Cooper Review. (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, September 25, 1908 Page: 4 of 8
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Wt
OF TYLER, TEXAS
W ill address the People on the Subject ot
-SOCIALISM
At the Covirt House in Cooper
Oct. 1st and 2nd
Rev. Andreevs needs no introduction to the
people oi Texas, being well known in religious and edu-
cational circles, and at one time at the head of Baylor Un-
iversity.
He is well known also for his ardent work in the in-
terest of humanity and political and economic progress.
Come Ovit And Hear Him Or
You Will Miss a Ra^re Treact.
W. J. Bell, State Secretary Socialist Party,
TYLER, TEXAS.
Tim GooBer Weekly Review
11.00 A T33AR
Sterling Hart, \ publishers.
Wren Hart, J
kctereii at the Post Office at (Joo^er a#
Second Olaee Mall Matter.
Cooyrr, Tix., Friday, Ski*t. 25.1908.
Cotton Factories for Texas.
Kight now, while the cotton
crop of Texas is being harvested,
is it not a good time to talk of
cotton mills for the State? Why
should Texas cotton he sent
North or to England to lie manu-
factured, and then shipped back
into the state in the shape of
cloth or clothing? This is a con-
undrum for Texas, and there is
no logical answer for it, except
that there is no good reason on
earth. If r Spartanburg, S. C.,
can convert 250,000 bales of cot-
Senator Foraker was a candi-
,tot. to, the Republican nmnina- ,(m int„ w|
tion for president, and now think j jn Texas (1() the 8alue> aml‘ if on(.
of him as ai: acknowledged paid t town in Texas can do this, why
attorney of the Standard Oil Co. not a dozen? When Spartanburg
I began manufacturing cotton it j
Do You Want a Good Position.
Preparation is the keynote to
success. A preparation that will
tit you for taking hold of oppor-
tunities when they knock at your
door, it is the surest and straight-
est road that leads to success, be-
■ cause it enables you to grapple
I successfully with the business
world. A thorough preparation
(must always precede a good pay-
ing position. Hill's Business
Colleg< s have prepared thousands
[of young men and women who
are holding the best positions at
the highest salaries all over the
south and ca-t. Bankers and
| business men everywhere com-
: mend Hill’s Bia-int >* College- n-
tlie best misi practica1 and thor-
i ough schools in the United States,
j They’re high grade and right up
I to <late in everything and have a
| wav of leading their students to
| success that no other schools
! have. Hill graduate
SI5 to $30 more salary
i of school than those
colleges because they are so much
better drilled in office work. 'The
i world's best and most modern
business education is at your dis-
posal. Our new shorthand sys-
tem is the best, easiest and quick-
est learned of any system in exis-
tence—none excepted.
Mail course $20. $5 for five
lessons including books. Big
summer discount continues for a
short time longer. $50 life schol-
arships in business or shorthand
are only $12.50. $100 scholar
ships in bookkeeping,
and typewriting are only $75. $50
telegraphy and station work
scholarships are $25. Our courses
cannot be excelled anywhere else
in America. Address Hill’s Busi-
Mooooooooo o 0 n
6 ENLOE DEPARTMENT X
ood, Kditoi*
mooo®
Jno. Huge
this week.
$OOQ|i
m the sick li-t
li cm
ness College. Waco,
Memphis, Tenn.
Mrs, Kiltie Rushing t >• >iv her
little daughter to Cooper for
treatment one day last week. She
has been troubled for some time
with her head.
Mi-s Kittie Ellis came down
from Paris Monday. We under-
stand she and her brother will
shorthand house'keeP during his stay here
during cotton season.
Rev. Williams came to fill his
appointmeut last Sunday but
prevented a large
attending. There I
the weather
'crowd from
More Than
a “Business
tion.”
True it is that the Anti-Saloon
League presents a practical husi-
Texas, or J was.no service Sunday night.
P. .1. Norris of Oklahoma,
_ . while returning from the funeral
roposi-! of his niece at Greenville, spent
I a few business hours here in in-
terest of the oil mill.
Witli eggs selling for 10 cents
a dozen and pork 15 cents
pound the farmer who
had no place on the map save as
>ld town, where
ness
plenty of poultry and hogs is in-
dependent and can hold his cot-
ton for better prices if he wishes.
| a said old town, where the good
Per: people of Charleston and the
raises coast country sometimes went to
Trade is a little late in opening
up thi* fall but it will come pret-
ty soon. Our merchants are well
stocked with new goods and they
will sell them as cheap as mer-
chants in any other town or any
mail order house, for the same
quality of goods. Read the ad-
vertisements in t.ie Review close-
ly and you will be convinced taat
Hub true.
There has been some talk of
re-organizing the band here.
Cooper ought to have a band,
and easily could have if the citi-
zens and business men of the
town would support itfinancially.
The boys are willing to contribute
their time to the work, but they
cannot afford to bear the expense
incidental to keeping it up. With
a little effort on the part of our
citizens the band could be re-or-
ganized again.
-BJJ *
Roosevelt could have passed
out of the president’s chair one
of our most popular presidents,
if he had not persisted in stooping
to depths beneath the dignity of
his office in trying to elect his
successor. In trying to elect
Taft,in our opinion,he has under,
taken the biggest job of his career
anil from now until the election
we may expect a letter from him
every few days in which he will
make himself more contemptable
to the American people.
avoid the mosquitoes and the heat
of summer. Today Spartanburg
ranks as one of the principal
manufacturing cities of the South.
Plant cotton factories in Texas,
and manufacture Texas cotton at
home. Bring the mills and the
Texas cotton fields together.—Ex.
An attempt was made a year
and a half ago to get a cotton
mill in Delta Co., but on account
of the poor crop the project fail-
ed. Members of the Farmers
Union, seeing in a home mill an
opportunity to eliminate the mid-
dle man by selling their cotton
direct to the spinner, agreed to
subscribe half the stock, if the
busmens men of Cooper and others
of the county would subscribe the
other half. Cotton mills in Tex-
as have proven to be paying in-
vestments, and in our opinion
one would not only pay the in-
vestors here, but would he worth
more to Cooper and Delta county
than any other enterprise that
could be brought in our midst.
We believe the Cooper Board of
Trade could accomplish more by
getting a cotton mill established
here than anything else they
do.
Over 1()0 bale* of cotton was
sold on our streets last Friday,
. I seventy-six in Paris. We have a
Tiip n j r’ght to say Enloe is a cotton
. . .... If, re': market a* well as a good town,
turns have come in. I he actual |
Mrs. Marion Patterson
proposition to the people.
We have had years of temperance
agitation, legislation and
mentation in our lane.
facts and figures showing the net [ Marion Patterson of
results of dry towns, dry cities Cooper, who was on a visit to
and dry states are pretty well in j AIr>. Cal Patterson, received a
hand. 'The experimental staged telephone call Sunday afternoon
lias passed. The whole showing j re^ l, n home a- her sister from
is bad for the saloon. The saloon Southern Texas had unexpected-
stands condemned as an economic I
blunder. a Paying Investment.
However, the Anti-Saloon Lea- j Mr. .John White cf Highland
Ave.. Houlton. Maine, says:
can
*;
. V Y*
Kodol will, in a very short time
enable the stomach to do the
work it should do, and the work
it should do is to digest all the
food you eat. When the stomach
can’t do it Kodol does it for it
and in the meantime the stopiach
is getting stronger and able to
take up its regular natural work
again. Kodol digests all you
eat. It make* the stomich sweet
and it is pleasant to take. It i»
sold here by all druggists.
V ; • RPW . V .
The New Catalog of Lyon & Healy
Pianos.
The handsome book, which is
just off the press, gives illustra-
tions and net prices of the four
new designs of Lyon & Healy up-
right pianos that are creating
such a stir in musical circles.
It offers proofs for every claim
made, and it differs from other
piano catalogs in many other ways.
Tim Lyon & Healy Piano leads
all others as the popular home
piano of America. It is prefer-
ed by good judges of tone and al-
so by all long-headed purchasers
who realize that should they ever
want to sell their piano again
they could more easily sella Lyon
& Healy piano than any other
make.
Drop a p' Stal for ♦hi- catalog
to Lyon & Healy, 77 Ailatns
street, Chicago..
#
gue brings before the public a
question that is more than a busi-
ness proposition. It is because
in the past, people have been
pleased to view the saloon as a
legitimate, commercial enterprise
in their midst, that saloon men
have violated laws, and broken
every restraint thrown around
them, and in many sections of
the state enjoyed a perfect, im-
munity against all prosecutions.
'The economic argument against
the saloon is valid, and must be
used, but to rest our case there is
to be lost. The saloon meets its
o uly: when the consciences of men
are so aroused and quickened bv
a full knowledge of its demoraliz -
ing effects that they are willing to
destroy it whether it be an in-
stitution either of commercial
loss or gain.—Colorado Issue.
Lieut. Keator, Spanish War.
Eating canned food and lead-
i ng the rough life of a soldier,
with its hard work and depriva-
tions, often result in loss of
weight, and strength and indi-
gestion. Harry F. Keator, a
lieutenant in a Chicago company
during the Spanish war. became
dyspeptic and lost weight to the
danger point. He took Dr. ('aid
well’s Syrup Pepsin and cured
..is indigestion and gained t2
pounds. The remedy will do all
we claim, and if you want to try
it before buying, send your ad-
dress for a free sample bottle to
Pepsin Syrup Co.. 119 Caldwell
Bldg., Monticello, III. It i> -old
by all druggists at 50c and $1.00 a
tmttle. _
“Have been troubled with a cough
every winter and spring. Last
winter I tried many advertised
remedies, but the cough contin-
ued until 1 bought a 50c bottle of
Dr. King’s New Discovery: be-
fore that was half gone, the cough
was all gone. This winter the
same happy result has followed;
a few doses once more banished
the annual cough. I am now con
vineed that Dr. King’s New Dis-
covery is the best of all cough
and lung remedies.’’
Sold under guarantee at all
druggists.50c. and $1.00. Trial
bottle free.
Mrs. H. G. Thompson and
little son returned last Saturday
from visiting her mother in Min-
eral Wells.
They Take The Kinks Out.
‘T have used Dr. King’s New
Life Pills for many years, with
| increasing satisfaction. They
take the kinks out of stomach,
liver and bowels, without fuss or
friction,” says N. H. Brown, of
Pittsfleld. V't. Guaranteed sat-
isfactory at all druggists.
A slight accident to a freight
train Tuesday between Cooper
ami Enloe delayed the 10:47
north bound passenger train
about three-quarters of an hour.
'
• '
| Geo. Ellis made a visit
I last Saturday and Sunday.
•I. M. Hagood was a Pari- vi<-
1 itor from here last Friday.
•Jim Patterson made a business
I trip to Cooper one day la-t week.
Paul Fit/, of Cooper gave Eu-
loe a pleasant vi-it Saturday and
Sunday.
Mrs. Oma Stephen* js on n|
visit to her sister, Mrs. J, II. \
Marion of Cooper.
Holiness meeting closed last
I huii? lay night. En! >e has quiet-
ed down to its daily routine.
get from.I Uerbert Smith went to I
ri„j t ,ir, | Cooper last Sunday afternoon to
of other V''Xt Jlt‘r vister’ Mi’s. J. K. Curtis, j
Mr*. .!. M. Yeargan has return-!
ed from Marlin Spring*, and re-j
port- her brother no better. She i
will go back in a few lays we j
learn.
Prescriptions
PURE DRUGS
When you are sick anil you need good medi-
cine. Wi en your doctor writes a prescription
he expo ts it to be filled with the purest drugs.
That L our specialty. Try u* on your next.
A > liavi* a ! .."ire line of patent medicines
toiM a nicies; and stationery. ::: ::: :::
OUR FOUNTAIN DRINKS ARE ALWAYS COLD
i McKinney drug comp'y
‘The Leading Druggist Cooper, Texas
“Bryan is in Town”
0 •
and Stepping at the ’’Hargrove Wagon Yard’
AM HERE FOR
BUSINESS
l Have Put in a
First Class Livery
and Transfer Stable
PHONE 39—OPEN DAY OR NIGHT
Yours to Please,
L
BOB BRYAN
THE KTEW
Lumber Yard
i *
£
m
We want to figure on
your bill of Brick, Sand,
Lime, Cement, Roofing
or Lumber. Bills never
too small to command
our attention and ap-
preciation. Give us a call
Cooper,
TEXAS
LYON LUMBER
in this
strenu
shelvej
the.ari
critici;
yuii
50 piij
fact
The Baptists Indies
dinner <>n the square
day.
will nerve
election
>n
Why?
From a small beginning the sale
and use of Chamberlain's cough
remedy has extended to all parts
or the United States and to many
I foreign countries. Why? Be-
:* lia, ni-nvoil ounncinllv ! A OhHrlrrril lrmtltutlon of thn InghoMt, grade. Wc confer degl
iv na pioveu vr*p< ‘“‘v ) give them a diploma that, stands for Homnthing »ik1 nUl be »
Mmku n .1 swiMu i Noten hccobWmi for tuition, Po*lt.lonr guaranteed. Hull rood
cause
valuable for coughs and colds.
For sale by McKinney Drug Co. j
j*Ote* HCCHplod
Cfttftlolue frfto.
confer d^Kroon upon our griMlHH,tnn an t
credit to thorn anywliero,
>r tuition. PorOtlonr guaranteed. Railroad faro paid from all point#.
We teach penmanship by tnali. Telegraphy taught by an old operator.
KKV. T R. NTira Fret*., McKinney, Texas
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Cooper Review. (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, September 25, 1908, newspaper, September 25, 1908; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1018207/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.