Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 35, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 8, 1905 Page: 1 of 10
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SENTINEL NEWS-BOY.
^44.
Vol. 1
Sentinel, Washita County, Oklahoma, Saturday, April 8, 1905.
No. 35
CHCM3<><H>CHCHCH>CH£0{*00000HCKHCHCHCHCHB
We have just received our second car of
CANTON PLANTERS.
If you have not bought, or if the one
you have does not do the work,
BUY A CANTON.
A complete and large line of up-to-date Cultiva-
tors, Plows, Buggies, Etc.
Call and see us.
fi H. C. WEY <& SON Hobart. Ok la. „
Under what a delusion we have been
laboring! Mr. Hanna, long since passed
to his reward, said "there are no trusts."
McKinley, our beloved and much la-
mented martyred President, eloquently
and most effectively remonstrated
against warring on capital. Our present
strenuous Ruler assured us in his cam-
paign that we need fear no evil conse-
quences from our great financiers, cap-
tains of industry. Now comes one Mr.
Garfield, and after carefully(?) Inves-
tigating the so-called Beef Trust, says
tliey receive only the niggardly profit
of 2 per pent Shame on a wanton
public who will thus rob these iunocent(?)
packers! Reader, you should pay
more for your meat, take less for your
live stock, and let these philanthro-
pists^) live to care for -posterity.
Another important personage, J ames
H. Echols, of Chicago, a man whose
very heart and soul goes out for the
masses, for what he oau fleece them
out of, says that it is a measly shame
for those ministers in and around Bos-
ton to protest against receiving money
donated by John D. Rockefeller; that
Mr. Rockeller's wealth was honestly
acquired; that he employs only methods
used by Any other upright, intelligent
business man. Later comes H. H.
Rogers, manager for Standard Oil, and
says "it was legally acquired;" says
slavery was once legal and justifies(?)
their action in receiving rebates and
crushing competition in many other
ways, by such argument.
Everette Yaw and W. W. Robertson,
Vice President and Manager, respect-
ively, of Maynard, Merrill & Co., one
of the largest book concerns in America,
now comes on the scene and makes oath
that they have not been, nor are now,
in any pool, combine or trust for the
purpose of controlling or influencing the
prices of school text books. Grover
Cleveland, that rare "combination of
brass, b^lly and brains,'* chuckles his
fat sides and shouts amen! Belmont,
Parker and Co. shout hallelujah! The
band strikes a lively tune and the Trust
Magnates Revelry is on.
One T. J. Connor, of the Armour
Co., Chicago, is under indictment for
alleged interfering with federal grand
jury witnesses. Pass the hat.
President Roosevelt and party
left Washington in time to attend the
reunion of his old regiment of rough
riders in San Antonio, Texas, yesterday
and today. The President and party
are also booked for a wolf hunt in
Oklahoma, and a "big game" hunt in
Colorado.
The second Russian Pacific squadron
is reported on its way to Vladivostok.
If the dispatch had said Bladderbustup
we could have put some faith in the
story.
mi* ;
I 9 Per Cent MONEY
On FARM LOANS.
I Commission payable in five payments, without interest. Money advanced lor \ \
; ; Final ProoL No extra charge. AM AGENT lor St. Paul Hail Insurance on ;
I Wheat and Oats—the only Old Line Company doing that fcisiness.
Will insure your property against Fire, Lijghtning and Tornado with the !
| very best companies in the country. Will meet any competition en Farm
:: U""' .Jlft J. A. HARRISON,
Office justice el the Peace, ;
II South of Drug Store, Sentinel
Texas is going to investigate the
workings of the Staudard Oil Company
in this state. Resolutions have been
passed requesting the Attorney General
to institute such investigations, and
upon his suggestion a bill has been in-
troduced making an appropriation of
$15,000 for that purpose, if the bill
passes, detectives will be employed to
probe into the workings of the Stand*
ard Oil Company and such other trusts
as may be existing in Texas.— Bonham,
(Tex.) News.
Every official investigation Into the
business affairs of the big trusts and
combines, (if this investigation is sin-
cere,) brings to light more rottenness.
The Consolidated Gas company, of New
York, is now under the search light,
and among other interesting develop-
ments the dispatches inform the public
that B. A. Whitelow, assistant attorney
for that concern, admits "that in order
to show a balance on a statement sub-
mitted by him to the committee, he
had obliterated a discrepancy of $3,500-
000, by charging that amout to 'con-
struction,' when, as a matter of tact,
such a sum had not been spent.
R. A. Carter, secretary of the Con-
solidated Gas company, explained the
apparent discrepancy of more than
$12,000,000 in a statement of the com-
pany's investments submitted to the
committee by declaring the larger amount
represented the actual amount invested,
the smaller the present values of the
property."
all is good.
Chicago Chronicle.
Life is made'of sun and rain.
Pleasure intertwined with pain,
Desert wastes and garden fair,
Hope andUiappiness and care,
But all of it is good;
Skies of blackness, skies of blue,
False or fickle, good or true,
Sun or shadow, light -or gloom,
Blight or waste or fadeless bloom,
All of it is good.
Life is made of love and hate,
Humble things and good and gr eat.
Sin and sorrow, strife and fears,
Grief and tenderness and tears,
But all of it is good;
Victory and grim defeat, _
Finished things « n 1 incomplete,
Buds that end in sudden blight,
Dusk and dawn and day and night,
All of it is good.
Life is made of sighs and song, *
Peace and plenty, right and wrong.
Pity, passion, praise and blame,
Greatness, lowliness and shame.
But all of it is good;
Out of chaos order wakes
Out of midnight morning breaks,
After grief we find release.
Death flings wide the doors of peace,
All of it is good.
CITY BARBER SHOP
By V. J. 8UTTERF1ELD.
South side ' ' ' SENTINEL
Anything you want in the barber line,
HairCut, Shave, Shampoo.
Laundry Sent Weekly.
Wm. TidbttL D. W. Bcaaett
*d\A\>a\V ftewvtW,
Phj-sicians and Surgeons.
Office in Barton Drug Co. building.
SECRETARY GRIMES REPORT.
Guthrie, Okla., April 3.—William
Grimes, secretary of Oklahoma, today
filed his financial statement for the
past quarter, showing 205 corporations
chartered, 17 foreign corporations, 186
notaries public commissioned, and 99
miscellaneous items filed, amounting
in fees to $2,733.85, of which $750 was
retained for salary and clerk hire,
and $1,983.85 turned into the Territorial
treasury.
As insurance commissioner, Mr.
Grimes also filed his quarterly report,
showing 2,039 licenses issued to fire in-
surance agents, 327 to life agents, 147
statements tiled, 107 companies paying
taxes, 5 articles of incorporation filed,
amounting in fees to $12,824, all of which
was turned into the treasury.
BRAIN LEAKS.
Prayer is a petition, not a mandamus.
Dividing the swag does not lesson ,
the crime.
. !
Splurging around is not a sure sign
of earnestness.
The man who goes gunning for trou-
ble never runs short of ammunition.
Some people conjure up trouble and
imagine that they are bearing heavy
crosses.
The reform that begins in the home
is usually a reform based on a solid
foundation.
The consecrated Christian has a
purse easily opened at the call of dis-
tressed humanity.
Barker's Photo Studio,
HOBART.
Latest styles and best work for least
money.
All Work Guaranteed.
Just north of Square, on Main Street
_ * _ _
||0USE MOyiNG.
With new trucks and a complete
house-moving outfiit I am ready to
do any work in that line, at reason-
able price.
\DWV to
ANDY ROGERS,
Sentinel, Oklahoma
The chief trouble about thinking
twice before acting once is that some
other fellow is liable to jump in and
seize the opportunity about the time
we begin on the second thought.
♦ l Hill I' l l IIIIII Ml III H IIIM II11II111111IIIII ;
Sekutiful (Pidtnre^
Qiveq ®Vee! I
j To every purchaser to amount of $5.00 in gro- \
eery department M. O. King stand.
! 1 BUTTER AND EGGS SAME AS GASH.
< . COME AND GET YOUR TIGKETS.
South Side, Sentinel, i
♦mm mi
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Hornbeck, Will W. Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 35, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 8, 1905, newspaper, April 8, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc181043/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.