Cooper Review. (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1918 Page: 14 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 20 x 12 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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THE COOPER WEEKLY REVIEW FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1918.
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Uncle Sam s Liberty war chest needs filling again!
We have the cash to fill it as many times as he lifts the
lid.
There are only two horns to this dilemma—you are
either a patriot or a traitor.
The men on the firing line and on the battleships have
turned from business, home, mother, wife, children, and
they stand ready to give their lives and shield with their
bodies us who remain at home.
We are unworthy to be thus protected, if we do not
do our utmost to sustain them.
We must be one in our determination to win this war.
Wp are traitors to the cause for which they are giving their
lives, if we do things here that make their efforts harder.
Life is not worth living unless there is something to live
for. Life would not be worth living if that bunch of
Heinies should wip.
That is why they cannot win. That is why we cannot
lose.
What a mountain of crime God. has on his books against
that horde of Hellish Huns. What grave is deep enough
Buy Sends
*y REV. WILLIAM A. SUNDAY
for this thousand-armed, thousand-footed, thousand-head-
ed,'thousand-horned, thousand-fanged pirate of the air,
assassin of the seas, despoiler of the earth and ambassador
of Hell!
The army and navy will dig the grave, but we must fur-
nish the spade.
Our boys will soon hang crape on the door of the Pots-
dam Palace, and the bands will play Yankee-Doodle and
Dixie along the Rhine and in Berlin.
Uncle Sam is the cactus in the Kaiser s pillow.
Our boys have gone over to clean up on that fool bunch
of Huns and it is up to us to supply them with whatever
they need to finish the job. It takes money to keep the
' riveters riveting, the sawyers sawing, the machine guns
spitting bullets and the grub wagon always on hand with
the eats. T here is nothing too good for our brave de-
fenders.
Our \ ocabulary contains no words adequate to express
our approval of the achievements of our government since
we threw our hat in the ring. We are rich on top of the
ground; we are rich under the ground and our rivers creep
like silver serpents to the seas, bearing our products.
WE WILL NEVER STOP UNTIL GERMANY DIPS HER DIRTY BLOOD-STAINED RAG TO THE STARS AND STRIPES. IT’S A
WHALE OF A JOB WE’VE TACKLED, BUT WE CAN AND MUST PUT IT OVER. BUT YOU MUST HELP. DON’T WHINE. DON’T
KNOCK. YOU CAN’T SAW WOOD WITH A HAMMER.
Buy Bonds
— Sspt. 30th
This Space Contributed to Winning the War by
COMBS & WILLIAMS CO
LAKE CREEK, TEXAS
H
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Cooper Review. (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1918, newspaper, September 27, 1918; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth981788/m1/14/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.