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About Illinois Valley news. (Cave City, Or.) 1937-current | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1945)
Illinois Valley News, Thursday, June 21, 1915 Frozen Food Lockers For Cave Junction ■ Advance Sign-Up Time Starts June 3Oth LOCKER STORAGE IN THE LATEST POST WAR STYLE / ■ ■ Refrigerated by the Latest Type Equipment TO MENTION A FEW MODERN CONVENIENCES WE WILL FURNISH FREE TO OUR LOCKER HOLDERS: ! • • • • • A A A A A CURE-OUT ROOM. PREPARATION ROOM. POWER SAW TO CUT YOUR MEAT. WRAPPING ROOM. PLACE TO CURE YOUR PORK. • A MODERN SMOKE HOUSE. • ASSISTANCE IN PUTTING UP YOUR VARIOUS FOOD STUFFS. • AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST—MORE STORAGE SPACE FOR YOUR DOLLAR. puxn¡^.júf¿T,\mHnnnniiirnh.¿.niinni;Tmim THEATER STORY Game Commission Warns About Fawns The Oregon State Game Com mission makes its annual request that sympathetic individuals re frain from picking up fawn deer that appear to be deserted. Tn most instances this is not true and if the fawn is left alone, its moth er will eventually return to claim it. Deliberate picking up of fawns in order to obtain a pet is again t the law, and a permit is not issued to keep it unless it can be proved that the fawn actually was de serted and would have died. While young deer may be at tractive pets, as they grow older they can become burdensome to care for and often dangerous to human life if adequate facilities are not provided. In the end the deer may have to be killed as most of them cannot satisfactoriy be released after being raised in cap tivity. BUY WAR BONDS (Continued from Page One) BRIDGEVIEW COMMUNITY CHURCH Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Young People’s service, 7 >15 p. tn. Evening service, 8:15 p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday, 8 p. m. ILLINOIS VALLEY .CHURCH OE SEVENTH DAY ADVENTISTS JUNE . „ ___ ÎS Postal Sav.r-rr System 1 • authonzed 1910. M 1:32.000.000 Veteran« .Bonut Bill vetoed by President Hoover. 1930. tl— Battle of Kenesaw I.' s tain. Georgia, 1964. 2* -"Dixie Clipper o ./"s first commercial flight U. s. to Europe. 1930. « -Capt Halls Arche expe dition sails in the Po laris." 1871. 30 -Eugene V Debs arres-ed for violation of Espion age Act. 1918. JULY 1— Rough Riders take Ket- Hiil in Cuba. 1896 Complete Line of U. S TIRES Recapping and Repairing DUCKWORTH The Tire Man Granta Pau Medical Arts Laboratory ¡ Sabbath School 1:30 p. m. Preaching :00 p. m. | Prayer meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. You are invited to meet with us. I F. W Cooper, elder. Cave Junc tion. I --------------- V ASSEMBLY OF GOD I. O O. F. HALL. KERBY Sunday school-------------- 10:00a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Young Peoples Service, Sunday 7 p.m. Prayer meeting and Bible study, Wednesday 8 p.m. Evangelistic Service 8:00 a.m. Rev. I). B. Wantland, pastor. ------------- V-------------- CAVE JUNCTION COMMUNITY CHURCH —Lot elate American showgirls in a Burmese village, and Ted Hecht as a Jap army captain, the two comedians provide continuous mirth. They are captured when they get too far ahead of their bud dies, and the sergeant is cap tured too, but they manage to turn the tables on dignified Cap tain Tomura, whose Oxford Eng lish isn’t good enough to cope with the flood of double-talk the George H. Gray, Pastor Sunday School 10 a. m. Morning Worship 11 a. m. The Sunday school choruses were given a new interest last Sunday with the accordion accom paniment played by Mary Eng land. The feltogram was given by Mrs. Nellie Dow. Mrs. Nicholson’s father John Hines is reported greatly improv ed. Mrs. Mary Seat of Elsinore. Calif., was a visitor. Rev. Gray gave a splendid Fath er's Day sermon on ‘‘The Worth of a Man." text from Matt. 10:31. Rev. and Mrs. Gray sang a lovely duet. “The Unclouded Day.” The monthly gospel song serv ice was enjoy,ed by folks from the Bridgeview. Kerby, Selma. Adven tist and Cave Junction churches. You are cordially invited to meet with us on July 15th at the church from 2 to 4 p. m. I three resourceful Americans give I him. During the confusion the boys knock out the captain appropri ating some Jap uniforms and a jeep and depart. The angry To mura and his men pursue them, with many complications, particu larly when the two showgirls ap pear on the scene. How the boys turn out to be heroes after all, only to return to peeling potatoes like any other soldier in K. I’., forms the conclusion of this com edy offering. THE WINNER—Little 15-month-old llarolyn Cheryl Meyer of Trenton. New Jersey, official pinup girl of the USS New Jersey, was made S3,200 richer in War Bonds through donations by the crew of the USS New Jersey for use in obtaining her future educ ation. Governor Walter E. Edge made the presentation. The child’s father, an Army Air Corps pilot, is a prisoner of war in Germany. He has never see n his little beauty quefn. She is held by her mother, Mrs. Harry C. Meyer. FIRE TOOLS KEPT HANDY WOULD HALT MOST FARM BLAZES “If I had had a pail of water <>. a »hovel handy, I could have put it out myself when it first start ed.” This statement, perhaps th>- most frequently heard after acci dental farm fires, forms an ironic epitaph for many of the farm homes, barns, grain fields and combines destroyed annually by fire, says D. D. Robinson, exten sion forester at Oregon State col- lege. Through preparation well in ad vance of the bad fire season is tha most effective defense against ac cidental fires, according to the experience of the Oregon fire fighting groups. Preparation for fire includes organizing manpowe r for quick response in case of fire, providing fire tools, equipment and water supply, and making sure that a communications system and transportation plan is ready. If everyone knows where a hovel, axe, back-pack pump and i ther fire fighting tools are kept, there will be no time lost in case n fire gets started. Local party telephone systems f usually have one particular ring for fire calls so as to get word to neighlcors in the shortest pos sible time. If the local fire war den’s name and phone number are posted near each phone, all mem bers of the farm family will know who to call in case of fire. ------------- V-------------- CLYDE W. RUNYAN Clyde Runyan passed away on June 7, 1945, in Portland and services were held at the A. J. Rose and Son Conservatory Chap el, Tuesday, June 12, at 1:30 p. m., under ausjijces of Doric Lodge No. 132, A. F. 4 M„ Walter Mies- cn, soloist and Nelle Clark, organ ist. Interment was in Lincoln Me morial Park. ------------- V-------------- Send The News to your friend« I I I SMEARS FOR MALARIA PARASITOLOGY COMPLETE BLOOD COUNT and CHEMICAL ANALYSIS URINALYSIS ALLERGY TESTS BASAL METABOLISM ELECTROCARDIOGRAMS ¥ AGGLUTINATION and SKIN TESTS for Undulant Fever, Typhoid and others ¥ GASTRIC ANALYSIS PREGNANCY TESTS KIDNEY FUNCTION TESTS SEDIMENTATION RATES SMEARS, STAINS AND CULTURES BLOOD TYPING BLOOD PRESSURES AND GENERAL LABORATORY WORK Closed On Saturday Afternoons Registered Medical Technologist M. ELLYN SCOTT, M. T. 611 East “G” Street GRANTS PASS, OREGON Phone 1122 Hours 10-12 a. m.; 1-4 p. m. A New Modern Deposit Plan to save your Time Quick • Easy • Safe Write or call for complete information— Grants Pass Branch o/ the United States National Bank Hrid Ottico, Portland, Oregon UH9UUMU 1