; ISA KsKdba 19. Ifi Vcrth Yc:r UjCd C VOL V BBAV' "TON, ORKOON. FRID.W. NOVEMBER 18, 1917. ko,m; i ftCrCTnCli CAY AT ZXl tlECO KAYAl TRAININ3 GASP Sokj Fcr v K fmn of Wuhington County wiB act at m, that thii county may be one of two coun tin is the state to secure aoil surveys this yer,ia the opinion of NeaJ C Jamison, county agri cattarabst. as expressed ia this city Wednesday. . A ao9 survey is a much more eaaaaan njatter than nost people mime. It wiB mean a complete survey, rnjipping, analysis and cUuiftcatioa of all soils in the raur.tr. Soil maps will be pre . pared and a bulletin issued that will show the exact una am oamposition of all soils in all of tle vosying conditions of the different districts of the county. With the aid of such a. survey, the county agriculturalist csn readily give advice on any farm problem that may arise. He will have at his command ready and reliable information as to the soil conditions of every district in his county and will be able to brine the best knowledge of science to the aid of the farmer with the practical experience and thus he can render the most effective service with the least delay. But if Washington County is to be one of the first counties of the state to secure this advan tage, there must be no delay in asking for it . Every fanner and business or professional man who is interested in .seeing this ad XKW rtti.es for shippers HAMPER LOCAL BUILDERS Starch Factory and Standard Oil ' Plant llandk-anaed in Get ting Material Delivered. . New rules regarding the use of gondola cars are hampering local construction ana causing no small amount of trouble for Manager Griffith of the starch factory and Manager Johnson of the local Standard Oil plant These ears being useful for the transportation of coal and other war materials, their use for the transportation of sand, gravel, cement and other build ing materials has been restricted and shippers are experiencing difficulty in getting deliveries of this class of goods by rail. Sorrento dub Meeting. There will be a special meeting of the Sorrento Improvement Club at the home of J. D. Wilmot on Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock to prepare a budget for a spec ial road tax in District No. 22. All taxpayers are invited to at tend. W. H. BOYD, President Road District 26 Has Good Beads John Trachsel of Elmonica was a congenial visitor at The Times office Wednesday and added his name to the list of good boosters for this paper. Mr. Trachsel is supervisor of Road District 26 and has lived in this community for more than 27 years and is one of the most enthusiastic good roads boosters we have met He gets results, toot for when he came here it took five to six hours to make the trip to Fort land but now there is enough! rock road that the trip can be made easily in three hours. The district was practically all cov ered with timber then ; now it is fertile fields and gardens. While Mr. Trachsel is one of the foremost boosters for the Oreneo road, he is friendly to any improvement in the roads through this city and if the road through Beaverton had been pro jected to connect with Canyon road, he would have been well pleased to see it go through. If the decision of the State High way Commission is favorable to the Bertha-Baaverton - ReedviUe route, Mtj Trachsel will drive his ear over this way and enjoy the Pacific Highway with us. . Road District 26 has had a tea-mill special road tax for the past three years and has had several other heavy taxes for roads in the past few years and has two rock roads through the district completed with the ex ception of about a mile and a half. Vcirn Co. vantage accrue to this county should promptly write te Dean A. B. Cordley at Oregon Agricul tural College, Corvallis, Oregon, and urge Mat the soil survey be made in Washington County this year. . While the soil survey is by no means a panacea for all the ius which beast the fanner, it wilt prove of inestimable vaaie to all who seek to apply the principles of scientific farm management to their farm problems. At pres ent there is no practical basis on which to work. The county ag riculturalist must either depend largely upon guesswork and ex periments in making his recom mendations, or else take the time to make special analysis of every soil with which he has to deal. After the survey is made, the farmer who would know what to do for his crop would merely write his troubles and his loca tion to the county agriculturalist and the latter would merely turn to the soil survey, learn the kind of soil with which he had to deal. and make his recommendations by return mail. But as the soil survey is not made in a day, it is of the utmost importance that it be begun this year as other conditions in this county are such that the greatest use possible can be made of tne survey as soon as made. SORRENTO DISTRICT PLANS CO-OPERATIVE BUYING AffiUiation with State Grange Assures All Supplies at But Little Advance Over v Wholesale Prices. Not only is the Sorrento Im provement Club a society with a record of past achievement of which they are proud and have reason to be, but they are show ing signs of activity right now that Dromise to make the rest of the Tualatin valley awake if they keep up. .Elsewhere in this paper a notice appears for a meeting of the club to consider a bud ret for the special road tax meeting to be held a week from tomorrow. At that meet ing, which is to-be held Tuesday night, the members will make a plan for the special road im Drovement and the budget nec essary to get the desired im provement They will also consider an or ganization for co-operative buy ing on a plan which has already been put into operation at Sher made through the state grange and the cost of supplies to the members are reduced to about two per cent above the wholesale price of commodities. Ladies are Invited Monday Night T ojliaa ova Aortaa-H a 1 1 v invitMi to the meeting at Cady Hall, Beaverton. Monday night when a plan for better markets for the by-products of the farm will be considered. Several other such meetings have been held recently in different parts of the state and a very active part has been taken by the ladies and the re sults have been gratifying. ' ' Soil Tests Free. Anv farmers of Washington County who desire to know if their soil needs lime may have soil tests made without expense to themselves if they will write or phone to N. C. Jamison, Coun ty Agriculturalist at Hillsboro. Mr. Jamison will take samples of the soil and have a complete analysis made. This will many times be of great benefit to the farmers. Ha r Guard Dance Tomorrow Night Will Help Soldier Boya One of the objects of the Hon or Guard dance to be given in Beaverton tomorrow night, is to provide money for Christmas boxes and other relief for the boys at the front You will enjoy the party all the more if you realize that your pleasure is to be extended to those at the outposts of liberty. Inspection day at Hie treat naval terljr the Itntaw-Pacic expoaltioQ grounds. TImm bos nr being t ruined thoroughly, call I3SC-D rcu i::.::l r:.iETi::s to vote Notice is nereby given to the legal voters of School District No. 48 of Washington County, State of Oregon, that a School Meeting of said district will be held at High School on the 26 daya of November, 1917, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon to vote on the proposition of levying a special district tax. The total amount of money needed by the district during the fiscal year beginning on June 20, 1918, ' and ending on June 30, 1919, is estimated in the follow ing budget and includes the amounts' to be received from the county schooUundf state school fund, specianwatfut tax, and ail other monejgt of he district: BUDGET KTOAAfED EX PENDITURES - .,. . 1. Teachers' salaries ti.VO 2. Furniture - 205 3. Apparatus and supplies, such as maps, chalk, eras ers, stoves, curtains, etc. 50 4. Library books 26 Boys at Home Also Being Oared for by Y, M. 0. A. Oregon boys are in the army and navy. Oregon boys are in high schools. It has been no small task for the interstate executive committee of the Y. M. C. A. to give full attention to each group. This tatc knows well what is be ing done by the Y. M. C. A. for its soldier boys "wherever they are," but it perhaps does not re alize the things that are being planned by the Y. M. C. A. for "the 'boys at home," who are more or less patiently waiting and preparing to do their bit. The Older Boys' Conference, to be held at Eugene just following Thanksgiving, is one of three such conferences under the direc tion of the Interstate Y. M. C. A. Committee, which are to be held More the middle of December. The other two are scheduled for LaOrande, Oregon, and Twin Falls, Idaho, . r The conference last year at Corvallis registede over , three hundred. Leaders feel that with the important issues to come up this year, and the splendid co operation being given by other state organizations, the registra tion at Eugene will not fall below four hundred and may go to five hundred. Leaders from Southern Oregon and some Central Oregon counties are expected to play a large part in swelling the enroll ment this year. A. P. Patton, of Hillsboro, is conference leader for Washington county. Fergusons Now in Alaska. TheTimes has been favored by Mr. G. L. Thompson, Mrs. F. G. Donaldson and Mr. and Mrs. John Summers with extracts from letters received from the Ferguson family, former Beaver ton people now at the Kobuk river station beyond Shungnak, tlaska. We regret that these ere received to late for us to print in this issue, but assure our readers that they will be published next week. , r. 1 .-X training rampy fcn I'legfl, VM at tli :m tax Cs L. 1 5. Flags 1 6. Repairs of jchoolhouses, i outbuildingsfyr fences 100 , 7. improving reunas. 8. Playground equipment. 9. Transportation of pupils 10. Tuition of pupils 11. Janitor's wages -1 . ,. 540 12. Janitor's supplies - .- 50 13. Fuel '. 450 14. Light and jpower-125 15. - Water iVif 50 16. -Clerk's aslyiry 180 17. Postage. ltd stationery 15 18. For the payment of bonded" debt and interest, thereon, 4tMd under Sec tions 117, 144 to 148, and . 422 of the St tool Laws of ' Oregon, 1911 ' 1650 19. Miscellwenjus - - - 250 Total estimated amount of money to I expended for all purposesiduring the year .....". $8465 - ESTIMATED RECEIPTS From county school fund during the coming school year - $2,665 BID 0BOSS WAB FUND PAST DUB. . In the Red Cross, campaign in June, Washington county sub scribed to the Red Cross war fund $13,359.68. This was a fine trib ute and indication of our patriot ism. The acid test, however, is not what we say we will do, but what we actually do, and it-appears that there are a number of unpaid subscriptions in the coun ty of Washington. - AIL of the subscriptions to this fund were supposed to1 have been paid on or before the 1st of October. The State Campaign Chairman, Mr. Henry L. Corbett, of Port TO THE t . ' ' " ' ria Ml X : Plain tie Panama, Balboa park, (Of From state school fund dur ing the coming school year ,. 650 Cash now in hands of dis trict clerk Cosh now in hands of coun ty treasurer, belonging to the district Estimated amount to be re ceived from all other sour ces during the coming' school year 1,600 Total estimated receipts not including the money to be received from the tax which it is proposed to vote $4,815 RECAPITULATION ' Total estimated expenses -for the year- $8,465 Total estimated receipts not including the tax to be ' voted 4,915 Balance, amount to be raised by district tax.... $3,450 Dated this 14 day of Novem ber, 1917. S. H. DAVIS, Chairman. Attest: C. E, HEDGE, District Clerk. land, informs us that the national office in Washington is "pound ing me on the back every week for more funds, and I am becom ing embarrassed because so much money ia still uncollected out in the counties." All pledges which were due on or before Octobor 1 should be paid at this time to the county treasurer, ' Albert Anderson Has Son.' Dr. C. E. Mason reports the birth of an 11 'a pound boy to Mr. ana Mrs. Albert AnaeiBon, nt their home west of town on Thursday, November 16. Mrs. Mary Baldwin was the nurse in charge of the case. FLYERS Tvo mrim n BEAVERTOIJ FlO 0. V. HILL NOW LOCATED' WITH THE STIPE GARAGE . ' Acetylene Welding Plant Ha Been Installed for Welding Practically All Metals. 0. V. Hill, recently from Iowa, and a Chevrolet expert, is now with Elmer Stipe nt the Stine Garage and has Installed an ace tylene welding plant that will promptly and effectively weld cost iron, aluminum, bronie, brass and other metals not sub ject to welding by ordinary pro cesses. ' Mr. Hill formerly had a Chev rolet service station in Iowa and has had extensive experience on practically all makes of cars. His experience, the up-to-date plant and the reputation which the Stipe Garage has always enjoyed for prompt and courteous service will combine to be of immense service to Beaverton people and the travelling public in general. BOY SCOUTS MOW HA VI , ROOM W OADY BLDO Library and Supplies to be Pro vided-New Members Added . ' Additional Bond Sel. During the meeting of Nov, 9, Levi Arnold passed tho Tender foot Scout test and Was accepted a member lie will receive his certificate in about three weeks. The - report on the cam paign to sell Liberty Bonds uliowcd that Oeo. Thompson sold 4100 worth of bonds more thsn last reported, bringing the total up to WW). : " ' . - 1 ,' ' Mr. K. W. Csdy, member of the local troop committee, has , very kindly let the boy scouts have the room over the stairs in the Cady Building. The rent .will b to keep the hall clean, ( - The Scouts have a stove and a globe in place in the room now, lOo having been given ' for the globe. A dollar waa also appropri ated to buy lumber for a table. A bookcase and some chairs are due to come yet, Ones a month money, books and magazinea will be contributed to the Hoout Library, the money will go to get new books and mitgnsincs for tile library and for supplies. Onee a week money will be given to the general working fund. . Mention was made of the Scouts intention to put up street signs. It was suggested that they do this in cooperation with the town council, ' The members of the local troop committeo are Dr. P. M, Carst ons, Doy Gray and F. W. Cady. ST. CECILIA PARISH NOW UNDER FATHER LeMILLER Father O'Flynn Geta Pastorate In Portland and Salem Man Takes Vp Work Here. Father L. A. LeMiller arrived in Beaverton Saturday to take up his work In charg i of the St. Cecilia parish, succeeding Father O Flynn who takes cinrne of a parish in Portland. Father Le Miller comes here from Salem. Having formerly ha1 charge of a parish at Verbooa-t, he has many friends here and is by no means a strangor to hit parish- oners. He is starting his work with an energy and consecration that sneaks well for the future of St. Cecilia parish, while the well known cooperation of the members of the parish insures an enthusiastic support of his en deavors. Friends of Father O'Flynn will lie glad to know that he is now parish priest for St, Charles Church in East Portland where he has an excellent parish and an appointment that is a deserved recognition of his excellent work here, . , Mrs. Ha! tie Bruce was visiting among some of her Eastern Star friends on Thursday of this week. STROUD A TVCKBR IS STYLi OF NEW RBALTY Fliul Former Lumber Man WS Ma Beaverton'a PofHilar Finn-. . Insurance Te Be Added. R. L. Tucker, former hmmar dealer of this city, who recently returned home after ah absence of several years in Idaho mi Utah, has purchased an interest in the real estate business of Stroud 4 Co. and the firm will henceforth be Stroud It Tucker. The new firm will add an fav w ranee departmant.and enlerft its field of activity. In this too wide business experience of Mr, Tucker will be of inestimable val ue, and added to the enthusiasm, courtesy and enterprise of J. Frank Stroud, the combination should mean much for the future of Beaverton and vicinity. nuraom rous tart Bl MOVBD, SAYS CTTT Wow Sidewalks la Vie and OU Iresores Are Ordered te Be lemoved. A speeial meeting of the town eouneil was held in town hall at T:0 P, M. Wednesday. This meeting wss called espe cially to take steps toward open ing up a county road through the Muesaigl property and others. When this is opened it will give a through county road to HUlabero on the north side at the railway. A committee was appointed to at oure it possible, by donation, right-of-way thraart. mam pttisa and if it can not be stewed by donstien, then condemnation I csedi wilt be Instituted. Mr. Welter waa appointed sad given full authority to tear dk-wa old fences snd move ' aidewsJja north to property line all aloag Hamilton street, . ' The recorded was Instructed t notify Seholls Telephone Co. to move their poles to north side of Hamilton street, " The. City Attorney. wss called upon to give explicit directions . how far the town proceed to build now sidewalks and make a lien on adjacent property. Preperty owners who refuse to build will have it built for them and pay it us s lion sgajnst their property. C. K. HKDOK, ..." :, ,' . '. , Recorder. Conversion of Liberty Bonds. ; "Secretary of the Treasury Mc Adoo has announced that thsr will be issued by the Treasury De partment in the near future a cir enlar suiting forth the manner in. which Liberty Ia)i bonds of tha first issue may be converted into Liberty Losn bonus of the seoonvl issue, , , The conversion will require tho adjustment of interest sod tho Treasury Department has devioea i method whereby this, in a lara-s measure, may he made without t'ue actual payment of any cash by tho holder of the bond to the Govern ment or vice verm. ' It is well to remember that tho dste of tli second issue of Liberty Loan bonus is November 19, anil that no conversions can be seem- pluhed prior to that date. Op portunity, however, will be given to holders of the first Loan bonds to deposit their b ' i for conversion in advance of t. I actual date of issue of tha etc. 1 0. t T WJs : Local Naval Recrtut!. I 8 j received telegraphic ir ' that Navy Recruiting h. t Pacific Division shall I 2000 firemen by DeeV and raising the age of s teamen from 25 to 30 r , ing age limits 1$ t- 31. These !.. I I J I those vessels of t i ' merchant 1-1 r by tie ry i