January 10, 1946 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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NE SLANT
BILL DICKIE
ABOL'T THOSE ’TROTTERS
Basketball coaches, sport writ-
ers and fans throughout North
America agree the sensational
Harlem Globetrotters, who come
l’ere Sunday afternoon to tickle
the sports appetites of Shelton—
ians. have done more to boom
basketball to its high position of
the best-attended of all sports.
Now in their 19th season of
maple court heroics, the clever
dusky basketeers have brought
their inimitable style of shooting,
passing, ball—handling, court strat-
egy and Showmanship to virtually
every nook and corner of the Un-
ited States and parts of Canada
and Mexico. They have been stu-
died closely by coaches and teams
everywhere, as they are always
coming up with something new.
The Globetrotters have compiled
a number of "firsts." They were
the first of the traveling quin-
tets to adhere strictly to the fast-
er type of collegiate basketball,
the first to introduce the stunts
and feats of Showmanship that
have stamped them as the most
entertaining team to step on a
court. and the first to adopt the
five~foul rule now so universally
in use.
After winning" the 1940 world
tournament in Chicago, the Globe—
trotters were the first team to
oppose the nation’s selected Col-
lege All—Stars in the Chicago Sta-
dium. a crowd in excess of 22,000
thrilling to their stand against
the varsity wonders in November.
1940. They were the first United
States team invited and to win
the International Cup Tournament
at Mexico City, turning the trick
in 1943 and 1944.
Among the traveling teams, who
have furnished a colorful chapter
to the history of basketball in
America, the Globetrotters were
the first to set up a system of
farm clubs in key cities, these
affiliated teams schooling out-
standing prospects in the Globe-
-. trotters’ style of play and having
lthem ready to step in when open-
ings develop in the super team’s
personnel, and the first to estab—
lish fall training quarters. This
season they drilled in advance at
Davenport, Iowa.
All of which may help explain
why the Trotters have compiled
basketball’s most amazing rec-
ord of 2,588 victories against only
209 defeats the last 18 years. The
current team, comprising such
great players and showmen as
"lllllllflllul
BEFORE YOU BUY
ANOTHER CAR
It will pay you to consult
us regarding the Bank
and Agent Auto Plan. It '
will save you .money.
HERBERT G. ANGLE
Angle Building Phone 304
Representing The Aim: Casualty and
Surety Company of Hartford. Conn.
illlll
SAVE TIME!
SAVE TIRES!
TAKE A FERRY
__________________.__
BREMERTON - SEATTLE
Lv. Seattle
Lv. Bremerton
12:15 a.m. 12:30 am
12:55 1:30
2:45 8:00
5:15 3:00
5:50 5:15
7:20 7:00
*7:45 7:30
8:20 8:00
8:45 8:15
9:15 8140
9:40 9:00
10:00 9:35
10:20 10 00
10:50 10:30
11:20 11:00
11:45 11:15
12:20 p.m. 11:40
12:35 12:05 p.m.
1:00 12:35
1:20 1100
1:50 1:40
2:20 1:55
2:55 2:20
3:15 2:35
3:35 3205
4:05 3335
4:40 4:10
4:55 4335
5:30 5:00
5:55 5320
1 6:20 6:00
‘ 6:50 6:35
7:30 7:10
7:50 7:45
8:25 8:40
9:00 9:40
10:00 10 20
11:10 11:30
* Except Sunday
3196K BALI. LINE
.’ Shelton's
'1 barber,
'ing gear arrived
‘Bernie Price. Duke Cumberland,
Zack Clayton, Lorenzo Davis,
Ducky Moore and Silas Phelps,
bids fair to continue the Globe-
trotters’ illustrious achievements.
It’s also an aggregation Well
adapted to the Trotters’ repetoire
of superb ball-handling and top
comedy.
LOOKING UP .
Basketball
year—if ever —; on
David exhibition.
There weren't many vacant
seats either evening, which may
be a pretty good tipoff that Shel-
ton sports fans are beinning to
take to basketball, what with one
of the best prep teams in many
years to watch, a rosy future is
apparent for the prep team, and
about as fine a gym as this part
of the entire state has from which
to watch the speedy action the
game offers.
Another banner crowd undoubt-
erly will turn out to watch the
famous Harlem Globe Trotters
this Sunday for there is no other
hoop attraction to vie for atten-
,tion this week end — the High-
!
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l
hasn‘t drawn twolAberdeen ________ H
such sizeable crowds in many a , Raymond
successive 7 Montesano _
nights in Shelton as it did last Hoquiam
Friday and Saturday for the high Shelton
school game and the House ofiowmpia “
climbers having an open date Fri- |
dayeeand the Globe Trotters have
the reputation of being the top
basketball attraction in the coun- ‘ in the Southwest Conference high
try among the teams which tour : school basketball curtain-raiser
the by-ways of the nation.
Anyway, it‘s a treat for the
Sideliner to come back to Shel-
ton and find the sport picture on
the upgrade as it seems to be now
for the crowds were pretty lean
at most basketball games in pre-
war days.
SOLACE?
Practically the entire Aber-
deen basketball team trooped
into the Shelton dressing quar-
ters after Friday’s game to con—
sole Highclimber Coach Chet
Dombroski after the 44-26 lick-
ing they’d just handed the
Shelton mentpr’s team. Most of
the Aberdeen basketeers ~were
players Dombroski had coach-
ed last year when he was sec-
ond team coach at Aberdeen
high school.
FUTURE ON PARADE
Fans at Friday’s prep basket-
bal game got a look at the future
when they watched the sixth
grade teams of Boredaux and Lin—
coln schools play between halves
of the first team game, Some of
the kids on the floor then will
be tossing in points for High-
climber varsity teams four and
five years hence for there were
a half dozen of those sixth grad-
ers who showed considerable na-
tural ability.
One of these names to tuck
away in your memory for future
reference is Elmer ‘Shorty’ Cole,
probably the smallest kid on the
floor Friday but also the smooth—
est and cleverest ball handler of
the lot. It was essentially ‘Shor-
ty’s‘ play which accounted for the
difference as Lincoln beat Bor-
deaux, 6 to 2, in the ten-minute
game the kids played.
SPORT SHORTS
Got to batting the breeze a few
lnights back with Ted Tompkins,
i.the husky bartender at the Vet-
erans Club, and found out he’s a
two-leggedencyclopedia on facts
and names concerned with profes-
sional boxing. If you want to
know the current champ, ex-
.champs for years back, or chief
contenders in any of the weights
‘ Ted can supply the answers. Hail-
I‘lilg from Ithaca, N. Y., home of
Cornell University and famed
Lake Cayuga. Ted has seen a.
lgood many of the modern cham-
pions box in and around New
York City before he got mixed
I up with the Army and wound up
lout West here, where he's taken
l root now that he's again Civilian
a Tompkins instead of Top Sergeant
Tompkins. ..
Ex-G.I.s will be getting into
all sorts of odd activities as
they readjust their lives to civil-
ian gait, and many of them will
be taking up educational pur-
suits, but one of the more uni—
que which is getting a thor-
ough once-over from a. newly-
returned Shelton soldier is pro-
fessional baseball umpiring. The
interested party is little Jackie
Stewart, who learned one thing
in the Army if nothing else
and that is he'll never be hap-
py unless he's connected in some
way with baseball. Jack is in-
vestigating the chances of util—
izing the G. 1. bill of rights edu-
cation provisions to finance his
way through a. professional
baseball umpire school in Cali-
fornia. “’alt Lunsford is doing
the sleuthing for Jack in his
I role as advisor to veterans at
the University of W'ashington.
Many Sheltonians will remem-
ber Lieut. Charles Hokonsen, suc-
cessor to Walt Lunsford as ath-
letic officer at the Navy Air Sta-
tion here, but few will remember
him as well as Homer McComb.
most sports-interested
because Mac has a big
slug of fishing gear as a Christ-
mas present reminder . . . includ-
ing some 180 feet of stainless
steel line, the big package of fish-
in time for
Christmas under the guardianship
of little Gene Anderson, former
Highclimber basketball and base-
ball player, who was a flight of-
ficer in the same outfit with Lt.
Hokonsen and returned from ov-
erseas on the same ship with him
. . . Hokonsen. former Iowa col—
lege: football star, became a fish-
ing bug under McComb’s tutelage
and the pair became inseparable
i angling companions while Hokon-
,sen was stationed here . . . at
i one time the two had counted 72
salmon they’d taken from Hood
; Canal over a period of time before
they quit counting. and many
steelhcad from rivers in this area
‘ . . . . Hokonsen had never fished
before coming here but he learn-
ed from an expert and didn‘t for-
get him when he had some fish-
‘ing gear upon his return to the
states this Christmas.
Dish Towels
The life of dish towels is usually
Once badly scorched, their days of
usefulness are soon over.
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short if they are used as pot holders.
J.
ETROTTERS com
Aberdeen Finds
It Tough First
Half But Wins
PREP HOOP STANDINGS
Pts.
L F
44
30
24
0
26
26
16
“7
l-‘l-‘l-‘OOOO
Results Friday
Aberdeen 44, Shelton 26
Raymond 30, Olympia 26
Montesano 24, Elma 16
Games Friday
Hoquiam at Olympia
Montesano at Aberdeen
Raymond at Elma
Games Tuesday
Shelton at Montesano
Hoquiam at Aberdeen
Olympia at Elma
Superior range, ruggedness and
firepower finally took its toll on
a game but out-talented High-
climber team which gave the pen-
nant-favored Aberdeen Bobcats a
handful of trouble for one half
before yielding a 44 to 26 verdict
Friday night in Shelton gym.
Up to two minutes from the
halfway mark the Highclimbers
stubbornly clung to a quickly-
gained lead, but with the count
at 13 to 9 in their favor soon
after the second quarter started
the Highclimber scoring mechan-
ism became untracked and failed
to mesh again until the fourth
quarter. Eyen so, that lead stood
up until with two minutes of the
half remaining Shelton still led,
13 to 12, but at this point Bob
Kevo, dark-skinned Bobcat for-
ward, broke loose for three quick
baskets (the only ones he scored
SHELTON-MASON COUNTY JOURNAL
..._.‘_...__.
Bearded Davids
all game) to suddenly push the -
visitors out in front by 18 to 13
at the rest period.
Mid-Game Sag Hurt
Shelton had led at the first
quarter, 11 to 9, and the third
To Hoop Laughs
It was good entertainment,
quarter was an exact repetition which is the highest compliment
of that second period with the . you can pay these touring bas-i
l ketball teams. That’s what they’re
Highclimbers scoring but two
points while the Bobcats marked
up nine to gain a 27-15 edge. Out-
side of those two cantos the home
out on the floor for and that’s
just what the bewhiskered Israel-
.ite House of David court wizzards
club played on even terms with 1 gave a. fine crowd in Shelton’s
the pennant favorites, for the
Highclimbers began to find the
range again in the last period,
scorin 12 points against Aber-
deen' 15.
The Highclimbers lost much of
their zip when Johnny Dunbar,
one of their best ball-hawkers and
scoring threats, got plastered with
four fouls before the second quar-
ter was hardly started and fin-
ally fouled out halfway thru the
third period after sitting out most
of the, second stanza.
Al Eaton scored seven points
in the first quarter, clicking beau-
tifully on one of the Highclimb-
ers‘ pet plays, as Shelton took its
early lead, and came back with
five more in the last canto for a
total of 12, but scoring honors
for the game went to Chuck An—
derson, Aberdeen’s rangy, left-
handed forward, who gathered 18
markers for the game, a dozen in
the second half.
Big Boys Control Boards
Aberdeen’s tall, husky pair of
Ernie Stein and Jack Edwards
had too much height and strength
under the baskets for the High-
climbers and their control of the
ball was one of the major fac-
tors in the harbor club's victory.
The Highclimbers also had their
sights badly out of focus during
the second and third periods, miss-
ing many easy shots which should
have 'piled up the Shelton total
and made a. closer game out of it.
At that Coach Al Bivens left
his Bobcat regulars in the game
all the way until the final minute
of play, evidently never consid-
ering Aberdeen’s lead safe.
In the preliminary contest, the
Bobcat seconds won a low-scoring
affair from the Highclimber re-
serves, 19 to 14.
, FIRST TEAMS
Aberdeen (44) Shelton (26)
Kevo 6 F Wilson 5
Anderson 18 F Dunbar 5
Edwards 4 C Sundsten
Stein 6 G Eaton 12
Fraser
Subs: SheltoniK. Cardinal 2,
White 2, L. Cardinal, McBride,
Oltman. Aberdeen——Smethers 1,
McGillicudy 3.
SECOND TEAMS
Aberdeen (19) Shelton (14)
Briscoe 4 F Graham
LaCroix 2 F Erhart 3
Brown 2 C Cartwright 6
Horne 1 G Deffinbaugh
Helland 4 G Rice 5
Subs: Aberdeen Brown 2,
Hoppe 2, Haukeli 2. Shelton—Mc-
Bride, Valley, Cleveland, H. An-
gle, D. Angle.
’C-LIMBERS RALLY T0 »
DEFEAT ST. MARTINS
Shelton shoveled on the coal in
large scuttlefuls in the last quar-
ter to wipe out St. Martins Preps
19-14 lead and walk off the floor
with a 28 to 23 non-conference
basketball victory Tuesday night
on "the Ranger court at Lacey.
The Highclimbers couldn’t hit
the twine in the first half, trail-
ing 17 to 7 at the rest period, but.
they gathered momentum in the
third canto and were under full
steam in the final period as they
chalked up 14 tallies while hold-
ing the Rangers to only four.
Highclimber scoring was evenly
divided with Johnny Dunbar and
Carl Sundsten getting seven each,
Harold Wilson six and A1 Eaton
five. Game honors went to For-
ward Brayde of the Rangers wit
eight. ' l 4i
St. Martins won a rough, low
scoring second team game from
the Highclimber reserves, 13 to
9. The first teams lineups:
Shelton (28) St. Martins (23)
Wilson 6 F Brayde 8
Dunbar 7 . F Dawson
Sudsten 7 C Wilson 6
Eaton G Bacack 6
White G Walker 1
Subs: Shelton«-K. Cardinal 3,
L. Cardinal, Fraser. St. Martins
-—Miller 2.
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new gym Saturday night.
Laughs came often as the
bearded ‘beauties‘ performed
many a humorous trick and eyes
popped frequently as one or an-
other of the hairy—faced casaba
experts staged a bit of legerde-
main with the swollen leather. A
bit of baseball and football, not
to overlook a crap game, were
tossed into the proceedings and
the maple board artists didn’t
overlook Referees Arne Johnson
and Chet Dombroski in provoking
humor either.
They concentrated on Dom-
broski to a large extent and
made him the butt of several bits
of by-play, but Chet got back atl
them a little himself when heI
grabbed the ball late in the ex-
hibition and arched a. beautiful|
shot cleanly through the twine
from outside the sidelines after
the Davids handed him the lea-
ther and invited him to take a
shot. .
The score, in case you’re inter-
ested, was 48 to 28, which was
that close because the Davids
elected to allow it to be. How-l
ever, the Shelton Legionnaires,
outclassed as they were. never-]
theless showing the markings of]
a potent ball club once they play ,
together for a while and a team]
composed of Bill Levett, Jim Mc- l
Comb, Warren Woods, Pat Smithl
and Jack Cole rang up 17 points;
in the first four minutes of the
second half during a sizzling
shooting streak. The lineups:
Davids (48) Shelton (28)
Hallisey 14 F Parsons 4
Miller 14 F Levett
Karsten 8 C P. Smith 9
Fessler 3 G Woods .
Hanauer G - McComb 6
Subs: Davids «— Hanaman 1.;
Shelton—Armstrong 5, D. Smithl
4, LaVigne, Rector, W. Viger,
R. Viger, Daniels, Price, Cole.
Blazers Chop At
Bremerton. Lead
But Lose, 28-27
Despite the accurate tossing of
blonde Bob Tobey, the Shelton
Junior High Blazers were a
point shy of victory when the
final whistle ended their contest
with Bremerton Junior High Fri-
day evening at Bremerton. The
score was 28 to 27.
Tobey tossed in 15 counters for
the “Blazers as he led a game
comeback made by his team-
mates, and had the game been
a couple minutes longer Coach
Arne Johnson’s Shelton young-
sters might have copped the duke
for they Were coming strong at
the end and had tied the count
at 25-311 with a minute to go
when Bremerton’s six-foot-three-
inch center Ken Bayer looped in
the winning field goal and Wally
Erwin converted a foul. The loss
of Tobey and Gene Wells on
fouls late in the game also may
have cost Shelton a victory.
Bremerton held a 15 to 9 half-
time lead. In the preliminary, the
Bremerton reserves earned a. 24,
to 15 victory.
The Blazers go to Aberdeen
this Friday, to Chehalis a week,
from Friday, then play their next
home game January 22 against
Olympia in the new Shelton gym.
The lineups:
FIRST TEAMS
Bremerton (28) Shelton (27) I
Erwin 7 F Clary 3
Ryan F Wells 3
Bayer 9 C Buck 5
Dotson 2 G Skagen 1
Fredericks 4 G Tobey 15!
Subs: Bremerton —- Peterson 2,‘
Herd 2, Monroe 2. Shelton—Rod-
gers, Koch, Heuer.
JOURNAL Want Ads are used by
' scores of your friends
w-«m—aflw
4n; CAfilEST CAQER.
or THEM ALL
i
«all: anglith GAMES
ARE FUNMlERTHAN A Cuzcus.
Wishkah Wallops
Owls By 28-18
Wishkah walloped the Mary M.
Knight Owls in a Tri~County lea-
gue basketball game played at
Wishkah Friday night, 28 to 18,
with Substitute Gunter’s seven
points topping the winner’s at-
tack. ‘
Herb Brehmeyer led the Owls
with a half dozen tallies and Bell
got as many for the victors. In
the preliminary, the Wishkah re-
serves swamped the Owl second
team, 25 to 7. The first team
lineups:
Wishkah (28) Knight (18)
Conway 2 F H.Brehmeyer 6
Anderson 4 F Palmer 4,
Scott 4 C B.Brehmeyer 3
Bell 6 G Zable 1
Foster 5 G Nye 4
Subs: Wishkah—Gunter 7.
Conserve Fat
Do not throw away any fat. If it
is clean and wholesome, ,use it in
food; if it is rancid, make soap out
of it.
_._._._.__
I? 3
Famous Colored
Basket Wizards
Scheduled Here
Good news to sports fans here
is the scheduling of the unbeliev-
able Harlem Globetrotters to ex-
hibit their famed basketball wiz—
ardry against the Shelton Legion-
naires next Sunday afternoon.
More pleasing than ever with their l
stunts of comedy and showman-
ship, the Globetrotters open their
exhibition of maple court magic
at three o’clock in the new Shel-
ton gym.
Call it legerdemain, sleight-of-
hand, or what have you, but the ‘
fact remains that the colored wiz-
ards of the court can do almost
everything with a basketball but
make it talk. With such men on
deck as Berie Price, Zack Clay-
ton, Duke Cumberland, Silas
Phelps, Lorenzo Davis and Ducky
Moore, they manipulate the big
ball with amazing skill. Even
their rapid-fire passing is a show
in itself.
The fun starts the moment the
Globetrotters take the floor for.
warm-up practice. They form a
circle near one of the baskets and
go through some fancy paces.
Once a game is started, they seek l
first to increase their record, l
l
which had reached the staggering
total of 2,588 victories as against
only 209 defeats for the last 18
‘ years, but sooner or later during
the contest they find ways and
means to put on their “show.”
The irrepressible Trotters spin
the ball on their finger tips, roll
a it down their legs and arms, pass
it between the legs of their be-
wildered opponents and perform
numerous other stunts. An unsus-
pecting forward is likely to find
himself with the ball perched on l
his head, while the crowd is roar- :
ing its.delight at the antics. i
The Trotters, however, never
deliberately attempt to make the
opposition look silly or foolish.
These little tricks are done in a
subtle fashion to add zest to a
game and even the player victims
get a kick out of the goings-on.
The Trotters still feature their
“baseball” and “football” stunts,
and numerous others popular with
the fans.
Franks Favored; Ken
Gets Two Steelheads
Fishing fortunes favored Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Frank—at least
they did Kenulast Friday when
they tried the Duckabush for win-
ter steelhead.
Ken returned with two nice
fish, while Mrs. Frank had one
on but lost it. Ken returned Sat—
urday and stayed overnight for,
another try Sunday but without‘
success.
Tax Obligation
A family man who earns $5,000
a year spends about as much on
taxes as he does on food—about
$1,000 yearly.
‘ OUR APPOINTMENT
' Local Distributors to
Stewart-Warner
Tacometers
Grease Guns
l
Thursday; January 10, '1
Fred-scan, StewartShare LEAH Me, ic
Pin Averages; Pauline Staley Tops Fe", 00
At the halfway point in the sea- 1
son, Mark Fredson and Bab Stew-
art are sharing honors as leaders
of the city bowling league aver-
ages, each with 187 pins—per-game
in the 42 they’ve rolled.
Two other kegelers get into the
180-pin bracket, Ken Fredson at
182, and Gus Gustafson as 180
even.
Mark has a slight edge in total
pins, 7883 to 7861, or less than
one—half a pin per game. TwoI
other kegelers get into the 180-;
pin bracket, Ken Fredson at 182, 1
and Gus Gustafson at 180 even.‘
Pete Roberts still holds the in-
dividual high-game and high’three
game totals, however, with hisl
257 and 661 figures.” I
M.Fredson.. 187 W.Woods 165
Stewart .... .. 187 Gavareski.... 164
K.Fredson.. 182 Price .......... .. 163
Gustafson... 180 Robinson ..163
Forbes ...... .. 179 Holt .......... .. 162
P.F'redson.... 178 Petersen .... .. 162
Daniels ...... .. 177 Dotson ...... .. 161i
Merrick 174 W.Snelgrove 159
Kopperman 174 Lindeman.... 158»
Dodds ...... .. 173 Carter ...... .. 157
Staley ...... .. 173 Gibbler' ...... .. 155
Aronson .... .. 172 Schneider....' 154
Reader .... .. 171 F.Snelgrove 153
Ferrier .... .. 171 Bishop ...... .. 153‘
P.Roberts.... 170 Dunbar .... .. 1520
B.Roberts.. ..169 Smith 152
Westlund.... 169 Funk .......... .. 150
Allen .......... .. 169 Drummond.. 145
Bayley . 169 Frisken .... .. 144
Skelsey ...... .. 167 Deer .......... .. 144
Young 167 N.Snelgrove 140
Noblett ...... .. 167 Mifflin ...... .. 135
I.H.Woods.. 165 McCaslin 135
Keever ...... .. 127
The World’s Greatest Exhibition of 5
Bskelball ‘
Featuring those Amazin 113‘s:
Magicians of the Mapl egr-
Courts, ‘ 1‘
In An Exhibition With the
Shelton Legionnaires
TROTTERS
U
Pauline Staley leads a ' II
race for top honors among"
44 bowlers with established n .Mas
ages in the women’s bowling 103301”
gue, her 151-pin-per-game atlon
holding a three-pin edge over “‘1 1
013. Russell, who in turn 9 ‘ oebu
Verda McConkey and Inez alum
by two and three pins respec mt_
ly. Dot Roberts completes: Th1:
leading five with a 142 ave P0ns<
Mrs. Russell holds both in' if} 5‘
ual single and three-game t rvestt,
at 209 and 539 while Mason . T11
ty Cleaners hold team hono e
the same fields at 877 and 1 12;: V
The averages of the 44 fat I
inine league kegelers follow! he g
Staley ...... .. 151 Robinson llan
Russell ...... .. 148 H.Smith .... .. both
McConkey .. 146 E.Smith en D
Dodds ...... .. 145 Gardner .... .. aren
D.Roberts.... 1,42 Bishop ...... .- ludec'
Bolen ...... .. 138 Koppermanm augh
Christiansen 137‘Brewster .... .. > am,
Fran F’dson 137 Woods . '- r. J
Stewart 137 Hines ., vimS
Mifflin .... .. 137 Lindeman Bes
Edgley ...... .. 136 Cormier anqu
Frisken .... .. 135 Wright .... .. mec-
Sharpe ...... .. 135! Schuffenh’er, ippe
M.Roberts.... 131 M.Fredson_...,he (
Durand .... .. 131 Hunter .... .. ware-
F. Fredson.. 130 Jacobson nd t
McNabb 130 Pauley ...... .. inne
Damon .. 129 Broz .......... ..g 1 1m,
Kubik ...... .. 1291Mauerman (unis
Skelsey .... .. 129 McCaslin rWin
Sutherland. 129 Snelgrove
‘Kimbel ...... .. 127 Tiffany ....... .-
_.____n...___
Use the Journal Want ,
They'really get results! B
et
hem
ing,
“8‘ fr
Em
refill
0m
Joh
harg
uesd
. 1,. .
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Mr.
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The Harlem
GLOBE:
Mr.
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Displaying Their Famous ey
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Tricks and Humor In
Adm.——-Students 50¢, Adults 75¢ (Incl. Ta'x.)
It is our Privilege
7a flnmm
As Wholesale and Retail
ALEMITE
Motor Oil, 1-qt., 5-qt., 5-gal. cans
Grease Fittings
for Cars, Trucks and Tractors
Lubrication ‘Units
Service Station Greasing Equip-
ment
We are prepared to supply every need of large users of these products, such
as
logging operators and firms, trucking companies, service stations,
contract-
Oil Gages
Ammeters
“mm-
ors, etc., as well as the retail needs of small users.
WESTERN sumv comm
218 NORTH FIRST ST., SHELTON
Temperature Gages
a
Speedometer Cables
and Housings "
V if,t
PHONE 126