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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1926)
Service Our Watchword! :S I s 2 s 2 2 so o o fi o o o o o o r Legion Hall, Maupin, Ore. Music by Bernie and Bob and their Spokane Symphon-Aters Vaudeville and Broadcasting Company of Artists Each member a Feature Soloist. Don't fail to hear them AOMISOON $1.00- iO(JK AND YIQMTY : Cecil H uff of Daf ur is working for F. T; Feltch. J. W. Farlow and Willis re turned to The Dalles Saturday afternoon. Buttercups are blooming by the wayside quite different from the weather in the eastern coast states. Did you get a valentine? : Miss Else Ledford came home from Tygh Friday evening to spend the weekend with the home folks. Albert Hill drove to Tygh Fri day, returning Sunday morning. M. A. Duncan went to Mau pin Saturday to bring home some horses he had purchased for spring work. There will be a basket dinner held ai Smock church Sunday, February 21. A. Frischknecht will preach at 11 o'clock, just after Sunday' school. You are invited to attend. Jos. White and wife of Wamic were callers at the B. Scot home last Sunday afternoon. The annual meeting of the L &. B. Ditch company will be held as the"community house March 6. NEWS OF PINE GROYE The county nurse visited the L. F. Walters family Friday. Mrs. Clara Cross was a Mau pin visitor Saturday. Malba Sharpe was out of school the past week on account of illness. Miss Nova Hedin is on the sick list. Noah Flinn and wife visited at the David Sharpe home Friday. They are Mrs. Sharpe's parents and formerly lived here. George Davi3 went to Walker's Srnday and will work there. L. C. Henneghan and Frank Stuart visited with J. S. Brown Sunday. T. W. Linn and son made a trip to Portland last Friday. The Pine Grove school enjoyed a Valentine box and game3 last Friday afternoon. Mrs. ,N. G. Hedin and Mrs. Ed. Davis were visitors. Virgil Mayfield's little daugh ter Erma, has recovered from her recent illness. Our Advertisers The Reliable Kind AFTER EVERY HURT TRAM MARK RO.U.5.BttOrf MMLEWNS MAUPIN DRUG STORE Maupin, Oregon 1 Old Mattresses Made New $3.50 Dont throw your old mattress away. New mattresses at fac tory prices. Acme Mattress Co. 108 N. Bdw. Portland About 25 people attended the Valentine party at the Pine Grove school last Friday. All patrons of the school had been asked to bring valentine packages they did not want. A fish pond was provided and all fished for valentines. Then the packages were auctioned off and paid for with "paper" money and when opened caused much merriment. An archery contest also was held. WAPIMTIA NEWS Wapinitia Church Service Sunday School 10:00 a. m., Mrs. Josephine, Floyd, Supt. Preaching 11:00 a. m. and 7:30 p. m., by Kev. VV. A. Mershon, Pastor. Christian Endeavor meets at 6:30, Sunday evening.: Misses Anna West and Ger trude Laughlin accompnied Miss Peterson to The Dalles Friday. Isham West went after them Saturday. Owine to Mrs. Llovd's sudden departure the party scheduled by the high school, to be held at the Lloyd home, was postponed. Miss Peterson, county nurse, was visiting schools hereabouts the greater part of last week. Owing to the condition of the road3 it was necessary for her to go to the Hackler school oh horseback. She also used that mode of conveyance to visit the Lewis Walters family, the mem bers of which are down with the flu. Miss Crystal Hartman spent Saturday night with the Lloyd children. Holly McCoy is at his brother, Frank's, home ill with quinsy. Mrs. Josephine Lloyd was called to the bedside of her moth er at Oakland, California last week, that lady being seriously ill. Mrs. Lloyd was conveyed to Portland by her husband Satur day, and from there went south by train. Mr. Lloyd returned Sunday. Walter Woodside is riding in a new second hand Ford. A number of young people gathered at the home of Mrs. Sinclair Friday evening and spent a pleasant time singing and play ing games. Joe Graham was called to Three Sisters Friday by the serious illness of his father. The old gentleman is 93 years of age. Florence Woodside was ill over Sunday. Mrs,. Josephine Woodside is teaching in place of Mrs. Lloyd during the latter's absence in California. Mac Holloman is helpinc . y Baty build a dam for a pond. Richard Delco is at work for George Claymier. F. A. Hackler left for Port land Sunday. Plans for the C. E. Social and play, to be given , Feburary 26, are well under way. The . play has been rehearsed several times and with a few more rehearsals will be ready for production. It is called "An Old Fashioned School." The cast follows: Prof essor-r Rev. W. 'A. Mer shon. Billy (dumb boy)Prof. Hal burd, Matty (cry baby) Ruby Powell. Sally (mischevicu's ' girl)--Ev- We offer our exporience and advice to those considering building a home. Very often a person is greatly handi capped by not being able to procure the exact home he wants, because of not fully understanding the problems commonly met with. We will help you solve problems, an to the best of our ability, assist you in securing a desirable home for your family. If you have nowhere found a house plan to suit you ex actly, let us prepare an original net of plans. We want you to have precisely the house you have pictured in your mind. A special plan drawn from your ideas may be the way. If you have a photograph or a cut of a house that appeals to you, bring it to our office and let us quote you a price on the materials. Again we say "Service is Our Watchword." Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co. Tommy (bad boy) Bill Hal burd. Sally-Rilla Powell. Freddie (sissy boy) Lincoln Hartman. Mud HorxRay Woodside. Grandad Gum Ernie Enders by. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Woodside left Saturday for near Portland, where they go for Mr. Wood- side's health. Ralph, their son, has rented the place and will farm it the coming season. Gertie Laughlin spent Monday night with Ruby and Rilla Powell. "If women keep on adopting men's cfothes," says Ralph Kaiser, then the wise man of the future is the one who will pick out a wife about three sizes smaller than he is." E3 "It is generally takes the average man a lifetime to learn that he is his own best friend and his own worst enemy," de clares Hugh Wood. Oscar Renick says the trouble with some men is they work too hard trying to get something they don't need and never ought to want. Bill Wi lliams says he always wears wool underwear, but he don't care to have the sheep grow that wool by feeding off his hillside grass. A certain Maupin man wants to know why, after a woman undergoes a minor operation, she makes that the sole topic of her conversation ever after. Tom Henneghan says there is but one thing he likes better than fishing, and that is more fishing Hereafter when you want tele phone connection you will be abliged to call by number. Bill Beck with says memorizing all names the indirectory is harder than remembering the names. EE) What wiih taking care of the marshals job, building fence, running a dance hall and taking up loose horses Gus Derthick says he believes he can still And time to wet a leader in the river. RSI Joe Kramer nays he never in dulgea in profanity, but when a wrench slipped and he mashed a finger he felt like saying "Gee Whiz!" r3 Jack McMillan mourns the loss of a brand new sweater. Jack says it's not what it cost that worries him, but the warmth it convened that he misses. Zero Hours of Automobile Accidents, 4, 5 and 8 P. M. 0 C$ mK-SXMM 5:00 P. M. 4j00 P. M. 8:00 P. M. QNB thousand and thirty of Chicago"! 11,785 auto accident last year, according to the Btewart-Warner Safety Council for the pretention of automobile accidents, occurred between live and six o'clock, Just when con gestion Is at Its worst In the homo-going rush. Only 47 of these 1,030 acd dents were fatal. Four o'clock is the children's zero hero. Thirty-three of the 182 children killed by autos In Chicago last year came to grief at four o'clock, playing lr tbt streets after school. Seven to nine Is the dnnjjeroiis time for adult auto fatalities, according to Chicago's 1924 record. Eighty-six of 353 such deaths occurred around the theater-going hours. Our advertisers are reliable Patronize them. Phone your news to The Mau pin Times. We want country correspond ents. Who'll volunteer? Buy Non-Detonating UNION GAS! , AND , ' Aristo Motor Oil UNlillGO. OF CALIFORNIA ' The Dalles - - Oregon Portland Painless DENTIST A Full Set of Teeth 40 q These teeth are first class and the best money can buy. Th y are guaran-' teed to give satisfaction. Why Pay More? Painless Extraction $1.00 W. F. SLATTEN Over Wasco Co- Bank THE DALLES, ORE. Frank is also down with the flu. adne Halburd.