Page Six
4-16, ( reamrry Not
To Iii-sliver Thursday
II": (it live" hf.” “Ti *
OII’I 37:1..0‘1 f v (.‘Iuann ry \VI‘il
b: rlmihleii '1'» I,‘ Ira" so that
(-nitiluyes; of The tum dairy firms
wl.l hr 'i‘olw to trim}: New Years
Dav :is It holiday, it unis announc-
ed today. so patrons will not re-
ceive their milk deliveries Thurs‘
(lav but will get double rations
Wednesday.
X“ \‘l BABY RELATED HERE
Grays Hailizir's first Christmas
Day I. In burr. to Mr. ii‘iil‘
Mi ' d of Pacific
nus morning
lson of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Ecuin of llarstine island, and
it grandson of Mrs. M. E.
Nicholson of Agate.
If you ‘~\’ish to Sell you’ll Have
to ’i‘ell Journal \‘v'anthds.
‘70 Relieve
:W
rLo’s
QUALITY MARKET
GROCERIES
FRESH MEATS
FRUITS
FINEST FOODS AT
BEST PRICES
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HOC DSPORT
H‘i-ntinuml from I':I'_’,I- Hm"!
f-l-i luiirzv‘ Fiwlson again played the low role
in the Highi‘limber defense. Jen”.
Philles turned in (Hi all :ii‘vvui‘nl
strong performance, too.
~l’rr‘dson Stops Scorer
Floyd LeBaroti, Tiger forward.
kept Ccntralia in the lead most of
the first half with three nifty
shots from the corners but he
didn't fare so well in the second
half when Fredson took over iii.-
task of checking him.
The Highclimbers gt a bi) d
with two fast baskr'ts but the-
Ivisitors bagged one of their own
to go out in front. by a single
ipoint again. That was their last
‘ taste of being front runner. how-
ever, for Shelton came back to
build up a 22 to 16 margin by the
end of the third canto and wid-
ened that steadily in the final
period as Wilson and
poked home a steady stream of
v tallies.
Kittens Take Opener
Centralia didn't go home emp-
ty-handed. however, for the Kit-
tens won a ragged 19 to 10 verdict i
over the Highclimber reserves in
the opener.
The Centralia squad was hanw
dled by Walt Lunsford,
.Highclimber track coach and jun-
Iior basketball mentor, who pinch-
‘Tiger mentor who
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.VVoods . . . . . . . ..F‘ . . . . . . .. LeBaron R
Ludeen 2 ____ .. Nordland‘
Wilson 15 VVVVVV VVC V. .. Krepps 5.
‘ Phillips 6 .... V. G.... .. Roberts 4
j Fredson 1 VVVVVV .VG ............... . . . Pi‘aff
, Subs: SheltonAs Loop 2. churn, i
'Chase. CentraliawrNoble 2. Hat-
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hit for Waldo Roberts regular
was called
away by the sudden death of his
father. The lineups:
FIRST TEAMS
Shelton (34)
field 2
, Howard 2.
SECOND TEAMS
(‘cntralia (19) Shelton (10)
Thompson 6 .. .F‘ ...... .. Ludeen
Osborne 1 ...... Plemons 1
Bryson 6 ........ ..C ................ .. Toby
Lyon 4 .......... ..G .............. V. Rector
Wheeler 2 G V. Maulden 5
Subs: Centralia:-.Blizzard, Pfaff.
Isaacson. SheltoanChase 2, Teln-
ple, Robinson, Bednarski.
Specials For
JEEEAW
WALNUT
II: 24-02. 33c
NUT MEATS... . . . 1/2-lb. pkg. 31¢
GRADE "A" LARGE
Eggs
NONE SUCH
2 doz. 890
MIME MEATZpkg.27o
FAIRMONT
Coffee 3-lbs. 39C
BONNIE BEST
PEANUT BUTTER. . . 2-lb. jar 27¢
FIREWEED
Honey lb. jar 23c
GRAHAM
GRAGKERS 2-lb. 25c
CRANBERRY
Sauce "-025. 13c
COMMERCIAL
CHOCOLATES . . 2-lb. pkg. 25¢
NEW NAVELS . . . Shopping Bag Full
GRANGES . . . 49c
SEEDLESS . .
. Shopping Bag Full
EFIIIIIT
45c
APPLES box 1.19
the ‘
lead quick after the, half started,
Woods 1
former I
Centralia (‘23)
use... In. rear Hour CONFERENCE To
OPEN FRIDAY;
SHELTON-MASON
HIGHCLIMBERS
SHOULD SHAKE CELLAR SPOT
All tlu-se side isnues of the
pun tier; season Will be swept
aside and the boys start playing
“for keeps" Friday night with the.
opening round of the 194?. north-
ern division of the Southvvest prep
basketball conference schedule.
‘ The Climbers find this their year
to open their schedule at, home.
with the Aberdeen Bobcats again
“first righters" with the Red and
‘ Black.
As things stack up now that the
practice schedule is out of the
way, the perennial champion Ho-
quiam Grizzlies and the Olympia
Bears loom as the
'favorites to battle it out for the
1942 flag.
Raymond has had a highly suc-
cessful practice schedule which
has revealed the Seagulls as pt-
tentially the strongest defensive
club in the circuit but lacking
much of an offense. The Gulls
have yet to score 3!) points in any
one game, but on the other hand
their rivals have found it extreme- ‘
lv difficult to crack the Raymond
Idefense for as many as 20 tallies.
i Aberdeen Dark Horse
, The Bobcats haven’t played en-
ough practice games to give much
of a line on their current ability
so Aberdeen goes into the sched-
. ule as the dark horse entry.
Among the Elma, Montesano,
‘Shelton trio which has consist-
ently held down the last three
places in the league since it was
organized in its present form
four years ago, the Highclimbers
appear to be the best club and
should improve their last place
.standing of the past two years
‘by a couple of notches. Elma and
IMontesano both appear to be
much weaker this year than last,
and might easily wind up in a
tie for the. cellar postion as their
only hopes for victory this year.
appear to be against each other,
with possibly one catching the
Highclimbers on an off night for
a second or third win during the
Ii season.
I The Highclimber outlook is ac-
itually the best it has been since
Ithe Central League incorporated
Iwith the northern division to form
,the present conference setup, not
lthat this year's club is as good
.‘as the 1938-39 aggregation which
had such aces as Bill Taylor, Bill
iLevctt and Bill McComb in its
iranks, but with Monte and Elma
weaker than they've been since the
‘league was organized and the
,1942 Highclimber club capable of
producing some pretty warm per-
formances on the right nights
there is a chance Shelton will be
able to hang up its first win
} over a “big three" rival this year.
i Olympia To Win?
That 1938-39 team mentioned
.above won four conference games
I by twice downing Monte and split-
,ting with Raymond and Elma. If
the dope runs pretty close to form
j this year. the Highclimbers should
Ibe able to equal that against the
{Eagles and the Bulldogs, then
Iwhatever they can add against
I the other four league entries will
Isimplv be “gravy” as far as bet—
tering the 1939 record.
I Summing it all up, this is the
I way the 1942 conference standings
i should ultimately wind up, as the
i Sideliner predicts it:
I 1. Olympia
2. Hoqulam
‘ 3. Raymond
I 4. Aberdeen
5. Shelton
, Elma
7. Montesano
For your convenience, here is
the 1942 northern division sched-
ule. Clip it and keep it in a con-
venient spot for quick reference
throughout the season which op-
ens Friday:
FIRST ROUND
JANUARY 2~
Olympia at Raymond
Aberdeen at Shelton
Elma at Montesano
. Hoquiam bye
JANUARY 9-"~
Raymond at Elma
I Dairymen Capture
Free-Tally Tussle
I From L. M., 43-38
E CITY BASKETBALL LEAGUE
wl pf pa
IMcConkey Pharm .... .. 6 0 177 130
Kimbel Oil . 5 l 170 108
4-15 Dairy ................ .. 4 2 199 187
6 *McCleary Timber .... .. 1 2 51 103
L. M. ........................ .. 1 5 169 182
IWilson’s Cafe .......... .. 0 6 125 186
Games Tonight
7:30~——L. M. vs. Wilson’s
8:30——Kimbel vs. 4-E Dairy
Games Saturday
7:30—Kimbel vs. McConkey
8:30——4-E Dairy vs. Wilson's
Games Monday
7:30—4-E Dairy vs. McConkey
8:30~Kimbcl Oil vs. Wilson’s
Potent point production mark-
ed the lone game played in Sat-
urday’s city league basketball
schedule as 4-13 Dairy squeezed
past the L. M., 43 to 38, behind
Ithe tally tossing of Jack Case,
just a bit stronger than that of
Bill
sell of the Merks.
All five of these lads reached
'two-figure personal totals with
Case, making his first start of
the season, topping them all with
13. Tate and Schirmer each rang
up a dozen.
The dairymen held a 20 to 10
" than the Merks could Whittle
{down in the second period.
-' Wilson's Cafe failed to put a.
Elineup on the floor so had to for-
; feit to McConkey Pharmacy in the
1 other scheduled game, leaving the
:pharmacists still unbeaten in lea-
. gue play. The lineups:
'4-E» Dairy (43) L. M. (38) ‘
iCase 13 ........ ..F ........ .. Fredson 4
3A. Cloutier . Schirmer 12
i Gibson 10 ...... ..C Driver 4
ITate 12 ..G. .. Elliott
1Watson .......... ..G. . . Russell 10
conference
I Since 1938.
'Mel Gibson and Joe Tate, whose'
combined work on the twine was
Schirmer and Gordon Rus-
half time lead, which was more.
Montesano at Aberdeen
I-quuiam at Olympia
Shelton bye
JANUARY 13’-
Aberdcen at Raymond
Elma at Hoquiam
Shelton at Montesano
Olympia bye
'JANUARY 16”—
I Raymond at Shelton
I Hoquiam at Aberdeen
i Olympia at Elma.
I Montesano bye
JANUARY 23~»~
Montesano at Raymond
Aberdeen at; Olympia
Shelton at Hoquiam
Elma bye
JANUARY 27—«
Elma at Aberdeen
Olympia at Shelton
Hoquiam at Montesano
Raymond bye
JANUARY 30—-
Raymond at Hoquiam
Shelton at Elma
; Montesano at Olympia
Aberdeen bye
SECOND ROUND
FEBRUARY 6-—
Raymond at Olympia
I Shelton at Aberdeen
Montesano at Elma
Hoquiam bye
FEBRUARY 13—~
Elma at Raymond
Aberdeen at Montesano
Olympia at Hoquiam
Shelton bye
FEBRUARY 17——
Raymond at Aberdeen
Hoquiam at ,Elma
Montesano at Shelton
Olympia bye
FEBRUARY 20——
Shelton at Raymond
Aberdeen at Hoquiam
Elma at Olympia
Montesano bye
FEBRUARY 24-—
Hoquiam at Raymond
I Elma at Shelton
l Olympia at Montesano
Aberdeen bye
FEBRUARY 27 m
I Raymond at Montesano
Olympia at Aberdeen
Hoquiam at Shelton
Elma bye
MARCH 3
Aberdeen at Elma
Shelton at Olympia.
i Montesano at Hoquiam
I Raymond bye
I Evacuees Arrive
(Continued from Page One)
ful knowledges for war emergen-
cies, she added.
Mrs. Valley praised highly the
treatment the crew of the trans‘
port accorded the passengers. She
has made six trips between Alaska
and the “states” now and “this
.is the first time I‘ve really felt
unconcerned about the safety of
Gordon,” she said. “The crew kept
a close watch on the youngsters
at all times and did everything
possible to make the passengers
comfortable and happy."
Ship Changed Course.
The trip was not without its
thrills. When first news arrived
that Jap submarines had attacked
shipping off California the trans-
,port ship was rerouted. which
was the real cause for the three-
day delay in its arrival in Seat-
tle. as that change of route sent
the ship into the storm area and
caused it to anchor for over two
days to await suitable weather.
Having planned on only a four-
day trip, the ship was not provi-
sioned for the extra time in tran-
sit and food ran low during the
last part of the voyage, Mrs. Val-
ley related.
Kodiak business houses were
hard hit by the. evacuation of the
women and children, Mrs. Valley
' pointed out. v
“This is the first year Kodiak
merchants have really stocked up
for Christmas," she explained.
“Before they catered almost en-
tirely to men, but this year some
stores hired outside women ex-
perts to stock them up with a
real representative line of Christ-
mas merchandise. for the entire
family. And the stores really had
a full supply. Now they’ll prob-
ably be stuck with a good deal of
I it.”
Mrs. Valley has lived in Alaska
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Valley are
I expecting another daughter-in-
llaw, Mrs. Dal Valley, and two
Imore grandchildren, to arrive
ihere from Alaska on the next
levacuation ship, whenever that
may be.
Mrs. Dal Valley and her chil-
dren were not able to come out
on the same boat with Mrs. Don
. Valley because the Dal Valleys do
not live at the naval base, having
built their own home in Kodiak,
although Dal is employed at the
base as a dump-truck driver by
the same company which employs
‘his brother, Don.
ALASKA VISITORS
‘MAROONED’ HERE
The vacation visit of Mr. and
ers. Sig Aardal and daughter,
I Velma, and their grandson, Sigrud
‘Bakke, all of Wrangel, Alaska,
{has grown to one of indefinite
I length.
I The Pacific war has caused it
i all.
I They came to “the states" to
enjoy the yuletide holidays with
relatives, spending Christmas at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
[Hunting and Mr. and Mrs. Siev-
; ert Aardal of Potlatch.
I Mrs. Aardal is a sister of Mrs.
‘Hunting and the two Mr. Aar-
dals are brothers. Mr. and Mrs.
iRalph Musto of Seattle aceom~
panied the Alaskans to Shelton
for their holiday visit.
But the Wrangel family can‘t
‘get passage back to their home
now. due to war restrictions, and
idon’t know how long they will be
' forced to remain “dOWn.here.”
. PLYWOOD EMPLOYE ILL
I Charles Bush, Olympic Plywood
plant employe, was admitted to
Shelton hospital Saturday for
medical treatment.
COUNTY JOURNAL
Experienced D
With Small Boats
,or gasoline engines will be, (in-3
llistcd in this class, M—2.
Needed By N avyi
Immediate ratings in the navy‘
are offered men with exoerieni-I
I
aboard small vessels in the, Puget‘
[Sound and Grays Harbor
areas
and qualified to man naval rtraft‘
.operating in Pacific coast waters, . . . , _I
iaccording to Navy Recruith C. 1 Will be enlisted in the Naval Re
,1). Nivision, at Olympia.
I Seamen, engineers.
leooks, yeomen and several other
'classes of experienced men are
Fresh churned . .
Special “A” Large locals
All Pork luncheon meat
Sea Shore Brand
Libby’s
Campbell’s
Regular 5c and 10¢ Values
SPARKLING WATER
Nalley's
Sunshine
Libby‘s medium
GOLD SEAL HEAVY TOM
Whole or half Turkeys
rn diom en. ,
CHOW MEIN DINNERS
With Noodles, Vegetables and Soy Sauce
CANADA DRY 28-02. bot 15¢
No further training will be giv- I
on the recruits before they
into service and ratings pay as
high as $126 monthly, besides al-
lowances for clothing, food and
quarters. Extra provisions are
Iiinde for men with dependents.
Physically fit high school grad- l
notes with amateur or commercial
radio experience or a. federal com~
munications commission license
serve for training as specialist
petty officers, second class.
Special eight months'
billets as radio maintenance men I tened with 3'. drop, of water. This.
Grocery prices effective Dec. 30 to January 5, incl.
A healthier, happier New Year depends largely upon good
food in a balanced diet . . .
Year begins with a visit to L. M. Get started on the right
food by coming in for everything you’ll need for the Holiday
dinner and party. The high savings will show that you’ll
have extra cash for fun, frolic and feasting in ’42 if you
will buy all your food needs here where every price is a
low price every day consistent with high quality. Phone 305‘
for Free Delivery Service.
BUTTER
. 91 score
EGGS...................doz.44¢
and a more prosperous New
2-lbs. 83¢
MOR 12-0z.can29¢
MINCED CLAMS . . . . . . 2cans 45¢
PLUM PUDDING ._ . . . . . .. can 25¢
RAISINS ........... 4-lb. bag 31¢
Em porium's Thompson Seedless
TOMATO SOUP
Scan525¢.
TOILET SOAP. . choice 6 bars 29¢
pkg. 49¢
ORANGE SODA 12-0z. bot. . 6/ 25¢
DOUBLE COLA (bottle deposit)
POTATO CHIPS. . . . 3-0z. pkg. 10¢
HI-HO BUTTER WAFERS .. . 19¢
HYDE PARK COOKIES. . . lb. 25¢
Sunshine, English Style cookies
RIPE OLIVES . . . . . N0. leans 15¢
RAMS
' Armour’s Star or Morrell’s
Pride . . whole or half
1... 35¢
Turkeys lb. 32c
Roast Beet lb. 25c
U. S. Prime Steer
list. Pork lb. 29c
LEGOILAMB ...... .. lb. 32¢
SHORT RIBS ...... .. lb. 17¢
Steer Beef
GROUND BEEF... lb. 28¢
All lean
SAUER KRAUT 2-lbs 15¢
instruc- ; ‘
tion course will qualify the men I on the stove for 10 or 15 minutesi
1.,
‘ing course. men are eligible for
go i
duty. Their
l
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. needed at once he gal-d wpgnwmq. so enlisting to fill important navy i If
they are dry they can be mois- i
with ex crience on either dies 13
‘ p ’0 iafloat and ashore.
Tues
Upon completion of the train-I
advancement in rating to chief‘ paper!
petty officer (acting appoint- , »7_—~—w .v n MAM—«ix
ment) before being assigned to I
'pay during training}
will be $72 per month, plus food‘
and quarters, and extra allow-,
ances for dependents. I
Due to changes in the physical}
requirements; many men previous-‘
ly rejected may now be accepted;
for enlistment. . ‘,
The Abstract Man of
Mason County
A. L. BELL
Rolls can .)e heated in the top?
part of a double boiler with hot}
water in the lower part and kept‘ Loans and Insurance
BELL BUlLDlNG
SHE-LTON,
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l
I
saves heating the oven for them.
We Carry a Complete Line of
Fancy Groceries
SPANISH OLIVES
Stuffed with Pimentos
FANCY OLIVES
Hazel Nut Stuffed
SWEET PICKLED GRAPEFRUIT RIND
SWEET PICKLED CANTALOUPE RlND
SMOKED OYSTERS
OLIVE BUTTER
HAWAIIAN PAPAYA CRUSH
GYLE’S GOLDEN SYRUP, made in Eng.
GARLIC EXTRACT
WHITE FISH CAVIAR ,
Gorton’s FILLETS OF SALT MACKEREL’ ' »
WINE VINEGAR, Sauturne .
FRENCH FRIED ONIONS, Robe's
SHOE STRING POTATOES, Robe’s
coo FISH CAKES, Ready-to-fry
ONION SOUP, White Rose
CANNED SCRAPPLE
OLD CHEDDAR CHEESE
Clearance
' HOLIDAY CANDIES
Mixed Candies, Chocolate Pyra-
mids. Giant Gum Drops,
etc. All fresh ....... .. 2-LBS.
BOX CHOCOLATES
Gift Boxes . . Asst. Choc.
3-lbs. 73¢; 5-lbs. 1.09
Peppermint Sticks 3/10¢
Giant size . . CANDY CANES
u
Mixed Nuts 2-lbs._... 55¢
N0 Peanuts
.PEANUTS 2-1bs. 35¢
Fresh roasted Virginia's
L. M. Blend Coffee
High in quality,
moderate price.
Guaranteed good
or your money
back
2-lbs 49¢
I)
Journal Want—Ads are snowing ,‘
itheir value in every issue of m
Abstracts, Real Estate
._-.s-.. .
1 FRUIT JUICES
Drink more Frult Juices for Health this
Season of the year . . . Avoid colds.
Tomato Juice . . . . 2 for 43¢
Reliance. Large No. 5 cans
Vegetable Juice . . . 2 fbr 69¢
V-8 COCKTAIL large No. 5 cans
Grapefruit Juice . . . 2 for 37¢
Bounty No. 5 cans
Orange-Grapefruit. 2 for 49¢
Florida Gold — No. 5 cans
FRUITS & VEGETABLES
ORANGES ...................... .. lO-lbs. 53¢
New crop Navels
GRAPEFRUIT .............. ._ 10-lbs. 39¢
Arizona Seedless
SWEET POTATOES ...... .. 4-lbs. 25¢
U. S. No. 1 quality '
Your Complete Department Store — Phone 305
in “Ali-6w
,‘c'.
wAsH,. I ‘V
“3
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