Illinois Valley news. (Cave City, Or.) 1937-current, January 08, 1942, Page 4, Image 4

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    Illinois V alley News. Thursday, January 8, 1912
Page Four
ROY WELLS SELLS
Illinois Valley News
exceeded anything that was even
dreamed of even after the Orange­
men won the coast championship
and the Rose Bowl bid.
Though cancellation of the game
in Pasadena was first looked on as
a catastrophe, the resultant shift
to Durham actually served to add
to the fame and prestige of Ore-
gon, as the victory occurred right
in the center of the skeptical east
and south, with many more big
eastern sports writers present than
could have watched the game in
Pasadena.
160 ACRE RANCH
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 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, 1879
M
C
ATHEY
SUBSCRIPTION PRICES
In Josephine County
Roy Wells last week sold hi«
ranch, 160 acres, on the Caves
highway, to Mr. and Mrs. M. Mur­
dock of Burlingame, f'alif., Roy’s
feon-in-law and daughter,
They
Editor moved their furniture to the ranch
and are now living there. Roy will
stay there this winter.
—
$1 so
.73
50
Germany Not Lacking
in Strategic Metals
$2 00
Bv D R. Morrison
Looking over the international
maritime statistics, we are con­
The Illinois Valley News reserve, the right to reject any advertising fronted with these astounding fig­
copy which i> deems objectionable. Advertising rates on application ures. From 1932 until June 1939
Germany imported the following
strategic metals:
Tons
Chrome
802,995
C r EDWOOD EMPIRE NEWSPAPER PUBLISHES Ufl/rJ
Copper ore
3.672,471
Copper metallic
1,287,489
155,958
Copper scrap
Tungsten ore
59,643
SRlAPtn
One
Tungsten scrap
29,674
sole I ATI OH
Manganese
2,219,572
PUBMSKt
Manganese scrap
221,664
Nickel ..................
25,472
RED ( ROSS WAR FI ND
Nickel ore
205,485
Scrap alloy
89,316
____ ,
Again we are asked to give to the Red Cross, this
time for the War Relief fund, which is entirely dif­
ferent from the annual roll call, which has just been
completed, and he it known, the Illinois valley came
through in flying colors, raising our quoto and con­
siderable over.
Now we are asked to contribute for the Red Cross
War Relief fund. This fund is for war purposes only,
and it is sorely needed RIGHT NOW.
We at home do not know the horrors of war and
what happens when bombs drop on our homes and
kill and maim our loved ones. The Red Cross will be
there rendering humanitarian service they are noted
for. 'Phis is the fund that we are asked to give to now.
Any amount will be acceptable. If you cannot afford
$5.00 give $1.00 If you can’t afford the dollar, give
what you can, but GIVE.
Naturopathic Phy»ici-n
The Kerby Union Sunday school
invites everyone to their Sunday : Office hours: 9 a. m. to 12
:
1:30 p. m. to 3:30 p. m.
school, which is held every Sunday :
Sherman’» Camp
at 9:45 a. m. in the I. O. O. F.
Cave Junction
hall.
0
-------------- o
”0
BRIDGEVIEW COMMUNITY
CHURCH
:
I
Rev. Harold A. Rogers, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 a. m.
Morning worship, 11 a. m.
------------- o
Dr. Fred W. Gould
Dental Surgeon
Tuff» Building
Phone 4
Grant» Pa»»
0
I)R. A. W. BARLOW
Trefethen home in Kerby
Scene of Jolly Party
Naturopathic Phy»ician
Among the new scholars in Sun-1
day school was Alice Pullen, and ;
Redwoods Hotel Building
the visitors included Mrs. Jay
Phone 516 for appointment
Parkinson, and her little two weeks I
old son, Jay, Jr., Mrs. Jennie Lewis ,
of Los Angeles, mother of Mrs.
Lee, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mc­
RTCRQFT
Clintock and little daughter Mar­
shop
lene of Bellflower, Calif. Mrs.
McClintock is the former Bonnie
PHOTOGRAPHS
Lee.
Cameras
and Supplies
Attendance at Sunday school !
113 N 6th St., Grants Pass
was 52 and collection $2.52.
The Missionary society this week
............................................................... ...
met with Mrs. William Arrant on : COMPLETE REPAIR Service
the County road, it being the time j
WATCHES and CLOCKS
for election of officers.
Reasonable Charges
At the morning service Mrs.
Clarence E. Eggers
Dow and Mis. Seat sang a duet,
JEWELER
“Faith of Our Fathers” and Rev. ,
:
Del Rogue Hotel Building
:
Gray gave a summary of the year’s I ......................................................
work financially. The average
weekly collections have been $2.35
F II A LOANS
and the receipts including personal
BUILD NOW — PAY BY
and Christmas gifts are $148.70 1
THE MONTH
with $22 in the building fund and
quite a creditable report to come
Valley Lumber Co.
from the missionary society as to
West F St.
Phone 47
work accomplished and money
raised
It was good to have Mrs Luther
Wardrobe Cleaners
Sherier back after two week’s of
absence while away in Southern
The oldest and best since 1911
California and other places.
Free Pick up by Grant» Pas»
Rev. Gray took for his text Matt.
Laundry
22:42, "What think ye of Christ?”
As we face the New Year what
«
thought is uppermost in our mind?
Too often we focus our thoughts
HULL AL HULL
too often on the frailties of the
FUNERAL HOME
preacher, the church members, the
church and Christian organizations
when the vital concern for all of
us is our attitude toward Him, and
our own relationship to Him.
Friends and relatives gathered
at the home of Mrs. Millie Trefeth­
en in Kerby last Saturday evening
to welcome and visit with Harold
Trefethen. and Edward Sowell,
who with Claude Tucker, Jack and
Hugh Morris have just returned
from Midway Island.
Those present were: Harold Tre­
fethen. F.d Sowell, Mrs. Millie Tre­
fethen and grandchild Dean Wells,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Trefethen,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Sowell, Mr. and
Mrs. Alton Sowell and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Burke, Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Owens, sons, Jack and
Jimmy, Mrs. Irene McCasland,
Misses Edda Burke, Elva Messin­
ger, Gertrude Bloomingcamp, Vi­
vian Taylor, and Messrs. Les Hen­
ry, Nat Woolley, Jack Sowell, Clint
Trefethen, I.yle Freitas and Law­
rence Anderson.
------------- o--------------
8,769,729
Total
These figures do not Include the
iron, zinc, aluminum and other
metals produced in Germany. In
1940 Germany produced 240,000
tons of aluminum, 15 per cent
more than the United State, Can­
ada and Great Britain combined.
THANK YOU!
Also conservative authorities fig­
I wish to thank all members of
ure that in 1941 Germany will pro­ the Auxiliary for donations made
duce 560,000 tons of this metal.
for the Hope Chest and for sale of
Italy and Spain control 76 per tickets, And to others of the com-
cent of the world's output of mer­ rrunity I extend my thanks for the
cury. Germany controlled coun­ same.
Also to Mr. Martin for the
tries control 33 per cent of the use of his window in the hard-
world's output of zinc and 25 per ware store to display our chest and
cent of the lead. In 1941 German Mornay Athey for publicity and
controlled countries produced 46 free advertising in the News.
per cent of the world’s output of
SHARLET SLACK.
iron. The Ukrains and Sweden
--------------- o---------------
alone have an annual output of WHAT WAR CROPS
•()•
about 20,000,000 tons. Also the
ARE NEEDED MOST
Ukrains produce about 30 per cent
BOYS BACK HOME
of the world’s output of mangan­
In an effort to help you increase
ese, which gives Germany an in­
the production of those commodi­
It is indeed gratifying to the residents of the val­ exhaustible supply of this essential ties the nation needs in order to
ley in general and to parents in particular, to see six material. Now it is plain to be successfully terminate the war, the
seen that Hitler started his cam­
of our boys back home from Midway Island, after an paign for conquest in 1932. Which Extension office has scheduled the
meetings in the Illinois
experience they will remember the rest of their lives. is borne out by the fact that at the following
Valley Grange hall during January
The boys, Hugh and Jack Morris, Claude Tucker, beginning of 1939 he had acquired and February. Specialists from
reserve of these strategic metals '
Harold Trefethen, Edward Sowell and Don Johnson, a many
Oregon State college will be pres­
times greater than all the
were on the island a year, completing their contract allied nations combined. However, ent and lead the discussion.
Jan. 12—Egg Produc­
with the construction company and started home. none of the countries controlled I tion Monday.
and Home Vegetable Gardens,
They arrived in Honolulu harbor on the Sth of De­ by Germany produce any great ' 2 p in.
cember, just after the fatal 7th, when the Japs bombed amount of copper or chrome and Tuesday, Jan. 13—Crop Produc­
the pre-ent consumption of copper tion and Soils and Fertilizer, 2
Pearl Harbor.
in Germany now is about 300,000
The boys were compelled to wait in Honolulu for a tons per year. Which under pres­ p. nt.
Tuesday. Jan. 20—Dairy Pro-
boat to San Francisco, and that trip should give them ent conditions will soon deplete duction
and Cattle Diseases, 8 p.
something to remem tier, also, for Jap submarines their stock pile.
m.
However in World War No. 1
Wednesday Jan. 25—Hav and
were looking for just such boats as they were on. Germany
had no equal in the art. Pasture Production, 2 p. in.
Anyway, they are home now and the families and of substitution. Copper was then
residents of the valley are surely glad they are here substituted. Common rifle shells
were made of steel and coated with
safe and sound.
a thin plate of copper sufficient to
--------------------------- O---------------------------
ilrara
retard erosion. However should
SISKIYOU MINERS’ ASSO( IATION
the Philippines islands fall to
Japan it would give the Axis acces-
the i'>eate-t ’chiome dejx tit in
the min­ to
the world. Considering all these
to fight facts we find Germany is not ,
help ma- wanting in raw material, such as
/ welcome
strategic metals to supply her fac­
I GIFT
to the
’ an organization on the way that will tories for some time to come.
--------------o
i Fenner
P
"In men whom men condemn as
ill I find so much of goodness
still.
In men whom men pronounce di-
vine I find so much of sin and
blot,
i do
c not dare to draw a line be-P
tween the two where God has
not.
"The bread that giveth strength
I want to give.
bid- the
The water pure
thirsty live;
I want to help the fainting day by
day;
I’m sure I shall not pass again this
way.
"I w'"‘ to give to others hope and
faith.
w. nt to do all that the Master
sr.ith:
we - t to live aright from day to
di y:
shall not pass again this
A LETTER
HOME’
tiling toward this end. The Siskiyou
lion was formerly launched Tuesday Battling Beavers Return
nd when the permanent organization W ith W est Honor Intact
ihould make a name for itself, and we OREGON STATE COLLEGE—
Along the Concrete
H) r 7 A."" n 7 COLL5I A N °
COMMUNITY CHURCH NOTES
Outside of Josephine County
One Year
o
KERBY UNION SUNDAY
SCHOOL
Oregon’s famous football phenoms,
the battling Beaver.« who busted
the betting brethren of Broadway,
returned to their home campus
Thursday. January 8, just a week
to the day after they rocked the
sports world by their 20-16 vic­
tory over the Duke "Blue Devils"
m the transplanted Rose Bowl
game in Durham, N. C.
They were welcomed home by
nn enthusiastic crowd of students,
faculty, and sundry Oregon back
er* who constituted the only peo­
ple in the country—outside of the
squad and coaches who believed
they could do what the "experts"
-aid was impossible.
\« Coach Lon Stiner explained
it. the Beavers were fighting for
more than a mere victory in foot­
ball, After the events of the fall
season in which eastern team«
socked those from the west several
times, and after the
I
O. s. c.
chances with Duke > were openly
belittled, the Orangemen were
fighting for the honor of the state,
of the west and of the quality of
Pacific Coast conference football.
That this honor was fully upheld
was proclaimed by newspapers and
radios from Maine to San Diego
and the "islands of the sea." Mem­
bers of the party who returned
with the team said the favorable
nationwide attention gained for
the state a- n whole and O. S C.
7 Assident
On Pebble Beach Drive
Crescent City, California
Ii]nilUIIIIIIHIIIIIIIItlllUIIIIIIUIIIIIIimUIIIIIIIUIIIIIIii |f»]
CHADWICK
HOTELS
i
COFFEE SHOPS
In Connection
HOTEL REDWOOD
Grants Pass, Oregon
HOTEL JACKSON
Medford, Oregon
Salem, Oregon
HOTEL MARION
McCredie Hot Mineral Sprint’»
:
ASK FOR
♦
NOT
SOMETHING
FOR
NOTHING — BUT DOING
WHAT YOU WANT DONE
PROMPTLY. I N T E L 1. I -
GENTLY AND ECONOM
ICALLY ....
:
:
:
:
:
McCredie Springs, Oregon
♦
AAA Towing
Nash Sales and Service
At Your Grocer
Phone 113
•è
(£•.............................. ••••••..... •»••«•».••«••.•••»••.••••
[ french
•>
laundry I
DEL ROGUE GARAGE
S. 6th Street. Grants Pass
I & DRY CLEANERS
Agencies
Sunday school 10 to 11 a. m.
Haynes Clothing Shop
Church services 11 io 12 a. m.
Come Sunday and hear Dr. | Wittrock’» Store. Kerby
| Lew Hammer, Selma
Geo. H. Gray, Pastor
t
--------------- o---------------
ILLINOIS VALLEY CHURCH
OF SEVENTH DAY
ADVENTISTS
Sabbth School at 9:30 a. m.
Preaching Service 11:00 a. m
Prayer meeting Wednesday at
7:30 p. m.
You are invited to meet with
us.
Lynn Jolliffce, elder. Cave Junc­
tion
I
(’all: Wed. and Sat.
STA1ORUF
PROCESS
:
0 1........................................................... 0
SERVICE—
Keibel’s
PERFECTION
BREAD
In The Advertising Columns
OF THIS NEWSPAPER
HOTEL SENATOR
Salem, Oregon
0
TRAPe
wit»-* X
CAVE JUNCTION COMMUNITY
CHURCH
CLIFF HOUSE
CHICKEN and SEA FOOD
DINNERS—at the
Eugene. Oregon
would all do well to adopt
the above lines as our New Year
motto.
'V'Ny'x. .
vO(j <
chuches
MINERS HEADQUARTERS
615 *‘G” Street
Grants Pass, Oregon
HOTEL OREGON
—
BLOW
YOUR OWN HORN
GRANTS PASS
HOTEL
Oh,Oh/ '51 Wrong Way!
COAX In Customers With
AIXVERTISLNC j
SäckiA
6ood Sc *7" ce /