The State Journal. (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1905 Page: 1 of 16
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The State Journal.
Third Year.
Mulhall, Logan County, Qklahoma> Friday, August
11, 1905.
Number
j County and City News. 5
Cooler.
Corn is ripening.
George Pettyjohn was here
from Redrock on business yester-
day.
Barney Woolverton, wife and
son visited Mrs. Woolverton here
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Rawlings
are entertaining Mrs. Rawlings'
sister, Miss Sophia Shannon.
Ed Baskins has opened up a
meat market in connection with
his grocery and begun serving
the trade today.
Miss Fay Williams, formerly
at Mrs. Taylor's restaurant, was
married at Guthrie this week to
Dennis Randall of Meridian.
The ice cream social held at
Antioch last Saturday night was
a very successful one, nearly $20
being added to the organ fund.
A marriage license was issued
Tuesday of this week by Judge
Strang to Rollin E. Anthis of
Mulhall and Miss Maudie Eggle-
ston of Cushing.
James Spengler, who is em-
ployed as manager on the 101
ranch, spent Saturday and Sun-
day wich his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. M. Spangler here.
Pete Tate bought out John
Hron's interest in the market,
and this week moved it to the
Rawlings block, combining
with his commission business.
day. Ottis returned to Guthrie
Sunday evening, but Mrs. Potter
and the baby remained over un-
til Thursday asternoon visiting
relatives here.
The Band Concert!
The Mulhall Rough-Rider band gave the people of Mulhall a
splendid entertainment at the Presbyterian church last Tuesday
evening, August 8, just before their departure for Clinton, Okla.,
The music was
Thanks !
r „ ,, ,, „... o, just ueiore cneir departure f<
tary Band °I desi^ hf /"! ^ ^ PlayS & threG dayS' ^gement. me music was
thank the Deonle of a \ ° & i grade a"d the b°yS a11 shoW g0°d ability' Wil1 Champion
vicinity for ^!he^r HhH " 1 and S6emS t0 have the band in much better dri than
y or their liberality in i it ever has been. Every member of this band is a musician-
Misses1 Wood°and <PhilHr!s for proceeds of the evening were about $25.00, which will
sistance in the nro^rlm tvf" I H? &PP 1 °" the expense of u™forms. The uniforms adopted are
State Journal for courtesies and! in themlatl0n milltary khaki uniform, and the boys looked natty
favors extended. We assure all! '
they are appreciated.
W M rm„Dm„ n j 4. Trilby is glad to say that Miss
w. M. Champion, Conductor. Audrey SaMng has not been suf_
, fering with heart trouble for the
Mews Letters from
'Round About.
party at Mr. J. Scott's Friday
night.
Mrs. J. J. Hayhurst and son
past two weeks, as Maria said in ThlocW vi > A n , . T ^
her w - n moa Theodore visited Dolph Rupert
her items last week. It was ma
laria, I always thought it was
| Uy state Jouniiil Workers - ~ J wu
uoowaaoQwqftoijaaooiKHWolf a girl about the age of Maria who
1 suffered with heart trouble.
Spring Creek Clatter*
By Dan Tucker.
Nice rain last Sunday.
Mr. Lambert is building a new
house for Charlie Kissner.
Mrs. Amelia Wreath visited
Schaffer, last
Trilby's Echo.
Little Earne Haight and Carrie
Dixon are both improving.
James Haight and C. H.Saling
were Stillwater visitors Tuesday.
Mrs. H. Boughan and Mrs. I.
F. Wortman are reported better.
W. I. Beach and wife of Poncai her mother, Mrs.
City visited his uncle, N. H. Kel- j week.
so, last week. j Mr. Editor, it is a busy time
Mrs. Iva Nickerson and little nowadays, and there is not much
daughter, Doloma, returned to! news to write.
Missouri last week. j Several of the neighbors of this
Miss Lettie Smith expected to ; vicinity went to the Cimarron to
start to Edmond Thursday to gather plums last Thursday.
visit her grandfather and other j Mrs. Perry's sister and fami-
relatives. j jy from near chandler spent a
Mr. Parker's brother and his ' few days with her last week,
it j brother-in-law are visiting him Mr. and Mrs. Dwyer, Mr and
Mr, W n m v i , from Missouri. The latter may ( Mrs. Smith and Willie Perry and
r1and SOn l0Cate here- i wi,e Su"d^d Doe he's
fprHflv tn ri ^ yes" N- H- Kelso has received a let- and ate ice cream.
terday to spend a few days with; ter from W. B. Fisher of Pleas- -n «
Speifgle^^whtfe Mr dM^^' ^ anton, Kansas, saying they were Rtifji Route No. 3.
McG,nIey 18 we":. — their son Harry,
traveling in Texas.
Mrs. M. J. Belless and grand-
daughter, Miss Woodcock, left
this afternoon for Davenport,
Oklahoma, where they will visit
for a week. Mrs. Belless has ex-
tensive property interests at that
place, and look after them while
visiting there.
The local postmaster was at
Guthrie Saturday to confer with
Rural Agent G. M. Brown in re-
lation to the revision of the rural
lines out of Mulhall to conform
to the county system require-
ments. Mr. Brown will pay us a
visit shortly.
Mr. and Mrs. Ottis Potter of
Guthrie visited at the home of
Mrs. Potter's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Will Fitzpatrick, last Sun-
Mon-
would teach school this winter.! Dolph Rupert threshed
M. Alderson killed a large wild day.
cat near his home Monday morn-! Did you say watermelon was
ing, and caught sight of twoj no good?
others The cat he shot sprang1 Ge0rge, where are you and
for a chicken that was drinking your items?
from the creek, we understand, j rnrl rw" A
TTnnio t u i. I Garter attended the party
Uncle Josh, we accept you as at Mr. Scott's.
an authority on all perplexing T_v,„ orw,
qoestions; please tell us the two1J,h' M. Alber' P?lffer vls""
principle notes in music; also the i „ " , ' ys ay;
consequences if an irresistible Mr. Editor! Nice little
power should come in contact jshower we had last Sunday.
with an immovable object.
The friends and neighbors of
N. H. Kelso did not spend Sun-
day with him as Uncle Josh ad-
vised them to. Trilby would
Clarence and Charlie Barnard
are busy making hay this week.
Miss Hallie Kemp was mail
carrier on route three Saturday.
Trixy, did ^he dust storm strike
rather spend the day with those! you Sunday, or did it"go 'round"
who do the hacking than those
persistent wheat sowers.
you?
Howard
Dick attended
Friday.
Willie and Maudie Rupert vis-
ited their grandmother, Mrs. J.J.
Hayhurst, Sunday.
Miss Mary Pfeiffer has re-
turned to her work in the store,
after a week's visit with home
folks.
Sandburr, come off the heel,
and let's see your items in our
newsy State Journal some time
again.
Solomon Pfeiffer is talking of
going to Arlington, Nebraska, to
attend the wedding of his only
sister, which is set for August
10. Hurry up, Pfeiffer !
Now, George, we know what
Trixy means by "Dutch quarter."
She thinks a kiss given to her by
a Dutchman is only worth a
quarter. I'll just bet that's it,
don't you, George.
Maria, Aunt Matt cannot tell
you where she lives, but from
what you write, you must be a
neighbor of Mrs. Lizard, who
livqs on the other side of the road
in another rock pile. But we shall
try and find you sometime, Maria.
Yes, Miss Maria, Aunt Matt
invites you to eat clabber-milk
and pickles with her, if you can
find her, and also bring Trilby
with you, then we will call upon
Miss Trixy and fill up on chicken
and pumpkin pie and get fat. We
have never had a smell of fried
chicken, have we?
Old papers at P. P., 10c per c.
Harness at Spangler's.
Buggies at Spangler's.
Disc plows at Spangler's.
Second-class colonist rates to
the northwest March 1, to May
15th, and September 15 to Oct-
ober 31, 1905. Rates range from
the | dfstancet0 acc°rding to
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Woosley, Tom B. The State Journal. (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1905, newspaper, August 11, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127812/m1/1/?q=aRCHIVES: accessed May 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.