anaheim-gazette 1921-06-02
Searchable text
NOTES ABOUT THE OIL FIELDS
Items of Interest Gleaned From Southern California’s Producing Fields and Progress Made.
The Union Oil company’s Chapman No. 6 continues to increase its production from 50 to 100 barrels a day, and now the big well is doing 3250 barrels of 27 gravity oil. The oil coming from the sands is cutting less than four-tenths of 1 per cent. Chapman No. 6 is the greatest producer in southern California and is rivaling closely some of the big Standard wells on the Tupman property at Elk Hills.
Chapman No. 2 is holding its own nicely at 1600 barrels. No. 7 is running close to 1000 barrels, and No. 8 is still making 200. Chapman No. 1, the discovery well, is still doing close to 600 and has produced more than 2,000,000 barrels.
The Chapman property will give the southern field another big well soon. No. 5 is in the oil sand at 4056 feet; No. 10 is cemented at 3030 feet; No. 11 is drilling in shale at 2775 feet, and No. 12 is held up with a fishing job at 3225 feet.
New work is a feature on the Chapman lease. No. 13 has the lumber on the ground for the rig; No. 14 is rigging up; No. 15 is ready to start drilling, so are Nos. 15 and 16; No. 17 has been located; No. 18 is a new well drilling at 900 feet; No. 19 has just been spudded in and No. 20 is building rig.
The Amalgamated Oil company’s next producer at Richfield will be Potter No. 2. This well is drilling in the 250 and 300 barrels and hold up to this figure for years. Drilling on No. 83 is at 875 feet in the conglomerate.
The Placentia-Pacific Oil company’s Wents No. 1 is now drilling at 3800 feet and is beginning to look very encouraging. While the showing is good, it is believed that the best thing now is to carry this well into the deep sands and get the big production while the drilling is under way. At 4000 feet Placentia-Pacific No. 1 may duplicate Chapman No. 6.
The Bixby Syndicate, according to announcement made last week, was to go to 4000 feet and quit. Developments this week look a little more encouraging, and it is understood now that the drilling will go on for a while. The present depth is 3950 feet, the formation fine sand.
At Chino No. 1 the National Exploration company has succeeded in getting out of the pipe and trouble that has held the well up for three weeks and is now drilling again at 1350 in sandy shale. No. 1 at Olinda is at 2200 in sandy shale that is showing some gas.
Orange county park is the scene of three wildcat well operations. The National Securities is drilling at 1950 feet, the formation being sandy shale. The Orange County Petroleum company, after making 1400 feet of hole, set pipe. The Olive Petroleum company is still idle, and the New York-
New work is a feature on the Chapman lease. No. 13 has the lumber on the ground for the rig; No. 14 is rigging up; No. 15 is ready to start drilling, so are Nos. 15 and 16; No. 17 has been located; No. 18 is a new well drilling at 900 feet; No. 19 has just been spudded in and No. 20 is building rig.
The Amalgamated Oil company's next producer at Richfield will be Potter No. 2. This well is drilling in the oil sand at 3200 feet and is looking good. Breen No. 2 is close to 1200 feet in conglomerate. Bayha well at 550 feet is in the conglomerate and Page No. 1 is held with a fishing job at 2780 feet. The Amalgamated has the Anaheim Union No. 54 at Brea about ready to put on the pump at 3600 feet.
At 3325 feet the Union's T. & G. No. 2 started flowing and looks like a good well. The well is not completed and will be drilled deeper before allowed to go on production. McFadden No. 2 at 3200 feet is about ready for production, a recementing job being necessary. Dickson No. 1 is still held up with pipe trouble at 3865 feet. Coyle & Bogue No. 1 will soon be ready for production; it is in the oil sand at 4032 feet. Stern No. 1 will be ready to go on production as soon as 296 feet of six-inch is fished out.
On the old Graham-Loftus lease at Brea the Union Oil company has just completed No. 51 and put this new well on the production, doing 150 barrels. No. 53 is drilling on the same lease and will be completed soon. On the old Naranjal property near Olinda, the Union has one well drilling, No. 10. In the oil sand at 3150 feet, this well is showing up nicely.
The General Petroleum is bringing in McKraken No. 1 at 3287 feet. Judging from the showing the well has been making a small producer is the best that can be expected. Davis No. 1 is pulling tubing at 340 feet and an effort will be made to locate water. Group 2-1, drilled to 4527 feet, is being plugged back to 4280 feet, and is undergoing a water test. Group 3-2 is drilling at 2500. Hugo No. 2 is going nicely in the conglomerate at 2500 feet. Jones No. 1, at 2100 feet, is in shale. Osmun No. 1 failed to get a shut off on the water at 3095 feet. Stein No. 1 shows 1750 feet of hole. Two wells are drilling on the Stern property; No. 5 shows 3300 feet in the sandy shale. Hugo No. 3 is standing.
At times the Petroleum Development company’s Bradford No. 1 flows and looks like a big well, and then again it has held the well up for three weeks and is now drilling again at 1350 in sandy shale. No. 1 at Olinda is at 2200 in sandy shale that is showing some gas.
Orange county park is the scene of three wildcat operations. The National Securities is drilling at 1960 feet, the formation being sandy shale. The Orange County Petroleum company, after making 1400 feet of hole, set pipe. The Olive Petroleum company is still idle, and the New York-California is waiting on pipe.
One hundred and fifteen derricks now dot the Huntington Beach oil fields. The number of operating companies has increased to 54 and the approximate daily production of this California’s newest oil field, is now 6,500 barrels. Fifty wells are d rilling, 16 wells are producing and the number of rigs in process of construction are 49.
No field ever opened up in California has been developed with such speed as Huntington Beach. The fact of the matter is that the speed shown has become a source of alarm in that careful and efficient development work is being sacrificed for speed.
At 2800 feet the Amalgamated Oil company is bringing in Huntington I-A. The well looks good for a 500-barrel production. At Fowler No. 1 casing trouble is holding up the well. Fowler No. 2 and Pearce No. 1 are building rig.
Preparations are being made to bring in the Bolsa Chica Oil company’s Augur No. 1. As soon as the state O.K.’s the water, the well will be brought in. The depth is 2132, and the well has been showing strong.
The Blue Shale Oil and Mining company’s well has been standing cemented now for a month. Information has been given out that the company was waiting on drill pipe. The rotary has been removed, and the rig does not present the appearance of ever going ahead.
Huntington Central sanded up and has quit producing. The tubing is to be pulled and the well given a chance to flow through the six-inch casing. Huntington Central No. 2 is rigging up to drill out the cement at 3006 feet.
The Hurst Oil Syndicate has extensive development plans for the Beach. At No.1 the water will be shut off. No.2 is rigging up and will start drilling this week. No.3 is building.Just recently this concern closed a lease for the Methodist camp ground property and has other leases in the now re-established area.
Merely for the sighting the argument, I discuss the position duty to any one but approach our subject“What does it profit eliminate any ideals of the other fellow of foreign credits.”
“In America we lose troubles and our tax serious problems.” Our foreign trade lost both the hardest face and the first wacky task, for until our firm developed and we find excess products, they ing up in our product in the readjustment while those goods we must carry a heavy would carry if the loss over international, domestic, sales.”
“Our difficulty in national trade lies in have during the last developing domestic quering of this country developing internal building up relations.The result is mitten other nation merchants, our brokerage agents.”
“Before the war products abroad ther German countries now us Those products foreign ships to form sales were financed and all we were into fact that somewhere yet for our products we built up for rivals at our own e”
“When the slump war, American mere because naturally saw to it that the nationals were marked was that in ther world orders for were the first cause on hand the Americas last to be sold.”
“The truths brought demonstrated that continue our isolate of necessity and fo
undergoing a water test. Group 3-2 is drilling at 2500. Hugo No. 2 is going nicely in the conglomerate at 2500 feet. Jones No. 1, at 2100 feet, is in shale. Osmun No. 1 failed to get a shut off on the water at 3095 feet. Stein No. 1 shows 1750 feet of hole. Two wells are drilling on the Stern property; No. 5 shows 3300 feet in the sandy shale. Hugo No. 3 is standing.
At times the Petroleum Development company's Bradford No. 1 flows and looks like a big well, and then again it settles down to a pumper. To date the best that this 4120-foot well will make is about 200 barrels. Bradford No. 3, at 4200 feet, is in gray sand, showing little indications of oil. No. 5, at 3965 feet, is showing some oil. Bradford Community No. 1 is going ahead at 4356 feet in sandy shale. Richfield No. 2 set 10-inch at 2900 feet.
The Petroleum Midway has two wells drilling on the Yarnell lease. No. 9 is making hole at 2175 feet, and No. 14 is in the oil sand at 3028 feet. Richfield-Yorba No. 1 is drilling at 8520 feet in sandy shale and struck some water and is to be recemented. Development work is being prosecuted rapidly on the Krug property. No. 1 is 2300 feet in sticky shale; No. 3 is 2800 feet in brown shale; No. 3, at 2500 feet, is in sandy shale; No. 4 is drilling at 1564 feet in blue shale, and No. 5 shows the rig built and complete. Lumber is on the ground for No. 6.
The Richfield-Consolidated wells No. 1 and No. 2 are being cleaned out and will be put on production in a few days.
The West Coast Oil company has a habit of bringing in 300-barrel wells. One each month has been coming in now since the first of the year. The late addition, No. 49, was drilled to 3-155 feet.
The wells drilled in the old Olinda field do not come in gushers, but at be pulled and the well given a chance to flow through the six-inch casing. Huntington Central No. 2 is rigging up to drill out the cement at 3000 feet.
The Hurst Oil Syndicate has extensive development plans for the Reach. At No. 1 the water will be shut off. No. 2 is rigging up and will start drilling this week. No. 3 is building. Just recently this concern closed a lease for the Methodist camp ground property and has other leases in the now restricted area that will be developed when the ban is lifted.
At 2550 feet an attempt was made to bring in Miley-Keck No. 2. The well made a big flow and stopped. A sand heave had filled the hole up for some distance. Not until this has been cleared out will production start.
Pantages-Huntington No. 1 is to be brought in with the lost baller in the hole. Four days' fishing accomplished nothing. It is thought that by lefelling the well flow for a while the sand will loosen around the baller so it can be pulled out.
The Republic Petroleum's new well is not producing. Brought in at 3685 feet the well produced for awhile at 200 barrels and then sanded up. It is the intention how to pull tubing and clean out.
At 3160 feet the State Consolidated No. 1 is being prepared to drill deeper. The well is flowing, but it is thought that by deepening it can be made a good producer.
In the independent list the Sun Oil company of California is one of the heaviest developers. This company has four wells under way. No. 1 is 2436 feet deep, and cable tools are going in to complete the well. No. 2 is a completed rig. No. 3 is drilling and going down fast; 2000 feet will be reached before the end of the week. No. 4 is building rig.
"The truths brought demonstrated that we continue our isolate of necessity and fortification, we must have for the conduct of with the nations. The strongest finance country of the world ships under the Americas approximately 40 ports exports and in ar today in possess portant physical facing on of foreign which has not been tory of any nation but we are almost a personnel that knowledge and extra trade and in its inc."
"For our own purpose ship-minded as we can, establish well equipped offices mercial contacts of the world we can build up as to compete on even commercial rivals, nize that the principal competitors have against our attempts adequately in world fact that they, and this organization."
"This first attempt more than an expert our foreign trade fices and in our o
OUR FOREIGN TRADE
Coming to the California State Bankers' convention almost directly from a series of conferences with other executives o f the American Bankers' association at Pinehurst, North Carolina, and from meetings with the United States Chamber of Commerce at Atlantic City, and the American Society o f Internation Law at Washington, where the various problems of American foreign trade were carefully considered, Henry M. Robinson, president of the First National bank of Los Angeles and of the Los Angeles Trust & Savings bank, one of the best known authorities on international finance in the United States, today outlined definitely to California bankers the real heart of the problem which the United States faces.
Pointing out that within the month he had heard both Secretary of State Hughes and Ellhu Root endorse the flat and unqualified statement that while in the past religious and political causes have been the base for war, economic pressure and ambition will from now on be the underlying motive for any immediate trouble which may develop between nations. Robinson said in part:
"Frankly, because of temporary difficulties, our people have at the present time dropped back from any position of idealistic helpfulness an dnow desire to know exactly where they stand in their material relations with the rest of the world.
"Merely for the sake of not confusing the argument, let us take in this discussion the position that we owe no duty to any one but ourselves. Let us approach our subject from the angle, 'What does it profit America?' and eliminate any idealism or any thought of the other fellow in our discussion for the time being in serious losses, has affected the courage of our international traders and financial interests and, unfortunately, has developed a disposition on the part of many of our bankers to question our ability to set up the machinery necessary to finance this trade with any degree of safety.
"One question has led to another. We are asked whether the Foreign Trade Financing corporation will operate in the interest of any particular group; we are asked whether it will finance shipments already made, or whether it will build for the future.
"Both honest and captious criticisms have run their full limit, and every possibility has been discussed pro and con. Catagorically, the answers are:
"We can successfully set up such marketing machinery; this machinery will be conducted for the benefit of the producers generally; it will not be used for the purpose of liquidating the frozen credits now existing; it will not be conducted in the interest of any particular group.
"The Foreign Trade Financing corporation is an American concern, built by Americans for the benefit of American business as a whole.
"I want to call your attention to the criticisms and objections raised before the federal reserve system was set up.
"Many of us can recall the attitude of bankers throughout the country and can remember distinctly that many of the leading bankers on the coast believed that the federal reserve act was entirely inadequate and could result only in great injury to the banking system of the United States; that the machinery was inadequate, wrongly conceived and impossible of beneficial operations, but it is to be doubted that any one here would at this time seriously question the tremendous benefit"
CERTIFICATE OF TRANSACTING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTIOUS NAME
I, the undersigned, do hereby certify that I am transacting a general electrical business under the name and style of Anaheim Electric Company; that the principal place of said business is at 209 West Center Street, In Anaheim, Orange County, and that my residence is at No. 3935 Bluff Place in San Pedro, Los Angeles, California.
In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand this 20th day of May, 1921.
CHAS. W. WALSWORTH.
State of California, County of Los Angeles, SS.
On this 20th day of May, A. D. 1921, before me, a Notary Public in and for said County and State, residing therein, duly commissioned and sworn, personally appeared Charles W. Walsworth, known to me to be the person whose name is subscribed to the within instrument, and acknowledged to me that he executed the same.
In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal the day and year in this certificate first above written.
(SEAL C. H. HAMLIN,
Notary Public, Los Angeles County,
California.
MASON & HAMLIN,
Attorneys-at-Law,
San Pedro, California.
6-2-14)
Anaheim Gazette, fifty-two weeks for $1.50.
MERELY FOR the sake of not confusing the argument, let us take in this discussion the position that we owe no duty to any one but ourselves. Let us approach our subject from the angle, 'What does it profit America?' and eliminate any idealism or any thought of the other fellow in our discussion of foreign credits.
"In America we look upon our labor troubles and our taxes as the great and serious problems. The development of our foreign trade looks easy, but it is both the hardest problem which we face and the first which we should attack, for until our foreign trade is developed and we find a market for our excess products, there must be a slowing up in our production and difficulty in the readjustment of labor problems, while those goods which we do market must carry a heavier tax than they would carry if the load could be spread over international, as well as over our domestic sales."
"Our difficulty in regard to international trade lies in the fact that we have, during the last century, been developing domestic trade in the conquering of this continent; instead of developing international trade and building up relations with other nations. The result is that we have permitted other nations to act as our merchants, our brokers and our insurance agents.
Before the war we sold our excess products abroad through the British, the Germans and the nationals of other countries now in competition with us. Those products were carried in foreign ships to foreign markets, the sales were financed by foreign money, and all we were interested in was the fact that somewhere, somehow, a market for our products was found. In this we built up the foreign trade of our rivals at our own expense.
When the slump came after the war, American merchants suffered first because, naturally, our British friends saw to it that the goods of their own nationals were marketed first. The result was that in the various ports of the world orders for American goods were the first cancelled, and of goods on hand the American products were the last to be sold.
The truths brought home to us have demonstrated that we can no longer continue our isolated position and that, of necessity and for our own protec-
"Many of us can recall the attitude of bankers throughout the country and can remember distinctly that many of the leading bankers on the coast believed that the federal reserve act was entirely inadequate and could result only in great injury to the banking system of the United States; that the machinery was inadequate, wrongly conceived and impossible of beneficial operations, but it is to be doubted that any one here would at this time seriously question the tremendous benefit that the federal reserve system has been to the country, even though they may at one time have thought it a most unfortunate creation.
What was true of the federal reserve system a few years ago is true of the Foreign Trade Financing corporation today.
We must sell our goods abroad if we are to continue to produce, and if we are to sell our goods abroad in competition with the nations we must be prepared to meet the needs and requirements of our customers. If we do not meet those needs, we will most certainly not get the business, and if we do not get the business our production will suffer.
Our problem must be met on a cold basis of enlightened selfishness and there is no need for us to discuss the benefits which will accrue to the other fellow. All we have to do to convince ourselves of the necessity for going ahead is to consider the dangers which we will ourselves face if we do not do so.
The proposal made by McHugh's committee is the first broad plan submitted, and no other plan even approximately as effective has been suggested. Somewhere we must start if we are ever going to finish, and the best way to start is to begin."
ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS COLLEGE
Santa Ana, California
Enrollments now active for our fall term. We can train you in a few months for a good position paying from $75 to $150 a month. The demand for our graduates was never so great. Salaries were never so high. We cannot fill half the position placed at our disposal. We MUST have more students this year to boost the wheels of business moving. Ask today for our FREE catalogue. J. W McCormac, President.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
war, American merchants suffered first because, naturally, our British friends saw to it that the goods of their own nationals were marketed first. The result was that in the various ports of the world orders for American goods were the first cancelled, and of goods on hand the American products were the last to be sold.
"The truths brought home to us have demonstrated that we can no longer continue our isolated position and that, of necessity and for our own protection, we must have our own machinery for the conduct of our own trading with the nations. Today, we are in the strongest financial position in any country of the world. We have enough ships under the American flag to move approximately 40 per cent of our normal exports and imports. In fact, we are today in possession of all the important physical factors for the carrying on of foreign trade to a degree which has not been equalled in the history of any nation in the last century; but we are almost entirely without a personnel that has the necessary knowledge and experience in world trade and in its incidental problems.
"For our own protection, we must become ship-minded, and, as rapidly as we can, establish trained personnel, well equipped offices and build up commercial contacts of the various ports of the world—this in order that we can build up an organization able to compete on even terms with our commercial rivals, for we must recognize that the principal reason why our competitors have been able to hold out against our attempts to participate adequately in world trade has been the fact that they, and not we, have had this organization.
"This first attempt of ours—it was more than an experiment—to carry on our foreign trade through our own offices and in our own ships, resulting term. We can train you in a few months for a good position paving from $75 to $150 a month. The demand for our graduates was never so great. Salaries were never so high. We cannot fill half the position placed at our disposal. We MUST have more students this year to keep the wheels of business moving. Ask today for our FREE catalogue. J. W McCormac, President.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Ed Price, Deceased.
Notice is Hereby Given, by the undersigned, Charles D. Brown, Administrator of the estate of Ed Price, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said executrix at her place of business, 803 H. W. Hellman Bldg., in the City of Los Angeles, in the County of Los Angeles, within 10 months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 15th day of April, 1921.
CHARLES D. BROWN,
Administrator of the Estate of Ed Price, Deceased.
4-21-t5
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of L. Nemetz, Deceased.
Notice is Hereby Given, by the undersigned, executrix of the estate of L. Nemetz, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said executrix at her place of business, 803 H. W. Hellman Bldg., in the City of Los Angeles, in the County of Los Angeles, within 10 months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 29th day of April, 1921.
PAULINE McADOO.
Executrix of the Estate of L. Nemetz,
5-5-t4.
Deceased.
TRANSACTING
ER A FICTIAME
do hereby certiing a general elective of the name and
electric Company;
place of said buslCenter Street, in
County, and that my
35 Bluff Place in
Mes, California.
I have hereunto
day of May,
VALSWORTH.
county of Los AnMay, A. D. 1921,
Public in and for
residing thereoand sworn, perarias W. Walsh
to be the person
obbed to the withknowledged to the same.
I have hereunto
my official seal
this certificate
H. HAMLIN,
Angeles County,
fifty-two weeks
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of L. Nemetz, Deceased.
Notice is Hereby Given, by the undersigned, executrix of the estate of
L. Nemetz, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, Department One, thereof (said executrix having no place of business in said County of Orange), within 10 months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 12th day of May, 1921.
PAULINE McADOO,
Executrix of the Estate of L. Nemetz,
Deceased.
5-19-4t
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of John Lemke, Deceased.
Notice is Hereby Given, by the undersigned, executrix of the Last Will and Testament of John Lemke, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said executrix at her place of business, at the law offices of Ames & McFadden, at Suite No. 2 in the Odd Fellows' Building at No. 133 W. Center street in the City of Anaheim, in the County of Orange, within ten months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 9th day of May, 1921.
ANNE LEMKE,
Executrix of the Last Will and Testament of John Lemke, Deceased.
5-12-t5
CLEAN THE STREETS
CITY CLERK'S OFFICE
Anaheim, Cal., May 5, 1921.
You are hereby notified that Section 1 or Ordinance No. 96 makes it the duty of any person or persons who owns or controls any real estate within the limits of the City of Anaheim to keep the street or streets upon which the real property is located, free from and remove all grass, weeds or vegetation.
SEALED PROPOSALS
Sealed proposals will be received by the undersigned, Clerk of the City of Anaheim, at his office at the City Hall, Center Street, Anaheim, up to Thursday, June 6th, 1921, at 8 o'clock P.M., for the delivery of 1500 barrels in carload lots of crude oil for street work. Delivery of oil to be made whenever ordered by the City of Anaheim. Oil to be delivered f. o. b. track, Los Angeles, or intermediate points if shipped by rail, otherwise to be delivered at the city's storage tanks at Anaheim. Bidders to state the location of wells from which the oil will be shipped, and also the names of well owners.
Terms of payment, cash on second Thursday of each month during such delivery.
A certified check for $50.00 must accompany each and every proposal, to be forfeited if the successful bidder fails to enter into a contract in accordance with his bid.
The Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim reserves the right to reject each and every bid.
Said oil must be from 12 to 14 degrees gravity and contain not less than 70 percent of liquid asphalt. Bidders must state in their bids the amount of liquid asphalt contained in the oil they propose to furnish.
The successful bidder will be required to give a bond in the sum of $500.00, with two sureties to be approved by the Board of Trustees, conditioned that such bidder will faithfully comply with the conditions of his contract.
By order of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim.
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
CERTIFICATE OF CO-PARTNERS
TRANSACTING BUSINESS UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME
The undersigned, Henry M. Adams, Addison C. Bowers, Elmer L. Bowers, do hereby certify that they are co-partners engaged in the business of buying, selling, vending and dealing in lumber, lath, cash, doors, windows, lime, cement, roofing materials and other building materials, and conducting a planning under the name
CLEAN THE STREETS
CITY CLERK'S OFFICE
Anaheim, Cal., May 5, 1921.
You are hereby notified that Section 1 or Ordinance No. 96 makes it the duty of any person or persons who owns or controls any real estate within the limits of the City of Anaheim to keep the street or streets upon which the real property is located, free from and remove all grass, weeds or vegetation from the outer edge of said street or streets adjoining such real property and the parking, up to the center line of such street or streets.
You are further notified that if the provisions of this Section 1 of said Ordinance are not complied with by you within ten days from this date the City of Anaheim will eradicate and remove at your expense, all grass, weeds or vegetation, which may be on any street or streets adjoining such real property and the parking, owned or controlled by you in the City of Anaheim, according to the provisions of said Ordinance of the City of Anaheim.
By order of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim.
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
5-5-t3
H.P.NOLL
Public Accountant and Auditor
ORANGE COUNTY AUDIT & COLLECTION CO.
Room 2, Central Bldg., Anaheim
CERTIFICATE OF CO-PARTNERS TRANSACTING BUSINESS UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME
The undersigned, Henry M. Adams, Addison C. Bowers, Elmer L. Bowers, do hereby certify that they are co-partners engaged in the business of buying, selling, vending and dealing in lumber, lath, sash, doors, windows, lime, cement, roofing materials and other building materials, and conducting a planing mill under the name or designation of Adams-Bowers Lumber Co.
That the office and principal place of business of said co-partnership is in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California.
That the names in full of all of the members of said co-partnership and their places of residences are respectively as follows:
Henry M. Adams, 417 S. Los Angeles St., Anaheim, Orange County, California.
Addison C. Bowers, 1401 North Main St., Santa Ana, Orange County, California.
Elmer L. Bowers, 116 East Washington St., Santa Ana, Orange County, California.
WITNESS our hands this 17th day of May, A. D., 1921.
HENRY M. ADAMS,
ADDISON C. BOWERS.
ELMER L. BOWERS
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