Image provided by: Beaverton Library Foundation; Beaverton, OR
About Beaverton times. (Beaverton, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1918)
THE BEAVEBTON TIMES 1 jgamumfnaaBmaaMMM 1 m m GETTING MONEY It's no easy job, this business of landing a dollar. It takes work, brains, muscle and energy, Onee you got it, it's yours and you have a right to do as you please with it, of course. This bank has no desire to advise you how to spend vour money at least not unless you ask for it. Our only mission is to care for your dollars if deposited at " our bank. Thev are subject to your check whenever wanted, but in the meantime they are SAFE. We can assure you of that fact. We use every precaution to safeguard our depositors' funds. DON'T FORGET your TAXES! We will pay them for you if you wish. OFFICERS: F. W. Livermore, President :B. K. Denny, Vice-Pres. Doy Gray, Cashier; Lillian Evans, Assistant Cashier. AUDITING BOARD J. T. Williams, J. A. Mott, S. K. Nelson and M. Welter BANK BEAVERTON Deavertonuregoio m DONT TELL ALL YOU KNOW TO PEOPLE YOU DONT KNOW Local and Personal News FOR SALE Four acres on the Oregon Electric, one block from Elmonica station, in pasture, garden, bearing orchard and berries of different varieties; 5-room house, barn, outhouses, etc A bar gain. Ernest Keehn, owner, Beaverton, Oregon, Route 2. 10-12 FACE the FACTS LET us faoe the facts. The war situation to critical. .. Unless the Allies fight as they never yet have fought, defeat threatens. Hungry men cannot fight at fneir best; nor hungry nations. France, England, and Italy are going hungry unless we feed them. Wheat Savings They must have wheat It la the best food to fight on. It i8 the easiest to ship.. We alone can spare it to them. By saving just a little less than a quarter of what we ate last year we can support those who are fighting our battles. And we can do it without stinting ourselves. We have only to substitute another food just as good. The Corn of Plenty Corn is that food. There'B a surplus of it. Providence has been generous in the hour of our need. It has given us corn in such bounty as was never known before. Tons pf corn. Train loads of corn. Five hundred million bushels over and above our regular needs. All we have to do is to learn to appreciate it. Was ever patriotic duty made to easy? And so clear? America' Own Food Corn I It is the true American food. The Indians, hardiest of races, lived on it. Our forefathers adopted the diet and conquered a continent. For a great section of our country it has blong een the staff of life. How well the South , fought on it, history tells. Now it can help America win a world war. Learn Something Corn! It isn't one food. It's a dozen. It's a cereal. It's a vegetable. It's a bread. It's a dessert. It's nutritious; more food value in it, dollar for dollar, than meat or eggs or mast other vegetables. It's good to eat; how good you don't know until vou've had corn-bread properly cooked. Best of all, it's plentiful and it's patriotic. Corn' Infinite Variety How much do you know about corn? About how good it iB? About the many delicious ways of cooking it? And what you miss by not knowing more about it? Here are a few of its uses: There are at least fifty ways to use corn meal to make good dishes for dinner, supper, lunch or break fast. Here are some suggestions: DESSERTS Corn-meal molasses cake. Apple corn bread. Dumplings. Gineerbread. Fruit gems. HOT BREADS Boston brown bread. Hoecake. Muffins. ' Biscuits. Griddle cakes. Waffles, i HEARTY DISHES Corn-meal croquettes. Corn-meal fish balls. Meat and corn-meal dumplings. Italian polenta. Tamales. The recipes are in Farmers' Bulletin 665, "Corn Meal as a Food and Ways of Using It," free from the Department of Agriculture. SCHOOL TO BECOME AU A ILLIARY LOCA L RED CROSS Father Le Miller Receives Con sent of High Church Official, Adds His Approval and School is 100 per Cent . Mrs. Herbert Taylor left Tues day morning for a visit at her old home in Minnesota. Mr. Tay I07 is the efficient foreman at the Downing ranch. GASOLINE ENGINE 2 H.P. complete magneto, bulldozer pump, direct connect., ready for ' irrigating. A bargain at $75.00. A. H .SPEANER store. 11 living in Sorrento, to Hillsboro Monday. M. O'Connell, former resident, who moved to Portland last year was here Sunday. He is moving back to Beaverton and will oc cupy the Carlson property nea. the Congregational church. I have a few choice young lay ing Plymouth Rock hens for The Beaverton Livery Stable truck took the household goods of P. B. Snyder, who has been sale. C. E. Hedge. Mr. and Mrs. Petch viaited over Sunday with relatives in McMinnville, returning Monday evening. Mrs. G. L. Newman who has been ill for the past two months, is still quite low and does not gain strength rapidly. qmararynr.r,p THE BEAVERTON TIMES We will serve Saturday, March 1 6 Our facilities for serving are unexcelled and a plentiful supply of Ithe freshest and best in all flavors will be on hand. Brick or bulk ,ice cream m ay be had to t ake home or for basket lunches, or we (will serve at any time you may desire, either with or without ice cream or soft drinks, Light Lunches at Right Prices Our goods are fresh and wholesome. We wil serve egg sandwiches from eggs that are really fresh. All our egg drinks are made with eggs direct from the nest. No stale or storage eggs used here. CIGARS AND CONFECTIONS ALWAYS THE BEST BEAVERTON BAKERY Exciting. Johnny was lit the concert and he was badly borett His mother was un easy, for Johnny was disturbing oth ers, but when a girl began to sing "The Minstrel Boy" arid reached the line "His father's sword )ie girded on," Jobnoy was ailve with excitement. "You like this, Johnny?" said his mother. "It is-" "Be quiet, mother, do," said Johnny impatiently. I want to see what happens to him when his father gets home." GET YOUR SHOES and har ness repaired at S. Diebele's shoe shop across from the livery sta ble. Shop open every day for the spring season. 10-18 Mr. and Mrs. L. Hammell and family of Katama were transact- in business in Beaverton Satur day. Mr. Hammell is one of the live farmers of that section and we expect him back again Sat urday to the opening of the starch factory. Charles Anderson, a former employee and long-time friend of Otto Erickson, is quite low with paralysis at St. Vincent's hos pital in Portland and Mr. Erick son has spent much time with him the past week. His condition is quite serious. St Cecelia's school will organ ize a Junior Red Cross formally on this afternoon, although the school is already actually 100 per cent Red Cross. As a part of the exercises of the day, the flag will be floated ceremonially from the flag staff. Definite action along this line was taken some weeks ago when Father Le Miller received from the Archbishop of Baltimore the communication published below and at once gave his approval to the plan as follows : In conformity with the follow ing appeal and because of our desire to be useful in this time of crisis to our Government, as head and Director of the Catholic Parochial school, I hereby give my full consent to having every child and pupil of the school to be made a Junior member of the Red Cross, in the sense as meant by the President and voiced by theHighest Church Authority in the United States. Respectfully, L. A. LeMiller, Pastor, Beaver ton Parish and Director St. Ce celia's Parish School. The Red Cross in the Schools. January 21, 1918, To the Teachers and Pupils of our Pa rochial Schools : The President of our beloved country, who is also President of the Red Cross, has issued a call for all schools of whatever kind to become auxil j liaries of the Red Cross and each 'pupil in each school a Junior Member of the Red Cross. His desire i s not only to add the ef forts of all the children to the work of the Red Cross in sustain ing the fighting forces of the na tion, but to teach by practice to the children those lessons of un selfish love and service which must be a part of the education of every child if this republic is to endure as a Christian nation. and remain the haven of Free dom. In this time of peril our coun try needs the services of the children as well as of the adults and in t he days to come she will need still more the clear heads, the honest hearts and strong and steady hands of men and women who today are school children. Therefore I ask, and urge, that each of you make full response to the call of our President, and that each school become a Red Cross Auxiliary, thus making ev ery pupil a Junior Member. It is a privilege, no less than a duty, for the children to help bear the burden of the momentous hours of America's trial, and in the days of her gratitude for final victory, to rejoice that they have helped to preserve her as the home of Liberty. Faithfully yours in Christ, J. Card. Gibbons, Archbishop of Baltimore. - The Beaverton Honor Guard Girls Mrs. Bertha Pennington, Bea verton's popular primary teach er, has been elected to a position in Seattle for next year. There are several new adver tisements in The Times this is sue. They are worth-while of ferings and it will pay to take advantage of them. it -'"7 tui 3 izi an 3-lb. Tin ROYAL CLUB Steel-Cut COFFEE, tegular $1.10 value, and 35-eent bottle of Royal Club Vanilla or Lemon flavoring at this store for f 1.10 Closing Out Shoes at Special Prices You cannot fall to be pleased with the values we are giving in shoes. The present high wholesale cost of , shoes renders lt inadvisable for us to stock up again. While we have your size we offer you a big saving. See our Showing of RUSSELL & GILBERT'S line of CHOICE CANDIES. The Finesfin Town. BRAUER'S Announce a F1M Dinner will be served between the hours of 5:30 and 7:30. Program at 8:00 MARCH 16th Dinner tickets 50c, children 25c, which entitles you to free admission to program Sale of aprons and fancy work made by Honor Guard or do nated by friends. GRANGE HALL Blasting powder, caps and fuse for sale in any quantity. A. A. PIKE, Scholia 'phone. Route 4 Beaverton, Oregon. 2tf WANTED Will pay highest cash price for your chickens and is. W. G. Hagar, Route 4, Box 20, Phone S-line-tL Beaver ton, Oregon. .. 6tf. We now have. a suimlv nf land Slaster at the Beaverton ware ouse, ready for dstrihution to the farmers. C. B. Buchanan ft Co, 7 FRED A. EVEREST At present Deputy Recorder. Candidate for Republican . Nomination for Recorder of Conveyances Primary Election, May 17, 1918. (Paid Advertisement), You are cordially invited to attend a social dance given by the Huber Commercial Club in the Huber Club House on Satur day evening, March 28. Music will be furnished by Covell's 8- piece orchestra ana reiresn- ments will be served as usual. F. L. Ward of the bakery ser vice of the Portland Flouring Mills was out Saturday looking over the starch factory. Plumbing and Heating Work that pleases and we furnish estimates cheerfully. Wheth er it be complete heating, ventilating and plumbing instal lation for a modern building or merely a pipe that is clogged, the service we render will please you while our moderate charges leave the smile that won't come off. Superior Service is Our Motto. BEAVERTON PLUMBING CO. Elmer Stipe, Manager. Second Hand Sale. I have left with me for sale a lot of household goods consisting of beds, mattresses, dressers,! range, washing machine, wring-1 er, kitchen utensils, and numer ous other articles too numerous to mention. Most of these goods were bought new last fall and are now offered at a bargain. C. E. HEDGE. HOLLY ISO good Holly at half price ; sizes 2 to 5 feet at 50 cts. to ?2. Thinning time is here. Act quick. F. A. Weygandt, IVa miles west of Beaverton, Route 4. ,. 10-12 J. Stroud, agent for C. B. Buchanan & Co., announces that the car of land plaster for dis tribution n Beaverton farmers has arrived end is now at the warehouse. We Print Butter Wrappers There is one place in ton where you can get '"Green Trading Stamp , ;. And that's AT SPEAKER'S