Illinois Valley news. (Cave City, Or.) 1937-current, November 26, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

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    Page Two
Illinois Valley News, Thursday, Novemlier 26, 1912
Illinois Valley News
j-j»............................................................................... 0
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
i Office hours: 9 a. m. to 12 •
:
1:30 p. m. to 3:30 p. m.
j
M
C
fDR. A. N. COLLMAN|
Naturopathic Physician
CAVE JUNCTION COMMUNITY
CHURCH
Sunday school 10 to 11 a. m.
Church services 11 to 12 a. m.
Senior Bible study, 7:45.
C. V. P S. meeting ...
7:45
All young people invited.
Bible class in side room ....... 7:45
Geo. H. Gray, Pastor.
-------------- o--------------
. > Editor
ATHEY
SUBSCRIPTION PRICES
In Josephine County
SI SO
One Year
Six Months
Three Months
Sunday school, 10 a. m.
Morning worship, 11 a. tn.
Young People’s service, 7:45
$2 00
The Illinois Valley News reserve- the right to reject any advertising
copy which i> deems objectionable. Advertising rates on application
,
rSEDWOOD EMPIRE SEW-RACER PliKLISHERS «»«.?
MemJieA
Thanksgiving
What have we to he th inkful for on this Thanks­
giving Day?
Have you any doubts about it?
If you have, think of (¡recce, Belgium, Holland.
Norway, France, China, The Philippines, yes even
think of England.
turrets of Canada's
r Bolingbroke bombers these
Browning machine guns promise
sudden death to the enemy who
crosses their sights. Tills gun is
capable of tiring 1,100 rounds of
,303-inch ammunition per minute.
Turret assembly (right) shows
pivoting seat-and gun unit which
gives gunner unlimited range. The
turret, a highly complex piece of
• i- —
.— j put
_.---- ¡ s
equipment, is motor
driven
made to revolve 360 degrees as
easily as a roulette wh*
Til.
gun turrets are installed in the
tuid-aft section of the Bolingbroke
fuselage, and this type of aircraft
is now used principally as a bomb­
ing and gunnery trainer.
The electrician. left foreground,
is wiring a testing panel to a turret
to check performance, while other
workmen r.re busy puttjng a finish­
ing touch to completed equipment.
Canada is now contributing a
large share of the aircraft for the
British Commonwealth Air Train­
ing Plan, of which the Bolin^roke
bombers are only one type. The
(¡RANTS PASS
HOTEL
P-
MINERS HEADQUARTERS
615 “G” Street
Grants Pass, Oregon
F H A LOANS
ILLINOIS VALLEY CHURCH
OF SEVENTH DAY
ADVENTISTS
BUILD NOW — PAY BY
THE MONTH
Valley Lumber Co.
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 Jolliffee, elder, Cave Junc­
tion.
o-
West F St.
Phone 47
HULL & HULL
FUNERAL HOME
Ambulance service dav or nite
210 West “A”
Phone 334
KERBY SUNDAY SCHOOL
Sunday school at I. O. O. F. hall,
9;4S a. ni.
—o
................................3
Seal of Approval =
Electric Lights Fail
To Fool ‘Old Biddy’
At the usual current cost, using
electric lights in the chicken house
to stimulate egg production is a
paying proposition, but it definitely
does not put anything over on the
Awarded by the American In
birds, says Cora Cooke, extension
stitifte of Laundering after i
poultry specialist. University farm,
Passing Rigid Tests
St. Paul. It will not raise the total
Pickup and delivery every Mon j
year's egg production, but, if used
day and Thursday in Cave
on well-matured pullets, will ad-
Junction, Kerby and
vance the production to the fall and
Holland
winter months when egg prices are
highest.
GRANTS PASS
If a flock lays very well in the
STEAM LAUNDRY
winter, they are not likely to lay
quite as well in the spring, How-
“Since 1900”
ever, it is a mistake to assume that
•1*
Q...
a flock that produces very few eggs
in the winter will make up for it in Gt"
<3
April and May.
I :
Miss Cooke corrects the idea that :
the lengthened day causes the chick­
ASK FOR
ens to eat more, which, in turn, :
produces more eggs. In fact, she
says, it is the assimilation of light : :
that stimulates production and
makes the hens eat more feed.
For farm flock use, the 12 to 14-
hour day is generally preferred over
all-night lighting, but it doesn't
make any difference to the hen
whether the day is lengthened in the
morning, evening, or both. The im­
portant factor is that the person in
charge of the flock should adopt a
regular procedure and stick to it.
cautions Miss Cooke. The most pop­
ular practice is to use morning I'ght
with an automatic time switch to
At Your Grocer
turn the lights on at the required
time. Morning light does away with
the need for a dimming system,
D................................................
which is necessary for night light­
1 ■——■ —■
——■•——
ing. and calls for less actual at­
tention on the part of the operator. ¡FRENCH LAUNDRY
When lights are used at night they
must be dimmed before being ! & DRY CLEANERS
turned off. This helps the chickens
And the roosts.
I
♦
Keibels
PERFECTION
BREAD
♦
0
Agencies .
B
CHADWICK
HOTELS
J
! , VF
Physician
Phone 516 for appointment
/ assed by (.enw
Bristol Bolingbroke. a twin-engined
reconnaissance bomber, requires
several hundred man-hours to build,
and costs in the neighborhood of
$85,000. The plant where thes-
sturdy craft are turned out ttndei
contract with the Department of
Munitions and Supply is one of the
largest in the Dominion, employing
more than 4,000 on the production
of this aircraft alone. Canada's out
put of aircraft has now stepped I
to about 400 a month, which on a
basis of population would compare
with a production of 5,000 in the
United States, and there are Still
some plants which have not yet
reached the production stage.
Canada’s overhaul and repair pro­
gram has itself developed int li a
major industry. With a person I
now numbering in the tliousaujs.
the program is being carried out in
some 30 plants of all types st ra­
logically located across the Doni in-
ion.
Canada manufactures seven other
types of service planes and one typo
of transport aircraft.
with courage. Our people make the necessary sacri­
fices without hesitation. The youth in our armed
forces are bearing the burden of battle with inspiring
bravery. There is generating a deeper loyalty to our
country and to its foundation principle of human free­
The greed and grumbling of an untouched people? dom under law. We should indeed be grateful that
The hoarding and howling about hardships, most of the American people prize liberty above life, and war
which never happen?
in the cause of justice above a craven peace.
There are other reasons for public thanksgiving.
Y es, we’re behind them —3000 to 6000 miles behind
In
this
critical year God through nature has blessed
them—hut it’s time to get RIGHT BEHIND THEM-
in spirit—in fortitude—in prayer—in War Bonds—in the long toil of the husbandmen, giving bountiful
EVERYTHING WE’VE GOT — cheerfully — unsel­ crops now safely harvested. The state has been
spared natural calamity and waste and loss from fires
fishly — willingly!
in our forests. No suHfins contagion has impaired the
THEN—THEY can have SOMETHING TO BE health of the people. Unemployment is no longer the
THANKFUL FOR!
dread spectre at many doorsteps.
I call on the people of the state to assemble in their
places of worship on the day herein appointed, there
to offer solemn thanks to Almighty God for the bless­
ings we enjoy, to pray for divine guidance for our na­
tion, and to beseech divine favor on the progress of
our arms. In the homes let the day be spent soberly,
without gluttony, matching in these war times the
Spartan courage of our soldiers with Spartan contin­
THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION
ence in living.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF 1 have hereunto set my
The Congress of the United States, in return to hand and caused the Seal of the State of Oregon to be
long-honored custom, having fixed the last Thursday affixed.
in November as the day for national Thanksgiving,
DONE in the City of Salem this sixth day of No­
now, therefore, I. Charles A. Sprague, Governor of vember, in the year of our Lord, nineteen hundred
the State of Oregon, do proclaim Thursday, the and fortv-two.
Twenty-sixth day of November, 1912, as the date for
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE.
Thanksgiving observance in the State of Oregon
Governor.
F JÔS .AN Bl CCCkeP V. TH COiP *
0 A’«. 36* Ol'oWAS rttlOW
H 4 n F oo AS AF ll
A-i MFÄT
Naturopathic
Redwoods Hotel Building
Evening service, 8:15 p. m.
Prayer meeting Wednesday, 8
m.
Above all this year—let’s he thankful that we have
men—and women—who believe that the United
In this situation jve still may find much to be
States—von and I—are WORTH FIGHTING FOR! thankful for. The nation is meeting the test of war
THE POCKETBOOK
of KNOWLEDC1
DR. A. W. BARLOW
BRIDGEVIEW COMMUNITY
CHURCH
Outside of Josephine County
One Year
Sherman’s Camp
Cave Junction
Haynes Clothing Shop
Wittrock's Store, Kerby
Lew Hammer, Selma
(’all: Wed. and Sat.
COFFEE SHOPS
In Connection
Record War Bond Sales Is Gcal
Of Women At War Week Nov. 22
STAIMÄRUF
PROCESS
HOTEL REDWOOD
Grants Pass, Oregon
HOTEL JACKSON
Medford, Oregon
WASHINGTON. D C. America's Women in the c ties and on the farms
n war factories and in th. r homes are de'.ermin; d to make Women At
War Week the greatest War Bond selling effort since Pearl Harbor.
Mrs. Franklin D Hi > scvelt - unded the keynote f r the Treasury Depart-
12 to 28. with an appeal to women to save
ment's Women At War Week, Nov. 22
on “little things” to pro­
vide money for War Bonds.
"We womcn want to
work hard, we want to be
a part of this strenuous
period because unless we
are. we will not be able to
face the men when they
return and claim our
share of the future respon-
sibility for building a
peaceful world," the First
Lady declared.
The overall direction of
Women At War Week rests
with the Women's Section
of the War Savings Staff
under the leadership of
Miss Harriet Elliott,
Associate Field D'rector,
»nd Mrs Henry Morgen-
thau, Jr . Chief of the
Special Activities Unit.
From coast to coast
women in every commu­
nity have made plans for
torchlight parades, fash­
ion shows, teas, rallies,
Io the . .-r»e o< Mi». Henry Morgen
store window displays.
Harriet Ellie.I.
Stamp and B >nd booths,
pageants, civic sings, balls and mardi gr
In each locality administration
of the one week drive rests with th • lo,- War Savings Committee which
has worked out activities adapted to th. Mr
Mrs M rgenthau. in a special n-essa
for W men At War Week, de­
dared that the spirit of America s pioneer omen lives today more strongly
than ever.
"The average America- w - in began t > rise t' t■•■w heights on Sunday,
Dec. 7. 1941." Mrs. Morgenthau said. “This winter the average American
woman will be spending le-s $ tn
in order to save m >re tq invest in War Bonds
and Stamps She will n t. pl. se G.xi. ever have t- fire a gun or fly a
bomber But she will, please God, always do everything she can to help
buy anytho g and the best - f everything—that fires or flies or floats in this
terrible war."
HOTEL OREGON
Eugene, Oregon
:
HOTEL SENATOR
Salem, Oregon
HOTEL MARION
Salem, Oregon
redie Hot Mineral Spring*
McCredie Springs, Oregon
A beautiful Funeral Service,
more than any other cere­
mony of contemporary life,
serves humanity’s finest sen­
sibilities and forms its deep­
est and most lasting impres­
sions.
If the Great Emergency
struck your home tomorrow
—have you given thought as
to whom you would call for
aid and as to what your
needs would be?
:
SERVICE—
NOT
SOMETHING
FOR
NOTHING — BUT DOING
WHAT YOU WANT DONE
PROMPTLY, I N T E L L 1 -
GENTLY AND ECONOM­
ICALLY ....
AAA Towing
Nash Sales and Service
Phone 113
DEL ROGUE GARAGE
507 S. 6th Street, Grants Pass
1
L.B.I1ALL
FUNERAL
HOME
I»-»».
♦ »
J-• C 3’». Ttjiro« 568
BUY
UNITED STATES
WAR
BONDS
AND
STAMPS
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