Page Four
Diehl Again Savings
And Loan President
F. H. Diehl, clothing store mer—
chant. was re-elected president of
the Mason County Savings and
Loan Association-at the annual
stockholders meeting last Satur-
day, with Guy A. Call as vice—
president, A. C. Bayley as secre-
tary-treasurer, and Phil Bayley as
assistant secretary-treasurer. enterprise With his ’40 Piper
The only change made in the Cruiser. It will_be used for scenic
board of trustees placed I. H. flights as well as bringing Shel-
Woods, laundry proprietor, in the ton hours nearer to key cities in
post held by the late James H. the PaCifiC Northwest-
Frisken. The Cruiser is a. three-place,
seventy-five horsepCIWer plane,
Inaugurated At
Shelton’s new air service is be-
ing inaugurated today. Ed. Jeff-
ery, who recently flew here from
Pennsylvania, is opening the new
hydraulic brakes, and tailwheel.
While in the East the plane was
used successfully in the same
.trade it will be placed‘in here.
Tony Galento (265 lbs.), his man-
ager (over 200.1bs.), and the pilot
(165 lbs.), demonstrated the ship’s
capacity for wbrk when all three
made a fast, COmfortable trip
from Erie, Pa., to Buffalo, N. Y.
Shelton is only forty minutes
from Seattle by air, while Port-
land is but an hour and a half.
Mr. Jeffery pointed out that a
cruising speed of eighty-five miles
per hour, plus air line travel,
brings Tacoma within thirty min-
utes; Chehalis, forty minutes; Ab-
erdeen, forty minutes; Yakima,
two hours; and Vancouver, B. 0.,
HOME
LOANS
O Convenient Terms
0 Reasonable Rates
0 NO DELAY
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' two hours. Numerous other
Mason county saVEngs lpoints are brought as close pro-
& Loan Association portionately.
The rates will be the same for
one or two passengers or four
hundred pounds of freight.
Title Insurance Bldg.
A Delicious Heart Shaped Cake
made from Fresh Oranges and
Lemons and covered with a
creamy boiled icing and tiny Red
Candy Hearts.
Also large e a r t shaped
Cakes may be ordered
at Your Grocers
— or at —-—
n .vw
PHARMACY
VIT
Phone 303
CLOSE OUT
SPECIALS
0 Valentine Cards by Norcross
0 Valentine-l-Gandy‘ by Canterbury
0 Perfzgne 180621158 by Early American
[New Air Service Dairy Cows Need I
Shelton AirportI
equipped with navigation lights,-
PHOTO
WORK
25f
roll
8 Prints and
FRE E
Enlargement
For GIOrious {m I son on mil
lustrous Hair I I
‘ FOR NORMAL OR our HAIR ,
. " . ,Ifific-Drene
Ample Supply Of
Water In Winter
Dairymen who lock their cows
in the barn from late afternoon
until morning are providing pro-
tection from the Weather but they
are probably reducing both but-
terfat and milk receipts unless
the animals are well supplied
with water, says Otto J. Hill, ex-
tension dairyman at the State Col-
lege of Washington.
Recent work with dairy cows
show that the average cow» needs
about one-half gallon of water to
lproduce one pint of milk. This
means that the average dairy cow
requires about twelve and one-
half gallons of water a day while
I a heavy producer giving seven gal-
lons of milk a day would require
as much as 32 gallons of water
during the 24 hours.
In many cases during winter
weather, cows are. turned in to
the barn about four o'clock in the
afternoon and remain there until'
about nine in the morning. This
for about seventeen hours out of
the 24, leaving only seven in
Iwhich they can secure the needed
water, unless supplies are avail-
able to the barn.
Hill points out that experiments
at Iowa State College indicate
that when cows have free access
to water they drink on an av-
erage of ten‘ times during 24
hours. Free access to water in
drinking cups in the Iowa tests
increased milk production three
and a half per cent and butterfat
10.7 per cent.
During cold weather, water for
dairy cows should be kept at a
temperature of from 50 to 60 de-
gress F. if the cows are to con-
.sume the amount of water which
they actually need to maitain pro-
duction. Hill pdirits out that this
50 to 60 degree temperature is
that of water from the average
well, which has proven satisfac-
tory for dairy cows.
Cattle naturally obtain a con-
siderable supply of the needed was
ter from food, Hill says. The
amount of water varies with the
‘food, however, and a cow on si-
lage, for instance, needs less
supplemental water than one on
dry hay. Frequency of salting
may alter the amount of water re-
quired by cows at various times.
Hughey Warns Of
Deer-Chasing Dogs
I
Dog owners who want to kee
their pets will have to stop them
from roaming the woods uncheck-
ed and chasing deer, Game Pro-
tector Paul Hughey warned to-
day.
He reported considerable deer
chasing by roaming dogs has been
going on lately, one deer having
been killed and another was only
forts of the game protector to
nurse it back to health.
Hughey said he will have to
dispose of dogs he finds loose in
the woods hereafter.
LAD IN HOSPITAL
m--- .___.___. , _.,.____._,_,.
Billy
Mrs. Cliff Reader of Potlatch, was
admitted to Shelton hospital Wed-
nesday for treatment.
We Deliver
AMINS
Pt. Norwegian Cod Liver Oil USP..- 49¢
_ pt, Super D Cod Liver Oil ------------ 1-39
fifucngiisifiif 2 for 32¢ 100 Parke Davis Haliver Capsules... 1.29
$2.00 REDUCOIDS 89¢ 100 Abbott Vitacaps ........................ .. 4.69
NOW ------------------------- -- 25 Abbott Vitacaps
.......................... -- 1-39
,51'00 TOILET 79¢ 50Parke Davis Abdol With C .......... .. 2.54
72 Sexta Vitamins ............................ -- 1-93
DEODORANTS TOBACCOS
75c SNO- I - . I
MIST .................... .. 59¢ thEL _________ 69¢
$3M .................... .. 49¢ SPECIALS giggles ......... __ 79¢
La n’ in t M'll (1
3301581111 ------------ Sigpirifltgdjr: (:rnatlio‘ii, JMOODEL.... 6 for
60 Pine, Lavender, Gardenia.
NSN SPI -------------- 9 gIIGLER" 6 for
use ........ __: _____ - 39¢ . ¢ 5.,Mnlesssfi: 89¢
Large
500 Teel .... .. 39¢
a—--------"
~-——————_¢
Srzcnc
PI
Reader, son of Mr. and
SHELTON-
ILLINOIS farmers promise to
set a pace in reforestation of
the land that farmers in other
states will find hard to equal
and difiicult to surpass.
Ralph M. Fisher, production
manager of the Illinois State
Forest Tree Nurseries, says that
during 1941 farmers of the state
will plant at least 10,000,000
seedlings as compared with 5,-
000,000 last year.‘ All of this is
a production headache for the
nurseries.
Last year the stock of seed-
lings was exhausted before the
demands could be filled. In
1941 once more it is feared the
supply will fail to equal the de-
mand. Plans are being made
to have 15,000,000 seedlings on
hand for 1942.
NEXT to the farmers, the strip
mining companies are the
greatest tree planters in Illinois.
After the coal is stripped from
the top of the beds, near the
surface of the ground, acres of
waste land are left.
Last year, in 11 coal counties,
companies planted 1,600,000
trees. This year they expect
to plant 2,000,000 more.
Farmers are finding it pays to
plant trees in their land which
is useless for ordinary agricul-
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MASON COUNTY JOURNAL
Tree planting farmers, fighting soil erosion with reforestation,
are setting in seedlings faster than nurseries can supply them.
Weathermen I
For $40 Pension
I Payments Listed
Imining the amount of senior cit—
Iizens‘s grant under Initiative ltll,
Isocial security department offic—
lials said .today the following bud—
getary guide is to be user! in
I Food, $9: fuel, $6; housing, $1.2; '
Ilight, $1.50; water, $1.50; Cloth-
Iing, $3; incidentals, $5; and house-
‘hold replacements, $2; total, $40.
I If an applicant or recipient pays
lfor items such as housing, fuel,
Iwater and light in an amount low—
Ier than that given in the budg ;
Iary guide, here will be no (le-
"duction because of such lower cost.
I When the amount paid for rent
Iincludes light, water and fuel, no
Ideductions will be made for these
|items.
An applicant or recipient buy-
ing a home on contract or making
,payments on a mortgage on his
’home will be considered as having
-the same status as a person rent-
I
Iing property.
.‘ Household items such as hous-
ing, fuel, light and water sup—
:plied an applicant as :1 result of
Icombined living shall be consid~
Ieredin determining eligibility and
_ 3the amount of the grant, the rules g
tion stops stubborn eros10n of land regulations said, I
the 8011- Planting 0f blaCk 10" I The new law is effective liarch
cust seedlings quickly yields tim- 1_
ber good for fence posts. The regulations said it might be
,assumed from the law that all
Ipersons owning a piece of real
Iproperty other than the place of
Iresidence arc to be found ineligi-
‘ble for a grant.
ture. For one thing, reforesta-
LLINOIS nurseries are trying
to get the farmers and strip
mining companies interested in
other types of trees, such as the
red and white oak, the black
walnut, the green ash, and the
.tulip poplar. The last is a fast-
growing tree which is very valu-
able for lumber. .
Where the land is thin and
eroded, as in southern Illinois,
state nurseries are urging the
use of the short leaf pine as the
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E Martin Attending ‘
I School Conference
V County School Supt. J. E. Mar-
I‘tin left for Bellingham today to
lattend the annual state conven-i
tion of school directors, in vvhichI
leading conifer which flourishes 0395311319
m sat‘sfactoril in such ter- ,
rai):t l y Itlon and the W. E. A. also join}
. I
Forestry, experts of Illinois ‘pmmmently- I
I The convention lasts through
1 le e b I . . .
gerrgofgefiggi Email: arid ISa‘turday. Discussmn of action on:
I 1131:: Jillllol'
tr;
[evaluating resources: , I I .
WWW
Haiti-(I
llig
lioquiom
To Olympia Friday Eve
Mason County VITVV. post mem-
bcr.; \i'all gather at Mcnmrlal Hall
at
7:30
hing
o‘cloc
for
all
made by the
time ago to
I post.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Maseru Oliano, 27. Shelton, and
lYoshiko I(-3.\V{‘.II‘IOILO, 23, Seattle, atI
IShelton, February 5.
Robert ‘W.
. . pending legislation, particularly
gfiftgigsgs hfaée t$?§edeiféifigf the state school building fund
pro— I
tion and promotional value. , posal and the state school district“
. . rhor '25., X ‘l '. ‘l 1
City and community plantmgs c ganl ’ltion bi 1, Will feature 1 lo
have especially increased since
1937 when the federal govern- 1 crican Democracy“ is the theme of
ment began augmentmg the State . the convention program, he said.
reforestation program. Last year I
24 cities and communities plant—
ed trees on 5386 acres in the
state. Cities used trees especial-
ly around reservoirs and in pub-
lic parks.
Olympic Plywood Site
Grading Progressing
The Grisdale Construction Com-
pany is making good progress on
'Oldest Simmons,
Native Daughter,
Passes At Vader
I
, _ Mrs. Catherine Simmons Ban—I
Pave-d ItthEglh-l'fihe an'mght 815' “Ion, 8.3I
'daug'htef' 0f one 0f " the} thist‘urea, find employment
of some
fH'St Ploneer famllles 0f WaShmgif kind. or another during 1940, the
ton and of Mason County, and
born on Big Skookum Bay, Octo-
ber 5, 1857, died Sunday evening
at her home in Vader, Lewis
County, after an illneSS of sever-
al months due to age.
She was the daughter of Michael
T. and Elizabeth Kindred Simmonsvi
who crossed the plains by ox-team
in 1844, and settled at Tumwater
in 1855, where her father built
the first grist and later sawmill‘
The Simmons family sold there
and. settled on a donation claim‘
'at the mouth of Mill Creek, on
the bay below Shelton, in 1852,
and built the first water-power
sawmill in Mason County. The
family left during the Indian War
of 1855 and remained for a time
in Olympia and at the blockhouse
Collins Point, but returned and
rebuilt the mill which had been
carried out by freshet, and sawed
Several cargoes of lumber for San
Francisco.
When a young girl she was
married to James Cantwell, and
after his death to John Bannon,
who survives her, with four
daughters, Mrs. Maude Hinkley of
Tacoma, Mrs. Tina Bennett of
Bellingham, ‘Mrs. Jessie Hillburger
of Chehalis and Mrs. Clara Grer-
maine of Centralia; her brother,
Charles, of Centralia, the last sur-
viving member of the original 12
Simmons children, she being the
tenth; 12 grandchildren and 14
great grand-children. Funeral ser-
vices were held at Che’halis Wed-
nesday.
Lake Crescent
Manganese Mine
To Be Developed
Port Angeles, Feb. 3 — C. A;
Moon and L. L. Le'venslater, 1038
Exchange Building, Seattle, today
announced the leasing of the Cres-
cent manganese mines, a group
of three claims at the west end of
Lake Crescent, twenty-eight _milei
west of Port Angeles, and said
they plan to start development
work within sixty days to prepare
for shipment of manganese for
sale to the government under the
strategic minerals act.
OWners of the property are
Charles Anderson and Theodore
Rixon of Port Angeles and the
Chri ...,?Morgenroth and Joseph
.Marrs lestates.
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high-grade manganese producer
on the north Olympic Peninsula,
several thousand tons having been"
shipped to the East Coast fourteen
years ago. In 1940 diamond drill-
ing under contract for the U. S.
bureau of mines blocked out 10,000
tons of high-grade manganese ore,
average 48 per cent, about 200 feet
below the present tramming tun-
ne .
Moon and Levensaler announc-
ed that a group of well known
Northwest mining men will oper-
ate the claim, which is located on
way.
Journal Want-Ads—Phone 100.
Employment For
I
The.Crescent group is the only
a railroad and the Olympic high-r and Jackyall in Denver, Colo, anai
its big job of moving stun-0'50,—
000 yards of dirt for the new
plant of the
1475 Workers In
I. This Area Found
old Reed shingle mill.
chinery of the old mill being
removed for shipment and a small
crew is at work tearing down the
mill building which will not be
needed: fertile new veneer, ,plant.
New building: work will start its
soon as the“ ground is made ready
for workmen.
I
Bi} helping 1475 workers from
IOlympia office of the Washing-
ton State Employment Service re-
joint sessions, Sutp. Martin saiqu
“Education and Defense of Am-‘,
Olympic Plywoocl‘
Company, which will replace the!
The ma—I
Two
\/
~/
s/
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I iron.
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Junior High iioop Team
At Hetguiam Saturday
nl‘lm'
from (tolTlf'Hftlll‘v't‘, action, the Shel—
Lllls Saturday for a
Ipuir of grim-rs 1:1 the lloqulnm gym
preparatory
caravan of cars to go to Olympia
inter-post
.mander William Compton remind-
cd today. The visit will repay one ,
thor M. Leuch,
ton, at Shelton, February 3.
lrdhruc
the Only Ironer with:
the same. '_
‘/ Forming Board—for arranging '
Clothes. I _t d
Cast Iron Shoe—no scorch “9 more “0"” e5 ,.
v _‘~" ‘ "" ’ 100% of the ironing 1!!
scratch or warp.
Mg; Control—leaves
both
Irom'lzg Points—like a hand
Guarantees Your Ironing
Satisfaction
H
i“
1
iursday, February 6, I: a)", F
Mr. and Mrs. Travis ['0]
Attend Conven
,, Com
turned to Shelton yesterday
ter
attending the three-day ‘\
stockholders meeting of the_ ()UNT
thorn Hardwarcmcn's Assocl
in Portland Sunday, Monday
~ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Trail“
a, week's detour
I
ll buskotccrs travel
starting at (mo o'clm k. , , V
T" ' “h ‘11" (‘lub “'L\" '1'
“'71- I 1 “Cs-dam
“£11.99? gift,“ ,5“ ,'_ 7 flit,“ Mr. Travis has been vicc
e]. “
II)‘ 1m“ l ‘l' d“, 13‘ " "‘ w dent and a
director in the a" ._
‘2 -. l r": H c. .“ o 2:, . . .
‘f U I; (5;!) 2,1,3?“ (:,.'§];T;r7_’l hag, tum, an oignmzution
of 200 _.
, "n , f)“ ‘ ,,.;j".)r’{ ’j‘j’ “3‘ ‘ ‘
pendent hardware stores in W
conigcs, intonsmcly fol tlm ‘li‘o- “Wm” Ruhr) and Oregom f0 Kn.
, -, I I H: If ",h . : .5) ".‘1' v~ v . x
qumm I... Iloqux ,Im \Vlil I) pews: Six years wlth his p GOES“
‘ "—M'A“”“ _‘ lol‘m continuing another year aske
“7 gr I 1 ‘pn IV H7‘ .‘4. M—‘“ x, 40 t
1. Fl . lo Kenna“, l isn. DAUGHTER MmVEs fivec
Mr. and Mrs. Robert 'j‘f. the
Route 1, became parents 120. am
a baby daughter born at
hospital.
k this
to
Friday cyc-
forming a-
ronnnsrs ‘
FLOWERS,
93 1a.
meeting, Com-
' en MoI
the.
Olmypia post somcl
the Mason County,
I
FOR EVERY OCCASIO
Delivered anywhere
222 South 10th SINGS};
. Q c ‘_ '
“OF/19' 1“ “d E'3 Shelton Call 112-W esher
18, both of Shel-l
gpen ends—that are used
Recent surveys show
American home that! i
other ironers combine:
PRICES
a s I o w a 5
Call for a free demons, ‘
hands free.
Iported the best year in its his-
tory.
“There are three reasons why
the Olympia office was able to
find work for so many people,"
Alice Helenius, local manager an-
nounced today. “One is that more
emplo ers in this district are tak-
ing a vantage of the facilities
which the Employment Service
offers. In other words, we help-
ed inorc employers secure work-
ers last year than ever before.
Another reason is that workers
of all trades and professions and
skills are registering with the
Olympia office in larger num-
bers; and third isthc impetus giv-
en to employment by the Nation-I ‘
a1 Defense Program.”
“From requests for workers
which we have received fr no local
employers, it is evident flat the
Olympia office will serve mere .
employers this year than in 1940.I
We have noticed also an increase
in the number of workers who are« ;
askifig us to help them locate
suitable jobs."
Placements have been made in
nearly every known occupation.
and workers have been sent as
far away as Alaska and the Phili—I
ppine Islands. I f.
Perhaps the most unusual rc— j.
quest for a worker was for a per-I
son to witness a marriage license.I 1
Asked'what advice she would' -";
like to give local workers 'for this: ‘,
year, Manager Alice Helenius said, "
“No worker should go from one
place to another looking for work]
until he has checked with the lo-I
cal office of the Washington State
Employment Service. If he does
this. he will get the best infor-
mation on jobs and where they
are to be had.” I
The number of job placementsI
which the Washington State Em-,
ploymcnt Service’ made in allI
parts for the last year totaled‘l
126,052, according to figures roll"
leased in Olympia by Commission~ IE
er Jack Bates of the Officc'of Un-I
employment Compensation and
Placement.
CCC Wants More Boys
MllfilleNl
Out Of Mason County 21/3
With ahother enlistment sched~I >_ .......... ..
uled for February, there are many}
P’liill’ llllllill
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Specie
. V!
56:.
Happyvale
Pals' 3
Luncheon Meat
E
Iopenings in the CCC available toI g
IMason County youths, Miss Cora‘ :11
Barber, county weliare adminis-
trator, announced yesterday; I
(3361 youn men interested in the ;, Sunny Jim
‘ are sked to contact Miss;
Bafbfw at the social sccurityi
,, building at Sixth and Railroad. I; _.‘; can ___________ __
I Hodge Funeral To Be
Held Saturday, 1 p. m.
Funeral services for Jerry
Hodge, Harstine Island resident ;
who died January 28 at the Shel- I
ton hospital, will be buried Satur—
day after funeral services at one
o'clock from Witsiers Chapel, it I ."I
was announced today. .
Four brothers, Ed. Clyde, Dale
MlllcllES
Elfin?
new
Carton ....... __
two sisters, one in California. and I
one in Iowa, survive. He was:
born May 26. in Iowa. ' ., _u-
ls f0 rday, turdy d onday
GFFEE' Ill. ‘ 250
calls
Mil
3 sails 25o
pig. 350
PINEAPPLE.
:.
E G G S’ . '
Grade ‘A’ Large
I
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_' _________ 57'.
» l
x.
w.
SWWMIE 3
2
., 3 fat master" 2
. lallcan 1”
250
250
w
SID—lbs. '. . , . . ‘
25—1bs. .. . .,. 2 to
boil 83h
"I.
-.“I.‘I-:-.‘-:.-w .2: '3': - "" I'
.. vr-r . :2