The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, September 25, 1931 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 29 x 21 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Amos Morgan, a young farm*
%
♦
FRIDAY, SEPT. 25, 1931
Thru an arrangement with
What's in a name?
*
J •
was Sizemore.
Old papers for sale at The
♦
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as
The Deport country is
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
per
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6
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r
THAT IS JUST HOW
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Cotton Prices
=f
a
v
*
L«
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Pusillanimous,
f
5c
*
.... 5c
INEXPERIENCE
SPECULATION
49c
•I
Groceries at Lower Prices
I.
I
WE UNDERSELL
* I
kJ. R. Westbrook
I
•V
First National Bank
9
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,1
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Trust Officers of This Bank Will Be Pleased to Discuss Their
Various Trust Plans With You
■OLLOWAY, PateltohOT
at the peMofftee at table that a conaidarable amcunt
ioc ;;
< >
69c to 98c 14!
MELVIN COKER
Dant tot
Big Rack Shota from Which You Can Supply
the Entire Family at Unheard of Prices
Your Buying Power has been Reduced by reason of the
Low Price of Cotton—and we have REDUCED OUR
PRICES to a Minimum to Equalize your Dollar Value.
We list just a few of the hundreds of LOWER PRICES
you will And awaiting you at our store.
Bogata Fair Held
Friday, Saturday
I. M. Daniels and family had
gone f
home.
•ecounts.-r-Clark.sville Times.
-i...
r
I
BIOS. E. HUNT. M. D.
re, Ear, Num and Throat
Ch—s Fitted
MM First Nat’l Bank Bldg.
PARIS, TEXAS
,v»
■
*
& Sons
and CASH GROCERY
Professional
■fer-———----\
Conservative estimators think
that the Deport country will
produce a little over a third
1 more cotton than was grown
That coupled
TRUST DEPARTMENT
PARIS, TEXAS ter
► Nice Grade 25-inch Percale, the yard
►
36-inch Brown Domestic, per yard —....
36-inch Fast Color Percale and Prints, per yard
New Fall Wash Dresses, fast color
' • ’ Lota of Tennis Shoes-----------------—
■j
With cotton seed quoted at
$8.00 par ton and hulls selling
for 13.00 and meal in five sack
lota at |12.00 per ton. it is pro-
tea as serMd rtam am* setter.-of cotton seed will be fed
BunacniPTioNpRica
|1.M PCB YBAB
M Rr Year Oetaide ef Lamar
and Bod Mirer Coantiee
[NVABU BLY IN ADVANCE
BAD ADVICE...
I
i here last year.
with barns full of feed, pantry
Saw a
ff<Jtow the other day who was
. His
NEW MODERN
SHOE REPAIR SHOP
■ r - J
FEAR...
Ben S. Beltz
FOOT AND SHOE CORRECTOR
Next to Paris Building & Loan Assn. Phone 241
PARIS. TEXAS
i-'
T. G. Tomlinson had sold six
bales of cotton in Deport for
11.87 which had been placed on
at Detroit the day i the publishers, The Times can
etained by the buy- again offer the Dallas Semi-
and brought to Deport for Weekly Farm News and The
a representative,
____________________________ i
Mrs.' J. E. King had died at
her home on the Dick Sharp
place, east of Deport. She left
her husband and seven children.
i . ------------------------------------------------------
Contracts had been let for
lF •
V
K
■^7 i.
/fl
nix feet seven inches tall.
—
Visit our new shop
while in Paris. In addi-
tion to repairing shoes
correctly, we give scien-
tific attention to any
kind of foot ailment
and fill orthopedic pre-
scriptions. We repair,
remodel or rebuild any
type of shoe to get the
right shape and fom-
Daintiest shoes reparied
L <:
a’nd twiddle their
One dollar pays for
whole year's reading of the
IVW’’-"
' ■
you can
the editor, I .
printers and The Times plant want to sell
one whole year for a dollar.
That was nice and he
straight this winter. The seed
are worth more than |8.00
when used aa fertilizer, and we
could use some fertilizer with
the cotton acreage for next
year restricted to 30 per cent
of the land cultivated this year
In the full. People are holding
on to their money tight this
fall until they see how they are
jroing to “come out.”
i
I
Im
I ■! I iw/l
1 i J
'w
■ fl
n \\\
— fort, r
and made to look like new, by
rebuilding and restoring the
shape.
Would YOU L eave HER To
This....?
■ .
EQUALIZED
News of Twenty
Yean Ago
; Taken from The Times of
20 Yean Ago
DE. JOHN R. BRITTAIN
Dentist
Office at
Crescent Drug Store
Deport : . , Texas
imBebmULm
BEFORE it is too late, you should arrange to protect your wife against
D her own inexperience and the bad advice of others, against worry, over-
responsibility and possible poverty. Leave your estate, whatever its size, in
trust. Make this hank your executor and trustee. Then you can feel sure that
your family will be safely cared for always.
1 W/A
M. G. Edwards had purchas-
ed the W. S. Griffin blacksmith .. . .
shop at Rugby and was operat-'u 5 marKet i .
■in<_ 3 before, but retained by the buy- again — -----
IV. I ___1 1____•_ _ .1 A A YA____A I VXF 1-
Cl <*11U MX VVIJ^XIV W VC]AB v AV* | VV XJClYlJf *'<•**** avvwv «■ aaw mwaw
'a better price. . iDeport Times to any address in
™M^th‘:re:S Sd °?i Prof, and ^TG. W. Webb,!
. 'Cliff after » via.t with Mr. S g L L E MasQn Mrs fie3 the rate js |2.00.
R. P. Kerbow, Mrs. Lala Hearn ------------
^and Misses Pauline Rollins and Uiu papers iur saie ui xne
Receipts at the Deport cotton Tillie Gunter had been attend- Times office, 15c per hundred,
cotton was coming in from all
—--- . i I
Ralph, small son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. H. Read had been car-
, )\
»
Ing from, a half, to a.
• ACre, and to cents
jnunds is being paid.
Iflr__■ .
An Omaha cafe owner
•Wveek announced cancellation of
There are a lot of things the first of this
worrying the farmer now, aside ()f low-priced cotton.
low-priced cotton and how
one can cut a sirloin steak out
of a beef of the feminine gen-
subscribers are promptly
newing their subscriptions, represented—io the -community
There are also several old sub- exhibit section.
. i. permitted their ities
He should ■ subscript tons to lapse during plays.
,ar’ the spring and summer, who In the women’s department,
Insists durjng the past two weeks have occupying a special section of
- rg. ajrajn enroll^. Cotton prices the building, the exhibits were
monopolizing the ar(; • jow an(| money, not plenti- exceptionally fine.
ful, yet a farmer and his fam-
— ily must have something to do
the O. E. Hayes, Mayme Pruitt
—--and J. W. -Cunningham proper-
Ed Simmons, |
| T. J. Lemens and Miss Jewell,
i Daniels had been united in
.... .U JlTSl HOW I'/ i • i*m&rriflffe ut Rutrby bv the Rev
LARGE THE SUN IS light truck. Will give iR b J ,.j k J * .
or take difference. T. J. Parker, ”ODer!a> "nne in tneir
If the sun were a hollow shell i St05!: _35’P
.and the earth were- placed at j^qST—Between Deport and Les
now, and still there would lie new trailer truck—Chevrolet or
1—can get same $25 under
bital path and the shell of the. Mst. price by seeing me.- W. H.
sun of 193,000 miles. If in ad- Johnson, Phong 28, Deport. 34-c
.. . ... . , . dition to this, holes could be------
that we will pick cotton in De- punched tbroUgh the SUn’s BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY —
J*n®er :s year, and that bus- sbell to admit brilliant light, The Times can sell you at a;
F1®*? will be much better ater one might look ifp from the bargain, scholarship in either i
earth just as he does now, and the Tyler Commercial College
I behold apparently starry hea- at Tyler or Byrne Commercial i
vens very similar to our pres-1College, Dallas, at a price you
I ent celestial starry upiverse.— can afford to pay. If interest-
Ex. . ecT see us for particulars.*
.r There are varying degrees of1 > —— ■ ■■ ' , ■
liars, according to the Texas ♦♦♦-
Legislature which attempted to <>
express its opinion of Gov. < >
Huey Long of Louisiana, who ! >
charged they had been l/ought ;;
like a sack of corn because they ♦
refused to pass the no cotton < >
In 1982 law’. It’s hard to cuss
« fellow and remain dignified
-while doing it. They finally de- ;;
-elded to call him a consummate o
liar. That means a finished or J!
'Complete liar, but it probably 4 ’
-didn't satisfy the boys who ♦
have engaged in politics for !!
many years.
I rdiinnable or contemptible would
hkve more nearly filled the bill.
shelves groaning under the
weight of food prepared for
winter, and smaller debts than
those contracted last year, Jan-
uary 1 will see this country in
better condition than it was on
i year in spite other amusement features. This)
was the second year that the
------------- school property was i
, The Times appreciates very | the community fair, proving
much the manner in which its satisfactory for this purpose,
subscribers are “ ' ** -”
M e 1 newing their
♦ Old Man Summer is a low
Djpow and doesn t know he nf*i scribers who
^overstayed his visit. IL ’ ’
be told that Autumn has
rived, and that if he i
in sticking around to kindly
Train from
■conversation.
Mrs. C. L. Cunningham, the|ing the Lamar county telchars’
I Rev. E. G. Roberts officiating.. institute at Paris.
Gill Brown had lost a portion'
of his left hand when it was' er near Blossom had been whip-
caught in a bandsaw while he (ped by three men who called at
was working in the W. F. Mar- his home, stretched him over
tin woodwork shop at Minter.1 > .fence and gave him a severe
------ beating. Morgan, who was
Corry Bell had been kicked renting land on the halves was
- mule which he was hitch- furnishing his own implements
ing to a wagon. A gash three and it was supposed that re-
cut in his sentment brought about by this
rendered un- had caused the action.
BARGAIN RATE TIMES
AND DALLAS NEWS
■- - - - 1! Corry Bell
to Tennessee to make their ?y • 1
ing U _
; inches long was cut in
Joe Dillard had bought the cheek. and. he^asK}""-----
Globe Hotel and the adjoining bX th« blow-
property from J. R. Pride.
STEPHEN H. GRANT, M. D.
Office: Deport Sanitarium
Hours: 7 to 9 a. n»
Every day except Sunday
tow-priced cotton and how
i
un-
pick
It al
-debts contracted this year, ami
J. M. Grant and Miss Pearl
Lawler place, two sacks El Reno ! Holl had been united in marri-
flour. Suitable reward. Notify «‘ige at the home of Mr. and
earth—240,000 miles—and cir-P'* *' 1 11>v ,M-
Bogata's fourth annual com-
munity fair was held Friday
and Saturday. A larger and
more varied list of exhibits was
shown this year than last, and
the quality of the items on dis-
play from farms, orchards and
gardens of southwest Red Riv-
ed county was far above an
average.
Livestock exhibits were on
display on Saturday. No judg-
ing was done in any department
until Saturday morning. Voca-
tional teachers judged the ex-
hibits.
The public school building
was used as an exhibition hall.
The school campus served as a
gathering place for crowds and
--- Cliff after a visit with Mrs. S.
W. Hearn.
Liiav li,
used forj im-
proving ~ ------;
yard were nearly 500 bales and
r> .. , t^u 4 cotton was coming in from all
re-1 Rosalie and Johntown were directions
Both commun-
presented excellent dis-;
ried to Paris to undergo an op-i
eration for throat trouble.
2 cents per word first
in Red River and Lamar conn- additional insertion.’ No ad ac- concrete sidewalks in front of
’ | ............J........ •'-■♦ - 4 • 4. t 4«
th^ subscriber, you can buy the* -.'
(services c
>10,000 in charge accounts held
against several hundred cus-
tomers.
will have to Worry no more over
poor collections-—provided the
same bunch is not permitted to!
come back and open new charge
the center of the shell, the
Some farmers have alreadyjT'10" 'ou'<l -'bo ........ .
:ed enough cotion and sold brM/.n‘ ‘be <). T. Smith, Pattonville Rl.
at the I price ) iquida e dc alM)Ut thg effrth as it doeH ANYONE—Wishing to buy a
I J • <n w* *1 .« 4 « I I 4 . a xx • • • xx • • 1 xl 1 . xx a • • j — • - —■— ■
we now cleaning up some old' bctw(. th or. - r
■debts carried over from last • • ■
---- according • to local bank-1
The prediction is made
- ~:----———----4-
Hon. R. L. McDowra had re-
turned from Austin, where he
Old papers for sale at The had been
The Deport country is need- this winter besides sit before Times office, 15c per hundred. to his home at Pattonville,
tqg cotton pickets tn help gath- the fire a’nd twiddle their
«r our enoinious’crop, and Sec- thumbs,
rotary Hutson has sent ads to a r *--'-
tbe daily newspapers for them, local news, enables a family to
’Cbtton in this vicinity is mak- keep up with the doings of
hale per friends and relatives, and to Rates:
100 learn all important news events insertion; 1 cent per word each
JU | J /1 D i v<i»« <»rwl I «i m •» »* /• / kit rt . 1 .1 f a. ? _ — _ t \T_ 1
ties. If you, reader, are not a cepted for less than 25 cents.
the I HAVE two good saddles, and tjes>
. .1 one.
Deport, Texas.
TO TRADE—Horse team,
'ill
of
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, September 25, 1931, newspaper, September 25, 1931; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1292967/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.