bat f ofl? THE MAUPIN TIMES - Uursdny iuiy ft. fOST5. mitt mmrcmsssgirxaBax iarijffBsiuia MM rrllMTTTTMtllltIlIITIIIIllirTTII Was L0 i i vi r I if Ttawsday, Friday mi. ST Bigger aod B etter Than Ever Arrange to Attend Every Day and Be There Write Secretary A. H. Gillis for premium list, then begin to prepare your ex hibits. Fatten your livestock, cultivate your vegetables, complete your sewing, do your canning and have exhibits ready for the Fair's opening day. ' Boost For and Come to the Big Fair ! rtntiiiHmniimHiTiTiiniimHmi TiTninniTTTintiTTiTiiiiizrriixTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin rrarnxiniixxxzxiixixnxTXiiiiiiix Criterion News Hay! Everyone is making ! Criterion this week. it at Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kirsch of Stay : ton, Oregon, wtre visitors at the Pete Kirsch home over the last week end. Mr. D. D. Wilson and daughter, AJene, returned Thursday from For est Grove, where they were visiting the former's mother, Mts. Austin. Sen Herding and wife from Tur ner, Oregon, announced the birth of daughter, who came to make her home with them on July 9th. They eall the newcomer Lois Emma. Mrs. Htrrilng formerly was Marie Appl , inf of this place. Mrs. Peter Kirsch and daughter, f Gertrude, motored to Bend to spend tie Fourth. They also rpent a day at East lake before returning home. Mrs. Bert Appling and daughter, Margaret, weie shopping in Maupin cn, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe G: Kramer were among those from Criterion who wen shopping in Maupin last Tues day. ; ;, :: C'A. Dnus and wife were in Mau pin Wednesday, Mrs. Duus coming la to consult her doctor. Hurry Rutherford is confined to bis Home with the mumps. Verle Bonney made a business trip to Portland last Saturday, tak ifig in a truckload of fat calves. FARM REMINDERS Although it is much easier to raise ealret by feeding them milk for tlx months or more, good calves can be raised without milk after the first two months, provided that they have iinrt and art strong healthy f aires at weaning time says the Ore gon exepriment station. It is es sential that such calves be allowed to eat grain and hay at an early age. The grain fed during the first two of threo weeks is cracked corn or cruthed oats, or a mixture of both, ftd diy. When the milk is discon tinued a more complete mixture Is nred. It is best to feed some form of leguminoi hay, because of the pro tln content. . loss of feathers on the head and neck of a fowl, says the Oregon experi ment station, but it is usually due to the fowls themselves in scratching and breaking the feathers off with their claws. This is apparently caus ed by a mite, thought to be the same as that causing scalcy leg, and which gets i under the skin, causing irrita tion. ApplUation of carbolated vase line Into which ha: been worked a little sulphur will be found helpful. Grain fields which show no mix ture just prior to or during the head ing period are likely to be free from mixture, although there are types of mixtures that 'cannot be identified ac curately until Just prior to maturity when the head characters are more pronounced, says the Oregon experi ment station. To obtain clean seed, t is bet to examine the field just efore heading, roghing it carefully at this time and again just before maturity. "INSIDE" INFORMATION One cup of rice will absorb 3 or 4 cups of milk when cooked in the double boiler and is of course much richer in food value than when boil ed in water. A pair of kitchen shears with sani tary white handles and strong, sharp blades is a useful tool. It can be used for chopping the heads and tails from fish; for cutting lettuce for shredded salads, bread for stuffing, marshmallows, dates and nuts, for desserts. Then there are all the ordinary uses for rcissors to cut paper for lining cake tins, twine on packages, shelf paper and many other uses. ' Get into the habil of closhig up the sewing machine when you stop work for the day. A little dust can undo all your effort at cleaning up your machine and making it run good. Unnoticed du4 also gets on light colored work, to Hs detriment. There rc several reasons lor the Bread for sandwiches should be 24 hours old. It should be cut in thin slices, and preferably filled with a chopped filling. It the filling is soft and likely to soak through butter both sidec; otherwise the butter may sometimes be mixed with the tilling and the spreading may be done in one operation. Cream the butter until soft enough to spread, but do not melt it as the flavor will be changed; RADIO TELEGRAPH NOW GOES INLAND Fourteen Cities in Nucleus of Network, With Plans for Twenty-nine as Wave Lengths Are Granted. Plans for the immediate establishment of a radio-telegraph system serving all the interior of the United States through four teen strategic cities just have been announced by General James G. Harbord, president of the Radio Corporation of America. The service will be managed and operated by the Corporation's subsidiary, R. C. A. Communications, Inc. The stations will be at New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, New Orleans, Kansas City, Detroit, Cincinnati, Cleveland, St. Louis, Boston and Washing ton, General Harbord's announcement reveals. The establishment of the new ser- j vice, which will give the inland cities direct communication with the world wide wireless networks radiating from New York and San Francisco to foreign countries, was made possi ble by the recent grant of ten exclu- hoped will eventually be added to tb radlo-telejraph chain. "Establishment of a new service,' General Harbord said, "will give th leading commercial and Industrial cen ters of America a new, quick and rell ZELL'5 FUNERAL SERViCt Undertaking and Embalming AMBULANCE SERVICE Call Maupin Drug Store Pbon.-345 Trucking Long DUtant Hauling A Specially INSURED CARRIER ELZA 0. DERTHICK Phone 8188 The above mip shows the twenty-n!n cities which the Radio Corporation of America hopes to Include In an Inland radio telegraph network soon. Work already It under way to give radio telegraph service to fourteen of the cities, on wave lengths already granted. These stations will be at New Orleans, Kansas City, Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, St. Louis, Cincinnati, New York, San Francisco, Boston and Washington. lire channels and fire shared channels from the Federal Radio Commission,' "We hope to extend the system," General Harbord said, "to the full list ot 29 cities contemplated In our origin nal application as soon as additional wave lengths are made available." Other cities whose commercial Im portance and strategic location justi fied a place in tbe new radio network, General Harbord said, were Philadel phia, Miami, Fla., Savannah, Minne apolis, Memphis, Pittsburgh, Houston, Norfolk, Buffalo, Portland, Me., Roches ter, Schenectady, Portland, Ore., Mil waukee, and many others which It Is able means of communication with each other. ' 1 "But its greatest significance, as the United States turns more and more to foreign markets, la that It brings Europe, South America and tbe Orient closer to America through ra dio's new and efficient avenues ot communication." Supplementing General Harbord's announcement, W. A. Wlnterbottom, vice-president In charge ot communi cations, revealed that the construction program for the fourteen cities was already under way. Three million dol lars has been set aside for the Initial expenditure. Wm. F. Schilling' Ignition, Generators and Starting' Motors on All Makes of Cars o ACTEYLENE WELDING From a Pin to a Locomotive Axle All Work Guaranteed At &f)c Maupin Garage SHIP BY TRUCK REKULAIl FREIOHT LINE SERVICE Between " PORTLAND - THE DALLES - MAUPIN Val(! New Barney opened ior business. Beauty Shop Burns livens hotel being ex tensively remodeled. THE DALLES TRUCK LINE Ine. SPICKERMAN'S TRUCK LINE PORTLAND-THE DALLES THE DALLES-MAUPIN , and Way Points and Way Points BONDED & INSURED CARRIERS