Image provided by: Beaverton Library Foundation; Beaverton, OR
About Beaverton times. (Beaverton, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 11, 1917)
3SH STAMPS lVt r uuno ovnncoATO HAiireoATC California Invites Yon- "Jon &fMhaG. MORRJSON V W ksW IM-ITO TMa..JvC- BoubJe S& H Green Tradbg.SUmps given if this ad i is presented Jit time.pt .purchase b.h i-ii-i7 .PORTLAND, OREGON 4 15"'.-.. , i X Don't 'freeze.' around & atove modern" bui'div with 13-inch brick wa'.ls,.. st&amatoi, b&i-aad cold water. Up - to- dato stores aad office! i Sanitary Best Display Lower Your Customers wm rpprectaw u-esa advantages - - EARL E. FISHER' BEAVERTON.OR. DR. EDMUND MYERS, Physioian aud Surgeon Bemverton Hour: Until neon and evenings Telephone 15-15 Portland Hours-.. 2:00 to 4:00 P. M, Telephone MarshaH 1900 835-6.7 Morgan Building OTTO ERICKSON . ' Authorized Ford Agent Service Station. Gasoline, . Gils, Tires, , Tubes, and a Full Line of Abcessories Ladies' Rest Room Tbrfee strong .reasons urge you ta1 buy -the Fori-car: ' Firstr because of its record of satisfactory service to more than" fifteen hundred thousand owners; Second, "because of the reliability of the Company which makes it; Third, because of its largs xadiator and enclo3ed fan, streamline hoed, crown fenders front: and rear, black finish, nickel trimmings, it is most attractive in appearance.- To these must be added its-:wonderful. economy ; in operation and maintenance about two cents a mile; likewise the fact that by reason of its -simplicity in construction anyone can operate and care for it. Nine thousand Ford agents, make Ford service as universal as the car.. Touring Car $360; Runabout $345; Coupelet $505; Town Car $595-f. o. b. Detroit IN STAN I ACTION SURPRISES MANY HERE This grocer's -stary surprises local people: "I had bad stomach trouble. All food seemed to sour and form gas. Was ' always constipated. Nothing helped until I tried buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed -fn Adler-i-ka. ONE SPOONFUL astonished me with it's INSTANT action." Because Adier-i-ka flushes the ENT1KE alimentary tract it relieves ANY.'CASE constipa tion, sour stomach or gas and prevents appendicitis. It has QUICKEST ac tion of anything we ever sold. L. RJ .an,- druggist,. $ x s KEEP WARM!' this-Winter. . Move into a j Insuiaaee Haasonable Rent $1C0 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one- dreaded disease that science ha been able to cure In- all its stages, nd that is-catarrh. , Catarrh being greatly influenced by constitutional conditions requires constitutional treatment,. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System thereby -destroying the foundation of IhviHaease, giving the patient strength by building op the constitution and assisting na ture in doing its work. The proprie tors have so much faith in the curative powers of -Hall's Catarrh Cure that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address: P. J. CHENEY CO., Toledo, Otoe. . Said by all Druggists,. -75s. Na,. 189,523 "Tomorrow at Sunrise!" " The words rang in his ears and echoed from the four walls of his prison. All through the long night he sat at the barred window and watched : the little stars glide i into view, only to pass from his J line of vision as the night were on. r Once-he had 'been free under those stars, . and ' no man had been the roaster of his destiny; btit now his was the fate-of those that had gone before.' Night after night,' through the drenching rain and the numbing chill of the whirlings snow, he had fought back the -sleep which nature forced uponhim.- Then he slept An officer passing unchallenged in the night, and a sentry asleep at his post was all; bet it was a disgrace to sleep at one's post, and to be caught by an officer 'was death. With the first gray light of the dawning day the guard- passing down the corridorof the trenches paused by the dugout with its barred door and called-? loudly, "No. 18S,523," and the prisoner stepped into line with bowed head, mid the clinking of ankle chains and the boom, of , the sun rise gun ,' Cold, gray, and silent. dawned the new day. Twelve men stood side by side with their faces to ward the - nsi3 sun. Eleven were spies and the twelfthwore the uniform of .his country. ; Faemg the firirg sauad. he saluted -as. the flae. unfurled to the wind.. A tear slipped down one lurrowed cheek and mingled with the miry slush -at his- feet He was back in the vineyards of Franee living again the--happy aays oi-peace. Then he saluted as the officer in charge raised his word, and stood very straight. lwo mounds there were, 'Some Where" oa. the front. One was large,, and the other was small with a white skh-ovor ifef On the rough surface was the simple inscription, No. 189,523. Gasoline Tax. . Aside from the unfairness nf attempting to raise road reve nues from taxing-gasoime, which is not the instrumentality nf rnnH destruction, there are constitu i come ami enjoy, a few L weeks of her glorious sunshine. The quick and com fortable way is via Portland "The City of Roses" and the famous SHASTA ROUTE Three- daily - trains leaving Portland 'at 8:20 A.M. 350 P. M. &00-P;lM. to- Sam Francisco (cfcjTiine- and a Sae-Line Ybur'choiceof stand ard tourist sleeping- cars. Dining cars'on all trains- Ask local agent or write for immigration John M.' Scott, Geneeal Passenger Af rat,: Portland, Qrtv. SflUIBEBfttaO' f In many states there are ait and gasoline r inspection fees, which have' been sustained by the courts only when the receipts -from said fees approximately cover the actual cost of inspec- tional objections. .