The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 22, 1943 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 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:
til
Thank God every morning
when you get up that you have
something to do that must be
done, whether you like it or not.
Being forced to work, and forc-
ed to do your best, will breed in
you temperance, self control,
diligence, strength of will, con-
tent and a hundred other vir-
tues which the idle never knew
—Charles Kingsley.
Texas’ state flower, the Blue-
bonnet, is blooming profusely
now. They don’t "just grow” in
this immediate area of the state,
but must be sown and cultivat-
ed. Mrs. Stephen H. Grant has
The majority may not always be
right, but it seems to have a priori-
ty rating just the same.
ssillllp
mardwoop
SOAAe AUC500RI FIRMSLHAVe TAKEN TO
POSTING HELP WANTeP APS IN
BBAUTV SALONS
We would think more of our seed
catalog if it would tell us how to
grow something that is bug-proof.
Nothing is too big for the United
States to tackle. That Red Cross
quota of $125,000,000 was oversub-
scribed.
Thieves must admit, sooner or lat-
er. that it pays to be honest. They
should figure that out before they
get in.
'1 here would be more satisfaction
believing half of what some men
SO <&&& *
MlNUjZ-
~~w -IP . / D/9V fiNO Nt&HT_
NOW aWDF OF TWMHfeRnJT/SA TOTAL OF /. 932 OOO
HIGH EXPLOSIVE PROJECTILES
^ ” WERE TURNED OUT By
AMERICAN ORDNANCE
~ ^ MANUFACTURERS IN FEBROARy
PLEASE keep your stock from run
ning over Jess Elder’s farm. H C
Clark. H.p
FOR SALE—Nice maize, delivered
at your barn. See Forrest Petty
Deport. il-p
HAY FOR SALE—See Jess Gifford
at John G. Wright’s barn, east of
Deport. tf_c
WORK STOCK For Sale — Mules,
mares and horses, ready to hit the
collar. Joe Kelsey. 13-C
f \---- ------* ..uis vji wiicti OUHlf II
a nice spot of them in her back ( say Jf we only knew which half
yard in Deport that delight the
eye, and State Highway Engin-
eer Pirie has the east bank of
the underpass on 271 a riot of
blue. This editdr is not afflict-
ed with hay fever, but he is for
morp Bluebonnets and , less
weeds.
believe.
Those Japs down in the Pacific
may think they are saving their face,
hut it looks like they are losing
their heads.
With Men in Uniform
(Continued from First Page)
How natural to fall out with peo-
ple who disagree with us instead of
falling out with ourselves for dis-
agreeing with them. -
The watermelon acreage will be
light this year, according to authori-
ties, and strange to say there has
been no talk of rationing.
Maurice T. Moore who was
born and reared in Deport, now
a prominent New York attor-
ney, accompanied by his charm-
ing wife, was here last week.
He is one of the outstanding
Texans who has made good in
the nation’s largest city. The
Times editor wants to tell the
people who knew Maurice as a
boy, and who do not get to meet
bun on his all too brief visits
here, that his 20 year career as
a lawyer in the highest circles Those who have
not f g bu,S‘nQSS salesmen now have a cnance. All
^ I ‘hey’ve got to have is something to
Kva Af er ;S.lr ^ m °th^ <SC“ and a CUstomcr with a ration
“*y*- After a bull session with i book
him last Saturday this editor is I __
inclined to believe that the long-
er hie resides in New York the
“The most efficient ad for head-
ache tablets is the one that starts
with a song, says Robt. Quijlen. “It
even provides the headache.”
Mrs. S. J. Parks orders The Times
sent to her son, Cpl. Forest Parks,
stationed at the Army Air Base,
Providence, R. I.
Pvt. Alvis Crosson has been trails-
and Mrs. Albert Crosson of Deport.1 °'dtlme C3ttle ruStler
Rustling Scourge
Sweeps Panhandle
Cattle Ranches
Amarillo. — The storied Panhan-
dle—home of herds agraze to the
horizon—is on patrol again.
With other Plains and prairie
areas, the Panhandle has beon
scourged by modern counterparts of
JUST ARRIVED — A shipment of
galvanized iron roofing. Deport
Lumber Co.
FOR SALE—First year Hurley cot-
ton seed, $1.50 per bushel. J. A. j
Wilson, Rl, Paris. ll-p
FOR SALE—My farm of 150 acres
about 1 Vz miles northeast of Deport.
Mrs. Floy Dickson Lower, 496 La-
mar Ave., Paris., H-p
PLANTS FOR SALE — Tomato 5c
per dozen, 25c per 100. Potted to-
matoes 35c per dozen, lettuce 5c per
dozen, 25c per 100. Cabbage and
collards 25c per 100. Peppers, sweet,
hot and piemento 5c per dozen. Cau-
liflower and egg plants 10c per doz.
Close week days 7 p. m.—Sunday
11 a. m.—Shackelford Greenhouse,
Clarksville. 12-c
FOR SALE!—155 acres heavy black
waxy soil, 2% miles from Clarks-
ville on highway. A real farm, well
improved, 40 acre cotton allotment.
2 big barns, hog shed, double gar-
age. New house, electricity, well
fenced and cross fenced. You sel-
dom have a chance to buy a farm
like this. Good reason for selling.
Only $50.00 per acre, Better investi- i
gate. Charley Grant, Clarksville 12c
TO RID your poultry house of mites
use Thermotrol. Guaranteed. De-
port Lumber Co.
FOR SERVICE—Small bone Poland
China boar, registered Jersey male.
Fees cash. Joe Kelsey. 13-c
longed to be
a chance. All
Wonder what the old fashioned,
rock-ribbed Democrats would think
Tp°3™e !S5reCiatfS TeX,aS a?d ,f they wer“ to wak“ “P and find
John Ralph Dickson, sen of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Dickson of Bisbee,
Ariz., and grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Will Dickson of Deport, who is sta-
tioned with the U. S. Army Air
Force in England, has been promot-
ed recently to lieutenant, according
to his grandmother. He lias been in
the army two years, joining on his
eighteenth birthday.
i
his birth.
PEACE IS TOTAL
| “Character is affected by a blow
on lht‘ head." says a news item,
" "I wars m these times is. total, ; which leads a commentator to say
11' ‘ f 8enso that- once >* has begun, that it is also done, at a tender age
no country in the world can be Cer- by a blow on the pants
tain bf not being drawn ip. . All ___
pew^i. total, in the sense thht no ' Probably we don’t deserve any
'l l C8n aff°rd ‘° be C"‘dit for beinfi out of iail because
UMUqerent to the condition of its most of the literature we get from
neighbors. Lord Halifax. Washington says something about a
^■————
Marion Hulen, Carlos Earl Ladd,
Sport Ridens and Arthur Hender-
son were called to Dallas last Fri-
day for their final physical exam-
ination for the armed forces. Hen-
County officials said it is the
worst wave of stock stealing the
Panhandle has seen in many years.
They blame black market boys,
fly-by-nights in big rumbling stock
trucks.
Texas Rangers, Cattle Raisers As-
-soeiation inspectors and county offi-
cials are patroling highways and
county roads.
Vehicles hauling livestock are be-
ing stopped for inspection.
FOR SALE—First year Roldo Row-
den cotton seed. $1.50 per bushel.
C. R. Randle, Rugby. tf-c
FOR SALE!—The J. T. Jones estate,
121 aches of black land three miles
north of Bogata. See Lenox Hud-
son. tf_c
THEY WOULD SWAP JOBS
WALLPAPER BARGAINS
’
jWe have some real nice Wallpaper and Border
which you can paper a 14-foot room for
$1.00
BOGATA LUMBER CO.
Goverment Statistic Show
That a chick hatched in May or June will start
laying in October and November when eggs are
scarce and high in jjrice, and will continue lay-
ing thru the wipt^r, At one year old the late
hatched hen has laid more eggs than her earlier-
hatched suiter, whfeh started molting and quit
facing in the fall
lise May and Joe Chicks for
awT Epig Production
ywr/Ve Way” Poultry
Legionnaire William H. Bennett of
Creston, W. Va., says that a banker
—...... —■ »■■«. uuiicu luira. nen- anc® the editor of the local newspa-
derson is the only one who did not Per were discussing local affairs,
pass the physical examination. Rid- Some things were not being done
ens was sent immediately to Camp iust ^Sht. “I’d like to run your pa-
Wolters, and Ladd will report Fri- Per ,or Just one week!” exploded
day to Camp Wolters, and Hulen ,he banker.
will report Friday to the Navy de- ! “Now. that’s something,” agreed
partment in Dallas. the editor. “I’d like to run your
__j bank for just one hour!”
’I
with
John L. Sanders, son of Mr. and
Mrs. R. F. Sanders of Biardstown
Rl, has just received his second
lieutenant’s bars at the _______
school at Yale University, New Ha-
ven, Conn. Lt. Sanders, a graduate
of Paris High School, attended E. T.
S. T. C. at Commerce and comnlet-
ed a course m aircraft maintenance were mad at me...
engineering. He was employed in
Houston prior to entering the ser-
vice in August 1942.
VERY POLITE
AAFTTC ' A Sail°r fa'lcd tQ salute an offi‘
“I’m sorry, Sir,” the Gob blushed.
"I’m afraid I didn’t see you, sir.”
“Oh, that’s all right,” the officer
replied. “I was afraid maybe you
Wives at Cut Price
in the Solomons
Woodward, Okla. — The price of
a bride in the Solomons is $16.50
a head, Maj. Emmett N. Carter has
written.
Color of the brides is saddle
brown. There are strings attached to
the purchase of one, such as:
1. The soldier must promise to
marry her before he flirts with her.
2. He must get the consent of
parents and the village chief.
3. He must promise not to take
her home with him, across the seas.
Keep Hies Out
Replace those old Window and Door Screens
now. We have a limited supply of these
materials.
also a complete stock of
J0NES-BLAIR and
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
PANTS
Let’s Make the Old Homestead
Look Like New Again
Bogata Lumber Co.
! you have
irtug
r ,60c worth of Leo
'i.
Mr. and. Mrs. Walter Mitchell of j
Detroit R3, have been notified that :
their son, Pfc. Claude E. Mitchell, j j
is a prisoner of the Italians, having i
been captured in North Africa. Mit- , j
chell was first reported missing by . :
the War Department. He is a gradu- j:
ate of Detroit High School, and was
employed in Dallas before entering
the service. After leaving the Unit-
ed States, he was stationed in North-
ern Ireland, and then sent to the
North African war theatre. i
Russell Huiett, 23-year-old son c4
Mr. and Mrs. Virgle Huiett of De-
port, was inducted into the army
April 3, 1942 at Camp Wolters and
was sent to Camp Wallace, where
he received his basic training. After
nine weeks there he was transferred
to Seattle, Wash., where he has been
in training for the last ten months.
On April 1 he received his ser-
geant’s stripes. Russell is in the
coast artillery anti-aircraft. He is
a graduate of Cunningham High
School.
$10,000 fine and five years imprison
ment
_
brides - to - be are invited -
Rodgers-Wade have a special bride’s serv-
ice to offer you! You are invited to come
to the store ... to pick the pattern of
crystal and china you would like to have!
We enter your preference in our Bride’s
Register. Then when your friends come
gift buying for you . . . instead of forcing
them to guess . . . they can be sure of get-
ting exactly what yqu want.. . and yet be
able to spend as little or as much as they
wish! To prevent duplication, each piece
purchased for you is listed on your page in
the Register!
Ploturrd here la
“Coronado" one of
tho famona pattern*
nhowii only at Rod-
rera-Wade.
* I*
28 OPEN STOCK PATTERNS of crystal and china are
offered by Rodgers-Wade . . . with more coming soon;
Km |0nK,a buge big-city assortment of
FOSTORIA crystal! Included is “Colony” by Fos-
J°rrla, ’ to g\witj?the Pattern of china pictured
here! You 11 enjoy trading at Rodgers-Wade!
it
Mfeii
I
Jh
Ti
ior
was
higl
in i
opp
hav
grai
Las
“Be
Hui
Dof
Rev
“At
tior
Xc
Mi
ter
of
of
Api
is a
T
ed
the
Ant
Un
cen
onl
U.
pre
ble
pea
as
in
the
wl
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. 35, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 22, 1943, newspaper, April 22, 1943; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth901651/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.