The Foraker Sun (Foraker, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 19, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
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Reading Now
Let us Furnish you with Literature for a
whole year at Publishers Rate.
READ THE LIST
The Foraker Sun, weekly 1 year $1.00
The Oklahoma News, daily 1 year 2.25
Uncle Remus' Mag., monthly 1 yr. 1.00
Home Life Magazine monthly 1 yr. .25
Womans World Mag., monthly 1 yr. .25
Total value, $4.75
This entire combination will be furnished
to the readers of THE SUN for a limited
time only for
$3.00
V
The Oklahoma News Daily, The SUN weekly, and all
0 magazine each month, for the whole year, for only
3.00. D<->./t delay. Send us your renewal or subscription
at once as this offer is for a limited time only. Just enclose
$3.00 with this "ad" and send to Sun office. We will see
that all papers and magazines are started to yon at once.
ness education by using your mo-
ments that would otherwise be
wasted? Why not spend an hour
of the long winter evenings after
nightfall qualifying yourself
with a knowledge of the famous
Byrne Simplified Shorthand or
Practical Bookkeeping for which
the buisness world will pay you
cash?
Fill out the following blank and
mail to the Correspondence De-
partment of Capital City Busi-
ness College, Guthrie, Okla.
Name .
Address
Course Interested in
Make up your mind that what-
ever you may have done in the
past you will in the future wear
your clouds "inside out and show
the lining." We all have clouds,
but that is no reason why you
should draw the attention of all
the world to them. It is the brave
cheerful soldier who inspire the
others. - Ex.
The place which gives a man
his living is entitled to his best
efforts to advance everything cal-
culated to benefit the place and
the community. No man has a
right to live in a live town who
seeks to enrich himself and not
activly identify himself with its
interests. To be classed as a
drone or chronic kicker and op
posed to every measuae supposed
to be for the good of the citizens
is a stigma tnat should attach to
no man in the corporation.- Ex.
We read of a wedding in high society
a few days ago in which the newspaper
said the bride's gown was plain. This
is what she wore: ' 'The bride was
gowned in heavy white duchesse, se-
verley plain, with rare old point lace.
With it was worn an exquisite veil of
rose point and duchesse lace that swept
from the coiffure to the end of her long
court train." We sure believe that
anyone wearing an outfit like that
would hesitate before going out in po-
lite society.
Bring your job work to the Sun of-
fice.
Get your Sunday roasts at the Farm
er's Meat Market.
§MaK§K§M§|i'§>
(□MOMQMnMDMDMQHOt
TKE FORAKER SUN
CHAS. C. DAUTRICH
Editor and Publisher
Published Every Thursday
PRICE OP SUBSCRIPTION:
One Year -
Six Months
It looks as if the Governor may
have the bootleggers against him
by the way he hands it to them.
Governor Cruces message was
short and to the point. It does
r.ot require some men very many
words to express themselves.
It is rumored that Princess Al-
exandera""of Fife niece of the late
King Edward will marry Manuel
the former King of Portugal.
Wu Tung Fang, an ex-minister
to this country, will remove his
cue on January 30, 1911. Sev-
eral Chinese merchants at San
Francisco will remove their pig
tailb on the same date at a Dig
banquet.
they should. The mail order
houses know that "printers ink"
pays and they are willing to
spend a little money to get the
business, The newspaper can-
not make the sale of your goods,
but it brings the people to your
store. Some merchants think
that if they put a little advertis
ment in the paper that everyone
who comes in ought to say,
saw your ad in the paper." All
merchants must learn that the
secret of advertising is to "keep
everlastingly at it, and make
good every thing you say." There
are a few firms here that should
be represented in the paper and
it looks as if we were going to
have to accept some lines that
are not represented in the paper.
We don't like to accept foreign
stuff but their money is as good
as onyone elses and will go just
as far helping the printer pay his
bills, which we have to meet the
same as other people. If there
was no paper in the town how
quick you would try to get one
started here, and offer all kinds
of inducments with contracts for
so much advertising space each
month and now that you have
got one the thing to do is to sup-
port it. You know that a town
One of the exchanges says:"
We went to all the business men
and ask them for a little increase1 cannot prosper without a paper
on their advertising. Some said ancl t"at a PaPer cannot run
they were doing all they could to w,thout ^Port.
support the local paper. While j _
some said that advertising did
not pay." So this editor took; When a town ceases to
Learn
While
Earn
You
Abraham Lincoln would split
rails all day in the forest and then
after his day's work was finished,
would walk five miles to borrow
a book to study and improve him-
self. It is said of Geo. Washing-
ton that in answer to a queston of
his mother as to why he studied
so late at night, replied that he
was working out the destiny of
his country.
There are hundreds and thou-
sands of young people today who
are desirous of gaining a practi-
cal education, but for one reason
or another they cannot leave
home to secure it, so they drag
along from one year to the next
in the same old rut. There are
hundreds of others that are
availing themselves of the oppor-
tunity offered by the correspon-
dence department of the Capital
City Buisness College, saving
their leisure moments and inves
tigating them in an education
that will mean thousands of dol-
lars to them in coming years.
You may say that you are not
able to take a course of short-
hand, bookkeeping, banking,
buisness arithmetic, ctc., but the
person who can least afford it is
the one that needs it most and
should have it by all means at
any sacrifice, it don't cost much
§
" " &
Palace Pool Hall
Cool Room
Good Light
Good Tables
: Cigars, Cold Drinks i
(!)
• J. H. HIERONYMOUS A
Proprietor
SEITZ & KIFF
Are now prepared
to furnish a Hearse
when needed. :: ::
REASONABLE CHARGES
— —i ii ■ ii HI |
Electric!
Bitters
Succeed when everything else fails.
In nervous prostration and female
weaknesses they pre the supreme
remedy, as thousands have testif'ed.
FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND
STOMACH TROUBLE
It is the best medicine ever Sold
over a druggist's cotUJ»?r.
A. C. PLAKE
NOTARY PUBLIC
Legal papers of all kinds properly
drawn an acknowledged
Osage Livery, Feed
and Cab Barn : :
Calls promptly answered both day
and night. Phone 8
SEITZ & KIFF, Proprietors
Builders Material
Handled in Car Lots
Cement, Lime, Lumber, Shingles, Brick,
Sand, Paints, Varnish Screen Doors and
all kinds of Builders' Supplies -
L. O. A11 en
FARMERS MEAT MARKET
Revard building
Sunflower Smoked "Ham, good • • lfi
Sunflower Breakfast Bacon, - - 221-2
English Bellses, 20
Smoked Butcher flacks, - - - 21
Dry Salt Backs, 15
Dry Salt Butts 12 1-2
Dry Salt Plates, - - - 15
Wienie Wursts, - - - 121-2
Balogna, - - ... 10
Pick Nick Hams, 121-2
Porter House Steak, .... 20
Sirloin Steak. 17 1-2
T-Bonh, 171-2
Boney Lower, 15
A good Chuck 12 1-2
A medium Chunk 10
Round Steak, 15
A good Pork Ham, 15
A mixed Sausage, - - - - 121-2
A good Lard, 17 1-2
A mixed butcher Lard, .... 15
NUNAMAKER & JONES Props.
G. B. STURGILL
Attorney At L aw
Hall-Floyd Building
Pawhuska, . qkla.
GRINSTEAD, MASON & SCOTT
Lawyers
Pawhuska,
Okla.
Our Business Is
PRINTING
What's Yours?
I Write today for our illustrated
grow j catalogue outlining our corres-
an jidvei tising contract that he it commences to die, and the more ! pondence cources and let us ex-
plain to you how you may take
had received from a mail order the people try to kill off each
house and when he had run the! other in business and good name,
advertisement the merchant call- j the more rapidly will utter ruin
ed him a knocker on the town j come to all. Stand together for
and all the mean things they j the advancement of every citizen,
of just becausc lie if a man shows ability to prosper.
could think
run the "ads" and made a few
needed dollars because the home
merchants were doing as much
do not pull him back with jeal-
ously or weigh him down with
cold indifference. -Ex.
this work and then if you pre-
fer doing the finishing part of
your course by receiving personal
work in the school without fur-
ther cost you may do so.
Young men, why not take ad-
vantage of this opportunity that
is now presented and gain a buis-
SEEDS
emiMstfiri
HWeto-</ay, /Mention this Paper.
mm
North SiAe Barber Shop
. t^-TO-DA fE TONSORAL1STS
* -Sundry Bask' »t Leaves Tuesdays and
Returns Friday Each Week.
E. W. IS toner, Prop.
Watch, Clock, Jewelry
Rej lairing
All WWfc Guaranteed
Ira A. M cCollister
at Pendergrafl'a iDrug Store
Meat Market
AND
..Bakery. .
Cold Drinks and Ice
® ® ® ® ®
WILCOX'S
. . .FORAKER. . .
LIVERY - BARN
FEED & WAGON YARD
Good Turnouts
Transfer Line
Reasonable Rates
1. H. Barham
PHONE 50
A
McDowell Music Store
HIGH GRADE PIANOS
EDISON AMREROLAS
LATEST SHEET MUSIC
Edison and Victor Talking
Machines.
Pawhuska ; : Oklahoma
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Dautrich, Charles C. The Foraker Sun (Foraker, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 19, 1911, newspaper, January 19, 1911; Foraker, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc287130/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.