Illinois Valley News, Thursday, November 18, 1937
Page Two
An independent newspaper devoted to the development of the richest
valley in the world, the Illinois Valley and its surrounding districts. BRIDGEVIEW COMMUNITY
CHURCH SERVICES
Published every Thursday at Cave Junction, Oregon by the Illinois
Valley Publishing Company.
10 a.
Entered as second-class matter June 1 1, 1937, at the Post Office at Sunday school
Cave Junction, Oregon, under the act of March 3, 1879
(Leonard Beard, Supt.)
Preaching each Sunday, 11 a. rn.
.......... Editor
M C ATHEY
Loyal Defenders, Vivian Pul
Bu»ine»» Manager
L. E. ATHEY
len, acting piesident .... 7 p. rn.
Preaching and a good old fash
SUBSCRIPTION PRICES
ioned sing begins ........ 8 p. m.
In Josephine County
$1 50 Prayer meeting in church
One Year
.75
Six Months
Wednesday night ........ 8 p. m.
50
Three Month»
“No books but the Bible and
Outside of Josephine County
$2 00 no creed but Christ."
One Year
ED WRIGHT, Pastor.
The Illinois Valley News reserves the right to reject any advertising
copy which it deems objectionable. Advertising rates on application
NON-DENOMINATIONAL
Cave City
C red WOOD
EMPIRE NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS unit
EXONERATED
Sunday School and church ser-
vices at Legion hall, Cave City
every Sunday.
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m.
Church services at 11 a. m.
Rev. George L. Gray of Grants
Pass, pastor. Everyone invited.
Wonderful news came to the citizens of the Illi
nois Valley last Tuesday when it was learned that ILLINOIS VALLEY SEVENTH
DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH
the Jackson county grand jury exonerated Richard Sabbath
school, 1:45 p. m.
Messenger from any intent to harm a passenger in Church service 3 p. m.
his car.
Prayer meeting announced each
Richard Messenger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sabbath at church service.
Messenger of Takilma, is an HONOR graduate of the M. V. Program, Sabbath 3 p. in.,
Oregon State college, and a member of Phi Kappa Nov. 20. ------------- o------ -- -
Phi, an honorary fraternity that only admits the best
material in any college. Richard has always had and TAKILMA NOTES
maintained a most remarkable character, an enviable Guess I'm a good deal like the
reputation for any young man, and the fact that his mail man who went on a walking
employer in Ashland, stood by him to the finish, is 'rip for his vacation, Had occasion
.o make a trip out here to Cen-
testimony sufficient to show the most skeptical, that tral,
Oregon, so thought I’d bring
Richard had been the dupe of suggestions eminating ny pick and pan along. Never
from other sources, and was only involved to the ex ;aw a place yet that a fellow
tent that his automobile and his room was used by wouldn't want a few samples of,
especially if he left his pan at
others.
There’s supposed to be cin
It is highly gratifying to all who know Richard, home.
nabar deposits in this country, and
and his many friends are legion in the valley, to have here the old prospectors tales are
his good name cleared of any responsibility from an ill about the fellow who made a
act committed by three other boys. And we want to rich cinnabar strike instead of
say that we do not believe, in fact we are positive, that ■zold. The industry is in its infan
yet, as nearly as I can make out.
the three boys involved are not bad boys. They went cy
A 25-ton mill is in operation on
off on a rampage of misguided thought, and it will Maury mountain, just on the other
do no good to society to put such buys in jail. A stiff side of the mountain from my
fine and a good lecture will do more for these boys place.
of the cinnabar that I
than a jail where their companions will put other saw Some
from there looks mighty
ideas into their heads. These boys are college students promising. It comes, so far in
and Richard Messenger had all the right in the world quite high grade kidneys. I miss
to be chummy with college associates. If not in them, the water that gushes so freely out
of our Siskiyous. Here you must
then by whom?
carry your samples several
It is simply an imprudent act that the boys will often
miles to water. I.ucky for me there
quickly live down if given an opportunity. Richard is a spring on my place, but its
was not involved in the act, and was only a companion. kind of a sickly affair and not
The News and hundreds of citizens of the valley what we would call a real spring
rejoice with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Messenger in the at home.
it’s getting colil out here
exoneration of Richard.
The wind blows almost all
0
A REVOLUTION AT HOME
time. It was fourteen above
night I got here. Never could go
iny place without forgetting some
thing. This time I forgot to buy
my candles and Pm 65 miles from
town. Sat around this old shack
in the dark for several nights and
rot awful sick of it. Then I hap-
We may think we are smart and keeping out Of
war, but we have a situation that may develop to lie
as bad or even worse than tangling with an alien ene
my, if the two warring unions, the A. F. of L. and the
C. I. ()., do not get together and reach an agreement
Nice Assortment of
bet ween t hemselves.
XMAS ( ARDS
Thousands of acts of vandalism are being com
in Now
mitted every day in the large centers between the
two union groups, so we are informed, and they are
getting worse, instead of better. Even life has been I
taken at strikes during the year.
It is bad enough for the men involved to be strug
gling against each other, hut the worst of all is the
hardships and misery imposed upon an unsuspecting
general public that has no choice, hut to let unions
fight it out while want and misery goes on for the
lack of cooperation between the two factions.
General John Public will stand for it as long as
possible, but when women and babies get hungry and
Where Courtesy and Service
cold, something is going to pop, and it will be the un
Reigns Supreme
ions that will bear the brunt of the popping. Capital
and labor have reached agreements and working men
an* getting the best terms they have ever had. The
( AVE JUN( T1ON
war now is between two f ictions of unionism that
BEAUTY SALON
claim they are the ones who must dictate, and the war,
apparently, is still in its infancy.
If the unions do not see the handwriting on the
wall, General Public is going to rise up and show it to
them in large letters, then all the work that has been
Open Evenings
accomplished to help the working man will be thrown
asunder, and the worker will be in a much worse con
FLO LEEDY
BEAUTICIAN
dition than he has ever been in. The heads of unions
are supposed to be fairly smart men, but they are
proving themselves “dumbbells" when it comes to
MACK'S SEED AND
FEED STORE
treatment of the public at large.
Field Seed»
Unions grew out of necessity when capital abus
Idaho and Montana Grown
ed labor. Now labor is becoming drunk with power
Grimm, Cossack. La dak and
and are doing as bad as the capitalists did when labor
Common Alfalfa
was forced to organize.
Gray Winter Oats, Common
Vetch
And in the meantime, (¡eneral Public pays the
bill and plays a most uninteresting part in the strug Fenuggrek, the Greatest Known
Cover Crop
gle, that of "watchful waiting."
Sperry's Dairy and Poultry
— ------------- o——
—
Feeds
ALMA'S
Send The Illinois Valley News To Your Friends
514 So 6th St.
Phone 301-R
Notary Publics
in Cave Citv
AMY HUSSEY
M. ( . ATHEY
Good for the Home
Dora Taggart Brown
................................................................. ...
Let all the people praise Thee:
then shall the earth yield her in
crease; and God, even our own
God, shall
bless
u*.—Psalm
67:5, 6.
“And ye shall eat in plenty and
be satisfied, and praise the name
of the Lord your God, that hath
dealt wondrously with you.”.-
Joel 22:6.
“It is a comely fashion to be
glad: joy is the grace we say t >
God.”—Selected.
A Great American
“What our fathers with so much
difficulty secured, do not basely
relinquish.”
That is the inscription on the
obelisk erected in honor of Wil-
liam Bradford, a zealous Puritai.
and a sincere Christian: distin-
guished governor of Plymouth
colony.
In these days when nation aft-
er nation has treated lightly its
pledged word, when the blessings
of liberty have been lost in not
a few and when real freedom to
worship God has been curtailed or
denied in some, might it not be
well for us to pause and ponder
it this Thanksgiving time words
written in remembrance of Gov
ernor Bradford?
We memorialize our Pilgrim
fathers. Might we not whether we
bear the marks of their courage,
their zeal, and their burning pas
sion?
Thanksgiving
challenges us
not merely to turn back the page
of history, but to face forward
with the pioneer spirit, the pion
eer spirit of early Illinois valley 3
days that may live again—God
willing and man resolving.
CAVE CITY’S
Popular Cafe
NOTHING DOWN
LOTA PEARUE
BEAUTICIAN
517 “G” Street
Phone 67-R
Grants Pass, Oregon
(¡RANTS PASS
STEAM LAUNDRY
$5.45 and Up
will build that additional room,
re-roof or modernize the
old house
Pickup in Cave City and Kerby
Monday and Thursday
SOMETHING NEW AND
DELICIOUS
Jordan's Freshly Frozen
See Us for Details
LUMBER
MEALS
COOKED
MADE
Like
Dental Surgeon
Tuffs Building
Phone 4
Grants Pass
COPELAND
♦
You’ll
5
Dr. Fred W. Gould
S
S'
To be alive in such an age!
To live in it! To give in it!
Rise, soul, from thy despairing
HULL & HULI
knees—
FUNERAL HOME
What if thy soul hath drunk
,the lees?
Ambulance »ervice dav or nite
502 N 4th St.
Phone 334
The passion of a greater claim
Will put thy puny grief to
shame:
S'
s
Fling forth thy sorrow to the
wind,
THE BARBER
And link thy hope with human
Bart McCue
kind :
Breathe the world-thought, do
CAVE CITY, ORE
the world-deed—
Think highly of thy brother 3
S
need.
Give thanks with all they flam-
FRENCH LAUNDRY
ing heart,
AND DRY CLEANERS
Crave but to have in
Of Grants Pa»»
Give thanks, and clasp thy her Family Laundry Service ----Dry
Cleaning Unsurpassed. Collect
itage
and Deliver Wed. and Sat.
To be alive in such an age!
ANGELA MORGAN.
right now as those bright and
shining lights that hang on each
side of the road in Cave City.
Guess I'm just plain homesick.
The Perennial Prospector.
HOME
Naturopathic Physician
CAVE CITY, OREGON
We Thank Thee, Lord
pened to remember how I'd heard
the old pioneers tell about the
lights they used to have made of
a little piece of rag in a saucer
of grease. So now I’m writing this
by the light of a piece of rag in
a tin can lid of melted Snowdrift.
It’s not a bad light at all. But I
can’t think of any kind of a light
that would look half as good to me
HOME
DR. A. N. COLLMAN
the
S1BERRIAN ( REAM
YARDS
Jordan's Siberrian Shop
Grants Pass Oregon
6.32 8. 6th St., Grants Pass.
PIES
Meal»
at the
Owl Cafe
CAVE CITY
DRUG STORE
ÌL8UT 1900
WHIRLPOOL
WASHERS
THE
CRAFTSMAN
$1.00 Creo»oted Emuliion 89c
25c
25c-50c
Penetro No»e Drop»
Penetro Cold Cap»ule»
75c Vick» Vapo Rub
100 Gold Medal A»pirin
Fountain Service
Ice ( ream
Forbes B. Slayton, Prop.
WARDROBE
CLEANERS
THE OLDEST AND BEST
Since 1911
Free pick up by
Laundry
“Plus Value”
Washer
The Whirlpool ’Craftsman" is truly a washer of
‘ Plus Value". Built from finest materials, blended
into graceful lines of great strength--should last a lifetime.
A standard family size washer with a Vitreous Porcelain
Enamel Tub, finished in a beautiful shade of Coral Gray, all
It mean» factory-arproved
aarvica—akallKl mechanics—
steel chassis, reinforced legs and other parts trimmed in Beige
Baked Synthetic Enamel. "Oiled-for-life' Motor and direct
drive Precision Transmission fully enclosed. Genuine “Sur-
special t.ol» and equipment —
genuine parr* for IVxlge and
gilator" Cleanser, Bar Type Safety Wringer with balloon
Plymouth car». . . . Drive in
of the features that make the “Craftsman" superior in value.
now for a frte »afety check-up.
GARNER’S
Automotive Service
Grant»
Oreeon
rolls and a rust proof, non-corroding Drain are just a few
If you are looking for "Plus Value" (more for your money)
at moderate cost—see the Whirlpool "Craftsman
toda»!
Ask tor c demonstration'
Rogue River Hardware
Where Most People Traile