Friday, August 4. 1944
BEAVERTON ENTERPRISE, Beaverton. Oregon
Pagre *
Famed *759 Gun of
’18 Now in Homi ter s
CHURCH OF T1IK NAZARENK
Leonard C. Johnson, Pastor
9:45 a. m. Sunday School, Glade
Baker Supt.
11 a. m.
Morning worship.
Wednesday 7:30 p. m. Prayer and
Praise service.
WEST 1111X8
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Canyon Hoad, near Sylvan
Werner J. Fritz, Minister
9th Sunday after Trinity
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Divine Service 11 a. m.
Sermon The Way of Life.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
George W. Springet-, Pastor
9:45 a. m. Worship and preaching.
Topic- Declaring the End from the
Beginning.
Following the sermon, the Lord’s
supper will be observed.
11 a. m. Bible School.
C. E. 7 p. m.
The evening topic will be The First
Christian Martyr.
Midweek prayer and Bible study
ednesday 8 p. m.
Study will be
» Corinthians Chapter 5.
ALOHA COMMUNITY CHUROU
Graydon D. Loree, Pastor
Sunday School 10 a. m.
•fary Antrim Supt.
Morning worship 11 a. m.
Youth fellowship 7 p. m.
Ethelene
dman, senior supervisor.
Mary
•'trim, junior supervisor.
8 p. m. Evening worship.
Wednesday, prayermeeting 8 p. m.
THE VALLEY
COMMUNITY CHURCH
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
4110 SW Gabel L a o s
Rev. H. A. Armltage. pastor
10:30 a. m. Morning Worship
*
BETHEL
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Rev. F. T. Sturtevant, Pastor
a:45 a. m.
Church School.
11 a. m. Worship.
METHODIST CHURCH
Albert S. Hlsey, D. D., Minister
1» 45 a. m.
Sunday School
11 a. m. Preaching service.
W. S. C. S. meets Wednesday.
PILGRIM LUTHERAN CHURCH
The Bible Churoh
Box 697, Beaverton
Farmington Rd. at Menlo Drive
Walter R. Buhl, Pastor
Sunday School 10 a. m.
Divine Services 11 a. m.
REEDVTLLE COMMUNITY
PRL8BYTBRIAN CHURCH
Sunday School 10 a. m.
Mrs. Otto
t ieorge, Supt.
Worship Service 11 a. m.
Young People's C. E. 7 p. m.
Prayer Meeting and Bible study,
I'hursday, 7 p. m.
While In Beaverton be sure to oat
at the Greynmuid Coffee Shop.
ST. CECELIA CHURCH
Masses 7:55 to 9:55 a. m. on Sunday
during summer months.
ALOHA ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Sunday School 10 a. m.
Worship 11 a. m.
Evangelistic 7:45 p. m
Prayer and Bible study 7:45 p. m.
Thursday.
DOUBLE DUTY
— DOLLABS
A M E R I C A N HEROES
BY LEFF
IMr ge st Arm Ever Mounted
In an Airplane.
/Vo Longer Do They Shoot
ORLANDO. FLA.—The old "75”
mm. cannon, the famous artillery
piece that dad slogged behind in the
mud of France during the First
World war, is now serving junior
from the air at 300 miles an hour.
The well-known French three-inch
cannon now provides our heaviest
air firepower from its perch in the
nose of the Mitchell B-25 medium
bomber. It is the largest gun ever
mounted in a plane.
The ‘ '75'’ makes the Mitchell a
triple - threat force of destruction,
with ita armor-piercing shells. 14 50-
caliber machine guns, and its ability
to demolish a target by skip-bomb-
ing.
The addition of the gun adds an
other job to the five or six man crew
of a medium B-25. Usually the navi
gator or the crew chief acts as
"cannoneer" and does everything
except the actual firing, including
the loading and handling of the can
non.
One of the advantages of the can
non’s long firing range is that it al
lows the pilot to see his hits on the
target which is ahead of him when
the shell strikes, and to phootgraph
enemy fortifications and the dam
age inflicted on them.
The gun is being perfected for use
as "air artillery" against enemy
ground Installations and recently
wreaked havoc on Jap airdromes
and landing fields in New Guinea,
and blew up a half-million gallon
Japanese gas tank in Burma.
The "flying cannon," which was at
first considered another aviation im
possibility, but which has proven it
self in combat, is now being further
developed and improved by air war
veterans back from overseas, at the
army air forces tactical center here.
AUSTIN, T E X A S .-Y e s, Indians
still live in Texas, but they don't
roam the plains shooting arrows at
people.
Instead, the 40 members of the
Alabama and Coshatti tribes inhabit
a 4,000-acre reservation within 90
miles of metropolitan Houston, the
state's largest city.
Plans are in the making now for
construction of a paved highway
fronting the reservation and building
of a trading post where the redmen
may offer for sale to the public their
beaded moccasins, lapel pins, bows
and arrows and a variety of useful
articles as well as amusing trinkets.
Chief of the tribe is 64-year-old
Ticaiche, whose Anglicized name is
Bronson Cooper Sylestine. He and
' others of the settlement are wards
| of the State of Texas.
The Indian Village isn’t an ar-
| rangement of tepees. Instead, scat
tered throughout the piney forest
land are small houses. On the old
cbuncil grounds where pow-wows
once were held are located a church,
school, hospital, teacher’ s home,
agent’s home, cemetery, and a com
munity center.
The white men overran the origi
nal two leagues of land (more than
double the present 4,000 acres) given
the tribes back in 1840 by the Repub-
• lie of Texas.
Homes of the Indians were burned,
their possessions destroyed and
i their stock stolen by resentful white
! men.
Since that time life in the tribe
| has been one of reconstruction. The
Missionary department of the Pres
byterian church has aided their
progress, and the State of Texas
looks after their welfare.
Six Sisters Meet Brother
First Time in 18 Years
MILWAUKEE.—Six sisters and a
brother, separated when their moth
er died 18 years ago, are now unit
ed. The brother, Staff Sergt. Jerome
Egbert, 26, who had been in the
Panama Canal Zone four years and
in the West since last October, met
the family at the homes of the mar
ried sisters and other relatives.
A high point of Sergeant Egbert's
Milwaukee visit came when he was
godfather to his month old niece,
Susan Margaret, daughter of his
sister, Margaret (Mrs. Stephen Cain,
2871 N. Richards street). He has
been getting acquainted, too, with
the children of his oldest sisters,
Louise (Mrs. Earl Huey, Redmon,
111.), and Bernice (Mrs. Walter
Stubbe, 6821 W. Dixon avenue). The
other sisters who have been with
him this week are Lillian, 739 N.
Jackson street, Lenora, who came
from Flint, Mich., with an aunt,
Mrs. Anna Kohn, and Josephine,
who lives with Mrs. Stubbe.
Their grandmother, Mrs. Callie
Eygabroad, came from the Wiscon
sin Veterans' home at King, Wis., to
her cottage on Lake Nagawicka to
give a reunion dinner in Jerom e's
honor; an uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mr*- John Barwig, 2843 W Juneau
avenue, gave a family party, and
Mr. and Mrs. Stubbe were hosts at
open house.
Dust tomato and potato foliage with
cryolite to keep the flea beetles and
other leaf-rating Insects controlled. Y a n k s D on ate $ 3 ,00 0 to
Cryolite should not be used on the
Child of Hero Mother
leafy vegetables, such as spinach, let
tuce and chard, because of danger of
LONDON.—American airmen at a
poisoning.
Ninth air force base in England have
contributed nearly $3,000 to an edu
cation fund for four-year-old Tony
Everitt, orphaned when his mother
IM ujor IIo4>|>le
saved a gunner from his crashed
and burning plane and then died try
By
ing to rescue others.
NEA Syndicat*
Men from the base filed by a table
after drawing their pay and deposit
( e g a d / WHO C&N REFÜ6E
ed $2,000. Soon the fund had grown
■ TO BACK THE INVASION
to more than $2,800 and still was
•welling.
I WITH A
The plane collided with another
! G'JRE-RRE:
aircraft and crashed into a field
INVESTMEN T ? J
near the Everitt farmhouse and
started to bum. Mrs. Betty Everitt
,T^
WAR
dashed into the inferno, beat out the
flames which were searing the body
LOAN
of the turret gunner—the only man
6ÛY
to escape—and continued her rescue
efforts until the bomber exploded.
N O 'H
A A i.
y »
Trading Post for
Indians in Texas
While shopping, eat at the Grey
hound Coff** Shop. Beaverton.
L I F E 'S U t t la T R O U B L E S
G
r w : * i
«
Arrous at People.
iW .1
(»t‘or£t* Sylvester Cronk, Second Assistant Engineer, Merchant Marine, was
the hole surviving officer of a shattered ship. In the only lifeboat that could
he launched he succeeded in rescuing 19 »urvivors in the stormy seas. Cronk
brought his boat safely to land after 31 dayt. Are you buy in* more War Bonds
tit an e v e r b e f o r e ?
U. S. Treasury Department
Registration Fees for Cars
Exceeds $3,000,000
Nazis Hope to Build U p
Sea Power for Next War
LONDON.—An article in the Ger
man newspaper “ Münchner Neueste
Nachrichten" reaching here said the
maximum hope remaining to Nazi
dom is to hold onto conquered
Europe for a peace that will allow
the creation of German naval power
sufficient for a new try at Great
Britain and the United States.
In discussing Nazi postwar aspira
tions, the article blamed Germany’s
inability to invade England upon
lack of naval strength, and said the
only reason the conflict had been
confined to the mainland of Europe
was that Germany did not possess
the means of inflicting defeat on
Friendly Creatures
British-American sea power.
I Creatures on Saipan are a chummy
The article added that it must be
bunch, according to Sgt. Herb Schultz taken for granted Great Britain and
; a Marine Corps combat correspond- America would emerge from the
I ent.
He writes:
war with their sea power un
“On successive nights now I have j impaired, and the new Nazi order
shared my foxhole with a large land would have no chance until such
1 crab, a giant toad—some four inches ; time as Germany and the new
long—and a lizard.
—' j
"The lizard was friendliest of all. j Europe had created sea power.
’ He crawled right Inside my shirt."
Motor vehicle registration in Ore-
j gon totaled 400,482 vehicles at the
lend of June this year, compared to
! 395,007 for the same period of 1943,
j Secretary of State Bob Farrell an-
) nounced today.
This represents an
increase of slightly over one per cent.
Passenger vehicles numbered 320,-
863, compared to 319,008 a year ago;
busses totaled 1,160 against 1,066 a
year ago while trucks numbered 41,-
966 compared to 39,650.
Registration fees for the six months
amounted to (3,142,011.65, compared
to fo«l totaling $2,969,635.04 a year
ago.
Socialists Hit Policies
N. Thomas, socialist candidate for i
president declared Sunday that Pres
Roosevelt’s "underwriting of white
supremacy in the far east and the
Balkanization of Europe between \
Moscow and London is an Invitation
I to new war*.”
,
The socialist leader also charged
that:
"Roosevelt before the war had
I not conquered unemployment, but es- j
j tablished It and subsidized the unem- ,
j ployed at a level of about 23 per
I cent of the workers. He has no pro- j
j gram adequate to the conquest of pov
I erty.
BERKELEY, CALIF.—Production
of synthetic sugar for the first time
in the laboratory, in experimental
quantities only, was announced by
three University of California scien
tists.
Lengthy experimentation of the
chemical steps in the forrrAtion of
sucrose by plants yielded two grams
of commercial sugar, produced from
fruit sugar and glucose phosphate.
“ The action was carried out by
means of enzymes extracted from
the bacterium ‘pseudomonas saccro-
chila,’ ” Dr. H. A. Barker, Dr.
Michael Doudoroff and Dr. W. Z.
Hassid announced.
“ No commercial application is
possible at this time, since the proc
ess far exceeds the cost of produc
tion from natural sources,” thev
reported.
Germans Take 10,000
Workers From Rome
ROME.—Allied military gov
ernment agents reported after a
preliminary investigation that the
Germans had carried away 10,000
Roman male workers in the last
few days, ’but otherwise hardly
molested the city. The removal
of the workers was carried out
under a “ voluntary enforcement”
program.
16547852
~
Haas to be at Forest Grove
Make Synthetic Sugar
In California Laboratory
WILL PAY CASH
For Small, 2 Bedroom
Home with not less
than x/x Acre in
BEAVERTON
Hi School District
(iive Full Description
7332 SW Canyon Dr.
Portland, 1, Oregon
-C No A need N to T lie SLEEP
is bed— to*»—
worry • nd fret because CON-
STIPf
IPATION or GAS PRES
SURE won't let you sleep Be
••naibl*—get up—take a dash ol
ADLER-I-KA
aa directed, to relieve the pressure
of large intestine* on nerve* *ml
nrgn*i ol the digestive tract. Ad-
lerika aa*i«t* old food waste* and
gna through a comfortable bowel
movement ao that bonrla return
to rcrmal are and the discomforts
of pressure stop. Before you know
it. you are asleep. Morning finds
yon feeling dean —refreshed and
ready for a good day's work or fun
Om* A d N r f lg f r « « y # a » tfrw ||f*f r # d s s
Beaverton Pharmacy
Beaverton, 2311
Friday-Saturda.v, Aug. 4-5—
BING CROSBY
in
DIXIE
P lu a -
Charles Starett in
SUNDOWN VALLEY
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Aug. 6-8—
Walter Pidgion—Grace Grayson
MADAME CURIE
Wednesday, Thursday, Aug. 9-10—
STYLE WOMAN
and
TIMBER QUEEN
I IT
Friday,
DOROTHY LAMOUR
in
RIDING HIGH
Cut thla out
LEGAL
To All Red Cross Members
And the Public:—
This is to advise that Mrs. V. D.
Calway, Rl, Box 219, Tigard, Phone
number Tigard 2353, has been ap
pointed Vice Chairman for the Ti-
! gard, Sherwood Area, of the Washing
ton County Chapter of the American
Red Cross.
As such, Mrs. Calway will be the
Chapter’s general representative for
that district, and will be pleased to
confer with all desiring information
on Red Cross affairs.
O. B. GATES. Chairman
Washington County Chapter,
American Red Cross
Visit our special bargain counter-
new mdse each week. Walkers Dept.
Store.
3tf
While in Beaverton be sure to eat
at the Greyhound Coffee £hop
............
“ I lost 32 lbs.
*■ )
wear size 14 again” ‘* ¿ . 7
Betty Reynolds , Brooklyn
Y O U
KNOW ,
S E E N T H E
I HAVE J U S T
M O S T
M KM'
Once 156 lbs.. Miss Reynolds f l j l w
lost weight weekly witli A Y D S
*
Vitamin Candy Reducing Plan.
After
Now she has a inode* s figure.
Usioc
Your experience may or may
not be the same hut try this
easier reducing plan. First Box
Must Show Results or money
back. No exercise. No laxatives.
No drugs. Eat plenty. You don't
cut out meals, potatoes, etc.,
you just cut them down. Simple
when you enjoy delicious A YD S before meal*.
Only $2.25 for 30 days supply. Phone, write
Army Trucks Available
BEAU TIFU L
Y / '^ V E S ,
LIVING R O O M
.F U R N IT U R E /
| M EAN
NOTICE
I
in
and to replenish our sup
ply of feed F R A N C I S
ill
BROTHERS
ill
stores will
be closed from August 6th
■
GROCERIES
'
MEATS
m m
RETRIGER
R A N C -G
7
FRESH FRUIT
JL ¥
ciated and we ask your
tion
during
t h i a
appre
a
m
^DZ^juihina.
-----------
3535
m
the 9/0ME.
B eaverton
Ml
TWO DAY REVIVAL Ang. 6-7
M
l
IMPERIAL FEEDS |
AT ALOHA ASSEMBLY OF GOD
i
Sunday, 11 a. m.-7:30 p. m.
Speaker
Lockers
Your patronage la greatly
» rnéM , ^
P hone
Qj
Sign Up for
inclusive.
«L
=
I
VEGETABLES
D I S P L A Y AT
I
Under new management ffj
MR. and MRS. BEN IAMB
I K N O W ,Y O U
THE
&
Elmonica
Grocery
our machinery,
recently
pastor
Rev. W. T. Mugford,
Firat Baptist Church of
Hillsboro.
Ore.
Monday at Grange Hall—Great Fellowship Meeting
2 30 p. m , free lunch 5 p. m. young peoples meeting 6 39, E\angeliatic
services 7 45 p m.
All Welcome.
NOW—
coopera
intermission,
which wt hope will enable us to
serv* you better In the future.
Beaverton 3177
;in=m 5iH=Mi5Hi=iM=m=m=in=in=in=i!t = ur-
in
W. E. PEGG
Francis Brothers
6319 SW Capitol Hiway
•
A)
If we are to have a “government of
the people and for the people" It must
be a “government by the people."
Many army trucks no longer needed
| can now be purchased from author-
I ized dealers.
Six Multnomah county
farmers have already filed application
Phone Beaverton 2311
. The blanks are now available and
farmers should file their applications
BEAVERTON PHARMACY
as soon as possible.
These applications have to be ap
proved by local and state AAA trans
portation committees before they can = l ll = I M = l l l = l l l = l l l = l i l = l l l = l l l = l l l = l l l = l l l = l t l = l l l
j be forwarded to dealers.
III
M j
=
III
i T i
Goes to Klamath Falls
I
L. Marble Cook will coach football jjj
and basketball at Klamath Falls high [in
ñi
school the coming school term.
He j|j
j was former coach of Beaverton high g
in
, school.
improve
for Future Reference
a Model's Figure
R. J. Haas, former principal of the
Aloha-Huber school will act as coor
dinator for the Trades and Industries
course to be given for the first time
next school year at Forest Grove
union high school.
Mr. Haas will attend a summer con
ference and training course to be
given at Oregon State* college for in
structors before taking up the voca
tional training work.
In order lo overhaul and
Saturday, Aug. 11-12—
Walkers Dept. Store, complete store
under one roof.
3tf
—
Strict reductions on all mdse, at
While shopping eat at the Grey I bargain counters, Walkers Dept.
Store.
8tf
hound Coffee Shop. Beaverton.
to August 13th, both days
Home
Wanted
Ample Parking—Form Fitting Seat*
TIGARD, OREGON—T E L 2585
Beat M m
— De Luxe Sound
Admission 50c, children 20c, Inclu tax
Men in Uniform 20c Anytime
2nd Show Approximately 9 o'clock
Contii.uoua Show Sunday at 2:30
MORTICIAN
Beaverton. Oregon
Est ab 1910 Serving 33 year*
FIIONK BEAVERTON 3411
S
CONCRETE PIPE
CULVERT
SEWER
DRAIN
SEE YOUR BUILDING M ATERIAL DEALER
Portland Concrete Pipe & Products Co.
3
5819 8 W. Macadam Av„ Portland. 1. Oregon
Sl3Mlslll£lll£lll = !l sMIzMiai'ISMISIHX
MlrlUSIi 1 gt 1 l»tn»ll!= „j
ATwatar 8384
*