The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 8, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
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every Thursday by
Not Incorporated
WHITE A SONS, Props,
Crosby ton,
E. WHITE, Editor
^"Subscription $1.00 per Year
Bp(
npt
Single Copy ,5c.
to the attitude of certain Demo-
_ crats, particularly in the South,
<EnteLed ?Losecord;£la8B "Latt« JanI *n making alliances with Aid*
lary 14, 1909, at the post office at —r r irJi v , . , . t
Crosbyton,_ Texas, under the Act gLnch and Cannon and the inter*
Cleveland campaigns andrin Con
, is constrained to break the
f his retirement, at '
to declare that, bi*would
be Wetter dead than longer sub-
mit to the control that now seems
to possess it.
This outburst is obviously due durnedi
1879
March 3,
Advertising Rates
fflwm* '■
7.00 per week.
__ .. w " r inch
each insertion.. Locals and readers 10c
jpyyaMMf line each insertion. v
No display advertising on first page,
JWS_
■ v ing matter will be run until ordered
out
, —,
" ,'i Any erroneous reflection upon the
^ character, standing or
any person, firm or co:
may appear in the columns
time is not specified all advertis-
matter will be run until on'
<uid charged for accordingly.
NOTICE TO THE PUfT£lE
fill Bouthem-homes> How in the-
xieyil does a person talking one
of these unfortunate waifs know
but what its papa is a millionaire
and its mother a common prosti-
tute. If I was not man enough
to produce my own babies I'll be
f$Mk'
fey
j
B.>- J- .
reputation of
rration which
nns of the
Review" will be gladly corrected upon
heing-brought to the attention of the
.publishers.
Four Issues One Month
E-
? ?
There has been 50,000 leaflets
aent out of Fluvanna this week set-
fintereats have W depend entirely
upon the people who are to be
ting forth to the outside world the
many advantages offered by our
town and county. —Fluvanna Her-
ald.
♦ 50,000 leaflets, think of it; sent
out by a little country town.
1st. What were they sent out for?
2nd. What good was derived from
them?
3rd. Who read them?
v- 4th. What's the use of burning
"Up moffSy to let folks know about
the undeveloped West.
The person who gives us the best
answer to the above four questions
we will give four years subscription
to the Crosby ton Review. We will
not answer them, but will get our
readers to answer tbem for us. All
replies must be in fo^ publication
not later than July 26th, So as to ap-
pear in the Review July 29th;~ Write
today.
ests these Republican leaders
represent in the revision of the
tan'ff.
vastly, better „ than, fctea rejfe
sentatives, just as the Republi-
can party is vastly better than
Aldrich and Cannon. A new
party would not mean much un«-
less the people could make sure
of its leaders. The interests
seeking to exploit the people do
not care'anything about parites;
they want men. They want men
in Congress, in legislatures, in
city councils. And in placing
their men where they can do the
most good for the interests
which intend~torob people, these
applca-
tion and offer a decent- reward
for one of the Southern breed
before I would take one of these
from the slums, or some other
worse dive of the Northern and
Eastern cities. I fully believe if
re so smart, or so un-
& in-
come natural parents that if they
would offer a $10.000 re-
ward that they could pick up one.
at some of the smaller cities o£
of the south. Or better try the
rescue homes. Stop this impor-
tation of the offspring of the vil-
est folks on earth and maybe you
will come nearer knowing what
breed you are handling. Some
of these "happy" would be fath-
ers or mothers may as likely as
not be trotting some dirty coons
baby on his knee. Who knows?
Woddith & Boom
Dealers
In
Flour, Feed and Coal—Wagon Yarc
... Your patronage solicit
PL A IN VIEW.
in connection,
id "
E X^S
uuuy uu ins Alice. vv uu miuws: with aiich
Cut it out,-patronize home and1 ,
you will reap a better reward.
robbed.
A carload of babies arrived in
Houston a few days ago from
New York and were distributed
among those families who made
application in due form. Shame
on our Lone Star State. It's bad
enough to go away from home
for our bacon, corn and other
products, but the limit is reached
when we begin to import babies,
patronize home institutions and
let"$W York or any other "sea
port" go to thunder. Home
grown products are
best.
always the
X,
m? ■
No man has a better right to
address the Democratic members
of Congress in relation to the
tariff, in either admonition or
criticism, than has Mr. Roger Q
Mills of Texas, who declares that
the Democratic party, as now re-
presented in Washington, might
as well pass out of existence."
SbeakirigTor the old-time Dem-
ocracy, Mr. Mills adds: "I be-
lieve that men who believe as we
rather see the party die
, than to see it further prostituted
to serve the uses of the basemen
who now seem to control it."
It has been, a long time since
the. country has heard from Mr.
Mills. But never has he forfeit-
ed authority to speak on public
affairs, and especially on the
tariff the literature of which he
has mastered as few men of his
time have everi'"attempted to
ir it* Mr. - Mills was in
Congress continuously from 1872
to 1899, approximately the last
seven years of that term having
been served in the Senate He
was a member of the ways jmd
means committee of the rfouse
for sorse .years. And as chair-
man jof that committee drew the
Mills Tariff Bill. Wliich was
-nassed by the House and ,pn which
is campaign of 1888 waa made.
he has been
one of the strongest of Ithe
ocratic tariff reformers iand
It's a disgrace to the South to
have t^import -the lowest bred
of the upper set of -the city to
Henry Ward Beecher once said:
"I think I am more grateful to
God for the sense that came to
me through my mother and sis-
ters of the substantial integrity,
purity and nobility of woman-
hood, than for .almost an:$fting-
else in this world. After a long
life I can say that I have not
lost faith in women. The longer
I live the more chivalric is my
regard for them. I should look
upon it as a fatal canker invmy
soul if I fell from my confidence
in the general trustworthiness,
honelTty, honor and charity of
womanhood. Therefore, when I
hear young men, or men in mid-
dle life, or old men, cast gross
HELL BROTHER S
i^SSSOISMSSmBfiU
Fine Tailoring. Expert cleaners and pressers.
Satisfactiorf^iiaranteed
Leave your work at Crosbyton, Post Office Bldg.
Piainview, - - -• '• - Texas
aspersions on the character of for the reader to overlook. And
women I feel as if I were in a just as advertising is the way of
den of hissing serpents. My the progressive store, so is the
soul, come not into communion, reading of advertising the way
of. _tiie progressive - person.
pocro
by them for they are themselves
far down in corruption-—If I hear r
Measure your progressiveness by
this standard, and you will not
, go far wrong. The advertised
a man speak contemptuous words gQod9 are usua„y cheaper . soid
of woman, my bnart si«hi at..^,^ proflt tQ Jraw
trade, and
the thought that he had a mothef
whose memory he insults."
The reader of a newspaper will
readily agree that it is necessary
for a merchant, with any pre-
tension to progressiveness. to ad-
vertise. Yet this would not be
true if it were not equally true
that it is necessary for the read-
er of the newspaper, if he or she
have any pretensions to progres-
siveness, to read and answer the
ads. These are twin-facts, twin
necessities. Whatever is of
enough importaqce for the mer-
chant to pay for the privilege of
saying is of too much importance
the ad. reader gets the savings. t
It is the saved dollar that counts.
For the Supply of the People of Crosby
and Adjoining Counties.
A full (assortment of No. 1 Lumber in-car load
shipments direct from mills.
••••
Roofing....
Also a full line of buiIdcrs materials including
Sashes, Doors, Building Paper, Lath, Plaster,
Lime, Cement, Sand, Brick, Oil, Paints, Stains,
Varnish Etc, Etc. - - • •
If your house burns, .charge it
to Joe Bailey; if lightning■strikes
your barn charge it to Joe Bailey;
if a drouth prevails charge it to
Joe Bailey; if any ill befalls you
or your wife's people, or anvthing
whatever goes wrong with gov-
ernmental ' affairs charge t he
whole blamed thing to Joe Bailey.
The slogan of the anti-Bailev
papers over the state is that "Joe
Bailey caused it all." In fact
they seem to imply that Joe Bai lev-
is Lord of all, and a mighty ruler
of the universe; and that he is
highly capable goes without say-
ing. It is a great wonder to us
that some of the little measly
sheets that are fighting him have
not accused him of robbing the
Fort Worth bank a few days
since. — Aspermont Star.
That's the most ignorant brain
leak that has sprung sinee Joe
Bailey said he would push us all
off in Gulf of Mexico. But that
is just such argument as Bailey
and his friends put up any way.
- -J x.
The following wedding notice
frbm a southern paper certainly
shows the energy of the editor
in. boosting his advertising col-
umns: Miss Jennie Jones and
Bob Henry were married at the
Jones mansion last night. The
bride is the daughter of our con-.
stable Jones, who. has made a
good officer and will undoubtedly
be re-elected next spring. He
offers a fine horse for sale in an-
other column. The groom runs
a grocery store on Main street
vertising columns and has a good
line of bargains this week. All
the summer he paid two cents
more for butter than any other
in town. The happy couple
left on the 10 o'clock train for
to visit the bride's
uncle who is reported to have
lots of money and Bright's dis-
ease. Bob certainly has an eye
for business.—Ex.
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White, F. E. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 8, 1909, newspaper, July 8, 1909; Crosbyton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242144/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.