The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, July 16, 1937 Page: 2 of 8
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Uniform
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an Comics That Will Amuse
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•SPECIAL—
5*
By C M. PAYNE
SWATTER POP—Look What Ambrbse I* in the Dog-Howe For,
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looer-at_o MIM
SHOPPE
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By T*f CLoasfeiia
Merry Go^Round
By HUT. HAROLD C tuNuairtsT.
D**UI of-the Moody Bible XnaUtuU
of Chicago.
Western N«wspaper Union.
Lesson for Jajy 18
LE3SCN TJEXT—Exodus J;U-W: 4 -
tOl.
GOLDEN TEXT—Th* Lord win glws
■trength unto his people —Psalm 29 11.
PRXMAHY TOPIC—When Maws Wu
Afraid.
JtrNJOB TOPIC—Uoata Made Ambaa-
sador " — -——- ,
INTERMEDIATE AWD^SESflOiir TO*-
IC—God Standi by Hta Workers.
YOUNG PEOPtE AND ADULT TOP-
IC—Strong tn the' Strength at God.
raED mac mubkat
cabs roa a
i •"<■ ^
vr Ecxssrrv is _
rention, they say*
a so I think someone*
phasize that. -CoV«f#V1
ther of opportunity."
tiroes, -when things look I 3
seems „that only by drat
serve strength can w* ^ '
Suddenly we <tnd
ounetmi
Never 1nva" hur ry! Who* God.
He needed a htanan leader to bring
his etrojggrpfgpig gy^got of the
bondage -wf^ilgypt and he spent 80
years getting Kim ready—40 years 1
learning all _ tl&fe%isdom of Egypt, j
and -to years learning the lessons of |
God. patience and humility/ on the
j'back side of the desert. 1 '
' • Infinite and omnipotent-is God, *
j-and he may movewith faster-than-
j lightning speed.- But usually w.tf find
i him working out his blessed pur- .
poses, no^xnaHy. quietly, but always
"nn time." Some' sne has said.
"It took God 80 years to prepare the]
man of the hour." but when that j
hour struck he was ready
Our lesson brings before us the
meeting with God which preceded
the appearance of Moses as the
Wad of the nation of Israel in its
mighty conBict with Pharaoh.— We
find him first proceeding vnth com-
mendable care but then going on in
unfortunate humgity which amount-
ed alrixpat tortaibelief and which re-
face-' with opportune
looked hopeless before W
really almost ready to gL:~
And, then Jooking back, mm:®
how things could have
bad as they were.i
Fwt—Wac Murray
WIT
in 1908,
Beaver Dt i
He lived a' normal smaB|ZL
^ American youngster, ki
seventeen,'J, J
AmetieuJJ
Kankakee, III
Bis b«yhood in
when he was
awarded the annual
aron' as his spokesman, i
r but-eventually we do see him going j
about his diAcult task with resoiu- j
tion and courage.
: I. Justifiable Caution (Exod. 3:13-
m
, Neither God nor man date entrust
a,high and difficult commission to
a ' fo<3!^h ^rr.an who brusquely Waukesha
"rushes ,:n~-wp re angels fear to
tre'afd." The fact that o&4 .-feels
fully and 'unhesitatingly qualified to.
take over such a responsibility is
0ion medal'^for the stada^|
ing the most"'Well-rounded {
ment ,tn scholastic subjeeti |
sports'. His mother WMtrtk,
dees to support them both, J
Fred attended Carroll eoB(|i
Wis., earning li~K
by"playing the saxophone. All
ken hip forced his mother *n
work, and Fred left coticgetil
to blow, a living out gf -his to
almost a certain indication thaf_he --pnene, Th^y m jved to
15 not the man to assume it. -. Calif., for her. heai •n ;and tt|
The ambassador^WSS?'1 have ere- ; was glad to get a job washing
* dentiala." God's: reprt^r.tative his - in'a garage. • to tay h«f
When "•they shall say"-—what b.Lfcs.^ Before he coukf colled
an important and difficult, situatian-ryjjay, the gara-ge went oankrop^
'that'creates. The <?ne Who spealts - F/ed MacMurray J^ced a
---'for God. mu?t^.e*pect cot only the " aging period
scornful bitterness of- God's _en-
emies, but also the _unbelieving
questions of tboie KftiOtn he seeks to
serve. -
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
" What shall I Say*" asks Moses,
and' God answers tha**h* may say
that "I AM" had sent Kim. This
name of God, reveals him as the:
eternal, independent, self-sufficient,
self-existent, immutabie. personal
being. Consider* Christfan brethren.,
whose we are and'whom we «erv4R.
Here; indeed" a ' lnspiration in ex-
cess -duty." "an over-plus of.
power." real equipment for Chris-
tian life and service. ~-
But Mo^es
beyond his own human infirmity f
even in the lighX-of^such a glorious :
MUM— JMO
5 DOWM-,
TURKt LEFT—
•PI^ASg.OFffCS?-
fS MAiM
AMD WALNUT
SnecET *2.
•OH.sf£S— ! D<D AS< ^ou
SEVERAL T:MES— THEV
"5USE' KEEP
MOVUH <s VOU
A RQuhO'To
NO MUM .1
Go DO^MKI
Ta<0
TvAi&4~V
FOLD YET: ^
BcRPRE
POKTEK IX. \ amp
"OtFrERGKiT
RNS3S
L
MAIM
WAl
HAT romantic
could you possibly predictfc
a boy so adventurous that
could control him. so reekksp.M
the aunt who took care of hiouM
his father and mother died
tured him to a merchant ship tf*
age of fourteen to curb him?
was John Masefield s start k
MAiW
him showing an
n. Unjustified Humility (Exod
10-I3>.
When Gid calls a man he knows
his limitations—why then should one
plead them as an excuse for not
England
Born in Ledbum.^ Hereford***
England, in 1S74. he sailed^thMMI
for three years. Leaving tbr#i
in port at New York city.
any odd job he could gtC *
worked in a bakery and m a BUR
stand-by of unwilling
ers all through the ages. When asked
to lead a prayer meeting, -teach a
Sunday School class, conduct a
young people's- meeting, thousands
upon thousands have lamely thus
excused themselves and" missed a
-blessing.
Tr r"HW' acawgr God in v. 11
made
BRONC PEELER
By FRED HARM AN
l KLttT -TALK
-To You, SCouc -
rTs vhEftY
t K\R3«TAi^T •
I Awt -fiZusTiw'YA
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■ace viMT vcfe
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W'A Sc
The Curse of Progress
,
'■mi.
w^gite
WP& i
1.
1 OOH'T CARE W YOU
MWt ocrr A CWFTS—you to
AMCAO AMD SPtHNNLE
THAT LMM — - «M> YOU
•SETTER. DO A OOOO
309 . VOUNA HAN/
Tn Late /'
A small boy was celebrating bis
birthday ifith a party tat the gar-
den. He b^Tt quarrel with one at
his friends. Billy, however, and did
not invite him to the party. His.
mother insisted that Billy should be
invited,. and finally prevailed upon
her son to do so
The lijtle host called upon his Cor-
mer frtanj. .
"Will yon come to nay ^a«fen
party. tomorrow?" he "SFsfced.
"IVM too late now," answered
Billy, "last night I prayed for a
blizzard."
No Reach
A salesman suffered a slight ac
monkey wrench among his tools,
he went to the nearest farmhouse
and inquired of the Swede owner:
"Have you a monkey wrench
here?**
"Naur," replied ihe Swede. "My
brother bane «ot a cattle ranch over
0*9 «* iu cot a sheep ranch
down there, but too coid for monkey
'ranch fewnL*"
CALLERS
——; ■
Br GLUYAS ,<ILUAMS
pija ouf af winjraw
SPTUS csir^c^ei^
* <w* SfoP
WWS1 S*S MWRJOY
■fe wrx ffs cpusrs.
ffi ,«wirEsw«5
*W6jJ) itorwcff,
ilhWKOl
el*mb
m «5 smh cr>
a*iow*6**c#o
r,i«smcn otvtt..
WSWIQ
•KURMfi&MMliWWI
tutti"
merits a-ttention. God made your"
mouth and mine. He gives us the
power of speech. He asks not the
eloquence'of polished rhetoricalpe-
-r*~4V-°r the flights of marl's imag-
-tnation. He wants but the incom-
parable elcqusncf of his own words
on our lips. Dr. Richard Ellsworth
Day in "Bush AgMv,,-jnghtly: points
out that this was the^ secret of the
power of D. L—Moody,
HI. Unnecessary Substitution
(Exod. 4:13-16). - "
Loving and patient is . our God.
but, mark it well, there is a bound-
ary line to that patience. Moses
went;too fais-in his needless humility
and really reflected on (Ee ability
of God, and he promptly substituted
Aaron as the spokesman. ,f
' Gracious wasx He- in thus provid-
ing a hejger for "Moses. But one
wonders, what Moses missed of
blessing and power because of his
slowness of heart To decline the
labor and the responsibility of serv-
ice for ,God means loss far greater
than we may ever know.
IV. "And Afterward" (Exod. 5:1).
Commissioned, bearing creden-
tials from (he infinite and eternal
"I AM." and with a strong and elo-
quent brother by his side, Moses
stands before Pharaoh to say in
God s name "Let my people go.'
Preparatiort""and the holy privilege
us ready for service. While it is
tolly to go unprepared, it is double
fptly to prepare and then fail to go
when God commands.
ag.ng ■periodvrj^TTT'a Jofc
tried to-ohfffS"^* 6r\ in the
studios a «a"' saxaptyne- plajw,l
had oo luck. Things, looked "
black, indeed.
Then.'he was signed up nl
band .called,the CaLfortdS 0fl|^
ans. which worked its way. to M
York city and was hired for ttephv
■■*Tt;ree's a- Crowd " Fred M l
■mall b£t"whi<3rled ra a rijghtljrW'
ter part in- "Roberta." A Ml
Sjout for Paramount sa* Ua
brought him back ts Hollywood, «i
be was given a contract which Ml
to his success m pictures.
OF EKWm
_ Strength L ata Strength** P
* The strtngth at a ooaH consists to
finding out the way fa which God
to going, and going In that way too.
—Baury Ward BeechOr.
T"
stable- He was porter «•1
O'Connor's saloon at th?_CohB«
hotel near Jefferson _
Then h• moved to Yorkers,
north end of New York city,
he worked in ai carpet
ing to the magnificent posll-^^,,
"mistake finder" at $8 50 per
It was at this time, in °"[?T
twenties, tha^Masefield start*-,
write poetry and in 1
London. His first volume '
"Salt Water Ballads. .
lished" lp 1902 opening with *
secration." in which he tw"
himself as the champion «
dust and scum of the e3rtk ..j
of verse -and novels follow*®'^
upon the other, arid
becarrte established ai on* < ^
land's greatest poets.
- So, remember John MaseOW
fore you pas# Judgment «;
neighbor's boy who is such*
terror of that young SLiiWJ.'a
works in the saloon acroMj
road tracks. Some day h"
may draw a "tear-to
lump to your throat
.. • <* ^-mnihant^' sm
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Curry, W. M. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, July 16, 1937, newspaper, July 16, 1937; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth243021/m1/2/: accessed May 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.