The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1922 Page: 1 of 8
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A liiMipit F«f All The Pi«pl«Sf Tin 6 r«at South Plains 0( Tail
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Coblez, March 11- Tw# bat-
try censiatissg of 45 officers, and
, 0 1 <fc , .1 fa ' k
werp where they will embark —
U. S. transport Canti^
n
•a
the U. S. transport Canti^ny
bound for f Portland. Maine.
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'
: [ Ml > 1 , IStJ, v, 1 AM.
' , . ... i> *C .J, i.T-80 r 13 ..,
estahnseyd, while the number of agad
dependent ministers and their families
lias- been doubled and the amount of
aJd«Sri*ea them Increased 100 per c« 4.
Collection® Are Pushed
While the collections bo far repro-
C3Ht ti h< *
of Southern Baptists to their work be-
fore the Campaign, the Bum collected
is not all that is due and in all the
/
iocL a'j ■ > -
close o t " Con i ' vi i 1,
:
Wim
I
mm,
The German residents
among whorii the soldiers made
their home gave them a friendly
-& h roprlate*
To Various Object* Set Forth
0 j j" y ) A§
Nashville, 1 onri.
orenzo.
-1 3Bk,
Comr '""met in
I ion Monday
but routine, businss.. was trans-
acted, which in the main, means
i iU ty's Mils.
J. L ij !_ cm_ a
farm agent for Crosby county
,
rl „ quoo'Iou
f Quite a number of Farmers
°
court in the interest of this Prop-
osition'and County Agent Jen.
mags of Lubbock county was)
lade quite an
: as to the value
fv v M7io 1 / a ox employing' an
a, ere also made by
J'lfcm T. - Gillespie and several
■ others pud it v/as finally agreed
to employ an agent. However,
the appointment was not made,
bi ing of the court is to
—k ,.l^i4Ma_pu£
' ~ pose. ' -
Stilt Found Hear t
Armed witha searc
3. bli ( J u) ul He e'(eC.
IS. Sfc ' ' , Jii<
E. W. i
s r L t . H.
fr-U raided v-.fcc
'< ptJiv/ect ci .
i\w ;< ay nicht and found i
J ' and a five ll: ji?g half
^.Good Rain Monday.
The long dry spell was
broken at this place Monday
afternoon fey a good gentle
'! \ 1 • IS v'
slowly about 4 or 5 o'clock
and ck ! v-en i
" ' , '' • 'uVi '
- - < v :< ' buyy r 1
Arkansas Wants
56 Worth Texas Cmttn
h H . ''' , • J a/iOChui
^ , . ; - ' ^ ■. -- - ^ r
general over the county with
.
Pahnr,twc - ; >u> j eel and
es having fallen in the Smith
or Evergreen community.
This rain has given new
Dr. E. Olll, Baptist Representative In
Europe, On U«ft, and P. V. Pavioff of
All Russian Baptist Union;
From the beginning of the Baptist
75 Million Campaign to January, 1922,
a total of $30,356,319.41 had been paid
In to objects fostered, by the Cam-
paign, it is announced by. the general
headquarters office at Nashville. Of
this amount $28,799,971.15 came in
through the payment of regular Cam-
paign subscriptions and the remaining
$1,556,348.26 in special contributions.
gjiSP
■
■: ■ ov ife. "
Jnco, March 14-Mrs. Mary
F. Barcus. aged 90 years died
this morning at the
me of her married daughter,
he was the widow of Rev. S.
Bai i in 1896 fiShe
Iseea a < i ' o£ the Met li-
Qdist . ^ ck,hl - w o and
s the mother of thirteen chil-
is, fifty-two" grandchildren
d twenty-ei/;hfc great grand-
ldrei >1 i rin 1 SO0O are
h«] i. i i:aJ, I ".Vid tWO Oi
; Tn 1 i > ,r f -"c'
The ions in the ministry are J.
<L ' ?ai (us, presid' 1 .of the
Georgetown district^ T. S. Bar:
states follow: Ala., $1,301,134.76; Ark.,
$714,68^.09; D. of C., $123,280.01; Fla.,
$469,753,53; Ga., $3,000,T74.10; 111.,
$298,576.13; Ky„ $3,187,656.15; La.,
$807,991.13.; Md., $393,517.46; Miss.,
$1.243.846.50: Mo.. Sl.190.754.70: N. M..
jsiding elder of the Brown-
woori 1S?wi W. Barcus of
Denton and; E. R. Bareus of
Austin. Eleven of; her children
are living and nine of them were
present when she died," Her old-
est child is 69 years old. -The
funeral will be held Wednesday
many friends ^during ^the two
have-been here gave
the Americans a hearty welfare.
The towns evacuated by the
Americans have not yet been oc-
cupied" by French troops but it
is probable they will scon be
taken over by the French.
Joe T. Mitchell, a traveling
salesman, was found frozen to
death near Tulia during the cold
• spell last week. His car became
, stalled in a snow bank and the
unfortunate man left the car and
had gone one and a half miles
down the road seeking shelter
where his body was found froze®
sta ience. W. V. Hallmarn
also a traveling salesman, was
found frezen to death in Kent
eounty. He. .too, had abandoned
his car tofseek sshelter and evi-
dently lost his course.
Tfxas' 0 dest ^d Fellow Dead
J. L. Aramons, 95 years old
and said t® he the oldest Odd
Fellow in Texas, died at Bren*
|ajt week., jfe _hii been, m:
ffm- ieveMfcy.fiv-e: jmmr
$145,229.97; N. C., $2,211,741.50; Okla.,
$840,562.65; S. C.,: $2,633,840.53; Tenn.,
$1,797,483.10; Tex., $5,162,658.85; Va!
$3,279,085. More than 250,000 baptisms
were reported by Southern Baptist
churches last yearr
How Money Was Distribute
. Seven general objects of the denom-
ination were embraced- 4n the Cam;
naign program/ and from the regular
Campaign contributions those objects
have received the following amounts,
according to a compilation by the head
quarters office: Foreign missions, $5,-
434,012.53; home missions, $3,5.62,'
600.67; state mrssiohs in t¥e BeviS^e«iF
states and local' work in the District
of. Columbia, $4,954,813.26; Christian
education, $7,192,442:79; Baptist hos-
pitals, $2,004,099.36; orphanages,
-jbft3;73f-.33-;—and—Rtsiief—a-rrd^-AiTn-tnty
Board, which ministers to aged de-
pendent ministers and their families,
$799,126.99. : si :
What Money Has Done
These funds represent an advance,
ranging from—200 to 300 per cent, in
the contributions of Southern Baptists
to their general missionary, educa-
tional and benevolent work, prior to
the inauguration of the Campaign,, and
have enabled ,.the boards and other
agencies to gre&tly extend thoir serv-
ices in all departments. In addition
to sending out more than 180 now mis-
sionaries since the Campaign began,
and providing many.' church buildings,
mission residences, schools, theolog-
ical seminaries, publishing houses,
hospitals and the like on the older
fields the Foreign Mission Board has
been enabled to open >o new
fields of Spain, Jugo-Slavia, Hungary,
Roumania and Southern Russia in
Europe, and Palestine, Syria and. Si-
berla lR. Asia, and DivEverett Gill, for
many years {tThfSsionary in' Ital^-. but
more recently a pastor in Kansas City,
hashed icc ^ ',-s>can rep-
resentative to supervise • the greatly
expanded work o \t Dr.
CH11 is giving much of his time to dis-
tributing Baptist relief funds In Rus-
sia and otherwise looking after the in-
tefests of the denomination there.
Home Work Enlarged
"Ambhg the outstanding ;accpmplisl^
paraphenalia for making intox-
icating liquors.
Witt was not at heme, but was*
then in Lubbck peddling booze
it is claimed, and was, arrested
by the Chief of Police and placed
ia tk ') "JL
-Tfe atill:r7. iij f 0?©3
byton by Sheriff Mitchell and
can be seen at the court house,
It is a very crude looking affair
but was evidently producinFtfie
goods.
Dogs Eat Bodies, _
Washington, March 12. —Tang-
led heaps of frozen corpses, some
attacked by starving dogs, sick-
valley, are described by Secre-
tary Heover in a nightmare pic-
ture of the famine district of
Soviet Russia drawn by Br.
Thomas H. Diekerson ©f tlie
hope and encouragement to
the farmers and they are
'hitting the ball" and with
proper seasons from now
on we may make r "v -
crop. ■ ' J s?
Cotton Shipment I© iurope.
A special train of forty cars
carrying 3,500 bale© of cotton
consigned to Europe, and said to
be the largest export shipment
since the world wor, left Atlanta,
Ga., last week. The railroad
freight charges were estimated
at $16,000 while the steamer
freight charges were $7,000. -
eluded In Territory Claimed.
-kv : i !:/. y it
, sJj,
t o * ;iifex©
sion from the Supreme Court of
tSaO u >. J nc Its
suit, not only includes all of the
bed Redlef river, but includes 66 HUJ| |P weBK anQ 6 Bft
ped in a" about twenty cars since
that oortion. of Texas between the first «f the Th y
Iwb I - " 'Olv.vt b
100 meridian
American relief administration,
in a special report on conditions
there. Dr. Dickinson made a
month's tour of the Tolga valley
tnd the foothills of the Unas,
travehtegl4,000 miles by rail, auto
and sledge, inspecting 150 vil-
lages on the snow-covered step-
pes. In his report to Mr. Hoover
Dr. Dickinson gSive the bare and
gruesome details of his ebserva-
tion. "Losses from famine in
Soviet Russia," he said, "came
under the head of emigration,
disease and Idea th. Emigration
That hog cholera in a virulent
form exists among Hale county
hogs was the decision of Brs.
Ross of Plainview and Porter of
Amarillo Saturday afternoon af-
ter inspecting a suspected case
on the farm of Ed Boy . west of
Plainview. Dr. Ross stated tha
this was the most serious case
he had seen since his college
days when pigs were treated
With the cholera virus jor labor,
atory experiments.
Dr. Ross has erdered vf25,000
doses of serum to be us^& en
Hale county hogs. Veterinarians
and local hog buyers are unan-
imous in advising immediate
vaccination by Hale county far-
.naers' ul all their liogg. for they
explain, cholera spreads like a
range fire if the prcper preven
itnli o ^ 1 net ru<oj stesl
nomal in-
fects the whole heard around him,
and not only that, but the wind
is an effective agent in spread-
ing the, dreaded disease girms,
so—that—hogS^belongittg—to—a
^ 'rjhboi man./ j ?r?y are
not iDjauni; xrora clioepso, Choi,
era, the hog .men say, works s©
fast in a section of the country
that, before the farmers could
do anything, it has been known
to kill many thousands of animals.
Many farmers may hesitate about
' Vh i . r 1 *. i?
A
1 ^ r r , i , , «r ,ff.
If, however, they vaccinate im„
■ ; Viu'tely, ill" rh r,y: of sudden
destauetion .of their herd can be
avoided, and the serum is not
mjurous—Plainview Herald.
We copy the above item so
and north of
jrteri
liec vii'Lvhlii • II
ritory recently develo^fed known
as the« ' > is.
Dall-v. r1_r • .burae,
Tei iiiiPM® Hillsboro, ISaaio,
JBreckenridge and virtuaity all of
the import .i mi in-
dustrial centers of North Texas
are ineluded in the slice of Texas
territory which Arkansas mod-
oefciy desires t© mmzoi, "' v.
The T^xas counties en the 32rd
paralel formin thern tier
of counties which Arkansas de-
sires to swallow by legal pro-
ceedore are Taylor, Callahan,
Eastland, Erath, Hood, northern
portionr of Bosque, Johnson, the
northern half of Ellis, the^aorth*
ern half of Navarro, Henderson,
the extreme north portion of
Anderson v-h1 7 aith,
Huslc and Panola.-
Beginning on the Louisiana
line the counties included in the
slice which Arkansas desires to
separate frem,..Texag,- ittJaddlfieiL
to those named as the southern
tier of counties bordering on the
32nd paralel are Harrison, Cass,
Marion, Bowie, Red River, Ti-
tus, Morris, Camp, Upshur,
Gregg,; Wood, Franklin, Lamar,
Delta J t >pkini i Is ins, Van Zan ti
Kaufman, Rockwall, Hunt, Fan-
nin, Grayson, Collin,' ISlis, .Tar
ir«nt, k\<r - v •' v;-f;ue,
Clay J \ r fa , f;;.n)hcno,
Aounr >* ; ' TJilbni
ger, Tnyior, rr?r • lAorton,
Shackleford, Jones, HaskelJ,
Knox, Foard and Hardeman.
Crosbyton is keeping
mSth; If" nit-' outstri) *
other f ^ * v>
:I?ji J
Blight ears of ca
tout first of the week,, fh
mm
Sidney Webb, two ^ ,
Burke and one by J. h. Marsbf
and yesterday Smith & Perkins
liliKgefe
the hogs going to
market. -•. ^ ~ „
:• smith
hogs per week,' WM
3'i~ ;; i 'i< "fv 1 j /«i yy
the best market price.
IIw
Death of Mrs. Fargesen.
ii' I? tfck-5 cit, v/as s , Imd-
>y; tr < w , 1 ic
)iIs u 1 , , Jij
■ ° ti <
, Jt j: <' 1
eels cvod\Ai h&
oi : ->Ki"k j f. .
about a year age and by her
: i r Ijv 4 lis. / #< ' .
herself to ©or people, whei will
ea% u" r j ii r l <
them. Accompanied by the hus«;
'
J. C. Orr. the remains were ship-
fssC a i'< ol(J homo i . -
■for i it i ;-«)!, ho ofln
Gibson being unable to make the
trip.
na, ■ ^ 1J1 y ^ *r'r'i r"
, Doings Around Wake.
There was a very interesting
basket ball game between Ante-
lope and Wake last Friday. Ti
score was 23 to 16 in f4vor 6f ~
the Antelope boys. However*
the Wake .boys gained courage
lyfcou the ' i;-, 110 ivau ovek,'
cli J:
favor of tho Wake girls.
A Sunday school social was
given at the home of Mrt Crof-
ton Fridrv c , jrn
to eleven o'clock. Tfce
the entire body were kept enter-'
I , 2<; f
} ■ ?, :Lp efc tl:v , ;,^Q wc
sfi7x,; be elosi c off
m
mm
Bis
mfee.tang^'---and,.. every... one went ■
home feeling, better..
Mr. Elmer
? • *c * ' i ' ,
at the social. We were ve
to have them with us.
The Wake singing class visited
Pansey Sunday. afternoon, and
pleasant
from the villages now rises to
about 80 per cent. Houses are de-
sertgd, not a dog, c?to? pip loft,,
wit^ snow; ^breaking through
the roofs add windows. Smoke
cdi^ie® from, the chimneys of not
moke than half the houses. Trav-
eling pn thp roads, one comes
pi! wt pathetic m m&m -fath-
eff, mother s7^ grand parents ahcF
samovar. When ca,mel or horse
falls sick they leave him to die
on the open plain. Sick persons
sit on top of the sledges and are
taken to town to die. "
Cow Drags Small Bey.
A little son of Joe Euday, who
lives on a farm on Pease river
eight miles south of Childress,
was injured 1 ing in
a manner that is hardly belie ve-
pbk '5 ;/ j,, play
ing with a cow and had caught
hold of her tall, the cow drag-
.
her run. In some, manner his
menta of the Home Mission Board-ai'e [hand- became caught in
Attorney General Ilee.ing,
when notffied of Arkansaa' claim
to abi ?exas' ter
ritory by seeking to intervene, in
the Oklahoma boundary suit, said
he had not been informed of this
the latest development and for
that reason declined to comment
on the Razorback state's attempt
tcrthrust a leg^ snout into the
oil resources of Texas. The At-
torney General very j: seriously
doubted whether the1 Supreme
Court would allow A^kanses to
intervene at this time, but was
of the opinion that the Supreme
court • mAfUi i >. <: '•'Vexas-
Oklahoma case before passing
upon A : v" r.iPt <o/ tifle to
one o£ the ieheoi portions of
Texas' territory.
wm
switch and he could not release
himself., The animal became
the aiding of more than 1,000 churches
with loans and giftB for church build-
ings, completion of the big- tuberculo-
sis sanatorium at El Paso, -enlarge-
ment of the work in Cuba andr tlj&
Canal Zone, strengthening of the 37
fountain mission schools and the de-
velopment of air fjiteven departments
of the "work of th# Board. In all sev-
enteen states of the Southern Baptist
Convention tltti state mission work has
been greatly extended, the number of
U&ptlBis hofiptt^ia fa the Bo-.iti. Iseg
three, all of the older eighteen Bftptiirt
by Mw. Lady, wbosey^
mi mm im rn tm eow'8 tail With ihc hwfch"
mmm —m— ^.
half ajpile, dragging the boy.
Mrs. Eudy saw the cow when
she started to rusa, and realized
the child could n'tiitrelease him-
self. She^ran into the house and
secured a butcher knife and fol-
lowed tke c©w. The animal: was
almost
this disease into Crosby county;
FrHifei - 1 im.i
| rngm- of the leading industries in. this
county and our farmers cannot
afford to take the risk against
this disease, but should vaccinate
their hogs at once.
'i . "? - ' a,
It is reported that approxi
mately 1,000 Indians on the Pima
reservation in Arizona are face
ing starvation, due to lack of
theljBP
past two years. We of Crosby ™ H- Cox*
county 'should feel very thank
fal that • conditions are ^as well traveling over
with us as they are. Jhave spent alt
they all report
timer"""
Misses- Johnnie Louise Boyd
and. Eunice and Ida May. Steen
visited the family of T. D. B*yd
at Webh^Saturday and Sunday.
There will be a pie supper on % , j
March 24th at Wake. Come &«d
bring your purse with you and
let us all have a good time tq«s
The high school pupils o
Wake are „ . .
play at the close of S^hpoFvvhi
will be the 21st of April,
Misses Leola Cox
vieve LightfOot are
trip to
Saturday and Sui
- Mr. and' Mrs. Rufti® Marsh are1
the heppy parents of a little dav.
daughter atlae^home soulh #f
mws^w:l
At the Methodltt Chuteli.
You are invited tcs hear Rev«
G§o. W. Shearer, Presiding El-
der of the Lubb@ck district,.
I church next
apliiiranci'
-
m,
I
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Buck, James T. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1922, newspaper, March 17, 1922; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242620/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.