The State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, February 11, 1910 Page: 3 of 18
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Friday
The State Journal
Mulhall, Oklahoma
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THE PENNY NUISANCE.
Bond's - Grocery
As usual, we are 'here with the goods." No special sale, but
we're going right along selling more groceries and selling them
cheaper than any of our competitors. We sell only the best;
we cannot afford to sell a poor article. And in order to con-
vince you as to our prices, read below:
GROCERIES, ETC.
J Fancy Rice, five pounds.
I Beans, 4J pounds for
Best Raisins, 4 pounds for
! Soda, three packages for
Two pounds Pru.ies,
i 3 cans of Tomatoes
Fine Navel Oranges per dozen
Fine Navel oranges, per Peck,
Bananas per dozen,
Lemons, per dozen
Corn, 3 cans for
25c I
25c
25c
25c
25c
25c
35c
45c
25c
25c
25c
SPICES, SOAPS, ETC.
Spices 6 packages for 25c
Matches, per dozen boxes, 50c
White Russian Soap 6 bars for 25c
Grandpa's wonder Tar soap, 3 bars, 25c
KirK's Cocoa Hardwater soap, 3 bars 25c
Naphtha, 10 bars for 45c
Sauer Kraut, 6 pounds for 25c
Pickles, 3 dozen for 25c
COLORADO POTATOES, CI flR
PER BUSHEL, jH.UU
This is only a small amount of the great number of things we
have in the line of good things to eat. We want your trade,
and that's why we're buying space in the State Journal to tell
you of the good things we have to sell you for the table.
Milton L. Bond
[Sucesssor to LEMMONS & BOND.
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Cow Gives 105 Pints of Milk in Day.
Columbia, Mo., Feb. 2.—Mis-
souri Chief Josephine, a Holstein
cow, owned by the Missouri Ag-
ricultural College, yesterday gave
thirteen gallons and one pint of
milk. This lacks only 1 3 pounds
of being equal of the world's
record of the production of milk
in one day.
The record cow in the United
States, which also holds the rec-
ord for the world, is a native of
Massachusetts. That cow gave
106 pounds of milk in one day,
which is only about a pint more
than Josephine gave yesterday.
In a week's test Josephine has
given an average of more than
forty-five quarts of milk a day.
Several months ago she estab-
lished a record for this state of
forty-seven quarts of milk a day.
The average consumption of
milk is two-thirds pint a person.
Josephine could have furnished a
tenement of 157 persons with the
milk they get by their daily al-
lowance in a big city. If churned
into butter Josephine yesterday
would have produced about three
and one-half pounds, which at
present prices would bring $1.40.
At the current price of milk in
Columbia—cents a quart-
Josephine's milk yesterday would
have brought $3.90.
To get this amount of milk
Josephine was milked three times.
It took 45 cents worth of feed
daily to keep Josephine when her
record was made. She ate al-
falfa, corn, ensilage,, bran, oil
meal and oats.
We are indebted toUncle Joe
Johns for the above remarkable
cow story. Uncle Joe clipped the
article from the Saint Louis Re-
public, which paper he swears
by, at least politically, and as
Uncle Joe is all right (except his
politics) we will have to admit
that the story must be all right.
Kidney disease is a dangerous
ailment. You should never delay
a moment to take some good, re-
liable, dependable remedy. In
such cases we recommend De-
Witt's Kidney and Bladder Pills.
These wonderful pills are being
used by thousands of people daily
with fine results.' They are for
weak kidneys, weak back, back
ache,inflammation ot the bladder,
and all urinary disorders. Sold
by all druggists.
Read State Journal ads.
Postoffice Department at Last Takes
Steps to Mitigate This
Inconvenience.
The State Journal has for a
long time hammered away on the
rural route patrons as to the
penny nuisance. That is, we have
advocated the placing of recep-
tables in boxes so the carrier
could take them from the box
conveniently. While a very large
majority of the patrons have pro-
vided themselves with some sort
of arrangement looking to an in -
provementof this difficulty, there
[are still a great many who have
not, and seem to have paid no at-
tention to warnings sent out by
the department, and published by
the State Journal from time to
time. The postoffice has at last
taken notice of this apparent
disregard of the warning, and
the following notice has been re-
ceived by the local postmaster:
The Postmaster,
Mulhall, Okla. Sir: — In
view of the extent to which the
practice of placing loose coins in
boxes by rural patrons has grown,
and the delay in the delivery and
collection of mail and the hard-
ship imposed on rural carriers in-
cident thereto, you are informed
that, commencing Feb. 15, prox-
imo, rural letter carriers will not
be required to collect loose coins
from rural mail boxes.
Batrons should enclose coins in
an envelope, wrap them securely
in a piece of paper, or deposit
them in a coin-holding receptacle,
so they can be easily and quickly
taken from boxes, and carriers
will be required to liftsuch coins,
and, where accompanied by mail
for dispatch, attach the requisite
stamps.
Respectfully,
P. V. DeGraw, -
Fourth Asst. Postmaster Gen'l.
If you would have a safe yet
certain Cough Remedy in the
home, try Dr. Shoop's—at least
once. It is thoroughly unlike any
other Cough preparation. Its
taste will be entirely new to you
—unless it is already your favor-
ite Cough Remedy. No opium,
chloroform, or any other stupe-
fying ingredients are used. The
tender leaves of a harmless, lung-
healing mountainous shrub, give
to Dr. Shoop's Cough Remedy its
wonderful curative properties. It
is truly a most certain and trust-
worthy prescription. Sold by All
Dealers.
Bad Habits.
The grasshopper chewsjtobacco;
The quail gets out his pipe;
The fishhawk is so awful poor
He has to hunt a "snipe."
The rooster has his cocktail;
The orchard gets plum full;
The onion squanders every scent,
And the radish has a pull.
Racket store removed to post-
office building.
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Woosley, Tom B. The State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, February 11, 1910, newspaper, February 11, 1910; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126596/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.