Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, April 14, 1939 Page: 6 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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PAGE SIX
THE COOPER REVIEW
FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1939
mazsCTric
*'
♦ *♦♦♦ + ** + + *♦
Family Reunion
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Moore en-
tertained a number of relatives
Sunday at their home one mile
north of town. Those present
were: W. T. Moore, Mrs. Carl
Moore, Misses Maggie and Vir-
ginia Mcore, all of Clovis, New
Mexico, Mr. und Mrs. Willie
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ftr-
rol and son, Mr. and Mrs. Elbert
Peterson and son, all of Waco,
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Brooks, Mr.
and Mrs, Jeddie Mosley, Mrs.
Annie Brooks, and Mrs. Julia Ha-
good, cf Cooper, Mr. and Mrs.
Felton Moore and baby of Tex-
arkana, Gaither Moore and fam-
ily, Mrs. Jonni© Vik>s,- lilrs,-3. J3-
Viles, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ha-
Sub-Freezing Storage
12 • Uw Temperature
with High Humidity Storage
CT"Sate^-*cn'
Prices Are Lower Than Ever! rv
It’s beautiful—it’s thrifty—it’s a bargain! Get
the inside story on why more G-E Refriger-
ators have been bought already this year dsas
in any like period in General Electric history.
G-l Selective Air Conditions place at your com-
mand different combinations of temperature and
humidity that provide the most practical low-cost
method of food preservation known today.
f LEADERSHIP IN VALVE ^
BRINGS LEADERSHIP IN SALES
a.
fyRi\
-"-*■** ...
Chevrolet is first in sales because it’s first in
styling — first in acceleration — first in hill-
climbing—and first in value in its price range!
Again the people of the nation are awarding Chev-
rolet first place in motor car sales!
And the reason they are buying more Chevrolets
than any other make of car is that this new Chevrolet
Hives them more of all the things they want in a
motor car, at lower cost.
Visit your nearest Chevrolet dealer today! See,
PERFECTED KNEE-
ACTION RIDING STSTEM
On Moitir Da Lux*
modsli orly
NEW AERO STREAM
STHING
Ntw loilies by Fisbir
NEW "OBSERVATION
CAR" VISIBILITY
World's Largest Picture to be Shown at Fair
Kill the Buss That Prey — Make Cotton Pay
By T. C. RICHARDSON, Secretary
Texas Breeder-Feeder Association
Cotton is, and should remain, in which we eseupe damage from
an important factor in balanced
agriculture on most Southwest-
ern farms. With good manage-
ment we will eventually make as
much cotton on the reduced acre-
age as the world will take. The
Breeder-Feeder program involves
better cotton yields through crop
rotation? and livestock* and tta1
cottonseed are indispensable t-*
good livestock feeding.
There is yet another way to
offset the smaller cotton acreage
and make more profit from the
cotton crop by increasing the
at least two or three of them.
Why not be prepared to fight
whichever of them shows up first
—and the others if they occur?
One machine of the right kind
and two chemical materials are
all that are needed for either one
or all the four principal cotton
insect! pests flea hopper, boll
weevil, boll worm and leaf worm,
weevil, bo)! worm and leaf worm.
Other methods and materials will
erve for one insect, but only a
good dusting machine is effec-
Saturday.
Mrs. W. A. Berry is ill at this
time with influenza.
G. W. (George) Mills passed
away at his home near Brown-
wood on Monday, April 3. He had
been ill for several months. His
brother, R. A. Mills, of this place
was unable to attend the funeral.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Mullins, Mr.
and Mrs. Merrill Davis and little
daughter, Maryvel and R. A. Mil's
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Ellis Matkin of Rodessa.
Mesdames Grafton Moore, B.
B. Viles and Paul Brown were
among those from here W'ho were
shopping in Cooper Saturday af-
ternoon.
Mrs. L. D. Berry and Mrs. Troy
Stockton attended the home dem -
onstration council meeting at
Cooper Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Will White and brother
who live1-, at Lubbock, are visiting
other relatives who live in Okla-
homa.
W. T. Moore, Misses Maggie
and Virginia Moore and Mrs. Carl
Moore, all .of Clovis, New Mexico,
are visiting J. A. Moore and fam-
ily.
Miss Ozell Beckham visited in
Lake Creek Sunday.
J. M. Yeargan and family were
Tyler visitors Sunday.
Mrs. Wallace Whitaker and
children of Faught spent Tuesday
with relatives here.
Mrs. W. W. Teague, who has
been ill for the past week, is hxw
proving.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Huffman
spent the week end in Dallas.
Mias Marin Manning of Los
Angeles, Calif., arrived Sunday,
April 9 th, for a brief visit with
Mrs. Robbie Phipps, postmistress
at Lake Creek.
tive for all four of these pests,
yields. That is by effective eon- j anil dusting machines may be had
trol of the insect pests which, like ■ sl1'^ Purst aru^ an^ s*ze
the poor, we have always with us. > ‘1)1 ton 11
Conservative estimates, based sn I Just as we know that weeds
,- yields j °n<l tr' lw u l" stow if wedo not
with and without the use of prov-
en control measures, indicate that
the bug? get from one-eighth to
one-fourth of the cotton crop for
which we labor cry year. The
average for ' e cotton belt is
about f 000,000 bales annually, cr
an average loss ol about two bales
per cotton farm.
If this loss were like those from
flood, drouth or storm, complete-
ly beyond uur control, our indif-
ference would be excusable. As a to latc, icaf worm time. Sometimes
hoe and plow, we know that one
or more of these four insect pests
will attack the crop some time
during the season. Good business
demands that we be ready with
the guns and the ammunition to
battle the hugs, just as we are
with the weed-killing implements.
Sulphur and calcium arsenate
aw the two effective materials
for a complete pest-control pro-
gram from early flea-hopper time
matter of fact, however, most of
the insect damage can be avoided
if we use the right methods at the
right time. So long as we enter
each season with only the pious
hope that the flea hopper, the
boll weevil, the leaf worm and
the boll worm will not “happen”
this year, we shall go on taking
the yearly losses from their de-
predations.
It is not often that all these
p.-sts seriously attack the cotton
crop in the same year; on the
other hand, there are few years
■idECTFQ. • G:YELA?:D • SiMCT I
a little extra arsenic is needed,
hut the two materials, separately
or in combination, and the same
dusting machine, will handle all
four pests.
Successful and economical con-
trol of these pests depends on
doing the right thing at the right
time, as w'ell as on having the
right implement and the right
materials. If we wait until the
bugs get busy) before seeing
whether our merchants have the
machinery and tke materials in
stock, part of the damages will
be done before we can get “hitch-
ed up”~Tbr-fog-fob.------------------
The flea hopper is the early
bird of this pest quartet, and
does more damage than many
people are aware of because the
insect is hard to find, and its
presence is not easily perceptible.
Its attacks cause the early fruit
buds to fall before they become
1 “squares," and we say “the cot-
i ton is not setting a bottom crop.”
It s a pretty safe guess that flea
hoppers are responsible, and dust-
ing with prepared sulphur is the
remedy.
What U considered the large*! photograph in the world i* this gigantic p,morama of Ja^n s Ml. Fu,land
Us^rroundings, that will cover an cntire wail of the Halt of Nations at the New York ITarid s hair. Work.
’> In Tokyo ore shown assembling this enormous picture that was exposed and enlarged in sections, and
cover* an area of 2/WO square feet./'
When You’re Hungry at The Fair—
♦ ♦
FNI OF. NF.WS
MRS. A. t). VtVYl.ES
Get the Inside Story on G-E
Selective
Air Conditions!
"LIFETifAE GUARANTEE"
LOOK AT THESE LOW PRICES
Psgas
1 4.50 - 21
| $860 | $935 r
1 $965
j 5.25-17
1 slTOO < $1395
j 5.50-17 j 6.00 - U i
• Here1! a new one-qualKy
four-feature fire-made by the
world's largest tire makers to
bring you a now BARGAIN in
long, safe miJeaac.
You get in MARATHOM spe-
cial Hi-Wide Tread. Roll-Grip
Non-Skid, Dual Cord Breeders,
Compression-Proof Cord. . . .
A new high in tire value!
Why pay mere? This tire
RUNS AND RUNS AND RUNS
♦ +** + •!•« V T t ♦ ^
» *
Needmore
♦ ♦
BY MRS. T. E, OWENS
*♦ + + + *+ + * + ♦ +
Mrs. Frank Vaughn is still a
patient at Reed’s Memorial Hos-
pital in Cooper.
Mrs. John Smith of Yowell, who
underwent an operation at a
Commerce hospital by Dr. Alvin
Waller Monday of last week, is
now at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Owens. She
is doing very well.
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Miller
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Ira Rex.
Those visiting in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Luke Moore Sunday
were Miss Wylie Moore of Dal-
las, Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Moore of
Horton and Mr. and Mrs. John
Moore of Century.
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus McCombs
received word Sunday of the mar-
riage of their niece, Miss Imogene
■ Nabors, to Junior Wilson, which
took place Saturday night. Both
live in Commerce.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stooks-
berry and Mr. and Mrs. Ilershal
Stooksberry of Dallas visited in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. John
Stooksberry during the week end.
Farmers are beginning to work
in the fields again since the re-
cent big rains.
Come to church, and Sunday
school Sunday.
NEW YORK—More than 80 res-
taurants at the New York World’s
Fair 1939 will serve its millions of
visitors. Their combined seating
capacity at once will exceed 42,000.
At top is the Turf Trylon Cafe with
searchlights in full play. In center
is the Rheingold Inn and Terrace
where patrons will witness an ice
carnival. Below is the Casino of
Nations which will have a corps
of waiters able to take orders in
a dozen languages. Food typical of
every nation will be served.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Riggs and
mother, Mrs. R. P. Hamilton, were
in Lawton, Okla., Sunday and at-
tended an Easter pageant.
Mrs. Malvin Wright and chil-
dren of Paris visited their moth-
er, Mrs. C. G. Wright, Sunday.
Save at tlis Sign el the Goodyear Diamond
R. E. McClain
and Son
Gull Service Station
Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Hooten and
daughter, Olinda Rae, Mrs. C. C.
McKinney and daughter, Mary
Fred, and Mias Anna Woodruff
attended “Tannhauser,” the pres-
entation of the Metropolitan
Opera Co. in Dallas Wednesday
afternoon.
New Day Motor Service
Announces—-
We have in our file* the original. of over 18,000 work or-
ders, 2,643 of them during 1938. This amount of work could
not be done unless prices were right and most of the custom-
ers were satisfied. To do such a vast amount of repair work
requires plenty of equipment, skilled lahor and the latest fac-
tory-machine shop, and welding methods.
We are always pleased to have any one visit our shop to check
and see why we can serve the trade day or night and render
a general repair service that Pleasos and Pays.
New Day Motor Service
good and Mr. and Mrs. Grafton
Moore and A. W. Enloe.
Miss Maud Wickersham, who
teaches at Fairlie, visited her sis-
ter, Miss Nettye Wickersham,
during the Easter holidays.
Misses Margaret Lou Wright
and Imogene Davis were) shopping
in Cooper Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Felton Moore of
Texarkana, spent the Easter hoi
idays with relatives here.
J. C. Berry and Joe Gaines
transacted business in Paris on
Get the Inside Story I
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Bolger Ch iyrolet Co.
Phone 2X0 * MR Cooper, Texas
Jess Spencer of Sulphur Springs
transacted business in Cooper on
Wednesday.
M. J. THOMAS. Prop.
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Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, April 14, 1939, newspaper, April 14, 1939; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth895656/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Delta County Public Library.