Pace Six
Olympia Pioneer
Woman Dies at 85.E
Funeral services» were held yes-l
terday in Olympia for Mrs. Mary,
Glidden, 85, mother of Arno Glida
den, former superintendent of the‘
local McCleary mill.
Mrs. Glidden, who died last Sat-
urday, was a real pioneer of this
district having been born in
Olympia and spent her whole life
there.
Surviving besides her son Arno,
are two daughters, Mrs. Fred H.
Sylvester and Mrs. Thad Childs
of Olympia. There are also three;
grandchildren 3. n d two great
grandchildren. ‘
Harstine Island Man
Passes At Hospital
1
Jerry Hodge, 43, a resident of
Harstine Island, succumbed at;
Shelton hospital Monday after a;
short illness.
He was born in Iowa, on May
26, 1897, but other details of re-
lations and funeral arrangements
at the present time are not avail—
able.
Try a Journal ClaSSified Ad—
I
I
I
l
l
and see the results! i
l
lento—n Juice Ilecipe Checks
Rheumatic Pain Quickly g
If you sufier from rheumatic, arthritis or
neuritis pain, try this simple inexpensive
home recipe that thousands are using. Get a
package of Ru-Ex Compound today. Mix it
with a quart of water, add the juice of 4
lemons. It's easy. No trouble at all and
pleasant. You need only 2 tablespoonfuls
two times a day. Often Within 48 hours—-
sometimes overnight—aplendid results are
obtained. If the pains do not quickly leave
and if you do not. feel better, Ru-Ex will cost
younothing to try as it is sold by your drug—
gist' under an absolute money-back guaran-
tee, Ru—Ex Compound is for sale and
recommended by
FIR DRUG STORE
The PRICE is RIGHT
Why not Have the
BEST
Inquire, Then You’ll Buy
Modern
CONCRETE BRICK
and
MASONRY UNITS
local board, or they run the
chance of experiencing the puni-
, tive measures provided for the
SHELTON CONCRETE
PRODUCTS
Seventh St. Bridge Phone 123
I
i
l
Sh
Wilbur Shaw famed Indiana
of the Aeronautic Sales Division
Company, scrutinizes a large 17.00-16 airplane tire that has been
subjected to a series of landings
receive in normal transport serVI
are being computed.
temperatures at various point t
brakes, are recorded by means of themocouples (electrical therme
ometers) connected to the bund
in front of the test machine.
Draft Summons
Must Be Given
Prompt Replies
Camp Murray. A warning
was sent out today to all regis-,
trants for selective service in the'
state of Washington to be prompt
in replying to summons from the
selective training and service act.
“Agents of the department of
justice have
ows Strength 0
Tests are so painstakingly made that even i
informed us mos-tI
SHELTON
Scholarships
To Be Awarded
Good Drivers
l Dearborn, Mich. ~— With the na-
ztion’s high schools preparing for!
; second semester activities, th e |
{Ford Good Drivers League todayl
, announced details of its 1941 goodl
:driving contests, in which 525.8001
lin scholarships will be awarded:
I boys and girls of high school agei
lthroughout the country.
l Started last year by Edsel Ford;
3 to. promote improved driving and[
iincrease motoring safety among‘
,youth, the Good Drivers League.
1 embarks on its second season with i
,onc major innovation that is ex-'
Epected to more than double thel
i membership, 1
! Where the nation-wide 1940 good 1
,driving contests were open only
; a boys, the 1941 contests will be
lopen to girls as well as boys.
This major change in the League I
program already ht:- produced 5
widespread interest, with indica-i
tions that girls are fully as an-
xious as the boys to demonstrate
their knowledge and skill at hand-I
ling an automobile. r
Under th new rules set up byI
Mr. Ford as League president and!
his national advisory board, girls‘K
will compete in a separate divis-'
ion, while the boys also will have
a section of their own. There will
be no mixed contests.
As- awards for the national win-i
ners, Mr. Ford revealed that 98
Good Drivers League scholarships
would be presented as follows,,
with identical awards for bothl
the boy and girl divisions: First?
prize, $5,000 university scholar~
ship; second prize, $2,000 univer-
sity scholarship; third, fourth and
fifth prizes, each $500 scholar-
1ships; and the next 44 winners,‘
3 $100 each.
l The contests are open to boys
‘anél girls between 14 and 18. In
pens Race Winner and manager or 6:1 to qualify for membership;
of the Firestone Tire Rubber ,in the Ford Good Drivers League,
, all entrants must be qualified and,
legally authorized to drive a car'
[in the state in which they reside}
“The Good Drivers League ob—i
ljective this year is the same asl
I last—to encourage better driv-
ling among youth,” Mr. Ford com-
I mented_
I “The response to our 1940 con-
i
. !
{Airplane Tires i
I
I
l,
l
4
more severe than it would ever
cc. Effects of the grueling test
and
hroughout the tire, wheel
les of wires rUnning diagonally
test was very gratifying and en-
service. “rather than a wilful {It-i complied US to broaden the scope
tempt to run out on the draft.”.0f tile League's work this year,
“We urge that all registrantsi we feel that over the years the
ad‘vi:.~e their local boards of any? Ford GOOd Drivers League can
recent change in address and ifiémd W111 make an increasingly
they have failed to 1.6mm quesgl important contribution to the
tionnaires sent to them by their; Cause Of 800‘] dl'iVing and to in-
boards, to do so at once. It is! (31:93-59 safety on our streets and
our policy to be as liberal asihlghwayS.
possible with men who are sub-i "It 19 hoped that this year’s
jeet to the provisions of the selec- League aetiViT-y Wm PFOVe high-
tivc service act, and we doll‘tlly {HteIfeSting to many civic or-
want them to in: unnecessarily?gamzatlonsi safety clubs, public
penalized for failing to
their duties."
I
l
llast year in furthering the work
|and objectives of the League is
F'I NuER TREATED :S‘Wtefuny awknowledged.”
Bud Forbes, foreman at the Mc-| EaCh State. according to 'Mr,
Cleary Timber plan, was treated ord' Wm have Its 0WD elimina-
delinquencies occur through the;
failure of a registrant to inform
the board of a change in address,
said Brig. Gen. Maurice Thomp—
son, state director of selective
in
l
at Shelton hospital today for a! tion contest to select the boy and
I lacerated finger. i girl state champion driver, as Well
as a runner-up in each division" A
separate elimination Contest will
be held this year in the District
AI:»\Vant Ads are used by
of your friends
KIOURN
scores
of Columbia. Last year wash—
'ington, D. C., entrants competed
. m the Maryland state contest.
State competition throughout
the nation is scheduled for next
‘July 1, bringing together at a
central .point in each state ’the
12 leading boy and 12 best IIgirl
contestants. They will be chosen
by the League board of judges on
the basis ofya road test under a
qualified obs‘erver, a letter on
thesubject of safe driving, and
til: I
I? l
MASON COUNTY JOURNAL
,CONIP‘EN
lUNEMPLIlYED lion
DURING lASl" ‘i’iillll
‘ 2nd Semester Starts
perf0,.1.m,officials' and schools whose help.
I
Mason-Thurston Claims on Social
Security Benefits Exceed
1939 by 9,268
Workers in Thurston and Ma- '
son Counties who filed their claims
[for Unemployment Compensation
through the Olympia office of the
Washington State Employment
Service received a total of $318,-
900.77 during 1940, Manager Alice
I. Helenius announced today. ‘
This sum was paid in the form'
of 25,138 individual warrants and
excessed the number of warrants
issued last year through the
IOlympia office by 9,268. The am-‘
ount of money paid in unemploy-
ment benefits during 1939 to eli-I
gible local workers in this dis—;
trict amounted to $174,245.81.
The payment of unemployment
benefits through the Olympia ofr‘
fice by calendar quarters for 1940
follows: ;
First Quarter ................ ..$73,756.77l
Second Quarter .. 78,175.50
Third Quarter ..... .. ..100,826.5O
Fourth Quarter .............. .. 66,142.00
Unemployment benefits paid to
eligible workers in all parts of the
state for 1940, according to fig-
ures released in Olympia by Com-
missioner Jack Bates of the Of—
fice of Unemployment Compensa-
tion and Placement amounted to
$9,467,981.52.
For Shelton Students
Students» in the Shelton senior"
wand junior high schools embarked
on second semester studies yes-
terday but still have their first
semester examinations to com-
plete due to the delay caused. by
the influenza closure preceding the
Christmas holidays.
HOSPITAL PATIENT
Gus Carlberg, Camp 5, was ad-
mitted to Shelton hospital today
for medical care. I
AGATE YOUTH ILL
Zane Zizz of Agate was admit-
ted to Shelton hospital Saturday
for treatment.
l
Slim 1? o"
ValfiieflOf Forest
De
ni- Maw.
mocratic Whip Gets Office Symbol
V .11
Senator Lister Hill of Alabama, right, named Democratic party whip
at new session of Congress, was handed a broken, brown horsewhip
as his symbol of office by Senators Pat Harrison of Mississippi and
Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky,
Products Used 0n
Farmsjlxtensive
Forest products with a value of
$10,528,000 were used on farms
of the State. of Washington last
year, says James W. Stubbs, ex-
tension forester of the State Col-
lege of \Vashington.
his statement on figures recently
released by the United States De—
partment of Agriculture.
While the farms were consum-
ing the $10,528,000 in forest prod-
ucts, they were actually produc-
r.
Stubbs based .
majority leader of the Senate.
veneer logs, poles and other
similar articles.
Of the total value of forest
products consumed on the farms
A. figures show that two million
dollars worth were produced and
used on the farms
Stubbs called attention to the
fact that these figures reveal that
sold and used. last year was
about three million dollars.
Biggest use of forest products
on the farm“: came in the form
of fuel wood with ‘the 84,000
farms in the state using an av-
erage of seven cords each during
the year, Second largest farm
use item is that of fence posts
ing and marketing $1,000,000
worth of similar produce. The
figures reveal that the average
farm in this state last year mar-
3 keted forest products with a val-
ue of $141. Included in the prod—
ucts marketed from the farms are
fuel wood, fence posts, pulp wood,
with the. average, farm during the
past year using 37 posts.
Stubbs points out that the
amount of forest products used
on the farms brings home the
‘need for careful planning and
lmanagement of farm wooillots
where these projects are feasible.
during the past year, the U.S.D.‘
themselves. ,
the total value of farm products,’
.; .
uesday January j
I}.
135100 Raised .
I ’,
‘ Nurses"
} One hundred
‘izcd Friday night at ,. /’
given by Shelton ho. a;
to raise funds to eq
I the
ltion room in the nur . .. _
. A large crowd atte, ut'oImérflolwd
ibeing received at " [.701
mu roam.- nouns: in z
'the hospital trustees“,
[wives who acted as
patronesses. A red-W
a patriotic motif was C
‘the decorations, with
themselves looking V9
in their long dresseS.
‘ Mr. and Mrs. Al K
,prize waltz contest ‘
:aftei' tying with MT.
l, Mark Pickens in he
“the hospital doctors,
the board of judges.‘
The sincere apprecvy
nursing staff to all
make the dance so 5 "
expressed today by‘
.y
Deeny, hospital supe L!
Senator Black N. st!» For on.
eflMafly "0|
10 Train 5
To Eight I5
Dr. Donald Black '
i
l
. 1,
l geles, Senator i‘roiéll but”
, district, was name ‘ y .,,
lcommittees in the 3,1;{590’39
i including chairmanshl fox. ‘L $11.1“
5 cording to a complet intact 15
lasslgnments made ‘« ,7 b 5. H
l last week. . Emu-y. mg]
{ He was named ch . {1,6119% v.
committee on medial“ em if; 'J'
pure foods and drug 1 ‘11 0
her of the etlucationl olith th
e 8
game full], educatw, ment of U
tions, industrial ins . .1 ,
. .- . . ‘ School
1 and bridges, SOCl‘dl 1 inter
reclamation, irriga." CW
“my Tuesd
mber of
have ali‘ca
In . V n the am
ihe Abstract , OWu towai
Vitally in
Mason C0 hate or
g the sci
drains and ditches 00
Loans and In , .
BELL BUILfi.
SHELTON,
._...._.____.__....._ --. ._ ___..t..______/.
Proposed :
, 15m. elei
t .' .Welders,
"1 which
Shown to
v “13 en in<
' Sheltongs i
. Cutives C
i 11.91%. 113.“
gtion in (
eSliablish
m for tn.
mmunity
. . to alievi
j M" Youn
r’ i trades.
Ogram of
i $9. . .
«on
i plants
provide
men inte
mselves t
trades 0,
Interesti
Depends
cOmmitie
hopes t(
assistam
lg of t}
“Ed anc
chooi We,
. Shelton
med by 1
v, their answers to a ueyi -.
on driving, q LonnaueI éafihe (:01
p 1 In each of the 49 state final e In the}
.- contests, safety experts assigned. me‘lue‘stic
by the League board of judges win: ,amn inte
' rate the boys and girls on their m .y lnte
drivmg ability in "on the spot" q'uézrpmr
. ionn
tests. The 49 boys and 49 girls
chosen as state champions will be
inVlted to compete in the nation-
al finals to be held in Dearborn
starting August 6.
Each national finalist, accom-
panied by a sponsor, will make the
trip to Dearborn as a guest of
the Good Drivers League. In the
finals, a series of comprehenSive
tests similar to those given last
year at the finals on the New
.York World's Fair grounds will
,be used again. These include day
. . . i ,
i ' h I But this time “155 .
cc yefzutlsi‘era‘cir‘that‘s like no edict-1v“ t
Eh r 12 with dual overdrl " ‘
.rs. And its beauty 9
tlve as l
e ust as distlnc .
°" at ’ demenstratlon
‘les .
' d averaged 25.05 mi
. . be big 85 imp. For lease rec-
Champ in 41! T d we be“ gawk” m1
r “on. findergllu‘xfie sellers in the 1940 and 1939
gfigrfll'u‘nsmtoo. That’s conSlstency'.
| a
be sure to get the factsgpde-m' dad
on bigness, on ride, on
MERCURY SECOND I
DIV.D
BOTH CARS
G ALL—JIM;
I
Be 50m.
:and night driving tests, all uri‘der
tionally known safety experts-
Ford Coupe (Aux. Sea lsecond annual banquet of cham-
$5,ooo university scholarship was
of Phoenix, Arizona, won the
DI)ng Sedan I Not eligible for awards in the
-the auspices of the board of judg-
i es, assxsted by a group of na-
Sedan 'Winners of the 98 scholarships
. Will be announced at the League‘s
1215:: :n Aligustflllt in Dearborn.
. ear e rs award of a.
1938 Ford Coupe can can”; if
, . immie
iwnmmm m..
Shipn award, a $2,000 scholar-
1936 Plymouth Coach
1936 Ford Sedan
contests are the 1940 state cham-
l plons; sons and daughters of mem-
bers of the League board of judg-
es and the League advisory board;
v and employes and sons and daugh-
l
l
:
ters of Ford Motor Company em- e
. H |p10yes and dealers. Schools
, Registration blanks can be ob- “fits to
X ‘ tainted from Ford dealers or. by d is
, wrl ing to the national head ua i a“ ht
1932 Chevrolet Coach of the ma Good Dive; ?angielsl
eague, Dearborn, Michi an_ I servi
Upon registration, entrints will i . two
‘rlacglve a kit of material that in- goanrom
‘ ‘ c u as a book entitled “How To . ' z t in k ortu
30 Become a Skilled Driver ” mem- '41 a éqlinder ca‘ Fm“
°"°’§“{ffgfii:on runs 3““ Wmnsrof thepremlersw‘elziiils:
13kt: its comlm‘m‘.‘ sweep?;ne,:nce ‘3 dough:
- C so sec . '3 n M ‘ s r ' ' WI ' e a W
bership card, a membership but- ‘° . .002: “an M: .5 u' '
(“Sid upwzo mile 1’e 3"" ’cquP‘Ed than? Tan—lumen ‘1
n .v‘fifiggf Linc° ' Kathk
s s .- ton and detailed instructions about “Stars; ‘m‘o-W‘Sh’”
gfiffil Mercury 9 f“ “w: ‘3“: gmfg‘gfl’gmnnusive proof of
the etc: in :1 1and F
II " the contests. “5 mm” M 5'1 " ii is
hVeS‘iS’" “° " whip- e y 3
Ion. Reine iced volume 3° ' fin and cumin“ r In
——————-—— luau W cm” 5 . \ 1
I . i 3100 more
T ‘ 1 What «I retard! four Ford products stole the show in nets. For
they've led their divisions in all recent Gilmore gfil‘dn
y 1 this year’s ong. e ing GumoreGi-and can on economy economy runs. And
the V-type engine that owered all i
— "‘— [I is , tun. Under conditions than you yourZelf
probably {Eur car; is thfifworld‘s record-holder on landiea, and in ass
‘ l M eve; encounueg- ' rades desert heads 6 a“ 01' Ofmance- ~
' 4 __ lwou icy mountain 3 , Pe B
AN n r 1113324215? thzndizstrictf nggmhlebd- ggwinds,e_levatiom
npto6,875 feet-they covered the tough Here’s what these records mean to
you—in your ceivilémfi
, - . . $595.2-mile route at an average of 43.3 miles per hour everyday
driving. They mean on can et better rform- r7 3th
mg the request of the great white , . 8 Pc of
father to cooperate with the nu- to average 22.6 0316: per gallon. And _the
(but cars won ancc for less money than in any other comparable car. ardner
‘ “one, defense program. three ursumdooeseoond-uvvell aswinnmg first
and sec- Come in —toduy! Drive a. Gilmore Run lead'er. You’ll 0m
ai1'm
Floyd H. Phillips, Taholah 011d 13 d” ’WPmlkes—bnahflg all-Hm
previous records! find in the Ford-Lincoln line the most car your money,
can years,
I agency superintendent, today 3am You might expect that from
precision-built Ford prod- buy. And you’ll get a top appraisal on your
present car, too.‘ 1; dpoor }
Skokomish and Makah tribes have I vi . his a
w: organized defense units and are . 2 V‘Sitor.
cooperating with the state and E R \
v . national defense programs. ' 'i‘
Phone 16 1st and Pine Ben Johnson is in charge of, s F9“
l the Skokomish reservation ' de- ‘ 13mg
liense group and Charles Peterson ospitl‘
1 ' —— he
heads the Makah program. S and Plne S 10
u