Hi P1M TIME Always working for the best Interests of Maupin and all of Southern Wasco County. Publishes only that news fit to print Caters to no particular class, but works for aDL VOLUME XVI MAUPIN, OUEGON. THURSDAY, JULY 3J, 1930 Number 38 MAD Maupin Times Ceases as Local Newspaper Today After 1ft Year' Publication Maupin Tim., Will go to Morgue Tho ' WHh thl isauo of The Maupin Timet the paper will cease to exist ' m local publication. The publish er hive concluded arrangements whereby the plant will move to Kainer and there bo used in publish ins; a new paper, to bo called The Columbia Rivfr Pilot. We expect to be able to movo next week. Since coming here the publishers have tried hard to give Maupin a real newspaper. We Jiave fought advenity of many furln, have uc ceeded in building up a rcapectablo ubscription list and a fair adver tiling clientele. It taken tho latter to keep up a newspaper. Tho l cal business men, with a few ex ceptiom, teem to harbor the idea that advertising only Adds to over head expenses, therefore have been lukewarm in using The Tunc col umni to tell patrons what they had to sell. Some of them have adver tised spasmodically, while a few have been faithful in their patronage. Among the latter we mention the Maupin State Dank, 0. P. Itcsh 4 Co., Tum-A-Lurn Lumber company, Maupin Drug Store. Thoe four busi ness places have stayed with us week in and week out While it is true we have enjoyed a liberal advertising patronage from Dalles merchant)!, atill the fact remains that without that patronage wq would have to had to shut down the paper and leave town. . , A great many of our subscribers seem to think a newxpaper man does not need money. We have rcpeatly sent subscription statements to such delinquents but without result. F.ah of those subscribers are abundantly able to pay up. It seems to us that rtlessnesa, not to say something ranger, impella them to put us off it long as they can and then dis cln'm responsibility for the paper rr.ming to them. Totienco haa ccas C;l to be a virtue with us, and some of those who are owing for their "T"Pr may expect legal service in a VISIBLE SUPPLY OF WHEAT SHOWS INCREASE Portland Grain Exchange Bulletin of Last Wak's Trading Rather Optimlitic Pacific Northwest receipts of new crop wheat show B large increase, out most of this la shinned on con-1 aignmejit and there seems little in clination to sell. The United States' visible supply increased nine and a half million bushels and the trade is skeptical aboi I better prices, in view of larger stocks. , A perspective shows European stocks smaller than a year ago, g'wlth conditions tnfavornblo to a yield approximately last year's, and harvest delayed. Canadian Nwhcat provinces are still experiencing de terioration, 'though a better crop than last year is in prospect. Ar gentina will not be the export fac tor of last year, but Australia ex pects a generous surplus for export from Increased acreage. Russia is an unknown quantity and reports of large sales usually dwindle to actual cargoes. France is reported "as favoring larger imports of wheat than allowed under the drastic re strictions now prevailing, and as a whole there is less of the satisfied hand-to-mouth attitude shown by foreign buyers. A fair volume of new busifiss was worked from Tortlnnd, moVy on favorable space offerings, to taling about eight thousand long tons of white wheat for United Kingdom and Continental ports and about two thousand short tons to Japan. ? Portland futures for the . week show net changes as follows: July unchanged, September '4 c lower and December, ,4 c lower per bushel, ft Portland, Astoria and Longvicw visible supply '1.603.316 buHhels. P Portland car "receipts for the week: Wheat,V 643; Flour, 60; Corn, 12; Barley, 6 Oats, 11; Hay, 13. ; . ... r6 ." Wonderful Lip Salve " Mulford's Lip Snlve for sunburned and" cracked Hps. 25 cents nt the Maupin Drug Store. suit instituted to collect their de linquency. We do not like to begin drastic action but when forced to the wall even a mouse will fight. We like Maupin. Her people are among the best on earth. There is no mora hospitable town on earth than' tho town founded by W. li. Staats and wife, and we wish noth ing but the best success for the place. We have enjoyed our stay here, we have made many friends and oome enemies. What newspaper man doea not have some of the tot ter? To the people of Maupin and vici nity we bid a fond adieu. We have spent many pleasant hours here and would remain if there was a prospect of Immediate growth of the place and a resultant increase in business. We will always look back upon our residence here with pleasure. And if any MaupinKcs ever come to hainicr they may be assured of a cordial welcome and entertainment hi!o there. In voticlueion wc again tsy good jyc, nd with n fervent God bless all Maupin people, wc leave you with nearte free from enmity toward each and every one of you. Wc have made arrangements with publisher Nelson of the Dufur Dis patch to publish Maupin happening) in his paper. Mr. Nelson will ar-fj range to hove a correspondent in Maupin and expect to print a page of Maupin news In each issue. The Dispatch is the nearest paper to this city and Its publisher wil make a special effort to chronicle the hap penings of this city in his" paper. Ve especially recommend Mr. Nel son to our business men as a job printer. He is neat and accurate in his work and wi print and dcllvwr work when promised. Remember the Dibpatch when in need of any thing in the job printing line. Times subscribers will receive the Dispatch at least those who are not far in arreara, and Mr. Nelson will carry and send The Dispatch to all paid up ioers nnd is empowered to col lect and receipt for all payment of arrearages, WILL HOLD "FIRE COLLEGE" Five-Day School Sponsored by Ore gon State College Oregon fire chiefs are going to hold a "Fire College" in connection with thfllir annual convention this year at Oregon State college, Au gust IV-ii. A wc-ony scnooi punsorcd by the association, i !ate fire marshal's of fice and the chool of engineering Is intended t jive latest instructions. In the science of fire prevction and con trol. Many special speakers as well as actual demomrations are sched uled. DOOKS ON HOME ECONOMIC: 4-H Club Member Add Number U Mupi Library The Maupin 4-H Club Leaders association recently ordered the pur chasing of six home economics book for the use of 4-H club member end any others interested, accordln; to Mrs. D. L. Rutherford prcsiden of the association. Those books wil bo left in the library at Maupii where they may be secured. The purchase of these books wa: made possible by a reserve fun which is raised by this association V send 4-H club members in the Mau pin district to the annual 4-H clul summer school at Corvallis. A small reserve was left over after this year's expenses were paid and is was felt advisable by this group to secure these books, The names of the books and their authors are : Laundering by L. Ray Balderston, Sewing (Clothing " for Women) by Laura L. Bait, Cookery Feeding the Family by Rose, Table Setting by Beth Bailey, Hows and Whys of Cooking by Halliday and Noble, Art in Eeveryday Life ' by Goldstein and Goldstein. Visited in The Dalle , Mrs. J. II. Kramer, son, Herbert, nnd Mrs. James Chalmers, visited and traded in The Dalles on Tues day The visitors were regaled with dinner at the home of - Mrs. Chal mers' mother, Mrs. Fugh, that day. R0C1 NOV BEING REPAIKED BY EXPERT - ; Diesel Engine Export oa Sit Fislag up Machinery and Lining Up Engines Tho rock crusher at work on the WaplnRia cut-off 32 miles j from Maupin, is temporarily idle, the cause being breaking of the main shaft of one of .the huge Diesel en gines supplying power. The break occurred about three weeks ago and since that time the crusher has not been turning out crushed rock. Additions are to be made to the crushing machinery, among them be ing a supplementary truahcr which will afford at leas 50 yards addi tional product each shift. U'lio liar ,vis company, which has the con tract to supply crusiKU rock for 13 link's of the highway, expects to complete the contract within the coming two months. When repairs and addition have been completed tnc plant is expected to be in shape to continue uninterrupted until the contract is completed. MAUPI N CLUBBERS PREPARE EXHIBITS FOR CO. FAIR : ' v.' '; , - 1. Various Sections Busy With Their " Department Demonstration; Names and Kinds 4-11 clubs in the Maupin district ar preparing for six demonstrations which will bo put on at the Wasco county fair, September 18, 19, 20. 'llicsc demonstrations ore being planned by members of jbr- plu 4-H Club Leaders' association, In cooperation with the county school superintendent, T. F. Brum baugh, and the county agent, W. Wray Lawrence. The kind of demonstration and 4-H club members arranging to put them on are: cooking, Gcrlrudt and Ernest Kirsch; Home Making, Elizabeth Rutherford and Margaret Appling; sewing. Dorothy Greene and Irene Woodcock; health, Eliza beth Rutherford and Allcne Wilson; poultry, Ralph Kaiser, Jr., and Frankly n Ucnick; crops, Harry Ru therford nnd Theodore Kirsch. Save Your Eyes Dr. Clarke of the Clarke Optical company, 326 H Washington street, corner of Sixth, Portland, Oregon EYE SIGHT SPECIALISTS, will be in Maupin. all day nnd evening of Monday, August 4th, at the Maupin hotel. SEE IIIM ABOUT YOUR EYES. Winter Fish itNUT at Sheepshfad Bay where yhjAshermen go out in the wee stna' hours on a winter morning for their catch and where the Bay at dawn is lined with tall masted sclhooners and dripping nets, break fast at the little stalls along the waterfront is an event. Salt winds and sea spray whet appetites, and it takes a big cup of steaming coffee and a man-size order of ham-and-eggs to fill the vacancy. Yet almost Invariably these fishermen will start breakfast with clams or oysters pried right out of the shell. They wilf tell you that nothing makes you feel better than fish on a cold day. Salmon a Winter Favorite " Our Friday fish is especially tov portant in winter when we are apt to eat too much meat. Agd scj LEGOE-HYBE WILL BE AT PENDLETON LECCE-HYDE COMING 70 PENDLETON MEETINC Head of Federal Farm Board Plan tw Be At College Eiten ; s'on Gathering J ' j W'heat fan-ufs of Oregon are to have cportujfcy on August 9 to hcur first hand lh3 ideas of the federal fam board leaden oil the present and future ma;k.!t outlook for wheat the world aw. On that data Secre tary Arthur Hyde of the depart ment of agriculture and hairm&n Alexander Legge of the farm board will address a meeting of farmers, bankers and college extension men a( Pendleton. ,iThe Pendleton meeting and ont in Spokane are the only two sched uled in the Pacific northwest ' by the farm leaders who are starting on a tour of the far west ty the in terests of farm marketing. Ar rangements for the Oregon meetinj were mad by the federal extension service through Paul V. Maris, " k. ector 0f butnsion at 0. a. 0. 4 . " Spending many million nirten Hunclrtd Men Given En, i p.ojrment Secretary of Commerce Lamon announced last fall that seven bil lion dollars would be spent in 1330 on construction and maintenance oi public works and public utilities. This 0ught to help unemployment In the Oregon district, for - extcn- 'pa of. generalina ! ' Kvt ajiriAiinnieiy mueii niimur dollars is being expended by estab Fished electric liirht and nower com- jpanies, giving employment to mort than thirteen hundred men on new construction alone. Will Vi.it Yellow.to Oscar Renick and family will load up their Oldamobile and will toke off on a trip to Yellowstone Na tional Tark. They expect to be gone a matter of two weeks and will visit other parts while away. During Oscar's absence the Tuin-A-Lum lumber yard will be in charge of a man from The Dalles office of the :ompany. Decorating Rooms Mrs. Marcus Shearer has a paintor at work decorating the woodwork in the rooms of the Maupin hotel. All woodwork will be given a coat of varnish and when the work has been completed tho rooms will fhine like a nigger's heel on a dusty road. of the best winter fish is salmon- warm in color and adapted to nour ishing hot combinations. Here is a recipe for a corking Stamn's Pit made as a fisherman s wite makes it: - Saute one small onion h two tablespoons butter for a few min utes, then add one and one-half tablespoons flour, and one cup milk slowly, making a white sauce. . Put alternate layers of salmon and mush rooms into a buttered baking dish, using a seven and one-half ounce can of salmon and a four-ounce can of mushrooms. Pour sauce over. Meanwhile have four potatoes boiled, drained, mashed and sea soned with two tablespoons butter, four tablespoons hot milk, salt and pepper. Pile them lightly on top of the fish mixture. Bake In a hot area uatfl brown MEETING 0. S, C. Plans Hen House for Central and East Ore. Blue Print Available at Agent' Offiee, Together With all ' Probable Coit The 0. S. A. C. 400-hen laying house has been modified to meet Central and Eantern Oregon condi tion with the object in mind of meet ing the cold f weather and warm summer conditiens. - Cel-o-glass covered frames have been provided as a means of closing the front. When not in use these frames slide down between the inner and outer walls of the front where they are protected from the intense summer heat as well as from de struction by the fowls. Double walls and a false ceiling are provided which will enable straw or saw dust to be placed between the roof and ceiling for insulation purposes. The double wall3 will al so make better insulation. This will provide a warmer house in winter and cooler house in summer. CAMP LIMBERLOST OPENS , A' LOST LOKE SUNDAY Sectional Boy Scout Summer Camp for Which 61 Scout Have Been Regitred W. W. Belcher, secctional.. Scout executive, was in Maupin a slum time Tuesday while on his way home from Camp Ringwaak, the Boy Scou. camp held at Scout Lake , during July. - f Mr. Belcher etated that Cam, I :mberlost, at Lost Lake, w.U opei Ji Sunday next with regu'r i:t n. r -inhering 0 .... Swimming an J wau-. turk will. ! tne of the fcalur. ; i inl thin., voar spH a. lidmund (Bo) Wilson a..d Ralp: iCaioor, Jr., fire two of the Maupi. Scouts who are planning on a;ien-f jng Limberlost during ' the firs period. " . UK) MUCH SPEED CO I IT. California People Ruin Cadillac C on Criterion Hill " A Cadillac car driven by Califoi nia people, ran into a bank on tht Criterion hill near the Hunt ranc. Saturday afternoon .turned ovei three times and sustained a runined top, smashed wheels and fenders and a twisted frame. The occupants of the car were thrown out, three of them being badly bruised and cut. Mrs. Sam B, Cohen, Los Angels, sustained a broken wrist and frac tured hip; Miss Hortense Cohen, Ox nard, and Miss Charlotte Cohen, Ventura, each received " severe bruises and a young son of Mrs. Co hen got out without injury. The Crandall ambulance was summoned and the Cohens taken to The Dalles, irrc hospital physicians took can of their injuries. " The car wa speeding down hill and went out of control, the result being as above chronicled. Just another illustration of too much speed with accompanying results. Eyett Getting Stronger- Mose Addington, who has been troubled with his eyes for severa years past, is now taking treatmejv from Dr. Brown of Salem with gooc' results. Mose's left eye developec' a cataract, the iris seeming to have grown to the lens, causing him de fective sight. Mose will go to Salem once each fortnight so the doctor can note condition of. the affected optic. . New Signs Evidenced The Maupin hotel and cafe and tho rainbow restaurant annouce their functions by neat signs. The hotel proprietor has fastened a neat sign at each end of the porch awning while tho wall on the west contains the information that rooms may be had within. Fraley's place is re splendant with a bright red sign which tells all that "Eats" may be procured in the dining room. " 'The signs are the . work of Wilson and Miller, all around house, sign, barn and fence painters. Chase Mosquitoes Away : Mosquitone keeps morquitoes away and heals the bites." 25 centf at tH 'Maupin Drug Store. v Ventilation of roosting . quarters is provided by having an opening' near the top of the rear wall. The air passes under the dropping boards up between the inner and outer rear -walls entering the roosting compart ment through a door near its top. Thia door may be closed during the very cold weather. Two ventilators are provided for each 200-hen compartment By ex tending these 18 inches below the ceiling warm air h retained. - Thia -warm air can be let out during the hot weather by making an opening in the side of the ventilator ihaft just below the ceiling level. Rear windows have been reduced in number to one for each ten feet of wall space. These windows may be removed when additional ventila tion is needed during the summer. Blue prints and pans for thia . poultry house can be seen at the county agent's office. CHRISTIAN UNIJY W03KS FOR ALL BETTPMr.NT '., i ' SchUm in Church Circle are AI way Detrimental Harmomy is essential for the sue- pess of a community. When th ! members of any place beg.'a u " "knock" each otlur, or some particu- ' !ar persons, then it is that harmomy is disrupted and the place toina tc' retrograde. Maupin, may b. :d to e an exception to th.u ii-if ! ut that fact remains there is err :ain faction here that se r.-, to de sire control of things ten .j . .-.1 t well as earthly. Tho-church it Maupin haw l,j:u a tic- for lo, these many nv "... . f pastors have left this city, - ing been at a salary loss, ia-i.-.u. spread their doctrines of unchri.st iMi .ike words to the detriment oi others who. in all religious zest, worked for the upbuilding and con-, :inuation of the church. A schisin occurred and that was caused ly, ;he desire for leadership exhii;;,! jy one member, abetted r.c i -Uo:! by some others That schism .spread : until one of the church's mrh - , nendencies was practically L.-U Some of the would-be leaders mads open demands that some others, those who had the best interests of the organization at heart, be ' forc ed to leave the church." The re- . suit is the church is losing out. In terest : is failing; membership hr. lost it pep and it seems to Le W a question of time when Maupin will have no place to wr"? snd none to worship with. Communities should , v '. to gether, churches also, tn.;t tho r :st good can be acomplished. One per son's ideas should not control all, neither should people seek to un dermine others that the few might gain their ends and the others suf fer by the machinations and . intri gue of the few. , , , Homa From Vacation , W. II. Williams and wife returned to their Maupin home yesterday evening, after having been absent 4 during the past three weeks. While away the Williams' visited many valley towns as well as spending a time at Siletz Bay and at Belknap; hot springs. Bill says his vacation lengthened his life at least 20 years, also that another year will see him taking another time off from ljis work as mail messenger in Maupin. Going After Daughte Mrs. D. B. Fraley and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Cyril Fraleyi" will go to Tygh Ridge tomorrow" 'efter the eldest Fraley daughter, Miss Alma. She has been at the '.home of her aunt, Mrs. Simie Hix, I a,. a a 1 ior ine pasi two weens. ) ReiigneJ Office I J. H. Kramer recently resigned his office of deputy, sheriff for this precinct. Joe also relinquished his office as town marshal of Maupin and Is now giving hla undivided at tention to his garage business, f Brought Melon In Oliver Roati want tn Tho Dnllpn tn. day and upon his return unloaded a truckload on fine Klodike watermel 1 ons. ' They are selling at 2 cents j per pound and are aweet and juicy.