Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1944 Page: 2 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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FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1944
FAGE TWO
THE COOPER REVIEW
COOPER REVIEW
m. D. HART A SONS, Publishers
ghat door south S. W. corner
-Telephone 86.
„»ared as second claw mat-
at the post office at l.oopcr,
under the act ot* Cougre:- ,
felt*!, 1879.
""^Request for changes of address
Mut be accompanied by both
,r and present addresses.
"subscription rates
> year .............. $8.00
months -------------------------
months bit
The address label on your
■ shows the time to which
jMur subscription is paid. Mon-
Say, January 1, 45, means that
TOur subscription expires on the
ftrst day of January, 1945.
simply make the best terms
they cati and then prepare
for another try at world
domination.
Premier Chamberlain fore-
saw the sacrifice of millions
of lives if Hitler insisted on
this war and even humiliated
himself and his nation trying
to persuade the war-mad
Germans from carrying out
their designs. The war is
now nearing its end and
America stands in about the
same position she did in 1918.
Uncounted millions of people
have died and the world is
bandkrupt. Shall this sacri-
fice be for naught. Germans
COON CREEK
BY JOE W. CANDY
A charge of $1.00 will be j
awde for publishing obituary no-1 must be controlled. Let s not
tices and lc a word for card of |
thanks.
No charge is made for publi-
cation of notices of church ser-
vices or other public gatherings
where no admission is charged.
Where admission is charged or
Where goods or wares of any
kind are offered for sale, the reg-
alar advertising rates will be
charged.
lose the peace.
AN OPPORTUNITY FOR
INDUSTRY
WEEKLY BIBLE THOUGHT
"If any man stumble not in
Word, the same is a perfect man,
able to bridle the whole body
also.”—Ja. 3:2.
TO GUARANTEE
OPPORTUNTIY
The CIO Political Action
Committee, with its instruc-
tions to canvassers to call
on every home in a given
area, should suggest some-
thing to industry.
For instance, what has
CIO to sell the people that
employing industry has not?
After it is all said and done,
At this writing we are back on
the job doing business in the
same place. 1 am eating this
fetch-taaed light bread again
and when I sit down to my lunch
of two sandwiches staring me in
the face, they look like they hail
gone through a depression on 4c
cotton. 1 never fail to think of
all the tine dinners 1 had when 1
was up home—and then back to
this. It sure makes you get dis-
gusted with war production and
high society, but you can’t have
a good thing always.
* « * * «
This is the hottest place down
here I have been in in nearly 100
'years and 1 often wonder how it
would feel to be cool again. We
had a seven inch rain down here
not long ago and my, my how I
would enjoy another one just, like
it right now. People all over
town have beds out in the yards
and sleep out there aad about
day-light, mornings you can do a
little scouting around and see a
funny looking comedy—they go
scouting around to the house,
but you had better be a little
careful that they do not see you
watching them. I haven’t yet
watcihed anybody—1 just have
the other fellow’s word for it I
haven’t slept out in the yard
yet and I am not going to, be-
cause I snore pretty bad, they
say; and I don’t want anybody
messing around my bed out in
the yard in the night to see if I
an dying.
0 * * * •
Although war has forced
this nation to adopt many
or the workers. Without
. . . , „ . private industry, there would
principles of those govern- u n0 need {or uniona
I saw a woman with a six
months old baby and it bail on
heavy woolen moccasions and
. , , .i ,, . . . the little thing was so hot it was
industry provides the jobs about t0 die T wanted to ask thae
If'
TIME’S A-COMIN
Mrs. Luther Champion, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Mc-
Graw, route 3, has at last heard
from her husband, Pvt. Luther
S. Champion. It is supposed he
sailed around May 23 and land-
ed safely July 5. He is some-
where in India. He said he en-
joyed his trip across and didn’t
get sea sick. He said he would
really be glad to get back to the
good old U. S. A-
Little Lyndol and Hubert Mil-
lard of Fort Worth and Bonnie
and Willie Young are spending
two weeks with their grandpar-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Millard,
of Cooper.
W. F. and Mary C. Anglin of
Irving and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
1). Wood of Sulphur Springs vis-
ited in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Tke following aro candidate*
in tho second Democratic pri-
mary, Aagast Mi
For County Clorkt
BERTHA EDWARDS
O. L. BRIDGES
For Aneiior-Colloctori
G. W. (Bill) MORGAN
OCIE E. MILLARD
For Public Weigher, Pro. 1 dk 8;
J. L. (Lain) MoGUYER
S. W\ (Seborn) CRUMBLEY
For Commiaaionor, Pro. 3t
J. L. CALVERT
T. C. WILHITE
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Poe were
in Dallas Tuesday buying mer-
1. H. Anglin over the week end. nhandise for their store.
NEWS ITEM - MOMflER or reDERAL GOV-
f EliNMEMY CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES MAS CiWOW.M
■r , , flZOM 800.000 IN LATE 20 » 1t> MORE
*■' ' • m*N 3, i'OO. 000 1
• OTTliO UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY *Y **
PARIS COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. PARIS, TEXAS
merits which seek domination
of their peoples, Americans
firmly believe that our Con-
stitution is the best instru-
ment yet developed for re-
conciling government by ma-
jority with the rights of in-
dividuals.
But if our constitutional
liberty is to be maintained
and
thousands of well paid union
officials. Totalitarian coun-
woman why in the
she j
was causing the little thing to'
suffer that way. Poor little babies
have to suffer untold agonies
many times because their sylish
mothers think it is terrible to go
out in public bare-footen—but
, . , . . , , , , (when they get to be about 16
tries do not tolerate labor J years old. they will go out in
unions. You don’t strike un-: ini,)lic with not enough clothes
, ,, . I on to pad a crutch,
der a Hitler or a Mussolini i * * * * *
WRIGHT PATMAN
WEEKLY NEWS LETTER
— CONGRESSMAN — TEXAS—*
The Home Front
A 1944 victory in Europe
would ease the 1945 tax burden.
Out of 175.000 casualty notices
sent out by the War Department,
only about 20 have failed of
eventual delivery to relatives.
to face a
! Prime contractors will begin cut-
Mv greatest^ regret In having hacks the day Germany surrend-
ers. Consumer goods will be
available in limited quantities 60
to 90 days after August 15.
Mustering-out centers, for a per-
will prob-
unless you wish . _____
... . , to come down here was having to
j t iring squad. put on my shoes—I did enjoy
If labor is wise, it will do I cro'n,ff barefooted up there so
much. When I first got home, my
!oet were so tender l almost had i iod of care and rest
| nothing to undermine tho
future of private enterprise, jto frawl> but before l left, I!aliv he established
I could ‘bust ’em’ just like ' ‘
control of communications.
Looking Toward Victory
Germany is weak, restless, war-'
weary, hopelessly defeated and j
knows it. She is simply holding
on, hoping to salvage her whole
hide as in 1918. The allies no
longer care whether the Nazi
generals revolt or not, because
they have the power to destroy
them anyway. In France, we are
moving down the Seine Valley j
toward Paris with the German
if
it would
in Dostwar C6rtain current \ i • j ♦ • • ( OU‘(* uufl cm just like back, By the urniv service forces. It is I ' “ V u tu*
in postwar, certain tuirtnt , And lt industry IS Wise, it in the old days. Old country life I not'necessary to advertise for I mean 'nYai,,on el$ewh*”‘ T t
tonHDnfiDss rrmet Vuj . • • i iw a., t.....i______ •*. . nuL 11 . saury > siH.pmnt.PiI nnrerp of Hitler by
tendencies must be reversed, i vvjjj be aggressive in seeing 1 ls. h;.uvl to beat, however, it has! lost ration books before replace-! relult/of'a'stdit
One principle rigidly to be :that its story is told in every | '\u-yoTl “iSreak of°Titte!Ssii! art‘. ! between
maintained is that the con- possible way to every citi- ritrht down ^the middle. ‘
atitution be amended only ini F it .... I frpe en_ ' T. , ‘ ’ * * ' , resale profiteering. incentive!
.. • , , . t. zen- Mee la001 anu 11 et el- ; The da-v we left home therei payments to farmers to save
the manner provided in the - ■ - ” -— — -J *- ■ ■ ■ -1 1 •'
A
Sinclair P.D. Insect Spray rates
Grade A. A. in killing flies, mosqui-
toes, moths, ants, roaches and bed-
bugs. Every batch is death-tested on
live insects to make sure it will kill
and not just stun. P.D. is pleasant
to’ use and will not stain when used
according to directions. Try it.
him and his military |
".rsEt!«™,.b0»r beaten, '“'ii!::;!I
peace terms are ready and pi on-1
'a se- ’[
The day we left home i payments to iarmers ui save i •
-- ■ t err, rise can only rise or tall i "l‘ye "agon and truck loads of j muchly needed alfalfa and clover \ s . n
constitution itself—never by together and it is foolish for ' he 'f!I!l0''S In '' inn.shorn that, ,-.(>eds will he made by WFA. Only ! ;'!'f f ‘tl ’ China will not li«-
executive and leKialative fiat i Z | % | ^ “
IMH
E. J. McKINNEY, Agent
Phone 344, 345 or 378
or judicial interpietation. f]estroys the other.
The tendency to take powers _
from the states and concen-
trate them in Washington
should be abandoned. Con-
gress should abolish the
will
temporary
be retained pei--
HOT WEATHER POPS
CORN
! like that, but it looks like a gov-
! eminent smart enough to start
| forming and winning a World
War in two years, could manage
_ We have often heard stor- 1 to get a few watermelons to
power of bureaucrats to con- jes about weather becoming j [v°Jksa'! ht°,,nrf?„n~ A!’6,1?’ hovvover’
! lav, they were
I cents a pound.
i XVU , , r , e (^ea^ or nf*w deal j the war, soy beans will be used
lould take hold of a situation | tor rice to shower newly weds.
four and live j permanently in government ser-
1 do not know | vice after the war. Until after
trol the lives and a tivities > iS0 hot that it popped the pop-
of citizens by means of Mi- COrn in the field, but we were
we are tending to the Japs and
In the post war decentralization
of industry, the South will make
a bid for one big auto manufac-
turing plant.
The War At A Glance
Hitler promised a ruined Eu-
Germans first and when we have | 1 °i,u
if defeat
impended—we
rectives.
always skeptical of it. This i termelon.
finished with them, we will a]j! promised a ruined Hitler if vic-
sit down and have a slice of v.a-1 tory ,impended. Indiscriminate
The founders of the consti- | week we have proof that this
tution proposed to guaran-jean occur. The weather has
tee opportunity, as well as j been soaring around 100 to
liberty, to the individual. Op- 105 and the temperature
portunity will prove a reality , reaches much higher under
in postwar only if we estab- certain conditions,
lish conditions that result in Uncle Rufus McGuyer
jobs and better living stand- brought an ear of popcorn
ards. We must understand j to this office which had
that over any period no group i many grains that had popped
can be prosperous unless jopen at the top. He said that
other groups also prosper.1 fm .stalk had fallen and the
We must see the necessity of {ear was near the ground
encouraging competition, of where it was evidently hotter
preventing monopoly and than had it remained
special privileges for man- right.
up-
agement, labor,
or investor.
agriculture
We would not
lishing this if we
risk pub-
did not
The sound formula for na- j have the ear of corn on ex
tional progress is the power hibit. It may be seen in our
and dignity of the free man, j window,
shaping his destiny by his
own self-reliant efforts.
Paper is one </i the critical-
ly short items of the nation,
and the government is re-
questing that each commu-
nity redouble its efforts to
gather waste paper for ship- ! sphere solidarity,
mont to the mills. Mrs. 0. G.
lanes, with aid of the chil-
Ircn from the Presbyterian
Church, have been gathering
waste paper in Cooper and
.Taking monthly shipments
this summer, and the Boy
Scouts have announced that
they will gather paper for
shipment. Our people will no
doubt cooperate in saving
waste paper if they are sure
someone will gather it up to
meet the emergency.
ten to Japanese peace terms
short of return of every foot of
her soil, all loot and rehabilita-
tion payments—because we are
close enough and powerful
enough to *et them for her. We
are six months ahead of schedule
in the Pacific. Japanese peace
feelers after the fall of Germany
will be ignored.
What Consumers Want
A survey by the government
apparently proves that the Amer-
icans with a backlog of spending j
power will not go on a wild buy-
changed greaHy thVpost ing spree as formerly thought. A
mr.it of Germany. The Majority of families will con-
tinue to use the goods they now
have, waiting for newer models I
Pp’I and for prices to adjust them-I
i selves to a peace-time level. This I
indicates the transition from a I
period of scarcity to a period of J
If
I
mm
I
mm
use of the robot bomb on civil-
ians has
war treatment of Germany. The
German’s love of war is match-
ed only by his readiness to quit
when beaten—as in 1918.
litical opportunists in South!
America, Nazi inspired, are try-
ing to start a series of revolu-
inr.s to distrupt Western Kemi-
Naziism and
Fascism plan to go underground
in Argentina in a warm nest to
: pawn their evil in a new world
two decades later. 'The Germans
are fighting in France only to
hold their robot bases—while
threatening England with some-
thing more terrible. Japan, 1,500
miles from Saipan by a B-29 su-
perfortress. will think another
‘Son of Heaven” has turned a
volcano down on her when hit
by our 12,000 pound “quake-
makers.” German soldiers at
fiont do not know unrest at
home because the Gestapo
fei
fe:
m fj
#•>
|,CI IVH ui .-v u, v, .u .. .«>. I I ^ V
plenty will be orderly. The things]
in f/gwlt
isl
a#
WHAT ABOUT THE
PEACE?
All indications are that
<Jermany will fall within the
next few weeks, but what
then? We have before us
some articles published in
1918 in which it was stated
that Germany was stripped
<*f power, and already some
well-meaning but misguided
people are cautioning against
being too harsh with the Ger-
man people after the war.
Well, Hitler has not fought
tkl« war by himself, he has
had the backing of most of
the German people, with
whom war is a business, and
If they are defeated, they
The President’s negro con-
trolled F a i r Employment
Practice Committee has sue
ceded in forcing eivqioy-
ment of eight negro street car
conductors on Philadelphia
tram system and the pro*
testing strike that hampered
war effort was promptly put
down by the U. S. army.
President’s negro controlled
committee announces that
its directive to employ ne-
groes in Chicago and other
places have not been resist-
ed. Deplorable as strikes
are, especially these caused
by racial meddling during
this war crisis, this does serve
to prove that the South is
not the sole offender of the
negro and his political or-
ganization in this country.
Red Cross Supplies
New Blood Factor In
Combatinsj Measles
Blood contributed by Ameri-
cans to provide plasma for the
armed forces is the source of a
new extract for combating
measles, it was announced by the
American Red Cross.
The blood derivative, called
gamma globulin, has been found
effective in preventing and mod-
ifying the disease, and will be
made available soon to civilians
without cost.
The new blood, by-product is
salvaged from the residue with-
out reducing the amount of plas-
ma or serum albumin processed
from the whole blood for treat-
ment of wounded men.
The derivative will be released
by the navy within the next 60
lays for disrtibution to public
health agencies under the super-
vision of the American Red
Cross. Physicians will obtain
their supplies from the pnblic
health agencies.
consumers want most are
this order: new homes, radios
lectrif irons, electric ranges, re-
frigerators, vacuum cleaners,
washing machines, alarm clocks,
and automobilse. Little sales pres-
sure or advertising will be need-
ed until consumer demands have
eon pretty well satisfied.
Mrs. Luther Champion has re-
turned to the home of her par-
ents. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Mc-
'Iraw. route 3. after a six weeks
'•isit with relatives in Timpson,
Nacogdoches, Mineola and New
has1 Orleans, La.
In Years Gone By
A Review Of The Past In
Cooper And Delta County.......
Attention, please—B’t and C’s! You are
now eligible to buy new Grade-1 tires, with
certificate. Get the MOST ior your tire dollar!
See us ior the BEST tire made —
Hardy’s Sinclair Service
NOW AS ALWAYS I
good/Vear
DElWERS ■
mom Miimoe
Thousands of users who have driven this new
tire millions cf miles with complete satisfaction
consider it practically equal to pre-war tires!
| Now. as always, it pays to insist on the PLUS
^VALUE buiit into Goodyears — PLUS VALUE,
developed through more than 29 successive
years of leadership — PLUS VALUE, passed
on to all Goodyear buyers. Come in today —
see this new, great
loader —get its full,
oxciiing story of
First Quality!
THE KIGH-MELEAGE
TIRE
There has
CJ&asified Ada Get Resaita.
Taken from the files of the Cooper Review.
TEN YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
Oscar Anderson passed away at his home early Tuesday morning
after a two weeks illness.
Cooper golfers marked up their sixth straight, victory Sunday
with a count of 18-3 against Farmersville.
The city water supply is getting low but not acute yet
been quite a drouth since last April.
TWENTY YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
W. J. Fisher, who has been visiting his daughter, Mrs. W. C.
Waggoner, of Dallas has returned home.
H. W. King has resigned as director of the Delta Band. (’has.
Naylor will direct rehearsals until a director can be located.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Morrill returned home Saturday from Waco
where they visited his mother.
THJRTY YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
The Delta County Medical Society held its August meeting Mon-
day, August 3, and the following members answered roll call: Drs.
F. K. Woodruff, T. M. Darwin, X. L. Burgess. 1). O. Lowry. I). R.
Westerman, L. D. Wood, W. A Wood and C. C. Taylor.
Judge J. N. Viles attended the convention of county judges at
Dallas this week.
Rev. R. L. Owen has returned home after holding revival meet-
ings at Blossom and Elder, Texas.
FORTY YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
Dr. P. Worley of Enloe transacted business in Cooper Thursday
and reported quite a bit of sickness in and around Enloe.
J. R. Albright, Chester McKinney, Courtney Lf$nbcth and Ran-
som Garrard left Monday for the World’s Fair,
E. D. Dummnn and H. D. Wynn left this week for the Northern
i markets where they will purc'-^s*- r/mr chan disc for the Ratli<r Morrill
Co.
It’s got to be GOOD
to b« a GOODYEAR
Hundreds of onginoon. chem-
ists, physicists and othor special-
ists are busy full tins in Good-
ysot's groat nsw Research Lab-
oratory. host equipped la
industry. Their work has sno
constant aim-TAKE TODAY'S
BEST AND MAKE IT BETTER.
if AN OFFICIAL TIBI INIflCTION STATICN #
]H. HMDl’S SINCLAIR SERVICE
axil
BEN WATSON. >Jgrr
Phone 345
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Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1944, newspaper, August 11, 1944; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth983731/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.