Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, November 18, 1955 Page: 1 of 8
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PHONE 109
ambulance SERVICE
McDonald Funeral Home
Sulphur Valley Publishing Company
The Past Seventy-six Years
f
The Delta Courier
s- J ' v
OPPORTUNITY
Is tailor-made for folks
with money in the hank
We Invite YOUR Account
First National Ba1
COOPER, TEXAS
Volume 76 No. 46
The Cooper Review, Cooper, Texas
Eight Pages
Friday, November 18, 1
ELT A ^,oa^ *s Margin 0^ Win For The Services Last
1 A R Y Team Over Cooper Friday Friday For
1A£V Ir""............ Delta Native
Bv Richard Stringfellow
Of all the years, this should be
the one that Thanksgiving would
have a very deep and sincere
meaning to us in this area.
Certainly, we are thankful for
the small things that we enjoy
daily, but this area has been
richly blessed this year with a
bountiful harvest of almost every
crop planted.
Do we accept this good fortune
without
scaon
to 7.
The
By the margin of a three-point put his team ahead 10 to 0
field goal, Wolfe City defeated I The Bulldogs came to life in
Cooper in their last game of the the fourth quarter and in a mat-
here last Friday night 10 ter of a few plays ripped off
enough yardage for their only TD.
, 12'-vard fie,d goal was; Thompson, who went into the
kicked by Quarterback Joe Mor- j game last Friday as high scorer
ro who with Wasson and Monroe for the district, scored the Bull-
were the offensive stars for the dog touchdown from the Wolfe
Wolves. The game gave Wolfe City 12 yard line. Ramon, who
City a cinch for a second place! had alternated with Thompson
berth in the District 13A stand-| for enough yardage for the TD,
)n®s' kicked the extra point.
The first quarter of the game With seconds to play, Cooper
was a see-saw affair with Wolfe I recovered a Wolfe City fumble
giving a thought as tO|C‘ty having the advantage most ■ and hopes were high in the Coop-
why, and from whom, this bounti-1 In xhc second quarter, j or stands
but since
us fail to do so we should
ful year came to us?
Next Thursday is the day set
aside each year to give thanks to
our Maker for all the blessings
that come our way. . . this should
be done every day,
reverently express our heartfelt
thanks on Thansgiving Day.
Church services will be held
throughout the country. There’s
a union service in Cooper on
Thanksgiving morning from 7:30
t( 8 30. If it's possible, attend one
of these services.
t + t
Of course, with the long week
end coming up, predictors are al-
ready beginning to estimate the
Lfe on the highway that
will b' almost a certainity.
We can dc our part in reducing
for another TD, but
Wolfe (_ ity uncapped their offense time ran out before the Bull
enough to score their first and dogs could start another drive.
score
only touchdown of the evening.
Morrow kicked the extra point
which gave the Wolves a 7 to 0
advantage at halftime.
In the third quarter, the Wolves
had a drive to stall on the 12
yard line with fourth down to
come. Joe Morrow, at a slight
angle, kicked the field goal to
Thompson, Cooper halfback and
star runner, had been nursing a
bad ankle and did not carry the
ball but three times during the
first half of play.
Outstanding on defense for the
Bulldogs was Tommy Wilson who
was in on more than half the
tackles for the Cooper team.
Joe Speake, 73, a long time
resident of Delta County and a
retired farmer, died Friday morn-
ing November 11, at 2 o’clock
at his home after a short illness.
Funeral servics were held Sat-
urday, November 12, at 3 p. m.
in the Delta Funeral Home chapel
with Bill Cavender, minister of
the Church of Christ, Cooper, of-
ficiating. Burial was made in the
Antioch Cemetery.
Pallbearers were Fred Balen-
tine, Calvine Balentine, L. A.
Stockton, Luther McCullough,
Abe Sneed and Johnny Pollard.
Speake, who has never mar-
ried, is survived by one brother,
Dee Speake, Commerce; two sis-
ters, Mrs. W. L Rowland, Mer-
ritta, Okla., and Mrs. J. C. Lacy,
Winters, Tt xas.
Christmas Parade Wit
Santa On December 2
Barton Adams W. Delta
Outstanding Farm Boy
Thompson High
Scorer In 13-A
With the 13-A District season
over, Cooper High’s Junior
Thompson emerged as the high
scorer of al' the teams.
Although Thomp son scored
only once against Wolfe City last
week, he finished the season with
17 touchdowns and 102 points.
The nearest 13-A players to him
were James Gouard and Wayne
Tillett of Van Alstyne with 82
points each.
Honey Grove’s Terry Eaton was
sixth with 55 points and Coopr’s
Tonnie Roman was eighth with
48 points.
Thompson is a senior student
this year and Roman is a junior
and will return to the Bulldog
squad next year.
Ida Mae Merrill
Funeral Held
At Pecan Gap
Handsome, energetic B a rr o n
Adams has been named the Out-
this u-< less loss of life, if we will I standing Farm Boy of the West
j t tV( j... precaution known Delta School. He is the son of Mr.
when we are on the highways.
t t t
Citizens of Cooper are still
phoning and telling this wiiter
in person of how much they
agreed with the statements in
this column two weeks ago re-
garding the Halloween exhibition
here.
With this many people in
Cooper wanting something done
about it, it would seem that an
effort would be made to find out
why other towns of this size can
afford policemen and Cooper
can’t.
Honey Grove is a good example
. . .rnd about the size of Cooper.
It is still the responsibility of
Cooper citizens to urge our City
government to work out some-
thing. If you, as a Cooper resi-
dent, do not tell our councilmen
and mayor how you feel about
it, they will think you are com-
pletely satisfied with the situa-
tion just as it is.
Their actions will be govern-
ed largely by the demand of the
people. . . . and their capabili-
ties from a standpoint of city
finances.
tit
Tin Retail Trades Committee
of the Delta Chamber is going
“all-out” this year in an effort
to stage the biggest and best
Christmas parade ever to be held.
In recent years the parade has
continued to draw people from a
larger area and has compared
favorably with much larger
towns. This year should be ex-
ception in the number of people
who coi e to see the parade.
The date is December 2, 5 p.m.
and you should start making
Plans to be on hand. There’ll be
plenty of candy for Santa to
give the kiddies and grownups
V’ill enjoy seeing the promised
increased number of floats.
If solicitors are successful
enough in getting funds for the
Parade from Cooper merchants,
it is being considered to secure
three camels for the parade from
a circus that is wintering at
Hugo. . . . this should be a real
treat for everybody.
1 t t
Since very little change was
being made from week to week
in the total cotton ginnings for
Delta County, there will not
be any more totals published un-
til January 1.
An ef'nrt will be made then to
secur , total from all Delta gins
to ainve at an approximate total.
lor the year. It is almost certain
to go over 33,000 bales. Wow! I
And on just a little over 36,0001
acres. 'That’s two crops in one
year!
tide concludes
year.
the feature this
and Mrs. W. A. Adams, Yowell.
Barron was president of his
FFA chapter last year under the
supervision of Weldon Hume. He
attended an Area convention in
Sulphur Springs for FFA chap-
ters last year also. Although this
is his second year in vocational
agriculture work, Barron is a sen-
ior student at West Delta.
Some of the projects carried on
by Barron is a nine acre corn
patch this year and he says “my
production will be just pretty
good on the corn.”
Although he has only sold eight
pigs and a sow, he still has two
fine pigs and also is raising two
calves.
He lives with his parents on the
80 acres farm near Yowell which
has some 65 acres in row crop.
The family has harvested a bet-
ter than average cotton crop this
year.
When asked about attending
college Barron said, “I hope to
attend ET next year.” He stated
that he would like to be an elec-
trical engineer.
In answer to the question, why
eengineering and not farming, he
stated, T wou'd really i ke to
farm, because I nke it, but I don t
have the start in farming that is
necessary.
Barren leferrerf to the cost of
buying machinery and equipment
to get set up in farming.
He a'teiids the Klondike Bap-
tist Church regularly and is ac-
tive in many school affairs.
The Outstanding Farm Boy
has been a regular feature of
boys and girls in the five Delta
State FHA Prexy
Visits Cooper
Miss Fern Foster of Hawkins,
the state FHA president was a
guest of the Cooper FHA chapter
Friday and Saturday, Nov. 11 and
12.
At a meeting Friday, she spoke
to the chapter about the Na-
tional meeting in Ames, Iowa,
which she attended.
Miss Foster was honored at an
open house Saturday from 7:00
to 9:30 p.m. in the home of Suz-
anne Tucker. Those attending
were served punch and cookies
She accompanied the Cooper
chapter to Boles Home Saturday
for the District II meeting. Dur-
ing the meeting, Bobbye Thomas
Cooper, was elected district par-
liamentarian.
United Fund Drive
By Alliance Here
The Cooper Ministerial Alliance
will sponsor a United Church
Fund drive from Nevember
through November 24.
Proceeds from the drive will be |
used to meet the local needs of'
emergency that cannot be hand-
led through other agencies in
time of need for those who can-
i not help themselves. Contribu-
| tions for this fund may be made
! through the individual church,
| according to a member of the Al-
liance.
I Members of the Alliance have
| also stated that the need for
meet situations of dire
1,
uuys, — - J I funds to meet situations or uuc
S&SSS* "I nec, „ urgent In «* contmunity.
Homemaking and Future farming.
The feature is co-sponsored by
the Agricultural
me n __________ Committee of
the Delta Chamber of Commerce Hospital
and The Cooper Review. This ar- patient.
Mrs. O. C. Harris was dismiss-
ed Tueday afternoon from Janes
after being a surgical
New, Renewal
Subscriptions
To The Review
Emmitt Grant, Cooper, Route
J. W. Darwin, Cooper, Rt. 3
Mrs. M. A. Brantley, Rt.
Cooper.
Earl Jackman, Cooper
Stanley Ward, Dallas
Mrs. J. H. McKinney, Cooper
Carl Jackson, Wichita Falls
M. S. Douglas Enloe
F. 8. Anderson, Rt. 1, Cooper
Mrs. Audley Jeter, Dallas
W. W. Marsh, Ben Franklin
Mrs. Raechel Marsh, Ben
Franklin
Bill Thomas, Logan, N. M.
H. G. Watson, Austin
C. V. Flanary, Paris
Norman W. Cavender, Cooper.
J. C. Chessher, Rt. 1, Lake
Creek
Mrs. J. C. Blalock, Monahans
J. W. Giddeons, Ft. Worth
B. G. Crawford, Rt. 1, Klondike
Mrs. Ralph Mauer, Phoenix,
Ariz,
Arnold Jones, Cooper
Mrs. Lillian Brown, Cooper
Clifford Mills, Rt. 1, Lake
Creek
James McCullough, Dallas
V. G. Gillean, Rt. 3, Cooper
A. H. Wilson, Lubbock
James C. Hanna, Lawton, Okla.
E. L. Essary, Rt. 1, Klondike
Travis M. Daniels, APO New
York, N. Y.
J, L. Gammon, Dallas
Bob Bartley, Cooper
James T. Moody, Bonham
C. E. Hollon, Rt. 2, Cooper
Ben Skinner, Enloe
W. A. Buchanan, Rt. 3, Cooper
Houston Brantley, Commerce
H. A. Ward, Lubbock
A. P. Oats, Dallas
Thurman Cathey, Cooper
Weldon L. Scott, Ft. Smith,
Ark.
Ellen Lane, Rt. 2, Cooper
Joe McCarroll, Cooper
Elnora Cloteaux, Houston.
Union Service
To Be At Cooper
Baptist Church
;:A
I
ill
Funeral services for Mrs. Ida
Mae Merrill, 71, of Pecan Gap,
were held Monday afternoon at
2:30 in the Pecan Gap Methodist
Church. The services were con-
duct by Rev. C. B. Garrett, Rev.
Raymond Trompler, Rev. Wesley
Thompso l and Rev. Kenneth
Gant. Delta Funeral Home made
interment in the Pecan Gap Cem-
etery.
Mrs. Merrell was born January
6, 1884, the daughter of the late
Joe Ben Whittenburg and Lucy
(Yeager) Whittenburg of Pecan
Gap. She died Saturday, Nov. 12
in a Dallas hospital where she
had been a patient three days. *
She is survived by three sons, I
W. M. Merrill Jr., and Donald
Merrill, Pecan Gap, and Ralph
Merrill, Ladonia; four daughters,
Mrs. Irene Bradley, Dallas, Mrs.
W. M. Thomas, Ladonia, Mrs. H.
N. Dyer, Hbnderson, and Mrs.
D. H. Brooks Sr., Paris; two bro-
thers, Marvin Whittenburg, and
J. B. Whittenburg Jr., San An-
gelo; ten grandchildren and
eleven great-grandchildren.
Pallbearers were her six grand-
sons, Bill Bradley, James Brad-
ley, D. H. Brooks, Jr., Felix
Thomas, Ralph Merrill Jr. and
Charles Merrill.
Certificate Of
Birth Available
Plans are now being made for I
the biggest and best Christmas
parade ever to be held in Cooper
on December 2 at 5 p. m.
Sponsored by the Delta Cham-
ber of Commerce, under the di-
rection of the Retail Trades Com-
mittee, the parade this year v/ill
stress the religious aspects of
Christmas in floats and entries.
The Retail Trade Committee
with Paul Castleberry met Mon-
day afternoon to appoint commit-
tees for the parade. Attending the
meeting were Castleberry, Mrs.
A. T. Poe, Mrs. Roy Emerson,
Manton Miller, Jess Brown, Ray
Banks, Roy Cain and Cha
manager O. L. Bridges.
With some funds left over
last year, th~ committee has
mated that some $200 wil
needed in addition to stage
type of parade that has
planned. New decorations
already been purchased for
streets in the business distri
Cooper.
For the committee to ca
merchants to secure the
amount the following me
were apointed: Mrs. A T.
Robert Stovall, L. F. Hoote
Mrs. Ray Wilson, Henry Sp
Finnell Johnson, Henry Ke
Harry Bartley, Dutch Hor
and Hugh Jaynes.
Members of the finance
vass committee were aske
contact their prospects and r
not later than Friday, Nov©
25, to the chamber offices.
MORE FLOATS THIS YE
The committee agreed Mo
to make a special effort to s
more floats for the parade
year than before.
A committee was appoint
encourage more floats and
tries. On the float committe
Russell Tucker, Roy Cain,
Banks, Lawrence Barrett
Thomas Robinson.
Hiram Clark Jr., was nam
parade marshal. The memb
the Cooper National Guard
will again direct traffic fo
parade this year.
fore Thanksgiving. However, due In addition to the Cooper
to Thursday being a postal holi- »
day, the papers will not be deliv-
ered until the usual day in the
week, Friday.
Turkey Day To
Be Holiday In
Delta, Cooper
Cooper and Delta County mer-
chants will observe Thanksgiivng
Day as a holiday according to in-
formation received from the Re-
tail Trades committee of the Del-
ta Chamber of Commerce.
As well rs merchants, profes-
sional offices and government
and county offices will also ob-
serve Turkey Day this year.
With Thanksgiving on Thurs-
day, usually printing day for the
Review, publishers have an-
nounced that the Cooper Review
will be printed on Wednesday be-
Two Men Caught;
On Adopted Child Robbery Charges
Are Filed Here
%
REV. JAMES SIMPSON
The Cooper Ministerial Al-
liance will sponsor a Union
Thanksgiving Service on Thurs-
day morning, November 24, from
7:30 to 8:30, at the First Baptist
Church in Cooper.
Rev. James O. Simpson, Jr.,
pastor of the Cooper Methodist
Church, will bring the sermon
for the services. A choir made up
of the choirs from all the
churches will sing an anthem of
praise.
A free will offering will be re-
ceived at the Thanksgiving ser-
vice and will be used to aid in
the work of the Cooper Minister-
ial Alliance during the year.
An invitation has been extend-
ed for the general public to at-
tend the services next Thursday
morning.
Wild Coon Hunt
To Be Staged
Here Next Week
/
¥
Can parents of an adopted child
get a birth certificate for that
child on which they are shown as
the natural parents?
Yes, says State Registrar W. D.
Carroll. Furthermore, the new
birth record v/ill bear no evidence
of the adoption.
If the mother and father of an
illegitimate child rnarry after the
birth, can a new birth record be
issued shoving the child to be
legitimate?
Again yes. These and other
facts of life and death will get a
thorough going-over December
1-2 when city and county regis-
tration officials and vital statisti-
cians gather in seminar at the
Texas State Department of
Health.
Invitations to attend have been
mailed to all registration officials
in cities of 10,000 or more, to
all health unit directors, and to
all county clerks in counties of
more than 25,000.
VVital statistics are complicat-
ed and highly confidential,” Car-
roll asserts. “We’re hoping for a
good attendance.”
The two-day workshop, con-
ceived last year as a means of
keeping local officials abreast of
registration policies of the fed-
eral government and the State
Department of Health, will turn
The Delta County Coon Hunt- j up problems which ultimately af-
Robbery by assault charges
were filed in Justice of the Peace
S. D. Wood’s examining trial court
Monday by County Attorney
Cameron McKinney against a 25
year old McCurtain County, Okla.
man and a 21 year old Lamar
County Indian youth following
the assault and robbery of a Pa-
ris man in the Cedar Creek com-
munity three miles southeast of
Cooper last Saturday evening.
The Lamar youth was arrest-
ed by Sheriff H. E. Bledsoe short-
ly after the robbery but before
the victim had reported it when
an alert citizen reported the youth
a having been involved in a dis-
m
>
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dawson
and Mrs. Emmit McFadden,
Commerce, spent the week end I
Dallas with Mr. and Mrs. Dud-1
iey Robertson and family, Mr.!
?*}d Mrs. Duane Robertson and,
Marilyn Joy Dawson, and Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne McFadden.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Hicks and
Son- Ronny, arrived here Tuesday
1° visit relatives. Mr. Hicks left
vdnesday f >r Chickasha, Okla.,
lr* assume his duties as manager
I'1 the J. c. Penny Store, after
'nK transfered from Colorado
City.
H-
i
feat
.
W*
V:
Hi
V
/- Cooper Review Photo
at«.no «»f li.etwupigsnen.......! ....... • ■
DEATH MESSAGE
IS RECEIVED HERE
Relatives in Delta County were
notified Monday of the death of
P. E. Webster of Roanoke, Va.
His death occured late Sunday
night.
Webster was the husband of
the former Pessie Meador, sister
of R. F. Meador, Klondike, and
Mrs. Ida Petitfils, Lake Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Meador and
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Anderson at-
tended the funeral Wednesday
and are visiting relatives in Roan-
oke, Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Harris of
Patrick Air Force Base, Fla., are
the parents of a son born Tues-
day, November 15. Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Harris
[and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hill,
Vernon. Great-grandmother is
Mrs. W. W. Garrison, Cooper.
I Gerald Williams has closed his
| Used Car lot on East Dallas, and
has accepted a position as sales-
man at Blount Chevrolet Com-
pany.
ers Association will sponsor a
Wild Coon hunt here on Novem-
ber 25 and 26.
The event is expected to draw
hundreds of people from a radius
of 200 miles from Cooper. The
last such event sponsored by the
Coon Hunters of Delta county
was tabbed a tremendus succes.
Entry fee v/ill be three dollars
and trophies will be awarded for
first and second places. Prices
will be given for third and
fourth places and ribbons will be
given the cast winners.
Coon on log and coon in log
will be held Saturday 1 p.m.
There will be open trailing
hounds only and mountain music
rules will apply. Dogs must hunt
feet every man, woman, and child
in the state.
Some of the problems are tense
and troublesome. Others are com-
monplace.
One of the most important
items to be covered at the meet-
ing will be the necessity for re-
quiring complete documentation
before amending a birth record.
Without such documentation,
Carroll says, birth records lose
some of their value as evidence.
Birth certificates are routinely
called for a prove a person’s age,
parentage, and citizenship.
So confidential is the nature of
vital registrations that all em-
ployees of Carroll’s office are
sworn to secrecy about the de-
last night to qualify. There! tails of their daily work. Even
will be coffee and eats that will
be sold on the grounds.
Those who attend have been
told that camping areas will be
provided and plenty of free park-
ing space.
jects this year. Barron is a
attend ET next year.
senior student and plans to
Mrs. Jim Adair was admitted
*4 t f m/trll/iol
(to Janes noepiuu mi *•*'-"----
treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Blount
and sons, Ronnie and Larry, are
making their home at 341 W. Ft.
Worth Street in Cooper, after
moving here from Big Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. McKinney
attended the TCU-Texas U. foot-
ball game in Austin and visited
rolofiv«»c in Copperas Cove last
weekend.
discarded correspondence is spe-
cially burned, rather than being
hauled away with regular trash
collections.
Other problems to be discussed
are methods of which Texas pa-
rets who adopt children born in
other stat -s or foreign countries
can get birth records for the
children, how delayed birth cer-
tificates are handled, amend-
ments to death certificates, and
the cause-of-death querying pro-
gram for the forthcoming year.
Registration officials planning to
attend the seminar should inform
turbance on the public square
earlier in the evening. The arrest
followed after a race between the
Indian youth, who was attempt-
ing to drive his car off the square
and Sheriff Bledsoe who had to
run the car dov/n afoot.
The robbery was reported
twenty minutes later v/hen the
victim was brought to Cooper by
Sterling Rattan, a Cooper Citizen
who had driven to the Cedar
Creek Community to carry a
passenger in his cab. The arrest-
ed youth admitted his part in the
robbery after being identified by
the Paris man and forty-five min-
utes questioning by local officers.
He was released Wednesday on
$1,000 bail.
Following the confession, Sher-
iff Bledsoe placed a wanted no-
tice with the Department of Pub-
lic Safety, Austin, for the other
party to the offense. He was not-
ified by the department Wednes-
day that the Oklahoma man had
been apprehended by Longview
officers. He is being held in jail
following his return here by
Sheriff Bledsoe the same after-
noon.
The victim stated that he had
gotten the Oklahoma man out of
the Hugo, Oklahoma, jail late
Saturday morning when the lat-
ter promised to work for him as
a truck driver and that they had
gone then to a beer tavern south
of Hugo where they met the In-
dian youth. He stated that the
three of them spent most of the
afternoon in beer taverns in Okla.
and that he was then taken to the
scene of the robbery and made to
lie in a ditch while approximate
ly $80 was taken from him.
other bands to march in th
cade. They are Sulphur Sp
Commerce, Wolfe City,
Grove and Gibbons High in
Pattersons Catering Servic
provide sandwiches for the
bers of the visiting bands.
The Mitchell Grenadiers,
team from ET in Commerc
again appear in the Christm
rade here.
Some floats have already:
entered in the parade and
of the churches and the
sterial alliance will enter
ous floats for the occasion.
A speical feature which c
secured for the parade is
camels. However, members
Retail Trades Committee d
to have the fund drive foi
parade before a definite de
could be made in securin,
paying for the camel.
The Lions Club will p
candy for Santa to throw
kiddies.
Gaining the reputation f
ing the best parade in Nori
Texas, the Delta Chamber
mas parade is expected to
3,000 people this year.
The 5 p. m. time was set
able more people to be in a
ance on December 2. The
route will be announced at
date.
M. I .Moss returned to his home
in Sulphur Springs Tuesday after
being a surgical patient at Janes
Clinic and Hospital.
attend tne seminar snouia uuorm R. D. Roderick underwent ma-
Carroll by writing to the State | jor surgery Tuesday at Janes Hos-
Department of Health in Austin, j pital.
Delta FFA Boy
Enter Contest
Deport and Pecan Gap
Farmers of America
members led Paris Distric
teams competing in Paris
vember 10.
The contests qualified
for Area VI competition i
phur Springs November 1
Winners were Deport,
Hopkins and Cooper, in t
der, in the FFA Quiz, and
Gap, West Lamar and De
Chapter Farmer’s chapte
ducting. Deport team m
also will be represented i;
chapter farmer skills and
hand chapter skills.
The high scoring Depo
team included Charles
Max Scaff and Alvin West
Darrell Burne
Mineral Is Hel
Darrell Burnett, seven
old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Burnett, Dallas, formerly o'
re, died Sunday in Memnr*
pital, Dallas.
Funeral services werr
Monday at 4 p. m. in the
bley of God Church,
conducted by Rev. Helms
McDonald Funeral
made interment in the
Cemetery.
Survivors, besides his
are one brother, Sammy,
grandparents, Mr. and
| E. Mobly, Ridgeway,
'Junn tiurneu, Danas.
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Stringfellow, Richard. Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, November 18, 1955, newspaper, November 18, 1955; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth980161/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.