Image provided by: Hood River County Library District; Hood River, OR
About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1926)
"I Temiums Awarded at Last Tygh Valley Fair The Times this week begins the publication of the awards made at the recent fair at Tygh Valley, giv ing the various divisions and grades with winners in each: HORSE DIVISION Registered Percheron Stallion A. II. McLeod, Dufur, let, Frank Batty, Tygh Valley, 2nd,. Mare R. G. Johnson, Wamic, 1st, and 2nd. Registered Belgian Stallion A. L Rondeau, Tygh Valley, 1st nnd 2nd. Brood Mare -A. L. Rondeau, Tygh Valley, 1st. Mare or gelding A. L. Rondeau, Tygh Valley, 1st, 2nd and 3rd. Mare or gelding 2 yrs. or under A. L. Rondeau, Tysh Valley, 1st, 2nd and Srd. Grade Percheron Mare and colt Frank Batty, Tygh Valley, 2nd and Srd. Mare or ' gelding Joe Murray, Dufur, 1st and 2nd. Grade Belgian Stal'ion May's Ranch, Tygh Val ley, 1st. 0 Brood mare same 1st. Colt same 1st Mare or gelding same 1st Grade Shir Mare or gelding R. G. Johnson, Wamic, 1st and 2nd. Sweapitake Stallion, mare, yearling, colt A. L Rondeau, Tygh Valley. Roadsters Stallion May's Ranch, Tygh Val Isy, 1st. Farm Teams 4-horse team A. L. Rondeau, Tygh Valley, 1st, Albert Hill, Wa mic 2nd; R. G. Johnson, wamic, 3rd. Saddle Horses Girls Saddle pony Portia But ler, Tygh Valley, 1st, Nina Math ews, Shearers Bridge, 3rd, Alta Chastain, Maupin, 2nd. Boys pony Vernon Hill, Wamic, 1st, Orlando Conley, Shearers Bridge 2nd, Kenneth Webb, Shear ers Bridge, 3rd. Ladies saddle horse Ada Knight on, Tygh Valley, 1st. Stock horses R. G. Johnson, Wa mic, 1st and 2nd, Mack Alsup, Grass Valley, 3rd. Gentleman's saddle horse A. B. MathewB, Tygh Valley, 1st, W. B. , Sloan, Tygh Valley, 2nd, John Ayres, Wamic, 3rd. CATTLE DIVISION Registered Shorthorns Bull May's Ranch, Tygh Valley, Srd. Calf same' 1st and 2nd. Breeding cow same 1st and 2nd. Heifer 1 yr. same 1st Grade Animals Bull 1 jr. May'a Ranch, Tygh Valley, 2nd. Breeding cow same 1st Heifer 1 yr. same 1st Registered Herefords Bull R. G. Johnson & Son, Wa mic, 1st 2nd, and Srd. Bull 1 yr. same 1st, 2nd, and 3rd. 1926 calf same 1st, 2nd and Srd. Breeding cow same 1st, 2nd, and Srd. Heifer 1 yr. same 1st, 2nd and 3rd. Grade Animals 1926 cnlf R. G. Johnson & Son 1st 2nd, and Srd. Breeding cow same 1st and 2nd. Registered Jersey Bull 2 yrs--A. H. McLeod, Du fur,. 1st Bull 1 yr. Mark Stewart, Tygh Valley, 1st, Frank Batty, Tygh Val ley, 2nd; J. M. O'Brien, Wapinitia, Srd. ; 1926 calf A. H McLeod, Dufur, 1st aijd 2nd. Breeding cow same 1st, Mark Stewart, Tygh Valley, 2nd. Grade Jersey Bull2 yrs. E. C. Butler, Tygh Valley, 1st 1926 calf Portia Butler, Tygh Valley 1st, Frank Faught, Dufur, 2nd, Bonney Duus, Maupin, Srd. Heifer 1 yr. Mark Stewart, Tygh Valley, 1st E. H. Gesh, Wa mic, 2nd, Rex Stewart, Tygh Val ley 3rd, , Breeding cow Mrs. E. C. Butler, Tygh Valley, 1st, Kelton Crampton, 2nd. J . Sweepstake Dairy herd Mark Stewart, Tygh Valley. Grade Holtein Bull 2 yrs. Albert Hill, Wamic, 2nd. 1926 calf Jack Hill, Wamic, 1st Albert Hill, Wamic, 2nd. Breeding cow Albert Hill, Wa mic, 1st. Sweepstake Beef herd May's Ranch, Tygh Valley, R. G. Johnson & Sons, Wa mic. (Continued next week.) THEFT NOTICr 1st Bull 2 yrs. same 1st. Bull 1 yr. same 1st, 2nd and 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 are returned before September 25th to The Times office or are sent back to fhe owner. Dr. H C. Dake, 793 Thurman St. 44-t2 Portland, Oregon GTIOEEKS! 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- -271 R THEDALLES, - OREGON j j Delarhue Optica! 1 Company: & Voght Clock, The Dalle, Ore. 1 l5h ' Galli-Curci Swayed by the Seer of Sweden tv:H53V. V .14? 6vV VV ' ' wV' ? - -.'4 1 'SL 'if .i4 1 I li'l - " t won. ""urwy Prima Donna Gives Wonderful Interpretation of the Writings of Emanuel Swedenborg HENRY FORD'S Dearborn Inde pendent publishes a remarkable article on Galli-Curci and Emanuel Swedenborg, by Clarence W. Barron of the Wall Street Journal, the world famous financial authority. Mr. Barron declares that Galli Curci has the most wonderful brain he has ever met or heard of in a Then answer to yourself the number of years that ought to be required to master these thirty-two volumes" Mean More Than Any Other Book Mr. Barron, still credulout, con tinued his correspondence with Madame Galli-Curci for some months. He learned that soon after she lost her dear mother she had sought the " RESTAURANT V Where live Inner Man Gets Full Satisfaction Short Orders Any Time Try Our Sunday Chi-llen Dinners Ice Cream, CoU Drinks ami Snwheia' Goods iVi it 7 CANOEING at a ttSeashore V IV." rn S tiJ'T v, . w 1 w--r-4 ., woman, althouga sne JS mucn more; writings oi sweacnDorg in a aesire "a true woman with a life and soul to know more about the other world of afTection for all that is ennobling whence her mother had gone. She and UDliftinor in the family, and in spent the entire summer vacation color, form, and music." Mr. Barron Is chairman of the studying Swcdenborg's Works, and declared: "They have meant, and Rotch Trustees, who acting under the ' nen more to me than anything else will of Lydia S. Rotch of New Bed- I have ever read." ford, Mass., began in 1872 a modern When Galli-Curci returned from translation of the Theological Works ! California Mr. Barron motored up which Emanuel Swedenborg wrote' into the Catskills to her beautiful and published in the .Latin tongue, Italian palace, and In an afternoon and deposited in the libraries of the world 150 years ago. , This work was completed and pub lished by the Houghton Mifflin Co. in 82 volumes in 1907. About three years ago there ap peared in a Cleveland paper a para graph that among her other accom plishments Galli-Curci had read all the Theological Writings of Emanuel with her and her husband, Mr. Homer Samuels, he was convinced that Galli Curci had read and devoured Sweden borg in a briefer period than any body had ever done before. He says of this interview: "Hours flew like minutes. I wasn't the questioner. Mr. and Mrs. Samuels were at me with the sharpest and deepest questions. They seemed In Swedenborg. The claim seemed so perfect harmony mentally and splr- absurd to Mr. Barron that he thought itually, as in their work In music K might be easily punctured by a simple inquiry as to the edition. The Bible a Greater Work Thai) Ever To Mr. Barron's direct inquiry Madame Galli-Curci promptly re plied: "Yes, I have read in the past year the complete Swedenborg Works, in fact it is the Rotch Edition of the Houghton Mifflin Co. that I have. "I can say certainly that the Bible to me is a greater work than it was before." Mr. Barron says: "My astonish ment was intensified. Familiar over many years with Swedenborg's gen eral theological writings, I had set out to read the entire thirty-two vol umes preparatory to an advertising campaign for the sale of this edition. Reading a few pages each day I fin ished my self-imposed task in four teen years. I shall probably finish a second reading, a my present rate of progress, in perhaps ten years. Was it possible that a woman with no previous knowledge or relation to these books had really intelligently read them within a year?" Swedenborg' Writings Mr. Barron continues: "As an economist writing state papers on weights, measures, coinages and cur rencies, Swedenborg is easily com prehended. As an engineer transport ing ships overland he is easily visual ized. As a government official in the great mining industry of Sweden, writing practical books on mining and smelting, declared to be the foun dation of modern metallurgy, he is of Interest in the encyclopedia of sci entific history. As the writer of vol umes original studies in search for the human soul he is not without human interest. "But when one comes to the realm of the unseen, where there is neither time nor space upon which to rest mental conceptions, few may enter into the fullness of the revelation which has come into the libraries of the world through Emanuel Sweden borg. "Think of twenty modern-sized volumes, originally ' written in the Latin tongue and unfolding from the Hebrew of 'Genesis' and 'Kxodus' the internal or spiritual sense that lies beneath the letter. Annex a dozen more similar volumes that not only expound every picture set forth in the book of 'Revelation' as Conveyor of a tremendous' truth of universal application throughout invisible de grees of creation and life; but also illumine all the problems of sex as presented throughout the universe from the union of the love and wis dom in the divine down to sex crystal lization in the mineral kingdom; in clude the deepest of all works ever written entitled, in the original Latin. 'Angelic Wisdom Concerning the Dl- V2 A restful and pleasant sport at Seaside and Gearhart on CLATSOP BEACH Tho picturesque Neennicum River and nearby lakes make boating and fi.diing n dclipht, Golf, links, surf-balhinir, hildnsr, mountain climbing, linncbock riding, dancing nro there. IluUl, restaurants, cottages of all kinds are at your service. $1S-'W Round TriP lUtum Limit Oct 31 via Oregon Trunk Ry. Tickets, Reservations, Folders, etc., of J. C. Wright, Trav. Pasgr Agt. 12. Griffin, Iders, etc., of 1 Pennsylvania's Contribution to the Sesqui vine Love and the Divine Wisdom.' worry vanish." Wanted to Laarn "She wanted to know about the 'Grand Man'. I told hor it would be easier to comprehend It if she woulJ forego tho idea of time and space and consider, as Swedenborg says in 'The Apocalypse Explained', that every so- j ciety in the heavens connect with' some organ of the human body and I helps to sustain it Therefore the heavens have the organization of the 'Grand Man', but we need net think of it as a shapo or figure. " 'Yes,' exclaimed her husband, 'I see It; it is organization.' I explained, also, how the 'Psalms' likewise con nected with every society of the heavens, and how the world within and without was knit together in one grand poem and song of creation, man in the image of his Maker and knit into Him through the heavens, from which he has life In every organ of his body. Swedenborg' 32 Volume Read In a Single Summer " 'Now I understand,' she said, and asked me for explanation of other things. Her intelligent questions, as well as her statements, left no man ner of doubt that Galli-Curci had performed the stupendous feat of reading the thirty-two volumes of Swedenborg In a single summer sea son. She declared 'Heaven and Hell' a very attractive and popular title and concerns that about which people are most eager to knowj but it is not one of Swedenborg's great wocks; al though it makes a good popular and introductory work." A Help in Her Work Galli-Curci understands the writ ings of Swedenborg even better than theologians, because she puts them into practice in the broadest life of loving helpfulness. She said that Swedenborg had helped her In hor work. She had no longer to think of herself but of her audiences, and let the music flow through her: regard herself Just a medium for life to pour through. She felt with and for her audiences, and singing was no effort for her. All Fear Vanishes "The more you do the more you give forth the more life and energy is poured into you, and you are stronger and not weaker for the do ing, the working and the singing, I always feel stronger; I am not ex hausted at all by my singing. Swed enborg shows the reason and how life comes in as you pour it forth usefully to others. You don't have to try worry or fret. You know it is not you but that it is just being done through you." Speaking further of the help Swed enborg had been to her in her work she said: "One gets to much more confidence. The other world and the one life, that comprehends, all life. becomes reality and all fear and Am r. lm 4 j 1-". Ml M.'! t I s Here li the Kcystono State's building at the great Sesqul Contennlal Inter national Exposition at Philadelphia, C'k'bratlns ISO years of American Iudo pendence. In this buo slructitro l't rinny Ivania la displaying her progress from the arrival of Tcnn to tho present day. The building Is one of the handsomest on tho bis exposition grounds and has proved a rendezvous for hundreds of thousands of people who have como from near and far to see the magnificent exhibits established by forty lhreo of the leading nations of the world. The Exposition continues until Durembcr 1. THE STORMING OF THE GATES FOUND On the highway near Shearer's j dairy ranch, a womens coat. Loser Read may recover same by calling at this office and paying for this notice, 45-tf The Times get the news ttytik hy'A' 4ii M&A?.ti ft Hit' ... mmmmmmmm I &1 Vgy . This picture is typical of many such scones enacted dally at the mala gates of the Seaqul-Centennlal International Exposition in Philadelphia where the 150th anniversary of the signing of tho Declaration of Independence i being celebrated. Tho "shot" was made from outBlde the gates and shows tha long sweep of historic Broad street, the main artery of tho expoRltlon. To the left can be seen one of the capltols of tho Palace of Liberal Arts and Manu factures which covers nearly eight acres of grounds and which houses soma of the finest exlilbltn ever soen. The Exposition will continue until Decern, bat 1. j