Page Four
Consolidated with The Shelton Independent .
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Shelton, VVashmgton
Subscription Rates :
BY MAIL: in Mason County (outside of Shelton city mail carrier districts) I
$2 per year; 6 montl’s, $1.25; 3 months, 75¢. Foreign $3.50 per year,
Postal;
regulations forbid residents of Shelton served by City mail carrier from}
receiving their Journal by mail. I
BY JOURNAL CARRIER: in Shelton, 25¢ per month (collected by carrier):
or $2.50 per year in advance.
Published every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon
MARKS IIIII LOOP
BO‘iII-ING NIATIIHES
Paramount, Driskcl Sweep Match-
es, L. M., Mason Laundry
Likmvise Show Gains
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GRANT C. ANGLE J. EBER ANGLE CITY BOWLING t
. . c, . , . . c .
Edltor Mariana] IParamount Theatre "44 28 .611
Member of Washington Newspaper Publisliers' Association *Driske}
Hardware W38 34 .528
and National Editorial Assoc1ation. ,Ca’mmaranos ___________ 37 35 .514
I Mason Laundry .36 36 .500
PENALTY ON BOOZE-GAS MIXTURE IAssociated on . .35 37 .486
L. M. ................. .. .33 39 .458
"". ’ "" . . . IVVilson‘s Cafe .33 39 .458
In proof that gasoline and liquor W111 not mix . Pastime
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, -32 40 .444
High Scores
Game—Mark Fredson 234.
Total~vMark Fredson 649.
Matches Friday
7 p. m.—L. M. vs. Cams, Asso-
ciated vs. Mason Laundry.
Without danger to the public and a dayof reckon.
ing to the violator of sound law, is eVidenced by!
the decision of Judge Wilson in the local Superior:
Court Saturday in which one of theIheaviest pen-§
alties for such violation was invoked. .
In this case in which the drunk driver was,
observed but not stopped in time, another man
lost his life in the wrecked car, the driver’s own nifty bowling marked
the week—
sister lies badly injured in a local hospital, and,ga,f‘ty league matches
1“ gen-
her four small children are left fatherless, all; The Ileading theatre
squad fat-
because one man mixed liquor and gasoline onitened its edge to Six games
and
the highways. 122% “Sffovéa‘v‘il’t‘i‘in
i’é‘sii‘ei‘énifit‘ififiio
The penalty: forfeit of driver license and be-
£21132"szfe?"e’:mfiistgggmiggV‘gfii
ing forever barred from driving a car, to remain Smith and Hankm Djurand
cut
in the state for eighteen years while he is required {23:6 WEE;
:‘i’ggogarggggft 2‘1";
to pay $12.50 a month for each of four children end and Mark Fredson
continued
aged from one to nine years until they all reachI
the age of eighteen; to pay $50 a month toward,totai and a 234 game which
off-
building a cash bond of $1;000 to the state
foriffrtisfi‘giohg‘gl’g’w 500195 "1 the
performance; and at the end of eighteen yearsi Bab Stewart and Pete Carlson
final sentence to depend on such performance. irespectmw which helped lift
the
IL. M. out of the basement in a
Thls may seem severe for laipse frOI-rtl'Z to 1 triumph over
Associated,
sobrlety at the wheel, but not conSidering that l Iwhne Mason Laundry
regained
cost one life, deprived four small children of theiriigiteh gojsesgéqnarg:
fvoeiiiégigt p332:
father and provider, and seriously injured theic‘amm,amos is Tiny
Férwerda
mother, the driver’s own sister, not to speak ofIbuilt his individual
average.
hundreds of innocent families endangered by theIiooguer to top the 600 mark
for
weaving driver on the crowded highways; but itithe night. .but it wasn‘t
enough
. . . . to salvage so much as a sin rle
should serve as warning to others inclined to mix! g
Wilson’s vs. Pastime.
Paramount Theatre and Driskel
Hardware were heavy gainers
Friday evening as some rather
game for Wilson’s.
drink and gas and go gayly forth, a. greater men-I “gig; 1:3)
ace to humanity than war; warning that theIw
Wilson's (0)
68 Handicap 54
Sn‘lgrove 54113. Tucker 570
' ' ‘ lDummy 453 Dummv 492
courts are tightening up as they should to protect {Dummy 513 Dumm;
the public. gBayley 508‘Sergeant 415
i M. Fredson 649; Forbes 621
1911885 936 2732.906 870 850 2626
IParamount (3) Pastime (0)
I, Handicap 162I Handicap 168
_ ‘Eiobinson 567 Dotson 419
At McChord Field for the past two months $2,21sz gggfigrieliqdmmy :53
or more some twenty huge four-motored bomb- 1543:2323“
Eggg’It-ali‘effier Egg
ers have been parked awaiting the passage of the 3313 9391009 2861 386 8315
797 2498
lend-lease bill and the financing of sales to BI‘l-Infiggdilégy (ZQIG
Han £2318 (a
tain of these huge fighting machines. Now theyiDodds p ammonson “p 562
are starting out on their long flight across the sea lama“ £33380“
for active service, one a day, under charge of aIFunk Momemck 525
British flying crew, and in due time are expected ’Dummy v573 Fredson
509
. . I915 890 883 2688;331 811 881 2623
to be chasmg Germans. These machines were”. M. (2) ' Associated (1)
' ' Handicap 99 Handicap 162
turned out _by the Boeing plant at Seattle, and if Istewart 613 Cotteren
570,
the other airplane plants of the country are domg I Mackey 575 McConkey 456
' ' “ i Roberts 489 Reader 509
as Well there should be a turn in the tide overmmott’k 483Noblett 550
there before long- .Carlson 614 Daniels
I 935 940 998 2873 387 890 1024 2801
TAXES VERSUS INTEREST ISki goldiers To
Try Olympics In
Thousands of persons made out income tax
returns this year who never made them out be-
fore, and as the base gets down into even lower;
brackets, many more thousands will be called. grilling 343.11.12.41
k~iMart. 119.73
upon next year and in the years to come. Thisgs—oon eshifst itslvfcfgsof
ggeggtgggs
year many Single men earning $800 or over andlfrorphthglslopes of Mourlit
holinor
family men of $2,000 found they had to pay ai3°temepoggiiggmgemub: 52,135;
tidy sum to support the government spending for on Mount Anderson. f t
war and peace, and they learned something
thatgtré‘fif‘fif’ifi;fififi‘fflg‘fprfie £51,;
did not concern them before in what credits theyiwill include a hike from
Longmire
Obtain a,” Springs to Teton reservoir, just
outside Rainier natioal park on
One thing many learned is that there were
thgiiiitelgieglrigisyoilfliilgasgzgfgi
no credits for personal and living expenses, in-.
cluding rents, while taxes and interest paid were3among the rugged Cascade
Peaks
has been in the open every day
. . . . ,to test equipment and find ef-
entitled to full credits to offset their earnings,;ficient methods of
utilizing ski
and this points clearly to the savings that could/“‘00PS 1“ mam
warfare Several
. . . . 'night operations, during which
be made in home ownership, even With lntereStiwartime conditions have been
sim-
paymentsy over paying out even larger sums for,u1ated, were included in the
train-“
, ing program during the first few
rents for which there IS no return; and as new {Weeks in March.
' ' The 4lst Division ski patrol
income taxes seek out those of lower earningscently entered a three man
team
many more people Will become tax conscmus andIin the sixth annual open
patrol
' _ I race held last week by the Moun-
pléose to spend their money for permanent bene tameers club of Seattle on
the
i s.
south side of Snoqualime pass and
- 1th h th d'd t ' th
The bugbear of interest and property taxesigzeegufihey5,313,135.13
til/rinwiiiia
deter some people from buying or building homes 11ng team. The men were
Cor-
of their own, but they for et that rents paid toIpolal 1" 13'
Osborne of Seattle!
_ and Sergeants LeRoy Zerba and
others are a dead loss, whi e owning
re-
9 p. m.—Driskel vs. Paramount, '
his strong pace to lead the night’s '
individual performers with a 649'.
Ikicked in with 613 and 614 totals-
Bud Forbes was a fourth city'
Practice Ordersl. At Everett, West
the men come from the 16151: In-I
a, home and Donald Brown of Spokane. A11
paying rents to themselves offers many advan-
tages over the income tax savings; people keep
up their'own homes better than rented property,
fantry.
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(JOURNAL Want Ads are used by
in their community affairs and becoming a cog
' on Puget Sound, in contrast with California and;
scores of your friends and
neighbors with great success.
Complete information a b o u t
and thus 'are getting ahead, steadily if. slowlyI
rather than going behind, taking more interest
hel s.
in its progress; even if they build for rental they] p
still may offset the rents collected with taxes andl'
interest payments and save on income taxes.
BEST COUNTRY ON EARTH
For some five or six weeks past The Journal
has been telling about the fine weather prevailing
the rest of the Union; particularly when‘the news'
of storms filtered up here, but admitted tapping
on wood.
Now that spring is really here by the calen-I
dar and still no bad weather we must feel thati
winter is really past and settle down to enjoy the
sunshine, the mellow ground, the floWers and
bulbs and the swelling buds and cheerfully admit}
that this is the best country on earth.
what you have to sell alwaysa
_____‘ __ .._ _..____.___
SHIP IOIIII FREIGHT *
, BY BOAT ' .
FAST FREIGHT SERVICE
WITH DOOR DELIVERY IN SHELTON
Seattle Freight should be routed via Str. Indian, Ferry Dock, z
Tacoma Freight via Str. Skookum Chief, Milwaukee Dock,
No. '
Time Schedule as follows:
Leaves Tacoma daily, execept Sunday, at 5 p.m. for I
Olympia and Shelton
‘ Arrives Shelton daily, except Sunday
PUGET SOUND FREIGHT LINES
CLARENCE CARLANDER, President
SHELTON—MASON COUNTY JOURNAL
Defense of their twice—won!
Southwest conference high school;
lbaseball title looms like a “Brit-I
{aim vs. Germany” problem for the}
.Shelton Highclimbers this springi
I‘M-maybe they will and maybe they
'won‘t be successful.
If Coach Homer Taylor had all;
of his legitimate lettermen re—I
turning the prospects would be;
fairly good, but the loss of Bob}
Cole, star righthanded pitcher, and
Gene Anderson, last year’s mostI
dependable infielder, by transfer:
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to other schools deals the High—
climbers a stiff blow to the solar
plexus. Cole went to Sewanee1
Military Academy in Tennessee)
and Anderson switched back to:
Elma. ,
8 Lettermen Return
That still leaves eight lettcrmen, I
plus three or four capable~looking
junior high graduates, to lookI
after the championship ramparts
and there may be enough power
there to do it, althouin the gen—I
eral outlook seems to indicate less I
hitting strength than last year’sI
club possessed and perhaps aI
Weaker pitching staff. I
Those are two items, however-,I
that could go the other way if:
the junior high material comes:
through in the most optimisticI
style. If, for-instance, Ed Miller,I
the stubby Indian. lad who was;
,the hero of last summer’s juniorl
legion team ,and Jess Phillips canI
dish up a winning brand of pitch-
'ing as sophomores; if DOn Dick—I
.inson can do a varsity job ofI
catching; if Jack Page can filll
ian infield gap; then Taylor‘s prob—
lem would be pretty well solved.
The rest can be handled by re-.
|turning lettermen and known'
'abilities such as those possessed,
.by Elmer Carlson and Ralph Le—I
Drew, pitchers; Earl Lumsden,
first base; Jim McComb, second
base: Warren Woods, catcher -_i
shortstop-outfielder; and Ted Van- I
Overbeke, Ken Fredson, and Ken”
Latham, outfielders.
Hitting Looks Fairly Good
Latham was last year's leading.
‘hittcr, McComb, Lumsden,
,Drcw, Woods, Fredson and Van-
Overbeke arc dependable stickersi
as a general rule,.so the hittingi
department may be pretty welll
fortified if the lettermen live upv
to their past performances. Van-I
Overbeke, especially, should be a
big improvement over last year
as he began to show power and:
Iconsistency toward the end of the:
gjunior legion season last summer.
5 Taylor‘s principal problemgap-
Ipears to be behind the bat and;
the left side of his infield. Fred—I
son can handle third if necessaryl
and Woods can take over at either i
sh‘ort or catcher and do a work-j
maiilike job if he wants to. Miller
and Phillips alternated between;
short and pitching in junior highl
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'and might help, although Miller!
is pretty slow footed for the in-
field post.
Reserve Possibilities
Little Bob Pearce, from
1940 reserves, may be a surprise.
infield package: too. Others from
the reserves who are seeking 1941:
varsity posts include Bob Puhn'
land Bob Pearson, pitchers; Milt
Clothier. catcher or first base;
Bill Booth, catcher; Bob S. Cole,
linfielder; Jim Waldrip, Floyd Fullm
er, Jack Hembury and Glen,
Sowers, outfielders.
Other junior high grads besides
those already mentioned
turnout yesterday
the!
include
and began
IBowlerS Do Well
I Seattle Tourneys
Final returns are not available
yet, but three or four Shelton en-,
tries in the annual six-game wo—
men’s singles bowling tournament
at Everett last Weekend should
Itakc prize places with their
scores.
Min Durand tops the Shelton
Icontingent with 1196 pins in the
,six game handicap tourney, fol—
.lowed by Gwen Skelsey with 1184
pins, Inez Dodds with 1168 and
Tena Stevens with 1138.
At the same time, two men's
iteams from Shelton were failing.
to cut much of a figure in thei
five-man event at a tournament
at West Seattle but individualfi
members of the teams fared fair
enough in the singles and dou-I
bles. I
, Pete Carlson was leading theI
handicap singles event with a 696 i
score while Phil Bayley was well
up with his 664 total. Bayley and
Shorty Aronson wer tied.with,i
Mark Fredson and Toad Sergeant I
at 1273 for a high spot in the
Idoubles. Mark hit 665 pins ac-
Itual in the doubles.
IGIRLS TROPHIES FROM
STAR TOUBNEY HERE I
Shelton bowlers returning from
Seattle Sunday brought home with
them the two beautiful little tro-
phies which Elsie Peterson and
Evelyn Smith earned when they
Won the doubles in the recent
annual Seattle Star women’s
bowling tournament in Seattle.
The names of each were en-
graved on the trophies.
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.quiam at Shelton,
Bill Chase, first base; Earwin
Loop, Wally Anderson and
Johnson, outfielders; Jake Graffe,
catcher; Rex Howry, Bill DeFord,
and Roy Baker, infielders.
Coach Taylor held his first
,working his way toward the firsti
S. W. . conference game w h 1 ch
sends Shelton to Olympia April 11.
Conference Schedule
The schedule follows:
April 11: Aberdeen at Hoquiam,
Shelton at Olympia, Elma at Mon-
tesano.
April 18: Aberdeen at Elma, Ho-
Olympia at
Montesano.
April 22: Shelton at Aberdeen,
Montcsano at Hoquiam, Elma at
Olympia.
April 25: Olympia at Aberdeen,
Montesano at Shelton, Hoquiani at
Elma.
April 29: Aberdeen at Montesa-
no, Hoquiam at Olympia, Shelton
, at Elma.
May 2: Hoquiam at Aberdeen.
Montesano at Elma, Olympia at
Shelton.
May 9: Elma at Aberdeen, Shel-
ton at Hoquiam, Montesano at
Olympia.
May 13: Aberdeen at Shelton,
Hoquiam at Montesano, Olympial
at Elma. '
May 16: Aberdeen at Olympia,
Elma at Hoquiam, Shelton at Mon-
tesano.
May 20: Montesano at Aberdeen,
Elma at Shelton, Olympia at Ho-
quiam.
‘Potlatch Grade
Students Visit
Capitol Grounds.
By Elizabeth Hussman and
Mildred Woodworth
Potlatch, Wash, March 19—
The intermediate and Junior high;
Le- visited the state capital at Olym-,
pia last Wednesday. As guests of
the-Hon. Charles R.
presentative,
the capitol cafeteria, climbing to
the top of the dome, and ViSitingiploy all workers on all construe,
the State Library and Progress
Commission where they were’giv-
en illustrative literature of State'
History and Geography for the
school library. They- also visited
various other buildings on the cap-
itol grounds.
The Potlatch Social Club was
entertained at the school house on
Tuesday evening by Mrs. Tomp-
goose.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Simmons, Mr.
daughter Anita,. Mr.
and Mr. Jack Simmons Were the
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
iJim Simmons of Sheltonl at a
birthday dinner in honor of Mr..‘ and Navy as essential to the Nat-
Iional Defense program. The forty-I
J. Simmons of Potlatch.
Several guests attended a house
warming party given for Mr. and in effect on all certified National
IMi‘s. W. W. Newton at their home; Defense projects at the request‘
g on Saturday.
Mrs. Roger Hill returned home
Monday after spending the weekI fense
with her. mother
Port Gamble.
Mr. and Mrs. Wyers entertain-l
ed at a birthday dinner in honor quate Preparedness for Nationall
of Bob Handly on Sunday after-HDemnse
noon.
Mrs. W. H. Smith and daugh-IUnited StatesArmM”
ter Nancy Lee spent Wednesday; —" "”
in Gig Harbor visiting friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Severance<
and daughter Donna Elaine
Shelton spent Sunday afternoon
ViSiting Mr. and Mrs. Terry Pa-
gel. Sunday dinner guests of the
Pagel’s were Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Pagel of Purdy Canyon.
I Mr. and Mrs. Johnson and fam-
ily of Everett spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Rodgeberg.
Miss Nellie Esaw was at home
over the week end visiting her.
parents. She returned to Seattle.
; Sunday afternoon. ‘
Friday evening Mr,
Norman
Main of Ellensburg
arrived to
j spend the week end with Mr. andI
Mrs. Asleson. Saturday Mr. and
Mrs. Asleson accompanied by Mr.
Main went to Kalama where theyi
Asleson's and Mr.
visited Mrs.
Main's parents.
Sunday .Mr. and Mrs. Pearce
had as their guests Stella DeRush,
Mr. Linder and Mr. and Mrs. BaulI
Wagner all of Se ttle.
Mr. and Mrs. Nel Simmons had
as their, week end guests Mrs.
Simmons two sisters and a cous-
in of Puyallup.
Mr. and Mrs. Gronvold returned
Ihome from a two Weeks trip to
Minnesota last Saturday evenin .
Mrs. Gronvold reported that 0in
Al:
Savage, Re- I
they attended theljects adminstrator, today announc-
SeSSiOh 0f leg‘iSIature- Other eV'Ied- that authorization has been
re-
.ents of the day were eating in
of'
- ' d I w 4‘ A’HIGHCLIIISER oiiMoNonitn ‘ '9 ; ’
SHELTON MASON COUNTY JOURNAL STRONG SCORING _ HépES JUST 8080 FOR 1941
IgigingI‘IVOYl’gntiaNlN
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' Tuesday, arc; 9'
ideiine’"
Iants
HICLIIIIBER. CAMP
'i v 'i -, g r t r_ \VHAT’S MISSING racquet string-5' .
1“21:1t eNolijeIti: xcgilzliflf’e After looking over the 16 teams I
stretch when 81191 LI
}4‘01- {941 Cinder Squad lin this year‘s state prep basket- tor, as gut
ldoesyf.
Iball tournament, Highclimber stretched betdre .
, , i i .Coach Frank Willard became tightens up an( p x0 > No_
,watiglisos Wife 2:112:11; Cgai%:c‘1;$21i I more convinced than cvcr
that, tamer and .mOI'el,‘
Hakma is going to find defense of a team without a Grade A center job,
according . ,' super-lo, ,
. i'
the Southwest prep track title his lell never get very far in strong i
goods houses. Stilt “fl'fiton n
Highclimber thmdads won 1a 5 t basketball competition. expensive Sidc,
" flying, In
spring about as hopeless as Po-a His own Shelton trams have I ('Ommml
"SB. 2‘. IE E.
land‘s plight against Germany. I been a good cxamplc of the luck ' ~W
‘ |
Only three lettermen return of strong centering. You can BO“ Lth QUIZ t
11-3 Tea
.from that championship squad aiidI go back a long way in High— A Bowler
rolled .v ‘2 name
two of them cannot yet be mark- climber hoop history without ’01“) Came
in the S d
ed down as certainties to turnl discovering a really capable id Standard
tom'nae "I
out this year. Weldon Galloway,’ pivot man, and you can also go 111 3.
(me-man SW9” W ,, ~
half mile star, is the lone Veter- back it good many years with— many
medals W111,” mm at{lavi
Ian campaigner Hakola can count out: putting your finger on a his P611901
games’ 1
on at this moment because Jim, good Higliclimbcr hoop team. If the touriiam
1.
Rose, husky jumper and sprintei',‘ The two run hand—iii-hand, it
tinned Iic would ‘-' _"‘ e .
has a hankering for baseballlappears. i medal. A tou ‘., ling
which seems likely to wean him Incidentally. Willard was tornI sanctioned
must. ye s
away from track and Frank Beret, between two personal friendships jor
feature a t "
who pushed Frank Waters in thc in trying to decide where his af—, man. or
a five-MP“,
sprints last year, is working afterIfections between St. John and Then
bowlers WT) 'ogegller w
school and may not be able toIBremerton should lie in the events, such as
't ‘ .. 83’ w
find time for athletics this spring. I championship fin 3.1 s Saturday
doubles, are prot ' this 25th
The junior high graduate list night, with Ken Wills of Brem- hip to receive
h gHEA
offers a couple of promising lads 5 erton and Floyd Hicks of St, 292) and
300 games: Higgém
in Donn Nelson, weights, sprints John both being close friends, but
Sweepstakes £61? “I cod 1
and broadjump star; and VVally|whcn the chips actually were on ihavmg no
team 2 w “fofiAYLE
Anderson, sprinter and jumper of the table the Shelton mentor be
sahctioned. he is, mneefii‘ligte
considerable ability. Jack Smith couldn‘t help but lean a bit to- an,
n’ot pl,ote(.’,ted- {Flushing};
of the 1940 reserves should helpaward St. John because Hicks had Following
a first ‘7 ‘8-1Ht'
.out quite a little in the weights, Ibeen corresponding regularly one pm
remains ,,
too, but after that What! That‘s 1 throughout the year with Willard
though surrounded . _,TICE 0F
,what Hakola would like to know. I and because a fella can't help but I
whicfl are down .s ; Ulaflltlerehy
Maybe Gordon Dickinson, George pull for a good little man meeting removed
’the dead“; go Ult’ililti‘sfrin
Valley and Wiley Hoyle of last a good big man. pin falls down. D pggnty,sz
Iyear's reserves, or Junior Pinck— KITTY’S SAVIOUR receive credit
for a. w, (gleam m
ncy, Tom Townsend, Warren Earl, Many a feline life may be NO because the,
ii,” 9,, $351!:
Wilfred Webb or Jim Noll of the the safer these days with. the that ‘jf
a' Standing, 7:? 'r 1;
junior high will develop' into var- discovery that the new textile,
dgadwood is’ being , r» i “V Di
I . I v . . I . , r , of
Sity calibre, but until they provej nylon, makes excellent tennis
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. grade pupils of the Potlatch '
school with their teacher, Mr.
Tompkins and Mrs. Tompkins,
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kins. After the business sessioniper week basis will continue to Taxes
' Advertise It! /.
two tables of contract were play— he paid in accordance with the. __ _- n
. :
ed,dhigh segr: go‘kng toéVirs. Kaare established schedule of monthly .
an secon 0 . rs. isley and’earnings with proportionate in- . ,.
,Mrs. Hale received the galloping crease in earnings based on theI
WlVell,S "y
[and Mrs. Kenneth Simmons and‘20 to 60%
T ‘ p and Mrs. on these projects. It will also mean
l\eil Simmons and son 'Mickey,i' Smith declared a material speed-i
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who is ill, injeffected by this order.
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a pin must be res was pub
themselves they cannot be rated!—
on (
.more than just earnest young fel-I . -—~—————— i ‘ By
lows trying to make the squad. up 4.1
. ’5
Effect On Ma 1’ .
m1- y I H 0 r; ,3 Cor
I OLYMPIA, March 20—Governor; - J:
lLanglie signed the three per cent .
-sales tax bill Monday, the new law
To HourSIbecoming effective May 1. '
I The increased tax was recom—
. ,2 ‘- 'i - .
. V_ thy t t k mended by the chief executive. to ' ‘
call sml S a e wor Pro lmeet the rise in old age pensionI . Convenle t. A
obligations resulting from passage I v;
of initiative 141. It was estimated . Reasona '
WPA Worked; On
ceiVed from Howard 0. Hunter,
Commissioner of the WPA, to em-
the new tax will raise $9,000,000
annually. "'
w . t t-f- d _ It will stay in effect until a H H;
titers: are; roast; ow 0 N0 DE sens;
partments, as important for Nat- I enaCted and held valid by the‘ ‘7
\Charle:
iopal DefenSe, on a forty—eight f courtszllljpon such action, the salets
‘ Matches ,
h k S h . _ i tax W1 revert to two per cen, ‘ . ,,urt '
aggragsliegviily Eoegfggecfshliid?:_g Plastic tokens, three for a cent,
Mason C011“! ‘Comeis'v,
as Defense.Sara‘sall:edsrpzidsrhmI & Lean dire
“projects. I 1 H. ., g
Smith stated that all workers ——f——‘_', Title insura .
"xe
employed on the forty-eight hour‘ A Vacant hmse wont Pay
increase in hours of work. .
This will mean increases of from I
of the average work
IEXAGO smut:
Representative- in Mason County for.‘ L ‘3
Olympia 25] _§._
PRODUCTS COMPANY '
High Grade Fuel and Deisel-Ov
ing up in the completion of any
facilities which have been indicat-
ed by the Secretaries of the War
eight hour work week will be put
of Army and Navy officials. I
Some 22 certified National De-
construction projects are
“Thismmrs ade-I
‘ROMPT SERVICE :
and recommends that , ' ,1
eligible young men enlist in the lst and Franklm ‘
the average the weather was very
nice. They arrived home just inI
time to escape the big storm of'
the week end in the East.
I week announced his
Mr. and Mrs. H. Paul Tompkins
and son Donald spent the week
end at Everett and Pinehurst.
They took Mrs. Tompkin’s father
to his home in Pinehurst.
Mrs. J. Simmons and Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Simmons spent
--’ Tuesday visiting friends at 'Mud
Bay.
Mrs. Kenneth Rathburn and two
‘sons Denny and Dick moved to
y.I
drove to Eatonville
where they visited
ter and son—in-law.
on
their daugh-
Elma Plumber, Once
Of Shelton, Retires
ELMA, Mar. 21——W. S. Ker-
rigan, Elma plumbing contract-
or for the past 33 years, this
retirement.
His plumbing business and cold
storage lockers here will be oper-
ated by his son, Martin. He came
from Lewiston, Maine but was inI
business in Shelton for a year or
two before moving to Elma iii-1918
I
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I
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l
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In a school full of bright, self-respect-
ing students,'there are very likely to be
for 13,468 persons, supporth 6:
payroll of $16,535,205 and co“, ~’ Ash 6;
one or two completely lacking in good $1 111,815.42 last year in stat"
.; lbw\
. . , ‘ iii 12
common sense. And that goes for bust- It is the brewers resp0fl9 3
ness, too...particularly the beer retail- make good beer—the
retailers’r,» High 1:
ing business. bility to sell beer in wholesq " fl
Out of thousands of beer retailers roundings—and the legally .. “High?
who conduct respectable, law—abiding authorities’ responsibility to
69‘. Hf. V 1;
businesses, there maybeafew“dunce” laws. All of these, working
’retailers who disobey the law or per- with the public, are needed to?
2i
mit anti-social conditions. the future of beer. I,
These few unwanted retailers are a You, too, can help the cause ‘ 3h.
menace to the future of the beer in- eration by (l) patronizing only?"
dustry...and also of the benefits beer ble places wherebeer is sold“,2
has made possible. Right here in Wash- porting any violation you may: i ll:
ington, beer provides employment to the duly constituted author
"I" 1
in; a:
, -
H1
BEER...a beverage ofmodemtz’on
or};
.999/
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