The Beaverton enterprise. (Beaverton, Or.) 1927-1951, January 26, 1945, Page Page 4, Image 4

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    Friday, January 26 , 194r
B E A V E R T O N EN TER PR ISE, Beaverton, Oregon
F P ig e 4
President Franklyn B. Snyder of
War supplies wer« produced by the
U. S. automobile Industry In 1944 at Northwestern University has announc­
the rate of more than $1,000,000 an ed the institution will erect buildings
costing $17,000,000 after the war.
hour.
WEST HILLS
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Canyon Road, near Sylvan
Werner J. Fritz, Minister
January 28th
Church School 9:45 a. m.
Church Service 11 a. m.
2nd Anniversary service.
Every one invited and welcome.
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THE VALLEY
COMMUNITY CHURCH
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
4110 SW Gabel Lane
Rsv. H. A. Armitage. pastor
10 80 a. m. Morning Worship
Bits o f Nev/s
A bout Our Boys
Private trancis J. Moore has been
4 awarded a good conduct medal in
France.
He is in the Engineer
General Service Regiment in Fiance.
He formerly lived in Beaverton.
BEAVERTON FULL GOSPEL
CHAPEL SERVICE
I. O. O. F. Hall, Beaverton
Orville J. Poulin, Minister
Sundays 7:45 p. m.
Thursdays 7:45 p. m.
Everybody welcome.
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7
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NATIONAL DISTIILC9S ROOUCTS COIfQMTIOS NCW TOM
3
Bourbon Whiskey—A Blend 86 8 Proof • 49% Grain Neutral Spirits
a s
BETHEL
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Rev. F. T. Sturtevant, Pastor
9:45 a. m.
Church School.
Miss Amarette Barnes, Supt.
11 a. m.
Worship.
Topic—The Larger Vision and Con­
secration Service for Church Officers
5:30 p. m. Junior High School So­
ciety, Mrs. Margaret Lou Braun,
Adviser.
7 p. m. Senior Pilgrim Fellowship
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Oeorge W. Springer, Pastor
Morning worship and preaching ser­
vice at 9:45 a. m.
Topic—Great Temptations.
Following the sermon, the Lord’s’
supper will be observed.
Bible School class session 11 a. m.
Christian Endeavor 6:30 p. m.
Evening service with special music
by the orchestra and a sermon by
pastor at 7:30 p. m.
Services Wed. 8 p. m.
Mr. Sprin­
ger is leading in course of study of
personal evangelism.
Everyone is welcome.
B e tte r—o r J u st as G o o d ?
OST o f us aren’t satisfied with buying—or growing
or manufacturing— something that’s “ just as g o o d .’’
W e want something better. And, in most cases, that
something better comes through competition.
For competition—real competition— is something be­
sides two people making, or offering for sale, the same
goods or services. It involves a lot more. And anybody
who serves the public prospers because he has something
better to offer—whether it’s quality, prices, service, or
just a clean appearance and a pleasant smile.
Real competition doesn’t come from punitive taxes, or
subsidies, or any other sort of horse-race handicapping
to make everybody in business start even. For it isn’t
equality that’s needed; it’s the inequalities that are the
true measure o f progress.
Real competition is the kind that encourages the
manufacturer, the farmer, or business man to get his
quality up, his costs down, and to develop new things
his customers want. It’s this kind o f competition that
produces something better rather than something just
as good—that insures to the public a steady increase in
the value it gets for its money. General Electric Company,
Schenectady, N. V.
M
ST. CECELIA CHURCH
Masses 8:25 and 10:20 during the
winter months.
METHODIST CHURCH
Albert S. Hlsey, D. D.. Minister
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Classes for all ages.
Attendance
invited.
Worship Hour
11 a. m.
tion Jan. 16 in the South Pacific.
is the son of Mrs. Jennie
Jones and the late H. A. Jones of
Beaverton, husband of Hazel, father
of Mark A., of Portland.
A
graduate of Beaverton High
School, he received training at As­
toria Navy Base and was instructor
at Farragut, Idaho, two years.
He
went to Diesel Engineering School at
Detroit, Michigan.
A brother Henry A. Jones F 1-c is
with the Navy in the Pacific.
Corporal Murdo M. Hickox was also
spl. Albert A. Karpetein, Beaverton,
awarded a good conduct medal in
France and is in the same regiment in tail gunner on a Fifteenth AAF Fly­
ing Fortress based in Italy, recently
F. ance.
completed his first combat mission by
Ensign Mark Edward Jones U. S. bombing a German-operated 9ynthetio
N. R , 35, was reported missing in ac- ^ oil refinery in Czechoslovakia.
SEEDS
1
^ 's i ï t K f K *
Dr. Heisy will be In the pulpit Sun­
day.
Al/OllA COMMUNITY CHURCH
Graydon D. Loree, Pastor
ALOHA ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Sunday School 10 n. m.
Sunday School 10 a. » .
Mary Antrim, Supt.
Worship U a. m.
Morning worship 11 a m.
Sermon—Simon's Mistake.
REEMMLLE COMMUNITY
Evening Service 7.30 p. m.
PRLSBYTBBIAN CHURCH
Quarterly business meeting will be
Sunday School 10 a. m.
Mrs. Otto
held Wednesday, January 31.
Pot
George, Supt.
luck supper at 6:30 p. m.
Young People’s C. E. 7 p m.
Prayer Meeting and Bible study, | #
N U -L IF E
.... $3.50
CHURCH OF TIIE NAZARENE
Thursday.
7
p.
m.
Leonard C. Johnson, Pastor
Pei 100 lbs.
Worship Service 11 a. m.
) 9:45 a. m.
Sunday School.
11 a. m. Morning worship—Evan-
A scientifically balanced plant
Turn war stamps Into Bonds
: gelist Nellie Emrick, Wilkinsburg,
food which works with Nature
! Penn.
to rebuild the soil and produce
6:15 p. m. Junior Meeting.
luxuriant.
beautfiul
lawns,
6:30 p. m. Hi-N.Y. and N. Y. P. S.
flowers and gardens.
7:30 p. m.
Evangelistic Service,
—Rev. Nellie Emrick.
Each night next week Miss Em­
0
SHEEP GUANO
75c
rick will sing and speak at the 7:30
hour. The community of Beaverton is
cordially invited to these services.
BHAXO
W v
What's Doing
IN THE
Churches
Ì
4%-oz. egg, B‘/ t Inches In circumference
0
Garden Seeds
Q
PEAT MOSS, Bale $ 3 .2 5
0
0
Lawn Seeds
Complete Lines
• * •
SOMETHING X-TRA
IN EGG PRODUCTION
PORTLAND, OREGON— Wartime
hens are responding to government
appeals for increased production
according to S. A. Cowan, 4430 N.E.
Killingsworth Avenue. As proof he
displays an egg weighing well over
a quarter pound and measuring
eight and one-half inches in circum­
ference from end to end. This over­
sized egg was laid by a White Leg­
horn hen only eight and one-half
months old fed on Triangle X-tra
Egg Producer and scratch.
Mr. Cowan not only reports pro­
duction of larger eggs by his flock,
but points to a remarkable laying
record as well. One pen of 90 Leg­
horns have been laying from 80 to
90 eggs per day. .Another pen of
225 birds are laying an average of
about 220 eggs per day.
“ I feel,” states Mr. Cowan, “ that
Triangle X-tra Egg Producer is
responsible for a large part of this
fine egg production.”
(Adv.)
Insecticides
Francis Bros.
You can almost always dispose of
; it, if you use want advs.
Kepler Davenport Co.
BEAVERTON, OREGON
Recovering and
Modernizing
Beaverton 3762
Open 8:30 to 6
Evenings by Appointment
TOWNSEND _______________________
SCHOOL
Prepares for—
College, Finishing School, High
School or Preparatory School, U.
S. Military and Naval Academies,
or U. S. Coast Guard. Personal ad­
visement
INDIVIDUAL TUTORING
Grace B. Townsend
2346 N. W. Glisan St.
BE. 5466
Portland
6519 S W Capitol Hwy.
W. E. P E G G
PORTLAND
M O R T I C I A N
Beaverton, Oregon
Estab. 1910—Serving 33 years
PHONE BEAVERTON 3411
QUALITY & SERVICE
A T . 7309
Save 20 to 25% on your FIRE INSURANCE COSTS
Oregon Mutual Policies are NON-ASSES8ABLE.
You NEVER pay
more than the premium on the face of the policy. Oregon Mutual
maintains more than three times the surplus required by Oregon
Insurance Laws.
Oregon Mutual Fire Insurance Company
o f M c M i n n v i l l e
•
Organized 1894—..40 years of Reliable Service Chae. L. Walker, Agent
New Location 112 So. 3rd Ave.
“Every Form of Protection”
Phone 1732
Hillsboro, Oregon
Hear Ihe G-E radio program«; "The G-E All-girl Orcheilra" Sunday 10 p.m.
EWT, N IC — "The World Todoy” newt, Monday through Friday 6i45 p.m. EWT,
C IS — "The G-E Hou*e Forty," Monday through Friday COO p m. EWT, C IS.
BUT WAR BONDS
YES, w e know there’s
GENERAL 01 ELECTRIC
a w ar going on!
MID WINTER REVIVAL
Church of the Nazarene
BEAVERTON, OREGON
JANUARY 28-FEBRUARY 4
- but here’s how we’re trying to overcome
Sundays— 11 a. m. and 7:30 p .m .
Weekdays— 7:30 p. m.
MISS N E L L IE EM RICK, Evangelist,
Wilkinsburg, Penn.
and
ai •
the difficulties of wartime travel
singer,
You ate coidlally invited to nttendthese aervicee.
SPECIAL MUSIC IN EACH SERVICE
= IH = lll!Eni£lll = llla;lll5lliaill3lll£IIISIII=lllxlll5IIISIIIxlll = lllslll£IIIEIIISIIl3lllâ
Sixth Church of Christ, Scientist. Portland,
Our trains are longer and schedules are slower now.
Space is hard to get. People frequently have to stand in
line to buy tickets or to get into the dining car. In short,
our service isn’t what it was before the war.
Ore.
Announce«
III
A FREE LECTURE ON
C H R IST IA N SCIENCE
Tire main reason is, o f course, that our volume o f pas­
senger traffic is fhv times that o f 1940, with just about
the same number o f cars we had then. And, like every­
body else, we are short o f help.
Entitled
ill
“Christian Scienae: The Fulfillment
Prophecy and Promise”
of
However, thus company is determined not to just give
up and blame everything on the war. Wherever possible
we have taken aggressive steps to lessen the difficulties
o f wartime travel For example:
ISr
RICHARD I. DAVIS, C. S. B.
of San Jose, California
Member of the Board of lectureship o f The Mother
Church. The Flret Church of Chrtet. Peientlet. in
Boston. Massachusetts.
In the edifice of
HI
Sixth Church of Christ, Scientist
S. W . Park Ave. and Columbia Street
Thursday evening, Feb. 1, at 8 o’clock
The Public Is Cordially invited
W niW H «m Bm »m -instr«m BiiiB!ii»iiu
.1
1 Our “ train assignment plan” for conch passengers
“ has to a large extent eliminated overcrowding and
standing on our long-distance trains. We endeavor
to sell only as many seats as are on the train, and
each pa&wnger gets a reservation slip.
O "Passenger aides,’ ’ capable trained women, have
~ been stationed on loaf dhtBM 8 P. coach trains.
They assist w omen traveMhg with children, help pre­
pare “ formulas ' for the babies, aid t!»e aged and
infirm, and paeform other services to nuke tlia
•journey a* comfortable as possible for even ore.
3
In spite o f the shortage o f help, we have greatly ex­
panded telephone reservation bureaus, increased our
forces handling reservations, and devised new reser­
vation systems, which are constantly reviewed. The
situation is not perfect, but it is much better than
it was.
4 We have increased the number o f chair car porters,
■ so that cars are now generally kept quite clean, a
difficult problem because o f the Utter from box
lunches, etc. Big trash boxes in the vestibules have
helped, too.
C "Train sen-ice agents” have been added to the staffs
•e o f long-distance coach trains. Thcne men supervise
all service features on the train, direct the chair car
porters, see to it that the trains are !;en: tidy, irv to
overcome difficulties and meet emergencies.
We don’t claim that all our people arc perfect. They’re
human brines, and are under the strain o f crctvded war
conditions. By and large w-e think they're dcir.g a sveU
job and we’re proud of them.
S 9
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