Image provided by: Hood River County Library District; Hood River, OR
About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1929)
THE MAUPIN TIMES f ug flu1! Thursday fcovember 28, 1929. lb Maupin Times AH INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER C W. Semroea, Editor C. W. Samoa and E. R. Stmrntl Publisher Piiblishe-d every Thuwday at Maupia, Oregon tiipiiuo ; Oir yr, U.6t; tix jnott'&ts fl.tfb; thiv Tioaths, oOcts. fc.lertd aa second clas, mail mat tes Sarpuntber 8, 1914, dt the post et&a) ut iinuiu, Otevu, uutii Uie Joi Match o, 1876. Farm Raymond Crabtreo'is one, of 'our young ranchers who haj tired; cif running a ranch on shares. Last week ' he . purchased ? the . two ranches' of John McCorkle and will make. these a . success. . Raymond " is one - of " the cocing yung men of this section and there is 'no doubt he will make a win t'hio new location and all his friends are pulling strong for him. Just who will take over the opera tion on the Andrew Crabtree ranch is not at present known. WaH of Foth.r'g Death A massage received Monday morning informed Mrs. J. H. Kra mer of the leath of her father, Al bert Peter, aged 74 years, who died at his home in Durbin, North Dakota the previous evening. Mr. Peter had suffered fhree paralytic strokes and it k supposed a succeeding ttroke carried its death massage. A widow and three children survive. Drhriag Nw Ford Ernest Doty is driving a Ford car of the vintage of 1929. He purchas ed the car from Kramer Bros. Ernest has been without a convey ance since the Fischer garage fire, in which his faithful old-time Liz ?ie met an end in flames. Coup of Wedding Mirs Jeanette Eurnsiile, well .nown on the Fiat, and Oliver Green from Philomath, were married at The Dalles on November 12. The newiyweds will make their home in Linn county. Charles Davis and Miss Tiny Thompson, sistes of Mrs. John Davis and Charles Davi", wre married recently. Both the -ntr:Hinj parties are well konwn ! . They will make the? home on K;v Road Truck Foreman Mose Addington and his a?vtnt, Julius Shepflin, are now do'r.g rod work with the assistance of a brand new road truck, which they received the first of the week. The truck is equipped with a blade oiW' the right hand side, which allows ff the shoulders of the roadway to be leveled down with ease. The Ty;:h Valley section also received like truck this week. Isntence- Errest Ptrick, who was found gvl'y in the Wasco county circuit coatv cvrly in the spring for viola- uf the national prhibition act, "v-t sorve tha sentence of one year fn tie ronkentiary given him by Jude W'iLon. Patrick appealed the east lo the supreme court, which tribunal sustained the sentence of JtHjre Vilson. George B. Skinner i sentenced at the same time for i 'ik' v iolation. The higher court's Atf sion wa. handed down on Tucs ci...y. iloars From Hospital Jjhn M;Cork!e returned home on Monday after having spent 10 days in Dalles ho. pital where he went Now is the time to buy your High Top Boots A. A. Cutter Bone Dry Keig's Skipacs Prices from $&5O-$17.50 X- ' Full line of shoes for all occupations and functions!. y WSBAaK'S STORE 204 K. Second St. rie Dalles through a siege of pneumonia. John was ill when he went to The Dalles on business and a consultation with a physician disclosed a very serious condition. He is feeling much better now. Oil Man Transferred A. A. Underhill, who has been in charge of the Shell.. Oil., company's Maupin station, ha,; been transferred to. Arlington and hereafter will work hs salesman for the company. Roy Pattee has come over from The Dalles as Underbill's successor. He will occupy the Cunningham re i dencc lately vacated by the former agent. Cliwed Highway Work The Harness Construction com pany, contractors on the upper part of the Wapinitia cut-off, clos ed their camp Monday and will cease operations for this season. They are. nearly through, with their work and as soon as spring opcrr so as to -permit resumption of work the company will hasten -their work to completion. TRAPPER'S POETRY (By R. C. Fulkcrson.) I rode out on my trap line In chilly wind and tnow, And when a got to camp that night 'Twas 16 down below. i The wind was still a blowing And the fog was rising fast, I rolled up in my blankets And went to sleep at last ""IS The coyotes they were howling On every hill around, While the lonely old trapper Was sleeping very sound. They wake from my clumbers With their awful hideous yells, I will go to town tomorrow For some 30-30 shells. I rolled out in the morning And made a little fire, Then I filled the coffee pot And hung it on the wire. I cooked myself a slap-jack, For that is all I've got, Then saddled up by bald-faced horse And rode off at a trot. If you want to come and see me, I live up on the hill, Just three miles Above the Woodcock mill. The road in not a straight one, It's as crooked as can be, Please don't forget my number It is Newhouse, Number Three. PAGE, LINE AND PARAGRAPH A Once-A-Week Service to Weklie and Semi-Weeklie A good disinfectant used oc casionally in th poultry house not only destroys the germs of conta gious diseases, but also many ex ternal parasites and some parastic worm eggs. One of the best disin fectants for this purpose is cresol, one-half pint in 8 quarta of soft water. A five per cent solution of carbolic acid also ie good. When cows are off pasture and arp hpinc ffiwn Arv IomA if 4a wall to consider the problems connected with summer feeding. It is advic able to start planning now the sys tem to follow next summer. If plenty of good pasture is not avail able, plans sbfculd be made to im prove it and also to nrovide ohher ( , succulent feeds to take ito place or to supplcnumt it. Hail data collected by the U. S. Weather Bureau over a period of 12 yews shows that hail is likely to occur in practically all sections of the United States the exceptions being a small crea in southern California and nearby portions of Nevada, and a few other small areas. Damaging hailstorms appear most frequently in the middle Plains particularly in Kansas and Iowa. Although cotton, ced meal is often used aa a direct fertilizer in sections where It ta cheap, it in probably more profitable to feed it to stock and apply the manure to the land. Very little of the fertili sing value is lost through feeding. Millions of dollars lo-t annually because of sour and off-flavored milk might be taved through good management, sanitation, and refri gyration, the U. S. Department of Agriculture believes. Clean, healthy can-fully fed cows, small-top milking pails, sterilized dairy utensils and prompt cooling and cold storage will do much toward preventing sour and badly flavored milk and other dairy products, The beef bull' should be well fed at all sea ons, but especially just previous- to the breeding season. A grood ration for an 1,800-pound bull is 20 punnds of silage, 20 pounds of legume hay, and 6 pounds of grain. If non-legume hay is fed, the grain ration should lie include about 2 pounds of cottonseed or peanut meal. Large quantities of silage should not be fed to a bull in heavy service. One tuberculous fowl may enure the disease to spread through the whole flock if control measures are not applied. Avian tuberculosis, which is particularly prevalent in the north central states, can be detected by a po.t-mortem or by the tuber culin test jriven by a veterinarian. All diseased birds should be killed and burned. The reminder of fowls over one year old should be marketed. The chicken house should be clean ed and disinfected and als moved to clean ground if practicable. Lots They'll For A ; Br JOSEriUSE B. GIBSON Director, Home Economict Dept L H. . Htint Company t HOW many times a dih of beans has saved the day in an emergency I This ever popular (ood comes lo the front when sujip.r must be hurried "so that we can get started," or when Jimmy has been sick all day and required all of mother's time, or in any of the ntliT inevitable household emergencies which require quick meal prepara tions. Oven baked beans are an excellent food from the standpoint of nutri ment, as well as of taste. They rank very high in thr list of foods which furnish iron to the body, and also are a valuable source of calci um, phosphorus and other minerals. ' Oveti bakfd beans may be quirklr ', adapted to form many other de.li cioui dishes; and the following reci ms sutreest a few of the many tin- usual luncheon and supper treats in to which a can of baked beans may be transformed: Bean Rarebit To 2 nips scalded milk, add 1 medium can oven baked beans which have been mashed fine. Add Yi enp finely chopped Ameri can cheese, and stir constantly over I slow fire until cheese is melted. Add 4 tablespoons flour, blended with cup cold water, to slightly thicken. Cook for several minutes. Season with salt and pepper and Worcestershire sauce. Serve on slices of buttered toast. This is an unusual and delightful supper or luncheon dish. halted Bean Souffle Mash 1 cuo oven baked beans and 2 table spoons tomato ketchup, teaspoon salt, Cup cream or milk, and 2 beaten egg yolks. Fold in stiffly waten egg whites, and bake in a buttered dish for about 20 minut'1?. This makes a delightful fluffy di'h. 'A Dollar Dinner for Four CW; ned Dried Bttf 364 Baktd Poidtoes. 10 English Ptat 11 Mod and Sutter 8 Apricot Upioca 23 Coft with Crtatn 10 If you could lift tha lid of a Pan-don-boX and And that good spirits Instead of evil ones were swarming M and showing you the dishes you could uh in preparing a dinner for your family of four for a dollar, Wildn't you be pleased? Here in typa It a description of such dln ntr, with price! and rieipti Indi cated. Crtam4 Drltd Bttfx Priizle content of i Jtf-eranca Jar of dried bf in three tablespoon! of butter for about five mimitei. Add three table tpooni of flour and stir until smooth. Mix one vA one-fourth cups eva porated milk with one and one WJrtb cupi o watsr ad add ilowly, and runwnys thmild be plowed up and seeded to a (train crop. Chilren may wear cotton fabrics J the year round provided the under Iwenr b adjusted to the season. The heavy cottons such as joan, madras, and pique are suitable for cold weather. In some climates wanhable woul materials may be prefercd, but they require special care In laund ering. Wool clothing should be do. Mgiml to avoid unnecessary thick ness of material at any point. FARM POINTERS Fall has been found the best time for applying limerock to or chards in western Oregon. So 'far no specific cure has been found for poultry paxalysi;', aiU birds showing symptoms of this dis ease which -do not improve in a few dnys, are best disposed of. recom nicmls the Oregon experiment ita. tion. It is questionable whether or not they- are satisfactory for human consumption. F.xcpriments conducted at the Oregon experiment station have f-hown that kale Is practically equal, pound for pound, to corn silage in the dairy ration. HOME POINTERS When buying organges for home use it is often more economical to buy several dozen at a time. Cider, ginger ale or fruit juice make an excellent accompaniment fr the main course of the holiday dinner. Too hot an oven will cause angel food cake to be tough and heavy. When frying oysters, the erg and crumb mixture with which they are coated with stay on better if allow ed to dry before the oysters are put into the hot hat. As eggs .-poll more quickly after being washed, it is best not to wash them until ready to use them. Enjoy Beans Quick Meal Serve with cold slaw, head letttic or other green salai Baked Beans with Bacon-Pour can of oven baked beans into a but tered baking dish and cover gener ously with strips of bacon. Bake un covered in moderate oven until ba con is delicately brown. Before sending to the table, garnish with sjirigs of parsley. Baked Bran Cutlets Mash fine 3 cups oven baked beans. Add 1 cup bread crumbs; 2 eggs slightly beat en; 2 tablespoons melted butter; and wit, pepper, Worcestershire saure and onion juice to season. Shape into cutlets? Dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs again. Brown in a skillet with 3 tablespoons fat. Serve with tomato sauce. (Cream of tomatu soup, heated and thickened with a small amount of flour, makes an ex cellent, quick tomato sauce.) Baked Bean Deliiht 1 ran oven baked brans 2 small onions 2 small green peppers 1 cup grated cheese Mix beans, chopped onions and green peppers. Place In a buttered biking dish and top with grated cheese. Bake in a slow oven for 31 minutes. stirring conitantly until creamy. Serve hot with the baked potatoea. English Ptat: Add one and one half tablespoon! of vinegar, one and one-half tableipoorut of itigar and two tablespoons of crushed fresh mint to the peai and juice from an, eleven-ounce can. Simmer gently (or ten minute!. I Apricot Topiaco: Scafd ona and one-fourth cupi of milk in a double boiler, add two tableipoona of min ute tapioca mixed with three table spoons of sugar, Remove from fire, add one-half of a beaten egg and the syrup from an eight-ounct can of apricots. Return to tha fire and cook until thick and creamy, stir ring; frequently. Then pour over th apricots, arranged In a lerving dish, and cool. To mtaiura one-half of an egg, beat the egg, meaaure the amount in tablespoons and then use half that numbjr Do You Feel Absolutely Sate? When you go to bod at night do you feel absolute ly safe? When you leave your home for a day do you feel absolutely .safe? Is your property safeguarded by a policy in a good, reliable insurance company Have you taken precautions against fire? If you have not now is the time to insure against that pos sible loss by fire. Insure Today We handle only the most reliable insurance and represent some of the most substantial insurance companies. See us today and let us write that nolicv that will give you the needed protection. Maupin State Bank (INCORPORATED) Callawav Funeral Chapel The Dalles, Ore. MLLEVAKS Dufur, Ore. We carry a complete line of Caskets JTTTTTTXXIIIXIXXIXXIIXlXIIirillXXXIIIXIIITIIXiriTXTlj CLASSIFIED COLUMN APPLES Newtown, Toitnth'ins, Ortleys, Baldwin. Good cookers, good keepers. Now in storage at Dufur, Oregon. Vanderpool Si Stouifbton. a-tr NOTICE TO CREDITORS The undersigned having been ap pointed by the county court of the State of Oregon for Wasco coun ty, Executor of the estate of D. C. Wigle, deceased, notice 1m hereby given to all persons having claims against aaid decea od to present thorn, verified a required by law, six months after thn firnt publica tion of this notice to mo at office of Gavin & Gavin, my attorneys, in The Dnlles, Oregon. James E. Taylor, Hxcrulor. Dated November 12, 1D2P. 4 .1 " :,KVKZK AUTHORITY" WEBSTER'S v NEW tKTERATIQNAL DICTIONARY TH2 MERRIAM WKB5TER Because Hundreds of Supreme Court Juilc concur In hthcitt ptnise of the work es their Authority. The Presidents of all lending Uni versities, College?, nnd Normiil Schools give their heady indorse ment All States that have ndopted a large c'lcrionnry n iMrtdard havo sdectcd Webster's New Ii.Um.T tlonaL The Schoolboolc of the Country adhere to the Mernam-Wcbstirr system of liacritlt al marks. The Government Printing Office at Washltig.or. uaks it as authority. WRITE f-r a UBinple pr of the Nrw Verdi, ipeclmcn of Rrgulnr snd India, 0. AC. Merriani 6orin. " nn;a, Mass. m' w..,,,4jA'M-.irttfavt-. a-j 1 I M Harvest Bread A Wasco County Product MADE BY Ufie Oregon Bakery Fresh Bread and Pastry Every Morning Order from your home merchant get the beat tixixixxixiiiixtuim mmmmm Wm.A. SHORT Dtntitt MAUPIN . . . OREGON 25 Cents buy the best and largest mel served In The Dalles, at JEFF'S place; Across the itreet from hi old htnud. Now at 410 East Second Street. WAPINITIA L O. O. F. Lodgn No. 208, Maupin, Oregon meet every Saturday night In I. 0. 0. F. hall. Visiting membert alwaya welcome. Willard Cunningham, Nl G. Everett Hasen, Secretary PERFECTION cFLOUR IT'S THE BEST Central Oregon Milling Co. Maupin, Oregon WhiteResteurant PRIVATE BOOTHS Where the text 85 cut meal is enul in The Dalits Next The DnH C. N. Sargent, Tprop.