The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, May 23, 1930 Page: 2 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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D.
W; Wi
TS
"VERYLAT
By MARY MAR
H S.
UK€H
<
were
the
ven a
their
C
,
First J®?
picnic Tuesday
men Midcher, Mrs. C
Silver Palls Lake was
:ir outing and after
swimming1 the picnic
.ved and greatly enjoy-
Jowing: Hazel Dell Dunn,
^y.$sl,: Bessie Lou Matthews,
Smith, Helen Morrison, Vin-,
' * Ballard, June Zatterelle,
te Mahe, Haseltine Russell,
""fs. Dick. ,
to town -the
a slumber party at the home
Morriso
EMcDERB
■WEDDIN
Will pleated skirts be worn this
summer? is a question that readers
often ask, and it is a question that
we Ssk ourselves when we take in-
ventory of theclotheawe have on
handr ; " ""
" The answer to the question is that
pleated skirts will be worn, but there
Is a decided difference between the
pleated skirts of last season and the
season before and those of today.
The side pleated skirt jet on a deep
girl*t yoke to be worn with long over-
home blouses has little place in an up-to-
date wardrobe because blouses of the
Hag:
Rubalie MfDermetlt, daugh
Mr. and Mrs. John D. McDer-
had announced her secret
e last • February to Glenn
r of Lubbock. According to
were married in Clovis,
,, but kept the m^mage
it until after the close of high
the graduation of '" Mrs.
•hter. .
^ Slaughter left Saturday for
Lubbock to join her husband who is
igaged in the barber trade at that
- *
V • ••
Church Notes
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sabbath School at 9:45 a, m., J. W,i
Aynes, superintendent.
'Junior Christian Endeavor Sunday
afternoon at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. C. E.
Rot, superintendent.
;!■ Preaching services, first and third
Sundays, both morning and evening.
Rev. J. W. Gregg, pastor.
'iS'iX —ssr O
W. M. S. OF FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH MET
The W. M. S., of First Baptist
church, met Monday and had the
Royal Service Missionary program.
There were fifteen ladies present.
Those taking part were Mrs. Higgin-
botham, leader, Mesdames Suggs, Dick
Bill Reed, Hicks, Chase, Carter and
McDermett. The lesson was "Chris-
tianity Answering Today's Needs."
Mrs. Moreland invited the women to
render this same program Friday at
three o'clock at the Colored Baptist
Church. This invitation was accept-
ed.
Will have circle meetings Monday
at church and have lesson in Mission
Study book.
AUXILIARY PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH MEETS
new sort are either worn tucked in or
or grasshoppers, the in
. under the old world ntfme
ust," tow been plaguing Egypt
and Palestine in recent weeks, wil!
descend on wheat and alfalfa fields
.In tin Dakotas and Montana this
summer if conditions favor them, the
U. S. Department of Agriculture,
warns. ■ . ' ' ' '
Mild outbreaks -occurred- in those
states and in parts of Texas last
year. Multitudes of grasshopper
eggs were laid and are hatching now.
The grasshopper eats practically any-
thing edible. It is born hungry and
never satisfies its appetite. :Bujt the
Department says that it feeds most
greedily on small grains and alfalfa.
Serious damage to those crops is Co
anticipated in the. Northern Great
Plains states unless unfavorable
weather halts this "locust" army.
' The Insect Pest Survey predicts
general epidenfos in North -Dakota
and Montana aflj in South Dakota;
especially in the alfalfa districts.
Outbreaks of consequence occur in |
some parts of the United States
every year, the Department says, but,
in general, grasshoppers come and go
in cycles. They are on the ascending
.side of the cycle now.-and are in-
creasing generally. An outbreak
usually continues in one locality for
two or three years after which a.
combination of control measures, un-
favorable weather, parasites and dis-
eases reduces it. Outbreaks may be
expected at irregular intervals. Form-
erly they occurred each year in some
Of Konjola
Miss Marion Hollins, former na-
tional golf champion, who promoted
the Kettelman oil field in California
and gets a quarter of th* t*n ihitlfon-
dcilars it was sold for.
THE WAY OF LIFE
By BRUCE BARTON
"If a Man Die, Shall He Live Again?'
It is the age-old question, asked at
the side of every bier.
And what can one say in answer
to it?
Every one of us is taught in child-
hood to believe in God and an after
life.
"The world just happened," say
some men. "It created itself through
the operation of natural laws."
But who or what established the
sections "and proved a serious barrier I natural laws and set them to opei*
to the progress of early American, ating?
colonists and pioneers, even as they J When you can dump a load of
plagued our American forerunners | bricks on a corner lot, and let me
and the ancients of Biblical times. i watch them arrange themselves into
History reveals that colonists in I a house—when you can empty a
New England and along the Atlantic ] handful of springs and wheels and
seaboard had great difficulty produc-; screws on my desk, and let me see
ing crops after settling in this coun- 'them gather themselves together into
try. Grasshoppers harried the west-' a watch—it will be easier for me to
ward trek of pioneers, and the in- rj believe that all these thousands of
roads on their crops were most dis- worlds could have been created, bal-
couraging to settlers in the New anced, and set to moving in their
West. This pest played as definifci1 separate orbits, all without any di-
a part in the romantic picture of the recting intelligence at all.
pioneer as did the buffalo or the Moreover, if there is no intelligence
Indian. in the universe, then the universe has
Perhaps no more dismal picture | created something greater than itself
can be etched on the mind than the —for it has created you and me.
Is it easy to believe that a universe
without personality could have crea-
ted us who have personality ?
Isn't it easier to believe that our
personality is a little part of the
great pervading Personality that has
created and now permeates the uni-
W. T.-J
and raercbar
tor, Charles Moisby, s
treasurer and C. O. Rose, legal coi
sel, all of Cincinnati, Ohio. The l.
lected Konjola dealer in Crosbytou 13
the-Carter Drug Company.
Application for change of the cor-
porate namo from the Mosbj ""
cine cOrripany to Konjola. Ine.,
filed at the office of the
of State at Columbus.
In discussing -the negotationa IE
up to the invet
eastern capital In the Cincinnati,
"IE
which led up to the investment of to*
capital In the Cincinnati .con-
cern, Mr. Mosby made thf jf)
G. H. MOSBY
CINCINNATI, Ohio, May 21^-G.;
H. Mosby, president and general f
manag<£- of the Mosby Medicine com-|
pany, one of the world's largest'
manufacturers of prepared remedies,;
announced Wednesday that eastern: cows
banking interests had bought a min-: to 7
ority holding in the company. The
purchase, however, will in no way
affect the present control or manage-
ment of the concern which remains in
the hands of Mr. Mosby. A program
af expansion in this country and in
statement. . . .
"Numerous efforts have been made
in the last two years on the part ttf
trade and banking interests to buy in«
to the company but it has been only
in connection with our present expan-
sion program that a sale of minority
interest has seemed desirable. This
sale of minority interest not only as-
sures our present expansion program
but will also allow, through special
arrangement, particularly favorable
participation in the ownership of' the
company to those drug dealers who
have been largely responsible for the
success of the business.
"The business of the company had
its inception seven years ago since
wffich time Konjola has grown to be
one of the two or three outstanding
successes in the proprietary" field."" ■
<y
%
According to the Bureau of Dairy
Industry, it is necessary to remove
from garlic-infested pastures 4
hours before milking to, elimi-
nate the garlic flavor and odor from
milk.
Biblical story of the hardships which!
the grasshoppers imposed on the
Children of Israel and the Egyptians.
And never, perhaps has man enjoy-
ed more obliging assistance in his
efforts to rid himself of this winged
ttfague. As the Bible. reifertjS-.Jh'i
<-!V
The Auxiliary of the Presbyterian
church met Monday, May 19, with
Mrs. J. W. Gregg. There were nine
members present. Mrs. Holloway
was leader. Meeting opened with a
song, "Father, We Thank Thee," by
David E. Aynes, Jr. Scripture read-
ing by Mrs. Holloway, and prayer by
Mrs. Joe Boyd. Study of Home and
Foreign Missions followed.
During*the social hour the pageant
Was discussed. Lovely cake and
punch was served. Next meeting will
be with Mrs. Holloway.
o .
• Increasing knowledge of parasitic)
diseases and their control is putting
the turkey industry on a more stable
basis, says A. R. Lee, poultry hus-
bandman of the U. S. Department
of Agriculture. He says there are
iftw more than 3,500,000 turkeys on
farms in the United States. The con-
Rtitute 1V2 per cent of all poultry,
crop of market turkeys in 1929
ed about 9 per cent over thai
else they are so short as to extend
only a little below a normal waistline.
The new pleaded skirts are usually
made with a smooth yoke and the
pleating is wide and flaring. Some-
times the material of the skirt is set
in fairly wide pleats which are stitch-
ed down to form a deep hip yoke, and
the doubling of the material beneath
the wide pleats is cut out at the under
side so as to eliminate unnecessary
bulkiness.
Some of the new box pleats are
pressed in such a way "that they stand
out in a truly box-like manner.
An advantage of the wide box pleat
over the narrow side pleat is that it
may easily be re-pressed at home or
by the tailor, without being sent to a
professional pleater. *
incident, Pliaraon at fTrst refused to
permit Moses to take the Israelites
back home, but later agreed provid-
ed Moses would rid the land of the
locusts. Moses called on the Lord,
and the Lord sent a West Wind that
blew all of the grasshoppers into the
Red Sea and dro'wned them. But
Pharaoh broke his bargain, the Scrip-
ture recounts, and the home-sick
Israelites were detained in Egypt.
The American farmer in most cases
does not have an obliging West Wind
and Red Sea at hand. But locust in-
vasions are not dreaded as they once
were, for the farmer now uses a
poison bran mixture which destroys
the American form of this pest at a
cost of only a few cents an acre
Try 'pineapple and
with mayonnaise.
iifewpij
..-mm
cabbage salad
Another petrified forest, the only
one so far discovered with the trees
lying as they fell millions of years
ago, is reported to the U. S. Forest
Service. The forest, which covers
several acres, was found by a road-
building expedition on the lower
Yellowstone reclamation project.
Some of the* trees are 10 feet in dia-
meter and more than 100 ffeet long.
The Department recommends
mash made by mixing thoroughly 12
gallons of water, two gallons of black
strap molasses, three ounces of amyl
acetate and one quart of liquid sod-
ium arsenite containing eight pounds
of arsenic per gallon; and moistening
100 pounds of bran with this mixtuii;
to make a wet but not sloppy mash.
Then the mash is broadcast over the
farm at the rate of 10 to 12 pounds
to the acre. Much time and labor
can be saved if farmers will locate
the hopper congregations during May
and early June and will broadcast the
bait before the insects grow wings
and scatter, the Department says.
In his write-up of a home talent
play an Oklahoma editor commend-
ed a neighbor for his "clever imper-
sonation of a gentleman."
Fresh cream for butter-making
should never be mixed with cream
from previous .skimmings until it has
been cooled. The addition of warm
cream raises the temperature of the
older cream and hastens souring.
—o ———
Crowell—Lee highway completed
into city, will open foi traffic soon.
verse;
And if there be a Personality in
the universe—a God—what kind of
God is He?
He. must be at least as good as you
or I. He could not have made us
better than Himself. The worse can
not create the better.
And if He is a good God, is it rea-
sonable to suppose that He would
have planted in human hearts this
unquenchable yearning for immortal-'
ity, and left that yearning unsatis-
fied?
You and I would not have done so.
Go where you will, from the most
savage race to the most cultured, you
will find that same instinctive assur-
ance that death is not the end. Would
a' a good God plant that assurance in
his creatures merely to mock them?
Without immortality the world is
an answerless riddle. We are born;
we struggle up through slow years
of development; and just as we have
reached our highest point of useful-
ness—we are cut off.
It is hard for me to believe in a
universe that made itself, and that
ruthlessly casts away its most prec-
ious possession—human personality.
It is easier to believe that behind
the universe is a guiding Intelligence,
of whose personality my own is a
tiny spark that shall not go out while
He lives.
If I cannot prove that this is so,
neither can any one prove to me that
I it is not so.
' And, until some one can disprove
it, I find it easier, more helpful, more
efficient, to believe.
LYNN COUNTY MAN CHARGED
foreign markets will be inaugurated
immediately. Banking interests wilt
be represented on the board of di-
rectors, it was stated. Other di-
Young pasture grass should^ be-
grazed closely enough to keep the'
leaves growing and to prevent the
development of. heavy stalks. Such
grass is richer in protein and soluble
carbohydrates and is more readily
digestible than older grass in which
more stalks have developed.
1930 BIRTHDAY GIFT
for the
HALLIE PAXTON W1NSBOROUGH
FOUNDATION
in the
Ministerial Relief Endowment Fund
-o-
THIS Llff Lfr CANDLFr —:—
"How far this little candle throws it's beams."
O——
Song: "Abide With Me" f - Congregation
Invocation -
Devotional Rev. J. W. Gregg'
Violin Solo Roger Butler
Prologue Mrs. J. W. Gregg
-O-
.'.VAVAV.'.V.VAW.V.WAWA'.W.V.W.V.VLV.WAT.VA'.WW.VA'.W.
WA
EVERY DAY PRICES
Just a few items from our stock at regular prices,
prices you are quoted elsewhere.
Work Shoes
$1.65
Leadall Coveralls
$1.15
Dress Shirts
m
98 c
House Dresses
98c
Bule and Grey Shirts
49c
House Shoes
49c
Compare these with Sale
Gingham
New patterns.
15c
36-inch Domestic
10c
Work Socks
5c
PS
sk is crisp and new. A trial will convince you that can and do
IN THEFT
LUBBOCK, May 13.—Sam Bellew,
resident of Lynn county, was arrested
in Plainview .Saturday afternoon and
lodged in the Hale county jail on
charges of theft in Lubbock county,
according to information received
here last night at the local sheriff's
| department.
| Bellew is wanted in this county for
a series of thefts said to have been
committed on farm houses in Hale,
Crosby, Floyd and Lubbock counties.
A brother, Dave Bellew, was ar-
rested in this city several weeks ago
and charged with theft in connection
with the same depredations. The two
are alleged to have stolen farm ma
chinery, cotton seed and other articles
from several farms.
Note—Bellew resides on a . farm
seven miles southeast of Tahoka.
Much of the stolen goods w^re found
at his residence, according to Sheriff
Sam Sanford, when complaints were
filed against him by Lubbock county
officers a few weeks ago.—Lynn
County News.
atru->.r-i_n —Li-ij-r*!!*" w ^ ^ m — * m m'
SSSi
mm
MBMBM
Musical Scientist
Michel son
, ■ .;'v-W
w
Characters
Church Mrs. Tom Boyd
Womans Auxiliary Mrs. D. E. Aynes
Ministerial ReHef Mrs. Clayton Carter
Seven Angels
1st. Haseltine Russell. 2nd. Ruth Freeman. 3rd. Mary Frances Aynes.
4th. Mary Catherine McKee. 5th Nita Roy. 6th. Nell Freeman
7th. Florence Aynes.
Solo: "Light Up the World for Jesus" Miss Johnson
Song: "Forsake Me Not," Aged Minister D. E. Aynes
Song: Response to Aged Minister Mrs. Joe Dickey
Previous Birthday Gifts.
Japan Ailene Freeman
Texas Marie Rutherford
Virginia Josephine McBride
Brazil Mrs. Pete Hacldey
Oklahoma Mabel Springer
'Korea Irene Dendy
Alabama . . . Nina Newton
Mexico . _.. Melba Williams
Widow Mrs. Carrol, Davis
First Orphan Marion Littlefield
Second Orphan David Aynes, Jr.
Offering.
Duet: "Father We Will Quiet Be" Aynes and Dickey
Director of Music, Miss Pauline Buck.
Benediction.
| WHEN
| is it going to
I rain?
•qf;*- . — *
Well, we don't know.
Though we do know that' your
dollar demands a lot of
and value.
is
X.
PB
W
Mi
Phone 74
i 1
. I
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Curry, W. M. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, May 23, 1930, newspaper, May 23, 1930; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242858/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.