The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1922 Page: 1 of 4
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o he Independent
PUBLICITY PERSONALITY PEP
Volume
This and. 1 hat
c SHK )X, KINGFISHER CoFNTY, OKLAHOMA, THl'RSDAY, September -S, l!'_k
News oi The Churches
Number Jl
r_
R 'member
The new Federal Fuel Distrib
utor, Conrad E. Spi ns, has shift- |>ut pivachim
ed the responsibility of coal prof-1 j)t ni_
iteerinc.il' there i any. to th
shoulder; «>1 state autll1 u'itie:.
Christian
unday School at lrt o'clock.
No preaching in the morning
u u:il at 7 :l()
He says that the only place
federal authorities can lake air,
action is when coal i> shipped a-
cross state line-.
'"Responsibility as to these
features must rest with the state
authorities", Mr. Spens says
''anil if profiteering n coal is to
be pi evented, the proper remedy
must be applied by state author-
ities."
From this statement by Mr.
Spens there is no doubt in his
mind but that there will be prof-
iteering in coal.
Edscl Ford in a re • nt confer
ence with coal operator declared
they ' the Ford plants) would not
pay to exceed * i.50 per ton for
coal at tile mines.
Were you one of the 119 in
Sunday School la t Sunday'.' (Vr-
I tainly was a line looking bunch
! of folks too and we all want you
there with u: to make it a still
! better looking bunch.
Next Sunday starts a new quar-
j t.er and the first U ;on n about
[the birth of John the Baptist.!
| All this quarter we study New:
I Testament lessons, principally a- i
I bout the life of Christ;. Natur-1
ally these are and should be the
most interesting lessons of our
I Sunday School experience and
; we hope to have the largest Sun- j
! day School the ne.vt three months |
.ve have ever had.
j REMEMBER Oct.
' Rally Day" .aid v.v
[ nmg on ha.. 11j.>; 300 i
School that dav. Our
Rally Day i "The
Childhood of Jesu
tXPERT
ftWll*t>
CVM
|
HOW EXCLUSIVE THE iHOPS
01>EC> To ANt>
I HEARD A -
300 out I , ,1
frtt OTrE
tVW Wj " #-
S' i* -',T y
life
) A Rooster Trip Oct. 3
Sport Carnival Oct. 6 and 7.
Arrangements have been ma le
the Cashion Commercial Club!
I for a Booster Trip on Tuesday,
I October 3rd. The Boosters w ill1
| be accompanied by a -l-piece .la; /
Orchestra carrying a piano, >lide!
' trombone, tenor banjo, saxophone
and drums. Everybody who can
join in this trip are requested to
do so. Cars will line up in Cash-
ion at it o'clock Tuesday morn-!
ing and will go t ({ceding, then
to Big 4 School Mouse, to King-
fisher, arriving there about noon
Okarche will be the next -top,
then Piedmont Edmond, Seward
_j Guthrie and Navina.
New Interruban Extension
Proposed
Delegates of business men from
Wichita, Arkansas t it y and Win-
field, have conferred with repre-
sentative citizens of Pon.'a City
relative to the proposed exten-
sion of the Winfield-Arkansas
City Interrurbun Railway to
W ichita, Kansas, and PoncaCity
Okla. Ceo. Theis, Jr., of Wich-
ita, head of the Arkansas Valley
Interrurban system is promoting
th<' proposed extension.
School Noies
pain- The High School has the
undav pl'one in, the number is 38.
h is our
R. I. Anniversary
At 9:30 Friday morning, with
a parade of school children. Leg-
ion boys, business floats and dee-
orated cars, the big 2-Day Sports
Plans for the 70th Anniversary J Carnival will open, and from
celebration ot the Rock Island then on something will be doing
i t,,, ins!. 'I'd for the benefit are rapidly reaching completion all the time until midnight Satur-
Birth and (" th" paren' aiid students, friv- and great interest is being mani- day. There will be foot races,
new
The
iloii conversation will not b e fested.
wonder al on and v.- hope to permitted. The accomplishments made in
have a wondei I ul d nd The eia • buried the hachet the development of the Rock Is-
v'et: in al.. morning and all are land lines from its forty-mile link
ulling together again. between Chicago and Joliet in
lwida;. I School Day at the 1852, to the present system of
ta*. 1 !'. A great number have 8200 miles serving fourteen states
: Congrersman L. M. Gen man ordered free tickets to the outer within the allotted throe score
Hut from price .i quoted then spoke on tin -treet here luesda\ *r.it« -o there will be no school years and ten. is naturally source
is no domestic coal at anything afternoon. He was accompanied Ion that day. 'of some pride.
like that priceand the smaller by County Attorney, C. W.Smith Mr. piark made a flying trip' This, however, is but the oc-
consumer will be held up with- !•. \\. I.ankard, Re, .11. I,, < lout: to Kingfisher Tuesday evening Icassion. It afford
The Ford plants are running
■ i , i . make it q wonder! u ti;,.,
again anil the chance' are the , •
are operating on coal bought at j
not to exceed the price mention-'
ed bv Kdsel Ford.
Gensman Spoke Here Tuesday
out a gun,and when wintry blasts Or.I'olovieh,Lee Grimes,Ed New-
come down from the north he
can shiver while he is being rob-
bed.
Congressman Nick Gensman in
his speech here Tuesday after-
noon told about homesteading a
claim in the Kiowa-Comanche
country.
In
cr, and Ed Ingram, editor of the
Kingfisher Free Press.
Notice
; of the American Le
I serve pies
le t ad ii
gion Auxiliary
ikes, and other cooked food at j
the Cashion Sport Carnival, Oct.
6th and 7th, and will appreciate
speaking of his first niKht | _inr clona|ions of 0(,nked f()0(! at
on Ins newly acquired home he |heir boot|,.
said he could hear the whisper- j
ing winds and the night birds
singing.
and was able to get only a part
if the books needed for the
High School.
We are glad to have Frankie
I back in school this week, but
i orry Charles is absent.
i The boys had their first Basket
i Ball workout Monday afternqpn.
3 lie 50
We too. I uiilcd hi Oklahoma
in the early days but if our mem- j
ory serves us right, most of Mr. j
Gensman's whispering wi litis
Were whist ling w inds, the night •
birds were screech owls and their ,
chorus was accompanied by the j
wail of the coyote.
Our Basket Ball Team
The condition of the Basket
Ball team this year is fairly good
and all the team needs is a lot of
practice. There have been sev-
| eral changes about the team as
| .some of those who played last
irvear have moved away, but the
j 'team has managed to put good
Ijplayers in their places.
Ij The prospects for the team
jjt.his seafon are fine, as the boys
Jliave been practicing all thru
I rummer, anil they are learning
T/ery fast how to throw the ball
to get it thru the goal.
a
The support by the school is
I going to be better than it was
' tst year. All the High School
hould go along with and yell for:
In la t Sunday - feature game them assume good yells help win
Oklahoma i those were happy the Flapper V flapped and the Old a game. The team is going to
nights we found our treed coon Maids ran. However the Flap-; get revenge on the teams that
by building a fire beneath the
tree.
Speaking of the early days
When we used to follow the
trail hounds up and down tin
timbered creeks in this section of
McAlister nut coal
The Flappers Flapped
Mrs. Kamseier Succumbs
After Several Months Illness
About four o'clock Friday
morning the death messenger
knocked at the home of F. E.
Kamseier and called Mrs. Kam-
sier to her home Beyond.
Mrs. Ramseier* has been seri-
ously ill for almost four months,
c aused by a stroke of paralysis,
and her death has been expected
hourly a number of times during
this illness.
Funeral services were held at
| the home Sunday afternoon and
Everybody is invited to be in the body laid in the Cashion
cemetery to await the Judgement
basket ball, base ball, mu-ie, bar-
becued beef and pork, and on
Saturday evening will be held
the big wrestling event between
McCone, of Wandel and Penright
of El Reno, a real contest be-
tween two real wrestlers.
opportunity
to review and commemorate the
achievements in agriculture and
industry, and to pay tribute to
the men and women whose tire-
less labors have made these
things possible, and whose hopes
and aspirations are being realiz-
ed.
The part which the Rock Is-
land has played in this contri-
bution to national progress is but
incidental. It typifies the growth (
of the transportation facilities
so necessary to the results attain- I
ed, but after all, the big thing)
which should be emphasized is
the broader view of the marvel-
ous changes which have occured
in the Middle West in the past
seventy years.
To those who contemplate par-
ticipation in the celebration we
commend a program based upon
the broad viewpoint which recog-
nizes the endeavors of all those
who have rendered signal service
inthe upbuilding of our territory
Cashion during these two days
and everything mentioned in the
program, printed elsewhere in
this issue, will be free.
The Mohammedans hold their
Sabbath on Friday.
Such a thing as a flash light
was unknown to us and we sup-
pose was unknow n to the rsst of
the world at that time.
per* after futile efforts on their beat them last, year which were
part to hit Crawford's offerings .Crescent, Piedmont and Omega,
had no place to llap except on'
the bench. 1
The Old Maids were in better Navina I earn Loses
trim and ran around the diamond !
so fast it madejone's head flap to !
count the scores, the final count
E. T. C. Clnb
Even at that time there wn.- I showing Old Maids 22, Flappers i v ■ r , c • u
not so much as a sinjrlo I«ord in s ' ion the Navina diamond, finish-
this section, and had there been ' .... | ing with a score of 22 to 4 It
they would have had to lie ei
ped with wing to fly over <.m- , , ,. - « -
bad places in the public road , ? f. Darland 16oked boys ordinairly play much better
stem of those days. j :not a few love lorn ball than they did Sunday, but
eiowd were seen somehow or other they were out
syst
(ti the Flappers. Ed Hogan , was a one-sided affair from be-
t°°k the booby prize in his make ginning to end. The Navina
swains in
Eleven members of the E. T.
C. Club met at the home of Mrs.
H. G. Smith, Sept. 22nd. One
visitor was present, Mrs. Melville
Carter.
The afternoon was spent with
, n c , | fancy work. At four o'clock, the
to Guthrie, Sunday j hostess assiste(J by her lwo(Jaugh.
ters, Vera and Marguerite served
delicious ice cream and cake.
The Club adjourned to meet
with Mrs. Geo. Stockdale, Wed-
nesday, Oct. 4th.
Corr. Sec.
Guthrie took Navina to a gen-
uine cleaning Sunday afternoon
We have often thot what con-|'iy'n^ to '''lt v,h'1 of luck and failed to handle theiClaims Baby
sternation would have reigned in; Banty and ( rawford capped ball in the field or to place it safe
our midst, what foot races would climax in their old maid cos- with the slick. Of course the
have taken place, how we would fumes, all the experienced dres-;- Navina boys are not profession-
have rushed into our homes in ^ arl; shown forth in these al players and they were up a
the dead hour of night without j rea"y old fashioned girl make- gainst a number of that class in
taking time to pull the latch "P- , ' the Guthrie team. The Navina
string, had we heard a car coming | In fact, every body had a good team is a high average team in
down the road with it' mechan- j time, and many a laugh. Flap- the non-professional class.
ieal roar and seen its flashing pers may primp, powder and
headlights. make eyes at the boys, but the Bath fubsand coffins are includ
(Jul Maids showed them they j ed in the list of articles taxable as
Teach Them
In Childhood
One of the inij oi iaut tilings in the child's
early education is'I HRIFT. It is equally
important as the three "k's" and should not
be overlooked. The youngster should be
trained to save money. Teach them to bank
their money and in a few years they will thank
you for putting them on the thrift road.
Start them with a dollar or five dollars or ,
more and watch with tlieni how the interest
grows.
IT'S THT BE SI TRAINING.
First National Bank
Yes, times "do" change, b.gosh jcouldn't play ball.
luxuries in Germany.
Leo, the fourteen months old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Blair
died Thursday night from diph-
theria at the home of his grand-
parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. F.
Eakins. The little one was laid
to rest in the local cemetery Fri-
day. Leo was the only child of
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Blair and they
have the deep sympathy of ev-
eryone in this community in
their bereavement.
IF
Have you ever said to yourself: "If 1 only
had a thousand dollars now."
Many a man has had to pass up a partnership
or grasping some good business opportunity just
because he did not have a little ready money.
Start banking your money NOW; increase
your balance regularly; and sooner than you
think you will have a snug sum tucked away to
seize the chance that comes along. Regularly
banking money builds credit.
We invite Your Banking Business,
Farmers State BanK
Cashion, Okla.
Melville Carter, President Horace Oj Smith, Cashier
T. Q. Abercrombie, Vice President
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Garnett, A. J. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1922, newspaper, September 28, 1922; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107590/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.