Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, May 07, 1942, Page 4, Image 4

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    Page 4
:
At the Churches J
Friday and Saturday!
TIMBER' \
.
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aaJ H b W 1' ia a hw*
WUMM boyo 'I
WDEKofth
wstll
•**© KINO
AN0Y CLYOf
t flf ANO» STEWART
Sun. - Mon
Tues
/
/ COULD they destroy this
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fantastic force that placed
ONE SOUL in two bodies!
EDWARD
SMALL
CORSICAI2
BROTHCRS
DOWLAS FAIRBAHS, JI
Bath Warntk
Aha T mmto H
Mitán id a i
Thursday, May 7, 1942
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
UiU-k-h
Wed’sday & Thursday
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Cur. N. Main and Laurel Sts.
Dr. George W. Bruce. Minister
Sunday Church school meets at
9:45 a. in Each department has a
bit of scripture adapted to the
age group present.
Morning sermon at 11 o'clock on
the subject, "The Church and the
Home." This is Mother's Day and
the music by the adult choir will
be in keeping with the day, as will
the sermon.
Wesley League for college youth
and the Methodist Youth Fellow­
ship for high school youth, meet
for worship in their respective
rooms at 6:45 p. m.
Evening sermon 8 o'clock on
the subject. "A Bunch of Certain­
ties."
Midweek Bible study period
at 7:30 p. m. each Wednesday.
♦ » ♦
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
J. 11 Turnbull, Minister
Bible school 9:45 a. m, C. E
Corry, superintendent.
Mother’s Day service at 11 a. ni.
Five-minute cartoon talk on “Mo­
ther." Special musical numbers .
Sermon. "The Church and the
Family-
Young People's Union 7 p. m.
Gospel service 8 p. m. Ten-min­
ute singing the songs you love.
Sermon. "Signs of Christ's Re­
turn—are they in Evidence To­
day ?"
Prayer, praise and Bible study
hour. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday.
• Mrs. Olive Allison spent the
week-end at Weed, visiting Mr,
and Mrs. Calkins and family on
Butte creek
---------- —.>------
"When some men discharge an
obligation." Mark Twain once re­
marked, "you can hear the report
for miles around."
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST
Pioneer Ave., South
Sunday school at 9:45 a m.
----------------------------- •-----------------------
Sunday morning service at 11
o'clock.
Subject: Adam and Fallen Man.
Wednesday
evening
meeting,
DENTIST
which includes testimonie« of
Hours 9-12 and l-A
Crristian Science healing, is held
3OCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXMXXXKXXM
Medical llldg.
Phone 5211
at 8 o'clock.
8
■
I
Reading room open daily from
2 to 5 p. ni„ except Sundays and
| holidays.
The public is coriadlly Invited to
attend these services and to use
1. Egypt, in about 600 B. C.
the reading room.
2. The principal tributaries of
the Atlantic are the St. Lawrence.
eve
Mississippi. Amazon and Plata
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
from the Americas, and the Niger
Eiaat Main Street
and Congo from Africa.
John R. Poet, Pastor
3. Sydney and Melbourne
Sunday school at 9:45 a. m.
4. King Solomon.
Bernice Beare, superintendent ui
charge.
5. 1704
Morning worship at 11 o clock
6. Panama
with the pastor bringing the mes­
7. 1922
sage.
8. Jama-Masjid, the largest ■nd
Young People's meeting and Ju­
finest mosque in India.
nior meeting at 7:15 p. m. Evan­
9. A number of nomad Aryan
gelistic service at 8 p. m. with
tribes, belonging to the great In­
the pastor in charge.
do-European language family.
Mid-week prayer meeting at 8
10 Russia.
p. m. Wednesday.
------------- •-------------
f f f
CATHOLIC CHURCH
"Yassuh," said the little colored | tUVURA1 QV a A r K l . . . ilMsn
Rev. W. J. Meagher, Pastor
boy. "I se named for my parents.
HltNidrll and John
Howard,
Mass at 9 a. m. Sunday.
Daddy's name waa Ferdinand and
haughtily alt ting bark-to-buck
» v <
NEIGHBORHOOD CONGREGA­ Mammy's name was Liza "
In the above acene from their
TIONAL CHURCH
"What'» your name, then?"
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
newest Columbia comedy, Three
Clarence F. McCall, Minister
CHURCH
•'Ferdlllza!''
(¡Irla About Town, play the ro­
Boulevard and Morton Streets
Howard G. Eddy, Minister
---------- •-----------
mantic lead* In the hilariously
Church school 9:45 a. m.. Mrs.
Bible school at 9:45 a. m., Wirt
funny film. Currently
The
latest
definition
of
a
bustle
M. Wright, superintendent.
Glen Prescott, superintendent.
Mthla
Theatre.
la
a
deceitful
seatful.
Morning worship at 11 o'clock.
Worship service 11 a. m. with a
High school Christian Endeavor special Mother's Day message on
meets at 6:15 p. m.
"The Church and the Family.”
Evening service at 7:30 p. m.
At 2 p. m. Wednesday. May 13,
FULL GOSPEL* TEMPLE
the Pilgrim Study club will meet
at the home of Mrs. Kradel, 72
E. Main and Siskiyou Blvd.
Fifth street.
L. P. furman, Pastor
I
Sunday school 9:45 a. m.
------------- •-------------
Morning worship 11 o’clock.
C. A. service 6:45 Sunday eve­
ning. Evangelistic service to fol­
low at 7:30 o’clock.
C. A. service and choir practice >*
DIAL 4341
7:30 Tuesday evening.
KMM30(XM30CM3CCC«DOCC«MM3K:C<M
Bible study and prayer meeting
7:30 Friday evening.
1. What nation was the first to
DEPUTY COUNTY CORONER
Everybody 1» cordially invited explore the African coast ?
to all services.
2. What are the largest rivers
flowing into the Atlantic ?
We Never Close—l*to»iie «ORI
3. What ’ are the two largest
CHURCH OF THE N AZARENE
Bertrand F. Peterson, Pa»tor
cities of Australia?
Fourth and C Street»
4. What king ruled at Pales-
Church school 9:45 a. m.
Morning worship, 11 o'clock.
Sermon: "The Church His Body."
Departmental meetings at 6:30:
t
Evening service. 7:30. Sermon,
"Vaiueo” by Rev. C. O. Preonall.
Prayermeeting. Wednesday 7:30.
p. m.
Evangelistic service 7:30 p. m.
Prayer meeting 8:00 p. m Wed- i
nesday evening.
8
Too rich
tine's height of power?
5. When did the English get
control of Gibraltar?
6 What la the capital of the
Republic of Panama?
7. When waa the tomb of Kin«
1
Tutankhamen discovered?
8. What famous palace hits
made Delhi, India, noted?
9. Who lived in Persia before
1500 B. C.?
10 What country dominated
Poland prior to 1918?
------------- •-------------
ANSWERS
1
1
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Second and B Street»
Earl F. Downing, Minister
careful driver ap-
proached a railroad crossing He
stopped, looked and listened. All
Bible school 9:45 a. m. Mother's .
he heard was the car behind Day program in charge of high ,
crashing his gas tank.
school class followed by classes
for all ages.
Morning service 11 o'clock. Solo
by Eunice Hager. Sermon, "The
Living Church and the Family."
Christian Endeavor 7 p. m.. with
junior, high school and young peo­
ple’s groups.
ri
Evening service 8 o’clock. One
of the professors of San Jose Bible
College will speak,
Midweek service. 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday.
Jg
ROBERT 5.
FHRRELU
A
Paid Advertisement
<
r
*
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Dr. Claude E. Sayre, Vicar
Holy Communion 8 a. m.
Church school 9:30 a. m.
Sermon and morning prayer 11
a. m.
Holy Communion 9:30 a. m.,
Wednesday.
Choir will meet 7:30 p. m.
Thursday.
You are cordially invited
worship with us.
YOUR DOCTOR’S
PRESCRIPTION IS
ONLY’ as good as the care and skill used
by the Pharmacist in filling it... ONLY
as good as the quality of drugs used . . .
Bring your prescription here and be
CERTAIN of full value from your Doc­
tor’s efforts.
8
THE COWBOY
SERENADE”
with
I
Gene Autrey
and
Smiley Burnett
plus
“THE OFFICER
AND THE LADY”
with
Rochelle Hudson
and
Roger Pryor.
Sunday, Monday
and Tuesday
Three Nice Girla...
Trying To Get Along I
Wednesday and
Thursday
Mid-Week Special
11 cents and 1 5 cento
THIS IS THE STORY OF
CARBOLOY
How 0 Most Strategic Material of the War-Invented
in Germany—Was Made Available to the United Nations
★
M.rs Ersdsus Thaa Hamads la War Frada t
lien . . . Carboloy is an American trade­
mark for cemented tungsten-carbide, an
alloy second only to diamonds in hardness,
more precious than diamonds as a vital
material in America's war program. It is
used for the tips of cutting tools, and for
wear-resistant dies. Carboloy is used in
small quantities; it is difficult to make
and difficult to use—but it has never been
scarce in modern times. There is no scarcity
now.
I n vs^ifod m ^lerae^my--"flrup^i Rretodo^l by
U. S. Moats ... Cemented carbide waa in­
verted in Germany—it lielonged ro Krupp
of Germany, and this made all the rest of the
world Krupp’s customer. In this country,
Krupp was protected by patent grants from
the United states.
General Boctrie Creates ladegoadoat ^reduc­
tion ... The General Electric Company two
years before this had begun research on
tungsten-carbide and foresaw its importance
in industrial production. For immediate use
in its own plants and for easier availability to
others, General Electric undertook the long
and arduous negotiations for the American
rights. Limited rights were obtained in 1938,
yrith Krupp continuing to export the mate­
rial to its United States customers—a busi­
ness which languished, however, as General
Electric painstakingly developed its own
Carboloy technique. This paved the way for
General Electric to make the United States
entirely independent of Germany for its
cemented tungsten-carbide supply as early
as 1936.
From the start, two totally different busi­
nesses were involved. Krupp originally ex-
“The Reliable Druggists”
Friday, Saturday
QUESTIONS
Mortem Tool Costs NoH That of Gonam ...
BROADY DRUG STORE
ENTERTAINMENT
Dr. U W. Staffers
Litwiller Funeral Home
1
LITHIA
ported cemented carbide« in chunk«—and
was unsuccessful. General Electric—and it*
subsidiary, Carboloy Co., Inc.—found it
necessary to develop a complete engineering
and manufacturing service, making various
types of Carboloy equipped tools, training
men in their uae, and offering to its customers
a specialized and successful production tech­
nique. For purposes of fair comparison, a
typical German cemented carbide tool in
1918 cost >31.36 in the United States, while
a comparable American Carboloy tool cost
>11,11.
VWMe vw vwWwl wl HvCTilC ■ Ww
y I
Taught te Industry ... In times of peace—
■nd 193S was such a time—the measure of
success of industrial adventure is to be found
in profit to the adventurer. By such a
measure, Carboloy could not l>e called
successful. Initial expenses were great. For a
time the Company lost at the rate of liooo a
day, and once had an operating deficit of
more than a million dollars.* One of the major
contributing reasons was the continuing high
cost of development, standardization, and
training. In 1936—37 alone, training courses
were given to 10,000 men in industry. More­
over, six major price reductions were made
in the face of operating losses, until the stand­
ard tool blank had been reduced in price 90
per cent.
FoWi and Rarsovaronca... Depression was still
another reason—labor-saving tools could not
be sold to industry or labor at any price. But
General Electric, with determination that now
seems providential, kept on—increasing its
'Over the entire period of itt exiilence up to
fanuary nt, tgpi the total net profit of the
Carboloy Company wat 2.J per tent of talet.
«
GENERAL
capacity, granting new licenses, condoning
instances of unlicensed production, staying
ahead of its market.
Frsdudlsa MuffigUsd Forty-flue Timas I n Four
Tears ... Cemented tungsten-carbide could
eaaily have been a source of weakness here, as
it was in England, had it not been for Gen­
eral Electric's policy ot continued expansion.
In 1939, the production ol the Carboloy
Company was less than io.ooo lbs.; in 1940,
it was $5,000 lbs.; in 194I, it was 163,000—
and in December came Pearl Harbor. Now,
in 194I, the Company'i production is going
at a rate that is 45 times that of only four
years ago.
Britain Dependent upon Us ... By contrast,
British companies, which had been content
to continue as customers of Krupp, found
themselves cut off from the vital material
when Poland was invaded Hut the General
Electric Company was able to supply sub­
stantial quantities to British industry im­
mediately and amce then has continuously
filled British orders. It has, in like manner,
filled Canada's requirements since 19)6. It is
currently supplying Canada, Russia, and
other United Nations. All this in addition to
supplying the greatly expanded needs of
American industry.
An inspirational Story of American Industry ...
Thus, the story of Carboloy does not end
in ‘‘too little and too late." Like many
previously untold stories of American
industry, it continues, a sturdy and in­
spiring example of public service born of
private enterprise, and characterized by hard
work, ingenuity, investment, research, risk,
and courage—a familiar pattern on this sid •
of the Atlantic. General Electric Compan ,
Schenectady, New York.
ELECTRIC
•Mitili
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