Cashion Advance. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 2, 1901 Page: 1 of 8
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Cashion
VOL. I-
CASHION. OKLAHOMA. THURSDAY. MAY 2, 1901.
NO. 47.
A. L. HOUSEWORTH and
J. L. HOUSEWORTH,
Physicians
AND Surgeons.
All calls answered promptly
day or night.
Office—North Main st.
Is>ieGGL s
sTOvei?
Attorneys at LaW
CASHION, OKI.A.
Cyrus Phillips,
Carpenter and
Contractor.
Plans and Estimates furnished on
on application.
All work guaranteed first-class.
CASHION, - - O. T.
HOYT BROS.
All Work Warranted,
Repairing Neatly Done.
FOIl AN
li Z Shave
Hair Cut
Call on
W. IVI. Gf?A [ IT
Also agent for Wichita Steam I.aun-
dry. All work guaranteed.
A.
M. FOLLETT,
Contractor
Stone, Brick,
AND
, Plastering.
Arch Caves and Cisterns u Specialty.
W. E. WARWICK.?
NOTARY PUBLIC.
All work in this line prompt-
ly attended to.
J. R. LYNDS.
Contractor
and
Builder . . .
Plans and specifications furnished.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
T. GIPSON.
Veterinary
Surgeon.
Dental Work a Specialty.
Satisfaction guaranteed on all work.
Will
be ft
Cashion ev
Postoilice address,
an s liarn
Saturday.
Nagte, Olda.
Washington Letter.
(From our regular corn |K>mlt'nt.i
The milk in the Cuban eocoanut is,
it se«ni3, not the l'iatt amendment
but tha tarriff. Although the mem
bers of the committee from the
Cuban Constitutional Convention,
now at Washington, have been
guarded in their talk, it has become
appearent that their object was to
use the Piatt amendment to dicker
for tarriff concessions on sugar and
tobacco, and that the Convention
will swallow the l'iatt at a gulp if
assured of tlio tarriff concessions.
They have, of course, been informed
that it is Congsess and not the ex
ecutive branch of the government
of congress that controls the
tarriff. The President could, if dis
posed, promise to recommed. tariff
concessions in his message to Con
gress, but there are numerous
reasons why he is not likely to do so.
chief of which the strength of the
interests in this country that would
be affected bv any tariff favors
shown t.) Cuban sugar and tobacco.
While the Cubans arc not making
any headway in the official object ol
their visit to Washington, they
have no cause to complain of the
warmth of their welcome or of their
entertainment. The President *nd
Mr*. McKinley gave a state dinner
in their honor last night, at which
they met the most prominent men
in Washington, lien Wood says
there is no doubt that the Piatt
amendment will be adopted, aud
that the information gained by the
Cubans will result in hastening
action.
A book just published by the gov
eminent " The History of the Cap
ital of United States' —which, by
the wav, is the handsomest book
ever turned ou'. by the tinvcrument
Printing office recalls the generally
forgotten but interesting fact that
the original idea was to make the
rotunda of the Capital a inonsoleum
,>f Washington. The idea was s,
far carried out that Congress adopt-
ed a resolution dedication# the ro-
tunda as the final resting place of
Washington's remains, and the con-
sent of the Washington family was
obtained. Subsequently, howerve,
Virginia protested against the n
movul of the reiuuins from Ml. \ er-
non, and in 1832 the owner of the
estate withdrew the family contest;
and the idea was abandoued.
One by one the traditions of the
past are swept away. Who has not 1
read in the past, with a thrill of
admiration, of the Indian under
sentence of death, who could be
turned loose on his honor with the
certainty that he would appear at
the time set for his execution and
pay the penalty? Mr. Raymond
Herz, a United States deputy mar-
shal in Indian Territory, who is vis-
iting Washington, thus disposed of
that tradition: "The story of Iiuli
ans under peualty of death being let
out 011 furlough and scrupulously
returning at an appointed date to !
be shot do well enough for old times,
but they don't occur in these mod-
ern days. A Choctaw Indian, who
had been condemned to death,
escaped, and it was two years be
fore we found him."
The old wrangle about the free
distribution of seeds by the Depart
nient of Agrictlture was given a
fresh start this week by the publi-
cation of charges made by the
Wholesale Seedinen'K League, alleg-
ing irregularities in the distribu-
tion and that ths government was
being d 'frauded by the use of small-
er pack .ges than bad heretofore
been used. Secretary Wilson denies
most positively either that there h
any irregularity or that the govern
ment is not gettiog all it. pays for.
He says that the seeds are bought
in bulk by the government and that
the packages were made smaller so
that a greater number of persons
j could be supplied, and that the only
Do You Want
c\
Harness?"
or
5o Go to
C. li. MAK1MOTT, The Hardware Mail.
pss
W promptly procured. OR NO TEE. Send in< dcl, • l.ctch.Vs ^ I'OSUlt of Ills
w or photo l<r free report on patent*! iitv. H,«>k How w ..
W to Obtain I'.S ami F'Tftgn PuteiitsnndTrad-MarU.s.'w V-d'Olll! V liJi\ tt
QC FREE I n', t t Tili« ever o!L d t > inventors lA
(V PATENT LAWYER8 OF 2« YEARS' PRACTICE &
Europe for his health. .Mr. Loomi*
sa"s that the asphalt trouble ii
Venezuela has been greatly exag
gerated by publications in thi-
country.
Tlio President and Secretary Root
have decided that 7ILOOO --liall be the
maximum strength of the regular!
ariuy, unless some new trouble in
the Philippines make it necessary t"
enlist a larger number of men. and
that the full number of officers anth
orized shall be appointed. There
will be just as many companies a-
though the full number of men au
I ho li zed were enli-ted, but there
will t) • fewer men in each company
The number of soldiers to be kept
ill the Philippines will lie decided by
circumstances, but no great ivduc
tion of the present number is looked
for in the immediate future. The
lighting over there is thought to tie
about over, but. the pies nee of the
troops is thought to be necessary a-
a reminder to anv resile s Kilipin >
that peace and quiet less ;. desired.
Cubans are not th • only persons
who fail to understand the lin.ita
tions of the President's authority
undor our form of government. Tlie
Postmaster General has liai his a*
tea tion called to a p "titi on— one of
the duplicated kind—to the Presi ,
dent, which is being circn at ed 1 it'
signers among the retail in -reliant1-
of the South and Mi i11'A 1 st. org
ing him to prevent t' e t.i'.is 1,
ment of a system of donn .-tie par-
cels post by the postefli. e depart-
ment It would seem that every
business man ought to hue v that
the President bad nothing to do
with it matter of this kind and thai
the Post Office Department cannot
establish any system not specifically
provided for by act of congress As
a matter of fact, the present postal
laws provide for the carrying of
inerehandis • in packages of four
pounds or less to any part of the
country, Canada or Mexico, at the
rate of one cent an ounce, as thev
have done for several years pi-t.
I The
lu Teitll,
Bee ami I,
e more I
c-ach tin"
big fabrlt
1 Ku 11 ile.
\>.
Marv Hh
more 1
ese textiles th
that we ran t
the art of ma!>
er in Fibre an
them rapid production
we ran do. Their era
and silk, aiv marvelous i
Our women are wild ;ii Ii"
sions as to the beau : s >t' th
crapes. I have a piece of b.-uc
♦o h; ve been wovt 11 by or< <>f i
£uns 2">0 years ago. and .t leo
arn of Japan-
i but little in
a, -..ys u wiit-
We t an teach
but this is all
■s. bull cotton
Suctions.
• Sho-
as i
the statement v.
in^ at art with up
ful as any bro« ; '
loom- of France i
are still brilliant
But the produt lio
must have been.
where we w.av.
would tax the I' s
p: est nt day to w. ;
cade. '1 here are so m
the des'^n is so intrIc-
on which theve r ri
woven w# re verj
for vt .y low w.
ui s almo c
Japancs do n i
need < u
ihe re.it
it
is t i 1
but it i> ts b au i
ev r v\ v n ia t.i
d ti ■ m . iy r 1 r.
I 'yon 1 e\; «
' Oh. how slow i
they wove indie
yards, and yet i
machinei y
e this pie
iy
mil
fnbr:(
p ada
tf tho
of bro
irs and
> luoms
were
marl. i;
is, with
i 1 om working
making th li.u
I), ha ' I. Th •
our sUil); the;,
nd tlicy will do
Mil I !M
In L
i if<*
muii'i
Saver.
iced that when
w,l
when
l diniinum
irevalent
troubles are pirn!1
• compelled to inhi
ion. too, often gets
th.i
-t is blowing,
ful when peo
tie dust. Con-
its start from
If you <1<
or iViviua
Town Lots.
>ire choice i < -idrncQ or'
ts in Cashion. Uuedino,
see I). F. Smith.
the dusL CJier illnesses almost equal-
ly grave follow from the breathing of
flytrg pprticlcs of filth. Add suflirient
watf r to transform the dust into mud,
and the power for harm is gone, for
mud is not inhaled. The germs that
infest dry dust become inert in mud,
because these germs, vicious as they
are are too lazy to go anywhere un-
1 ss they are carried. Moreover, niiei
is very likely to get ultimately into the
drain pipe, and the g"rms are carried
ofi wli ' e th*' ;n do no harm. ICvmi
when mud drirs on the clothing and U
brushed off fhe dust that arises there
from does not appear to be as danger-
ous as that which has not been recent-
ly wet. I cplie'b Weekly.
V >
=mn, ,'t
A c. HOI STON. s I. HOCSTOX.
Houston Bros.,
L. L. WOOUS. Manager.
Jllli!!', Li, mimic
iiiii
Cement, Pnints. Oils, Varnishes,
All Kinds of Building Material,
\ N I >
CO.A L.
Cashion. Oklahoma.
Are You doing to
Try The Long'-Bell Lumber Go.
s nsyiRPR CO A!
Sash, Doors, Moulding, Paints and Oils,
C. W. LUDWICK, Local Agt. Cashion, O. T.
fcLft-cm
9
TfiPT 1< A W 1 tilltl Itnno i n n v \v
® 20,000 PATENTS PROCURED THROUGH THEM A
«'| I n1U. - - ,■ in ti,lent ■■■1 mlvnv t iiitliful It
[S..rvk-i-. M"<li rato flliai.
iwt," C. A. SNOW & CO,
PATENT LAWYERS,
mOpp. U. S. Patent Office,
WASHINGTON, D. 0®
reason for the charges is opposi
tiou to the free distribution of seeds
by the government.
Mr. Francis B. Loomis, United
States Minister to Venezuela,
reached Washington this week, and
conference with
official denial
that Mr. Lootnis had been recalled,
at, the request of the President of
Venezuela or for any other cause,
was made public. It was further
stated that Mr. Loomis is 011 leave
of absence, granted at his own re-
quest and that he will go to
'"I'llr
World Renowned
Deering Binder
Best on Earth,
For Sale by
IVI EARS & BOWLS N,
Call and examine before buying.
We also handle the
Canton Buggies,
Mitchell Wagons,
Spring Wagons, Sulky Plows, Har-
rows. Cultivators, Buckeye Grain
Drills, Pumps, Wind Mills.
also a full line of
HARDWARE,
Tin and Granite vVare, Forks,
{Scoops, Spades, etc.
Ol R PRICES ARE THE LOWEST. GIVE IIS A CALL
MEARS &
ROBB &
ITJlGva/tcr 13
Grain and Coal
Are prepared to handle any grain offered
at goinsr market prices.
Also handle McAlester Coal, and respect-
fully solicit your patronace.
A. L. FlsheFv, Manager.
Pioneer Drug Store,
BROOKS A STONE, Proprietors CASHION, O. T.
"P \ F," *5 ? (f'V*rN
- " LJI UHb ^
1 1
Wall Paper, Paints, Oils and Hard Oil,
Patent Medicines, Toilet, Articles,
A full line of School Books and Supplies.
o-le - M
ft H h
Rciik i.i iV; I v Hit A It. l'ropric
\\ !iol, s:ite Dealers in
ASK V( IJR G ROC KB l'"OR THE
WHite jJ'rcBt cr O-ilt Edg'e
PLOITE.
R, H. BILLINGS, Manager. J
JOHN LONG NECK ER. C. ENGLAND.
Longnecker & England,
iuiil JLilJlulU lillli iui
Also Insurance on City and
Parm Building.
A net Ion sal's cried on reasonable terms^
Offl -e at Hotel Maine, Cashion, O. T.
DONALDSON, The Blacksmith.I
M () K S PI S ri () 101 N (J,
1 MF/HK V;i!RK. I'liOW V/; KIi Ji fiPKt'lflhTY. ]
A (jr.-t class v -ignn inuk- r in c innection with this shop.
D. F. S M 1 T H,
P -1
U ^ •- *
Money on Fai'ms and
Town Property
Well located town lots a specialty.
CASHION, OKLAHOMA.
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Cashion Advance. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 2, 1901, newspaper, May 2, 1901; Cashion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc102638/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.