February 6, 1942 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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m a Journal Want-“ Status uo Kept
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_ “““'
DANCE
SHELTON
VALLEY
Sponsored by
I Shelton Eagles
Rau’s Orchestra l
SAT, FEB. 7
Admission 25¢ ——- Tax 5¢ ‘
Total 30¢ per person
Dancing 9:30 to 1:30
‘. » iResults Repeat Again and Again.
— Want-m.
Maintaining the status quo be-
tween themselves but stretching
their edge over second division riv-
als, Paul Marshall’s Insurancemen
and 4-E Dairy captured odd—game
Victories in commercial bowling
league play Thursday eVening re-
spectively from the Texaco Fire—
' chiefs and Mac’s Corner.
The. result left the insurance ag-
ents topping the circuit by a. sin-
gle game over the milkmen. Indi-
vidual scoring leaders topped the
city league with Blondie Peterson's
237 and 586 figucres high for the
night, but even so he couldn’t
bring Mac’s home with a winning
decision because 'Vird Savage did
too well for 4—15). Dairy. Sonny
Workman and Jess Daniels were
potent for Marshall’s.
MOOSE LODGE
FFERs, CONTINUOUS
Plio'rncnou
From Cradle to the Grave
So many good worthy men in this community
have expressed a desire to join the L.0.0.M. that
the local Lodge has opened its charter for a short
time only.
The Loyal Order of Moose is a fraternal society
international in scope.
Over 17,000 lodges with membership of near-
ly a million make it possible for you to provide
protection for the entire family from the cradle
to the grave. Should you or your wife die—your
children will never become a public charge because
of dependency, but will be properly cared for and
educated in the child City of Mooseheart with its
$17,000,000 investment.
Old age will not be dismal and comfortless,
but will be filled with happiness and contentment
among friends who care in Moosehaven in the city
for the aged in Florida.
The Moose Lodge have provisions for waiver
of dues for members in service. Now that the crisis
is upon us, the Moose will do its full share in the
victory program that completely unites us.
The Local Moose Lodge extends an invitation
to all worthy men to see our representative who
will be at the Moose Hall every Friday night at
eight o’clock and Saturday afternoons from 1 to 4.
Bonnie Best
.______. ._4 .. u_w__._,__,__,_, ‘_
I
Mrs. Barlow Bias 3
At Dewatto After
Lingering Illness
Dcwatto, Feb. 4mMrs. Lillianl
Barlow, who passed on January 24 '
Mr.
lat the home of and Mrs,
Bert Carney, had been in ill! L PF
health many years. Her daugh-lOlympia .............. .. 6 0 262
ter, Mrs. Bessie Carney, of Dc-EAhertleen ..... .. 5 1 265 154
Watto, went to Elgin, 111., whercilloquiam .... .. .. 4 2 250 164i
Mrs. Barlow resided to visit her‘Raymond . 3 3 218 194
last May not expecting her tolMontesano .. .2 4 144 248,
live long. However, in July an op- 1 Elma ............. .. . l 5 149 275i
eration was performed and Mrs.§Sheltnn ____________ 0 6 161 2321
Barlow partially recovered andi Friday Scores '
was up and around. On Septem—‘g
ber 24 Mrs. Barlow accompanied‘,
by her two daughters, Miss Eva‘
Barlow and Mrs. Carney left El-
‘gin in a new Plymouth and trav-
elling by easy stages arrived in.
Dcwatto October 4 with Mrs. Bar- ‘
low apparently gaining health.
'! For some weeks she participat-
ed in many of the current amuse-
'ments, sewing parties, etc., and
was the life of the parties. 111'
November, however, she showed
signs of the return of her illness
and was soon bedfast and gradu-
ally grew worse until January 24,‘
when she passed away. Her funer-
lal in Seattle was attended by a
number of people from here, De-
lwatto and Union, while a new-
lcomcr, she will be missed by all.
i Mrs. Barlow was born March
59, 1861, at Waterton, Wis,
Survivors include two sons, B. E.
Barlow of Crystal Falls, Mich.,‘
l
I
..___ v.._--—J——_.~ —-—-~,..
’ again and from then on either ledi
and F. R. Barlow of Elgin, 111.;
two daughters, Mrs. Bessie Carl-l
Iney and Miss Eva Barlow, both
‘of Dewatto; eight grandchildren
and four great grandchildren. ,
Her ashes were sent back to El-
gin for interment beside her hus-
band, who died in 1929.
Mr. and Mrs. E. P. King, of
with their son and his wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Dick King. They amus-
ed themselves with deep water
fishing in the canal and were re—
warded by catching a big Ling
cod.
News not received in time for
last week‘s paper: a surprise visit
to Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Cunning-
ham by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Mas-
sie, Mr. and Mrs. John Dawson Jr.,
land two small children, and Les-
ter Hughes, all of Tacoma. Mrs.
Massie is a sister of Mrs. Cun-
ningham and Mr. Dawson is Mrs.
Massie’s son. They drove back to
Tacoma Sunday evening.
Harry Burt was painfully in-
jured in both knees in an acci-
dent while working on his truck
at Camp last week.
Frank Lockwood, who has been
falling timber for C.M.C. contem-
‘ plates returning to Troutdale, Ore-
gon,
position in the wool Pullery.
1 Tom Markwell,
has been quite sick for a couple
{of weeks but is improving at this
writing. Bill being
I
}Chehalis, visited over the week end
Dan drives from the mouth of Lit-
tle Mission Creek to Holly every
day to work on the boom and can
get no one in Bill’s place- Fortun-
ately
dumped due to bad roads.
Specials for Friday, Saturday and Monday
SYRUP . . 2‘6aoz. 23c
Gold/Shield; ,
COFFEE . .
49 -lbs. ........ ..
wioooauav's
SOAP..
quart.
' 1 3811:4539
BAKED BEANS,
20-oz.tin 10¢
No Rub Wax .. . . qt. 69¢
Large Borenec. 2 for 45¢
Tomato Juice 15:02 3/ 27¢
LAKOTA
Peas, 16-02... 3 cans 33¢
, 5-lbs. 47¢
Sunkist
Crystal White Bagas '
Soap Chips .
3-1119. 91c
LIBBY’S FRUIT
SUPREME-v
MAY’NAISE
__________________ .. 53¢
2-lbs. 88c
PRODUCE
Juice Oranges. 50 for 49¢
Sunkist Lemons. doz. 27¢
Carrots . ._2 bunches 15¢
Grapefruit. . .. 12 for 39¢
Lettuce 2for13¢
Broc. New Cabbage — Squash
Cauliflower New
Spuds
soon to resume his formeri
now of Holly,.
sick works:
quite a hardship on Dan Orcutt.‘
not many logs haVel'beenv
iShelton Skiiers
l
SHELTOEMASQN idURNAIJ
lliftll‘i’lBEIiS ‘WlN’
391E POSSESSION
OF LOOP CELLAR!
-7 l
NORTHERN DIVISION I
Elma 32, Shelton 31
Hoquiam 47, Raymond 26
Olympia 51, Monte 25
‘ Games Friday
Shelton at Aberdeen
Raymond at Olympia
Montesano at Elma
In a thrill-packed, evenly con-
tested battle, Shelton’s Highclimb-
ers “won” sole possession of the
northern division cellar Friday
evening by slipping a 32 to 31
verdict to the Elma Eagles in El-
ma’s dimly-lit, narrow-gauge gym.
No more than five pomts sep-
arated the two teams at any time
during the nip-and-tuck struggle.
Shelton got away to a strong
start, leading to 3 after four
minutes of play as Warren Woods'
posted six markers, but the Eagles
tied it up before Shelton scored
oror were no worse than knotted
with their Mason County rivals.
At half time the count rested.
at 18—15 for the home five, but at!
the third rest period the High-l
climbers had deadlocked it at 27-]
all. In a wild last quarter the Ea- I
glcs stretched their margin to 32—1
27 with two minutes to go, but‘
baskets by Sam Wilson and Earl,
Lumsden shaved the margin to
one point. Bill Chase missed a crip-
ple in the last ten seconds which
would have pulled the tilt out of
the fire for the Highclimbers.
Chase, Ken Fredson and Woods
were chased on fouls.
Elma‘s second string played
beautiful ball to shellack the
Highclimber reserves, 29 to 13, in
the preliminary.
Friday's games closed the first
half of the northern division
schedule with Olympia leading the
circuit with six straight victories.
This Friday’s scraps open the last
lap. Thelineups:
FIRST TEAMS
Elma (32) Shelton (31)
Boyd 3 .......... ..F ............ .. Woods 8
Byrd 7 .......... ....... .. Loop 3
Winders 10 .... ..C ........ .. Lumsden 6
Petty 3 .......... ..G ........ .. Fredson 41
. Grass 9 .......... ..G ...... Phillips 8,
Subs: Elmafinone. Shelton——
Wilson 2, Chase, Pearce.
Pinochle Party
Held At Camp
‘ I
By June Quartier
Camp 3, Feb. 3—Mr. and M s.
George Clifton and family wyt
to "Centralia Saturday and v‘ils-
ited friends.
The womens’ club of Camp’ffi
held a card party at the ynmn
hall Friday night. There were five
tables of pinochle and high scores
were won by Norman Hulbert and
; Cecelia Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. John Drebick were
visited by Mrs. Roberson of Cen-
tralia. Mrs. Roberson is Mrs. Dre-
I, bick’s mother.
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Norman:
Hulbert had as guests Mrs. Ralph
Clyde, Mrs. Bert Thumser and
Mrs. Dick Sorter and son Jimmy
of Bremerton.
Elmer Iveum and son Ardean,l
of Minneapolis, are guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ole Anderson.
Miss Coralie and brother Donald
Hughes, of Seattle, are living in
camp with Mr. and Mrs. Ned
Rucker. Carolie and Donald are
going to our Camp 3 school.
Fare Pretty Well
lbounds to keep possession.
1Whooping Cough
Season At Hand; 1
Cautions Urgedi
Whooping CSEh—“has appeared
recently in this area, according to
D1‘. S. P. Lehman, Mason County
PA i Health officer. So far this winter
181$ 25 cases have been reported here.
\Vhooping cough is a serious in- 1
fection especially for young chil-
dren, Dr. Lehman. believes. As
high as twenty-four per cent of
our cases under one year of age
result in death. Ninety seven per.
cent of the deaths from whooping
cough occur under five years of
age and seventy nine per cent of
these deaths are two years of age
or under.
Parents in areas of the county
where whooping cough has ap-‘
peared are advised to keep very‘
young children at home and away
from other children as far as pOs-
sible. Parents with babies or very
young children are advised L0,
wash their hands carefully before'
attending to them, as whooping
cough is frequently spread by hand
shaking and handling objects
touched by victims of the disease?
This precaution should be observ—‘
ed especially when the parent re-l
turns home from the days work,‘
or has been to town, or out among
the neighbors. ;
Whooping cough has recently:
been reported in Thurston, Pierce,
Grays Harbor and Kitsap coun-l
ties, Dr. Lehman warns. l
It is very hard, as Dr. Lehman?
points out, to check the spread of,’
as a1
whooping cough, because
rule, it takes from seven to ten
days to incubate a case of the:
disease. During this incubation),
period when it is most likely to!
be spread, it is almost unrecogniz-
able. It begins with an attack of
catarrah which resembles a cold, meeting .
1 die Skokomlsh school.
next giving way to the paroys—
mol stage which all recognize.
Much too could be done to keep
down our whooping cough deaths
by having a physician attend all
colds of toddlers under tWO years
of age, Dr. Lehman said. This is
a fairly sensible rule to follow for
all pre-school children for they
are most susceptible to the catch-
ing diseases at this period and
most of these catching diseases be-
gin with symptoms which strongly
resemble those of a common cold.
All cases of whooping cough:
should be kept in strict isolation.
With whooping cough, however,
isolation does not mean that the
patient need be confined strictly
to a room or to his bed although
he should, of course, be watched
with great care by a physician. It
is not good for a child with whoop-
ing cough to remain confined for
weeks; it is a handicap to deprive
him of the. benefits of sunshine,
, fresh air and play.
Under the strict supervision of
their parents whooping cough vic—
tims should be allowed to play
outside in the fresh air and sun-
shine but they should never be
allowed to go among other chil-
dren nor should they be taken for
. rides in public vehicles.
Jr. Hi Wins Cage
, Tilt By Baseball
Score Of 9 to 4
With the score sounding more
like a baseball pitching duel, Shel-
ton junior high posted its second
basketball victory of the season
with Montesano junior high the
victim by a 9 to 4 count Saturday
at Montesano.
Both the first and fourth quar-
ters were scoreless sessions for
both teams and at half it stood
at 2-2. But Shelton ran “wild” in
the third period ‘to tally seven
points as Joe Parsons found the
range. Shelton passed up five
foul shots, in theylast quarter, e1-
ectingvto take the ball out—of-
Some great defensive play by
Julian Howarth and Rusty Viger
helped keep Montesano away from
Montesano
Ill Stilliltggcontc’lastiztm contest, 21
to 17, despite Hal Richardson’s
Shelton Ski Club entrants earn- i nine counters for the losers.
ed fourth place in the men’s com-l
petition, fifth in the women’s, and
Shelton is idle.this week end.
The first team lineups:
third in the junior events at the Shelton (9) Montesano (4)
first Southwest Washington ski Daniels .......... ..F ........ .. Augustine
meet of the season at Mt. Rainier Parsons 6 .. . Polsfoot 4
last Sunday. Savage 3 ...C .................... .. Kiel
Dick Powell’s victory in the Howarth ...G ............ .. Hopkins
men’s slalom was the outstanding Viger .............. ..G ..............
.. Eastei
performance among Shelton’s Subs: Shelton Richardson.
stave entries. Russell Pickens took Monte—mick“ Pringle, Eontain.
fifth in the junior slalom and
seventh in the junior downhill, fol—
lowed immediately by Clarence
Robinson and Travis McGuire in
eighth and ninth places in the
latter event, while Roy Peacher
earned points in the men’s down-
hill with a 14th place finish and
his wife, Mac, earned a fifth
place rating in the women’s down-
hill.
Team standings were as fol-
lows:
Men~—Longview 112, Grays Har-
bor 110, Castle Rock 92, Shelton
42, Lewis county 6, Olympia 0.
Women —— Grays Harbor 104,
Longview 16, Olympia 12, Castle
Rock 12, Shelton 10, Lewis coun-
t 0.
yJuniors —— Grays Harbor 110,
Longview 43, Shelton 29, Lewis
cm nty 24, Castle Rock 0, Olym-
pia 0.
Three Pin Prizes
Come To Shelton
tournament at the Broadway
three spots being in the five-
game' singles competition.
Bab Stewart earned fifth place,
with his 968 total, Mark Fredsonl
took tenth with his 956, and All
I Ferrier thirteenth spot with a 942$
figure.
Shelton’s entry failed to
place
in the team event.
Journal Want-Ads get
"rom those who want your “Don’t
Wants."
I
. _—
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
“Spirit” is the subject of the
Lesson-Sermon which will be read
in all Churches of Christ, Scien-
tist, Sunday, February 8.
Golden Text: “I have poured
out, my spirit upon the heuse of
Israel, saith the Lord God" (Eze-
kiel 39:29).
_Among the citations whichicom-
pris the Lesson-Sermon is the
following from the Bible: “Whith-
er shall I go from thy spirit? or
whither Shall I flee from thy pres—
ence? If I ascendup into heaven,
thou are there: if I make my bed
in hell, behold, thou art there”
(Psalm 139:7,8).
The Lesson-Sermon also in-
cludes the following passage from
the Christian Science textbook,
“Science and Health with Key to
the Scriptures" by Mary Baker
Eddy: “The Scriptures imply that
God is All—in-All. From this it
follows that nothing possesses
,reality nor existenCe except the
. Idivine M” H’s ‘d .
Shelton pinmen captured three] um and 1 l eas
prize places in the open bowling}
8.1- I
leys in Tacoma last week end, alli
The
Scriptures also declare that God
is Spirit. He fill all space, and it
is impossible to conceive of such
omnipresence and individauity ox-
Cept as infinite Spirit or Mind.
Hence all is Spirit and spiritual”
(p.331:11-14;22).
Finely granulated whole wheat
flour milled from hard wheat
makes better bread than the more
coarsely granulated flour. The
coarser the whole wheat flour,
cash ' hOWever, the larger the proportion
of white flour that must be used
to make a light loaf.
, .
son’s horse, missing for sometime,
,the past fifty years. He leaves
‘scveral nieces and nephews and a
Iother donations netted $21.53 for
___~_..\Jd_.l.\ .———_.~a ._.._..._, .
Matlock Events
Make News Briefs
By Mrsfzeo Priszner
Matlock, Feb. 47Axe1 Willad-
was found dead on the old Fair-
brother place Sunday afternoon.
How long it had been dead was
not known or what the cause was.
Clinton Reid brought Albert
Kuhnlc's logging truck home Sun-
day from Mud Bay to start haili-
ing logs for Vick Rambo Logging
Co.
A large number of Matlock and'
Vicinity people attended the fun-
eral of Alvah McKibbin in Shel-
ton Wednesday. Mr. McKibbin has
a resident of Matlock for
host of friends.
Mrs. Zeo Priszner spent Satur-
day and Sunday in Shelton taking
care of her new grandson in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Calvinl
Rhines, Sru
Arthur Vernon of Bremerton,l
called Wednesday afternoon to see
his cousin Mrs. Zeo Priszner andl
sons before leaving for Pearl‘
Harbor Saturday to work in the
navy yard there.
Grange Active In t
Skokomish Valley,
Skokomish Valley, Feb. 4—,
Johnny Garrison, Jr., is expectedl
home this week on a fifteen day'
furlough from the navy.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bee of
Port Angeles, spent the week end
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. War-
ren Johnston.
The Skokomish Valley Grange
degree team will put on the third
and fourth degrees at the next
February 13 at the Mid-
The Grange card party and
the infantile paralysis fund.
Don't forget there is to be a
free dance at the Middle Skokom-Il
ish school Saturday, February 7,
sponsored by the Grange. Ladies
bring cake or sandwiches.
The Junior Womens Club will
meet at the home of Alice Taylor
on Thursday, February 12.
Visiting Spring Styles I
Mrs. Maybelle Sparks, Mrs.l
Maude LeMaster and W. M. 121-:
liott attended the Spring style»
showings in Seattle
through Wednesday. ,
GRADE “A” MEDIUM
EGGS .
GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE
CORN FLAKES ..... ..
Shopping Bag
Oranges........
Cooking '
Apples 6-lbs. 25¢
Onion Sets . . . . lb. 15¢ ,
ITY
Sunday‘
I
"UTTER .
GINGER SNAPS .... ..
'TOILET TISSUE ____ ._
FEARS or APRICOTS.. ,2 cans 39¢
. 3 pkgs, 25¢
PINK SALMON 2 cans 45¢
SODAS _‘ ........... .. 2—lbs. 19¢
GRAHAMS ...... .. 2-lbs. 31¢
VEGETABLES
LARGE '
Grapefruit. 12 for 45¢
Lge. Lettuce . 2mi- 15¢
Mflh ,_ ._
Pantorium Quint
Wins Double Bill
From Harborites
Despite a month’s absence from
the maple boards, Shelton’s Pan-
torium Cleaner cagers, making
their first start of the season as
such, were totin' their shooting
irons Sunday so were able to re-
pulse a strong zero hour assault
by Casey Hardware of Aberdeen
to win a 57 to 53 independent
basketball decision in Shelton's
new gym.
Lanky Danny Cormier played a ‘
two—gun role in the performance, J;
hitting the bulls eye for a 27-point
personal total as he notched ’em‘ "
from long, short and medium
range with uncanny regularity, es-
pecially during the third and early
part of the fourth quarters. His
shooting a 1 m o s t single-handed ‘
shoved the Shelton quint into a 12«
point lead which was too much for
the visitors' courageous rally to
I overcome.
Bill Levett dunked in a dozcnl
markers in a preliminary game of:
Six-minute quarters to lead the-
Pantorium gang to a 34 to 27 vic- i
tory and a sweep of the twin bill.
Levett tallied ten in the regula-,
'tion length windup tilt, too. The
lineups:
FIRST GAME
Shelton (34) * Casey’s (27)
Levett 12 ...... ..F .... Levinson
Anderson 8
Cormier 8 4
Somers 6 2
Cloutier 4 ...... ..G ............ .. Barry 6
Subs: Shelton—Price 4, Watson.
Casey—Travis 4, Mattson 5.
SECOND GAME
Shelton (57:) Casey’s (53),
Anderson ........ .. Estrada Gi
Levett 10 ...... Faulk 113
Cormier 27 . .. Mattson 15, ,
Somers 6 ...... Barry 13‘
Cloutier 6 ...... ..G ............ .. Travis 4‘,
Subs: Shelton—_Watson 2, Price,f
McComb. Casey —— Levinson 4,l ‘
Cutts. ' v."
The largest grain elevator west? ,
of the Mississippi River is locatedl ‘ '
at Vancouver, Washington. It was: .v
completed in 1934 with a capacity!
of 154,050,000 loaves of bread.
.2...
NOTICE
Anyone wishing to hire
Carpenters, please call JIM
R UC H, 409-W, Business
Agent for Carpenters Un-
ion.
Two Deliveries Daily 11 am. — 4 pm.
COCOA . . . . 2v
CENTENNIAL
FLOUR
2-lbs. 25¢
.. 6 rolls 29¢
aer; v
Pot Roast _ lb. 250
Boiling Beef lb. 200 ‘-
Plll‘e lardZ-IbS-
Pork Steak lb. 300'
Fresh Ground
Pure' Pork
. 45¢
Prime Beef
Sliced
Paramounl Pruonls
, 7M1 MnMIIRRAl
i.
i
I
Th rsday 17¢ N
_-em0ra1
Dri fo:
0 ZEIbgo 87.33:,mrel
' Tomato SOU
ZIii-(oz. V49-lbs. $2.05 (Scans 4
FORMAY . . .. 34b5, '
. 6 cans J n
BLACK PEPPER. lb. 1
MEATS
Hamburger
Sausage 1b. 22¢
RibSteak........lb.35¢,
Bacon . _. . .l/z-lb. cello 20¢ .
SALMON -— HALIBUT —- KIPPERED
‘ SALMON A FRESH OYSTERS
‘ all, Feb
_fi Friday, February 6,_,, abng
, Indians of the
iliave received a number '0 W
i and Mrs.
‘ Yallma' Rd Mrs \V
ifrom deer hunters. The hi T SugtROb‘
. tanned and fashionchnto rton 25$:-
I i n '1
, for household use. j 0n Hoods C
u I \7 if
v “ GHTER B(
. aand l’Il‘s.
u .
THEATRE .l-gii’i £352“
Shelton, Wash. OSpital. A
Friday Saturd. \\
TWO FEATURES"
lililillll .
. . trying to
I new» sins......--w- n..- a .va-,.-.t.:..€ te future. I
; Sunday - Wedne ‘htup to d,
b°dy keeps
CMAILIS
BUYER
n! Mum: I. g .—
1 ’ slate trucks
if o l
' y, stohry 01
FAULII‘TI i e W O
lilllllllll._ 04!? rs i.,-. “
h ' ,eywel'e cash
.1 , .,i . - .sPeed N th
8 their [11
ad.
Two FEATURES v.
11' heads 5
“ARIZUNA f the car. 1.
TERRORS” ' s‘
with Red Barry
1
and “was full
“PARDON M “d assorted
STRIPES” 2“ 0r abou
N 80011 'b:
‘ d-Ctysta15
Friday Satur ssibleH
CAMPBELL’S
. it.
~ ‘ “01m
,1 l u r
‘, ort Styles a