The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Tocker Foundation Grant and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Crosby County Public Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
*-b
n' some ■
nt from
uy paper.
... i'j
.■
TSoZ
mmm
■I week.
0 per week .
-.00 per week,
, K„„„ 20c per inch I
ate ar$ headers XQe
tpage;
~* i! PP*! «SP
J lodge directories will
for at the rate of $1 per
Slag* notices for enter-
^ „ where an admission
*ed Will be charged for
per line just the
—BH -^L M
HI ' iinnn 4-Ui-i
view will
MH
tiggagii:
MM
'-' - ,"<• " w'i' "> '■
BYTQI -S ' U' HPLAINS R. JR.
mm
e glady .corrected uporf
e attention of -the
iT*" ^ ^ % 1
In this corner will be
given mattes of the greatest in-
JM*
^ar .wiJJ.be edited by Mrs. Nannie
£,. White, and" we hope to interest
i . . /•
..r-rv'O . I'";,
' £ ■
and this will be weJUooked after
'. . ..; '
boyg and girls and in every way
to be. i g'and
interestin - mera Cor-
> .. ■:
evo:v,y
...
;.' Y .'V ^ YvY^YYv-Y:,.^/;
Scientific cultivation as. well
stock - ces on Dairy
and Poultry.'
The Review lat rn
the estabii. . feat-
ure? \ . arable
Y::.v; y:.;; Yj 2; "Eeview .and';'we;
hope t ; "girl,
r -.1/,?*%
It has -often
truthfully too, that the man who
and every woman and man Wur tomorrow. If there is some
L-o.sbi'.'ton .9:30' a. m.
-- 4:30 p. m.
ing with north and sduth
is at Lub-
idit artici ; ladies for
the Woman Corner. We ask the
boys a ' {i is to send us letters
for,the Coyo and Girls Corner
and every farmer and. Stock
-raiser or Poultry raiser is re-
quested tp: sendin^etters" giving
your experience in matters of
most interest to your people.
The Review hp,s too good a sub-,
scriptioi list to go ou tas a gen-
eral local paper and we propose
'I: v. J". \ 'orris.
rchy and lawlessness has
W'J a crisis in Fort
111
fiday week before
, . J rank Norris, pas-
of the First Baptist Church,.
" ~ •c ^indii^ed-fey-the-grand^ jury.
"charge of .perjur^. .Before
burned--several'
orris re.ceiv-
/. , - - ■ - . -
1 of his official board two,
threats were niade to
■Kmid the parso-
■■■■I was burned,
d.tb g-ht the parson-
..v ' ■■■:.. ■ ■ exfam-
ges were made
fore the j•-jur y~that Rev.
'rote the three anonoy-
iu^Jetters;^ddfessi „
1 any knowl-
,.15^
..
he evidence
tSSal^lTleae fea Ltfreseachwi
in itself, worth a y ears-: supserip-
tion and hope to hold every sub-
scriber we have and many others.
Every, line of matter in thesevle-
partments will be. home set ^nat-
ter, and will be-Cre^ from first
hands-and will not be plate or
^.cxmd^handed in any way.
Watch your Review and help us
make it a better paper each Week.'
Better Farms and
'Greater Products.
. As has been the wonderful im-
provements in live stock through-
put Texas, from the broncho,
longhorn and razor back to the
highgrade arid thoroughbred
stock of today; thus producing
worpounfe-of meat where, only
one grew before; so, by so styled
scidrttific meth^s in agriculture;
.,n
itted, the granc i - eturfi-, will products of the farm be im-
, proved in" quality, and quanity,?
.
. . - '
: ion' fire from, the
. jpusmeans
icticaMy destroyed, the
I
tors
ing with their
(since received
' letter- threats
,djre things" to
is" thoroughly
.1 the churches are
'"'"^ij||^ig|hat
t of the lawless
. 11
"the Baptist
"nsis
gambling bill
i, which
' '' ent of
^ .,.J like he
stor of tlie Ft, Worth
; been making war
moving picture;
* evite to that
.wsmrnwm
3; his stand
•' protection
also op*
: by the
I recall
Bourag-e and avail of ..this and
certainly need no better convinc-
ing argument than the example
everywhere before themjn. stoek
raising,... „ _
- The same will- appljr to vege-
table as has_z Apphe£L to_nanimal
life, and the reward of closer ap-
plication and better methods be
as great. If every farmer will
make the most of his opportuni-
ties, study his business and ac-
quire and apply all the informa-
tion he can.gain it will be the
greatest source .of profit and
pleasure he has ever experienc-
ed. . :f ^ -
Many are realizing and acting
upon this, and .those who do not
will be left in a class of non-pro-
that will cost ( :e per
cent. Begin now and do not let
an opportunity escape.
Hon. R. L. -Henry has won his
long and earnest figfyt in Con-
gress for a drastic anil corhplete
: : / V ?
Trust. That, the i mmediate ef-
fect of the investigation will tend
to be injurious to the business
interest >f the country is quite
probable.* Yet, if the'final result
if the investigation shall free
said with the same truthfulness*-
that the.business that runs ^the
man sea <)L\j clpv ,m assign-
ment ? 1 „.' How many
of us today put on; until tomor-
, ' 1 .'
ply to the proprietor of the store]
'
man 1" ly, whether he is
on his own pay-roll- or that of
some one else,
' • When' we put oft something
today, until tomorrow, we begin
to crowd the morrow, and . when
' ,
in the first place it. is _easier to
still place it aside for the second
time,' and pretty' soon we have
the "tomorrow" so crowded that
the boss- finds himself in the
hole, if you are the boss you are
no exception to the rule. To do
the most, and be the most sue-
siiccewsful, We must crowd today,
work and plenty, of it, and at, it
il the time,. is' the only "thing
that can toughen the fiber, 4ake
out the sap, harden tbe muscle,
gener • - , •. \ jve per.jonalirv
V.
the testing time comes—as it
will come to all!
rs and think-
ers/a/;. '.It 1:3 are not grown 4n
hot houses, shielded from diffi-
culties, but are made out in the
open, ; iere; the stress... and
■stornis of life, try them
every angle. \ _;
it will not keep 'until tomorrow,
If it did not need attention today,
a tickler may inform you that
the "tomorrow" is-near at- hand
and yoU had better turn in and
do it today;
The trouble with those who-faii
in life is, they postpone present
pressing duties until they are un'f
able to perform the" "duties, and
the work is never done right and
a piece";of Work that is not worth
Well and at the time it is
f e^ed; is not worth doing at all.
fiNhe young man would crowd
all he possibly .can into today,
and risk.nothing until tomorrow,
he would soon be on the road to
success, and his worth is incalcu-
able. His services will be sought
and his pay will-be at the top of
the Wage scale and more.
Every ' man makes -.-his own
place", and the world will gener-
ally give you what you deserve.
No use to spend your time in en-
vying the man ' 'higher.. up, " if
he attained it by honest - endeav-
or, for there is one thing certain,
no man- becomes great by Chance
or accident, and holds his' own
against all corners—for the only
abiding greatness is achieved.hy.
climbing the ladder of fame rung
by-rung, in the face of all kinds
of difficulties and obstacles.
Even a genius has to work to
maintain his place, and about
the only differense between a
i • m 11
«
from.
Vol. 1. No. 2, of. the T\W-
County News, Published at Aber-
"nathy, Texas reached our ex-
change table this week and we
J«c '' Jou .
News on our X list. The News
is. published bV Webster & Han-
dm, and they are getting out a
nice p^ap^ on the start and we
hope for them a success. To
make a success of a country ne ws
paper /depends entirely on the
town in which it is published,. If
every enterprise in the town
backs it with every-bit of its bus-
thing that" needs attenHo^ today"^tiess : ^ wil^1Bake a success, but
every time^inerchant, profess-
ional or business man. Banker or
whom-so, ever, that may be guilty
of sending a dollars worth of bus-
iness out of town is simply tak-
ing a support that ought to be
given a home industry and giv-
ing it to some-one that would
not care a dam if the town never
amounted to anything. Crosby-
ton is the on ly town we ever saw
that the business'interests stood
by the Newspaper from the start
to finish, with few exception's.
That's why so many people ask
us as well as the citizens of Cros-
by ton how it is that the Review
is so good a paper.
We will show every Wednes-
day and%Saturday nights from
how on. Come-i ~and enjoy - a
"good Moving Picture Show.
Crosby ton Amusement Co.
They Are Socialists. s
stated in a speechjrrCoftgress a
few da\ s j . Uu ''.-ml/ koose-
-
..... . i; ^ "■ '■ -..
. . ' .. ■;
ment. They are so close to-
gether 5. I 1 „. , "h is
a Republican is a Dem-
ocrat, and for that ► or son they
have both been
ing off to the Socialist party and
the only, thing that either old;
party, can do is to cry Socialism.
Is it a fact that if any'man takes
a progressive idea, that he be-
comes a Socialist?- If it is, Roose-
velt is 'undoubtly a Socialist, and!
mark what the Review says right
now: Roosevelt will be; the next
President of the United States.
Roosevelt is progressive, and,the,
standpatters in Congress know it,
is why they are kicking^. The race
will be between Roosevelt and
Wopdrow Wilson, and we are for
Wilson but the time for the Dem-
oerat s to Capture the governnaent
is not yet at hand, but four years
from now theJBig^how-will come
off. If, Roosevelt and Bryan are
J , f,i ° . . i
Socialists, as .Biea Bfrys thejr. are,-
the Socialists have .already jjapt-.
ured fcwo of Ub '. « oi. in „
win the ■ this-, ;
nation about a quarter of a cent-
..vr^ /:
that. ' . :: . '
Girls and boys
fifteen years of . age1,
testifying in ■ Washington this
week before a Congressional h
vestigating Committee thai -is
looking into the strike affairs o£- '
Lawrence,- Massachusetts. ^ The
children told of working long-
hours at low wages, and thaj the-
company-charged them five cent's
a week for drinking water, and
which they termed canal water.
They were charged the five- 1
per week whether * they. .drank
fhe water- or [?npt. These chili - , ■
dren told of ati%cities that would •
never have been repeated in thi4-
State. As far as-the proceedings
have reported they show the op- r
erators of the mills and factories ,
to be-about the oneriest set Of
bipeds on earth, and whose in-
finitesimal .souls by thousands
could revel..in uncrowded comfort '
in the hull of a mustard .seed. T ^
- "
*; W ?ori
II
Eor
For;
Vor 1
For:
ism
CITY BARBER SHOP
1
Located in the. Building ftext to. Postofflce.
Want your patronage and guarantee satisfaction.,
HOT and GOLD - BATH. Laundry "basket leaves
" Tuesday and returns Friday^: '
MATHIS & MORTON, ' Prop., Crosbyton, Texas;
Genel
Genea
...Landl
Farmers sh<MH :reeograze, -en--:^itas«ii4«--oriiBarsH i^
a.tem
minationj and the conquering
spirit. The trouble is not with
PERSPIRATION. Brilliance
teflwut en^gy^i^L^ fai hi le
mediocrity plus^eternal vigilance
is success. \ ___ _
Ihaveheardyoung mencom-
plain that times have changed
since- their fathers, • who -have
made successes, were boys, and
hence they- are;w-gfsatly handi-
capped in .these modern days,
When .competition is fierce. They
charge up their failures to the
times in which they live. Not
so! We are living in the great-
est age of the world's history
for young men of nerve, deter-
inationi
the times, but with the boysl
|You are tjrying to succeed ; with-
out work| Mothers likewise, are
spoiling their daughters, by mak-
ing wall flowers out of them, and
taking off their shoulders all re-
sponsibiiity of - serions purpose
and sober living, and some day,
when daughter marries a two-
bit, dude, she will have two help-
less'human beings on her hands,
or a divorce case in" the courts,
and s< ,of her life.
Inst . ' our boys
: : ' ' ■ - ' - v
(he
||ft ,
many parents has ruin.e
better crowd {hem into 'work..
Sentimentalism bn the p;
rof
-the
girl
success.1 Whenever J
^'^We^donH
•en to have as
we had," i never
.giesstojftflfrol
Millinery s Opening
Mare!
1912
Crosbyt1
lO.OQO :
We are located in J. E. Johnston's Store
where we will havS an up-to-date stock of
"MtUtnery^-atftd~ -^w^notrr^ifieT^
the 16th, at which time^-we invite every Lady
in Crosby County to attend.
We have a welP assorted stock of the
latest creations in-MiJIine.ry goods, a full line
of 1912 spring designs and patterns. Come
to the opening and inspect onr goods. You
can rest assured that you will have the same
advantage at our store as you would in the
fashionable city.
You will find in charge, Miss Madie -Miller,
an expert in trimming, with years of expri-
enee and vy/ guarantee the best prices. '
Yours to pfease,
for real success. -.Whenever I
•hea ^
Ml!
hard tim
' g
WmSm
an
rn Si ' 'ill®
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, Frank E. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1912, newspaper, March 14, 1912; Crosbyton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242273/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.