THE MAUPIS TIMES Charter i.'o. 224 REPORT OF CONDITION OF The Maupin State Bank AT MAUPIN, IN THE STATE OF OREGON, At th do of buaines June 30, 1928. RESOUURCES Loans and discounts, including rediscounts, acceptances or bills of exchange, old with endorsement oi me can v """'' shown in 29, 30 and 32, if any) ,161,"r; 2. t. 4. Overdrafts secured and unsecured U. S. government securities owned, including those hown in iterrus 30 and 35, if any Other bonds, warrants and securities, including foreign government, state, municipal, corporation, iiiwuu including those shown in items SO and 36, if any 6. Baking house, f 5,200; furniture and fixtures, $2,200.. 1. RAnl estate owned other than banking house.- 9. n. 12. (ab) Cash on hand in vault and due from banks, Dannero and trust companies designated and approved reserve agents of this. bank - - 40,00,. Checks on banks outside city or town of reporting bank: and other ca h items - Total cash and due from banks, items 8. 9, 10 and 11 ,. $40,034.24 Total..:...... : - - LIABILITIES II. Capital atock paid in - ' IT. Surplua fund Ye'TfnSn 18. (a) Undivided prohts - $8,520.20 (b) Less current expenses and tax?s paid 4,476.19 DEMAND DEPOSITS, other than banka subject to reserve: 23. Individual deposits subject to check, including deposits due the State of Oregon, county cities or other public t funds - $136,154.90 25. Cashier's checks of this bank outstanding payable on ' demand .: L - : 2,436.94 Total of demand deposits other than bank deposits sub- ject to reserve, items 23, 24, 25, 26.... $138,591.84 - 17; Time certificates of deposit outstanding .'. 68,677.11 TIME AND SAVINGS DEPOSITS, mbject to reserve and payable on demand or subject to notice: Total of time and savings deposits payable on demand or subject to notice, items 27 and 28 $58,677.11 Total - .....$230,312.96 STATE OF OREGON, County of Wasco ss. I, F. D. Stuart, cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that tfca above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. F. D. STUART, Cashier. ', . CORRECT Attest: .- , ' Subscribed and sworn to before ; My commissioon expire:; January 10, Criterion News Notes P. J. Kirsch and son, Paul, were In yaajiin on business Sr-nday la.ct. ' All the farmers of this senion are busy in their hay fields. ' County Agent Daigh and Mr. Hy alop of Corvallis were here last Sun lay looking at the boys' potato fields. AH club members' spuds passed inspection, with the exception of one. There are six Criterion boys hi the potato club. Mrs. McLeod of The Dalles, is visiting with her daughter, Mrs. D. L. Rutherford. x ' Harry Rutherford spent Sunday afternoon visiting with Bonney Duus. . . Vi W. C. Daigh and wife and little daughters, Margaret and Marylyn, were dinner guests at the Kirsch home Sunday last. MrsAppling and . brother, E. Patrick, picked cherries at the John son orchard, Maupin, one day last week. V Mrs. D. D. Wikon has returned home after a short visit with rela tives at Cottage Grove. WERNMARK SHOE STORE Shoes and Repairing Wa$co County's Exclusive Shoe Store hoet for th Whete Familv Gneral Repairing The Dalles, Ore. ZELL'S FUNERAL SERVICE Undertaking: and Embalming AMBULANCE SERVICE Call Maupin Drug Store Phone-345 CRANDALL UNDERTAKING CO. I QUIET SERVICE LADY ASSITANTS The Dalles, Oregon. Phone 3 5-J Reserve District No. 12 13.36 8.650.0C 13.763.0i 7.400.0C 5,673.6. 6.36 - - $230,312.91 25.000.0C 4,000.01 4,041.01 LAWRENCE S. STOVALL, L. C. HENNEGHAN, J. S. BROWN. me this 3rd day of July, 192S. GEO. McDONALD, Notary Public. 1932. Wiley Harris of Bakeoven was here one day this week, coming after a rack, which he purchased from Edwin Kidder. Emery Davis and Hank Harphara are employed at the Greene ranch, hauling hay. C. A. Duus and family were in Maupin on business on Tuesday. Sylvester Kramer and wife of Du fur visited at his parental home on the Fourth of July. Otto and Ed. Herrling celebrated tlie Fourth at Prineville, and from fiere went on to Bend for a short visit with their brother, Alfred Herrling. Hugh Knight attended the Alfred Nys funeral at Wamic last Wednes day. P. J. Kirsch and family ; pent one day of lat week fishing and picnick ing on Deep creek. D. L. Rutherford is busy binding his grain in .bundles. Doings at Pine Grove Mrs. Charles Gabel and two child ren of The Dalles, have been visit ing -with her foster parents, J. S Brown and wife. Rev. W. A. Mathews and E. W. Richmond went to The Dalles Sat urday to bring back Mr. Matho'3' new Cheverolet coupe. Ben F. Richardson gave a dance at the First and Last Chance auto park last Saturday night. A good attendance is reported. E. E. Miller and auto party re turned from their eastern trip July Fourth. Mr. Miller writes that his health is much improved. W. A. Bullock of Klamath Falls was on Wapinitia Plains Sunday and Monday. He left for Madras Mon day afternoon. jTC. McFarlane, senior member of the McFarlane & Son Lumber company, has returned to Pine Grove. He was compelled to return to Manning, Oregon, to complete 1 planing the balance of hi" old setting lumber cut, and expects to be here ' continuously ere long. N. G. Hedin has been employed to make new sur- ! veys for the McFarlane mill in order to lay pipe lines to the mill and. pond. The Linn mill is cutting out mill frame lumber for the new plant. Fred Ault, woods boss for the Mc Farlane mill company, left for Port land recently, where he went for medical treatment. He expects to return shortly, Twelve hundred Bheep arrived from Redmond last Thursday, they being consigned to Rose Dahl. John Karlen will add to this band to bring the number up to grazing strength, when they go to the Mt. Hood re serve. Frank McCoy and E. Hammer brought in the Abbott pack horses to be shod for mountain work this summer. Billy Hunt scoured the Pine Grove settlement recently after a doien horse, hoe nails. He found them In the morning at 4 :30 iu the Wapinttla Irrigation company's shop. Now that pack horse that threw a shoe is airsin ready for its regular trips to the hills. Henry Miller is surely the busiest man heraboutv His job is driving truck to keep the men on the road supplied with mush, niaecaroni, to bacco, medicine, mail, milk, etc, and joes and comes like he was the shuttle cock of the community. George Claymeir and Roy Batty re building sheep burns and feed np rrns n their respective ranches. Ray Kaylor has a crew of car penters and other mechanic- busy n his ranch. The hum of machin ery hc&psaks the long head possessed by Kay. , , Lester West is his own boss dur ng the reul boss's absence. The Conleys and Mullers from Tygh Valley were Pine Grove visi tors la t Saturday night. A fire of undertermincd origin -.tarted -in the northwest corner of he Richardson auto park at 2:00 Vlock a. m. Sunday morning. A mcket brigade reaching from tho :anal to the fire soon put a quietus on the fire. Virgil Klayfield is cutting hay anu rutin on the John Sinclair pla:e on shares. uiadys Smith is visitiiijf her si. er, Mrs. Archibald GutzVr .. im Judluus- Robert Ralph Hammer &ti Ernest Emlorsby all wood camp operators. Ed. Walters has taker, the job of "burner" for the Brown Construc tion company. Robert Shepflin has gone -to Wrentham to work on the Jaeckel ranch until fall term of ichool be gins. Roy Woodsidc recently returned from school and assumed his former position with a surveying crew. Roy has made his own way at school through his own earnings. Stay with it, Roy, and you will later em ploy many of the y ins fellow; who today are seckimr a rood time. "Dad" Coale stopped at Hedin's ranch on his first lap into the heart of the quartz land. Dad spent the many years mining and prospecting the Cascade mountains. Those emi nences give plenty of room for such pur.uit3 as well as outdoor sport. Prospecting is like fishing in that it's good even though the ore and fishare scarce. AMERICA LEADING IN RADIO CQaONICATIOii Tine opening of a new, dlroct radio channel between New York and Lis bon. Portugal, (or the transmission find reception of Radiograms was re cently announced by the Radio Cor poration of America. The Inaugura' tion of this radio circut a-ids another spoke ti) tlie world wide communica tion Bystem which has New York as Its Imri and rac!iale3 directly to Eng land, France. Germany, Italy, Hol land; RclRliim. Sweden, Norway, Po- I land, Turkey, Argentina, Brazil, Co j lomliia. Venezuela. Porto Rico, the Dutch West Indies, and Dutch Guiana. From San Francisco other direct radio , circuits join the United States to j Hawaii, Japan, the Philippines, Hong J Kong and Shanghai, China, the Dutch East Indies and French Indo China. ; To further insure the continued su premacy of the United States In trans ' oceanic radio communication the RCA Is plnnnmg additional circuits for the jiear future to countries as near as Canada and Cttna, and as distant as i Spain, Czecho slovakia, Chile and Siberia. "Logging" Made Easier By the old system of logging, the great pieces of timber lny upon the ground ufitil there was sufllclent snow . to "snake" them to the water. By the most modern methods the logs are carried over the snowdrlftB by means of a mono-rail system, which supports the carrier with its cargo a few feot above the ground. Time and mon-y are saved, for the construction cost of the "L" line Is not great. , Dr. Thaddus L. Bolton, of Temple (Texas, University, says that cows horses, monkeys and dogs laught. Andrew O'Connor, an American sculptor, 54 years old, broke all pre cedents in the history of French art recently, when he won the first gold medal of the Salon dca Beaux Arts. Turkey is the only country in the world in which ChrLtianty is not accepted as a religion. , DR. CLARKE COMING l Dr. Clarke of the Clarke Optical j company, HGOA Alder street, Port land, Oregon, EYE SIGHT SPEC, IALIST, will be in Maupin all day and evening of Monday, July 16, at Home hotel, SEE HIM ABOUT YOUR EYES. WINTERTIME RADIO RESULTS OBTAINED DURINGSUMMERTIME No Longer Is There a Dividing Line Between One Season and the Next in the Pursuit of Radio Happiness. By DR. ALFRED N. GOLDSMITH Chief Broadcast Engineer, R. C. A. Radio, unlike canucd goods, bai no winter or summer vepsou. There are fresh vegetables the year round In the radio garden, so that It la hardly necessary to har vest and ran our radio enjoyment d u r 1 o i a few months for use In what might be a less fortunate tea son. It we mentioned wintertime or sum mertime phono graphlc music, we might, be' laughed at. because the Ooldimlth phonographic presentation has come to be accepted as a permanent, un changing. Immune form of entertain ment, ready to serve In mid winter or mid summer alike. And by the same token, when radio programs and radio services are maintained from one end o. the year to the other at the same high levels of excellence, with little difference to In dicate the passing seasons. It becomes decidedly out of order to speak of seasonable radio. ' Today the signal strength ot any first-class broadcasting station within Its service range Is more than ample to ride high above the normal iuin niertlme static level. Indeed. It Is" only when the radio enthusiast Insists on going In search of DX or long dla tance signals that the static level be comes troublesome, since he has plunged below It. I Important Considerations j Of course the elements of good re- i ceptlon should perhaps be more close ly observed Id summer than In winter. Among the more Important considera tions are: 1. Selecting the signals from a sta tion of adequate power, located not too far distant. It Is well that the station have a repuatlon for careful maintenance, and be quite free from the criticisms of poor transmitter op eration, haphazard monitoring, vary ing power, serious fading, wave length wobble, and other signs ot poor broad casting. Fading, It goes without say ing. Is usually a condition beyond the control ot the broadcaster, and may just as well be charged np to the lo cation of the listener. 2. Selecting high quality programs, and especially features with sufficient "body" to cover up such static back ground as may exist even with high signal level. It Is well to note that signal level Is one thing, and sound level is another. Thus a dance orches tra or concert band is a better feature i in combatting static iLterference than "a string trio or a violin solo. 3. It Is well to be content with reasonable volume. While It Is true I that the volume control of the radio set increases or decreases everything ; Issuing from the loudspeaker static as well as signal proportionately, It is a matter of bow much background noise may be present before the lis tener becomes fully conscious and even irritated by its presence. By be ing satisfied with reasonable volume during the days of high static, we may reduce the background noise to a mini mum. Tba power of transmitters is not reduced during the summer months. Hence In most localities there la am ple signal strength from leading sta tions to ride well above the usual summer static, with the exception of i the occasional thunderstorm In the immediate neighborhood. Yet who expects ideai radio conditions every night? Try driving your automobile through a thunderstorm at night, with the dazzling flashes ot lightning, the torrential downpour of rain, with the Ignition system In difficulties due to moisture, and other troubles! Still, we do not speak of summertime auto mobile handicaps.' We are willing to forego motoring during the occasional tcrm of winter or siimro, Quality Pragrami Programs are maintained at the highest standards, although Id keep ing with seasonable moods and ac tivities of outdoor weather, they may be pleasantly different from those of indoor weather. The skilled program director, In fact, pays close attention to the demands of bis summertime audience. As to the radio listener, there Is Just as much reason to listen in dur ing the sumn.er as during the winter. Music, enlightenment, contact with the world, the thrill of sporting events, participation In history to the making, and other program " features form a rich mental background for our summer life. If anything, radio may truly be en Joyed to better advantage amid the outdoor setting made possible In warm weather. The acoustics are frequently better when windows can be thrown open. Radio Is at its best outdoors, on the porch or even on the lawn. Indeed, too little attention has been paid to the stage setting for the radio presentation, and summer time offers us many an opportunity la thlg directlpu. I A. N V LrrE ROUND taw IWNVFH h,UA KWS-VS ITV ... I IS MOlt;S. St. I HS ... OlK'M.tl , ilf V.I.X N INNTt . l f.r T M IHKIIMU Pk- Al l AM I 4 Sir ,,riv" ... l llilJM I I Pill NflVV VDkll .. ..., R. B. BELL, Agt'nt Maupin, Oritgoo FC !j uosruN UN UN F.DW. H. F. & P. A. Lapine -72 milc litlK'-Califr-nia highway oiled to Modoc Point. Vale Much land being leaned near here for oil iiivcutig-itmn. . Bnker Box factory has paid $70, 000 in wnfres in 3's years. North liend H.OnO.OOO coal products plant to be built here soon. WhiteRestaurant Where the bost 3. cent meal is served in The Dalles Next The Dalles , Creamery C. N. Sargent, Prop. U)e Maupin Times Jffears lReader l Mmwmw Urnrn vlfts. rPilf.0 mmm Contlcrnon; I v.tsh to taH ijdvontuKo of your Magailna Bargain 0(fr. I am enclosing tlie ahnve amount In fiiymant lor a on year aubecrlpllon to your paper nnd the HVE, Mgiume 1 liavo marked with an X below. All eubecrlptloni are fur a full year, Town.. St. or R. F. D.... Alrierienn Poultry Journal O Amorlcan Swineliard Cnpp"r'f Furmr ' ' Ti Dairy Farmer Everybody' Poultry Magazine Farm & Firaaida Farm Llfo O Farm Journnl Fruitj & Garden a P Gentlewoman Mjniine ftirfL CC Mark this coupon now and bring TV!" A V L,rlUUdE or mail it to our Bulnen Office l JUA I ,1$ - mvir nay t to scrr.s nSVUHN UM2TOCT.Sl,lat TO , ., '., 7.y 7S.SJ VI.SO M (. fi.SO 1K.3 l,ow laiesiui pansoi miu west, south end cast. 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No nead to wait t.i Renewal will be extended from date of preterit expiration. Stale.. D Good Stories C! Household Magazine ( Modom Homcmaking CI Needlccraft Open Road (Boy.) 1 People' o Home Journal ' People' Popular Monthly Sportsman' Digest Successful Farming Woman' World