The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1911 Page: 3 of 6
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The Independent
W\ F. BARNARD,
Editor and Publisher
Subscription $i. a year in advance
50 cents for 6 mo.
30 cents for 31110.
Established May 14, tyoS.
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. Dec. i 7, 1911
t# 1. 11. Ei i E/tS WILL BE NOTIFIED or
THE EXPIRATION OF THEIR SUBSCRIPTION TO
THIS PAPER AND GIVEN AMPLE TIME IN *H>CH TO
RENEW. THEN. IF NOT RENEWED. PAPER WILL BE
01 SCON TINUED RENEW A T ONCE.
Of Interest to
Hunters
For the benefit of a few hunt
which facts shall also be stated in
the license issued to him, and
paying to such issuing offieci thi
sum of one dollar and twenty - ;
five cents ($1.25); Provided, that
no license shall be required for
hunting upon fine's own premises,
actually owned or leased and occu-
pied.
Section 3—Any citizen of the
United States who has not been a
resident of Oklahoma for the six-
ty days immediately preceding
his application therefor, may ob-
tain a hunting license for himself
in the same manner as is provid-
ed for the issuing of a residence
hunting license, except hunt deer,
turkey or prairie chicken, on pay-
ment to the issuing officer of the
sum of fifteen ($15.00) dollars.
Section 4—Any alien may ob-
tain a hunting license for himself
from the State Game and Fish
Warden or any of his bonded
A protective tariff is a tax the
necessities of life to increase the
wealth of those who enjoy the
luxuries of life. Pryor C reek
Clipper.
Talk about your alfalfa seed,
what's the matter with turkeys?
Mrs. Geo. Staktey brought in 11
turkeys this week and sold them
at if) cents per pound. She re-
ceived a check for $25.60. How
would you like to have about 160
acres of 12-pound turkeys to bring
to market.—Newton Journal.
The boys are getting wise to a
new money making proposition,
instead of taking the surplus sup-
ply of house cats off to the wil-
derness to suffer a tortuous death
by starvation, they hit them a
whack on the back of the head
and get from 15 to 75 cents for
the jackets.—tntnan Review.
ers in and around Cashion, a Part j deputies or from the County Clerk
of the "Hunter's Law" is pub- j of county in the same man-
pub-
which
lished. Mark the following, which ne]. as is prov^ide*l for the issuin
seem to be points of argument j & resj(|ent hunter's license, on
here, and might Keep some trotn payment to the issuing officer of
.eing misled: I the sum of twenty-five ($25.00)
"Article I, Section S, Oklaho- dollars.
ma Fish and Game Law. It shall Article II, Section 2
>e unlawful to . hoot at any game ^ny person violating this provi-
inimals, game birds or non-game :sjon.shall be guilty of a misde-
birds, on, from or across any pub- meanor, and on conviction shall
lie road or highway or rail road punished by a fine of not less
right of way. than twenty-five ($25.00) dollars,
•'Section 9—It shall be unlaw- nor more than one hundred (,$100)
:or any person to fish or hunt up- dollars, or by imprisonment not
exceeding thirty (30) days, in the
on the lands of another without
he consent of the owner or oc-
cupant of said land; Provided,
that such consent shall not be re-
quired for hunting or fishing up-
on unoccupied lands, except where
notice of objection is conspicuous- 1 j^ev jr] R Hicks
IV posted upon the premises by j Almanac
the owner or his agent, r rowd- 1
Teddy keeps reiterating that
he will not be a candidate for the
presidency next year, but he does
not go any farther than that.
What Teddy doesn't say means a
lot more to some people than
what he does say, especially at
this particular time on this one
particular subject. Marshall 1 rib
line.
instigated the assault wiil have
the pleasure of knowing just
where their husbands are spend-
ing the evenings, and it will un
doubtedly afford the ladies great
pleasure and peace of mind to
know that there is no witty young
woman at the jail to help the hus
bands while dull care away.
Crime follows cold weather as
night the day and, "The female
of the species," etc. Will sonu
expert psychologist kindly ex
plain the epidemic of murders
being committed by women in
these United States? There is a
fresh horror every day and the
gentle sex is fattening its killing
average. Even the Kansas "Tar
ring Party" had its origin and
inspiration at a "mothers meet
ing," it is said. The answer is
somewhere between high living
and the suffragette movement.-
Sulphur Post.
discretion of the Court. (Hunt-
ing on Sunday is a misdemeanoi,
and comes under the above pen-
alty. )
d. on lands of the State not
Before the great Drouth of 1901,
leased or occupied, permission ; the Hicks Almanac gave timely
shall not be required to fish or j warning. For over two years
mnt; and provided, further, that prior to 1911. the Hicks Almanac
prosecutions for violations of this I again sounded a warning of drouth
se<5tion can be commenced only j and dangci. And so tor t'oi ty
•mon the complaint of such owner ; years this same friend of all the
,,r occupant filed before any court 1 people has steadfastly refused the
uithorized to punish such viola-I offers of speculators and cunt in-
tion, or upon written complaint | ued to warn the public of the
to any Game Warden or officer! coming dangers of storm and
mthorize to make arrests for such jj weather. As they should have
A Stevens shotgun that sells
in the United States for $4.25
sells in Europe for §2.So, a diff-
erence of 52 pel" cent. Yet the
gun is manufactured in the Unit-
ed States and must be shipped to
Europe to be sold in a cheaper
market. This is but one illustra-
tion of the injustice perpetrated
by the Payne-Aldrich tariff. —
Pryor Creek Clipper.
There is a man who never drinks,
Nor smokes, nor chews, nor
swears;
Who never gambles, never flirts
And shuns all sinful snares —
He's Paralyzed!
! There is a man who never does
A thing that is not right;
His wife can tell just where he is
At morning, noon and night-
He's Dead!
—Mt. Park Herald.
I
offense.
Article IV, Section 1—It shall
be unlawful to hunt within the
State of Oklahoma without a prop-
er license, except as herein pro-
vided.
SeCtion 2 - Any citizen of the
State over fourteen years of age,
who has resided therein for sixty
days immediately preceding his
application therefor may obtain a
hunting license for himself from
the State Game and Fish Warden
or one of his bonded deputy ward-
ens, or from the County Clerk of
the County of his residence, on
filing an application therefor with
the issuing officer, accompanied
by an affidavit stating name, age,
place and time of residence, and
postoffice address, weight, height
and color of his hair and eyes,
done, the people have nobly stood,
by Professor Hicks, their faithful
public servant, who has grown
old in their service. Send only
one dollar to Word and Works
Publishing Company, 3401 Frank-
lin Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri,
and get his Magazine and Alman-
ac both for one year. The Al-
manac alone, a fine book of 150
pages, is only 35c by mail. Let
everybody respond and leceive
the warnings of our National
Seer for the coming year.
The Mulvane News is uugal-
lant enough to call attention to
the faCt that the Eagle advertises
"Billy" Sunday in one column
and whisKey in another. Bet you
"Billy" does not make 1 holler
about it.
It looks more and more every
day as tho Oklahoma City was
going to fall down on its agree-
ments with the people in the
matter of the state capital deal.
It is not paying the rentals for
state office quarters as per agree-
ment, nor has it furnished the
site promised. There is a grow-
ing sentiment thruout the state
that the question of selecting a
permanent capital be resubmitted
to the people. - Okmulgee Chief-
tain.
Of course you are not guilty,
but you have seen women come
down town shopping afternoons
and spend a dollar or two in six
or eight different stores and re-
quire the purchases to be deliver
ed by that many different wagons,
when the purchases could easih
have been carried home or con
gregated at one store and deliv-
ered. You must not ride a free
horse to death. The merchants
want ; our trade, but they want
it so they can live, if unusual
conditions are exacted now it is
onlv because necessity compels
them to do so.—Pryor Creek Cli}V
per.
1 overheard the remark the oth-
er day that there was nothing
much in the Cashion paper, but
that parties away from here would
find it interesting. I am thoroly
convinced, one way, that there is
"nothing much in the Cashion
paper," but there are a whole lot
of people who ought to appreci-
ate the faCt that it isn't their
money that is keeping it
this Kind of a year. This
has lived longer under otic
agement than any other
ever published here, and consid-
ering the fact that papers started
here by men who did not come
here broke, but who did not seem
to be able to stem the tide and
left the people of Cashion a few
times without a paper. I came
to Cashion broKe and since get
ting along this far will stay with
it now. I need your encourage-
ment instead of censure, and 1
believe if most of the people of
Cashion will only give this mat-
ter some thought they would real
ize that a "Post-Dispatch" or a
"New York World" could not be
published by the support of a lit
1.1 . _ * 11 —0nf] < nn
—•T-
gotng
paper
m an
paper
The way a woman looks at it.
Miss Anna Carlson in last weeks'
Lindsborg News: "After the
men who composed the Shady
Bend tar party are sent to jail to
receive their well merited pun-
ishment the jealous wives who
tie village like Cashion, and con-
sidering the fact, too, that most
of us the past year have not been
flush with the coin of the realm,
it has meant more than was gen-
erally thought to keep your paper
going. It takes good, hard work
and expense to do so. About 60
papers in this State suspended
publication last fall. This paper
will not.
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1911, newspaper, December 7, 1911; Cashion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107683/m1/3/: accessed May 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.