Image provided by: Hood River County Library District; Hood River, OR
About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1926)
f h n: R.E. Wilson Co. PHONE MAIN 271 BE assured that every article listed here U . the highest possible quality and Is guar anteed absolutely. Take advantage of them and be the gainer. 17 bars Crystal White Soap gf A ft 6 bars Crcme Oil Soap VjT A rCM 1 box Peets' Gran. Soap CD l Uft This is $1.85 worth of soap . -all for A One half pound Green or OQn Illatk tea OOC Aunt Dinah Molasses 1 No. 2 tin 1C Economy Quart Fruit Jars d1 per dozen pl0 6 boxes Ohio IJluc Tip Matches QRp this week for OOv Sperry's Pancake Flour per package O&V Five-pound can Crimson Rambler A Og Corn Syrup .wt tA AdENTS FOR Superior Drills r. k I: LOCAL AND PERSONAL Leonard Chiistitin wait in from his nokeoven ranch Tuesday, j 0- Nyal's Kidney Plaster for back I nrhe. Maupin Drug Store. 0 j I). A. Harvey came in from Wamic on Wednesday on a buamess mission. Tony Ktifert was down from his Nena ranch a short time on Monday. ' Geo. Mallatt and fattier, the lat ter from Mololla, were in town Tues day. o Albeit Aithloy and son were in Oelarhue Optical Company . Voght Block, The Dalles, Ore. 1 1 5 was, e v.u:.a, ( 9 - Hi r. X AUCTIONEERS! and Livestock Brokers Martin Thrall WHEN YOU NEED OUR SERVICES PHONE AT OUR EXPENSE OR LEAVE WORD AT THE MAUPIN TIMES OFFICE Phone No. 292- THEDALLES, rwAiWfnvwvsrt i iwt ii iw -t i t nn i ,n liit iiti jut iwt i from their Bakeovcn ranch Tues day. Phil McCorkle, the sago of Happy Ridge, was doing business in Maupin Tuesday, p Klzic Dcrthick is at his old pout back of the counter at Butler's for a short time. Mrs. Chas. Crofoot and daughter or Wamic, were shoppers in Maupin last Saturday. One week only. 76c to $1.60 rending bookB a large assortment to pick from G6c each. Maupin Drug Store. : -271 R OREGON " j it it mt ivii itfumivijui 1m iwi luimini Wrn, Cotz, rancher from near Shanlko, v.a doing bnslnesi in Mau pin on Tuesday.. Jack Staats made a trip to the Prlncvlllo country last week, return ing this week Monday, F. A. Morrow and Jan. E. Kennedy were Wamle residents doing busi ness in Maupin Wednesday, Clarence Vanderpool , prominent Dufurite, was in town Wednesday, hobknobblng with old friends. L. T, Henderson, assistant mana ger of the Ford Motor company's Portland plant, was in Maupin on business yesterday. Wm. Sturgis took advantage of the opportunity Wednesday and had his horses shod by Jim Chalmers. Sturgis is hauling wheat. Dr. El wood was called to The Dalles Saturday by the serious ill ness of his son, Ogden, who was suf fering with gastric grippe. James Chalmers and wife and Hugh Knight and sister, Miss Edith Knight, went to Kaskalla Sunday for an outing and to fish. Peter Kirsch and wife were in town Tuesday, having come down for the purpose of getting a load of fruit from the Johnson orchard. Chester McCorkle, now living near Woodburn, with hh family, visited in this vicinity part of the week, leav ing for home Wednesday afternoon. GU iin Morris and wife, the latter daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Beckwith, came up from Oakland, Oregon, Saturday and spent part of Sunday here. Mrs. Enu-ht Doty, and Mrs. Carrie Harris have returned from the mountains, where they went for the purpose or benifiting Mrs. Doty'a health. A. J. Hammond, brother of Mrs. R. E. Wilson, and his daughter, are guests at the Wilson home. They expect to return to Portland to morrow. A. II. DcCamp retnrned from a trip of several weeks in Califarnla last week, being very much im proved in health, but he is willing to stay in Maupin. Mrs. H. R. Kaiser went U Port land Monday and met her daughter, Winifred, who was returning home from a week's visit with relatives in Washougal, Wash. Jack Morrow and family arc .en joying the salubriousness of the mountains, Jack taking his vacation from his strenuous duties as ice man. They will be gone a week. Miss Edith Knight, sister of Hugh Knight, came in last week for a visit with her brother, leaving for Irrigon Tuesday, where she will visit another brother for a time. Miss Knight is teaching school in a Cal ifornia town. Alfred Herrling and wife accom panied by the lattcr's mother, Mrs. Ed. Fischer, passed through town Tuesday while on their way to the Willamette . Valley. Mrs. Herrling wil be remembered as being JIiss Phyllis Fischer. They now live- at Bend. EAST MAUPIN NEWS Dave Donaldson is building a new house. Mrs. Hester Nystroui of Portland spent Sunday visiting Mrs. E. A. Ca ton.' o Gertrude Doering accompanied Hilda Noval to The Dalles on Mon day. Miss Hilda Noval of Tygh Valley was a visitor at the Hotel Kelly on Sunday. Jean Caton returned home after spending a week with friends at Portland. - o Mrs. Clark Richardson visited her daughter, Mrs. 0. J. Williams, and friends Monday. Mrs. Lottie Donaldson went to The Dalles Saturday to see her father, who is ill at The Dalles bospital. Mr. and Mrs. Si Richardson left for Portland Monday, after a short visit with Mrs. 0. J. Williams and yjnother. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Herrling and daughter, Mildred, passed through here on their way to the coast and stopped to visit the Fischer family. A few hand painted dinner sets left $7.60. Drug Store. 42-piece Maupin Truck Broke Dowa One of the Richmond trucks en gaged in night haulinir of sheep guano, broke down at Hunt's corral the first of the Week. Consequently Billy Heckman and "Klausie" Martin are laying off the job for a few days. Painting Drug Store Painters have greatly improved the interior of the Maupin Drug store by aplying a coat of white paint to the walls and ceiling. Wamic Maa la CoIIuioa G. G. Magill,' Wamic rancher, was in The Dalles Monday and figured in a slight auto accident The Wamic man was driving on Second street, thinking to beat another man to a crossing. The other fellow speeded up and his machine busted into the Magill car. Damage was slight. Former Maupinite la Benedict Claude E. Hall for some time em ployed by F. C. Butler as meat cutter, now following the same vo cation in The Dales, was married in that city last Sunday, his bride being Miss Isabelle Aldrup of Corvallis. The young couple will enjoy a short honeymoon and will set up. house keeping upon their return to The Dalles. Took Needed Water Fined Phil Mott, Clarence Alexander and Floyd Eubanks, ranchers on the , Waplnitia section, absolutely need- j ing water for stock and domestic ; purposes, helped themselves .to a j oujj'ijr a v uuing vina viiv "vi v fined a total of $46.00 and costs by Water Master BTOwn. The matter was settled out of court. Making It Comfortable Ben Fraley and wife believe that nothing but the best is good enough for their customers, And to carry ont that idea recently installed a conple of easy chairs and a settee. The, new pieces of furniture are leather covered and make acceptable addition to the resting place of the Rainbow restaurant. Rain Helps Seeding The rains of this week will have the effect (rf putting the ground in shape for seeding. Many ranchers are treating, their grain preparatory to putting it in the ground, and with a little more precipitation summer fallow will soon be planted all over this section. Bought New Wagon Carl Duus came in from Cri terion Monday and when he went home was riding on a brand new j Mitchell wagon, purchased that day from the Wilson company. OoooooooooooooooooooU o PICKED UP ABOUT TOWN o OoooooooooooooooooooO In speaking of the recent Amund son trip to the polo Billy Heckman moralizes thusly: "One trouble about taking a vacation at the north pole is that you can't bring back anything for souvenirs but frosted feet." "The main drawback about busi ness," says Oliver Resh, "is that it takes up so much time that other wise could be spent in fishing." "Some people will not believe that 'money talks' until they have heard it say 'Farewell, " is the de cision of Ben Fraley. x Joe Kramer says the best way for a man to enjoy a watermelon is to be about 15 years old and steal it. x "Young America can now be said to be burning a lot of midnight oil and also a lot of midnight gasoline," according to Dad Richmond. "Tomorow is the day that the things you did not put off today will begin to sprout," says Dick Johnson. x "Fies," says Jim Woodcock, "never knpw when to take a nap and neither do they seem to know when a fellow is trying to take oue." According to Bill Staats "the modern farmer has grown too wise to exchange his money for gold bricks, but he will swap his vote for a lot of soft soap." ' x "The life of the keman may be all to the good," says Jack Morrow, "but packing heavy cakes from the street to iceboxes on a hot day is anything but conducive to aimable ness." a Dave Donaldson Is a champion fisherman. But when one considers that Dave uses a pole long enough to fish both sides of the river his luck is not to be wondered at. Ooo ooooooooooooooooooO o ELEVEN YEARS ACO o o From The Times August 20, '16 o Ooo ooooooooooooooooooO Several people from Wamic are going to the huckleberry fields after berries, which are now ripening In that district. The separator owned by John Van Meter near Grass Valley, .with which Ray Aubrey has been work ing, blew up last week, burnlnjr the straw stack and 300 sacks of wheat, bruising up Mr. Aubrey and three other men quite badly. Frank Creager brought a cucum ber to The Times office thU morn ing that measured 13' inches in r A ITTAUAntf I . -til J 1 wmUDlLL and General Machine Work Cylinder Grinding, General Machine Work, Truing Crankshafts, Making Pistons and Rings, Bearings, All Sizes Made to Order. Sheet Metal Workers ; Complete Line of Parts for All Makes of Cars Full Line of Lahers Springs Electric and Oxy-Acetylene WELDING IffiEAP (Q. (QALLOWAY 609 East Second Street Phone 400 Notice of School Meeting in District No. 48, Fairview. A meeting of the patrons of School District No. 48, Fairview, will be held at the school house on the af ternoon of Saturday. Ansrust 21. at 2 :00 o'clock for the purpose of con-1 sidering the transportation question and also to receive bids for same. W. O. Chastain, 40-t2 Chairman. I. O. 0. F. WAPiNrriA Lodge No. 209. Maupin, Oregon, meets every Saturday night in I. 0. 0. F. hall. Visiting mem bers always welcome. WERNMARK SHOE STORE Shoes and Repairing Wasco County's Exclusive Shoe Store Shoes for Uie General Repairing Whole Family The Dalles, Ore. HARTWIG'S FLOWER SHOP "Merchants oj Beauty" Flowers for All Occasions The Dalles. Phone 794 l! II IV A thwh culture! profetstoml vhokr hip ii the m(tpdiK cRarKterittlc ol the Sttte Unlvwmly. Tnintn it offmJ . 22 departments of the Collesp of Literature, Science and the AHs. Architecture and Allied Arts Business Administration Educa tion Journalism Graduate Study Uw Medicine Musk Physi cal Education Sociology. Social Work Extension Division. 51st Yrsr Opens September 27, 1926 For no motion or rotaJofuf writ Thf fUjlrtrer, (fMWMc? of Orfon, ufm. Ort. length and 7 k Inches in cireumf er ence. E. H. Taylor'e header box and wagon tipped over Saturday morn ing at his ranch near Criterion, throwing him and the loader, Joe , Gray, upon a ledge of rocks. Both were quite badly bruised up. Charles W. Steed and Arthur 0. Harvey of Wamic have entered a contest in The Dalles land office against Mrs.Annie E. Rust of Tygh Valley on a homestead entry on land in Sherman county. Dave Donaldson has been making a raid on coyotes, getting three last week. It is reported there is to be a wed ding on the lummlt of Mt. Hood in the near future. Well tell about it in next week's Times. ' V We print all the new we can get. THE DALLES, ORE Phone 383J Read Tiie Times for the news. Buy ; Non-Detonating UNION GAS AND Aristo Motor Oil UNION OIL GO. OF CALIFORNIA The Dalles - - Oregon I Your Watch Haywire? If it is not doinj? its work bring it to The Times office and Mr. Semmes will send it to GUY A. POUND Manufacturing Jeweler and Watchmaker Successor to D. Lindquist THE DALLES - - OREGON I Richmond's Service Station (As you come into town) j Gas, Oils, Accessories Free Air and Water TIHTPTf i v For Heavy Hauling AGENT FOR CHEVROLET Cars and Accessories My Aim is Service to the Public Courtesy in I every uu PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS C t 1