Illinois Valley news. (Cave City, Or.) 1937-current, January 16, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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    Illinois Valley News, Thursday, January 16, 1941
Page Four
Illinois Valley News
An independent newspaper devoted to the development of the richest
valley in the world, the Illinois Valley and ita surrounding districts
Published every Thursday at Cave Junction, Oregon by the Illinois
Valley Publishing Company.
Entered as second-class matter June 11, 1937, at the Post Office at
Cave Junction, Oregon, under the act of March 3. 18 ¡v
M
C
Editor
ATHEY
SUBSCRIPTION PRICES
In Josephine County
One Year .......
Sia Months
Three Month»
Outsole of Josephine County
One Year
si so
.75
50
$2 00
The Illinois Valley News reserve' the right to reject any advertising
copy which i> .teems objectionable. Advertising rates on application
0 f! E g 1 o (H
PAPER
P ublisher !/ ^A-sso tfi at i oh
_ __ n
'REDWOOD EMPIRE NEWSPAPER PUBUSHEBSJ'»^
MEETING “PROSPERITY”
GJ
but a feller can’t stay on the cars
all the time, so if he wants Cave
City he’s just gotter wander ‘round
'til he finds 'er. Tell you what,
E1., lets have a Congressional in­
vestigation, or, better still, let’s
put the whole business up to the
Tax League or the Brain Trust—
if it has a brain, Lets get this
thing fixed up so's folks'll know
which town they’re in —if any.
I'm a peace at any price sort of
a Kuy.
HE'S THE BOY CAN DO ITI
Naturopathic Phyeiciaa
Office.
Sherman's Camp
Cava Junction
hr. Fred W. Gould
NOTHING DONE YET
We wonder what it takes to make the citizens of
Cave Junction do what they should do?
A few weeks ago we told you that a garbage dump
was a necessity, and that we should find a place where
all the garbage from the city could be dumped. As
fas as we know, not a move has been made to find
such a place.
It won't be long until the health authorities come
out and tell you, in no uncertain terms, that you must
do something about the garbage. Then you'll have
to do something.
Why don't we do it before this happens? We still
think a .Junior City Council could be formed and
elected by the people and do the things that must be
done in a growing place like Cave Junction. We are
going to have to do something to take care of the
growing pains of the city. Let’s have a committee
meeting to discuss this matter and get something
done.
:
ssse sees see ssssseeeseeessss ess eessesesaatssssageeessaeeM44*esess^B
E
JOSEPHINE FAIR TO
BE SEPTEMBER 10-12
i Drs. Cantrall & Dixon i
VETERINARIANS
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 13
(AP)—The Oregon Fairs associa­
tion announced dates for leading
Oregon fairs and two in Wash­
ington at its 13th annual meeting
here Saturday.
Dates included :
Oregon State Fair Sept. 1-7;
Pendleton Roundup Sept. 10-13;
Pacific International Livestock
Exposition, Portland, Oct. 4-11;
Northwest Turkey Show, Oakland,
Ore., Dec. 9-13 Southwest Wash­
ington fair, to be held between
Centralia and Chehalis, August 20-
24; Western Washington fair
Puyallup, Sept. 15-21.
Oregon county fairs include:
Josephine and Coos Sept. 10-
12.
Officers named included Her­
man H. Chindgren, Molalla, pres­
ident; T. J. Krueder, Portland,
vice-president; Mabel H. Chadwick,
Eugene, secretary-treasurer; L. H.
Pearce, Myrtle Point, Charles
Trowbridge, John Day, J. W.
Dodd, Tygh Valley, Fred Roper,
Grants Pass, and Mrs. Willard
Herman. Harrisburg, directors.
—Grants Pass Courier.
--------------o--------------
**
: Cor. "th & M Office phone 116 |
i Res. phone 245 or 577-Y ;
Grants Pass
l/u,
L. B. Hall
IW-
FUNERAL HOME
Mrs. L. B. Hall, Manager
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Phone 388
OFF IN A CORNER
W ITH PHIL SNORT
Dear Ed:
I perceive that my friend, El­
wood Hussey, is having a dem
hard time convincing the world at
huge just where Cave City begins,
ends and has its being. He did
n.entii n Cave Junction but didn’t
s:iy a blamed word about Todelope.
Wliassa matter, whassa matter!
5 i a: Cave Junction has a Postof­
fice, Cave City hus the stores and
places of amusements and Tode­
lope has a derned mean disposi-
closely as to invite a collision with
an approaching car and the other
is failure to dim lights when driv­
ing directly behind a vehicle at
night.
Several accidents have been
caused by cars driving jtoo close
to the center strie, particularly in
fog, it was said. Under such con-1
ditions, drivers were warned to
keep well to their own side of the
center stripe in order to avoid
sideswiping an approaching car
which also might be too close to
the center line.
Failure to dim lights when fol­
lowing another car may be as ser­
ious as failing to dim when meet­
ing a car. Oregon residents in­
formed the safety division. Bright
lights reflecting back into the eyes
of the driver from his windshield
or rear-view mirror may tempor­
arily blind the driver and cause
an accident.
Tn the interest of safer driving.
Snell urged drivers to remember [
these two dangerous practices anil
avoid them in their driving.
o--------------
All Type of Clocks Repaired
Clarence E. Eggers
JEWELER
Del Rogue Hotel Building
Qu.miiiiiio
I :
4
HULL & HULL
FUNERAL HOME
Ambulance service day or nite
CAVE JUNCTION
COMMUNITY CHURCH
502 N 4th St.
Phone 334
't m'.ay School 10 to 11 a. m.
Church services 11:15 a. m.
-------------- o--------------
ILLINOIS VALLEY CHURCH
OF SEVENTH DAY
ADVENTISTS
Sabbth School at 9:30 a. ni.
Preaching Service 11:00 a. m.
Prayer meeting Wednesday at
7:30 p. m.
You are invited to meet with
us.
F. W. Cooper, Elder, Kerby.
BRIDGEVIEW COMMUNITY
CHURCH
Sunday School 10 to 11 a. m.
Worship service 11 a. m. to 12 ni.
Preaching 8 p. m. to 9 p. m.
Young Peoples Service 7 to 8 p. ni.
The Southern Pacific president
Prayer meeting Wednesday •1
said the railroads are confident of ' 8 o’clock p. m.
their ability to handle efficiently
--------------o--------------
any added transportation load due
SUPPOSIN’”
to national defense activities.
McDonald pointed out that the
Contributed by Ed Wright.
Southern Pacific has commenced
A poor old colored lady was
taking delivery on 2540 new
busily at work washing for one of
freight cars, costing $7,750,000.
I her customers when the good lady
It has on order 20 new streamlin­
inquired into her financial condi­
ed steam locomotives, costing
tion. “Yasm” she said “we sholy
$3,500,000, and 51 new light­
is poor folks at our house, we aint
weight streamlined passenger cars
got nothin to live on only jest as
costing $3,500,000.
I works.” “But Mandy” said her
Mistress “supposin you should get
sick, or supposin you should get
out of work, or supposin—“Now­
honey, youal jest stop that there
supposin right now; its “supposin”
that keeps the sleep from your
purty eyes; its supposin, that is
causin your purty black hair to be
gitten gray lookin; its supposin.
that makes you so fearful and
sick like; jest think honey, what
the book say “The Lord is My
Shepherd. I Shall Not Want”. Say
honey les us quit supposin, and
begin trustim”
REDWOODS HOTEL
Grants Pass
SOLICITS YOUR
PATRONAGE
Excellent Coffee Shop
IN CONNECTION
REASONABLE RATES
SERVICE—
Through the courtesy bf Mr.
and Mrs. Raphael Leonard, we i
were privileged to see the Kodiak
Mirror, sent to them by their son j
Gordon, who is in Kodiak working
on the airport.
The paper is tabloid form print­
i
ed on a Mimeograph and is quite ,
snappy with jokes and stories of j
local interest.
The paper is a
member of the Associated Press, :
so it states, and carries press dis­ :
patches, but is only published
once a week.
The paper had 18 pages, approx­
imately four columns wide, for
its December 13th edition and
most of the advertising, which was
quite generous, was mimeographed
in two colors. Gene Dawson is the
editor and is published by the Ko­
diak Publishing company,
one column, "Cornin’ and Go-
the Mirror chronicles the ar-
rival of Gordon Leonard of Cave
Junction, and I Earl Haider of
Grants Pass. In
I the editorial col-
utr.n we find two interesting ar­
ticles: “There are no hopeless sit­
uations; there are only men who
have grown hopeless about them.”
AND “You can’t tell it farmer
girl that the stork brings baby
calves, because she knows it's the
bull.” Quite diversified and indeed
interesting.
Congratulations to
Mr. Dawson and the Kodiak Pub­
lishing company.
■ - - o
Send the News to your friends.
It is almost as good as a letter from
home
I
Gone
up
,
I
You can’t afford to be I
Without Insurance :
Don’t Wait Until it is i:
:
TOO LATE!
1
I
Cor. 5th & C bls.
Guaranteed Work at Reason­ :
able Prices
Î
KODIAK NEWSPAPER
REACHES I. V. NEWS
tion, so what? 1 wouldn't be a
blamed bit surprised if Todelope
-taited a blitzkrieg any minute.
Last time I saw Jack Hout he was
just a frothin’. Why in tarnation
thunder don’t they get the County
Surveyor out and run the lines
between all three places and then
build line fences. Danged if ’taint
gitting* so a feller don’t know
where he is at if he lights any-
whi
' i ween Cave City Park and
Keil y. Sometimes I want to go
to Cave City, other times I want
to go to Cave Junction or Tode­
lope. and they is lotsa times I
don't wanto stop in any of ’em.
Dental Surgeon
Tuffe Building
Phone 4
C.ant* Paes
(Tjsssieei ..»»«»••••••••••••••••••• ************************* -********
The mechanics of this theme and how it works, are
S. P. Traffic Set All-
becoming more common every day, and more and
Time High in 1940
more people are taking advantage of its teaching.
In a recent issue of Liberty, issue of January 11,
Exceeding even the heavy vol­
ume of 1929, freight traffic han­
there is an article on page 38 entitled, “Seven Steps
dled by Southern Pacifif lines in
to Personal Success,” the same idea that we have
1940 was the greatest in the com­
been printing in this column for more than two years.
pany’s history, according to a
Professor Walter R. Pitkin tells his readers what
year-end report by A. D. McDon­
ald, president.
to live for and how, and his most important theme is
“During the last decade,” Mc­
“Know what you want to be and do.” We have told
Donald said, “the railroads have
you hundreds of times to make up your mind what
created a new era in railroad
you want and then start getting it but, as the good DANGEROUS DRIVING transportation, the benefits of
which have gone to transporta­
professor says, you must make up your mind first.
PRACTICES ARE TOLD tion
users in the best and fastest
In nearly every publication one picks up nowa­
service in history at the lowest
dangerous driving practic­
days, you can find an article on the same theme, told es, Two
average railroad rates in the
recently called to the attention
in a different way. It doesn’t make any difference of the state traffic safety division wot Id; to employes in highest wag­
in history; and to government
how it is told, it’s the same thing in any language. by Oregon residents, need cor­ es
in a substantial increase in the
Make up your mind what you want—Have faith that recting in the interest of greater proportion of taxes paid to reve­
highway safety, according to Earl
nues received.
you will receive it—Then get out and dig for it. It Snell,
secretary of state.
will come if your faith is strong enough and your per­ One is the practice of following “By contrast, the owners of our
properties, our stockholders, have
the center stripe on highways so
severance is tireless.
received no dividends since 1932.”
--------------------------- O
DR. A. N. COLLMAN
j
SEE M C ATHEY
at The News Office
i
FOR
NOT
SOMETHING
NOTHING — BUT DOING
WHAT YOU WANT DONE
PROMPTLY. I N T E L L 1 -
GENTLY AND ECONOM
ICALLY ....
i The Seal of Approval
AAA Towing
Nash S; !es an i Service
Phone 113
DEL ROGUE GARAGE
Awarded by the American In­
stitute of laundering after
Passing Rigid Tests
Pickup and delivery every Mon
day and Thursday in Cave
Junction, Kerby and
Holland
GRANTS PASS
STEAM LAUNDRY
507 S. Oth Street. Grants Pass
“Since 1900”
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