The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, July 30, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
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Additional Local News
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Mrs. Kennedy, a widow who
lived at Cunningham, died sud-
denly Wednesday of last week.
The funeral took place at the
Woodard school house.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wright,
Miss Eva Bell and W. 8. Griffin
of Rugby, passed through De-
port Wednesday on their way to
Paris in the Griffin car.
A revival meeting has been in
progress at the Mt. Pleasant
Church for the past ten days.
Thirteen conversions were re-
ported up to Vfednesday.
Miss M. A. Fraser entertained
on Friday evening at ainuer,
Rev. and Mrs. Erwin, Rev. and
Mrs. J.M. Youree, Rev. and Mrs.
Minor Bounds and children.
H T. T. Jeffus and family left
Monday for Hot Springs, Ark.,
to visit Mrs. Jeffus’ brothers,
Clyde and Fred Bell. They ex-
pect to be away about ten days.
While in West Texas a few
weeks ago, Thurmond Smith got
a wheat beard in his right eye.
It has paused him considerable
pain and it is being treated by a
Paris specialist. _____ ,
Ocie, son of Mack Bernards
who resides four miles south of]
town, cut his right leg quitel
severely with a hoe one day last
k. Several stitches were re-
quired to clpae the wound.
We offer to the public, three
good reels of pictures next Sat-
urday afternoon and night.
These pictures are high class,
and we appreciate your patron-
age. Come and see diem.
Deport Theatre.
I am agent for the National
Steam Laundry and will appre-
ciate it if you will give me your
laundry bundle. Phone me at
the Cash Grocer. Bundles call-
ed for and delivered.
Knight Larimore.
J. A. Jeffus informs us Thaty
the Halesbot-o Thrasher Co., has'
completed the work for their
machine in this section and re
turned home. About 16,000
bushels of grain have been turn-,
ed out. —
t. G. C. Baughn celebrated
her 82nd birthday last Saturday.
She still retains much of her
youthful vigor however. Last
year she attended Sunday School
\every Sabbath. She has raised
ive children, and still does the
cwiking, washing and ironing.
I
Rome Maddox, whose home is
at Fulbright, but who has been
at Floydada several months for
the benefit of his health, is quite
ill. His family received the fol
lowing message Wednesday:
“Rome Maddox is dangerously
ill. Send family quickest way.”
G. E. Day of Rugby, was in
town last Friday and informed
the editor that he expects to
make the race for county com-
missioner of Justice precincts J
and 4. Mr. Day lias resided in
the Rugby section for thirty five
years, and is known to nearly
every voter in the district.
ten Warren of near Cente*
Point, was injured Wednesday'
while driving under a barn with
a load of hay. Just as they
were entering the shed, the
"team lurched forward and Mr/
Warren’s shoulder was caught
by an over head rafter and
badly wrenched. Thursday
morning it was reported that he
had not rested well during the
night and had considerable fev
er.
Complimentary to Messrs
Will and Paul Erwin, assistants
to Evangelist W. A. Erwin, Miss
M. A. Fraser, assisted by Mrs.
J. M. Youree and Misses Lucile
Kelsey and Edith Fuller, served
tea on Saturday evening to the
f Jlowing guests: Misses Hess
Binnion, Bertha Norrell, Ruby
Thompson, Bertha Allgood,
Mary Ellen Grant, Cora Read and
Leta Gray; Messrs Will and Paul
Erwin, Rusael Kelsey, Lawrence
Teague, Raymond Nobles, Walt
'er Evans and Ed Avery.
THE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
Learning the mechani-
cal aide of the newspa-
per business.
I This photograph shows a linotype machine in use in the School of
Journalism of the University of Texas. Recognizing the importance
of newspapers to the commonwealth, realizing that the press is the
most potent molder of public opinion, and that a free and enlight
ened press is an important factor in all progress worth while, the
'regents of the University of Texas established last year a School of
Journalism, where the youth of the state of journalistip ambitions
might receive competent instruction, be grounded in the best tradi-
tions of journalism, and inspired with the highest ideals of service,
j’i'he school enrolled fifty students during the first year. Consider-
able stress is put upon the mechanical and business side of newspa-
per publishing, with a view to being of service, particularly to the
'rural and small town press of the state.
OUR PUBLIC FORUM
J. A. Kemp
On Proper Marketing of Cotton
/ When the farmers of this nation tore down their
/ JjCfcS warehouses and granaries, closed their smoke houses
' WQ and nulled down the cellar doors and turned their
products over to speculators to hold until the consumer
demanded them, they ceased to become a factor In Ax-
ing prices, for without the facilities to hold their
•■products they lose the power to bargain. It Is the mis-
sion of the Farmers’ Union to rebuild storage facilities
and turn the keys over to the farmers so that the prices
may more nearly be governed by supply and demand.
Mr. J. A. Kemp, President of the Texas Cotton Confer-
ence, in discussing the proper methods of marketing
cotton, said In part:
“Wo should not'Only build warehouses, but we should encourage the farm-
ers to put their cotton In them. This must be done by the bankers and bus
lness men of the state and it Is up to them to get busy. Every business
man In Texas knows that It Is wrong to force cotton to sell In September
and that it Is wrong to cause it to be thrown on the market at any time In
amounts larger than the market demands, yet this thing has been going on
In this country ever since cotton has been a factor in the crops of the South.
Cotton is the very backbone of this country. When the cotto.i crop is
off and the price bad the whole state suffers. When cotton is thrown on the
market In a lump the price Is forced down and Texas Is hurt JuBt as badly
as though the price were down owing to bad staple of an off year crop. But
business men have overlooked this important factor in the handling of the
cotton crop.
We must build warehouses all over Texas this summer and when the
:rop Is baled it can be stored in good fire and storm proof structures, mak
ng a receipt for a bale of cotton as good collateral as the best bank uo.a
n the Federal Reserve Bank.
The bankers of Texas can Ananee the Texas eoKon crop and I believe
hey will demonstrate this fact this Fall. We have the money to carry the
farmers over. The thing la that the farmer and the banker must get to
gether. It is a mistake to wait until the cotton is picked and then
start to bring about conditions for Its financing.
The planter must learn that It Is to his Interest to take proper care of
his cotton and that this care can be had only through warehousing. The
warehouse receipts will mean ready cash. Look what was ddne last Fall
and the start was a late one. The price of cotton was raised In spite of
the influences to hold it down. I do not contend that cotton should bring
an abnormal price, but I do believe that it should bring a price that will
give the farmer a good return on his Investment. This can be done by
feeding It to the market as the mills call for it.”
A
h
OUR PUBLIC FORUM
Clarence Ousley
On the Law of Supply and Demand
I am amazed that ao long the cotton Industry should
have suffered the grave disadvantage of an entirely one-
sided representation concerning supply and demand. We
need not deceive ourselves with the notion that by any
act of legislation or any concert of action we can suspend
the trade law of supply and demand, but we cannot as-
certain economic value without knowing demand as well
as supply. When you plant your cotton in the spring
the Federal Government counts your acres and publishes
to the consuming world the precise figures of cotton acre-
age In the United Slates which furnishes two-thirds of
the production and thereby constitutes two-thirds of the
productive Influence upon the cotton market. The government reports the
condition of the crop and continuea month by month to report its condition
until the crop Is picked and then It begins in September to count and report
the bales that are ginned and continues to count and report the bales ev-
ery month until the ginning Is conceded. So that from the time the crop
Is planted until the last bale Is ginned the buying world knows by accurate
official representation the acreage, the condition and output from month to
month, and yet at no time does the producing world know the condition of
the consumption of the product.
Those of us who have been laboring in this field have made repeated ef-
forts by formal communication and by personal Interview with congressional
and administrative officials at Washington but have been utterly unable
to obtain the desired results.
1 am compelled to state this blunt fact, not In any captious spirit but for
• he purpose of demonstrat'ng to you that relief in this important particular
must come through the cotton states themselves.
We Democrats have talked so long about State sovereignty as a negative
quality In resistance to the encroachments of the Federal Government and
an a bulwark against the usurpation and the tyranny, actual or potential,
which follow from the concentration of political power In the hands of the
1 ederal government, that w^, have forgotten the positive qualities of State
sovereignty. We have lost sight of the fact that the State possesses all
powers except in so far as It has conferred certain powers upon the Federal
Government and In so far as the sovereign people have reserved certain
powers to themselves Sovereignty In the political sense means state omnip-
otence within the limits of human endeavor. Except as to the limitations
to which I have already referred, the sovereignty of the State la as complete
and as boundless as the sovereignty of the monarch who assumes the Jlvtne
right of kings. In an emergency of this kind, the State Is warranted, and,
Imicod, under the very obligation of legislation, this body Is commanded to
conserve the public welfare by any device of legislation that does not pal
pabljr offend the Constitution.
It is a well-known fact that R. D.
Sanders biff jewelry and optical
establishment at Parla furnish
eg more reul advantages to one
having weak eyes and defective
vision requiring the use of glass-
es, than any other place in. that
city. He has gone further into
the science of optics than any
one else, has spent a life time
experimenting and fitting eyes
of every known defect, and has
restored to normal vision more
defective eyes with glasses than
any other optician you could
find. You are sure of satisfac
tory glasses if fitted at the San-
ders Jewelry Store, cast side
square.—ad v.
Always So.
Gen. Mgr. N. II. Ragland
made a trip over the Paris & Mt.
Pleasant road this week and re-
ports crops very tine on the line.
—Paris Review.
For Sale
Scholarships in the Paris and
Tyler Commercial Colleges, at
prices less than you can buy them
from the schools. The Times.
EN
BOARD!
COLD WEATHER PIES.
TUS EAT pics art! popular lu Eng
land. They are matte with auy
meat and often have a crust of
pastry. Those made with beef are the
most populur.
Baked Meat Pie.—Take one and a
half pounds of beef, a quart of cut po
tutoes, half a cupful of cut onion, hall
a cupful of finely cut carrot, two table
spoonfuls of finely cut parsley, a tea
spoonful of salt, one-third teaspoouful
of paprika and a tablespoouful of flour
Wash the meat, cut In small pieces,
put Into a saucepan, cover with boiling
water and boll slowly for two nod a
half boars; then add the onlou, carrot,
potatoes, salt, paprika and boil for bait
an hour. There must be a pint of
gravy. MU the flour wltb a little cold
water, add and boil a few minutes
Llue bakepan with crust, pour In the
meat and vegetables, cover aprf brush
the top wltb cold milk and bake for
twenty minutes, or until light brown.
Macaroni In Thia.
Italian Beef Pie. — Tnke one pound
of cooked beef, six ounces of mncaroul.
one pound of ennued tomatoes, a table
spoonful of chopped parsley, two tea
spoonfuls of chopped shallot, one and
a half ounces of butter half a pint of
stock or water, half nu ounce of flour,
a tablespoonful or Worcester sauce,
salt and pepper to taste Melt butter
In frying pun and put In the chopped
onion and flour and brown them care-
fully. Add stock and stir till It bolls,
then add sauce. Slice or chop the
'ineat and put In a buttered pie dish a
layer of macaroni, meat and parsley.
Put tomatoes on top with a hit of but-
ter. Bake for about hnlf nn hour.
With 8tew Beat.
Beef nud Vegetable Pie.—Take about
a pound and a half of lean stew
beef, a cupful of diced carrots, one-
half a cupful of cut onion, n quart of
small potatoes, two tnblespoonfuls of
salt, eighth of n teaapooufnl of pepper,
two tablespoonfuls of cut parsley.
Wipe the nieut. cut lu small pieces, put
In boiler. Add two quarts of bolting
water and boll alowly for nn hour.
Remove four cupfuls of the beef stock
for a bro.a; then add carrots and
union. Boll thirty minutes, add pota-
toes and seasoning. Roll twenty-five
minutes and odd parsley I.lne hake
dish with crust, which has been rolled
thin, pour In meat and vegetables, cov-
er top with dough, brush with a little
milk nud hake In moderate oven.
The Reason We Haven’t Changed
Our Ad, It Is—
THAT’S ALL
W. P. EVANS & SON
Rugby Rambles.
CORONACH.
lie Is gone on the mountain.
Ila is lost to the forest.
Like a summer dried fountain.
When our need wss the sorest
The font reappearing.
From the raindrops shall bor-
row.
But to us comes no cheering.
To Duncan no morrowl
The hnnd of the reaper
Tnkes the ears that are hoary.
But the voice of the weeper
Walls manhood In glory. i
The autumn winds rushing
Waft the leaves that are near-
est
But our flower win In flushing
When the blighting was nearest
Fleet foot on the correl.
Sage counsel In cumber.
Red band In the foray.
How sound la thy slumber!
Like the dew on the mountain.
Like the foam ou the river.
Like the bubble on the fountain.
Tbou art gone, and forever!
—Walter 8cott
Mrs. Cotton visited relatives
at Bogata Friday night.
Miss Lula Spears is visiting
Mrs. Stephens at Johntown.
Mrs. Wright Hale is visiting
her mother, Mrs. Wright, at
Winfield.
Miss Winnie Bell was the
guest of Gladys Young Saturday
and Sunday.
Mrs. H. D. Roach of Bogata,
was the guest of Mrs. W. II.
Grifiin Friday.
Miss Vera Cotton is visiting
friends at Haiesboro and attend
ing the meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Ham Banks are
visiting the latter’s lather, Dr.
Johnson, at Ripley.
Mr. and Mrs. Dyer of Deport,
were the guests of their son,
Charley, part of last week.
M r. and M rs. Clyde Lawler
and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hale
were Milton visitors Sunday.
Mrs. G. W. Grant visited her
daughter. Mrs. II. D. Roach, at
Bogata Saturday and Sunday.
Misses Ruby and Zelrna Thom-
as of near Paris, are guests of
their aunt, Mrs. C. W. Clifton.
Will Petty has sold his crop to
R. M. Bell. Mr. Petty expects
to move to Big Springs in a few
days.
W. C. Hancock received a tele-
gram Wednesday stating that
his sister, Mrs. Burrus, had died
at her home in Norman, Ok.
Bro. Veteto of Bogata, and
Brd. Duncan the county mission
ary, will begin a Baptist meeting
here Saturday night. Every-
body is invited to come and take
part.
Eva Bell.
HUSBAND RESCUED
DESPAIRING WIFE
4fter Four Tears of Discouraging
Conditions, Mrs. Bollock Gave
Up in Despair. Husband
Came to Rescue.
Catron, Ky.—In an interesting letter
from this place, Mrs. Bettie Bullock
writes as follows: "I suffered for four
years, with womanly troubles, and during
this time, I could only sit up for a little
while, and could not walk anywhere at
all. At times, 1 would have severe pains
in my left side.
The doctor was called in, and his treat-
ment relieved me for a while, but 1 was
on confined to my bed again. After
that, nothing seemed to do me any good.
I had gotten so weak I could not stand,
and I gave up in despair.
At last, my husband got me a bottle of
Cardui, the woman’s tonic, and I com-
menced taking it. From the very first
dose, 1 could tell it was helping me. i
can now walk two miles without its
tiring me, "nd am doing my work.”
if you u.c all run down from womanly
troubles, don’t give up in despair. Try
Cardui, the woinan,’s tonic. It has helpe
more than a million women, in its
years of wonderful success, and si
surely help you, toot. Your druggist lias
sold Cardui for years. He knows what
it will do. Ask him. He will recom-
mend it. Begin taking Cardui today.
TFrtfe to: Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Ladles*
Dept.. Chattanooga. Tenn.. for ijprciai
ms on your cut and 64-page book. Horn*
rejdmeot for Women,” tent in plain wratpper. hfcb-tt
Advisory
Jnxtructio
Cane Mills
And Evaporators, Deering
Mowers and Rakes, Mitchell
Springfield and Peter Schut*
ler Wagons. Bridge and
Beach Cook Stoves, Majestic
Ranges, Washing Machines.
Buggies and Surreys.
J. H. Hancock
Paris, Texas
The Election.
Little interest was manifested
in the election here Saturday
Only 54 votes were polled. The
vote was as follows:
For franchise________ 12
Against franchise____________39
For supreme court...........4
Against supreme court.......45
P'or road tax_________________16
Against road tax_____________33
For students' loan_____________7
Against students’ loan_______43
P’or levee bonds........... 16
Against levee bonds__________36
P’or college separation........28
Against college separation____26
It will seem that the only
amendment which carried at this
box was the last one on the bal-
lot which provided for the sep-
aration of A. & M. College and
tlte State University. Over the
State all amendmets were de-
feated.
IMPERIAL SAD IRON CO.
SSS Ft. Worth, Til
want* a representative
at every town to tell
the MKRUl iron. MM
mStMINU MIIM-
IIT with the MKIUI
MM. Labor reduced
igjialf. MFIMITU-
_____ Can be operat-
ed ten hour* (or two cents.
one-ha
HTTII.
ed ten hour* tor two cente. Ironing can be dor
on the porch, no running back and forth fro
theironing board to the fire. The greatest thin
on earth in WMM WftTNEI. Each one is sold undi
a guarantee. Call on our representative and see
a demons! ration of its merits.
tVe are represented at i/our place by
DEPORT HARDWARE CO.
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure Rheumatism, Neu-
ralgia. Headaches, Cramp*, Colic
Sprains, Bruiaea, Cuts, Burns, Old
Sores, Tetter. Ring-Worm, Ec-
zema. etc. Antiaeptie Anodyne,
used internally or externally. 25c
Malaria or Chills & Fever
Prescription No. MM ia prepared especially
•or MALARIA or CHILIS A FEVER.
Fie* or tlx doaet will bleak My nan, and
If taken then aa a tonic the Fever, will M
return. ‘ It acts on (ha Hear baiter than
Calomel and dona oof gripe or sick an. 2Sc
\
• *
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, July 30, 1915, newspaper, July 30, 1915; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1158875/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Red River County Public Library.