Cooper Review. (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, October 11, 1918 Page: 4 of 8
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1. A. Hutchison m
Writes From France
t
American Expeditionary Forces.
Auk. 25, 1918.
Mrs. W. S. Slough, have a bakery here that bakes 2 mil-
Dear Sister and Family—Since I lion two-pound loaves of bread daily,
wrote last we have moved about 300 You people back there can’t imagine
miles from where we were, had a tine what our Government has done until
trip and saw some pretty country. ><*u take a trip across France and see
France is a very beautiful place. They yourself. I did not think there
have some of the finest gardens you was 80 niuch stuff in the world. I don’t
ever looked at and they are well kept, know how long we will be here but
most of them are worked by women we might be located here permanently.
*nd old men. We have a better camp We are about 80 miles from the front
here than the first one we were in. lines. 1 really don’t know or don’t!
We have nice barracks, hot and cold feel like I’m in war but might before j
shower baths, electric lights and plen- ** 8,over
ty to eat.
than they were back in the States. , .
We have plenty of jam, syrup, butter everything, have
and our bread is wonderful. They
In fact our eats are better You *"*57 have^plenty ‘of
me ___„____„___ ,
2 big Y. M. C. A’s.
here and they furnish us with plenty
of good reading matter and have
shows every night except Sunday and
have church service twice on Sunday.
Your brother,
SGT. L. A. HUTCHISON,
Co. B, 48th Engineers, American
Exi>editionary Forces, France.
-Buy Liberty Bonds-
M. G. Ellis has accepted the prin-
cipalship of Minter High School.
SUNDAY WITH
THE CHURCHES
•mpi^
bowels i
trouble
it.
ANNOUNCING THE ARRIVAL OF
4 BIG SHIPMENT OF FILL SUITS. COATS AND CRESSES
A
EVERY
MISER
HELPS
THE
KAISER
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As a matter of fact these new garments have just come in by
express from our New York buyer, and therefore show the very lat-
est styles of the season. It would be impracticable to attempt to de-
scribe them here, but you will find every desirable style sanctioned for
the season s wearing represented in the showing. This occasion is
worthy of a special trip to the store for we doubt if there has been
seen in Cooper this season a showing combining such smart simpli-
city, such beautiful effects and such moderate prices.
The New Suits are priced $20 to $69
The New Dresses are priced $15 to $45.
The New Coats are priced $12.50 to $65. ____
AYOtV
cwSjthis store is
ip
ifigSp
I
Ipr...
, MIL--.
'W
V '*•£
Hose—Stylish and
Serviceable
HEADQUARTERS
FOR MIJNSINGWEAK
The cool weather reminds us
is time to buy heavy under-
ear. This store has exclusive!
yJj igency for Munsing Union[
Suits and two-piece garments in,fe>
Delta county, and our stocks of®
garments in all weights, for
Men, Women and Children are
ready for you. If you are not
already a satisfied Munsing
■
i: Sr
■>
111! I
\\
These fine dressy IKON CLADS j|
will suit the most fastidious, and give ||Wear customer,
good service too. Then we have |f|
qualities in sturdy cottons and lisles ||,
for every day use, which are built "
for wear, but which look fine as well.
When you buy IKON CLADS it is
not necessary to sacrifice wear to style
or vice versa.
let us union
suit you this fall and \vc guar-
antee you will wear no others.
Prices no higher than the or-
dinary kind, $1.00 to $2.23.
Strong and Elastic
They must he both to be fit for
lively boys and girls. It takes a
lot of strength to withstand a
boy’s hard wear, and stockings !:j
cannot he made stronger than f
IRON CLADS. The fine yarns |
used insure elasticity and com-
fort.
We have different styles
at a variety of prices
GEORGETTE BLOUSES $5.95
The georgette crepe is of a
very soft texture, but the man-
ner in which the styles here are
brought about is the most inter-
esting feature of this group.
Some of the new ideas have a
single large button which fas-
tens at the front just below the
collar and which is very novel,
fluffs are interesting.
ulfVrange of colors.
OUR MILLINERY DEPARTMENT IS FtATURIHG A OEAiiTIFOL UE OF
HATS AT $5.00
We have just unpacked several express .shipments of charming Fall Hats which
come just in time to fill the places made vacant by recent sales. Some of these hats
show striking new ideas, for quite a number Qf entirely new models have made their ap-
pearance for Autumn. Black Velvets, Beavers, Felts and dressy hats of Satin are in the
assemblage, and you will be agreeably surprised both as to values and individuality of
these new Hats.
18 Years Delta County’s Leading Dry Goods Store.”
M. E. Church. South,
gong—Holy, Holy, Holy.
Sunday night’s program:
Invocation—Rev. Wright.
Song. .
Scripture reading—Rev. Bounds.
Prayer—Rev. Horton.
Our School Problems in C ooper
Prof. Newton. , , _,
4-Minute-Men—Revs. Wright, Hor-
ton and Bounds.
Everybody conic.
ooo
Baptist Church
Don’t forget the services at Baptist
church Sunday.
Sunday school 9:45.
Preaching 11 a. m. _
There will be no service at night as
we all expect to worship at the M. E.
church. PASTOR,
ooo
Presbyterian Church
Sunday School 9:4->.
Preaching 11 a. m.
Session meeting 3 p. m.
Christian Endeavor 7 p. m.
There will be no services at night
on account of the union st-ruce
M. E. church.
-Buy Liberty Bonds-
Enloe School Open-
JNO. D. GARRARD:
3
ed Monday
Prof. J. I. Moreland who recently
moved to Enloe where he will super-
I intend Enloe school this year, was in
The Review office Saturday to get a
supply of report cards. He stated that
! school would open Monday with bright
| prospects . The community’s first ly-
eeam number was well attended on
Wednesday night and on Friday night
a get-to-gether meeting was held at
the school building which was well at-
tended with much interest. Rev.
I Bounds of Cooper was present and
took a prominent place on the pro-
gram.
-Buy Liberty Bonds-
Charlie Smith Writes
From the Trenches
•' ,
. jp
"w
Ever
IF YOU FLAN BUYING A
SWEATER. TAKE OUR AD-
VICE AND BUY ONE
NOW
As you have probably learned,
the United States government
has decreed that sweaters in the
_ future or at least after October
Wmh'' j 1st, 1918, are to be made from
50 to 65 per cent cotton and
manufacturers will be allowed to
make up sweaters only with the
actual amount of yarn they have
on hand.
We have purposely purchased
a very liberal quantity of all-
wool Sweaters and if you care
to own an all-wool sweater now
for the next year, buy one today.
Priced $6.00 to $16.50.
Somewhere in France, Aug. 28, 1918.
Dear Grandma. — We are in the
trenches. I am down in my dugout.
You would call it a cellar. I think
we will rest for 20 days when we leave
here, don’t know. Are there many j
boys leaving Cooper now for the train-
ing camps, and have they raised the
draft age? We have been almost all j
over France and England since we j
landed. France is a pretty country in |
places and some places don’t look so
good. Step over some morning and I |
will let you take a look over No Man’s
Land, see the barb wire entangle- j
monts, etc. I picked some dewberries I
this evening and got the cook to make
me a pie. I was out in the trenches ______
roaming around and run into the nic-: ...
est patch of dewberries you ever saw, sure going to be .Id here this winter
-o I got out on the parapet and picked Will I am about 8 et‘P n°w> I w
my bat full. First pie I have had quit, J have thref'iore houi s to sit
i since I left Texas. Now believe me
it was fine, it tasted like the pies you j
j used to make.
Grandma you used to ask me when J
I was at Camp Travis if there was !
' anything I wanted, I would like to |
I have some heavy yarn socks and a
'body's Attention
has been called to the remarkable
fuel saving secured with Cole’s
Original Hot Blast Heaters.
Coal ^prices are soaring—why be a slave
to an extravagant heating plant or stove
that is a demon for fuel.
Join nowin the great army of
satisfied users who have found
relief from high fuel bills
with the great fuel saving
COLE’S Original
Hot Blast Heater
Burns cheapet coal clean and bright. Uses any fuel
Everybody^ searching for a way to save fuel
and foot. Here’s your opportunity to
cut yoir coal bills square in half and
gain a perfectly heated home as
we'. Investigate now. Our Store
m is Fuel Savers Headquarters.
No. 112
Kiyi'
and I can go toied and sleep a bit.
SGT. CHRLIE L. SMITH,
Co. E, 359 I, American Expedi-
Mrs. F. M. D.'ia i3 critically ill in a
sanitarium in Jr’is.
--Buy "berty Bonds-
A farmer fpi Vasco, Delta county,
j,j | his twelve-year-oid son. who had
up bought a bicycle from a neighbor and
i heavy wool sweater, something that I came to
|------
Pariaesterday in search of
hand it charged to his father, and had
left home. Officer Kuykendall assisted
him in the search. They found him
at the market square, where he was
sitting contentedly on a wagon and
his bicycle was leaning against it.
Ilis father took him back home.—Sat-
urday’s Dinnerhorn.
Il
& uoas <
Few people rdize the gravity of the fuel
situation. The feeral government through
its fuel administers for each county, has
warned and is ectinuing to warn the people
the great dangein defering to purchase the
winter s supply! coal.
Industrial iants are limited in their sup-
ply utilizing skk and lignite as substitutes.
One greareason why the government is
so anxious fo/ou to get your supply early, is
that later all U cars will be loaded with traffic
both ways vvle hauling off the crops and re-
turning withoods.
Now wle it s convenient to supply your-
self at a snrFer cost, to prevent congestion of
traffic latent your coal.
For storage capacity only a limit-
ed supply11"1 be kept in stock and when the
present sP^Y ls exhausted, we have no as-
surance fitting more.
Frc the standpoint of economy, get
coal; frmthe standpoint of patriotism get
your fu and last, you owe it to your family
to pro5e it with a supply sufficient to insure
comfo^uring the cold bleak days of winter.
- have now on hand several car loads
of tfpest grade of coal, but it will not last
long We urge yo uto buy Now—Save Cost.
item Lumber Co.
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Cooper Review. (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, October 11, 1918, newspaper, October 11, 1918; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth981131/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.