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Charles W. Marling
© The Enid OK Events
11-07-1941
Submitted by: Jo Aguirre

© Glenn

Cora Mae and Charles W. MARLING

Garber Cemetery


Marling – Rev. L. L. Scott assisted by Rev. Johnson officiated at the funeral of C. W. Marling Wednesday afternoon in the Methodist Church at Garber. Burial was in Garber Cemetery with Henninger Funeral Home in charge.

Active pallbearers were Ward Dobler, Lester Hackler, Chester Dewey, Raymond Snoddy, Jonnie Hayes and Bill Wilcox.

Honorary pallbearers were Frank Dennison, Robert Goff, Charles Sandburg, Tom Snoddy, William Hackler and George Koehler.

Marling, 48 year old Garber service station operator, believed to be the first patient to whom insulin was ever administered for treatment of sugar diabetes, died at Garber Saturday noon. He was sitting in a chair at his service station when he collapsed and died instantly.

He went to Garber from Glacier Texas, 21 years ago and went to work in the Garber – Covington oil field soon after which he was stricken with diabetes.

Marling, a member of the Methodist Church and the Woodmen of the World, lived at Alva as a youth. His father owned a laundry in Alva.

Survivors are his wife of Garber, one daughter, Mrs. Charles L. Brown of Dallas; two sisters, Mrs. Della Redmon and Mrs. Eula Brown, both of Wichita, Kansas.

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