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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1930)
thursday, Juris 12, ISM. THE MAtmN tIMfiS Some Eye Otjeners: Save the Labels for Valuable Premiums There' Cream In Every Drop r . Look Them Over 50-poound sack Woodcock Flour $1.59 Good grade Tomatoes, per case $3.00 4 pounds fine Raisins at this time 27c Iodized Salt, best on" the market, can :...9c Golden West Salad Oil, per gallon ....$1.40 Large Ranch Dill Pickles, per gallon 59c With each purchase of Palraolive toilet Soap at 25 cents for three cakes, we give an extra cke free. r f Maupin's Leading Grocery O. P. Resh & Co. Everything For the Table Maupin, Oregon 1D1 TT About JL tta Upa Town Tum-A-Lum Tickler Published in the merests of the people of Maupin and vicinity It THE TUM-A-LUM LUMBER CCPfaon, M.U 71 ! Personalities 1 Mike Kimsry has been spending a few days at The Dallci on business. V Mm. W, H. Staats U at home again after a visit with relative at Portland. Lester McOrkle hi moved to hit fathcr'a ranch and will farm aame hereafter. Huntel Hollis wj In town from the high spots after provisions on Monday. John Powell and Dick Olmstead have gone to the mountains for the purpose of cutting cedar fence posts. Mike VanLaanen, wife and little . daughter, after a it for four months, left for their home in Sulem Tuesday morning. Rev. Everett Hasen and family left for Mill creek Tuesday. The alder peoplo wiH spend "me time in the cherry orchards. Jmes Baxter came up from Kent yesterday. lie had been there a couple of weeks setting up a rock crusher for the county. The Times force with Mike Van Lannen, Laco Crecnc and. Albert St. pennis, caught tho limit of trout at Frieda last Sunday. Willis Roberts, Jr., was down from the Fitzpntrick ranch Tues day. Willis will pack for ho Fltzpatricks this tcason. HolHster (Red) McCoy, who hw been at Chcrryville for the past few w(eks, returned for a visit with home folks this afternoon. ' Jim Baxter and R. H. DcCamp left for Seattle this morning. They go there for both pleasure and busi ness, and will be gone about 10 days. Estel Stovall has concluded his studies at 0. S. C. for the summer and is again at work in the Maupin drug store. He came home, last Friday. The town is rather quiet this week, owing to the absence of many of the younger element, they being attendants at thu summer tchool at Corvallis AI. Gillis, secertary of the Wasco County Fair association and a prominent rancher of the Wamic section, was a caller at this print shop Saturday Inst. Lawrence Palmer, a long-time friend of AI Hartman, Jiving at Ben ton City, Washington, accompanied Mr. Hartmnn to Maupin on the mail wagon this morning. W. Wray Lawrence, the new county agent, was a welcome caller at The Times office last Saturday, he being in Maupin on budncss connected with his office. Wiley Harris has been In Portland several weeks and returned to Mau pin on Tuesday. He has been tak ing care of his daughter, who has been ill for ceveral years. o John Fitzpatrick was down, from Nena today. Ho has completed (hearing and will now herd 1 his flocks in the hills of the Deschutes until time to take them to the for est reserve. Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Short went to Madras I ant Saturday, the doctor going for the purpose of attending to his dental patients. Mrs. Short returned t0 Maupin Sunday. o Tom Fwctt made a turn-around trip to Tho Dalles Tuesday,' going down the second time after a truck load of gasoline for the Shell com pany. II is wife accompanied him. o Mrs. Harold Pingrec, sifter of Mrs. Krnest Ferguson, whose hus band is one of the road crew now living in Maupin. came over from I he Uallcs yesterday and spent a day or so with her t istcr. She will leave for her home in Los Angeles soon. County Officer Hera- County Attorney Francis V. Gallo way, As essor Will L. Doud and County Agent W, Wray Lawrence were in Maupin a short time last Saturday, being on their way to Shaniko to attend a meeting of non tillable land owners .held there that day Will Start Suit Lin- A. L. Hartman will begin a twice-a-day stage line between The Dalles and Maupin on July first Mr. Hartman will arrange bis schedule ao as to connect with the Bend stage at Maupin in the morning and with the stage lines entering The Dalles at that place in the afternoon. Jlis stage will be equipped to carry pack age jxpre. Mr. Hiitman has been most aocommodtinc, during the time he has been cv-jing mail between Maupin and The Dalles, and should receive a good patronage from our people in the matter of his stage line. His schedule will appear In this paper later. As !.o most nutni'ons hay in the world is of little or no value if the livestock do not liks it and will not cat it freely, palatil'lily is an inv p?r'ant factor to b? considered in providing hay for the livestock. FARM REMINER3 Dairying authorities everywhere recognise Oregon as being far In the lead of other states in the control of the contagious abortion disease. The use of hot water and steriliz ing equipment, a clean barn and milk house and quick water cooling of milk are three important steps. toward cleaner, better quality, and therefore higher priced dairy pro ducts, sav; the Oregon Extension service. Cost-of -production investigations carried on by the Oregon Experi ment station show that horse labor makes up from 6 to 15 per cent of the cost of farm products. Garden aquariums have become the fad among wives of Maupin. Several housewives have totalled concrete bowls in then flower gar dens and have Dainted water lilli-s am! other water plants therein. With the VfcHure is growing aquatic creatures such as gold fish, tadpoles, mud cats, beetles, water dog, mos quito lame and other things indi genous to water.'. It may be the wives have installed the gold ' firh for some ulterior purpose, for in ttance. insisting their husbands re main at home at timv, to feed such fish when the wives' desire a time away from their better halves, and insisting that the gold fish must be fed and looked after. June is the month of roses, also of weddings as well as a month when love's young dream runs ram pant. 'Tis then that lip meets lio. sigb attuned to sigh" heart beata with heart and the breath of !ove is as exotic as a zephyr blown from t rose. Gee Whiz! how that breath must of (end when one of the lovinrj one has eaten butter toned with leeks or had enjoyed a meal of young onjons, Halitosis is sweet by comparison. Poets have raved over the wind; sailors invoke charms to cause the wind to blow and fill the sails; those visiting in the tropics welcome a wind as a cooling messure and the Hollanders grind their grain with its power. The Eastern Oregon country has wind to spare. Day may break with all the attributes of a pleasant day but with the rising of the sun come,; a wind that blows a gale from the north, then switches around to the south and then changes its mind and blows from the other two points of the compass. It is the upriver wind that raises cane with fihermcn. When that wind blows it is impossible to keep a fly in the water and the fwh won't bite then anyhow. x . Ia it parental teaching or influ ence that causes some children to act like heathens? We have noticed the difference in little ones and sometimes carry the idea that euch are allowed to pick up knowledge how and where they can. Yester day a couple of little ones were play ing on the walk, using sand and stones as playthings, A man ap proached and the little girl arose with the remark: "I will frow this wock at you." And she meant it, although (he had not been distrub- cd in her play by the passer-by. As children are taught in the home so will they deport themselves when from under parents' eyes. Vol. 1 Maupin, Oregon, June 5, 1930 Number 41 Editorial They have named the new planet Pluto; we suppose it in inhab ited by Plutocrat. O. F. RENICK, editor. This ia the merry month of May but next month is the marry month of June. Where do you sleep? We know that ia rather a personal question but with hot weather com ing on don't you think it would be much nicer to have a cool, screen-ed-in sleeping porch to spend the night in than a hot stuffy room? Once again we would like to held you plan a lattice fence, lawn furniture, or ' window loxes for the beauti f. cation of your home. "Swat the Fly" or better ftili. put op Turn A-Lura screens and keep them outside away from the family. The new. athletic field at the school grounds has been level ed and will be seeded to grass. "Do you want gas?" asked Doe Short aa he puU Fischer in the chair. "Yes, about five gal lons," replied Verne, 'and take a look at the oil." Another car of that excellent cement we sell ia in our warehouse. Shattuck says to ,'oan a gun to a person who leads an aimless existence. u 9 S V s C M -O c cd o S o 0 z Jjjj d n, S 5 .2 u 3 Ml S kit A -as I a 2 0 9. w .c: r e " ' ---So Tteporto show that Oregon leads the entire country in the number of cowg in cow testing associations. The practice of a'oving hay to renmin in the field f t i period of several weeks whue awaiting a bslfr is not conducKi to the pr duction of good quality hay. If the hay is to be baled from the field and a baler is not available at the time, it is usually best to stack the hay. Ford Offers New De Luxe Sedan Remember we have Antivenin, the sure antidote for snake bite at the Maupin Drug Store. Can be rent ed for special occasions. OREGON NEWS NOTES Bids ipened for grading and sur facing Kthalem highway three miles cast from Jewell. West Linn Bids opened for con struction of modern sewer system here at estimated cost of $16,000. The Dalles C. G. Hedge re ceived contract for construction of Eddins Motor company building on corner of Third and Court street. Lebanon Contract awarded to Hauser Construction company, for clearing, grading, grubbing and bridging first tection of Linn coun ty extension of Oregon Electric railway, east of here. ye4MAW-y.v.--Av-;- ,.....,;.-., -V-.$ v.-.v.v.;..;.:..',:.; T fP -ft a LdPl . r - Ford De Luxe Sedan THE De Luxe Sedan, recently added to the Ford line, la designed for those who desire distinctiveness and unususl comfort In an automobile. Ths Interior is In vltlng and roomy with wide doors to both compsrt-'-ments. Absence of rear quarter windows gives the eat a striking Individuality and affords privacy to ths ou cupants. Interior trimmings and appointments are luxurious Upholstery la either In brown mohair or a deep tan Bed ford cord patterned after that used hi high-priced cars. Other refinements Inclnde arm rests for the rear seat, mahogany finished garnish mouldings on the windows and beneath the windshield, flexible robe rail and hard ware In an attractive pattern. The front seat Is adjustable within a range of four Inches to suit the convenience and comfort of the driver. It la moved qulckty and easily by a small, Inconspicuous handle In the front center of the seat Just above the floor. The De Luxe Sedan, like other Ford body types, can be obtained In any one of seysrat color combinations. i. ,, , -y .... ' I "SUPREME AUTHORITY """j WEBSTER'S 1 NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY -THE MERRIAM WEBSTER Because Hundred of Supreme Court Judges coneur In nighest praise of the work s their Authority. The Presidents of all leading Unl vsrsities, Colleges, and Normal Sohools give their hearty indorse ment. ( All States that have adopted a lnrgc dictionary as standard have selected Webster's New Interna tional. . . The Schoolbooks of the Country adhere to the Metriam-Webstet system of diacritical marks. - ' The Government Printing Office at Washington uses it as authority. U W). tprclmen of Regular tnd India r.pen, FREE. G.&C. Mirrlam Co., Spring- Mhos. tKSVLATINO CAKE OAK 11 ' " ,: MAY 22 I L "y'J JSEPT.30 I iV t V I rrvM unrr yr I . rovms Tmtra '1 m at. Psad rr-i w at 4.aH mw I i A Tarn atn.7 at. t w mjm osctm wm I A i 111 Go East otb" the Colssmbla 1 f lii'J Rlwer Srenle Rontc oh either I j If,. If the Empire Batlderor the lYortli II Pill ' Jl CMrt United. . . I I I II lHj!!lljji iilj . .; ftMDtmtUWrmm ; I E. W. GRIFFIN, Ageat, Maapia Or. IrpL L s DAVI3, TrT ?tp' A,t' J Fresh Every Day Maupin Home Town Bread Cakes, Cookies, Pastries -X- Ask Your Dealer La Grande Fountain and dairy lunch opened at Union Pacific stage depot. . Maupin 5hoe Shop MAUPIN, OREGON Shoe Repairing Well Done. - Bring in the old Shoes E. A. CYR, Poprietor. Your Watch Haywire? If it is not dointr its work bring it to The Times office and Mr. Setnmes will send it to GUY A POUND oaauuiaeturing Jeweler tui Watchmaker SuocmMur w U. Lindquist 'THE DALLAS - - OREGON CRANDALL Undertaking Co. Tha Dalles, Oragas. PKena 35-J LADY ASSITANTS huh. Maupin Mr. and Mrs. Charles Oofoot Wapinitia Tygh Valley- Roy Ward W. B. Slo.a A QUIET SERVICE