The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 17, 1910 Page: 2 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 25 x 18 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:
SMW
fflU
$*
'; * •?-?^|PSPP!
W;
mm
His'
,JW
- ■ .. • • •• . —• ■■■■•
'■■■■, •■'> : . ; ; "■ -1 ,.-„ • ■-, ■..." ■ '...,
•• ,.' ■' ••■'■ •'■•■ ;:. .:■/ ■< ■ • ">v ■' * ; i. .■ r '■?<> • ■ •"■'■ -
■r:' '
Wholesale and Retail '
* .
ipt
...
>'"v'l ^ ^ ,V
, McAlister, Mailland
■■"<m ■' - . . '
rirf^tmwT;
i
cotton seed cake. Packing House Products and Flour Sold to Dealers only. General
j iw-r ^ *r ■
| SSt I I
- ;. y, j...- rif:;
r--'.- •.'•:■■■..■<■ ■ f,r - ■ ' . .
,: ■••>.', ;■ V". :■>-!&,■■■<■:'A' ;f
r~——*•*:;' .■■■.' -.; - ' ,-
V's .
. •*ya
^ i" ' /
'"••■•'"and Maize, a n d 51
000 bundles of Kaffir and Maize. N. E. of Cros-
byton 15 miles.
V
mm
J. A. ABERNATHY.
! •
K^r-
! 4 rV^-' V>
AU Kinds of Building Material
Barbed Wire, Posts, B|est Nigger
Head Coal, the Best Grain
The Deepest Spot The Sea"
-/k
We want alL the Clean, Dry Bonestrt
you can bring us
"^iBWiock iumbef & Grain Co.
/Science is restless as well as
curious. The demands of science
are never satisfied. People list-
ened and were fooled with the
story of Dr. Cook, because, it
was eloquently told and smacked
of mystery. Science accepted it
because it complied with certain
requirements of the country of
the far north already knoWn.
Science is still unsatisfied, but
finds temporary relief in the re-
cent discovery of the deepest
spot in the sea. It is about one
hundred miles off the com^ of
the island of Guam. The depth
has been ascertained to be 31,000
feet, or something over six miles
There is no particular benefit
in knowing this fact. It will not
affect, or change so much- as a
hair's breadth, the commence of
It will add no- jot of
CHOPS ACT AS INTOXICANT
Inhalation of Banzfne, Excetaiva Emo-
tion and Joy Riding May I^Kako
One Drunk, 8aya Authority.
any one, yet secure
this information over a year's
work was required and an im-
mense amount of money was ex-
pend^.
jr **
It is interesting of course to
London.—The vapor given off by
turpentine, which intoxicated a num-
ber of men who were unloading a
cargo, of it at! Bristol, is not the only
curious inebriant. , Even the homely
chop, taken after long abstention from
tirwrtrfc®^ may stimulate to the point
fotdrunVenneas.
" ""©rdinary petrol, or benzine, if in-
haled in] sufficient quantities for a
long enough period," a correspondent
was Informed by a medical analyst,
"will produce the same result.
"Intoxication is by no means an ef-
fect of alcohol alone. The intoxica-
tion caused by alcohol is completp
and, generally speaking, lasts longer;
but it is quite possible to develop all
the symptoms of drunkenness through
excessive' emotion, whether Joy, grief
or the exhilaration excited by muBic.
"What really happens is that the
nerve centers are in such cases
thrown out of unison with each other
and with the brain, so that mentally
directed actions—walking, talking and
sb on—become aimcuirinid tfr
Respectaablc Stealing.
itself tends to incoherency.
"A motor ride in fresh . air, espe-
cially to a person unused to it, will
often produce similar effects, owing to
excessive oxygenation of the blood, in
plain words, overstimulation.
"Again, a man who has been ill for
any length of time and, having been
on a milk-diet, takes too hearty a
know the deepest spot in the sea,1 meal of meat when he is first allowed
that food may expect to experience
Lubbock,
■■ "'-i 1
Texas
" "
mmmmmTTm7T'?
Don't fail to visit the Fair, it js head-
quarters for everything in Queen'S-ware,
Glassware, Tinware, Jewelry, Novelties
Notions, First Door East of Post
ju8t afl it ia to know the highest
mountain peak.
But beyond Cthe henefit oi Add-
ing to...the scientific knowledge of
the world, Dr. Charles Town-
send, who is responsible for" the
>ns!
)C
discovery, has nof helped the
world a great deal.
Plymottth Rock Cocks
' Sale
The best stock to be had. The
parent stock cost $10 each.
They are the blue<ribbon getters.
Pricefrpnj^SL 60to|2.00^ e*ch> fKif Ma'son she planted and harvested
T. H. Ballowe,
* i- '
Crosbyton Texas.
|Kf|a
■y -.jE!
mm
Sfeii
rSHw1!
1 i1 (i i -ft Hi rf wmm.
■
mmmm
iPii
raft
A jSRi iBMmM
■ ™ES®-1ES3iS
mtm
• selfl
f
«-«
P m
ill
i ■■>
■ i'-
.ubbock
l^ai
ro~
' ... , .mm
m ^ f#
symptoms of Intoxication. A .chop,
can, under such circumstances, make
him distinctly drunk.
.."^ti ong cogee will also produce re-
sults not unlike spirit, especially if
taken on an empty stomaoh after
some hours of brain work. Tea is
also dlstfnctly stimulating, as .Is
sb—n at ap i'at home,' where it is
usually noticed thar th — women'-e
tongues wag :most freely after the
second or third cup."
Pittsburg—business men were
somewhat startled recently when
they were told, in a qublic address
given before the Pittsburg Board
of trade, that one of t he greatest
evils of modern life and institu-
tionswas' 'resp^table steaiiM,"
The speaker declared that the old-
commandment, "thou shalt not
steal," had been distorted into
"thou shalt not rbe caughtateal
* 9 9
ing" . • "V-Tr-?-.-r;-~
In view of the fact the probe
is working overtime and in
various directions, it is not nec-
essary to go very far to become
convinced that it is quite easy to
apply this, twisted version of an
importan t section of the decal-
ogue. Pinchot, before the Ball-
ing investigating committee, inti-
mated that there werecertain land
grabbers who were trying t o
If;
ONION QUEEN OF NORTHWEST
Miss Turner of Dayton, Wash!, CleAre
98^30 from Ten-Acre Patch-
Crop immense. ,
Dayton, Wash.—Miss Alice Turner
of this place is being dubbed thp "On-
ion Queen .of^the ¥sen6 Northwest.1
ten acres of onions and cleared above
all her expenses $8,880. The crop was
an Immense one, being raised on new
land and watered with artesian well*.
Miss Turner came into possession of
amall tarm by the death of her
father a year ago. She wks at a loss
to know what to do with the old home
akd her mother, when she decided to
become an onion grower all by her-
aelf.
She engaged men^to pldty and plant
her- acreage to onion seed, and
throughout the Bummer superintended
the weeding and watering of the crop.
, In spite of many scofflngs from
neighbors, who declared onions would
be worthless this fall, she persevered
and now la envied by all. The total
crop was purchased by a New York
commission man for distribution iji
the east Miss Turner realised 75
cents a sack for the onions, whicD
yielded nearly one thousand sacks a*
acre."
ever, that it is difficult to discerr
the difference. They have dist-
orted the commandment. "Thou
shalt not be caught stealing" iiT
the commandment that the ttSvfcv
literally substituted, and under
its provisions they proceed to get
busy. Their coffers filled with
good, round gold nieces, while
the man who labors goes hungry
This is what was declared to
be respectaote stealing and it is
ali truth fulness one of the gratest
evils of the modern life and of
modern instutions^
: 'j....
-
iiii#
M
"J:' ■" ® j jJgm
INn^u* „
n
Charity Charge Diss
Ban Francisco —When the estate of
the administrator It was diseovered
that the woman, who was supposed to
tyave died In poverty, possessed a for-
tune appraised at 988,000, of which
u 1,000 was ia cash. Mrs. Moore lived
a hovel and for years was a charge
the Catholte Benevolent association.
kce the fire of 1906 she received aid
the Red Crosa society. ;,Twx
in the east are heirs to the es-
Fortune to scnooi
■- i- ■
become
!||K
I#1®
- WtM.'i .
v
flpOHl
t-~ ■*
%
>1 /•":!'
)f the Crosbyton boys
jday on the Canon.
^4aen BE>, .C&cziK Ipff J __
known that Charles. W- Bennett, a.
wealthy man of Binghamton, N. Y.y
who died recently, willed $200,000 to
J; W. Casey of this city as a reward
for saving his life 80 years ago
Casey Is the proprietor of a laundry
here and is comfortably well off. CaBey
and Bennett were school ehums In
Binghamton; - The former, who
an expert swimmer, rescued Be
from drowning in the Susqy
river. , 1
Bennett then told hin
that he would ever r«
heroic act.
investigation is on which indi-
cates that the packers are tryii
to steal from the people the rijjfft
toiive. A brilliant young man
congressman from Piladeiphia
has asked for an in vesication of
the cold storage trust, insisting
that the men behind it are try-' ^
ing to steal the profits of the
producer and to bankrupt our old
frierids, the ultimate consumer.
,Every where-the-eyesisturnedit
is attracted to some investigation
which is being probed with the
view^jf finding who have been
guilty of respectable stealing.
Thbre ^are certain factors in
the business life of to day which
would like to set up new standards
of economtc law«. They would
abrogate the law of supply and de-
mand in its stead declare the price
commodities, recognized asneces-
sary for general use, it is to be
established by the common con-
sent and the agreement of those
who Control their production.
These men can properly be class-
ed as thieves. They have
adopted business methods, which
\
i
i.j
• VI
>7
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. 2, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 17, 1910, newspaper, February 17, 1910; Crosbyton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242175/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Crosby County Public Library.