The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, March 28, 1919 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.
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'tmm
*■
aiaiter Jin,
$ Gfoaby-
■ March.
1M!
GB TO sTHE FUBLIC.-
«'reflection won the character,
.'appear-
,f the Review will be gladly cor-
g brought ttitho ajtteotfon of the
n&oa bet first page.; when
nd ciraWMWiw accordingly
directoriMWillbacharaed-
evateof Si per month. AU readloS
.or entertoiuments. etc.. where an admls-
barged wilt be char««4 for at mk rate
^{fi^Mrbuajast the some as any other adver-
r I & - r> i/-v-•A'.'/, _" . " % , A ' SMSIrIS^ l/i
sifemut
i -
mm
SS1S
iiv :■•■■'m
miasm
MS
■ • ■ ■■■■.
%&■?!■-.' .
Nobody eyer got rfcli tomop-
row. Begin saving today
Savfnga crank tip the pros-
wfa&r r « , i
Siffl U' ,
tDevisetftoStr
ipertyijl
^KJS0B|
et Desired Results.
RglgP
HRsI
ay ad. $13.00 per week. Half .page
^ w^bIi. Fourth paaa display
H' ± ittwtliiw-01*8 .'<& $ page
-' ,yin«hpach insertion. Uvte and readers
« Iw eaob -fr' _
? i
--- , . -:v-—v:-.;
Relief Campaign.
; -campaign ever in-
stituted by any Jewislr society
liOi^^nr^°®fterrOTI
April 7th, when the American
: ^ Jewish Belief Committee will
open its drive for the States ap
portionment of the $85,000,000
4, war SSSSBCW&.
" The campaign is heartily indor-
. sed by President Wilson and
other prominent- national -char*
acters who are cognizant of its
need and purpose. The-fund will
"mTtlTe used for Jews alone, 4>ut
for all sufferers within the war
zones. It is non-sectarian, though
>eing waged by the American
Jewish Relief Committee.
'Jews have always been
solictted-""forijeontribuations-—to
campaigns of every kind for re-
purposes throughout the
mtry and this- fund to be
will be- the first in which
Ifctoppoars that for pearl stringing
no machinery has fret been devised to
take the place of clever, practiced.
Angers. | The pearl-stringers are, for
the most part; girts and women; and
generally they have learned their skill
from other and older members of the
famlly long engaged In the work.
Good light Is one of the essential
needs of the pearl-stringer, especially
^wheh'We is 'employed la""making -or
xepalrlng- pearl ornaments. All ben<2<«
must be arranged acaording to size,
and then, separately, and most cart*
fully, sewn Into place on their dainty
"framework. For example, if the de-
sign be that of a flower or a leaf, thej
skill Hes tn graduating from the lurg«!
"est pearl to the small one that touches
the extreme point.
Only the finest silk Is employed for
stringli^ the_^fine§t ^pearts.^ Orgat!
beads, roundT and shiny, unmistakably]
artificial, and with &> more 'luster
than wl es, may be allowed to.,
hang together on. catgut, but "orients"
must be threaded, "pearl kissing pear;
¥
x:li-
on silken strands worthy of thSr.
shape :
.The v, ol ino io' , lies in the
apparently simple manner of tying the
knot that attaches the snap. Some*
tim.es also she has ma i >.oot be-
tween bead and betfd, an operation!
that adds to the Ioj i a of the necklace,,'
but detract-; 'from the beauty of the!
line of peart?.- ' The- knack" of making
.this tiny knot will perhaps bo ac«,
quired by the novice only after a year's
practice; and the perfect hang of the?
heads, neither too loose nor too tight,'
(depends,upon .this little .knot. ?
' There is no needle fine enough for*
threading* small seed pearls; so the-
StriagttvJnat^-JiC£_dwji-.feoin...a_blt.-o5
A H' tlis weeMh 1® -the- world
is what has bean saved by
someone.
Savings beget' rftore when
vthe^arc invested; War Saving^
Stamps, are the finest invest-
ment in the world; "thrift
Stamps art first aid to invest,
merits.
Money saved 1 woney earn-
,'wtt. Buy War Savings Starpps.
Sharing -fn ~4he—€lov©mmeflt7
is good citizenship; you do
that by Investing in War Sav-
ings Stamps.
Wise buying makes wages-
count more. Saving is the
quickest road to opportunity.
Spend wisely, save sanely, i re-
vest safelv. Buv War Savings
Stamps. _
We carry a complete line of |
Staple and Fancy
GROCERIES.
NINETEEN SAVINGS
iESQLUTIOMSFOi-
Just Received, a Car'of
. ■ •: - LIGHT CRUST ' FLOUR ,'J
/ ' ' and WHITE PEAL MEAL v. 1 ^
■ - - It's Fine—Try a Sack. • - :
' § - •
• Highest iarl^c.'5' Price Paid For litter ami Eggs.
1
ill
rth'a
Here are the Nineteen Savings
.Resolutions for N'ineteen-Ninetoejj.
Every one of them good! Ploxfeo
•observe them" throughout "the .year,
and live up to- ycu? pledge. To
have one, mtist save. Save" and Have!
You atJe your biggest as$etl Capi-
talize yourself! Take the if oat of.
life and put it *ln Thrift!
1. J will: not quit,, but will push
-ray-personal job in-helping clean up
fee—Avar. —•—■—
MABE-KARR CO,
---•-T4ie--G-a&li"Store^O #"--Pf>i€€-4o-A-li--~-
Ex-Senator iall©y Thrsat-
, • : ®sis to Split His Ticket.
Newark, N. J.. March 21—As-
The Old Reliable Hail Insurance Compaiiy
Hii
- ■■
R'Ire as thin as a hair.' She arranges
her pearls, if they are of differen;
: slees, on a grooved board covered w!
illiard-table cloth, any other matferlal|[
uch as a green baize, being much toof
oarse. ' ■ _ -■ I
i The work of the pearl-stringer is g®
little known that it is doubtful wheth-
er onp'in n'flinnsnrid \vo)novi
2. I Will hny wisely, save sanely
and invest sscurely, . and will insist
upon getting 100 cents value for ev-.
ery dollar 3pent.
3. I will take the "if" out of_ Life
and make it build up Thrift.
I will have a personal share in
,e Jews have called ujxm all
citizens of the United States ta
'• •• t. -• T a.. . 1 aiiffiit«Ava
to admine the pearls displayed In the.
jeweler's case ever give a thought to
the patient lingers that have threaded
the beautiful pearls and tied the gI-
mo.s.f;..inyisible, jsmniag. knots thatlinfe.
contribute for Jewish sufferers
and other sufferers in the strick-
en zones. The end of the war
has not lessened, but rather has
-accentuated, *he -sufferings-of
the Jews in Asia Minor who have
been ■practicaily denied any
" means of livelihood. Particularly.
* is this true in Palistine and Gal-
icia. The American Jeswish Re-
lief committee did not particir
pate in the funds secured from
,e U. S. War Work . Campaign,
rniie Jewish Welfare Board se-
i£ired an apportionment of the
funds, which were used for pro-
rooting the welfare of our sol-
s and sailors. The funds to
secured by the American
wish Relief Committee will be
d in relieving distress and
Iring Of the populace in the
torn arears of Palestine and
Galicia in particular.
.them to their diamond clasps,
The pearl is the only gem, it 13
Wainied, needing pot the hand of man
to bring it to perfection, and history
affords ample evidence of the intense
fascination it has always exercised
upon the people of eVery land. The
pearl is the oldest object of personal^
adornment.
. I will have enough sand to hold
on to the slippery, dollar.
6. I will increase my savings, not
tomorrow, or next day, but rowT
f. - J wiH'capitali'Zb' juy'MwH'^through j
serting that the Democratic
party has "ceased to support
Demecratic principles," former
U.'S. Senator Joseph Wr Bailey
of Texas, declared in an address
here last night that he would
didate of any party which con-
stantly reduces pur liberty, un-
necessarily increases our taxes.
Bailey, who was-the principat-
saving, I am my own biggest asset. -
I will not sell my War Savihgu
Stamps ot other Government securi-
ties for a" mess of pottage.
9. I. will joiriPthe "Get, Ahejirt"
movement, sir;!! as one of the Gov-
ernmenfs War Savings Societies.
10. I will not let the ' War-is-Ov-
lhdian mythology often speaks e#
the pearl, attributing its discovery to
the^god Vishnu, who. is said to have
caused it to foe drawn from the ocean
for his daughter Pandaja. The rec-
ords of the Babylonians, Egyptians,
Fersians and Bornans also contain
many references to the gem. The
wife of Emperor Caligula, for an or-
dinary betrothal feast, is said to have
decked herself with pearls to the value
rrf SI,CG0.0C( • j] Julius Caesar pre-
sented Servilla, the mother of Brutus,
with a specimen Valued at §250,000.
JSpS
Iji another plaqe in this issue
we* are publishing
1 for a Conference of Texas
ton raisers-to meet in Dallas
, 7th. it is also urged
&?:■■■ ■ JK '—""iiir «*-*-
the cotton
tton .are invited to take
tiflgp. It is &aid
,th is facing a loss of from
3 to $SOOl6QOfi|0 on
Convicts* "E! Dorado." ^
[j '.Th^^featesf fenlehcy is shown to
criminals in New Zealand. Thus, in
'one Jail,, at the end of the South
island, a prisoner may keep a race-
horse, and is permitted to transact
■ business concerning It - In- the -same
jail well-behaved prisoners are al-
lowed an a'uci auou out occasionally
"on their own."
Prison authorities in New Zealand
are believers in the moral effects of
open air. In one of their institutions
the newly arrived misdemeanant is
allowed the choice of living In jail
or outside it, tents being erected at
■the back. This system of sending peo-
ple to jail by letting them live out-
Me-hasr -however,--dfead-vtmt-a geSi-
n one case the "prisoner^." resenting
^ 1;' 1 ' ' -i "lock-
itcd lir si-, . in bu :h.
| .JK.'jNlj!J
country, depress-
business
s^ict-
'cmoved the price
' itely advance again
ggest^d It^'at pe-
/.to-
fJTlCE
dux
Shijn the Trouble Makers.
".Vtane ii]> our lrJr,-', come what will,
. 1 , 'ou will retaiii a happy, cheerful
disposition, urges a confirmed opthn-
ist. If y>u find that there are somb
..few'-'';p('0pl --\vh6-. :-your. fur the
.wroici,- .;i.vv'.,...{io not seek-, their- e©m-
-pcjay. .'if ^re toe many
soi i/< r to fnn.rntain an optimis-
tic (' s'i3 s<13- and whose friend-
s3>;>. ■ while ■ cultivating to
. bowi trouble makers. , Boitow happl-
■ n> (i - aiid beauty from these sunshiny
natures and leave the gi^uches to
R}«4nlc.iHto the shadows and grow.bent
and wrinkled. '
■ '■ i
-*;Ari:xjyai-~Kftr;
IPathej*—What did the teacher say
when ahe hcai-d you f^Venr?
-^ei^y--.--"She;aaked-'Wh I Iear&etl
it.
on the parrof,
ii ^rnk
■gi
or" idea make me ungrateful to those
who have fought" and bled for Lib-
erty.-
11. I will be behind our end of the
Peace Table with rr.y heart, brain;;,
labor, encouragement and money..
12. I will employ all practical
means of stopping ,the "foolish drip
from the pocket-book * which under-
mines the foundation of Family Suc-
cess, and save through War Savings
Stamps, Thrift Stamps, and other
Government Bonds.
13. .1 will make Thrift a hanpy
habit and a solid business which se
cures continuous profit from the
-s-pemitng- of money Tvisely.
14. I will remember that Thrift
is one of the great lessons taught by
the war.
. 15. I. will not set aside my newly-
n.ct?uired habits of Thi-ift and Saovi-
fice, but4 will -'"caFSry on" with grear.-
er zeal and enthusiasm than ever
■before. - ' ' '*■
16. I will keep a written. account
of What I buy study it weekly, and
try to reduce my foolish spending,
and increase my ability to buy wise-
ly. . ;; '
17. I will look ahead and not al-
low my impulse to spend thought-
"ossly, rob me of some big oppprtu-
nlty ^or - advancement- ^which^—may
rnrn Around Fund" which .will
heofl,- or better, an unexpected- op-
portunity. 1 ' ';~4—*
38. T will save—not through mi-
"O'-ii-.iofs or to support future Iaxi-
ness—but to live well now and in the
iuturo. ...
-IS. I will conserve my time, my
energy, and my money tteit" I' n:iay
work-wirlsout -flnaneial wor ryr-witli- a
fclear h ca^~ -an^frogli vis iom
speaker at the Victory banquet
of the "road horse association,"
blamed the Democratic party for
the passage of the prohibition
amendment to the- -constitution
Pledges macle in. 191S to invest in"
'''•Hwii States Government "War Sav.
jogs Stamps, but which, for any rea-
he t>r^TCceHiTT*er
(ll,.: 1..53S. - may be fulfilled ,and the
r-ovorrinicnt expects that :th$y "shall
he fultilied by the purchase of lOiti
'Var Saving^ Stamps. ^
& AVa.r Sayhigs. Pledge iik a pcrso-n-
•>. biuuing. obligation. -Save an 1
m
: •' i.iv
and for the near passage of the
amendment granting suffrage,to
women.
. "I-have been s? Democrat all
my life," he said. "A voter Dem-
ocrat if you please, and I have
never, scratched a party ticket.
But those who control the Dem:,
ocratic party have renounced
one Democratic principle after
another with such rapidity and
bewildering succession that they
have left nothing except the
name Since Thomas Jefferson
founded it tM Democratic party
has always insisted that every
state should exclusively control
the local affairs o£ its own peo-
ple, but a Democratic Congress
immolated that time honored
doctrine upon the alter of nat-
ional prohibition and a majority
voted to repeat the sacrifice in
behalf of woman suffrage,"
The doctrine of revefetree for
the constitution, he declared,
had been altered until* the_-Cpn-
"The liberty we have-thought
worfh fighting for and dying
for," he declared, "is the liberty
of the- individual—the right of
every man to do for himself and
with his own whatever he pleas-
lere with the right of olliec hiyii
to do the same. But in this day
they tell U3 ythat it is better to
be good than it is to Be free, and
they have mutilated our p'enai
statutes until the lawyers cannot
carry even an index of fehem in
their ininds. We have restricted
'tfce-jrghtB. of - men-xtntil; no'ci vi\-
ized country on the globe inter-
... St.-Pa«sS Fire 4 Marine Sisiirane® Cb.
There are two HaiS Insurance compaiies by the-
name of St. Paul—the St. Pad Fir® and Marine
Insurance Co. and -ifee St. Paul Mutual Hall Insur-
ance Co. .. .J SI
I do sot represent any Mutual Instflraece company.
The Old Reliable St. Paul' Fire & Marine Insurance;
--Co.- wis orgasized In 1865, and Is oae of the oldest?
companies doing business in the Uni
For information aboist Hail Insurance to protect
your, crops against damage see me at my office at |01
Collier's ^arber Shop.
«l
iw8WHinwitma warsr?
Mt. Blanco Federal
Farm Lean Association
(in Process of Organization)
You pay no Fees unless we'can get your loan"
through. Extra favorable terms, while orga-
nizing. See or write
"K. J. MATTHEWS,
! . Mt. BSaeeo, Texas.!
aaaaBMB
COAL! COAL!!
. " «Wti-en in1ifeed""of jCoal see"
>-' I have just commenced hi'the Coal basiness md-
will appreciate any and all orders receded. .. .;^ "
I shall attempt t© have good c©al'oii hand and
Will assure you of kind and eourterus treatment at
all times.
Bs¥t Fofget tite Man> - z
Boh't Ferget tfee Place.
D. L.VI|AMMER at Elevator
- , --- -
imjjwmaawM
■ m
' '
■' '-'M
I
Iplil'
m
r
ures and the business of its peo-
ple as much as thia free gave rn-
went of the United States." v
F<DR. SALE—Sundan, ■.seed,'
thresher run «15c lb. Rccleatied
:aind floated 25c- lb. :: Als(> . maize,
feterita aiijd ,Sehroak kaffir, sor-
ghum. / •, r;f i\, r^dv.c-k
Rails V'oSc
D. B. &. W. L. SGHOOL
aaimsgs^ , j;
1mm
1 .■ ' 1
I
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Buck, James T. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, March 28, 1919, newspaper, March 28, 1919; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242482/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.