The State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, December 16, 1910 Page: 3 of 20
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Friday, December 16, 1910
The State Journal
Mulhall, Oklahoma
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GET READY FOR THE FIRST ANNUAL
Poultry Show at Mulhall
January 17, 18 and 19, 1911
f| J. H. CORY, President F. F. BALL, Superintendent A. B.WOOD, Secy. ||
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LOCAL NEWS
F. F, Bail's father, motherand
sister came Thursday night to
spend Christmas at the Ball
home.
J G. Wilson is making speciil
prices on a go jd grade of New
Mexico coal. See the adv. on an-
other page.
Col. R. V. Leahy, p.stoffice
inspector for this district, is here
today checking up the local
office. Inspector Leahy resides
at Guthrie.
G. H. Chapman & and Son are
dirtributing some small calendars
that are very pretty. They are
small, being about the sive of an
ordinary envelope and may be
mailed to friends and their cus-1
tomers.
Notice t he big adv. of John
Thompson, grocer, on ano'her
page of The State Journal. This
is the largest exclusive grocery
house in Mulhall, and the prices
noted are for the first-class
articles. Give John a call.
other page.
Note the Mulhall creamery
adv. on the subject of coal. The
special prices made on the Miss-
ouri coal as noted in last week's
State Journal induced many buy-
ers to come in and nearly twenty
lo^ds of coal were sold Saturday.
This is a practical demonstration
that advertising in The State
Journal pays.
Charlie Carpenter, ex-sheriff
of Logan county, was in town
today. Charlie's friends are
pushing him into the U. S. mar-
shall fight, as a successor of John
Abernathy. resigned. Charlie is
capable and deserving and his
hundreds of Logan county
friends hope he pulls the plum.
Abernathy's resignation takes
effect January 1, 1910.
A post card from Col. A. P.
Kidvvell, locates him at Sanford,
IF
People who buy our coal find it burns well, and comes ^
back for more, is it not good evidence that you would ♦
find it satisfactory also ? ♦
Buying your coal of the Mulhall Creameary eventually ^
>cket
coal
puts the money right back in your own pocket, isn't it ^
a business proposition to buy YOUR coal of the ^
creamery ? ▲
Answer these questions and stand by your own institu- ^
tion. ▼
♦
Mulhall Creamery ♦
Company.
Phones 2 and 35.
P. S. WATCH OUT FOR NEXT WEEK'S ADV. ♦
Florida, where he visited the
greatest celery field in the south.
He writes that 35 acres brought
$35,000. He writes that all the
Mulhall boys who invested in
everglade land had better hold
same, as it is increasing in value
rapidly. Col. Kid well says he
has not yet had to discard his
Oklahoma winter clothing. He
expects to return here about
January 1.
Mrs. George K. Chapman was
reduced to unsconscious for some
time as a result of the run away
of their driving horse last Thurs-
day evening just as they reach-
ed their home. Mr. Chapman
received no serious injuries. The
buggy was torn to pieces. The
horse ran into the iron fence at
the McConnehey place and re-
moved about two sections and
several posts. We trust Mrs.
Chapman will recover soon from
the bruises and shock.
CRUCE HAD BUT 20,000 THE LEAD.
Socialist Hold Balance of Power In
New State.
Final figures compiled by the
state election board show that
Lee Cruce, democratic candidate
for governor, received a plurality
of 20,691 over J. W. McNeal. re-
publican. Cruce led the demo-
cratic ticket with a total of 120,-
217. McNeal received 99,527;
Cumbie (Socialist,) 24,607 and
Rouch (Prohibitionist) 3,214.
Altogether 253,730 votes were
cast.
All six of the state questions
were defeated. Two of them,
the railroad and tax-amend-
ments, carried a "yes" and "no"
vote, but failed to receive a ma-
jority of all the votes cast. In
order for any of them to have
carried they would have had to
receive 127,366 "yes" votes.
The local option amendment re-
ceived the largest number of
favorable votes, 105,141, but was
overwhelmingly defeated, with
126,118 votes against it. The
woman's suffrage amendment
had 88,208 votes for, and 128,-
928 against. The Bryan election
law, upon which a referendum
Public
Sdlc
Dec. 23;
Having decided to rent my
i farm and quit farming, I will
sell at public sale the following:
25 head of fine cattle, including
7 head of registered Pole cows.
5 fine red Pole heifers.
5 good milch cows.
4 red Pole yearling heifers.
3 fine red Pole bull calves.
23 head of hogs, including
19 fine gilts, with pig to fine
Registered Poland China Boar.
Also 250 bales of prairie hay
and a lot of farming implements.
Time: Friday, December 23,
1910.
Place: My farm at Mulhall,
Oklahoma.
See large bills.
M. A. MULHALL.
N. H. Kelso, Auctioneer.
L. K. Meek, Clerk.
was invoked by the repubblicans,
was defeated by a vote of 80,208
votes for to 106,659 against. It
could have become a law by a
bare majority vote. The "New
Jerusalem" bill lost by 82,929 to
116,698.
The returns on about half of
the state ticket show these plu-
ralities: Lieutenant governor, J.
J. McAlester, (Dem.), 21,923;
state treasurer, Robert Dunlap
(Dem.), 24,753; secretary of
state, Ben Harrison (Dem), 23,-
610; chief mine inspector, Ed
Boyle (Dem.) 23,260; attorney
general, Charles West (Dem.),
25,938; state auditor, Leo Meyer
(Dem.), 24,205.
Read State Journal advs.
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Woosley, Tom B. The State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, December 16, 1910, newspaper, December 16, 1910; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126925/m1/3/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.