Page tfiro . TflS MAUTflN TIMES Thursday. Jun. 20, 1820. The Maupin Times AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER C W. Seamee, Editor C W. Sibbm and E. R. SlBBM PnMUhers Published every Thursday at Maupin, Orcgoa Subscription: One year, $1.60;. tlx Booths, $1.00; three months, 50cts. Entered as second das, mail mat tar September 8, 1914, at the post office at Maupin, Oreon, undr the Act of March 8, 1870. ELEVEN YEARS AGO From The Times June 21, 1918 A reception to the boys who will soon leave for training camps was given them at Waphuti latt ertn Ing. Those who will answer the call are Sam Appling, Lonis Wood aide, Earl Birchard, Ltster Mc Corkle" and aa Indian boy, Tommy Kto. " ! A tlephone communication to Wamic from the Summit told of a iheep herder being lost in the mountains. Nothing has been heard further and rangers are look ing after the sheep. Eighteen- carloads of sheep were shipped from Maupin to Idaho with in the last two days. Seventeen more carloads will leave for the same destination next week. The last phone pole set for the purpose of carrying wires between Wapinitia and Maupin were iet h front of the poitoffice on Friday last. Joe Cha, tain, Mrs. John Mc- Corkle and Mrs. G. W. Vanderpool were chosen as a committee to pur chase sewing machines for local Red Crosj use. A canvas was made by Mr. Chastain and the sum of ?i!7.00 raised, at a dollar a throw, Begin to arrange for your exhibits at the' coming Wasco Co. Fair , which will be held August 29-30-31 Write the secretary for premium list and make as many exhibits as you can prepare. Help out Dance and Show at the Fair Ground Pavilion one the evening of Wednesday, July 3 These entertainments are given as an iutroduction to the big 4th of July Celebration the beld at the Fair Ground. Good music and new pictures C. M. PLYLER, Manager for the puropse, 97 persons respond ing. . BulMinf BriJge Approach - A crew of men is at work con structing approaches to the new bridge. The approaches are of dirt and will be covered with gravel and oiled. The road leading from the highway to the 0. T. depot will be changed, but just what the grade will be is as yet undertermined. Moving Telephone Eaenange 0. E. Bayi and Charlie Crofoot are at work transfering the phone exchange from tlte Beckwth resi dence to the Crofoot place. The work entails much knowledge of telephone lines and Baya supplies that, while Charlie is using his trength in pulling Jack strap. Attended Reunion O. B. and A A. Derthick went .o Linn cpunty last Friday for the purpose of attending the annual re union of old settlers iu the Provi dence section, near Scib. The re union was held at the old Joab Pow ?11 church, a meeting place the Der .hick families attended when living where. They returned on Tuesday. Same Warden In Town "Larry" Gramse, deputy game warden located at The Dalles, was in Maupin yesterday for a time. Larry has been keeping close watch on violators of the fish law and has een active in apprehending several who failed to procure licenses before trying their luck in Eastern Oregon vaters. Jnr Wap-Mt. Hod Cut-Off Chas. Crofoot and wife went to Monmouth Sunday,' taking thetr laughter, Velma, back to normal chool. They made the trip both vays over the Wapinitia-Mt. Hood cut-off and found the going fairly jood. "hip Yearlinr Wethe The . Abbott afcd Troutman sheep ranches shioDer three carloads of LET THE CHILD rJTVERYONE muM eat to live, ljand the majority of people be Clieve firmly that it Is advisable to cook before eating. So what are you doing, Mrs. Housewife, to teach your children this ancient and hon orable craft? Here's hoping that you aren't the kind who brusquely says when her little girl wants to help : "Run away. You're too slow. I'm in a hurry." Of course it's generally quite true, but isn't it a truth that hurts? And how can the child ever learn to conk if she doesn't begin now? Good cooks rise from homely tasks. Spread It and Do It Even if the child is small, there are things which she can do. For instance, the little girl or hoy ot four is enual to spreading frosting on cookies, and, if they happen to be animal cookies, she can place the eyes in approximately the right places. By the time she Is seven or eight she will be able to master the whole process. However, anything to do with the 0oven is always more or less danger ous, so probably it is best to start the child out on something simpler. A gelatin dessert is always good. Soaking the gelatin, dissolving it in the boiling water is one operation taking little time. After that there can be a pause for play. Then, later, comes the arrangement of the pieces of canned fruit or Vegetables in the mo'ds and the pouring of the semi solid gelat'n over it. Salads are easy for a fairly yotinp; child to arrange, and, if they are planned to retuMe some ohiect. the joy "1 mSVine them is even greater." The well-known candle stick salad is one of the delights of yearling wethers to the Portland yards last Saturday. The shipment numbered better than 800 animals and were passed on by Dr. Stovall, liverctock inspector for this dis trict Indian Poniet to Portland A bunch of Portland buyers shipped three carloads of range horses to the fertilizer works at the big town Sunday, the animals being gathered on the reservation. The Indians received prices ranging from $3.00 to $7.00 each for the horses. They will be killed and con verted into fertilizer, feed for chicken- and hogs, and also for fox feed. The last shipment makes six carloads shipped from this point re cently. Neyr Welding Plant When at Portland Monday Bn Fraley pudchased and brought back with him a new acetylene welding plant. His old one, purchased bo fore the civil war, was obsolete and Bill Schilling nearly lost a limb by its giving out while working on the sand elevator last week. The new plant is the latest out and Bill ts laughing all over at itj installation. Natal Hemmorrhage E. M. Hartman sustained a nasal hemmorrhage last Sunday, his nose continuing to bleed all that day and a part of Monday. Dr, Coberth with a couple of nurses came over from The Dalles and the doctor suc ceeded fn allaying the no:e bleed. The old gentleman was very weak from loss of blood by the time the ailment was checked. a Took Trout to Madras Saturday lart Andy Smith with a distributor of trout for the State Fish commission, took a load of 10,000 fingerling trout to Madras where they were turned loose in Crooked river. Building Cabins The lumber having arrived car penters are at work at the fish hatchery putting up a couple of ca bins. One of them will be occupied by James Vaughan and wife, who will move in as soon as it is com pleted. ' Bees Swarm Yesterday a swarm of becs lit on one of the apple trees in the Resh yard and were give quarters in a box by Bill Williams, In the even ing Bill took the honey makers to a child of four, To make it, lay a slice of pineapple on a bed of let tuce. Stick half a banana in the hole ol the pineapple and top with a red Maraschino cherry. Make a handle M a green pepper curl at the base of the candle. Butterfly salad is ano0er which the child will be eager to make. All he h to do is to cut a slice of Hawaiian pin, apple in two and place it on a piece of lettuce with the rounded sides facing each other, then make a roll of pMniento eheee and put it be tween the pineapple pieces for the butterfly's body, and finally use strips of p'tnirtito for antennae and dots of mayonnaise and hits o' pi micnto ?nd green pepper for the spots on the wings. Embryo Boy Secure But thi doesn't mean that onfy the little girl should learn to cook. The chances are that her interest will head her that way without urg ing. Boys, too, should be able t, cook at leaM simple, foods; they may be led in this direction by pointing, out that the Boy Scouts encourage camp cooking. Or you could allow your son to invite hii boy friends in to dinner any time he will cook the meal. The fam ily should discreetly retire to an other room or' go visiting during the dinner. Be sure that be has prac t'ced the meal beforehand, and make it obligatory that the dishes be washed afterward. A good menu for such a meal would be : Canned Clam Chowder, Scrambled Eggs and Bacon, Buttered Canned Peas, . Fruit Gelatin, Cookies. Another menu might consist of Creamed Salmon 1 in Timhale Cases (we must have stjlel), the East ;ide and will provide pro per sparators and living quartern in a new hive. Attended Legion Meeting The following members' of the lo cal American Legion post, with thir wive:, attended the meeting of the Tri-County Council at The Dalles last evening. Ernest Confer, Don Miller, Raymond Crabtrec and How ard Nye. Remember Wernmark's broken line shoe sale all next week. Rural Carrier at Dofur . The rural mail carriers of this district will hold a meeting at Du fur Sunday next, it being a regular meeting of the association. Carl Pratt, carrier on Route A, Maupin, expects to attend. '' Telephone Line 'Projected It is said that a new telephone line will be built between Wamic and Maupin, work to be begun and com pleted this season. The line now in use "is badly out of order and a new line is necessary if communication by phone is to be continued between the placer, mentioned. B..F. Turner went . to Portlund Sunday and the first pf the week at tended a meeting of the Postmasters League, which was held in the big town. He returned home yesterday. Auto Accidents Thursday afternoon last a car containing a man and two women ran into a bank on the Criterion grrfde, throwing the passengers out. One of the women received a severe cut on a hand, Dr. Elwood being called to close the wound. The same evening a man named Hammond, with his wife, coming from Klamath Fall" and going to Portland, suffered an accident on the Maupin grade, their car turning over. As the car left the road the occupants jumped out, the man sus taining a cut on the arm which necessitated six stitches to close. Dr, Elwood took .care of that accident al so. OREGON NEWS NOTES Baker $20,000, L. D. S. church dedicated. . Vale $96,921 lowest combination bid on 45 mile lateral system of Harper and Little Valley unit of ; Bend Sheeji bridge constructed COOK Baked Potatoes, Peach Whip (made of whipped cream and mashed canned peaches), and Cocoa, Another dish that your son will like to cook is baked beans with hafl, not really bake the beans himself, but at feast open the ran and heat them. First, he should crisp some bacon in a fryinn pan, then remove the bacon and add one half tablespoon minced onion. Saute until golden brown, then add contents of a big can of baked beans and the diced bacon. Stir until the beans are hot. Add salt and pepper if desired. Another way to interest reluctant children in cooking, is to arrange a campfire In the back yard. Or you could set up your portable camp stuvc there and let the children prac tice cooking foods. If, by any chance, the food gets burned, the bouse and your own kitchen are near. And hen, the next time you have a picnic let them prepare the meal while you act the part of a lady of Icistie Food for Picnics Camp Hash is a dish that will be called for time and agaia To make it. heat two tablespoons fat in a skillet, add one large minced onion and one diced green pepper and saute until brown. Add two table spoons water and turn in contents of a twelve-ounce can of corned beef, six or f'ght sliced, boiled po tatoes, two teaspoons aal and one fourth teaspoon pepper. Heat thor oughly, allowing it to bro'n on bot tom. Stir as little as noihle. This will call for some self control on the part of rtir wtMtil cooks, but that's alt part of the lrnon. across Deschutes river north of bore to provide means of moving sheep to and from Bend storkysrH. Condon Contract awarded to Union Oil to funiixh oil for city pumping plant, Klamjath Falls Building permits totaled $163,310 here for iimuth of May. Falls City Local creamery con sidcring enlarging quarters. CLASSIFIED LOCALS THRESHING OUTFIT One" 16 27 Case tractor and ono 24-inch Case separator fo- sale cheap. ' Inquire at The Maupin Times of fice. 32-tO FOR TRADE 40-acre farm, near E. tarada to trade for farm at Smock, Wamic or Tygh Valley, P. . Monroe, Route No. 2, Esta cada, Oregon. 32-t4 OARSE WOOL EWES FOR SALE About 280 three-year-old ewes and 225 lambs for sale at the A. B, Matthews ranch, Tygh Valley. Call Matthews and learn prices and particulars, 31-t2 GAS ENGINE FOR SALE I haVe a 2-horse-power Stover gas engine, practically new, a thresher tank pump and a . 1-inch . centrifugal pump for sale. See them at the new bridge. Ask for H. S. Hngle. FOR SALE Dwelling house con taining five roon'S, store building and pool hall' with fine pool table, f helves end counter, now doing a good business!, Will take small down payment, balance on lime to suit buyer.. Must sell on ac count of my health. Call on or write Matt Busic, Wapinitia, Ore gon. 27-t4 SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY In Equity No. 4393 In The Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Waico ounty, John Bartholdi, riaintiff, vs. Black Butte Lumber Company, A Corporation, John G. Helmrich, and J. L. Kelly, Trustee, Defendants BY VIRTUE of an elocution, de cree and order of sale, duly issued out of and under .the seal .of the Circuit Court of .the State of Ore gon, for the County of Wa co, to me directed and dated the 28th day oi May, 1929, upon a - decree for the furecloHure of a certain lit-n, and Judgment rendered and entered In suid court on the 29th day of December, 1928, In the above entitled cause, In favor of the Plain tiff and against the Defendant Black Butte Lumber Company, corporation, a judgment debtor. In the sum of Three Hundred Nlnoty-one and 84-100 dollars, with Interest thereon from the 28th day of October, 1927, at the rate of six per cent, per annum, $2.40 filing fee, and the further sum of one Hundred Twenty-five dollars, at attorney's free, and the further torn of Thirteen and 60-100 dollars, coats, and the costs of and upon this Writ, and commanding me to make sale of the real property embraced in such decree of foreclosure and hereinafter described, I will, on the 20th day of June, 1929, at the hour of 2:00 p. m. o'clock, in the after noon of said rity, and at th front Jor ofMhe County Court House In Dalles ' IV Wstu County, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in- hand, all the right, title and Interest which the Defendants, Black Butte Lumber ' Company, s corporation, John Q. Helmrich, and J. L. Kelly, Trustee, or either of them had on the 28th day of October, 1928, the date of the lien foreclosed herein, or which auch Defendant or any of ths De-" fendants herein, have since acquir ed, or now have In and to the fol lowing described real property, situate and being is Wasco County, Oregon, to-wit: About one-fourth acre located on the touth side of the Columbia river highway, and having thereon s con crete office building 20 feet x SO feet in size, and located directly across the road from the box factory building, all located In section 2, township 1 North, range 13 F,ast of Willamette Meridian, and being portion of Laughlln'a Donation Land Claim, and the record title to which parcel of real property is now in John G. Helmrich, of The Dalles, Oregon, and which building was erected by the Black Butte Lumber Company and is upon land described aa a distance of 26 feet on ths wet ide of the center line of said build-' Ing, and a distance of 75 feet east jf the center line of taid building, "nd running from the Columbia !tiver highway s distance of 100 feet southerly, being land required for the convenient use and occupa tion of said building itd necessary for said office ue. or so much of said property aa will satisfy said 'ttdgment and decree, with costs nd accruing costs. Sold property will be sold subject to confirmation and redemption si by law provided. Dated at The Dalles, Oregon, this 28th day of May, 1929. HAROLD SEXTON Sheriff Wasco County, Or. M.10-.T27 1 ' CRANDALL UNDERTAKING CO. QUIET SERVICE LADY ASSITANTS The Dalles, Oregon. Phono 15-J' Your Watch Haywire? If it is not doing its work bring it to The Timep off.ee and Mr. Semmes will send it to GUY A. POUND Mauutniiiring Jeweler mud Watchmaker buccwNiur (a 1), LIndquist TUB DAUK3 - - OREGON WERNMARK SHOE STORE Shoes and Repairing Wasco County '$ Exclutivt Shoe Store hoei for tb Gnneral Repairing VhoU Family The Dalles, Ore. WhiteRestaurant PRIVATE BOOTHS Where the best 35 cent meal is served in The Dalles Next The Dalles Creamery C. N. Sargent, - Prop. I a