The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 11, 1912 Page: 5 of 8
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LODGES.
V
a
■ i
The Independent M_;u| carriers
Established May 14. 1908. ^ ^ ^
O. F, Cashion Lodge No.
meets every Tuesday night of each
month in Odd Fellows' Hall.
('has. Helms. N. G.
Niel Nissen, Sec.
A F A: A. M., Cashion Lodge No. It>S,
meets 2nd and 4th Saturday nights
of each month in Masonic Hall.
W. S. Cole. W. M.
Ed. Owens. Sec.
This is an uge of great discov
tries Progriss rides on the air.
Soon we may see Uncle Sam's
mail carriers Hying in all direct-
ions, transporting mail. People
take a wonderful interest in dis-
covery discovery that benilits
them. That's why Dr. King's
New Discovery for Coughs, Colds
and other throat diseases is the |
most popular medicene in Amer-
ica. "It cures me at a dreadful
cough," writes Mrs. ]. F. Davis,
SticKney Corner, Me., "after
doctor's triatment and all other
remedies had failed." Frcoughs,
colds or any bronchial affection |
its unequaled. Price 50c and
Si.00. Trial bottle free at All
Druggists.
this year to keep their farms
from beinj^ sold for taxes. No
wonder the farmers of Oklahoma
are not out <>f debt. -Daily Stai.
E. S, A rem a Chapter No. by,
K,8 meets 1st and :<rd Wednesday I
nights
of each month in Masonic Hall.
Mrs. Nellie Hogan, W. M.
Mrs. Beryl Sulzer, Secy.
\Y O. W., Lodge meets 2nd and lth
Saturday nights of each month in
Odd Fellows' Hall.
J. Free, C. C.
S. W. Hogan, Clerk.
\V. K, H.VHNAUI)
Editor and Proprietor.
Subscription $1 a year in advance
aO cents for 6 mo.
cents for 3 mo.
Entered as second-class mail matter
at the postoffice at Cashion, Olila.,
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.''
Published Every Thursday.
Cashion, Okla., July 11, 1912
all foreign subscrib
I 1™ • £rs will be notified of
the expiration of their subscription to , •
this PAPER UNO given AMPLE time in which to (Jlie bunch of LTackel'S 111 hlS
renew, then, if not renewed, paper will be
discontinued renew at once. ihand, twoothers in his hat, with
pious accents loud he cried, "1
My deal on the Guthrie Daily never thought of that." A bunch
, i , u of crackers t<> the tail of one
Star Saturday proved to be 110th-
What Might
Have Been
The boy stood on the back yard
fence, whence all but him had
tied, the flames that lit his father's
barn shone just above the shed.
ing but wind. Another deal was on j
that
M
M, \V. A., Downs Camp
small dog he'd tied; the dog in
anguish sought the barn and mid
knew nothing of and was j '
its ruins died. I be sparks flew
pulled off before 1 got over theie. anf1 re(] t[ley ijt Up0n
The Salary position was what 1 brat, they fired the crackers
was after, as Editor Max- in his hand and also those in his
No. 7152, meets well had offered me «5 a hat- There camc burst "f
1st and 3rd Saturday nights of each
month in Masonic Hall.
G. C. Eschwig, V. C.
Avery Wight, Clerk.
which looked good and was worth tlinR sound-the boy! Where
. has he gone? Ask of the winds
investigating. 1 wish it under-
stood by the people of Cashion
neral that
that far around strewed bits of
meat and bone, and scraps of
clothes and balls and tops and
nails and hooks and yarn, the
from this town, but this proposi- ; relics of the dreadful boy that
Kebeccah Jewel Lodge No. 13, meets an(] niy readers ill
every 1st and 3rd Saturdaay nights j . .„vav
, n,i,i PpiinWi was not wanting to get away
of each month m Odd Fellows |
Hall.
w7n„Ja"var,r; Sec" I non looked Kood to me. and I j burned his father's barn.
was just merely seeing a chance
Catarrh Cannot
Be Cured
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS,
as they cannot reach the seat of
the diseas.Catarrh is a blood of
constitutional disease, and in or-
der to cure it you must take
internal remedies. Hall's Ca-
tarrh Cure is taken internally,
and acts directly upod the blood
and mucous surfaces. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is not a quack
medicine. It was pescribed by
one of the best physicians in the
j country for years and is a regular
prescription. It is composed of
the best tonics known, combined
with the best blood purifiers,
acting direct upon the mucous
surfaces. The perfect combi-
nation of the two ingredients is
what produces such wonderful
reults in curing catarrh. Send
for testimonials, free
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., O.
Sold by Druggists, price 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for
constipation.
Great statesmen as they (The
Father of the Republic) were, they
knew the tendency of prosperity to
breed tyrants, that when in the fu-
ture some man, some faction,
some interest, should set up the
doctrine that none but the rich
men, none but white men. or none
but Anglo Saxon white men were
entitled to life, liberty and the pur-
suit of happiness, their poster-
ity might look up again to the
Declaration of Independence and
take courage to renew the battle
which their fathers began.—Abra-
ham Lincoln.
circum- j
One just can't keep from think-
ing of those delicious Fruit Salads,
stances over there and at tlit same every tjme t^e Words "Jelly pow
Mrs. Alvin Cornwell, Oracle. tjnlc continuing this papei, which (jer" hobs up. Try THE ALTON
Mrs. (. (. (omtorth, Ret. ^ circumstances GOODS Jelly Powder.
.odge, meets every and ^-oiild do, if given the chance, j
Hoval Neighbors, Cashion Camp No.,
2570, meets 2nd and 4th Tuesday to better my tinancia
nights of each month in Masonic
Hall
of each month in i
Y eoinen
4ti Thursday night
i,■ 1 t< >j s Hall.
A. Martin, Foreman.
Rbodii Morris, Cor
Farmers' Union meets every 2nd and
4th Monday nights of each month in
Odd Fellows' Hall
J. E. Calhoun, Pres.
Ed. Owens, Sec.
However l do not feel disappoin- Oklahoma Farmers
, , lwr And Debt
ted in not making the deal over j
there, and will continue here at
the same old stand for what
is in it.
'How
The Oklahoman asks
many Oklahoma farmers are
out of debt?" Not very many;
nor are they likely to be as long
But on the above deal with as the present rotten robbing
Maxwell 1 feel that 1 didn't get a gang of tax-eaters are sucking
^ i<t . 1 „ the verv lifeblood out of them by
City Council of Cashion meets l.t SqUlij-e deal on the proposition, ,
Mrindn.v ninht of each month in S. | the high tax method now pre-
but now7, since investigating tne 1
1 vailmg.
proposition, am fortunate that * ^ ^ matter of record all over
some other poor sucker got taken s^ate that many of the farm-
in instead of myself. ers, owning good farms, have been
forced to borrow money from
Rnth Wasson spent the Fourth
in Guthrie.
Monday night of each month
S. Cole's office.
S. B. Stewart, Pres.
S. S. Cole, Clerk.
A trip over the south part of
town, the storm-swept district,
shows an almost complete recov-
ery from the cyclone. Por the
most part, the trees have over-
come their damage, houses are
either repaired or rebuilt entire
and in many cases the property
is worth more now than before
the storm. A very noticeable
thing is the construction of new
and substantial "fraid holes."
These are not confined to the
storm district, but appear all
over town.—Hennessey Press-
Democrat.
!<* tvp^
any and every source possible
with which to pay their taxes for
Choose your color, pay your
grocer 10c. Take it home and
follow the directions and you will
have a Fruit Salad you will be
proud of. THE ALTON
GOODS Jelly powder.
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 11, 1912, newspaper, July 11, 1912; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107714/m1/5/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.