The Sentinel Leader. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 54, Ed. 1 Friday, August 8, 1913 Page: 4 of 6
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SENTINEL : LEADER
Published every Friday at Senti'
r.el, Washita County, Okla., by
rH'J r-NT1NEL PRINTING CO- Inc.
k. W. HULETT, Pres.
Forsftr. Editor
Manager
fact that one could be kept in'governor's secretary to find out
condition for use at all times i if I could locate Governor Mc-
thus preventing the use of one I Alester, and I put in a long dis-
when not in condition to be used. | tance call for him. I did not
It is ffoinjr to b..' an absolu. t him, hi;t made arrangements jR^tes on Both Raw and Manufactured
: kir-.r him to come to Oklahoma
v i v to.l:Mr. Wilson goes
LliWEH KAitS ruri to GOUBtliS
\
IMVM.'M.'VM.'VMtVmHVllMnilllliKMMMWmiVWVmmmiMmiVtlMM
THE PEANUT INDUSTRY RE- ' \ Fine Helens in Comanche \,
CEIVES IMPETUS. j
necessity, ^o why put it off.
Product Greatly Reduced by
New Clr.rsification.
A YOAI?, In Advance ,,i:
id wisely
Another ffoostfor the local peanut
i butter and peanut culture industry of
r <•
-
of/ tilc OKlii*
iioo received
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i1
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I
tior
Loc
for
of t
of
A:
rit
nv, Victor IVi. :
•i t sent and has
been principal-
1
He is mar-
35 years
la;
old and has always been a demo-
crat.
ty :
a' t-
) per acr
>out
m). male tur-
;ynine thcr-
v Dr. A. D.
ti rf Ann ■
•r .t a test
Okie
lOVi^J
Hi.
| .... a e
uster county, $16. While
I- . they claimed lo have raised Btck-
The election is over and the) ham COunty 15 per cenc and Cus-
da: - are just as hot as ever, j ter county to about $1S per acre
■Neither do we realize that the | and I don't think tb v raised
"high cost of living" has been Kiowa county any. While I was
cut very much by the way thej only there for the purpose of get-
,vote was made on the several i ting what I consider justice for
measures. Still it is a great Washita county and not for the
satisfaction to kuow that the purpose of fighting to get any
people have been able to express other county raised, I do empl
themselves and that the majority; cally believe that this count.,
v,- . Whether it is good for us assessed mueh too high as com
generally remains to be seen, pared with other counties, and
I: coal is any cheaper next year,1: nat we are willing to be put on
w ■ will be thankful that it is so. equality with Kiowa county and
If it isn't, we will be thankful; measure values with them and it
ti: t we can get it at any price i3 decidedly and honestly my
should a coal famine occur, opinion that Kiowa county has
Lot's be optimistic. Laugh at | actuall, taking it as a whole, as
our past hardships for the way good if not better land than we
ws overcame them. Look for- i have. I think that wre ought to
ward to the good things and en- iSt;ay jnside of the law in what
joy them when they come. ■ we do, and I am sure that our
. land would not cash out for
Last week Sentinel for four; what it assesaed for. 1 will
nights was in darkness on ac-, ciose by saying that I enterpret
count of having the flues of the the law as meaning what it says;
light plant boiler at Hobart for j that the land should be assessed
re^ipping. Right at this time, ; at its actual advalorem value,
while the citizens see the great | what it is actually and honestly
disadvantage which is placed up- j worth, and what it would bring
on them in such a case, it per- i h. K. Thomas, Com. for 3 Dist.
haps will be well to suggest that | at a volunteer sale for spot cash."
i#itinel's light plant is very)
thi
ably vi'htb'
have. But .v
more when G
turns from K
purr
wh
and
to r«-
jiiVS ui «. U.r
uiuij I l it'
. n
iksTjee
b tntrfefeco^
l
: c ■■■r m-
' not be al-
. r.o natural
is as nc
:
ill e.|
1 ic ;>!
ug nullities.
li pr.
•nor
Cruce re-;
J ENTIRE V, EEK TO BE Givi
OVER TO TH _ VOO MGoTERS
:-;o c:
Bob Taylor's Dream u
.. em to
What heaven is I know not, but . ^
I long have dreamed of its purple t .3 n,
hills and its fields of light bios* \3 hereby
r the experiment
aluiible to the American
n the on enow going on In
: v.-hera thousands of" dol-
lv-.u f-p;in t.nyif?
tfries tran°rort!ng the
lv> D:.-: / ~t of'Columbia,
nre joined fn wedlock '0
"i til? offspring of which j
► a croa3 between a North j Practically every county in Okla-
i rabJKt and an Aus'ralinn |homa is interested In the fourth an-
r.nd tb<- s-ini of 1 or inutil session of the A. i d M. college
ereof as may be nec^'^nrv, 1 stale farm school at the Oklahoma
impropriated, out of the ' •-'•ate Fail- and Exposition, Oklahoma
mes rancid;
v bull r bo-
alwavs good.
lahoma Young People sro Eil-
e To Atttnd the Sessions
from £tp. 2't to Oct. 4.
An Irrigated Truck Garden
J. D. Go Vine, a true': fanner ro.«fd.
ing near Hobnrt, is planning to gtufaen
on a more elaHorate scale than ever.
To guarr; against a defioiency: of rain-
fall ti.is year, he has arrant d to irri-
gate his rnrden patches. A "^ell has
j been bored, a windmill erected with
| storage tank to warm the water,
I flumes provi :■ ! and (iifcheg dug, so
that every11 . g y in tip-top shape for
a successful yield.
" homing with immortal beaut v ; of, ' I:, 'nt : . d of the House, to carry W. S-ptemher 24 to 0<";b. r i. Idl-
, ' ,. . ;t t> • rf {M« r,- The r, hool will be b-11 tha serond
-its brooks of .laugher and its - v.opk cP u e big fair, opemn? on Mon-
rivers 01 M ig iii.d J i ■ ]>;:"<■ > i «-tvr- tiay, Sertember aad continuing
nal love. 1 long haAre dreamed jPEANUTS G00D F0R POULTRY (throughout the six days, it wT. be
that every bird which sings its
life here may sing forever there
ill the I re I l' ii;'.-. i: 1 < on-
seerated soul that suffers here
may rest among its flowers and
live and love forever. I long have
dreamed of opal tower sand bur-
nished domes, but what care
Unusually Delicious Flavor
by a Goober Diet
! boys' ard <;:"ls' week in the building
mparted • re:r -J tsi't rir y for ilie A. and M.
I collego by the State "air a?'^'clation.
On" hundred •uid twenty b and
t20 girls are eligible to attend tho
pas' staie lilir school this year. The
Demonstration Farm Profits
For the vejir lf.12 the Ury an county
demonstration farm of thirty-five acres
y-e!' • 1 a net or.sh profit of $1,511.
; Ten acres was planted to corg, fifteen
acres to cotton and ten acres to oatt.1
| Love county comes second with s
profit pf ? ' i.
"Several tlirrs during the
p-.r. says Cottrsll, i have eaten. . .^ooi jg conducted by the college in
.Vrd chicken and roast chicken from j co-or-ration with the Bute fair, and
•ire's that had Spanish peanuts as a pro,;df.s for the bo,s and girls at-
I art of their ration. The flavor was | tending a wee«c s work in agriculture
mid domestic economy and an oppor-
GREATLY REDUCED
RATES FOR STATE FAIR
badly in need of another boiler.
Some may say "why lock the
door after the horse has been
stolen" but to those we will say
"lock the door before any more
are stolen." There is no doubt
but that the time will come and
that not far distant, when day
service will be required. It is
very badly needed at the present
time. Many fans would be buz-
Acting Governor McAlester
it seems has accomplished anoth-
er of his coups. While the le-
gality of the school book con-
tracts were to be determined by
the state Supreme Court in Sep-
tember. State Supt. Wilson
says in the Oklahoman: '' When
I left my office at 7:30 (pretty
long hours) Friday evening I
picked up an afternoon paper
for gat of pearl or street of gold if j 'r^,OTI8- B
I can meet the I ved ones who h : °f^ lunity ,0 8ce th" fair iu a r'!"asant
, ,, ( , nil i c a ^ ' 1 ,l f ■■ s"',n,-h peanuts could tell and pr0fltablo manner. In ad.iiiiou to
ha\e blessed me here, and see the , hat proportion of the feed the nuts the sMC}a^bnilding put up for the ex-
glorified faces of father and moth- iiould f .- to -are the best flamj ^Usive use of the school, the college
er and the baby brother who died jind non* eould t.;:i «ie best Viili furnjtoh a big tent far general
among the bursting buds of hope, wa/T . _ . , meetings and where the boys will be
•mil t'ike into mv 'inns mv leiliv • ', ' ' ^ J" on oth^r housed. The girls will live in the A.
ai d take into my arms my baby ^imcis the bpan.sh peanut wii be and M coll bul'dingi which is
.who fell asleep ere her little f .special value to feed in liberal qua.,- , mMeni ,n every respect, havlm; con.
tongue had learned to lisp. "Our to. mou ting h^ns. The cured. Qrete floors eleclric Iights ail
(Father who art in heaven." r p^rt- v#!ne" and ^ conta,"s ;3ther conveniences. The building is
"What care I for crown of stars fa°t proteiD an over .50x100 feet on the north sido ot ice
and harp of gold if I can loveand -it will probably be a profitable ground ccmPrisms lh®
laugh and sing with them forever feed to give In limited quantities to ; The daily pr0RTam for the wePk
in the smile of my Saviour and h>"'is- *n(1 in conslderab.e quan- wi„ lectures and demonstra-
, tides to broilers and older fowls that ■ 6ubj#cU , t
are being fattened | hom^ #COQOm|cs and rurR,
"For fattening It must be fed with , fairg> leein( the fair and geelng 0klv
W1 homa City and Its Industrial and pleas-
ure sights. This work in all its details
Lettuce An Early Crop wUl be under the direct supervision of
Lettuce growing is so simple that members of the faculty ef the A. and
McAlester Okla Aug 3 Th'' ,,ttle can ba Bai'1 about 'L Th# >w<1 M. college.
state of Oklahoma probabiy has "6 ™al1: f,nd he^e ,haTe , '° r , , u , , ~
. , . t. ' , . ,, planted shallow. The dry winds of Fate of El(jht Bridesmaid*.
the largest cotton patch in the
my God.
State Owns 800 Aeres Cotton.
I corn, kaflr or milo, or the flesh
j be too soft and too oily."
jlng continually through these and found that the governor had
extremely hot days. Then, too, j gone to Kansas City. After con-
if we bed an extra boiler they ferring with two or three indi-
woukl both . i*t longer from the viduals, went to the lieutenant's
of
aur springs occasionally blow the i ' Three times a bridesmaid never a
| state. On the penitentiary farm e# d away before It has a chance to bride." runs the old matrimonial warn-
,adjoining this city there is a field germinate. If It gets well started It ing, but seemingly there is danger In
Of 800 acres It is not onlv a large S UBUaIly P"0*'8 wel1' p%"lcularl>' 0D being a bridesmaid onoe. Judging from
r-teh hut this vear there i* nu rich' hpaV"y mannr|,d «r0UDd ^ ^ remarkable confesslc made by a
patch, but this year there IS an gocrpt of mak|Bg a goo4 quality of prominent society worn Ji recently.
exceptionally nne crop on it and lettuce, that Is. crisp, tender lettuce, ^t her wedding there were eight
■ if something unusual does not OC- is to keep it growing fast for ion bridesmaids, all of whom have since
cur it will yield nearly, if not ^ water and ban- married, but not one of whom is now
quite, a bale to the acre. rard vln« wlth ber huBband
Greatly reduced rates have been
secured for the seventh annual Okla-
homa State Fair and Exposition, Okla-
homa City, September 23 to October
4. The rate for the entire fair period
will be two cents a mile each way
on all railroads, and on two days the
rate will be one fare for round trip.
Already passenger m^n are getting,
ready to handle the largest crowds
in the history of Oklahoma. They say
that in recent years the traffic during
State Fair time has been steadily
growing and they are expecting to
handle anywhere from 250,000 to 500,-
000 people during the twelve days
of the Fair this year.
The open two cent rate will be in
force daily during the Fair, the min-
imum selling fare being $1, and the
final limit on the day following the
close of the Fair.
Dates for the one fare for the round
trip are yet to be selected, and will be
announced in ample time. It is equiv-
alent to one and one-half rents a mile
each way, and is the best ever before
given the people of Oklahoma on any |
occasion. Thousands and thousands i
of Oklahoma people will take advan-
tage of the open rate of two cents as
well as the excursion rates, making
it possible for the greatest number
of Oklahoma's populaUon of nearly
two million persons to attend what
promises to be the greatest State Fair
and Exposition In hlatory.
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Forster, Warren D. The Sentinel Leader. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 54, Ed. 1 Friday, August 8, 1913, newspaper, August 8, 1913; Sentinel, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc273444/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.