The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 25, 1943 Page: 3 of 8
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THE DEPORT TIMES, DEPORT, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1943
PAGE THREE
V'
CUNNINGHAM
ppep
SBADOWLAND
Mrs. Albert Crosson of Deport, I The homemaking girls with their
spent Tuesday night with Mr. and'sponsor, Miss Alma Flippo, enjoyed
Mrs. Marvin Betterton.
Curtis Gifford spent Friday night
and Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.
. Grady Hignight at Deport.
Mrs. Whitworth of Bogata, spent
Thursday night and Friday with Mr.
and Mrs. Wylie Gifford.
Mrs. S. A. Williamson and daugh-
ter, Pat, spent Saturday night with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Williamson at De-
port.
Ruby and Fajr Aubrey of Deport,
spent Thursday night and Friday
with Mr. and Mrs. Wylie Gifford.
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Hignight of
Deport, spent the week end with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Gifford.
Miss Crela Mae Gray of Bogata,
spent Tuesday night with Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Gifford.
Mrs. Finis Gifford and children
were guests Friday of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Crosson at Deport.
Mrs. Kyra Ridens and son, Ray,
spent Thursday night with her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Will
, Widner, in Paris.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Williamson and
daughter, Glendal of Deport, spent
Sunday with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. A. Gifford.
Mr. and Mrs. Wylie Gifford and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gifford and
son, Kenneth, spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Wesley Talley at Deport.
Bobbie Joe Gifford was ill the
past week with tonsilitis.
Crela Mae Gray of Bogata, spent I
Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Wylie Gif-
ford.
Mrs. Robbie Gooch and daughter,
Barbara An of Deport, are visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Shi-
ver.
Mrs. Kyra Ridens and son, Ray,
spent Friday night with Mr. and Mrs.
B. F. Ridens at Deport.
Joe Lee Betterton of Texarkana,
is visiting his wife and children
here.
MOSLEY
.Mrs. Carol Harkrider was back in
school Wednesday after a short visit5
with her husband in Tennessee.
Miss Lillie Cawvey, and Jackie
Reed of Detroit? were united in mar-
riage in Clarksville Friday.
Miss Bessie Mae Chandler was out
of school Monday because of illness.
Mrs. Arthur Fisher and children
and Mrs. Joe Fisher and children
visited with Mrs. Perry Smith at
Fulbright Sunday.
Jess Chandler says he is getting
along fine, but still has to use a
a crutch.
Many in the neighborhood plant-
ed potatoes Monday, March 22. The
ground had dried enough that men
were busy in the fields again this
week. Some planted corn.
Bruce Evans is reported ill. He
went to a doctor at Deport Mon-
day for examination.
Jess Chandler was in Deport Mon-
day on business.
E. F. Sandlin bought the almost
dilapidated shed at the school house
and hauled it away Friday.
a hay ride and picnic Monday night
Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Morrison and
Mrs. John Morrison of Dallas, visit-
ed relatives here this week.
Mrs. W. L. Holbert who has been
ill at her home here, is reported
improving.
Mrs. John Allen spent the week
end in the home of her children at
Rockford, Mmes. Silas Howell and
W. J. Fowler and their families.
Ira Temple who has been ill for
several weeks, is reported improv-
ing at his home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Harve Oglesby of
Milton, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Anderson.
Misses Jackie Taylor and Ruby
F. Malone who are attending ETSTC
at Commerce, spent the week end
with their parents here.
Dudly Batch left Friday for Camp
Wolters, where he will enter the
army.
Mrs. Jim Pace is ill at her home
here.
Mrs. Alvis Glen Ballard of Clar-
dy, recently visited in the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Eudy.
A social was enjoyed Friday night
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. E.
McGahan in honor of the faculty and
the board members.
Mr. and Mrs. Murl Roach and
daughter, Judy of Johntown, spent
the week end visiting relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Cook have mov-
ed to the Musgrove farm south of
town.
Mrs. Ollie Bell of Paris, spent Sun-
day in the home of Mr. and Mrs. A.
D. Bell.
Mrs. Ira Taylor is able to be up
again after several weeks’ illness.
THE UNHOLY CROWN
\
MINTER
McCRURY
MARTIN
LONE OAK
Clover Crop Cheap
Nitrogen Source
East Texas farmers are learning
the value of producing their own
nitrogenous fertilizer, Oran Dawson
of Crockett, United States soil con-
servationist for nine counties in this
area, reveals.
Following Dawson’s instructions,
several Houston county farmers
planted small tracts Southern Giant
burr cover last year, with an aver-
age yield from the tracts planted of
18,731 pounds, or approximately 9
1-3 tons of green weight an acre.
This was equivalent to 142% pounds
of nitrogen, or 890 pounds of 16 per
cent nitrate soda, at the time the
clover was plowed under. It would
have cost $18.25 an acre to apply the
equivalent of commercial fertilizer.
Actual cost of establishing the first
year’s clover seed plot was $8.35 an
acre, including seed and labor, Daw-
son stated.
Rev. S. E. Kirkland held his regu-
la rservices here Sunday. Sunday
school was well attended and every-
one is cordially invited to come each
Sunday at 11 o’clock.
A1 Parks took his son, Burl Dean
to Paris on Monday to an eye spec-
ialist.
Miss Faye Cheatham of Texark-
ana, spent the week end with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Luther Cheat-
ham.
Miss Margaret Tidwell of Texark-
ana, spent the week end with Mr.
and Mrs. Adron Westbrook.
Miss Ruth Armstrong spent the
week end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. F. A. Armstrong at Paris.
Mrs. Mary Smith' fell recently and
her condition is reported unimprov-
ed.
Mr. and Mrs. Mills of Post Oak,
spent Sunday with Mr. arid Mrs.
Ferguson.
Mr. and Mrs. Joel Bolton and
children spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Malone at Cunningham.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gray of Tyler,
spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs.
Cato.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Slaton of
Deport, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Less Gifford.
Shorty Bolton of Venice, Calif., is
visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Joel Bolton.
Mrs. Belle Allen is improving af-
ter a two weeks’ illness.
Mrs. Elmer Hutson came home on
Tuesday from New Orleans, La.,
where she has been visiting her hus-
band, who is stationed in an army
camp there.
Bob Damron of Bogata, visited his
mother, Mrs. Belle Allen on Friday.
Miss Celestine McCrury returned
home Sunday from Shallowater,
where she has been for the past three
weeks visiting her sister, Mrs. Rich-
ard Brumley.
Mr. and Mrs. Caz Cathcart and
children of Rugby, visited Mrs.
Belle Allen on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bail Stogner and
children of Green Hill, spent Sunday
with his mother, Mrs. Minnie Stog-
ner.
Misses Helen and Hattie Webster
spent last week at Deport with Mr.
and Mrs. J. N. Roddy and Mrs. J. L.
Davidson.
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Lee Green
and son, Thomas of Paris, spent the
week end with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Scoggins.
Mrs. Elmer Hutson was absent
from school Thursday to attend the
funeral of her uncle, Jdsse Kilgore
at Deport.
Mrs. Minnie Coyle of Cunningham,
is visiting her mother and sister,
Mrs. Belle Allen and Mrs. E. C. Ab-
ernathy.
Rev. D. B. Myers spent the week
end at Sulphur Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Roddy and Mrs.
J. L. Davidson of Deport, spent Sun-
day with Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Webster.
___a
A GOOD IDEA
First Bride: “Yes, sir, I’ve got my
husband where he eats out of my
hand.”
Second Bride: “Saves a lot of dish
washing, doesn’t it?”
Hoyle Murphy spent the week end
with his sister, Mrs. Waylen Gray
and Mr. Gray at Texarkana.
Mrs. Brady Fry and Miss Mildred
Brown of Dallas, have returned to
their homes after spending several
days witu their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Edd Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Kincaid and
children spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Gardner at Deport.
Mrs. Edd Brown spent the week
end visiting her son, Willis Brown
and Mrs. Brown in Dallas.
Mrs. Burl Kincaid and children
spent the week end with her par- |
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Francis at
Deport.
Jimmy, small son of Mr. and Mrs. !
J. B. Lee, was reported ill last week.
Mrs. Bill Southerland and Miss
Dollie Hensley spent the week end
with their sister, Mrs. Homer Solo-
n on at Clarksville.
Lifeboats to Carry
Mrs. H L Beu"of"paris, i.
ing relatives here this week. I Washington. — The lore of deep
Mrs. S. P. Hoover and daughter, sea fishing will be applied to the
Mrs. Dee Harper of Dallas, spent the business of keeping men alive in
week end with their daughter and lifeboats and rafts at sea under a
sister, Mrs. Claude Whitney. plan announced by the Navy.
Mrs. Sallie Vickers has returned The Life-Saving Board of the
to Leonard after attending her dau- Navy and Coast Guard, the Depart-
ghter, Mrs. Ralph Pixley, who was mCnt Said, has developed a kit the
ill the past week with influenza. size of a two-quart can containing
The children of Mr. and Mrs. all essential fishing equipment and
Houston Floyd have whooping directions for its use which will be
cough. made standard equipment on all life
Mi\ and Mrs. Lota Haynes and boats and. rafts on all Navy and mer_
children of Chicota, spent the week chant ships over 3,000 tons,
end with Mrs. Haynes’ parents, Mr. j A similar kit, lighter in weight,
and Mrs. W. L. Robinson. I win be used by airplane pilots forc-
Ellis Whitney and family of Bos- ed down at sea.
well, Okla., spent the week end with
his mother, Mrs. J. R. Whitney and
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ashford.
Dudley Dearman has returned
home from Houston, where he has
been visiting.
The WSCS met Monday afternoon
at the church and quilted.
Virginia Whitney of Paris, spent
the week end with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. M. Whitney.
NOT EVEN COLD
Daddy (coming in from town):
Well, mother, they have frozen all
fats and oils and butter, and we
can’t buy any today.”
Little Josephine: “Ah, dady, you
musn’t say that. I had some butter
for breakfast this morning and it
wasn’t frozen.”
SHELL THEM PEAS
“Sir, the enemy is before us as
thick as peas.”
“All right, shell them!”
Saturday
MARCH 27th
48 lbs. Kimball
$0 05
FLOUR
JL
24 lbs. Kimball
$<f .05
FLOUR _________________
1
50-oz. Jar K C
OCc
BAKING POW. .....
09
2 lbs. Clabber Girl
OCc
BAKING POW.
X9
HULLS and MEAL
DAIRY RATION
MAIZE
J. A. Thompson
Every family should have a new
Texas Almanac. Charles Nobles.
TAKING STOCK
REPLACEMENTS—VALUES—CONDITIONS
Do You Need INSURANCE?
GRIFFIN & ANDERSON
INSURANCE AGENCY
Times’ Classified Ads Pay.
<WVSRVWMVLAA«W>
v
PLEASE
Times subscribers are ask-
ed to notify the subscrip-
tion department promptly
of any changes in their ad-
dresses. Under the new
postal laws, newspapers
and periodicals must pay
postage due for notices tit
any changes in address fur-
nished by the postoffice. In
addition, there is also the
problem of delay in deliv-
ery or failure to get the
paper. The best plan is to
the changw of aHHrMfl
Take Care
of your
WATER HEATER
U
Drain the sediment from your water heater
tank about once a month.
Don’t set the thermostat too High; not over
150 degrees. (This is best for the plumb-
ing, too.)
★★★
Modem gas water heaters are practi-
cally fool-proof, and many of you
have models with tanks of solid
Monel, factory-guaranteed for 10
years against corrosion. But they do
need simple and ncw.ones “c
mighty scarce till we win this war.
lone starEBgas company
WE CONGRATULATE OUR
Dairy Fanners
The dairy farmers producing milk in the Paris milk shed have done a
splendid job. Feed prices have advanced and feed often cannot be pur-
chased at all, farm labor is difficult to obtain and the dairy farmers living
costs, like your, are up. Regardless of these problems our dairy farmers
are producing 2,000 gallons more Grade “A” milk each day than required
December 7, 1941.
1943 FEED PROGRAM
Our dairy farmers are urged to improve pas-
tures and raise ensilage, wherever possible, this
year. Excessive transportation of feed, especi-
ally roughage feed from one part of the coun-
try to the other is wasteful, and impedes our
all-out war program because transportation is
vitally needed at this time.
Post War Dairy Farming
Dairy farming in the Paris area has a great future. An efficient dairy in-
dustry backed up with high-producing animals will help our business in-
stitutions a great deal during the post war adjustment period.
Pure Blood Foundation Stock is a Community Problem
and Every Effort Should Be Made to Con-
stantly Improve Our Dairy Animals
LAMAR CREAMERY
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1
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Paris, Texas
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 25, 1943, newspaper, March 25, 1943; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth901777/m1/3/: accessed April 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.