Page F0111“
SHELTON”l‘lIlAS%N Clllll‘l'll’l llltl‘ifiii.
Consolidated with The Shelton“ Independent ‘
Entered as second-class matter at the pos‘iotilcc at Slit lion, II
aslllllglou
Subscription Rates:
BY MAIL: in Mason County (outside of Shelton city mail carricr districts)
$2 per year; 6 months. $1.23: 3 mmllhs. TIM. Foreign $3.5” pigr year.
lr’oslal
regulations forbid residents of Shelton S“l'\’8d by city mail
carrier irum
receiving their Journal by mail.
BY JOURNAL CARRIER:
or $2.50 per year in advance.
Published every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon
J. EBER ANGLE
Manager
GRANT C. ANGLE
Editor
Member of Washington Newspaper Publishers Association
and National Editorial Association.
HOUSING SITUATION AND NEW GROWT
, The housing situation in Shelton, which has
not been good for the past year, is growing more
acute with new people coming in every day seek-.
ing houses or apartments to rent, generally of the
modest class within the reach of working fami-
lies, and about all the liveable houses in town are
now occupied.
Some of these visitors are working in the
Navy Yard city and are forced to go afar to find
living quarters within reach, but the rest are of
families already located or planning to come to5
Shelton when homes can be found and ;t is this
class of caller that this community needs and
should be better prepared for.
For this reason and also that a new home can
be built cheaper now than is the prospect for
later in the year, more attention is being turned
to either buying of old homes, or of grounds suit-
able for later building; and while this will not be
of much help to the existing home scarcity, it will
help out later on. . , .
It goes without saying that 1941 will be a is
year all over the country, something like an old-
time boom, with its government spending of mil—.
lions in this state, and the good effect on all in-
dustry and employment; and. Shelton has already
trial building, as well as in business expansion
and changes, indicating that this community Will
also go forward and justify any early investment.
TO DEVELOP MANGANESE
There is some encouragement that the gov--
ernment will show some real interest in thedevel-
opment of manganese mining on the Olymp1c pen—
" ‘ linsula, and besides protecting the operation with-
in the National Park, will help in opening the
needed mine-to—market roads.
Ithas long been known that manganese ex—
ists in the Olympics, for patient men have pros-
pected and held claims in that region for many
years hoping for the day when science would find
new methods 0 f reduction and the government
and domestic needs would pave the way to market
with some hope for profit.
Now there seems a real prospect for this de-
velopment in the building of a modern refining
plant on Hood Canal, and the testing out of the
high and low grade ores which are known, and
also giving encouragement for renewed effort in
locating new ores; for this country needs work
rather than playgrounds just now,
INTEREST IN TRADE TRAINING
While considerable interest is being shown
by registration for the prospective trade school in
Shelton it is surprising that more of the youth
of school and after-school age do not signify their
desire to take advantage of the opportunity offer—
ed-for free instruction in trade lines to supplement
their schooling.
There has been little chance in recent years
for youth to enter the more lucrative trades to
take the place of older men who are either past
their best years or who are about to retire on pen-
sions, and now in the war emergency there is a
great scarcity of skilled workmen to meet the call
for'menyand to enjoy the good going wages.
It is planned, if enough show interest, to open .
and fit up a school with machinery and tools, and
for local managers and workers in the trades to
take the time to give pupils practical training t0I
qualify for good jobs later on; and federal and
state support can be secured to carry on the prow
ject Without charge to the trainees.
GROUNDHOG SAW HIS SHADOW
Mr. Groundhog saw his shadow, at least ar-
ound Shelton for a brief period, on Sunday, Feb-
ruary 2nd, and if the old proverb means anything
this section may
weather.
_However, in recent years, and particularly
during the past three, this canny animal has lost
hlS reputation as a weather prophet, for what-
ever he saw on this day of the year seems to have!
worked out in reverse. .
Here at the start of February and winter
more than half gone with the days growing ap-
preciably longer, buds swelling and f l o w e r s
blooming, there is somehow the feeling that Pu-
get Sound is not going to ’have much cold and
snow, although moisture records may keep up.
In spite of the sad memory of the “bridge of
wooden ships that never sailed the sea” of the
last war orgy of waste another huge appropria«
tion is made to build another such bridge of ships
that will never reach the sea, and add to the “silk
shirt” era of war preparedness. It is useless
spending that hurts and hampers the real job:
in Sllgllon. 2.3!; per month (collected by carrier) 3
be in for six weeks of no-betterl
lllCLlll’lBERS PLAY
SAlllE Gill llth
Reserves Post Victory No. 1 By
, 28-20 Over Elma; Varsity
I Beaten By 31 To 18
l NORTHERN DIVISION
l \V L PF PA
illoquisim .................. ..6 0 215 134
{Raymond 1 230 169
,Abcrdeen 2 220 132
{Olympoz .. 3 216 186
{SHELTON . .' 113 250
lMontesano . 5 157 251
IElma- .......................... ..l 5 150 130
’ Results Friday
g Elma 31, Shelton 18.
' Hoquiam 34, Raymond 30.
* Olympia 56, Montesano 42.
' Games Friday
Aberdeen at Shelton.
Elma at Montesano.
Olympia at Raymond.
l Elma hustled into the victory
{column for the first time this
iyear in northern division South-
'west conference basketball
'with a 31 to 18 decision over the
Shelton Highclirnbers at Lincoln
gym Friday night.
ter, 6 to 2, at the half, 12 to 7,
and at the third rest period, 22
.to 12. .
‘ Little Gone Anderson, who play-
ed iii a Highclimbcr suit last
year, gave his former teammates
*a lot of trouble with his fine ball
handling and passing, as well as
producing eight pomts, while
husky Les Metzger, red-haired
7center, added another eight tal-
Ilies.
Had the visitors been able to
fclick on their foul shots the mar—
igin would have been considerably
,greater. but the Eagles convert-
{cd but three out of 19 gift toss-
}cs. Shelton made seven of 15
Igood.
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lall the way, loading at the quar-
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Igrove‘s reserve lineup came
:through with its first triumph of
gthe year, 26 to 20, over the Eag-
llets in the preliminary. Lanky
gMilt Clothier canned five field
itosses for a ten point total
play ,
13359}ng Will gill someones“om; DELlRlURR
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The Eagles were out in front(
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The night 'Wasn't a complete ; 39 points in a game between
M0,?"
. . . . - . ,olackout as far as Shelton \vale‘mkey and 4'1“: Dairy
last year-i
started off the car With both ublic and indus-wconcempd however for Ned
Sne;_l The third record, another all-
I I ,
to . ter total the league has ever seen.
SHELTON-MASON COUNTY .lOlTrtixiAli
ll—lVHAT OUR READERS l
W
l I THlNK I
-, (Rhinitis AT our HOOP sanPs;
THREE sesame RECORDS Rhine,
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l n. 3, Shelton, Wash.
ClTY BASKETBALL LEAGUE . The lineups: ,‘ Jan 30 1941.
w L PF PAl GAMES LAST NIGHT ,Edmor' Shelton_Mason ’
McConkey Pharm. 5 0 250 134; First Game ,Cmmtf, Journaly
Rayonier ............. .. 2 1 120 120% NICankey (91) ‘INilson’s (29) ?
Shelton. Wash.
McCleary Timber 3. 2* 143 135, Wilson 4 ,,,,,,,, ..F ,,,,, . A. Daniels «l
Dim Editor:
L: M- ............. u ]30 154: M. Taylor 33 “HF” . Adams 5! so
{'(II', I have failed to see any
Kimbclpll 3 2 '57 150M». Smith :36 ..C ........... .. Martin gamma“
on the proposed ordi—
4_; Dairy ,,,,,,,,,,,, _, O 4 108 139}- Eacrct 10 ______ ..G . .... ..
Kelly 14 l llunce nlaltlllg‘ one hour parking in
Wilson's cafe 0 5 75 160; 31153011 2 ..G .... H D. Dalliels 5ltlic
business district, a law.
Hmviwcr, I have been asking
'Suhs: McConkeyv G. Smith 6.
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‘ very few peo—
Latest Scores
Kimbel Oil 68, L. M. 41 Saw” Game
l Iopillions and find
McConkcy 91, Wilson‘s 29 i
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KimbClOil (03) L-M- (41) ple have given it a thought any
n n i‘ .. I. . w.“ . 2 (v ' “
McClearv «ii. Wilson's 29 11635.“. “ """ "a
"" " S‘wlgw‘ei 127A” “143‘ t}? "“y It
“omdnt- be
Mcconkév 53 Ravomer 30 ‘cd..5.o.l 8 ,, ........ .. Clarx 4 i done or
Lacy 11 never enfOI‘CC 1t-
i . ~ Cormie; 23 .... SOmSTS 8l
Kimbel Oil 29, 4-E Dairy 24
Rayonier 48. Kimbel Oil 42 'I
For my part, I believe the laws
: * Al , ,,
---G ---------- 7- En‘OtL Ishould be made tor the people ant.
l/l .
H. Gruver 2 .G ,,,,,,,, .. Fredson 131
" “* -: . not oo‘ole for the laws. Ma be
L'tebgt'ef?’ Mccledu 20 lpm {i Subs: KimbclieRau. L. M. gtithatl
ebb-plains the (leciinillg girth
Games Thursday iHanson' l, ratel. Once a law is passed, whe-
, w. r. , .. , , \ M M .
10 n1~v_$cgleary_f:a{0n}i3er l ithiérgéraod ()1 bad, lL Should be
11 n. m.—7 c onke - -P airy _‘ W ~ l-_ 1 :11 . .
‘ Games Saturgay lL- “I- (34) .McCleary (535)? To those who live in
Shelton
ISomers 5 ........ ..F Roberts 2 i and are down town shopping ev-
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I it very nice to' park in one place,
7 p. meeMcCleary-Kimbel , ‘1' J a p
8 p.ml__v4_E Dairy_VVilson 311.1ny I Marv Morganl , cry day or several
times a day.
9 p,m,_{,,M,-Rayomer {gl'flfcl‘ 4 ........ ..C.. J. Bednarskl Slims
law would not bother. To
Monday Games ’EECWQH 5 ------ --G .............. .. Madscn those of us
who come to town
9:30*_MCCOnkey_Ll M. Elliott ‘1 ...G ...... .. Lambert 2 ‘1 once a
week or so, we find it ncc-
10130V_Rayonier_wnson I Subs: L. ~i'l/I. ~7 Hanson. Mc- i essary to
spend several hours do-
Games Feb_ 13 iClcaryAMel Morgan 8, B. Bodnar— , ing‘ the week‘s
shopping. We find
10 p. rn.i—l{ilnbcl-Li—E Dairy '31“ ~7' Schermer-
11 p. lnerayonier—McConkey 8993’“ (lame
adjacent to most stores and go
i’tayonier
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1‘“ y (48) Kimbel Oil (42) : about our business, not having to
Three new scoring records, tonBm'goync 12 --F -------- -» Carlson l
WOWY abOUt finding Parking
amtmm figures, were established;Anderson 3 .......... .. Levett 4‘,spot
m an hour.
m city league basketball play in5§3e11 20 .......... ..C ...... .. Cormier
10g As an example. I park about
the past weeks games as the C21S_Il?V-elton ...... ..G ...... ._ McComb 12,
noon or so on Saturdays, do my
aha tosses Showed absolutely 1.Ao'iDittman 1 .... ..G ,,,,,,,,,, ._
Gruvcr 2 I shopping while the children attend
mercy for the twing 5 Subs: Rayonicr —r— McGough
McConkey Pharmacy‘s unbeaten‘giitgn 2: Moms" Kimbel 011'”
second half leaders hung up a new | “ - , W , _
all-time record last night 'when! (LAMBS SATURDAY
all go to the Show which gets us
out about five—thirty. Now if We
have to hunt a new parking spot
thev beat Wilsonvs Cafc_ 91 to 29.; v First Game ever" hour, the whole
thing IS
Previously no city league team’McL‘efl‘E' (41} Ill/“50W”
(29>;59331Ci
had ever soared past the seven-§EVIarV “EDT-galls F .......... ..
PLGGJYIS 7y bVCYY 0217111115137 the same pCO'
ties. During the course of the rout. l‘rj‘pbmm 9 ‘‘‘ "1“
-------- ~~ ' 10 l RIO (Emile mm to“: park' at“. d
Pat Smith scored ‘36 and Murry)“adscn 7 K. " 1 If:1m,na,.fl:0um
ShGPPmL—T alldylsw‘
Taylor 33 points, far and awaylMCl M31"ng G D~ Denise 2353' .19
O: “5’ fins 15 the
the best individual marks of the{Schermer 9 ....G ___________ Kelly 6 I
JULY of living in a _Small place. '
current season. Smith, howevery! Subs: McClcary we \‘v'yatt {3,} 1.1
a City the Size of Olympia
still holds the all-time record with % Lambert 2'
Wilson‘ST'A' Daniels
Dun. 1‘ it as one shops within that radius
Semnd Gan“, I and then moves on to the next for
I V w
RM.“an Hwy) .another hour, but in Shelton, the
W” . . . . .
VVVV Welton g Isnopplng area is too limited.
IflIcConkcy (53)
EG. Smith 3
time total, was established as Ray-
v _ , INL Taylor 12 U '7 _ B.,,.,,.)..m, 71 Thch are no merchants on
the
3101' got: 402?»? Smth 14 __..C ........ .. L z’lsjnll 10700411011,
1 belieVC- Did the men
' e I "" ..Z’ I v. tl. . -
the first quarter the score was alD‘ “mm” 18 “ Alwelbon 1 ‘vmo
“light Up thb new Oldl
,Russsn 4 nancc think of the
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the greatest one—quar-I Dittmani
24-24' tie,
Weeks 6,
Not long ago it was estimated
Subs: I . .
~(as printed in the Journal)
Rayonier
their lodge and then may be we'
merchants ? '
warm ll mnwngmj m
It. Ifjri 5;; 3 if! 5': . ,
Alibi ‘L‘AlibkiLL‘ii-LLLl l; town-Iii
Til it)? (it till
‘ Will}, Tllllfi {All/l"
Strong Individual Scoring; Marksl
l Pin Play Friday; 'l‘ililciu‘l
' L. M. Sweeps Milk-ll
3, CITY LEAGUE HOVJLIXG
\l‘. 1.. Pct.
Cmnmarunorl .30 fill .538
Paramount Theatre . .30 2“ .583
Driskel Hardware ,.__..‘57 631 :29
Pastime ...................... 26 .490
Mason Laundry ........ ..24 27 .471 l
\‘Vilson‘s Cafe .......... ..fH 27 .47!
lAssociat-od Service ....‘BI 27 .47]
‘L, NI. .......................... ..‘20 3! .392
llighScorcs
i GamefieBab Stewart 258.
l TotalieBab Stewart 619.
! Matches Friday
l ’I' p. ni.-WVJilson’s vs. Pastime,
l Driskcl’s vs. Paramount.
I p. ianL. M. vs. Cams, AS—
} sociatcd vs. Mason Laundry.
l Paramount Theatre thrust it«
self upward into a first place tie
with Cammaranps in city bowl-
ing league competition Friday
night by downing Pastime while
the bottlers were losing to Ma-
son Laundry, both decisions by
the odd-game margin.
Second division clubs won the
other two matches of the evening
when the tailend L. M. applied a
whitewash brush on, Associated
Oil and VVilson‘s Cafe’cdged Drie-
kel Hardware, 2 to 1.
The L. M.‘s Bab Stewart set
the scoring pace for the league
by hanging up a 258 single game,
third highest of the year, and 619
total. Two other 600 scores‘wcre
spent out of town.
So far, I‘ve always found a
parking spot and I think most
cveiy one can if some good soul
will teach them how to back into
a space instead 01' having to go
around a block time and time
again to find one into which they
can drive straight into.
I Laws are laws. They must b
enforced.
I By the way,
. councilman’s
(3
how about the
wife who made a
,“U” turn at Second and Cota Oil
,a busy Saturday afternoon and
, , . Morris 1. that. i . X " i' '.l i *2 °
:lead the HighChn‘lblerS t0.t1‘1umph: Try Solving This One , Third Game
]$80,000 of Mason county‘s pay-I“ fiéowggltuoig
Em 3‘ second half “me Who“ bmkel Still another oddity in league
IKimbol on (29) 4—157 Dairy (‘34) “’0” “"35 being Spent
outside. If the street over the \yel‘otv line”
'3 3'14 ElealeCk at the half- happenings resulted in the L.
Mrghevett G ________ "F ________ _r vvatsoh 3 the people from out of
town are ‘ Son far 1 have] f},qu ‘10 {we
’ _Blg Walt Eddy played some McCleary Timber scrap
'I‘huI-sday4,211,150n ________ P"C1(')ut,-er 3 going to have
to buck an hour’s wanting one 1min. parking ,
inlce ball to aid the Shelton cause, night in which both teams left the
Cormier 16 "c Fburrc parking law more money will be Martha‘ M
Sattgrt’flwaite
ltoo' , ‘ , , floor believing the timbermen had 1.3. Tavlor ....
"""" “human 6 ‘ _, ‘;__,__, s ___'
_wv___;_~___~
: Th15.1‘1"‘day the Highchmbers won a 25 to 23 overtime verdict.
McCognb 5 G Cl'oufier G ‘ ‘ ‘ r,
Ecntertam Aberdeen m Llncom A re-check on the score, howevenl Sub‘s.
'6”:qu 4_E ‘v V L
{gym as the second half of the showed the L. M. actually had
alDairywiGibson 4 L‘Go “, ,1.
lnorthern division schedule gets 25 to 23 edge at tho end of regu-i
_’__' ‘mé
i under way.
l Elma
‘he lineups :.
FIRST TEAMS
i (31) Shelton (18)
,Anderson R ........ __ Phillips 4
lBennett 5 ...... __F__ Lumsden
IMetzger 8 ...... ..C.. Fredson 6
lSpalding 2 .... ..G._
IWinders 6 .... ..G
I Subs: Elma—Jasper 2, Grass,
,Boyd, Kinnaman, Claflinp Shel—
iton~gRosc Woods 1, Robertson,
5 Valley, Klink.
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DiCkinson 1 pretty well overshadowed. but to;
-------- Mccomb 4 skip over each game rapidly, hercl
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lar playing time. Just how this‘
situation is to be ironed out has;
the league guessing. I
\Vith such items as these steal—l
ing‘ the Show the individual play“
in the games of the week wasi
Pirates Square
Accounts With ,
Cleaners, [iii—3‘7
is what happened: P t o 1 ,n. ‘1 . ‘
t2?
tailcs an ‘elle urgoyne a e liens-V, .h-C
another dozen in leading Rayonier : 37 l C W 1'h pmduced a 49 to
‘ ,E , g, k I. V_ ,_ revenge verdict for the Pan-
!Sholmn S<2§;)ND TEAlngma (20) to ItS‘és to ~12 VlCtOI‘y over
Igun- torium Pirates over the Vanev
I , . bel 011- The game was CloselCleanel‘s of Elma Friday
ovcni'r'r' '1
,WllSOH -------- --F ---------- ~- Claflm 6 throughout. quarterly scores
be-l as an after-luau; Of'tfi’e" 81,915,; , '2‘
Chase 2 "'F ”” MCMa-Ster :1 mg' 24'24'
34'32‘ and 4240: Ray'lElma hiflh school ‘ame il I‘ ll "
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Eddy. 5 ...C .... .. sackrlder 2 Quier leading. igym ,3 ii. g: 'l
4111(20 i. If.
Igloth‘erlm ~' ngaman 2 Defense Bogs Down 2 Throughout the first
half the!
, lerce. -------------------- arger 3! The pulp mill’s bid for the
sec—Isa... W2, t- it «U . .1. ».
J Subs. Sheltonflldoop 2’ Tr0t_ .p .. lgi , MI 1 the Pirate.) , ,.
:ter 2, Coburn. Elma~»Walker 3,
iSheets, Cameron.
ECLOSING SPURT WINS
,FOR HOQUIAM, 34-30
I Raymond, Feb. 1.~(Special.)—
iHoquiam’s closing rally here last
{night gave the Grizzlies "a 34 to
1,30 victory over Raymond and un—
Idisputed possession of the north-
3ern' division lead. Harry Tokas,
ione' of the least used reserves on
ithe Grizzly squad, was the hero
df the big Hoquiam rally, con-
tributing five important points as
,the winners came from behind
a 25—19 deficit as the fourth quar-
ter opened to snatch the crucial
Verdict.
Tokas finally put Hoquiam
ahead at 29—28 and the Grizzlies
Ikept command thereafter. Bob
IHoffer, giant Raymond center,
,lnore widely distributed.
was forced out on fouls midway
through the final period and Ho-
quiam controlled the backboards
after that. The lineups: '
Hoquiam (34) Raymond (30)
(S'tubberfield 1 ..F ...... .. Rubstello
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Klock 4 .......... ..F .......... .. Miller 10
lClayton 3 Hoffer 13
,Siden ......... .. .. Karlis 2
'Graham 3 ...... ..G .............. .. Plato 2
l Subs: Hoquiam — Wayman 5,
9. Raymond Gacek, DeForest,
IB. Ponzola.
4-K
SCORING SPREE GOES
TO OLYMPIA, 56 TO 42
I Montesano, Feb. 1.—(Specia1.)—
{What may be a record point to-
tal for a' single northern divis-
ion basketball game was estab-
lished here last night as Olym—
pia Won a 56 to 42 verdict over
the home floor Bulldogs. The line-
xups:
Olympia (56)
Montesano (42)
B.VanEaton12 F' ...... .. Drugge 10
Rockey 9 ...... Gallagher
Bettcher .... Moore 14
Hansen 10 ....
Beck .......... ..G .... ._
I Subs: Olympia—Fuller 4, O'-
iRandall, Ashwell. Montesano
Reed, Heikkenen, Koski.
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The Abstract Man of
; Mason County
A. L. BELL.
I
‘ ‘Abstracts, Real Estate
. Loans and Insurance
BELL BUILDING
. SHELTON, WASH.
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Wittren 10, Haney, Riddell, Tokas‘l
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:scored 13 to top individual hon-l
Iors but Hoquiam’s punch was I, bagged 25 betw
HOffer I losers.
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. lBoth marks are sub'ect to the '1"-
________ _‘ Best total to pace the dairymen as they l c” . . . J ‘ ,
C".
Thompson 1 caught the pharmacists on an offl““1uuS 0f the Closmg
WCCkend Of
Leary 4, Hume 2, —~. Van Eaton,l
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. . Smith Shelton s e n t
Handle 297i Handlca 2’6
Struthersa’p 470W. Savad: 5:8 Inez Oodds, Morna Wood, Juanita I ,2»
Cohen 33838kerbini" 382 Star'wmll, 'Edna Robinson, Marie‘
Dummy 420k:- Savage 410 Kublk and F10 Cormier to the big
Fraser 327lOlsen 389 I seattle mofi'
’ Young 442} Fourre 493
00151133va lgictlupéaasycgpgfiisdsgyléwgé gginlg8 igtomthgd res;
period thiLll
when the Rayoriier defense CPl‘lthe third quartbjuggtir ill:
lapsed in the 13515 quarter. Wlthlvaders scored the first three "
igdnéluntugcsséopianihfeggagfilffgif:lgointgessrnith bagged three long:
Wilson staged a scoring bender of 02:11:, batigdaln rsvgaffgf 31,1033?
his own. aiOlEd by Murray Taylor after missed foul shots
and Pat Smith, which left the mill before anyone mahzed it the pi.
hands far behind. irate mar in had In "
McCleary downed Wilson's Sat~fcomfortab§1ge 35 to 19.0h1t0d to
urday, 41 to 2'9, with Pete Rob-I Lémtt tamed nine . . ‘
erts, Bill Schermer and Bill Mad- lsecond half drive ngfltiirme‘icgfig
‘
sen hitting some uncanny tosses :and Smith seven, ’but Jesg Andep
and Homer Cooper duplicatinglson, the adroit faker from Elma, I
for the cafemen. ‘topped the game scorers with 15,
Dan Cormler registered 16lof which he bagged eleven in the
pomts as Kimbel skinned by 4-Eisecond half. Pat Smith had 1::-
Dairy, 29 to 24, Saturday, and. Lev ‘ 2 .n o n-
added 23 more to his personal to-liggs, at 1 to um done we”
tal as the Oilers routed the L. M., i The Pirates room
120.41, last night. Bill LEVBttltheir better gangs incesibglneiging
and Bill McComb added 20 and 15 ‘1 the Elmans, p as sin g nicely :
respectively for the victors While'throughout the scrap and
hittiii‘v‘I
Mark Fredson and Ned Sn€Igroveitheirfishots well, so made up
eon them for thezthe absence of the two Tavlors.
iBill and Murray, and Bill Somers.
~~3The lineups:
Pirates (49) Cleaners, (37)
‘Levett 12 ...... ..F ____________ .. Cahill 5'
IMcComb 8 .... ..F‘ .... ._ F. Osgood 8
[(1. Smith -7 _...c .... .. Anderson 15
of
AN
Dairymen Tread
0n Mac’s Corner
"P. Smith 13 ..G .... .. i"
Heels For Leadonoame ...... ..o ........ ..iia’ié‘éi‘é’i ii
, Subs: Pirates —~‘ Cloutier 9.
COMMERCIAL BOWLING ICleanerskPrice, L. Osgood.
M o i 216' Pet" ‘
acs omer ............ .556l
to my __________________ ..24 21 .5331Els1-e Peterson
Daviscourt Bakery ..22 23 .4891
McConkey Pharmacy 19 26 .422'
High Scores
Game—Lee Westlund 209.
Total—Bill Noblett 530.
Matches Thursday
Mac's vs. McConkey.
4-E Dairy ,vs. Daviscourt.
4-E Dairy slipped within a
gameof the league leading Mac’s
Corner quintet in commercial lea-
gue bowling play Thursday night
by blanking McConkey Pharmacy
while the leaders were taking a
pair from Daviscourt Bakery.
Virdon Savage picked up a 518
Bowling Tourney!
Once more Shelton’s feminine
bowling contingent made its mark i
in the annual Seattle Star tour- I '~
nament last weekend. l .'
Elsie Peterson was the bright|
star of the eight Shelton pinwo-
men who competed in the meet.
With Evelyn Smith, she tops tllcl ,
doubles with 1157 pins and holdsl '
I
Second in the singles with 586.!
night.
for Mac’s Corner, but the. bakers;
established a new single gamel
team scoring record of an evenl
1000 pins while posting their lone
point.
The lineups:
IlcOonkeys (0) 1
Bill Noblett set the pacelgfii’dgm coming Saturday anal
Elsie scored 581 pins, actual in;
the doubles and 539 actual in the
singles. ’Evelyn had 446 in the
doubles, and the Shelton pair en-
joyed 130 pins handicap.
In addition to Miss
4-1; Dairy (3) and Mrs.
Peterson ‘
783 759 752 2294l805 842 801 2448l
Good Example
v I) , . . r .
Mac 5 (*0 inalis‘ourtf’ (I) Mummy had decided it was time
i N. _.
Where Special are Offered 5 "
During J and february t0
ProspeCtiVe Buyers
trict during 1940.
lTig:?g;Eap iglogéflldicap to persuade little Monica to go to
Dittman 480iHflderman 465l bed. “Be good, like chickens,” she
iNOblett 530‘West’1und 517' said “D'you 58C, they are all in
Gerhardt 428 Crowe 334 l bed early!” “Yes,” replied Monica,
Cammarano 472tMiuer 510 “but the mummy hen goes at the
872 837 871 2580} 843 1000 843 2686
same time as they do.”
5
I
Do You Need Encouragement To Get air
Early Start in
1941
f
A.
Not Select A location in-
n
Take advantage of the,
SPECIAL DISCOUNT of
on the usual prices on any location, im-
proved or unimproved, or on acreage. See
I
Angle Building
l
I
l
I
..
Illllll‘llbl'l' of 200 tt‘ll‘fl’fllllf‘ s O,
I
l
Fel
Tuesday, February 4, 19
I
was «an. nlllr.‘
.
li‘
lllul Fm."ch .
2, it‘lll llolkls 612. a
l,‘lI not? with
.
L‘l
.. v:
'Fll
\__;
\l'l'l'lf lump, up.
Pillallloullf's victory was led
ll—lcrb Durand, the laundry‘s I
l, Dodds, the L. Mfs by Stewart
*Bllrk Mavkcy, and VVilsonfS.
l Jack Miller lilli'l.l?‘orbes. The
' illg:
‘l’asiill’lv (l) I Paramount” 33‘
Handicap 201‘
Dotson
H andi 0 ap
I
l
' L i .
I :lBO‘Roblnson
I
I
I Friend Sl/lgsliclscy ,
L, McElroy 481;.‘Sl‘nitll ~
1 l‘l. Ferricr Forrest , l$1303]
'Allcn ElSZ‘Dm‘Ltrld . , those
‘925 930 977 23321:: 950 853 v2 ch or.
(hulls (I) l Mason Lily. ' ’ 6 pro(
Handicap 5A4 Handicap ym
Al'onson 47:1 Doddu City 1,
I Peterson 522: ‘Noods the be
I Scott A17llDumnly ~officf
l Merrick 528i it‘llnk 11°“; to
:P. Fredson 5431A. Ferricr the Se,
{840878 878 2596831 893 918 ' 1
L. M. (a) Amociated j
Handicap 78‘, Handicap own a
’Stewart 61:: Noblett, , shot f
, Mackey 5911F McConkoy lumen,
EElliott, .Tr. i7": Reader 'i‘eporte
I Elliott, Sr. 531Cottercll ’_ had
:Carlson 535l§3anicls fién i]
965 903 963 28317335 873 901 I- '- score
I Drinkers (l) Vl’ilson’s and fin
Handmap 192 Handicap j Vn 01a,
,VV. Sil'lgl"\'o 482 Tucker ' and,
lDriskel 524, tiller lg, C
IcGough‘ 472; li‘cul‘re .. ear”
I Bayley 465 Sergeant u
iM. Fredson 591IForbes . érefl
‘ o n . H l? .' on“. ,
“3.12895 941 2126‘J7i poi, 917‘:T geek
l ' " “Ore
YOU ARE COVERED for an)? Bani
cidcnt for $.25 per day. L0 wers
FINEST FOODS AT
BEST PRICES
time the rate is cheaper. jv wen
i Angle. kex
e..- . I i I (ilrll‘il
I MILLO’S - R: I:
.' 1 , by
l QUALITY MARK _....
i 7431?
l l DRUGS “"33"
GROCERIES , ME
5 FRESH ME/ATS led-1m
g, FRUITS : “ii
,9 High
l HOGDSPORT
Look over the New Homes built in the dis—
Note the homes sold
during last year and the resale values of
property in the district.
Investigate the advantages of location
View, public service, streets and conven-
ience to schools and business.
I‘ll. G. ANGLE