The Guymon Herald. (Guymon, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 4, 1920 Page: 4 of 12
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page four
derrick looms high
at the new well
The new 106-foot tower makes
things look like business on Bunting
lease southwest of Well No. 1. The
complete rig where th". second well
of the American Fuel, Oil & Trans-
portation Company is located, makes
it look like real business out that
way. The new equipment is being
rapidly installed, but the rotary rig,
when ready for action, will not look
like the old outfit which has been
used in drilling the first well west of
Liberal.
It takes a lot of work to get one of
these new and big rigs going Tightly
for the placing of the machinery is
no little task. But everything is going
smoothly and the company hopes to
have the rig in actual operation in the
not far distant future.—Liberal News.
the guymon herald
thursday, september 4, 1920.
Hickox, Boy, Cecil snd Harry Hiraip-
sten, Sam Graham, Vergil and John
Nevins, Charlie Fouty and Rev. J. D.
Morgan.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Baldwin, Harry
and L. A. Nevins called at the J. R.
Nevins home Thursday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Baker visited school
Monday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. MatteT and family
spent Sunday at the C. C. Adams
home.
Elizabeth Grizzard spent Sunday
with Thelma Mills.
The Literary at Prairie Rose will
be every two weeks, beginning Thurs-
day night, October 28.
heaters is the order of the day around
here. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hamby of New
Nexico, who lived in the Plain View
neighborhood last year, took Sunday
dinner at the Mulanix home and at-
tended Sunday School at Perkins in
the afternoon.
G. G. Jones bought a cow at the big
sale in town Saturday.
CHRISTMAS PHOTOS
You had better see Mathis, the
photographer, about them now. Do
not wait until the rush is on, or you
might not get them in time. 32tf
PRAIRIE ROSE
October 28th.
We have been having a little cold
•weather lately.
Prairie Rose was well represented
at the Free Fair at Guymon Friday.
Miss Petalta Rist, who has been
working near Tyrone the past week,
returned home Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Nevins and children,
Mary and Tarvey, Alice Jones, Mrs
Brinkman and daughter Vera, Mr.
and Mrs. Decker and Mr. and Mrs. L
D. Brandcamp spent Sunday at the
Decker home.
Arson Harrison and Lawrence
Hitchcock called on Robert and Ed-
win Jones Sunday.
Mrs. C. A. Garrison returned home
Sunday after a visit with relatives in
Texas.
Guests at the T. J. Rist home are:
"Misses Maude and Minnie Jones, Mur-.
el Decker, Stella and Eadie Hampsten,
Nora Nevins, Ethel Fouty; Messrs. ,
Frank Decker, Ralph and Adrian | flj
PERKINS
October 28th.
Mr. and Mrs. George Gross and Will
Gatz went to Cimarron county Satur-
day to be with Mrs. Laura Greaser,
who was to be operated on Sunday.
School closed Friday and all went
to the fair in Guymon.
Mr. Lee Kelly as selling meat in
this community Tuesday.
In spite of the bad weather Sunday
there were fifty-eight out to Sunday
School. We had several visitors. Let
us all keep coming and see if we can
have as good a Sunday School thro
out the winter as we had this summer
Cleaning house and putting uj
The most economical and efficient
tractor on the market is the Fordson
See A. D. Hopkins about one—now.
THE GUYMON GOOD
ROADSCLUB
City'* Commercial Organization
Meets second Monday night of
each month. Correspondence so-
licited. Visitors welcome.
"We work for Texa County"
I. M. LIGHTNER, President.
JACK CURTIS, Secretary.
mi: Fall sweaters at Latham!.
If you expect to plant wheat this
fall, you need a Fordson Tractor to
prepare the ground. See A. D. Hop-
kins, the Ford Man. 17tf
Entire Audience Mystified
i• /•/ u^^«iTAnit fV n onhiol
Tries vainly to detect difference between the actual
playing of famous violinist and recreation by Ldi-
son's new phonograph.
Those present at the tone test held in Guymon
heard Mme. Sokoloff make several tests with her
violin, and were unable to catch a difference between
the original rendition and its re-creation by the New
Edison. No one could tell one from the other.
The New Edison
"The Phonograph With a Soul'
Come in and hear the identical instrument which was
used in the tone test at Guymon. Make the great dis-
covery for yourself.
A. RODMAN
BRICK AND s—:
CONCRETE WORK
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Phane 209. Guymon
LICO
FLOUR
"Stands The Test"
Try a Sack
at
FLETCHER GRAIN & GROCERY CO
—and no one
could tell the difference
You can buy your New Edison on a Budget Plan
which so distributes the payments that you 11 hardly
feel them.
B. F. Garst Music Co. and
Wanser Drug Co.
The Strongest Guarantee
You Can Have
The factory-like
service of this house
to owners through
its spendid dealer's
organization guar-
antees the maxi-
mum amount of
service on every
Republic Truck
used in this terri-
tory.
Juy a Republic Truck, not only for
its record of dependability, but be-
cause of this reliable service always
at your immediate command.
Tkc O. J. Watson Motor Company
Kansas-Oklahoma Distributor#
Wichita, Kansas
«•
o *
J. W. Jordan, Guymon, Okla., Agent
rtTTHiri tnn"i""'"wtw*tw«m niiiiii mnniiiiiiinnimiii|i|iiiitnniimi|
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The Guymon Herald. (Guymon, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 4, 1920, newspaper, November 4, 1920; Guymon, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc274107/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.