The Delaware Register. (Delaware, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, September 30, 1910 Page: 3 of 4
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THE DELAWARE REGISTER, SEPTEMBER 30, 1910.
PAGE THREE
I
The New
RAILROAD
Is Coming
So Is the
BIG
AUCTION
SALE
Of Lots In the
BARBRE
Addition
On the First Day of
OCT. 1910
Lots $75 and $100
Prices not
Advanced
$50 Lots all Sold
Buy Now Before the
Advance Comes
Take a Walk Over Our
Way and PICK OUT ONE
Then Come and Talk it
Over with
W. P. Hughes
Sales Agent
The Delaware Register
I
Register Printing Co, Publishers.
I,EN GOHEEN. EDITOR.
Issued Every Friday Morning.
From The Register Building, North
Nain St. Delaware, Oklahoma.
Independent. All Home Print.
Price, $1.00 Per Year in Advance.
ADVERTISING KATES:
12% cents per inch per issue.
Local, S cents per line each insertion
All locals run and charged for until
ordered out.
Entered at the poat office at Delaware. Okla-
homa aa second elms. mail matter, under act of
Congresn of March 8, 1879.
Friday September 30,1910
TAVENNER’S TALK.
By Clyde H. Tavenner.
Special Washington correspondent to
the Register.
Washington, Sept. 27.—Pres-
ident Taft has made it plain
that he hopes and expects to
to secure a renomination for the
Presidency.
This means that he does not
even yet see the point conveyed
in the returns of the recent
elections. It is evident to many
that the President sees no sig-
nificance in the fact that from
Main to California the candidates
branded with his indorsement
have been retired to private
life by overwhelming major-
ities, while those having his op-
position have everywhere been
elevated by the people.
In view of the decisive repudia-
tion of the Taft administration
in the recent elections, it be-
comes interesting to know the
identity of the men whose advise
the President has followed to
his political downfall. Here are
some of the men in the Taft
cabinet whose pedigrees make
it plain why Mr. Taft’s adminis-
tration has failed to please the
common people.
Attorney General George C.
Wickersham—Former attorney
for the sugar trust; (it was he
who induced President Taft to
recommend in his annual mes-
sage against a Congressional
investigation of the $2,000,000
sugar trust underweight frauds;)
immediatly upon taking office
Wickersham dropped suits which
had been started against the
beef trust, taking the position
that he did not believe members
of the trust “ment” to violate
the law and that nothing could
be gained through prosecutions
for “past” offenses; Wickersham
wrote legal opinion vindicating
Ballinger and indicting Pinchot
and Glavis.
Secretary of State, Philander
C. Knox—Former attorney for
the steel .trust; hand of J. P.
Morgan is seen by many in his
conduct of the state department;
the Manchurian proposal, for
Wall street’s benefit, made
America the subject of laughter
in every civilized land, and with
the Crane scandal, practically
ended our influence for the doc-
rine of “the open door.”
Secretary of Agriculture Wil-
son—Does whatever his supe-
rior officers (Taft, Aldrich, Can-
non et al) demand in order to
hold his position; has shown
himself to be an enemy of pure
food laws by permitting manu-
facturers of food products to
use benzoate of soda in any
quanity desired; takes position
retail merchants and not trusts
nor tariff are responsible for in-
creased prices. This is official
view’ of the Taft administration.
Charles Nagel, secretary of
Commerce and Labor—Former
attorney for the Waters-Pierce
(Standard) Oil company; he is
at the head of the department
in which is located the bureau
of corporations.
Secretary of War Dickinson.
Harriman and Illinois Central
lawyer; showed his hand as a
stool pigeon for the railroads by
blocking an independent line of
steamships to Panama.
Secretary of the Treasury
MacVeagh—His record is im-
material, as Aldrich is real head
of currency and finance of coun
try.
Ballinger—Exposed and dis-
credited. but still in office.
THE TRUTH ABOUT MAINE.
Sufficient time time has now
passed to get the truth from
Maine. Authentic reports show
that the Democratic victories
there were not won principally
upon state and local issues as
the Republican leaders have
tried to represent. The most
prominent issues were:
Failure of the Republican
party to fulfill its campaign
pledge to revise the tariff down-
ward, high post of living, Can-
nonism, Haleism, questions pre-
taining to prohibition.
The Democratic congressional
candidates promised to investi-
gate and expose the following:
The costs of living as effected
by the tariff and the trusts.
Extravagance in government
expenditures.
The part played by Mr. Wick-
ersham in the sale of friar lands
in the Philippines.
The amount of money Cortel-
you and other cabinet members
squeezed out of plutocrats for
campaign purposes when Roose-
velt ran in 1904, and how much
Hitchcock raised for Taft four
years later.
sites and Ballinger’s relation
thereto. • ,
The reasons why President
Taft joins the Guggenheims in
denying to Alaska territorial
government.
The influences behind the rub-
ber schedule, cotton schedule
and wool schedule of the Payne-
Aldrich tariff bill.
The part played by national
officers in promoting the plund-
ering of the civilized Indians of
Oklahoma by lawyers, claim
agents and politicians.
GENEROSITY OF ALDRICH.
Republican candidates for Con-
gress boast of the generosity of
Senator Aldrich in permitting
a large number of articles to go
on the free list in the new tariff
law. And Democratic candidates
are telling what the free list
really consists of. Some of the
things that the generous Rhode
Island statesman permitted on
the free list were joss-sticks,
bladders, dried blood and horse
hair. Then there are bird’s
eggs, lemon juice, turtles and
junk. Also acorns, bones, ashes,
zaffer, catgut, fossils, Brazilian
pebbles and oakum.
The efforts of the trusts and
syndicates to grab timber and
mineral lands and water power.
NOTICE TO HUNTERS.
Get your hnnting license from
County Clerk, Ed Elliott, and
receive complimentary a hand-
some little case which to carry
the license in.#
Try the Register job work.
JUST ARRIVED
A new and complete line of
SUNDRIES
Also a special shipment of fine
MEESCHAUM
. and BRIER PIPES
Everything to Please
We are now selling the famous
AGANIPPI SPRINGS WATER
City Drug Store
Delaware.....Oklahoma
HOOPER & GRIFFITT
General Blacksmiths
and Woodworkers
Hot and Cold Tire Setting
Farm and Machine work, Repairing a Specialty
GUARANTEED TO PLEASE
Shop West of Humboldt Supply Co.
W. E. BRUNER
General Blacksmithing and Horseshoeing
I. F. McCamment
WOOD WORKER AND CARRIAGE MAKER
Repairing In Any Line Properly Done.
Home Pure Food Bakery
FRESH BREAD EVERY DAY
Cookies, Cakes and Pies
Always Fresh
J. W. McCAIN Prop. - - Delaware Okla.
t -.
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Goheen, Len. The Delaware Register. (Delaware, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, September 30, 1910, newspaper, September 30, 1910; Delaware, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1321763/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.