The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 24, 1935 Page: 3 of 6
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THE DEPORT TIMES, DEPORT. TEXAS, THURSDAY, JAN. 24, 193S
■
Coiffures for Young Sophisticates
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TEXAS!
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Times Classified Ads
pay.
Announcement
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So Cool
ter)
of
hairdressing,
a
ESTABLISHED 1902
Boat-
AUTOMATIC
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notice
f
HOT
I
WATER
and
Prevents Waste... Increases household efficiency!
Suspected
GARDEN-FIELD
and FLOWER
SEED
»
Your Cheapest Method of Water Heating
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tablets SO eta..
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Seed Potatoes, Cabbage and
Onion Plants in Season
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After Feb. 1, visit me
in my new location or call
Phone No. 11 for service.
I Will Continue to
Dispense
Gulf Gasoline
and Oils
Quality Groceries at Reasonable Prices,
and you will find that no one appreciates
your patronage more.
Believing them best
for your car.
HONOR ROLL PUPILS
OF MINTER SCHOOL
FEAR HALESBORO CHILD
ILL WITH DIPHTHERIA
HONOR ROLL FOR THE
CHAPPELL HILL SCHOOL
Because of the low cost of
your natural gas service, one
of these modern automatic
heaters is economical to oper-
ate. For instance, one will heat
enough tfhter for two hot
baths at a cost of only 1 cent ’
You aren’t really living in this modern age if you still have to
hand-light your water heater. The most up-to-date and thor-
oughly care-free way to insure abundant, clean hot water at
any minute is a Gas Automatic Water Heater. No waiting then
for water to heat if you want a quick bath or have dishwashing
or laundry wor’ to do!
A gas heater is the most efficient automatic hot water system
you can own. Thermostat control prevents fuel waste. It uses
only enough fuel to keep your hot water supply at just the tem-
perature you prefer. Before spring cleaning gets under way,
have installed this efficient helper.
federal RESERVE
SYSTEM
and
and
THREE NEW PUPILS
IN McCRURY SCHOOL
First National Bank
DEPORT, TEXAS
Milt Jarvis
Phone No. 11
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!
HAYES & SONS
BUY RIGHT—SELL RIGHT
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ , ------ ----------------------------
1
iA>NtSTAn
Com mu n Natural Gas Co
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• Your gas appliance dealer or your gaa company has
wide selections ot modern gaa appliances. See them.
Remember. National Housing Act Ixtans take in these
appliances.
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Dunn,
| Crump,
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io
Particularly do we want to show you our
Garden Seed in Bulk. You get more for
your money and they are of First Class
Quality. Will have — 4
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! the money.
the passage of H. R. 1 is very
promising and it will cause a
distribution of money over the
entire nation which will im-
mediately go into tihe channels
of trade and production
‘ help everybody.
I 1
I
I
A
NOTICE .
Interest earned to Decem-
ber 31, 1934, will be paid
on consumers’ deposits.
Customers desiring pay-
ment at this time may re-
ceive same if they will
bring or mail deposit re-
ceipts to our district of-
fice at Clarksville. Texas.
COMMUNITY
NATURAL GAS CO.
I
by
fast
over a
fe-’
H. R. 1
The question of paying the
Adjusted Service Certificates is
very much before Congress.
One group desires the payments
to be made through the issu-
ance of new currency, as pro-
vided in H. R. 1, showing that
we have a sufficient gold re-
serve to issue the money and
have remaining much idle and
unused gold. The other group
wants tax-exempt, interest-
bearing bonds issued and sold
for the purpose of obtaining
The outlook for
OB.,
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Seventh
take their
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A TONIC AND BUILDER
Mn. N. M. Etheridge ot
1317 E. 10th St. Little
Rock. can
recommend I>r Pierre'.
IHF (.olden Medical Discovery
Hy hi«hly a. a intrm builder
It gives me a fine appetite
and drive, away that tired
New a
News from McCrury:
Several were absent from
school Friday on account of
bad weather. Three new pu-
pils entered school last week.
Myrtle Lue, small daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Finch, is
ill at her home here. Charles
Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Kennedy, is improved
after several weeks illness with
pneumonia.
Ollie Barker and family are
occupying the house vacated by
I>ewis Nolen and family.
Joe Rhinehart of Mosley, vis-
* ited his brother, Biggum Rhine-
hart, on Sunday.
Malvin Nolen, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Nolen, is improved
after an illness with typhoid
fever.
“Turned up
’Wc--.
Mho
» -.1 -
Minter teachers have an-
nounced the following honor
roll for the month: Ruby Lee
Taylor, Junior Jordan, Emma
Jean Threadgill, John Buford
Whitney, Mary Helen Land-
rum, Virginia Whitney, Ruth
McDowra, Charles Ball, Edna
Jordan, Lucile Ball, Delbert
Haskins, Callie Ruth Whitney,
Helen Parks, Lillie Mae Bryan,
Ruby Chappell, Pauline Elmore,
Geraldine Hoover, Theresa
Kirkham, Nadine Lewis, Eve-
lyn Robinson, Louise
wright.
M ■_____
What a Voice!
Contralto: “Did you
haw my voice filled the hall last
njght ?”
Soprano: “Yes, dear; in fact,
I noticed several people leaving
to make room for it.”
r
News from Haleeboro:
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Hobbs
and children are visiting in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Lum
Fennell at Deport since Friday
night, when they carried their
son, Philip Harold to have anti-
toxin administered as they
feared he had diphtheria.
Luther Cheatham and daugh-
ter, Miss Fay, Mrs. Cliff Pettit
and Russell Cheatham, accom-
panied by Lawrence Cheatham
of Windom, spent from Friday
until Tuesday with their par-
ents and grandpaernts, M •. and
Mrs. W. S. Cheatham at Kerr-
ville.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Daniels
spent part of last week attend-
ing the bedside cf Mr. Daniels’
father, W. H. Daniels, who is
ill at the home of his daugh-
ter, Mrs. Jess Kilgore at De-
port.
Augusta Womack visited in
the home of his uncle, Alva
Wilson at Craig, last week.
Mrs. Will Allen and Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Allen and children,
Wayne and Wanda, spent the
week end in the home of their
daughter and sister, Mrs. Law-
rence Cheatham, at Windom.
The heaviest rains in years
fell here Friday, Saturday and
Sunday. The mail carrier fail-
ed to make his rounds Satur-
day, due to high water on Mus-
tank creek. Maurice and Ho-
mer Hobbs and Carlos Vaughn
who were on their iway to De-
port Saturday, were forced to
turn back when they encoun-
tered high water near the Hen-
derson place.
Philip Hobbs has been suffer-
ing for several days with an
abcess on the back of his neck.
John Wright and family have
moved from the F, C. Steven-
son farm to Biardstown. The
house they vacated is now oc-
cupied by Mr. and Mrs. Richard
White and children.
Horace Jeffus, census enum-
erator for this district, has been
at work since Monday of last
iweek. It will probably take
him 30 or 40 days with favor-
able weather.
Beginning Feb. 1, I will
be in charge of the filling
station at the Paul Short
Garage. In making this
change I expect to be bet-
ter prepared to serve you
and want all my friends
and customers to visit me.
wi
-
ak
I COMO RUSHAN —
CCC Camps
The government will doubt-
less double the number of CCC
camps. This will cause increas-
ed employment. It is neces-
sary that an effort be made to
secure such a camp by the peo-
ple residing in the locality
where it is desired. There is
no way that a Member of Con-
gress can secure the approval
of such a location without con-
siderable support, accompanied
by proper proof from the local
people. An effort is being
made to locate a soil erosion
camp in Delta county and a
forestry, or park camp near
Daingerfield. An application
for a soil erosion camp should
be made to Mr. M. R. Bentley,
College Station, Texas, and for
a forestry camp to Dr. D. E.
Coipr~Austin, Texas.
Denison Dam
There was a meeting in Wash-
ington last week of those inter-
ested in the development of
Red River valley. It is pro-
posed that a dam be construct-
ed near Denison, where the
bluff is 160 feet high on either
side, and where more electric-
ity can be generated than at
the Norris Dam on Cove Creek
in Tennessee valley. It will be
two miles long and will cover
250,000 acres of land. It will
require the immediate employ-
ment of about 3500 men. If
this dam is established, whe-
ther the electricity is distribut-
ed through government agen-
cies or private companies that
may purchase it from the gov-
ernment for distribution at rea-
sonable rates, the rates to res-
idential consumers will likely
be the same as at Tupelo, Miss.,
where it is 3c per kilowatt for
the first 50 KWH, 2c per KW
for the next 150, 1c per KW
for the next 200 KWH, and all
° in excess of 400 KWH, the rate
will be 2^2 KW for lc, or 4
mills per kilowatt. Represen-
tatives from Shreveport, Paris,
Denison, Bonham and other
places were here at the meet-
ing, which was well attended
by Members of Congress from
the different states in the area
involved.
ir I
■ '■ ,X'\.
which
shown a mass of curls playing
low over the left eye, might
also be termed a “saucy” coif-
fure. Nothing is more suggest-
ive of pertness or impertinence
than this way of dressing the
hair.
Then* the smart sophisticat-
ed appearance of a young mod-
ern is best expressed in the
coiffure featuring a braid en-
circling the head. This braid
can be effectively worn with a
knot (top right) swung low on
the neck or with a mass of
curls (second row center).
The hairdress showing
mass of curled bangs (second
row right) is a clever adapt-
ation of smartness without the
lacquered woodeness that is us-
ually so obvious. This coiffure
is strictly 1935.
The “jeane fille” bob shows
bangs curled up (bottom left)
■ ORW
The smartness of restrained
sophistication is evidenced in
the coiffures of seven students
at Texas State College for Wo-
men (CIA) who offer the latest
styles in hair dressing. The
pictures were posed by, top row
left to right, Mary Helen Johns-
ton, San Angelo; Mary Eugenia
Abilene; Winifred
Waller; second row,
Gladene Parr, Woelder; Mary
Catherine Beck, Winfield; bot-
tom row, Christine Chandler,
Troup; Cleo Manley, Houston.
Just as the new year brings
an abundance of resolutions, it
also sets up nc*«v ideas for un-
usual coiffures, and the inter-
est manifested in them
young sophisticates is
equaling that incited
new frock.
Coiffures, like clothes, offer
an unlimited number of styles,
and for handling that so-called
“mop” on your head, co-eds at
Texas State College for wo-
men (CIA) give their ideas.
One of the most popular
ways is the impish “boy cut”
(top left) that has only a sug-
gestion of feminism in the long
roll that winds from the fore-
head toward the back. The
closely chopped hair over the
ears and at the back certainly
gives a mischievous look,
Depicting a young street ur-
chin, the gamin style (top cen-
Iff
Sj
4a
A business man was deliver-
ing a lecture on a shady firm
with which he had been em-
ployed. “Of course, as soon as
I realized there were possibili-
ties of dishonest profit being
made I got cut of it,” he said.
“How much?” a student in
the rear asked.
MM.- ■
,1
Big Game Hunter (in thrill-
ing tones): “Once, while I was
having a meal in the jungle a
lion came so close to me that
I could feel its breath on the
back of my neck. What did I;
do?”
Bored Listener:
your coat collar.”
into a close roll while the long
bob (bottom right) set in loose 1
waves gives an ultra-modem
restraint in sophistication that
certainly denotes “up to date-
ness.”
Chappell Hill School News.
Mid-term examinations have
been given and the following
pupils were on the honor roll:
Mertice Chappell, Kathleen
McGill, Junior Rusco, Boyd
Bailey, Artie Lee Hignight,
Duane Rhodes, Jessie Worthey,
Lloyd Hugh Frazier, James
Earl Bell, Thelma Jo and Marie
Whitney, Inez and Junior Pate
and Wayne McGill.
grade pupils will
mid-term exams.
next week, which will be sent
out from Paris.
The following pupils received .
perfect attendance certificates:
Maggie Frazier, Thelma Jo and
Robert Whitney, Jessie
Ruby Worthey, Mertice
Imogene Chappell.
Spelling prizes were given to
Mertice Chappell, Bessie Wor-
they, Oscar Ray and Duane
Rhodes.
The pupils are conducting a
clean hands campaign. Soap
has been given to each pupil.
The third and fifth grades
are very glad to welcome Ruby
and Louise Crawford who have
moved from ’Hoovertown.
Junior girls basketball team
played Martin Tuesday. The
scores were 8 to 6 in Martin’s
favor. A game played with
Shadowland recently resulted
in an 8-8 tie.
The enrollment of our school >
has increased to 32.
I
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 24, 1935, newspaper, January 24, 1935; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1293141/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.