Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, October 26, 1951 Page: 5 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Delta County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Delta County Public Library.
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1951
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The Cooper Review, Cooper, Texas
Pag
March of Dimes
Being Prepared
For Great Appeal
With a staggering total of over
45,000 new and old polio cases now
requiring medical care, the Na-
tional Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis, through its local chap-
ters and the March of Dimes, is
I pi epai ing its gi eate t appeal for
support, Mrs. W. O. Wallace,
chairman of the Mothers Division
of the Delta county chapter, de-
clared today.
Participating in a regional meet-
ing of Marsh of Dimes directors
and representatives just completed
in Dallas Mrs. Wallace with Mrs.
Jack Silman issued this report on
the present polio situation:
“For four straight years epi-
demics have swept the country,
piling up 133,000 cases or an aver-
age of over 33,000 cases a year.
The result has been a terrific
carry-over of patients who are
struggling to overcome the after-
effects of the crippling disease.
“During all this critical time the
National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis has endeavored to live
up to its promise to the people that
no case shall be denied adequate
care because of lack of funds. The
load has been so heavy, however,
that the National Foundation has
plunged into debt each year to the
extent of live or six million dol-
lars.
“In other words the March of
Dimes has not kept pace with the
March of Polio. The time has
finally come to put the National
Foundation on a balanced basis.
We cannot continue each year in
the red.
“Therefore, we are unanimously
determined to set our sights much
higher than ever before. The
coming March of Dimes will open
on January 2 and will continue
through January 31 instead of
opening on January 15, as has been
the custom. The American peo-
ple, we feel sure, will support this
expanded program.
“We were told at the meeting
that scientists and doctors are at
last closing in on polio. Now is the
time to keep this fight adequately
supplied with the dimes and dol-
lars needed, not only to help those
who have been stricken but to
continue the research work to
conquer infantile paralysis.”
Date figures on polio cases this
year show a total ending October
13, 1951, of 22.793. Epidemic aid
already sent from the National
Foundation to chapters which have
exhausted their funds now totals
$6,833,442. Thus far this year
the National Foundation has ship-
ped 496 respirators (iron lungs)
to places where they are needed
to save lives.
To Relieve
Misery of
N3T666
LIQUID OR TABLETS-SAMf FAS! RIIIIF
,vr
36 Million Pounds
Of Milk Produced
During September
Reports of thirty-six handlers
subject to North Texas Milk Mark-
eting Order No. 43, including those
in Delta county, showed receipts
of 36,326,911 pounds of milk from
local producers during September.
B. W. Bain, Market Administrator,
announced today. The average
test of milk delivered bv the local
producer was 4.093 G butterfat.
The total receipt of other sourc-
es milk, skim milk, cream, and
other products by handlers made
to supplement the local producer
supply amounted to 10,716.035
pounds. Of this volume 7,720,235
pounds was classified as Class I
(bottled milk, buttermilk, skim
milk, chocolate and cream) and the
balance utilized in Class II (man-
ufactured milk and shrinkage)
milk. Producer milk classified as
Class I was 35,449.981 pounds and
876,930 pounds as Class II.
Order No. 43 for the North Tex-
as Marketing Area became effec-
tive for reporting provisions on
Sept. 1, 1951, and all other pro-
visions became effective as of
Oct. 1, 1951.
I like my \
TLeiirb-ornl ’>
stays touch-tool while •
it keeps us warm!” J
I
» •" I
Klondike
MRS. FRON1A McBRIDE
7
MRS. JACKIE L. DAVIS
Revea! Marriage
Of Jackie Davis
To Pfc. J. L. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Faulkner
have announced the marriage of
their daughter, Jackie Guin Da-
After several weeks of drought
the drought was broken when a
nice rain came Monday night fol-
lowed by a light norther.
Mrs. Tom Irvin has accepted a
position in Greenville with Sears
Roebuck.
Rev. Orbin O. Harper of Sulphur
Springs filled the pulpit at the
Baptist Church in Klondike Sun-
day. He and Mrs. Harper were
dinner guests in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Hollis Henderson.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McBride
and Judy Kay and little friend of j
Commerce visited Sunday after-1
noon with Mrs. Froniu McBride.
Friends here were sad to learn
of the accident of Dan Nelson of
Dallas who was injured in a
motorcycle accident wreck Satur-
day.
children from Rio Grande Valley
children fram Rio Grande Valley
visited over the weekend here
with Mr. and Mis. Everett Jones.
Mrs. Lila Wood is ill of flu at
her home.
Adolph Ainsworth, who has! vis, to Pfc. Jackie L. Davis, the
been ill for several days, was tak- ceremony taking place in Texar-
en to Dallas for an emergency op- kana. Ark., Oct. 19 at 2 p.m.
oration Monday. The bride and groom were ac-
Mrs. Robert Cunningham is suf- companied to Texarkana by Mr.
fering from a sprained ankle for , and Mrs. Charles Leo Burton of
the past week. j Telephone. Mr. Davis is the son
Mrs. Claud Moxley was able to of Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Davis of
be in church Sunday after several Edmondson.
days illness. Pfc, Davis will be at Camp
Mrs. Orville Brooks has been stoneman, Calif., for a short period
ill this week. * before being transferred to the
Charles Edward McGee is re- Far Eastern Air Force. Mrs. Da-
ported ill at the home of his grand- | vis will continue to live with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Davis, in parents at 1907 Walnut Street,
Fort Worth. - Commerce. She is a freshman
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne South and student at ETSTC.
children of Mt. Pleasant were .n .... ■■ ■■
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Stephenson.
Mrs. Maud Wallace and father,
O. P. Hooten, have returned home
after spending several days in
Dallas with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Otho Hooten of
Dallas were here Friday visiting
Mrs. Bob Wallace and family.
Mr. and Mrs. James Ward of
HEALTH TALKS
When Food Intake Exceeds Food
Expenditure Result; Just Pudgy
When the time comes that your I take the other 4 ounces as a mid-
income is greater than your ex- morning snack,
penditures, you look forward to | Snacks, which may help you
saving that extra money until it: over some of the rough periods
accumulates enough to represent of a diet, are quite permissible on
something important in your life, this food regime if they are de-
a house, old-age funds or some
such investment.
When your food intake exceeds
your food expenditure over a long
period of time, you don’t look for-
ward, you just look bulgy. And
it’s not the fat of the land that
you are going to spend to get
back to normal, it’s the fat of you
that is going to be put into circu-
ducted from the total calorie cost
for the day. You must eat three
meals a day on this diet, but if
three snacks can be worked in,
too, that’s quite all right.
Other juices, all figured on the
basis of 4 ounces a serving, cost
as follows:
Apple juice, 6 cents; grape juice,
lation if you would get your weight | Jresh juk.r, v cent's; cami(,d’
orange juice, 6 cents; canned or-
ange and grapefruit juice, blended,
5 cents: pineapple and prunes are
tablespoons sirup, 9 cents; one
large .dice canned pineapple or
two small slices, each with two
tablespoons sirup, 12 cents.
A half-cup strawberries will cost
4 cents and there other berries are
5 cents per half cup: blackberries,
blueberries, loganberries and rasp-
berries.
On a reducing diet, in which
sugars arc eliminated or dis-
couraged, it would be best to buy
only the canned fruits which have
no sugar added in the canning;
they are usually on a shelf to
themselves in your grocery store.
Mr*. W.. W. Garrl*on
Tuesday from St. Josep
pital where she recently
went an operation.
Mrs. T. L. Hemby
Wednesday after a visit
sister, Mrs. Glen Wheat,
arkana. Mrs. Wheat is re
ing from injuries receive
automobile accident sum
ago.
LaFalco Robinson and
Miller of Austin, students
University, spent Sunday
Falco’s parents, Mr. and M
lace Robinson.
Rainfall measured 1.28
according to Jimmy Hodg
ther observer for Delta
The rain which started
p.m. Monday night contir
termittently Tuesday mor
Read the Ads In The R
the fruits which have the highest
percentage of carbohydrates. One
medium-sized banana costs 10
cents, one bunch of grapes (divide
a pound into four bunches) costs
10 cents, four fresh plums cost 10
down to normal proportions.
The 1500 calories which are al- ]
lowed on this diet under discus-
sion are less than you need to
meet your daily expenditures.
Therefore. 1500 calories means a
limited income, less than you need,
so you will have to spend some
of your “savings.”
To bring the comparison be- , . , , . , i
, . , , cents, and lour medium-sized dried 1
tween calories and money closer, |_________D1 ___, r f
this 1500-calorie diet is translated
into $1.50, counting 10 calories to
the penny. You have a daily al-
lowance of $1.50 to be spent in a
r
ross
Roach
definite manner; you will need an-
other $1.00 to $2.00 to meet your
daily "expenses” and that extra
money will be the fat that you
use up.
On the $1.50 food allowance, you
are supposed to spend 18 cents a
day on fruits or juices. That
doesn't sound like much, but you
prunes cost 8 Vi cents. Any of
I those would make a good between
[ meal snack. You could stew those
dried prunes, without adding sugar
and use some of your milk al- I
i lowance to have prunes either as
! a morning fruit or as a dinner
dessert or you could use those
prunes in a fruit salad.
Other fruits will cost you as
I follows:
A large apple, 10 cents; a medi-
um-sized apple, 7 cents; apple-
■/
i
ir
yea
’round
MRS. TONEY STEWARD
Sgt. Chester Elgcnc Grant, sta-
tioned with the 443rd F. C. Wing
at Donaldson AFB, Greenville, S.
Dallas and two of their friends C., spent the weekend with his
from Hcdley and Mr. and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emmit
Harry Ward, Jr. and children vis- 1 Grant, and sister, Pat.
ited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Oliver of
Harry C. Ward. Dallas visited during the week-
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Chancellor ond with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
spent Sunday in Dallas with their Emmet McCarrell.
get a heap more fruit for the mon- sauce- 10 conts Por half-cup; fresh
ey than you do most other foods. ;,Pricots' 2 cents each; cherries,
And fruit is a stomach-satisficr, |two for °_ne ccnt= one lar«e juicy
quieting those sensations you may
call “hunger pangs.”
The cheapest of the juices on
the calorie budget is tomato juice.
FROZEN FOOD; fcOCKERS
SAVES YOU FOOD WAS
For real economy buy large quantities of f
when most plentiful and tastiest! And be
. . economize, when you buy in bulk and use
frozen food lockers to keep the extras fresh
tasty for ready preparation and serving.
Low Rentals
orange, 10 cents: one medium or
ange, 6 cents; one tangerine, 4
cents; half a grapefruit, 3 cents;
half a small cantaloupe, 6 cents;
, /r) , .. , , one-fourth small cantaloupe, 3
a full glass (8 ounces) costing only | ccnts; half a slice of watermelon
5 cents. You may find it more
to your liking to have a regular
fruit-juice glass, 4 ounces, of to-
mato juice for breakfast and then i
daughter, Mrs. Nolen South, and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Flavc McBride
have returned home after a va-
cation with Mrs. McBride’s sister,
Mrs, Enos Gant, and family in
Louisiana.
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Frazier and
son visited Sunday with his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Frazier
of Cooper.
Hollis Garner, employed at
Waxahachie, spent the weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Parker of j ^ith hjsparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Irving and Mr. and Mrs. Milford
Smith of Dallas were here for the
weekend with their mother, Mrs.
Jennie Smith.
Mrs. Doyle Williams of Dallas
Howard Garner, and sister, Peggy.
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Mullins and
Shirley spent Sunday with Mrs.
Mattie Hocutt and Dora Faye.
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Carring-
ton and Mr. and Mrs. John L.
THE REAL GLORY OF WAR
By Ruth Taylor
The glory of war lies not in
lines of marching men, in the stir
ring music that sets our pulses
beating and straightens our shoul-
ders in pride at the sight of our
best and finest.
The glory of war lies not in
clash of arms, in the screaming
rush downward of the bombing
plane, or in the silvery streak of
the torpedo darting straight to its
goal.
The glory of war lies not in bat-
tles won over the enemy, in vic-
tory attained at great cost in lives,
heartbreak and tears.
The glory of war lies not in
one inch thick, 4 cents; 37 medium
sized rasins, 10 cents; one fresh
peach, 5 conts; two halves canned
peach and 2 tablespoons sirup, 10
cents; one large fresh pear, 8 cents;
two halves canned pear and two
WILSON
Food Co.
K
■ (S\
PHONE 30
TRACTOR Special OVERHA
GUARANTEED AND GENUINE PARTS
FORD
PARTS & LABOR
*50°°
Walker
B" FARMALL ”H” FARM
PARTS & LABOR
PARTS & LABOR
*5250 $6850
Tractor & Motor Co.
is spending a few days here with —** I the subjugation of the conauered
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jack attended the PJC-Arlington |n th„ Yin.-.l ,,nnnuo<i nf
» *
And you’ll like it, too ... Dearborn’s Cool Safety
Cabinet that never gets hot on top, sides or bottom
—won’t scorch drapes, walls or furniture—won t
burn careless fingers. Circulates bone-warming heat
to the far corners!
You'll like these Dearborn features—
FAMOUS HIGH CROWN BURNER—gives you all the heol you're paying (or.
GLO-BRITE RADIANTS—give obundont, floor warming radiant heat in a jiffy.
PILOT OPERATED—No more match hunting on cold winter mornings.
COME IN_See our complete line of famous Dearborn gas
heaters.
ANDER 50 N
6r Ou/inutuAj^Co-. m
TEXAS* MOST ACCOMMODATING STORE . J;
COOPER. » PHONE 60 ".%?■
SUPERPHOSPHATE
and
RAW ROCK
again available on
PM A
PURCHASE ORDER
And we have just received a
car load still on the tracks
ALSO
WHITE DUTCH KY 31 FESCUE
ALTA FESCUE BROME GRASS
RYE GRASS RESEEDING CRIMSON CLOVER
ORCHARD GRASS PASTURE MIXTURE
PERSIAN CLOVER (very scarce)
CARL P. HARRISON
Phone 117 Cooper
Gough. Homecoming football game at
Klondike School News Paris Thursday night of last week.
The West Delta School Carnival Mrs. Lelia Williams of Portalcs,
will be held tonight with a big N. M., and daughter, Mrs. C. D.
chicken dinner to be served at the Bostick, and children, Judy and
lunchroom for only 50 cents. In Jimmy, of Dallas and I. J. Jones
addition to the carnival, the caro- i of Greenville visited Mr. and Mrs.
nation of the three queens will be Paul W. Hanna Wednesday
held as well as the results of the Miss Susan Choate of Dallas
i ugly man contest. 1 visited over the weekend with her
A rummage sale held in Cooper i grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
by the first, second and third j Hanna. She was accompanied
grades sponsored by the grade j here by her aunt and uncle, Mr.
teachers, Mrs. Oncy and Mrs. Eth- ; ;lnd Mrs. Ebb Neal of Dallas, who
ridge, made $60 Saturday. The j visited at Rattan.
in the final conquest of the ag-
gressor. It lies not in the death
sentence of the tyrant.
The glory of war lies not in
its destruction but in its con-
struction.
Such glory as war may have lies
in the lessons of war—in the driv-
ing home of the copy book max-
ims that Tor what we take we
must pay.” That “if. we don’t
work, we die.” That “a stitch in
time saves nine.”
The real glory of war lies in
its ability to separate the chaff
from the wheat. The sacrifice it
members of the classes thank all ; Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Rhodes of entails is like a clear white light
those who^ donated clothing to be Dallas visited Saturday with her upon our lives, pointing out what
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Mul- is essential to us and what is just
lins.
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Hancock of
into a rhythm band under the di- j fnlpc spent the weekend with
___„vr n/T„„ D1„„1,„.„,. -------I their son and daughter-in-law.
sold and Anderson Hardware and
Furniture for the space used.
All members of the first and
second grades have been formed
No Half-Ms Nero
oNLyW^stindhouse
, rection of Mrs. Blacketer, county .
music supervisor. Some members | and Ml s' W' °' Hancock- and
j of the classes have purchased in-
struments so that all members of
' the class can participate
band.
Donna Jo
Mrs. Donald Bates and daugh-
in the I *er> Kay, of Clarksville spent the
| weekend with their parents and
The West Delta boys basketball grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
team dropped a game Tuesday ’ \!' oy' , _ . _ _ ,
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Jack and
family have moved to Paris where
he is employed by the Peyton and
Guest Paper Co.
night to Pickton 38-30 while the
West Delta girls team won 41-19.
Wednesday night West Delta girls
j defeated Sulphur Bluff girls 38 to
27 while the Sulphur Bluff boys
team defeated West Delta boys
team 33 to 19.
Social Security
Manager Stresses
Aid ta Employer
a cluttering up.
The real glory of war lies in
its power to raise the focus of at-
tention from our narrow lives to
those of our brothers. What we
learn now in keeping our fighting
men fit will always be a barrier
to careless indifference as to out-
brothers’ needs.
The real glory of war lies in
its cohesion, its ability to make
men live together—to forget for
the moment prejudice, hatred,
suspicion and misunderstanding—
to fight for a common cause. It
*
GIVES YOU
NO DEFROSTING
THAT’S
i f
i* •
Plans Formulated
For Antique Show
“Help your employer to help
I you” is a good slogan for everyone
who is working in a job covered by
| social security. That's the word
from Paul J. Files, manager of the
Paris Social Security Office.
Your employer is
law to report your wages every
three months for crediting to your
social security account. He is
supposed to enter your correct
name and social security account
number on each report. If he
fails to turn in the correct name
and number, he receives letters j \ycRs
Plans for an afternoon tea and
antique show are being formulated
by the Afflatus Club following the
regular meeting of the club last
Friday afternoon.
Appointments o f committees
have been announced as follows:
Refreshments: Mrs. D. Todd, Mrs.
J. C. Smith, Mrs. Opal Preas, Mrs.
lequited i.vj A ^ Brice and Mrs. Florence Fly.
Arrangements: Mrs. Tom Boyd,
Mrs. Morris Vaughn and Mrs. P.
T. Specs.
Invitations: Mrs. O. W. Sim-
mons, Mrs. Clyde Waters and Mrs.
M. F. Young. Registration. Mrs.
G, Fred Turner, and Mrs. Rube
from the Social Security Adminis-
tration concerning his failure to do
so. This additional correspon-
dence is time consuming and ex-
pensive for your employer. He
wants you to get proper credit on
your social security account so
that you and your family will get
all the benefits due you, but he ] Office.
cannot do it unless you help. Mr.
Files pointed out.
You should show your social se-
curity card to your employer im-
mediately when you go on a new
job, so that he can be sure he has
the correct information for report-
ing your wages. If you have lost
your card or are going on your
first job and have never had one,
I you should apply at the Paris so-
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Toney ! teaches men of different faiths and
Steward and daughter this week ^ backgrounds to know one another
are Mr. and Mrs. K. F. Steward \' and where there is understand-
of Boswell, Okla. in* there is no hate-
___ The only glory of war lies in
the lessons that we learn. War
shows men what they really can
do. It spurs them on as personal
ambition never could. They ac-
quire new skills, new talents, new
resources in themselves—which
they will not forget in time of
peace.
Hold Ellis Family
Reunion October 14
The annual Ellis family reunion
was held at the Cooper Roadside
Park Sunday, Oct. 14, with a large
number of relatives and friends
attending.
Among those attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Thurman Ellis and chil-
dren, Dallas; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Grisham and children, Garland;
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Ellis and
children, Texas City; Mr. and Mrs.
B. B. Brewer and children, Spring-
town; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Brewer and children, Ft. Worth;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Blissett and
children, Paris.
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Beeler. Jr.
and daughter. Pecan Gap. R. C.
Ellis, Cedar Creek; Mr. and Mrs.
B. J. Rainey and daughters, Mr.
and Mrs. Elmo Hagood and daugh-
ter, Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Taylor,
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Shaffer and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Shaffer and daughter, Mrs. W. S.
Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ha-
good and Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Mc-
Gaha and children, all of Cooper.
We deal in facts! And the fact is that
only Westinghouse FROST-FREE has
the magic button that COUNTS door
openings to measure defrosting need.
Only FROST-FREE gives you ALL
THREE "No Defrosting” benefits—
Automatic defrost ing exactly when, and
only when needed.
Automatic disposal of the frost water
—no trays or pans to empty.
Ur/rostinn so fast that even ice cream
and frozen fruits stay frozen.
So, look for the button and you’ll find
the world’s first and finest completely
automatic refrigerator... Westinghouse
FROST-FREE! See it today.
The next meeting of the club
will be held on Nov. 16 with Mrs.
Owen Hooten.
cial security office. If you don't
live in Paris, you can get an ap-
plication blank at any post office
and mail it to the Social Security
you can nt sure...if its Westinghouse
•T. M. IT. ,
isst i n n.,
AND 2
The same application blank can
be used for getting a new card
with your same account number
if you have lost your card, or to
apply for a number if you have
never had one. “Help your em-
ployer to help you," Files says,
“so that you and your family will
get all the social security benefits
for which you and your employer
have paid.”
i
ANDERSON
6- r3uJi/vufuSui Co-
TEXAS' MOST ACCOMMODATING STOR
COOPER ,. , PHOME 60
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Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, October 26, 1951, newspaper, October 26, 1951; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth976271/m1/5/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.