The State Republican (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1907 Page: 4 of 8
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The State Republican.
ftihllsltud E\v.y by
THi: REPUBLICAN PUBLISHING CO. 1
One Dollar Per Year.
I
I - ffjB .t.n.l.ilit.i nwtWr I tbru«r> /I, ,
lu, ■ u ifu* ni Cordell, o. T., und«r
(lit- . v" C .. i. • "• uli •>. I*7 .
J. w. UTTBRBACK, EDITOR.
FRIDAY, SEPT. £0 1907.
The Volm,. S-t
Wo nr« now numbered with
the "alao rans."
TIITITWTftltttttttttttt
jCocal Stems
Mi:!. I: tit Mil! nUtti
Two bales of cotton came in
lown Tuesday.
Nona Gist returned from Col-!
orado Springs Saturday.
A. H. Knight is here on busi-1
ness from Rocky Ford Colorado,'
Mrs Sam Dupertise- was up
from Hobart Sunday visiting Mrs. i
Lathom.
John Ogle came down from I
Enid Monday lor a few days stay J
with relatives.
Wet or dt j
a pusher for
r, sun or clouds, be
... r your city. Do not
pout because things do not all:
come your way. Majorities are
rirht only when thoy agree with j
us, but it is best, to submit grace-1
fully to the orders of the major-
ity. If the majority favors pro-
gress bo for progress and do
missionary work on the mnjority.
—Times Journal.
The census of Oklahoma just
taken shows the state to have
more people than any one of the
following states in 1900: Arkan-
sas, Colorado, Connecticut, Dele-
ware, Florida, Idaho, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Ma'ne, Maryland,
Montana, Nevada, Nebraska,
New Hampshire, North Dakota,
Oregon, Rhode Island, South
Carolina, South Dakota, Utah,
Vermont, Washington, Westj
Virginia and Wyoming. Okla-
homa's 1,407,000 is as much as j
three or four of the smaller of
the above. This census puts
Oklahoma almost equal with
California, Mississippi and Kan-
sas and by the time of the next
census it will equal any of the.|
state3 named. The showing is a1
remarkable one and no great
city has yet been built, but the
foundation has been laid for one.;
The man who can read that cen- j
sus report and not feel proud of:
tlie state is too dull to live in a
thriving, hustling community, i
He. should move out.
Jake Pankratz has moved his |
hardware store into the R. R.
Redus old stand.
Chas Arnold returned Wednes-
day from Kansas, where he has
been for some time.
A. H. Raasch and O. P. Smith
brought in the election returns
from Bessie Wednesday.
J. W. Miller was in from his
farm in the west end of the (
county Wednesday.
Harve Dean and family re-
turned Sunday from a visit to
Mrs. Dean's relatives in Texas.
According to the special cen-
sus Washita county has a popu-
lation of 22,005 and Cordell 1,393.
Some one broke into the Cold
Storage Saturday night and
about 100 bottles of beer were
taken.
Miss. Willie May Bills came up
from Rocky Wednescay. She
will attend the Cordell Christian (
College.
Prof. Wallace returned to this
city Friday. lie is now ready to
take up his duties as teacher in
the public school.
Sam Hefner returned Monday'
from the hospital at El Reno, J
where he underwent a successful I
operation for appendicitis.
Frank Peitn, who has been in j
this city for the past few days
started Wednesday for his home
in Tucumcarri new Mexico.
We are givmj
of ware at our b
Seo advertiser/!
for particulars.
R. E. Lutz & Sons.
free $7.50 worth
ore next week,
nt in this paper
Hill's Business College.
(OKLAHOMA CIi'Y, OKI A.)
Clyde Nelson who has a $90
position wiih the Oklahoma Cen-
tral Railway Co., nt Purcell, I.
T., paid i'-i a very pleasant visit
last week. He is very much
.pleased wiih his position and lias
a chance for promotion.
VV. J. House lias accepted a
p(i tllaOii .,11 I... ^ • A. v.
C. - n Co., . ' '"V-V City nt
The eight months old son of Mr.,
and Mrs. .J. D. Monroe, died at;
their residence, September 13th,1
he was sick but a few days. The j
bereaved parents thank their j
friends and neighbors for their
kindness and assistance through,
their trouble.
Halsey Hodges has resigned his
position with the City Natipnal
Dank and will move "his family to
Oklahoma City in a few days.
He will be employed in a whole-1
sale implement house. This ex-;
^llei't fPm'
friends
.uh li arret t
u- ">•
Vv< . I
with
o a i.
the
.,tl.L i
Cm Co.,
L°st week we had three calls |
f, • to 'i'C ! ' i"r - i'.vTfi
lli'HIS oulbiu~ U:u .
The reputation of our school is
• Is. it', •; • f, ,uxi'
business tu iv from other places
besides Oklahoma City. There
is an unusual demand fur young
men.
We have arranged, for a booth
at tiie SuU Fair in October. It
\vi
thi
side of the Art Building. It is
ti r H 1 1 ir fionon the ground
and we invite every one to make
that . headounrtorr. *nd witness
the work ox our students. We
will have ihe work i arried on
there just as it is in our school
and will rive each visitor a hand-
some card written by our pen-
man as a souvenir.
Write today for a catalogue
and special rates.
be on fie right hand side of
main entrance on Lhe south
Yourchcice o<" any imported J
horses, $1,000; home bred draft
atallioSdS K&£) to £750. A. Lati-
|n Cordell who regret to see them
Coming' io C.jaiJ! lor one
week beginning Sept. 23, Dr. II.
'I. Shepherd, the Kansas C|ty
Eyesight Special!.- u O.iioe at
Iron Hotel.
tiooi i'u,isii-e,
The Cordell public schools will!
open Monday, Sept. 20. All!
students will assemble at the
I main building for classification.'
; 1 Ait e\ory one be i ;v n atly tor j
I work. Lot M. Jones, Supt.
; Why buy a cat in a sack? At t
! our exhibit next week we will i
show you a Majestic in actual'
' operation. R. E. Lutz & Sons, j
Coming to Cordell for onej
I week beginning Sept. 23, Dr. H.
IT. Shepherd, the Kansas City
I Eyesight Specialist. Office at
j Iron Hotel.
j Come and see the great cooking 11
j wonder at our store all next j
: week. See advertisement in this j
! paper. R. E. Lutz & Sons. |
Your choice imported horses, I
j $1,000; home bred horses, $300;
j to $G50. Frank L. Stream, Cres- j
'ton, Iowa. *
II. E. Lutz tii Sons arv giving!
free a handsome set of ware,
woi! worth $7.50. See advertise-;
>
Read Every Word of This Announcement.
Here is Your Great Newspaper
and Magazine Offer for 1906-7.
tin ~
TO OLD end NEW
SUBSCRIBERS
Read Every Word of This Announcement.
We offer this year what we believe to be the most ex-
traordinary subscription offer ever made to the reading
public. It is strong, desirable, and exceptional in its
character and should be taken advantage of at once by
every one of our readers.
Magazines are among the necessities of modern life.
They are not merely entertaining but serve as friends
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home.
Every Home Needs a Magazine Because it Will Help Make it Better and Brighter.
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A Magazine of Inspiration
for the Ambitious of both Sexes
"Spare Moments" is the best magazine ever published at
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an initial circulation of 10,000 copies to a circulation of a
quarter of a million a month, breaking all records in maga-
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merits of its contents. For 1906-07 "Spare Moments" presents
a literary program unexcelled in any magazine.. During the
coming year "Spare Moments" will contain: Three Serial
Stories of intense and absorbing interest by writers of estab-
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Twelve special articles right up to the minute, and dealing
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and written by those who have won recognition as short story
writers. Seventy-Two pictures and paragraphs about men
and women who have come to the front, and how they climbed
the ladder. These brief biographies will be full of inspiration
and encouragement to young people who are just starting to
elimb.
During 1906-07 "Spare Moments" will print a series of
articles under the title, "THE LAST DAYS OF THE CON-
FEDERACY." Those articles will contain the personal remi-
niscences of Mrs. Jefferson Davis, with hitherto unpublished
letters and reports, dealing with the more prominent features
of the historic struggle.
A New York editor says: "No such value has ever been
given for the price," and its subscribers say " 'Spare Mom-
ents' is a Dollar a Year Magazine for a Quarter." And if you
doubt this drop a postal card to The Publisher, Box 984,
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Human Life.
Edited by Henry Alfred Lewis.
HUMAN LIFE, Edited by Alfred Henry Lewis
When you subscribe for Human Life you know exactly
what you are going to get. Its colors are nailed to the mast,
and its contents to the name. You're going to get the only
magazine in America that is devoted entirely to the people,
not things. Not prosy or puny people, but men and women
who bulk big in the public eye, men and women who are doing
things that arn bringing them fame or fortune.
Every day a new celebrity of some sort arises above the
horizon of obscurity; the moment he does Human Life catches
him in picture and type, and tell you his story in that intimate
and chatty way that makes the best of reading.
Human Life's sole purpose is to tell you, not so much about
the greatest events of the month, as about the men who pulled
them off. Not the victory or defeat, but, the man behind it.
Big people at clcse range is our motto. We are mainly con-
cerned with the human interest side of the story. How the
talked-about one cM it, how he lives and acts and thinks, how
he work? and piny.". v li-.t about his wife and children and
home-—t^ere are tiling nov.-.days about which the world chiefly
cares to read. And these are the tilings that you will find on
the pages of human Life.
Dining the past year Human Life ran a remarkable scries
of celebrity articles, articles that have been quoted extensively
by the press of fn entire country; and each one written by
the one best fitted by intar e and ability. These include
stories on Rockefeller, Lawson, Helen Gould, Ida Tarbell, Sec-
retary Taft, II. H. Rogers," Alexander Dov/ie, Geraldine Farrar,
Upton Sinclair and J. Ogden Armour.
Human Life is distinctly the magazine about people. It is
well-illustrated and well-written, the right magazine at the
right price. S"11 for the ] 1 r sum of five cents a copy and
fifty cents .a year, it is equal in value and interest to the
dollar publications. It is cripsy, breezy and entertaining. A
dull line is its worst enemy.
H ** o ^
TaKe Advant
The Best Proposition
of
Offer
ear
rm
has been standing for the farmer and the farm heme for twenty-years and it is
sa
id to go into more actual farm homes, in proportion to circulation
other caoer oublished in America. I" ac.vo.:atcs prr.cir.al, • not fane
It believes in the farm
mote its welfare.. It
questions of the day as they
the best that goes.
than any |
y, tanning.
Our Great Proposition is
^ v \ A f | FT^
State Republic, Yearly Subscription Price, $LG0| ^y|
Human Life
Spare Moments
Farm News
61
66
66
66
66
6i
A rirs In
IP A -
5>2.GO
Remember the State Republican and all three cf the above splendid papers for
$1.00 ONLY ONE DOLLAR $1.00
88 Papers
Send at once. Get right on. ~ Don't miss a copy. Address all orders to
The State Republican, - Cordell, Oklahoma.
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Utterback, J. W. The State Republican (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1907, newspaper, September 20, 1907; Cordell, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc160534/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.