The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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ummi
•Wr«J
«.rt>y (ambles. ‘ I
NO DISPUTE!)
ACCOUNTS HERE!
- Q —T—--.■■■. o-.
wen*
/
We do not claim to have the beat system, but we
do claim to have as good a system for keeping your,
accounts correct as can be found. Through this
system each order given us is placed on a ticket of
which
DUPLICATE TICKETS ARE MADE
One ticket goes to the customer, and the other is
placed on the file in the store for future reference
should occasion demand.
A Balance of Your Account Accompanies
Every Order
*
That goes out of the store, hence you have every ad*
vantage in keeping a “check” on the store.
The McCasky System “is as Good as the Besl
and Better Than the Rest.”
Hayes & Sons
‘The Sanitary Grocery’
MOTOR SERVICE
between -
PARIS and DALLAS
Effective April 18th.
SOUTHBOUND
Leave Paris 6 K)0 a. m.—Arrive
Dallas 11:15 a. m.
NORTHBOUND
I^eave Dallas 5:00 p. m—Arrive
Paris 10:00 p. m.
BETWEEN PARIS AND ENNIS
SOUTHBOUND
Lv. Paris 6:00 a. m. and 4:00 p. m.
Ar. Paris 11:45 a.m.and 10:00 p.m.
F. B. McKAY
General Passenger Agent
Tcrrell.’Texas
WHEN
IN
PARIS
Stop at the
MORGAN HOTEL
The Best $1.00 and $1.25
House in the City.
Sims & Sims
Proprietors
210 Clarksville Sf.‘
UGH! CALOMEL MAKES
YOU DEATHLY SICK
Stop Using: Dangerous Drug: Be-
fore It Salivates Youl
It’s Horrible!
You’re bilious, sluggish, con-
stipated and believe you need
vile, dangerous calomel to stfirt
your liver and‘clean your boW
els. *
Here’s my guarantee! Ask
your druggist for a 50 cent bot-
tle of Dodson’s Liver Tone and
take a spoonful tonight. If it
doesn’t start your liyer and
straighten you right up better
than calomel and without grip-
ing or making you sick I want'
you to go hack to the store and
get your money.
Take calomel today and tomor-
row you will feel weak and sick
and nauseated. Don’t lose a
day’s work. Take a spoonful of
harmless, vegetable Dodson’s
Liver Tone tonight and wake up
feeling great. It’s perfectly
harmless, so give it to your
children at anj time. It can’t
salivate, so let theta eat any-
thing afterwards.—Advertise-
ment. 2
Baseball Game Friday.
lied River County vs. Ful-
bright was the advance an
nouncement made in connectioi
with the baseball game playe
on the high.school grounds Fri
day afternoon, in which the Fui
bright team came out victorio<
by a score of eleven to four.
Saturday’s game resulted in a
victory for Red River County by
a score of five to four.—Clarks-
ville Times.
7
Mr. and Mrs. G. K. Day
| Paris visitors Sunday.
Grandma Reece of Roxton,
visiting relatives here.
Miss Ida Franklin of Deport,
is Visiting relatives here.
Miss Myrtle Lemens is visit-,
lug friends at Byrdtown this
week.
Bob Cheashir and family from
Hagensport, are visiting rela-
tives hero.
Miss Annie Hutchison spent
last week with Miss Myrtle
Lemens.
The writer spend Wedndesday
night with Dr. and Mrs. Roach
at Bogata.
Miss Carrie Belle Hatenville
of Roxton, is visiting Miss Fairy
Belle 8tarks.
Mr. and Mrs. Drew Hancock
have been entertaining a new boy
aince Thursday.
Mrs. H. D. Roach of Bogata,
spent Friday with her mother,
Mrs. G. W. Grant.
Ross Price of near Clarksville,
was a guest last week of rels
fives in this sectiou.
The Methodist and Presbyter-
ian revival will begin next Sun-
day, everybody come.
Miss Verna Cooper of Bogata,
was a guest of Miss Winnie Bell
Wednesday and Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Grant
were guests of Sam Grant and
family near Deport Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mart ScafT of
of Clarksville, are visiting Mrs
Scaff’s sister, Mrs. G. W. Grant.
Statem Griffin took his wife,
bis daughter, Dora, and Mrs.
Grogan to Paris in the car Mon-
day.
Mrs. Mat Ferguson returned
from Hagensport last Wednes
day where she spent several
days.
Mesdames J. E. Neal arid R.
M. Bell spent last Thursday
with Mrs. George Porterfield at
Deport.
Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Law-
rence of Winfield, were guests
of her sister, Mrs. Wright Hile,
last week.
, Misses Kate Horne of Bogata,
and Mollie Banks of Clarksville,
visited in the home of Will Han-
cock last week.
Messrs. Drew Allen and Will
Cotton returned home Friday
from the Farmers’ Union Meet-
ting at Houston.
Mrs. Sam Foster left Sunday
for Greenville, her home, after a
visit of several weeks with her
brother, B. L. McAlister.
Messrs. G. C. Neal and R. M.
Bell attended the singing con
vention at Savannah Springs
from Friday until Sunday.
v G. W. Grant took Mesdames
G. W. Grant, Eita Bank, W. B.
Chesshir, of this place, and Bar-
ton of Hagensport, to Clarksville
in his Ford lest Wednesday.
The Baptist meeting conduc
ed by Rev. Vetelo of Bogata,
and Rev. Duncan, the county
missionary, closed Tuesday
j^ight. About twenty-two con-
versions are reported. Five
were baptised on Mustang Wed-
nesday. >,•
Eva Belt..
Hf ‘JKW*
We are needing rain.
Vlaitlng is taking the day.
Mrs. LrfQts who has been 1)1,
Is greatly improved.
Mra. Harris has returned home
after visiting her mother for a
short time.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie HiU left
Wednesday to visit Mrs. Joe
Dillard at Anson.
Jack Bell and family and moth-
er have returned from a tour of
twenty one counties.
Ralph, the infant son of Mr.
and Mrs. Alford Lewis, has been
sick, but is improving.
Miss Jessie Hickman of Wichi
ta Falls, is visiting - her sister,
Mrs. Georgia Buford.
Mrs. J. R. Jordan and chil-
dren are visiting Mrs. Jordan’s
mother, near Commerce. '
l Francis Burroux who is at-
tending school in Paris, visited
borne folks one day this week.
Dr. W. R. Phillips and family
have returned from a visit to his
relatives and friends in the west.
Miss Esther Bush by of De-
troit, is spending her vacation
with her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Taylor Teague.
Viola Marshall, Preston Har-
grove, and Eura Holt have re-
turned home from Commerce
where they attended the normal
for two months.
M rs. W. C. Holt and sons, Roy
and Joe, also her little grand-
daughter, Nina Bell, have re-
turned from Anson, where they
visited Mrs. Holt’s mother.
• Ben and Idyle Martin and
Zilpha Owen of Paris, have been
visiting in the home of W. F.
Martin for a few days, but re-
turned to their home Monday.
Selected.
IBM***!
77-
-sCMMSSS* (S 4'Xf O i y
fist'.
.ecause
jeeause
because
ii is delicious —-
it is refreshi^A -—•
it is tkirsf-c[uei\chii^-
,
. . . ■
'
-
■ . y
1
i
i And because it is the combination
%. of the threc.Thot lqarks Coca Cola
^ as a distinctive beverage.-
Demand the genuine and avoid disappointment)
^THE COCA-COLA CO. Btlanja.Ga. ^
////////////„/////n(„,„l I ,U\\\\\\\^nNN
r
A Knotty One.
Date Set For Reunion.
The annual reunion of the
Grant family, which was post-
poned earlier in the season, has
been set for Thursday, August
2Qtb. It is to be held in the
grove on the Scaff pasture, one
mile east of Fulbright. The ed-
itor has a bid to be present and
he is going, even though it is on
press day and the chances are
he will have to walk. We have
been a guest before.
Good Paint
is cheap; and Devoe is not the
only good paint; it is one of
dozen; and, very likely, the only
one in your town—there are
hundreds of middling and bad.
You can see what chance there
is of another good one there;
Iterhaps one in ten at the most.
Bad paint is dearest; middling
is dear; costs 2 or 3 times as
much as the best.
No matter about the cost a
gallon; that isn’t it; the cost a
square foot; the cost a job; bet
ter yet, the cost a year.
There’s a whole education 'in
paint in this advertisement.
Devoe
Brazelton, Pryor & Co. sell it
Moments Well Employed.
Investigate our clubbing offers
PARIS & MT. PLEASANT RAILROAD CO.
We are at considerable extra expense, oper-
ating through package cars from Dallas and
St. Louis affording you from one to three days better
service than you can otherwise receive. We are not re-
ceiving the cooperation of our patrons which we feel we
should, as these cars are operated solely with a view of
giving you better service, and uuieaa you instruct future
shipments from those points via Cotton Belt, we will be
forced to discontinue this service.
r
C. F. COLLINS, General Freight Agent
County Tax Levy is Fxed.
✓ -
The commissioners’ court of
Lamar County at its session
Tuesday fixed the annual tax
levy, the different items of which
are as follows: Estray and jury
fund, 2}£ cents; courthouse fund,
2Yi cents; roads and bridges, 15
cents; general county fund, 20
cents, making n total of 40 cents.
It is understood that the total
taxable values of Lamar County
this year will be about the same
as last year. There is said to
be a small decrease in personal
property, but it is offset in pre-
cinct No. 1 on account of new
brick buildings in Paris.
When I wits a freshman in
Williams College,” said Garfield,
“I looked out one night and saw
in the window of my only com-
.petitor for lirfct place in mathe-
matics a light twinking a few
minutes longer than I was wont
to keep mine burning. I then
and there determined to invest
a little more time in preparation
for the next day’s recitation. I
did so, and passed above my riv-
val. I smile to day at the old
rivalry, but I am thankful for the
way my attention was called to
the value of a little margin of
time, well employed. I have
since learned that it is just such a
margin, whether of time, or - at-
tention, or earnestness, or pow-
er, that wins in every battle,
great or small.”
Sain Tell, Who killed four of
his wife’s relilives in Conway
County, Arkansas, was senten-
tenced to life imprisonment in
one case and to the electric chair
in a case tried later. It develop-
ed last week that the life sen-
tence is a bar to the death sen
tence unless the governor first
pardons him in the life term.
And it was held by the attorney
genernl in a similar case that
it is optional with a pardoned
prisoner whether he accepts a
pardon. As it stands Sam Tell
can not he executed under the
death sentence nor can he be
sent to the state convict farm
uuder the life sentence because
he is supposed to occupy the
death cell. Lawyers are trying
to unravel the tangle.
Don’t Kill the Toad—He is Useful.
m®
of women, who have
been benefited by this
remedy, urge you to
TAKE
The toad lives from 10 to 40
years and it can lay over a thous-
and eggs a year. It has lived
two years without food, but can
not live long under water. It
never takes dead or motionless
food. It captures and devours
wasps, yellow-jackets, ants, spi-
ders, beetles, worms, snails,
bugs, grasshoppers, crickets,
weevils, catapillars, moths, etc.
In twent.v-four hours the toad
consumes enough food to till its
stomach four times. A single
toad will, in three months, de-
vour over 10,000 insects. If ev-
ery ten of these would have done
one cent damage the toad has
saved ten dollars. Evidently the
toad is a valuable friend to the
farmer, gardener and fruit grow-
er.—Bulletin.
The Woman’s Tonic
Mrs. Sylvania Woods,
ofClifton Mills, Ky., says:
“Before taking C a r d u i,
I was, at times, so weak I
could hardly walk, and
the pain in my back and
head nearly killed me.
R U B-M Y-TISM
Will cure Rheumatism, Neu-
ralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colie
Sprai ns, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Old
Sorts, Tetter, Ring-Woyn, Ec-
zema, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne,
used internally or externally. 25c
®SSg
. ' ■ t*--:
,
■ (
No. Six-Sixty-Six
This is • prescription prepared especially
•f taken then i* a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acta on the liver better than
Calomel and doea not gripe or aickea. 25c
sv—■■■'.' ...... 1 <
TAN-NO-MORE
MMm
CREAM
ivar Spots,
all kiadrad
AND
FREGKELEATER
Two of the moat
Scientific Beautifying
Agencies Known.
TAN-NO-MORE freckeleater
THE Siam BEAtmnEK
The scientific combination of Cream
and Powdor. Delightful in appnaraacn
and planning in ita effect. Uaed daring
Iba day it is a protection from tba ana
and wind. Ia tba evening its nan assarsa
a faaltbma coaaplaxioa.
teefht »• that the hast wav
Eaparfeecs haa I
i anew Taa-lla-Meri
wipe eft with a sett la
Witt* dry.
50 AND 35 CTS.
• la ta pat it aa wary wet mmd
•we I at eace aadl4a aat wall
All D*al«ra
For the removing of Livnr f
Freckles, Ring Warm nag all kindred
blemiakea of the skin. It will blanch the
ehia in 10 dava and maka it aa aa
and sett as a baby’s.
Mikas lid CsnpIsiisM Bred
Bood Bwipluiont BtMir.
All Dealers
50 AND 25.CTS,
AM iaeda aatd —tar aa a ha. Iota iearaotai to please ar — **«» hach.
Anoints reasserted It will be seel a amall ae—pi* *1 of Tee el Mere pad ear Hitt* Reohlet hr Kelt
BAKER-WHEELER MFG. CO.
DALLAS. TEXAS
*77
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1915, newspaper, August 13, 1915; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1159114/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Red River County Public Library.