7 Illinois Valley News, Thursday, February 2, 1939 Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Meóla made a trip to Grants Pass the first of the week. J. J. Villair has been confined to his home with the flu during the past week. I American Legion I VALENTINE “SPOT” I Dance Boy Scout Week Offers Tribute To Daniel Beard ILLINOIS VALLEY CHURCH OF SEVENTH DAY ADVENTISTS Sabbath school at 1:30 p. m. Speaking at 3 p. m. Prayer and study, Wednesday evening at 7:39 p. m. You are invited to meet with us. F. W. Cooper Selma Elder o Cave Junction Community Church Sunday school.................... 10 a. m. Preaching ........................ 11 a. m. Evening service ............... 8 p. ni. SATURDAY FEBRUARY 4 Prizes for the Lucky Couples Bennett’s Orchestra American Legion Hall BRIDGEVIEW COMMUNITY CHURCH Sunday school ................ 10 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. ------------ o----------- BRIDGEVIEW CHURCH NEWS By Ed. Wright We had a real good service Sunday morning, January 26 al- though there were only 20 people in attendance. One family, that of Mrs. StockwelL was absent on account of illness. Burt Fox, an old time friend and brother preacher of Ed Wright, was there from Crescent City, and preached us a splendid sermon on Church Unity. The singing was good and a special number rendered by Mrs. James and her two sons was enjoyed by all. They make their guitars almost say the words. They will play for us again next Sunday. We expect a good at tendance next Sunday, February 5, as it is Communion Day. ------------ o- ILLINOIS VALLEY MOTOR CO. G. A. Hicks, Prop. 0' 0 MAKE THE BLESSED EVENTS BORN—To Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Camp of Selma, at the Lathrop Maternity home in Grants Pass, Saturday. January 21st. a baby son, weighing 8 V4 pounds. The Hotel Del Rogue Building | young heir was named Donald .................................................... 0 Lowell. I Del Rogue Coffee Shop Your Headquarters é : When in Grants Pass = : I l’m Hog Enough to Want Your Business And Man Enough To Appreciate It KEITH’S MARKET KERBY HIGH SCHOOL NEWS (Continued from Page One) Kerby’s seconds lost to Gold Gold Hill's seconds 20 to 10. The lineups: Kerby (35) 23 Gold Hill Brooks 9 F 3 Chapman ....................................................... 0 ?■ 12 Belknap F I EXPERT REPAIRS | Bergman 5 I Hill 13 C Mullens All Work Guaranteed Lentz Haberman 2 G G 5 Hammond MURPHY HICKS I Henry 6 1 Thompson s Walton i ILLINOIS VALLEY GARAGE I S 2 Shosmak’r Longnecker 0.......... --.... -..............à Morrison s Wolff Referee: Bill Bowerman, Med- ford. CANDY GIFTS This Friday, February 3. Ker- For All Occasions at by meets the strong Central Point in the local gym in what HORNING’S SHACK quintet promises to be one of the best GRANTS PASS games of the season. The Bad- gers defeated the pointers on their own court 32 to 18, so they will be out for revenge. Come early Notary Publics and see a couple of good games. in Cave City Kerby has four more confer ence games. Central Point here on AMY HUSSEY February 3, Rogue River there on M. C. ATHEY February 7; Phoenix here on Feb ruary 10 and a postponed game with Sams Valley to be played here at a later date, probably GRANTS PASS February 17th. STEAM LAUNDRY Pickup in Cave City end Kerby Monday and Thursday REDWOODS HOTEL Grants Pass SOLICITS YOUR PATRONAGE Excellent Coffee Shop IN CONNECTION REASONABLE RATES MINER’S SUPPLIES A SPECIALTY General Merchandise for Every Family Need Selma, Oregon Mining Industry (Continued from I'axe One) known as arseno pyrite. Ores of this nature, in which the Grants Pass and Gold Hill region seem to abound, I have given the name of “Grantite," after the town of Grants Pass. “When the deposits of this ore have been developed, it is almost a certainty, from present observa tion. that it will mean a yield of many millions in gold, with the proper smelting or a chlorination process. “This ore is found to be well distributed and in extensive veins, and without doubt will be of great extent by the enormously rich lenses going thousands of dollars per ton. These veins car rying the sulphide, which I have named “Grantite“ are of large ex tent and certainly will carry depth, but the very large ore chutes, running thousands of dol lars a ton, will naturally only be distributed through these veins. “Besides this sulphite ore, grantite, there was found very extensively, oxidized ore, which, while apparently carrying the values of sulphides, will certainly yield very large returns by the proper methods of treatment, such as chlorination or similar proces es. These supplies of sulphide ore appear to be almost inexhaust ible, but the values can only be recovered by special methods, concentration by flotation, or other means. “I am familiar with practically all of Central Alaska, particular ly the region opened up by the Alaska Railroad, known as the Broad Pass Region, and I have ex amined many ores while I was there, and in the whole length of the railroad I have not known of a single mining region that com- pares in any way with the Grant« TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Pass or Gold Hill region. If the CLASSIFIED ADS —This is a warning not to buy any stock or poultry from the D. L. Webb homestead without my permission as this property belongs to me. D. L. Webb. 39-3tp. FOR SALE—Weaner pigs. Also light stock trailer. D. c. Thompson, Selma, Oregon 39-ltc FOR SALE OR TRADE—Jersey bull 2 years old for good milch cow. Enquire at News office. 38 3tp BUY Out of the high rent district and save on Murphy road. GEORGE GROEBLI, your trac tor, Implement and Machinery man. Perfection Milkers, Cream Separators, Aermotor Wind mills, J. I. Case Tractors and Implements, W’ater Systems and Pumps. Everything for the prospective farmer. 24-39 DO YOU KNOW THE VALUE of one of these small classified ads. They get results, and cost so little. Lew Hammer’s More than any other man. 88- year-old Daniel Carter Beard has been the inspiration for American Boy Scouts, now observing their an nual “week." Pioneer woodsman, artist, author, friend of youth, “Un cle Dan” Beard is the only man to receive the Boy Scout golden eagle badge. He is one of three men to be awarded the Roosevelt gold med al for distinguished service. Years ago, when the Scout movement struggled in infancy. Dan Beard was one of the men who got behind it and pushed. FOR SALE — Mining location blank«, both quartz and placer and trespass notices at the Illinois Valley News office. railroad had traversed any such region as this, it would have prov en an enormous success, and there would now be a stampede to that section of Alaska. ■ “In all my travels of Alaska, I have never located any veins adjacent to the placers that could be described as Mother Lodes. “I have devoted many years to research work, looking to sources of gold in nature that had to be discovered, and for the last three years my work has been especial ly devoted to how gold is precipi- tated in mineral veins and mineral deposits, other than metallic gold. “The tellurides have already been discovered, but I have dis covered that the exide aurite is probably one of the most, if not the most, plentiful of gold that exists in nature. It requires special methods of treatment to recover and special methods of assaying to determine its pres ence. “The Grantite, also a form of telluride, associated with pyrite, will not be recovered by the or dinary methods of assaying. . . . These ores are perhaps the prin cipal source* outside of free gold* existing here. “So non« of the value* here Pape Three have been learned up to date, ex I movies on the vacation camps un SELMA NOTES cept the free gold, and these veins der her direction last summer. carrying these unusual ores of o gold are the true mother lodes of The D. C. D.’s will meet Thurs placers and other forms of free day, February Sth at the home P. J. Thielen Buys Out gold. of Dorothy Dexter. Local lead Furniture Partner As toon as the first smaller ers will be in charge. is established here and orsi are Last Monday Mr. Linkhart an treated, I believe it will equal Miss Dorothy Warren returned nounced that he had sold his in or surpass any of the gold re- to school this week after being on terest in the Linkhart & Thielen gions of the country. the sick list for a short time. Furniture store to P. J. Thielen. “I have examined a region of Mr. Thielen has been in the Jackson and Josephine counties The school scales recently or furniture business for years and from North to South of nearly 60 dered by the P.-T. A. arrived and has been with Mr. Linkhart for the miles; that is from Jacksonville are being used by the Selma, Dry last two years. The store was re —east and west about 30 miles. den and Central schools a*id are cently moved to their present lo “In the study of mineral veins, reported working very satisfactor cation, 108 S. 6th street, where the general deduction is that the ily- they have larger quarters than the wider and longer any vein is, the old location. greater depth you can expect, and ------------ 0------------ Mr. arid Mrs. P. Pyle and fam I h^ve seen veins here up to 40 ily of Grants Pass were guests Mr. and Mrs. Keith Owen and feet in width, and I have traced over Sunday at the E. Barnes family spent last Sunday with Mr. them up and down the side of the home. and Mrs. Harry Messenger at Ta- mountain from 60 to 100 feet on kilma. the same vein.’’ Mrs. Longnecker is quite ill at Respectfully submitted, her home. Everett Longnecker Aunt Mary White gave a birth William Gillisland Vance, E. M. returned from Los Angeles where day dinner party last Sunday for Geologist-Engineer, he has been employed the past few her husband, Homer White. Sr., in Boswell Mine. months. honor of his 76th birthday. Those Mr. Vance told us that Don present were Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kemmerer, mining engineer and The Deer Creek P.-T. A. met at White and son Herbert of Grants his family and Herbert K. Pat the school house Thursday at 8 Pass; Mr. and Mrs. Homer White, terson, former head of the Toron p. tn. Miss Nola Welch was in Jr., William Frainey. of Takilma to, Canada, Stock Exchange, and charge of the program and showed and William Echo of Grants Pass. his family, both of Toronto, would sodn arrive and make their homes here during the development of the Boswell mine. 1 ------------ o------------ ANNOUNCEMENT KERBY NEWS (Continued from Paee One) thair son Howard on his Sth birth day. The party was held at the attractive home of the Wilsons in Kerby with Mrs. Lola Peter- sen, Miss Alvenia Connell, Max Morrison, Wctidall Jones, Frankie McLean, Norman Wilson and Howard Wilson as guests. The lovely birthday cake and ice cream as well as the many other good things appealed great ly to the small guests. As further entertainment the guests were taken to the show at Cave Junc tion after the dinner. — o— Clarence Roe left Saturday night for San Jose, Calif., with a truck load of furniture and other property. Mr. Roe expects to go there to make his home soon. He has been employed at the Montgomery ranch north of Kerby this winter. Mrs. Emily Kellert has been confined to her home for a few days on account of illness. I wish to announce to my Illinois Valley Friends that I have purchased the interest of Ralph J. Linkhart; in the firm of Linkhart & Thielen Furniture Company, and will conduct the bus iness in the future under the firm name of the THIELEN FURNITURE COMPANY I appreciate the business from the Illinois Val ley and sincerely hope to merit your continued patronage. All merchandise delivered free of charge in the Illinois Valley. P. J. THIELEN iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim ENJOY FRESH MEAT WHENEVER YOU WANT IT Rent a Cold Storage Locker at Reasonable Rates ? ILLINOIS VALLEY ICE CO Phil Sawyer, Prop. Maurice Sauer has moved to Tulelake to take charge of his "imnuuiuuiiuiiiiiiiuiniiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiu'iiiiiiiiiniiiniiiimininiiiiHiiiiniiimnmiiiTnii brothers ranch at that place. —o— Les Henry and son Leslie have moved KltO the Glenn Young house f rom Maurice Sauer’s THE WORLD'S GOOD NEWS ranch. will come to your home every day through —o--- THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Carl Stallcup is on the sick list An Intern al tonal Daily Newspaper with a good old case of flu. It records for you the world's clean, constructive doing» The Monitor Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Martindale attended to business matters in Grants Pass last Monday. Kerby Girl Scouts have select ed their plays, roles are assigned and rehearsals begun. They ex pect to have the program in shape to present the latter part of this mopth. 0 fi 0 fi 0 fi 0 fi 0 fi 0 fi 0 fi 0 fi 0 1+ doe» not exploit crime or sensation; neither doe» It ignore them, but deals correctively with them Features for bu»y men and al! the family. Including the Weekly Magazine Section Ths Christian Selene» Publishing Society On*. Norway Street. Boston. Massachusetts . Please enter my subscription to Ths Christian Science Monitor lor a period ot 1 year *13 00 6 months »*00 J months »3 00 I month »100 Wednesday Issue, including Magaslne Section I year *3 60. * lsaues 3Se Name Address Saniftln ( on Rtquui Men's Work Shoes Black retan uppers, heavy composi tion outsoles, solid leather construe- (¡¿I (Ift tion, A shoe for more wear for * Peters Work Shoes. Solid leather construction, heavy composition out soles, natural caulk welting. The best wearing shoe Peters has ever offered for only ..................... *" e* Work Shoes by Ball Band. Men’s steel toed mining shoes with heavy duty composition soles. These toes will not break down, insuring com fort and long wear. The most ser- $¿/1 vice you can get for ......... * ' * Men's Work Pants New shipment just received. Complete range of sizes in Coverts, moleskins, whipcords, and Bedford cords. All Sanforized Shrunk $1.1» $1.3» $1.65 $1.7» and $1.»8 Golden Rule Store Grants Pass, Oregon 0 fi 0 B 0 fi 0 fi 0 B 0 B 0 fi 0 B ¡