Chickasha Daily Express. (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. FIFTEEN, No. 165, Ed. 1 Monday, July 13, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
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PAG2 TWO
CBICKASHA DAILY XfRS8 CHICKA8HA OKLAHOMA.
Condensed Statement of
The First National Bank
ofiChickasha Oklahoma
At the Close of Business June SO 1914
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts $G24 2G36
Btocks and Warrants 77.1)07.82
Overdrafts - - 8.074.16
Furniture and Fixtures - - 6.000 00
Premium on Bonds . 10290.49
United States Bonds to secure circulation 200000.00
U. S. Bonds on hand - $ 15.000.00
Cash with U. S. Treasurer - 10000.00
Cash in Vault - 67 824.95
Cash with Banks 110528.17
State Bonds - 200000.00 403.35312
$1328954 45
LIABILITIES
Capital
Surplus ....
Undivided Profits net
Circulation
Re-diScounts ...
Individual $782895.)r
Deposits Banks 2y.457.76
United States !.93 8t
$200000.00
60000.00
10.355 89
200.000.00
36250.00
822348.50
$1328954.45
The above statement is correct.
F. L. SLUSHER Cashier.
The above figures show the condition of this BanV.
We invite accounts of all desiring safe conservative
and liberal banking connections.- No excessive loans.
Wm. Inman President.
W. W. Horne Vice-Pres.
& Ed. F. Johns Cashier
j" F. C. Hall Ass' t Cashier
The Citizens National Bank
CHICKASHA OKLA.
Capital . ... . $75000
Surplus and Profits . 45000
Your EuiWbi Solicited
PIRECTORS-B. P. Smith Wm. Inman. W. W. Homo
W. H. Driggers; J. F. Drigges J. C. Driggera Ed. F.John
jfMMf hij.ebaalt corporation tad ttdlridval taileliad. Srtrr .. U
mj Atamvtv eounnrat ri.a coaaerraura banking.
One 6-cylinder Studebaker left in stock
Four cars sold last week that is faster than we can get
them in future so better get -your orders in eoon. Can
get but one more 37-Buick and one 25-Buick for balance
of season. Due to arrive here Tuesday is the Light Car
Sensation of the year. 24 horse power 4 passanger wire
wheels extra wheel 4 cylinder 3 speeds and 30 miles to
the gallon of gas. This car sells for the price of ordinary
"cheap" cars or very near it tho the price is the only
cheap thing about it. WAIT AND SEE!
PAUL SPINING Ph4bStl
Good Cars Only-Salesroom 125 S. 4th
li i iii rrir "
IS.
Splendid Remedy
' For Eczenia
Also for Salt Rheum Acne
Tetter Psoriasis and
Other Skin
Troubles.
McConuell Meetings are
Ended
Aftor usJiik H. S. S. for a while the char-
acterlHtlc uiarki of all nkln troubles change
completely. When nwnii ban leome
chronic the lower akin low it powi'r to
divert Impurities and fhiia they continue to
gather lu the weak upoin or thue already
attacked. The action 8. H. B. 1b that of
an antidote a if J this fact haa been demon-
strated lime and time attain la the most
severe forms of weeping eT.enh.
lt Inlluence In the tlxmiea whore tho ttny
arteries transfer the red K-sxrd for tlie worn-
out hlood t the veins lit iiuite reroarkahle
and goes on wiptiinUy with evury tick of
the clock the fl at of the heart.
And new skin Is thus caused to form
while the (terms of Irritating luflueacpg that
cause pctctna are scattered ant their harm-
ful nature entirely suspended
8. H. B. has a wonderful tonAe ltnflnitci
In tho flood becautat It eanttta 1)0 "ilim"
Is entlnily free of any mineral drills orany
other drugs wrccpt the remarkable medi ltial
effect of the pure vegetable products of
which tt Is made.
Few people realise how harmful are many
of the strong crude ointments that nit
to be In favor before thev learned that
H. 8. fi. Is safe speedy and sure. Ask at
any drug store for a bottle of 8. H. H.
Continued from Page One.)
"A Happy Home and How to Make
It" a Chautauqua lecture was Sun-
day afternoon's offering to a very large
congregation which laughed and wept
and went home to put Into effect the
lesHons it taught. McGennell was bur-
Usquer orator dramatist humorist
impersonator preacher and more
while giving this address filled with
found advice and cleverly conceived
nctualltlcs.
Somebody said afterward he'd he
willing to wager more liunbunds who
had been JnUifflerent to the sacrifices
and love of their wives hugged thoae
helpmeets and that more nagging
criticizing wives kissed their spouses
and cooked a good meal for their hus-
band than ever in oim day's history in
Phlokasha.
Few things did McConnell overlook
In his treatment of the home w.hone
happiness he insisted depended abso-
lutely upon the love that was manifest
In It. Ho touched with magic hand
upon every department of homo life
pleading for fie children skipping
from the day o." Si'mlc fcerfecllon to
the present with Us varying condi-
tions. He burlesqued the wooing young
suitor of today and the sweethearts
i.ive it a good trial and you will soon see whr. ma ...ni..f ... htnn ati.r
dod lrnorovemrtnt In fliiv fnrm nf alHn t " ....... j nnuwut. crvi wwtp h-uhj
a d
trntitle. Write to The Swift Ntwchlo Ci
(WIS Hwlft Hldg. Atlanta (!. for special
free advica and new book oii skin er bluud
trouble.
PAY MILLIONS
IN INCOME TAX
My United Tress.
New Voi. July Hi. Income fix re-
turns havo disclosed the richest re-
gion in the world. Estimates several
months ago made tho Empire state ti
bad second to i'eansyivania. in number
of millionaire residents the Keystone
state having upwards of six hundred
while New York boasted but four hun
dred odd tut a little corner of Man-
hattan ha.s captured the real wealth
honors.
This is the story. Fifteen thousand
New Yorkers in the district bounded
roughly by Twenty-flurth street
tho Bowery the Uattery .and the Hud
son river have an annual Income ex-
ceeding $101101)00000. These poverty
stricken New Yorkers pay on an in
come tax total of $liiXK000. On the
last payment day $5000000 was paid
in. or -three days now penalties haw
been assessed on the small minority
who did not come forward on timo.. An
U'J per cent or the "victims" paid up
on the dot the penalties are not heavy.
In marked contrast to the wealth of
tho lower Manhattan district the bil-
lion dollar income esti-tato covers a
district two square miles in extent
is the square mile to the east bound
ed by Fourteenth street the Bowery
and East river. In this territory re
side over finn.CUO persons. They do
not pay income taxes. They Iiv in
the most populous district in (he world
and tiiey count their money by pen
nies instead of by dollars hundreds
and thousands.
When Time Presses
YOU WILL afitxrexaliM Living ou hand few cans of ot
All tW ratfxoa a warming tKrougK iey'v ln colcL Y
Witt tLem yuu au (avpu dainty yet auLsJactial meal in
' Saw minutes. ...
Lot a send jroa mapply of cnir euineJ gootls. In tst
moi aftpeanno they arc so lilt tha cJwr' frnsL gixxls lliat you C
fcrobably ooulJ nest tall tk JiUaraar i1 you were to mala a V
We are making a specialty this week of Heinz Spaghetti Pork and
Beans. Let us sell you a dozen cans.
E. TIGNOR raoNEhffi
uan't ben
ALL the
Choco-'
lates
NATIONAL GUARD MANEUVtRS.
Hy l.'nited Press.
Cearhart Oregnn .Inly 13. Two
thousand national guardsmen from
Uregrm and Idaho and .j00 regulars
fictn the twenty-first Infantry station-
ed at Vancouver Barracks Vash. en-
tered camp here today for ten days or
maneuvering. This is the largest body
of military men ever gathered in en-
campment in the state history. The
twenty-first Infantry tnrtrched to camp
H (Usance of iibout 201 milno leaving
Vancouver Uarrackn July and arriv-
1m; fiere seventh day u Et;o.
WOMEN WATCH POLITICS.
By United Press.
Topeka Kan. July 13. That tho
newly enfranchised Kansas women are
takjng keen Interest In politics and
will cast as heavy a vot In proportion
as the men in the August prini!rics
and congressional and state election
this fail is the belief today of cam
paigners who report that tho attend-
ance at political meetings over the
state Is about half men and half women.
So they
just sell
the Best
of them.
Ice cooled
INTERLAKE REGATTA WEEK.
By United Press.
Put in Jlay July 13. The unnual re-
gatta of the Interlake Yachting asso-
ciation opened litre today and will
Continue throughout the presunt week.
The Cleveland I!o:'t club the Vermil-
lion lioat club arui the Lone Star club
of Toledo are new members which will
compete.
acquainted and who mourn the awak
ening. Mis illustrations were absurd-
ly funny but had convincing truth in
them. He rajiped the bachelor who
if McConnell wejm in the Oklahoma
legislature would bo aotnpellcd to pay
a heatry Lax unless he could produce
a certificate signed by two estimable
women that he was not responsible
for his unmarried state.
He showed that helpmeet is one who
Is adapted qualified for another and
that helpmeets are mated. There is so
much mlsmating so mucls haste to
satisfy some ambition good or evil
and it ends in unhapplness and the
divorce court. He scored the deceit
practiced by sweethearts upon each
other and pleadtid for honeat in court-
ship. McConnell was extremely vigorous
against race suicide declaring that tho
Bible said children are an heritage of
tho Lord and that the young woman
who does not expect or cherish the
ambition to be a mother should not
becomo a wife. Ho said no man
knew the full Joys of life until he had
taken his own child from its mother's
arms thrown it on his shoulder and
felt a stream of hot milk gush down
tho back of his neck. Ho said poor
men esteemed Ibcjuisolves rich in tho
possession of belovd children.
McConnell mimicked the father try-
ing to cairn a crying baby' and then
endeavoring to sit down while making
tho child believe he was still standing
up. That illustration was so realistic
as to make the congregration roar
with merriment.
He drew tears from the eyes of
many as he told of tho boy's room of
how nothing had been prepared Ith
the boy although the horse had its
barn to pigs their pen the chickens
their yard the girl her piano and par-
lor and. how the boy had to go some-
where else to enjoy himself. It was
a superb appeal for the boy's happi-
ness in his own home.
McConnell asked the men of his
audiimce to go to sleep and he pro-
ceeded to teach a lesson to women
after which he directed them to nap
iMhile he lectured the men. Misiity
sound advice was given in both cases.
He urged men to go home after tho
service and give their wive token of
their affection. Ii detailed exactly
now it should be done and his ex-
planation was delightfully refreshiirt;
an4 appealing and humorous. There
was a pathetic strain through it too.
Hs closed with a mighty appeal for
happy homes ftcre so that all might
live i i happiness In the ''koine over
there."
Last night McConnell preached cn
the subject "'hy Tttrrloat Thou?" It
was Liken from trie conversion of
Paul anW was n powerful striking ex-
position of the menace of delay and a
Rtrong exhortation for immediate de
clston. He said men and women
should not Ignore or repudiate their
tlofct of sin. and he aavp three reasons
why ail should promptly accept Jesus
Christ their past their present and
their future life.
He dwelt for some time upon the
mutiplicity of churches and the con-
tusion resulting but pounded home
with dramatic power that each preach-
ed Jesus Christ as the savior of man-
kind. He told of a congregation that
Ind been "busted rkht In two by a
chicken-leg" but that the man who
believed Rod had any hand In the dis
ruptlon was simply a fool.
jgr It
You'll find this is the es-
tablishment to handle all
your needs in
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Finest line only carried
let us have your order this
week we know once you
buy here we'll be sure of
ycur future patronage.
Thrte Phones 14.
THrL)NHINE
THE
Oklahoma National Bank
Of Chicltasl A Oklahoma
Official Statement (Condenned) to the
Comptroller of the Currency-
June 30 1914
RESOURCES
Loans and discounta - - - $4398G7.63
Overdrafts - - - .174.82
U. S. Bonda - - - - 25000.00
Furniture and Fixtures ... 5000.00
Redemption Fund . . -. - 1250.00
State bonds and Warrants - - :0142.90
Cash and sight exchange - - 188'252.45
Total - - - $OSLSi7 70
LIABILITIES
Capital stock.' - - $100000.00
Surplus - - - - 15000.00
Undivided profits net - - 10791.47
Circulation - - 2500'UO
Deposits - 639.H9G.23
Total - $Cfe9b87.70
f ne in the church of ehrint but peopio
did not discuss that very much. Ho
said tho Masonic hypocrite did not
make Masonry wrong because the'
hypocrite had just sneaked in and wag
not in reality a Mason.
McConnell explained away that us-
ual demand for a "feeling" showing
that no feeling might be apparent be-
cause a man chose to do tho right
thing and becomo a Christian. He
pointed out the wiy showed the dan-
gers of delay the littleness of men's
excuses and then offered tho Inst in-
vitation. Evansolist "llig Hill" Tetley
pleaded with eloquent appeal and con-
verts began going to the front.
The various ministers made their
Hniir.nni'emr'nis from the nlatform.
among them being a meeting of thejM
X I ok;1 1...
day evening at the Christian church j
and an organization of tho boya xt i
the town at 7 : -1 5 o'clock Tuesday eve-j
ning at the Kpworth Methodisst church.
Oilier meetings and tho m;ual services ;
also were announced.
Members of the evangelistic party
viero a long time at lie tabepiacle
bidding tjrewcil to friends made dur-
ing their stay in Chickaaha.
Before last night's meeting closed
hundreds held up their hands to pledge
their prayers for the success of the
Tetley meeting at Pauls Valley.
The above Statement is correct.
J. A. JULIEN Cashier.
All business receives careful and painstaking attention
whether large or small. We invite your attention
to the above statement.
I J
n
mill TIME S ARE HARD
Money close and the demand for loans
about three times as large as we can sup-
ply it is natural that in case one of our
regular depositors needs an aocommoda-ti-n
he should be favored first his inter-
est cared for.
Why not protect your future interests by
opening an account with us now the
amount of your firt deposit is not so ma-
terial as the fact that you become one of
our customers.
We are the only bank in Chickasha oper-
ating under the Guaranty Law.
4 per cent paid for time deposits.
Bundle of Clothing
is Found on Porch
Was it foul play a baptising or a
washing left at the wrong house are
the questions being revolved in the
mind of David Hmke 423 Colorado
avenue after finding a bundle of wet
clothes on his porch when he return-
ed from church last night.
Be it any of the tree or any one of
a dozen other possibilities tho fact
remains that the clothes were found.
They were wrapped into a more less
neat bundle and were a complete out
fit of clothing for a girl about 12 years
of age. Even a comb was found in th.;
bundle. Every si itch in the bundle
was wringing wet.
Mr. Burke cannot account for tho
ni u.orii.uu presence. Ho thinks the
clothing might have been left there
by mistake that the wet condition of
the clothing is the result of a tmptm-
i ing er that the owner has be; n the
victim of foul play. Anyone who can
throw any light on the subject may
confer with Mr. fiurke at the abov ;
address.
Mrs. L. C. Wright is spending a few
days in NoriJe with friends and rela
tives.
THEh
Farmers Stale
Bank
1 Oldest
Best
Largest '
INSURANCE
JOHN T. OWSLEY
Fire Tornado Accident Health
Hail on Crcps. Bonds of All Kindt
Suite 412-414 First National Bank L'uiMinK.
CHICK-ASH A :: OKLAHOMA
2SSESBK2Bt
He exprenged his disgust for hypo-
crites and admitted that many vere in
sM3 Onickasha
1 -7;I Si
MAKE YOUR NEXT
SACK
Cream
and your cooking worries will be
fewer. Your cooking better.
It's the onfy Flour made in Chickasha.
Full
tar
WE PRESS YOU
to give u a hearing and thf-n you will
cutely give our work a trial.
If you d( isire god laundry work and
have tailed 'to obtain It It is becaunj
you havo not favored us with an order.
Our methods iml our inrani preclude
liiiflg
Co.
Mrs. Guard Rusnirll gpent Sunday In
Ei Reno wttfc frlyndj
the church but nyocrltes pretending Ihe possibility of poor work. Skilled
to encourago and live & right prjnci-j or:tVby M.'lllti.'nt .nuKt
Pie did not make It right for & man to! produce wonderful results at the
refrain from doing rlflht hlmgelf. He TJ If J
declared hs was a Mason and there' IOy&l JLaUndrV -
I vere forty hypocrites In Masonry to Phone 303. 116 N Third Street.
Before Ypu Purchase.' Figure With Us
It co.'its you nothing find In appro-
ciat'.'l hy u::.
Wm. Cameron
...li;M3Ea.EU.NT mil WJUMM Mtf7RiALT'
Onx a etntwner always a customer.
Give u a trial
South .Third. Phone 1!V
w
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Evans, George H. Chickasha Daily Express. (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. FIFTEEN, No. 165, Ed. 1 Monday, July 13, 1914, newspaper, July 13, 1914; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc730997/m1/2/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.