Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 20, 1913 Page: 4 of 8
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GARBER SENTINEL.
ESTABLISHED NOV. 3rd, IW. BY S. H. PETERS
lished Ev
KAV 1' E T E R 8
v Thursday
Editor & Proprietor.
Subscription f'rice • S1.0O per year
Ehtkr*I> IN th>
Postoffick AT GARBER. OKLAHOMA AS ^r' i,-qt;s W.ii-
Fighting Flies Old
It will soon be liy time ac • read
the caleudar. The mighty campaleti
of mankind against this pest wi.l be
waged with renewed activity. I he
war against the fly Is not new. Of la'e
years the d:tily papers lacking murder
and divorce cases to till their columns
have given the world the latest tcieii
tific methods to get rid of this pest
and the result is that the time ia com-
ing when flies will be as much of a
disgrace in a home aB bedbugs are
now.
The buffalo that liv<d on these
plans years ago used a practical
method to protect themselves from
the flies. In almost every pasture, e
have in mind the one just west of
Garber, are a number of small depres-
sions. They vary greatly but would
average between ten and twenty feet
across and about a foot deep. After
• rain these hold water for sometime.
They are commonly called buffalo wal-
lows and that is their right name. An
old buffalo hunter who hunted buffalo
for their hides told us that when the
flies were bad that the buffalo would
roll aud wallow in these places until
bis long hair was completely covered
with mud. This displaces the theory
that these places were made by paw-
ing aud scraping of ihe bulla when
fighting aud shows that seeking pro
lection from tiles reaches back into
the ages
HINTS. HELPS AND HITS.
Failure is a good, grim teacher.
Expectation without effort is dream-
ing.
Uncle Walt
INCOMES OF PARIS WAITERS.
Half the headwaiters in Paris be-
gan packing their trunks for New
York when they read in a Paris daily
j thai it is nothing for a maitre d'hotel
in the American metropolis to make
$7,000 to $8,000 a year, a figure that
looks very formidable in francs. When
I Louis Barraya, for nearly twenty
years headwaiter at the Cafe Paris,
and who knows Americans as though
he had :i:oiuori::jd the Social Register
and stock exchange membership, was
asked what he thought about the state-
ment he smiled. "Perhaps," says he,
LOW
COLONIST
FARES
TO
Califo
SO EASY TO
rnia g
ment he smiled "Perhaps," says lie, . , -p^ l(., ^
"that is quite possible in America. Jt~3C1I1C v>Ot!St
¥Q.UP FLOORS AND MAKE
THEM LOOK LIKE NEW
^ - - -v T" '■
Nothing me&es c. room look more seedy and rusty than tho w>ru, un-
sightly paths acroca the lioor that you can no long-er cover up with ruga.
You can i-efinish every floor In your home—dotho work yourself with
very little trouble or expense—and have floors as smooth as glass, clear aa
a mirror, yet withstanding the severest wear and tear of continual walk--
Ing u .d scraping of chair legs, if you apply
Popularity is not
character.
a certificate of
Suspicion has sharp eyes; love has
sharper.
Trudging perseverance eclipses aer-
oplaning luck.
Good leaders are few—almost as
few as good followers.
Yes, Mr. Sparkle, shine all you can,
to enlighten, not to dazzle.
A hearty effort will often accom-
plish more than a skilful one.
To be fearless in the presence of
real peril is not courage; it is rash-
ness.
With dead and ancient totnes to tol'
•lid bum the midnight Standard oil
may *Mtn a job forbidding; but It's
the proper thing to do, whene'er you
have the time, If you have a mind
non-sklddlng. If one in social spheres
would shine, he ought to cut out pool
and wine, and give some time to study;
load up with wisdom to the guards
and read the message of the bards
from Homer down to Ruddy. How
often conversation flags, bow oft the
weary evening drags, when people
get together, when they have sprung
their ancient yawps about the out-
look of the crops, the groundhog and
the weather, llow bleat the gent who
entertains, who's loaded up his active
brains with lore that'a wotth repeat-
ing, the man of knowledge, who can
talk of other things than wheat aud
stock and politics and eatlog! Our
lives are lusterless and gray because
we sweat around all day and think of
naught but lucre; and when we're at
our inglenooks we never open help-
ful books, but fool with bridge or
euchre. Exhausted by the beastly
grind we do not try to store the mind
with matters worth the knowing; our
lives are spent in hunting cash, and
when we die we make no splash, and
none regrets our going.
WALT MASON-
Cpojrlgbt 1913 bj George Mattiew Adams
The making of plans should be
something more than a pleasant men-
tal exercise.
He is wise who does not allow un-
due satisfaction or undue regret to
cheat him out of the benefit of a try-
ing experience
In ocean voyaging submerged ice-
bergs are a most dangerous factor,
and the subtlest menace to society Is
the secret, oath-bound criminal order.
The old and the new are not com-
petitors, any more than spring and
summer are. The old is a preparation
for, a prophecy and promise of the
new
The enthusiasm with which some of
\is adopt improved methods is equaled
only by our surprise on discovering
that the adopted methods do not work
automatically.
The arts are related Painting get*
tone from music, music gets structure
from architecture, architecture gets
expression from oratory, and oratory
jets color fjs® painting.
It would be a fabulous sum here. A
well paid Paris headwaiter gets 6,000
francs a year. If he is clever, knows
his patrons, makes them feel at home,
he may double his income, but hardly
do more. Our methods in Paris are .
different from New York methods. A
New York headwaiter caters to
wealth. A rich man offers him $50
and he gets any table he wants. Not
so with us. A rich American wanted
me to hold a table for him the other
evening and offered me 200 francs. I
refused him, as I knew one of our ]
regular clients, and not a rich one,
sat there every evening." Betell Oli-
vier, headwaiter of the Ritz, confirmed
Louis' statement He pleaded guilty
to making about 12,000 francs, but
was inclined to thlnli that Ix)iiis, who
is supposed to be the most prosperous
headwaiter in Paris, had rather un-
derestimated his income.
L L
Mexico
New Mexico
Arizona
AND ALL POINTS
WEST'
"THE FINISH THAT LASTS."
It is the most dependable finish for woodwork, floors, and furniture,
which stains and varnishes by a sing-le application, transforming- any old
•••• • rtrt n nar. xjt-. farimifftt.iflri rtf OftV. THfthdCflTlV.
eurXaco into a per
or other expensive
yourself — easily,
a. hard, durable
dui>t and dirt do
feet imitation of oak, mahogany,
hard woods. You can apply it
successfully—and it produce*
lustrous surfr.ee to which
not easily cling.
When an able bodied man halts you
on the street and asks for money on
the plea that he Is unable to find em-
ployment, the chances are ten to one
that he Is lying. ,The industrial de-
mand for labor has been steadily In-
creasing from week to week since the
close of summer, says the Cleveland
Leader. Men are going about the
downtown streets of Cleveland bear-
ing signs almost beseeching workers
to take the jobs they advertise. In
front of all the employment agencies
are bulletins soliciting applicants for
many kinds of employment, skilled
and unskilled. The Indications are
that there will be an even heavier de-
mand for labor next year. The pros-
perity that lies behind the refusal of
the business world to entertain ap-
prehensions over the most important
presidential election held in many
■years certainly is the solid kind
TICKETS ON SALE
MARCH 15th
TO
APRIL 15th
1913
Write to
Fay Thompson
Div I'assenger Agent
Oklahoma City, OR
Or consult
W, E. JA0KS0N, Aeent
GARBEK, OKLA.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the Matter of the Estate of Flora
A. Cinnamon, Deceased.
All persons having claims against
said Flora A. Cinnamon, deceased, to
exhibit the same with the necessary
vouchers, to the undesigned George
Cinnamon, executor of said estate, at
his place of business, The Farmers
State Bank of Garber, in the County
of Garfield, State of Oklahoma, and
that four mouths have been limited
as the time for creditors to present
their claims against said estate.
Dated the 5th day of March. 1913,
George Cinnamon,
Executor.
In | Garber & Kruse,
W F3-1
VARNISH CO
LOUISVILLE
NTUCKY
from
these days men are not seeking Jobs;
the jobs sre seeking ©en.
Atlys. for the Executor.
xi. s. eoora
fleat Haiket and Grocery.
The place to buy Best Grade of groceries
for the least money. Home rend-
dered lard at all times.
RABBINICAL PROVERBS
Poverty cometh from God,
dirt
but not
A small coin In a large Jar makes a
great noise.
Into the well that supplies thee with
water caat no stone*.
What the child savs out of doors he
has learned indoors
When the righteous die, they live;
for their example lives.
The world stands on three pillars:
law, worship and charity.
Use thy best vase today, for tomor
row it may, perchance, be broken.
Life is but a loan to man; death it
the creditor who will one day claim It
Wheat exports from the United
States in 1912, will materially exceed ^
those of recent years. The record of, W
the ten months now available in the I tff
Statistical Division of the Bureau of j
Foreign and Domestic Commerce in- j
dlcates that the wheat exports of the . ^
full year will exceed one hundred mil- ...
lion bushels, against eighty-three mil- J*
lion in 1911 and sixty-two million in W
1910. The total for the ten months
ended with October is seventy-six and
a quarter million bushels, against six
!r 4
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It's the iriPERIAL, if it's the best.
Made only in LaCrosse.
I^leases every purchaser.
Kntirely alone in up-to-date features.
Ilteady for work anytime, anywhere
Is simple in construction, strong, and durable.
mE,V D,HAIL 4 LIFE IN8URAH0E
I represeut the best companies doing
business in the State. Our rates and
teruis are as good as you can And with
any companies arid tne standing of the
companies Hre unquestioned.
See me before contracting for any
k'ind of insurance. A postal card or
a telephone call will bring my propo-
altlon to joo *t once.
J. R. Sparks,
Hunter, Okla.
Call &f> on W, lliljmps, Okla.
Impel* Inl
BWEUMM.
I^ose no time but buy one.
The bearings are warranted to last as long as the discs.
Thy friend has a
friend's friend has
creet.
friend, and thy
a friend; be dls
Our kindly deeds and our generous
gifts go to heaven as messages and
plead for us before our Heavenly Fa
ther.
Ttere are three crowns—of the law,
the priesthood, and the kingship—but
the crown of a good name Is greater
than them all.
r r
ty seven and three quarter minion in v jj0y yyho can drive a team can operate it
the correspohdlng months of last year. ^
ThiB increase occurrcd chiefly in the j W
new crop | w
— \J/
It is time that the warning of Bclen j
tists and lovers of nature against the j
slaughter ot useful birds was heeded 1
by the American people and attention | —
paid to their preservation. How I W
many thoughtless men and boys wan- I |/
tonly kill birds never can be known,1 ^
but the figures must run into the hun- X
dreds of thousands and perhaps to the ( ...
million mark Generally speaking. t:V- j
exy bird that Is killed reduces the j W
i army of consumers of insect pests,
and that means just so many more in-
sects are left free of forage in our ag-
ricultural domains.
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What would the Judge who h
ruled that women summoned for jury
service cannot get off by making
The New John Deere Garg represents the \kt
most advanced development in the construct- ^
of ridding plows. It combines all the desir-
able features tending to make a successful
gang plow, with beaw draft and automatic
xy action. w
vto A slight pressure of the foot releases the plows and per-
J mits them to drop into tha ground, the point first, where J
% they soon find their depth. *
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MUFFLED KNOCKS.
"I wisb I could afford to buy aa
good cigars aa you can, old scout;
rd buy a rather better quality than
you do."
"Going to leave us. are you. Muff
kins? Well, you'll be glad to know
that your dropping out won't hurt our
business a bit."
"Yas, you've told me the story a
dozen times. Fladger, but go ahead;
there's a sympathetic quality In your
voice that I like."
"I value your opinion so highly, old
chap, that I'm going to ask you not
t« waate so much of it on me. Walt
till I ask you for It."
housawor^an'excuse°'think If^r ^ I aill putting ill the Jollli DCd 6 Hue of gOOds.
ipending the ,iay m court, he hud to ^ ^ buggies are now in the Heal} building and I am ading
the Michigan line.
go home and make the beds and wash
the dishea?
ill
ti/
•ll
An English lecturer, over here, says
that England is a coward and a anob.
It will be qute interesting to know | ^
what this discerning and impartial j j.
critic will aay about us when he lec- j J*
tures In England about the United j W/
Stales Uf
ti)
A Los Angeles girl hugged another |
I Of
I*
*
4*
Consider my storage battery Electric light system.
^ I of the first quality is always kept on hands. ^^0* I
{jsOcH Come to us for your I
o hard she cracked three ribs It
rauat have been a long time slae«
ahe Indulged In the pleasure
G. H. EBERT,
General
Hardware
Whoever Invented saloon Iceboxes
that cannot be opened from the Inside
conferred a lasting favor upon the
rubber fraternity
Wc Give Green Tfading Stamps
Garber,
Oklahoma.
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Peters, Kay. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 20, 1913, newspaper, March 20, 1913; Garber, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144726/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.