The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 16, 1914 Page: 3 of 10
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I
The Independent
Established May 14, 1908.
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(it'WW
W. 1<\ HAKXARI)
Editor and Proprietor.
Subscription $1. a year in advance
50 cents for 6 mo.
30 cents for 3 mo.
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Entered as second-class mail matter
at the postolTice at Cashion, Oltla.,
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."
Owing-to a ruling1 of the l'ost Offloe Depart-
ment. we are very desirous of holding our
privllotfrt of entering tins paper us necond-
elass mail matter, or pay one cent, slump al-
ttxed. on each paper, at ttie Cushion post office
b(i we must try to keep up with tin; following-:
This is no charity institution—wo have bilU
to pay.
When your paid up sub-cription expires, we
Will notify yen—if not renewed wihiu ten
da\ s from notice your copy of paper will be
discontinued.
No pap' rs will he sent to any address unless
paid for, or equivalent i-< received.
Sample copies of this paper will be sent, pre-
paid, to prospect ve subset ibe- 8 or ad v> rtisers.
No papers will be sent to any address on
credit.
It you receive t' is p iper, 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.
Published Every Thursday.
Cashion, Okla., July 16,1914
As Others Zi
There is no longer any doubt about
the Wilson administration being a fail-
ure—Teddy has said so and Teddy is the
people. Teddy means only that it's j
the administration that failed him If
it h.vJ only been his he could have done
a lot w >rse and then proved by the
s .me anology that it was a great suc-
cess, for Roosevelt's only ana ogy of
anything consists of the exuberance of
his expression.—Alva Pioneer.
London, July 1). — A South London
policemen arrested two suffragettes j
who were acting suspiciously near a
church today and marched them to-
ward the police station, holding one
by eai h hand.
He was getting along all right de-
1 spite the struggles of the two mili- |
, tant , when a third woman approached
; from behind and cut the constable's
suspenders.
E ther his trousers or the prisoners j
had to go and the two women escaped !
1 he bobby is being unmercifully "jol-
lied" and has already applied to be
transferred to another precinct
In a lengthy editorial the Enid
Events give ibree essential rules to be ;
considered in borrowing money. The
first is til it the pur pose for which you <
desire it will produce sufficient returns
to repiy the loan;second, that the im-
provement for which the money will
be used will "turn" in sufficient time
to repay the loan; and third that pro-
vision sh.uid be made for a gradual
reduction of the principal. All
BIG CUT IN PRICES!
Base Ball Glove, 1-4 off; Base Ball Bats, iiO pet off.
These goods were bought at a discount and we
want to give our customers the benefit.
10 gallons First-grade Paint to close out, $1.50
per gallon. This is a big bargain—call first and get
it.
Wall Paper from 10 to 30 per cent off. Let
us save you money on wall paper. After figuring
you will find you can buy it for less here.
Fly Bane, 00c per gallon; 5 gal. cans, SOc gal.
It keeps the flies off your stock. You save the cost
by the gain in your stock.
I. STONE
Registered Druggist
forever, but they are unlike a brook in
one particular, and that is the brook
purifies itself by running, but a candi-
date—well, the longer he runs the mud-
dier they make him. But we are glad
Very | to say that as a general rule mud
good ones but in the opinion ot this pa- gauging is losing its potency as a fac-
per the reahy essential provision, and
we speak irom long experience, has
been omitted. The editor of this pa-
per has always found that it is vitally
necessary t lirst find someone who de-
sires to make a loan. The rest is easy.
County Assessor W. H ATeade, of Al-
tona township, announces his candidacy for
the office of County Ass ssor of Kingfisher
county, subject to the will of the vote! s at il.e
R. publican primary, August 4, 1014
County Judge ltobt. K. Shutl- r an-
nounces as a candidate for re-election to the
office of County Judge of Kingfisher county,
subject to the will of the voters at tlie Demo
oratic primary, August 4. 1914.
County Judae Juo. M. Graham a-ks us
to announce his c;indid:iey for the oltice oi
County Judge of K t gUsher county, sul'jeet to
the will of the voters at the Republican pri-
mary, August 4. UM4
And then, there are folks who sit
around with their hands folded and
complain that busy folks aon't do
enougti for them. —Anna Carleson.
That Oklahoma man who after hav-
ing drilled elevenr dy holes announces
that he intends to keep right on is
surely not iooking for oil or gas, at the
p;ice oil is now. He must be looking
for that Pab3t Blue Ribbon vein
thought to exist in Oklahoma.
Pro Hied to the limit: Some of the
newspapers tire relating a tragic inci-
dent that happened down in Payne
county. A gi made caustic comments
because the e< itors trowsera were
patched, and the editor promptly r-ued
her father for $12 he owed on back
subscription. — Marshall Tribune.
One of our exchanges says: "The
' farmer plows his acres and sows his
! prunes and wheat, that seers and other
fakirs may have good food to eat.
To him all city dwellers must look for
| daily bread, and clerks and paying
tellers from off the land are fed.
The b-.shop and the broker send to the
soil for grub, the thinker and the jok-
j er and every other dub. And should
the sturdy tiller some season cease to
! til), where should we get the filler our
j famished frames to fill? But here is
j iittle danger o! such a sorry fate the
horny.handed granger will never hes-
! nate. He toils in sunny weather, and
| even in the rain, to get his corn to-
gether and sell the same for gain 'Tis
i gain which keeps all workers in fields
I or in ihe town, from out the paths of
I shirkers, which might have pulled
them down. So while the farmers
i gather tiie price of motorcars, or keep
| it if they'd rather, to salt away in jars,
i we thall not lack potatoes or fruit or
kippered oats, or corn or ripe tomatoes
to save our sundry goats. We only
netd to hustle, like those who grow
j the rice, and by such process rustle
S the kale to pay the price."
tor in political campaigns Men do
not become suddenly bad merely be-
cause of the fact that they have been
nominated for office, and the idea of
candidates trying to convince the peo-
ple that all good men belong to this
party and all bad men to that, is silly
twaddle and child's play. Men may
not all be quite a like but usually men
who have run the gauntlet of public
inspection and criticism in a primary
can generally be relied upon to be up
to th.' standard in morals, intelect and
integrity and the flaying candidates
give each ofher is merely a matter of
habit and is rarely ever based upon
any palpable defects in the men who
are running for office.— Ex.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Rind You Have Always Bought
Elmer Thomas of Lawton figures
that since statehood Oklahoma legisla-
tors have been in session 526 days and
have cost the state $936 ^53. By infer-
ence, Thomas wonders if the state got
its money's worth. One of the valuable
setts of the state given by one ses-
ot' the legislature is the annotated
code, written bv lawyers, and adopted
by the legislati.e without navir.g been
read.
Bears the
Signature of
In a month from now the parties will
have selected their candidates for the
various offices and for the next three
months after that the opposing candi-
dates will devote their time to show-
ing the good people how bad the men
are that the other side is running for
office. It has been said of candidates
that they are like a brook; they run on
$100 Reward $100
The readers of this paper will bef
pleased to learn tnat there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all its stages and
that is Catarrh. Hall.s Catarrh Cure
is the only positive cure now kuown to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh bei. g
a constitunional disease, requires a
constitutional treatment. Hall's Cat-
arrh Cure is taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system, therefore de-
stroying the fonndation of the disease,
and giving the patient strength by
building up the constitution and assist-
ing nature in doing its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in its
curative powers that they offer Ono
Hundred Dollars for any case that it
fails to cure. Send for list, of testi-
monials.
Addres: F. J. CHENEY & Co Tole-
do' O.
Sold by all druggist, 75c
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
pation, —adv.
The Farmers' Creed
I believe in a permanent agriculture,
i soil that shull grow, that prepares
for a country iii'e and a country church
that teaches its odherents to become
richer rather than poorer from year to
year.
1 believe in hundred-bushel corn and
fifty-bushel wheit, and 1 shall not be
satisfied with anything less.
1 believe that tha only good weed is
a dead weed, and that :t clean farm
ought togo with a clean conscience.
I believe in the farm boy and the
farm girl, the farmers best crops, and
the future's best hopes.
I believe in the farm woman, and
will do all in my power to make her
life easier and happi> r.
1 believe in the country fchool, its
people to love o eply and honorably.
1 be.ieve in community spirit, a pride
in home and n ighbors, and I will r!o
my part to make my own community
the best in the state.
I bolieve in the farmer, 1 believe in
from life. I believe in the inspiration
of the open country.
I am proud to be n farmer and I will
try earnestly to b" worthy of the name.
- -Selecter'.
Bucklen's Arnit.a Salve
For Cuts, Burns, Sores
Mr. E. S. Loptr, Marrilla N. Y,.
writes: "I have never had a Cut, Burn
Wound or Sore it wruld not heal."
Get a box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve
to laj. Keey handy at all times for
Burns, Sores, Cuts, Wounds. Pre-
vents Lockjaw. 25c, at your Druggist
— adv.
C. C. Burright went to Guth-
rie Sunday.
Miss Irene Cashman, who is
attending Capital City Business
College at Guthrie, returned Sun-
day after a few days visit here
with her parents.
Mrs. J. A. Jamison and chil-
dren, of Clinton, Iowa,were here
last week visiting her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cashman.
She was on her way to Jett,
where Mr. Jamison has a position
with a grain Company.
Chigger Bites
To get rid of Chigger Bites put a
little of Hunt's Lightning Oil on and
the itching stops instantly. Good for
all kinds of insect bites and stings.
1- ine for headaches and neuralgia, as
well as rheumatism. All druggist.—
adv.
C. E. Price was
visitor, Friday.
a Kingfisher
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 16, 1914, newspaper, July 16, 1914; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107197/m1/3/: accessed May 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.