMrsLeonardThierfelder,Mrs.O.E.ReidenbachanddaughterJuita. P.T.A.MEET TUESDAY EVENING The Parent-Teachers' will hold its regular meet night at the Anaheim high torium at 7:30 This date ranged for the evening so be possible for fathers to well as mothers. Preceeding the regular executive board is request as important business will given attention.An intro dress has been arranged cordial invitation is extended ents.A social hour will meeting. LOCAL ROY SHOW SICA F. RAICHE, M.D. specializing OBSTETRICS And Diseases of Women 18 First National Bank Bldg. Phone 649 Anaheim Examination Free DR. G. A. NETH tructic and Electric Treatments ensured Drugless Practitioner est Center Street. Anaheim, Cal. e hours: 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. ings, Mon., Wed., Fri., 7 to —Phone 413— A. C. FOY ROCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC at 204 Fisher Bldg., 133½ W. er St. Anaheim, Cal. CHAS. S. O'TOOLE HYSICIAN & SURGEON Hours 10 to 12; 2 to 5 esr Office 598; Res. 546 in 206-207 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg. Anaheim, California INSTON-WICKETT CLINIC Clinic Bldg., Anaheim J. A. Johnston General Surgery W. H. Wickett General Surgery I. A. Jackson X-Ray and Radium W. M. Cole Internal Medicine H. D. Newkirk Eye, Ear, Nose and Throal R. D. Aikman, Assistant H. van de Erve Pathology J. Robinson Diseases of Children A. H. Galvin Orthopedics Ward, Ph. G. Pharmacy PICNIC AND BARBECUE YESTERDAY A Mother's Day picnic was enjoyed yesterday by a group of Anaheim young people when they left Anaheim at an early hour, going to the canyon above Orange county park. At noon time a barbecued dinner was enjoyed. After lunch hour stories took up the time. Later in the day hiking parties and games followed by wild flower hunts were enjoyed. Those in this party were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schenider, Misses Evelyn Kennedy, Florence Schnolder, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Clark, Stanley Clark, Messrs. Oscar Walter and Henry Schneider. SUNDAY DINNER AT TEDRICK HOME Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Tedrick were hosts yesterday to a group of friends at a Sunday dinner served at their home near Orange. Following the dinner hour a musical program was enjoyed. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Win Wellman, Miss Anna Miller, Mr. and Mrs. P. Tedrick, Mr. and Mrs. Weisel and baby, Miss Charlyn Tedrick, Miss Luna Wellman. BEACH PICNIC ENJOYED SUNDAY A picnic was enjoyed yesterday at Huntington Beach by six Anaheim people. Following the luncheon spread the remainder of the time was passed with games, pictures and motoring. Those in the party were Mr. and Mrs. Pritchard, Mr. and Mrs. George George, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Ward. LOCAL BOY SHOW TALENT IN PAINTINGS Oswalk Stock, son of O. of the Anaheim Realty Co. just cause today to be prothe young man's paintings, play in the window of the State National bank, where there is a display of one or other of special interest. The six paintings of yoshow considerable talent m the work but also in the o scenes and subjects. GETS ONE YEAR HARRISDURG, Pa., Ma. Ligi of Scranton, Pa., whose connection with the Wallplosion last September, hader investigation by the cof justice, was sentenced d court here today to one yeanment on the charge of eton. He pleaded guilty. A careful statistician recalisted a list of 4047 American men and what each made his moresult showed that generadising is the best road to the United States, and peverywhere else, too. BRIDE AND GROOM TO BE HONORED Mesdames Ruth Ward and Harriet K. Boyd were hostesses last night to a delightful dinner given in honor of Miss Frances Schumacher and Fred Scott, whose wedding will take place in June. The home was artistically arranged with dainty Cecil Brunner puds and white pinks. The center of the table was graced with a large bowl of the little buds with roses scattered on the cover. The chandelier lights were covered with pink tissue, giving a subdued lighting effect and two pink candles were at each end of the table. Place cards with a bride in costume were placed beside each cup marking the seat of each guest. While the friends of Miss Schumacher were at the table a toast originated by one of the group was read and each one wished the bride and groom to be many happy years of married life. After the dinner a program of music was enjoyed. The guests present were Misses Frances Schumacher, Evelyn Degryse, Vera D'Rourke, Carrie Lou Evans, Messrs. Fred Scott, Jimmie Boyd, William Schumacher, James F. Sutherland and Welcome Ward. EPWORTH LEAGUE ENJOYS MOUNTAIN EXCURSION Under the good generalship of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Sutherland, thirty members of the Epworth League of the I. E. White Temple, gathered at the church at 9 o'clock Saturday morning and drove to Modjeska's camp, the boys enjoyed a game of baseball before dinner. Then came the "eats." Each one was told to appear down by the fire with a stick, where they were given a pie, good sized steak. Of course appetizing odors floated on the breeze and each one was given a plate and fork, and all the sandwiches, salad, pickles, olives and pie for which they could possibly wish. After dinner everyone hiked up the harbor county's program of harbor development at Newport is more than three-fifths completed. It is disclosed by the monthly statement of Secretary Lew H. Wallace of the harbor commission, made public today, following the commission's weekly meeting yesterday, and the balance on hand May 1 to complete the work is $130,592.25. The big dredger is in the midst of its job at the upper turning basin near the old glass factory and the large area of marsh land between that point and the Newport syndicate's property is being filled in to be used later as industrial sites. Contractor Ledbetter is making good progress in extending his trestlework at the entrance breakwater and rock is being dumped as fast as it arrives. As soon as the dredging in the turning basin and in the entrance is completed and the jetty is built up and extended 200 feet further into the ocean, the initial harbor unit will be ready for use, and commercial shipping out of Newport harbor, long looked forward to, will at last be possible. The harbor commission's current financial statement is as follows: Credited to account of harbor commission with the treasurer of Orange county, $500,000. Salary and expenses of commissioners, including rentals and office expenses, $4,832.19. Attorney fees, $400. Advertising and printing, $444.41. Purchase of right-of-way and proportionate share of bridge construction, $22,000. Services and personal expenses of engineers, $6,194.25. Field and office expense of engi- News Notes of the Oil Fields The deep production that is being obtained by the Standard & Petroleum Midway has lured the General Petroleum back to the Montebello field. The O. P. has located Cruze No. 4 and will begin active work at once on the well, the intention being to make it a deep test well. As soon as the La Merced Oil Company conquers the sand in its Manly No. 1 a 150 or 200 barrel well will be the result. At present the well is cleaning out at 2750 and will be put on production. Calkins No. 1 is ready for a water test at 2635. The McGinley Oil Company drilling on No. 13, a new well, reports a 1000 feet of hole. No. 10 is standing at 2300, No. 11 is fishing at 3360, and No. 12 is held up with the casing struck at 2900. A defective string of casing caused the Keeler Oil Company delay in the drilling of Walters No. 1. At 3010 feet the casing had to be pulled out and replaced. Walters No. 2 is drilling in sandy shale at 2775. The Pan-American's deep well is now making new hole at 3400 and is going very nicely. No. 1 is still producing, but the intention is to carry it into the deeper sand. The Petroleum Midway will offset the General Petroleum's Cruz No. 4, with Baldwin No. 12, a new well. Baldwin No. 9 went on a production test at 3060. No. 11 at 3000 feet is showing oil and gas. Work has resumed on Germain No. 1-B at 3600. Prugh No. 9 is drilling at 2300 in hard sand. Temple No. 14 is the Standard Oil's new drilling well at Montebello. No. 53 on the Baldwin spudded in a few days ago and shows 1450 feet. GRU The beach festival of music parties evenings albeit sands they by thins. All needing food seem the geo about come that in populous noun habitions. Sev son, or The mission portant of this preserver spawns up mounds rounder dorset condition lure eroding hatchin 'runs' Tennis duciable ditions. Rec sporting angler tical thoritii A. E. White Temple, gathered at the church at 9 o'clock Saturday morning and drove to Modjeska's camp, the boys enjoyed a game of baseball before dinner. Then came the "eats." Each one was told to appear down by the fire with a stick, where they were given a pie, good sized steak. Of course appetizing odors floated on the breeze and each one was given a plate and fork, and all the sandwiches, salad, pickles, olives and pie for which they would possibly wish. After dinner everyone hiked up the hall to the dam and in other directions or to other attractions. All returned to the cars at 3 o'clock with various specimens of yucca, rubber plants and wild flowers. Those who enjoyed the pleasant up were Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Sutherland, Bethel Elliott, Florence Findlay, Bernice Nichols, Isabel Strutt, Mabel and Clarice Brown, Marie Gretchen and Marguerite Twinem, Ellina Leusch,race Curtis, Opal and Velda DeWitt, Nicole Baker, Ethel, Florence and Ellie Santee, Alice and Florence Wright, Carl Reinert, Lauren Wright,ifford Elliott, Robert Brown, Donald Sehlman, Ensley Harold and Clarce Bircher, Wilbert Bonney. DELIS CLASS LL DAY OUTING Members of the Fidellis class of the Methodist Sunday school will have an early day meeting and social at the com-modious ranch house of Mrs. E. D. Williams on West Katella Tuesday. Over 40 women are going to meet at different houses of the members: 9:45 and then assemble at the home the president, Mrs. Warren Mathis, 306 East Broadway. They will go a body to the home at 10 a.m. each guest is to bring one covered fish, sandwiches, cup, knife, fork andoon. The menu is to be a surprise everyone. Visiting and sewing will be the order of the day. For information call Mrs. Mathis, 380-J. Ten new members were taken into the class last Sunday, swelling the attendance to 82. T. A. MEET TESDAY EVENING The Parent-Teachers' Association will hold its regular meeting Tuesday night at the Anaheim high school audium at 7:30. This date has been arranged for the evening so that it will possible for fathers to attend as well as mothers. Preceeding the regular meeting the executive board is requested to meet important business will have to be given attention. An interesting address has been arranged for and a dialial invitation is extended to all parts. A social hour will follow the meeting. GEISHA GIRL IS FOUND WITH EMPEROR'S CIGARETTES TOKYO. (By Mail). A pretty geisha, a bunch of cigarettes, and a more gallant than discreet general in the Japanese army form the ingredients of an incident which has given Tokyo and the rest of the empire food for talk and argument for some days. The immediate result was the removal from active duty of Gen. Takayanagi, chief of the general staff of the Japanese Siberian military forces. The trouble started when a customs officer, in searching the baggage of a geisha girl returning to Japan from Vindivostok, found in her baggage a bunch of cigarettes bearing the crest of the emperor, such as are smoked only by members of the imperial family or are given as gifts by his majesty to distinguished persons. The lady the General Petroleum's Cruz No. 4, with Baldwin No. 12, a new well. Baldwin No. 9 went on a production test at 3060. No. 11 at 3000 feet is showing oil and gas. Work has resumed on Germain No. 1-B at 3600. Prugh No. 9 is drilling at 2300 in hard sand. Temple No. 14 is the Standard Oil's new drilling well at Montebello. No. 53 on the Baldwin spudded in a few days ago and shows 1450 feet. No. 55 is being prepared for production; the screen pipe going in at 2700. No. 56 is standing cemented at 2140, and No. 57-A is 2300 in ahrd sand. The St. Helen's Petroleum well. Nutt No. 1, went on a production test early in the week and is making about 150 barrels. Monterey No. 5 is being prepared for production at 3150. P. & B. No. 4 is rigging up. The Western Pacific Oil Company redrilling its No. 1 has got down to 3100, and at that depth set pipe and cemented the well. The best thing of the week in the Puente Hills field is the showing got by the Chino-Corona United at 2950 feet. At this depth the well is drilling in hard sand, showing considerable gas and some substantial oil colors are making their appearance. The Gold Seal Petroleum is abandoning after drilling to 3800 feet and not getting any very encouraging oil indications. The Mahala Oil Company is drilling at 2300 and reports some gas. The Pomona Oil Company has no progress to report for the last week, the well saving stood idle at 2860 feet. There were few developments of any importance in the Newport field. The Coalinga-Mohawk announces that it will shut down for six weeks or for a couple of months. Urgent work in the northern fields necessitated the move. The H. T. & K. Syndicate went on a pumping test at 2550, but to date has pumped mostly all water. The Interstate Oil Co.'s Mesa No. 1, also on a production test, failed to produce anything much but water. The Long Beach Consolidated has reached 2525 feet, the formation being a sandy shale showing faint traces of oil. The Nortaland is drilling at 450, progress being slow on account of hard digging. Wisconsin LOCAL BOY SHOWS REAL TALENT IN SIX PAINTINGS Oswalk Stock, son of G. J. Stock the Anaheim Realty Company, has not cause today to be proud. Six of his young man's paintings are on display in the window of the Golden State National bank, where each week there is a display of one kind or answer of special interest. The six paintings of young Stock now considerable talent not only in work but also in the direction of fines and subjects. GETS ONE YEAR HARRISBURG. Pa., May 9.—Tito Id of Scranton, Pa., whose suspected enction with the Wall street exsion last September, has been uninterested investigation by the department justice, was sentenced in federal court here today to one year's imprisonment on the charge of draft evasion. He pleaded guilty. A careful statistician recently made list of 4047 American millionaires, what each made his money in. The audit showed that general merchandising is the best road to millions in United States, and presumably anywhere else, too. The trouble started when a customs officer, in searching the baggage of a geisha girl returning to Japan from Vindivostok, found in her baggage a bunch of cigarettes bearing the crest of the emperor, such as are smoked only by members of the imperial family or are given as gifts by his majesty to distinguished persons. The lady not being such, an inquiry was made, and it was found that General Takayanagi had received the "smokes" from the emperor and had given a part of them to the girl. A great outcry followed, and the general was promptly placed on the waiting list in spite of the fact that he is generally known as one of Japan's most efficient officers and a particularly well informed authority on Siberian matters. The geisha gallantly came to the defense of her friend, explaining that, Delilah-like, she plied her admirer with wife to such an extent that life was not accountable for his actions when she obtained the imperial cigarettes from him. The general explained that as they were celebrating the lady's impending retirement from the geisha profession, he thought the occasion suitable for the bestowing of the gift as a proper encouragement in her laudable course. As might be expected, the Japanese press has filled columns with arguments pro and con, the most interesting comment being probably that contributed by the Yomiuri, which bitterly opines that it is a peculiar sort of army discipline which places a general on the waiting list for giving cigarettes to a geisha, but has failed to punish any one for the great tactical blunder which resulted in the great massacre of over 600 Japanese at Ninolaesk last year. The Long Beach Consolidated has reached 5225 feet, the formation being a sandy shale showing faint traces of oil. The Nortland is drilling at 450, progress being slow on account of hard digging. Wirscher and Gray, new comers in the field, are drilling at 550. The formation has been so hard that no hole could be made with fish tails. On putting in the Reed Roller bit the drilling speeded up to several feet a tour and now good time is being made. Figuring that Huntington 2-A will never make much of a well at its present depth preparations are underway to deepen the well. The Argonaut Oil Company drilled out the cement on the Turley well at 2858, got an O. K. on the water and is now drilling in the oil sand at 2875. Owing to the strong gas pressure, drilling is going on with the constant fear of the well blowing out and blowing itself into production. It was the intention to drill Huntington Central No. 1 deeper after trying it out at 2272, but on going a little deeper, just a few feet, the well came back with a flow variously estimated at from 1000 to 4000 barrels. Today the well has quieted down and is making 450 barrels, although the gas pressure continues to hover around 600 pounds. In the laboratories of the United States forestry service at Madison, Wisconsin, experiments are being made to determine whether a certain clay, found in large quantities in Wyoming, can be used successfully in a process for de-inking printed newspapers. GRUNNION SEASON WILL EXTEND OVER TO AUGUST (Fish and Game Bulletin). Those who live along the sandy beaches need no introduction to the festive grunion, a piece-de-resistance of many a moonlit "hand-packing party," staged at times of highest evening tides, when those toothsome, abiet tiny fish crowd up onto the sands so plentifully, to spawn that they can be, and often are gathered by the bucket-full. Although not recognized by law as needing protection either as game or food fish, these small "silver-smelts" seem to have taken quite a hold of the general public. So many inquiries about the best time to take them have come to the fish and game commission that it has considered them of enough popular interest to call for an announcement concerning their peculiar habits. Several seasons ago, W. F. Thompson, chief fisheries investigator for the California, Fish and Game Commission, incidentally to his more important work, made a digressive study of the interesting biological problem presented by the grunion in its spawning habits. Thompson cleared up much of the uncertainties surrounding these, up to then, little-understood fish. He showed that certain conditions of current and temperature, by regulating the depositing and eroding of the sandy beaches, and the hatching of the eggs, rendered the "runs" of these fish, the "Lauresthea Tennis" of the ichthyologist, quite reducible to rule. These are the conditions that govern their reproduction. Recently, Victor Walker, veteran sporting-goods man and expert surf-angler of Santa Ana, who is in a practical way one of the foremost authorities on grunion, prepared a SAN FRANCISCA PAYING TEN DAYS One more dizzy motorist learned yesterday that Justice of the Peace John B. Cox means what he says. William H. Burgess, prominent San Francisco auto dealer, with offices on 831 Van Ness street, was led reluctantly to jail for driving his Pierce-Arrow automobile 62 miles per hour along the county road. Burgess was arrested several weeks ago, and in his trial April 19 was found guilty and sentenced to ten days in the county jail. He gave notice of appeal and put up a $200 bond to assure his appearance. Deciding that he would rather be in jail when it rained than any other time, he appeared before the "speeder justice." Thursday and abandoned his appeal, asking for parole. He was informed that he would have to go to jail and get his parole while he was on the inside looking out. After telling his wife "good bye," he started his term of incarceration in Orange county's justly celebrated bastile. After Burgess had departed, Justice Cox leaned back in his chair and with a benign smile remarked, "In spite of what these newspapers say, they all get it, don't they? Huht!" The hangers on about the court room admitted that they did and asked him if Burgess was to get a bouquet, to show that he was given the same rigid impartiality enjoyed by Debo Daniels. CABARET GIRLS USED AS LURES CHICAGO, May 9—Jed A. Flanagan, familiar cabaret luminary, was arrested Saturday charged with being a "lure" for a fashionable North Side gambling house. Detectives who made the arrest declared that Flanagan CABARET GIRLS USED AS LURES CHICAGO, May 9—Jed A. Flanagan, familiar cabaret luminary, was arrested Saturday charged with being a "lure" for a fashionable North Side gambling house. Detectives who made the arrest declared that Flanagan received 10 per cent of $2300, the sum to be paid in John Barry's lawsuit at 4559 Kenmore avenue, by Lock Davidson, a banker of Wichita, Kan. Flanagan, according to the police, admitted having taken Davidson to the place, but denied that he had received a "rake off." The gambling house was raided and a roulette wheel confiscated. Flanagan figured in the shooting of Herbert P. Zeigler by Mrs Cora Orthwein. He was the man, who escorted Mrs. Orthwein to her home from the Green Mills Gardens after she had shot Zeigler. The police declare they have received two complaints against Flanagan. One man is said to have lost $1750 and another $1900. LEE'S Filling Station is now open for business at the corner of Center & Philadelphia Streets I have a complete line of Ventura Oils and Gas Goodrich Tires and Tubes Your patronage solicited. Come in and get acquainted. Lee S. Geiselman Four-flusher: A business man who figures that answering the phone will take less of his time if he'll wait about five minutes. Attention, Citrus Ranchers On Five Year Basis We Will Contract LEMONS At $30 per ton; Oranges at $40 per ton, f. o. b. factory; Apply in persons for contract particulars of Manager Granite Springs Estates 1101 MATEO ST., LOS ANGELES, CALIF. Pan After Pan of our rolls, buns and small cakes is required to fill the demands of our always growing list of customers. The list grows because our products are so much better than the ordinary. Just try them once and you'll know how strong a reason for growth that is. J.C. NOFFMAN, PROP. PHONE 945 NEW-ANAHEIM-BAKERY 136 N. IOS ANGELES ST. & RESTAURANT THE FINEST PASTRIES & BAKERY GOODS IN THE CITY