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anaheim-gazette 1922-09-07

1922-09-07 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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OIL FIELD NOTES Recent developments at Huntington Beach indicate that the future of the field lies in deep drilling. This feature of the development of the field will undoubtedly govern all sections of the field. The Amalgamated Oil company, drilling on Fowler No. 4 at 4100 feet has passed through 700 feet of oil sand and the end is not yet in sight. The Jaggers Oil company, drilling on the north side of the field, has reached 4000 feet and nothing of any particular importance in the way of showing has been struck yet. This would seem to indicate deep drilling. The Mosier Special's Krahling No. 1 at 4708 has made some production and will undoubtedly make something good when the water trouble has been taken care of. The Selby-Root-Hogue Oil company's Curtis No. 1 at 4400 is a commercial producer. Clark No. 2 at 4000 feet is beginning to show some oil. The Standard Oil company has fully demonstrated the need of deep drilling along the so-called ocean front section of the field. Drilling Surf No. 2 to 4430 resulted in a flush producer of 600 barrels and a settled producer of 500 barrels, 23 gravity, clean oil. Surf No. 1 drilled a number of months ago to 3790 proved a failure. The well produced a few barrels of heavy oil. The Standard's success will undoubtedly mean the redrilling and deepening of Surf 1, National Exploration No. 1 and the Union Oil company's Newlands No. 2. Those who have been watching the developments at Seal Beach will have something of real interest now in a few days, when the Seal Beach Oil company balls down its 3200 foot well and tests for water. Should the Seal Beach Oil company get a water shut-off at once, the drilling will go right ahead with the rotary and the depth of the oil boring sands, if there be any there, will be quickly ascertained. The Petroleum Midway boosted the production of the Long Beach field wit ha 2200 barrel well on the Davidson property. The big well was finished at 3390 feet and is producing the usual high gravity oil that has made the Long Beach field famous. Perrin No. 1, another Petroleum Midway, completed at 3450 feet, seems to be good for about 450 barrels of 21 gravity oil. Fields No. 3, the Petroleum Midway well that started the excitement on the extreme northwestern front of the field, has been plugged back to 3305, and is making about 125 barrels of 21 gravity oil. The General Petroleum is about to put the South Coast Oil company on the map as a producing company. Both Seoco No. 1 and No. 2 are in the oil sand and the wells are showing up nicely, Seoco No. 1 at 3200 feet and No. 2 at 3000 feet. A. T. Jergins has started to reduce further the tax rate of the city of Long Beach. The reduction is in the shape of starting well No. 2 on the city reservoir property. The famous Jergins City No. 1 has been pinched down to 3500 barrels and continues to produce with remarkable steadiness. The Oceanic Oil company is about to realize production on its No. 2 an income tax payer must meet California Seventh Tax Ration. A number of Orange county mappers appear before dawn in their return audit of their report nouncement by Elk City collector for Orange County. At the same time that he and a corp just completed a Orange county and quencies had been any other district investigation made irregular it will start about six said. He was eminent that the drill be construed as a willful tax dodger of filers, Burns says report their income. Burns says that county is concerns here will be who made errors or errors that were cause of incorrect filling in the various areas. He intimated that have refunds complied in computations, observations that were noure to take exempt the basis for motions that will be made. Burns advised taxpayers who write their returns will be deputy at some east their place of residence this district is co- Drilling on the La Habra Midway is section of the field. Drilling Surf No. 2 to 4430 resulted in a flush producer of 600 barrels and a settled producer of 500 barrels, 23 gravity, clean oil. Surf No. 1 drilled a number of months ago to 3790 proved a failure. The well produced a few barrels of heavy oil. The Standard's success will undoubtedly mean the redrilling and deepening of Surf 1, National Exploration No. 1 and the Union Oil company's Newlands No. 2. Deep drilling in the northeast side of the field has been attempted by the Union Oil company’s Copeland No. 8, a 1500 barrel well completed at 4250. The new Union Oil company’s well is making 27 gravity clean oil. This is the biggest well the Union has ever gotten in the Huntington Beach field and will go quite a way to offset the number of small producers and the one dry hole drilled. There seems to be quite a possibility of the Fullerton Oil company contributing some real deep sand production to the old Brea field. Some time ago a test well, No. 14, was drilled to 4760 feet, no oil apparently was found and the well has stood idle a number of months. A few days ago the hole was washed and cleaned out, and showed a lot of oil. Pumping equipment is going in now at 4000 feet, and a production will be made. At Richfield the Amalgamated Oil company has suspended operations on the Placentia-Pacific, a well that has been watched with great interest for several months. A fishing job at 4128 caused the Amalgamated company to suspend operation temporarily, at least. The will is in the Richfield wildcat territory and would give the old field a new lease on life should it prove a producer. The deepest test well drilled in the north end of the Richfield district is the recent completion of Kraemer 1-15 A by the Standard Oil company at 4750 feet. The well is not looking very encouraging and probably will not make even a commercial producer. Kraemer 2-17A, completed at 4493 feet, is on production, making about 60 barrels. Kellogg No. 2, another deep completion at 5660, went on the pump, and made a little oil, then sanded up. A T. Jergins has started to reduce further the tax rate of the city of Long Beach. The reduction is in the shape of starting well No. 2 on the city reservoir property. The famous Jergins City No. 1 has been pinched down to 3500 barrels and continues to produce with remarkable steadiness. The Oceanic Oil company is about to realize production on its No. 2, an outpost well that moves the productive boundary line of the field a half mile north of the present center of production. At 3278 Oceanic No. 2 is showing lots of oil and there is little doubt now that this well will be one of the big ones in a few weeks. Shell success has become a habit on Signal Hill. This company averages two completions a week and increases its production from two to four thousand barrels weekly. Shell Dobyns No. 3 at 3295 came in at 1600 barrels. The oil is 28 gravity and gives this little property a total of three very good wells. On the Wilbur lease No. 2, finished at 3295 feet, is a 1625 barrel well. Reaching a depth of 5700 feet the Standard Oil company has failed to find any indications of oil for the Bixby on the Alamitos lease. This deepest test well drilled to date at Long Beach is in blue sandy shale and the outlook cannot be said to be encouraging. Should oil be found soon and in commercial quantify the well will set a record for deep production. At Santa Fe Springs the daily output is scheduled to be doubled in the next ten days. A large number of the smaller concerns in the field have wells about to come ii. By the middle of the month Santa Fe Springs will be putting out 50,000 barrels daily. The Amalgamated Oil company’s Dallugge No. 1 is back on production, making 1000 barrels. Leading off with a gusher of 3300 barrels the General Petroleum held its accustomed first place for the honor of bringing in big wells. Santa Fe No. 8, completed at 3817 feet started flowing at the rate of 3300 barrels and will probably not decline much in settling down to normal production. Santa Fe No. 52, redrilled and completed at 3818 feet, is back in the producing list, doing 2800 barrels daily. The deputy state this district is co-in every district i In Los Angeles, that there are 11 turns for the Los They were taken ports filed by per more income and showing less than California is th he union in th revenue tax paid 1922. The contrib were only excelle York, Illinois, P chusetts, Michigan California paid taxes a total of total collections f and territories w For the fiscal collections were dicafing a reduc internal revenue low the previous 905,678.95. More of this was due excess profits tax The decrease oi 1921 for the who per cent. The showed the least cept North Carolina was but twelve p The receipts act of October 2015.19, for the fi compared with $ during the previo the recent completion of Kraemer 1-15 A by the Standard Oil company at 4750 feet. The well is not looking very encouraging and probably will not make even a commercial producer. Kraemer 2-17A, completed at 4493 feet, is on production, making about 60 barrels. Kellogg No. 2, another deep completion at 5660, went on the pump, and made a little oil, then sanded up. Drilling on the La Habra Midway is now close to 4300 and the indications for a well have not changed. Preparations are being made to carry the well to 5000 feet, and this will be done unless some unforeseen mechanical troubles should develop. Passing 4400 feet and not finding any oil cannot be said to be a very encouraging feature for the Standard Oil company's test well, Mitchell No. 1, at Buena Park. Much of the formation is hard sand. In the Bixby Hill the National Security (the Beatty Oil company) No. 1, located near Orange county park, is approaching the 4200 mark, and as yet only the meagerest showings of oil, gas and colors have been found. Fairview has taken a dip as far production is concerned. The drilling is now at 3800 feet, and there seems to be little possibility now of getting into the "pay" short of 4200 feet, or possibly 4500 feet. Oil men who went over the Fairview's holdings prior to the starting of the test well predicted production at 3200 feet. The Coalinga-Mohawk believes it has a showing that may produce a well in its McClintock No. 1 at 4250 feet, and will make a production test shortly. Leading off with a gusher of 3300 barrels the General Petroleum held its accustomed first place for the honor of bringing in big wells. Santa Fe No. 8, completed at 3817 feet started flowing at the rate of 3300 barrels and will probably not decline much in settling down to normal production. Santa Fe No. 52, redrilled and completed at 3818 feet, is back in the producing list, doing 2800 barrels daily. No. 91 has been flowing for three weeks, and has settled down to 3540 barrels. OUGHT TO BE IN JAIL Men believed to be students of Colorado college wrecked a $50,000 museum on the campus because they did not like the president of the college. Among other things, they objected to an announcement that officials of the college would not renew the contract of the football coach. Scrawled on the sidewalk was the threat: "This will keep up until Duniway (the president) goes." All the lawless elements are not, it seems, with the Ku Klux Klan or inside the jails or prisons. There is not anything very different in the spirit of this outbreak and the one in the Chicago jail caused by the "visitings days" of the prisoners being cut down. These lads want their own way and took a more cowardly and less logical way to get it than the prisoner stock. It will be interesting to learn what loving method may be used to convince them of the error of their ways. It was a second offense and if any one can say why these young, educated, or partly educated, ruffans shouldn't be in jail one would like to hear the reason. A million and a half of workers, they themselves could if they were not at work, scarce working day. But what it means as wage earnings less than $6,000 per week, perhaps more. And if you take it means at the billions of dollars lion dollar a year the workers they short. A two spending power kets abruptly relaunts. But that is no production and of those striking part lost to the business busi- This secondary whole country, in time it might primary loss earners. If it immediate loss two together with $12,000,000 and. This is an im- ANAHEIM GAZETTE INCOME TAX PAYERS MUST EXPLAIN ERRORS California Seventh State in Amount of Tax Returns A number of income taxpayers of Orange county may anticipate notice to appear before deputy collectors in the near future to explain discrepancies in their returns discovered by audit of their reports, according to announcement by Elmer B. Burns, deputy collector for Orange county. At the same time Burns announced that he and a corps of assistants had just completed a sales tax drive in Orange county and that fewer delinquencies had been found here than in any other district in the state. The investigation of those who have made irregular returns in incomes will start about September 1, Burns said. He was emphatic in the statement that the drive in no sense can be construed as a campaign against willful tax dodgers, for the majority of filers, Burns says, made attempt to report their incomes correctly. Burns says that so far as Orange county is concerned, the investigations here will be for men and women who made errors in their statement—errors that were easy to make because of incorrect information as to filling in the various items. He intimated that a number may have refunds coming to them. Errors in computations, deducting of exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted, are the basis for most of the investigations that will be made. Burns advised that Orange county taxpayers who will have to explain their returns will be notified to meet a deputy at some point in a city nearest their place of residence. The deputy stated that the drive in this district is co-incident with drives no war on the face of the earth ever reached, ever approximated, until virtually the whole world went into the recent war, which wrecked the economic stability and all but paralyzed the industrial powers of the old world. Strikes that cost more than any war ever cost, except the one incompatible war, are destructive forces to be well pondered and carefully discussed before men get into them as well as after they have gone into them. Strikes costing at the rate of fifteen millions of dollars a day! Can they be worth it? HOMEMADE FLOOR OILS One part boiled linseed oil thinned with three parts turpentine makes an excellent floor oil, the United States department of agriculture finds, while one part light motor or engine oil combined with four parts kerosene gives results similar to commercial kinds. The motor oil recommended must not be confused with the heavy, less highly refined kinds that contain dark sediment. WHERE FORD'S IDEA LEADS If the idea of currency based on crops and farm animals is acceptable, why not have more currency based on automobiles and matinee tickets and every little thing? J.C.Osheer,D.D.S.,M.D PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT—ORAL SURGERY—GLASSES FITTED SUITE 1 CENTRAL BLDG PHONE SUNSET 337 OFFICE PHONES HOME 753-1 SUNSET 341-J. Residence, 887 S. Los Angeles St. RESIDENCE PHONES PACIFIC 341-M HOME 753-2 J.W. TRUXAW, M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON HOURS 11-12; 2-4; 7-8 GOLDEN STATE BANK BLDG. Cor. Center and Los Angeles St. ANAHEIM, CAL. A. BAYLISS Orchard Spraying 611 East Center St. Phone 239 SUMMONS In the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange. Charles E. Ramella, Plaintiff, vs. Josiah Bates, et al, Defendants. No. 12992—Summons. Action brought in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange, and the complaint filed in the office of the Clerk of said County of Orange. Leonard Evans, Attorney for Plaintiff. The People of the State of California Send Greetings to: Josiah Bates, S.F. Smith, R.E. Radcliff, G.D. Plato, John Romello, also known as John Ramella, Meta Sophia Dorothea Zeyn, Wilhelmina Johanna Holcomb, J.C. Schumacher, also all other persons unknown, claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest, in the real property described in the complaint, adverse to the plaintiff's ownership or any cloud upon plaintiff's title thereto, Defendants. You are hereby directed to appear and answer the complaint in an action in computations, deducting of exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted, are the basis for most of the investigations that will be made. Burns advised that Orange county taxpayers who will have to explain their returns will be notified to meet a deputy at some point in a city nearest their place of residence. The deputy stated that the drive in this district is co-incident with drives in every district in the United States. In Los Angeles, it was announced that there are 12,000 irregular returns for the Los Angeles district. They were taken from the 18,856 reports filed by persons with $5000 or more income and 152,956 returns showing less than $5000. California is the seventh state in the union in the amount of internal revenue tax paid for the fiscal year 1922. The contribution of its citizens were only excelled by those of New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Michigan and Ohio. California paid in internal revenue taxes a total of $131,652,855.89. The total collections from all the states and territories was $3,179,451,083. For the fiscal year 1921, the total collections were $4,935,061.95, thus indicating a reduction in income from internal revenue taxes last year below the previous period of $1,397,905,678.95. More than $1,000,000,000 of this was due to the repeal of the excess profits tax. The decrease of income of 1922 over 1921 for the whole country was 30.42 per cent. The Los Angeles district showed the least decrease of any, except North Carolina, and the decrease was but twelve per cent. The receipts from the prohibition act of October 28, 1919, were $1,978,015.19, for the fiscal year 1922, as compared with $2,152,387.45 collected during the previous fiscal year. COLOSSAL COST OF THE STRIKE A million and a quarter to a million and a half of wage earners are on strike. They are in the main of the most highly paid crafts in the world. The majority of them have had an earning power, even during industrial depression, of from $35 to $45 a week. The other skilled workers now on strike have fallen somewhat short of such earnings only because general business was slack. And just when business had got well started again, when it was picking up speed, those in computations, deducting of exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted, are the basis for most of the investigations that will be made. Burns advised that Orange county taxpayers who will have to explain their returns will be notified to meet a deputy at some point in a city nearest their place of residence. The deputy stated that the drive in this district is co-incident with drives in every district in the United States. In Los Angeles, it was announced that there are 12,000 irregular returns for the Los Angeles district. They were taken from the 18,856 reports filed by persons with $5000 or more income and 152,956 returns showing less than $5000. California is the seventh state in the union in the amount of internal revenue tax paid for the fiscal year 1922. The contribution of its citizens were only excelled by those of New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Michigan and Ohio. California paid in internal revenue taxes a total of $131,652,855.89. The total collections from all the states and territories was $3,179,451,083. For the fiscal year 1921, the total collections were $4,935,061.95, thus indicating a reduction in income from internal revenue taxes last year below the previous period of $1,397,905,678.95. More than $1,000,000,000 of this was due to the repeal of the excess profits tax. The decrease of income of 1922 over 1921 for the whole country was 30.42 per cent. The Los Angeles district showed the least decrease of any, except North Carolina, and the decrease was but twelve per cent. The receipts from the prohibition act of October 28, 1919, were $1,978,015.19, for the fiscal year 1922, as compared with $2,152,387.45 collected during the previous fiscal year. COLOSSAL COST OF THE STRIKE A million and a quarter to a million and a half of wage earners are on strike. They are in the main of the most highly paid crafts in the world. The majority of them have had an earning power, even during industrial depression, of from $35 to $45 a week. The other skilled workers now on strike have fallen somewhat short of such earnings only because general business was slack. And just when business had got well started again, when it was picking up speed, those in computations, deducting of exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted, are the basis for most of the investigations that will be made. Burns advised that Orange county taxpayers who will have to explain their returns will be notified to meet a deputy at some point in a city nearest their place of residence. The deputy stated that the drive in this district is co-incident with drives in every district in the United States. In Los Angeles, it was announced that there are 12,000 irregular returns for the Los Angeles district. They were taken from the 18,856 reports filed by persons with $5000 or more income and 152,956 returns showing less than $5000. California is the seventh state in the union in the amount of internal revenue tax paid for the fiscal year 1922. The contribution of its citizens were only excelled by those of New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Michigan and Ohio. California paid in internal revenue taxes a total of $131,652,855.89. The total collections from all the states and territories was $3,179,451,083. For the fiscal year 1921, the total collections were $4,935,061.95, thus indicating a reduction in income from internal revenue taxes last year below the previous period of $1,397,905,678.95. More than $1,000,000,000 of this was due to the repeal of the excess profits tax. The decrease of income of 1922 over 1921 for the whole country was 30.42 per cent. The Los Angeles district showed the least decrease of any, except North Carolina, and the decrease was but twelve per cent. The receipts from the prohibition act of October 28, 1919, were $1,978,015.19, for the fiscal year 1922, as compared with $2,152,387.45 collected during the previous fiscal year. COLOSSAL COST OF THE STRIKE A million and a quarter to a million and a half of wage earners are on strike. They are in the main of the most highly paid crafts in the world. The majority of them have had an earning power, even during industrial depression, of from $35 to $45 a week. The other skilled workers now on strike have fallen somewhat short of such earnings only because general business was slack. And just when business had got well started again, when it was picking up speed,those in computations,deducting of exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted,are the basis for most of the investigations that will be made. Burns advised that Orange county taxpayers who will have to explain their returns will be notified to meet a deputy at some point in a city nearest their place of residence. The deputy stated that the drive in this district is co-incident with drives in every district in the United States. In Los Angeles,it was announced that there are 12,000 irregular returns for the Los Angeles district. They were taken from the 18,856 reports filed by persons with $5000 or more income and 152,956 returns showing less than $5000. California is the seventh state in the union in the amount of internal revenue tax paid for the fiscal year 1922. The contribution of its citizens were only excelled by those of New York,Illinois,Pennsylvania,Massachusetts,Michigan and Ohio. California paid in internal revenue taxes a total of $131,652,855.89. The total collections from all the states and territories was $3,179,451,083. For the fiscal year 1921,the total collections were $4,935,061.95, thus indicating a reduction in income from internal revenue taxes last year below the previous period of $1,397,905,678.95。More than $1,000,000,000 of this was due to the repeal of the excess profits tax. The decrease of income of 1922 over 1921 for the whole country was 30.42 per cent. The Los Angeles district showed the least decrease of any,except North Carolina,and the decrease was but twelve per cent. The receipts from the prohibition act of October 28,1919,were $1,978,015.19,for the fiscal year 1922,as compared with $2,152,387.45 collected during the previous fiscal year. COLOSSAL COST OF THE STRIKE A million and a quarter to a million and a half of wage earners are on strike. They are in the main of the most highly paid crafts in the world.The majority of them have had an earning power,even during industrial depression.of from$35 to$45a week.The other skilled workers now on strike have fallen somewhat shortof such earnings only because general business was slack.And just when business had got well started againwhen it was picking up speed,these in computations,deductingof exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted,the arethe basis for mostofthe investigationsthatwillbemade.incomputations,deductingof exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted,the arethe basis for mostofthe investigationsthatwillbemade.incomputations,deductingof exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted,the arethe basis for mostofthe investigationsthatwillbemade.incomputations,deductingof exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted,the arethe basis for mostofthe investigationsthatwillbemade.incomputations,deductingof exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted,the arethe basis for mostofthe investigationsthatwillbemade.incomputations,deductingof exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptions permitted,the arethe basis for mostofthe investigationsthatwillbemade.incomputations,deductingof exemptions that were not allowable and failure to take exemptionsthe above mentioned map;thence southerly along said Los Angeles Street 50 feet;thence Westerly at right anglestothe Westerly line of said Los Angeles Street 249 feet;thence A million and a quarter to a million and a half of wage earners are on strike. They are in the main of the most highly paid crafts in the world. The majority of them have had an earning power, even during industrial depression, of from $35 to $45 a week. The other skilled workers now on strike have fallen somewhat short of such earnings only because general business was slack. And just when business had got well started again, when it was picking up speed, those high paid craftsmen took themselves out of work with their strikes. Taken all together the earning power of those 1,250,000 to 1,500,000 striking workers, their earning power for themselves, could be averaging now, if they were not on strike, but were at work, scarcely less than $6 a working day. But if it were $5, see what it means as measured in terms of wage earnings alone. It means not less than $6,000,000 every working day, perhaps more than $7,500,000. And if you take it at $7,000,000 a day it means at the rate of more than two billions of dollars a year. A two billion dollar a year earning power for the workers themselves stopped dead short. A two billion dollar a year spending power in the domestic markets abruptly relaxed. But that is not all. The industrial production and the industrial service of those striking wage earners are in part lost to the economic energy and the business building of the country. This secondary loss, this loss to the whole country, may equal now, and in time it might surpass, the direct primary loss to the striking wage earners. If it is no greater than the immediate loss to the strikers, the two together would range between $12,000,000 and $15,000,000 a day! This is an industrial loss, a financial cost, an economic wgstage that same with the successively reduced on the said Executor at his place of business, Room 3, Golden State National Bank Building, City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California, within four months after the first publication of this notice. Dated, this 10th day of August, 1922. CORNELIUS WOHLGEMUTH, Executor of the Will of Katie Wohlgemuth, Deceased. H. V. WEISEL, Attorney for Executor. 8-10-5t M. Eugene Durfee ARCHITECT Room 5, Cassou Bldg. Phone 692 Anaheim J. W. UTTER, M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 101-202 First National Bank Bldg. Residence 244 So. Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, California J. H. COLE, M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Diseases of the Eye and Fitting of Glasses a Specialty 312-313 First National Bank Bldg. Tel. Office Home Phone 644-J 644-M Anaheim, California J. E. SCHUMACHER CO., Opp. S. P. Depot, W. Anaheim. Phone 794. HAY AND GRAIN From Farm to Consumer Enrollments now active for our tail term. We can train you in a few months for a good position paying from $75 to $150 a month. The mand for our graduates was never great. Salaries were never so long We cannot fill half the position placed at our disposal. We M.S have more students this year to join the wheels of business moving. Ask today for our FREE catalogue. J. W McCormac, President. A fine assortment of Overhauled Fords and Other Used Cars Everyone a Bargain Six 1921 Ford Tourings Two 1920 Ford Tourings One 1919 Ford Touring Several 1915 to 1918 Ford Tourings One 1920 and one 1921 Ford Coupe One 1921 Ford Sedan A 1919 Mitchell Touring, in fine condition, wire wheels, only $585. Late 1919 Oldsmobile, Oakland, Chevrolet and Overland 1917 Dort, in A1 shape, only $165 SERVICE THAT SATISFIES WICKERSHEIM IMPLEMENT CO. FULLERTON, CAL. THE ANAHEIM GAZETTE $1.50 Per Year THE ANAHEIM GAZETTE $1.50 Per Year Good Place to Buy— G-O-O-D L-U-M-B-E-R GANAHL-GRIM LUMBER CO. Anaheim. Cal STROUP'S MEATS ARE HARD TO BEAT You make no mistake when buying at STROUP'S MARKET “The House of Service.” TRY SCHNEIDERS MARKET FOR QUALITY MEATS The Quality Meat Shop 131 West Center Street PIONEER MANUFACTURERS OF CLAY PRODUCTS “The Sign of Service” Acid-Proof Alkali-Proof Permanent Sanitary PIONEER MANUFACTURERS OF CLAY PRODUCTS "The Sign of Service" Acid-Proof Alkali-Proof Permanent Sanitary SPECIFY "PACIFIC" Vitrified Clay Sewer Pipe. Standard Since 1888. The Best Pipe for City Sewers. PACIFIC CLAY PRODUCTS COMPANY, 600 American Bank Bldg. 129 West Second St. LOS, ANGELES, CALIF. "Better Service" It is our endeavor to render "Better Service" to our patrons with the aid of our Plan Book Service. Built in Fixtures, Dust Proof Finish Sheds. Adams - Bowers Lumber Co. "BETTER SERVICE" H. M. Adams A. C. Bowers E. L. Bowers