Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 2, 1960 Page: 2 of 8
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Review
June 2, 1960
___PUBLISHING CO. J T. Toney and Richard
ublishers. East side square, Cooper, Texas. Phone 88
nd class matter at the post office in Cooper, Texas,
of Congress, March, 1897.
ry Thursday.
made for publication of notices of church activities
lie gatherings where no admission is charged,
ion is charged or where goods or wares of any kind
r sale, the regular advertising rates will be charged.
line between news and advertising is the line which
rmation of public interest from information dissemi-
fit.
ON RATES DELIVERED IN DELTA COUNTY
$1.50 1 Year.....$2 50 2 Years ...$4.50
TION RATES DELIVERED OUTSIDE DELTA CO.
$1.75 1 Year_____$2 75 2 Years $5.00
-•"••ORIAT
GUIS SOUTWWKT
SUMMIT COLLAPSE I map men, and so on. Few Meoa-
The results are not good, but j be™ of Congress know the gen-
not mean that war is eral facts about CIA, and these
avoid learning any details. This
agency is entrusted to Mr. Allen
New, Renewal Subscriptions
they do
imminent. World tensions may yet
be relaxed by firmness and pa-
tience on our part.
The Administration’s handling
of the U-2 affair was certainly
clumsy. Yet it seems clear that
Mr. K had already decided to
sabotage the Summit meeting. His
admission, in Paris, that he had
known about the U-2 flights when
he met with the President last
September could hardly be any-
thing but true. And certainly the
question of going through with
the discussions did not hinge up-
on the President's making the
public apology Mr. K. demanded.
The President made sufficient
apology when he stated that the
flights had been suspended and
wculd not be resumed, thus re-
pudiating the import of his pre-
vious statement in Washington.
This also gave Mr. K. a face-
saving basis for going ahead with
the meeting — if he had wished
to go ahead.
Our Spy Syitem. It’s centered
in the Central Intelligence Agen-
cy (CIA). This is a big outfit, now
putting up a new building almost
as big as the Pentagon, 8 miles
from the White House.
Everything about the CIA is
secret, the number of employees.
............................. Richard Stringfellow
G MANAGER.............. .. J. Travis Toney
RINTENDENT ...... _____ ... Kirby S. True
ITOR ............. .... O’Conna Mora
PERATOR________ ... ........James C. Allen
itorial Comment
LEGION RAISES THE BOOM
ow” is a typically American word, and one that
reoccurs with impressive frequency in most any
f that industrial and economic progress of which
dinatelv proud.
for many years it has been accepted management
jtomatically reject the superior skills, the season- j what it costs per year, and what
?nt - in a word, the know-how - of job-seekers [ it does. In general it’s thought
exceeded an arbitrary number of birthdays. A
ly by the U. S. Department of Labor in seven
56, for example, revealed that applicants of 35
Id for consideration in many cases, that 41 per-
were open only to those of 45 and younger and
;:ent were closed to all over 55.
by this growing system of unconditional rejec-
kers by age levels. The American Legion, in its
tion, resolved to take action. It was ordered that
ill week of each May was to be designated "Em-
Ider Worker Week" and machinery be set up for
[Rations to employers giving outstanding coopera-
i program.
kn the first full year of operation have been im-
ifficials of the Labor Department (which has ad-
yorker placement specialists to its employment
‘port a changing viewpoint among employers,
jfic evidence is seen in the three national citations
L,e Legion a year ago and the 16 further national
yarded since - one of them to a St. Louis emplov-
orted that 20 percent of his workers ranged in
to 82 years!
recognition of “Employ the Older Worker Week"
opening of the second annual observance when
trick J. McNamara saluted the Legion in the
jte on Monday. May 2nd, and offered a joint reso-
orizing and requesting the President to proclaim
Dnal event beginning in 1961 and calling on em-
ail others concerned for appropriate observace.
;ion, we might add. was passed unanimously.
by the Legionnaires initially, and leiterated by
r, age discrimination “deprives the national econ-
ortant sources of experienced workers, increase*
upon public welfare resources, and imposes on
ns a sense of humiliation and loss of faith in the
rise system”.
re, The American Legion rates a salute from all
it may have as many as 40.000
employees -- in Washington, in
other U. S. cities, and through-
out the world. There are some
“detectives” but mostly the em-
ployees are skilled analysts who
study and evaluate. They include
economists linguists, teachers,
geographers, engineers, scientists.
W. Dulles.
The reason for all this is that
we found out that before the last
war our intelligence system was
poor. This should not happen
again.
Medical Care. Medical care for
th’e aged has become a hot po-
litical issue and will no doubt
be a prime topic for political
campaigning. One of the sharp-
est criticisms of the Administra-
tion’s plan has come from Gov-
ernor Rockefeller, who said the
plan could mean a “very sericu*
fiscal situation, very high costs
and cumbersome administration”
in the State of New York. Demo-
crats in Congress are not inclin-
ed, however, to make politics out
of the suestion of passing a bill.
They recognize the problem as
being too serious and will. I be-
lieve, accept a bill agreeable to
the Administration if necessary
to make help available, ever
it it does not provide as much
help as they would like.
Tax Help for Small Business.
This would reduce income taxes
for both small corporations and
unincorporated firms and thus
better equalize the impact of Fed-
eral taxes on big and small bus-
iness. The bill contains the same
relief which the Administration
proomised just prior to the 1956
election, and has been quietly op-
oosing ever since. There is bet-
ter than a 50-50 chance for its
passage before adjournment.
June Graduates. It’s reported
that more companies are scout-
ing the college campuses, but are
G. Y. Wakefield, Arlington I
O. D. Sandlin. San Antonio
Mrs. Dixie Hart, Cooper
Mrs. T. H. Whitlock, Baytown
Manton F. Pound, Ft Worth
Mrs. H. B. Woolsey, Rt S,
Cooper
Mack Lancaster,
Sulphur Spring
J. D. Lancaster, Hallsville
Mrs. B. W. Jackscn, Cooper
M H McCarty, Coloiado City
J. C. Pendergrass,
Grand Prairie
H. R McCrary, Rockwall
Mrs. J. W. James, Rt. 1,
Pecan Gap
Doyle Young, Rt. 1 Pecan Gap
Mrs. Clara Slough, Rt. 1,
Cooper
Chester Slough, Odessa
Mrs. J. A Mobley, Cooper
W T. Pratt, Rt. 3, Cooper
Robert L. Vick, Midland
Lawton Hidle. Ft. Worth
A. W. Scott, Childress
Ernest Kyle, Yountville, Calif.
Earl M. Thompson. Dallas
Nellie McGuire, Rt. 1, Cooper
Mrs. Grace Stratton, Cooper
Mrs. J. Elmer Nelson, Navasota
Maggie Hayes, Dallas
A. S. Carrington, Lufkin
Mrs. E. H. Dixon, Lewisville
O. C. Slough, Houston
D. G. Hanna. Frisco
Cletus Bridges, Dallas
Elton Bridges, Tacoma, Wash.
Mrs. E. P. Bridges. Lubbock
W. J. Hooten, Ft. Worth
J. R. Fulton, Cooper
Claude PerkUis, Cooper
Sam Rogers, Ridgeway
L. D. Berry Jr., Dallas
H. E. Thornberry, Dallas
W. T. Bryan, Rt. 1, Cooper
Betty Oats, Dallas
W. I. Bartley, Cooper
L. D. Wright, Commerce
“LEST WE FORGET”
rrocco come news reports of the efforts of that
t to impose the death penalty on profiteers who
ed cooking oil that paralyzed 10.000 persons. The
horror that first made the news last September
cco sought the aid of the World Health Organi-
sing a medical mystery, the details of how the
perpetrated and detected, its aftermath of suf-
the continuing efforts to aid the victims are re-
June issue of the Reader’s Digest,
ing oil, as this fantastic medical mystery story
being thinned by greedy merchants with motor
(at a salvage price, and which, unknown to them,
subtle and potent nerve poison. As a result, 600
hopelessly crippled for life, 8,000 will require
Rehabilitation over months and years and 1,500
jnes are expected to recover after treatment,
ome, we can be thankful to the late, great Dr.
Wiley, father of this nation’s first food and drug
entless in his fight for a vigorous, effective sys-
rcement, that the U. S. leads the world in safe-
st such perils. With trained food and drug of-
ting a control program that encourages partici-
esponsible manufacturers there is little chance
from cheats and ignoramuese.
59, for instance, these Federal authorities insti-
od seizure actions involving the confiscation of
,800 tons of unfit foods and 207 seizures of adul-
islabcled drugs. There were 208 criminal prose-
ten injunctions obtained to protect customers
te producers.
security in this area as seen against the back-
Digest report on the Moroccan nightmare is a
inder that Dr. Wiley is being considered this
[or a place with other American immortals in
Fame. Of all Americans, he deserves this post-
lor, and his election - like his deeds - would cons-
ther service to us all. It would reawaken us to
* what we have and the vigilance required to
rotection strong and alert to the ever-growing
of food and drug technology.
In Years Gone By
TEN YEARS AGO
Chester M. McKinney Jr. will be awarded a degree of doc-
tor of philosophy by the University of Texas in their com-
mencement exercises Saturday. June 3. at Austin.
The Board of Engineers has been notified that their report
concerning the Cooper reservoir and dam and other projects
in the Red River Valley has been approved in entirely by the
Red River Association and the Board’s action on the pro-
ject should be announced within the next sixty days.
Paul Coleman, who has been resident engineer in Delta
county for the past three years for the Texas Highway De-
partment, has been transferred to Pecos where he will be in
the office of the District Engineer.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Funeral services were held for J. J. Watson Tuesday fol-
lowing his death in a Dallas hospital.
More than 1,800 persons attended the Delta County Semi-
annual Singing Convention held at the Cooper High School
auditorium Saturday and Sunday. The fall meeting will be
held in Charleston.
Grand jurv for the June term of court are R. N. Stovall,
M. Stubblefield. T. C. Wilhite. C. B. Winters. W. C. Jones, L.
H. West. Wayne Templeton. S. E. Polk, A. H. Jack, Homer
Preaslev, H. E. Moon. O. C. Brooks. D. A. Pardue, Russell
Regan, Carmon Stockton, and Luther McCollough.
THIRTY YEARS AGO
The general mercantile store of Smith and Lowe at Rat-
tan was destroyed by fire Thursday with the loss set at $8,000.
Leonard Fulkerson, who director a band in Cooper for the
past two years is making arrangements for another year.
W. I. Bartley Jr. is having a miniature golf course laid out
on East Dallas Avenue, one block east of the square.
FORTY YEARS AGO
Jury list for the the first week of district court is as follows-
J. S. Millsap, W. S. Unsell, J. M. Wells, J. M. McCrary, W. S.
Ellis, N. B. Woodside, J. R. Jack, J. B. Allard, Robert Rainey,
C. F. Burrow. L. S. Noland, J. A. Brannon. G. A. Maxwell,
W. C. Ratliff, Brently Moon, A. P. Miller, W. S. Slough. E.
G. Gideon, Sam Marsh, M. L. Huggins, B. Adams, J. H. Kit-
chen, L. R. Alexander, H. H. Leeman, P. V. Carrington, Gus
Taylor, L. L. Crump, S. E. Skinner, J. C. Chessher, F. L.
Steed, J. N. Holley, P. P. Proffer, J. C. Jeter and W. H. Gun-
ter.
FIFTY YEARS AGO
Bonds for the new school building in East Cooper have
been sold and sealed bids have been received for its con-
struction.
Rev. E. G. Prewitt has resigned his pastorate of the Chris-
tian Church here and will go to Shawnee, Okla.
looking mostly for superior tal-
ent. Best offers are going to en-
gineers with starting salaries of
$500 to $550 a month; business
graduates, $440 to $475 a month.
Accountants are in heavy de-
mand, as are economics majors,
marketing and laboratory re-
searchers, mathematics and phy-
sics majors. Those graduating
fro mhigh school who have
found themselves good students
should arrange to go to college
if they possibly can do sc.
Labor [Management Conference
The idea, started by George
Meany of the AFL-CIO. seems to
be making some progress. A pre-
liminary committee is being
formed -- with three labor men
chosen by Meany, and three em-
ployers chosen by the National j paired,
Association of Manufacturers —
to frame plans for the conference.
The idea is a good one, and I
hope it works, but I would be
happier about it if the confer-
ence procedure included consum-
er' representatives,
“Politics is People”. The Na-
tional Chamber of Commerce has
made a realistic comment on pol-
itics: ‘"Actually, most of us do
take part in politics . . . politic-
ans aren’t really just office hold-
ers and their immediate back-
ers. Politicians are most every-
body! And politics is people!”
W W White, Enloe
J. L. Gammond, Dallas
Harley Ozment,
Pond Creek, Okla.
Mrs. W. W. McCruistion, Paris
A. H. Pender, Dallas
J. P. Watscn, Cooper
Mrs. J. T. Dawson, Dallas
L. H. West, Dallas
Sara E. DeWit-t, Dallas
Mrs. Ida Fleming, Rt. 2, Cooper
Mary R. Walter. Ben Franklin
W. F. Gregory, Rt .2. Cooper
J. A. McNutt, Ben Franklin
George Reid, Pecan Gap
Robert Henson, Cooper
Van Brewer, Winnsboro
T. E. Davis, Memphis
A. L. Evans, Charleston
Den McCombs,
Midwest City, Okla.
C. C. Sanders, Mt. Pleasant
Mrs. Clara Winfrey,
Evansville, Ind.
A. C. Morris, Rt. 3, Cooper
Elwood George, Dallas
R. W. Singleton, Rt .1, Cooper
L. F. Hooten Sr., Cooper
C. J. Rhodes, Cooper
W. Glenn Vernon, Hooks
Floyd Thomas, Ben Franklin
J. C. Wester, Dallas
A. T. Stubblefield, Rt. 1,
Lake Creek
J. E. Branch. Ben Franklin
Ormon Roderick, Rt. 1,
Pecan Gap
Mrs. C. C. Winfrey. Dallas
H. Lee Quate, Dallas
H. H. Anglin, Cooper
Mrs. A. A. Moxley, Klondike
W. S. Unsell, Cooper
Mrs. Ncrma Burch. Dallas
Marcile Dunn, Dallas
Mrs. Jennie Caulhen. Tyler
Glare Damage
To The Eyes
Just Ahead
Camp Gambill
Opens On June 12
Camp Gambill, Red River Val-
ley Girl Scout Council Camp
near Paris, will open June 12
with a full Brownie session No
more registrations can be ac-
cepted for this session, but there
are still openings in the .second
Brownie session, June 19 25. a ie
Intermediate session June 26-
july 8 still has some vacancies,
but the tent unit is filled so only
registrations for cabins can be at- j
cepted, according to Miss Lor-
raine Wagner, Camp Director.
Waterfront improvements have
been made, a new shewer house
and storage building are undei
construction and improvements
are being made in the kitchen.
A week of pre-camp training
for counselor., begins June 5 with
the following serving on the
staff- Miss Julia Ann Beard, Miss
Anne Lehnhoff, Miss Robbie Jo
Peek, Mrs. L. A. Click, Mrs. V.
A. Wilkerson, and Mrs. Alex
Stark. Paris; Miss Wanda Powell,
and Miss Jan Derryberry, Ma-
bel, Oklahoma; Miss Sonja Alex-
ander, Clarksville, Miss Char-
lotte Smith, Sulphur Springs and
Mrs. Wilma Dennis, Sumner.
Mr. and Mrs. Judd Jones, Dal-
las, visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Alton Jones, last weekend.
GRADUATES at TJ.C,
In graduation exercises held
Monday night, Larry Smith was
graduated from Texarkana JUIU
lor College.
Smith plans to attend Sam
Houston State College in Hunt*,
vilie this fall where he has been
offered a full scholarship to pjay
baseball. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. Smith of Cooper.
LAWN BOY
RIDER - MOWERS
Handles like a tricycle, turns
in 4'i foot circles, 4 forward
speeds, reverse and neutral.
Priced at only $259.90.
Other Lawn Boy mowers ai
low as $59.95.
Sales & Service
O’DEA’S
Lawn Mower Service
302 F. Kaufman Paris
Phone SU 5-2587
YOU FEEL BETTER
Most people are realizing
that two pairs of glasses to
the same prescription - one
pair in Green Anti-glare i li-
ter glass - the other in regu-
lar wear, is smart more ways
than one.
All summer long, the anti-
glare tinted glasses are
“Worth their weight in gol i,”
for vacations, driving, fishing,
and countless other ways, but
not the least of all the advan-
tages of “A pair and a spare”
is the safetv of a reliable “ex-
tra”, while the others are re-
or replaced. Don’t
spoil a vacation by being
“caught short”, we can dupli-
cate anything.
Dr. Crawford’s Laboratory
grinds everything in the Op-
tical world!
Good glasses If You Need Them.
Good Advice If You Don’t
Dr. Crawford’s Clinic
Convenient Terms
PAY WFJKLY
Gilmer and Putman Streets
Sulphur Springs, Texas
When you look Better
you'll feel your Best
and look your Best
m TUF-NUT
matched
SHIRTS AND PANTS
,, „ ,v W Atmy t«i“ w,,h
Mod* '’“A,,, and lannnl bell
°appeo'»i’«-
STAY your correct Si ^
In A.iWY ,an and
silver gray.
SiZC t:
2842
Sizer;
SHIRTS uizy,
2.98
2.98
NORTH
SIDE
PLAZA
GET YOUR TUF-NUT UNIFORM AT:
PARIS
Air Conditioning*—temperatures made to order—
tor all-weather comiort. Get a demonstration!
Why Look Beyond
Americas
See the ev * Mystery Sh win color Sundays, NBC-TV—
the Pat Boone Chew Shuwruom ween y, ABC IV.
St Choice Car
for the things you want
ts Opinions____
SPARKS THEATRE
THURSDAY - FRIDAY, JUNE 2-3
A murderously funny story, magnificently cast, marvelous-
ly made:
“OUR MAN IN HAVANA’’
ALEC GUINNESS. BURL IVES, MAURINE O’HARA,
ERNIE KOVACS, RALPH RICHARDSON, JO MORROW
Comedy
SATURDAY, JUNE 4
The man who has never disappointed you in a western pic-
i-
SP * ^ >
ture:
“COMMANCHE STATION”
Technicolor and CinemaScope
RANDOLPH SCOTT, NANCY GATES
Comedy
TWs Is the Kings wood 4 Door
9-Passenger Station Wagon
VILLE, N. J., BEACON: “There is a sizeable
state and in the nation who believe that the
political candidate or a party can wni at the
ouse the so-called liberal way of life,
m needs more definitions, we would say that
iberal is one who wants more and bigger gov-
re bureaucrats ... and more inflation.”
N. Y., REPUBLICAN-REGISTER: " The na-
s presently $290 billion. The interest on this
e is $9.5 billion a year.
nt proposed budget calls for spending of 79
dget which Eisenhower presented to Congress
tained. and IF the surplus is used to pay off
tinnij 1 /JoKf onH TTi^ ufo phw «-t-
----- — — — -—r - - *• - *•** • • v vii 9xii uc ku g>l 1VJ W
te surplus each budget year, with no more
the national debt will be reduced to zero in
century.
SUNDAY - MONDAY, JUNE 5-6
91 Minutes of the most intense suspense in motion picture
history:
Every dramatic moment filmed entirely abroad the world’s
most glamorous Luxury Liner:
“THE LAST VOYAGE”
CinemaScope and Color
ROBERT STACK, DOROTHY MALONE,
EDMUND O’BRIEN
Selected Short Subject*
X2ZZjQ^227
TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7-8
“BEAU JAMES”
Technicolor
7^ ^ ^ — 1 4 1 l - f I f 4 i e 9 y • eeR * %—
Ajaotru uu Inc luiuuui Luaru ui tile uiieu mayui jimmy wain-
er of New York:
BOB HOPE, VERA MILES, PAUL DOUGLAS
Comedy
F*» Uonwefcai Trantoortaboa
With wagons like this one tn the lineup, it’s no wonder Chevrolet is the most pooular c*, m
6- and 9-passenger models, ere widest where wagons should be w.de-w.th comlortahi ? * U’ S A" ,ive Chev* »»B°ns.
cu. ft. of cargo area by a simple adjustment. All five feature all the things that ar. i “ 1 *P*Ce ,hat b*c<>m®s up to 92-
suspension cushioning all four wheels... an economy turio-fire vs that gets u t™,™8 Cheyrolet ,irst cho«». too: pull coil,
or that well-known saver, the HI-tmkift .... the shift free smoothness of TUNoooV.nr m°r<S m"*‘ *th* p,lk>n 00
height in Chevy’s noomien body by fishem than you’ll find In any other car of the u.T * ",d*f Uw" >nd entr.nc*
by and let your dealer list all the reasons why you can't buy any can roe “ tow 3- the best time to stop
,r* * J,
_ ^ in on the hottest thing this spring ... see your local authorize*Chevrolet dealer
CANTRELL CHEVROLET COMPANY
250 W. Dallas Are.
COOPER, TEXAS
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Stringfellow, Richard. Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 2, 1960, newspaper, June 2, 1960; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth983995/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Delta County Public Library.