Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, September 15, 1933 Page: 6 of 8
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I
I
M E. CHURCH.
C. D. REYNOLDS, P. C.
Sunday School at 9:45. O. C.
Mullin*, superintendent.
Preaching second and fourth
Sundays at 11 a. m. and night.
Young People’s meeting at
6:15. Lnther Johnson, president
Miss Maurine Johnston left
l'»'dav for Clarksville where
will teach this winter.
Miss Tressie Marie Pope, who
has been visiting in Amarillo,
came home this week.
Troy Stockton spent the week
end at home.
J. E. Thompson and family left
Friday for a trip through the
Western part of the State. They
will visit in Lubbock and Amarillo.
visiting in
Tuesday.
Mrs. 0. G. Davis of Dallas
ited friends here this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Troy Bond, who
have been at Price for the past
..’eek, spent Sunday at home.
Mrs. R. A. Mills is ill at this
time.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Jackson
have returned from Harlingen.
They were accompanied home by
Mrs. Ralph Jackson and children.
Mrs. J. R. Deason received a
MILAM NEW
KENNETH W. COPELAND,
Pastor.
Thomas Gumming, Sunday School
Superintendent.
Sundae School at 9:45
Preaching Service at 11 a. m.
Christian Endeavor meets at
6:45 p. m.
At 7:45 p. m. the choir will
present a special “Song Sermon”
entieled “My Redeemer.”
Miss Ella Griffin, who has been j letter this week from her .brother,
M. P. Church Will
Give Song Service
tLINORL BARRY
©T» UK V
The pastor and choir of the M.
P. Church will present a special
song sermon Sunday night. The
subject of the service will be
“My Redeemer.” The subject
will be woven into about twelve
songs. All are invited.
1 Syr
*u!fe
Final Installment
no^sis? Jovce AsTiton,
reu losa of memory in
lent in Chicago. One
I
poor stenographer,
in a skidding taxicab
accident in Chicago. One morning two years
later she woke, alter a fall from her horse,
her memory restored, to find herself, as Frills,
the wife of Neil Packard, rich California
fruit packer. She determined to tell nobody
A her predicament but set about learning
what she could of her life in the interval.
From the conversation of her friends and
lu iivi uvj» 0u,hctthat sue had
feeen a heartless, pleasure-loving young ho
stian. One letter that troubled h? r <««• f»u*<>
s Homan signing herself Sophie blaming
Frills for not giving a home to a baby Sophie
mas caring for. Could it be her baby, Fnlla
ondcrcd! She also found herself involved
an affair with a man named Maitland,
a San Francisco, where she went while her
!>usband was away on business, she met
Jfobert Ainsworth, a poet whose work she had
tlways admired. When Joyce returned home,
•hi- decided to be pleasanter to Neil than
drills had been. But this line was dangerous,
t>, for Neil was pathetically anxious to win
ck her love. At his request they call upon
til’s mother, whom Joyce finds adorable
-ater, she met the poet, Robert Ainsworth.
gU) ! several times stopped for lunch at his
tn* m when she was honsehack riding. One
lay he started to make iove to her. Later,
Joyce and Neil, out riding’ are come upon
•y Ainsworth. Cornered, Joyce makes lull
•orfession,—her loas of memory and its re-
storation. When Neil accuses Joyce and Ains-
g»th of being in love, Ainsworth makes a
•’graceless" exit, leaving Joyce to explain
fileil is hurt but ui>on arriving at home is
Failed to his Mother’s home. Joyce decides
she must go away.
had read every word of the bold
handwriting that danced over its
pages, and, fascinated, they had suf-
fered with the curious, lost spirit
that had cried out her secret fears in
her journal.
“Oh, Neil, it’s so terrible!” cried
Joyce, “I knew Frills had been a
bad lot, but I never thought of her
as suffering somehow — I, never
thought of f.cr a, J...,,. ,|] tL
did care about you?
you.”
Neil did not reply to her question, Slaton Lubbock and
and Joyce saw that he was trembling
like a leaf. “Do you think—do you Toxa“ towns. They were aerom-
think, Joyce, that things might come ! named home by Miss Ella Griffin,
out as mother hoped they would? Thev left last Friday and drove
! to Slaton that day. Cottaa U fine
Frank Young of Lake Greek,
W. W. White of Fnloe and Miss
Bona White-of Lake Creek re-
turned Tuesday from a visit in
other West
Texas towns.
Bible Study at
Services at 10 a. m.
Communion service at 10:45.
Bro. Rowen from Paris will be
with us Sunday morning and eve-
ning.
Ladies’ Bible Class meets at
3 o’clock Tuesday at the church.
Prayer meeting Mednesday at
8 p. m.
Young People’s Bible Class i
meets at 7:30 o’clock.
REPORTER.
Fire, Tornado, Wind, Hail
In fact Insurance of all kinds
except “BAD”
Let U» Show You One of Our Special
ACCIDENT POLICIES
Presbyterian Church
D. E. COX, Minister.
Sunday School at 9:45. W. D.
Hart, superintendent. Mrs. Jen-
nie A. Young, assistant.
We will have our Sunday School
Rally Day and promotion exercise
at the 11 o’clock hour.
Junior Christian Endeavor at
2 p. m.
Mid-week worship Wednesday,
7:45 p. m.
You are cordially invited to at-
tend all services.
FOSTER & EDWARDS
S
Telephone 19, Ratliff Bldg., N. Side Square
Insurance—Insurance — Insurance—Inst
Ld
U
z
<
0c
D
c/5
z
rvyvvw'rwwwvvvwvwvvwvvv'
| INS URANC
FIRE CASUALTY LIFE BONDS
—CALL—
A. R. BYRNS & CO.
50
>
Z
n
Telephone 135.
“When You Lose—We Pay'
things deliberately, in a sort of crazy between us
myself, but we might bring on I^aw-
iou's cfiiiu, and uo our best with it,
i
“Roxic knew you better than I
lid," Neil said slowly, “I guess that’s
t setback for me all right ... I was
*o bowled over by what you told me
hat day with that Ainsworth fellow
fiat I didn't know what to believe,
i began to think I just imagined I'd
kin married at all!”
Just then Joyce saw Roxic mov-
ng capabiy about the dining-room,
*id running to her, she flung her
mis impulsively about the older
roman.
“Roxic, you darling!” she cried,
Sam told me how wonderful
•ou'vc been-”
Roxic beamed and flushed with
diastirc. “I didn’t do nothing!” she
aid confusedly. “But, my, it's good
c have you back, Mrs. Packard,
»c’ve certainly missed you! And
* .v do come in to dinner if you
t <- Mr. Neil are ready.”
‘Where’s Dickie?” she asked
»c If vhen they were seated, “I
live n’t seen him since I got back!”
in that section, they report, much
ot it will average a bale to the
acre. About half of the crop
was plowed up for the Govern-
ment.
Buy your
Perry’s.
toilet articles
Insurance—Insurance — Insurance—Insurance
Joyce saw that he was trembling like a leaf.
effort to get back her identity—to
remember!"
“Yes,” said Neil, “I don’t know-
much about these things, but I
should think the medicos might ex- I
plain that second blow—the time I
you were thrown from l-'ire Queer I
—as a sort of mental snapping, due
to the pitch you’d worked vourself |
up to.” v
Frills’ diary filled in most of the I
“Oh, Neil, I feel as Frills said, that
in this crazy world it's something t >
know that loyalty like yours ovist.!
. . . Do you want me, now. knowing
all this? It’s been a sorry business, an I
it seems to me you’ve been th” vie-
seems
tim!”
“No victim about if,” be raid r1 o
lv, “I mean—T do want you—if. v
what about this Ainsworth ' ’ O
“Ainsworth — Robert Ainrv «
W. H. Maupin, who owns an or-
chard of citrus fruit near Har-
lingen. He said in the storm area
there was no fruit left and the
leaves on the trees were torn in-
to strips.
Mr. and Mrs. U. A. Alexander
of Commerce visited W. W. Tea-
gue and family Sunday. They
were accompanied home by Wan-
da Teague, who will spend a while
with friends.
Miss Jimmie Bowen visited Miss
Evaline McCarty of Cooper last
! week.
Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Cain and l
Mrs. J. W. Curtis of Greenville, }
Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Voyles and
Mrs. J. IT. Pickard of Portales, N.
M., were guests of A. C. Voyles
and family Sunday.
Roy Reid is doing nicely at
this time. .
“New”
lines for
Old Shoes
at Reasonable Prices
fOLES and HEELS
^[^HOSE olds hoes may
look “honpLa«” fn
look “hopeless” to
you . . but not to us.
Our expert rebuilding
service will save them.
Bring them in. Weuse
Only—
THE BEST OF
LEATHER
Kooten Harness
and Shoe Shop
5 2
NSLEE
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 I wine.
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
f “Oh,' that’s right—T must send
•for him. He’s been living with Sam
fsince you left. Moped about the
•house so dismally that we thought
me was going to cash in, poor chap,
couldn’t do anything with him.
gaps in the story that Neil had grad- Joyce suddenly had an idea. “N- ”
•tally pieced out that day for Joyce. I she said.* “1 think I see now \v t
From the scattered notes-he learned Robert Ainsworth felt that dav! I
that Frills had been conscious of her j think he must have felt ashamed of his
loss of memory, but filled with the 1 part in the whole affair—I think ha
conviction that alT at on some day,
it would come to her whom she was,
where she came from—her whole
place of life. r
“Some deep instinct,” the diary
Work-¥/orn
Women
Find New Youth and Bloom
In This Amazing Tonic
-suck
“towing”
modes!
kept looking at me reproach-
Iwith you. It gave me the creeps.’
I “Funny little Dickie!” said Joyce.
J Conversation lagged. Joyce did not
.want to ask any questions covering the
jtime of her absence, thinking she might
Jturn Neil’s thoughts toward his
.mother, and cause him pain. She like-
wise did not want to tell him anything
I*1
(about her life in San Francisco during
•that time: it now was resuming the
unreality of a had dream, and she had
.no wish to revive the memories by-
talking about it. So she ate silently.
• All at once she was aware that Neil
was regarding her thoughtfully, with a
brooding stare uniike the matter-of-
factness she remembered in him.
“Anything wrong, Neil?” she
asked nervously,
i “No, dear, I was just thinking
how wonderful it was to have you
back.”
“Oh, Neil, you musn’t say things
Jike that to me! I know it’s only
your kindness, your natural sweetness
■--” Joyce’s voice choked up, and
/he left the table. Neil followed her
into the living-room,
f “Well, we won’t go into that just
mow, Frills, if it bores you.” Joyce
was about to remonstrate with him
for his misconstruction of her
words, when he went hastily on,
f By the way, I found something
ghat’ll probably interest you—a di-
krv kept by you—by Frill ,—begin-
ning about the time of o r arrival
'home in Manzanita after our mar-
riage.”
j “Can I see it, Neil?”
1 “Sure, I’ll get it, just a minute.”
•And he went rather wearily out of
the room.
, Joyce was worried at the change
In Neil. He seemed to have lost all
his enthusiasm, all his spirit. ”1 hope
he’s not really ill,” she thought
miserably. “Of couue his mother’s
death was an awful blow. Perhaps a
little time . . Her mind was run-
ning along this course when Neil
came back.
“May I look at it with you?” lie
asked, “I didn’t read much of it.
Somehow it seemed — not quite
right. I thought I’d put it away and
tcad it with you—when you came
pmc.” He spoke so quietlv that
said, “kept me from telling anyone.
I felt that I must discover it, must
work it out, for myself.”
And then later, came an entry that
made a very deep impression on
Joyce. "I know I did wrong to marry
Neil Packard without telling him.
He’s too good a man to he treated
so meanly, but I just couldn’t tell
it. I couldn't tell him. And I had to
marry him—not again in a lifetime am
I likely to meet a man so surely poses-
sing that which can be depended on. In
this crazy world it’s something to know
that loyalty of that sort can be
secured!”
must have seen it all, have realized j
what a splendid person you were, and; .
have felt that he simply couldn't run
off with your wife I”
Neil looked at her sideways. “Sounds
like the bunk to me. What on earth
makes you think that?”
“Well, you see, Neil, I never saw
him after that day in the woods, and
Women often fade fast because they
have to bear the cares of the whole
family. They become rundown, tired and |
haggard looking. Strength is needed —
strength from the inside. There is no
finer source of strength and vitality than
i Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. It con-
| tains both iron and tasteless quinine in
l highly concentrated form. Iron, as you
-the
, . , , , j know, builds blood, the source of all
you remember he behaved so queer!,y, , life and strength. Quinine tends to r irify
rejec mg me by his silence . Joyce had- the blood. Thus, in Grove’s Tasteless
to swallow hard to keep back the
emotion that surged over her at the
memory, but she went quickly on.
"I’d always felt so sure that he was
an exalted being, somebody finer than
the rest of the world, and for him to
turn into—into just a cad seemed all
Thus,
Chill Tonic, you get two extremely valu-
able effects.
Start taking this famous, time-proven
tonic today and see how quickly you pick
up strength and vitality. Mark the im-
provement in your appetite, in your pep
and energy. Note the new youthfulness
As the diary went on, the entries
became more and more excited. "I’m
cheating Neill” Frills cried, He’s got
a right to a wife who’s more than
just a unit existing for the time be-
ing! l ve got to get back my mem-
ory! Perhaps drink will do it. Bring
on the wine cups—I’ll try ’em!”
Why do I take so much per-
verse pleasure in shocking people
around here? Maybe when I get back
my memory I'll find I was a small-
town school teacher, or sometxxly
who never had a chance to express
wrong. I'd rather be able to think of. ! you feel and show-. Three days will tell
him without bitterness—and I do feeb I you wonders! Grove’s Tasteless Chill
sure I’m right, that he simply couldn’t; j Tonic is pleasant to take and contains
bring himself to take your wife : nothing harmful. 40 years of use attests
FAL
HAT
away.
Neil
smiled. "All right with me,j
darling; think anything you please, as'
long as you don’t think of him too
much!”
Joyce regarded him tenderly. “Neil,
she said softly, “May I make a con-
to its merit and safety,
today at any store.
Get a bottle
fession to you? I’ve fancied mvself so! i
superior to Frills, but I wasn’t really, I
herself! Well, I’m expressing my-
self all right these days! All I’ve got
nearly as- as keen. It’s taken me a ter-
ribly long time to find out what she
knew- all along . . . Neil, dear, you’re
the finest person I’ve ever known in
my life, and I—I love you.” f
\vce barely caught the words.
V
Neil,” she said impulsively. pau«-
before she opened the !
eel at home here!”
J smiled, a sudden
“Warmed Joyce t>>
•Mv they opened :!
tv,
’T
Ithem.
. Is nearly midtii-M
Mi
£“»book aside. Fastii,.
to do is think of something reckless
and wild, to be seized with an insane
desire to do it! . . .”
And then, all at once, "Arthur
Maitland — ugh, how I hate him !|
Why do I endure him around me?l
God knows! I flirt with him like ai
common street woman—yet I love!
Neil! Why do Edo it? Sometimes I
feel as if it’s to try Neil's patience,
to see how much lie really will stand|
from me. There seems to be no limit
to his affections!”
. . I’ve gone almost the limit1
and it’s done no good! What did Ij
think it would do? God knows! Neil
knows—I can see from his face that
be knows there's been too much to.
that affair between Arthur Maitlanc j
and me. If he'd only knock me down
a blow, they say a blow will bring;
back one’s memory. But Neil won’t
—he never will. I’ll have to kill my-‘
self first. Perhaps that horse, that
surly brute Fire Queen. But F have '
charmed life—a charmed and
a damned one! H- w •’« this thing going
end?”
And the last ert-y in the honk, in
sprawling, blotted characters: “I’ve
•wen rotten over tha* baby ot
’via’s. Of course Neil wants it
brought on here. But a child—why
c!i ukl I wreck -i noor child's life as
I’m wrecking Neil’s? It’s better of!*
V. hr-r it is—I'm a lost soul now."
“Neil.” said Jovce at last, "NelK
doesn't it help to know that Friila
THE END
reap
&KS.
GUESS TH&
D&PRtSSiOkJ IS ov£(?
suae 'wough.....
FRANK SPIVEUS IS
AGAIN buying gas
FE& THAT FLlP-
CK54BETTE LIGHTER
O* HIS.
$;
$w$
Hi
If Money
G'-evv On
"T ——
z'
<Y
I
- tip - tilts
- turbans
- and many
more
^pHE NEW Millinery “gives
i i
pretty
newcomers
andnovel, flatter ing dips and
. . what style!
tresses a chance.” And yet these
are everything you could dream of in
curves. Small .
your
beautiful
perkiness
but my
,. . you’d still want to
take advantage of the
savings w:; are offering
in cur early showing of
Autumn Footwear.
..... ,
•'**? T.-P
Ecoonmy Shoe Store
A Large Number o£ “Topping
Modes” Ready For You
To Try On! In:
RICH VELVETS and FELTS
Untrimmed or Trimmed with dainty
bows, novel ornaments, etc.
CRAWFORD - NORRIS - STEVENS GO.
i
:
/b A ~ ^
Some people are havin
this time.
Everybody is picking c<
.mmunity.
(Will Thomas is sic!
Austin is not so
its time.
Mr. and Mrs. Morgan
;ng their daughter, M
hoffeit, since last week.
Mrs. Gantt visited Mrs
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bui in arc
nr f>er two neW dauK'
vv.
Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
nd daughter have move
,is community where M
>rs
■e UJ
Mi
unda
-ell.
I
.teach Milam seh
have th^m wit
.axine Cantrel
■ith Mrs. Chari
—«>-»-<*>-
V, . have a complete
assware, enamel and al
are and dishes at Perry
Ask for good baby
alter Chandler’s Mark*
IY ALL MEANS
ISH HIGH SCh
I r«r. Roberts, presmeiu
outh’s most popular
usiness Training at Tyl
Ives the following sane
ble reasons why every
irl should avail themse
•e opportunity of rece
igh school education.
“With the facilities n<
ided by our various sta!
durational lines,” says
■ts, “is there any reaso
aung boy or girl sho
raduate from high scho
“Without a high s'cho<
1 on every worth-while dc
I jrtunity is closed and r
i f one’s ambition to mi
i air advances educations
i absolutely no chance. r
all colleges oj^ literar
e barred against a
ite. If every young per
it realize the absolute
tlie above statement, I
lore would not be grea
st taken in finishing
•hi i course.
me paint a wor
case coming
iiich I trust
brne to” every young
jy and girl who has r
jlcted high school, to
to high school with th
the fall term this y
‘A young man came
ice and related his <
His parents tri<
il upon him early in 1
th high school, but lik
lumber of youngsters,
jt see the wisdom of
[is parents’ means wer
d at that time the
mid provide for him
bool training. This
lishing the ninth grad;
;ainst going any furt.h
g he could get by—
limself with the fact
irents did not grad
gh school and that
od, respectable citiz
ping true, why should
iy more time in sch
“Recently, fortune i
the famtiy of this b
,8 discovered on the 1
,ich brought them c<
ialth. It dawned •
that his parents t
iy and he should like
physician. He inqui
,w he should go aboi
|e University prepai
r entering a medi
found that rega
her his wealth of n
he was barred f
i0ol in the land sim|
decided when he f
th grade he had
iough.”
“This lad told me
id been sufficiently
h the* need and inv
h school training i
quit school, perhar
ive stayed in school
‘Seeing this young
cament and knowini
agedy is' being enact,
beginning of
[hool term, I am p
ite this with the 1
iay prevent others f
e -mm-fuollsh thiru
school." <"
Lerts^'th • requin
■Mdually being rai v
Jcause the business
|>mmg more exact
kpiirements and in
(and that their emp
Ust have a high s
- _
—
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Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, September 15, 1933, newspaper, September 15, 1933; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth980670/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Delta County Public Library.