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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1928)
The Maupin Times C. W. Semmei, Editor C. W. Stmmei and E. R. Semmei PublUhers Published every Thursday at Maupin, Oregon Subscription: One year, $1.50; dx months, $1.00; three months, 60cts. Entered as second class mail mat ter September 8, 1914, at the post office at Maupin, Oreon, undr the Aot of MarchS, 1879. Power Is the basis of industry. When power is curtaied industry suf fers. It makes no differenc3 wheth er that power is generated by water, from streams, frn steam engines or electric motors, that power Is the medium which moves the wheels of progress. It works in light, . heat, motion and other phases of living, yet Its uses and value are only in in fancy. There is un organized effort tend ing to the exclusion of powers com panies on the Deschutes, Umpq.ua, Kore and ol'uer rivers in Oregon. , Tue aiguuicat is advanced that to al low power companies to dam those rivers for power plants would des troy the fishing pleasures of thou tan ls of sportsmen. Just vhon, we would ask, has those streams yielded aught but a few salmon to the enterprises of the 5tt?? T!ow much have those streams 'cdded to the wealth of the state of Oregon, as'de from he commercial fi-hing industry? Would it not be r tte." f.'it the streams mentioned be harnessed and thereby give employ men to hundreds of men all the year around than to wake them exclusive fishing grounds for part of each year? Industry is the medium which keeps the country on its feet. With out indusry panics 'would ensue; trade would be at a standstill and poverty and crime run rampart. Damming the streams mentioned means that industry would be given an added impetus and add to the state's treasury. More men would be given a chance to get the where with with which to keep their fam ilies, educate their 'hildren and en joy the delights of life. It seems to us that objecting to he improvement of Oregon streams by fishermen is a the state as a whole. There are numerous fishing places In this state sufficient to satisfy the most ardent follower of Izaak Walton. Damming the rivers would not necessarily kill off the fish in them. The law says that fish ladders must be constructed to allow the fieo passage -of fish over such dams. No fish would be killed, and thes port would not suffer by such obstruc tions. Keep the streams open and they will be enjoyed by a few; dam them and allow power plants to oper ate through the force of the water and he whole sate would benefit. The a ctlon of a tew fishers en wh0 seek to obstruct the development of Oregon looks to us like saving the spigot and losing the bunghole. PAGE LIXE AND PARAOHAPH beef bull, COO points; for a unit I on rum, 300 points; and for a boar, 100 points. To be considered purebred an animal must be eligible to regis try iu its breed association. The prizes are awarded with the under standing that the money is to be used for paying the expenses of the coun ty aseut to the International Live stock Exposition to be held next December. 1XFOK.MATIOX TOR THE FAMILY A Few Stories Which May Interest Both Young and Old A Once-A-Week Service to Week Km And Semi-Weeklies Never subject earthware dish to sudden changes, of heat or you may crack it. Allow hot casseroles or baking dishes to cool gradually. Two discuses of alfalfa, bacterial wilt and winter injury, which have caused ivrious losses of alfalfa in many regions, in the past few years are described, and recommendations for their control are given, in cir cular 3U-C, 'Bacterial Wilt and Winter Injury of Alfalfa." This circular can be secured free from the U. S, Department of Agriculture. Condon State oiling 17 miles of John Day highway north of here. Some corn belt farmers who have nmaA RVBAt driver hnv for ttllngp are . . , . enthusiastic. Good silage can also be made from clover straw remaining after threshing the second-year crop J for seed. In this case It- will be 'necessary to add considerable Water Sweet clover straw is something like a by-product which might easily be wasted but which makes excellent feed when put into the silo. Use a thermometer in the meat when cooking rib roasts of beef, or leg of lamb. Then you do not have to guess whether the meat Is well done or rare or medium. When the temperature at the center of a rib roast of beef is between ISO F., the meat Is rare; between 150 F. and 170 F. it is medium; and it Is well done at 180 F. In hog-raising sections of the country some of the larger packers pay a premium, of 10 cents per hundredweight for hogs originating in "modified accredited" areas in the national campaign for eradication of bovine turberculosis, such areas be ing those In which tuberculosis has been found to affect not more than "one-half of one per cent of the cattle and in which all animals reacting to ;the tuberculin test have been remov ed from the herds. It is estimated jthatthe returns from these premiums ! will amount to nearly 11,000,000 .during the present year. Sauerkraut has became such a popular article of diet in this coun try that we now produce about 1S, 000,000 gallons each year, the value of this amounting to over 3 million dollars. Sauerkraut has the same chemical composition as cabbage, i the principal differences being that i the added salt and acid resulting from fermentation largely replace the sugar of the cabbage. These changes make sauerkraut much more palatable than cabbage to many peo ple and do not detract materially from it food value. War has been declared on all scrub beef bulls, scrub mutton rams, and scrub hoars in West Virginia by the West Virgina Cooperative Ship pers' Association and other State farm organisations, which are offer ing money prizes to the three coun ties gaining the most points during an 11-month period. For every scrub beef bull castrated or shipped to market, 600 points are given; for a scrub mutton ram, 400 pointu, and for a scrub boar, 200 points. Scores bred animal in a county; for c:.ch Avery simple and practical method jof trapping roaches in large numbers jis to take several tin pans with ver tical sides about 3 luches In heipth. 'greasing the bottons and sides with Irancld buter and placing the pins jwhere the pests are most numerous. The roaches will be trapped In the pans because of their Inability to climb up the greased sides, and mv tbe destroyed by shaking out into a l fire or boiling water. Commercial ; sodium fluoride dusted into their hiding places or runways is an ef fective means of poisoning, them. roro'im Advtrt'-:n R-prr?mtttlv fli-i AVERiCAf. PLCZi, A--51 C'ATIO' a i 1 Heigli-ho Zippety Toe, Get J I Your Best and Away We go 1 TO THE BIG x i Shady Brook Hall Satur Septem day ber O 0 Music by the popular S3 Me ad wlarks ! g Lay Dull Care on the shelf on above date, doll up m 1 you dancing clothes and grap a few hours' pleasure I i Ribbons ....... Just One Irom Man i Pine Grove News While on his way to Madras to , close a deal for his ranch, George Richardson, Portland machinery dealer, went off the grade west of j "Dead Man's curve." He claimed he ; wag forced oft the rond by a passing auto. Ills car was somewhat wreck-1 ed, but he was not Injured. Verne Fischer went out and hauled the : wrecked auto Into Maupin. J. S. Brown and Harry T. Lewis are lining up their press and getting ready for baling. ' Miss Flossie Q. Overman writes i Pine Grove folks regarding the meet ing of the World's Sunday School convention, which she attendod. Ishom West and Ed. Beebe made a trip to the mountains lust Sunday. Emll Iloechler and family are at Sumlt Prairie, their usual camp. E. E. Ellinwood and family, E. E. Miller and wife, Dorcas and Ernest Loot and Manna Hedin all met at Clear Lake Saturday and Sunday. The Shepflln-DeLore-Sturgls out fit finished heading Wednesday and begun threshing on the Shepflln ranch the next day for a nine-day run. U. S. Endersby has completed threshing his own grain, the W. A. Dane rrop and Earl Cunningham's, and is now at Lloyd Woodslde's place. Mrs. Henry Peterson entertained the O. S. Walters family at dinner on Sunday last. i ! U. S. Enderby's thresher Is at ' Bert Hi'.rain"r's place. From there the machine wll thresh out the crops of Snm Wall, O. L. Paoeet, O. Bron ner and Ed. Davis. ! j George Beebe's children have mov jed from Wm. Sturgis to the Herb ; Hammer house. Herb Hammer is now putting In his time at the J. P. Abbott ranch, i,1 Ed. Davis. Is now helping In the I harvest at the John Boen and John ; Davis ranches. ' C. L. Mclntyre and wife from : Washington have moved to. Pine ! Grove. Mr. Intyre is employed at ! the John McFarlane mill. I "Dad" Moore has made one trip I to the huckleberry fields near Jack : Pot and has gone back for the pur pose of spending another week pick ; ing berries and fishing. The Hcdlns recently spent five days at Swim, picking berries. Ben Richardson spent a couple of days last week on a vl?it with his son, Frank, at High Rock. People are picking berries near ; Tea Vine mountain, which Is, as j good a place as any In the moun ; tain. Wm. Moore has returned from a i 10-days' trip to Wolf Meadows and j Frying Pan lake. John McFarlane offers the opinlcn i that the new mill will be ready to I turn wheels by September 10th, ; The boiler for the power plant came j in this week. ; Linn' mill continues cutting pine iand fir lumber an extra good grade ! L. C. Henneghan and wife, Mack i Holloman and family, Emll Hackler j and family. Jack Donaldson and i family, 'Nick Karolus, .Lester Kelly j and family, Mrs. Cha. Crofoot and i son, Curtis Abbott and family, J. 8. : Brown and wife are among those ment Camp. : Engineer Carrlgher and wife and j Is thus closed. ;J There were approximately 100 jjWeek end campers at -Swim, with a 'great overflow congregated at Frog : , Lake, Clear Lake, Clackamas, 01 ilalloand Government Camp last I i week. ; Good fishing is stiil on at upper I 'west fork of the Salmon river, lower j j Still Creek, lower Big Meadows and j! Salomon Flats creek. Julius Shepflin and party of young folks spent last Sunday in the moun tains. Ernest Confer and family and George Claymier and family spent last Sunday in the mountains. Mrs. Henry Peterson Is at. the Laughlin home for a couple of weeks weaving rugs. 4 -v r-- hp m im 0 1w Maupin State Bank (INCORPORATED) rs S3 O. S. Walters and family spent Sundaf last at the Harold Walters Earl Cunningham Is hauling pine wood his week. Much grain Is moving to Maupin from the upper Flat at this time, near Shearer's Burn, s-ith of S-m-mlt. The J. P. Abott sheep are now at Jack Pot and Black Wolf meadows. J. S. Brown and Harry Lewis bal ed one stack of alfalfu an timothy to supply the road camps win horse feed. Herbert Goode and family stop ped at Pine Grove o visit friends last week. Mr. Goode is private secretary to City Commissioner Mann of Portland. CLASSIFIED LOCALS WOOD FOR SALE -Oak, Pino. Cot tonwood. Inquire of Guh Balzar, Shady Brook, Tygh Valley, Ore gon. 4t4 PIANO SACRIFICE near Maupin. Partly paid for piano like new. Free delivery. Fully guaranteed. Will accept phonagraph, saxn phone or other instrument part payment Balance your own terms. Write at once to Geo. Robinson, piano adjuster, 208 Oak street, Portland, Oregon. 4143 FOR SALE Durock Boar two ye irs Id last June, good grade hog, weight, 300 lbs. Price $25.00 S. G. Ledford, Wamic, Oregon 40-t3 FOR SALE 12-foot McCorrnick header, in first class condition. Price $160.00. Ed. Herding, Shaniko, Oregon. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SAXE OP PERSONAL AND REAL PROPERTY FOR SALE New Zealand sheep Romney buck, five two-year-olds, three Ramhoulets; two Guernsey bulls, one yearling, one two-year-old. Albert Hill, Wamic, Oregon. 41-tf KSfliiiiilliiiii " " ""' Plan now to attend the Fourth Annual Old Fort Dalles Frol-' .ies! September 13-14-15 -Watch for Details in this paper next week Notice la hereby given that the undersigned, John Gavin. Trusts, in Bankruptcy Docket No. 11428, pur suant to the order of Refer, in Bankruptcy mad. and entered April 4, 1928, will, on and after the 25th day of August, 1928, at my offlc 502 First National Bank building. The Dalles, Oregon, tell at prtvaU tale, for cash, the following personal property : 1 Farm Wagon 1 Garden Drill 2 Walking Plows 1 Mcllotte Cream Separator 1 3-Pole Stacker 1 Hay Unloadcr and ReverslbU Slip 1 Grindstone 1 Scythe 1 Share of Stock in the Tygh Val ley Farmers Telephone Lin. and will sell at private sale: .the Southwe t Quarter of th. North west Quarter (SWH NW14) and Northwest Quarter Southwest Quarter (NW SWK), Section Twenty-five (25) j the South Half of the Northeast Quarter (SVi NEU), Southeast Quarter North weut Quarter (SEV4 NWH). Northeast Quarter Southwest Quarter (NEK SWK) and Southeast Quarter (SEH) Section Twenty-six (26); the North Half of the Northeast Quarter, the South east Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (SEK NEK) and th. Northeast Quarter of th. Southeast Quarter (NEU BZM), Section Thirty-five (36). containing 660 acres in Township Three (8) South, Range Thirteen (13) East of Will amette Merdian, located about thrt. miles east of Tygh Valhsy post of fice. Said land will be sold for one fourth cash and the remainder pay able in long time annual install ments, with interest at 6 per cent Bids may be submitted in wrltlnr or personally. JOHN GAVIN Trustee In Bankruptcy. Dated Augurt 1, 1928. """" Publication dates August 9th, 17th and 24th. WAPLNITIA I. O. O. F. Lodgn No. 209, Maupin, Oregon meets every Saturday night in I. O. O. F. hall. Visiting members always welcome. D. L. Rutherford, N. G. O. F. Renick, S.e'v. ZELL'S FUNERAL SERVICE Undertaking and Embalming AMBULANCE SERVICE Call Maupin Drug Star. Ph.ne.345 Wilson Painting Co. House and Sign P.A-I-N:T:E-RS-! PAPER HANGERS and DECORATORS Call, Write or phone, Times Office. Maupin, Oregon. Z7 Ue Dalles Floral Co. FOR ALL OCCASIONS When' you deilr. Flowers for a party, wedding, fun.ral or aay other purpose, phon 710, Th. Dalles, or leave your order Th. Maupin Times offlc ni your order will be delivered a the next mail or stag.. BULBS NOW IN BLOOM 1