The Delaware Register. (Delaware, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1910 Page: 2 of 6
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THE DELAWARE REGISTER SEPTEMBER 23, 1910
JOHNSON & DANIEL’S
South Market
M. L. WRIGHT, Manager
Always Has Something
—— Good to Eat
Fresh Meats
Salt Meats
Sugar Cured Hams
Premium Breakfast Bacons
Staple and Fancy Groceries
We Sell Home Bakery Bread
Buy and Sell Country Produce
Call Phone No. 1,
Delaware,
Okla.
BULLY FOR MARY.
Emporia Gazette: When the new
queen of England first went into ef-
fect ahe didn't make much of a hit
with the Crown and Scepter Editor
of the Gazette, who didn't like the
way she did up her front hair. More-
over, the stories about the new queen, possible, she would be doing a great
which were current in the Public
fluence wisely and patriotically. She
could not do better than to follow the
example of Queen Mary, and stand up
for home industries. She does most
of the buying for her home, as a rule,
and if she always insisted upon hav-
ing goods produced as near home as
Prints, indicated that she took a mo-
rose and severe view of things, and
made life a burden to her associates.
Rut then you never can believe the
things you see in print.
The latest reports from England in-
dicate that Mary is just the sort of
« queen the country has been needing
for several hundred years, and the
Gazette, which was the first to criti-
cise her front hair arrangement, is
among the first to congratulate her
upon the manifestation of a variety
of horse sense that is uncommon, not
only in royal palaces, but in the hum-
ble homes of the plain people.
Queen Mary has given it out fiat
that in making purchases for the roy-
al households, British manufacturers
will be patronized from the beginning
of the l'Bt to the end. This applies to
wearing ai parel, grub, furniture and
every doodad that can be named.
The royal kitchens always have
been presided over by French and
Italian cooks, and these dignitaries
will be fired immediately, and their
places given to British cooks. The
foreign style of cookery will he aban-
deal in the upbuilding of the com
m unity.
The queen has established a beauti-
ful precedent in England, and. while
a slavish imitation of royalty Is a
thing to be deplored, the women can't
do better than imitate her curves in
this matter.
Old papers exchanged for
clean rags free from lint at the
Register office.
TRADED ONE OFF.
A Russian woman, living near
Winnepeg, Canada. recently
gave birth to twins, but her hus-
band was so displeased over the
dual addition to his family that
he promptly traded one of the
! babies to another Russian for a
pig. The case came to the at-
i tention of the government au-
thorities and a constable was
sent out and the father was
forced to cancel the trade, which
he had made over the hitter
Latest styles of ladies trimed
hats at the Delaware Cash Store.
protests of the mother. It is
doned or discouraged, and the royal ' probable that the entire family
family will get back to a safe and -yvill be deported.
sane diet of roast beef and plum pud- | --
ding.
This is the most sensible innova-
tion that has been made by a British
monarch in a thousand years. It's
importance cannot be over estimated
The influence of the queen reaches to
every household in the empire upon
which the sun never sets,
the queen does is
hv every British matron, and so this
new scheme will do more for the
home industries of the country than
anything that can be devised.
American women are not queens
in the British sense: they have no
crowns or scepters, and most of them
do up their hair in a becoming style.
Every American woman in good
standing has a circle of influence,
however, and she should use that in-
KISS CURES NERVOUSNESS.
The osculatory art at last has
been put to a practical purpose,
whatever The kiss has healing power and
promptly imitated is a neVer-failing balm for nerv-
ousness, in the opinion of Jas.
L. Carrico, a Washington baker.
Carrico’s wife testified that
when he put his arms about her
and kissed her, her nervousness
disappeared.
When you want something
nice in vacant or improved pro-
perty see W. P. Hughes.
The City
Drug Store
Wants your trade
And will try to please
you in every way.
I
BJ?witt & Miller
Delaware
Oklahoma
TAVENNER'S TALK.
By Clyde H. Tavonner.
Special Washington correspondent to
the Register.
Washington, Sept. 21. -Spend-
ing $3,567,685.66 every business
day, the United States’under the
reign of the standpat Republi-
cans has become the most ex-
travagant government in the
world.
Increased expenditures in the
first year of the Taft adminst-
ration, over the corresponding
year of Cleveland’s last admin-
istration, amounted to $575,730,
600, or over 120 per cent. This
occured under the much-herald-
ed Taft policy of “cut-to-the-
quick” economy, recently re-
pudiated in Maine and Vermont.
National expenditures for the
ensuing year amounted to $1,
098,847,184, which is more than
the entire capital of all the nat-
ional banks in the United States,
$919,143,815, and more than one-
third of the entire output of all
our gold mines in 120 years,
$3,063,787,000.
Two striking illustrations of
the Republican “business” ad-
ministration are: A deficit of
$11,579,265 since June 30, 1910.
A deficit of $180,381,354.69 since
June 30, 1907.
Here are some of the ways the
standpatters spend the people’s
money in a republic:
Marble baths for senators.
Autos to carry them 100 rods
between their offices and the
Capitol. Touring cars for the
President, vice president and
“Uncle Joe.”
More than $2,500 for appoli-
naris water for the senators.
Thousands of dollars to keep
them in vaseline, castor oil,
olive oil, bromo quinine, hair
tonic, costly perfumes, glycer-
ine, bergamot, nail brushes,
clothes brushes, traveling ex-
penses in attending funerals,
etc.
MUCH MONEY WASTED.
If the wast at Washington’ is
$300,000,000 a year, as stated by
Aldrich, every American family
suffers to the extent of $16.66
every year. This enough to buy
a suit of clothes. It will buy an
overcoat or a cloak. It will buy
nearly three tons of coal. It
will buy four or five pairs of
shoes, or various other neces-
saries.
PEOPLE ARE NOT REPRESENTED.
An increased annual tax of
$100,000,000 has been saddled
upon the American people thru
increased freight rates with-
in the last few years without
opposition by the government.
But this is not enough. The
railroads want still more reve-
nue, and as soon as the Novem-
ber elections are over it is believ-
ed they will be allowed to boost
their rates a couple of notches
higher.
The interstate commerce com-
mission is now going through
the formal procedure of taking
testimony as to the reasonable-
ness of the new increases which,
according to the estimates of the
commission, will swell the an-
nual profits of the railroads
$500,000,000. There are high-
priced lawyers for the railroads
at the hearings, and also an im-
posing array of legal talent for
the big shippers. The public
alone is unrepresented.
One fact that has cropped out
at the hearings is that the rail-
roads seem to have unanimously
agreed that the increased rates
shall apply where they will be
the least annoyance to the trusts
and big combinations of manu-
facturers. The added burden is
to be laid or the little fellow
the merchant, the householder,
the fathers and mothers of the
families, the country storekeeper
and the farmer. Products of
th^ trusts enjoy a striking im
munity from increases. This is
not hard to understand. It is
not easy for the railroads to put
an increased rate over on the
sugar or the steel trust. Such
[ H. C. BERENTZ
General Merchandise
EARTHENWARE, CROCKERY AND TINWARE,
GENTS’ AND LADIES’ FURNISHINGS
Phone No. 2.
South Main St., Delaware Okla.
and nail and probably defeated
by counsel for the combines who
gather like flies '•’ out the room
in which the coir fission meets.
But it is easy money to put an
increased rate over on the gen-
eral consumer, because he isn’t
present to enter objection, nor
is anyone there to enter object-
ion for him.
The interstate commerce com-
mission declares it represents no
one in particular, but sits as a
judicial body wholly. The re-
sult is that in many, many in-
stances the case goes against
the consumer by default.
School children are usually
pictured as in rebellion against
the beginning of the school year,
but the truth is that the retuiyi
of the average boy or girl to his
or her hooks in September is as
happy as the closing of them in
June.
Boiling Time for Vegetables.
From the Boston Herald.
The following valuable table of time
for the boiling of vegetables will be
of use to many cooks:
Asparagus. 15 to 20 minutes.
Beans (shell), one to two hours.
Beans (string), two hours.
Young beets. 45 to 60 minutes.
Carrots, 40 minutes.
Cabbage. 30 to 45 minutes.
Onions, 30 to 45 minutes.
Peas, 15 to 20 minutes.
Spinach. 20 to 30 minutes.
Tomatoes, 15 to 20 minutes.
Turnips, two or three hours.
OIL EXCHANGE
CAFE
Campbell & Quigley. Prop.
We Buy and Sell Everything
Good to Eat. You can get
Roast Pork. Roast Beef, Boil-
ed Ham, FRESH EGGS, DAY
OR NIGHT, Sliced Meats by
the Pound, Sweet and Fresh.
We will also handle Fish
and Oysters.
In fact everything that goes
to make up a good meal.
Give us a Trial.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
1. Barbre Addition a beautiful 100
acre tracL
2. Lots 21, 22 and 23 B 2 Zane ad-
dition $600 each. These are fine busi-
ness lots 50x140 fronting on Main street.
3. A nice 2 room cottage, good well
grounds 50x140 $600.
4. Good 5 room house, cistern, lot
60x140, close in $1200.
5. 8 room, 2 story house, lot 60x140
one of the best houses and nicest locat-
ion in town, close in, $2200.
6. 10 acres oil and agricultural land
one mile north of Delaware, $100 an
acre. This tract is leased and royalty
goes with sale. Several good oil wells
close by, Warranty Deed and perfect
abstract of title.* Here is a chance to
grow rich.
7. 80 acres, one half mile north east
of Delaware $50 per acre, this is good
oil land and fiin agricultural land, leased
royalty goes with sale. Warranty
Deed with perfect abstract of title,
here is a chance to make a fortune.
8. A few other good properties
worth the money.
Call on or address
W. P. Hughes Sales Agent
Delaware - - - - Oklahoma.
Main Street
Delaware
Okla.
increases would be fought tooth
Then You Know It Is Pure!
When you put a cold drink in-
to your “inners” you want to
get not only the cooling effect
but the beneficial results as well.
Then it must be pure, made with
pure flavors and of a pure distil'-
ed water. That is. what you
get when you call for the Elec-
tric Bottling Work’s goods made
in Nowata. Their pops and
other bottled drinks are absolute-
ly pure and healthful. Take it for
a washer, use it for a chaser.
It tasts good, is good and does
good all the way down. For
sale everywhere. All flavors.
Your’s for the “dough”,
W. A. Sandefur.
Barbre & French, buv and sell
everything. _
WATCHES FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
FREE! FREE* FREE!
For Getting Subscribers for the Kan-
sas City Weekly Journal.
Her to Boys and Girls.
Any boy or girl who will secure ten
new subscribers lor the Kansas City
Weekly Journal at 25 cents per year
each, making a total of $2.56, and will
send the full amount to us together
with t.hr names and addresses, we will
mail to his or I er address postage
preraid a beautiful solid nickel-silver
watch.
Description as follows:
Attractive solid nickle-silver watch,
handsomely engraved 1-andseer design
back. Movement is American con-
struct'on. Jeweled eseapment, damas-
keened plates. Dials are white ana-
mel, Arabic figures. This watch is
an up-to-date bassine model with anti-
que pendant and bow. A nice size
for the boy or girl
Povs and girls, here is your chance
to secure a beautiful present by do-
ing a little work In getting subscrip-
tions Do not lose any time, but get
out and Becure the ten subscribers be-
fore It Is too late. Remember that
the subscription price to the Weekly
Journal is only 25 cents a year. You
get 10 subscribers, making $2.50.
This offer will only hold good until
January 1, 1911.
Write names and addresses plainlv.
and send money by postofflce order
or draft, and address all communica-
tions to The Kansas City Journal.
Kansas City, Mo.
Please take not that names must be
sent in all In one list and money must
be sent with them, or we cannot send
you the watch. Address.
The Kansas City Journal, Kansas City,
Mo.
Delaware Cleaning Works
STOUT BROS.. Proprietors.
Ladies' and Gents’ Clothes Cleaned
i and Pressed.
Cleaning, Pressing, Repareing All
Work Guaranteed.
We want to show you something in
Men’s Latest Style Made-to-measure
Suits Made to Order.
Hats Cleaned and Blocked.
Delaware. Okla.
Phone 606. Strictly All New.
METROPOLITAN HOTEL
EUROPEAN PLAN.
C. A. DUNKENTON, Mgr.
Special Attention Given to Men From
the Fields.
110 to 114 E. 8th St. Coffeyville, Kan.
O. H. WILLS
DEALER IN
Newspapers, Periodicals.
Magazines,
Stationery, Cigars. Tobacco,
Post-Cards.
Postoffice Bld'g.,
Delaware, Oklalicma
Call at the
City Barb erShop
For a good First Class job
Keen Tools, Clean Linin,
Your patronage will be
appreciated
Agency Robeits Laundry
W. B. DUNLAP - - - Prop.
Bring the Babies in
and Have that
Picture Made
A. F. COONS
Photographer
Delaware, Okla.
Family Groups a Specialty
HUDSON’S
BARBER SHOP
Strictly First Class
East Side Main Street
Delaware,----Oklahoma.
DELAWARE TANK CO.
Manufactui ers of
Oil and Water Tanks
Surface Cisterrs ard Resmciis
All Work Guaranteed.
Rear of Humboldt Supply Co.
W. O. Campbell Walter Meyers
C. W. GARRISON
PRACTICAL
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER
Delaware, Okla.
SHUCKER & STEWART
Blacksmiths and Expert Horseshoers
Horseshoeing is our Specialty
General Repairing
At Chase’s Old Stand
Delaware.......Oklahoma
EDWARDS & EDWARDS
Physicians and Surgeons
Office in Coons Bldg.
Delaware, Okla.
Old Eyes Made New!
I can’t give you new eyes, but
I can make your old eyes as good
as new, with a pair of my care-
fully fitted glasses.
I understand eyes and glasses; my
business is to fit one to another. Let
me help you to see as you used to. pos-
sibly as you have never seen before.
I fit the eye and the face, benefit the
looks and improve the vision so that
headache and nervousness are relieved.
I make a specialty of school children’s
glaces.
M. B. Moudy
DOCTOR OF OPTICIAN—at Dun-
lap’s Barber Shop.
That Cozy Place
FULERTON’S
Ice Cream and Con-
fectionary Parlor
North Main St.. Opposite the
Wilbur Theater.
Coffeyville
Purity
Sold.
Ice Cream
Reich & Sons
Livery and Feed Stables,
Delaware, Okla.
First class Rigs, careful drivers
at all times. Give us a call.
E. H. CULLISON
LAWYER
Notary Public
Delaware. Oklahoma.
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Goheen, Len. The Delaware Register. (Delaware, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1910, newspaper, September 23, 1910; Delaware, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1321784/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.