UPD: my Vim-fu is not as strong as @ib's or @sehe's ones, so you might want to use the solutions they suggested instead of mine one.
But, my solution is easier to edit and to debug personally for me (as a Vim apprentice), so, let it be here anyway.
You can add the following temporary function in your vimrc:
function! MyTmpFunc()
:%y
:%s/old1/new1/g
normal! G
normal! P
:%s/old2/new2/g
endfunction
Then restart Vim with the files you need to affect (something like vim myfile1.txt myfile2.txt myfile3.txt), and execute the following command:
:argdo call MyTmpFunc()
That's what you described in your question: function MyTmpFunc() will be called for each argument given to Vim.
Now you can delete MyTmpFunc() from vimrc.
Be also aware with :bufdo - it calls some command for each opened buffer. There is also :windo, which executes command for each window, but personally I found :bufdo the most useful.
Also please note that you don't have to create temporary function if you need to execute just a single command in the each buffer. Say, if you need just to replace "old1" to "new1" in the each buffer, then you can execute the following command:
:bufdo %s/old1/new1/g
and that's it.