oc-plain-dealer 1923-03-14
Searchable text
ESTABLISH NORTH LINE OF SANTA FE SPRINGS OIL FIELD
With oil Operators
Santa Fe Springs developments seem to establish the fact that the fourth line of the field is fixed as production is concerned. The famous north line test well, the Standard's Brownrigg-Keller, has passed the 5400 mark and found no oil. The Shell Company's Slayden No. 1 is now at 5000 feet and has found nothing particularly encouraging. The Amalgamated Oil Co., had some very promising showings in the Benton well from 3000 to 3500 feet, at times the well looked almost good enough to try out. However as drilling continued the showing disappeared.
The Springs field mystery well the Machris Bros.' Bandini Norswin has been bailing for a couple of days but has not gotten underway for a production test. The supposed depth of the well is 5200 feet, and it is understood pipe was set at 4755 or there abouts. Information on the well for several months has been a closed book. It appears that the well at best will make only a small producer.
McIntyre Brothers have resumed development work at Santa Fe Springs and announce that it is their intention to get their share of the deep sand Meyer production. Rigs are up for Nos. 2 and 3 and it is the plan to redrill and drill No. 1 now a 400 barrel well into the lower zone soon.
Petroleum Midway success at Santa Fe Springs continues on the basis of 8000 barrel wells. The company's Mattern 2-1 completed at 4607 was the sensation of the field last week at 8000 barrels. The big well is flowing thru a one inch aperture and is under a pressure of 740 lbs. The big Baldwin producer is now flowing consistently at 6000 barrels. Fox No. 1 the last of the trio is making 5200 barrels.
E. A. Parkford staged a come back when he redrilled the Santa Fe Springs Syndicate No. 1, to 4500 feet and brought it in a 5400 barrel well. Producing from the Meyer sand the well is making 34.5 gravity, clean
Green’s Orchestra At Dance Assemblys
Beginning Thursday evening, March 15, and continuing every Thursday evening thereafter, the Green’s Dance Assembly will take place at the Elk's Club in Anaheim. Harry Green's Orchestra, whom many have heard the past two seasons at the Orange Show here, will render your favorite melodies and everyone who intends to go knows before hand that they are going to have good music.
Mr. Green has a chain of clubs in and around Los Angeles. He employs the same orchestra at each dance so that you can feel assured that the music will be up to the top notch at all times. Something that will interest the ladies will be given away at each dance. And nobody can go away and say that they didn't have a good time.
SO. CAL. LIVESTOCK BREEDERS MEETING
There will be a meeting of the Southern California Purebred Livestock Association at the Union Stock Yards, Los Angeles, on Saturday, March 17th, at 11 o'clock. Caleteria luncheon.
The program will include a report of the junior club committee and sons now phases of that work.
Prof. J. B. Lillard, superintendent of agricultural education of California, and W. R. Ralston, state club leader, will be present and talk on the important of this work.
Sam H. Greene, secretary of the California Dairy Council, will discuss better breeding and what it means. If possible he will conduct his famous trial of the scrub bull.
All livestock breeders are urged to attend as the object of this organization is to promote better breeding and better livestock conditions.
TAKES POSITION IN L. A.
John Johnston, formerly connected with the Anaheim Produce Company, has accepted a position with Christopher's, the ice cream manufacturers in Los Angeles and has taken up his duties there. The family will remain in Anaheim for a time.
Hoover To In Merri
E. A. Parkford staged a come back when he redrilled the Santa Fe Springs Syndicate No. 1, to 4500 feet and brought it in a 5400 barrel well. Producing from the Meyer sand the well is making 24.5 gravity, clean oil.
Tom Donnelly has a producer worthy of his efforts on the Oll and Land Syndicate's, No. 1, property. At 32000 in the Bell and the well failed to make much of a showing. Drilled to 4100 feet the well started off with an initial flow of 3000 barrels and bids fair to hold up.
Union Oil development on the Bell lease continues to be successful. At Bell No. 9, a 3000 barrel well was brought in at a depth of 4095 feet. This producer completed on top of the Meyer sand has demonstrated the feet of the non existence of water between the Bell and the Meyer sands. Bell No. 1 the discovery well of the Santa Fe Springs field is off production for the first time for over a year. Sand came in and plugged the hole stopping the flow. The well is being washed out and will be back at its old 2800 barrel rate in a few days.
That Richfield is to be given a conclusive deep test well became known today when it was learned that the Wonder Company Limited would drill a well to at least 6000 feet. A number of deep wells have been drilled at Richfield, but it seems that operators are not satisfied with results obtained and continue to believe that the field has not been given a real deep test well. The Standard Oil company's Kraemer L-15A has passed 5250 feet and continues to find little encouragement. The Union's deep test well on the Graham-Loftus lease, No. 55 went to 3520 and has had a lot of trouble with water. It is thought that the Union's test well will make a producer if a water job can be accomplished. Repeated efforts to shut off water have failed. It is understood that considerable leasing has been done at Richfield on the strength of the showings of the Union's Graham-Loftus test well.
Arch Preserver Shoe Week
Get acquainted with the shoe that gives perfect satisfaction in style and comfort to women of all ages
the shoe that keeps the feet happy, and well groomed, no matter where you are, nor how much
Get acquainted with the shoe that gives perfect satisfaction in style and comfort to women of all ages
the shoe that keeps the feet happy, and well groomed, no matter where you are, nor how much you stand or walk; the shoe that eliminates all the little aches and pains and makes your feet a help instead of a handicap.
THE ARCH PRESERVER SHOE
is a Natural shoe, because it answers every requirement of Nature. It supports the foot so that the arch can not sag and strain the foot structure. It promotes circulation of the blood and keeps the foot vigorous and healthy. Yet it allows the heel to be raised, because of a concealed, built-in arch bridge — and it is made in the smartest of styles for all occasions.
All this week — come tomorrow, if you can — we are giving demonstrations to enable you to get acquainted with the Arch Preserver Shoe.
QUALITY SHOE STORE
BEISSEL-NEWCOMB & SCHILLING
111 EAST CENTER STREET 103 EAST 4TH STREET
ANAHEIM SANTA ANA
Hoover Heads Union of Societies To Improve Child Health in U. S.; Merger Will Act as Clearing House
DR. LIVINGSTON FARRAND HERBERT HOOVER
"If we could grapple with the whole child situation for one generation, our public health, our economic efficiency, the moral character, sanity and stability of our people would advance three generations in one."
Two years ago Herbert Hoover, discussing the possibilities of child health work in America, made this pronouncement. Today he is taking the first step toward making the hypothesis a positive statement. As president of the American Child Health Association, Mr. Hoover will head an organization which aims to grapple with the whole period of child life. To insure the success of this project he has associated with him in the work such nationally respected leaders as Dr. Livingston Farrand, President of Cornell University and former chairman of the American Red Cross.
The American Child Health Association is not a new body, but the union of two great national organizations doing child health work in America today. They are the American Child Hygiene Association, whose leaders have included such men as Dr. Philip Van Ingen, of New York; Dr. J.H. Mason Knox, Jr., of Baltimore; Dr. Wm. Palmer Lucas, of California, and the Child Health Organization of America under the presidency of Dr. L. Emmett Holt, which have heretofore dealt with different phases of child-life. Now merged, they will, in the words of Mr. Hoover, strive toward the objective that "there shall be no child in America that has not been born under proper conditions, that does not live in hygienic surroundings, that ever suffers from undernourishment, that does not have prompt and efficient medical attention and inspection, that does not receive primary instruction in the elements of hygiene and good health." With this object in view, the American Child Health Association will act as a clearing-house of information on child health activities both here and abroad, and will maintain a practical field service ready to go at the request of any community and help solve local problems.
National headquarters are at 532 17th Street, Washington, D.C. The treasury is Mr. Corcoran Thom.
BLIGHT INJURY ON TOMATOES STUDIED
The Western Yellow Blight on tomatoes is coming into prominence in Orange county because of its increasing damage to the tomato plantings each year. The aid of the United States Department of Agriculture has been solicited by the farm advisor and local growers to conduct an investigation of the disease in Orange county, with a view to controlling its spread and damage.
A co-operative arrangement has been made by the Farm Advisor with M. Shapovalov, plant pathologist of the Division of Plant Industry, to establish experimental plots on two soil types in the county—the sandy and clay loams.
The disease will be studied under various amounts of water application and controlled field culture.
This is not a new disease, but is spreading rapidly and becoming an economic factor in production. It is found in practically all regions from Utah to the Pacific Coast and from Mexico to British Columbia. The entire tomato industry is vitally interested in the control project. Very little is known about the actual cause of the disease and factors favoring its development.
The local plots have been established to ascertain more fundamental data and correlate local soil and climatic conditions with the progress of the disease.
FAVOR HOSPITAL OIL LEASE
SACRAMENTO, March 14—The bill of Senator E. J. Gates of Los Angeles to allow the State to lease lands of the Norwalk State Hospital to oil promoters was favorably reported by the Senate oil committee. Action by the Senate is expected today.
St. Patrick's concert and entertainment at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 17th at St. Mary's Hall, West Commonwealth ave., Fullerton. Felling's Orchestra.
"Bicycle Week" Being Nationally Observed
The seventh annual "Bicycle Week" is being observed as a country-wide demonstration of the many and varied benefits and advantages to be obtained by old and young people through the use of a bicycle.
This is the seven successive year in which the joys and blessings of wheeling have been brot to the attention of the general public in effective and more or less spectacular manner. "Bicycle Week" was practically the forerunner of the special week idea for the emphasizing of the sterling characteristics of a commodity and the present wide cycling activity in the United States is due to a considerable degree to this annual spring demonstration.
"Bicycle Week" serves as the special period of the year when bicycle enthusiasts advance the many arguments in favor of wheeling for economy, health, leisure, sport, and general utility. The importance of the bicycle as an independent form of individual transportation is undoubtedly appreciated now more than ever before. The average man or woman now has little or no time to waste for common conveyances such as street cars and railway trains. Much time is lost in waiting for a trolley car and when the car does come it is generally crowded. The natural desire is for some form of individual raves minutes, improves health vehicle that adds to convenience, and is generally useful seven days in the week. This is where the bicycle came in. The bicycle is now more popular than ever before from the utility standpoint.
The trusty bicycle has always formed the cheapest vehicle of transportation. In this respect it is hardly likely that the bicycle will ever be supplanted by any other means of personal transportation. Authorities on the subject point out that even walking is expensive when compared with wheeling. Moreover, cycling is twice as easy as walking and three times faster. The bicycle will never pass out.
It Pays to Advertise in the Orange County Plain Dealer.
CALIFORNIA OFFERS "TOPNOTCH" VODE
Another of those "topnotcher" vaudeville road show programs which have been causing such a sensation at the California theater every Thursday, is scheduled to open at the popular Anaheim playhouse tomorrow afternoon.
A galaxy of stage stars such as are seldom seen off the big circuits will entertain.
The outstanding feature will be the celebrated Washington trio, three harmonists who are sure to create a sensation here. These boys can surely knock 'em over when it comes to pouring out the vocal music, and their act is a dandy.
Another of the unusual novelties is Jim Black, famous "legless wonder." This man has an offering that is guaranteed to put him across with a regular tornado of applause.
Cortelli and Rogers, those two wops, will keep you laughing tigh-out. There is something appealing about wops, anyway, and this act, a regular "big timer" should be received here very big.
Clifton and Kraemer, character comedians have an act that will make you roar in glee. They just love to see you grin, and they are never disappointed or dissappointing.
The cinema end of the program is ably held up by Florence Vidor and a notable cast in the brilliant feature picture "The Real Adventure."
Miss Vidor has a tremendous following here, and this photodrama is said to be her best.
Tonight will see the final performance of Sir Hall Cainne's great picture, "The Christian," one of the finest pictures ever seen here.
FREED WHEN JUBY DISAGREES
Glenn W. Hyde was freed when a jury disagreed on the evidence charging him with intentionally offering a no-fund check to the Bowles Motor Co., of Santa Ana, on a car purchased. Superior Judge R. Y. Williams sat in the case.
St. Patrick's concert and entertainment at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 17th at St. Mary's Hall. West Commonwealth ave., Fullerton. Felling's Orchestra.
The trusty bicycle has always formed the cheapest vehicle of transportation. In this respect it is hardly likely that the bicycle will ever be supplanted by any other means of personal transportation. Authorities on the subject point out that even walking is expensive when compared with wheeling. Moreover, cycling is twice as easy as walking and three times faster. The bicycle will never pass out.
It Pays to Advertise in the Orange County Plain Dealer.
FREED WHEN JURY DISAGREES
Glenn W. Hyde was freed when a jury disagreed on the evidence charging him with intentionally offering a no-fund check to the Bowles Motor Co., of Santa Ana, on a car purchased. Superior Judge R. Y. Williams sat in the case.
St. Patrick's concert and entertainment at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 17th at St. Mary's Hall. West Commonwealth ave., Fullerton. Felling's Orchestra.
ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF
J. A. Stinson Jewelry Store
121 E. CENTER ST.
Complete Stock of Jewelry, Watches, Diamonds, Cutglass and Sliverware
Expert Watch Repairing
OUR COLLECTION OF FASCINATING JEWELRY IS DESIGNED TO FASHIONS MOST RECENT DECREE FOR SMART JEWELRY
J. A. STINSON JEWELRY STORE
121 East Center Street
Phone 258 Anaheim
JAGGERS & GUYETTE TO BE PROSECUTED
C. O. Jaggers and C. J. Guyette will be prosecuted on the charge of selling securities without a permit from the State Commissioner of Corporations, C. N. Mozley, deputy district attorney, announces. Superior Judge Z. B. West sustained the demurrer of the defence, based on the allegation that the information filed did not charge a crime under the corporation securities act.
St. Patrick's concert and entertainment at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 17th at St. Mary's Hall, West Commonwealth Ave., Fullerton. Felling's Orchestra.
Newest Styles In EASTER MILLINERY
IN BEAUTIFUL COLORINGS AND SHADES, WITH WONDERFUL NEW TONES AND COLORING, FOKE, SHAPES ARE LEADING, ALSO BROAD BRIMS WITH BANKINGS OF VARIOUS—COLORED FLOWERS IN LEADING SHADES.
We have not forgotten "the kiddies", pretty dainty little misses hats. We also specialize in order work — prices to suit everybody, don't fail to see our line before buying your new hat,
The Parisian Millinery
209 East Center Street
The Original House Anaheim
Mary Millerick Shop
SMART WEAR FOR WOMEN
Mary Millerick Shop
SMART WEAR FOR WOMEN
East Center Street Anaheim Calif.
ASTER FASHION
EXPOSITION
Falluring Beauty of Lovely merchandise offers Unusually Wide Latitude Selection for the Woman or Miss of Discriminating Taste Who De-uality with Individuality
AT VERY REASONABLE PRICES
EXPOSITION
Falluring Beauty of Lovely merchandise offers Unusually Wide Latitude Selection for the Woman or Miss of Discriminating Taste Who De-duality with Individuality
AT VERY REASONABLE PRICES
of Unquestioned Smartness
The Three Piece Costume
fashionable outfits yield a fine of value for though it combines all good points of a suit and a dress it is priced considerably less than the need costs of both garments.
OCKS FOR EASTER
FOR STREET, AFTERNOON AND FORMAL WEAR
PORTS APPAREL
WEATERS—SILK TUXEDO, SILK COOL JACQUETS AND SLIP-ONS,
SMARTEST ARRAY OF COLORS.
SILK SPORTS SKIRTS
AND PLEATED STYLES, ROSA CREPE, AND NONE CRUSH-REPE, IN POPULAR SHADES.
NEW ORIGINAL AND EXCLUSIVE
CAPE STyles
MANY AND VARIED ARE THE WAYS IN WHICH THEY MAKE THEMSELVES SMART.
SILK SPORTS DRESSES
ONE PIECE SLIP-ON AND TIGHT HIP-LINE MODELS, CANTON CREPE, ROS-HANARA CREPE, BOKHARA.
WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF HOSIERY
EASTER MILLINERY
THE HAT YOU WEAR ON EASTER SHOULD BE OF THE KIND TO GRACE THE BRIGHTEST MORN THAT EVER DAWNED.
WHETHER IT BE SIMPLY TAILORED, DEFAURELY FLOWERED, OR BEGUILLED LACE VEILED—FOR TAILLEUR, LIGHT SILK FROCK—SPORT WEAR, OR ELABORATE COSTUME, IT WILL SET THE KEY FOR YOUR WHOLE COSTUME.
OUR ADVANCE SHOWING OF MILAN FACED IN COLOR—MILAN HEMPS—BAGEL BRAID OR SILK FLOWER TRIMMED OR DRAPED IN BRIGHT SILKS—MALINES—and NARROW RIBBON.
EATION FOR EACH FACE, COSTUME AND PURSE