Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1966 Page: 8 of 10
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III. junior1
rlor University.
Blaster holi-
parents, Mr. and
Jr., and other
Miller, freshman
Jniversity of Tex-
Blaster holidays
uts, Mr. and Mrs.
tter, sophomore
»rth Texas State
ending the East-
his parents, Mr.
Schmitter, and
Charleston Man
Now In Viet Nam
NEWS FROM PECAN GAP Mrs. Kate Morgan Mrs. D. Daniels Dies In Arkansas
MRS. C. A COCKRELL
Boilerman Second Class John
H Butler. USN, son of Mr and
Mrs. C. B Butler of Charleston,
is among 3,500 Navy officers and
men reporting for duty recent-
ly at the Naval Support Activ-
ity in De Nang Viet Nam.
Their tasks include off-loading
ships and handling supplies from
razor blades to roadgraders, air-
craft fuel and lubricants, and
provisions of all kinds, through
the Port of De Nang, and over
beaches from the demilitarized
zone in the north to the Chu Lai
in the south.
School Election
Voters in the Fannindel Inde-
pendent School District elected
i Thomas Reel and Sam Merrill,
encumbent, to the School Board
in last Saturday’s School Elec-
tion. Reel succeeds Vernon Par-
rish, who was not a candidate
for re-election. At Pecan Gap
where Mrs. T. C. Wilhite was
election judge; Mrs. J. J. Giddens
and Mrs. C. A. Cockrell, clerks.
62 votes were cast. 53 persons
voted at Ladonia.
Review
Thursday, April 7, 1966
NEED AN
nsion Phone
mere pennies
|ay you can go cn
king when the
tie rings!
family.
Mrs F M. Underwood, former
Texas Lowery, arrived by plane
in Paris Saturday from San Ber-
nardino. California, to spend the
Easter holidays with her father.
Tom W. Lowery, and the Garth
Yeagers in Pecan Gap. Mrs Un-
derwood teaches in the public
•choc’s in San Bernardino.
W. M. Merrill is a patient in
Dallas hospital.
Mrs. C. W. Deatherage. Pecan
Gap. and Mark Deatherage. Ro\
ton. visited Mr. and Mrs. Billy
at Gran.;
Of Pecan Gap Is
Buried Friday
Easter Holidays
The Fannindel School will dis- Sand‘1R and Barry
miss classes at 4 p.m. on Friday. * '-airie Sundax.
April 8, and will resume class-
room work at 8 a m. on April 1
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Yeager ac-
companied Mrs. F M. Under-
Mr. and Mrs Richard Thomas. wood and Tom I^wery to Hope.
Dallas, visited their parents. Mr. ; • Sunday where they visited
and Mrs. J. M. Thomas. Mr and relatives.
Mrs. \V. A. Sansing Sunday. | ^*r and Mrs. Murl Moore and
T. C. Wilhite and A E Conley Gai1- Lubbock, visited his sister
attended a political rally in Mt. j ^s. Je>> Giddens here and his
Vernon last Thursday. , Lithe;. F. J. Moore, who is a
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Perry. Rox- Pat*ent at P-easar.t Grove Nurs-
ton. visited friends in Pecan Gap j 1Rg ^o:‘e in Paris Sunday.
Mr* Kate Morgan. 77. widow
of Sam Edward Morgan of Pecan
Gap died at 1 30 p.m. on Wed-
nesday. March 30. at Park Haven
Nursing Center in Greenville
after a short iHr.es
Born in Pecan Gap on Aug.
30. 1888. Mrs. Morgan was the
daughter of Add Walker and
Lonella Hensley Walker, pioneer
residents of that area. She was
educated at Mayo College in
Commerce, and taught school for
three years prior to her marri-
age to Sam. Morgan on June 13.
jndav afternoon
Mrs. O. F. Muncy and Mrs.
John Deatherage has returned1 Richard Siebtr.hausen visited
✓
BUSINESS OFFICE TODAY AND
CONVENIENT EXTENSION . . .
A LIMITED TIME YOU MAY
LTR CHOICE OF COLOR WITHOUT
LL EXTRA CHARGE FOR COLOR
YOU ACT NOW YOU CAN SAVE
ITHE USUAL INSTALLATION
home after undergoing surgery
in a Paris hospital Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. B. Newman, of
Commerce, visited friends here
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Scott, Dal-
las. were visitors in Pecan Gap
last week.
Mrs. Don Woodall ar.d children
of Commerce visited her parents.
Dal.as with Mrs. J, B. Hibbert.
who underwent an eye operation
recently.
Mrs. Fearl Clower and Miss
Etta Adams were in Sulphur
Springs Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dulles Terrill of
Roxton visited friends here Fri-
day.
Blan Sandlin. Commerce visit -
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Stancil, here1 ed n:' mol"er' Mrs. Ruth Sand-
Friday
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Young were
lin. Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Van Calverv, of
in Dallas Saturday visiting their I ^>ar!s- 'L-i.ed Mrs. Al.ie Price
daughter. Mrs. Joe Williams, and
TEL. NO. 96
,7.
GU LF STATES
efyo/une
in i fief
ClwC TOP CS F £ A T w R £ POST S TE'.l
IVi
wsJ L S i C VvA'm AT
CSE TlV£ CCSS'DESED
HEdPPL'L in C.3.ING
The BITE CP THE
TARANTULA ..
THE GOOD OLD DAYS?”
.... signs of the past
Today’s prescriptions pro-
long lives and shorten the
duration of many illnesses
MILLER’S
Pharmacy
Your Dependable
Druggist
Phone 199 Cooper
Saturday.
Emmett Hurst. Dallas, visited
friends here Saturday.
Mrs. A. J. Shannon was called
to Boston. Mass., to attend the
funeral of her father.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Newman.
Irving, visited here recently.
Mrs. P F. Campbell has been
visiting relatives in Fort Worth.
Mrs. Grace Whittenburg is
spending the Easter holidays with
her granddaughter. Mrs. Bill Mil-
ler and family in Houston.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ward. Mr
and Mrs. Lewis Hopkins and Mrs
Lillian James visited in Dallas
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. McFarland
and children of Hurst spent Sat-
urday here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. Moody.
Rev. and Mrs. C. B. Garrett
Greenville, visited Mrs. O. F.
Muncy here Thursday.
Mrs. Thelma Apple, Dallas, j
visited in Pecan Gap Sunday. I
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Arnold, of |
Hurst, visited friends in Pecan j
Gap the first of the week.
Mr. and Mrs. I. V. Daniels. Mr. j
j and Mrs. Billy Don Daniels and
children, all of Bonham, were
I guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. A.
] Cockrell Sunday.
Surviving are two daughters.
Mrs J. T. Williams of Sulphur
Springs, ar.d Mrs. G. C. Boyer
of Greenville; three sisters. Mrs.
L. B Clower of Pecan Gap. Mrs.
J. W. Taylor of Santa Anna. Tex-
as. ar.d Mrs. M J. Balser of
Fox. Okla.. and two grandsons.
Her husband preceded her in
death in July, 1965.
Funeral service was held last
Friday at 10 a.m. at the Pecan
Gap Methodist Church, where
she had long been a member. The
pastor, the Rev. Walter Zimmer-
man, officiated and was assisted
by the Rev. Charles Wesiey Gar-
rett. pastor of the Pecan Gap
Baptist Church.
Serving as bearers were Ver-
non Parish. Frank Crawford. Ar-
dell Allison. T. C. Wilhite. Garth
Yeager, and Malcolm Woodard.
McDonald Funeral Home of
Cooper was in charge of ar-
rangements, and made interment
in the Pecan Gap Cemetery.
Mrs. Dora B. Daniels. 84, a
resident of Delta County for 52
I vears. died last Thursday eve-
ning in El Dorado. Ark. where
| she had been visiting with re-
i latives for two months. She had
| been in failing health for sev-
, eral months. She was the widow
i of J M Daniels who preceded
her in death in 1942. She was
bom in Mayflower, Ark. on
Dec. 21, 1832.
Surviving are three sons and
four daughters, Jack Daniels and
L. F. Daniels of Cooper, Pete
Daniels of Grand Prairie, Mrs.
Garland Anderson and Mrs. K.
R Russell, both of Arlington,
Mrs. Maude Cash of Smackover,
Ark., and Mrs. Nonlee Smith.
Camden. Ark. She also leaves a
step-brother. Joe Lee of Big Spr-
ing. 21 grandchildren and 27
great-grandchildren.
Funeral service was held last
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the First
j Baptist Church of Cooper where
I site was a member. The Rev Bob
I I. Johnson, pastor, officiated and
! McDonald Funeral Home made
I interment in the Lake Creek
Cemetery, with grandsons ser-
ving as bearers.
Former Resident
Dies In Lubbock
A food credit rating u , ,
able asset. (i„ard ,t *
iru«t, Ketail Cr.dl, ,1**0
Mrs. Grace Hendrix has re-1
reived word that her brother-in-
law, W. M. Freeman, died in
Lubbock on March 25. and that
funeral service and burial was
in Lubbock on March 28. He re-
sided in Delta County until he
moved to Lubbock in 1932 where
he taught school until his health
failed. He also taught school in
Delta County.
Surviving are his wife, the
former Bessie Echols, four sons,
one daughter, 10 grandchildren
and one great-grandchild.
Symptoms Of
Eyestrain
Mrs. C. C. Oliver, a member
of the Cooper High School fa-
culty, was in Houston last Sat-
urday and Sunday attending a
meeting of the State Classroom
Teachers Association. Mrs. Oliver
is president of the Delta County
unit of Classroom Teachers. Her
husband accompanied her
Burning, smarting, feeliti
sand in the eyes, sorene^H
eyeballs, redness, inf
conditions of the eye iid ^
common symptoms of J*\ **
Perhaps headache i8 onTnf
most common symptoms ® ,h|
strain. It may be frontal tL*
al, or occipital. pain in 'th
of ,he kcad. extreme nervouH
nauseation, and swimmin
head is also caused manv.H
by defective vision. Many injH
duals suffering from the ‘ H
symptoms of eyestrain atMk
th7 •%*** *o other (H
and suffer much, perhap, N
many remedies, before disc0v?
mg ‘he fact that their eve,
at fault. y ^
.n/'mLT.Vf<^rd'S£linic- ConvJ
and Putman Streets ’smjjl
and Putman
Springs, Texas.
Delta Native
Dies In Paris
YOUR PIPELINE TO MAXIMUM YIELDS
FEED YOUR CROPS DELTA - FLO . .
- - AND WATCH THEM GROW
‘ OUR SOLUTIONS ARE PRODUCTS OF ALLIED CHEMICAL CORPORATION”
There Are Many Brands Of
GOOD FERTILIZER
Misses Ellen and Bab Janes
of Houston and Jeff Janes, jun-
ior per-medical student at Tex-
as Christian University, Ft.
Worth, will arrive tomorrow
(Friday) to spend Easter week-
end with their parents, Dr. and
Mrs. Olen G. Janes and Juli.
Aaron Denton Garner, 69, a
native and long-time resident of
the Lake Creek area in Delta Co-
unty. passed away last Sunday
morning in a Paris hospital. A
son of R. D. and Frances (Pat-
terson) Garner, he was born on
Nov. 19, 1896.
Surviving are a son, Autrev
Garner of Panama Canal Zone;
a daughter. Mrs. Sue Barker,
Houston; a brother, Roy Garner,
Rt. 4 Paris; and four sisters, Mrs.
W. H. Stripland, Mrs. Johnnie
Long. Paris, Mrs. Stella Lewis,
Rt. 4 Paris, and Mrs. Lera Wynn.
Dallas. Eight grandchildren and
two great-grandchildren also sur-
vive.
Funeral service was held Tues-
day at 2 p.m. at the McDonald
Funeral Home Chapel in Cooper,
with the Rev. Harvey Redford of
Paris officiating, with burial fol-
lowing in the Lake Creek Ceme-
tery.
But
i a OUR DELTA - FLO LIQUID FERTILIZER
has many advantages over all other brands.
Come in and give us an opportunity to discuss these ad-
vantages with you.
Visit Otir 1-Stop Farm Service Center
FARM CHEMICALS • LIVESTOCK SUPPLIES
® LICENSED HERBICIDE DEALER
• AUTHORIZED TREFLAN DEALER
Give Us An Opportunity to Serve You.
DELTA LIQUID FERTILIZER COMPANT
P. O. BOX 49G TELEPHONE 325-4350
BEN FRANKLIN. TEXAS
D. C. MOORE. Owner I. E. MORRIS, Manager
\Vo
...... . u
There’s no hangover heat with gas cooking. Turn a gas
burner off and it’s off — instantly. Cooking stops. Broil-
ing is cooler, too, and smokeless. With gas you can
broil with the door closed. Gas makes the big difference
because it’s cool, clean, fast, safe, efficient, dependable
and more economical than you-know-what. Now’s the ideal
time to get that modern, automatic gas range that you've
always wanted—at gas appliance dealers or Lone Star Gas.
-'iw
HLA
• «r
# Sport Sedan. Eight standard safety features,
\ng front and rear seat belts.
DISCOVER AMERICA
ILETlS ALWAYS BEEN FAMOUS FOR SMOOTHING OUT ROUGH ROADS
And right now for a Double Dividend, you get a buy that’ll smooth out your budget!
CHEVROLET
DOUBLE
DIVIDEND DAYS!
NO. 1 BUYS • NO. 1 CARS
Now at your Chevrolet dealer’s
Buys on (hose big. beautiful Chevrolets have'
never been better! Expensive car looks and
luxury, solid value features like Delcotron
generator, self-adjusting brakes, Magic-Mirror
finish. Right now you can find just the color
and body style you want—and your ( hevrolet
dealer’s making it mighty easy to buy. See him!
1500!
GM
i of good buys ail in one place... at your Chevrolet dealer’s: Chevrolet • Chevelle • Chevy II • Corvalr • Corvette
41-mi
NTRELL CHEVROLET CO.
1100 Block W. Dallas Ave. Phone 220 Cooper, Texas
Anniversary
ft ~ ~ ■ TS . v
Range
Celebrating the 150th Anniversary of the Gas Industry
A6R|CULT1
By Gordon Ford,
rWeeJs can reduce pusturl
Ljd. by as much as 50 percent
,,.amv pasture and hal
|Th,;t hy with th<’ d4
plant, for Nutncn.l
rf ture and Light. They towel
I " quality, harbor insects uni
ISases and increase labor anl
lequipment costs.
I Weed control by chemical d
I orhanical methods can up fort
r nullity and yields- But weel
I ntrol* is no substitute for prJ
I10, fertilization and managemenj
AT
The new weed
a grower’s meets
7:90 p.m.
ALL
• Refresl
This is a new idl
broad leaf weeds!
MISS IT ! ! —
PHONE 83
■ y
FOR SALE
Farm Supplies
BARB WIRE, 2 point, :
guage, imported @ $6.90
roll, American wire @ $9.45 pc
[ roll. Cooper Feed & Supply C
Nursery Stock
[TOON ROADSIDE NURSER
See us for roses, shrubs, shac
ar.d fruit trees. Located at er
of North East First Street
Paris Highway. Phone 179-W.
Business Directoi
FURNITURE
riprap -
Pickup & Delivery
AUTO SERVI
Dclco - Southlan
• Goodyear Tires-Tube
• Washing-Polishing
STOCKTC
130 N.W. 1st St.
INCOME V
C. A. COCKRELL —
30 Years Experience - Rc
PAUL C
Phone 248 -
• Sinclair Gas - <
• Road Service
• Tire Repair
Jack Daniel* Electric
RefrigeraUon Servlc
*5® E. San Antonio, Phoi
All Work Guarantee
POE MOTOR 0
eor THE BEST in 1*
AND used cars s
j htONE ",C,IARD
McKinney
Mdio & T-V Re]
1„,c‘ure Tube Repal
•® Day Guarantee <
I Voeper AU Work
JAMES L. HODGES
jerry hot .comb
phone 84
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Cooper Review (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1966, newspaper, April 7, 1966; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth984189/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Delta County Public Library.