The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1913 Page: 2 of 6
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LODGES.
The Independent
Established May 14, 1908.
t O. O. P., Cashion Lodge No. 150,
meets every Tuesday night of each
month in Odd Fellows' Hall.
Chas. Helms, N. G.
Niel Nissen, Sec.
<2
W. 1<\ llAUNARI)
Editor and Proprietor.
Subscription $1. a year in advance
oO cents for 6 mo.
30 cents for 3 mo.
knew a man who sold out at what
he considered a good price, ex
pe6ling to buy at a decline in a
year or two. Land has increased
in selling valuation nearly 50 per
cent in many cases since then,
and the end is not yet, so it
seems.—Dexter News.
a F & A. M., Cashion Lodge No. 168,
meets 2nd and 4th Saturday nights
of each month in Masonic Hall.
W. s. Col®, W. M.
Ed. Owens, Sec.
★
Entered as second-class mail matter
at the postoffice at Cashion, Okla.,
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."
O. E. S., Arema Chapter No. 69,
168 meets 1st and 3rd Wednesday
nights
of each month in Masonic Hall.
Mrs. Nellie Hogan, VV. M.
Mrs. Beryl Sulzer, Secy.
Published Every Thursday.
Cashion, Okla., Jan. 16, 1913
Small advertising patronage
1 make small newspapers.
The Guthrie Daily Leader says
"a new company will revive the
defunct Southwestern Iron Works
and make it a paping institution. "
Speaking of the zone system of
charges in the parcels post Geo.
P. Hampton, an export, says that
in its essentials it is identical
with the Interstate Commerce
Commission's plan for express
rates, and l,no prophetic vision is
needed to foretell that this gener
eral principle must be finally
adopted by the railroads for de-
termining freight rates." Some
kind of system of distance tariffs
will eventually settle the trouble
of freight rates.—Capital.
Col. A. T. Kioliiii'dson
General Auctioneer
I will cry sales for one per
cent. Phone 31
Cashion Oklahoma
Reference: Any one I have
cried a sale for.
S. S. ( olc
Notary Public
Farm Loans, Real Estate,
and Insurance. Insures
Farm and City Property.
Office E. Side Main Street
Col. I}. F. Hal*in*
General Auctioneer
Have had experience. Sat-
isfaction guaranteed. For
sale dates see Farmers State
Bank, or Phone 152 R Line,
Cashion, Okla., my expense.
VV. O. W., Lodge meets 2nd and 4th
Saturday nights of each month in
Odd Fellows' Hall.
J. Free, C. C.
S. W. Hogan, Clerk.
It used to be that even the
quietest woman could create quite
a bustle, but, thanks to Dame
Fashion, she don't have to now.
Alva Pioneer.
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.
Kt'beccah Jewel Lodge No. 13, meets
every 1st and 3rd Saturdaay nights
of each month in Odd Fellows'
Mali.
Mrs. Joe. Flohr, N. G.
Winna 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. Cornforth, Rec.
Yeomen Lodge, meets every 2nd and
4th Thursday nights of each month in
Rector's Hall.
S. A. Martin, Foreman.
Rhoda Morris, Cov
Farmers' Union meets every 2nd and
4th Monday nights of each month in
Odd Fellows' Hall.
J. E. Calhoun, Pres.
Ed. Owens, Sec.
"Some of the booze fighters
i are a good deal like a fool dog
: I've got out at my place," said
I Old Si Chestnut. "He's been
j run over by an automobile three
| or four times, but whenever he
j hears the toot of a horn he's right j
I out into the road again ready for
another bumping."—Sedgwick
Pantagraph.
A number of the prominent ad-
vertisers of Oklahoma City have
boycotted the Oklahoman and
now that paper states it will ac-
eept mail order ads from the larg-
er cities. The Oklahoman is in
j position to sympathize with the
country weeklies, a large major-
ity of which undergo such treat-
ment the year around.
City Council of Cashion meets 1st
Monday night of cach month in S.
S. Cole's office.
S. B. Stewart, Pres
S. S. Cole, Clerk.
Guthrie citizens will drill for
oil and gas east of that city in
the near future. It is not doubt-
ful that another oil boom will be
the result. It they are success-
ful with this venture, it is only a
matter of time when oil and gas
will be found in a comparatively
short distance from Cashion. We
undoubtedly have oil and gas
near us.
Will land keep right on going
higher? That is a question asked
by so many, and few care to risk
an answer. Three years ago [
The Influence
Of Mothers
Napoleon was the greatest ego-
tist of history. He was not dis-
posed to give credit unduly to
other people. Yet he wrote of
his mother: "It is to my moth-
er, to her good principles, that I
owe my success and all that I
have that is worth while. I do
not hesitate to say that the future
of the child depends on the
mother."
All thru life he ordered his
brothers and sisters around, and
paid slight heed to relatives <>f
any sort. Yet he always treated
his mother with respect, and she
in her turn never lost her head,
but thriftily laid aside resources
for the days of adversity which
she saw were bound to come.
This influence of mothers is
inevitable. The father is away
from home a large share of the
time. It is to the mother that
the child turns. She is his clos-
est companion for the first few
years of his life. In all the per-
iod when his habits are forming
he is constantly in association
with her.
These considerations help ex-
plain the stagnation of Turkey
when other peoples with whom
the Turkish nation has been in
contact, have been moving for-
ward. The women of Turkey
have been degraded. The Turk-
ish boy has no respedt for his
mother. She has no anthoiity
over him. So he loses an ele-
ment in his training that is the
natural heritage of the boys of
every civilized country.
Turkey is paying the penalty
of the ignorance and degradation
to which it has subjected half its
population.-—Kansas City Star.
60 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
Af!>J
Trade Marks
Desic.ns
Copyrights &.c..
An onp spndlne n sketch and description m iy
quickly iiseertain our opinion free wlioilier ;
invention n prnhHl ly patent able. Communi.
tions net ly ci.ntlilniitlal. Ht'NISliGOK on I'ntt iiu
sent lice. OMest nuency for securing patents.
I'atentg tak.n tiirotmli Mtnm & Co. receive
tpeci'il notice, without charge, lu the
Scientific
A handsomely Illustrated woeitlv. T,nr~est cir-
culation of tiiiv sciettiiUc Journal. Ter.iis, f.'i ti
year: four inniitbs, $1. tjolj by all newsdealers.
MIM & Co.38,Bro:,d^ New York
Brunch Office, h'26 F St., Washington, I). C.
FREE METHOD.ST CHURCH
Sabbath school 10:00 a .m.
Mrs. Ermina Washburn, Supt.
Prayer Meeting Wednesday, 8 p. m
Class—Each alternate Sabbath 11
a. m.
G. 1.. Anderson, Classleader.
Preaching—Alternately each Sab-
bath 11 a. in., 8 p. m.
Everybody Invited.
E. O. Davenport, Pastor.
M. E. CHURCH
Sunday School every Sunday at 11
a. m., preaching every second and four-
th Sundays of each month, both morn
ins and evening. All are invited.
A. G. Williamson, Pastor.
Leland Eaton
Agent for
The Saturday Evening Post
Chicago Blade and Ledger
St. Louis Globe Democrat
St. Louis Republic
The Country Gentleman.
All of the above are 5c each.
—adv.
Electric
Bitters
Mado A Now WSan Of Him.
"I was Buffering from pain in my
Btomach, head and back," writes H.
T. Alston, Raleigh, N. C., "and nay
liver and kidneys did not work right,
but four bottles of Electric Bittera
made me feel like a new man."
PRICE 50 CTS. AT ALL DRUG STORES.
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1913, newspaper, January 16, 1913; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107738/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.