Page Six
Native Daughter
Back In Shelton
Edna fiOllifi arrived '
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Mrs. last ,
week from Saginaw, Michiga 21,:
with her three young sons, andl
will make her home With her u!
ther, Frank Troinor, on Comic!
Creek. The sons, Elmer, Donald‘
and Larry, will be "l’li'lllll‘ll :n till.“
grade schools this fall.
Mrs. Olli is a native of Shelton“
the daughter of a pioneer resi-f
dent, Joseph Trainer, born at the
south end of First street, and hen
school days were spent here. She
left in 1913 for Michigan where;
she was married and raised her
family, and has lived until coming'
back to Shelton.
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FINAL DIVORCE GRANTED
Judge D. F. Wright signed final,
divorce papers in Superior court
Saturday for Clarice from Thomas
Hopland.
MARRIAGE LICENSE 3
Fredrick Charles Harner, 21,
and Lola Virginia Cherry. 20,
both of Montesano, applied for a,
marriage license here Saturday.
Gas is More Economical. adv.‘
THEATRE
SHELTON, WASHINGTON
Two shows every night
Starting at 7:00 P.M. i
Matinee 2:15 P.M. Saturday
and Sunday
Admission 10c and 25.»: plus tax
‘ lOIIS
win by Otis Te,in of Union Satur-
Womah seriously
Injured By Car;
Driver Charged?
_._,_._ ,
Mrs. Cora Kindred of Brcmcr-i
ton is in Shelton Hospital in ser-g
condition as the result of!
having been struck by a car driv-l
day night at Union.
i'at Glidden of Bremerton, hitl
hv the Teig car at the same time, i
also is receiving treatment ati
Shelton Hospital but his conditioni
is not as serious. Mrs. Kindred;
was rushed to Shelton by Statefi
Patrolman Cliff Aden, who hap-i
.oened along just as the accidenti
happened, his prompt acting be-l
ing credited with saving the wo-l
man’s life. j
Teig received a $20 fine, plusl
costs, a 20-day jail sentence, sus-f
pended, and his drivers license was i
suspended for 60 days on a reek-3
i less driving charge.
.I. C. Grimm of Olympia, also:
arrested on a reckless drivingl
charge as the outgrowth of a
. he had near ivfunson Lakes;
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‘on the Olympic Highway Sunday;
rl'Eht, was fined :nlO and costs,{
given a suspended 20-day jail sen- 5
and his llCE‘l‘lSC suspended;
for 20 days when tried yesterday.
’l‘ne arr: s't was made by Aden,3
assisted by Pat Smith, s t a t e ;
patrol rookie. 1
Edward A. Hobi, Aberdeen, f0'-|
.H...
.feited $12.50 bail yesterday wheni
he failed to appear for a hearing:
on charges of being drunk in pub- l
(Final Ist Half Standings)
CITY SOFTBALL LEAGUE
KOKOMisH, luau);
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W L RI" RA
Active ()luh ............. ..5 2 62 :55 .
Rayonier .................. ..4 I 48 48
Mohilgas . .... ., ...4 4 49 52
Skokomish .4 4 65 51
Bonneville ................ ..2 5 15 85
Latest Scores
Skokomish 8, Rayonier 6.
Activians 9, Skokomish 2.
Skokomish 4, Activians l.
Bonneville 7, Mobilgas 5.
Games Thursday
Mobilgas-Skokomish. No. 1.
Activians-Rayonier, No. 2.
Games Monday
L. M.-Activians, No. 1.
Rayonier-Mobilgas, No. 2.
Game Tuesday
Skokomish-Bonneville, No. 1.
Midget Johnny Edmiston, Sko~
komish Grange‘s “soft armed”
softball pitcher, first did the
Activians a bad turn, then re—
taliated with a good one.
He pitched his grange club to
a 4 to 1 victory over the Activ-
ians last Thursday night which
endangered the clubmen's first
half championship hopes, then he
turned around last night and cin-
ehed the crown for the Activians
by pitching the clubmen‘s lone
remaining challanger, Rayonier,
into an 8 to 6 defeat at Loop
Field.
The Grangers had to come from
behind last night to eliminate Ray-
AOTIVIil-S WIN FIRST IALF
TITLE WITH 8
1 lie place and for parking on the onier; Trailing 6 F0 3v gomg mm
l highway. He was arrested early: the fifth, Skokomish shoved five
, Sunday morning on‘the Skokomish
‘Valley road by Aren and Smith.
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irevoked for a year, on charges of
Iruns across the dish in the fifth.
lNeither team scored after that.
Bremertony ‘ Edmiston kept Rayonier‘s h o m 9
Walt r B. An 'ell, ,
e g givenirun hitters quiet last night, the
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was fined $100 and costs,
days in jail, and his license first pitcher in several games to
do so.
Edmiston's victory over the
. c ' ’ rrest . . .
drunken lrlvmg after ms 3 lAetxvxans Thursday was the first
.Article Describes
.last week after wrecking a stolen
“ ' 'v‘xs‘alilc .
(sum ‘0' I 01” H ‘car near the city limits on thel
A . A 'was suspended unless he is freed
Last Time Tonil'cl lof a car theft charge he will face
EDWARD G. ROBINSON in Kit-Sap county. I
“DA LUp|N0__JOHN Angell‘s companion, Myles O.‘
GARFIELD iWilliams, was fined $10 and costs
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, . . , and turned over to Bremerton po-
“EHE SEER EVOLF, lice. on a charge of being drunk1
by Jack London.
‘in a public place.
This is the story of a hell—ship i All cases were prosecuted by‘
of the human dregs that were i
Frank Heuston, Mason Countyi
its crew . . . and of the heart- prosecuting attorney.
less killer that ruled them! , '*"~——-: Wm— , l
This is the one story of the IVOT FRIEND NOR RELAI‘ION!
Mel Dobson, prominent legion-
sea you H never forget‘ News’ naire, Odd Fellow lodge officer,
cartoon‘ ‘and Rayonier employe, wishes it
, :known that the person who has
Wednesday lbeen going around town the past
, few days claiming to be a very
“RIDE, ,close friend and in some cases a
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RIDE” lrelative of ,his is a total stranger
Eugene Fallen“ M.u..,m lto Dobson and that anyone loan-
Stephens, Mary Healy
Thrilling Racing Romance!
NEWS —- SHORTS
. ing thi sparty money or property
‘on the strength of the claim to
friendship or relationship to Dob-
son is doing so at his own risk.
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Thursday —-— 15c N ite SUNDAY
Double Feature
“TOO MAN Y
BOY ARRIVES i
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Deach of
Route 2 became parents of a baby
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son born Sunday at Shelton Hos-
BLONDES” pital-
Rudy Vallee, Helen Parrish —‘—‘—-—~“
-—and— INJURED AT REED MILL
O. M. Steen suffered an arm
GOLD”
John Garfield, Francos
Farmer, Pat O’Brien
injury in an accident at the Reed
, Mill Monday.
l Hflwfl
5 Cool, Quick c o o kin g with
. Gas. adv.
AWE/l
-PUTS nus
r «a “FE-SAVING
‘ (AR!
Get Rid of Unsafe
TIRES Before They
Get Rid of You—
Goodm Silvertowns
Protect You Against
Both Skids and
Blow-outs i
AND YOU CAN
PAY AS YOU RIDE
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V
rm
Use our liberal ludgof Plan to equip
your car with this famous llfo-sovlng
fire. If will carry you more mllu—
more solely for fewer dollar: illo-
any I'lro over built.
‘ , Bayshore road. The sentence herel
both farms and hatcheries.
game of a doubleheader the two
teams staged to make up a game
rained out earlier in
The Activians hammered John
Eager for a 9 to 2 victory in the
second game, taking advantage of
the redhead's wildness for a large
part of their tallies. Hugh Clark
hurled steady ball for the club-
men.
Bonneville Surveyors have at
least one club they can beat in
the league, it seems, for they
slapped a 7 to 5 defeat on Mo-
bilgas Thursday night which
eliminated the gasmen from title
contention. The only two games
the surveyors won in the first
half were both over Mobilgas.
First Baseman Vic Miller hammer-
ed two homers for the surveyors
but didn’t get credit for his sec-
ond when he missed second base.
Because of the transfer of sev-
eral players to Longview for sev-
eral days. Bonneville's game last
night with the Activians was post-
poned, now won’t have to be play-
ed inasmuch as the clubmen can-
not be pried loose from the first
half title anyway, and so, too, has
the Bonneville-L. M. game sched-
uled for this Friday been delayed.
Second half play opens Thurs-
day.
L. M. BECOMES SIXTH
ENTRY FOR 2nd HALF
Entry of the Lumbermen's Mer-
cantile squad swells the city soft-
ball league to a six team organ-
ization for second half play, which
gets under way this coming Thurs-
day evening. _
With six teams and only two
fields available, the third game
of each set of pairings will have
to be played on an “extra” night
aside from the regular Monda
and Thursday nights the league
adopted before. the first half start-
ed, hence there will be single
games each Tuesday and Friday
nights for the second half sched-
ule.
Fish Hatchery
(Continued from Page One)
game, restocking in some places
and newly planting in others, and
the continued program will prob-
ably add another 75,000 to those
who pay $1.50 for county, or $8
for state licenses.
He pointed out that while
sportsmen might upset the nor-
mal balance of fish and game,
there were many other factors
that prey on natural life, too re-
duce the natural increase, for all
life is food for something else. As
instance while a salmon may
spawn several thousand eggs hard-
ly a Ifhlf-dozen turns into fry and
IIVe to return as mature fish, but
propagated in a hatchery and
reared to fingerlings or even
larger the loss is slight for the
fish are able to care’ for them-
selves. The same is true of pheas-
ants and other game birds, and
the antificial rearing is now bear-
ing fruit in. the increasing bird-
life in many counties of the state
where planting has been done: Ma-
son County being an example in
both fish and birds.
Good Results Obtained
The talk on fish was concluded
with the statement that the com-
Imission is drawing from the uni--
versities and training men who
are students of wild life and ar—
tificial methods of conserving it,
and is securing good results in
Pro-
tection and enforcement of the
the year.
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Budget Manager ;
' A.
Above is M. L. Fox, recently
named budget manager for Al ,
Huerl)y Motors, whose special
attention is being devoted to
promoting sale of Goodrich
tires. Mr. and Mrs. Fox have.
moved to Shelton to make their
home.
Olympic Peninsula
Titled “Olympic National Park,
Our New Playground” a compli-
mentary and well illustrated ar-
ticle about the tourist attractions
on the Olympic Peninsula appearsi
in the current issue of The High-u
way Traveler, national magazine!
widely distributed among th e
traveling public. I
Included in the article, which“
notes much of interest in the his-i
tory and natural attractions of'
the peninsula, is the story of Juan '
de Fuca’s discovery of the Straits,
and unique features of peninsulal
attractions. ,
REGISTRATION
LOTTERY JULY 17
Washington, D. C., July 10.——
Selective service headquarters an-
nounced last night that the lot-
tery for newly registered men of
21 would be held here July 17.
A total of 750 numbers will be
drawn. The largest number of'
men registered in any draft dis-
trict was 661 in the Sparrows
Point district of Balitmore.
,aluminum to be used for planesl
SHLTON=MASO CUNT .iRNAi
:QUESTiONs, ANSWERSVABOUT ,
COMING ALUMINUM COLLECTION!
Questions and answms about‘
the collection of aluminum July1
24th and 25th which will he (tour;
ducted by the Boy Scouts in Slicl~i
ton.
\Vho Gets The Aluminum After
It Has Been Collected? Th e
aluminum will be picked up byl
I city, county, or State officials and '
.taken to yards of waste dealers.
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for sorting, classifying, and bal-l
ing. Then, it will be shipped toj
smelters.
Do The \Vasle Dealers (It-t Paid
For This Service? No. They are
to contribute and supervise their
facilities without profit. The:
metal will be sold to the smelt-
ers at a special uniform price fix-
ed by the Government. The smelt—
crs will be paid directly by check,
to "National Scrap Aluminum l . i
F d‘n fir, f h F d .‘1 I. softball team to Benton next-
un C 0 t e C on ‘0 Sunday to meet Renton Hilll
serve Bank of Richmond. Virgin-
ia. Thus, the entire net proceeds
will be available to the Office of
Civilian Defense for any cxpcndi-‘
tures required for the proper dc-
fcnse of the civilian population.
What “’in This Aluminum Be
Used For? This aluminum will be '
used to take up the regular needs;
and will allow freshly smeltedé
Actually, it will replace twenty~
million pounds of aluminum that
will go into fighter planes and,
the twenty-million pounds of
aluminum will provide 2,000 fight-
ter air-planes.
Is It Necessary For the House
Wife To Give All The Aluminum
She Has? No.
what she can get along without.
Of course, we are hoping that
everyone will make some sacrifice
to help this very worthy cause.
What Kind Of Articles Might Be l
Made With Aluminum? Pots,
pans, washing machines and parts
of that old vacuum cleaner that
doesn’t work any more, toys, and
shakers, old aluminum in picture
frames, bookends, iCe trays, meas-
uring cups, soap dishes, camera
equipment, kettles. and double
boilers, bottles and jar caps, re-i
electric appli~,
frigerator plates,
ance parts and all things like that.
Incidentally there may be con-
siderable aluminum around metal‘
dumps, etc.
Should Business Houses Be So-l
licited ? Yes.
1 tion
. being "mde as, a patriotic gprvicoi practiced and that sacrifice
musti
! Grange 'in
She merely gives i
Almost every busi—
sometimes the School, etc.
Do Scouts "aye To Transport
The Metal To The Collection ()9.qu
lcr‘.’ No. It will be hauled from
the Scout Troops collection point'
to the waste dealers by City:
County, and State Officials.
Is There Any ()ilicr Objectich
To This Campaign Besides The?
Actual Collection Of Aliiminuni‘Z'i
Yes, of almost equal importance
is the bringing about of a con—'
sciousness of all the citizens of
the United States that conserva-
of our resources must be
be made.
Skokomish Softball :
Team Seeking Titlel
Skokomish _Grange Sends i t .
the first elimination
game to settle the Western Wash-
ington grangc softball champion-
ship.
Sunday’s winner then enters the
Western Washington finals, meet—1
ing the Northwest district cham-l,
pion the following weekend for
the Western championship.
Fernandina Family In
Shelton For Vacation
Mr. and Mrs. Fred LaChance
(Fay Becker) and children, are
plant at Fernandina, Florida, here
ion a short vacation, visiting in
lOlympia and at Hoquiam and the
but not unpleasant trip and are
,not complaining about the heat.
adv.
recent arrivals from the Rayonierl
t Angeles mills. They report a warm .
Purse Will Return >
Mrs. Mary Adams, the pat-‘
riarch 0f the Skokomish Indian
Reservation and one of the best
known native Indians, lost her
black purse with $15 in currency“
and some change in it while trad-
ing in Shelton Monday.
As money comes hard and that
was her last, she is hoping that
some good American has found,
the purse and will return it.
BOY BORN SUNDAY' l
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Jackson of
Route 1 became parents of a
baby boy born Sunday at Sholton l
Hospital.
DAUGHTER BORN SUNDAY
A baby daughter was born Sun- ,
day at Shelton Hospital to Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Temple of Shcl~
ton.
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Gas is Quicker. adv.
Visit McKcnna
, ed friends in MCKen .
: tiansen and M1". an
Tuesday, ~111y ‘1
Mr. and Mrs. W
children David and
end. They visited
Thortcn, former She “.C
Cook with Gas-
The Abstract
Mason C0 ‘,
A. L. B
Abstracts, R93!
Loans and Ins:
BELL BUN-D;
SHELTON, .
Gas is Quicker.
Travel Into The
OLYMPICS
By Saddle Horse
f 1-Day Conducted Trips
l Skokomish Divide
i 0
u or More, Riders
ness house will have some old
aluminum that they will be happy
to dispose of. Some. may even
have out—dated articles that they
would be happy to get rid of.
Where Should Scouts Put Their
Aluminum ?._ It should be collect—
ed at a central point and guarded
until it can be turned over to
someone specified to haul it to
the nearest Court House. In some
cases this will be the Post Office,
a each
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L. L. DICKINSON
STAIRCASE CAMP
on your old car
badly!
B U T I V
Our Supply is About (3:0118
C ‘ ~
See Me As Soon As P055111}, 3
»* .. es
Buick Sales & Service
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Have you discovered how smoothly you
cruise along with Finer Flying A?
SPEED‘
You Can Get a 1941 fiui
You can make your selection
some fifty various models!
You Can Still Save $96” 0
Price hasn’t raised yet!
3 You Can sun Get a “ma: 1:
ff
we need used "J
’T WAIT 1,,
“M W.
T p a tankful mall? and eel the di erem‘e at 4”
EASIEST GREle TOWN '7 f 17 .
part in the conservation of game
and fish.
George Hixon. of Cushman Dam,
told of the value of fish in at-
tracting the sportsmen's dollars!
to Mason County, in reporting the l
Lake Cushman record. For 1939]
the number of fishermen on that
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your motor smooth on hard pulls, another reduces
knocks at traffic speeds, another gives smoothness
at higher speeds.. . and so on. Skillfully blended to-
gether, they smooth out your car’s performance at
any speed. Try a tankful of Finer FlyingA today and
feel the difference. Go fast. Go slow. 69 fast again
...smootb at every speed.
One traffic sign says “her:
. . . you're constantly changing driving speeds
Your motor may run smoothly at 45 but balk at
changing traffic speeds. Or it may run smoothly at
low speeds but not at highway speeds. . . that is,with
ordinary gasoline. Now this problem has been
solved. Finer Flying A gasoline has been scientifical-
ly developed to give smooth peiformance at all traffic
speeds...45, 25, 10 or any speed. And, here’s why.
lake during the season was 5,436,
their catch 39,480, or an average.
of 7.26 trout each, against thel
state average of 6.1 fish. In 1940.
the fishermen were 5,531, catch
47,955, and average 8.67; while up
to July 5th this year there werel
3,681 fishermen in the lake, who
caught 29,971 trout, an average of
8.1 each, and the season is notl
half over.
[laws and rules is also playing its 3
Adds to motoring pleasure. How refreshing it is to
find comfort statioz‘z light and spotlessly clean. There’s
always a supply ofsoap, tissue, paper towels and Jam'-
tary, disposable seat covers. Andfar mothers traveling
with small children, Associated Certified Clem! Com-
fort Statiom have special seat. . . "For Baby, Too. It's
just another Associated Service.
FINER FLYING A
IS 7 GASOLINES
IN ONE
i It’s difierent gasolines blended into one.
i Polymerized gasoline, Alkylated gasoline, Reformed,
‘i Cracked, Solvent-refined, Straight-run and Natural
gasolines are all in Finer Flying A. One fuel keeps
SON BORN SUNDAY
Mr. and ‘Mrs. John Yurman .of l
Route 2 became parents of a]
baby son born Sunday at Shelton'
TIDE WATER ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY
' Al. lllIERBY MOTORS
Hospitat. . O V
Fl In A at ASSDBIATED DEAL R
Cool, Quick C o o k i n g with {
Gas- adv. —— — ,