The Sentinel Leader. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, April 26, 1918 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sentinel Newsboy and Sentinel Leader and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Our Summer
Reduction Sale
of Hats will begin
Friday, April 19
and continue thoroughout
season.
Our stock will be kept re-
plenished by new hats and
trimmings each week.
Do not fail to see our hats
and get our prices.
Mrs. B. F. Burke
Milliner
Sentinel, Okla
-jI SOME OF THE POINTS OF
|1 CLAUDE MILLERS PLATFORM
I Propose to Go to Congress On i
Win the War Platform From a
Bread and Meat Basis, and
Looking at it From an Agricul-
tural District Standpoint
Your Monuments
Onp 8L*t:
■ l U LI til L UNDERDOWN & SHEPHERD, Prop.
Hob&n Rlarble IIOrKS Hobart, Oklahoma
Prompt
Service
la what you want when
you order
Coal Oil,
Gasoline
Lubricating Oil
Or anything in that line.
Call 15 and get that ser-
vice.
Rodgers
Oil Company
E A. Stapp. Manager
Sentinel
Hospital
C. M. TRACY
0
Surgeon in Charge
Dependable train-
ed nurses always at
your service, in hos-
pital or at your
homes.
The Leader has Claude Miller’s
announcement this week. Mr.
Miller spent Saturday in Sentinel
'shaking hands with his many old
time friends here. He is making
| an active campaign and will ad-
dress our citizens at some later
date, after the Liberty Bond
campaign is entirely over. Be
1 >w you will find some of the
points in his platform:
Win the War
I believe we are going to win
this war, and WE MUST WIN
IT and do so as fast as possible.
Why waste a moment of unnec-
essary time or waste a single un-
necessary lifej Let’s do it now
and with all our might, as it has
to be done.
Encourage Bread and Meat
Raising
If a price is set on wheat, let’s
put it on ail other commodities.
1 fear setting prices of farm
products is like monkeying with
a buzz saw, or facing a famine.
Let’s give every bit of encour
agement possible to the produc-
ers of wheat and hogs, as well
as a.l other eatables.
Move Without Profit
If we are strong enough to
conscript the railroads, we are
surely strong enough to move
corn from Iowa or other corn dis-
tricts (by the Government, with-
out profit at either end of the
line) into a district that has not
raised an ear of corn for two
years. I would have insisted on
Mr. McAdoo awfully strong to
move the said corn if Mr. Hoover
thought price-fixing on corn im-
practicable.
Congressmen Must Know Needs
I believe that the implement
makers, the hide and leather
dealers, the bullet manufacturers
and the Iowa corn fellows were
too strong for our representative.
If we keep up the present lick
on wheat, cirn and hogs, there
will be a famine in the U. S. and
the Western European front in
less tnan two years. Let’s try
to keep the men who are on farms
there and encourage production,
else many farmers may seek
work in which there is more pay.
End War and Force Peace
!l
Senioriy
I have been a visitor to the
National Congress for twenty
years; knowing all the delegation;
most of the representatives from
New Mexico and Texas, and
many from Arkansas and Ken-
tucky. I do not think it would
be fair to say my experiences
arc not at least equal to those of
the present incumbent.
Prohibition
I am in favor c f and shall work
for bo*h national and interna-
tional prohibition.
Our Boys Over There and in
Camps
If it takes all the wealth of our
country to care for our soldiers,
l say take the wealth. Those
boys are doing the most noble
thing that has ever yet been
done. The fathers and mothers
of those boys have a right to de-
mand the spending of the wealth
of this nation to care for the boys
who have gone to the front. How
little seems the part of those
‘who have but gold to giue/’
End All Large Fortunes
At the Oklahoma City meeting
Secretary Lane said that this
war is the beginniog of the end
f ali large fortunes in the U. S.
and I hope to be ab!e to see that
that statement is carried out, and
jelieve the radical profiteer is as
c angerous to our country as the
radical I. W. W. or Bolsheviki.
Patriotism Pre-War Opinions
It is commonly known that
every good American, regarcLss
of his pre-war opinions, has now
taken his stand in the ranks for
lis country, and as Biyan says:
“All arguments are closed,” and
we cannot now be too careful in
criticising any persons gre-war
opinion, because all are giving
up their sons and are making
sacrifices for our country. In
order to properly maintain our
republican form of Government,
we must concede to every patri-
otic and honest American the
right to his pre- war opinion.
Reconstruction
In the great reconstruction
period ahead we must surely look
out for the welfare of the plow
and hoe. Great industries are to
be put where the raw material
is produend, and our agricultural
districts must have equal show
with the gigantic centers of the
eaet, and the common people
must have men to stand up fer
the great common cause. - -Adv
KING’S MEAT MARKET
Has been overhauled, Enlarged and new furni-
ture installed, and we now have one of the most
UP TO DATE MARKETS
Sentinel ever had. Ccme in and see, and see how neatly
we have our market arranged. Pirvri II
We will soon add KRAUT, MACKEREL, PICKLES. I
and manv other lines usually found in a Meat Market
M. O. KING, Proprietor
Dr. Richardson,
Painless Dentist
Crown, Bridge and Plate ork a Specialty. All work
Absolutely Guaranteed
Office over
Oklahoma State Bank
Sentinel, Okla
PROTECT^
YOUR
CATTLE mm*
y - •
m
Simplest, safest, surest way to vaccinate cattle against Blackleg.
No Dose to Measure. No Liquid to Spill. No String to Rot.
ASK FOB FREE BOOKLETS.
you saxis BY
BARTON drug store
A Texas Wonder
FISK
Th« Tir*
Of Greatest Service
GIVE US YOUR CAR
For a few minutes and
we know we can re-
pair it to suit you.
Our work is done
right and best mate-
rials are used. If *ts
not right, we make it
right___-
PlaHe’* f
Garage
whueLEGHORN
I will sell eggs
from my White
Leghorn pens
at $2.00 per set-
ting of 15.
These are from
the best strains in
the country and the
birds are all well
marked.
Mrs. ROBE’T TROTTER
PR. R. W SIPPLE
Veterinarian
Seutinel - - Oklahoma
The Ambulance
BAPTIST CHURCH
Preaching-first and third Sun
days.
Conference-2:30 p. m. on Sat-
urday before the third Sunday.
Sunday school every Sunday at
eleven o’clock. N. Taylor. Supt
Praver meeting at 7:30 Thurs-
day evening. Y. F. Walker.
Pa* tor
As soon as a victorious and
honorable peace may be had, 1
believe in an International Con-
gress, Court and Constitution,
and an International army to
absolutely police any unruly or
warring nation on the earth; a
Congress formed by all the civil-
ized nations to pervent war, and
to actually force nations to a
Court of Arbitration, and stop
the manufacturing of war muni-
tions only under the direction of
the International Congress.
Swapping Horses Now
In the midst of the greatest
battle ever fought on earth the
allied nations changed generals
and put in General Foch. In the
midst of her fearful trials, Great
Britain swapped Asquith for
Lloyd George. Why? Efficiency!
A man who had the experience;
a man who knew the needs; a
man who dares to do or die.
Junketing Trips-Garden Seed-
Franking
All of my life I have been op-
posed to twenty cent mileage for
congressmen or officials to take
junketing trips to Hawaiian Is-
lands and other pleasure resorts
at the expense of the public, es-
pecially in war times, and am
against the garden seed waste,
and the franking of letters for
political purposes.
Conscript Munition Plants
If I go to Congress, I shal
favor the conscription of every
munition factory, and do not be-
lieve that one cent of profit
phould be allowed made on the
bullets while the blood is going
free.
A Little Irrigation
If a few of our creek valleys
could have some encouragement
in irrigation, we could raise
enough alfalfa in a dry year to
feed every work team in the
Seventh District, and could buy
it around $15.00 p3r ton instead
of shpping it a thousand miles
and paying $35.00.to $40.00 per
ton.
The Texas Wonder cures kid
ney and bladder troubles, dis
3olves gravel, cures diabetis.
weak and lame backs, rheuma-
tism, and irregularities of the
kidneys and bladder in both men
and women. Regulates bladder
troubles in children. If not sold
t • _ x .... 1 1 L-. „ r, n T » \Y-
M************4***********
Hail Insurance
$24.00
PER
ACRE
by your druggist, will be sent by
mail on receipt of $l.u0. One
small bottle is two months’ treat-
ment, and seldom fails to perfect
a cure. Send for sworn testi-
monials. Dr. E. W. Hall, 2926
Olive Street, St. Louis. Mo,
NOTICE—DEMAND for TAX DEED
To the owners of the following de-
scribed real estate, situated in Washita
county, Oklahoma:
Lots 16 and 17 in block 37, of the
first addition to the town of Sentinel,
Washita county, Oklahoma.
You will take notice that the under-
signed, G. W. Reaves, is the holder of
tax sale certificates number 6 7 < and
678 of the 1915 sale of 1914 taxes on
tne above described property and un-
less redemption from said sale be made
within sixty (60) days after the first
publication of this notice, a tax deed
will be demanded and will be issued as
provided by law.
G. W. Reeves,
Holder of Certificates
First published in the Sentinel Leader
April 5 1918 12-19 26
INVESTMENTS
can
Household Goods For Sale
I have several articles of fur-
niture for sale, good as n ew
Two good oil stoves, and one of
Bolon’s New Majestic renges,
which is a $loo stove and has
been used only six weeks. Chair,
cabinets, tables, nice sideboard,
writing desk and several cooking
utensils. Inquire at City Hotel.
Mrs. G. F. Megnin, Prop.
kmum
‘Hunt's Cure" Is guaranteed to
stop and permanently cure that
•errible Itching, it is com-
pounded for that purpose and
rour money will be promptly
refunded without question
If Hunt s Cure falls Vo cure
Itch, llcsema.Tetter. King Worm
or any other akin dlsea»a. we
the box.
For sal* locally by
Barton Drug Company
SENTINEL, OKLA
We lead in HAIL Insurance
THIS SEASON
Loss adjusted and paid in shortest time.
i i Come in and t&lk it over
Absolutely no delay
TORNADO SEASON “°ne°'°ur
Insurance that insures—IS IT
Sea that you have plenty of Tornado Insurance
We told you last year that
The National would make T
money—IT DID We want to tell you now that THE OWL Petrol- |
eum Company has even greater possibilities. Better buy all you J
m now, while you can buy it at the par value of $1.00 per share. J;
CALL AND WE WILL TELL YOU ALL ABOUT IT !,
THERE IS NONE OTHER LIKE IT !!
Elk Vally Land Company ;i
Roper Building, SENTINEL, OKLAHOMA j
: Your Governments
Fa Ua
. M
Says buy your coal now as there will be another ^
shortage next winter and it may be more serious
than last winter.
We have about 400 tons in our bins. Get your
supply while you can. ^
Help Win The War- 5
by buying now and let the factory and ships have
the coal next winter when the coal supply is short. *
to
J. C. Wolfenbarger'd
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Fields, John. The Sentinel Leader. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, April 26, 1918, newspaper, April 26, 1918; Sentinel, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc937899/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.