Illinois Valley news. (Cave City, Or.) 1937-current, May 20, 1937, Page 2, Image 2

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    Illinois Valley News, Thursday, March 20, 1937
Page Two
Illinois Valley News
Lace Goes Style High for Day 'VI ear
An independent newspaper devoted to the development of the richest
valley in the world, the Illinois Valley and its surrounding districts
Published every Thursday at Cave City, Oregon by the Illinois Valley
Publishing Company.
M (
ATHEY
1.. E. ATHEY
THE BARBER
Bart McCue
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
CAVE
CITY. ORE
Curing Stuttering.
Editor
Buiinm Manager
SUBSCRIPTION PRICES
In Josephine County
............... ...............
Qnu Ycir
^HIN LEE, ARIZ.—Away
C
> up here in the Indian
country comes a newspaper,
A GOOD PLACE
$1 50
.75
50
T K r <* <• M o n t K *
saying some expert at cor­
recting human utterance has
turned up with a cure for
stuttering.
TO EAT
Outside of Josephine County
$2 00
One Year
HOME COOKING
The Illinois Valley N'“w» reserves the right to reject any advertising
copy which it deems objectionable. Advertising rates on application
♦
MINES AND MINING
Whoever applied the misnomer, alluding to this
section as being simply a “pocket mining section,’’
did not know much about mines or mining. It is
true that hundreds of rich pockets have been found
in the hills and creeks of the district, but when the
question is asked, “where did it come from,’’ no one
seems to have an intelligent answer.
Any sensible person can reason out the fact that
all this gold had to come from some source up in the
mountains, for the Illinois valley is filled with gold,
all over it. One can dig a cellar most any place and
pan the dirt and get a few colors, but all of this gold
had to originally come from some huge deposit of ore
which is still in the mountains, some place.
The application of “pockets” has had a tremen­
dous bad effect on the development of the mines in
this section, because capital does not like to risk its
resources on “pockets,” as a consequence many of
the good mining engineers have given the district a
wide birth, because it has been known as a "pocket”
country.
Nothing could be further from the truth, because
as we have stated, the original source of all this gold
had to come from some place where there are quartz
and where a huge ledge of it is waiting for someone
to find it, and it is still waiting.
However that may be, some of our local prospect­
ors have recently uncovered ledges that speak vol-
umns and in the near future, do not be surprised to
learn that the “Mother Lode” has been found and
hen the whole camp will be known the world over.
Some new mills of the latest type will soon mala
heir appearance in the valley and when they start
look out. Then the real development will be under
way, and the “pockets” will take a back seat for the
real thing. It’s coming, you can’t stop it, and those
who get on the band wagon now, are the ones who
will profit most.
----------------- o-----------------
Some /'i til'll are ro fond of ill lurk that they run half
way to no < t it —Jerrold.
----
---------- O-----------------
MAKING PROGRESS
"Nothing succeeds like success," so we are told,
and this aptly applies to the Illinois valley which is
coming into its own in a big way.
One of the grandest spots on the universe, this
valley, the richest valley in the world, is now becom­
ing known all over the Pacific coast and many new
settlers are looking this way. As an agricultural
section, the valley may have more potential possibil­
ities than appear apparent, but as a mining section,
this district has no superior and few equals, "believe
it or not."
If one is looking for a garden spot to build a home
and retire and live happily the rest of their life, the
Illinois valley presents opportunities few places can
boast of. On all sides of the valley springs gush
forth sparkling clear water, so much of it that it
literally goes to waste. In these streams miners have
taken out millions upon millions of gold, and there is
still millions left for the crafty prospector who knows
his stuff, but in the valley proper, are homesites, hun­
dreds of them, waiting for someone to come and with
ingenuity and a desire to build a home, one can ac­
quire a piece of property that would make a wonder­
ful hmm*, and this can be done in any section of the
valley.
In the last five years many new coiners have set­
tled in the valley and in the next five years its pop­
ulation will be doubled and trebled, because the val­
ley has "I I and has it to spare. Write to your
triends it they are looking for a home and tell them
ot the wonderful possibilities of the richest valley in
the world.
----------------- o—-------------
Il h»’ • i ii‘ t th< toih/n,- to ai; e fair words.
Hay-wood
Owi Cafe
FRANK HATI.EY, Prop
(’ave Junction
□........................... ....................................□
{Square Deal:
| Furniture Co. |
C. A. SNIDER, Mgr.
/'■'HOOSE tor your
V-J afternoon
c o s-
tume a suit tailored
at the front from yoke to waist. The
of lace and you will
iiat is designed especially to com­
have arrived at the
plement the suit, being of the iden­ I
:
dizziest heights of
tical wool lace worked with felt in
Bought Sold Exchanged
fashion. We know of
the same colors.
no more all-important, all-signifi­
Likewise, the daytime dress tai-
cant gesture that has to do with ; lored of lace declares its practi­
current costume design than this of cality as well as its flattering, pre­
tuning lace to general daytime
possessing locks.
The two-piece
SUPPLIES
wear.
model to the left in the picture,
The grand part of the existing en­ being smartly tailored, bespeaks a>l 1 400 S. 6th St. Grants Pass 1
that one could wish for to wear to
thusiasm for lace in the daytime
any afternoon occasion from spec­ p] iHltllHiHliHlllllUilillHIHMSWISHIIIiHiilllllHSIHiiiQ
is that it is revealing as it never
tator sports to the cocktail hour.
revealed before the practical w ■’
ability for all hours and the as­ Just now it is proving highly ac­
sured adaptability of this feminine­ ceptable for cruise or resort wear.
It is wearable, also, under the fur
beloved medium. Then, too. such
wide use of lace as it is now mani­ coat or a new spring topcoat, if you
are faring north. It has puff sleeves
fest. brings much anew of romance
and high pockets on the blouse, both
and loveliness into the afternoon
of which features are pet topics
hours of fashion.
with young girls this season.
Just recently a pageantry of lace
The suit illustrated to the right
was staged in the ballroom of
speaks in dramatic terms of the use
one of the noted superb hotels in
being made of vai lace edgings this
Miami which presented a most en­
season.
The shops are showing
trancing scene. At this gorgeous
daintiest of blouses thusly fashioned
lace ball, which seemed almost as if
| of vai and the neckwear depart-
it were a glimpse of fairyland, the
I menta are making a big showing of
program unfolded with breathtak­
ravishing collar and cuff sets, bibs,
ing beauty with a promise of style
vestees and the like of this type
futures that assured an unprec­
lace worked row-on-row on net
edented vogue for lace. Notwith­
foundations. In this model we see
standing the lure of ravishing eve­
a winter resort fashion such as is
ning creations oi shimmering filmy
to be taken seriously as a forerun­
lace or of the Very new printed
ner of a style-to-be when summer
laces or of crisp starched lace sil­
comes north. This stunning suit of
CAVE CITY
houettes, or of lace in the very
shirred va) lace on a net back­
new ‘'pretty” colors (cyclamen
ground tells better than words of
pink, thistle, azure blue and such),
the whole-hearted way in which de­
not forgetting smart black or white,
signers are emphasizing lace this
the big message comes to us of the
season.
importance of daytime lace fash­
And have you seen the new lace
ions. such as. per example, the suit
frocks
with
all-around
pleated
of dark lace centered in the ac­
skirts! If not you have a revela­
companying illustration.
tion of super chic and charm await­
This model by Victor Stiebel
ing you
There is a fabric type
(London designers are certainly i of lace suggesting eyelet embroid­
coming to the front this season) is
ery that yields most graciously to
of navy wool lace lined with tile
this treatment. Printed laces are
red crepe
The shirt blouse is in i immensely important
the same tile red crepe with pleats |
-- Western Newspaper Union.
i New and Second Hand!
Goods
Mining and (’amp
Groceries
Fresh Fruit and
Vegetables
In Season
Radio Tubes
and Repairing
Illinois Valley
Grocery
C. Y. Arnold, Prop.
I
|
I
l.ini.n I’ie
Take one and one half cupfuls of
bread crumbs, cover with one cup­
ful of boiling water and let stand
until soft. Mi;’ one cupful of sugar
and one and one half teasp nfuls of
cornstarch, add two egg yolks well
beaten and the juice and grated
rind of a lemon Combine t! ■ i, x
tures and make in one crust.
<£ Western N. w « p« i l . i
IRENE’S
BEAUTY SHOPPE
Cave Junction, Ore.
I Open Evening- by Appointment
|
Phone
Emulation
"What a beautiful ring!”
I Enjoy a smart hairdress at
"Yes,” said Miss Cayenne. "It
| Irene’s Beauty Shoppe. Per-j
was an engagement ring But the
. manents, refreshing facial and*
engagement is broken."
* all
beauty aids
Rememberi
"Aren't you going to send it
I
IRENE’S FOR BEAUTY"
j
back?"
"Of course But I want to keep it ’ Permanents $2.95, $3.75, $5.00l
long enough to let the next gentle­ | Fingerwave»
35c, 50c j
man see what he is expected to b\a i Marcell
75c, $1.00g
up to.”
«•■ • • —» •
How to Relax.
DEFORE I started out here, feel-
ing somewhat jumpy after
wrestling a radio program for six
months, Jimmy Swinnerton, the art­
ist, who's one of the most devoted
friends these high mesas ever had.
advised me to try stretching out on
the desert sands as a measure for
health and complete relaxation and
a general toning up.
"Just lie down perfectly flat," he
said. Then he took another look at
my figure.
"Anyway, lie down,"
he said.
So today I tried it. Another friend,
John Kirk, the famous Indian trad­
er, helped me pick out a suitable
spot on the Navajo reservation that
was forty miles from the nearest
habitation.
But the site I chose was already
pre-empted by a scorpion with a
fretful stinger and an irritable dis­
position that seemed to resent be­
ing crowded.
So I got right up
again. In fact. I got up so swiftly
that Kirk said it was impossible to
follow the movement with the hu­
man eye. It was like magic, he
said.
Speed Crazed Drivers.
XITHY the hurry, Sonny Boy?
V V i see you almost daily. You’re
roaring through populous streets or
skidding on hairpin turns or whirl­
ing at sixty perilous miles an hour
around the kinked and snaky twists
of mountain roads like some de­
moniac bug racing along the spine
of a coiled rattler.
Il I am one to say. you probably
have primed yourself for this sense­
less speeding on that most danger­
ous of all mixed tipples—the fear­
some combination of alcohol and
gasoline. Or perhaps, like the blind
mule of the folklore tale, you just
naturally don’t care a dern. One
thing is plain: Despite the high per­
centage of mortality your breed is
on the increase.
So, again, echoing the question
which the coroner must frequently
ask at the inquest, why the hurry.
Sonny Boy?
It can’t be that anybody wants
you back at the place where you’ve
been or that anybe iy else will be
glad to see you at the place where
you’re going.
Really now, Sonny Boy, what is
all the hurry about?
Civilization’s Predicament.
I 1 EEL it my duty to call atten-
* tion to the following warning, re­
cently published:
"The earth is degenerating in
these latter days. . . bribery and
corruption abound. . . the children
no longer obey their parents. . . it
is evident that the end of the world
is approaching!”
However, it should be added that
this prediction is not, as might be
assumed from its familiar ring,
the utterance of some inspired ob­
serve! ol the present moment. It
is a translation from an Assyrian
tablet, (fated 2800 B C.
So, if the fulfillment of the doleful
prophecy has been delayed for 4,-
737 years it seems reasonable to
assume that it may be some months
yet before civilization flies all to
pieces.
• • •
Back Again !
John
---------- —--- Q---
How about ( ave City organizing a base ball team,
e have material here for a very good team and dur­
ing the summer months plenty of good wholesome
sport could be enjoyed by the citizens of the valley.
A good team would have no trouble in getting games
with other towns and Grants Pass and Medford and
Ashland might want to take our scalps. It’s a good
suggestion. I lit* Legion or ( haml>er of Commerce
should give this serious thought.
1
But why? By his own admission,
nearly all stutterers can sing and
most of them can
swear fluently, thus
providing superior
emotional outlets in
two directions. One
of
the
smartest
criminal lawyers I
know deliberately
cultivated a natural
impediment in his
speech.
In court­
room
debates
it
gave him more time
to think up either Irvin S. Cobb
the right questions
or to figure out the right answers.
And one of the most charming
voices I ever heard belonged to a
Louisiana girl whose soft southern
accents were fascinatingly inter­
rupted at intervals by a sudden
stammer—like unexpected ripples
in a gently flowing brook.
• • •
-¿joe
Waning States' Rights.
A S I watch commonwealth after
*■ * commonwealth below the Ma­
son and Dixon line tumbling over
one another to embrace centralized
authority in exchange for federal
funds for local projects. I'm re­
minded of a trip which a friend of
mine out here just made.
He’s a descendant of the Lees and
he decided to pay a pious pilgrim­
age to the last remaining strong­
hold of the late Southern Confed­
eracy. So he went to the only two
states that voted last fall for states'
rights, making his headquarters in
the ghv»t city of Passamaquoddy
He reports that, in both Maine
and Vermont, the secession senti­
ment is getting stronger all the time
and that there's a growing tendency
to name boys for Jeff Davia rather
than Ethan Allen or Neal B. Dow.
IRVIN S. COBB
«— WNU Service.