Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1919 Page: 4 of 8
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THE GARBER SENTINEL GARBER. OKLAHOMA
H
GARBER SENTINEL. Preparatory
and Dedication
kttlu->ud mot >r€ i*. by *- b. pirtb
8. H. filTtK# A Nw, Koirtji• Jt 1-corKiJKTOU
Kn Fytexs. Oil imto*.
PVbUaMd Kt+tj Ttcr*3 j %cMrnpt>oe l*rte • IX0 f* W*-'
Of the Oil Field M. E.
Church. Garber, Okla.
trriki ;i tbi P>j iviiici At CAlUL OBLaH
■*n vittik
Scrviet* t*t h evening it 8 :S0 p ra
bet'ooinc Aut- C. 1910.
WEDNESDAY 850 P. M.
Music.
Evicfelistic S rmor. by Rev. Webb,
of Medford.
THURSDAY SSO P. M.
Sirtfir.f.
H. C. L.
"We are almost in the throes of a revolution on account of the
crime of profiteering. Governments, national and state, are earn-
estly endeavoring to solve the problem which must be intelligently
met or society will go into chaotie conditions that will rival Russia. «en or. by Rev. Stnu of Biliinp. Ok.
Under present conditions Shylock is getting his pound of flesh Reading—Ruby Mires.
• i .. . .. , t , « «__ Benediction.
and to do so he is cutting aangereusly close to the heart of society. FRIDAY 8:30 P M
Statesmen are awakening to this fact and now something must be Ser*en by Rev. Simpson, of Hunter,
done if wisdom and laws are equal to the occasion of prying the Special Music.
, . , - _ . , . , , . . , Membership Call Will Be Made,
the jaws of privilege loose from suffering humanity before it perish SATURDAY s o P M
or awaken in throes of revolution. Sermon by Dr. White, of Enid, Okla.,
Progressive writers and statesmen have pictured and deplored
the unequal struggle but those who have been reaping the harvest
have been enabled to checkmate up to the present every effort for
relief with the same old cry of "calamity howlers "
have increased and intensified until the desire to rob by wholesale
District Superintendent.
Organisation of Church Officials.
SUNDAY-DEDICATION DAY.
A Fall Day of Worship.
The dangers Organization of the Sunday School at
by wholesale-
Dedication Service.
has become a controlling madness in the minds and desires of those Rev. White, District Superintendent,
who own and control the necessities of life. w pre*jh ar? *,eC fate ,ke
Building at 11 a. m.
Somehow, by some method, the mighty millions who wish to Big Basket Dinner. Good Shade.
live upon this mundane sphere, must learn how to not only produce Plenty of Water.
J , , * .... . „ .. ,. .. , , * .. Bring Your Basket and Stay All Day.
in dependable quantities m all its diversity of production the 3;00 p ^-sermon by Rev. Dr. Porter
the
necessaries and luxuries of life, but to absolutely and without
dangers of destruction of
with as much sacredne* as life itself, which it actually represents.
Notwithstanding this menace to society, there is a worse ex-
treme that some of oar statesmen are proposing for a remedy; the
of Enid.
storage, by Shylocks, control the same 8:30 p" the Epworth
Preaching by Dr. Porter Will Folio*
at 9:15 p. m.
Don't miss a single service. We ex-
pect j ou to be present. Bring your
contraction of the currency that will not only check the rising of family and friends with you. You will
prices but will so paralvze business that life is reduced to a game of l'*ten 10 al 'l16 b!9t ,speakers ,n
the state, l ou can t afford to miss-
By Committee.
Robt. Brown, Pastor.
waiting and energy is at a discount. Such periods of depression is so come,
worse than death and is not necessary to checkmate the evils of
profiteering.
The Call of the Road"
When you take the highway this spring you want a car that
permits you to er.jov your outing. It must take the roadj
efr-cientlv and with comfort, operate at low cost and inspire
pride in its appearance. MM 90 is just such a car. The ap-
preciation of 600,000 Overland owners has built up manufac-
turing methods that make possible the unusual value of
W<xiei 90 at its economical cost. Get your Model 90 now.
RED BALL GARAGE
Phone 131 Garber. Okla.
Model 90 Fit* Puicrfrr Tooriag car f. © b. Toledo *
Come to our store
Sa!e
C. L.
Public
Having rented ray farm I will sell at
public auction, 2 miles south and 2j
AFTER THE H.
. , .. .... ... , east of Garber, on Wednesday, August Prr f p>cci HTI "A 1
Everybody will be in full co-operatian with the president and 13, beginning at 10 o'clock sharp, the uiCMiuiiai^ wai uo
the administration in the inquiry into the high cost of living; following described property:
C F
that is to say, everybody except the profiteers. The government 7—HEAD HORSES—7
seems to have determined to discover, if possible, just what Causes o4Q0Ba" Mares' 3 >ears old' *eight ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
contribute toward the high prices charged for the necessaries of life, ~ j gay Mare 4 years old, weight 1100. Enid. Okla.
and to eliminate those causes so far as can be done. We are told 2 Bay Horse?, 5 years old, eight 10,11,12 Oklahoma State Bank Bldg.
that a concerted movement in this direction is afoot at Washing- 2400. Phone 1336
2 Mares, smooth mouth, weight 2500.
That the situation with regard to prices of every-day com- H-HEAD CATTLE-14 p, a. SMITH
.... . , a , * , ... . , , . ' ... 1 registered Jersey Bull whose dam,
modities is deplorable and getting more so cannot be denied. \ ir- • made an official record of 690 pounds of DEXTIST
tually every day the housewife learns that this or that article at the butter in a year. t
provision stores costs more than it did the day before. The same, 8 head of high-grade Jersey cows of
upgrade course applies to nearly everything else required by the proven worth and all heavy producers.
consumer, the patient, innocent bystander who is unable to stop - Jerse>" B^de Heifers, fresh in Octo-
the soaring prices. He is in the grij of forces which he cannot con-
trol, and unless some government power can get the high prices by
the topknot and shake them down to a normal level there appears
ber.
1 Yearling Steer. 2 Calves.
31—HEAD SHEEP—31
3 registered Shropshire Bucks.
3 registered Shropshire Ewes.
20 high-grade Shropshire Ewes and
Office just west of telephone building
Telephone 230
J. u. MORGAN
Notary Public
* H. (iOODE
Heat Haikct and Grocery.
L'he place to buy Best Grade ol groceries
tor the least money. Rome rend-
derod lard at all times.
COL
-ECTIONS A SPECIALTY
GARBER. OKLA.
HOGS
2 Durco Jersey—1 Gilt 90 pounds,
B.
1v:
Ha per Hhe*!uf
LUYTER
GARBER,
&c*irtlHcr
OKLA
'*■
to be no hope for relief to the consumer.
Now that the war is over and the peace treaty ready for rati-
fication, the administration is free to tackle this most pressine of f
problems. Dispatches from Washington give us assurance that it
may not fail of results which will cut the cost of living, so that the
average family can get along without hearing the howl of the wolf l Barr w % pounds.
every time the door or window is opened.—Daily Ardmorite. 1 HENS Pure Bred Stock
40 White Wyandottes and 5 Rooster?,
1 year old.
WATERS FOUND WITH OIL AND GAS 10 R" L r^hinepy
1 Van Brunt Drill. 1 Acm" Binder, ] Offic
3-foot cut. 1 Defiance Gang Plow. 1
Sulky Plow. 1 Disc Plow. 1 Emerson
Mower. 1 Di<c Cultivator. 2 Riding ——
States has been consumed have led those who are closely associated cultivators. fi Lumber V.'agon and Ex-Prosecuting Attorney, Ca.-f.eld Co
with the oil industry to regard as very valuable any new informa- Box. l Set Harness. Charles N. harmon
The enormous recent increase in the use of gasoline an.'! ot'r:-
derivatves of crude- petroleum and the *>*-iief that nearly 1. f '! t
total amount of oil originally stored in the ground in the United
'DR. E. LANGDON BEARD
Sute i<**ti.-t r. D strict No. 24255
Farmers
i GARBER,
rth
Phorp 104.
- OKLAHOMA
Furniture,. Bugi
BUY IN ENID
LARGE STOCK TO SELECT FR0.1
Hcosier Kitchen C?.binets. Sealy Mattress
I
umplete Line Stoves, Ru.^s and Furniture j
TER.'ilS—Lash or Installment
i
Free Delivery—Prompt Service '<
GL'S MIELITZ, Owner.
Col. Clint Triem, Auctioneer.
Garber State Bank, Clerk.
i&J'j S;; \
._V Eo
-A
; '01'
' .k -'i . 0 I
tion which may aid in discovering new fields or in increasing the Household Furniture l Piano. 1
production from the oil fields. A report just published by the C°uch- l Boo,;case. And other art. !es
United States Geological Survey, Department of the Interior, as I ^""nerwiU be Tervedby Ladies' Aid
Bulletin 693, based on investigation made in the Appalachian field by TERMS All sums Sio and under
Messrs. R. Van A. Mills and Roger C. Wells, contains many new cash; all sums over $10 a credit of one
facts concerning oilfield waters which may be of service in solving >Par at 8 i r cent- Purchasers must
the problem of increasing the country's production of oil. furnish good bankable notes.
In general oil and gas occur not in large caverns or in under-
ground lakes but in minute open spaces between the grain ; of porous
sandstones. The oil in nearly all fields is accompanicd by variable
quantities of water, generally very salty. Nearly every oil well
yields some water with the oil, and many yield considerable more
water than oil. The amount of water in the oil-water mixture gen-
erally increases r. > the well grows older, until finally the yield of oil
may be too small to make the well pay and it is then sai l to be
"drowned out." The drowning of many wells is a result of the
natural movement of oii and water in the roe-its—a movement con-
sequent upon the removal of larg ■ quantities of oil and g:;s through
wells—but drowning is often the result of leakage of water from a
water-bearing s'.ratUm into the oil-bearing stratum through non-pro-
duoinff wells which have been drilled through both strata and from
which the casing has been removed.
A thorough knowledge of the chemical properties of oilfield
waters would aid the oil operator in detecting the source of such
damaging leakage, for the waters in different strata and at different
depths are of different composition. In the bulletin just pub- 1 ^ sa'e a*- the Taft Pharmacy
llshed Messrs. Mills and Wells present analyses of many oilfield =ri~=;=r"
waters and suggest how such analyses can be used to advantage in
avoiding trouble with water in oil fields. Valuable information is
also given regarding the chemical interactions which probably occur
underground in some oil fields when waters containing different
salts insolution become mixed and interact to form precipitates
which cement and close the rock pores and decrease or stop the flow
of oil—Oil and Gas News.
H. HEMKEN
For Piasteriog
ar)d Mason Work
Guarantee all my work to
give satisfaction.
GARBER, OKLA
A*. TORNEY-flT-LAW
Eoid. O^la.
IS, 19, 20, 21 Okla. State Bank Bldg
Res. Phone 1335 Office Phone 466
DKW.L. POTTEK
DKXTIST
Girber. - Oklahoma
Phone 198 Garber, Okla.
Or. J. H. Bcatty
PHYSICIAN ar.d SURGEON
I (Diseases of Women ar.d Children)
Office—U e door west of Garber's store
INSURANCE
Fi ITE LIGHTNING TORNADO |
I write all kinds today
J. D. PORTER, Garber, Okla.
MAIL, YOfll
KODAK I'iCTI RES
To Finishing Dept.
McCcnkay's Studio
Developing 10c per roll, any size
Printing 3, 4, 5c.
One day service.
Enid, Oklahoma.
Johnson-Brown Furniture Co.
ENID, OKLAHOMA
<s£ '
*S*«eai
x armers State Bank
GARBER, OKLA.,
Capital . . . $50,000.00
B. A. Garber, President
M. C. Garber, Vice-President
G. J. Taft, Cashier
J. L. Neuner, Assistant Cashier
Twenty Years of Persona! Service
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S. H. Peters & Son. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1919, newspaper, August 7, 1919; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc145090/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.