PRINTING
; THE JOURNAL
r PHONE 100
LNO. 82
«S SCARCE
'fihbbillg Choice Spots:
art— 2 . .
T "S. j, Psales Chairman R9-
87 ‘ a fiEVent But Week
:duc- f. Oct. 21, 22 I
tore? ‘~~ I‘
"e for the 1941 Mer—I
“Sition, scheduled for;
_: 1nd, Wednesday nights:
; ’ ‘3 rapidly dwindling
d the vanishing point,
"Chairman Paul Lur—
,, )' ~tOday after his com—,
t" sIlent the latter part:
,i Contacting Shelton
' ‘ 8.
by his committee, Cliff
euenschwander and
l Chairman Marshall‘
3 e merchants contact—
i‘hger to obtain space-
,Dosition, again spon-
by the Kiwanis and
v' 01‘ the fourth con-
“, v.1"
..Who have not yet
.d and wish to se-
.ll SPACE l
POSlilOli;
Space should get in
‘ any one of the four
committeemcn and re-
"‘ e desired, Chairman
-‘€gested. The mm
11
e.
2
1e
fincentrated on reach-
1:
1.
. yers of the past ex-
,far.
Don Clark and his
Ction committee take
this weekend, for
i, 9 important task of
fOr‘ms around which
are fashioned. Most
Will be accomplished
.Sunday by a com-
mg of Hugh Clark,
Charles Savage,
hmert, Lyle McElroy,
,, ' CY Murphy, Homer
Rowe, Ed Elliott,
. unk with all other‘
I' e two sponsoring
I i0 help out.
» exposition will serve.
, A 1942 model merchan—
f 0f the public in this P
as swell the civic
. .015 both the Kiwanis
C1libs. Doors Open,
*, fit seven o’clock. the
.‘In'g held in Lincoln
” bhnson
‘ : led By Tree
11h'ies
, suffered
i F
were
rank Johnson, 49,’
" Logging companV
the George Grisdale
near Deming, in
W. according to in-l
eiVed here today.
: Struck by a falling
fibeen employed as a
ker by the Grisdale
(Finland, August 7,
1- .,’ had lived in Wash-
\ K ‘_ past 27 years, work-
i mDson Logging Com-
hat December.
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L.o
.,
Tow—-
3‘ 1. Farmer
At Hospital
,
" etcher, 71, Matloc'k
3.»); , ’
at Shelton Hos i‘al
5 can; neral services artful
55¢ ' a day at two o’clock
55¢ ,l ' .F‘uneral Ho with
126 _.,j w.‘ Shelton Ml morial
r. ‘.
39" R 1', a streetcgir opera-
61¢V before moving to
1.682;. .glanch i 1924. He
1Engl d February
;:, are _"two brothers,
"‘ er. both of Seattle;
> Asa Bateman
P." and Mrs. Leo
‘.‘11ee Dam, several
" nieces, including
at Matlock.
.. 4‘ Die
:7‘ "e,an Sunday
ason, 70, a former
.35 hskokomish Valley,
I; i,, ("he in Nederland,
‘yIES-south of Beau-
,. after an illness of
hash aggravated by
I“ Which she suffer-
th p,tWO months ago.
.,.' mother of Nolan
.I n County deputy
an aunt of Mrs.
and Purl Jemio
, ’1' Three other
, Mason of Asher,
or of Oscar, Okla.,
“Nederland, Texas:
rs- Clyde Rowland
kognd a nephew, Guy
M11308 (Lewis Coun-
.. We.
so:
hex—t
. lalived in Skokomish
3.21 to 1931 and for
g {nee that last date
,, Texas. She was
.. Inis, Ill., October 5,
Set For 3rd
“ofsaturday Eve.
a third degree is
no? which a special
h°f Mt. Moriah Ma-
, been called by
f" Maurice Need-
, atlli‘day evening at .
the Masonic Tem-I
‘ “on v 1"“
.ministration against
gression;
ROODY. D- 0-
6017 s. E. 8671“
‘ PO TL 153,2), 0:55.
Tree Nursery Laudecl
By Simpson Company
COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
VVEDNESDAYeU. S. Navy rc-
cruiter at city hall, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m.
WEDNESDAY~O d d F e 1 10 w s
lodge weekly meeting, 8 p.m.,
1.0.0.F. hall.
WEDNESDAY WA c t i v e C l u b
weekly dinner meeting, 6:30 p.
m., Moose hall.
TIII,TRSDAY~»-Opening‘ of 1941
federal migratory waterfowl
hunting season, sunrise.
THURSDAY—Commercial league
bowling, p.m.. bowling alleys.
THURSDAY~City council semi-
monthly meeting, 8 p.m., city
hall.
I.W.A. SEEKING T0
EQUALIZE LUMBER
PAY IN SECTIONS
Seeking equity of competition
between different sections of the
nation in the lumbering industry,
the International Woodworkers of
America adopted a program for
placing 16 organizers in the south-
ern and southWestern timber areas
at the six-day international con—
vention closing last night at Ev—
erett, Charles R. Savage, busi-
nessVagent for Local 38, I.W.A.,
reported today.
In addition to Savage, George
Clifton, Jim Wells, Virgil Adams
and Martin Stevens represented
Local 38 at the Everett conclave
and George Sisley and Virgil Hal- ! take the place of those cut The
stead represented Local 317 (the
Olympic ,Plywood).
The southern and southwestern
timber industries are at present'
operated largely outside the union
fold with wages considerably low-
er and freight rates lower than
those in the Northwest, placing
Northwest logging at a serious‘
competitive disadvantage with the
southern industry, Savage pointed
‘out. The convention was advised
on
its organization program by
Michael Widman, assistant C.I.O.
director of organization;
Other highlights of the six-day,
conclave found the I.W.A. endors-
ing the foreign policy of the ad-
Hitler ag-
the Roosevelt-Churchill
eight-point program; a federal old
age pension of not less than $60
a month (Savage was the only
speaker for" the pension resolu-
tion); an amendment to the Bon-
neville Act permitting the Bone-
ville Power Authority to purchase
private properties for distribution
of public power; the power pro-
gram of the Washington and Ore—
gon granges; many resolutions in
behalf of working people’s legis-
lation; numerous amendments to
the I.W.A. constitution (to be re-
ferred to the membership for rati-
fication); and two full slates of
officers for the I.W.A. were nom-
inated and will be referred to the
membership for election within
40 days along with the amend-
ments to the constitution.
Nineteen states and Canada Were
represented at the convention. The
1942 convention was set for Spo-
kane.
AUXILIARY SESSIONS‘
FIVE ATTEND I.W.A.
Among 100 delegates and 40 vis-
itors representing Washington.
Oregon, California and Idaho were
five Mason County women at the
I.W.A. Auxiliary convention at
Everett last week, held in con-
junction with I.W.A. convention.
They were Cecilia Clifton, Hel-
en Savage, Marie Adams, Laura
Lord and Gladys White. Mrs. Sav-
age was elected parliamentarian
for the convention. Edna Gillispie
was elected president, Claretta
Orton was re-elected secretary-
treasurer, Muriel Williams was
voted trustee, and Edna Reese
vice-president.
Outstanding measures support-
ed by the auxiliary delegates_in-
cluded an extensive health pro-
gram cooperating with the De-
partment of Agriculture to provide
milk for school children under pro-
visions of the Surplus Commodi-
ties Commission, and a safety-
first education program.
FAUBERT RE-ELECTm R
TENTH TIME BY RESORTMEN
Hoquiam, October 11—William
O. Thorniley, Seattle, was reelect-
ed to serVe his 10th consecutive
term as president of the Olymplc
Peninsula Tourist Resort and H0-
tel Owners’ association, this morn‘
ing at the annual meeting in the
Hotel Emerson. E. H. Faubert.
Shelton, was reelected secretary- un
treasurer, also for the 10th year-
About 75 persons were present
for the morning business meeting
and at lunch heard Major J. Gor-
don Smith of British Columbia
talk on “Travel and World
Peace.”
A reserve fund will be set up
for the investment in defense
bonds.
District vice presidents elected
were: Carl Cooper, Pacific Beach.
first district; Gil Erickson, Qum‘
ault, second district; Hollis Burn-
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Seattle, October 14 The 25,-
000,000 trees projected for grow-
ing in the Cooperative Forest In-
dustry Nursery at Nisqually. and
for planting by forest owners, re-
present $300,000 per year in fu-
ture pay rolls, according to Frank
C. Reed of the Simpson Logging
Company, Shelton, Washington.
Mr. Reed cited the pay roll po-
"tential of the tree-planting enter-
,prise in announcing, through the
West Coast Lumbermen‘s Associ—
ation, participation by the Simp-
_son Logging Company in the in—
dustry nursery and tree-planting
project.
“We have considerable areas of
good tree-growing land. which are
now idle,” Mr. Reed stated. “These
areas are largely on sections
which were swept by fires of ear-
ly days, while still carrying vir-
gin timber. Much of that burnt
.timber was salvaged and Nature:
has produced a new timber crop:
on the greater part of the old}
burns. On the remaining acreage;
tree planting is required to hastenl
the production of a new timber}
crop. ‘
Help To Permanence
“The Simpson Logging Com—
pany welcomes the opportunity to
secure planting stock through the
industry nursery, as such stock
has hitherto been unavailable to1
private forest owners. Our tim-
ber operations and land manage-'
ment are planned for permanence,
and the Simpson Logging Com—
pany is taking every practicali
means to provide a future supply
of forest materials.
"The Simpson Logging Com-"
pany, which has been operating
out of Shelton for approximately
fifty years, has endeavored to,
leave its lands in such condition
that a new crop of trees would
fine stand of young timber ex-
tending west of Shelton is evidence .
that this has been achieved for
the most part. Over much of the
area there is a stand of fine young
forest already established, varying
in age from five to forty years.
“These lands are being given-
increasingly better fire protection
through the years, and improved
methods are being followed to se-
cure the prompt seeding in of
logged-off. lands after cutting, by
natural means.
“The areas which will be plant-
ed within the next five years are
those where fires have destroyed.
the young growth that was be-
coming established. It is expected
that by planting up these blank
spots the extensive cutovcr hold-
ings of the company can be put
on a fully stocked basis. which is
essential if the forest industry out
of Shelton is to be maintained.
“The success of the efforts of
the Simpson Logging Company to
maintain a continuous forest op-
eration out of Shelton depends a
good deal on the cooperation re-
ceived from the public is the mat-
ter of care with fire, especially in
the cutover areas.
“The specific objective of this
planting is to maintain the econ-
omic support of the forest com-
munity of Shelton, which our in-
dustry operations are providing
now. This means productive use
of every acre of tree-growing
land under our management.
Nursery Benefit Cited .
“The value of the industry nur—
sery may be roughly gauged on
the basis of an average annual
increment .of 500 board feet per
acre in the growth of a timber
crop from seedling to saw log
size. At current rates this footage
represents $6.00 in forest wages.
‘The industry nursery is com-
mitted to production of 25,000,000‘
trees for planting in five years;
500 Wlli.plant one acre. Thus the
nurse}? 1n planting enterprise may
be Visualized as the source of
$300,000 per year in future wages
from forest lands on which na-
tural reproduction has been burn-
cd—too Often by the careless pub-
IlC. It IS hoped that every per-
son who. uses these forest lands;
will realize the necessity of carei
with fire. He must do his part in
not alone KEEPING WASHING-
TON_ GREEN and pleasing to the
tourists View but also in keeping
mes? young trees green to make
903311319 the continuance of our
forest industries whose pay rolls
are so essential to the future life
and success of the communities
and state.
.___..__.
ham, Forks, third district; Harry
Schoeffel, Olympic Hot Springs,
fourth district; W. A. Bovee, Port
Angeles, fifth district; L. P. Stet-
son. Lilliwaup, sixth district; Thad
Pierce. Qlympia, seventh district.
Declaring travel brings better
derstandlng between peoples,
Smith said that “if Hitler had
traveled more he would have
known that he was biting off
more than he could chew” when
heuinvaded the democratic nations.
He also would have known
that these nations are determined
to defend their freedom,” Smith
added- “Travel by their peoples
has brought the United States and
Canada very close together, and I-
look forward to the time when to-;
gether We will help police the
world to maintain peace."
j‘wineries for the entire rest of
‘ Washington.
Consolidated with The Shelton Inde
pendent
SHELTON, WASHINGTON, Tuesday, October 14, 1941.
VISIIOI‘S to the St. Charles
of Lambert B. Evans, father of
l FIRST VINEYARDIST IN STATE
<9
Winery on Stretch
island are
usually shown the picture above, the only picture ever taken
the grape growing industry of
Washington, the man who planted the first grape vine grown
in the Northwest back in 1872.
His picture is one in a unique album collected by Charles
Somers depicting
in photographs the growth of the grape
and wine industry of Stretch Island. Mr. Somers t00k the picture
of Mr. Evans in 1909, When Mr- Somers first came to Stretch
Island and purchased part of the original
site on which the St. Charles w
GRAPE INDUSTRY
GROWTH DUE TO
LEADERSHIP HERE
Mason County Men Play Leading
Roles in Development Of
County’s 2nd Industry :
l
I
Mason County men have taken
leading roles in the development.
of the grape growing industry
and its offspring, the wineries“
ever since the luscious fruit has‘
been grown in this state. i i
In observing national wine week:
for 1941, this week, it is fitting,
then, that a brief review of the
place Mason County men have,
taken in the industry should be
made. ‘
Evans homestead,
Inery now stands.
Grape Grower
In the first place, Lambert B '
Evans developed the first 1‘
vineyard in Washington on
property on Stretch .Island
the center of one of .the f
grape growing areas in the
Then came Adam Eckert to
periment with crossing diffe
types of grapes and develope’what
is now known as the Island Belle
grape, general conceded now to
be the finest ine grape im Am-
erica. . _.
First Bonded Winery Here
As the years rolled by and na-
tional laws were revised to allow
the return of the wine fermenting
industry, Charles Somers of,
Grapeview built the first bondedi
winery in the State of Washing—
ton, known as the St. Charles
Winery, located on Stretch Island,
along with two other wineries.
Mason County has four of the 23
wineries in the state, Seattle eight
otherS, leaving only eleven other
In 1935 another Mason County
son, John Binns, then living in and
practicing law in Tacoma, drafted
the legislation which today gov-
erns the Wine industry of this
state. His bill was passed by the
legislature of 1935 and the bill
has proven to be the best legisla-
tion ever passed for the benefit
of Washington fruit growers and.
it has put Washington Wineries on
a stable, profitable basis, as well
as being a rigid safeguard for
the public.
Stiff Standards Set
That law Set up a very high
standard for Washington wines
to reach. It provided that nothing
but Washington-grown fruit
could be used In fermenting wines}
in Washington wineries and it
provided for the distribution of
(Continued on Page Four)
Special Millage
To Bring $46,000
Free To Belfair
Passage of a special levy next
Thursday by Belfair school dis-
trict reSidents will bring $46,000
free to the district in the form
of state and federal funds.
Badly crowded because of the
influx of defense industry work-
ers in the Bremerton Navy Yard,
the Belfair school district must
add new quarters to its school fa-i
cilities. The state has promised
$6,100 and the federal government
$40,000 __ provided the district
produces $3.900
The resulting $50,000 fund
which would be raised by that
series of events would be used to
construct a second school building
to help ease the badly over-crowd-
ed condition of the present struc-
ture.
The special levy asked by the
Belfair school board to raise this
$3900 fund is 15 mills, to which
an additional ’five mill levy has
been attached to provide funds
for general maintenance purposes
for the 1941-42 term.
M,
APPENDIX REMOVED
MISS Wanda Emerson of Shel-
ton underwent an appendix o'pera~
tion at Shelton Hospital Saturday.
V
Above is aipicture‘of Adam
Eckert, one ofithe pioneer grape
growers of the county and the
man who developed the famous
Island Belle grape, recogrfiz‘ed
as the finest American grape
for wine making purposes. Mr.
Eckert came to Mason county
in 1889 and died in 1934 at the
age of 84 after having establish-
ed the foundation of Mason
county’s second industry, the
wine industry. He is shown here
standing beside a grape vine on
Stretch Island Which was over
50 years old in 1928, when this
picture was taken.
COUNTY FARMERS ,
ASKED TO R A ISE
CROP PRODUCTION
Certain Products Listed For Con-
centration By' Growers In
This Area, Says Rail
Mason County farmers are ask-
ed to contribute to National De-
fense by increasing production of
vital foods, states Bert Rau, chair-
man Of the USDA. Defense
Board, upon his return from a
district meeting at Longview last
week.
Goals for production of all
commodities have been establish-
ed for counties throughout the
nation. Production of some foods
will be decreased while others will
be materially increased. This
pr'ogram is a planned program so
that farmers will not find them-
selves in the same ridiculous posi-
tion they were in following the
last war.
Mason County farmers are ask-
ed to increase the production of
the following products: oats,
barley, potatoes, hay, milk, eggs,
market cattle, hogs, market
chickens. and market gardens. Al-
so practically every farm is ex-
pected to have a home garden.
Starting very soon a farm to
farm census will be made by A
CA committeemen to determine
the feasibility of increase on the
various farms.
The information asked for in
the report will be number of
cows milked, pounds of milk pro-
duced, hogs produced, eggs, beef
and chickens marketed for the
year 1941 and anticipated for
1942. ‘
If farmers will have these
figures available it will facilitate
getting the information.
This program will give Mason
County farmers an opportunity to
serve the nation and also profit
by it themselves. The depart-
ment of agriculture has guaran-
teed the price of a number of
commodities at 850/,» of parity
throughout 1942 and this price
is a “floor” not a “ceiling.”
,l Clarence Robinson, 15-year-old
Shelton high school junior, bagged
,his first deer yesterday, but
ichances are he'll never get anoth—
ier one like it.
His initial venison was an al-
lbino buck, a very rare specimen
lin the deer family. Hunting with
Ihis parents. Mr. and Mrs. Allie
Robinson, and Laurence Carlson,
,manager of the Shelton branch
‘bank, young Clarence dropped his
freak buck with a nifty shot
through the neck in the wooded
area between Lake Cushman and
Skokomish Valley about mid-af-
ternoon yesterday.
Being his first deer, you can
readily imagine Clarence’s sur-
prise and puzzlement when the
lYoung Hunter’s Ist Deer
Tums OutAs Albino Buck
DUCK
SEASON
0pm
OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER
white apparition walked out in
front Of him.
“At first I thought it was
somebody’s goat,” the youthful
'hunter confessed.
But a close scrutiny revealed it
to be a genuine two-point buck
deer, all right, so Clarence up and
whaled away, dropping it with
his first shot. It weighs in the
close neighborhood of 125 pounds
and was on display at Paul Ber-
ets’ Shelton Sporting Goods to-
day, where it drew much atten-
tion and comment from passers-
b .
yA few claimed to have seen al-
bino deer in the woods on rare
occasions but none knew of pre-
vious occasions where the rare an—
imals had been shot by hunters.
Pass the aspirin, please.
Judges in the third annual Mer-
chants—Journal football sweep-
stakes found themselves with the
biggest headache they’ve yet had
in trying to unravel the third
week results of the 1941 contest,
what with eight parties tied for
first place and an almost im-
possible knot to untie.
After using three different
methods of trying to solve the
riddle the judges finally decided
Danny Wilson, foreman for the
Linscott Lath Mill which operates
Within the Reed Lumber Mill, had
the closest score predictions and
awarded him the $5 cash prize of
the week. He and the other
seven all chose 17 winners from
last week’s crop of 20 games.
Wilson’s victory partly saved
face for the male contestants, for
feminine prognosticators had
walked off with the first two:
weekly prizes. ,
Bum Steer
But to get back to the judges‘
dilemna. In the first place one
of the metropolitan Sunday pa—
pers the judges used to obtain
their scores reversed the actual
outcome of the Syracuse - Holy.
Cross game, giving the Victory to
the latter when ‘actually Syracuse
had won. That threw every bal-
lot out of kilter and necessitated
a complete rechegk of a record‘
number of entries after the mis-
take was discovered Monday. In-'
cidentally, Hugh Clark, assistant
Highclimber football coach, had
at first been listed as the Winner
of the week before the error was
discovered.
The re check then dropped
Clark into the 17 bracket and
elevated Wilson, Dave Swenson,
Lenita Cheney, Bob Bampton, Don
Oborn, Nina Stinchfield and Aud-
rey Crabill into the same niChe-
Try, Try Again
The first comparison of Pre-
Sixteen changes have taken
place on the silver salmon derby
board in the past week, eight 01d
rung holders grabbing higher
spots on the ladder while eight
new ones “bumped” low rung
holders off.
Biggest fish of the week was
good enough to take over second
spot on the board and was only
seven ounces shy of the top fish,
still George Forbes’ 16%»pounder.
However, M. S. Preppernau of
Kent was back in his favorite
haunts on the canal this weekend
and came in with the second Six-
teen-pound fish of the derby, Plus
an ounce to spare. His wife,
Audrey, also bagged a silver big
enough to boost her place on the
board several rungs.
At the current reading the
smallest fish on the board is 11
Pounds. six ounces. The week’s
newcomers include Victor John-
son. Tony Nelson, Mrs. Maurice
Quinn. Paul Marshall, Keith
Holmes, Chet Valley, Tom Nel-
son and William Sargison.
Lbs. 025.
George Forbes .............. ..16 8
M. S. Preppernau ...16 1
Alma Nommenson . ...15 12
Ernie Cole ............... .. ...15 4
Bob Bednarski ...l5 2
George Dunning . 14 14
Sam Bednarski ...14 9
Omer Dion ........... .. ...14 7
Russell Gunter ...14 '5
Marian Hillman ...14 5
Florence Howard .. ...l4 5
Louise Huff ........ .. ...13 15
T. V. Dunning ....13 15
Andy Allshouse ....13 14
E. C. Williams .... .. ....13 12
Harry McConkey .. ....13 12
Louie Wilson ...... .. ....18 11
Art Walton ........ .. ....13 8
George Gilmore ....13 8
Wayne Stone .... .. ....13 6
Sonny Collier ....13 5
Art Nelson ...13 5
Steve Bednarskl . ..13 3
Len Walton ..13 21/,
Keith Hurst ........ .. ..13 2
Gertrude Morgan .. ..12 14
Tony Nelson ........ .. ..12 14
Tom Nelson ..12 13
Louie Wilson ..12 12
Vic Johnson ..... .. ..12 12
Gordon Russell ..12 12
Claire Tozler ..... .. ..12 11
F. A. Eacrett ...12 10
Keith Holmes ................ ..12 10
MEN FINALLY SCORE AS DAN l
WILSON COPS $5 GRID PRIZE;
JUDGES RUN INTO TIE GRIEF
DERBY CHANGES FRE
EIGHT NEW RUNG HOLDERS
i
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‘ing the Weather.
DUCK SEASON
COM MENCING
ON THURSDAY
First Use Of New Young Public
Hunting Grounds Also To
Be Made; Bad W’eather
Is “’anted
If it's blowing and squalling
and raining Thursday morning
not everybody will wake up cuss-
Not by some-
what.
There’ll be that considerable,
portion of the population which
is smitten with the duck hunting
bug who’ll wake up Thursday in
the wee small. hours and murmur
fondly, “Boy, what a swell day"~-
if it's blowing and squalling and
raining. '
Thursday, as you’ve guessed by
now, brings the opening of the
1941 federal migratory waterfowl
hunting s‘eason, and the more
disagreeable the elements are (in
the ordinary viewpoint on the
weather) the finer the duck hunt-
dicted scores sifted Wilson and 91:5 like it because that? Keeps the
Swenson out of the eight with the birds flying low and Within eaSIer
most closest scores. Then check- range 0f guns-
ed against each other Wilson and Name“, After SPOFF-Smnn
Swenson again were found dead- Along With the opening 0f the
locked so the judges, determined 1941 waterfowl season Will come
to get a winner, tossed the entire the oPemngv too: of a new Public
eight back into contention again ShOOtmg grounds Situated at the
d tr.ed another s Stem, add-n mouth of the Skokomish River
3; the] total scores}, of the wling: which have been named the Harry
ning teams and the total scores A. Young Public Shooting Grounds
of the losing teams on each bal- In honor 0f the late promment
lot to compare with the actual Mason County Sportsman Whose
total scores of the winning and efforts saved that particular sec-
losing teams in the 20 games tion of choice duck hunting land
played.
Under this system Wilson came
nearest, predicting a total of 295
points for the winning teams (ex-
cluding, of course, the three
games he missed) and 123 for los-
ing teams. Actually, winning '
teams scored 463 points and los—
ing teams 135 points in the 20
games in last week’s list.
Pity Poor Judges
Anyway, it was a great race,
even though it added a few gray
hairs to the judges’ noggins. l
Twenty-eight other contestants
trailed right behind the leaders
with 16 correct predictions. Re-
sults of last week’s list of games. I
Cornell 7, Harvard 0 '
Fordliam 27, North Carolina 14I
Washington, 23, ‘W.S.C. 13
— Syracuse 6, Holy Cross 0
Dartmouth 18, Colgate 6
Oregon 20, U.S.C. 6 ,
Santa Clara 13, California 0
' Texas Christian 20,, Indiana 141
Baylor 20, Arkansas 7
Northwestern 41 ,Princeton 0
Notre Dame20., Georgia Tech 0
Oregon State'lO, Stanford 0
Clemson 26, Boston College 13
Vanderbilt 39, Kentucky 13
Penn 28, Yale 13
Rice 10, Tulane 9
Minnesota 34, Illinois 6
Michigan 40, Pittsburgh 0
Texas 40, Oklahoma 7.
QUENT;
Maurice Quinn . ........... ....12 ‘ 8
G. F. Mahaffey' .... .. ...12 ,8
Audrey Preppernau ., ...12 7
Elizabeth Wolfe ...12 .
Axel Hendrickson 1.12 6
Mark Ferrier ................ ..12 4
Wilfred Christensen .»...12 4
Carl Rains .................. ..12 3
Lucille Christensen ........12 2
Carl Blomgren .............. ..12 2
Mrs. Maurice Quinn ....12 2
Leonard Booth} .......... ..12 1
Clarence Sowers ...12 1
Hazel Bleecker ..12 1
Paul Marshall ..12 1
Ole Olsen ...... .. ..12 0
Chet Valley ...... .. ..12 0
Clarence Weston .... .. ...11 15
Mrs. Vic Johnson ...... ..11 15
Barney Morgan ............ ..11 14
Virgil Morgan 12
Chet Hillman 8
Bill Levett ...... .. 8
Herb Bowman .............. ..11 7
Mrs. Helen Mitchell ...... ..11 7
Len Christensen .......... ..11 6
William Sarglson .......... ..11 6
Bill Bellinghausen
Laid To Rest Today
Last rites Were observed this
morning for William Henry Bell-
inghausen, 48, a resident of Shel—
ton for the past nine years, at
St. Edwards Catholic Church.
He was summoned at Shelton
Hospital Friday evening after an
illness which had kept him under
hospital treatment for the past
two months. He had been em—
ployed by the Shelton Concrete
Products company prior to his
illness.
He is survived by his widow,
Bertha, and a son, Robert, resid-
ing at 426 Franklin street. Mr.
Bellinghausen was born at Colton,
Wash, January 15, 1893.
Will Grisdale Drives
To His Own Operation
I
Will Grisdale, superintendent of
Camp 3 operations for the Simp-
son Logging company, drove him-
self the 17 miles from camp to
Shelton Hospital after midnight
this morning for an emergency
appendix operation. His condition
was reported this afternoon to be
very good and his recovery rapid.
from falling into private hands
and thus being lost forever to
public use. It was one of the last
of the better duck hunting areas
in Mason County which was still
available to the public.
Through efforts of the Hood
Canal Sportsmens Ass’n the area.»
was given Young's name by the
Staté Game Department.
Shoot Sunrise To 4 p.m.
Regulations set by the federal
government covering the migra-
tory waterfowl hunting season are
the same as heretofore. Hours of
shooting are from sunrise to 4
p.m. daily, Ross’s geese, wood
duck, Wilson’s snipe (or jack-
snipe) and other rails and galli-
nules. are prohibited prey, dain
bag limits are ten fowl in 'the
aggregate, of which not more
than three redhead and bufflee.
head can be included, or 25 coots
per day.
USe of any feed or live decoys
' is prohibited in hunting migratory
waterfowls, along with sink boxes
or boats or watercraft in which
side cars of at least five feet in
length are used and the rower
must be plainly visible from the
waist up at all times. Use of
rifles or pistols cannot be used.
All migratory waterfowl hunt-
.ers must have, in addition to their
regular hunting licenses, an un-
expired federal migratory bird
hunting stamp, procurable at any
government pOstoffice.
Sunrise Schedule
For the convenience of hunters.
daily sunrise hours for the duck
hunting season in this area fol-
low:
Oct. 16 ...... ..6:32 Nov. 15 ...... ..7:20
17........6:34 16 ...... ..7:22
18 ...... “6:35. 17 ...... ..7:23
'19.. 6:37 18 ...... ..7125
: 19 ...... ..7z26
:
:. 21...~..:..7:29
': 22 ...... ..7:31
, .: 23.x.......7:32 ~
24;.......7:34i
'. 25. ..... ..7:35
26.,..,.;I.7:37
: 27 ...... ..7:38
: 28 ...... ..7339'
: 29 ...... ..7z41
: 30 ...... ..7:42
Nov. 1 ...... ..6:58 Dec 1 ...... ..7:43
2 ...... ..6:59l 2 ...... ..7:45
3 ...... ..7:01 3 ...... ..7:46
4 ...... ..7:02 4 ...... ..7247
5 ...... ..7:04l 5 ...... ..7:48
6... 7 :06 6 ...... ..7249
7... 7:07 7 ...... ..7:50
8... 7:09 8 ...... ..7:51
9... 7:10 , 9 ...... ..7:52
10.. 7:12 ' 10........7:53
11... 7:14 11 ...... ..7:54
12.. 7:15 12 ...... ..7:55
13.. ..7:17. 13 ...... ..7:56
14 ...... ..7:18 14.. .... ..7:57
5 More Men From
County Inducted
Answering the 14th draft call
issued to the Mason County Selec-
tive Service board, five men were
inducted into Army selective ser-
vice training at Tacoma today
from here.
They include Ray Deane, Bill
Madsen, Fred Clark, Melvin Phil-
lips and James Kelly, all of Shel-
ton, Mrs. Martha C. Haines, clerk
of the Mason County board, re-
ported.
A sixth man, Roy F. Hall, will
be inducted with the Shelton
group but his induction will be
credited to the St. Maries, Idaho,
draft board inasmuch as that is
where he originally registered,
Mrs. Haines explained.
ARM CAUGHT IN BELT
Norman Norsby, Route 3, suf-
fered severe burns on his right
arm when the member was caught
in a conveyor belt at the Olym-
pic Plywood plant last Thursday.
He is being treated at Shelton
Hospital.
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