The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 14, 1911 Page: 2 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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The little reading
The Independent reir pr;
1 thf r<*;ul
| the ready-prints contain may be
worth loe a quire t<> some pub-
- , lishers, but we claim the adver-
Subscription $i. a year in advance
W. F. BARNARD.
Editor and Publisher
50 cents for 6 m<\,
30 cents for 31110.
Established May 14. 1908.
Entered as second-class matter
at the postoffice at Cashion,
Okla., for transmission through
the mails.
"The bee that gets the honey,
Don't hang around the hive."
Published Every Thursday
Cashion, Okla. Sep. 14, 1911
tising contained in its columns is
not worth anything to us unless
we get paid for it. We have had
firms write us tor our advertising
rates, and then find their adver-
tising in our ready-prints. Hut
we pay ioc a quire for it. 1 hat
shows what the publisher who
uses ready-prints is doing for
! himself. It is true that the omis-
sion of the ready-prints will cut
the paper,
nit it is the home news you want
very pleasant aflair at Mr. So and
So's house given in honor of some
cuss, who, if facts were known,
should be in the pen serving a
life sentence for about ooo vi-
olations of every law in the stat-
utes of his state government.—
Signal Star.
hll runciun JI/DJI-"'"
ers will be notified of (loWll t lie (| IKlll 111 V
the expiration of their subscription to
this paper and given ample time in which to
renew then if not renewed, paper will be
discontinued renew at once n(jt the sta,e ru.ldjng patter and
Beginning with this issue of the patent advertising. I believe.
The Independent has again "cut no one will mis. the ready-print
ou" its ready-print. Our sole jn this paper except the ready-
Dod Gaston says "Next to a
downright bore a good mixer is
probably the most annoying per-
son. "
Among other things, the Sun-
day school conventions are the
means of getting a great many
hotnelv people together, blue
Mound Sun.
He that monkeyeth not shall in
no ways be monkeyed with. In
reasons for this is, (i) that OUI\ print house. We simply must other words, don't give the ot hei
ready-print carries advertising!
that we do not get paid for; (2) .
that in running a paper in a small1
town like this, we must cut down 1
all unnecessary expense; (3) that
tlat print paper of the same grade
costs five-sixths less than the
ready-print and the same number
of home-print pages. The ready-
print house gets paid for the ad-
vertising which appears on the
ready-print side of our paper, and
we pay them 10c per quire for]
this advertising—they charge us
10c a quire for this ready-print
and receive the pay for the ads
therein which we make possible
for them to collect pay for. If a
newspaper is a business deal why
not run it on a business basis?
Let us get down to business in a
business way; economize where
it is necessary, by not spending
our profits each month for Cana-
da advertising and many other
ads which appear in our ready-
prints at a cost to us of 10c a
quire which we do not get pay
for, but pay our profits for. We
figure our fiat print-paper at a
saving to us of $<So a year (figure
15 quires at $'-50. freight 25c.
drayage 10c, for 52 weeks; then
difference of 40 reams flat print-
paper at $15.60). Where has the
profit gone? What are you in
the newspaper business for? Why
are you in debt? In other words,
MARRIOTT BROS'
CONFECTIONERY
West Side Main Street
Confections, Stationery, and
School Supplies
We are always ready to serve all
kinds of Drinks and Sundaes.
If you don't know what you want,
we do!
Yours for trade.
have pay for the advertising our fellow hell for what you do on
paper contains in order to enable
us to publish a paper for Cashion.
We are determined to print an
eight-page paper for our readers,
we are out $80 a year more than antj vve believe this effort will be
the si-
Star
yourself.—S11 vder Signal-
"The Liver Pills act
So Naturally and
Easily."
Such a statement, coming from
the cashier of a bank, shows whac
confidence responsible people have
in these pills. Mr. a. l. Wilson
after trying them wrote:
"I have used Dr. Miles' M®rvi
and Liver Pills and also your
Anti-Pain Pills, on myself, witli
good results. The Liver PtlU
act so naturally and so easily
that I aoarcely know that I
have taken a pill. Frequently
bein? troubled with headache I
take an Antl-Paftj Pill and *et
Immediate relief in every case."
A. L. Wilson, Sparta, III.
Mr. Wilson was for a number
of years cashier of the First
National Bank of Sparta.
Dr. Mile*'
Nerve and Liver Pills
are different from others. Many
kinds of liver pills are "impossible"
after one trial on account of their
harshness. Dr Miles' Nerve and
Liver Pills do not act by sheer force
but in an easy, natural way, with-
out griping or undue irritation.
They are not habit forming.
if tha first bottl; fail^ to benefit. y-vjr
druggist v.ili return the price. Ask him.
MILES MEOiCAL co., Elkhart, ln<l.
Negroes Flee
From Caddo
Caddo.—For the first time in its
history Caddo Saturday had no
' negro resident, the blacks having
all fled from much of the sur-
rounding country, the exodus
starting Monday morning, follow-
ing the first report of the Killing
of Horace (.iribble, a white tann-
er, by negroes, and continuing
thruout the day, no warning no-
tices being necessary. The blacks
toon fright at the temper of the
wiiites and feared to remain all-
ot :ier night. All outgoing trains
were crowded, while extra cars
were required for the handling of
the baggage and express.
More thtn 500 purchased tickets
for McAlester, Muskogee, Atoka,
Ron ham, Whitewright, Denison
and smaller towns. rl he ticket
sales amounted to nearly $1000.
Cattle, hogs and crops were sacri-
ficed at ridiculous prices in order
to raise money while much other
personal property was left behind*
it is necessary, besides advertis-
ing it might be possible for us to
get instead of having it appear
111 our ready-print and get noth-
ing for it. Let's get on a busi-
ness basis and get paid for what
we do. The time will come when
all the newspaper boys will wake
up to the proposition of saving
apprecu
iated.
Men have less respect for their
fellowman, usually, than they do :
for their fellowoman. Men who
j would blush to uttter a naughty
When a poor cuss drinks a lit- J word in the presence of a lady
tie booze and sits in a game of ! will swear like a trooper among
poker he pays a fine for drunken- his men associates. When 'men
ness and gambling. When one k rn to respect theniselv.-s
of the Four Hundred does the 1 their fellowman you will >
same thing he gets his name in j great improvement in s ,k.{
the paper as having attended
and
ty.
—— 1 MB—
KILLthe COUGH 1
amo CUBgffliJLUMCS
a! Hornet.
1/1*5 W W lil%l J
rnn^oughs oqj
PIAL BOTTIE FRF-g 1
and ml thsoat and mwc tmusues
GUARANTEED SATfSFACTOPV
Or? MO rViV f?£FUMO€Djjf
hm* vr"*--*! jflH^TTTi ;-j
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 14, 1911, newspaper, September 14, 1911; Cashion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107671/m1/2/: accessed May 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.