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About Beaverton times. (Beaverton, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1920)
V FAITW THE BKATBKW TIMM FRIDAY, HAY 28, 1W0) S:nser Excursbr lta BEACH id G0UOTA5I ' RESORTS Commencing SATURDAY, MAY 29th ' Season and Week End Tickets Go Where the Ocean Roars or ' ' ' Up in the Mmmtans where the Air is Pore and die Scenery Inspires Fares on Application For particulars inquire of Local Agent Southern Pacific Lines John 11. Scott General Passenger Agent Dr. C E. Mason Phone Cslls Answered Day and Night EAVERTON OREGON FRED JENSEN ATTORNEY AT LAW Cady BniUuc Boon 8.-O0 to 10:10 A. 11. Dally Portland Office: 720 Board of Trade. Scholia Beevartaa . W.E.PEGG UNBEBTAKEB AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR Oath, answered day or night Prompt Bevvies ttaTDTON BISHOP' BROS. Fer Quality Dry CeewiaCaocerisi, Men's Faruitbings No. 12. Bopart f tin GoatttUon of the BANE OF BEAVERTON At Beaver tea, is the State of Oregon, at the- doae af snaiaoai HAY 4, m. Loans and discounts J 279. 3 12. 42 Bonds and warrants 31,072.10 Furniture and futures . 2,500.00 Other real estate owned ., 1,500.00 Due from banks (not re serve banks 6,661.98 Due from approved re serve banks 72,863.64 Checks and other cash items 4,897-62 Cash on hand ...1 21,321.08 Total $419,108.74 liabilities Capital stock paid in $ 10,000.00 Surplus fund 10,000.00 Undivided profits, less ex penses and taxes paid .... 2,269.80 Individual deposits subject to check 223,526.05 t Demand certificates of de posit 10,298.62 Time and Savings De posits 163,014.27 Total $419,108.74 State of Oregon, County of Wash ington ss. I, Doy Gray, cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. DOY GRAY, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me tb:s 5th day of March, 1920. F. W. CADY, , Notary Public. My commission expires June 22, 1020. Correct Attest: F. W. LIVEBMORE, B.-K. DENNEY, ; Directors. Rogers Auto Transfer 271 Taylor Street Daily trips to Beaverton, Hilbboro and Forest Grove PhotMM: Mua676S, A3110. Res. B14S4 G rag Hiiku I trng Dittos Moving Beavertan office at Stipe's Garage THE BEAVERTON TIMfc , Beaverton, Oregon. A Weekly Newspaper, issued Fridays. R. H. Jonas. Editor sad Pnbliahar altered at the Boaverton (Oregon) Postofftee as second-class mail mat tar. SUBSCRIPTION RATES m advance' except by arrangement itn till" publisher.' -a year by mail fl.OO Advertising rates on application.' A FUTURE POLICY FOR THE TIMES (Events which have happened within the past few weeks have given rise to considerable speculation regarding the future of the Times, and, owing to the fact that the publisher of the Times was incapacitated at the time and was thus unable to explain to the interested parties just the signifi cance of the happenings, we take this means of announcing fully our inten tions for the future. As most of our readers already know.the publisher of the Times early j this year purchased an interest in the Forest ttrove News-limes, tnus pro viding, the best of facilities for the printing of the paper. Since early in February we have been making daily tripB between Beaverton and Forest Grove and we believe that every read er of the Tunes, who will take the trouble to compare an issue of, that date with the present issue ox the pa per, will agree that the new arrange ment has meant a decided improve ment in the paper. Hence, when we received notice three weeks ago to vacate the house in which we have lived since coming to Beaverton and were unable to find another house in Beaverton which could be rented, there was nothing to do but accept one which was offered in Forest Grove. And while we live there for the present, we will in no wise lose interest in Beaverton and will spend fully as much time here as formerly. In addition to the present facilities for making tne limes a may repre sentative naner of Beaverton and vi cinity, we will maintain an office here with Mr. uarrutn.wno will at tend to all matters of subscriptions, advertising and news vhich you may wish to leave for us, and with the completion of the present school year we will be aoie to announce tne asso ciation with this paper of an O. A. C. graduate in industrial journalism. In short, the publisher of The Times stands as ready tcday as in the past to make The Times just as good a paper as you want it to be. And this applies to every reader as well as to the advertisers. If you have news for the paper, send it in. Don't worry if you may not be able to write it just as you think it ought to be. Send it anyway. We have had twen ty v ears' experience trying to make things sound right. If you have a neighbor wno aoesn't lane tne limes, send us his name. We will send him a copy of the paper and nine times nut of ten he will subscribe. And when you have something to sell or want to buy something, nemember that the little reader ads in the Tunes do a lot of time-saving for you. Speak a good word for us and we will reciprocate. Your interests are our interests and it is our ambition to make The Times not only the best oaoer in Washington County, but the j best country paper in uregon. BISHOP BROS For Quality Dry Goodi, GroceriM, ManUFuraiaaings , ARE WE ALL SO? How curious it is that we human beings are always longing for some thing that wc have not got, and find ing, when later on we perhaps get that particular thing, that it does not bring us half so much happiness as we had expected. Then we at once begin to long for something mor; and go we go on new very happy, never quite satis fied. There Is a lesson here for those of us who are wise enough to learn it. j Happiness and cheeriness are so very 1 much more a state of mind thani a 1 result of outward circumstances. If we determined to be happy with what we have now, we might be ready to be still happier with whatever good 1 thing- Fate has in store for us.. But once get out of the habit of being ' happy and cheery, and it is very dif ficult to develop it again. TRUE FRATERNITY Among the many rebirths that have been coming in American life in recent yean has been the Urge number of fraternal societies. 1 have watched my country with sort of a loving and on-looking eye for many years and I have wondered what was the real soul of America., Had it a soul? And what was that soul? I saw the buying and selling. I saw the greed for gain. I saw the mad pursuit for money, for honor, for glory, renown, and I have won dered had it a soul: But among the great ordinary common masses of the people, to which, thank God I belong, I found that there was an un rest calling for something some thing more than politics and state craft and business gain, and I found fraternal institutions springing up here and there over Americaiot seek ing the mere pleasure of a fraternity but wanting to know what they might do m the way of betterment of man kind. The age of inspiration has not passed. The soul of America was seeking for the real thing in Ameri can life. Fraternity, faith, friend ship, family ties, family insurance, and the banding together in one great body for loving service. Vice Presi dent Thomas R Marshall. A SILLY VERY SENSIBLE POEM It was midnight on the ocean Not a street car was in sight, The sun was shining brightly, And it rained all the night. . - It was winter day in summer, The sky was raining glass, , A barefoot boy with shoes on, Stood sitting on the grass. f It was evening and the rising sua, Was setting in the West, The little fishes in the trees, Were cuddled in their nest. While the organ peeled potatoes Lard was rendered by the choir, While the sexton rang the dishrag, Someone set the church afire. "Holy Smoke," the preacher shouted, In the rush he lost his hair, Now his head resembles heaven, For there is no parting there. Lots of Town Happenings Told In Brief Form. I easaaw Miss Ruth Cadv is home from Tur ner, Ore., where she was a teacher in the high school. R. S. Guppy has added an attrac tive new fence to his property, great ly enhancing Its appearance. 'Union Services will be held at the Congregational church next Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. All are -cordially invited to attend. The old Huber saloon building, now occupied by toe Scholia Telephone Company, has recently been painted and now presents a much more sight ly appearance. A. Rossi has cleared away the de bris left when the old 1900 saloon building was torn down and the cor ner now presents a very attractive -and inviting appearance probably inviting enough to cause a new struct ure to arise there in the near future. We thorouB-hlv atzree with G. W, Stitt that the county practiced poor economy in providing uncomfortable quarters for the primary elections. It was difficult to get judges and cierics to serve and tne illness wnicn followed the exposure m the unsuita ble buildings will make them harder than ever to secure in November. If a better showing isn't made in Nov ember, we're apt to scratch the tick et There was a happy reunion at the pleasant suburban farm home of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Alexander of West Beaverton, last week, when ber two brothers, E. H. Hammer, of Min neapolis, and E. Hammer, of New xortc, 'surprised her alter being sep arated for 18 years. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Hammer left Tuesday for Seattle on return trip and E.Hammer leaves Saturday lor San Francisco and ex pects to spend the summer at other points of interest in Calif ornta. Hun- day a trip was enjoyed on the high way. Lunch was served at Eagle Creek and needless to say enjoyed by all in spite of a refreshing shower just as everything was completed for the "feed." They were all de lighted with our Oregon scenery and promised to come again. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander will regret their de parture very much, as things have been rather lively on the ranch the past two weeks. fLOCAL NEWSl I I Lots of Town Happenings Told I L AS IT SEEKS TOME That on election dav for a aolliiur place "any old bole" seems to have been held good enough. That it's twin sixes for the rich man. Six twins for the poor man. mat it taxes more wan a glad hand to hold business nowadays. That ft is not theJtast fighter, but the best runner that -wins the polit ical battle. That a misplaced switch is ant to wreck a woman's train of "thought. That the golden eagle like other good ten-ors, is a rare bird. That our 'friend Sam has won as Sect'y. of State, and that there was no nigger in the "Wood"-pile s we predicted. lhat we have a sneaking suspicion that Bryan will run attain this year. and it might be the best thing that could happen, for we always had good times right after he ran. We've got to change our luck some way or oth er. That rag-pickers in New York are paid 33 bucks a week, school teach ers draw 20. And they say educa tion pays. That in the algebra of love, one and one makes one. "That the average man will deride high-heeled shoes, and silk stockings, and square- necked waists, and then the son of a sailor will twist his neck off admiring those who are decked out in these things, and will never notice a woman sensibly' dressed. Not that women care to be stared at, but certainly they do not care to be overlooked, to be taken as part of the landscape, like a stolid stump or something." That in a mirror a man sees his necktie; a woman her years. "That a furnace fire is just like a man it goes out when you want it to stay in, and it insists on staying in when you'd just as soon it would go out." That there, are thousands of men who never spoke a cuss word to their wives. They are old bachelors, of course. That the divorce judge, like a poor marksman, makes a good many miss- That astronomers havintr discov ered a water vapor in the atmosphere of Mars is possibly a sign that Mars is going dry. That it is a waste of time and mon ey to advertise for lost friendship. That a man is a thief when he hooks his wife's dress. CITATION '" la ttm Com Cant of the State of . Oaeaaa foa.tte Corny of Waa- Ia the Matter of tka Eatata of Vol atine Nahbooor, Deceeeed. To Valentino Mehbauer, Jr., owl to all other persons or partis, claiming or having any interest in the above entitled estate: . Ia the Name of the State of Ore son, yon are hereby commanded to appear m the 'County Court at the County Court House, Hitliboro, Ore gon, before the Honorable County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Washington, on the 16th dag of June, 1020, at the hour of ton o'clock A. M. of said day- to show cause, if any exists, why an order should not be made authorising the Administrator, W. P.,. .Deslnger, to sell all of the real property belong ing to said estate, towit: The southeast one fourth of the noetheaat one fourth of Section twenty-nine, and the northeast one fourth of the -southwest one fourth of Sec tion twenty-eight, all in township two north of range ten east of the Wil lamette Meridian Containing eighty acres, located in Hoed River County, Oregon. :t' . Witness my hand and Die seal of said Court affixed this 10th day of May, A. DM920. ' . , H. A. KURATLl, County Clerk. Ex Officio Clerk of County Court. . V,; By Ed Luce, deputy. " ' 'ts s Rev. E. E. Gilbert, of Salem Dis trict, Supt. of the M. E. Church, occu pied the pulpit at the local M. E. church last Sunday. FOR SALE A good cook stove. Inquire of W. H. Hunter. -' 19tf Henry Fiske "Geo! I'm tough. When I pass my hand thru my hair I pull out a handful of shingle nails." Cheer up, Stanley, if every holiday was a day off we wouldn't live any longer. Be sure to read the stories the ads tell. tf ' uooa young noisiein jersey cow, $75.; also fine Lowell yn Setter pups, &VU. . AIM nun BISHOP BROS. ; i '' Far Quality Dry Cm1i, Gtocotmi, M.a'aFnnii.h.iiff. fWf sunset Yawl I lOGDlHSSHASTAl I I i ROUTES f I GASOLINE SHORTAGE SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY is ready to move promptly to any point in this State or any other State it serves GASOLINE DISTILLATE KEROSENE fi FUEL OIL offered it for shipment and is ready to do all in its power to remedy any existing shortage with good service. SOUTIlEOn PACIFIC GtCPAHY Beavertca xx Ytd P. G. HAfnJDfnCE. YWtV ABKteataf BUILDING HATBOAL Glass , - Paiat . Vara Mb ' 'LarabaV'- E Lima -Plaster Cement Oraval Band, Ete. BEAVERTON OREGON GENERAL TRUCKING DAILY TRIPS TO PORTLAND ' Office tU Ask St Broadway JM4 ' " Pnoae Boavortea lt-ll HARRY BARK Kg' Pre. ' Es2?ertca "For a Better ; R. H. JONAS, President FRED JENSEN, Vice President J. FRANK STROUD, fleeretary . DOY GRAY, Trcastrrar Jua now while the Charter Is Opea Eeavertost Fuel Co. Office for the time being at City Bakery. .. . v Delivered in any qmntity, any where, anytime ' Coal for sale In ton lots or by he Back. a.H.WOLF The 'Beaverton Fuel Co. has pole wood for sale,- Get your order in on time. Oregon Yellow Danvors Onion seed for sale. Pure and clean. Home grown, fl.75 per pound. Sao Chas. Bernard. 16tf