Cooper Review. (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, December 22, 1916 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
TU COOPER WEEKLY REVIEW
|oom Fur-
the wife
mi
ERS
|)ak, Bird’s
Tapestry
fring.
Mi ‘
It PAYS
To Exchange Your
Cotton Seed
FOR
Hulls and Meal
If you are not one of the seemingly satisfied list, will you not
begir at once? ROADS WILL BE BAD SOON.
Bring us your Cotton Seed now, from 100 ponds on up, and take
out your HULLS and MEAL any time.
5000 Pounds Hulls and
1000 Pounds Meal for
2000 Pounds Cotton
Seed
THREE FOR ONE IN YOUR FAVOR.
YOU HAVE THE SEED—IT’S HIGH.
WE HAVE THE FEED—IT’S HIGH. •
WE ARE WILLING TO SWAP—ARE YOU?
It will pay us, because we need the seed to run our plant. We
believe it will pay you because you need the feed for your cow.
COOPER COTTON OIL GO.
fLOWER,
Cashier.
|to 14 Days
money If PASO
|inv case of Itching,
[ Piles in 6tol4days.
base and Rest. 30c.
Cough Medicine for Children. ,
Mrs. Hugh Cook, Stottsville, N. Y.,
says: “About five years ago when we
were living in Garbutt, N. Y., I doc-:
tored two of my children suffering
from colds with Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy and found it just as repre-j
sented in every way. It promptly
checked their coughing and cured
their colds quicker than anything I
ever used.” Obtainable everywhere. I
Deep-seated coughs that resist or-
dinary remedies require both external
and internal treatment. If you buy
a dollar bottle of Ballard’s Horehound1
Syrup you get the two remedies you
need for the price of one. There is a
Herrick’s Red Pepper Porous Plaster
for the chest, free with each bottle.
Sold by City Drug Store.
See John McClanahan, the real es-
tate man, for bargains in real estate.
IN OUR NEW HOME!
The Olympia is now neatly housed in its new home next door to
the Garrard Hotel, where you are invited to call on us. The same
splendid service and courteous treatment at all times.
HEAR OUR NEW MUSIC ON THE VICTROLA.
THE OLYMPIA
ANDERSON BROS., Props.
Cooper, Texas
ANOTHER REAL ESTATE TALK.
The reason that I can afford to
take $86.00 per acre for that farm of
mine is because 1 have another good
investment waiting for the sale.
I have absolutely no doubt but
that this little farm will sell for $126
per acre inside of two years.
Another cotton crop the size of
this one will sell for more than this
is bringing for the reason that at
the beginning of this cotton year—
Sept. 1, 1916—there was a surplus
over from former years of 2,000,000
bales, but by next September when
the next crop begins moving there
will not be a bale in the world’s ware-
houses. It looks like $100 per bale
for two or three years.
Anything like these prices will send
land up to $160, $176 and $200 per
acre, according to kind and locatiwn.
This period of 1917, 1918 and 1919
with the country flooded with Euro-
pean gold and cotton high is your
time to buy and pay for a home. It
is the opportunity of a long lifetime,
for you can raise the bulk of your
living at home now just as easily as
you could when groceries were cheap
and turn your twenty cent cotton and
sixty dollar seed into a home.
Land is comparatively cheap yet.
The advance that is going to astonish
people has just set in. And 1 want
to fcay this to the man who has a
surplus of money that land is the
most profitable thing you can put
it in. You can not lend it anyone
for ten per cent. Money is consider-
ably cheaper and that is one great
reason why everything else is higher.
You can see at a glance that land at
present prices is far lower by com-
parison than any other community in
the country and must inevitably and
will advance to $100 in one year,
that is nearly twenty per cent, and
rather hurriedly rise to considerably
higher prices.
This 50 acre farm of mine at $85
it will advance to $125 in another
year, that is twenty-five per cent,
making a total profit of forty-five
per cent in two years. I have no
doubt that this will be so. A careful
analysis of the whole situation will
lead you to no other solution.
You can buy this place by paying
either $1500 or $2000 or $3000 down
just to suit you. It is just a mile
from court house, can be easily tend-
ed from town, and is in the Cooper
school district. This little investment
is going to make somebody a mighty
good profit. See me at Patteson &
Ratliff’s office over Delta National
Bank. Very sincerely yours,
JNO. L. RATLIFF.
TESTIMONIES
Regarding the Work of Evangelist
Ridley in His Recent Meetings in
Colorado.
:•*+ ♦+♦♦♦♦♦*+«
For fifty years I have been a col-
lege and unversity man as well as a
preacher of the gospel, and I long to
see the time come when Dr. Ridley’s
method of presenting truth shall be
adopted by our great teaching cen-
ters, whether seminaries or universi-
ties. His way was the Master’s way
—teaching by illustration. He is the
equal of any man I have ever known
in the fine art of illustrating.—Gil-
bert Frederick, D. D., Chicago Uni-
versity.
Dr. J. W. Harris of the Baptist
Temple, St. Petersburg, Fla., and for
10 years pastor of the First Baptist
church of Omaha, Neb., says: In
my long experience as a pastor I have
had many evangelists to assist me in
special meetings. These have repre-
sented all schools and no school, but
Dr. Ridley has the most winsome way
of presenting truth of any man I
have ever had. After listening to him!
twice each day for a month, he wasj
more fascinating the last service than'
the first. He rang clear to the word
of God from start to finish and never
once went out of his way to abuse
anybody. His tenderness and bigness
of heart melted and moulded people
for God.
Dr. Randolph Cook, pastor of the
First Christian church at Albuquer-
que, N. M., writes: Ridley’s way is
the way my Master worked. He nev-
er loses his head, he never fusses, he
never sounds a low note in the plan
of salvation. After listening to him
Well
Dressed Men
—Go to —
BON TON TAILOR SHOP
!
Let VCM1 McCombs take
Your Measure
QUALITY FIRST-
PRICES LOWEST
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦*♦♦*♦♦*♦***+***♦ »
COST OF LIVING.
Consider this significant fact:
While the cost of livng has gone up,
the cost of telephone servee has been
at a standstill or has been reduced.
During this time the telephone ser
vice has broadened to such an ex-
tent that you get several times the
service now that you did a few years
ago. When you figure this it means
for almost seven weeks I came to the! that telephone service costs less now
than a few years ago. This has been
done by study and work of telephone
employees in the way of making
economies and efficiency. The Gulf
States Telephone Company is pleased
to give you the most for the least.
Nervous Women.
When the nervousness is caused by
constipation, as is often the case, you
will get quick relief by taking Cham-
berlain’s Tablets. These tablets also
improve the digestion. Obta ' ]<■
everywhere.
conclusion that his method of teach-
ing and preaching the gospel has
some advantages over that of any
man I know. I have heard him roar
like a lion, and yet tender as a little
child. Hundreds were won for the
Kingdom during our campaign.
Dr. E. A. Butler of Trinidad, Colo., Sickly children need White’s Cream
one of the six pastors co-operating m Vermifuge. It not only destroys}
the Ridley meetings there says: In worms, if there be any, but it act
all my experience in class-room, col- as a strengthening tonic in the stom j
lege and pulpit I have never listened aeh and bowels. Price 25c per bottle, j
to such a series of sermons as Dr | Sold by City Drug Store.
Ridley delivered for more than thirty t— -------- ------- ----- ------ — ------
daye on “The Holy Spirit.” There 1
were something like one thousand £
confessions of Christ during the cam- £
paign and 1 attribute the great work
of grace to these messages more than! &
to any other one thing. £
The Rev. Dr. Henderson of Trini-1
dad, pastor of the First Methodist j v
church, speaking from the pulpit said: j £
For a long time I have made a study j |
of evangelists and their methods of X
work, and have often listened to the jj*
famous men of America. I have gone £ Best Nursery Stock in the
through two campaigns led by Billy | Southwest—All Guaranleed--
Prices Rifht.
GEO. H. IHLEFELDT
Teacher of
VOICE AND SIGHT SINGING
extends his Heartiest Wishes for a
MERRY CHRISTMAS
and a
HAPPY NEW YEAR
J.W. CRAWFORD
Agent for Texas Nursery Co.
Good for Constipation.
Chamberlain’s Tablets are excellent
for constipation. They are pleasant
to take and mild and gentle in eff.et.
Obtainable everywhere.
I '
T ^
The MAXWELL CAR
Touring Car, $6f>0.00 Roadster, $635.00
if it!
ciga-
’rince
a try-
ment
*ppiy-
N.C
I
%?4£H
Sunday; I am well acquainted with
the work of Dr. Chapman; have
worked for weeks with the Scovill
Party, but I say without hesitation
that Ridley preaches more gospel and
presents it in the tenderest way, andj
is as a preacher, the equal of any
evangelist I know. I have urged him}
to organize a real Evangelistic party'
and give his life to the work. Hav- j
ing been a pastor for more than fif-
teen years he knows the pastor’s!
problems as no mere evangelist does.
Dr. Len G. Broughton, in some ways
the most famous and widely known j
of American preachers, says: For
five summers while I was away at
Northfield or in England, Ridley sup-
plied my pulpit in Atlanta. He was j
the most popular supply I ever had |
any my church paid in twice as much
as it ever gave any other man. He
is the only man on either side of the
sea who ever filled my house in my
absence. He believes the Bible and
has the faith of a little child.
William D. Upshaw, editor, author
and nation-wide prohibition lecturer
says of Dr. Ridley: He is the most
restful and refreshing pastor I have
ever had. His work in Old Central
church, Atlanta, was nothing less than
phenomenal. In two years there
were more than 800 additions to the |
membership and everything else went}
at the same ratio. The church loves
him today as it loves no other man.
G. C. MCKINNEY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Upstairs over Delta
National Bank.
Dr. W.
Dr. C.
Ellington.
Ellington.
REAL ESTATE DEALERS
Enloe Carrell
COOPER, TEXAS.
W. J. McDaniel
ALTUS, OKLA.
We have some good Improved
farm land in Jackson county,
Okla., in tracts of 40, 80, 160 and
320 acres. Prices range from $40
to $75, owing to the improvements.
Good terms at 6 and 1 per cent.
For further information see—
Enloe Carrell
COOPER, TEXAS.
LIST YOUR REAL ESTATE
WITH US.
ELLINGTON 8 ELINGTON J
♦ Dentists ♦
♦ Office upstairs in First National ♦
♦ Bank Bidg., Southwest Cor. Sq. ♦
♦ (XOPER, TEXAS. ♦
♦ ♦♦❖❖❖❖❖<••»* ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ *
"dARWInT^ X*J
♦ - »
• Office over First •
♦ National Bank •
♦ COOPER, : s TEXAS •
❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ♦ ♦ ♦
: I. B. Lane J. N. Vile* ♦
❖ LANE & VILES ♦
❖ Attorneys-at-Law. ♦
❖ General practice—Special atten- ♦
❖ tion to probate matters.
❖ Office over North Side Pharmacy ♦
❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖
Review and Semi-Weekly Fan
News, both one year, $1.75.
, We are also
agents for
THE HUPMOBILE
Touring Car, $1,260
Roadster, - $1,260
• O. ANDERSON & SON
Exclusive Agents for Delta County Let us Demonstrate them to You
Review and Semi-Weekly Farm
News, both one year, $1.75.
VIRGINIA FARMER
Restored To Health By Vino!
Atlcc, Va.—“I was weak, run-down,
Ho appetite, my blood was poor, I could
not sleep nights and was rapidly los-
ing flesh, but I am a farmer and had to
work. Medicines had failed to help mo
until I took Vinol. After taking threo
bottles my appetite is fine, 1 sleep well,
my blood is good and 1 am well again.”
i—Oblando W. BorkeY.
Vinol, which contains beef and cod
liver peptones, iron and manganese
peptonates and glycerophosphates, is
guaranteed . for a. run-down*, conditions.
McKinney drug store.
Also at the leading drug store in all
Texas towns.
Buy until you see O. W. SIMMONS’ nice, new
stock of up-to-date goods. No auction trash
in our selections. If you want first class goods
at lowest prices, call and see us; will save you
money on anything you want in Jewelry,
Watches,Diamonds and Gut Glass; Ivory Toilet
Sets. : : : : : :
Your friend,
O.W. Simmons
Jeweler and Optician.
fLv •
-
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.
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. 36, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, December 22, 1916, newspaper, December 22, 1916; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth980199/m1/3/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Delta County Public Library.