The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, July 9, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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WI
CHASE.
SANBORN^
COFFEE
CHASE
sbnborNS
TEA
HEALTH
VOI3RSt
SAY THE WORDS—
“CHASE & SANBORN ”
When ordering tea or coffee and assure
yourself of the best of satisfaction. The name
is known the world over, due to the fact that
for more than fifty years they have served the
people of the U. 5. with tea and coffee of supsr-
ior quality.
Hayes & Sons
Miss Willie Craddock visited
relatives at Deport last week.
Mre. Jim Wright is visiting
her son, John Wright and family.
Henry Danlela and. Ben Ward
made a busineaa trip to Clarks*
villa Monday. *'
Mra. May Wright who Uvea
near Clarksville, visited relatives
here last week.
Mrs. Bod Cawley has return-
ed home from Paris, her eyes
having improved. -
Ernest White is visiting his
sisters, Mrs. Willie Williams and
Mrs. John Wright.
Messrs. Richard and Fred
Brymer and Charley McCrury
went to Paris Friday.
Miss Mary Jones of Bogata.
spent part of last week with her
sister, Mrs. Billie 8pear.
Mr. and Mrs. 8am Moore pf
Rugby, spent Monday night
with Mr. and Mns. Griffin.
MUs Vera McClusky of Rug-
by, attended the wedding of her
cousin, Miss Josie Pitman.
/ Sunday afternoon Rev. Fu
gerson of Bogata, spoke th
words that united the lives of
Richard Brymer and Miss Josie
Pitman. We. wish for
young people much happi
jnd prosperity. r
L. M.
&
‘The Sanitary Grocery’
MOTOR SERVICE
between
PARIS and DALLAS
via
Effective April 18th.
SOUTHBOUND
Leave Paris 6:00 a. m.—Arrive
Dallas 11:15 a. m.
NORTHBOUND
Leave 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
Terrell, Texas
TnEN PARIS
Stop at the
MORGAN HOTEL
The Best $1.00 and $1.25
House in the City.
Sims & Sims
Proprietors
210 Clarksville St.
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 start
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 liver and
straighten you right up better
than calomel and without grip-
ing or making you sick I want
you to go back to ihc 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 any time. It can’t
salivate, so let them eat any-
thing afterwards.—Advertise-
ment. 2
Singing School to Open
I will open a singing school
the Deport Baptist Church Mgin-
day morning, July 12th. It ^ill
have a duration of ten days jhnd
the tuition will be $1.25/per
pupil. Anyone caring to know
anything about my character, 6r
ability as an instructer, I will be
glad to furnish him with recom-
mendations from my home town.
Luther McGee.
TO ENABLE YOU TO PROPERLY CELEBRATE THE
NATION’S BIRTHDAY, JULY 4
THE
Will Sell Round Trip Tickets to All Points in Texas at
REDUCED FARES—GO AND VISIT YOUR FRIENDS
Tickets on sale July 2nd, 3rd and 4th Limited for
Return July 6th, 1915. See Cotton Belt Ticket
Agent or write—
JOHN F. LEHANE,
Gen’l Frt. and Pass. Agent TYLER, TEXAS
Standard Commercial School
At The Panama Exposition
There is a model school con
ducted in the Palace of Educa-
tion of the Panama-Pacific Expos-
ition in San Francisco. Its pur-
pose is to demonstrate .nodern
methods in teaching and the im
provetnent of commercial ednoa-
ion in business. The school is
conducted by |he exposition
authorities.
The bookkeeping used exclus-
ively in the model exposition
school is the same text we use
in our regular work. We con
sider this quite a compliment to
the work we are doing. The ad-
visory committee of the Panama-
Pacific Exposition would not se-
lect a text for use in the mode)
school unless it was modern in
every respect. This school will
be visited by thousands of teach-
ers and business men who are
interested in modern nqethods
aud it was necessary to select
the best. You cannot afford to
waste your time and money at
tending a school that teaches ob
8olete methods, or get-rich-quick,
experimental courses when you
can attend a standard school at
the same price. Enroll with us
and be assured that you will re-
ceive everything that stands for
efficiency in a commercial line.
Write for catalogue today.
Paris Commercial College
Paris, Texas.
To Take Long Trip
D. W. Jarvia la a Tennesseean.
What we have heard convinces us
that seventy per oent of the olti
aena of this Immediate section
came here from the ciay bills of
that grand old state. Potllcker
was a favorite dish with the
people of that and neighboring
states some years ago.
The following ex ^rpta con-
cerning potlicker were taken
from an Asheville, N. C., paper
given us by Mr. Jarvis:
“The base of genuine potlicker
is cabbage or turnips, and prop-
erly prepared as only the old
negro cook of that elder and bet
ter day could make it, it was bet-
ter than blackeve soup and equal
to jowl and greens. It has caus-
ed many an elegant and high-
toned gentleman to commit the
sin of gluttonv. ,
Th»y grow turnips in Kentucky
and Tennessee that are mote like
fruit than vegetable, so sweet
they are. They are planted the
first week in September when
the moon is new. Then by the
middle of October when the frost
has first kissed the maiden foli-
age and made it the glorious
matron—wife of opulent autum —
then your turnips are ripe.
Butcher a shoat of some sixty
pounds and dress it nicely. Take
a chunk of loin, half fat and half
lean, and put it in and iron pot
witli sliced turnips, pure spring
water, and a pod of red pepper,
and allow the mess first to boil
and then to simmer until the
turnips are mashed, are of the
consistency of mush. Dip out
the meat and vegetable, and the
broth that is left is potlicker—
sure enough potlicker.
But it is not yet a balanced ra-
tion. It requires pone corn bread.
There is no real corn meal in the
woHd outside of Kentucky and
Tennessee. Corn grown in these
states has more oil in it and will
weigh more to the bushel than
any other. Besides, more and
better whiskey can be distilled
from it. Select your corn and-
take it to an old-fashioned water
mill that will grind about twenty-
five bushels a day if the miller
begins at dawn and Works until
dark. ^It must not be ground
too fine. Give such meal pure
spring water, hickory fire, iron
skillet and lid and an old negro
mammy who knows how to cook.
She will mix the meal and water,
fashion it into pones and drop
them into the hot skillet, and
cover with the hot lid on which
live coals are heaped. In a few
minutes a glorious brown comes
over the upper and lower crust
and there is real corn dodger—
the best bread that ever went
down human gullet.
Serve your potlicker with a
pone of that bread. One or two
stiff drinks of pure two-year-old
apple brandy under one’s belt
before sitting down to such a
dish always adds zest to the
feast.”
Eddie Collins
Drinks
—considers it the premier, all-’round -wholesome
thirst-quencher for athletes. This comes well
from one of whom Comiskey said, after paying
#50,000 for him—‘ * I secured him for the White
Sox fans because I believe he will prove that he
is the greatest exponent of quick
thinking and the brainiest player in
the game."
Demand the genuine and
•void disappointment
% The Coca-Cola Co. ^
ATLANTA. GA. ^
^^^/////////////Ijlllll | |llU\\W'^^
Low Round Trip Fares
Daily to
Corpus Christi
THE GULF RESORT OF TEXAS
Delightful\ Bathing, Fishing, Camping. Excellent Ho-
tel Facilities. Tickets Good for Ninety Days.
Best Reached via
M. K. & T. Ry.
Through San Antonio
Double Daily Fast Trains, carrying Chair Cars, Sleep-
ers, Dining Cars. Stopover of One Day allowed at
San Antonio on both Going and Return Trips.
Ask your local ticket agent for the Reduced Rate via the
“KATY” through San Antonio or write—
W. 6. CRUSH, G. P. A., DALLAS, IDAS
Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Moore $nd
children, Miss Aline and John
Harold, will leave for Dallas Sat-
urday, where they will join a
party of delegates to the Sover-
eign Camp W. O. W., which
meets in St. Paul, Minn. Mrs.
Moore goes as a supreme dele
gate of the W. C., and the doctor
as a sovereign delegate of the W.
O. W. When the lodges adjourn
after a twelve days’ session a
8t. Paul, the Moore family wi
go from there through Washioj
ton, Oregon, down the Paci:
coast to San Francisco to see
Panama Exposition, and froi
that place through Wyoming and
the National Park, and Colorado.)
They expect to be gone until
the middle of August.
\
Rugby Rambles
TAN-NO-MORE
AND
FRECKELEATER
Z. •
Farris Day of Woodland, was
hfere on business last week.
|G. D. Farris and Frank Griffin
»re Paris visitors Saturday.
Mrs. Sam Foster of New Mex-
is visiting her brother, B. L.
lc Alister.
TAN-NO-MORE
THE SKIN BEAimriER
Th scientific combination of Craam
ana! Powder. Delightful in appearance
ana pleasing in its effect. Used daring
the day it is a protection front the ana
and wind. In the evening ite nee nsnnree
a faultless camplaxion.
trtt
wind. Ii
witless efi
Experience baa tangM »• that the bast wav
le apply Tea-Ne-M.ro i. te pat II ea very wel aad
wipe eft with a oefl lewel el eace and de eat wait
Two of the moat
Scientific Beautifying
Agencies Known.
FRECKELEATER CftEAM
Ter the removing of Liver Spate.
Freckiea, Ring Worm and all hlnihmd
blemishes of the akin. It will blanch the
shin in 10 days and malm it as aabesth
and soft aa a baby’s.
Maku ltd (MpUw M
Good Cf pillion BiHir.
terltledry.
n
Miss Mamie Spear visited her
aunt, Mrs. Stephens, at John-
town last week.
All Dealers
50 AND 35 CTS.
All Dealers
50 AND 25 CTS.
J. C. Mason was the guest of
his sister, Mrs. R. C. Kimball,
Friday night.
BAKER-WHEELER MFG. CO.
DALLAS. TEXAS
Mrs. Charley Dyer and Mrs.
Ettie Banks are visiting relatives
at HaganspOrt.
Miss Monte Hutchison of Blos-
som, was the only teacher who
taught last year that failed to ac-
cept the proposition offered her
by the school board for this
year’s term. A meeting of the
board will be held the latter part
of this week to elect a teacher to
fill the vacancy.
Miss Vera McClusky went to
Halesboro Sunday to attend the
wedding of her cousip, Josie Pit-
man, to Richard Brymer.
Misses Myrtle Lemena and
Kva Bell returned home last
Wednesday from a week’s visit
with Lillian Wilkinson at Bogata.
Eva Bell.
BASE BALL AT PARIS. TEXAS
Account of game between Paris and Fort Smith League
1 Teams of the Western Association at Paris on .
Sunday, July 18
We will sell tickets at ONE FARE for round trip. Good
only on date of sale. Train will be held at Paris till 6 p.m.
C. F. COLLINS, General Passenger Agent
V ■
-
_ M
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, July 9, 1915, newspaper, July 9, 1915; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1159437/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.