IThursdoy Jut? 1?,. 1630. TII.fi MAtiMN TIMES AN EXPLOSION In this space next week ECODMMY Save the Labels ior Valuable Premiums It will tell a story that will be of interest to all and will make a noise loudcnough to be heard over all of this section. Watch for it! if I There's Cream In Every Drop Maupin's Leading Grocery O. P.'Resh Co. Everything For the Table Maupin, Oregon ! Personalities :-1 Jack Gctchcll vUitcd Badger crock yesterday. friends at Oicar Renick and family were at Swim on an outing last Sunday. Ben Fraley was a business visitor at the county sent on Monday. A. Lincoln Hartmnn w in from Wapinitia on a business miwslon lust Saturday. Jack Berthala whs down from Summit Prairie after building sup plies yesterday. The Bate Shattuck and Cyr families picnicked on creek last Sunday. "Kelly" Clear Arthur Peterson and family from Hamilton, Montana, were visitors at the home of Mr. Peterson's cousin, Mrs. Oscar Renick, and family, Mon day. llurstcl Hollia came down from CARE OF TEETH ESSENTIAL Dr. Strict, With Slate Board Health, S Advises of Teeth have an important task to perform for the body, and unless his sheep camp, above Carson, Wash-j they are kept in condition to perform ington, Saturday, and will remain (that task, the health will suffer. at home a short time before return ing to the hills. Roy Ward and wife and A. Lin coln Hartman attonded the quarter ly conference at the Maupin church last night, they representing the Wapinitia congregation. Willard Cunningham conveyed a load of cattle to the Portland stock yards Sunday night. George Wilson, the Silvcrton painter, is in town again and is .ready for all painting job. - George! Morris and family went to Portland Sunday and spent the week at thai metropolis. Kenneth and Elton Snodgrasa were in town for their Sunday holi day the flrct of the week. o Mrs. Marcus Shearer was in The Dalles yesterday on a combined business and pleasure errand. Dr, W. A. Short and wife were among those who took in the Wa mlc picnic at Swim lust Sunday. Miss Ruth Cox of Supplec, sin ter of Mrs. Roy Pattce, was a guest at the Pattce home Inst Thursday. o Bob Shepflin is using his strength pitching hay on the Verl Bonney ranch up Criterion way these days. Job Crabtrce began construction of the forma for the foundation of the new gymnasium at Wapinitia on Monday. Verl Bonney was down from his Criterion rartch yestcrdny getting some repairs for his hay making machinery. L. C. Ilcnncghan, wife and the latter's sister. Mrs. Knowlcs, of Du fur loft for an outing at East Lake yesterday morning. , Oliver Turner visited with her home folks from Friday until Sun day,' coming , up from Portland, where the is employed. Mrs. E. W. Griffin in confined to the house with a continuation of the ailment that has affected her during the past two years. , Leonard Webcrg is delivering the winter wood at the residence of his parents in Maupin. The wood was cut on the forest reserve. o Ed. Gabel was in from the Natur al Pasture yesterday, coming to town for the purpoBo of laying in a supply of harvest supplies. o Tho Richmond garago is at work overhauling George Mallatt's com bine. Bill Schilling is working as extra man at the Richmond garage. Walter Emerson and wife, and Miss Lucille Walgamot, friends of Jack Getchcil, of Shell Maupin force aro camped this week at Bonney crossing on Badger creek. Mrs. Will Davis and children came over from Fossil Tuesday and art spending a few days with the lady's sisters, Mesdamcs Ellis Hughes and and Phil Starr. Mrs. Edwinson, formerly Miss Helen Richards when sho taught in the Maupin schools, with her hus band visited hore from List Saturday band visited ere from last Saturday until today. James Staats and wtfe with their daughter, Irene, and Mits Jaquelinc Mason, came up from Portland and spent the past week end at tho home of tho former's brother, W. II. Staats, and wife. Malcolm McDonald took a steamer from Glusgow, Scotland, June 28 and expects to arrive in Maupin the lat ter part of tho present month. Mai culm has been visiting in Scotland for several months. N. G. Hedln, with his wife and daughter, Nova, came up from Port land this morning. Newt is still on the commercial end of the KOIN broadcasting station. They will make tho return trip tomorrow. "Shorty" Miller and family hove into town last Saturday and expect to remain for some time."Shorty" has been operating a sawmill in the Silverton section but is again ready to grasp a paint brush and smear paint. Good digestion depends upon well chewed food. Chewing is easy when the teeth are sound, or at least in good repair, but when they are decayed and sore, thorough chewing being painful is avoided, and digestion is interfered with. Further, if the decayed spots are neglected, the pulps or nerves of the teeth may become infected and abscesses at the base of the roots may develop. , ' Teeth infected in this way may cause very serious troubles, the ef fects of which may last through the entire life. Sound teeth are one of the child's most precious possessions. The mother whose health is good and who eats the right sort of food be fore the child is born, usually en dows the child with sound teeth with which to start life.- This is the first and perhaps the most Im portant step. Not only before birth does food influence the structure of, teeth, but after birth as well Therefore bottle f'jj babies murt be givr. food containing the lime baits and vitamines in ordsr to produce teeth of the proper siz! and density. Of course, the breast-fed baby gets the vitamines . from the mother. If, therefore, the mother is healthy and eats a properly balanced diet, the baby teeth get a good start. The next important step is the enre of the first teeth The first tcdh need as much care as the second set If any of the first teeth are lost, the jaws do not de velop normally and the second teeth are likely to be irregularly placed, and are, as a result more subject to decay. They are just as likely to become infected as the second set are. Therefore, dental attention to cavities is a important with the firtt i with the second teth. Shipped In Combine W. II. Aldridge went to . The Dalles one day last week and while , ever grown in this section, Fint Load of Wheat To Elmer Snodgrass goes the honor of having hauled the first load of the 1930 crop of wheat to the Maupin market. The grain was grown on the Lester McCorkle ranch and was as nice and plump as any Lester there purchased an dvancc-Rum(-Icy combine Bobby Davidson haul ed the machine to Maupin from whence it was taken to the ridge Bakcovcn ranch by a pillar tractor, i Ald-catcr- Gone to Dufur 1 Tom Swctt has packed up bag and baggage and has moved to Du fur. Tom spent many years of his life at our neighboring city and now that he has secured a residence moro to his liking in Dufur, con cluded to again make that place his home. Maupinites will miss,. Tom and his wife, for during their stay here they made many friends. Ex-Mayor Butler was callef on Monday. French is now on the road as salesman fsr the Stadleman company of The Dalles. Giving Away Charts Resh & Co. are giving away a child's health chart with each pur chase of a can of Thompson's double malted milk. The charts aro laid out as a record of height and weight of a child from the age of one yar to 18 years, giving as well tho weight according to height. The chart is worth having as it will prove a Maupin a permanent record of the develop ment of the child as ho grows up. Call in and sec one of these handy records. began his wheat harvest on Monday tho day Elmer brought the load to town. Installed Electric Cooker John Wittman continues to effect needed improvements at the hotel Kelly. His latest was the installa tion of a large electric hot point cooker in the kitchen, it being de signed for quick service cooking. The Maupin Power company made the installation. D.'Z. TTn About 1 ICR upt Town TUB NEW rOBD TL'DOB 8EDAX YOU arc baying proved performance when you bay a Ford. Yon know it bas been built for many thousands of miles of satisfactory, economical service. . Letters from users in every part of the world show the value of the sound design of the car, good materials and accuracy in manu facturing. You 6ense a feeling of sincere pride in the oft-repeated phrase "Let me tell you what my new Ford did." ' Further tribute to the sturdiness, reliability and general all-round per formance of the new Ford is shown in the repeated and growing pur chases by government- bureaus, by police departments, and by large industrial companies which keep careful day-by-day cost records. In most cases, the new Ford has been chosen only cfier exhaustive tests covering speed and power, safety, comfort, case of control, oil and gas consumption, low yearly deprecia tion, and low cost of up-keep. They have found, as you will find, that the Ford embodies every feature you want or need in a motor car at an unusually low price. NEW LOW FORD PIIICKS Roadster . . . . . Phaeton . . Tudor Sedan . . . Coupe . . . . . . . Sport Conpe . . . De Luxe Coara . . . Three-window Fordor Sedan Convertible Cabriolet . . De Luxe Phaeton . De Lose Sedan . Town Sedan ... S135 '410. '493 493 523 S43 600 625 623 640 660 (AH price . o. b. Detroit, plus freight end de livery, Bumpert end tpere tire ttxtrm, f tost coefj ASK FOR A DEMONSTRATION NOT very far from wherever you are is a Ford dealer who will be glad to give you a demonstration ride in the new Ford Ford motor company picked up aroun1! town Mutard and hot cakes. Sandwiches and tabid dancing. A combination hard to digest. One night last week a coterie of convival souls gathered at a popular Maupin eating house and during the evening hilarity grew with the passing of time. One of tho party evidently objected to the quality of sandwiches served to an other. He grabbed the edibles, made a mash of them, then proceed ed to smear the mess onto the walls, Result, a very mad proprietor and i mess that required much patience! and hard work to eradicate. The end of the party came when one member did a hootchie-kootchie on the table, . A riotous ending to a riotous time. , A certain Maupin lady was at tacked with a bad case of shingles early in the summer. Recently she went to The Dalles for a concluding treatment. Upon being asked how she liked shingles, replied that so far as she is concerned she does not lika them and will having nothing to do with such even if they were to be placed on her roof. And that's that this part of Oregon. At the picnic were five brothers, ranging in age from 83 years down to 71, each hale and hearty and seemingly good for many more years of activity. Here's to the Driver brothers. ? lMWAiMMIMaw1nailaatf Goorge Morris likes his eats. His delight it to sit dovn to a well fill ed table holding up a well cooked meal. Last Sunday he went to Port land with his family. Wandering about town he ran across a restau rant and looking inside discovered his sister, Mrs. Hattie Davdson, running the place, which is known as the Roseland cafe, located at the corner of Twelfth an? Yamhill streets. George there fihed up on the best on the market. He izys Mrs. Davidson invites all ..Maupin friends to call on her when in the big town. The annual gathering of the Dri ver brothers and the picnic held by the Wamic community marks an epoch in the history of this section. The Inaugurators of the yearly pic nic, the Drivers, are well known in Fresh Every Day Maupin Home Town Bread Cakes, Cookies, Pastries Ask Your Dealer s rV rnr sWa-V WJy aH3 Maupin Shoe hop MAUPIN, OREGON Shoe Repairing Well Done. Bring in the old Shoes E. A. CYR, Poprietor. Your Watch Haywire? If it is not doinp( its work bring it to The Times office and Mr. Semmes will send it to GUY A: POUND ateiMiwtarlng Jeweler atxi Watchmaker U U. Lindqulst THE DALLES - - OREGON