Death Claims Edgar Sandlin, Local Banker Page: 2 of 2
This text is part of the collection entitled: William A. McGalliard Historical Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Ardmore Public Library.
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2 THE DAILY ARDMOREITE, Ardmore, Okla., Wednesday, March 25, 1959
Deaths and Funerals
dallas dresses that
you just wash & wear
home:
Lodge.
*
A95
EACH
STYLE
ham, all of Ravia;
Rl*
ft
• 4
ya
tv*
—
fi
*
was plugged after perforations at j
I
f
Davis, Okla.
Phone 653
SOUTHWEST'S FINEST
Visitors Always Welcome
I
SAVE!
on Feather
119 W. Main
Phone 2134
Sizes 10 to 20
21" TV
/
B= 7 A St., SW
\,l.
LAKE MURRAY LODGE
LIGHTEST NYLON TRICOTl
PROPORTIONED SIZES!
t-
M5
★ HI-FI
* RADIO
★ TELEVISION
/
y
★ CAR RADIO
X
a,
CALL
I
JL
i
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY!
is your problem
L
KRESS
I
I
I
I
Save During Our
Pre-Easter
Penney’s lace lavished Feather Trique
is silken-soft, light for comfort, nylon
tricot that is twice as fine. These slips
fit so that your outer clothes look better.
Full slips have shaped bodices, fitted
backs. In proportioned lengths in white.
Slip sizes 32 to 40.
is your
answer!
NOW
ONLY
Famous Dallas styling fresh as a Spring breeze!
One and two-piece fashions styled with pencil
slim or flared skirts' Smart features are the pretty
embroidery, lacey touches! And just think: simply
wash, then ironing only a matter of choice! Mar-
velous price, too!
FASHION
CLEARAWAY
lyne tanks and a butane tank in
the 30 by 30 foot frame and sheet
Unbelievable
BUT TRUE
the I
one
'1
BLACK
. ICE BLUE
1 BEIGE
1 PINK TULIP
MINT MIST
JACK KNUTSON
IND. GARAGE
' -AIM AUTOROL—
SUN IGN. EQUIP.
Automatic Transmission Work
Hwy. 70 East — Ph. 7388
% ‘
We Sell
SECURITY in
The form of INSURANCE
AU Kinds Except Life
WYMORE & WILLIAMS ,
r Ph. 1041 B
HOUSTON COX
Service Station
22 14th Ave.. NE (Highway 70 East)
COMPLETE SERVICE STATION
FACILITIES
Courteous attendants. All the “Little
Extras" a customer expects.
You’d Smile Too, If Your House
Was Insured By
THE HALL AGENCY
INSURANCE
118 West Main — Phone 4780
HALE'S
NURSING HOME
(Formerly Pruitt’s)
Max
Mrs.
Davis Radio & TV
419 12th, NW Ph. 1360 or 1801
PRESCRIPTIONS
MARTIN DRUG (0.
PHONE 5
Free City-Wide Delivery
CARROLL'S DRIVE-IN
1314 N. Washington Ph. 739
MALTS 25c
5 BURGERS 95c
• Women’s Early Spring
Dresses now—
$4—$6—$8
• Girls’ Easter Frocks 3 to
6x and 7 to 14, now—
$3 and $5
• Group of Easter Millinery
oow—
$2—$4—$6
I» 5
PENNEY
PLUS VALUE
married at Butler. Pa., in 1888.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Ross Eason.
Suspect Bound
Over for Trial
HOUSE of SOUND
Hi Fi Stereo and
Talking Book Records
Changers. Amplifiers. Speakers
SPECIAL ON
DIAMOND NEEDLES
26 N Washington Phone 5907
Blast Death
Held Accident
For Prompt Service, Call
On Us At Any Time
A. BLACK, BROWN OR
NAVY. SIZES 10-18.
REXROAT—School board pres-
ident Clark Acox was re-elected
for another term on the board here
as the result of an election yes-
terday. The vote was 14-0.
Both the five-mill building fund
and the five-mill emergency levy
MT. WASHINGTON — No elec-
tion was held to fill one vacant:
post on the three-member board. I
Present board members, L. A.
Whittaker and Leonard Walker.!
are expected to confer with Coun-
ty Supt. Omer Rowe and appoint ■
a third member.
i
r
volved totaling nearly 5,000 acres.
The leases, all for a 10-year per-
iod, cover all or part of the fol-
lowing section:
In 6s-7e, sections 1, 2, 3, 10, 11,
Elections
(Continued from Page 1)
A. J. Sutherland. Ed Karstetter,!
C. C. Claxton and Bill Jennings. I
j
4
/I
a
Darling, If you would be mine
we would always have a roof
over our heads, to eat that Is!
FOR TERMITE TROUBLES
JESSE GLENN
PHONE 5204
here 37 years and was a 32nd de-
gree Mason and member of the
American Legion. Masons are to Ardmore Masonic Lodge No. 31
.. n from 1914 until his death, and
Batteries for AH Makes
of Hearing Aids
FLOYD R. MITCHELL
General Manager
503 Gilbert Bldg Ardmore
Call 3047
1
&
Shop
Penney’s!
best way
to save
IZh«^
■I.
Mrs. Joella Grossman
Services have been set at 9:30
a. m. Thursday in Bettes Funeral
Chapel for Mrs. Joella Lusk
Grossman, 924 3rd Ave., NE. who
died Tueseday following a long ill-
{ ness. She was 95.
A native of Harrisville, Pa.,
Mrs. Grossman came here 35 years
ago from Shidler. She was the
B
I
&
£
a
MAYTAG AUTOMATIC
get?. WASHER
I l *169”
i • Reconditioned.
Guaranteed
~ 7. Washers $19.95
$500 Down. $5.00 Month
MAYTAG
SALES and SERVICE
“We Service Everything We Sell’
114 E. Main Phone 3488
Penney’s IhopnpTey's During
Our Big Pre-Easter Event!
2-HP, 21-Inch
Power Mowers
NOW QQ
Only- J JO OO
the
building fund levy carried 28-1.
Dundee has a five-member '
board.
SULPHUR—Ralph Dodson had
no opponent in yesterday’s school
board election here and he will
continue on the board for another
five-year term.
Both levies were approved. The
five-mill building fund levy re-
ceived 114 votes for and 7 against.
The five-mill emergency fund
levy was sanctioned 120-4.
Holdover members of the board I
are Russell Brown, Glen Haines, j
Willie Spindle and Dr. R. W. Mor- |
ton,
PLAINVIEW — Voters here
yesterday elected Berlyn Gardner
for another term on the school
board and also passed building |
and emergency levies.
Gardner was elected 32-0 while
both of the levies passed by a !
42-0 vote.
• All Girls’ Easter Hats now
$1 and $2
Bags 88c
• Final cleanup Women’s All
Wool Spring Short Coats
$7 and $10
• Group of Girls’ Spring
Suits in 3 to 6x and 7 to 14
now $4
Oil
(Continued from Page 1)
jected 7.000-foot outpost venture
that is being operated as a •‘tight”
hcle.
American Climax Petroleum
Corp, is rigging up at its No. 2-B
Horsley, in NW SE SE of 25-5s-
5e, in the Madill field in Marshall
County. It is a projected 5.000-
/
<
dren, 10 step grand-children; 20
great grand-children, and 14 step
great-grandchildren.
Services were conducted by Rev.
John Fleming, pastor of the First
Baptist Church, Tishomingo. Bu-
rial was in Tishomingo Cemeterv,
under direction of Watts Funeral
Home of Madill.
ZANE1S — W. L. Ealey was
elected for another term on the I
Zaneis school board in an election
held here yesterday. The vote was
27-0.
The voters also approved a five-
mill emergency levy by the same
vote.
11
lta£
serve as pallbearers. They will i
meet at the hall at 3 p. m.
A World War II veteran, Bar-
nett served as chief petty officer :
in the Seabees. He was born in
Whitwright, Texas. Sept. 26, 1905.
Surviving are his mother, Mrs.
I Carrie L. Barnett, 121 B St.. NW, ;
i ind a brother. Arch. Denver. Colo.
Burial at Rose Hill is in charge
: of Bettes Funeral Home. The Rev.
J. Cullis Smith wall officiate.
of Carter County Schermerhorn
Oil Corp.’s No. 7 Bonner, in SE
SW’ NW SE of 8-3s-2w’, is to be a
800-fcot effort.
Three new shallow tests have
been reported in Stephens County.
Kent Eby’s No. 25 Harley, in SE
NE NE of 24-2s-4w, will go to
505 feet. Kay Oil Co. has staked
its No. 2 Baker, in SW’ NW SE
of 36-2s-6w, for a 500-foot ven-
ture. The firms No. 3 Baker, in
SE NE SW of 36, is another 500-
foot test.
In Cotton County Glenn Grimes
has spotted the site for his No. 1
Powell, in NE SW NW of 31-ls-
Sw, for a 2.300-foot venture in the
Walters district.
Only duster reported was Fal-
con Seaboard Drilling Co.’s No. 1
Rushing, in C NW’ NE of 18-2n-
lOe. 3’i miles northeast of Cen-
trahoma in Coal County, which
The building and a pickup truck I
in the garage were destroyed. It;
was located a mile and a half west (
of Commerce St. on Plainview!
Road.
I
I
Oil
V i' <
® 11
TUESDAY
SMORGASBORD
Served 6 P.M. to 9 P.M.
ADULT DINNER $2.50
Child Under 10 $1.25
SUNDAY
SMORGASBORD
Served From 12 Noon to 9 P.M.
ADULT DINNER $2.50
Child Under 10 $1.25
Regular Menu Also Served
Every Nite
Call 6600 for Reservations
■♦••Il \
I 1
5,032-65 feet failed to produce. !
Total depth drilled was 8,181 feet.
In leasing activity a block of
nearly 5,000 acres has been put
together by Quintin Little, Ard-
more oil man, in northwestern
Bryan County.
Little, through the Stewart Title
Co., Durant, has filed nearly 300 :
separate instruments on an area
starting about a quarter-mils west >
of Silo and running northwest to !
within two miles of the Cumber- :
land oil field.
The region covered is in Ranges I
7 and 8 east, township 6 south. !
Parts or all of 13 sections are in- !
I probability, stemmed from acete-
FOR GOOD
PRINTING
U/FRR'C PRINTING and
HLOU J OFFICE SUPPLY
PHONE USS
Across the street east of postoffice
“Accidental death because erf an
explosion and fire of undeter-
mined and unknown origin” was
the verdict of a coroner’s jury in-
volving the death of E. T. Barnett
Monday night.
The jury held an inquest late
Tuesday afternoon and within
minutes its verdict.
Barnett, 53 is survived by his
mother, Carrie L. Barnett, 121 B
St. NW, was well known in Ard-
more.
Shortly after the blast, County f
Attorney Jim Payne, said “It ap-
peared Barnett had been blown
through a partition separating a
garage and a room being converted
into temporary living quarters.”
Payne said the explosion, in all ■
George Reinert and Mrs.
Freeland. Oklahoma City;
Dorsa Allen, Garfield, Ark.; Mrs. I
Sequoyah Herd, Marble Falls,
Texas: Mrs. Wilbur Richardson.
121 F St.. SW: two sons, Bert and
Fred, Agter, N. M.; four sisters.
Mrs. Les McKinney, northwest of
Ardmore; Mrs. Ed Bedford, south-
west of Ardmore; Mrs. Clara King.
Fort Worth, and Mrs. Lettie Wil-
son, Frederick, Ark.
SPRINGER—Grover Bell re-
ceived 92 votes and Lewis Holder
53 in yesterday’s school district
election. Incumbent Cloy Morgan
did not ask for re-election to the
five-man board. Bell will take
office today.
The two levies carried better
than 3-to-l. The building fund
levy vote was 97 for and 28
against, and the vote was 85 for
and 27 against the emergency
levy.
Mrs. Quinnie Graham
MADILL (Special) — Funeral
tervices were held Tuesday after-
noon at 2 o'clock in the First Bap-
tist Church, Tishomingo, for Mrs
Quinnie Ella Graham, 76, who died
in Tishomingo Monday,
Mrs- Graham was born March
S. 1883 in Tennessee and had mov-
ed to Johnston County more than
60 years ago. She was united in
marriage with William Addison
Graham in 1900. and they made
their home in the Russett and
Ravia communities before moving
to Tishomingo.
Mrs. Graham had been a mem-
ber of the Baptist church since
she was 11 years of age. She had
been in poor health for many
years.
Survivors include seven chil-
dren, Mrs. Lydia Belle Clifton,
Miss Mary Lee Graham, Mrs.
Christine Irwin, Mrs. Annie Eas-
ley and John Graham, all of Tish-
omingo; Edgar Graham, Ravia and
Tim Graham of Duncan, Okla.;
four step-children, Mrs. Cora Ca-
lor, Cooper, Colo.; Joe Graham,
Mrs. Bertha Hurst, and Dan Gra-
ham, all of Ravia; one brother,
Russ Hurst, Ravia; 16 grand-chil-
I
ExchaBS* M
J. C. Yeatts Appliance
Phone 573 1003 W, Bdwy.
P R I NTI N G
nf T?istiQCtioru ■
MARLEY PRINTERY
PHONE 494
«CaO«B 9T9EET reOM u >M OM
i,
D98
Oss
are to serve as pallbearers.
E. T. Barnett
Rites for Ervin Thurman Bar-
nett. 53, Samedan Oil Corp. em-
oloye. will be at 4 p. m. today in
the First Orthodox Baptist
Church.
f 1
TV
and
HI-FI
SALES & SERVICE
EASY TERMS
We Are and
SPECIALISTSInstallation
In Service Work ot^
John W. Pickens, charged with
murder in the shooting death of
Luther Ligon, was bound over to
district court Tuesday at a pre-
liminary hearing held before Jus-
tice of the Peace Pat Johnson.
County Attorney Jim Payne
used only four witnesses at the
ehort hearing 'while the defense
presented no witnesses.
The shooting occured in a beer
tavern on Main Street on the ,
night of March 14. City police of- iiG
ficer Don Wallace said at that |
time they (police) found Ligon ‘
lying on the floor of the tavern j
with his head under a table.
No date for the district court trial i
has been set.
C. A. Zellner
Charles Arnold Zellner, 79, re-
j tired Carter County farmer, died
Tuesday afternoon at his home in
Norman after a heart attack.
Services are at 2 p. m. Thurs-
« ------- -,— , day in the Primrose Funeral
t*1* ";jeeler region ; Home. Norman.
r. . ! Fellner was born in Hemstead
County, Ark., Dec. 22. 1879. He
] is survived by his wife. Almeta;
: of the home; five daughters, Mrs.
■Trique slips!
4
I
'CHOICE’ CHAR-BROILED
—Also—
> PRIME RIB --
• SEA FOODS
• MEXICAN
DINNERS —
Popular Price* )
«a. m to 11 p. m. i
DARRELL GREEN S A
Tower Motel St
Restourant
Hlway 77 North
_ metal building. '
12, 13 and 14. In 6s-8e, all or part ;
of sections 6, 7, 8, 17 and 18.
Records in the Bryan County*
court clerk’s office show that
much of the area has been as-
signed to the Jud Oil Co., com-
posed of his three children or to
the children themselves.
They also show that Little has
conveyed over 1,000 acres of min-
eral rights to University of Okla-
homa football coach Bud Wilkin-
son, a close personal friend of
the oil man’s, subject to a 10-year
oil and gas lease.
great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Grossman was a member |
of the Memorial Christian Church, i
The Rev. John Boryk is to con- ■
duct. Burial will be in the Quay ! _
cemetery, near Ya[e. Grandsons ing year until it consolidated with
I the Ada Council to form the-Ar-
! buckle Area Council. He continued
j treasurer of the council until his i
! death. In 1949 he received the Sil- I , . -
i ver Beaver award for distinguish-^* Passed by the same margin,
ed service to boyhood-
Fraternally he also was a mem-
i ber of the Woodmen of the World
Barnett died Monday in an ex- j and served as clerk, council com-
plosion and fire at his home mander and banker. He had been
southwest of the city. He had Jived i banker of the local lodge from
*” J j j- jggg to now
He served as treasurer of the
i also as treasurer of the Knights
Templar, the Royal Arch Masons
j and the Royal and Select Mast-
ers. Also as grand senior deacon
by appointment. In 1901 he joined
the Knights of Pythias and served
as chancellor commander. He was
master exchequer for years until
the lodge disbanded.
Survivors in addition to his wife.
Bird, and one daughter, Mrs.
Eloise Grinua, of the home, 333
D St., SW, are a brother, G. J.,
823 Stanley; four half brothers,
Hudson and Monroe, of Moulton,
Ala.; Woodfin. Florence, Ala.; Rus-
| sell, Fort Worth; two half sisters,
Mrs. R- p. Irwin, also of Moulton;
Mrs. B. W. Lufborrow, Hinesville,
Ga.: and one grandson, William
Sandlin Grimm, Irving, Texas. A
brother, Fletcher, died last year.
The Rev. Elbert M. Whitwell,
former pastor of the Ardmore
Christian church will join the
minister. Rev. Richard DeVilliers
in conducting the rites. Burial is
to be in Hillcrest Memorial Park, i
Harveys are in charge.
Active bearers include John H. ;
Snodgrass, Robert Batis. Chester
Dennis, John Judd, William A-
West, John M. Hendricks, James
R. Cox, Louie Bastin and Leon-
, ard Jones. All friends are hon-
■ orary bearers.
Here for the funeral will be
i Mr. and Mrs. Gene Durie. San-
| ta Rosa. N. M.; Mr. and Mrs
Charles Durie, Mr. and Mrs. W.
L. Kirkpatrick and Miss Helen
Durie, Oklahoma City; Mr- and
Mrs. Edgar Lee Downing, Dal-
ias; Mr. and Mrs. Ben Thomp-
son and Mr. and Mrs. Durie
Thompson, Tulsa.
K. (. STEAKS
■
Sandlin
(Continued from Page 1)
1 at Colorado Springs and San Fran-
j cisco.
Sandlin was treasurer of many
! Ardmore organizations. He was
! treasurer of the local Salvation
■ Army Board, chairman of board
and life elder of the First Chris-
| tian Church, a Scottish Rite Ma-
; son, member of the Red Cross of
; Constantine, and a 33rd degree
* Mason. He was appointed district
widow of John Elmer Grossman, deputy grand master under two
an oil field driller. They were grand masters. He joined the In-
married at Butler. Pa., in 1888. dian Consistory at McAlester in
/ 1911 and was a member of the
Alamogordo, Ardmore team that conferred the
N. M.; Mrs. Ira Hooks, of the 30th degree for about 10 years,
home: a sori, James, Odessa. In 1957, he was awarded a 50 year
Texas; eight grandchildren and 14 membership pin by the Grand
Active for three decades in the
Boy Scouts, he served as presi- :
dent of the Chickasaw Council in
1937 and as treasurer the follow-
DUNDEE—Leo Harrington, al-
hough he did not seek re-election,
will continue to serve on
school board here since no
filed for the office.
In yesterday’s balloting,
five-member '
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Death Claims Edgar Sandlin, Local Banker, text, 2013; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1627229/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Ardmore Public Library.