TSS MaCpLn tlMES Thursday, Jum 3, 1025. I ,7 ' Am 0 mm wwm. To Everybody Living In Oregon: A big event touching the history of Oregon is scheduled to occur on Saturday, June 29, when the new bridge crossing the Deschutes is to be dedicated to public use. At that time Governor Patterson and other state officialy, Highway Commissioners, Wasco County Court, State Engineering force and other notables of Oregon will attend. The exercises will be under auspices of the Boy Scouts of the dis trict assisted by local committees. All are requested to bring baskets and help make the occasion a memorable one for Maupin. All come! E : , Saturday, June 29 : - I tiTITTTTITTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTIIT.irTTTTIITIIITIIIIIIIIIirTT "INSIDE" INFORMATION Serre small portions of food to children o that they can clear their plates without the feeling of being staffed, or nagged into eating.- it Don't put hot foods in the re frigerator. Cool them fir, t to room temperature. Don't use ice to cool such things as the tops of carrots, the outside leaves of let tuce or thick paper on parcels from the market. Don't waste ice stor ing vegetables for a short time if you are going to a e them immedi ately. Opening and shutting the door frequently raises the tempera ture of the air in the refrigertor, so that more ice is required to cool it PAGE, LINE AND PARAGRAPH A Ouce-A-Wmk SerTic to Weekli And Smi-WeeUiM To prevent horses from eating eata too rapidly, place a little chop ped elover hay or some whole corn cobs in the feed box with the oats. and salad dressing, is very good. After the tomatoes have been peel ed and oeooped out they should be seasoned inside with salt, turned upside down to drain, and placed in the icebox until time to fill and serve them. Cottage cheese for sandwiches may be moistened with a little cream, with salad dresing, or with tomato catsup. Alfalfa hay should not be put in the barn too green, as it is likely to heat and in extreme cases to burn. Eggs to be shipped to market should always be packed in the fill ers small end down, as they carry better in tranmt and storage in that position. One of the beet kinds of sweet elover hay comes from .the seedling crop harvested with wheat of rye. This mixture of sweet clover and straw cures well in the shock with out much damage to the grain and makes fine feed after thrashing. Discolored lace may be restored by letting it simmer a few minutes in sour milk. Then follow the usual procedure of washing in luke warm water. Lettuce may be easily and quickly shredded by using a pair of scissors instead of a knife. On of the most important fac tors in successful muchroom culture is good ventilation. This not only supplies oxygen but allows the carbonic-acid gases exhaled ly the growing . plants to e cape. ' Drafts should be avoided, however, a sud dvn changes of temperature check growth and cause darkening and craking of the mushrooms. Fresh tomatoes can be filled with almost any left-over meat or vege table for a atuffed tomato salad. A 'filling made of chopped meat, such as chicken, veal, or tongue, cooked peuf, chopped pickles or cucumber, Bermuda grass pasture should be kept closely grazed, as the stems be come dry and wiry if allowed to get too old. Where there are not enough stock in the pasture to keep the grass well grazed, it often pay to harvest for hay and get a fresh growth for pasturing that will be more nutritious and palatable than the older items. and others who do not have brooder equipment If it is decided to renovate the strawberry bed and keep it for an other year, first mow the tops, particularly if the matted row sys tem is used, then clean out the bed, removing surplus plants, and culti vate the coil between the rows. In regions where the growing season is long, the foliage need not be cut un til sometime in August, but the North crops, the tops should be mow ed and a bed renovated as soon ar possible after fruiting. Some straw berry growers apply a small amount of fertilizer after renovating the bed. Many poultrymen are building up a good trade by selling pullets of from 8 to 12 weekks of age. Thfo offers a profitable outlet for surplus chicks,, jtnd gets the pullets off the range before they crowd the birds that are being raised for laying stock. By the time pullets are 8 weeks old they are past the , stage of greatest danger and can be kept in colony houses or in summer shelt ers on range at low cost and with a minimum amount of attention. They usually find a good market among farmers, backyard poultry keepers, Pine Grove News The core wall of the dam has been tested and the three-foot storage backs the lake up to the bridge level and holds it to the high mark when the conduit pipe is closed. Thus the actual storge demonstrate.- what the Wapinitia Irrigation company has claimed as an asset and . security namely, that a lake bottom to start with is much better than an artifi cial basis. When Frog creek and Clear creek flow is low there appears no rea on why this three-foot core wall storage cannot be released to aid in after season irrigation just that much. Sheep will be admitted to the for est range about July 1. Gertrude Laughlin has returned from hep switchboard work at Mau pin. ' Frank Richardson has ceased labor at the Joe A. Graham camp and will now work for the McFarlane mill company. Walter Sharp has traded his Star car in on a Chevrolet truck. He wills haul wood. Lewis Walters and son", Virgil Mayfield and Ben Richardson at tended the Dodge sale at Smock last week. The 4-H members, chaperoned by Mrs. Blanche Hedin t Corvallis, and Newport, will return to Maupin on Saturday night. Joe A. Graham's road crew is drag ing the Clackamas to Clear lake road and is al o taking the S bend out of the highway eight miles west of Bear creek. H. R. Wray is another man who is hauling wood from the Dane tract. J S. Brown, Engineer Carrigher, inspector of egineering of the high way, "Dock" Wilkins, E. E. Miller, W. B. Keen, Robert Ellcnwood, En gineer. Moss and others met at the canal and roal intersection in the mountains to view the canal and high way engineering. J. S. Brown is to furnish the S. Simenson camp hay for 20 head of stock. Wallace Fargher has rented 200 acre and 300-acre tracts at Pine Grove for sheep pasture, to be used when going to and coming1 from the mountains this reason. . Ben and Frank Richardson have "buzzed" up a pile of limb and slab wood, which they will hold for sale. Dewey Linn is cutting wood on the Olson claim, recently purchased, where .the new awmill is to be located. Ralph Woodsido and Morion O' Brien are again working at McFar- lane's mill. The mill cut is about 12,000 feet per eight hours. They operate the planer' after hours. Lester West is hauling wood from the Walter Sharp wood camp. WAPINITIA L O. O. F. Lodgn No. 209, Maupin, Oregon meets every Saturday night in I. O O. F. hall. Visiting members alwav welcome. Geo, Clajrmier, N, G. Bernard Welch, Secretary. Crescents RAKINfi 11 Jail pound:! ZELL'S FUNERAL SERVlCt t Undertaking and Embalming AMBULANCE SERVICE Call Maupin Drug Stort Phona-34S Trucking Lobi Distant Haulia A Specially INSURED CARRIER ELZA O. DERTHICK Phoni Ture and :i wholesome!! Wm. F. Schilling' Ignition, Generators and Starting' Motors on All Makes of Cars ACTEYLENE WELDING From a Pin to a Locomotive Axle All Work Guaranteed At 67e Maupin Gararfe JaNaWa WrW iS Hill Dr. WM. KENNEDY DENTIST DENTAL X-RAY Firtt National Bank Bldf. The Dalle. Oregon Phone 391 SHIP BY TRUCK REGULAR FREIGHT LINE SERVICE Between . - PORTLAND - THE DALLES - MAUPIN THE DALLES TRUCK LINE Inc. SPICKERMAN'S TRUCK LINE PORTLAND-THE DALLES THE DALLES-MAUPIN . - and Way Pointy and Way Points BONDED & INSURED CARRIERS inMaiiMaNHaafWP