The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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Drew Allen baa a mighty aide
I child.
The Money You Save
by buying Groceries of us will help you to pay
for some of the luxuries to furnish your home.
Seed Irish Potatoes (Triumph) per bushel . . $1.35
Onion Sets (Red and Yellow) per gallon . . . 35c
SEED CORN—Iowa Gold and Silver Mine, Oklahoma
v i
White Wonder, Iowa Dent, Strawberry and Bloody
Butcher at, per bushel ..... $2.00 and $2.25
Seeded Ribbon Cane Seed (Japanese) per lb. . 12 l-2c
Soudan Grass Seed, per lb.. ........ 35c
All Kinds of> New Garden, Flower
and Field Seeds—Prices Right
Help Texas Feed Herself
by raising something at home.
Hayes & Sons
‘The Sanitary Grocery”
First in
Everything
First in Quality
First in Result*
First in Purity
First in Economy
and for these reasons
Calumet Baking
Powder is first in the
hearts of the millions
of housewives who
use it and know it.
SECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS
World'. Pm Fm* S»wiH1
MADE BV THE
’ baking
CHICAGO
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Election Notice
By virtue of the authority
vested in me as Mayor of the
to;wn of Deport, Texas, I here-
by order sn election by the quali-
fied voters of the town of Deport
to be held between the hours of
8 o’clock a. m. and 6 o’clock p.
m. on the 6th day of April, 1915,
for the purpose of electing the
following town officers:
A Mayor, Five Aldermen and
a Town Marshal. The polling
place shall be at the oil mill, and
J. C. Bratcher be presiding offic-
er.
The election to be held in ac-
cordance with the general laws
of the State. Every inhabitant
of the Town of Deport, who is
qualified to vote for members of
the legislature of the State, and
who has resided in the limits of
the town for six months preced-
ing the election is entitled to
vote.
Given under my hand with the
seal of the town of Deport affix-
ed this, the 2nd. day of March,
A. D. 1915.
V. C. Oliver, Mayor.
[seal] Joe Grant, Secty.
Bob Williams went to Deport
Tuesday.
Miss Ethel Matthews is vieifc-
log at Mount Vernon.
Mr- Tucker of Fulbrigbt, was
here Monday buying bogs.
Cicero Hart of Mlnter, spent
Sunday with Monroe Jeff us.
Miss May Allen spent Thurs-
day night with Mfss Clara
Baugh.
The singing at John Chris
tian’s Thursday night was well
attended.
Hubert Windell of Minter,
spent Monday night with Grov-
er Spears. r
Boy Ford and Bob Cblders of
Bogata attended the singing at
John Christian’s.
Miss Clara Baugh visited
Misses Josie and Lorena Pitt-
man Sunday. ^
Ben Ward and Robert Morris
of Morris Chappel visited Bud
Cawley and wife Sunday.
Mrs. Fannie Mitchell's little
sou fell in the fire Monday and
burned one of his hands very
badly.
Travis, the little son of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Cox, is very
sick at the home of Mrs. Cox’s
mother, Mrs. Carter, south of
Bogata.
We are still having some bad
weather, but o&r Sunday school
and prayer meeting are still
holding on. Sunday school ev-
ery Sunday morning and prayer
meeting every Sunday night.
Everyone invited.
L. M.
NtwiBrMf
p&musmmmimam mmmm,—ir
Rugby Rambles
At the Baptist Church
W. H. Nance made a trip to
Paris Monday.
Mrs. J. A. Hancock visited
Bogata Monday night.
Miss Winnie Bell visited home
folks Saturday and Sunday.
Mrs. G.-W. Grant visited her
son, Dr. 8. H. Grant, at Deport
Friday.
Fred Clifton and Charley
Elder visited Joe Neal at Detroit
last Week.
Little Elvin Farriss visited his
father, John Farriss, at Bogata,
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawler of Mil
ton were guests of their son,
Clyde, last week.
Quite a number from here at-
tended the W. O. W. meeting at
Paris Monday night.
Mrs. Petty and Mrs. Cotton
went to Johntown last week to
attend the beside of their fath
er, Mr. Williams, who is sick.
f
Eva Bell.
The following is the order of
the services at the Baptist
church next Sunday:.,
Sunday School promptly at 10
o’clock.
Preaching at 11 a. m. and. 7:30
p. m.
Pastor’s subject at the morn-
ing service, “A Good Soldier.”
At night. “The Wages of Sin.’
A cordial invitation extended
to all. J. E. Peaden, Pastor.
Our Sunday Schools
Subscribe for The Times.
FOR
Fire Insurance
Tornado Insurance
Cotton Insurance
SEE
i i ?
JOE A. GRANT
AGENT FOR RELIABLE COMPANIES
FIRST STATE BANK - DEPORT, TEXAS
The following enrollment, at-
tendance, and offering for last
Sunday was reported by the
superintendents of their respec-
tive schools:
METHODIST
Enrollment_________________125
Attendance __________________97
Collection_________________$2 30
Joe Grant, Supt.
PRESBYTERIAN
Enrollment_________________173
Attendance________________116
Collection_________________$8.08
J. H. Read, Sqpt.
baptist
Enrollment__________________99
Attendance___________ 82
Collection____..._________-___$1.08
, J r. Bratcher, Supt.
Cotton Seed, Meal and Hulls
We are paying top price for
Cotton Seed. Plenty of meal and
hnlls to exchange if you need
feed. •
Deport Cotton Shed Oil Co.
Five new eohool buildings are
to be erected at Dallae. *
Governor Ferguson has pro-
claimed March 2 as “Texas Flag
Day.”
England baa announced an
embargo on all shipping to and
from Germany.
The government ship purchase
bill was blocked Monday by an
unexpected Republican filibust-
er.
War munitions totalling $12,-
000,000 have been shipped to the
warring nations by American
mills to dite.
V
The outer forts guarding the
entrance to the Dardanelles have
been reduced by an allies’ fleet
of forty vessels.
The first shipment of an order
for 82,000 tons of hay for the
allied armies is being concen-
trated at Galveston.
George Lawley, builder of the
efip defending yachts, Puritan,
Mayflower and Volunteer, died
at Boston Saturday.
The steamship Dacia, which
sailed from Galvestou recently
with a cargo of cotton for Bre-
men, Germany, is being held at
Brest, France.
* j ✓
Only prompt action by nearly
the whole tire department, pre-
vented the destruction of the
big plant of the Fort Worth
Packing Company Sunday. /
A Chinese boycott in the West
on Japanese industries and
business houses, as a form of
retaliation against the demands
made on China will be instituted
soon.
Premier Asquith of England
has asked the House of Com
mons to vote a credit of $185,-
000,000 lor war expenses for the
remainder Of the period ending
March 31.
Ex-President Theodore Rodse
velt is the defendant in a libel
action brought by Tiiomas
Barnes, New York Republican
boss, in connection with charges
made by him.
Governor Ferguson has de-
clined to interfere in the case of
Fredrico Sanchez under sentence
to hang at Oakville for complicity
the murder of the county
jailer last December.
An application for a new trial
by Charles Becker, under sen-
tence of death for complicity in
the murder of Herman Rosen-
thal, has been denied by the New
York Supreme Court.
The appeal of the Rev. A. C.
Parker, pastor of the Christian
church, of that city, averted the
lynching of a negro arrested in
connection with the murder of
Jack Jcmes, a young white man
at Waxahachie Monday.
The Reason We Haven’t Changed
Our Ad, It Is—
/ -
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W. P. EVANS & SON
FOR
Fire and Tornado Insurance
SEE
J. H. MOORE
Insurance Agent, DEPORT, TEXAS
Common Sense
Cross Roads Notes.
Longfellow could take a worth-
less piece of paper and write a
poem on it and make it worth
$65,000—that’s genius. There
are some men who could write a
few words on a piece of paper
and make it worth $8,000,000—
that’s capital. The United States
can take an ounce and a quarter
of gold and make it worth
$20— that’s money. A mechanic
can take material worth $5 and
make it into watch springs worth
•j>1,000—that’s skill. There is
a man in Chicago who can take a
fifty cent piece of canvas, paint a
picture on it, aud make it worth
$1,000—that’s art. A Greek can
take an article worth 75c and
sell it for $1—that's business.
A woman could purchase a hat
for 75c but prefers one worth
$57—t hat’s foolishness. A
ditch digger handles several
tons of earth for $1.50 a day
—that’s labor. The author of
this can write a check for $9,000,-
000, but it wouldn’t be worth
a dime—that’s rough. There
are people who will tell you
that other papers are as good
as this—that’s nerve. Take
$1.00 and get a year’s subscrip-
tion to The Times—that’s com-
mon sense.
No* Well
"Ttaedford’s Black-Draught
la the best all-round medicine
lever used,” writes J. A.
Steelman, of Pattonville, Texas.
“I «uffered> terribly with liver
troubles, and could get no relief.
The doctors said 1 had con-
sumption. I could not work at
all. Finally 1 tried
THEM'S
BLACK-
DRAUGHT
and to my surprise, I got better,
and am to-day as well as any
man.” Tbedford’a Black-
Draught is a general cathartic,
vegetable liver medicine, that
has been regulating irregulari-
ties of the liver, stomach and
bowels, for over 70 years. Get
a package today. Insist on the
genuine—Thed ford's. E-70
• : *
$
1
‘ > ' ' .
J
■ A|!
"v
■
Mrs. Thomas is visiting her
son at Terrell.
Master John Williams is qnite
ill at this writiqg.
G. S. Legate transacted busi-
ness in Paris Monday.
Most ol our farmers got their
oats planted before the [last
bad weather.
Times Honor Roll.
Edgar Hickey and wife of near
Blossom visited relatives here
the first of the week.
Following are the names of
those who have renewed their
subscription since our last issue:
W.L. Baughn, T.J. Allen, E.V.
Bell, 8. H. Grant, L. W. Barrett,
Basley Pomroy, J.T. Westbrook,
Mrs. C. A. Franklin, Troy
Grant, S. H. Bell, R. Isbell. Is-
bell, Isbell Bros., L. Bays, Miss
Willie Stsljs.
{WHEN
I 1N
PARIS
Stop at the
MORGAN HOTEL
The Best $1.00 and $1.25
House in the City.
There were dances at the
residences of Charlie Pomroy
and Clay Young last week.
Those attending report a nice
time.
Alva and Henry Wilson and
and families of near Milton and
£<one Oak visited in the homes of
Joha and Bill Pomroy the laat of
the week.
Miss Eulalia Gray of Patton-
ville was a guest Saturday and
Sunday in t{be borne of Mr. and
and Mrs. Ed Hutchison.
Sims & Egbert
Proprietors
210 Clarksville St.
<1
■m
-
Investigate our clubbing offers.
• .
:
Henry, the eight-year old son
of Dick Pomroy and Houston,
the fonr-year-old son Of Bill
Pomroy, have been suffering
with chills.
Daisy.
This line Is to fill this space.
SAFETY AND SERVICE
THE HOME INTERURBAN
(TEXAS TRACTION COMPANY)
between
DENISON SHERMAN DALLAS
artd intermediate point* *
Direct interurban connection* at Dallas for Waco, Corsicana, Port
Worth', Cleburne and intermediate points.
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1915, newspaper, March 5, 1915; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1159601/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.