The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 17, 1943 Page: 4 of 8
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SHAKING
Outride Lamar and Red River Coun-
Hm *2 00 Per Year
1MVABIABLY IN ADVANCE
FOR SALE!—Weaned pigs, $6 each.
Joe Kelsey, Deport.
CONVERTEP DURING 1942
INTO CHEMICALS TO HELP
win True war
WANTED—Second hand lumber to
build a small bam. Pete Storey, tf
ia made (or publication
i of church services or
illc gatherings where no
is charged. Where ad-
charged or where goods
>f any kind are offered (or
HEAD MAIZE For Sale—3 or 4 tons
at Deport Co-Op. Gin, $45.00 ton.
Raymond Nixon. 19-c
jar advertising rates
THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1943
As we understand it, the pay-go
tax means go-pay.
The Victory garden has another
advantage: We can raise our own
vitamins.
We Americans are in our glory.
Meat rationing is giving us plenty
to beef about.
What a pity the airplane had to
be ushered into a new world on
wings of death.
Over at Naples in Morris coun-
.ty that town was about to lose its
newspaper, which has been pub-
lished for fifty-eight years. The
reason was a lack of patronage
■on the part of local merchants
who could sell about all the mer-
chandise they could get without
any advertising. When the news
got around that The Monitor was
preparing to suspend publication
for the duration, due to a lack j
of advertising patronage, mcr-1
chants called a meeting. They
realized the value of the news-1
A broad-minded man is one who
winks at most of the bad things that
the world approves.
Wishing won’t win the war. It
will be won only when we put our
hearts, money and strength into it.
The world may not be all that it
is cracked up to be, but there is no
denying that it is pretty well crack-
ed up.
paper to their town, and to keep
it operating, forty-five of the for-
The food conference in session at
Hot Springs, Va., didn’t seem to be
getting any place fast. What’s cook-
in’ anyway?
ty-six firms in that town pledg-
ed their steady weekly support'
for the duraiton. Last week’s j
Monitor carried forty-five adver-
tisements for these merchants, |
and they have saved their home |
town newspaper. Wonder what
that one merchant who refused
to co-operate will tell tjpe men
now in the armed service when
they return home. With the ex-
ception of letters from home
folk, the local newspaper is the
most interesting thing they re
It is easier for Washington to for-
give taxes than for the people back
home to forgive those who make
taxes possible.
ceive, and they are going to re-
member the advertisers who
made it possible for therh to re-
ceive their home town newspa-
per while they made a much
greater sacrifice for those adver-
tisers. Families with sons in the
armed service who ar^ trying to
get the home town news to those
boys could help such a situation
as prevailed at Naples by pat-
ronizi-----------* ■’
The edict goes forth that women’s
garments must have only one pock-
et. Even one is more than the a\4fr-
age husband can find.
The cresceht is t;.e
INTERNATIONAL 9VMBOL
FOR FOOD
A FR06 •
CANNOT
SWALLOW _
WITHOOTi-^-
Eyes
FOR SALE—Nice business in Bo-
gata. For further information in-
quire at Times Office. . 19-c
Billy Roae, year and k half old
son of Mr- and Mrs.-Elbert Parker
of Dallas, who was a guest last week
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Shelton who occupy the Wm. N.
Skeen property in northeast Deport,
started himself a fire on Thursday
when he secured matches and struck
them to see if lace window curtains'
would burn. They would.
Deport Volunteer Fire Department
was called, but Mrs. Shelton tore
the curtains down just about the
time they set the wall paper on fire.
She suffered only minor burns.
GETTING Married? — Invitations
printed in our plant or we will or-
der them engraved for you. tf
TO RID your poultry house of mites
use Thermotrol. Guaranteed. De-
port Lumber Co.
JIANT REFRIGERATION-EQUIPPED
STORAGE ROOMS ARE USED TO I
txECUTE" MOTHS FROM FUB-UNEPl
FiyiNG SUITS, A SERIES OF
SUDDEN TEMPERATURE CHANGES 1
-SHOCK* THEM TO DEATH
With Men in Uniform
Every time we fight a war we get
the worst of it. We must not only
win it against those who start it, but
we must feed ’em after the war.
izing stores which advertise,
and telling them why they are
according them the patronage.
Honor Roll Deport
Times Subscribers
Goerring was eminently right
when he said three years ago that
not a single bomb would ever fall
on German soil. They are not fall-
ing in singles.
(Continued from First Page)
Boyd Griffin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. A. Griffin of Rugby, has gradu-
ated at Sheppard Field from an in-
tensive course in airplane mechanics
and now is prepared to blast the
Axis as one of America’s “comman-
dos in coveralls.” He is now quali-
fied to play a vital role in the Army
Air Forces ground crew teams that
“Keep ’Em Flying.".,
a: '
Gen. von Arnim One
Of Hitler’s Best
TYPEWRITER RIBBONS — Just
received, a fresh stock to fit any
make typewriter. You must bring
your old spool for exchange. The
Deport Times.
WANTED — Your subscription to
any magazine in the nation. Why
not let your newspaper handle your
subscription? It won’t cost you a
penny more and it will save you
time and postage. When your sub-
scription expires to any national
magazine just drop in the office;
we’ll be glad to serve you.
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 of
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
send the change of address
in advance.
One hundred thousand tons of
bombs have fallen on Germany in
the past few months. The next 100,.
000 will be easier on us and tougher
on Germany.
i, The Times wishes to express its
^appreciation to these subscribers
who have placed credits to their
•UbacripUons, and welcomes those
Whose names are placed on our lists
i Mrs. Lillian Pointer
! Vert Bell j 1
Sgt Carol H Harkri'del
1 Troy Smith
’ Jack Jeffus
f Jacob H. Phil ley
Mrs. Roy Shelton
j Homer Hayes
; B. W. Gardner
Ji R. J. Dunlap
Dorothy Read
Oladys King
Cpl. Tellas Hutson
Mn. Earline Webb
J. W. Shiver
R. H. Clinger
8. B. Lynn
Walter Allen
X. K. Gunn
J. W. BaU
Pvt Jas. N. Holt
Mn. Agnes Weddle
Cpl. Vorris G. Phillips
Aren't we beginning too late in
our campaign to stop juvenile de-
linquencies? No doubt it would
have been more effective had we
started two or three generations
back.
Maybe when we have a feeling
that the millennium is just around
the corner we will find a candidate
who will stand for enough to jus-
tify us voting FOR rather than
AGAINST him
Mr. and Atyra. R. D. Nixon have
ordered The Times |ept no^heir ne-
phew. Cpl, Vorris1 G? PffiWjps, who
is stationed mthe Manama Canal
Zone. Cpl. PhilltgSs-enj[isted in the
army about six years ago and has
been stationed at Ft. Bliss, Denver,
Colo., and New Orleans, La., prior
to being sent to Panama Canal. He
is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
J. A. Phillips, but after their death
made his home with Mr. and Mrs.
Nixon.
Line From Coke
Pleasant
Completed
■ I
*
A single word from the President
sent 50,000 workers in the rubber
plants back to their jobs. This de-
termined attitude might well be em-
ployed as effectively in other strikes.
The order of John L. Lewis to strike
certainly should not be more pow-
erful than the voice of the American
people.
Mrs. Sam Stone of Chicago, 111.,
is visiting Mrs. J. H. Moore and Miss
Nita Grant here, and other relatives
and friends in Paris and Clarksville.
The Stones were formerly in the
lumber business in Deport, moving
to Chicago in 1912.
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hoover of Pat-
tonville Rl, have two sons in the
service. Cpl. Raymond A. Hoover
is now stationed with an infantry
division of the army at Ft. Lewis,
Wash. He has been in. the service
since Nov. 1942. His wife was the
former Miss Frances Ann Finck of
Pattonville. Pvt. Charles D. Hoov-
er is in the tank corps at Ft. Knox,
Ky. He was inducted in February
1943. Both boys were farmers prioi*
to entering the service.
Pfc. Francis Westbrook returned
Sunday morning to Camp Livings-
ton, La., after a few days’ visit with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom West-
brook. A few hours after Francis
left, another son, Pvt. Robert West-
brook, arrived from Camp Wallace
on a three-day furlough. The Tom
Westbrooks have two other sons in
the service, Pfc. Samuel H. West-
brook in North Africa, and Pvt. Jas.
T. Westbrook at Camp Campbell,
Ky. They have another son here,
I Austin Westbrook.
Col. Gen. Jurgin von Arnim, now
in the hands of the Allies, is rated
one of Adolf Hitler’s best command-
ers, a cold tough disciplinarian of
the old Prussian school. He fought
successfully on the Polish, Norwe-
gian and Russian fronts and was pro.
moted to Colonel General when he
was given the command in Tunisia
Jan. 2.
The 54-year-old, hook-nosed Gen-
eral has been characterized as pure
Prussian, pure army, pure business, j
brave enough and cold and calculat- I
ing. He is not popular with his staff ’
and has a reputation as the tough- I
est of disciplinarians, a man hard |
upon his subordinates. 1
USE THIS ORDER BLANK
THE DEPORT TIMES,
DEPORT, TEXAS.
Enclosed find check or dollar bill for which send
The Deport Times one year to
Name__L
Address..
This offer good only in Lamar and Red River couhties.
Sent elsewhere, the cost is $2.00.
of a six-inch pipe
the Coke Field, eight, miles
t tf Wiimsboro, to the TUm Ai-
k and Refining Company at Mt
1 la almost half completed.
1 coaatructkm of the lb* «ps
lay M and I* miles of the
Hat have been laid. Wet
|MH slowed construction
,---- „ W »m'.1
, Baa la owned by the Thlco
Um Company, subekHary of
for the project
Company haal
- Boy! - Rent!
-Sell! -Trade!
USE OUR
Want Ads
Result*I Quick and Easy!
Learn Now of the Benefits
a 25c Ad in Our Want Ad
ATTENTION! DAIRY FARMERS:
Roughage Feed
is THE KEY to
SUCCESSFUL
DAIRYING
Roughage is the key to successful and profitable dairy production through
the winter months. Plant row crops, hegari, and other feed crops now for
storing through the winter, either dry or as silage. The protein and caro-
tene value of ensilage is high and is retained in feed when it is stored in
an air tight pit silo or other good silo. This rich feed will keep your dairy
herd producing at maximum through the winter months!
THERE'S STILL TIME TO PLANT
ENSILAGE AND WE URGE YOU TO DO SO
> •' W *— wti,», ■ —l
Wr ’fir -
m *Sr
-•'J v?J
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 17, 1943, newspaper, June 17, 1943; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth902397/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.