The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 20, 1911 Page: 1 of 10
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''KEEPING E V E R 1. A S T 1NGLY A T IT 1
I; o l N 1> 1 O H K I N G S U C C I
vol. iv.
CASHION, KINGFISHER COlfNTY, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, JULY o. 9"-
no.
S. S. $T(
jnt
\ o ( it r V II ti I i ('
Real Estate and
Insurance. In-
sures Farm and
City Property.
E. SIDE MAIN STREET.
Farms for sale, see S. S. Cole
Houseworth & Pollock
Physicians and Surgeons
Day phone 25; night phone 1S-3C
All calls promptly answered day
and night. ()ffice two doors south
of Post Office.
We handle the
•Parllin OiTinloi'if"
IS
si ad
irsi /Sfc
*
The noted Canton Goods.
COLE & BORKLUND
60 YEARS1
EXPERIENCE
Trace IVTarks
dcs'.cks
COPVBitHTS &.C.
Anyone sending n sketch and description nin?
eniokly ascertain our opinion, free wl.oil.or v..
invention it, )>•"«.h«*.Iy patenl 'iMp. < .aiitmii K
lii."f triot )y confidentlal. HfiNIJEOCK c ,:'
sent lice. oldest nitency for socurinii:palei
I'ateois lalion throueli Munii & co. S'fccelvt
tftciri not ice, without charge, in the
Scientific"
/ rsndfOTnolv tlliiKtrotod weekly. T.r.r-eet oir-
c*. 11 • f ■ v t fir-, tifco -'.IT mil. Tor., i . n
i :ir months, VL teuiU tyuil r,e' sdeulerR.
& Go.3eiB,"d-"- Hew Ycrlt
Branch Ofiice. 625 F St., Waehineton. D. c.
Wealth and Poverty
The great aim of the race is to
acquire money. Merchants, la-
boiers, professional men and art-
isans of every class spend their
average of eight hours a day chas-
ing the nimble dollar.
If the truth were known, it
would be found that in a period
of twenty years, the amount of
money earned in wages by these
several classes does not differ so
greatly.
It is the amount earned and
not paid out that constitutes
wealth, while poverty results
from spending every dollar earnd-
Wealth aud poverty differ only
■ as the Words thrift and shiftless-
1 ness differ. The thrifty man can
not help accumulating while the
I shiftless is ever dollarless.
From the very tirst day of wage-
earning, the thrifty man's dollar
becomes thrifty and wotks for
him, practically increasing his
wages. The extravagant man
who spends it all, frequently pays
interest, thus decreasing his
wages.
The thrifty man soon acquires
a habit which compels him to
save; the shiftless acquiring the
opposite habit of wanting a little
more than his wages justify, and
getting into debt if he has credit.
The man who earns three dol-
lars a day and lives on one dollar
a day must eventually become
wealthy, while the man who
spends every dollar of his live
dollars a day or whatever he earns,
must become a pauper the min-
ute his earning power ceases.
This lesson should be taught
early in life.
Your rich neighbor has not
earned with his labor a cent more
than you have, but his savings
have worked nights and Sundays,
a part of his surplus coming from
that five dollars you paid the bank
for a loan when you were sick and
lost a week's work.
The thrifty man is wealthy, the
spendthrift a pauper, even though
the latter inherits five thousand
dollars tomorrow. His habits
will force him to spend it.—Wich-
ita Beacon.
+ p f 9 ? t> f ? f 9 * ? • f ? *9 ? 9 § *> f p * * ••«>«•
•
- Q) £> 0 O & $ 0. ©! & *£ 0 ft O Q) &
• — —
: Just Stop and ThinK
i Did it ever occur to you that in selecting
t your bank that it was not for a day but for
t years and in many instances a lifetime con-
Si nection.
t How important it is then that you choose
* a growing and progressing institution,
I strong in capital, conservative in manage-
* ment, and permanent in its control; one
* whose future gives assurance to you of its
£ stability.
Your careful study of our statements as
* they appear from time to time and our
•j method of doing business will better enable
I you to judge of our ability to serve your in-
l terests to the best advantage, and we as-
l sure you that we will appreciate having
* you with us.
[ The First National BanK
; of cashion, oklahoma
(THE SIGN
-I > CF *■ f*.
QUALI
Ilton"
Last Sunday was a day of mark-
ed interest for the membership
and friends of the Methodist
Episcopal church of Cashion.
Baptism was administered to ten
candidates and about twenty-five
were received into membership,
i Quite a number more are to he
received soon.
ABSOLUTELY
hGQGDS„
rpURE
"BAKl
POWDER-'
A MODERN POWDER FOR MODERN PEOPLE-:- f -
IT DOES KOT CONTAIN CKEAM OF TARTAR OR ALUM, f i
10,15 and25$ a can at all ''"
modern grocery shoes
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY I 'I/I
THE ALTON MERCANTILE COM PAHY^f 1
ENID.OKLA^
Fred Bible's barn was struck
by lightning Monday evening and
burned to the ground. Besides
the loss of his barn, he lost feed,
and a lot of farm paraphernalia.
1 He resides southwest of Cashion.
A line 2-inch rain fell here last
Saturday evening, and another
jof i 1-2 inches Monday evening.
No, we are not getting too much
I rain. We want the subsoil wet
i at least once in two years. Swat
the fellow who says it's raining
too much!
:
The Open Door'
THE FARMERS' STATE BANK has
opened legitimate banking privileges to this
community—privileges long their due—and
the people have shown their appreciation
therefor by the large and increasing patron-
age given this institution.
The Directors and Stockholders who make
the semi-annual examination of the bank, in
all its details, are men of twenty years'
acquaintance in this community.
It is to the interest of every farmer to
open an account with the FARMERS' STATE
BANK. In addition to the safety afforded
by the conservative management of the bank;
the depositors are further protected by the
State Guaranty Fund, and rigid regulation of
the State Banking law.
This bank is doing a strictly banking bus-
iness, and engaging in 110 s |>re illative
si«ie lines, eomliinaf ions or pools.
Our Deposit Account registers the con-
fidence of the community. It is not bolstered
by any outside money, public, banks or other-
wise.
We will clerk your sales, guaranteeing
satisfaction as in the past, and will render
full and detailed account therefor the next
day showing article, purchaser and price.
We will negotiate farm loans at the best
I rates obtainable.
We pay interest on time deposits, large
or small.
drawn
Legal documents properly and neatly
vn by Notary Public in bank. Cashion, Ok
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 20, 1911, newspaper, July 20, 1911; Cashion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107663/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.