Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, December 2, 1932 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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE COOPEIi REVIEW, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1932.
v>’
*
#av
FELIX RIESENBER6
C
UUBGOilRT
MALI UP
-is
V %
^ ^ V
Sixteenth Instalment
ilarceny against a few lucky simpletons
[who bought l\u're the upward trend
SYNOPSIS: . . . Johnny Iirccn, to ycan.|ot war. With the advent of St. James
old, who hail spent all o! hn> bn- aboard a [ and Kailtoul, anil toe ill.lux of iullovv-
:in»money*cameaclas>;‘ ar<1 dash-
•xwt on which he, hif mother ati<l the man
Jbc called father, were living. 11c is the only
survivor, struggling through the darkin
•Lure. . At dawn, amid surroundings en
Cuely unknown, his life in *scw \ oik begins.
LJnablc to read, knowing nothing of life, he
Jewish family, living and
to read, knowing nothing of Inc
-
«io«n.-; a second-hand clotlun; business »>n the
liowery. . . . From the hour lie set foul in
•the city he had to fight his way through
against bullies and toughs . . . and soon he-
£4ioe so proficient that he attracted the
.attention of a would-be manager cn lighters
<<wlio enters him in many boxing tournaments
. It was here that rug Malone came into
____ (m
young llreen’s life—an old fighter who was
square and honest He took Breen under
liis wing —sent him to night school and « \
illy took him to a health farm he had
tualiy
The scene shifts and the family
Van Horns of Fifth avenue is introduced
. Gilbert Van Horn, last of the old family.
gs a man about town, who meets Malone and
Broen at one of the boxing shows. ... Van
Horn has a hidden chapter in his life . . .
wrhfch had to do with his mother’s maid, years
.ago, who left the family when about to
fcecoirm a mother. It was reported that she
parried an old captain of a river ciaft . . .
Sfan Horn has a ward. Josephine about
Breen's age. . . . Van Horn, now interested
an John . . . prevails upon him to let him
Hittnce a course in Civil Engineering at
Columbia University. . . . John and Josephine
each other, love
^.Oismuia umvcisivy. . .
Mil become attached to —...
prows and they become engaged shortly after
Breen graduates from college. . . . Josephine
ftias another suitor, a man of the world named
fUatoul. . . . Josephine became resiless as
John Rives full attention to his job and sails
for Paris to select her trousseau. ... At the
last moment Kantoul sails on the same boat.
At sea on the return home the great
ocean liner crashes into an iceberg and sinks
--all passengers taking to the lifehoats. Van
Worn perishes but liantoul saves himself—
with Josephine. Preen learns that (.ilbert
-Van Horn was his father. Back home, Josrph-
«ne returns Breen's ring and marries Kantoul.
Johu, stunned, buries himself in his work
and rises rapidly.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY.
Almort Strauss, cabling from Paris,
arged John Breen to continue the work
of Colfax:
You have never met me, but I know
and have confidence in you. We must
*iot despair, no matter bow dark the
night We must go forward wherever
wut -«e our way or where we feel our
waj Planning must continue so that
later on we will know what to do.
John Breen didn’t know what to do.
Safety—the mime itself gave security
—began to soar and touched a point
where the stock could not be bought
at any price. Five hundred d >ilars a j mentioned it.
share was offered but few were wise | engineering,
enough to sell.
Rantoul's new place at Southampton,
bought lock, stock, and cellar from a
(ierman dye man, tinder suspicion and
therefore subject to forced sale, ap
have been across too."
John Breen had departed for the war.
John had no particular desire to fight,
or to live. His utter carelessness, as is
often the case was set down as trans-
cendent courage. He was decorated
with tile Croix de Guerre. A month
later lie forgot it somewhere, and never
’ He concentrated on
"John has been wounded.” Marvin
Kelly met Josephine in the St. Botolph.
The war was on its last legs. John had
survived. "He’ll probably never get
” \ look of great
back to the front."
peared in pictures in the Sunday papers, i concern came into Josephine's eyes.
fc
s;r
V, /
xs.
4
%i
I
m
i
mm
JMMt
Max Schmeling, former champion,
is the best heavyweight on the fistic
horizon today, say experts, as the
result of his victory over Mickey
Walker Champion Jack Sharkey, to
whom Max lost the cr*vn, must give
him a return battle or retire, say
these same experts.
Get our prices on new and used
furnture before you buy.—Home
Furniture Co.
How One Woman Lost
20 Pounds of Fat
2S>
M
m
‘‘Men hung at her elbow, bent over her, pursued her with the intensity
of wild infatuation."
It was a very elaborate place and be-
came the scene of the famous Allied
Fair, the great open air charity fete
under the management of the notor-
ious Fulgenct Torpillier. the Society
........................ — Ace. Seventy-five percent of the money
The pay he was getting was necessarv [taken was clear profit, for Torpillier.
U only the insatiable city would calm • But Josephine, in very becoming
llown How it tossed and squeezed and i frocks, things with the new military
misused its people.
* * *
“And they’ve pinned a few incaal* on
him, the Croix de Guerre.” be added
That night Josephine dressed in som-
ber black, her blond hair gleamiaj’.
Collar and cuffs of fine white 1-r pat,
her the severe air of a very hi*r;i class
domestic; a simple gown, close fittinr
and expensive.
When the youth, Mitchel, was over-
whelmed by the myth, Hylan, when
the shaky city was being pounded
hourly by rumors, in that time when
shipping and men and dollars mingled
in red carnival, Josephine Kantoul
tplurged in a splendid orgy of waste.
She even made money, and site demon-
strated her ability to spend it.
The war carried Gerrit Rantoul into!
firmana! whirlpools where lie navigated
with much skill. Munitions specula-
tions sent his star to dizzy altitudes,
shot Fir- upward on a rise of values.
Rantoul, at last, was many times a mil-
lionaire.
Rantcwl, at a dollar a year, also
served his country while his New York
nSwr.. in Pine Street, burned with ac-
tivity At the very beginning of the
wild time, a Russian Commi* ion,
headed by a Grand Duke and carrying
gn 'unlimited credit, fell to the wiles
?f 'lorephine. A neoteric cult to which
she nftae ribed included several Rus-
»ians, w!h«.. in return for lavish enter-
tainment, (inducted the Grand Duke
.and :hi: advises to the genial atmos-
ffr-Lit v>f St. Botolph and the tender
mercies of the great St. James. Ran-
-ou.l after this killing, in w'hich
Josephine felt she held a charter in-
fere.^. fell into the expanding schemes
»6 Cerngt 5>t. James.
I Ahy ost without trying, and because
?oscphine. ‘“Clever, you know," he
found himself on the inside in Shell
'Consolidated a fifty million dol-
ar combination of enterprises previ-
Tusly defunct. Tri-Nitro-Bullion also
’Ktgan the erection of vast explosive
nvrarks in New Jersey, manufacturing
an unstable compound with great ■
rapidity as its chemists learned the
tmainess, in quantity production tests.
Rantoul, who took on a strange ficti-
tious importance, was made Chairman
of the Board. Tri-Nitro soared to
dizzy heights with the booking of
further Russian orders. Josephine did
much to reconcile Gerrit Rantoul for
!her marry annoying traits. Tri-Bull, as
ft was called on the curb, led Rantoul
into the picric acid pool, a sweet bit of
ibusiness engineered by St. James.
Sf. James, swinging Rantoul with
tiim at the head of a (froup of the more
Airing newer men, bought a fleet of
lake steamers and founded the world
(trading corporation of Jason, Fill-
more, and Jones, with pretentious
offices on Broadway. This firm was
-lamed after three likable chaps in bis
Gerrit, I’m going across. I feel it
effect, dawn gray, and sky blue, car- . my duty.”
ried on her flirtations with an ever Then the armistice uproar swept the
widening effect. She felt no fidelity greater city, the floodgates of relief
among admirers; she never made the deluged the avenues and cross streets
fatal mistake of being bound up in with flying ticker tape and scraps of
Lost Her Prominent Hips—
Double Chin — Sluggishness
scribed tract;
Thence N. with W. B. line of said
tract to center of Sulphur creek;
Thence W. with the meanderings
of said creek to a point due N.
from the place of beginning.
Thence S. ito place of beginning,
containing in 'both tracts 14<) acres
of land more or less. Less 25 acres
of land deeded to H. C. Grass lit
1896 of the west end of the latter
described tract. Including all of
the above described land which lies
within the boundaries of Fannln-
Lamar-Delta Levee Improvem nit
District No. 3.
That on the first Tuesday in De-
cember, A. D. 1932, the same being
ing the 6th day of said month, at
the court house door of Delta Coun-
ty, in the City of Cooper, Texas,
between the hours of 10 a. m. and
4 p. m., by- virtue of said levy and
said order of sale, I will sell said
above described real estate at pub-
lic vendue for cash to the highest
bidder at the property of J. B.
Miller.
And in compliance with law, I
give this notice by publication in
the. English language, once a week
for three consecutive weeks imme-
diately preceding Said day of sale,
in the Cooper Review, a newspajrer
published in Delta County.
Witness my hand this 10th dav
of November, A. D. 1932. r48
C. H. HENSON.
Sheriff, Delta County, Texas.
JOHNY McKEE, Deputy.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF S SALE
Gained Physical Vigor—
A Shapely Figure.
any one man. Poor Rantoul, chanting
his little private ditty, at times casting
lecherous eyes at bold telephone tarts,
girls who looked upon him as a pros-
pective sugar papa, to employ terse
terms of the time, nursed a burning
jealousy. The sad part of his prediea
ment was his real love for Josephine,
based upon nothing but futility.
The splurge she made, the bills she
ran, the countless worthless followers
who rode in his cars, drank his liquor,
ate his food, began to tell on him. Men
hung at her elbow, bent over her, pur-
sued her with the intensity of wild
infatuajhn. Then things began to get
a little out of hand. St. James, in the
process of squeezing bag holders,
nipped Gerrit Rantoul for a million; it
was a start. Josephine had jilted St.
James. Then Tri-Bull was condemned
by the Government as unsafe. The
Army would have none of it. The
Navy refused even to use it in depth
bombs. It was reported as an unstable
explosive. Gerrit Rantoul lost heavily
in Tri-Bull, finding himself possessed
of most of St. James’ holdings, ex-
changed for value before the had news
seeped through that the stuff was
worthless. It was one of the little for-
gotten tragedies among the big men,
well behind the front.
The expensive apartment at the St.
Botolph had been succeeded by a more
lavish suite covering two floors of the
new Du Barry. A super-flat with pri-
vate elevators and exclusive service, an
expensive nest bordering on the eastern
edge of Central Park. Poor Rantoul
fairlv groaned when he began to realize
the drain of this establishment. He was
w'orn down by his excitement, irritable
through his worries, and Josephine,
spending his money and banking her
ow n, rode on the necks of her admirers.
What a flaming time of lurid patriotism
it was* In the great hotels, foremost in
the vast entertainment for charity
Josephine lived on high. It was at this
time that Cloissy evolved his famous
scent, Parfum Josephine!
* * *
Judge Marvin Kellv. white, ruddy of
face, still the solid substantial figure of
unshakable integrity read the lists of
causalties in the club, the same club
where he had so often sat with his
friend, Gilbert Van Horn. The old
paper. The town was wild, crazy. Jose-
phine, in a becoming uniform of olive
drab, with a shiny Sam Browne belt,
sailed from the scene of her triumphs
leaving a trail of bilts and an army of
domestic servants to the tender dispo-
sition of her aged spouse.
Judge Marvin Kelly, as trustee of
her private fortune, smiled aj the com-
plete and thorough manner in which
this very capable and practical woman
had built up the resources of the for-
tune of • an Horn.
Mrs. Wentworth left for Kentucky.
"Thank heaven, for a rest,” she said.
"When you see John, give him my
regards." Judge Kelly had approved
certain arrangements as to real estate.
"Dear Marvin, how lovely of you to
think of him.” She kissed the solid old
sachem, and was gone.
Gerrit Rantoul, always the gentle-
man, to all outward appearances, took
her to the steamer and then turned
back to the city to survey the wreck
That cur St. James, was a rotter.
Jason, Fillmore, and Jones, a paper
company, was on the edge of complete
disintegration. Gerrit Rantoul strug-
gled like a Christian to ‘tnload his
stock on others before the inevitable
crash.
The Southampton place went at a
sacrifice. The luxurious apartment in
the Du Barrv followed. Rantoul could
hardly keep ten feet ahead of the
wolves.
“Old Rantoul’s on the run." The
word was on the street. His credit
evaporated. By the most desperate ef-
fort he saved a few thousands, here and
there, and by moving bark to his fra-
ternity club, a rather stuffy place, with
college trimmings, he managed to hold
his own in the city. One thing he did not
do. He never cried for help. He might
be a coward, a quitter, a rotter, anti
all of the things people thought of him
but he never shouted for assistance
from his rich wife.
“Damn her?” Gerrit Rantoul hated
Josephine. Hated her so he could not
find words to express his aversion,
Yet, v. hen at last a letter came iron
her, he trembled, trembled, as he tort
it open, and cursed her.
Dear G. I have just seen John. Ti-»
dear boy looks so splendid in his ur.i
form He is so fit and brown and ha-
completely recovered from his wound
If you’re fat—first remove the
cause.
Take one half teaspoonful of
Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot
water in the morning. To hasten
results go light on fatty meats, po-
tatoes, cream and pastries—in 3
weeks get on the scales and note
how many pounds of fat have van-
ished.
Notice also that you have gained
in energy—your skin is clearer—
you feel younger in body—Kruschen
wild give any fat person a joyou.J
surprise.
But be sure it’s Kruschen—your
health comes first—and SAFETY
first is the Kruschen premise.
Get a bottle of Kruschen Salts
from Hooten Drug Co. or any lead-
ing druggist anywhere in America
(lasts ‘t weeks) and the cost is but
little. If this first bottle doesn’t
convince you this is the easiest,
SAFEST and surest way to lose fat
—your money gladly returned.
althokiy.iod i»y state ok
TEXAS
Board of Insurance Commlxslou-
era or the State of Texas, Austin.
Texas, Feb. 4, 1932. To whom It
may concern: This is to certify that
Umpire Insurance Company of Tcxus
B. 1. Jordan, secretary, Odd Fellow
Bldg., I’arls. Texas, has according
to sworn statement complied with
the laws of Texas as conditions
precedent to Its doitiK business in
this state, and I have Issued to sale
company a certificate of*. Authority
from ‘.hi* olllce entitling it to do
business In the state for the year
ending February 28, 1933.
Ulvcn under my hand and my
seal of office at Austin, Texas, tfce
date first above written. W. A.
Tarver, chairman of the hoard.
mm «.K> ..nee .ovooio cops Avenue hnfl seen many stirring, ..
effic’. The issue was listcJ on the | mnrehes. and the day when the great [ He js in ans with a commission, .u.
Gics-k i- xchange and skyrocketed from (Liberty Loan Parade swept up the Ave- I engineering expert He says taat ri •.*
<lhe 'tart. The world was hungry for nue he had marched. But his eyes IlMft. A“Wpn Stf»uss, liar, them ■
,1 Ll.irte .ti.l nrn . IaaIoJ tin, /./U.«»viri e .if tilli.irr. . foT IliTTI I 111 11 rC Of it. AlmOO otiJU.S
zeniu it lapped up stocks and pro-i looked down the columns of killings. I ^,nr
. i . c,......i r .. I., r.... .t.___I i i: , . i .L. i _4 ... i- . _ t ■ the man
<lttccd profits, and fought for the priv
siege of giving away its money.
Rut St James’ greatest achievement
•was Safety Submarine, selliit" on the
curb at ten, with few buyers, while
Jobbers washed the stock in nettv
down the lists of the lost, the lists of 'th<’ ™n V™ onr.e a,m0.st *ot 'nter.-ster
wounded, and then he found it.
John Breen. Major, 11th F.nginecrs.
Wounded at Argonne Forest
‘‘Poor Gilbert, f can almost feel Jure
here. looV<mr at this hut no. 1'«
in th >se Peruvian fni.ies. John is
her id he has the Croix de Cue"
lovelv ribbons.
Next
l» ff <• <• •> •> •> •!• •> •> <•
* MILAM NEWS *
c- <•
^ •>
Some people are still pulling bobs
Mrs. J'm Absire was shopping in
Oooper Saturday.
Rube Toon and family visaed in
Okirksvtde Sa.turda • ani Sunday.
The Sunday School is .nttll grow-
ing
ttorace Stanley and wife were
shopping in Cooper Saturday.
Mrs. Will Thomas ir. improving
slowly.
Ci.athe Brooks an1 family spent
full ay with Edd Shot!eit and
f.’l ‘ v.
Miss Mattie Coston of Enlott
spent Saturday night and Sunday
with Beatrice Austin.
Gordon Williams of Charleston
visited Mr Austin Friday night
M-s. Murray h’S gone back to
Cooper to speu 1 .1 while.
Mrs 13ro:ks and Mr*. Box canned
turnips and potatoes Wednesday.
Charlie Cant-e.l and family mov-
ed Monday into one of Mr Pat-
terson’s houses.
GUESS WHO.
--<3X&~<t,-
NOTICE OF SITERIFFtS SALE
Notice is hereby given that by
virtue of a certain ordler of sale
issued out of the Honorable District
Court of Delta County, Texas, on
the 10th dap of Ncrvember, A. D.
1932, by J. T. Taylor, clerk of said
court, for the sum of four hundred
fifty and 26-100 ($450.26) dollars,
with interest thereon from the 19t.h
day of October, 1932, at the rate
of 6% per annum; and costs of
suit under a judgment in favor of
Fannin-Lamar-Delta Levee Im-
provement Dkstrict No. 3, suing as
plaintiff ui»n the relation of The
Exchange National Bank of Tulsa,
Oklahoma, and' Pannin-Lamar-De’.-
ta Levee Improvement District No.
3 suing in its own right and behalf,
in a certain cause in said cou.-t
No. 3402, and .styled Fannin-Lamar-
Delta Levee Improvement District
No. 3 vs. J. B. Miller, placed in my
hands for service, I, C. H. Henson,
Sheriff of Delta County, Texas, did
on the 10th day of November, A.
D. 1932, levy upon certain real es-
tate situated in Delta County, Tex-
as, describedl as follows:
Situated in Delta County, Texas,
a part of the S. G. Chandler Hd.
Rt. survey; beginning at Wynn &
Donaldson’s S. W. comer of S. B.
line of said Chandler survey;
Thence north 127.1 poles a stake
on the S. bank of Sulphur River;
Thence in a N. W. direction with
The State of Texas, County of
Delta.
Notice is hereby given that by
virtue of a certain ordler of sale
issued out of the Honorable District
Court of Delta County (62nd Judi-
cial District), on 10th day of No-
vember, 1932, by the clerk of said
court, for the sum of twelve hun-
dred and sixty-four and 50-100
dollars and costs of suit, under a
judgment, in favor of Newman
Phillips, in a certain cause in said
court, No. 3371 and styled Newman
Phillips vs. Mrs. Lottie Hargrove,
and placed in my hands for service,
I, C. H. Henson, as Sheriff of Del-
ta County, Texas, did on the 11th
day of Nov., 1932, as commanded
in said writ or order of sale, levy
upon the following described real
estate, described in said order of
sale, bo-wit:
Situated in the town of Cooper
in Delta County, Texas, particular-
ly described as being the west 1-2
of Block No. 14, as shown in the
original or old town platt of the
town of Cooper, which properly is
commonly and generally known as
theHargrove property, and levied
upon as the property of Mrs. Lottie
Hargrove, and that on the first
Tuesday in December, 1932, the
same being the 6th dav of said
month, at the court house door, of
Delta County, in the town of Coo-
per, Texas, between the hours of
10 a. m. and 4 p. m., by virtue of
sc id levy and said order of sale. 1
will offer for sale and sell at pub-
lic vendfue, for cash, to the high-
est bidder, all the right, title and
interest of the said Mrs. Lottie
Hargrove, in and to .said property.
And in compliance with law, I
give this notice by publication in
the English language, once a week
for three consecutive weeks imme-
diately preceding Said day of .sale,
in the Cooper Review, a newspaper
published in Delta County.
Witness my hand, this 11th dav
of November, 1932. r48
C. H. HENSON.
Sheriff, Delta County, Texas.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
Mr. and Mrs Jess Jones moved
to the residence known as the Dr.
Charles Ellington property on East
First Street. Mr. and Mrs. E, L
Knight will return from Dallas and
occupy their residence.
See our Klingweave hosiery, now
59c.—Economy Shoe Store.
the meanderings of said creek to
the W. B. line of the original sur-
vey;
Thence south with said line of
145.1 poles to the S. W. corner of
original survey, a stake;
Thence E. with S. B. line of ori-
ginal survey 64.3 poles to the place
of beginning.
SECOND TRACT—Situated1 in
Delta County, Texas, part of the
Miles Piland Hd. Rt. survey; be-
ginning at C. C. Miller’s N. E. cor-
ner a stake;
Thence E. with the N. B. line
of the F. Chaffin survey a stake
the S. W. comer of the above de-
Notice is hereby given that by
virtue of a certain order of sale
issued out of the Honorable Dis-
trict Court of Delta County, Texas,
on the 4ith day of November, A. D.
1932, by J. T. Taylor, clerk of said
court, for the sum of nine hundred
twenty <fe 89-100 ($920 89) dollars,
with interest thereon from the 4th
day of October, 1932, at the rate
of 6% per annum, and costs of
suit under a judgment in favor
of Delta County Levee Improve-
ment District No. 8, suing as plain-
tiff in a certain cause in said court
No. 3404, and styled Delta County
Levee Improvement District No. 8
vs. Francis Rivnd,, et al, placed In
my hands for service, I, C. H. Hen-
son, Slier!ff of DeHa County, Tex-
as did on the 5t’i day of Novem-
ber, A. D. 1932, levy upon certain
real estate situated in Delta Coun-
ty, Texas, described as follows:
The following described property
situated, lying and being in the
County of Delta and State of Tex-
as, viz:
Being parts of the John D. Mil-
ler survey, Patent No. 243, Vol. 31,
and the John Darrell survey, John
D. Miller, assignee, and known as
the old E. H. Miller homestead and
more particularly described as fal-
lows:
Beginning 228 varas north and
144 varas east of the S. E. comer
of the John D. Miller survey which
point Is the N. E. corner of a 12-
acre tract deeded to T. E. Miller
by J. F. Alexander, Oct. 5, 1900, as
shown in Deed Book 2, page 209;
Thence north passing C. L. Mil-
ler’s S. W. comer and continuing
north with Miller's W. B. line in
all north 730 varas to the S. E.
corner of a 31-acre tract sold to
T. E. Miller by E. H. Miller, De-
cember 27, 1887, as shown in Deed
Book P, page 597;
Thence west with T. E. Miller's
S. B. line and passing the E. B.
line of the John D. Miller .survey
at 144 varas and continuing west
with the S. B. line of Miller's 31-
acre tract and 35 acres, in all west
527.5 vnra.s to the E. B. line of the
John Hamilton 553 acre survey;
Thence south with the E. B. line
of said John Hamilton .survey pass-
ing Its S. E. corner and contnnlng
south with E. B line of T. E. Mil-
ler's 37.5 acre tract in all south 955
varas, a stake in the 8. B. line of
the origin-1 Miller survey, which
point is the S. E. comer of T. E.
Miller’s 37.5 acre tract;
to the S. W. comer of T. E. Mil-
ler’s 12 acre tract bought of aj.x-
Thence north with Millers W.
B. line 228 varas to his N. W. cor-
Thence east with the N. B. line
of Miller’s 12 acres 263 vanas to
the place of beginning, containing
75 acres, more or ’ess. Including
all of the above described land
which lies within the boundaries of
Delta County Levee Improvement
District No. 8.
That on the first Tuesday in De-
cember, A. D. 1932, the same being
the ah day of said month at the
court house dcor of Delta County,
in the Citv of Oooi>er, Texas, be-
twen the hours of 10 a. m. and
4 p. m. by virtue cf said levy and
said order of sale, I will sell said
above described real estate at pub-
lic vendue for cash to the highest
bidder as the property of Francis
Rvnd and Charles E. Rynd, and in
ccmolitnoe with law, I give this
notice by publication in the Eng-
lish language once a week for thr'e
consecutive weeks immdiately pre-
ceding said day of sale in the C°°'
per Review, a newspaper published
in Delta County.
Witness my hand this the 8th
day cf November, A. D. 1932.
<r48> C. H. HENSON.
Sheriff, Delta County, Texa3.
By Johnny McKee, Deputy.
J. W. Maynard, who has be*nj[
patient at toe Cooper Hospital fo*,]
several weeks recovering iroa^f
major operation, is able ta be out!
again.
+++++♦♦*♦♦♦♦*^
Keep Smiling
Health Will Do it J
See your Chiropractor '♦
H. Lindsay Wright
CHIROPRACTOR
+ West First St. Phone 226 *
* Cooper, Texas ( +
OSTEO-PATHY
B. A. HARRY
Osteopathic Physician.
At 1302 Monroe Street.
—PHONE—
Day 367 Night 428
COMMERCE, TEXAS
5li
/
/'
FOR YOUR OLD
LAMP on LANTERN
Bring in your old lamp or lantern and walk
out with a brand new, latest model Coleman!
For a limited time you get $1.50
trade-in allowance on your old
lamp or lantern.
Take your choice of the stand-
ard Quick-Lites (match generat-
ing) or the new Roto-Types
(instant lighting). Either model
assures you the finest kind of
lighting service at low cost. All
Coleman Lamps and Lanterns
make and bum their own gas from
regular untreated motor fuel.
fi=
Coleman
LAMPS
Quick -Lito Model C329,
Regular Price $6.95 • •.
NOWS!
ONLY
with your eld lamp
or lantern.
SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER
THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE COMPANY
WICHITA, KANS. PHILADELPHIA, PA.
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. rtTIMQ
TTIV-Ml I RAlia
CHICAGO, ILL-
Fire, Tornado, Wind, Hail
In fact Insurance of all ki nds
except “BAD”
Let Me Show You One of My Special
ACCIDENT POLICIES
BOB FOSTER
Telephone 19, Ratliff Bldg., N. Side Square
The P’s
MAKGAR
Thence end, with the S. B. line
of said original survey 264.5 var ’.s
J. F. HENSLEE
North Side Square
Cooper, Texas
-A full line of-
HARDWARE, LEATHER GOODS, WIRE, NAILS,
ETC. OLIVER AND MOLINE IMPLEMENTS,
HARVESTING MACHINERY
Repairs for all standard make implements
Hay Ties-
Binder Twine.
Steam Cookers and Sealers.
IRON ROOFING IN ALL LENGTHS
Seed Oats and Baled Hay
A STOCK OF USED CLOTHING AND OVERCOATS
AT UNHEARD OF PRICES.
SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY.
T( achers
Mr. and
Miss Scott,
Vernon of
Texas Statf
m Port War
formation
departments
one ^tnjo'cd
High
Mary Ver
Hlarry
Henson
jorie Bltdsc
Are
Last wen
end we all
something,
ior, said
had holiday
have to
he dreamed
Mr. Irons
Wednesday
said he i
not drop
Well, her|
hard on
stage Frldif
me, people
be grand'.
Miss “Clo
come Frid
Junt
Mr- Iron
ior boys
noon aftei
baskatball
boys were
18 to 5.
think his
ball even
He still
that you
is ewnectei
on, the sc
watch foi
find out
when the
play Liik.
temoon.
The So
nesda.v to
[lowers,
30tt, ou
business
with us.
poned
Thursd1
and selei
their c
their flo
the rockc
to
Fvery
their re;
Chlce
stitch.
Verna
ends of
Mrs. Ir
the pillo
A fre:
the sum
Da rid
exohang
eept Ch
iMtozei:
to tore!
Wede
study
Mss
aglish
Wayr
dred or
Bryce
Keitii
Clovt
spell
Ila
Louis
home.
Mlair.1
with
Laur
notes
Who
Johnsc
and
with
v
We
this
c,f Co
have
gain.
Mrs
retu.n
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, December 2, 1932, newspaper, December 2, 1932; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth983915/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.