The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1932 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 29 x 21 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
ever
J
The Bogata baseball team
Another reason why we are
First prize for the beet util-
• <
/*»
*
r
¥
habit
An attractive
[*»
L'.‘>
weather.
Texans
Times Classified Ads pay.
Home
on
INSURANCE
YOUR NEWSPAPER
1
I
a
Vcan happen to a cotton crop in house:
I- *■'**
John H. Perry. New
.■
4.
it •‘J
Let’s Swap/
I
V
I
1
I
- 'll
id
•I
I
Gave Fortune Away
1
»
’ your part.
1 ’ *'
.Tl
'■
£•
I
5
r
"Say, what kind of
are
ON TEXAS FARMS
By W. H. Darrow
Extension Service Editor
In bringing in your quota of canned foods add* fruits, please let us have
as great variety as possible.
A woman may dress appro-
priately for small cost, eight
Pierce Ament of Littlefield,
is here for a visit in the home
of Mrs. J. T. Williams.
LONE STAR GAS AD
AWARDED FIRST PRIZE
►id ivy poi
wash their
. r<
■ kB? ----------------
RatalU at the peatofle* rt Depart,
Tskm, as essend-elBM mail amStar.
SUBKBVnONPBlOE
fi.ee pcb tea*
fl.10 Par Tear Oataid* af Lamar
and Bed Elver Canties
INVABUBLT IN ADVANCE .
*"FRIDAY, AUGUST 571932
S
IS
SO
24 25 9427
■■
about
down and 1
eral hundi
GEORGE TERRY
RUPERT L. BALLARD
For Weigher at Deport
JOHN W. TEMPLE
DAN SOUTHERLAND
For Constable, Precinct 7
TROY GRANT
T. C. (TROY) BUSSELL
FIRE, WINDSTORM, HAIL, PLATE GLASS
BONDS and AUTOMOBILES
MRS. J. H. MOORE
Insurance Agent DEPORT, TEXAS
HAULING
ANYWHERE
ANY TIME
Regular freight service
between Paris, Deport, Bo-
gata, Talco.
KIRBY TRANSFER CO.
Deport, Texas
.Mi
JFe7/ swap The Times
for a Variety
of Canned Foods
. A~. ' * • ' ' • i *. ‘ «
I '■
If-
•ts.
J -rH
company
expecting, if you don’t
TJ, ”, . • q
Hl
Mrs. Farm Wife-
S'.
■ I
■ $
Ma
• ••da 1
1 U' »’•’ ’’’c '
•y.
r'
L-
i"
Sr
According to the laws of nature, editors have to eat.’ Knowing there is a
scarcity of money—and a goodly supply of CANNED FOODS in the farm
homes, we are making the following proposition to those who wish to
becor.’.o new subscribers or renew expired subscriptions— ,
■ .i—.*
solicitors of orders far t
that are .kori^liijr /■!
greater nuisance to the
ican home, as Bhy housewife
might truthfully f
the housewife whose
constantly invaded by the itin-‘
remedy in her own hands.
A timely suggestion along oiine bath will destroy the ivy
■
■y
ft- • •
£££% £
1
11 *'
■IS
I
I'.
hi*
With the finest corn crop
years, no brood sows should
■hipped to packers. There will 1
be a big demand for pigs this
fall and winter.
|p5w;i .‘.“‘I
• -
•h.
■
O'
'v .
■ ;m'.
r
I * L*'V
We notice that aU
as editors seem to pick on our
friend Sam Holloway of the De-
Airplane rides
» their weakness,
ight, Sam, there are
about those rides-r-
port Times,
seem to
That’s aR i
two things
they will 1
are very thrilling and
very elevating. — Farmersville
Times.
Yes, and reasonably depress-
ing when the pilot noses up a*
45 degrees, throttles
lejs the ship fall sev-
red feet.
It pays to feed dairy heifers
before freshening. J. E. Coyle
of the Dallas County Dairy
Herd Improvement Association
fed two and checked their pro-
duction against two which re-
ceived no preliminary feed. The
two that were fed prior to calv-
ing gave 30% more milk than
the other two and the extra
production paid for the extra
feed in one month.
wardrobe demonstrators in Ma-
son county horn; demonstration
clubs have proven. One year’s
clothing ranged in cost from
$2.60 to $40.97, with an aver-
age of $17.89. All demonstrat-
ors made budgets, kept records,
used foundation patterns in
making their own clothes and
improved their clothes closets.
Tell your neighbors about this offer—and tell them to bring us canned
goods to trade for The Times. We will greatly appreciate this favor on
' • ..
THIS TRADE PROPOSITION IS GOOD
. TILL AUGUST 81, 1932
■
■ mirr
'‘-7
I
&
i •
I
L
■- ‘ ■-
b wktfect to the
■ Aug. 27. 1932:
REEl-RIVER COUNTY
For Tax Assessor
MAX SCAFF
For County Clerk .
B. A. (BUN) CRAIN
FRANK SMYRE
this newspaper and other Texas
was I of business, and I am not going
ru“* to allow you to use it as a store.
Good day.”
That ’might seem rather in-
considerate. But it is one way
the peddler,
who has not the slightest con-;
sideration for your peace and;
comfort, but uses your home!
as a market place, in unfair
competition with home mer-
cJ»ajits who pay rent, taxes, li-
censes and in other ways con-
tribute to the welfare of the
community.—Herald, Sauk Cen-
ter, Minn.
President Hoover dealt agri-
culture a severe blow last week
refusing to sign the farm }ieaVy- hand of depress-
bill. It will cost Texas alone j — ......
approximately ten million dol- terprises or manufacturing es- ‘
He has approved bills tablishments.
1 ’"4-
>“V -r
J. ,
■ .1
■M+-
Deport’s first bale of cotton
of the 1932 season is expect »d
next week. Last year's cron
pw.i was late, and our first bale
came on August 21. Prospects
for a big crop are not so good
now as a month ago, but much chants
August.
IHlNNIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilillllllllllUlllllllllllllillllllll
1 YEAR’S SUBSCRIPTION—5 QUART GLASS JARS FOOD
1 YEAR’S SUBSCRIPTION---6 QUART TIN CANS FOOD
1 YEAR'S SUBSCRIPTION--------9 NO. 2 CANS FOOD
: 1 a
■
■
■ P
’ L ii; >•’
V-
r
l
L I
X
Six months extra grazing
more than repaid N. P. Pace of
ou afe^there but penton county for the lal>or and
investment in clearing and
planting a piece of bottom land
to a clover and grass mixture
last winter. He has asked fur-
ther help from the county
agent in improving more pas-
tures with the view of turning
his 400-acre farm into a prov-
able stock farm.
X
Z
X -r
b
I
r I
►
* I
*
hr '
k3
John C. Thompson’, president
of the Texas Ginners Associa-
, tion, is authority for the state- j
; ment that an average of ?2 hut “out of sight; out of mind!”
g cento per 100 pounds was To keep in step with the pro-
■ charged by Texas ginners last gress of your community; to
» rear, and that the price must get your share of business, you
be raised this year. Most La- must advertise regularly. Take
■gp ~ _ / ____ . _ r
charged from 15 to 20 cents yOur confidence; he can
n , > 1 you invaluable assistance. Es-
- ■ tablish an advertising budget.
Will Rogers, America’s hu- Plan a regular, schedule for
■Emorist, paid editors of small your advertisements. It s a po-
town newspapers a very great , l»cy that is followed by the
compliment last week. The oc- most successful stores; its an
casion was a visit of the Nat- ’dea ^*£ ^11 be profitable for
t nation- zette.
w ( Mrs. Ed Lawrence and dau-
who doesn’t read at least one’ghter, Yevonne of Vernon, are
■ •** ■ * •_»*•— *. f _—» a. - i---
I of Mr ”and Mrs. Othor Pearson.
»
r
in
v X.
... 'XittfluiB
.... '
It’s An Easy Life
At least so far as wash day worries are con-
cerned, when we are entrusted with your
MJlaundry work. Cleaner, more careful, «more <
. economical are some of the advantages you’ll
enjoy. Try oar family wash service.
,8c to ftrat Tea Pooada
’ Be * each AddKieaal Peoad
►
t..
mar and Red River county gins your newspaper publisher into
charged from 15 to 20 cents your confidence; he can give
to last year.
I
With our offer to trade a
year’s subscription to The Times and high temperatures, aside
for canned food, there is no from the unreasonable
good reason for any family in fish have occasionally of refus-
this section doing without the ing bait,
home paper. See our offer else-,
where.
■i
J I
. ■ n ’
I .
I
AUGUST nn
"SL
S
a
I l;l
r 1
F 1
1
■ z
College Senior: *T would give
live dollars for just one kiss
from a nice little girl like you."
Innocent Co-ed: "Oh, how
terribler
College Senior: "Did I of-
fend you?*
Cb-cd: "No, I was just think-
ing about the fortune I gave
away last night"
I
I
I
■
-
I •
I
/
6
21 22
2SM
S
to 11 A
14 IS IS IT IS
SI
9
lent last week.
tonal Editorial Association to you —Stillwater
California.‘He said till
■I advertising did not control
our pages and that any person
weB-evritten country newspaper ’ visiting this week in the home
was not truly informed. i
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________1 - _____
AH announcements ta thia column are ma
action of the voters at the Democratic primary
LAMAR COUNTY
hive/to admit they’For Representative, 37th Dist
- and very. BEN H. SHARPE
For Representative 38 Dist.
C. C. (CHARLEY) CANON
For Tax Collector
CLYDE HUMPHREY
for County Clerk
ROY J. WEAVER
For Commissioner, Precinct 1 lity institutional advertising in
the United States has been
awarded to the advertising de-
partment of the Lone Star Gas
System, by the Public Utilities
I Advertising Association. More
than 100 companies in the Unit-
iui Tcv-,maiLer now mucn ii may inier-
entered fere with your daily routine.
ing you into buying something
4.1. — X •_ __ _ _ X ________ _ _ ?Xl___,
which urged prepar- want nor need. Sometimes you
but to get rid of him, when
IV tVIBUN IVI
-
If vacationiste and motorists
wish to a "* *
Amar-1 they should
testHy.-SS ‘STR.’S*?
nose home to ing to Dr. Theodore Cornbteet,
1 by the Rin-; dermatologist and lecturer at a
erant super-salesman has the poet-graduate cttnfc of the Chi-
remedy in her own hands. • cago Medical Society. The gas-
A timely suggestion along oiine bath wiU destroy the ivy
this line is made by Prof. Con-, in moat cases. Dr. Cornbteet
rad, of the New Jersey Teach- said,
ers’ college, who points out that I ’
the peddler who boasts that his1 The Bogata baseball team
firm has no store is trying to J™ over the Highway team 4
make a store Qut of your home. 3 Sunday afternoon at Bo-
You are expected to furnish a ?*ta, playing off a tie, both
place where he may do business teams having won a game each,
free from the expense which
other merchants must pay.
Besides, the insists on making
- you shop at his convenience, no
cd States and Canada with sev- J matter how much it may inter-
eral thousand ads were entered ■ fere with your daily routine,
in the contest. The company He takes up your time argu-
also won honorable mention for ing you into buying something
^ an ad entitled “A Timely Re- that in most cases you neithar
minder” t--1--’-*- ------ • -
;> ation for winter heating. __ _ r
The winning ad appeared in you ought to say:
; this newspaper and other Texas ( “This is a home, not a place
J newspapers last fall and
house dress t*tlv(l “Your Gas Dollar—What
—r— alxiut another change in the can be made forabout 76 cents, Becomes °F It*. The adver-
\ as blowing Tuesday, following The Dinner Horn, established demonstration club members in 'ar (l*vj(l°(lj
each pas dollar stays in Texas,
being spent for materials, sup-
SS.K,
?“!:«l medical attention have hem
j ad was that most of the money
" paid out by customers for gas
is put right back into the state
to maintain a dependable and
Mrs. Joe Rogan, 4-H pantry t uninterrupted gas supply, and
of the Berry also to develop the gas system
Home Demonstration .for future needs.
{Club in Williamson county has Roth ads were written by
to the neighbors ' Willard G. Wiegel, assistant ad-
what she learned in a meat can-, vertising manager for the Ixme
i_ .i r. ii has Star. Art work on the winning
ad was done by Hugh Cargo,
commercial artist -of Dallas.
Type setting, mats and electros
were furnished by Western
Newspaper Union.
L ’T; -
f •-.-X
►
k « .1
r I
►
► I
£ I
►
> I
►
► ]
t I
J ]
: i
I 7 ■-
■
■ •
B ' 'I
The following was taken from
circular sent to retail mer-
i by a large wholesale
The value of your local news-
---- ■ --------------- paper to the success of your
John H. Perry, New York business cannot Im? over-esti-
■ newspaper publisher, proposes mated. It’s worth all the sup-
r Europe pay its war debt to the l>ort and co-o|M>ration you can
' United States in wine, beer and give it. For the newspaper is
Hquora, which in turn would Im? a mirror reflecting the life of
•old to our citizens. He claims the community in which you
this (would eliminate bootleg- and your store have an impor-
| ging, release hoarded money tant part. Your advertisement'
this mirror. Everylx»dy sees it
there. If it is not there, the
mirror is dark where your store
should be.
you cannot be seen. Your store
is open for business as usual,
Economic conditions brought
, aiA/uv anwviivi in t Uflll DC IflMUC llJl ilDUUl ID CCIlLa, t , -
A reasonably good gulf breeze Paris newspaper field last week, it has been found by 65. home1, **ni<‘nt displayed a large dol-
\ as blowing Tuesday, following The Dinner Horn, established demonstration club members in . <liv><I<vri into various sec-
three weeks of extremely hot and published for nearly; fifty, Wichita county who entered the ^ens’ showing that 93. cents of of discouraging
■feather. Texans can stand years by Walter E. Boyd, was -annual house dress contest. “*“* *"
much heat if there is a breeze, sold to the Paris News. News-1 ------
but we almost melt<-d and ran paper suspensions in the United:
down the past three weeks. Status last year totaled 283'
p?1 suPP^-v*n^ her sister with need-
type and a hand press to print |made from a rar()en by Har.ellthe s'stem'
a newspaper, and they have i c|ub gjr| jn gO v-'
• i€ counts'.
ion like most other business en-
kn'-. He has approved bills tablishments. With the retire-1
providing millions for industrial ment of the Boyds from Lamar, demonstrator
purposes, but rejected agricul- C(;linty journalism, The Deport Creek
(Times editor becomes the coun-!
ty’s oldest publisher in years of, I^jss^d
service.
i ning school last fall. She has
given 23 canning demonstrat-
ions) in which 3600 containers
of meat were put on pdntrv
shelves.
Clyde Carruth, Gray county
dairy herd demonstrator, does
not see how he could run his
dairy without a silo. Last year
he dug a trench silo and filled
it with 85- tons of sorghum and
hegari. He averted a drop of
25^< to 50% in production last
winter by feeding ensilage
while wet weather kept his 15
cows off wheat pasture 2’4
•nd restore respect for law and. is the reflection of your store irt months,
order.
in
5!?
11 _________________
.(glad the election is over because
'it gives Homer M. Price of the
Marshall Morning News, Ash-
Thur? ,eT Evans of the Bonham Fav-
of the Dei«ort post office Thurs- ite and Holloway of the
day morning under heavy loads Times a chan^ to get
°f <1"“^ °lJkr ca^a,OR•• back down on the creek and
mall order houses know enough (..fetch
in” some more catfish to
to pl»nt ■ few «ed before har- lx. eatin. on._CUrk,vi|Ie Time,; I
vest time. Everything has its draw-
backs, including fishing—for in-
stance, chiggers, ticks, turtles
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.
Matching Search Results
View six places within this issue that match your search.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.
The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1932, newspaper, August 5, 1932; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1293012/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.