The Citizen. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, September 17, 1909 Page: 1 of 8
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Tt« (wndiiion upon which God
It. Hi g.VMii liberty to vrmn i
«t(«rn l risilnnoe. whi^U tKindi-
ti.%u if he break, B rnt u<l« in at
th« oonarqu«inc« ot lii
cm rTUfK a ti th« punishment of lnw
fctlllt -CCRKAN.
THE CITIZEN
A Non-partisan Political Newspaper with Purpose and Plan
K«ep aflMion l*jfnre m«. O tU*ud ; and lei
the yu'oplM r«th^r t«lrt<nfzU>: lei then#
ooote new; than U l tbera tptjk; let us coioo
n««r toti'ther to Jtidcftnent —floly Writ
NO. 22.
cashion, oklahoma FRIDAY. september 17 1909.
ONK IX >1.1. A H A V'KHK
6 ntonthn &•«.. 4 months .Sc
liilllMHin i ♦♦♦ i"i i i i i
Dr.s HOUSEWORTH and POLLOCK,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, j;
Cashion Oklahoma.
Office, N Main St. Day Phone, 25, Night Phone, 18 or 30 i.
All calls answerd promptly Day or Night.
| i i <n | ><■■! IIH 8 Hit
B. P. Woodworth, A. R. Eastman,
President. Vice-President
Melville, Carter, Cashier.
tiie
FARMERS STATE
BANK
| OF CASHION OKLAHOMA
J CAPITA Li $10,000.00.
§ Commenced Business, Oct. 18, 1908.
V Deposits in this Bank are
Guaranteed by the Depositor's
Guaranty Fund of the
State of Oklahoma.
We pay inttrest on time deposits, large or small,
a specialty. Taxes paid. Fire insurance written.
your sales.
Farm loans
Let as clerk
CRM GRAIN CO.
Highest Market Price Paid For
(RUN OF ALL KINDS
-TT* f *> ± j *"'** "r - ^ Hv
WE WILL TREAT
YOU RIGHT
Every Socialist
In Oklahom?. should become
subscriber to The Citizen
Tke Initiative and Referen-
dum was a child ol Socialism
placed in the constitution
It was bucked and gagged
and hog-tied by the politi-
cians. It is the purpose of
THE citizen to remove
these bonds.
The Citizen is the only
socialist with the harness
on- Will you come and help
Mr. Socialist, or is your so-
cialism just wind only with-
out any intention ot accom-
plishment?
The Payne Tariff
now.
How it was made.
One who has studied the bill
thus far naturally wonders how
such a bill Could be made.
The mode and manner of its
construction is graphically
described by Mr. Samuel G
Blythe in the Saturday Evening
Post. He sayh: I
Perhaps more. At any rate,
they lost nothing, and the way
they muddied the water while
conceding things they had long
ago decided to concede was
beautiful to behold.
President Taft announced
during his campaign for election
y'that he would, if elected, call
an extraordinary session of
BO YEARS-
EXPERIENCE
Tbade Maims
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyoixi ponctinu a akatrh arm? dboacrlptfc*. mi*
' /alcaJf .iBcertnln our ot>mum irae whalltt: an
WSU E52S&E iSN&^SPS
MM (rws. OMn* lfW7 P'tOTJA
Pntpnw lA'uta w.cootfli Hons A Co. reeel.-i
tMtal " iliul OMW. Int.'.#
Sckatillc Americas.
v \m<yamrtt linn ni —*H- Lj"*4 *
«f K J mmMI jxarwil. Troy B
lllfearsflu*
4 Millioa Dollars is carried oil ont of
Qkiitaa ever) year by Rfan* el
| tasmnee. Do y«a want to prevent
I it and Mwuragi oar own capital by
I taping rar hands on onr po«k«t
' kwfcs? Theu K#t into um "Cftiaen
Quf" mi wo will got to it after a
irisk
Just here it thay be opportune
to say there never was a minute
when the tariff bill was out of
control of the men who had the
task of maklhg it. Speaker
Cannon and Senator Aldrich
ran tie whole show President
Taft stepped in after the bill
had gone to conference and
insisted on some changes. His
insistence was anticipated.
All that row about free hides
and free oil and such other
additions to the free list or
reductions in schedules the
President insisted upon was a
•ham battle. Aldrich and
Cannon knew they would have
to recede in places, and they
receded where it hurt least.
This Is the point: They gave
in to the President's demand
for free liidf's and free oil and
the rest, but in so doing they
made such a row that the gen-
eral impression was that the
sacred policy of protection was
having a dent put in it that
never could be ironed out.
They rampaged aud ranted
around, fought and squabbled
and, finally, let the President
have his way. It was a great
victory for the President! Bui
while they were rowing and
bending slowly aud with horri-
ble creakings on free hides and
free oil aud a reduced lumbt •
rate they distracted attention
from the wool and woolen
schedule, the cotton scheduu
and the steel schedule. lv
impious hand was laid on those
rates. They went through as
Aldrich had plauned them
months ago. They were the
vital schedules, from the
Aldrich viewpoint. Free hides
and free oil were non-essentials.
The gist of the tariff bill is in
wool and cotton and steei
schedules, which were saved
intact by the masterly retreat
on hides aud oil and the fev\
other things where retreat was
made at all. All legislation is
comqromise, but the skilled
legislator tries tA compromise
on the items he does not care
about or that are not vital.
The Payne bill was loaded
down with trading stock, and
Cannon and Aldrich traded a
lot of it off to the President
I*>id they trade off any wool
or woolen rates? They did not
uor any steel or cotton, either.
They traded hides and oil
and such. Consequently, all
stories about defeats of the
leaders in this recent tarifl
may be forgotten. They knew
what they could get, and t'ley
got *11 they expected to.
| Cong-ess for the express pur-
pose ot revising the tariff.
The Dingley tariff law, which
was operative at that time and
until the fifth of August of this
year, when the present tariff
law was figned, was passed by
; .he extraordinary session of
Congress called by President
McKinley in Marcn, 1897, direct-
ly after his first inauguration,
and consequeutly had been
in force more than twelve
years when the new law became
effective. The Republican
leaders iu Congress knew long
ago there must be tariff revision
eventually, and early last
summer Representive Sereno
E. Payne, of Auburn, New
York, chairman of the Ways
and Means Committee of the
House, where all tariff legisla-
tion orgijiates, Wf n prelimi-
nary work looking to the
preparation of a new law.
This was a tentative arrange-
ment, of course, but the
Republican leaders were almost
sure Taft and a Republican
would be elected,
aud knew that if such was the
case Payne would continue as
head ot the Ways and Means
Lioinmittee.
WOULD ABOLISH EARRINGS
lite nil other fc
work, re- jf
quires the
best too',-.
Dressmaki r
who kno
use only
Shears and Scissors
the kind thai new balk or "haeEie."
Bveiy cut it true and clean—do un-
certainty. THAT'S the kind «*
shear* to have, and there*® only one
way to get them- look tor the
Keen Kutter, for 3/ yeara the
antee ol perfection.
Kfctn K. utter alto appears on tfc
nry beat pocket knivea lor men and
the complete Keen Jtutter
Um being acid under
th.'t mark and motto:
"Ttm RfUacthi
0/ Quailtf kammin
1cm Iftw tte Me*
tr rcrgotttk'
Physician Tell* of Fatal Case o Ccrv
•umption Cauaed by the Orna-
ment—Other Dangers.
"A young girl died of conaump
tion in a strange way last week,
f aid a physician. "It was sad. 8h(
was a healthy, beautiful girl a fe^
months ago.
"But a few months ago a achoo.
friend of hers, being taken off b.
tuberculosis, left my patient a pair
of earrings. My patient wore V '■
earring!", which must have lieen alivf
with tuliercule Bacilli, and ir fc
short time a tubercular sore inani
fesed itself in the perforation of hei
left ear.
"In putting in the ring, she had
broken the skin, inoculating herselt
with consumption. It was consump-
tion of the galloping kind. It ouljf
took a few months to kill her.
"We talk about the corset, dan-
ger," the physician concluded, "but
it is nothing beside the earring bin-
ger. Karrings, even the clip sort
that don't require pierced e&rs,
cause a dreadful amount of eczema,
arid the foolish law permitting jew-
elers to pierce the ear is responsible
for an equally dreadful amount if
blood poisoning.'
STATE FAIR OFFICIAL®.
Making
L fc HRKLIMD.
K*> atale fair can be Bucewsfyd*
conducted unless there *r* proo-iP
trails of the various depatrmenta.
Those who have charge of the g:"i>«5
Oklahoma state fair to be fcel<l t*'
Oklahoma City September 2 to Octo-
ber 8, has already accomplished mnc'1
to make the coming fair a euece>
Below will be found a list of the
ceri, directors and superintendent!!:,
The Officers.
President—Henry Overbolser.
Vice president—V." M. Jordan.
Secretary—1. S. Mahsn.
Treasurer—S. O, Heyiuan,
Board of Dircctore. <
H. Overholser, C. G. Jones, F. M.
Joruan, S. C. i.eyman, V. L. Bath, C. H.
Keller. C. P. fltcs. J. M. Baas. Mre.
Mattie H. Flick, U. N. LongteUow,
Jos. Hucklna, Jr. '
Superintendents. .
Manager live i-ock show—JoM
Fields, Oklal r,ma City.
Class A—Beef Cattle—Frank K«n|
yon. Oklahoma City.
Class A—Dairy Cattte—J. B. TtXj)
burn, Oklahoma City.
Class B—Korses—W, U Ecgtleh,]
Stillwator.
Class C and D—Sheep and i
R. Kleiner, Wheatland.
Class E—Poultry—W. P. Hawklna^
Oklahoma City.
Class G and H -Farm Products,
Horticu'tnre and Floriculture—Wm.|
Alscn, Kdirond.
Class I—Fine Arts—Mrs. Harry CJ
Davis Ok ahoma CHy.
Class J—Educational—Mrs. BellQi
Hedhind, Oklahoma City.
Geological—Prof. C. N. Gould, Nor
man
Class K—Agricultural Implements—
Orln Ashtoti, Oklahoma City.
C ass Lr-Dairy—Prof. R. C. Potts,
Stillwater.
Cla.-s M—Apiary—F. W. Van De-
Murk, Stlllwuter.
Class N—Culinary—Miss flarri^t U
Toan, Oklahoma City.
Class O—T**tll%—Mrs. F. 0. Haiku
Oklahoma City.
Sto-ck Judging Contest—Prof. W. A.
Llnk'ster, 6tUlwater.
Superintendent of Oates—Wcfltoa
Atwood, OV-lahonis CHy.
Superintendent of Ticket*—-J. F«
■Warren, Oklshoms City.
Superintendent «f Hospital Dr. W.
M Hubbard. Oklahoma City.
Marshal «( ai ®—W. ^ WatHrS.
Ofc)*b<m * I
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Woodworth, D. G. The Citizen. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, September 17, 1909, newspaper, September 17, 1909; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc98620/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.