Cashion Advance. and Oklahoma State. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 15, 1906 Page: 1 of 2
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Asktandye skull recieve,
tfj and ye shall find,knock
and it shell be cptntd unto
yoM.—<fiib'.c.
; aw .v .v >\w «i
Cashion
OKLAHOMA STATE.
AN J3
V 'MWaVJIMJVXNAU W.Wf
It Where thare are
^ 1- ree Men, thoy wlilj
5 muKe themselves j
| heard. —Jefferson
aw«w;
VO.VI1.
CASHION, OKLAHOriA. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 15 ioof\
NO. 24.
**sm>u
Entire timi* will hereafter be Uevot
♦•J to the practice of law. Twenty-,
ears • ■xpericm-e. Largest
in Western Oklahoma.
lingfislwr, O.T.
Lest You Forget
If
i+
;H+++ttv+r+++vTT++«-t-H^-+-:-+ ••:••
jjl Say Jim
I
!
Dr. G. A. Nichols *, l. Houseworth and
/, .<r n -1 !• L- Houseworth,
Dr.C.W. Raymond P!ivs,cians
DENTIST nr.d SURGEONS.
V!1 call answered promptly 1
rfiy or night
office—Kcrth Main Street
IN CASHION
Every Monday
Bassett BWg- Oklahoma City,'
h. WEIXEI, |
Cashier. 2
X S. W, BOG AN. A. L. HOUSEiYORTFT,
♦ Pros iijt-r. t. Vice-Preside-it.
1 FIRST MAL BANK 3FCASHI0N 1
.t *No. eiei. ♦
* i
Money to Loan on Chattel
Or Commercial Paper,
t Notarv hublic in Office- Taxes Paid for Non-residents.
W. II' IGAN
A. L. lloUH woiiTn
liJItKCTOUS: |
E. L WELCH W. K. Warwick 3
]
N'. M. Hooan
^SCEsjbt^
New Era Paint
/."s p:i'f paint every atom oi it
Ti-crc -re ncrc square feci cf covering serfsce - better
c*c:\: ; urfacv in a dollar's worth cf New Era Pd.it thin
in i uciU '•• worth of sny other paint made.
r.uy Ntvv l. .1 K.r.tyou buy glass, by the square foot,
in : .->i of by ;hc g;\l!on. Hint's rual economy. New Era
Pj«it always loo Is b.-st, defies weather and endures longest.
We will pve you color ttrd anil proofs cf whit we say
abo|i: New Era quality.
Atrnje by th* far^eii Palm and Varrtntj oaSrrj Hi Amrrto«.
Acme White Lcttd & Color Works, Detroit. Mich
C >w KZL- v^,- \
S&x. •.isv.sa
hi oriK- : > luce ou.t • .v Era Paint \vc
sell you regular color*; at 1 ">0 Per (>al. This paint is.
guarantesd absolutly pure none better.
The •Leading Druggists,
' r
"y **9«
'? *
• - - V •' •:? ; il l
.... S£SJ <if?
-DE A!
E, W. SIBLEY LOCAL MEAGER.
Ii t irf Kliii'l boni) frrt(fiai't nl rluo.
!«■ utpli' I.onl that i !u>r tli no
'• '*i !%<«11ml Onk t« .' ir> h"UM' Itr] t >
, i<1 > r)t feff thfldrl' ■ a 'I •'
i A'
i>*.
-'/lSTovrrs
iPANCtS
rv nw a c
«4 f av
A complete stock of the oelob.atocl
Round Oak StoveS
klio farniture &: Household Equipment.
J. A. SHAW
aucl S ' :1 ii'I ''i't • ->f
I Decs a General Eankinp; Business I
We again call your attention to the fact that
v.Te have the biggest, best, freshest and clean-
est grocery stock in town. We have also
added for the convenience of our friends, a
small but select line of men's shiris. lioss,
overalls, sweaters, handkerchiefs ect.
Come iu, if you don't know us and get ac-
quainted anyhow
Carver's Grocery
It you are : going to Cashion
brmg'me out an empty oarrel of
Hour for to make a chicken
house [for me dog to live in.
You can "get it where all the
people get the best quality of
groceries at the lowest price,
at
X.Smith &Co,
A HOLD Ul' ON WHEELS.
Circular letters sent out to dealers by
the Implement trust predict that the
retail price of farm wagons is to be
pushed up to $100. The trust logic is
that it is not "business" to take less
than a hundred as long as their com-
plete system enables them to compel
the farmers to pay that price.
a farm wagon can be finished, even
in a small factory, and put onto the
marker complete at a cost of $3u. The
Advance can cite you to an experienced
and well informed wagon maker for
verificaton of this fact.
Yet no private capital will invest in
the establishment of a wagon factory
for the reason that the trust would cer-
tainly swallow or kill any private facto-
ry that might be established.
Now are the intelligent farmers of
Oklahoma content to continue paying
more than three times tlie cost for all
the wagons they will use during their
natural 'ifetime, and to leave that price-
less legacy of daylight robberry to their
children.
The cost of a single legislative junk-
et would equip a wagon factory that
could manufacture all the wagons used
in the state. Such a factory need not
necessarily he operated by convict la-
bor: there should be no law against giv-
ing an honest man a job.
Since the corporations and trusts
have annihilated natural competition
and have organized a merciless and
conscienceless olligarchy within the
nation, the people must turn to the
state itself as tiikik corporation and
use its powers to protect themselves
from the greed of the piratical mono-
polies. Now in the time of forming out-
organic law we should lay the founda-
tion of these enterprises.
The farmers of Oklahoma have a
right to buy farm wagons at a reasona-
ble profft above cost. And when com-
pelled to pay two or three times that
much they are being robbed and the
papers and the parties who see it done
and do not protest arc unworthy of
the farmers support.
What will bring victory to the repub-
lican party in Oklahoma? The Jour-
nal would be pleased to see every Ok-
lahoma republican tell us next week
— Perkins Journal.
The Advance uninvited butts in:
(iet up a great excursion to the Phil*
ipiues, Japan or elsewhere, and take a-
long about 10 of the prominent repub-
lican leadsrs,(no use to name them) and
somewhere far away—lose them.
A * -iir lend of Kroovwl rooflny and ubipUp jmt t ■
flint at th.. \rlAii as_l
"Equal rights to all and special priv-
clegcs to none."is the motto of equita-
ble government. This leads one to en-
quire why an equitable government
should grant a special privelege to any
one citizen to sell liquid damnation to
bis fellow citizens, and distribut devil-
try and disturbance in a quiet neigh-
borhood.
The whole liquor license system is
wrong and rotten and unjust and a rel-
ic of barbarism. If it is unsafe to trust
in the hands of all it is unsafe to trust
in the hands of any one. The business
is either public or private: if public the
public should conduct it: if private it
should be open to all.
Since the prohibition interest seems
to have committed suicide in the last
campaign, and thoughtful citizens do
not'desire to see the political as well as
the social and moral corruption that
will ensue with the continuance of the
license system. It might be well to
consider the State Dispensary system—
the whole retail business in the hands
of state officials, the profits going to
the school fund.
This system has been outlined before
in the Advance. A few advantages are:
No gathering of loafers No treating
Nosale to minors or drunkards. .Sales-
men have no interest in increasing
sales. No alluring furniture or decor-
ations. Better inspection of liquor
sold. Less number of salesmen requir-
ed, and the others liberated to engage
in productive industry. Saloon inter-
est eliminated from politics, and the
display of saloon prosperity no longer
demoralizing the young & thoughtless.
FARM LOANS.
F. L. Holing of Kingfisher Okla., rep-
ersents the only Company doing bus-
iness in this county who will make
you a farm loan without charging any.
commission. You get all you give
your note for. One note one mortgage
Money payed as soon as your title is
approved. Long time and easy pay-
ments, if desired, any way to suite you
Call or write and your business will
receive prompt attention.
Roy*i
Bakinf Powder
Absolutely
Pure
OISTINCTIVKLY A CREAM Or
TARTAR BAKINO POWDM
Royal does not contain an atom
of phoaphaUc acid (which ia
the product of bones digested
in sulphuric acid) or of alum
(which Is one-third sulphuric
acid) substances adopted for
otljer baiting powders because
T IS,Abercronit>lo .I.tiopkiiis, H#2Ml rray
llarvy Stewart I>, H \\ oodworth
CO OPERATIVE
A Horn: Enter^r'sa
HIGHEST PRICE FOR COTTON
Ginning done promp lyand reasonbly
"Our Home First, the World Afterward."
To The Business Man
Who is a Business I lan
Means Business and
Expects to Do Business
Yon can not afford to sit
down'this great year of
good crops and liberal
buying with a great stock
of merchandise and mat-
uring bills aad let the bus-
iness goto the other fel-
low. The time to adver-
tise for the fall and winter
trade is right now, and lie
who asks for it will get it.
And will grow and pros-
per in his day and genera-
tion. While he who dis-
dains to appeal to tha
people through the
colums of their home pa-
per will find the people
will disdain to trade witb
him.
Take Rock Island
|t0 Kansas City
rains leave Cushion nt 10 2!> a in IT ie!< Ti'nad so-
viet' is attruotlve.puiok tlinn improved ru.vt bsd, tnurl*
cous employi-n— and llir best meals on nhetls. On** a
passanif*!-, hero lifter steadfast patron.
H will ti* a plenMir* to Ink* car* of you •* the a^Kt
trip I* Kansas City.
E. C, Shoemaker TfttWWI
-;r j
Cashion Okla. f g-' ^
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Woodworth, M. F. Cashion Advance. and Oklahoma State. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 15, 1906, newspaper, November 15, 1906; Cashion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc102922/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.