The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1914 Page: 3 of 6
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EFT
Buy It Now!
The Anderson Hollow Wire
Lighting System at factory cost
until we get agency established. $8.70
buys Tank, Pump, Wire, Lamp. $2.70
buys extra lamp and wire. Only a lim-
ited number in each locality.
Phone Wal-2548. Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma Light Mfg. Co., (the lamp makers).
Oklahoma Horse & Mule Commission Co.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
As I have accepted a position as an auctioneer
with the above company, I wish to inform the pub-
lic that these Sales will he held at the Nat'l Stock Yards
in Oklahoma City, Auction Barn No. 4, on 1st and
3rd Fridays of each month.
We will sell your horses and mules at a commission of $2.00 a h ad;
if passed out and not sold a charge of 50c a head will be made. On Jan-
uary 23rd, we will have for sale seveial carloads of horses and mules
which are broke and unbroke. Feb. 6, we would like to buy several
carloads of heavy horses and mules broke to work. For further infor-
mation, see Col. A. T. Richardson, Cashion, Okla.
Phone No. 14 for Auto
Livery (New Car)
GoodTeams for Bad Roads
Rates Reasonable
Cecil Frymire I
Livery, Feed and Sale Barn |
Phone at My Expense. Cashion, Okla
!
DO YOU WANT ONE?
Then fill in the blank lines below and mail to us
and we will send you one of our handsome new Pre-
mium Catalogs by return mail.
A watch for the boy, silver for the table, furnit-
ure for the home, a pipe for Dad: In fact, anything
you may want at no expense to you.
It Will Pay You To Investigate.
The Alton Mercantile Co.,
Premium Deparment. Eni*?, Oklahoma
GENTLEMEN : —
Enclosed find 2-cent stamp to help pay postage
on one of your new Premium Catalogs.
Name
Street No. or RFD
Town and State.
DO IT NOW!
The Independent
Established May 14, 1908.
The announcement that there ia to
be a decrease of from 50 to 90 percent
in express rates after February 1,
I shows that the parcel post has proved
that express rates have been excessive
and unjust. Is there not an argument
in this in favor of the government con-
trol of telegraph and telephone lines?
—Idabel Democrat-Record.
W. F. HARNAUI)
Editor and Proprietor.
Subscription $1. a year in advance
&0 cents for 6 mo.
30 cents for 3 mo.
Entered as second-class mail matter
at the postoffice at Cashion, Okla.,
for transmission through the mails,
under the Act of Congress March
3, 1879.
'The bee that gets the honey,
Don't hang around the hive."
HliSIlJKNC'H I'llONK !tO
Published Every Thursday.
((wiiik to ruling of the Host OfHoe Depart-
ment, we aro very desirous of holding our
privilege of entering- this paper as second-
class mail mutter, or pay one cent, stamp af-
tixed, tit) each paper, at the Cashion post oilice
so we must try to keep up with the following:
This is no charity institution—we have bilU
to pay.
When your paid up subscription expires. w«
Will notify yen—if not renewed within ten
da\s from notice your copy of paper will bo
discontinued.
No papers will he Kent to any address unless
paid for, or equivalent is received.
Sample copies of this paper will tie sent, pre- j
paid, to prospect've subscribo* s or advertisers.
No papers will bo sunt to any address on
credit.
If you receive this paper, some one has paid
for it and is having \t sent to you. You'll Ret
no bill from us, but same will be discontinued
at expiration.
Cashion, Okla., Jan. 29, 1914
A new headline has appeared in an j
Enid paper. It states that the streets
of the city, not the machinery at its '
oil well, need fixing.
A wise exchange admonishes you
trouble hunters to take this advice:
Trouble is no necessity. If a fool in-
sults you it doesn't matter, a black-
guard can't, a gentleman won't. But
if an ordinary, honest, common citizen
does, run, for the chances are he is
right.
To find out just what is in a paper
ask the fellow who does not take it be-
cause he does not like the editor. He
is the one who always reads it closest
although it is his neighbor's copy that
he borrows or swipes.—Ada News.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind Yen Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
Don't blame Mexico too much for the
evident tameness and the low casualty
record of the war she is carrying on.
She is doing the best she knows how.
When she be omes a more modern, in-
telligent and Christianized country,
she will be able to make a better show-
ing when she goes to war.—Alva Pion-
eer.
Oklahoma needs the paicel post limit
increased to 100 pounds. Campbell
Russell then can be sent to Washing-
ton to initiate a capital removal bill. —
The Ardmorite.
It is impossible to make pjop'e un-
derstand their ignorance, for it re-
quires knowledge to perceive it; and
therefore, he that can perceive it hath
it not.— Jury my Taylor.
Tan.'o! Tango! The city pipers
have gone crazy over it. What the
tarnation is it? Wd people who live in
the country, who are civilized, are not
up on the fads of the easy-goers, but
after reading about it we imagine it is
some kind of a hugging match.
After having been fined $2,000 for
violating the passenger rate law by the
railroad commission, the M. K. & T.
Ry., has notified the commission that
no further protest will be made against
the2 cent passenger rate.—1 label Dem-
ocrat-Record.
Advertising Brings in Customers.
Frisco receivers are suing former of-
ficers and directors for 14 millions of
loot of that system, and the New York
World is hammering at the stockhold-
ers of the New Haven road to sue J.
P. Morgan's heirs for 21 millions loot
out of that system.
The Mexican trouble has not quite
settled, but if all the federal soldiers
cross into the United States and attach
themselves to Uncla Sam's free lunch
counter, as they are likely to do, Hu-
erta will have to abdicate and seek a
new field.—Idabel Democrat Record.
For legal work see S. S. Cole.
"Business is r'ull," said the grinder;
"It's on the bum," sbid the hobo; "On
the tramp," complained the soldier;
"Rotten," said the d aler in cold stor-
age eggs; "All pied to the devil," be-
gan the printer; "Dead," said the un-
dertake ; "In hell—!" s-hout'd lie
preacher. And they all felt foolish
when the weather man said "Fair To-
morrow."
Heart Disease Almost
Fatal to Young Girl
"My daughter, when thirteen years
old, was stricken with heart trouble.
She was so bad we had to place her
bed near a window
so she could get
her breath. One
doctor said, "Poor
child, she is likeljr
to fall dead any
time.' A friend
told me Dr. Miles'
Heart Ilemedy had
cured her father,
so I tried it, and
she began to im-
fcvuawgi prove. Siio took
'W&r a Kreat many bot-
' ties, but she is
spared to me to-
day, a fat, rosy
cheeked girl. No one can imagine thH
confidence 1 have in Dr. Miles' Heart
Remedy." A. R. CANON, Worth, Mo.
The unbounded confidence Mr.
Canon has in Dr. Miles' Heart Rem-
edy is shared by thousands of
others who know its value from
experience. Many heart disorders
yield to treatment, if the treatment
is right. If you are bothered with
short breath, fainting spells, swell-
ing of feet or ankles, pains about
the heart and shoulder blades, pal-
pitation, weak and hungry spells,
you should begin using Dr. Miles'
Heart Remedy at once. Profit by
the experience of others while you
may.
Dr. Males' Heart Remedy Is sold and
guaranteed by all druggists.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
4
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1914, newspaper, January 29, 1914; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107173/m1/3/: accessed June 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.