The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 6, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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From. n6w to May the 1st we are making lower prices on everything in our line, and it will payyrou t 5JJ,-n ^
miles to buy at our store. We handle the famous Leudinghaus Wagon>, in both Bojs dart and Standard Kim. A roll line
of the famous John Deer Implements^ Agents fyr- the Denton-Weaver Wire Co. Hacks, buggies, harne s, gasoline
I wind mills, nine fittinos. aueerTs-ware. Arcadian Malleable Iron Ranges^-best on earth, and J. I. Case
IPjengineCStar wind mills,pipefittings,queen's*ware. Arcadian Malleable . . .
^TOreshing Machines. ^ If you want goods that will give you service call and examine our stock before buying. March
Will be our special sale month and we will save you money., Conifc to see us.
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Plainview
Texas
General
Hardware
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Economic Foundation of Vioe
All vice and prostitution as
well as all morals, have an eco-
foundation, and the pure
moralist who approaches the stu-
pendous problem of the whfjte
slave traffic from a moral stand-
point only, ia hopelessly lost.
In the course of a discussion
last year at a great catholic con-
j^J§§; ference m Liverpool, Father
Hushes told of a girl-in that city
evey Center of population in
America. Chicago alone requires
th£ sacrifice of fifteen thousand
girls to prostitution per annum.
That this frightful "condition is
the result of econmic conditions
is best evidenced by the follow-
ing authentic information gath-
ered from official sources con-
cerning the 5,000 licensed pros-
titutes of the city of Paris.
1,440 driven to it by want and
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E. M. WALLING
J. W. CRAWFORD, JR.
,.«S, ^ ,
who was engaged in the^drapery. misery.
Texas Nebraska Land Cq.
Lockney, Texas - •
Greneral agents in FloyiTtflncl adjoining counties, the great
shallow wat& .belt on the Plains. . Prices from $5.00 to
$40.00 per acre owing to distance from railroad and towns.
Can fit you up In any size tracts. Terms to suit purchaser.
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Practical Young Men
The young man who is petted
too much at home is seldom any
good. What is wanted now-a-
day is a practical man who can
do something else besides smoke
cigarettes and twist a cane. The
time to learn to work and to learn
business habits is in one's youth.
He who leads the life of a butter-
fly until he is twenty-five or thirty
Ml
at 62c per , week:. She
drifted into a life of vice and
n Father Hughes found her
she had 'sper.t two years of this.
e induced her to leave her life
was living and she offered
Itiari* over to him $50,000 worth
1 " of jewelry received as gifts from
. her "admirers" in these two
years. The good father argued
|p that -while girls were offered
Jfs $65^K> for two years of virtuous | -
• - and $50,000 for the same time
spent in vice the result must be
inevitable. The reverend gen-
tleman might have added that
while some poor workingman's
home furnished the -giri- viofekn
of the system which he deplored
that the workingmen of Liver-
volUntari,y furniah
ey and jewelry as the
price of her debauclfment.
* There are 100,000 prostitutes
4n-London, 50,000 in Berlinr480r
000 in Paris and a similar qnuta
every center of population in
ntal Europe. "Hpf this
artny of the "victims of
isane industrial system one
three annually attempts
5 and one in every ~ twelve
a; other causes so multi-
le death rate Jn the ranks
jhfortunates that1: at
years this vast
"of 275,000 prostitutes must
be replaced from the homes of
the working class. What does
vatt drftm upon the vitality
1,250 orphaned homeless no
otti e rst nei nsof support.
1,400 the discarded mistresses
of wealthy men.
400 country girls enticed and
seduced.
280 city girls deserted by their
lovers.
80 to support feeble and help-
less parents. -
In the light of these revela-
tions the only conclusion for the
student of economics is that so
long as . woman is the political
and economical dependent
man, so long will she be the vic-
tim of his passions and vices.
The further conclusion is just as
irresistable, that so long as the
wcrking class is economically
dependent upon the wealth own-
ing or capitalist class, just so
long wiH the daughters of the|<
working class fill the houses of
prostitutes and haunts of .vice
maintaintained and patronized
by the leisure or capitalist class.*
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Universal, political and econom-.
ic liberty mean universal virtue;
vice and prostitution is the price
which conization ®ust pay for [ year5 of age and then reeognize3
its denial. The white slave traf-' thc .fact that ha h e made an aite
The boys on the farm are better
off if they only knew it, than
thousands of the boys who are
at large, wandering hither and
thither searching and lookintr-for
"rich bonanzas" tpr turn up.
There is nothing like being prac-
tical and there is but one way to
be so. Acquire business habits
and train yourself to do good,
honest, hard work. Don't waste
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fic is not a matter of morale but a 0f himself, has precious little to
matter of economics. Man" will 'recommend him when he applies
be-virtuous and moral when he for.ajob. This may be a cheat-1
must; woman Will be virtuos and nut, but it fits not a few young
moral when she can. men in every city in the TJnion.
your time learning to tie £ cm
You can hny rrftvat.3 already tied.
J. T. MORRIS CBb SONS
a rg ains
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Gents' Suita that are all the latest styles;, collars and fabrics
Fancy Serge at.. .
FancyJ3erge
Novelty Serge at
Novelty Serge at...
A beiUr one for $20.00~artd-
Youth's suits from $3.00 to .1
$15.00
17,30
18.00
19.00
rzz: 205"
10.00
Ladles dress good^in quantity and quality—all the" latest shades
and paterns, ladies Motions, shoes'and oxfords in any sty le and price.
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Gents' neck wear.
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We sell the celebrated Ko.bo Corsets
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19
Killed By Ball
Frank, the little fourteen-year
old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. T.
Brown died last Thursday, April
2& at six o'clock at the home of
his parents in-Tulia.
The sad death was caused from
a base ball striking the nhild in
the side only last Friday.
Little Frank has l^een raised
in Tulia and .has numbers \f
friends here -among the school
children Who* are heartbroken at
his sudden death. Mr. and
Mrs. Brown have many.
friends- and —- relatives \ here
who join us in extending to
them our deepest sympathy in-
the loss of this dear little son.:.
- Tulia Standard. ,,
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Bee^Hive
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A newly married couple went
to a hotel and the bride wentf
out to do sonie shopping, an^
when she returned got off the_
elevator on the wrong Hoor and _
went to what she supposed was^ j
her own Aoor and found it lock*
ed, she rattled the knob and said:
^"Honey,;let me in," No re-
sponse. She knocked again and j|
cried: "It's me honey; open th*J|
door." Silence reigned within
'till the bride becoming terrified,
she rattled.the door wildly «^|j
^'Honeyl . Honey,
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when from within came in
. /'IWitt. this^jg
ee-*hive, this is « bath-room!'
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White, F. E. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 6, 1909, newspaper, May 6, 1909; Crosbyton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242135/m1/2/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.