Page 4 Friday, January 5, 1945 BEAVERTON ENTERPRISE, Beaverton. Oregon What’s Doing IN THE Churches ST. CECKUA CHURCH Mau«a o 25 and 1U 28 during the winter monlha. CHURCH OF THE NAZAKKN U l.eonaid C. Johnson, Pastor y 13 a ni. Sunday School. 11 a. m. Morning worship; Rev. and Mrs. Earl Mosteller, outgoing missionaries to the Cape Verde Is­ lands, will speak. 6:15 p. m. Junior Meeting. 6 30 p. m. Hi-N.Y. and N. Y. P. S. 7:30 p. m. Evangelistic Service, pastor will speak Wednesday 7:30 p. m. Prayer meeting. Bullís Flew to Russia Use More V Mail Free Want Ads Veterans Should Have Jobs Awaiting Them In another column of this paper i will be found an ad of special ap- peal to returning servicemen or wo- men who want Jobs. This newspaper hopes that in this way it may be the means of bringing together those who have Jobs to offer and those who want Jobs. Thus in a small way we hope to bring happiness in the new year to those who really need a job. Of course the nation can never re­ pay even in a small way the sacri­ fices made by these men and women j WEST HILLS but they can make their lives happier LfTHEHAN CHURCH if they have a Job and are independ- ' Canyon Road, near Sylvan m t* *W -' ent and able to make a good living Werner J. Frits, Minister for themselves and loved ones. The new mobile Chest X Ray Survey Unit, built and equipped East Sunday after Epiphany Lewis B. Hershey, director of Civil with Christmas Seal funds is now ready to travel to all parts of Sunday Softool 9.¿8 a. m Service says: "We can help the vet- ! Divine Service U a m. the State. The photo shows, the workmen who built the trailer, eran if he desires our aid. But we Sermon: A New Commandment. The overall size of the Unit is 38 feet long and 8 feet wide. It Church dinner and annual meeting cannot help him fully without the co­ contains a Westinghouse X-Ray Unit in its own X-ray room, operation of his home folks—o f the of the congregation. community into which he must read dressing rooms and a dark-room for developing the films. Mr. just himself. The average veteran und Mrs. A. A. Anderson will b« in charqe of the Unit and take CHURCH OF CHRIST does not retorn to his home to rest the pictures. The Oregon Tuberculosis Association and the County George W. Springer, Paster on his military laurels. His main de­ Morning worship and preaching ser­ sire is to integrate himself in civilian Public Health Associations pay for the service out of Christmas vice at 9:45 a. m. life with full opportunity to use his Seal funds. Topic—Our Relationship to Time. skills and abilites. There will be special musio by the All our veterans the men who have Pacific Bible School quartet who will been and still are fighting so glor­ March of Dimes be our guests at the morning service. iously to preserve the Ameiican way j Following the sermon, the Lord’*' of life— must be given that full oppor-! Starts January 14 supper will be observed. tunity to enjoy it. And each w ill! Bible School class session 11 a. m. have that opportunity if all of us -ev- ! Forty-three prominent industrial Christian Endeavor 6.30 p. m. ery agency, every group, every indi-, and civic leaders-have been appointed Evening worship service 7:30 p. m. vidual for whom they fought —coop­ I as State Chairmen for the March of Midweek Bible study and prayer erate to give it. | Dimes and will direct the Fund-Rais- service Wednesday 8 p, m, The scrip­ They did not fail us; we must not I ing Appeal of The National Founda- ture study will be Eph. Chap. 6. fail them!” New Safety Valve Controls i tion for Infantile Paralysis, January 14-31, in their states, it was announ- Highest Power Ever BEAVERTON rULL GORKI* i ced today by Basil O’Connor, Foun- j dation President. CHAPEL SERVICE Sent Over Wires. Although the infantile paralysis I. O O K Hall, Beaverton I epidemic of 1914, with nearly 19,000 Orville J. Poulin, Minister Sundays 7:45 p. m. PITTSBURGH. — The greatest i cases already reported, was the sec- Thursdays 7:45 p. m. ! concentration of power ever sent <’"<1 largest in the recorded history of Everybody welcome. into a piece of electrical equipment d'sease >n the I nited States, the in a public test—nearly 3,000,000 nation was better prepared for the inarch of the C.ippler than ever be- A1AHIA COMMUNITY CHURCH kilovolt amperes—was stopped in its j fore, through the generosity of the Uraydon D. Ceree, Pastor tracks by a newly developed me­ ] American people whose dimes and Sunday School 18 a. m. chanical “ safety valve.” [ dollars helped to stem the tide of the Mary Antrim, Supt. The mighty current, which engi­ j mysterious poliomeyeiitis for which Morning worship 11 a. m . neers said was as great as if the | there is no known preventive and no j total electrical output of all power I cure at present. BETHEL E. T. Hedlund of Portland, will di- ! stations in the Pittsburgh area had CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH been thrown onto one transmission jrect the Oregon drive, Rev. V. T. Sturtevant, Pastor line and stepped up through a 9:45 a. m. Cburoh School. ! “ fault” condition, was hurled into a S. P. Traffic Climbs Mias Amarette Barnes, Supt. new type circv't breaker which dis- To All-Time Peak 11 a. in. Worship. j persed its arc harmlessly in a frac­ 5:30 p. m. Junior High Pilgrim tion of a second. A “ fault,” which Fellowship. Southern Pacific’s freight and pas­ 7 p. m. Senior Pilgrim Fellowship. | may be caused by lightning or a senger loads piled up new t*ll-tlme short circuit, sends over a transmis- traffic records in 1944. President A. THE VALLEY ; sion line a short circuit current far T. Mercle. reported today in a state­ COMMUNITY CHURCH more powerful than the normal cur- ment of the railroad's activities. UNITED PtUNBYTERLAlY Among the chief factors enabling I rent carried in the wire. 4110 SW Gabel Lane One hundred and fifty leading pow- the rail lines to carry the vastly in­ Rev. H. A. Armitage, pastor i er company executives and engi- creased wartime transport burden, the Mi 30 a. m. Morning Worship ; neers of the nation viewed the test railroad president listed good team­ at the Westinghouse high power work within lailroad’s own organiza­ METHODIST CHURCH tion, with its customers, with mili­ alternating current laboratory in tary and government agencies, and Albert 3. Hlsey, D. D., Minister East Pittsburgh. 3unday School 9:45 a. m. close cooperation among the rail­ Classes for all ages. Attendance Huge Charge ’ Drowned.* roads, which comprise the country’s invited. j As they watched, relays automa­ transportation system. SOT. ROBERT D. EZELL Worship Hour 11 a. m. He said; "The Southern Pacific tically detected the coming of the Services conducted by youth group man-made super-current and the looks to the future with confidence," from Cascade College. Potluck din­ he declared. ‘ We are not afraid of ner will be seived following the ser­ Hutton to Head Department breaker, acting more swiftly than the postwar competition. All we ask is . * | surging power, spontaneously threw vices. Public cordially invited. Daily discussions of facts and pre- out switches causing its arc to be that we be afforded the opportunity of competing with other forms of sentatlon of news pertinent to the dispersed in a tank of oil. A similar transportation on a fair and equit­ ALOHA ASSEMBLY OF GOD agricultural Industry will be the fea- current on a regular transmission able basis." Sunday School 10 a. m. Worship 11 a. ru. ture of a new service department to line unprotected with the highly de- _________________ be inaugurated by station KALE Veloped circuit breaker, would have p u : i : D T H o r n p n e w P r e s i d e n t KEEnvilJ.F, COMMUNITY Portland^ early Jn^January. accord crashed through to render useless ; r l u , , P 1 n o r n iM i e w P r e s id e n t Ing to Charles E Couche .manager PKl.SBYTHRIAN CHURCH valuable electric equipment, engi­ Philip Thorne was elected presi­ Sunday School 10 a. m. Mra. Otto Directing the new department will he neers said. dent of the Cedar Mill Community Burton 8. Hutton, former Oregonian, George, Supt. new low oil content circuit Club at a recent meeting. Tom Gal­ who resigned as A s s is ta n t general ag- | The 11 e new Young People'« C. E. 7 p. m. Prayer Meeting and Bible study, ricultural development agent for the breaker also was demonstrated in lagher is vice president: Bert Reeves, Great Northern Railway, St. Paul, tests * ith less severe overcharges treasurer and Lois O’Connor, secre­ Thursday. 7 p. m. tary. The club meets on the second Minn., to head the department. in whicl 't automatically “ doused” Worship Service 11 a. m Morning and noon broadcasts will the “ fault“ and reconnected itself Thursday night of each month at PILGRIM LUTHERAN CHURCH be presented daily except Sunday. to the regular line, all in a fraction Leedy grange hall in Cedar Mill. In setting up the new department, of a second. Engineers declared that The Bible Church "There is no reason why an Indian KALE is the first Portland station to in regular use the equipment could Box 697, Beaverton present a complete and diversified perform this act so quickly that a shouldn't be President of the U. S.". Farmington Rd. at Menlo Drive program of farm facta for residents person watching an incandescent 1—Indian Affairs Commissioner John Walter R. Buhi, I’astor Collier. Sunday Service 11 a. m. of thts territory. lamp attached to the circuit would Sunday School 10 a. m. i scarcely notice a flicker. Now at Hillcrest A continuing fault on the line, I Too Late to Classify however, causes the circuit breaker A former Beaverton barber, P. J. to again interrupt itself and trans­ NEW ZEALAND WHITES, pedl. Stevens is now located with his greed, lowest prices offered. Illness brother, B. K. Stevene in a l>arber mit a signal to the control board forces reduction. Dr. Ferrtll, New- shop in the building with the Hill- revealing the condition. It then re­ beig, Oregon., Rt. 1, Bx 76. Inquire crest Qrocery, which his hi other mains open until the condition is rectified. Scholls Store, Phone Scholls 8377. owns and operates. Official A R * C. B. Assn. Regis­ Two Generators Used. trar. 50 Two huge generators, especially , H ires 1 in 20 constructed, supplied the phenome - 1 For Stove and Diesel Oil Call Marry According to a report front Wash- nal amount of current for this { Baines. Phon« Bea vertan 3381 tf W e will help you fill out i tngton, D. C„ of Jan. 2. neatly one test. At othei confeience sessions The home town paper is like bread I person in 20 is on a governmental delegates to the power engineering Your Priority and meat to service men payroll in this country. | conference heard discussions of re- ; cent advances in various branches of electrical and steam engineering and were given a glimpse into the future possibilities of the gas tur- 1 bine. The gas turbine, simplest of all engines in that it has few moving i I parts, is approaching the stage of I practical application in a major field j i and has important possibilities for wider use, the engineers and power company executives were told. “ Rapid development c f efficient Symptoms of Distress Arising from LEONARD C. JOHNSON. Pastor I compressors and turbines, and of Phone MUi I materials that are suitable for serv- I ice at high temperatures, has al- Missionaries to the Cape Verde Islands due to j lowed outstanding advances during Rev. and Mrs. Earl Moatellei FreeBookTeils of Ho me Treatment that wartime in the gas turbine power Must Help or H Will Cost You Nothing January 7 at 11 A. M. system, which, though very old in Over toe million bottle* of the WILLARD principle, had to await these refine­ Hear theae young people ae they soon shall sail TREATMKNThsvebeen »old for relief of symptom. of ill«» re«» arUtng from Stented« ments," said C B Campbell, man­ Next Sunday. Rev. Richard Taylor and the Cascade College and Dwodeail U lce r« due t tree«« A d d — ager of engineering. Group will be In the morning eervioa at 11. Peer D lfe d ie n . Sen» or Upwt Stomech. Wider applications of the gas tur- Oosslesoss AsrShden C I m ptrvsnrvs nleeeneee etr woesiiie »•« M nssfiemit, over - 1 ' duetc.' Eire«« Add. Sold on U t le y » ' trtell j bine in the fields of transportation, A»k for **W 1llerd'« U oiqt'* which fully in the chemical industry, and in explain» thl* treatment—New— at I connection w ith blast furnace opera- Save 20 to 25% on your FIRE INSURANCE COSTS Beaverton Pharmacy I tlor wera predicted for the near Oregon Mutual Poltrire ara NON-AME8SABLE. You NEVER pay future. Beaverton, 2311 •f IS i policy Oregon Mutuai I surplus required ftjr Oregon Use of V-mail by civilians in writing to service men overseas must be step­ ped up in 1945 to conserve critically needed transport space, the Office of War Information reported today on the basis ot facts from the Army and Navy. An itensified campaign urg- , ing the public to increase its use of ¡V-mail was opened January 1, 1945. by the War and Navy Departments with the cooperation of OWI. While the total volume of Army and Navy V-mail incoming and outgoing, is almost twice that of 1943, recent drops in the use of the microfilm ser- i vice by both service men overseas and civilians at home has been of concern to the Army and Navy. Red Cross wo.kers, morale officers 1 1 chaplains and others who listen to GI troubles suggest that civilian corres­ pondents avoid writing "dangling” letters to men overseas—letters for example- telling of an illness in the family without giving reports on pro­ gress toward lecovery. In sending V-mail letters in sequence, they point out, especial care should be taken by the correspondent to see that page 1 doesn’t announce striking news that is explained on the second form. V- mail letters may not arrive in se­ quence and the service man or wo­ man may he kept in a state of sus­ pense dangerous to his morale. Ih n d s Change in Procedure Over America Farmers who need lumber for em­ ergency maintenance and repair of farm dwellings may now apply to the War Administration for preference ratings, instead of War Production local field offices, S. A. Smith, re­ gional manager announced today. The change in procedure, accord­ ing to Smith, is effected by an amendment to Directive 26 issued on December 29th. Under delega ation of authority already provided by Directive 26 WFA assigns prefer­ ence ratings to farmers for lumber for all other permitted uses. Great Electric Current Tamed Electric and Gas Water Heaters also Bathtubs DEWEY THE PLUMBER Beaverton 2925 roly I Uibi7 mio/us courts ivit/i prune QUICK RELIEF FROM STOMACH ULCERS EXCESS ACID Oregon Mutual Fire Insurance Company or MrMTîrjrvtLLE Organizad 1894 40 years of Reliable Servios Chaa 1. Walker. Agent New Location 112 So. 3rd Ave. “Every Porta of Pro tact I on" Mk Phone 1732 filila be ro. Oregon PORTLAND OPTICAL CO. COM PLETE O U T R A I. S F .K tlC F . D r L e ig h to n E . R o y . O p to m e tr ist M r. W m . II. S m ith . O p ticia n 413 S. \V. W a sh in g to n S t Portland. Oregon BE. M il An Eighth Air Force Fighter Sta­ tion. England—Staff Sergeant Val- more H. Bullís of Beaverton played a small but important part in the fourth shuttle mission to Russian, tha largest of its type ever launched by the Eighth Air Force, during which supplies were dropped to the Patriots of Warsaw by the planes which cov­ ered 3800 miles before returning to England. Taking off from a base, the fighters were hampered by heavy clouds until they leached Poland, where they found perfect visibility. Four Ger­ man fighters were shot down over Warshaw by the powerful Mustangs as a swarm of twenty enemy planes attempted to intercept the big bomb­ ers dropping food, medicine and am­ munition to the besieged Poles in the smoking city. From the Polish capitol ,the force flew hundreds of miles eastward to land at a base in Russia, and com­ plete the first leg of the journey. Leaving Russia, the fighters flew to Italy, which the Americans des­ cribe as “muddy and poverty-strick­ en", to complete the second section of the long journey. The force com­ pleted the trip when the fighters landed in England, after flying across the Continent from Italy. Befóte his enlistment in September 1942, S Sgt. Bulbs taught school at Beaverton. His wife, Mrs. Florence R. Bulbs, resides in Beaverton. CLOSING OUT Beautiful ana characteristic, the tower of the California Building at San Diego tells' the story of a race that ran its course before Europeans saw this continent. Recalling, too, the Spanish conquerors of Mexico and the coming of the first Califor­ nia settlers, it emphasizes the gold­ en legends that were carried back to the Old World. If there was no gold in the streets, there was plenty in the hills. America has made good many times over the tallest tales ever told about its riches. That it may continue to grow and pros­ per, our men are battling through­ out the world. So, too, everyone on the home front can help insure the future by buying more War Bonds to back our fighting men on land and sea and to save for post war progress and security. Kemtone-Games-- Bird figures— Baggety Ann Pictures-Perfume- Bottles and Vases- AT REDUCED PRICES Beaverton Furniture Co. BROADWAY AT WATSON U. S. Truiisury Depa> tmeni Beaverton Full Gospel Chapel Services Upstairs Oddfellows Hall Sundays 7:45 p. m. Thursdays 7:45 p. m. e v a n g e l is t ic , f u l l p r e a c h i n g , m u s ic O R V IL L E J. POULIN, «nd gospel s in g in g Minister EVERYBODY W ELCOM E Free Want Ads For EX-Servicemen This newspaper will accept without charge, for a limited time, the 'Situations Wanted" ads of men and women in the armed forces who are returning to civilian life in Wash­ ington or Multnomah county and who lived in either of these counties prior to enlistment. Your want ad should not exceed five lines. It must reach this office by Wednes­ day noon to insure insertion in the current week's issue. We reserve the right to reject any want ad eubmitted. and to limit the number of appearances. Cancellation order should be sent in immediately after employment la obtained. PIONEER PUBLISHING Co. Aloha New* Tigard S3ntinel Beaverton Enterprise Multnomah Pr