anaheim-daily-herald 1921-12-09
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News Notes of the Oil Fields
NEWPORT AND SAN JOAQUIN HILLS
The big showing of oil that the Laguna Beach Oil Association led the world to believe at 3250 failed to materialize. On drilling out the cement at 3250 water found and very little evidence of oil. The well operations have been shrouded in mystery for some time and information was difficult to obtain.
The Tepothal Oil Company has resumed operations. Eight inch pipe is going in and actual drilling starts again at 1875. The hundred thousand dollars additional moving picture capital reported to have been invested in the well did not materialize. However the company has secured additional capital and will go ahead.
The H. T. & K. Syndicate set a string of pipe at 310 feet and cemented.
Drilling on the Nu Santa Oil Company's No. 1 is now at 2650 in blue shale. The showings thus far have been fair, but nothing to get excited over.
At 3000 feet even the W. A. G. Oil Company set a string of ten inch pipe and cemented. Wirscher-Gray No. 1 is drilling at 3000 feet in blue shale. W. A. G. Oil and Petroleum is ready to spud in at No. 1.
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H. J. EFKER, Prop.
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ANAHEIM DAILY HERALD
The drilling operations of the Interstate Oil Company includes Heights No. 1 standing cemented at 280 feet, 12 1-2, and Norris No. 1 drilling by pipe at 2100.
At 3335 feet the Long Beach Consolidated's No. 1 is drilling in brown sandy shale and is showing some nice oil colors and quite a bit of gas. The well is really locking better than at any previous time.
HAWTHORNE-INGLEWOOD
The Kitselman Company at Hawthorne has two wells on which work still continues. A production test is to be made on No. 3 (Hicks) as soon as the cement sets. Playa Del Rey is rigging up to proceed with the rotary at 1751 feet.
Watch Closely for Disease in Flock and Prevent Its Appearance, Says Expert
The most reliable and profitable method for curing poultry is the hatchet. At least that seems to have been the experience of a large number of commercial poultry raisers. They find that it does not pay to spend much time or money in trying to bring a sick fowl back to health. One reason is that it takes considerable time, during which the bird will not be laying, and another is that a sick bird is always a menace to the rest of the flock. However, in spite of the efficiency of the hatchet as a cure, it is not good business to be careless just because such an efficient remedy is at hand. Prevention in most cases is not difficult nor costly, and pays big dividends.
Some Diseases Spread Rapidly
The poultry flock is subject to a number of diseases, some of which spread rapidly and cause big losses. The birds may also be infested with various parasites, some of which live on the surface of the body and others in the various parts of the interior. Such parasites, whether they are outside or inside workers, are injurious because they take a part of the nourishment which should be used to put on flesh or to produce eggs, and also because of irritation and inflammation of the parts they attack.
The contagious diseases caused by germs and the weakness and loss of flesh caused by the larger parasites are the most important conditions which the poultryman must consider in order to keep his birds in health. These germs and parasites can be kept down by suitable preventative measures, and the aim and study of the diseases should be to learn prevention rather than cure. Medicines may be given advantageously at times but as a rule, as has been suggested, it is better to kill the suffefer. There is another reason not yet mentioned that makes the killing of sick birds desirable. Birds that first contract diseases are apt to be the weakest ones in the flock and should be culled out.
The more birds kept on a farm or plot of ground and the more they are crowded the greater the danger from contagion and parasites, and the more chance of escaping disease if they are raised in clean brooders and kept upon ground where poultry has not run for some time.
Sometimes these directions cannot be followed explicitly. If all the available ground has been recently used for poultry, fowls, should be taken from that part which is to be used for the new flock, a good coating of freshly slacked lime applied to the surface, and a few days later it should be plowed. Then it should be cultivated caree or four times with intervals of a week, and finally sowed to a small grain crop. In a few months the greater part of the germs will be destroyed, but it is better to leave the ground unoccupied by poultry until a winter has passed.
It is more difficult to raise a new flock free from parasites if the eggs are hatched by hens, for hens may carry lice and mites and various parasites. For this reason it is a good idea to select hens for brooding from a flock free from disease and pests.
To keep germs and parasites from developing to a great extent, poultry houses need to be cleaned frequently and the drinking fountains and feed troughs need a weekly washing with boiling water or other disinfectant. If any lice or mites are found on the birds or in their houses, the roosts and adjoining parts of the walls must be painted with commercial carbolene or a mixture of 1 quart kerosene and 1 teacupful of crude carbolic acid or grulesol, or the house may be whitewashed with freshly slacked lime and sprayed with kerosene emulsion. Dust the fowl with sodium flouride or lice powder.
Use Disinfectants Freely
Good disinfectants kill germs of contagious diseases, the external parasides, and in some cases parasitic worms. In applying a disinfectant to the interior of a house it should be worked into all the cracks and crevices. Spread over the ceiling and the floor, the roosts, dropping boards, and nest boxes. These germ killers are most easily applied to walls and ceilings with a sprayer or with a brush. Ordinary lime wash, made from fresh-hatched lime, is very good for the
Karl Had Far Better Place of Exile Than Did Napoleon
Every healthy boy dreams longingly of life on an island, but ex-emperors don't seem to like islands a single bit. Just experiment with the next ex-emperor you meet—look him in the eye and say: "I know a nice little island." and see if he doesn't get a cold chill. That's why it's always a painful job to "see off" one's ex-emperor friends when they're embarking, under the international auspices, not to mention a smart military escort, for some lovely, lonely island with very superior scenery and a peach of a climate. Ex-emperors are so emotional, you know.
Napoleon on his way to St. Helena was dreadfully peevish, and now poor Charles of Hungary is on his way to Maderja, after a sorry sendoff which made his sailing a melancholy affair. Charles has an advantage over Napoleon in being accompanied into exile by his devoted ex-Empress Zita and their children, who are soon to be increased in number. Napoleon had only a bevy of old marshals and other hangers on, who could hardly suppress their yawns when the ex-emperor bragged of his victories.
Charles is worse off than Napoleon, in one respect, and that is that he hasn't any victories to brag of. He never was master of Europe. He
Use Disinfectants Freeiy
Good disinfectants kill germs of contagious diseases, the external parasides, and in some cases parasitic worms. In applying a disinfectant to the interior of a house it should be worked into all the cracks and crevices. Spread over the ceiling and the floor, the roosts, dropping boards, and nest boxes. These germ killers are most easily applied to walls and ceilings with a sprayer or with a brush. Ordinary lime wash, made from freshly slacked lime, is very good for the purpose. But in a case of an actual outbreak of disease add 6 ounces of crude carbolic acid to each gallon.
About this time of the year it is very important for the poutryman to protect the birds in his flock from the attack of disease and parasites. The cold rains of fall and early winter make the fowls much more susceptible than they are at other seasons, and diseases have a much better chance to get hold of them. Proper precautions of the kind mentioned, which are discussed in detail in Farmers' Bulletin No. 957, published by the United States department of agriculture, with comfortable quarters and good feed, will do much toward preventing loss.
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Charles of Hungary is on his way to Maderia, after a sorry sendoff which made his sailing a melancholy affair. Charles has an advantage over Napoleon in being accompanied into exile by his devoted ex-Empress Zita and their children, who are soon to be increased in number. Napoleon had only a bevy of old marshals and other hangers on, who could hardly suppress their yawns when the emperor bragged of his victories.
Charles is worse off than Napoleon, in one respect, and that is that he hasn't any victories to brag of. He never was master of Europe. He never saw the streets of Cairo. As an exiled ex-emperor he lacks what the highbrows call a background. He just as good looking young cavalry officer of royal blood, boosted unexpectedly during the war and now left "waiting at the church," as Vesta Victoria used to sing.
In the matter of islands, Charles has Napoleon beaten a block, Maderia is much superior to St. Helena. Maderia has a reputation. It gave its name to an admirable wine, of which a rare old cask was once considered a propitious and gentlemanly legacy from one's grandfather. And it's quite a fashionable refuge for high life elopers from England.
If Napoleon could have had troops of gay young elopers to harangue about his victories instead of that bunch of weary old campaigners he might have lived much longer. But his island was picked out for him, as the most God forsaken spot on earth and the least likely to be the scene of another escape from Elba.
It had been just a calling station for ships sailing between England and the Cape of Good Hope. Its inhabitant were few and uninteresting, socially quite beneath' the regard of an ex-emperor. The island itself was just the summit of an ancient volcano, rising 2,700 feet above the sea, with an area of forty-five square miles. In the center was an old farm house, Longwood, in which Napoleon spent his last plump and petulant years, presiding over a bored little imitation court, spatting with the English governor of the island and thinking up grandiloquent phrases for his will.
The life of genius is marked by violent extremes. St. Helena was the grim contrast made necessary by the imperial grandeur of the Corsican's heyday. But Charles, whose advent-
Friday, December 9, 1921.
The island, with it 300 square miles, is more than six times larger than St. Helena. Mountains intersected with deep gorges rise to a height of 4,000 feet."
Charles may find fair hunting there. Or he might go in for growing grapes and making the wine of the country. The climate is delightful when dust storms don't blow across the ocean from Morocco. The little Hapsburg children can grow up there under the healthiest conditions. Unless the exile of Charles extends to his offsprings, most of them will doubtless elect to leave the island for their schooldays and for the subsequent serious business of life, which even Hapsburghs have to consider nowadays.
IMPOSSIBLE TO MISTAKE.
Neverwed—So you've named your little boy after you? How can you tell which one your wife is addressing?
Longwed—You heard her call "Peter, darling?" Well, wait till you hear her yell for me.
A little boy, the youngest member of a large family, was taken to see his married sister's new baby. He receded more interested in the contents of the baby's basket than in the baby, and after examining the pretty trifles picked up by powder puff, Much surprised at his discovery and looking rather shocked, he said: "Isn't she rather young for that sort of thing?"
If you are ashamed of your calling hire a boy to call for you.
AWFUL THREAT,
Judge—Why did you strike this man?
Prisoner—He threatened my wife.
Judge—How was that?
Prisoner—He told my daughter that he was going to kiss her for her mother.
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