Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1916 Page: 1 of 8
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GARBER SENTINEL.
Whole No. 905
GARBER, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1916.
VOL XVIII, NO. 3
TOTffl JPO1® ED. >1. S III E I. n s !•' O It §BHI®I
Ad.
jpooooQcoocaoaeoe^i
^ Our BanK is--
s
1
The Old BanK
T\)z Strong Ban^
The Liberal Banl^
We invite you to start a checking account with us. Get
one of ouc interest bearing certificates of deposits aud it will af-
ford you rare pleasure to
WATCH YOUR MONEY GROW.
It would be your profit and our pleasure to have your name
on our hooks.
1,000 Barrels Of
Oil jsi The Tanks
The Sinclair Well on the Hoy Farm
Five Miles South of Garber Put
1,000 Barrels in Tankage
in Fourteen Days
NEW TANKAGE ON THE GROUND
The Oil In The Tanks is Conclusive Proof That We
Have an Oil Field. And it is Flowing Naturally
From 1130 feet from a Sand Only Entered
About Two Feet. This Sand is Likely
Twenty or Thirty feet Deep
The Farmers State Bank
GARBER, OKLA.,
Enid 0; Garber 2 If somebody had passed the hat for
John lleiger when he broke up the
In a battle between Hope l'erry, of game j,e would have got a nice little
the Chicago Nationals, and Clyde] purse, 'i'his is the second game re-
Geist of the Tulsa Western associat- cently John has broken up. Kvery-
ion, at the local park, Sunday, the Gar- i was 80 PXclted n"b"<iy bought
ber Oilers wou by the bcore of 2 to 0 j
It was an exhibition game, Both i Wilmotb, who is attending school at
Gelst and Perry spend their winters in j N°rma". dldQ,t here for the game
I and the fans were very dissapointed.
Enid, 20 miles west of here. Twoj
thousand fans gathered to see the con-1 The best talent in Northern Okla-
, . . .. .. . | homa was represented in this ex-
teBt Ueist pitched tor the famous 1y
jbtbition. Enid had.d^'ro!- i.i.e. ip.
Garbei Oiler?, «i.u Torrj was on the, (}ar|,er played ail home men except
mound for Ertid,
Iu the eighth frame Cramer waited
l'erry out and got a base on balls.
SouthwicK sacrificed him to second.
Frank Reiser truck out but his b g
brother, John Itei ger, drove the ball
over, left field for three bases, scoring
Cramer. Clyde Gelst singled to lefr
scoring John K iger,
Enid only got one man to second
base, The Garber Oilers are the
champion amateur team of northern
Oklahoma.
The score:
• H H
Garber, 00 0 00 0 02x—2 3
Enid, 000 000 000-0 2
Summary: Three-baae hit, J
ger; two-base hits, L, lleiger, Weising-
er; sacrificed hits, F. lleiger, South-
wick, 2; double play, Southwick toj.
linger; le t on biisus, Garber 6, Enid 3;
bases on balls off Perry 5, off Geist 1;
struck out, by Perry 11, by Geist S).
Umpires, Sleenrod and Gilpin. Time
1:3G.
Geist.
Should our bpys be up against perry
again they would connect with him
better. Perry is the speedest pitcher
they ever batted.
It was a great exhibition. This is a
game that will live long in the memor-
ies of the fans.
In fourteen days tlie Hoy well put
into-ihe tanks about a thousand bar-
els of oil—there'may be a lew barrels
more or less, but it does not miss the
amount far. And from very good
authority we learn that the well has
not been permited to flow its capacity..
New tankage is on the ground and
will be errected at once.
The Hoy well Is on the northeast
corner of the ne 20-22 4 west, five miles
south of Garber, by the Sinclair Oil &
G iB company. Ou September 9'.h the
drill euteren about two feet into an
oil sand. It has not been deepened
It Is not known here how soon the
company will tegin offset wells but it
is thought that they will be in opera-
tion }n thirty days. Many claim that
wheu the offset wells reach the sand,
and not until then, the depth of the
sand will be tested.
At present the field is practically
shut down, A few other tests are go-
ing iu, out nothing in comparison to
when the fraternity is ready to open
the field up.
and one south
over farm.
of Garber on the Ho-
Stiatton and l!ell will drill atestin
either 1 or 2 22 5 west, five miles west
11. H. Galbreath aud others are mov-
ing in a rig for a test in the sojth-
west corner of Schinitz farm, sw 7-21-3
west.
Hanson and others have started
their machine, a N >. 28 Star, for a 1250
foot test ou the northeast corner of
the Boepple farm, ne 11-214 west
spudding in Monday morning. This
test is three miles south and one west,
of the Hoy test. Many of the oilmen
say that the sand reached in the Hoy
at 1130 feet will be about 660 feet
deeper at the Beopple making It
necessary to go 1790 feet'aud express
their doubts that It can be reached
with a Star rig. .
A pump, a pumping engine, boiler
and a car of water line, arrived this
week for G. T. Braden, for his test on
the northwest corner of these23-23-3
west, Weaver farm. The water line is
being layed from the W, It Davis
springs three aud a half miles south
west of the well. This test has been
shut dowu several weeks for luck of
water,
Why Pay 10
When You Can Qet
5J £.. MoneY?
We have plenty of Money at 5 1-2 per cent
ON hARM LOANS, 7 to JO years time.
Call and talk it over with us. ... .
GARBER STATE BANK
PHIL HARTMANN. Pres.
T. B. STRATFORD, Yr. Pres.
W. W. STRATFORD, Cashier.
VV. L. STRATFORD, Asst. C'sh'r.
Oil, like gold, is where you find it.
But, the oilman today is placing his
bets according to the dope of the
geologists, and do not forget that the
Hoy was located by geologists. These
scientific follows claim we have a big
field extending to the very edge of
to w n.
Nearly every man has a pet theory
aiiout anticlines and oil and we invite
everybody to call at the Sentinel shop
and expound on them. We are good
listeners here ahd every Saturday
afternoon hold a ' geologists" conyen
tlon, reading chapters from govern-
ment surv. ys aud giving chart talks
You are entitled to membership if
your subsciption to the Sentinel is
paid.
Geology was given a big boost when
oil was found ou the Garber anticline.
Vote for j. B. Thomas
Notes of Game
Perry was wild and started off by
giving Southwick four balls without
getting one over. Frank lleiger w«s
the next batter up and he connected
with the tirst ball for a sacrifice. J.
lleiger struck out. and Clyde Geist
followed him. Perry was afraid of
Giest and gava him four balls none i f
them near the pan, He crawled out ol
the hole by striking out the next man
up,
He got iu bad ng.iin iu the third.
Cramer was the first up and waited
him out for a walk. Southwick aacii-
liced, Frank lleiger struck out and
B iker threw to first. Cramer tried
tor third but was a little late. In th<-
eight Cramer again leading off walk-
ed. Southwick again sacrificed
With tyo down John Keiger connect-
ed for three bases.
Two of our strongest hitters, Frauk
lleiger and Huck Wells, showed up
pjor in the batting practice and they
failed to connect in the game, There
was a man on every time Frank came
up. He swung a little low. In the
fifth with two on he knocked seven
fouls and then struck out.
¥
w
Democratic
Candidate For
CouQty Commissioner
Second District
Garfield County
THE LMDIAG L0(M<I> OF THE WORLD H^IVC
CO/iTRI&UTED THEIR &EdT TO OUR dTOCK OF
rtEW TALI GOOB!>, AQW RMDY FOR YOU. OUR
PRESTIGE \ft MERCNylf(DI<§>IrtG EA>]&LE§ U§> TO
0&T>M THE EXCLUSIVE $>ALZ OF t\At\Y CHOICE
Fyl&RICJ>; WE CAH &H0W YOU G00B!> YOU OMAOT
FI/iD ELSEWHERE I ti THE CITY. OUR L^RGE
PURCHyl<§IMG POWER EMBLEM U<§> TO GET THE
LOW PRICE. TO &UILD OUR &U<§>IrtE<§>& &IGGER
WE GIVE THE LOW PRICE MB >ILW>1Y§ THE HIGH
QUALITY.
At I Wm* Prir^c We Bought Early and are selling at last year's prices:
—__L 3 Blankets, Underwear, Outings, Wool Dress Goods,
— - Sweaters an^l Knit Goods.
RESP'Y,
iASBH & COMPANY
We give trading stamps
In The Trend.
I'lace a ruler across the map of
Oklahoma from the Augusta at:d El
Dorado oil UeldB in Kansas, through
the Blackwell oil field to the Wichita
Fails field in Texas, and draw a line.
1 his is the "oil trend" talked of about
a year ago and now being tested out.
Along tills trend to the southwest
tor a width of forty miles wherever a
prominent anticlinal fold is located
the laud has beeu leased up and test
wells are being put down. The oil
fraternity hope to locate several new
oil pools. In this trend Garber is the
most promising locality with the
largest anticlinal foid in Oklahoma
aud with oil producing at 1130 feet at
about two feet iu a sand, The pros**
peets are also good at Lookabe,
Cement, and numerous other places.
Several years ago when local capital
put dowu two shallow tests near Gar-
ber the oilmen said we were 50 miles
i west of the oil fields because the red
| beds were too deep here. The sur-
face rises to the west at the rate of
I about 8 feet to the mile aud the rock
j ledges dip to the west at the rate of
about 20 feet to the mile. The oil-
J man places the two together and calls
it the normal dip of 3J feet to the
mile. He estimated by it that the^
| Layton sand would be over 3,000 feet
| here. And shook his head. The L y-
j ton is the shallowest of the producing
I sands in the oil fields,
Although geologists expect the big
| production along this trend to be deep
they expected new sauds. The shal-
, low sand just eutered here at 1130 feet
I is a new sand. Its production will
depend upon its thickness and den-
sity. The oil fraternity is waiting
feverishly for it to be drilled in.
Geologists claim that the Arbuckles
are the oldest mountains in America,
and that this section of the state was
once a great basin containing an in-
land sea They predict that in the
antlcliual folds there will bu large
accumulations of oil in the deep flurus
sand leilge3. These sands four and
live thousand feet below the surface
; were once the bottom ol the set.
Some Berries
I One of our farmers evidently had a
little fun with an oilman recently,
Under the caption, "A New Way To
Locate An Oil Field" the following
appeared iu the Tulsa Democrat:
Jim Gerhart of Bartlesville, arrived
in Tulsa last ,light, and sa>s that a
farmer up near Garber, says, "that
there la oil on tills farm, because there
are lot of oil berries on this land.
There are small black looking berries
and full of oil."
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Peters, Kay. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1916, newspaper, October 12, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144936/m1/1/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.