The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 24, 1909 Page: 8 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 25 x 16 in. Digitized from 35mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
wwMwpntfw -*1 ~m •**
1 " • -w-f**##*-m-*>- +mmrn*.
If RSffl
j*ul to
iweFw
4& i
iasW
. ■ ,. I. '"•,...
I ;'■ ;•' .,,
•w.v ,'
I*
mim
. —.
wr-—■
W&V.
SB
""T."'*' ,*r
^ ""
wmgmz
HTTTZ -•- i
RRui^HRBMKik'! . * •
fe....... i—...' ;.,,. ..r A.-,.rna*r^,-r7TT ^
"13
■. ••
T" i,-.
WV:
111
- ^
■1®
tern
"Castle Gould." That is a far
ry from Mouse Trap Gould.
Running through the nauseat-
evidence-in the Gould divorcer
it^whgrgin a formed actress is
in* sued b y her husband for
ical separation, are details,
ich shows a desire on the part
hese swollen rich to establish
on the foundation
f simple American ancestry, but
is recognized by the express
Word spobocracy. ■„ "Castle
'■? may be a pleasing pile to
nie eyes of the interested family
. and the word a Soothing sound
in their ears! Yet to the remain-
der of the country such pretense
is wearisome to the extreme.
•v The true aristocrat is always a
democrat, both in taste and man-
- uur and in hi3^aling8~with-bis
fellows* He is never found play-
ing the host at monkey fdinners
nor disgusting Europeans with
manners as does the spu-
American people, as common
clay; not human beings who
are fit to feed upon ,the same
meat. They put jheir flunkeys
in the halls of congress and in
the United States senate to do
their bidding and the aforesaid
•flunkeys do not soldier on their
jobs. They deliver the goods.
They make it possible for the
yellow-blooded puny social prin .
cess to rfae high on the beiew.r
1. ■'■■ ■ ■ i
sm
specimen as he stalk thru
spas arid art galloric3 of-fehe-old
IP
world* The gentle wom# n of
the honorable families of Amer-
ica are not ijoted for the number
of bottles they can enipty ih a
limited time, nor for qurrels With
the butler and hired man. J
The present Gould tt&orce case
and the one of Castelane Ifame
present a .serious question—to
elephant as he tramples the com-
mon.. human herd beneath his
feet; ;
Where will it all end?
It will end in social arid polit*
ical chaos if the sensible people
of the country do^not check it.
We rail at the socialist gjid sit.
supinely by and allow the vulgar
rich to manufacture socialists at
an increasing ratio~~datbr7
takirig stock this week.
. .Isham Collier, is yisiting in Sey-
mour for a fewdays."
' JuliairM, Bassett made a trip
to the Spur Ranch this week.
present goings on in the United
States senate are helping along
Leslie Collier is vjoitingijo Sey-
mour thifc week, •' ; v :C,„
Lloyd A. Wicks and Jack Pyle
made a trip to Yellow House
CanOn last Saturday.
^nrjraivni
young friends were in town yes-
terday. !
Mr, Culberson tells us" that he
has several new houses to begin
in the next few days.
E. M. Allmon was in Crosby-
ton the first of the week and had
us place his name on the sub-
scription list.
^ tCmT , , •. ^ The Review job office
The Cap Ellrsm^^aiKliatiulyv -anit
TftKn on^ un'fo arP pSiGutO GO
John McDermett and wife are
in Baylor county this week on a
visit.
see so many homes in
handle, (hat has not even a screen
to keep out the fly, and the
thousands who never gtfitlrd
against the increase of fl.e*. it is
remarkable that we do not have
sickness world without end here
on the Plains." This is a fly coun-
try, and if every fantiilv would
spend just enough time tli fteep
the home", the lbts and out houses
clean, and use some good disen-
fectant, at this time of year we
would-iot- lhave -half ihe .... flieSI
See that your closet and out
houses are disenfected once a
week, and, the droppinjrs, arid
waste i s burned that often you
will kill a million flies every year
and soon the fly will be a thing
of the past. "Try it.
Practical Fashions
LADIE&^TUCKED sHtfiT WAIST
- T-.f vi, ..> *
TTOtire^satisfoction guar
anteed.
■4 :
M
■|§j
America. This fortune which |
the present female defendant!
has been squandering in'such an j
ostentatious, and to be more cor-1
rect, vulgar manner, is unearned j
' increment, wrung from the peo-
pie of this country by Jay Gould,!
wrecker and plunderer of rait-1
roads and railroad builders, ma-(
riy families in America today are
in poverty as a result of his pira-
cy. The husband and father of
some lie in a suicides grave. Up-
on the dark waters of a troubled
financial sea, made so by himself
Mr : w
- rm
E;3P
■I
■ :;v;v ■ - -SB- "/>v . 1 ■
| South Sldt of Sqmry Flpydidt, Tlx.
.Phutu by W. M.
Paris Pattern No. 2853, All Seams
/VUowed.—This attractive little waist,
which hj developed in peacock blue
cotton voile, is also suitable for cham-
bray, linen, Indian-head cotton, Per-
sian lawn, nainsook,' batiHte or thin
silk. The fullness of the front is dis-
trihiiied. - in groups of natrow back-
ward-turning tucks, Stitched from
shoulder to waist line. The sleeves
are tucked in groups, the lower edge
finishing in a deep point, and being
trimmed with a narrow plisso ruffle of
the material- Narrow insertion trims
the high collar, which is fastened with
Bmall jet buttons, as is the center
front of the waist. The pattern is in
se.ven sizes—32 to 44 inches bust
measure. " For 36 bush the waist re-
quires 4% yards of material 20 inches
Wide, yards 27 inches wide, 2%
—rja wwrds- Sjydnches widn, -or" 2%i yards 42
inches .Wilde.! two yards of vvliiti.Jnserr
Street Scene, Floytlada, Texas.
Jay Gould alwayaswam triumph-j the fire in the fuse, toward the! Dr. Wm. Jourdon, of Asper-
SAtly °n the surface. When a j mine of powder. Aldrichism is ' mont, was in the city this week
victim would attempt to rise to synonymous with anarchism;! and he is^ell pleased with our
SWK-
safety hft would club .him to
he would sink to rise no more.
Not content with this Jay Gould
attempted to. corner the
gold of
tlje\ United States, - but- failed
through the efforts of the admin-
istration then in power at Wash-
iOgtQIL .
■ Mr. Bassett.
i$&::
I
1
Ic5' - ■
m%;0-
Today"this fortune1 is
^.Ms
tij*' 1
P-v
L
paraded over America and Eu-
rope and is being used in a man-
ner not conducive to foistering
love of country and patriotism
in the remainder of tlpe ninety
millions of people. Thgse ninety
millions must work. Those with
.the millions ih gold work not,
fires in the great cities of Amer-
ca and do not to be the son of a
prophet to testify to the fact, , ... ... , .
being, -tftat there will be some drastic; yesterday for Tenn.
neither do they spin,
outshine Solomon: T
°ut
mansions, and
; J JU '
V^;
,
"castles."
1
people and
who erect
_rowth.
Henry A. Wallace^
one uses a bomb the
death, figuratively "speaking, and other his brain to despoil the; Henry A. Wallace, of Wal-
laces' Farmer, of Des Moines,
•Castles Gould.'Ham,lowa
was in Crosby ton the - first
not a drra^r, but 1 tave oBTp the week and spenris" Whi
served somfe" social smolde"ring4wtte1Rock Hou3e [he guest of
Twenty-four of the Eilison
regulatirig some day in America, where they have decided is the
by the ballot it is to be hoped; if! lace' but„ they wl" be back in
not then it will be by methods the near future and WI" come t0
that will move us back a thousand!sta^ next tlme*
years in the path of civilization.! —
It should be made impossible for
"Castles Gould" to be erected in
Democratic America, or erected
yet they in Europe with gold wrung from
They build the American people. —T. K.
-Murray in The Daily Panhandle.
Flies Kill 5,00(^A Year In
New York City
The Merchants Association of.
by Dr.
1st
==
LIVE STOCK COMPANY
Ranch Crdsfoy ^eunty, Texas
New York has a report
Daniel D. Jackson, Bacteri
of the Water Bure
mittee on pollution of waters of
New York Citv
Ranch, L^mb County, Texas
deaths in 1907 |rbfP intestinal
diseases; 5,000. of. these% deaths
and 50,000 cases of sickness be-
ing due to flies carrying intest-
inal disease gei ms from sewerage
BRAND-N-
NOR
ERN OFFICE
chauge Building
\ ILL.
1326 St;ock
GHIC
respond exactly with the greatest
prevalence of fliesj The report
is based on an. examination of
110;000 flies taken near the sewer
oTFfi
locality and provaloneo of intoot
Residence Lots $1
JULIAN
P. O: AMri
ik
ETT, Manager
to $80.
to
Crosby Co.
Business Lots
'v
1^1
ge Cattle
inal diseases; '
It is the nart, of
prudence
Owners df -Vt
r^
Modern Woodmen of America
met Tuesday evening with a
good attendance and transacted
some important business, neigh-
bors rerflember the next regular
meeting wijll be held Sat. 7:30
p. m. July 3. your presence is
required. 7 —
Brain Pierced—Lived a Week
San Antonio, Tex., June 19.—
After living a week: with his
brain pierced by two bullets,
Clive H. Shook, a well-known
attorney, who was shot last Sat-
urday night, died at 1 o'clock
today at the Santa Rosa Hospital
surrounded by the members of
hi3 family. He "will be buried
with military honors, as he held
a commission as First Lieutenant
during the Spanish-American
War.
Julius R.Norton, who was
released Friday oft ?$10,000 bail
oi was-again taken into custody
today.
• ■]
Uon, one yard "of narrow insertion and
seven-eighths yard of edging.
To procure this pattern send 10 cent!
to "Pattern Department." of this paper.
Write name and addresp plainly, and b*
sflro to give size and number of pattern.
NO. 2853. SIZE.
NAME ;
TOWN
STREET AND NO
STATE
Monument to Private Soldiers
Nashville, Tenn., June 10 —A
monument to the private Con-.,
federate soldiers was "un veited at
Centennial Park in this city this
afternooq in the presence of an
immense crowd of people Judge
Wilson of the State-Civil Court of
Appeals was the orator of the
day.
The mbnument was erected by :
Frank Cheatham Bivouac of
Nashville and the life-size figure
of a Confederate private soldier,
seated,* is the work of Julian Zo\- ,
nas. Tpe various veterans'or-
ganizations and the United
Daughters of the Confederacy
chapter of the city took part in.-
the ceremonies.
3Bi
JX.
CROSBYTON LOTS FOR
A
i- 'rl~~ ■ T~ ' ..n. 1 JiM-V. . r. . ,\
yton> Texas . ^—___ 4—A |&j
wM :i , . ' ■
A' V" - . ' • ' ' ... >.£J
i ■.*"* . - • * ■ ,a"* •.
;
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
White, F. E. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 24, 1909, newspaper, June 24, 1909; Crosbyton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242142/m1/8/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.