The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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LODGES.
I. (). O. F.f Cashion Lodge No. 150,
meets every Tuesday night of each
month in Odd Fellows' Hall.
Chas. Helms, N. G.
Niel Nissen, Sec.
A K & A. M., Cashion Lodge No. 168,
meets 2nd and 4th Saturday nights
of each month in Masonic Hall.
W. S. Cole, W. M.
Ed. Owens, Sec.
() E. S., Arema Chapter No. 6*J,
168 meets 1st and 3rd Wednesday
nights
of each month in Masonic Hall.
Mrs. Nellie Hogan, W. M.
Mrs. Beryl Sulzer, Secy.
Let's make it a point to see that
the next state legislature passes a
law making it a felony to carry
deadly weapons. — Pawhuska Cap-
ital.
Congress adjourned when it
seemed that a majority of the
members of both houses were
about to be investigated.—Mus-
kogee Phoenix.
Whenever we hear some old
skinflint boosting for religion we
are always reminded of a bald-
headed druggist trying to sell
hair tonic.—Mac Cretcher.
fort is to be some place whore
she can take off her corset and
scratch her ribs.
The Democrats of Oklahoma
have had full state control ever
since statehood; tax payers are
now wondering what another five
years would do to them with the
same business (?) methods in
vogue as for the past five years.
—Guthrie Daily Star.
Don't know of anything that
looks more lonesome than a coun-
try school house that has been
neglected during the summer
months—and most of them have.
W O. W„ Lodge meets 2nd and 4th
Saturday nights of each month in
Odd Fellows' Hall.
J. Free, C. C.
S. W. Hogan, Clerk.
M. W. A., Downs Camp No. 7152, meets
1st and 3rd Saturday nights of each
month in Masonic Hall.
G. C. Eschwig, V. C.
Avery Wight, Clerk.
Kebeccah Jewel Lodge No. 13, meets
every 1st and 3rd Saturdaay nights
of each month in Odd Fellows'
Hall.
Mrs. Joe. Flohr, N. G.
VVinna Walton, Sec.
Koyal Neighbors, Cashion Camp No.
2570, meets 2nd and 4th Tuesday
nights of each month in Masonic
Hall.
Mrs. Alvin Cornwell, Oracle.
Mrs. C. C. Comfort h, Rec.
Yeomen Lodge, meets every 2nd and
4th Thursday nights of each month in
Rector's Hall.
S. A. Martin, Foreman.
Rhoda 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.
The couple who were married
in an air ship the other day, just
before the machine was wrecked,
had their first falling out and
family jar mighty quick after
marriage. „
The state board of equalization
has lopped off $750,000 from the
valuation of the Oklahoma Gas
and Ele6tric Light company. Let
the people rule and the farmer
pay the taxes.—Waukomis Horn-
et.
Millions of dollars every year
now go to Baltimore and the Pa-
cific coast for canned peaches
alone which are consumed in Ok-
lahoma ; yet this state has the
best fruit and more of it, and
should at least can all her own
people need.—Guthrie Daily Star.
60 YEARS*
EXPERIENCE
Patents
Undone sending a nketrl
lokly ascertain our opu
inrennon is probalily pate. '.- ■■■■•
tlonsstrictly confidential. HANDBOOK on ' ateiita
«ent free, oldest agency for semiring patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. reoelT«
tpteial notice, without charge, lu the
Scientific American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. I.srTest clr
dilation of any sclentltlo Journal. Terms, |3 a
year; four months, $L dold by all newsdealers
MUNN & Co 36iBroad*<>V' Hew York
Branch Office. 626 f 8t- Washington. d. C.
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description iuh *
onlckly ascertain our opinion free whether an
Invention is probably patentiihle. Communion
About every other man met
nowadays has the auto fever, and
many are effe6ting a cure by buy-
ing either new or second hand
cars. The roads are excellent
for traveling by auto, and many
strangers are seen on the roads,
going overland onvisits to friends.
DISTANCE OF TOWNS
FROM CASHION. OK I. A.
Coal oil at Stone's grain office
at 12 and 14c: coal at $5 for soft
City Council of Cashion meets 1st
Monday night of each month in S.
S. Cole's office.
S. B. Stewart, Pres
S. S. Cole, Clerk.
C& CHP*^
With confiscatory taxation;
with the present vicious laws; with
the present regiment of tax eat-
ers; all these will drive away any
immigration which might ever
look over int<"> Oklahoma.—Guth-
rie Daily Star.
The Sugar Trust controls the
sugar output of Cuba, and for
that reason they want sugar to
come in free of duty. This would
save $60,000,000 a year and would
kill their competitor the beet su-
gar industry, which pays $40,-
000,000 a year to American farm-
ers for sugar beets.— Slayton
(Minn.) Gazette.
•
Navina . miles
7
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Seward 14
1 1
•
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•
Guthrie 44
'9
•
• -
•
Crescent
ib
•
•
Lock ridge 44
b
•
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Piedmont
'5
•
•
•
Reeding
b
•
•
m
Kingfisher
>9
I
•
Edmond
2 1
•
•
Y ukon
25
•
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Oklahoma Cy 44
.5 5
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El Reno
.15
•
•
A Tulsa young woman went
into a drug store for the purpose
of buying a bath sponge, but
when the handsome young clerk
appeared she became frustrated
and asked for a sponge. The
young man fainted.—Perkins
Journal.
Papers report that New York
thugs have left that city by the
thousand since the recent invest-
igation commenced. Fears are
entertained that they are headed
for Oklahoma City to run for
county attorney.—Cherokee Re-
publican.
A man's idea of solid comfort,
says Statesman Mac Cretcher, is
to sit down some place where he
can get his heels higher than his
head. A woman's idea of eom-
A "hired man" tells why he
thinks boys leave the farm, and
there is probably a good deal of
truth in it. He says that farm-
ers are continually grumbling
that they are the hardest worked
people in the world; that they
get the least return for their ef-
forts; that they speak in dispar-
aging terms of their condition
with that of city people. Is it
any wonder the boys take their
fathers at their word and seek
more congenial surroundings?—
Misspuri and Kansas Farmer,
Clean old papers at this office
for sale at 5 c the package.
What We
Never Forget
according to science, are the
things associated with our early
home life, such as Buciden's Ar-
nica Salve, the mother or grand-
mother used to cure our burns,
boils, scalds, sores, skin eruptions
cuts, sprains or bruises. Forty
years of cures prove its merit.
Unrivaled for piles, corns or cold
sores. Only 25 cents at All Drug-
gists
n
Pain Pill,
then
To Head-Off
a Headache
Nothing ic Better than
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills
They Give Relief without
Bad After-EffscU.
"For four years I was subject
to almost constant headache. At
times so severe I was unfitted
for work. Through the advice of
a friend I was persuaded to try
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills and
the result has been that I have
entirely eradicated my system of
those continuous headaches that
followed a hard and continuous
mental strain."—O. L. Russell,
Agt. C. & N. W. Ry., Early, la.
For Sals by All Druggists.
25 Doses, 25 Cents.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1912, newspaper, September 5, 1912; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107722/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.