anaheim-daily-herald 1921-06-13
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News Notes of the Oil Fields
Of the fifty or more companies operating at Huntington Beach the A.O. Company is the only one doing day light work. This is being done at Fowler No. 1 where a very close tab is being kept on the formation and water occurrences. The company's geologist is also at the well daily, giving it his entire time. Fowler No. 1 is drilling deeper at 3165. Fowler No. 2 is building rig. Huntington I.A is cleaning out to go deeper from 2564. Pearce No. 1 is drilling at one thousand feet.
After getting an O.K. on the water shut off the Bolsa-Chica Oil company at Augur No. 1 has decided to go 50 feet deeper from 2143. The decision was reacquired on account of a showing the Standard's adjoining well has made.
Just as soon as the Edens Syndicate is able to get a delivery on screen pipe Edens Syndicate No. 1 will be brought in and put on production. Drilled to 3839 the well shows some of the nicest looking sand in the district.
Even with the tubing and rods in and pumping Miley-Keck No. 2 is not making much of a showing. The gas and sand seems to work on the oil. For a short time the well produced at the rate of 200 barrels. It will be drilled deeper.
The bailer lost in the Pantages-Huntington No. 1 has been recovered, the well cleaned out and put on the pump. It is making about 350 barrels of 21 gravity oil.
Republic Petroleum No. 1 is something of a disappointment. Cleaned out a second time and put on production at 3684 the well is not making more than 50 or 6$ barrels. No. 2 is rigging up to start drilling.
The Sun Oil company's No.,1 now drilling with cable tools at 2500 feet is in sand but the sand is not showing much oil. No. 3 set pipe at 2050. No. 2 is a rig and No. 4 is rigging up and will spud in this week.
No. 1 the famous well of the Texcal company is being brought in. Drilled three times, the last well was finished at 2900. No. 2 is going deeper at 2860.
Vista Del Mar No. 1 at 2145 is pulling the 8-inch and is making preparations to go deeper. No. 2 is testing for water at 2445.
The Union Oil company's Copeland No. 1 drilled deeper from 2940 to 3020 looks like a water well. Swabbing of the well brings up practically all water. It appears that bottom water has been struck. The rig marking the sight of Newlands No. 1 is being torn down. This one went to 5026 and was dry.
Additional Field Information
Argonaut Oil company-Turley No. 1, 3044 standing cemented. No. 2 a rig.
20 for 20c.
It’s toasted.
LUCKY STRIKE
CIGARETTE
Members of The Bar
If you want to be positive that your legal advertisements will be inserted correctly and proof of publication sent to you promptly, have your notices appear in The Anaheim Daily Herald.
Send by mail or phone Anaheim 540, and we will have our representative call at your office the same day.
SUDS AND DUDS
of the
SANITARY LAUNDRY
FULLERTON
REFRESHING CLOTHS
Clean linen is the Summer rule... That Keeps Duds and his family cool.
NOTHING is too good for Duds and his family. They buy the best clothes; they No. 1 drilled deeper from 2940 to 3020 looks like a water well. Swabbing of the well brings up practically all water. It appears that bottom water has been struck. The rig marking the sight of Newlands No. 1 is being torn down. This one went to 5026 and was dry.
Additional Field Information
Argonaut Oil company-Turley No. 1, 3044 standing cemented. No. 2 a rig.
Bell of Montebello, No. 2, 600 feet, sand and gravel, drilling.
Bolsa Chica Petroleum Corporation, rigging up.
Blue Shale Oil and Mining Assn., drilling out cement at 2400, using 8 inch.
Callifornia Machinery and Supply company, building rig, and rigging up.
Eddistone Oil Corp., Ashton No. 2, 1675, hard sand drilling.
East Long Beach Oil company, building rig.
Climax Oil company Uo. 1, rigging up.
Edea Oil company No. 1, rigging up.
Fidelity Oil Corporation No. 1, 1800 meet, blue clay, drilling.
Golden Dome Oil company, rig built.
Gypsy Syndicate No. 1, 1800, hard sand; No. 2 building rig.
General Petroleum, Community No. 1, 2000 feet, hard sand, drilling.
Huntington Central No. 1, 2272, cleaning out; No. 2, 3000 feet, no shut off.
Huntington Midway Crude, building rig.
Huntington National, rigging up.
Huntington Diamond No. 1, building rig.
Huntington-Hawthorne No. 1, rig standing.
Huntington Owners No. 2, drilling, 500 feet, sand and gravel; No. 1 is building rig.
Huntington Mutual No. 1, spudded in and started drilling.
Huntington-Pacific No. 1, rig built.
Great Western Petroleum company, rig built.
Hurst Oil company No. 1, 2509, re-cemented; No. 2 building rig; No. 3 lumber on ground.
Mallis Oil Syndicate No. 1 rigging up No. 2, drilling at 500, blue clay.
Miller Syndicate No. 1, 1500 feet, hard sand, drilling.
ANAHEIM
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Clean linen is the Summer rule... That Keeps Duds and his family cool.
NOTHING is too good for Duds and his family. They buy the best clothes; they eat the best of foods and they patronize the laundry with a reputation—the laundry where Mr. Suds greets your clothes with his famous sanitary smile, and sends them back to you looking and feeling glad.
LOOK FQR SUDS & DUDS
A. W. Cleaver
Proprietor
225 W. Santa Fe Phone 26 Fullerton
PAINTING APERING
ROY A. TAYLOR
All Work Guaranteed
210 N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim —Phone 26—
Houses and Apartments in Demand
There is a great demand for furnished and unfurnished houses and apartments in Anaheim. If you have a place for rent you can find a tenant at very little cost through a Herald Want Ad. Phone your ad right now.
CALL 540
Huntington Mutual No. 1, spudded in and started drilling.
Huntington-Pacific No. 1, rig built.
Great Western Petroleum company, rig built.
Hurst Oil company No. 1, 2509, cemented; No. 2 building rig; No. 3 lumber on ground.
Mallis Oil Syndicate No. 1 rigging up No. 2, drilling at 500, blue clay.
Miller Syndicate No. 1, 1500 feet hard sand, drilling.
Machris Brothers No. 1, 1000 feet blue shale, drilling.
Metcalf-Hinkley No. 1, rigging up.
Mid-Central No. 1, 4180, idle; Mid-Central No. 2, building rig on 7-11 lease.
National Exploration company, Newland No. 1, 2600 feet, drilling by pipe at 2760.
Moser Special No. 1, 3156, cemented; No. 2 drilling at 1800 sandy shale.
Miley No. 1, standing cemented, 250 feet of 15-inch; No. 2, building rig.
Peerless Oil and Refining company No. 1, drilling, shale and boulders.
Sandburg Petroleum company No. 1, 2100, drilling will set pipe at 2150.
State Consolidated No. II, 3200, drilling deeper, cable tols.
Ventura Oil company No. 1, drilling at 3400, hard sand, showing a little oil.
Finders quickly get in touch with losers by reading the 'Lost and Found' ads in the Herald.
WILL PROSECUTE
WASHINGTON, June 13.-A proclamation has been issued by the commander of the American marines in Haiti, providing that all persons charged with inciting rebellion will be tried by an American military court, the navy department announced today.
WASHINGTON tion of "promotion some enthusiasm during and aftervention last July republican parity.
These "promotion fact vague asses They were not ate the federals but apparently
By Balancing “Health Accounts” Daily,
Bank President Keeps College Girls Fit
BANK presidents have resorted to many sports to free their minds of dull financial care but running a girls college, which is the choice of G. H. Bartle of Fannetsburg and Chambersburg, Pa., is probably the oddest hobby in the profession. This is how it happened.
Mr. Bartle is president of the Fannetsburg National Bank and the business head of Wilson College, third oldest college for women in the United States, at Chambersburg. A few years ago the college found itself in need of a business man as manager and Mr. Bartle was called upon. The result is he, now handles both jobs: that of running a woman’s college for nine months annually and running a bank the other three and at odd moments between times.
The bank president can now tell at a moment's notice the price of eggs, ice cream and cream puffs to say nothing of cheese rarebit and fudge cake. Since adding the man to be good and are now holding the makers for payment.
That, in substance, is the bottom of the situation which was exemplified in the quarrel between Senator Fro
G. H. Bartle, Banker and Presiding Genius of Wilson College, Where He Manages Everything From Finances to “Eats”; A Group of Students at a “Bartle Lunch.”
aging of Wilson College to his career, Mr. Bartle has planned the menus for thousands of girls with an insight into the tastes, peculiar to college girls which amounts to genius. He has managed the chef and servants as well. From his masculine viewpoint the servant problem is nothing so tremendous.
“Servants aren't so difficult,” he claims. “First, I have an excellent chef and second. I treat him like a human being. I say 'we'll do' not 'you do,' and I express pleasure when a good effort is put forth. In the third place I realize that college girls, doing mental work, must have good food and they have it, with the menus so varied that the cooking doesn't grow monotonous. I arrange the menus for two weeks ahead and this helps insure a variety. It takes very little time and I find the girls are a healthy, blooming lot as a reward."
It costs $520 a year for a girl at Wilson College, according to this bank and kitchen chief, for tuition, room and board. That is the minimum. An average is $606 per year. Various colleges for girls have written and some have sent representatives to Chambersburg to inquire how the cost is kept so low. This is the manager's secret:
“In a bank, accounts are balanced every day and every day the books tell you the condition of the bank and that of every individual who does business with it. I have applied a similar system to running this college's business affairs. We have supplies enough of all kinds and good food, but we eliminate waste and keep strict accounts.”
ANAHEIM FAMILY GETS LETTER FROM SON IN U.S. NAVY
Master Robert Fishering, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Fishering of West Anaheim, sends greetings to his many friends of Anaheim and Orange county, on board Read Admiral Strauss' flagship Huron.
Rear Friends—I am sending this to you from the other side of the world and as I want all my friends to know where I am, L know of no better way than through the Anaheim Herald. I left San Francisco on the 5th of March on transport Logan, visited Honolulu, Guam and Manila, was received into the radio corps on board Admiral Strauss' flagship Huron, bound for a two years cruise in Atlantic waters. Admiral Strauss was awarded the distinguished service medal during the great war for laying the Allies' mine barrage in the North Sea. He came to the far east direct from Washington, where he had been stationed on naval work since October, 1919, upon completion of the work of removing the mine barrage in European waters, a task which he supervised.
Interviewers of Admiral Strauss at Manila quoted him as favoring the (Naval Holiday) or halt in increase of naval strength. Admiral Strauss is the author of several articles on ordnance and ballistics. He was a member of the commission which decided the cause of the sinking of the Malme in the Havana harbor.
In 1912 he was appointed vice admiral and made chief of the bureau of ordnance. He invented a superposed turret system of mounting guns on battleships and has done much experimental work on torpedoes.
We left Manila April 22, on board the Huron and I am writing this in Shanghai, China, May 15. This is the them to be good and are now holding the makers for payment.
That, in substance, is the bottom of the situation which was exemplified in the quarrel between Senator Frelinghuysen of New Jersey and Attorney General Daugherty over patronage.
As explained by republican politicians here, too many promises were made by too many persons. These promises were mostly vague and were born perhaps of the enthusiasm of the moment. But now it develops that a good many more folks have expectations than there are places.
Daugherty, as President Harding's chief political advisor, has been more or less in charge of the pie counter. He has been of course in sole charge of the many federal fudgeships, district attorneyships and U.S. marshalships which come under the department of justice. He has in some cases appointed men whose selection was a great disappointment of other republican politicians, who had given other candidates assurances.
After it became known that Frelinghuysen and Daugherty had hot words in Daugherty's office over New Jersey patronage, many republican members of congress began to discuss their differences with Daugherty.
THIEF TAKES MONEY AND CLOTHES FROM DWELLING
The loss by theft of $90 in cash, three ladies dresses and a man's suit was reported to the police today by A. Christina, 907 East Walnut street, Santa Ana. The robery is thought to have occurred about z:30 Sunday.
Aording to Christsina, a Mexican known as Jesus Flores or Jesus Rivera, is supposed to have been the thief. Flores stayed at the Christina home Saturday night.
Flores told Christsina that he had been in the jail at Long Beach until a few days ago.
ANAHEIM CENTER'S BIG MEETING ON TUESDAY NIGHT
The Anaheim Farm Bureau hold its regular monthly meeting at Loara school at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 14.
No meetings will be held due July and August and it is hoped a full attendance will be present this last meeting, as there is an important program.
Horticultural Commissioner Mr. son and Mr. H.E. Wahlberg, farm visor, will discuss in its different phases the subject of fumigation.
Chas. E. Eygabroad, a director of the California Fruit Exchange, give the result of the experiment made by the California Fruit Grov Supply Co. to determine the most desirable kind of tent for fumigation.
Dr. J.C. Whitten of the department of agriculture will speak on the subject of the use of lime in crops.
Murray Horn will make a report his trip to the State Farm Business Conference.
MAIL SCHEDULES
Arrival and departure of mail to the Anaheim postoffice are as follows:
ARRIVALS
6:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
3:43 p.m., 6:40 p.m.
DEPARTURES
6:15 a.m., 10:00 a.m.
3:15 p.m., 5:10 p.m.
BUY IT IN ANAHEIM
cled the cause of the sinking of the Maine in the Havana harbor.
In 1912 he was appointed vice admiral and made chief of the bureau of ordinance. He invented a superposed turret system of mounting guns on battleships and has done much experimental work on torpedoes.
We left Manila April 22, on board the Huron and I am writing this in Shanghai, China, May 15. This is the first official call of the admiral since he relived Admiral Albert Gleaves at Manila. Brig-Gen. F. J. Kerman, commander of P.I., accompanied Admiral Strauss on the voyage from Manila.
The cruise of the Huron will include Australia, India, Russia and Atlantic sea-board and possibly through the Panama canal home. It means about two years on the water. It is sure the life. We all love our admiral and I enjoy the radio work.
Hoping this may find you all well in dear old Anaheim, I will close for this time.
ROBERT, H. FISHERING.
POLITICAL I. O. U.'S CAUSING TROUBLE IN WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON, June 13.—Collection of "promissary notes," issued by some enthusiastic politicians before, during and after the republican convention last June is causing trouble in republican party circles.
These "promissary notes" were in fact vague assurances of federal jobs. They were not made in a way to violate the federal corrupt practices act, but apparently many workers took
SPECIAL—TUESDAY ONLY, JUNE 14
All 30c, 35c and 40c
Latest Popular Music
25c copy
Demonstrated by Howard L. Potter
Hammel’s Music Store.
124 East Center St.
ANAHEIM
OUR AUTO TOPS, BOOTS,
SIDE CURTAINS, Etc.
withstand the destructive effects of the sun, rain and wind
BEST because we use the highest grade materials and skill in
—Our —
AUTO TRIMMING SERVICE.
—No trouble to look over your car and submit estimates.
JOHNSON & MAXWELL,
AUTO PAINTING AND
TOP WORKS
—Phone 91 —
326 E. Center St., Anaheim, Cal.
—Your satisfaction is our success; that is our motto.
We can repair anything that looks like a body, fender or a radiator. Remember we guarantee our work.
TOP WORKS
— Phone 91 —
326 E. Center St., Anaheim, Cal.
—Your satisfaction is our success; that is our motto.
We can repair anything that looks like a body, fender or a radiator. Remember we guarantee our work.
ANAHEIM AUTO SHEET METAL WORKS
S. A. BEISERT/ Prop.
FENDERS LAMPS TANKS
307 E. Center St., Anaheim
Back East
EXCURSIONS
On Sale June 15 to August 15
Three months' limit—Not to exceed Oct. 31
Boston ... $179.10 New York ... $172.14
Chicago ... 106.80 St. Louis ... 101.40
Kansas City ... 87.60 St. Paul ... 105.00
New Orleans ... 106.80 Washington ... 162.30
and many others. Add 8% tax.
Liberal Stopovers
GO ONE WAY, COME BACK ANOTHER. There are four routes east via the Road of a Thousand Wonders. The fares are slightly higher one way via Portland.
—For complete information covering all destinations, rates, routes and trains, call on, write or phone
Southern Pacific Lines
Interline tickets sold to all points by local agent.
S. F. WILLARD, Agent, Anaheim Phone 123
Santa Fe
Summer Excursions
Cheap Fares
to
Los Angeles—San Diego
Flagstaff—Grand Canyon
and many other points
On Sale Daily—Return limit three months; not to exceed October 31, 1921. And
Week End Rates—on sale Fridays and Saturdays; return limit, fifteen days.
Also
Back East Excursions
On Sale Daily—June 15 to August 15
Return limit three months—not to exceed October 31
Ask Santa Fe Agent
N. J. KUHLMAN
Agent
Phones: Office 217; Res. 227J Anaheim, Calif.
If you have a spare room a HERALD WANT AD
will find a tenant for you.
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