Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 13, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 4, 1905 Page: 5 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 16 x 11 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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GET THE HABIT" AND RIDE IN
COAL!
rn
I wi
Built to vv^ar^ndtosUtnd this. climate.
THE GENUINE MCALESTER
fHE J. W. GRAVES CO., SSS&„A
HHiH E. LAYNE, Manager.
coal i
THE COMING OF AUTUMN.
The splendor of the year ha* gone;
The slimmer skies are overcast;
Down the dark slope the year movea-on
To his dead fathers iu the past.
lie hears no twittering from the eaves,
Nor music from the haggard hough;
He stoops, and twines the fallen leaves
Into a chaplet for his brow.
the weather given the prisoners. The
) stone work on the first story of the
1 court house will he completed at onee.
i These buildings, although" uot large.
I will he very hansome and comfortable
when completed. —Chief.
Beneath his shadow as he goes
The last sad lily pines away;
The rose the very royal rose—
Drops, and is trampled in the clay.
O golden summer merged in gloom,
O glory of the land, adieui
Autumn has cook*, and I resume
My yearly cold- Atish —Ashool
—London Punch.
IN ORIENT CIRCLES.
Wichita Eagle, Oct. 28.
The Kansas City, Mexico and Orient
Railway company are making extensive
preparations for the installation of
other trains on their line and-'have
purchased a number of engines and
now have over 300 box cars on the
way from the car shops at St. Charles.
Mo., besides a number of passenger
coaches under construction which they
think will be delivered to them by the
first of the year.
The general belief among railroad
men is that the line between here and
Sweetwater, Tex., will l* in operation
long before the Kansas City service is
inaugurated. This track is very nearly
done; in fact, the grading has been
completed some time ago, and all that
has been delaying the laying of the
steel is the scarcity of ties and rails.
This matter hat been overcome to a
great extent and the Orient people au-
nouce that they have very near enough
material to finish the roadbed from
Oakwood to the State line of Texas and
that work between these two points will
be rapidly pushed to completion.
President Stillwell will start on a
tour of the entire system today and will
closely investigate every reasou for
delays from Oakwood to the Gulf of
Lower California.
AT WORK ON JAIL.
The brick masons that have been
working on the court house, have com-
pleted the brick work for the first story
and have comtneuced work on the jail.
They expect to have the first story
completed and the cells under cover in
two weeks. This work should be crowded
to the utmost and a protection against
ABSENCE OF THE PRESIDENT.
Wichita Eagle.
In making his homeward journey from
New Orleans to Washington by way of
; the high sea. President Roosevelt will
be outside the jusisdiction of the Uqited
States for two or three days. It was
stated inthe Associated Press dispatches
| that he would be the first American
j president to be outside the Uuifed States
, during his term of office.
| It has been claimed that it is an
i unwritten law of this country that the
| president can not go beyond the bouDd-
j aries of the United States. It was a
very foolish unwritten law and a good
i inauT people will be glad that President
Roosevelt has seen fit to disregard it.
When President Roosevelt gets out
on the Atlantic ocean he will be out of
the United States, of course, butjie
i will not be within the jurisdiction of
any other nation. In fact since America
'owns Porto Rico and is building the
Panama canal this country owns a little
1 bit more of the western portion of the
1 Atlantic ocean than all other nations,
and if there are any fine points of dis-
I pute to be decided about the presidents 1
trip we can declare the western Atlantic
ocean an inland sea.
In his famous debate with Alexander
Campbell, Archbishop Purcell said that
| the Pope a fugitive in the mountains of
1 the moon would be as much Pope as
| when in Rome. President Roosevelt is
as much president of the American
people, who constitute the government,
on the Atlantic ocean as when in
! Washington. ,
.When Abraham Lincoln fell at the
hands of an assassin many people were i
alarmed for the safety of the govern-
ment. At that dark period in our his-
tory the voice of James A. Garfield,
"God reigns and the government at
Washington still lives," was a flood of
sunlight that banished the clouds of
doubt. Mr. Garfield only said in an-
other way that the American people
are the government, and it can never
die while they live. ^
This idea that something dreadful
might happen if the king stumbled over
the frontier boundary belongs to an age
of ignorance and ruperstition. It does
not belong to this age. Roosevelt is
president of Americans and not of
America. His duties as commander-
in-chief of the army and navy and chief
executive officer has to do with people
more than with territory.
S ee.
Beef Market 1Q roceries.
ICE, COLD DRINKS AND CONFECTIONERY.
;; Cream Station for Winfield Kansas. fi>
Agents Empire Cream Separator.
HIGHEST MARKET PRICE PAID FOR HIDES AND COUNTRY PRODUCE !
At the old stand, Sentinel.:
;
CLUNG. §
ftas&wawt as,
——«■——————i—_ ' ——A—— mm
South side Main street, Sentinel.
Here you will find a nice stock to select from.
at moderate prices. Also carry best Pumps,
Washing Machines and a fine line of pocket
and table cutlery,
. Why not trade at home?
S A SHEEP? NO!
But its fleecy staple made into the
newest and beat
At. rock-bottom prices, from 16 2-3c
to $1 per yard. Call and see them.
Robinson Drug Co.,
LIST YOUR FARM LANDS WITH GOAR & HORNBEC*
They have buyers on the string.
If you want to sell, See them now
1)
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Hornbeck, Will W. Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 13, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 4, 1905, newspaper, November 4, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc181087/m1/5/: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.