Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. [1], Ed. 1 Friday, January 3, 1941 Page: 2 of 5
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AGE TWO
THE COOPER REVIEW
WRIGHT PATMAN
'Uta^&Uu.vU ;
—
FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1941
TODAY AND
TOMORROW
DON ROBINSON
LEGISLATION
glamour
COOPER REVIEW
W. D. .HART & SON, Mrbhshers
W. D. HART LYNDOL E. HART
Pirst door south S. W. corner square—Telephone 86
Entered as second class matter at the post office
st C ooper, Texa., under the art of Congress, March
[1879.
Request for changes of address must be accom-
panied by both former and present addresses.
The address label on your papei the time ririI ,a iu ....... (......j ..... ...............
fto which >"ai ubsc ription is pa -i’i,''.i" _ ...... aurvev of 360.000 of the 856,024 into going to a third rate movie, Mem* to have be
the^fiVst^day'ofHja^uary^lOj'o.1 1 ril>t,°n ITfar' distant as they might ap- families which had borrowed mon- conie extremely popular in Washington recently.
----- " pear. They will not only be de- ey from the FSA. The borrowers
signed to prevent strikes but also I increased their average net in-
from $375 before they
KLONDIKE NEWS
MRb. FROM A McRKIDL
TERRACING
War Situation tration has been reported by its
In our preparedness program, administrator, Mr. C. B. Baldwin,
changes in labor policy will
be The estimate was based upon a
A vicious practice of law-making, by which the
people are fooled into favoring legislation in very
much the same way that Hollywood entices them
CHRISTMAS, 1940
to extend working hours. comes
America is one of the few countries, in all Many peopie in this country re- sought help to $538 in the crop
the world, in which Clhristmas was celebrat- reive much comfort from the fact >'t>ur I 'vol'> 1,1
ed above the eailth Here there were lights that Germany, with 80 million tinanl Lunuts "bu 1 )1>1I<>"1 —-----»—* ------- —, ............. — —.......- —
in windows, tall decorated trees in peaceful ! PW*S'ow”; L LZ Z>! “ ~ SSiZ* * ! £% t In“ St
come extremely popular in Washington recently.
In Hollywood, it a Greta Garbo picture turns
out to be u flop, the producers will play up the
fact that Greta, Garbo is in it and not say any-
thing much about the story.
In Washington, the idea seems to be to write a
lull that features something1 everybody wants and
KLONDIKE ...... -_______________________
[ Mrs. J. B. Allard, Mr. and Mrs.
Morris Allard and Marylou, Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer McCombs, Mr.
and Mrs. W. D. Hollon and An-
j l ie Jo and Eugenia and Cora
Blandon attended the wedding in
I Commerce Christmas Day of Miss
j Lavoniu Allard to C. B. Lewis, J.
K. of Cumby.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Moxley of
Grandview are visiting Mrs.
[ Claud Moxley and daughter, Miss
Irmajean, this week.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. White and
homes, on snow-covered lawns—the singinlg
of carols in tihe streets and the pealing of
bells.
In Europe, the joyous pealing of the
Christmas bellfc was silenced and only the
*hriek of air-raid warnings was heard. The
cheery flames of the Yule-log gave way to
blinding flares dropped by bombers. There
was no singing of carols in the streets and
only the deadly crash of exploding bombs
was heard. There were no holly-wreathed
candles in the windows. There was only omin-
ous darkness and deatlh thilsi year in Europe
during the traditional season of light
country of 40 million people,
when there is only a channel of
.■ate" 20 miles wide between them;
whereas, there is an ocean more
than 2,000 miles wide between
Germany and the United States.
Another fact should not be over- ....... ....
looked, however, and that is anltht-* rt‘sult of Physlcal lnabll,ty t0
ocean can become a paved high-
borrowed on 40 year terms and
for an interest rate of 3 per cent, ^ ^RDS
Speaking of the expanded
health program of the PSA, Mr.
Baldwin said: “The failure or
slow progress of many farmers is
way to our shores, rather than
such a great barrier, and, besides,
Hitler does considerable boring
from within, and the Latin Amer-
ican countries are not immune to
his stealth and intrigue. The sub- j
marine menace is the greatest I °f talking about a stiffer federal
and | peril now faced by Great Britain. ; income tax and excess profit tax
When Germany obtains control structure, but it will at least wait
for the March 15 tax returns be-
do a good day’q work, and the
failure to meet loans on schedule
lias often been due to illness or
to the expenditure of farm funds
to meet, urgent medical bills.”
Stiffer Taxei
Congress will do a great deal
armed people.
un-
That is the reason
life.
. ., . .... of a country, all the people in
In a million air-raid shelters, in a million , ^at country are required to im-
darkened cellars, in countless dank subway mediately turn in to the German
dormitories there were tiny singing of authorities all their guns, ammu-
Christmas carols—not beneath the stars, for t uition and other things that could
death was hovering tJhere. But deep in the ,IC usc<1 t0 flgrht Wlth- In thls
bohvels of the earth men sang, and their eyes , soldiers could a
were on their wives and children. And they whole nation 0f practically
thought of days past anjd days to come when
again there will be lights in windows, and
Yule-logs, and joyous pealing bells.
This year [in America the Christmas lights
on ooir trees and in our windows must have
shone more brigiitly, and Christmas bells
must have rung more loudly than ever before
and the sight and the sound of them must
have gone out over the land and across the
sea. They must have penetrated into the
deepest air-raid shelters in the remotest part [men will become of ago in 1941.
Of the 'war-torn world. Men and women must j Under present law they are not
have heard and must now remember that required to register as they be-
the good tidings, telling of peace on earth,
good will to men were promised to all the
peoples of the earth.
In our hearts aw in the hearts of those in
Europe the determination must become an
iron resolve to rid the earth forever of its
oppressors, of those who have enslaved and
persecuted, of those who have again unleash-
ed tlhe horrors and devastation of war
the peoples of the earth.
fore seriously tackling the prob-
lem of new tax legislation. This
means that it will be at least May,
possibly even later, before the
precise character of the 1941 tax
changes will be known.
President's Budget Menage
The President’s budget message
to Congress will probably be pre-
Right now there is a good example of this prac-
tice awaiting action early at the next session of
Congress. The bill is written by Representative
Jerry Voorhis, of California, who no doubt has
dropped in on neighboring Hollywood often to see
how things are put over out there.
The glamour, or front, for the bill is a propos-
ed tax on billboards.
Representative Voorhis knows that there are h
lot of people who don’t like billboards. He knows
that garden, clubs and women’s organizations are
always protesting against them. He knows that
legislation to curb billboards is popular. So he
writes a bill featuring a $1 tax on billboards.
That $1 tax won’t curb billboards, and the col-
lection from it by the government won’t amount
to a drop in the bucket so far as the Treasury ia
concerned. But there’s another glamour appeal
tied up with the revenue. It will be contributed
to our defense fund. 11/ will help to give us a
few thousand dollars of the many billions we need.
revolutions in those countries are sented January 4, Saturday, the
next day after Congress con-
almost impossible. It is possible
that the day will come in our own
country when we will cherish that
wise, sane provision of the Second
Amendment to our United States
Constitution which says, “the
right of the people to^ keep and
bear arms shall not be infringed.”
Another Registration Day
Approximately 1,300,000 young
The days of peace and good will toward
come of age, but they will be reg-
istered on a date yet to be deter-
mined, and have numbers selected
by lottery. Drastic changes in
the Selective Training and Ser-
vice Act are being studied.
Sinful Influences Banned In
Army
Mr. St.irnson, Secretary of War,
has selected a committee which ]
upon v.-ill attempt to curb sinful in- J
Ifiuences around the army’s can-j
jtonments. This group will be ex-
venes. It is expected to include
the following:
1. Detailed picture and revision
of the estimated spending figures
for the current fiscal year.
2. The President’s first esti-
mate for the 1942 fiscal period.
3. Outline the President’s de-
cision as to what additional taxes
should be enacited by Congress.
4. Will probably call for at
least a six billion dollar increase
in the national defense program
for additional bombing planes, for
air basest and for selective ser-
vice costs.
If the President demands furth-
er pressure for speed in the arms
program, a further bulge in
commodity prices will likely re-
sult.
CURB
purpose
But now let’s get to the point of Mr. Voorhis’
bill. The billboards are the thing you’ll hear most
about, but the real story is in another clause. That
clause, down near the end of the bill, reads:
“No deduction of advertising expense from gross
income shall be allowed in compuuting taxable net
income.” Advertising expenditures of less than
$100,090 are exempted.
This clause has nothing to do with billboards. It
applies to all advertising—advertising in maga-
zines, over the radio, and in newspapers. It means
that if a company shows a profit of $100,000, but
lias spent $300,000 during the year on advertising,
it must pretend that its profit has been $300,000
and must pay taxes on that amount.
The purpose is to stop big advertisers from
spending big amounts on advertising.
ADVERTISING
COlt
pected to see that the new citizen-
men will come again, but first the nightmare lsoldicrs ?Pt plenty of good whole-
of dread and deatlh must pass. Only then/will some recreation, such as movies
free men and women again come up out of >"<1 other diversions which the
the earth to walk freely and without fear, nrmy considers essential to what
singing through the streets. Only then will ........
the carols and the belis again l>e'heard. Only jarmy posts is not allowed. Social
then will Christmas again Ibe celebrated in life will be provided, and further
peaceful homes beneath peaceful jskies. educational opportunities will be
offered those who desire them.
FSA Borrowers Income Up
An average increase of 43 per
cent in the incomes of farm fam-
ilies which have received help
from the Farm Security Adminis- j
H. C. Walker was able to be
back at the Lamar Trucik and
Tractor Co. Wednesday after an
illness of several days.
Mrs. H. C. Henderson of Pon-
tatoc, Miss., is visiting her sister,
Mrs. J. H. McKinney.!
On first thought $100y000 might seem enough
for plenty of advertising. But when it is measur-
ed against the job that advertising attempts to do,
it is an insignificant amount for a large company Commerce, Mr7 and‘"Mrs.7 John
Mrs. W. D. Hollon and family Sat
urday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyle Robnett
and baby of the West were here
for a few days last week.
Mrs. Bryan Long was attending
to business in Cooper Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Robnett
are ill of influenza this week.
Rev. Orbin Harper is suffering
of the flu this week.
Rev. and Mrs. Sam Welborn
of Mt. Pleasant were here a
short while Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. George iPatterson
moved Monday to the residence
vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Foy Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis moved
Tuesday to the residence vacated
by the Pattersons. Mr. and Mrs.
Davis have bought this place and
will make it their home.
Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Toloson
have purchased the T. B. Wallaae
residence and are remodeling it.
Mrs. Til Hendricks and Mrs.
Viola Irvin were in Cooper Thurs-
day.
Mrs. Ada Nelson is suffering
from rheumatism this week.
It is reported that ten pupils
are absent from school on account
of the flu.
Mrs. Dewitt Sweat is a flu pa-
tient this week.
A. V. McCaleb is sick with the
flu this week.
The Baptist Church members
gave Rev. and Mrs. Harper a
pounding Wednesday evening.
NEEDMORE^
Mrs. T. E. Owens is spending a
few weeks in West Texas visiting
her father and sisters.
Visiting in the home of Luke
Moore during Christmas holidays
were Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Moore
of Horton. Miss Wylie Moore of
to spend. $100,000 spent to tell 131,000,000 peo-
ple about a product means an expenditure of one-
thirteenth of a cent on each person for a whole
year. No matter what kind oi' advertising a com-
pany did, it couldn’t attempt to tell 131,000,000
people about its products with such a ridiculously
small per capita expenditure.
Instead, if it attempted to got along on an ex-
penditure of $100,000, it would have to limit its
- | advertising activity to the cities where it could
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bailey ] leach the biggest number of people for the smallest
and daughter, Nancy, are visiting amount. In the country towns it would mean we’d
BUSINESS PROSPECTS GOOD
The Review greets its readers rwiit/h the
first issue of 1941. The prospect for busi-
nei s is good due to the huge expenditure of
Federal funds for armnament with conse-
quent price advances, bull there is evidence
this will be curbed by precautions against in-
flation. Conditions are set for much higher
prices in the future, but thlese prices will
probably not be sustained when the war
erlds, as the world nations will be prostrate
and our world markets, whidh have been
I Dr. and Mrs. 0. Y. Janes.
Mrs. Ora B. Anderson returned
from San Diego, Calif., where she
visited for ten days.
Mrs. Roy G. Cain, who has been
ill witlj influenza, is improving.
IN YEARS GONE BY—
A Review Of The Past In
Cooper and Delta County ......
stop hearing about new products, and new develop-
ments, so far as advertising is concerned.
Actually, whether the bill passes or not, most
companies couldn’t afford to cut down their ad-
vertising expenditures to l-13th of a cent per per-
ron. Instead, they’d spend more than that and
pay the taxes on it. But they’d spend less than
they do now—and that would mean just one thing.
Moore of Chiggerridge, and Mr.
and Mrs. John Adams of near
Commerce.
Miss Mildred May spent the
latter part of Inst week with
her brother and family of Green-
ville.
Mr. and Mrs. Obie Martin and
children of Roxton spent the
week end with Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Humphries.
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Weems and
family spent Christmas Day with
Mr*^ ind Mrs. J. R. Stooksberry.
Mr.' i.nd Mrs. Hershal Stooksberry
and children of Dallas spent Sun-
day with Mr. Stooksberry and
family.
Mr. and Mrsl Riley Humphries
and daughter, Lois, spent Sunday
ConJnucti From Rage One
winter legumes for soil-building
purposes. A. B. Carrington has
planted one acre of Early South-
ern Giant Bur Clover, and two
acres of Hairy Vetch. Mr. Car-
rington h?T5 plan red 4 rows of th/s
winter legume and skipped 4 rows.
He will plant cotton on the 4
rows skipped and let his olo’*^
and vetch grow until about Mt
when it will be turned under a .u
followed with peas or soybeans.
Then cotton or corn will be plant-
ed on these fertilized rows next
year, and the other 4 Vo * J will
receive the legume treatment.
In permanent pasture work, M.
Stubblefield, L. E. Foster, and
others have proven with demon-
stration that it pays to disc old
Bermuda grass pastures. The
Bermuda grass did much better
after having been disced. They
have also found that it helps to
mow' their pastures. It is esti-
mated that 250 farmers mowed
pastures during 1940.
The Land Use Planning Com-
mittee last year sponsored a co-
operative fruit tree buying pro-
gram. Through their efforts, 720
fruit trees and 1,850 berry plants
were bought by 52 different
farmers. This represented an av-
erage of about 16 trees and about
33 berry plants per farm at a
cost of $2 per farm. It is believ-
ed that most all farms can have a
small fruit plot for home use at
a very small cost.
Building plans for houses,
farms, poultry houses, and other
farm buildings have been furnish-
ed to 43 different farms.
The infestation of grasshoppers
was not so bad in 1940 as in some
other years, but with the County
Agent as a leader, about 14,000
pounds of government wet bait
was mixed and distributed to 58
different farms. A rat eradication
campaign was finished early in
1940 when 735 pounds of rat
bait was mixed and distriDuted to
600 different farms.
The Land Use Planning Com-
mittee, in cooperation with other
individuals, purchased a soil test-
ing kit for the use of the County
Agent. Tests were run on soil
samples from 54 different farms.
As a result of these tests, phos-
phate was added to about 20
acres of alfalfa. Commercial fer-
tilizer was added to about 70 acres
of land on eight different farms
in the sandy soils of the county.
These fertilizer demonstrations
gave good results. The big ad-
vantage of these tests was deter-
mining the amount of present
plant food. With knowledge, it
is easier to figure a better and
more economical fertilizer to
use.
Prices would go up. For the primary purpose of .with Mr. and Mrs. Willie Jackson
Taken from the files of The Cooper Review.
TEN YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
Grand jurors summoned to serve in the January term of District
lost by the war, will improve very slowly. It Court are B. A. Wilson, J. Will White, J. R. Lowe, J. C. Smith, Hen-
ii • evidently a good time to invest but not
safe to incur too much obligatiorts that may
have to be paid in years after peace.
ry Chesnut, Harve Morgan, O. Thomas, R. J. Jones, S. B. Scott, H. R.
Hicks, G. T. Anderson, J. A. Garner, F. J. Hettick, John Green, and
D. R. Black.
County officials who took the oath of office Thursday morning
were Claude Kinard, Jr., tax collector; Luke Robinson, tax assessor;
John T. Taylor, district clerk; B. B. Tynes, justice of the peacte; Jim
Watkins, constable; Jack Lemmond, commissioner, precinct 4.
Eleven boy received football sweaters at chapel exercises Wed-
nesday from Coach Ruddell. They are Opal Prcas, Raymond Ilagood,
Morris Balentine, Charles Collard, Bill Brackeen, W. S. Jones, Virgil
Robinson, Wilson Gray Houston, E. G. Pharr, Wilson Good, and
Choice Wickersham.
TWENTY YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
A Parent-Teachers organization, has been formed in Cooper with
Most of the Am'eirican people either at-
tended the final football gairrues or listened to
them over the radio New’ Year’si Day. Foot-
ball is the greatest amateur game of the na-
tion—a game in which it he best brawn, skill
and Iheads of the nation^ schools develop
their powers in the most grilling competi-
„ . .. .. , , i a few offices yet to be filled. The officers of the group have been
So far as we know, no other narionals play named as followa: Mrs FlowerS( prpsident. Mrs. Albright, first vice
football, but if they did, it is safe to predict president; Mrs. Townsend, second vice president; recording secretary,
that they would fail to measure up (to Amer. Miss Valine Hobbs, Miss Lillie Carrell, treasurer; Advisory Council,
Dr. C. C. Taylor, W. D. Hart, Dr. D. O. Lowery, and Rev. J. C. Me- |
Clain.
Grand jury for the January term of district court is as follows: J.
M. Yeargan, W. J. Hudson, L. R. Alexander, J. H. Marion, C. A.
Cockrell, J. E. Hammett, T. N. Landers, J. A. Fisher, Henry Click, B.
L. Oats, and W. J. Hardy.
__THIRTY YEARS AGO THIS WEEK *
The Italians referred to the British army
in Notfth Africa as the doomed BritiAh, but Viola Darwinf Gertrude Cox, Elise Walker, Mac West<£ Fay Rattan,
they mutft have meanlt daannjed British- ! Luc* Brackeen, and Ruth Stovall.
advertising is to increase consumption to the point
where mass production can be most efficient—to
the point where a product can be sold at the lowest
possible price.
You have probably read dozens of examples of
"bow advertising has reduced prices. Puncture-
sure automobile tires used to cost $25 to $40. Now
puncture-proof tires cost less than $10. Adver-
tising made mass-production possible. Mas.*} pro-
duction meant a better product at lower cost. The
same formula applies to radios, automobiles, elec-
tric refrigerators, canned goods, drugs products
baby foods, or most any thing else you can think
of.
There’s no doubt in most people’s minds that ad-
vertising leads to economy and quality. And con-
versely, a curb on advertising would mean less
sales, slower production, higher prices, and poorer
quality.
and daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith and
son, Wayne, spent Christmas hol:-
days with T. E. Owens and fam-
ily.
Miss Dora Kfttfcrryr; Miller
spent the Christmas holidays vis-
iting relatives in Commerce and
Cumby.
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Roark of
Century and Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
Mooie spent Sunday with Mr. t»id
Mrs. Joe Moore.
DELTA WOMEN
Co ./tinned from pace one
Jack Hagood is ill with the in-
fluenza, also his sister, Mrs. T. A.
Mosley, of Enloe.
Along with the making of the
garments the girls strived to im-
prove their appearance by im-
proving appearance of their hair,
nails, hands, skin, clothing and
posture. They built 32 clothes
closets and remodeled 28; added
10 sleeve boards, 15 hat stands,
21 shoe racks.
Some 200 families improved
food prpearation practices through
demonstration helps given on new-
est methods of preparing fruit
pies, fruit freshments, fruit cakes,
dried fruit dishes, fruit sand-
wiches, and fruit drinks.
Extension program of work in
the county during 1940 was be-
gun in January under the leader-
ship of Miss Genevieve Feagin
but on March 1, the present agent,
Miss Ellen D. Hooker, was ap-
pointed by commissioners’ court
to succeed Miss Feagin, who had
resigned tq enter Indian service,
in Oklahoma.
ican standards, as (they do in otfcher sports.
The syndicate that prohibits Uh*)
copyrighted songs over the radio has render-
ed the public a great service.
DISGUISE . . . undetected
The Voorhis bill ought to be defeated—but what
is even more important is to do something to end
the system which makes it possible for a bill to
gain popular approval by wearing disguise. It
makes it tough for us voters when we have to look
to see if legislation, complicated at its best, in-
cludes a set of fclse whiskers.
It wasn’t long ago that a price-fixing bill was
passed by Congress through the same kind of mas-
querading. That bill, known as the Fair Trade
Fnabling Act, was thrown out of Congress when it
first, appeared. Then it thumbed a ride on the
I ail-board of a bill that was sure to pass. When
t,he President signed that bill, the price-fixing
Appearing on a program of the Industrial Club at thg Cooper High hitch-hiker jumped out into the open and said, “I’m
School were the following students: Gladys and Haflfie Simmons, law.'”,
Let’s watch out for hitch-hiking legislat on from
now otu
C. A COCKRELL
INSURANCE
NOTARY PUBLIC
PECAN GAP — TEXAS
A. M Howse Son
One Day Service On
Photographers
Kodak Finishing
COMMERCE, TEXAS
Always glad to see our
friends from Cooper
and vicinity.
r t
Roscoe Grant, who has had
position in Corpus Christi, visit-^
ed his parents* Mr. and Mrs. W.
H. Grant, during the holidays.
’Vscoe has been transferred
Mineral Wells and left Tuesda
to begin his.wark there.
Beware Coughs
from common eolfc
That Hang On
Creomulsion relieves promptly be-
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender. In-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with the un-
derstanding you must like the way It
quickly allays the cough or you prt
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds. 6 ronchitU
PresStfl KElid
|e Christina* At [
Fine Succ
Sere was a heal
Itmas” program]
llethodist Churc
The church
lito cloth with
shing the main
songs appropria
n were sung 1
were dressed in
v. R. E. Porter
;sage of script]
1 of Christ. Missl
Marie Pickard gl
I of the “TrJ
. »>
the close of tl|
Isentatives of
py school clal
their orphanaj
llaccd them on i
just in front o|
|rmount given
of Waco is al
[Cochran, State!
en, Visits Pe«J^
B-- Cochran of
Warden, was
loon on offi<
.rappers or hu
tch animals u
the hides to
t are in dan/|
t and having
vg time in jail|
•e of running f
that all hunl
bom ply strictl
land letter of
remember til
lin Franklin,|
^st . policy.”
lap School
U. S. F|
I Pecan Gap
Inew United
on a tall flJ
| of the mainl
to our pat|
|lory” flying
Each Fridal
|apel exercise
truth, pridj
|verio*is patrl
ss Tommie
|Davis, etude!
ton are here T
lidays.
is White of
m Gap Tuesl
• Alfred cl
jcity the firs|
lonstration
JHome Demo
|has been m<
in each l
building, wi
f Mrs. H. T
muary 2. T
r great ini
d everyone
be present]
jj. M. Gillisl
Ihei sister, ^
jnday.
p.nd Mrs. C.|
In spent Surf
|nds.
R. E. Por
thodist Chu
Ihe sad mesj
his 1
who reside
rk.
K Morgan,
ps Univer.4
spend the
Ints.
|C. B. Garr]
Is in Pecaif
In.
Parker of|
i v..
jtall Pickard!
fcFerrin,
1. and M. C|
lchristmas
I people of t
fhe funeral
at. Coopei
rid Mrs. C
II are! her
holiday:
smith’s pi
I. Sockwel
frry Ch
few Year
|0 per cd
|t White
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Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. [1], Ed. 1 Friday, January 3, 1941, newspaper, January 3, 1941; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth983988/m1/2/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.