ATTENTION. "TRAPPERS ' want livt uiuaarsts and a mala ccoon. H. r. linn, Wapinitia, Ore- Tim. Schedule No. 1. Nor. U. 1926 THE DALLES-MAUPIN STAGE LINE DcpoaJaLle Sorvice Batweea Klamath Falls Oil seepage along THE DALLES, DUFUR TYCH tU ajwn. 11-tl Lost River investgri. near Bonanza intereati APEOW Whore Ik laoer Man Cots Satisfaction Full i SHORT ORDERS rv Time (TRY OUR SUNDAY I CHICKEN DINNERS lea Crooe Cold Drink aad S.vwaiv' Goods ' Mav.l,. Read Pown . Read Up A. M. , p. M. 9:30 Lt. THE DALLES Ar. J. 30 10:20 DUFUR 1:40 11:05 TYCH VALLEY l.BS 11.30 Ar. MAUPIN Lt.JiM FARES 0. W. R. T. Tko Dall.t lo Dufar......$1.00 $1.90 The Dalles to Tygh $2.00 $3.90 Tko Dallea to Maupin $190 $4.50 Connection at Bank Hot!, La Tko DalU for Portland, feadletoai NOTICE Modora Equipment Cearteooe Treat ment and Carofal Drivers . CHAS. BROWN . . . Maaaaoc Stage Depot at Raiabow ReaUareat CRANDALL UNDERTAKING COMPANY, "QUIET SERVICE" ' Tko Dalloa, Oro. Pbooo 3 5-J LADY ASSISTANTS Your Watch Haywire? If it is not doinsf its work brintr it to The Times office and Mr. Semmes will send it to GUY A. POUND Manufacturing Jeweler and Watchmaker Successor to D. Lindquist THK DALLES - - OREGON' TRAVEL BY STAGE ttSlfeitt mcborn j Kutlicrino cueimuH I. 0. O. F. meU every Saturday nigiii in Lodge No. 209, Maupin, Orespou, L O. 0. F. hall. Visitinj mem bars always welcome. 3. C. PRATT, N. U. , E. R. RICHMOND Sec y. Suite 15-18 Vogt Block Tolapoao 111-W Dr. Fred H. Pagelcr OPTOMETRIST Strictly Optical V DoLARHUE OPTICAL CO. Tko DalU, ... Orofoa AUTOMOBILE 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 fars Full Line of Lahers Springs ELECTRIC and OXY-ACETYLENE WELDDLNG jfEADJD. (CALLOWAY 609 Eat Second Street Phono 400 Tko Dalian, Orof os Phoa 353-J 'SUPREME AUTHORITY" j ' WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY HIS MERFJAM WEBSTER Because Judge concur In highest (Th. story of a womsn who had loat tn nr.nicut thing in Wtt faith Iti lior f.llowmtu and how It cam back to h.r at Chrlatmas Urn..) ULDA rOTTSFIELD win very unhappy. Fur two iiionttia alia hud fretted herself because a um of mone, which she had Invested had been loat. ' She had ent runted It to an old friend of her girlhood In a nearby city and when the newa came that the money wai lout rtuldu made up her mind then and there that all humunlry was alike eager and ready to cheat even tta own friend If thero was a chance. She grew more hitter aud sullen each day mid withdrew her self almost entirely from the circle of friends that alio hud known so long. She never stopped to think that even without tills umouut she could still live lu comparative ease; that there was nothing In reason she would hiive to deny herself as the Income die still had was quite large. Mindly aha shut her eyes to all thfa and would not ul- 3. Thnt the known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security hold er owning or holding 1 per cent or more of the total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities ar: (If there are none, so stato. ) .li'Hiiillno E. Morrison, Cape Horn. Washington. Mergiinthuler I.lnotyps Company, 1 llrooklvn, New York. I I. That the two paragraphi nt above, giving the numci of the own STATEMENT Of tli Ownership, MniiBnoinrnt, Cir culaton, l ie, Required by tlm Act of Congr.ia of Auijint 24, 1912, 1912. Of the Muuplu Times published weekly ut Maupin, Oregon, for October 1. lUL'tl. .State of Oregon, County of Wnsco, ss. Ileforc me, a notary public in niul , fi- the Stnte niul cminty ifr'Hiiil, pcrsonni.y upponreu v, v . semmes, j ,,,. ,m.M10um, and security hold. its, if any, contain not only the list Hundreds of Supreme Court Cur in hlimeit nrilia oi ins wot a their Authority. The Presidents of all leadlne Uni versities, Colleges, and Normal Schools give their he my Indorse- tnetv. mi state tnat nave adopted s large dictionary as standard have selected Webster's New Interna tional The Schoolbooks of the Country adhff to the Merrianv Webster system of diacritical marks. The Oovernmcnt Printing Office at Washington uses It as authority. WRITS far a tunpU Din of th Htm Werilf, tpwinita ol Ktfular nj India fipcu. HlxE. swtaayl LAST JANUARY n aw J J i , N, I -II I s BY- Legion Hall Maupin, Oregon SAT AN. 29 Hhari Music By the Well Known ttONYHICKS New dance music, a warm hall, good floor and Good Management will make this dance erne of the best of the season. IMnce Tickets $1.00 Spectators 50 cents of his knowledge and belief, n true statement of the owm'i'xhlp, ninimi'c- nient (niul If 11 daily paper (he cir culation), etc., of the itfoi'fHuid pub lication for the date hIiowii in the above caption, required by the Act of AutruHt 'ii, 1!12, embodied in sec tion 411, Pout ul Lawn and Regula tions printed on the reverse side of this form, to wit: 1. That the tinnics uml addresses of the publisher, til itr. innniiKlntf editor, and business malingers nre: Publisher, V. and K. It. .Semmes, Maupin, Oregon. Editor, C. W. Semmes, Maupin, Ore gon. Mnniigin.T Editor, ('. W. SemmeM, Maupin, Oregon. Business Mutineers, C. V. Semmes, Mnupin, Ori'ifon. 2. That the owner is: (If owned by a corporation, its mime Wind nddrens must be stated uml ulso iiunu'diately thereunder the naiiii-ii uud addresses nf stnikliiilders owiiiiil' or holiluvr lone per cent or more of totul nmoutil of stock. If not owned by a cor poration, tho Mime and addresses of. I the individual owners must be given, i l If owned bv a firm, t unman v. (tr low herself to think of her many bless- other unincorporated concern, its lngs or to frame even the slightest ex- nmnc nnd address, us well n those of j cuso for the friend who had fulled, leach individual member, mint be Now, with Christmas approaching, (riven.) I he grew even more bitter than usual. I 'mmes, Muupm. t)regon. ng to law, deposes nnd says that, he of Hloi.k10( tmjy ippr upon Is he ed or of The Maupin 1 in.es t b,Mks f thf company but & arid that the following Is, o the .est . , ,.,. whwo h, lt0ckholdr or ! "I'm not going to do a single thing this year," she repeated to herself over and over. "Why should I, anyway, after my great loss?" So when the Ladles' Aid called for an offering for the annual entertalu ment and Christmas baskets to be giv en to the poor Bhe was ready with her ffswer. But when they left hurriedly after her curt refusal she was more , unhappy than ever. "No ene seems to have 8Dy sympathy for my great mis-1 fortune," she walled to herself. "What 1 a cruel world It is ; no one seems to care." . The window where she sat brooding opened out on Arbor street. Soon after the Ladles' Aid left she looked out to , see that some one else was coming up the steps. This time It was a young girl and Hulda sniffed to herself as , she saw her: "Another who comes seeking," she sold under tightened lips. But the young girl who entered hnd not come begging. Instead, she hud come to tell Hulda that she was the duughter of the tnun to whom Huldu Edw. K. Semmes, Maupin, Oregon., ctirity holder appears upon the books of thu company as a trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of : the person or corporation for whom such truidve la acting, Is given; also that the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant's full knowledge Mid belief as to the clr , cumstnnces and conditions under 'which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company ai trustees, hidil stock and securities In a capacl ty other than thut of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no rsa son to believe that any other person, it'h'K'Intluiii or corporation has any interest direct or indirect In the said stock, bonds, or other securities than in ho stated by him, ft. That the average number of opics of each issue of this publica tion! sidd or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscrib ers during the six months preceding the dute shown above is: (This In formation Is required of dally publi cations only.) C. W. Semmes, Editor. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 2Gth day of January, 1927. SEAL Geo. McDonald. (Mv commission rxnircs Jan. 13, m.) Read Ttio Tlm.i for th. bows. THK CI IANGING NEAR EAST 1 By JOHN W. MACE Field Director of the Near East Relief The observance In December of Golden Rule 9undy en behalf of the overseas wck of the Near East Relief, as sponsored by President Coolldge, tails soaln to public attention the importance and alonift. canee of this humanitarian enterprise. In the current number a tM Review of Reviews, Mr. Maee reviews what AmorsM has dene for tnt) people of Bible Lands. This extract la given by epectat jorvnlaatotj of the publishers. HE Near K.nt la a true topsy turvy Intnl. Hhei'o thinxs are not wnut they seem nor as you expect them to bo. Everything that the Ameri can thinks he knows tibnn ttn Near East turn3 out to be different whi'ti he gets there. For exumnln nn!l,lii I. had entrusted her money and that she more dotlnrte to tho American mind had heard thut Huldu was In need; bofore tho American leaves ho-ne- umi nrr iue uuu len ner Hirunaea. i man toe el -estn ) is ie,l f.iei Her father bad been 111 for several months, crushed by the failure of his hopes, all of which was due to the treachery and deceit of his pnrtner In business. He was now better and things were beginning to look brighter. mere was every nope tnnt no one would lose a dollar. In the meantime tho girl had come to offer Hulda some money from her own eornlngs she was private secretary to some big man In the city. " After the girl left Hulda sat hud dled In her chair. God! how selfish she had been how blind how un grateful! Great teurs trickled slowly down her cheeks, tears thnt carried away orever the bitterness and self ishness that had been In her heart of late. The world, after all, was a won derful place and Its people were won derful people I - Making her way to the phone, she picked It up with hands thnt trembled and called for the president of the Ladles' Aid. (, Mil, Wetrn Nwip.pr Union.) Appropriate Hubby What kind of a tree shall I get for Christmas? Wlfey A fir tree might help suggest a suitable present for me. Hint Turkey achieved a tremendous vic tory over Greece three yeari iibo. Asia Minor, although It meant th herculean hatard of absorbing a mil lion new Inhabitants Into a populatloa of five millions on a limited and thin soiled area. It was a task and risk from which the slronr-est and richest natloa ot earth mlRht excusably have shrunk, llupe borrowings and desperate expo dbmts were necessary lo order to feed and shelter this horde of fugitives. Inevitably there was great loss of life nmonx the sick. Infirm, and aitd: crushing (he power of il, Creek na- I only the strongest survived. But t Uon utterly and securing to itself I rt(ly ,)lat undPalred Immigration Is fast A MESSAGE of GOOD WILL By ALBERT ASH ALLEN ' Empty Bowl, Formed by Children of an American Orphanage In 9yrla. TTaRK! Now the btlU, on Christmas Day, X -i Bring back tht iny of happy limes Some spirit, which had gont away, Now hovtrs in these merry chimes ; JFitA peace on earth, good will to men I touts the message heard again. Hark I How the belli, on frosty air. Ring hope and comfort, love and peace i iw ljuwu oj n uwui u mere To hid the worldly tumult cease; With peace on earth, good will to men-' Thus is the carol heard again. Bark! Now the bells o'er vale and hill Reach to the Islands of the sea In one sweet voice of "Peace, be still, and let thy burden rest on Me;" Thus peace on earth, good will to men Is, In the echo, heard again I This Town of 20 Ha9 44-Piece Band A 20-man town with a 44-pleee band has been discovered by the Conn Mu bJc Center at Elkhart, Ind. Forflst Grove, Mich., Is the town. Th enflrs population of 20 ! housed in five dwellings. Small boys throw stones from cne end of the town to the other. Two stores serve the needs of the community. Yet Forest Grove's bond numbers 'A pieces, Indisputable ascendency In nil the gean and Anatolian region. Hut visit the Near East and what Is your dlseovory? There you re.illzo that Greece looks vastly more like a vic tor, now, than Turkey. 6habby Constantinople The Turk holds Constantinople, of course, by. virtue of scaring Europe's peace negotiators when he. camo down to the Ilosphorus with Hie big, Inso lent army that had driven all Greeks, military and civil, out nf Asia Minor. Brrt there Is grave question about how much glory thero Is In holding tho Constantinople of today. The ctty looks meaner and shabbier than lt ever did bofore. Try as' ono will to wish well to tho modernized Turk In his professional reformations, one has to acknowledge that If tlm appearance of the city of Constantinople Is any algn, the Turk Is stj.M the skk man of the Orient And he has lost Syria, Arabia, and Mesopotamia forever. Prosperous Athens On the other hand, In startling con trast, Atnans Is a city on a boom. By the same token the present-day Greek is In lusty health. Greece's come back since 1922 Is amazing. Not only In the capital and In other cities, but In towns and In counlry districts there abound evidences of a sound and growing pronpr.rlty. All this has happened as the direct result of Greece's great "defeat." The stupidity of the Turks In driving out meir ureea-unnstiun subjects, after their supposed triumph at Smyrna, is proving an Incalculable enrichment to Greece. After tha fall of Smyrna the Greek nation In Europe, with rare generosity and faith, opened Its doors to receive tho refugees of Grecian atock who were being expelled from proving an asset to Greece. It brooght Into the nation a host of clever, thrifty, enterprising people the sort especially that had made Smyrna ths richest, city of Its site on earth a great army of producers and business organizers, Athens Is vibrant with energy, die tlnctly American In spirit. Its popu lation has doubled since the beginning of tha World War. The pro-American feeling ot Athens is not exhausted by Its Imitative ener Kies; a great spring of gratitude wells out of the national heart Greece ha not forgotten that America, thronaa the medium of the Near East Rellefl and other benevolent agencies, santl her inestimable assistance In money and In experienced social worken when refugees from across thi Wgean three years ago were pourlni in on ner by Hundreds of thousands- sick, Hungry and dying. I took much comfort In thinking oi that while I was In Athens, for then is no satlfactlon deeper than In help Ing those who help themselves Watching the crowd, It pleased me tt reflect that some, at least, of.thosi happy folk were among the exile whom America had fed and helped U keep alive until they could stand oi their own feet again. And It Is pie ant to record that the Greek public authorities never let down any of theli own efforts because Americana wars there helping. Tbey shouldered ths utmost of their own burden, and en operated Desidos In everything that the American organisations asked and It should be remembered the more than half of the warda of ths Near East orphanages are Armenlai children, with absolutely no clalm nxcept the paramount claim of bumai Ity for refuge on Greek soil