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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1926)
. 1 " I Inside Information for J Home and Other Places j Department tf Agriculture Supplies . Hint, of Value to All i Don't Meke Beet Wait Heat Comb honey that is left in the the hivos after the honeyflow is ov er becomes soiled snd discolored. It should be renfbved as soon as fin ished. When the honeyflow is over &H the empty supers should be rc- niovod, so that the bees will not have ! empty space to keep warm during Uw Winter. "Inside" Information Sauce nsturulle is made by thick ening the water in which a vegetable was cooked. It may be made in con nection with many kinds of vege tables, and will also provide the ba ck for a good vegetable soup, creamed or otherwise. ' Don't boil string beans a long time with ham or pork merely to flavor them. The vitamins will be destroyed and most of the other valuable in gredients extracted. Instead add bacon fat or crisp ULced bacon at Irving time. Add a tablespoon of horseradish to tweet-sour sauce for beets. ' Try potatoes cooked in tomato Juice instead of wate'r. Slice or dice them for quick cooking. Finely chopped raw celery im proves many dishes, such as creamed beef, fish, crabmeat, oysters, pota toes, cabbage, or hard-cooked eggs. Try it in cream sauce for serving on croquets; with cr..med canned peas and lima beans, stewed tomatoes and other vegetables. Add just a few minutes before serving time. School Lunch SurprUea Think back to your own school days, and recall how delighted you were when you opened your lunch basket and found a "surprise" there. You will immediately want to put on your "thinking cap" a little more firmly and see what you can do to relieve the monotony of the same old sandwiches in Johnnie's or Mary'a box. The United States Department of Agriculture has a few suggestions to make that may help you. To begin with you can't do entire ly without sandwiches, for they are the most convenient method of com bining several Substantial foods In a small space, and are easy for the children to handle without table ware. But you can make sandwiches of different kinds of bread gra ham, rye, raisin, nut, date, prune, or fig breads, and breads made from cooked cereals with combinations of dried fruit and nuts. Then there are the quick breads rolls, biscuits, corn bread,' muff ins, which aro not necessarily served hot, although wo are apt to prefer them that way. Once In a while use one of these dif ferent breads, either for sandwiches, or without filling so they do not seem like the same old thing Save all the little jars that have tight lids peanut butter and salad dressing jars, and jelly glasses. Fill these jars with such favorite foods a hon Jcy or preserves, apple sauce, stewed fruits, cottage cheese, or anythirijj jthat cannot be spread in ih ordinary .way. days last week. Everyone de clares the exposition was the best ever held. Herb Hammer and family called on the Job Crabtree famtly in Mau pin on Monday. At a meet. g of church officials of the Maupin and Wapinitia con gregations, held here last week, Mrs. Everett Richmond was elected dele gate to represent the two churches at the conference at Portland, be ginning September 16. Waico Healthiest County. j The state of health of residents of I Wasco conty must be at the high Jest level of all the counties of Ore gon. According to the reports of 'the State Board of Health for. the ipast two weeks there has not been a 'single case of disease in the conuty in that time. THEFT NOTICE AUCTIONEERS! and Livestock Brokers Martin & Thrall WHEN YOU NEED OUR SERVICES PHONE AT OUR EXPENSE OR LEAVE WORD AT THE MAUPIN TIMES OFFICE Phones No. 292- -271 R WAPINITIA ITEMS r THEDALLES, HI I p li.fc I tr lit J - I; t I l OREGON Little Miss May Delore Beuel of Portand is spending a few days with her aunt, Mrs. Mabel Sturgis. Mrs. Matilda Delore, who hat been in Portland taking treatments for an ailment, returned to her home here and seems to be much improved in health. The water situation in this neigh borhood is becoming desperate. Wells are going dry and the owners of those which contain a little water have been forced to deny same to those who have none. The new bridge on the Simnaaho road over Paquet's Gulch, is about completed. The entire road will soon be shape to travel. Rev. W. A. Mathews and wife and Wm. Drake came over from Simnasho and attended church ser vice at Wapinitia Sunday evening. The Wards entertained company from Portland over Sunday last The party that broke into Dr. Dake's homestead cabin on or about September 1st, was seen and is known. No action will be taken against him if the articles stolen aro returned before September 26th to The Times office or are sent back to the owner. Dr. II C. Dake, 793 Thurman St 44-t2 Portland, Oregon $Hi Nearly all the people of Wapinitia mTOfe wereat the fair at Tygh all three Adh '0 Ooo ooooooooooooooooooO o ELEVEN YEARS AGO o o From The Times Sept 10, 'IS o Ooo 0000090000000000 oo 0 L. D. Kelly and wife and Dr. Hat field and wife arrived in Maupin Friday from a trip which took them over mountain ranges, across prai ries and rivers to Yellowstone . park. The party traveled 2600 miles on the trip. School begins at Criterion Mon day with Miss Herrling in her usual place and a good enrollment of scholars present. Mr. Curts, the hog dealer, was here Wednesday and bought and shipped 300 head of hogs, over 20 farmers bringing the animals in the morning. A movement is said to have been started in Portland to connect the Barlow road with Hood River by leaving the old part of that road a few miles east of Summit and thence around the base of Mt Hood. There is some talk of graveling the road leading though and out of Maupin from the steel bridge to the F. M. Confer place on the Flat n a 1 i 1 I 1 s Mrs. T. A. Connolly of Maupin is in The Dalles this week. She ex pects her sister to arrive from lie- land this evening. The sister will make her future home in this section. A meeting was to have been held at Wapinitia at which to elect an eleventh grade for that school, Mr. Rains to teach the clans. Results have not reached this office. School will commence there next Monday with W. J. Patterson and Miss Phyllis Fsicher as teachers. County Superintendent Bonney and office force are in the Criterion section, busily engaged in preparing exhibits for the coming ItSr. iincan Ranch Seven Miles Southwest of Wamic, on SEFTn at which time the following livestock, farming, imple ments and other articles will be sold: 7 Head of Horses from 4 to 7 years old. 5 Head of Cows. 1 Yearling Heifer. 2 Calves. About three dozen Chickens. 1 Wagon. lHack. 1 16-inch Plow. 1 14-inch Plow. 1 14-hoe Single Disc Drill. 1 3-Section Harrow. 1 McCormick-Deering Mower New. 1 McCormick-Deering Rake New 1 Woodsaw, in good shape. 2 sets Harness. 1 Saddle. 1 Header Barge. A Few Potatoes. ,: 20 Tons Hay. " '! Silvertone Phonograph. 1 Charter Oak Range Brand New, AND MANY OTHER ARTICLES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION HERE TerTT.Q U sums up to $10.00, CASH. All sums over $10.00, 12 months' time at 8 per cent interest. 5 per cent discount for cash. FREE LUNCH WILL BE SERVED o BRING YOUR OWN CUPS o j& , . "1U1. A. DUNCAN, Owner C, BUTLER, Auctioneer. F. D. STtf ART, Clerk THE HONORED COLORS J WE ARB the colon red and green. How we are honored I How could Christmas be Christmas without green and without red to help in the gay decorations? Long ago we two colon were given this honor. How gay and pleased it makes us. It makes green so vivid sod bright with delight. It makes red so glowing and resplendent with enjoyment. Ware glad no other colors were chosen I Mary Grabam Bonner. , 1IJ5, Wistern Newspaper Union.) Algernon Noteup the Bundle That Cured Him IT WASN'T his real name, but peo ple thought he deserved It. Like a top, he carried a swelled head upon small foundation. Ills nose wss so much In the air that It distributed snubs plentifully. Ilia Idea of getting up was that of putting others down Algernon despised Christmas. fit even felt ready to snub Santa Claua. This snob had a special snub for" any body who believed In Christmas cheer and generous happiness. He was an ardent member of the Society for th Prevention of Useless Giving, . Indeed, be was the chairman of the branch Of It that Infested his town without bear ing a gift. There may hive been a streak of fat In his character, but there surely was a streak of mean. It was a bundle that cured him. As he (talked to bis door with his eyes on the church steeple he fell over It, snd as he opened It that Christmas Day and found that a cumber of his neighbors had conspired to warm his heart with tokens of kind considera tion, he felt so strangely humbled and ashamed of himself that he wss. never afterwards able to look down upon anjrbQdj. 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