The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, September 24, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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.
I Cross Roads Notes
| Paris i
Cfttttmtfclil Cotlt^c Notes* 1
Brains Make Money
PRICES STIMULATE BUSINESS
10 lbs Swifts Jewel Compound . . $1.00
a
5 lbs Swifts Jewel Compound . . .50
“Economo” Cooking Oil per gal. . . .75
Irish Potatoes per bu.....' 1.25
Dried Peaches, choice Cal. 3 lbs . "•. 25
SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
$1.00 Bucket Wigwam Coffee . . 90c
6 Bars Crystal Soap .... 25c
Free Theatre ticket with each cash purchase of
$ 1.00 or more.
Hayes & Sons
“The Sanitary Grocery”
REAL ESTATE!
I buy, sell or trade land,
extend, buy or trade
- land notes. Look after
Rental Property and do
any kind ot buying,
selling or trading.
Write or phone me
what you have.
T. N. ALLEN
Real Estate Agent
Deport, - Texas
Toledo, O.—Clarence R. Featli-
erstone, 22, went to great pains
to serve well a customer named
Mrs. Henrietta Johnstone, at
the restaurant where he was
employed as waiter. She came
every day and he grew atten-
tive. Then they decided to mar-
ry. At the marriage license- of-
fice, the records showed that
they were mother and son.
Gary, Ind.—Gary taxi jitneys
are waging a war on fat men.
The drivers get nearsighted
when a fat man stands waving
frantically at them from the
sidewalk. Eight jitneys recent-
ly passed by Mayor Tom Knotts.
“Why should we put in one man
who takes up fifteen cents worth
of room?” said a driver. A five
passenger jitney will carry ten
slim steel workers at a nickle
each.
CALOMEL SALIVATES
AND MAKES YOU SICK
Three Winners
If you want a Wagon
you can’t beat these-
SHUTTLER
MITCHELL
SPRINGFIELD
J. H. Hancock
Paris, Texas
Acts Like Dynamite on a Slug-
gish Liver and You Lose
a Day’s Work.
There’s no reason why a per-
son should take sickening, sali-
vating calomel when 50 cents
buys a large bottle of Dodson’s
Liver Tone—a perfect substi
tute for calomel.
It is a pleasant, vegetable
liquid which will start your
liver just as surely as calomel,
but it doesn’t make you sick and
cannot salivate.
Children and grown folks can
take Dodson’s Liver Tone, be-
cause it is perfectly harmless.
Calomel is a dangerous drug.
It is mercury and attacks your
bones. Take a dose of nasty
calomel instead and you will feel
weak, sick and nauseated to-
morrow. Don’t lose a day’s work.
Take a dose of Dodson’s Liver
Tone today and you will wake
up feeling great. No more bil-
iousness, constipation, sluggish-
ness, headache, coated tongue-
or sour stomach. Your druggist
ays if you don’t find Dodson’s
Liver Tone acts better than
horrible calomel your money is
waiting for you.—Adv. 3
Not Paint.
The worst mistake in painting
is not putting off. That costs
about 10 per cent; you keep your
money a year and pay 10 per
cent for it. Paint would have
to come down 25 per cent to
make 10 per cent on the job,
for wages do not go down. The
worst mistake is “cheap” paint
It costs from 50 per cent to 100,
first cosc and another in wear.
What a liar “cheap” is! “Put-
off” is bad-enough; “cheap” is
ten ti nes worse. Dkvoe.
FOR
Fire and Tornado Insurance
SEE
J. H. MOORE
Insurance Agent, DEPORT, TEXAS
There was singing at the
house Thursday night.
Miss Emma House who has
beeu ill for some time was re
ported no better Sunday.
A good many of our friends
attended the Lamar County Kair
at Paris Friday and Saturday.
Miss Myrtle Young spent the
week end with her brother, Tom
Young, and family, of near Mil-
ton.
Bazz Pomroy and family of
near Deport spent Saturday and
Sunday with J. A. Fomroy and
family, p
Henry and Alva Wilson and
families of near Lone Oak and
MUton, visited relatives here
Saturday and Sunday.
Mrs, Shellie Pomroy and her
mother, Mrs. Thomas, and Mrs
Martha Pomroy who were ill the
past week are improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith snd
daughter have been attending
the bedside of their daughter
and sister, Mrs. Verna Stone,
who is ill near Clardy.
George Legate, who has been
attending the bedside of Lester
Brown of Paris, the past week,
returned home Saturday night,
and we are sorry to say that Mr.
Brown is no better.
Daisy. ,
Terrell Tidings.
May Woodall who was ill last
week, is better.
Ellis and Jessie Woodall spent
Sunday at Centerpoint.
Alford - Brawn and family
spent Saturday night and Sun-
day at Rosalie.
Ray Woodall spent Saturday
night with Henry .Woodall and
family at Rugby.
W. R. Woodall spent Sunday
at Fulbright with bis sister,
Mrs. S. H. Skidem.
Mr. Blankenchlp’s folks who
have been ill with typhoid fever,
are slowly improving.
Rev. Chase who has been con
ducting a revival in Delta Coun-
ty, returned Monday.
The farmers are very busy
picking cotton, gathering corn
and breaking oat land.
John Clarkson and family and
Mrs. Bertha Mannings spent
Sunday with S. Clarkson and
family at Shadow Land.
Guess Who.
Pick Seed Corn in the Field.
The first step in growing corn
is the selection of good seed.
Select your seed corn in the
field from the standing stalks as
soon as mature.
See that ears are of uniform
type in size, color, shape, and
depth of kernel, and position on
stalk, and with well-projected
husks to retard attacks by
weevils.
Dry thoroughly in a dry room,
store in tight paper-lined boxes,
fumigate, then, put in liberal sup-
ply of naphthalene or mothballs,
and close tightly.—News Letter.
Prizes for Corn and Syrup.
We desire to offer $1.00 cash
for the best three ears of corn
grown from seed sold by us.
We will also give premium of
$L00 for the best sample (half
pint)of8yrup made from cane
grown from seed sold by us.
Hayes & Sons.
LaCrosse, Win.—This section
of the country has had whiter all
this summer. Farmer William
Finn got so angry because the
snow had spoiled his crops that
he picked up a snowball the oth-
er day and threw it at a rooster.
That day for dinner he ate the
first chicken ever killed by a
snowball in August in the Unit-
ed States.
The indications are that the
Paris Commercial College will I
unable to supply the demand
that will be made ror its gradu-
ates this year. The financial
depression has caused practical
ly all business houses to reduce
thbir office force to the mini-
mum, and when the reduction
came, the least competent help
was dismissed. A slight im*
provement in business condi-
tions requires that some of this
office force be replaced, and, of
course, it is replaced with train-
ed men and women. Inasmuch
as the Paris Commercial College
stresses thoroughness, business
men prefer help from this school.
Some of the students accept
ing positions recently, direct
from the school are:
Miss Elizabeth Carlton, with
Paris & Mt. Pleasant R. R. Co.
Miss ^ Birdie Cannori, with
Frisco R. R. Co.
Miss Ruth Dudley, with La-
mar Motor Co.
Miss Edna Frteser, with Paris
Box Mfg. Co.
Miss Marvin Cagle, (Tempora-
rily) with Lamar Land & Title
Co.
Miss Roxana Shidelcr, with
Gibralter Hotel.
Mr. Warren Goodman, with
Texas Midland R. R. Co.
Mr. VV. H. Dickson, with Blair
& Hughes Co., Quanah, Texas.
■Miss Matoka Wilburn, with
S. P. Hardwicke, Abiline, Texas.
Mr. Frank Humphrey, with
Gore, Hosey & Jones, Idabel,
Ok la.
Miss Lucile Chartier, with
Bogata Merc. Co., Bogata, Texas.
Miss Roxie Dowty, with Con-
way-Duncan Co., Blossom, Texas.
Miss Winnie Marchbanks,
with Farmers’ State Bank, Val-
liant, Okla.
Mr. Henry E. D. Walker, with
Burleson College, Greenville,
Texas.
Mr. Clyde Scales, with S. M.
Neatherly & Co., Vernon, Texas.
Miss Elma McCracken, with
W. E. Calvin, City.
Mr. Will Irwin, with Wilson
Lumber Co., Rokhoma, Okla.
Mr. Sam Andrews, with Paris
Creamery Dairy Co.
Preparation is the secret of
success. It will pay you now to
prepare for the better opportun-
ities. If you want an education
that will prepare you for the
most exacting position, the Par-
is Commercial College will please
you, in any*department. You
not only get the very best cours
es by expert teachers, but you
get the support and influence of
a school whose reputation will
be worth most to you in the fu-
ture. Ask for particulars.
Paris Commercial College,
Paris, Texas.
k,'r'tv3
The Jtio. Deere Stag
Sulkey Plow
Invest your money in an Implement that
will bring results. It will pay you big to break
every foot of your land. The easiest and best
method is with the Jno. Deere Stag Suikey
Plow. Lightest Draft. Easiest to Operate,
Simple, Durable, Well Built. Has exclusive
features that you will not get on any other,
plow—for instance the Quick Detachable Share.
Call and see the sample on our floor. We will
be glad to show you whether you buy or not.
Deport Hardware Co
“The House of Quality”
HOGWALLOW NEWS
(Dunk Botts, Regular Cor.)
Fletcher Henstep has a mule
named Justice, on account of his
bad eyesight.
Fit Smith is confined in jail
at Tickville. He has bought
himself a bottle of patent medi-
cine and expects to be out in a
few days.
A belled buzzard was seen ov-
er Musket Ridge this week. It
is the same cne that comes every
year, and has a large number of
followers in this section.
Slim Pickens is firing the en-
gine at the sawmill on Gander
Creek. Slim says the sawmill
is not making much money now
as it takes about all the wood
they can saw to keep the engine
running.
Slim Pickens was in Tickville
Monday and enjoyed some music
rendered by a blind man. Slim
did not have to pay as everybody
thought maybe he had dropped
something in the cup before they
came up.
Sim Finders went to hear the
Hog Ford preacher last Sunday,
Sim is a strong Methodist, but
thought he would go over and
see if the Baptists had found any
new arguments as to why their
religion was the best.
The photographer that set up
for business in Bounding Bil-
lows took a picture of the Twins
of the Calf Ribs neighborhood
Tuesday morning. To save
money they had only one of
themselves made, and instruct
their friends to merely look
twice at the picture when they
wanted to see both of them.
Plenty of Meal and Hulls
Plenty of cotton seed meal and
hulls for sale. Meal $1.25 per
sack; hulls $5 per ton.
Detroit CotTON Oil Co.,
Jno. Harvey, Manager.
Detroit, Texas,
Hard Cash to Loan.
On black or sandy land farms,
or take up and extend notes. It
is your benefit to see us first.—
Lamar Land & Title Co., Paris,
100 per cent
— Baking Dividends
No disappointments, no failures, always a success
when used right*-- Gold Leaf Flour—bakes best
biscuit, best cake, best pastry. Cost more, but
really is cheaper on account of its certainty in
baking results.
Housewives who take pride in
their baking will Insist on getting
G®ML!rfAF
CAPE COUNTY MILLING CO.. JACKSON, MO.
For Sale By
Baughn & Oliver ■ Cash Grocery Co. - Hayes & Son
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, September 24, 1915, newspaper, September 24, 1915; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1159199/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Red River County Public Library.