Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 8, 1962 Page: 1 of 8
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Serving Delta Country For
BULANCE service
PHONE 109
cDonald Funeral Home
oluitie 84 No. 45
Combined With
Br
The Past Eighty-Three Years
♦
ii nn
The Delta Courier
4% PAID
SAVIN
At
First Natio
Cooper, T
ibin II Vaccine Set
or Nov. 18 In Delta Co.
,, L imar-Delta County Med- on sugar cubes
,society has announced that! Dr. Olen G. Janes and Dr.
. ^cond round of Sabin oral | Oscar Gaza Janes, both mem-
; vaccine will be given in bers of the Medical Society will
““ supervise the Type II Sabin
Vaccine on November 18, the
: anie as they did with the Type
I Vaccine.
Published at Cooper, Texas, Thursday, November 8, 1962
° two counties on Sunday,
Member 18. and this time ]t
11 be Type II
n,ere will be no makeup date
Type II, officials said. Those
wish to take it must do so
\he announced date, or see
hr doctors individually.
'[■here will be two stations in
lta County - at the Cooper
eh School for white residents,
at the Booker T. Washing-
School for colored residents,
"donation of 25 cents per
rscm will be accepted, but no
, win be denied the Sabin II
•cine because of lack of
The vaccine, as in the
pc i campaign, will be given
uest To Preach
ext Sunday At
aotist Church
si
he Rev. Lewis Wingo, pro-
sor of religious education at
Southwestern Baptist Theo-
ical Seminary in Ft. Worth,
] be guest preacher ne :t
iday at the First Baptist
arch of Cooper. He will
ach both at 11 a.m. and 7:30
according to announce-
warn
GIN REPORT
Cooper Cooperative 1,740
Stubblefield-Mille'r Gin 2,622
Farmers Co-Op, L Creek 1,712
Farmers Co-Op Gin, Enloe 1.981
Pecan Gap Gin 2,lo2
Ben Franklin Gin 1,075
14,292
Wrecks Fatal To Tradition Followed In D
One In Delta Co. Democrats Elected To 0
Total
s
ET Homecoming
Scheduled Nov. 10
Former students of East Tex-
as State College and its pre-
decessor, the private Mayo
School, will return to Commerce
Saturday, November 10, for a
Homecoming Parade, barbeque
luncheon, Business meeting, an
ETSC-Lamar Tech football
game, a student musical show
and other activities,
Acivities will open with a
7:30 a.m. breakfast for agricul-
ture majors. Registration for
ex-students will begin at 8 a.m.
in the Student Union Building.
An “Alumni Show," featuring
work of former students, will
be displayed in the Art Build-
ing from 9 a.m. till noon.
Following the 10 a.m. parade
from the campus through down-
town Commerce, ex-students
will conduct their annual busi-
ness meeting for election of of-
ficers.
Group meetings will be held
vehicle apparently missed a
turn at intersection of the old
Klondike highway and Liberty
Grove road just south of Coop-
er, and ran into an embank-
ment.
Anderson was taken to the
St. Joseph’s hospital in Paris
where his condition was not re-
ported serious.
Damage to the Anderson auto
has been placed at $1,200.
Salvation Army
Residence Drive
Today, Friday
Tuesday of last week which -------- "“Y”": A residential drive for funds
drew an attendance of approxi- WraV fr°n\ P®ns °t ^51 for the Salvation Army is be-
____* i a . a c thf> accident theorized that the \nn mnrlnrtPfl tndav in Delta
Redevelopment
Plan Discussed
At Mt. Pleasant
The Rural Area Development
plan was discussed at length at
a meeting held in Mt. Pleasant
Tuesday of last week which
A Sulphur Springs youth,
Billy Wayne Phillips, 22, died
in Baylor Hospital Tuesday
from injuries received in a one-
ear accident on Highway 19 east
of Cooper. Phillips and his com-
panion Ronald Farrell, Route 3,
Sulphur Springs were rushed to
i Dallas Sunday v/here Farrell’s
condition was not believed too
I serious.
The two were riding in Phil-
lips’ automobile when it left
Highway 19 two miles north of
the junction of FM 64 to Coop-
er and slammed into an em-
bankment. Both were thrown
into the windshield and Phillips
was pinned by the steering
wheel.
Highway patrolman James
Travel Today In Russia Is Easy
And Safe Says Cooper Resident
paratively deficient in what is
considered moral behaviour. But
there is no outward evidence
that this is true. If anything,
one sees less rowdiness and
of B.
Truman Ratliff, I at 5 p.m., following the football
«C /Inn ftnmn nnrl n Troinmrf Cnnrtnl
lirman of the board of dea-
s.
he local church is without a
tor following the recent re-
lation of the Rev. Robert E.
ikins who left today for
larillo to become pastor of
Temple Baptist Church, He
been pastor of the Cooper
rch for the past four years,
r Franklin M. Segler, pro-
■or of pastoral ministry at
game, and a Training School
Exes banquet is scheduled for 7
p.m.
A Student Senate sponsored
musical, “If I Were A Bell” will
be presented at 7 p.m. in the
College auditorium. The three-
act, all-student, musical depict-
ing college activities is an ori-
ginal production by Don Shook
of Duncanville, who is also cur-
rently serving a director of
mutely 300. Attending from
Cooper were Robert N. Stovall,
L. L. Allard, Goebel Templeton
and Chamber of Commerce
Manager O. L. Bridges, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Stockton and G. M.
Davis of Enloe also attended.
The Corps of Engineers of
New Orleans and Texas A&M
College representatives were
present to discuss various phases
of the program and offer ad-
vice, as well as the Farmers
Home Administration and Soil
Conservation Corps, Wright Pat-
man of Texarkana, congressman
from the First Congressional
District, presided at the meet-
I ing.
I Following the service of
i luncheon Civil Defense was dis-
I cussed at length, particularly in
! its relation to the Cuban crisis.
the accident theorized that the
car left the highway sometime
between 1 and 2 o’clock Sunday
morning. The accident was not
discovered until late Sunday
morning.
The car was traveling south
on Highway 19 when it ran off
the highway to the left just
short of the first of two small
ing conducted today in Delta
County, and will continue
through Friday. Business firms
were solicited last week.
The drives followed a meeting
held at the Hotel Cooper Tues- and return by way of Len-
day of last week with Charlie, ;nor"[j was some 700 miles one
By C. W. Bailey
Although an American going
to Russia for the first time is
apt to feel some concern for his
safety, he soon learns that ---- ----------- ----
travel today in Russia is easy I drunkenness, and better discip-
and perfectly safe. There are
good hotels, food, service, (no
tips expected!), and friendly
people. The American will or-
dinarily be on a guided tour,
but he v/ill be allowed freedom
of the major cities. There is
some evidence of secret surveil-
ance, but no more than is to be
expected, world tensions being
as they are.
Our trip from Finland to Mos-
Pohlzon of Dallas, Salvation
Army field director for the
northeast Texas area. Some 35
bridges. The car shot over the | county residents attended the
creek bed and slammed into the meeting, and were served coffee
opposite bank. It then rolled
back into the channel and when
found was standing on the rear
bumper at a near 90-degree
and doughnuts.
Committee chairmen for the
business canvass were the Rev.
Julian D. Thomas of the Cooper
angle. Water was about two feet i Methodist Church, the Rev.
deep in the creek. | Robert E. Jenkins of the Cooper
Another one-car accident was > Baptist Church, and the Rev.
reported Sunday to the local i Howard Adams of Pecan Gap.
Sheriff’s Department. Douglas) The Salvation Army drive is
Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. an annual event in Delta Coun-
E. S. Anderson, driver of the ty.
School Board
Hires Teacher
Ft. Worth Seminary, will choirs at the First Methodist
ach at the Cooper Church on Church in Cooper; and Bob
idav, Oct. 18, Ratliff states. Regan.
ons To Hear
uest Speaker
Tien the Cooper Lions Club
t at the Delta Country Club
arrow (Friday) at noon, a
;t speaker will be heard. He
1 H. McAnally of Dallas, an
lority on civil defense,
ean Harrison and Harrell
>m are in charge of the pro-
n, and are asking all Lions
b members to be present.
Banks To Close
elta banks will be closed on
lday, November 12, in ob-
anee of Armistice Day.
Lewisville vs Cooper Here
Friday Night For 4th Place
Meeting in called session
Monday night in the office of
Superintendent Wade Bledsoe,
the board of the Cooper Inde-
pendent School District voted to
grant Mrs. Homer Bowers a
leave of absence, and to hire
Mrs. Patricia Ainsworth of
Commerce to replace her the
remainder of the current term
of school. Mrs. Bowers is quite
ill at her home in Enloe. Fred
* Newman, school board presi-
i dent, presided at the Monday
night meeting.
r-
> mppp* ■ (:'■ •
lta COUNTY R.A.D.
BULLETIN BOARD
By Redevelopment Committee
■ mtSSSoR $K§i
-
I'e RAD Development Pro-
m or Act was signed May
;962, by the President of the
ikd States and provides the
owing;
Loans for Industrial and
fimercial' Projects.
Loans and Grants for Pub-
Facilities.
Technical Assistance in-
ying three types of activity:
Providing a wide variety
technical data and informa-
k including procurement
onnation; (b) Sending Mem-
‘s of the Administration’s
" to an area for consulta-
1 and guidance; (c) Furn-
lnB technical assistance
to enable consulting
-> research organizations,
•ersitics, etc, to make stud-
evaluating the needs of and
eloping potentialities for the
lomic growth of redefvelop-
‘t and other areas, and in-
'gating proposals or pilot
|e°ts showing promise.
Occupational Training,
detaining Subsistence Pay-
»ts.
Urban Renewal Acceltfra-
, Local Action
*te basic process by which
Act will operate places
JJy responsibility on local
V Law, applications from
^unities of less than 10,000
Ration demonstrating an
Vy and vital need for
'he projects receive priority
'deration. Any needed pub-
works project is eligible,
Wing water and sewer
ns- gas distribution sy*
municipal buildings and
other essential public
that a community la
d to initiate.
could be of great benefit in
Delta County. National Guard
Armory construction could be
realized in Delta County. The
list is long on projects that
could be started locally if the
people of Delta county would
put forth some effort to find
out about the RAD Program.
Some sixteen interested peo-
ple attended a meeting of the
Accelerated Public WortePW-
gram in Mt. Pleasant. Texas,
ft the Alps Cafe last
this meeting it was made plain
that the responsibility dei^n^;
ed on the local Initiative. That
is if local interest had a pro-
hpnefit the community.
iTKS*
aids has been suggested to
work out a better and more
profitable working agreemen
how to finance these agree
men!S’ thatthaerekllinS option
ments that a jons? Write
3£ fe Box'S Cooper, Tex-
aSnther inquiries pertain to a
s„° ey on ?ent properties as to
needed types. ™»‘ MI>'
^Congressman Patman stated
♦hnt the OEDP program eoukl
he of great value to the people
5 dS. County end that
After dropping another con-
j ference game last week, the
; Cooper Bulldogs will meet the
Lewisville Farmers here Friday
i night, with whom they are tied
for fourth place in the district,
| each having a 1-2 record. Both
teams have defeated Whitesboro
and lost to Commerce. The
Farmers lost their other district
contest to Rockwall 13 to 34 last
week. Cooper was downed by
Plano two weeks ago.
Intercepted passes, five in all,
j and a fumble spelled doom for
the Bulldogs as the Commerce
Tigers turned two interceptions
into touchdowns to defeat the
locals 14 to 8 at E. T. Stadium
last Friday night.
After a first half of play
which saw the game stalled
near mid-field, the Commerce
Tigers cut off a Bulldog pass on
the Cooper 13. Three plays
later Fullback Johnny Martinez
plowed through right tackle
from one yard out. Quarterback
Ray Weems kicked the extra
point to put his team out in
front 7-0 in the closing sec-
onds of the third period. The
Tigers intercepted another Coop-
er aerial in the fourth quarter
deep in Bulldog territory.
Weems added the talley on a
five yard burst through right
tackle and kicked the extra
point to give Commerce a 14-0
lead.
With less than one minute re-
maining in the game, Quarter-
back Randy Poteet scored Coop-
er’s lone touchdown on a five
yard keeper through left tackle.
Poteet :hen passed to End Rob-
cit Harrison for the two pointer.
Statistics show that each
team had eight first downs.
Commerce' led in yards rushing
with 129 to Cooper’s 105, and
114 yards passing on 4 of 9
passes, while the Bulldogs com-
pleted only 6 of 15 passes for
55 yards. In the penalties de-
partment Cooper was set back
on four accounts for a total of
40 yards, while Commerce was
penalized eleven times for 105
yards. The Tigers fumbled twice,
Cooper recovering both miscues,
Commerce in turn fell on the
Bulldogs fumble.
Delta County would get
Cooper
even
that
the
Reservoir
Antioch Church
Revival Set For
November 12-18
7. 7;
k
m
gSlfi
i
ills
' ipf
nA«T^"n
Armistice Came
44 Years Ago
In World War I
Forty-four years ago fighting
ceased in World War I in Eu-
rope, and the Armistice, sup-
posed to end all wars, was sign-
cd.
People went wild as the news
was flashed in America, and not
person worked that day.
Both bosses and employes
climbed into trucks, or any
other available vehicle, and
moved throughout cities and
communities singing, whistling
and making joyful noises anti-
cipating that fathers, sons and
brothers were coming home.
The only sad faces were those
who had lost relatives in the
v/ar. .
And November 11. 1918 be-
came known ns Armistice Day.
That is. until other wars came -
World War II and the Korean
War, and that day was changed
to Veterans Day.
Next Sunday, Nov. 11, »
Veterans Day, and many older
residents will' pause to recall
that first Armistice Day way
back in 1918. .
The American Legion or
Tonper, headed by Arthur Stah-
mer, was meeting Wednesday
night to decide if there would
ix/T «nv soecial celebration, and
certainly all the World War 1
Rev. Bob I. Johnson
Rev. Bob I. Johnson, pastor of
the Dellwood Baptist Church
in Mt. Pleasant, is to be the
evangelist in the revival meet-
ing at the Antioch Baptist
Church which begins Monday,
November 12, and continues
through November 18. Services
will be held daily at 10 a.m.
and 7 p.m.
Rev. Johnson is a graduate of
East Texas Baptist College and
Southwestern Seminary.
The music will be under the
direction of Rev. Thomas Glos-
up of Sulphur Springs, a retired
Associational Missionary.
Resident’s Mother
Dies At Lubbock
Mrs. A. F. Emerson, 86, moth-
er of Roy Emerson of Cooper,
died Tuesday at 5:30 a. m. in
Lubbock where she had been ill
for two weeks. Her son had
been at her bedside for the past
week.
Funeral service was held at
Lubbock Wednesday at 10 a.m
m ana Mrs. Roy Emerson and her
- 'm, recall their I daughter, Sadie Sue, left Tues-
SSSjf when thi first Armls- ' day night for Lubbock to attend
tice Day came. nw*’
Roy Hall Rites
Held Sunday
Funeral' rites for Roy Hall,
Pecan Gap carpenter who died
at his home there last Friday at
9 p.m., were held last Sunday
at 2:30 p.m. at the Pecan Gap
Baptist Church. The Rev. Per-
ry Crowell and the Rev. How-
ard Adams officiated, and Delta
Funeral Home of Cooper made
interment in the Pecan Gap
cemetery.
Son of the late D. T. and Ann
(Poulk) Hall, he was bom in
the Dial Community on May 20,
1894.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Helen Hall of Pecan Gap, and
a sister, Mrs. Oscar Yeager of
Pecan Gap.
Serving as bearers were E. L.
Cummings, Frank Crawford, C.
W. Deatherage, Moody Houston,
Sam Stephens and A. H. Young.
McQuagge Home Is
Destroyed By Fire
The home of Mrs. Fae Mc-
Quagge, Rt. 3 Cooper, was en-
tirely destroyed by fire Monday
about 10 a.m. The house was
moved to the site about five
years ago when another home
of Mrs. McQuagge was also de-
stroyed by fire.
The Cooper Volunteer Fire
Department answered the call.
LORD’S ACRE FESTIVAL
The Lord’s Acre Festival will
be held next Monday evening,
Nov. 12, in the Educational
Building of the Methodist
Church at Enl'oe. Stew, chili,
pie and coffee will be served by
the ladies of the church, begin-
ning at 5 p.m.
To State Meeting
Mrs. Troy Kern of Lake
Creek, president of the Cooper
Parent-Teacher Association, and
Mrs. John Shaw of Cooper plan
to attend the statewide P-TA
convention to be held in Fort
Worth Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday of next week.
Joins Longhorn Singers
Bill Miller, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Manton Miller, is » mem-
ber of the Longhorn Singers, a
choral group at the University
of Texas in Austin.
ingrad was some 700 miles one
way, through the industrial and
historic heart of Russia, enough
to afford a good view of Russian
life. But Russia is much larger
than the United States, so that
we saw only a small part, com-
parable say to a trip from New
York to Chicago. The route
passed through the rolling re-
gion of tall pines and silver
birch in the north, then indus-
trial towns and farms between
Leningrad and Moscow.
One could observe the wretch-
ed housing all the way. How-
ever, the most striking impres-
sion I had was the lack of mod-
ern transport facilities, in all
phases. In the towns and coun-
tryside, we saw almost no hard-
surfaced roads or paved streets.
People walked on muddy paths,
and the scarce vehicles were
fighting ruts and mudholes.
Moscow has good streets and
roads, of course, but there are
no traffic jams! One night about
ten o’clock, I was able to count
just six cars from my hotel
window, in the center of the
city. There appear to be no
private cars, the ones on the
street are state-owned taxis.
There are a few fine passeng-
er trains, such as The Red Ar-
row that we rode. But for the
most part, the railroads and
equipment compare with ours of
forty years ago. The motive
power is mostly coal and wood
burning steam engines, each
with a brilliant red star and a
picture of Lenin on the head
| end. The railroads do not ap-
pear to be equipped with sign-
als of any kind - the trains ap-
pear to be directed by young
women standing beside the
tracks holding colored signals.
Each railroad station has a fine
statue of Lenin in the waiting
room. Probably half of the rail-
road workers are women, some
doing the heaviest kind of phy-
sical work.
The one bright showplace of
Russian transportation is the
Moscow subway. This modern
and efficient system is a work
of art. Each station is individ-
ually designed in granite, mar-
ble. statuary, and elegant chan-
deliers. Perhaps the reason is to
brighten the lives of the Mus-
covites, some six millions, near-
ly all riding the subways. A
surprising thing is that there
are no ticket collectors on the
Moscow transport - the whole
thing is on the honor system.
You wonder how a nation so
deficient in transportation could
be regarded with so much fear,
and how such a nation could
transport the means to wage a
war anywhere except on its
own soil. It seems obvious that
Russia’s threat to the world
must lie entirely in the nuclear
weapons.
Russians dress plainly, but
comfortably. The women wear
low-heels, cotton stockings, plain
cotton dress and coat, a scarf
tied round the head. By West-
ern standards, I did not see one
elegantly dressed woman in
Russia.
The Russians soft petal the
matter of religion, and the sub-
ject has to be broached by the
visitor, if at all. The Soviet Con-
stitution guarantees religious
freedom, but it is clear that the
Communist Party and the
schools teach the young to avoid
involvement in the "prejudices
and superstitions” of religion.
In visiting several beautiful oTd
churches in Moscow and Len-
ingrad, I did not see a single
active church. Most of them are
now space science museums.
One old cathedral within the
Kremlin walls has been convert
ed to an Anti-God Museum. The
architectural beauty of theoe old
churches has been preserved,
but the walls have been plenti-
fully inscribed with quotations
from Marx and Lenin.
One might suppose that a peo-
ple without the
line than in the average Amer-
ican large city.
Our view of Russian schools
was confined to Moscow Univer-
sity, a showplace in its new
skyscraper building in the Len-
in Hills. Except for the enorm-
ous pictures and statues of Len-
in everywhere, this school is not
unlike our large American uni-
versities. Students look the
same the world over.
The stores of Russia are drab
affairs compared to the West.
Clothing appears to be priced
very high, an ordinary suit for
a man costing $100 or more.
Long lines of shoppers form at
practically all counters every-
where. An American is immedi-
ately recognized, presumably by
his clothes, and he will be fre-
quently propositioned by Rus-
sians to sell his suits, sweaters,
and especially his drip-dry
shirts, but this trading is strict-
ly forbidden. One of my sad-
dest memories is that of being
constantly approached by little
I school boys wanting to trade all
their belongings and money
JOHN CO
... Gove-
Delta County
tion in Tuesday’s
ion, and elected
office. John Co
governor in th
talley, received
Delta County, w
ent, De!mocrat-T
an Jack Cox poll
Delta County.
The county ga
Democrat Prest
lieutenant gover
Eill Hayes, Repu
Congressman At
County voted 91
as against Repu
ry with 152 voA
The county
Of ---- -------„ , -
for chewing gum. I did not have goner Carr for
a stick, but if I ever go to Rus- ! giving him 939^
sia again I will take all the lican KeruWrly s
chewing gum I can carry. These
children have not yet reached
the age to be blighted by the
hatreds that afflict the adult
world.
In Russia, one is completely
out of touch with the rest of
the world. The hotel radio gives
only Radio Moscow, with its
steady program of classical
music, news digests, and politi-
cal propaganda. The only En-
glish newspaper is the Daily
Worker.
American tourists in Russia
are treated to the best in enter-
tainment that is available. For
two dollars and two hours’ not-
ice, he can have one of the best
seats for the Bolshoi Opera, the
Ballet, or the puppet show. This
in spite of the fact that all seats
to these performances are
known to be sold out weeks in
advance. The only explanation
is that the seats are taken from
Russians. The same system
seems to apply to the railroads,
where tourists can have good
accommodations on short notice,
in spite of the fact that Rus-
sians are sleeping at railway
stations by the hundreds, wait-
ing their turn.
The two high points of the trip
for me! (1) The Kremlin, with
Red Square and Lenin’s corpse
on display Moscow; (2) Lenin-
grad (old St. Petersburg), where
all of the grandeur of Tsarist
days is still preserved in all its
beauty.
It is often said by Westerners
that the Russian people would
like to revolt against their
Communist overlords. We saw
no evidence of it. The peoples’
faces and bearing reflect a hard
existence and a sober mood, but
nothing to suggest latent revolt.
Working people went about their
work at least as cheerfully as
Americans.
Veteran conj
first district, W
Texarkana, poll
Della County,
James A. Tim
There were 14
the Texas Consti
the ticket, and D
proved eight of
Amendment 4 d
ter storage', the
to 139. The c
Amendment 14,
by a vote of 464
According to
Delta County
1,070 voters w
in Delta Cou
their approval
Democratic state
Although the
returns had no
in Cooper at th
view went to
afternoon, it w
derstood that
was the unani
Texas governor.
Quarter
Resume
After a reces
due to the illn
Cooper owner, t
terback Club m
night for a din
with President
siding. Thirty-
thusiasts attend.
A resume o
football games
Coach Jimmy J
ed films of
game, which C
the Plano g'
Bulldogs lost
Another Qu~
is scheduled f
p.m. at the hot
STUDENT OF THE M
SELECTED BY THE STUDENT
OF COOPER HIGH SCHOOL
Mrs. Herbert Na
ton.
The 16 years
co-captain of
ball team and
ball at C.H.S.
Katie is a m
squad, secretary
ice Club, m«(
F.T.A. snd the
Church in
the Junior
lected her as
at the Junior
Academical
Student. She
absent nor
years and
it a 9 years
The Junior
grapher for thf
sold »
Katie Nabors ported, tho
M M M the yean.
V * * After
Student of tho Month for Oc|*™
tober, as setoetad by tho
Council, is n
iHi'r
ffl li'll
! Il l ! '
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Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 8, 1962, newspaper, November 8, 1962; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth976876/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.