PICKS
, EEIIIE
, ERR
' Ill-Dav Era
Jun
\f 19
filunior at Irene
001 and a three-
“ footbaii, basket-
wiv' has been chosen
911 American Le-
WI 63%? from Shel-
. Vergreen Boys
nus Summer, the
09d yesterday.
{Gaga-S sent f r o m
. |
ta
te Camp offers :1
,cs "1 citizenship
I governmental
other gs o.
¥°Ung boys for
911' school and
II
I
V,
' leave here June
3? days in the
Which is not
termined. Last
,at Camp Mur-
mtensive Arm)
site ma)
. 'by :-
as th 3 Wivell post
a g: most deserv-
jumOrOup of a hall
Newest submersible added to America’s rapidly expanding navy
is the U. S. S. Drum, launched at Portsmouth, N. H. She’s the 35th
submarine built at the Portsmouth Navy Yard.
SHELTON, WASHINGTON, Thursday, June 5, 1941.
Class at Irene
» juzeitool- Only mem-
'. we" Class are con-
’ ea behind the pro-
the delegates to
thpass along the
‘3 ensuing school
PAST SCHOOL
0f Sendin the
be bOnie bf”; Fred
One hundred and forty—four stu- ,
dents in the four schools of the
Shelton system maintained per—
fect attendance records through-
out the 1940-41 school year, ac-
cording to records kept by the
four principals. I
Shelton Junior high had. 64 with
perfect records, Irene S. Reed
high school had 45, Lincoln grade
school 22, and Bordeaux grade
school 13 .
The list includes:
SHELTON JUNIOR HIGH I
Seventh grade—Gene -. Berg‘eson,
Richard Chase, Mitchell Compton,
Gerald Eagle, Robert Gunter, Earl
Hamilton, Dail Kennedy, Ronald
Rayson, Arnold Stoehr, Warren
Stone, Thomas Turner, Harold
Wilson, Ruth Hall, Thelma Har-
rison, Patricia Rhodes, Joan So-
per, Marjorie Troy, Marilyn Wak—I
d for the past
5. now
ees_ show the
"kerLM
. ice—c
‘ Pick
61 Dobson.
Oglmander—
ddy.
Ice‘Commander -
’ german Soule.
1‘ .Johnson.
Officer;
bent Harold
EEG-Faiibert
‘t'AFiiis~M.' A.
.fierstohn SIER‘
tiv Oates (junior).
V I board~John Elia-
Will b lee. .
“E, .1111; rages: Eighth grachRobin Binns,
“Eli ' Samuel Bolling, James Casteel,
ason '
the J reminded
une meeting Duane Cracola, Julian Howarth,
Gordon Smith, Robert Smith, Ray
Stevens, Willard Wivell, Ellen Ad-
ams, Georgena Booth, Betty But—
ler, Lucy Franson, Nora Jost,
Lois Page, Alice Parks, Nina Mae
Stuck, Laura Surratt, Verna Zo-
lotun.
Ninth grade—Owen Anderson,
Richard Baldwin, Gerald Cole,
t,
:12" Post is now‘
huffing Schedule
0T.
One ' I
3 June meeting
,- @3520 9f its profits
club famwal show to
' lo“? the Railroad
‘ 3°“ project and
2‘ n A ~- . Sidney Collins, Howard Diesen,
1mg?“- uxularys Ward Dunbar, Marvin Morkert,
1‘ “11:83 allowEd their Laurel McMurray, Harvey Petty,
Floyd Waters, David Welsh, Mabel
Baker, Doris Cleveland, . Dulcie
Compton, Aloha Dunbar, Vivian
Elson, Cecelia Everson, Nona Har-
ris, Violet Johnson, Frances Le-
Drew, Ruth Lindsey, Marguerite
Moore, Dorothy McAioon, Marion
McEwen, Florence Oborn, Laura
Stuck, and Margaret Wolcott.
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Sophomores — Winston Asche,
Kenneth Calkins, Charles Fergu-
son, George Franz, Earwin Loop,
Jack Page, Jess Phillips, Donald
.n'IEeting Tues.
“allay little chunks
me Waldrip, who
vetmg' in many
‘3 onvon 2. $20
- 6 one of
size had they been
i
I etrizb' Chairman of
the c°mnlittee, re-
eggress of the
,, bedall rogram,
as eing in
PERFECT ATTENDANCE FOR
144 SHELTON STUDENTS
a
bow 1‘ etidy to get
Saeger, Dick Saeger, Jack Sceva,
Ben Soper, Robert Stevens, Dan
Tough, Sam Wilson, Dorothy Ba-
ker, Doris Hickson, Rosemary Kid-
well, Iris Wells, Nona Whitting-
ham.
Juniors—Elmer Carlson, Robert
S. Cole, Kenneth Courteau, Paul
Dunbar, John Eliason, Wiley Hoy-
le, Martel Jackson, Art Matthews,
Ainley Rempel, Glen Roessel, Vern
Wenz, Betty Barron, Evelyn Black.
Stewart, Roland Temple, Jack
Dorothy Chambers, Mildred Clark,
Alta Nelson, Marie Short.
Seniors—~Richard Ammerman,
Walter Eddy, Jim McComb, War-
ren Melcum, Harding Olund, Ne-
dra Oppelt, Helen Schillinger.
Second Draft
R e g i s tration
Slated July 1
All Mason County young men
who have reached the age of 21
W
‘ ‘qfée Opened last
Act 5 for officers.
ive Club during
s,ths of 1941
Unpson Log-
cguntant. as the
resid
re ent.
ttc and Harold
ed in conten-
’I‘f. John Stev-
d We McElroy,
tors Ckey Duck-
g’ “W3. George
tteerfigiiident, for
n be held next
m"(her nomi-
t .
th A tH'lnal presi-
“15> Acg‘QMberShip on
V9 Club and v .
" ‘ v by
u help lead u. since October 16 (or vnll
th the preset: July 1), Since the first draft
registration last year, are urged
by Chairman Ed Faubert 0f
the Mason County draft board
to remember that they must
make plans to register for the
draft on July 1 this year. .
Definite plans for conducting
this second draft registration
have been completed by the 10-
cal draft board, Chairman Fau-
bert said, but tentatively the
mployment
tore to ac.-
field repre-
‘1 detail man
PanY, man- plan calls for the registration
' rod- to take place in the present
at Walla draft board office in the base-
ment of the Shelton postoffice.
No registration by precincts,_as
was the case in the registration
last year, will be held this year.
so rural young men will haw
to plan to come to Shelton that
day to register.
tOday.
Vas {19W duties
thgatlon and a
ha‘l’ing in Port-
: to -e sold their
Mr. and Mrs.
TERM SET BY
BORDEAUX GRADE SCHOOL
Marilyn Anderson, Richard Ba-
ker, Raymond DeLaVergne, Ei-
leen Drake, Charles Griggs, Flor-
ence Griggs, Lillian Griggs, Phyl-
lis Herzog, Billy Kempton. De-
lores Rutledge, James Gordon
Simmons, Emmett Smith, and Mel-
vin Whittle.
LINCOLN GRADE SCHOOL
Donald Clark, Robert Rhines,
Gwendolyn Lumsden, Rosabell
Stewart, Eleanor Ann Booth, Shir-
ley‘Clay, Jane Clothier, Jean
Courteau, Wayne _, . , Stone, Mary
Ann Latham, Anna Mae McAf—
erty, Ella Louise McAferty, Bar-
bara Munson, Marceil McAferty,
Jay Look, David Dotson, Stuart
Loughnan, Darlene VanCleave,
Rosa Mae Depoe, Verna Kidd,
Aylene Loughnan, Ella Mae Noble. l
PIONEER RAYONlER
EMPLOYEES TO BE}
FETED TOMORROW
Banquet In Olympia Will Honor
Men With Company On Or
Before May 10, 1927
Fifty-four living pioneer em-
ployes of the Shelton Rayonier
plant will be honored tomorrow
evening at a banquet program to
be lleld at the Governor Hotel in
Olympia starting at 7:30 o’clock.
‘Nine others who have since
died but were among the plant's
employes on or prior to May 10,
1927 will also be paid homage at
the program. Ted Fuller will be
program chairman and Merritt
Kaphingst is in charge of enter-
tainment.
The veterans will be presented
With a printed list of the names
of_the 62 pioneers which will be
suitable for framing.
This list includes D. B. Davies,
Velza Adams, Edward Buchanan,
Merle Cleveland, George W. Coo-
per, Sr., Ernest O. Dahlgren,
Charles DeMoss, Paul Dittman,
Sr., Harold Emery, Lloyd Fos-
dick, Edward Fuller, Wilbur W.
Flint, C. J. Farrel, Edward Four-
re, Andy Harris, Axel Hendrick-
sen, Charles R. Hurst, Anton
Kaunas, M. C. Kaphingst, Walter
XV. Kullrich, Bernhard T. Winiec-
1.
311501}, Myron Lund, R. C. Little,
Archie Lemke, Vivian Morgan, F.
R. Murphy, Arthur E. McLaugh-
lln. Silas V. Pearcey, John Pinck-
George J. Cropper, A. J. Fer-1
‘Prep Champs To Be
Feted wednesday;
Tubby Graves To Speak; First
Local 161 Votes
309-26 In Favor
Of Acceptance
Shelton Rayonier plant em-
ployes belonging to Local 161,
International Brotherhood of
Pulp, Sulphite and Paper Mill
\Vorkers Union, voted Tuesday
by a margin of 309 to 26 to ac-
cept the offer of a ten-cent an
hour pay raise, effective June
1, as drawn for the Pacific
Coast pulp industry in Port-
land last week by a joint nego-
tiating committee representing
the operators zind the I.B.P.S.
I’.M.VV.
Local 161’s ballots, after be-
ing counted here Tuesday night,
were sent to Portland where
the total vote of all pulp work—
ers in the Pacific Coast indus-
try will be tabulated sometime
this weekend. The total vote
of all employes in the coast area
will determine whether 'the
agreement of the joint nego-
tiating committee is accepted
and a contract drawn between
the I.B.P.S.P.M.W. and the op-
erators.
The agreement upon which
the workers voted included a
no-strike clause in addition to
the ten-cent an hour pay raise.
TWO BLAZES KEEP
FIREMEN ON JUMP
HERE YESTERDAY
O. K. Stephens Residence Scri-
ously Damaged; Defective
Wiring Is Blamed
One home was badly gutted and
another slightly damaged by fires
yesterday as ,the Shelton volun-
teer fire department was called
out twice within a few hours.
,The home of O. K. Stephens, 283
‘South First street, suffered Sev e
ground floor damage when fi e
apparently starting from defect-
ive wiring in the pantry, broke
out early yesterday afternoon. All
the rooms on the first floor were
gutted, although most of the fur-
and May streets on Angleside but
niture was saved by volunteers
from the crowd.
Mr. Stephens suffered minor
burns about the head while at-
tempting to extinguish the flames,
but he did not require hospital
treatment. The second floor rooms
of the residence were not badly
damaged, the flames being ex-
tinguished by the fire department
before reaching the upper story.
Later the same afternoon a fire
broke out in the kitchen of the
Dewey Daniels residence at Tenth
damage was confined to a minor
amount by quick action by the
city fire department.
Joint DeMolay Picnic
Scheduled On Sunday
Final plans for the joint De-
Molay picnic at Twanoh State
Park next Sunday in which the
Bremerton, Port Angeles and
Shelton chapters will participate,
will be laid at a special meeting
of Mark E. Reed Chapter this Fri- ,
day night at 7:30 o’clock in the‘
Masonic Temple, chapter officers
announced today.
Dance To Clear Debt
Tentative plans have been laid
by the Shelton Garden Club for
a public dance to be given late
this month for the purpose of
raising sufficient funds to clearl
up the remaining slight indebted-
ness on the Railroad Avenue beau- the former couple to visit friends
tification project. Further de-
tails will be released at an early the latter
date.
97 GRADUATE FROM SIXTH
ney. Lewis Packard, James Rut-
ledge, Nick Ruff, T. J. Seljestad,
TQHY Servidio, George Trow-
budge, Albert Thompson, Leonard
A. Walton, Charles Walton, Clar-
ence Weston, George Young, all
of whom are now with the Shel-
ton plant.
Edward M. Mills, I. Zellerbach,
J .D. Zellerbach, Charles H. Con-
rad, S. Sonnenberg, A. 1. Ellis,
of the San Francisco headquar-
ters: W. L. Raymond, Elizabeth
Mathews and R. J. Sibbald, all
of the Seattle office; E. H. Vicary
of, the Seattle office; and J. R.
Kiel yand N. B. Gibbs of the
Fernandina plant complete the
list of the living pioneer employes
of the company.
Among the deceased who were
still in the com an ’s em 10 e
are Emil Carlson,p C. DepBOlt,
DaVId B. Derry, Thomas Flanni-
gan, Bert W. Libby, Frank A.
Nephew, E. W. Putnam, and An-
ton Yurkas of the Shelton plant,
and A. J. Bennett of the Port An-
geles plant. '
Tell the prospects Where you are.
With a Journal Want-Ad
on this pioneer list but died while.
GRADE IN SHELTON SCHOOLS
Shelton’s
graduate 97 studentsfrom their
sixth grades into junior high
with the start of school next fall.
Lincoln grade school sends 69
and Bordeaux 28 up to the inter-
mediate sdhool. The sixth graders
are‘
LINCOLN—Rollin Aitken, Her~
bert' Angle, Richard Angle, Lola‘
Barger, Bob Berg, Eleanor Ann
Booth, Delbert Brown, Barbara
Butler, Gloria Butler.
Olive Calkins, Victor Cameron,
Patricia Case, Henry Chappell,
Geraldine Christensen, D o n a l d
Clark, Shirley Clay, Jane Clothier,
Tom Connolly, Raymond Cook,
Ted Cook, Jean Courteau, Gene-
vieve Cox.
I
Roy Deffinbaugh, Alla Lu El-
liott, Vernon Farrell, Louise Get-
ty, Jack Graham, Betty Hayden,
Ivan Hays, EVelyn Hickam, Dick
Holland, Maxine Holman, Barb-
ara Jackson, Allen Johnston. '
Edith Klink, Patty Kilmer, Don-
ald .LeRoy, Gwendolyn Lumsden,
Oscar Lundberg, Nancy Marshall,
two grade
a
121 and continue until August 2,
Garden Club To Give
schools Ruth Mast, Alvienne McCord, Bil-
200 To Buy Tickets \Vill
Be Admitted; Players
To Get Trophies
Shelton will pay homage to its
championship Highclimber base—
ball team, three times hand run-
ning kings of the Southwest high
school baseball conference, at a
victory banquet, next Wednesday
evening in the Shelton Hotel.
which will be staged under the
auspices of,the Shelton Chamber i
of Commerce. ,
Tubby Graves, popular coach of
the University of Washington
baseball team, has accepted an
invitation to be guest speaker at
the victory fete and said yester—
day when invited to come here
that he probably would bring one
or two other Seattle athletic lu-
minaries along with him.
The twenty players of the 19141
championship Highclimber squad,
which won nine games in ten con-
ference starts and has compiled
a record of 28 victories in 30‘
conference games over the past
three years, and their coach, H0-
mer Taylor, will be guests at the
victory banquet. Each player will
be presented with a handsome in-
dividual trophy, signifying his
participation on the championship
team.
Attendance at the banquet will
be limited to the first 200 fans
to purchase tickets for the din-
ner, which will sell at 75 cents
and may be procured from W. A.
Witsiers, Sid Hatcher, Dick Ed-
dy, Ed Faubert, or Bill Dickie. No
tickets will be sold after next
Wednesday noon, if there are any
left at that time. The banquet
will be a mixed group so will be
open to mothers of the players
and any feminine fan desiring to
attend. .
Plans for the banquet were
cemented this noon at a lunch-
eon attended by Ed Faubert, Dick
Eddy, Bill Witsiers, Sid Hatcher,
I. H. Woods, Homer Taylor and
Bill Dickie.
ALLL SENIOR LIFE
,. Aus-
'“sIIIIIMONEO
Shelton will take
In his
homes, places
“‘In these days of
credit and destroy the
rights and liberties . . .”
TO GATHER MONDAY
Instructors' Course In Swimming,
Life Saving And Water Safe-
ty Available During July
All Mason County residents
holding Red Cross senior life
saver ratings who are interested
in taking an instructors’ course
in swimming, life saving and wa-
ter safety next month are asked
to meet 'in the courthouse next
Monday evening at eight o’clock
by Chairman Myron Lund of the
Mason County Red Cross chap-
ter. .
At the meeting plans will be
laid for providing assistants for
the chief instructor for the an-
nual summer swimming and life
saving classes which the Red
Cross and Active Club sponsor
jointly here and for arranging a
preliminary training course which
must be held prior to the in~
structors’ course (mentioned al-
ready) which wi‘il be conducted
by Ben Carpenter, regional field
representative and instructor for
first aid and life saving for the
Red Cross.
The course Carpenter will con-
duct will be held the week of July
14, while the annual swimming
and life saving classes open July
Chairman Lund said.
2 Shelton Couples
Leave For Montana
Mr. and Mrs. George Dunning
and Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Replinger
left here this morning on a two-
week vacation trip to Montana,
on a large ranch near Lewiston,
couple to visit rel-
atives in Missoula.
1y McGaughy, Mollie O’Brien,
Bernadine O‘gg, Bob Okano, Leo-
nard Parks, Stanley Phillips, Gor-
don Pigmon, Dick Powers.
Morris Rebman, Robert Rhines,
Gerald'Ristine, Maxine Ristine,
Joan Rucker, Mervin Smith, Eu-
gene Stacy, Rosabell Stewart,
Phillip Stoehr, Elmer Strope, Clin-
ton Sullivan, Golda Sullivan, Mary
Alice Todd, Patty Troy, Charles
Walton, Gene White, Jack Wil-
son, Bernadine Winiecki, Mar-
guerite Zolotun.
BORDEAUX —— Marilyn Ander—
son, Phyllis Arbogast, Lee Avery,
Laurence Avery, Sally Brown,
Allan Brumbaugh, Francis Buch-
anan, Raymond DeLaVergne,
Shirley Dittman, Eileen Drake,
June Furister, Lorraine Goodwin,
Phyllis Herzog, Billy Kempton.
Lavon Lambert, Nadine Lauber,
Albert Luhm, Albert McBride,
Jimmy Mead, Bobby Mell, Bar-
bara Myers, Jerry Riley, Fae Rob-
inson, Gene Roush, Joneen Stev-
Resting and relaxing seems to
take the nod from Shelton’s
school faculty members for a
1941 vacation activity, it seems,
the Journal’s annual poll of teach-
ers' summer plans indicates.
At least 14 members of the
faculty list said they intended to
take things easy this summer, al-
though several of that group said
they might work in a few short
trips during the idle months. Five
others have definite plans for
traveling, some on rather exten—
sive tours.
Summer school is the second
choice with an even dozen having
at least indefinite plans for fur-
thering their education during
their vacations, although some
of these will only go to school
half the summer, spending the
other half in resting or traveling.
Eight have jobs, or want jobs,
for the summer, a half dozen of
the feminine teachers are to be
married, four are undecided on
what they will do and one says
he is a. lead-pipe cinch to don Un-
cle Sam’s kaki for a year of
Army training. This latter one
is Ned Snelgrove, one of the home-
town products among the faculty
‘ranks. He expects to be drafted
before June is gone.
On the “loafing” list are in-
cluded Miss Dorothy Hawthorne,
Miss Anna Hertzberg, Miss Nor-
ma Johnson and Vice Principal
Frank Willard of the junior high,
Principal Inga Kristiansen of
Bordeaux, Miss Regis Jones, Miss
Helena Hendrickson, and Frank
Stinchfield (if building a home
can be called 'loafing) of the sen—
ior high, Mrs. Nellie Pugh, Miss
Juanita Harrell, Miss Josephine
Wess, Mrs. Florence Weeks, Miss
Aida Johnson, and Miss Florence
Janssen of Lincoln.
Those planning to go to school
include Miss Virginia Armfield,
Miss Eleanor Marr, of Lincoln,
Miss Helen Ottini of Bordeaux,
Miss Opal Coy, Miss Judith Tur-
ner, Miss Irene Rivers of the
senior high, Werner Conrad, Miss
Margaret Kane, Miss Ida Olson
and Mrs. Margaret Riggin of the
junior high.
The travels will send Princi-
pals Dora Fredson and Maude
Shorter of the senior and junior
highs respectively back East to
take delivery of a new car for
Miss Fredson with a trip through
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part June 8 to 14 in a nation-
wide observance of National Flag Week, Mayor
William Stevenson announced yesterday, as he
issued a proclamation setting aside the week in
Shelton for that observance.
w
subversive forces and inf
symbolized by our country’s flag, all loyal Ameri-
cans should answer this challenge by displaying
and paying tribute to that flag as the emblem of
SHELTON TEACHERS FAVOR
TAKING IT EASY AS THEIR
SUMMER VACATION PROGRAM
to
BUY, SELL,
EXCHANGE
Use the
("LASSIFIEDS
OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER
proclamation the mayor asked all citi-
zens to display the Stars and Stripes at their
of business and other suitable
locations and to hold patriotic exercises.
The proclamation stated:
orld wide turmoil, with
luenccs striving to dis- ~
ideals and institutions
coronors office and do some study-
ing on the side; Hugh Clark, Walt
Hakola, Arnie Gabrielson, and
Fales Martin of the junior high,
and George Br0ckway of Lincoln.
Kid Cupid has tagged Miss
Harriet Holman of the senior
high, Miss Myrtle Rediska and
Miss Doris Tarte of Bordeaux,
Miss Ruth Wyman and Miss Lois
Hoskins of the junior high, and
Miss Connie Clumb of Lincoln.
The latter has been Mrs. Chet
Valley for several months already.
The undecided list includes Miss
Helen Orton of the senior high,
Miss Blanche Bertrand, Lincoln
principal, Miss Charlene Patmore
of Lincoln.
Painters Raise
Scale to $1.371/2
Painters Local 1040 will be raised
to 351.37%» an hour effective June
15 as the result of action taken
by the local’s members yester-
day.
The scale, previously at $1.25
an hour, will conform to prevail-
ing wages in the building trades
on national defense projects,
Secretary Tom Kneeland of the
Painters’ Local explained.
Troop 25 Scouts Seek
Odd Jobs For Summer
Boy Scouts of Troop 25 are
seeking odd jobs to help earn
money for their summer camp-
ing expenses and are asking any-
one having such jobs to notify
Mrs. Robert Binns, phone 49-M,
as she is handling the calls for
Wage scales of the Shelton-
ELLIOTT NAMED
JOINT SERVICE
CLUB CHAIRMAN
$600 Quota Asked Of Mason Coun-
ty As Part Of National Drive
To Supply Recreational
Facilities
Another important civic job has
been placed upon the shoulders
of Walter M. Elliott, general man-
ager of the Lumbermen's Mer-
cantile store, with his appoint-
ment as chairman for Mason
County for the United Service
Organizations, a coalition of ener-
gies of six large nation-wide or-
ganizations which seek to raise
f u n d s to
provide re-
creatio n a l
facilies for
U. S. Army
soldiers.
The group .
includes the
Salva t i o n
Army, the
Y. M. C. A.,
the Nation- ‘
81 Catholic.
Society, the
Na ti o n a 1’
Jewish So-.
ciety, and
a national‘
W. M. ELLIOTT
protestant organization.
In Mason County a quota of
$600 has been set to be raised'
by public subscription. Chair-~
man Elliott said today the drive
would be conducted along the
general lines of the Red Cross,
roll call with community chair-
men heading soliciting crews in’
each area of the county.
These community chairmen have,
not as yet been appointed, Mr.
Elliott said, but he will make the-
appointments within the next
. few days, after he has had time
to study the situation over a bit,-
then a meeting of these chairmen,
will be called to explain the plan.
Reno Odlin, well known Wash-‘
ington banker, is state chairman
with Governor Arthur B. Langlie
as honorary chairman. Thomas
E. Dewey is natibnal chairman and
is at present on a national tour
studying the recreational facili-
ties at the many U. S. Army-
camps to determine the needs,
along that line.
Lumber Leader .
Takes Run-Out
on U. S. Board.
According to the news from
Washington, 0. M. Orton, head.
of the IWA unions called back
before the National ’Mediation
Board persisted in his refusal .to.
recommend return to work in the
lumber industry until all the
‘union demands had been granted,
on the grounds that the compro-
mise was employer-made and to
accept would weaken the power.
of the unions. Chairman Dykstra.
and the Board. which included sev-
eral of the highest officials of the
CIO organization, ,urged compli-
ance with the President’s request
for immediate return to work in
the lumber industry as very im-
portant in the defense measures.
The matter is now before the full
board and the President as the
key issue involving Coast labor in
lumber and other war production.
Women Plan Golf
Play Wednesday.
All women golfers interested in
participating in weekly golf com-
petition at the Shelton Golf
Course are invited- to report at.
the clubhouse next Wednesday
morning at nine o’clock.
A meeting of severai feminine
links fans yesterday resulted in
a decision to hold weekly compe-
tition every Wednesday morning
during the summer months.
Considerable interest is report-
ed among the women golfers this,
ye r and a lot of fun is antici-'
the troop members.
Mothers of the Troop 25 Scouts
will check up to see .that the
work is done satisfactorily.
CALENDAR
COMMUNITY
TONIGHT—City council
ing, p. m., city hall.
TONIGHT—Boy Scout court of
'honor, 8 p. m., courthouse.
meet-
the East to Washington, D. C.
and other interesting places, Miss
Margaret Mowry to Los Angeles
and Texas, Miss Alma Burke to
New England, Miss Ottini to Ne-
vada after her summer school is
finished, Miss Betty McClelland
with relatives,
fornia.
Jobs will occupy the time
have jobs in Shelton lined up;
ens, Ray Stullick, Lorna Waters,
Melvin Whittle.
of Lincoln on a trip East, Miss
Viola Mehus of Lincoln on a trip
around the U. S. in a new car
and Miss Ethel
Mae Cochran of Lincoln to Cali-
of
Cliff Cannon, Homer Taylor, Ed-
die Duyff of the senior high, Who
Ben Hallgrimson, music director,
who will work in the King County
FRIDAY—V. F. W. post and
auxiliary meetings, 8 p. m.,
Memorial Hall.
FRIDAY'Moose Lodge meeting,
8 p. m., new Moose Hall.
SATURDAY—«Superior court, 10
a. m., courthouse.
MONDAY—County commission-
ers weekly meeting, 10 a. m.,
courthouse.
MONDAY—Opening games of
city softball league schedule, 6
p. m., Loop Field, two games.
MONDAY—Eagles aerie week-
ly meeting, 8 p. m., new Moose
Hall.
TUESDAY—Kiwanis club lunch-
eon meeting, noon, Shelton Ho-
tel.
!
l
pa ed.
Loggers Play Sunday
At} Schneiders Prairie
After taking an enforced vaca-
tion last Sunday due to rain, the
Shelton Loggers expect to re-
sume their Sunday play at Sch~
neiders Prairie this coming sab-
bath against the combined Kam-
ilche-Schneiders Prairie team,
li/[anagcr Jackie Stewart said to-
ay.
The game is scheduled to get
under way at two o'clock, he said.
Mayor Stevenson And
Family To Make Trip
Mayor and Mrs. William Stev-
, enson and their two children, Wil-
liam, Jr., and Rosemary, expect
to leave Shelton next Saturday
on a vacation trip which will take
them to Detroit to visit. rdatives
with a side trip from there into
northern Michigan, then a, re-
turn through Indiana to pick up
a new car with stops at Yellow-
stone Park and the Rushmore
Memorial.