Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1958 Page: 4 of 8
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>per Re\ iew
Is to mot
Chapter 885 OKS v*. !!
^day night in a .stated
7:30, for a memorial
bibet's are urged to be
Mrs. Billy K Pratt and
h Hand.
puts. M: : .V H .
Lf i
P'K N
lund", an authoritative
(Guide, with pa,
k of all wedding e-
|1 make planning your
j easier. Regular price
fceive your
p'aee your order with
^edd:r , • n
Camera Store. Cooper.
c-17
April 10, 1958
ATTENDS FUNERAL
Among those from out of town
1 attending the funeral of C. F.
| Erben Monday afternoon were
! Robert Connell and daughter,
.Mrs. Peggy Penny, Fort Worth;
I Mrs. Louise Stiff, Mr. and Mrs.
i David Stiff. Mr. and Mrs. Henry-
Stiff. Mrs. E. B. Stewart, Mr. and
Mrs, G. C Reynolds. Dallas; Mr
1 and Mrs. W. I Stevenson, Hous-
1 ton; Miss Jennie Roby. Mr. and
I Mrs. Hollis White, Brady; August
| Erben, San Antonio; Mrs. Hugh
Fabrigge. Beaumont.
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Rush and
John Allen Jr.. Odessa, Mr. and
Mrs. J W Bates. Claudia. Leslie,
j and Jackie. Garland, spent the
Easter holidays with Mrs. Claud
, Pickens.
Want to buy loan cotton. See
Tom Rountree. **15
Mrs. McMillan Is
Hostess To Club
The Cooper Home and Garden
Club met March 18 in the home
of Mrs Benton McMillan with
Mrs. Lallie Jones as co-hostess.
Mrs Young and Mrs. Mosley ,
gave a demonstration on “Plastic
Flower Arrangements." An ar-'
rangement of pink carnations j
made from fiber wood was shown j
by Mrs. Jones.
The hostesses served refresh- j
ments to seventeen members.
The next meeting will be held
April 15 in the home of Mrs. E-
dith Shumate with Mrs. Kruger |
Allen as co-hostess.
Among tho^e visiting in the
home of Mrs. A- Allen last week- i
end were Mr. and Mrs. Bob \ ick, j
Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Hidle, Ft.
Worth. Mr. .and Mrs. T. L- Allen
and children of Arlington, Mr.
and Mrs. A. C- Moddox, Fort j
Worth.
Plays Will Be
Presented Here
By Myraa Barrett
Cooper W S.C.S.
Hus Monday Meet
The Cooper Woman's Society
of Christian Service met Monday
afternoon in Fellowship Hall of
the Methodist Church, with the
Mrs Owen Hooten.
New, Renewal
Subscriptions
To The Review
J V Flowers, Jr., Ben Franklin.
Chleo Roland, Garland.
Four one act plays will be pre- | president
sented by the Cooper Speech 1 presiding
Class on the nights of April 11 | Mrs Troy Brewer brought a l. E Branch. Lake Creek
and April 17. Between acts en- ; meditation on “Youth", using \jattie Boston, Pecan Gap.
tertainment will include orations, Isaiah 54-13 and Proverbs 22-6 £ w McBrayer, Dallas,
poetry reading, and special music, for her scriptural background. gam Alexander, Waco.
Included in the program will be Mrs Alton Wright presented the
••Sugar and Spice”, our district Prayer Calendar projects and
winning on one-act plays, and all I Mrs. Clovis Hooten led in prayer,
of the orations and poetry read M1SS Ruth Glanville gave a
ings that will be entered in the brief report of the Seventeenth
Regional Contest at Denton on Annual Meeting of the North
April 19. ' I Texas Conference Woman's So-
“The Brink of Silence,” which 1 ciety, which met recently at the
deals with a man whom the world First Methodist Church in Wich-
has declared dead, and "Along ;ta Falls. Mrs. Clovis Hooten was
Came Harriet,” which reveals the re-elected for a second term of
excitement caused in a girls’ dor- two years
IL MAM’S
mitory when a young girl who tary of Student Work, at this
uses everyone as a punching bag ■ meeting. Miss Glanville is retir-
is smuggled into one of the girl s ing June first as conference sec-
r Kims, will be presented at 7.30 retarv of Supply Work after hav-
on April 11th. Between act en- ing served in this office for four
ertainment for this night will in- ! years.
elude orations by Sharlene Gar- j dedication of ‘‘My World
rison and Nan Ca>tle. Poe.ij 3ank" was given by Miss Glan-
S. J. Treadawav, Austin
C. E Black. Glenwood. Ark.
Mrs. Buford Wickersham, Mes-
quite
James W Poe. LaFayette, La.
Glen Harrelson Jr„ Dallas
Mrs. L. Luna, Garland
Mrs. C S. Owens, San Angelo
Mrs. E O Wylie, Dallas
Mrs. W J. Downing. Pecan Gap
J. A. Thurman, Rt. 2, Pecan
as conference secre- Gap
Mrs Ola McVay, Cooper
M. N. Edwards. Rt. 3, Cooper
E. E. Johnson. Rt 1, Klondike
E. Winkler, Chicago, 111.
W. O Hendley, Bay City. Mich.
J. B Allard, Cooper
J. A. Acker, Cooper
H. L- Lancaster, Rt. 1, Pecan
Gap
Russell Ham, Cooper
J O Shaffer, Rt 2. Cooper
E W Boles, Rt. 1. Cooper
G. C. Hall, Cooper
W. W. Cregg, McCamey
W T Pratt. Rt. 3, Cooper
J D Shirley, Cooper
Elaine Wright, Dallas
Bill Kant, Grand Prairie
Elnora Cloteaux, Houston
B. A. Buckman, Pans
J. D. Lancaster, Hallsville
Mrs. Ruth Joss, Littlefield
Jap Simpson, Cooper
Mrs. Chas. Pickard, Pensacola,
i Fla.
Mrs. Mattie Miller, Cooper
D. D. Cregg, Arlington
W. C- Walls, Sherman
G. L. Russell, Houston
Raymond Burrow, Dallas
P. M. Neal, Rt. 1, Pecan Gap
Frank Cautlin, Grand Prairie
Floyd Taylor, Rt. 1, Cooper
S. L. Cregg, Enloe
May Engle, Cooper
W. A. Moody. Ben Franklin
C. C. Taylor, Burkburnett
T. J. Blundell, Rt. 1, Klondike
Harold Sims, Tyler
Mr. Max Huffman, Commerce
Mrs. Ida Fleming, Rt. 2, Cooper
Orv ille Thurman, Rt. 2, Cooper
G. W- Carter, Rt. 2, Cooper
Mrs. W O Simmins, Cooper
A. A. Ellis, Dallas
R. P. EUis, Dallas
Bruce Fielding, Cooper
Ernest Kyle, Imola, Calif.
L. C. Bain, Port Arthur
V. W Worden, Charleston
Mrs. W. L- Williams, Cooper
WHO
was the man who said, “If a
thing is worth doing at all, it’s
worth doing well?” The J. C.
McKinney insurance ag-
ency, Cooper, Texas, believes
in that philosophy and
WANTS
FOR ATHLETE’S FOOT
USE T-4-L BECAUSE—
ROYAL SCOTT
or
c
Now at
c-17 I
asianas 3 ibs. .25
SALERNO
lb.
/
Crisp
Thin
Vv.'-
— MEATY PORK
GRIFFINS — STRAWBERRY
CPS pound 49c PRESERVES IUS 39c
Give a
[ARTY FROM YOUR PANTRY!
|with quick-fix foods
and COKE 29*
flafr * 1 J
FLUFFY INSTANT
Potatoes, box .20
(Less Coupon)
”(V>ha” la • tr»J•
Apple Butter
or Apple Jelly
i 20 OZ. GLASS
Reading by Betty \ arbrough and!Viiie, ^jrs A g Crawford. Mrs. Paris District Woman’s Society It sloughs off infected skin. Ex-
1“ ‘-'v Young. 3rd special mu.-ic Alton Wright, Mrs. Owen Hooten, 0f Christian Service will be held poses more germs to its killing
bv the Mello-Dears. and Mrs. Ben Holcomb. The meet- jn the First Methodist Church action. IN 1 HOUR, if not please
Mor bers of the cast for “The ;ng was closed with the bene- in Paris on Tuesday, April 15 at with STRONG, instant doing
Brink of Silence" will be David j diction. 9 3Q a.m. Miss Alice Alsup of Ft. T-4-L liquid, your 4B<* brek a.
Albright, Jesse Moses, Charles i Circle one win meet on Mon. Worth, a retired missionary, will any drug store. Use T-4-L FOOT
Martin and Benny Joe Lowry. In j day April 2\. at 2:30 p.m. in the be the featured speaker. District POWDER too—gives a Jinn ot
“Along Came Harriet” the cast ho*me of Mrs D B, Westerman. officers for 1958-60 will be elect- antiseptic protection,
will be Marva Hagood, Brenda The Annual Meeting of the led and installed at this meeting. Hooten Drug Co.
Manes, Nancy Castleberry, Linda
Skinner. Betty Miller and Norma
Cauley.
“Take A Letter,” which invol-
c? an author trying desperately
to hire a secretary with his
special qualifications, and "Sugar
and Spice,” which describes the
turmoil caused when a school
girl from 'Paree' comes for a vis-
it. will be presented at 7:30 on
April 17th. Between act enter-
tainment for this night will in-
■ elude orations by Norma Cauley,
Charles McKinney, and Danny
Toney. Poetry Reading by Benny
Lowery and Charles Martin, and
special music bv Nan Castle.
The cast for “Take A Letter”
include Whitney Miller, Linda
Allen. Y’vonne Webb, Janice
Cathey, Betty Y’arbrough, Betty
, Maynard and Mary Nell Morris.
! Benny Joe Lowry, Tommy Mc-
| Clung. Linda Beeler, Myrna Bar-
rett and Dorene Foster, will ap-
pear in “Sugar and Spice.”
The price of the tickets will be
! | 10 and 25tf.
everyone to know it. Insurance
in this day and age is very
complex and there Lsn’t one
situation in a
MILLION
where an expert firm like the
j. c. McKinney agency
couldn’t save everyone con-
cerned l°ls of
DOLLARS!
fl h
!» M :>'
...r *$4 VE
§804.7$
UMv.W.v.lVMlWver.«-V
TliCE head 1 fle | SHORTENING 3 lbs. 69
fficial
LITTLE
LEAGUE
AND
ffY LEAGUE
I BASEBALL
Equipment
Tfcv&iM REGISTERED
RODS
REELS
LINES
LURES
TACKLE BOXES
WADERS
ACCESLCRISS
g
PERFORMANCE .
FISHING LINES ijt
SILffcAM’S
Talk On Lamp
Shades Is Given
“Lamp shades serve two pur-
poses - one for light and one for
decoration,” so said Mrs. Henry
Dunn, of Yowell, who gave step
by step demonstration on cover-
ing lamp shades to the ladies of
the Virgie Stokes Home and Gar-
den Club which met April 3 in
the home of Mrs. Loyce Holffomb.
After the program, Mrs. Wes-
ley Wallace auctioned off a var-
iety of articles that the club lad-
ies had made.
Refreshments were served to
fourteen members and the fol- |
lowing guests: Mrs. Dunn and
Mrs. Bill Smith, Yowell, and Mrs.
Ernest Gant, Rt. 2, Cooper.
The next meeting will be April
17 in the home of Mrs. D. A.
j Bigony with Mrs. T. B- Craig as
| program leader.
Now During
mu APRIL
NEW 1958 BELAIR CHEVROLET 4-DOOR
EASY CombomaticWASHER - DRY tR
THE IDEAL APPLIANCE FOIl
. . . ALL FABRICS
mv? i
1
o_. .1
... |
Model CDH-RL
SMALL DOWN PAYMENT
EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS
Exclusive: Tilt-Tumble Washing
It’s t eclu to th« turn 1 le that gives gentle, deep- ■
cleaning action. Clothes are high-lifted, then deep-plunged
and tumbled through sudsy water to get every fiber of every
garment thoroughly cleaned.
Exclusive: 4 Master Rinses
Easy rinses better, oftener than all the others; yet uses less
water. Clean washed clothes are rinsed really clean — no
mere trickles, no little sprinkles.
Surge ’n Spin Clothes Saver
Only Easy provides this exclusive extra clothes saying ac-
tion! Each master rinse is followed by the exclusive Surge
’n Spin cycle. High speed spins are followed by low speed
coasting periods.
AUTO-STOP CONTROL — The Combomatic can be used as
a separate washer <nd dryer. The machine can be pre-set
to stop at any point shown on the dial by moving the Auto-
Stop Control to that position.
WASH TEMPERATURES — Select Cool, Warm or Hot wash
water to provide the right temperature for every type of
fabric.
RINSE TEMPERATURES — The choice of Cool or Warm
rinse water plus the exclusive Easy rinse action means bet-
ter, more economical rinsing.
AUTOMATIC W ATER LEVEL FILL — Pressure switch
automatically regulates the minimum amount of water re-
quired to efficiently wash each load according to size and
type of fabric.
SPACE-SAVING CABINET — The Easy Combomatic is only
27 inches wide. . .less than half the space required for a
separate washer and dryer. . .counter-top height. . .fits
where others won’t.
MOTORS — Two heavy-duty, permanently lubricated 115
Volt, one-third H P, 60 cycle motors, with built-in overload
protection.
I.INT SCREEN _ Self-cleaning, stainless steel screen elimi-
? 0 1 r _ 4 -loon in rt
nates need iui urn cuiu j/t* *»•
© HARDTOP SPORT SEDAN
© 250 H.P. TURBOTHRUST
V-8 ENGINE
© POWERGI/IDE TRANSMISSION
© POWER STEERING
* POWER BRAKES
© LEVEL AIR SUSPENSION
• PUSHBUTTON RADIO
© FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING
© AIR FLOW HEATER
© 800 x 14 WHITE TIRES
* EASY EYE GLASS
® TWO-TONE PAINT
The Regular List Price $3,899.76
During April Will Sell For 3,095.00
YOU SAVE *804.76
OK USED
CARS
1956 CHEVROLET
1956 FORD FAIRLANE
2 - Door
4 - Door Thunderbird V-8
Engine, Radio, Heater
1956 FOR D
Red and White
Radio, Heater.
1955 CHEVROLET
Overdrive, White Tires
Utility Sedan
Blount Chevrolet Company
SALES SERVICE
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Stringfellow, Richard. Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1958, newspaper, April 10, 1958; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth978507/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Delta County Public Library.