The Duke Times (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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WHEN BIO
BOSSES MR
by JQtKt
tt t*AM M things H#w ««*•
OlltteU ••■* ih«» i««i tt* fur
M •!« nUmi i«Hi •»< »tt«i
u In lh« *»• •• 'tt*
dtNIi in* lMl« lfc»
rsJlr*>s4 Hulea laiifud
wd h*< • I»•« "f
l« o'llrWsa i«un *"•» «r Ini*
Ib**' |iir« • rfn MM HI tit
Urn •u|>i«nuk| In '«•». nud
ihU U ib# ait»r» tti» II hap
prt.r.1 Th* |—»pls "t th* tUUU
I Ha stockholder* of ihe tall
ssasl 4m t iiw* into •»»«• »' Tfc,,» "•'*
iwihtH il»* •J#"** *■'. uhl»*h (Ml li ubuu'
^ I i p(«wf thai lt»«* tint) U IfUr
VM O'lWIrti a t»«n -alls •>•«" 'h» cardinal '■
9 -■ „r angry • •«>»* alt*'kinged en-
mn. mm pwllle lo liken l*»« lo «•>" di »lt. sourly
4MMr4 Mm a ae.oti-1 • •rdlttnl Richelieu Th*
„ilt ii< kit-it the loan's fancy. and ll stuck s
TW catdlt.sl dldn t mliid He •«» '«*» *»«"7 „
mm mrfl at itirrv nsiwea Hlf bualneas u i •lock
Arr« with the town, bo had for customers
mmm Bhr Jobs. tb« ••m and henchman of J»e
him) *h<w 4<ibn bought and sold •took* It
mam to be supposed 'tiat th* cardln.il profited
Inside knowledge Other business frlenda
wmw powerful and their friendship financially
while Colonel (.egarde. who control*
railniad la nlao president of th*
KWurt'- railway, an slectrlc n»ad. with
iU and local lines In th* town The elec
r wmt4 needed mail) political favora and th*
retool obtained them lor It. or for bla friend
•■Ml I^rgardc Keslly there waa no other wa>
gm€ aaythinx I'nles* and until Pat nodded
ti there waa nothing doing, for the town
fed out of hla ban ti and state legislator*
«mt bla orders
Olirton waxed rich. Ilut one generation
twy from the oulil aod" hla clothes apelled
Mawlran business niau, but hla necktlea faded
tit. inter spectrum to a neutral tint, and marked
aba politician who bought and sold franchises and
it >oha at will Knowing the time* to
to keep silence, a loyal friend and a dead
he made money for his stock dabbling
serenely grafting hU political way as
means to a desired end, and was
million and a half, at least. He owned
Ua town
As John Pale's business of owning the railroad
ipvw greater nnd more complex, be was more and
am away from Lacedaemon—for that is better
t;rwk than the real name of the town, anyhow —
5S tvcaair necessary for him to ask favors of the
cardinal, nnd the favors were given with open
&and l>ale found It necessary, too, to have a
Mly local om»n and a voice wherewith to fool
tta» pnople He Iwught the l>ally Planet Publlsh-
wy romjMKJ». awd made Pat O'Brien president
Ihla rpgnrd<M the presidency a reward for
Ikvora received and a tinal binding of tbe town
hmm to his chariot tail The cardinal knew that
PMlocJi. the editor, received all his orders from
JMa. and regarded the presidency as something
«tf a Johr. Grown to full stature among the other
tallroad kings, ruling had become a habit with
Jme lisle Me made and unmade towns and tbe
(Maple in them at will, and expected no other in
j.—t than Joe liale's to be thought of. or moved
w «r n»ed for by any one connected with hint
TSiairtlr he mistook his man. as when one
ho wvnt Into the office o( one of his eminent
Ml well-paid legal aids and found the lawyer
dtaatt to the outside world and Joe Dales busi-
.sums to a volume of llalxac.
* The railroad king blew up. "I don't pay you to
i - f dum French norels." he roared. The law
j j^Qm* a! !*»"" a lang moment.
-lir imie" be finally said. "You pay me for
what I know.'not what 1 do. Ill read dum French
u>- innrnrrtr do any other dum thing
tarto—W dnnt time or any dum place'—for
,r - H Asm please!" ending with a Wagnerian
tauac-m tbe table.
Wfcereui^n Joe Dale changed <he subject.
Dale thought he owned the P™»,d,e"t
imtly rianet company, but the cardinal had other
thought* -ahaut the matter. Colonel Legarde
» new franchise for an extension of the
"sl«nl it r to a summer resort, some 30 miles
Ihe proposed extension would pa>s
ih,oTh another town or two on its way to the
Mfe and would parallel Joe Dale's steam road^
ftaw Joe Dale and tbe colonel were bitterly at
km «»«e rarious grabbinga and *n»lcht^«3 e^
hsd wade ar. the other's magnate ship The ^ ar-
tel could not see that this concerned him at
1 The would be s benefit and a
^ the town There was money In
* tar him The deal was on
. TVs Joe Hsle came from New *ork and sent
tar the cardinal The two men faced eoch
ta«wot poker player. Is a ^
,ti" For the reel. It might bare been
**h«kerea farmer In his Sunday ^ \
m HU man otherwise correcUr cUd. wearing •
iT^Dnta. "Tbst the l.terstau P-
. - fiM„hl.. for that foolish summer re-
mmt estsmsVn of thetr*.-
-1 hear so too," the cardin*! replied
"Welt M > cut it Aort Tb^y oaD t ** "
would he a good iblag for the
1" nJIllP^t It It rarall^la my
mast refuse the franchtoe Here was
m
GOOD FROZEN DISH
MOl>M« AiWAVl
ibttma
W81COMC OW
UMII
BrU «f QaaWy
PS'HMf IS IM* "I
u teagis S* Tmss 9—4*4
to NfiH1**
TWte si* »•• 1 I
lo 4M*lnel hum aorh -he# * •
Is hoi huih r««n "he -mm
•a* ht rinsing oMM*M Ihe lln
•<oh o» I at sing lh» e»snh mt ihs
11 m $404 Allhuegh Ihe Inhur ml K*
pa.lng Ihe mmmmm Is allglM. II inhM n
loag iiwe for ihe hssiisg — ■' ihe
trnmrnm Is lo he sertred m dinnof ••
gighi ll sh~04 he land* m ihe eorty
Mutaing The nnme mmm- la 4m
,i.-l from ihe taoasy sppeeisnre et
lha tto|*k dISh
In ftaeslng pnrk In -«i«inl !*"• »'
|r« snd ensraa sal* A polni lo re-
member In frer,lag lb- wuaae Is lo
mah^ Hie lid <»f ib« mold brine light
hr rnbbmg ll nllh welled fni Ammmt
lh« »m**i m>umm^m sr» mspl* rsrn
wo|. tanilla. almond, rot#, snd irtJli SS&r-STWM
muusaoa <* every s«rt. as -II as g8S^e«e(^jSSVff
nrapoliisn and ihosa with nut and
otne flavor* seswtesisaa fc»y» tl^JPriSSSTlJaS?
The** mtMias** sr* nenrly all msd» «r*
from rream. awr»<»iened. «s*i»red nnd nes
wblppe«l to s foamy llgbineas before
fiwslng
CMehan Mousse. Heald one cupful
of rich milk, add to It Ihe yolks of
three egg* well b*st*n. and "all anl
pepper lo season and cook In s dou-
ble boiler like custard Tske from
the fire, sdd one-quarter of a bo> of
gelatin thst has soaked for an hour
In ..neijuarter of a cupful of cold wa
ter |*ui one cupful of prepared chick
rn meal In s bowl This may be the
lotted chicken which comes In the
form of a psste or chicken chopped
line and pressed through a sieve Pour
the hot custard over this, then stir
the mixture In a pan of Ice tmtll It Is
J smooth and commence to stiffen Add
| one cupful of whipped cream, then
pack In one large mold or 'he patent
Individual charlotte russe molds and
„piked. He had no o<her local „,v..r with Ice and salt
I ...Trkine the franchise or the cardinal. nn4 | co,d turn on a
any war the d^ was done. All wondered what ^ of wh|f. lettuc. leaves If char
. would do «_ lotte russe molds are nsed. All the
he would do. _ As fa(|t as a ralV | centfra wIth s,lc<,d heart celery and
nut meats marinated with French
dressing (Town with mayonnals*
voo ©cock Tflflr fr<vpcf*3C
or you wont Be pftesioeoiT
of me artier cook**** toao
^ 'bo^h. of the right, of 1^
Zmmmt «ockhota«* it -s. my
waa undlsiurbed.
-o^r | cvxje. ^ pftivflre rrp rw«r
S^(<3 rctLLt^O O corovnro ofP
<n fNiPP€«- 2>TXX:»<_'*
"Pollock will roast you." rbe magnate went
on "Of course he cant do It by name, but he
w lit do you up. You must block this franchSBe.
Insist o* ft. as your friend "
Well, Mr. Dale, c'ofonel Legarde te my triend
too." continued the cardinal
—me extension will parallel my road. Tot*
must step It." snapped Dole, irritated by
tlon of bts enemy's name. He cared nothing
about tbe extension Itseff. but tbat Co^l t£
garde wanted »t waa enough to make h*m flght
the franchise, tfltrien knew this sa the real r«Sr
son and »ent on deliberately
-|t will be a hard thing to do. Coleoel Le-
garde is popular-
This -econd mention of Legarde was wo muett
franchise or you wont be IM'sldent of the
•t company long."
Hold on. Mr. Dale Dnol get hostile T4 no
tdes vou were so dead set sgainst ibis thing
Well. I am. And 1 dent wa.t lo hare to teJl
you about It again
•You wen t have to " the cardinal «sared him
and departed, well satisfied with the
he had made Dale too mad to see that no p*om-
xl- had been given to block tbe obnoxious fra*
Ch'j^e iiale went back to New York coovtBC^t
that be had shown the man with the red neefc-
tle It waa not sale for *mJ**'™
.,k th. iwu Knt| AppBrwuy **
when the franchise came before the «"undl It
wal cbewed over chewed up. delayed. <a^ed. la-
*" UD kKaln Juggled with, side tracked and
ISrytLng but killed outright Public Intern*: In
It lagged Polloek of the Manet his fears
bv S parUamestary acrobatic, whi.-h he thought
JK%rtan-s method of "sartag face." tank
himself and hia loaded .dltorlnl peo to New \orh
so business
Thia was the cardinal a time, ead be acten
ouukly At the nest meeting ^tha city
the franchise ••* rashsd throogh Iht I
aa m the state* *f PnOoc
rsSSSs
have been trngu. '' - • tb<, oniy
Y°oUrt wirth new ideas about city bosses and thdf
Ua'The erlsode for It was only an episode In thn
„,^bUP,r.«d«»C. w„
leD bTsh8eofatr^ntowhnd JSoe°Dale had chopped oil
r™ut Joe Dale was not through with PU
O'Brien. It Is a railroad king's prerogative to
nith i* well as to reward, and for the punish-
ruent of O'Brien, Dale iald a Jrap1^lJJ|^"ecUT*
ness of which lay entirely In Its simplicity.
Came John Dale one da, to the cardinal and
said "Pat I have a private tip that a big
Si i. coming off in Nipper
thousand at the market snd hold on until I
tell you to let go."
• \ll right.' said the cardinal, and bought an-
other ten thousand as well for hls own aceount
Nipper advanced a point. He called in*fe*
chosen friends who formed a pool and
heavily. Nipper advanced two points, five P°ln"*
Pat bought more, he would pull out
Dale did and retire from active business with his
profits.
John Dale himself had gone to New York on
the day he gave his order to O'Brien ™thln n
day Nipper began to sag. Then it dropped below
the buying point. The pool put up more mnj
sins The stock still dropped, swiftly now. and
the other members of the pool became *»"n<*-
Pat reassured them They're shaking out thn
Cost s# •poeta-e"* „
"I wnnt Ihe o«<*. of r.mrae, MM
the saplring sUt*amso, "but not nn-
less I nm tbe people's rb«lre
• Wc enn fl« thsi. too." ssid !>»• «»-
pslgn manager. only you know lln
a good deal more expensive !<• be tho
people's cbol«*e than It Is to g«» in nn
the com prom 11>« candidal'- "
TAKI A FOOTBATH TO NIGHT
XZZX t.".^
*r.»». 1 nut a fitly rrlUv« *
"2uJ•jr&iz? ans
h^H:-s
atltutea. funipl'* "f Al''-ns Foot Taos
I khkK or our msular a)a« aeni or
™!1 for *• Addreas Allen 8. ^ma««t
UK«r. *. Y. ,.root.Tabs for Foot-Tubs."
Tactful.
A woman with a pronounced squint
IS a i-eimm niij
ryes which Is as difficult In art as It
is fssclnatlng in nature."Beacon.
easing frown with mayonnaise. to a fairtilonable photographer
Ham mousse can be made In tne jo^ed at her and * ho looked st
same way If potted rh,c^" ^ him and both were embnrrassed.
i, used be carefnl about adding much ^ ||poko flrat
other seasoning, as both are nigniy -won't you permit me." he snid, to
seasoned when packed t#ke your portrait in profile* There
; a certain shyness about one of your
Girls and Their Figures.
Stiff corsets are unknown in France
1 "Tench corsets are always supple and
l.endaMe. and this much accounts for
the tase of French figures, whfch are
never tightened except at the waist,
leaving the bust and hips quite free.
If the figure Is tightened in too
rauch it gives too straight a look to
the figure and makes it stiff and un-
comfortable, movement being ren-
dered ungraceful by this stiffness. Let
any girl try to lace her corset only
o. >h^ wsic! nnd let her select It as
Midas.
Midas had come to that r"l»t in his
career where everything he touched
turned to gold.
"What shall you ever do with tfte
stuff?" asked his entourage in visible
alarm.
Midas affected not to be uneasy.
"Just wait till the boys begin to touch
me!" quoth he. displaying an ac-
any £in iry iu i«o *ir i v°Y miaintance with economic tendencies
„t the waist and let her select It as qunlnUncejm^, ^
soft and light as possible, and then
see if her figure be not as graceful
iu shape as the French figure
No tight, straight down, even la-
cing will ever make a pretty figure.
If the corset cannot be made express-
ly to suit the figure, then let It only
be laced in the middle of the waist.
Kven then no real preset should be
worn by girls until they are well in
their teens.
Hardwood Floors.
To re polish hardwood floors, melt
half a pound of pure beeswax and add
a pint of turpentine and half as much
ammonia. Stand the mixture over a
boiling kettle, in order to keep It
warm. Apply to tbe floor with flannel
He Rose to It.
"Do you know," said a little boy of
five to a companion the other day, "my
father and I know everything. What
1 don't know my father knows, and
what my father don't know I know.
"Ail right! Let'a see. then." replied
the older child, skeptically. "Where's
Asia?'
It was a stiff one. but the youngster
never faltered.
"Well, that," he answered coolly,
"is one of the things my father
knows. —Harper's Bazaar.
Looked Like a Patter-.
"My dear." asks the thoughtful hus-
warm Applv to the floor with nannei band, "did you notice a large sheet
c'otb and let stand until quite cold. | of paper with a lot of d.agrams on
Now as to polishing, the merriest and about my desk?
quickest method Is to give the chil- "You mean that big piece wlth dot.
dren a lark. Collect from the rag ! and curvesjind diagonals and thingi
bax all the discarded stockings and all over It?"
sScs draw them on over the chil- Yes. It was my map of theipaih
« shoe* start a two-step on the of Halley"s comet. 1 wanted to—
piano and the children will do the "My goodness' I thought It wa, th it
the other memoer, « Kssmake" is cutUr.g° out' my n -
small blocks of_ stoen. ne p|ece ^ bruMei9 carpet wrapped r°gt .
her sky-rocket.
Nipper continued to toboggan Pat's Wei)4l
were seriously concerned They talked of selV
Ing snd pocketing their losses, but h* sho™4
them hU hand Look here, he said. John Daln
la In thU thing »p to his neck and we know -hers
he gets Ms private tips. ^J*
has on a»y tooks aione As long M
snd keeps up hU margins. I m satisfied. HU
friends knew the cardinal, they knew he. to*
was up to his seek:" they held on.
^i»4denly Nipper went down like msreury IB
bl'.zrard weather Tbe Wends were wildly
alarmed They tnalsted that Jobs Dale was glvtt*
Dick the -double cross Though he did not b»
Here It. he wired to New York for special sn4
private inees-lgatlon o* John Dale's moreaena
there And after a little delay tidings came thai
made the poolskarer* very sick a.en Johs Data
had ( H to N*w York had s ahort talk with hln
l«-he: ben gone straightway to his broker and
sold snort wa thousand Nipper at the market Thn
rrelts »n the sale us the stock went down wos*
' iom• on the Lnc*dneseon parchaa*
MsanwhUs Jos Usie »*wid so to U that N1pper
«VI go towi until Pnt CTBrtsn was utter*
piece of
sround s brick —Harper's Baxar
—
Trench Spinach snd Ebb*-
Three pounds of spinach, two ounces
of butter, a little white sauce, four or
i x f^ga. salt snd pepper, s grate of
tutmeg: cook the nicely washed spin
•ch In the usnsl way. and meanwhile
boll the eggs till hard, drain the spin
acb very thoroughly and press through
* hair sieve: dissolve the butter In s
*t*wpon. put in the spinach and stir
it till quite hot: mix is the whit#
sauce by i*egrees. and. If you have It.
a lttt> cream, season all with pep
per. salt and nutmeg pla-e on a hot
<Muh. and around It arrange the hard-
hoded egsg cut in halve*
Rhubarb and Kaistn Pie.
Chop fine ow pound ot rhubarb and
and cce-half cupfuls of seeded
Add one pint of aagar and
rell beaten moo This will make
Wtk Cs""s •rains,
sn wsle* with -a.'^a
I the lat-wr In salted wa
rk*». «t*se of eskn and
it into «re. dtp
r tn deep fat and
Delightful
Desserts
and many other pleasing
dishes can be made with
Post
Toasties
A crisp, wholesome food
always teady to serve
With fruits or benien it i»
delicious.
"TW Memory Uascn**
4 LrW S
Male *w» Ts
Gtmd Thieo
U by Own «ft«a Ibt sad 15c.
POSTt M CEKEAL CO. LTD
y
nnd At
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Roberts, Jasper N. The Duke Times (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1910, newspaper, August 4, 1910; Duke, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc402837/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.