February 11, 1943 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
©
Shelton Mason County Journal. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 4 (4 of 8 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
February 11, 1943 |
|
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader ![]() |
Pge Four
Wine Council
Holds Meeting
At the annual meeting of the
Washington Wine Council, com-
prising nearly all of the wineries
of Washington, J. C. Sams was
elected president, W. B. Bridg-
man vice president, Warren L.
Dewar was re—elected secretary,
and Otis B. Harlan treasurer.
The meeting, which was held
in the New Washington Hotel,
February 3, was for the purpose
of making plans for the industry
during 1943. Members estimate
that added wine volume will pro-
vide for fruit growers a market of
35,000,000 pounds of Washington
fruit, this year.
U. S. Steel Output
Twice That or A‘xis
U. S. steel production this year
output of the Axis nations, War
Quantity Buying
Possible For
will approach twice the combinedi Ratlfllled FO‘Odq
Production Board Chairman Don-
ald M. Nelson said in a report on;
Northwest ranchers, prospect-
the status of the steel expansion ; ors and others who live too far
program.
Pointing
aly,
and Japan
out
that
h as
program
approxims
BENEru amiss
BCompleX......,......14’s39p‘
BCompleX.........'.... 28’s73¢
BComplex............100’s2.19
A-D
Multi-Vitamin .
Multi-Vitamin .
Multi-Vitamin .
~ Wher
Butter going?
. 28’s 39¢
100’s 98¢
. 14’s 59¢
. 28’s 98¢
.......100’s2.89
Fir Drug Store
DAIRY PRODUCTS
COMMISSION
e is th
‘ Tl'rom the
’from a marketing center to buy
Combined , their rationed canned and process—
steel production of Germany, It~l
is estimated at :
50,000.000 to 55,000,000 ingot ton?
annually, Nelson declared that tl
country’s steel capacity
ready increased to mom
000.000 tons, aid on com“‘ ,
*‘ ' ‘ .nsfou '
2 be.
':"'il.ll'.‘,‘l‘- tons.
ed foods as often as once a month
the length of each point ration
"iodgmay apply to local war
rationing bmrds for '.
allowing m m may
,. ,4.
full hump-1
l.t'-.’l.iOn
lilllsrl
[I
.,. .
H ill
1‘».
full ruiut value— mustt b
g'at one time. It is assui ,
‘ tioning officials 'explained, that
consumers who are granted a cer~
, tificate for a specified time period
on the basis of their stated need
, will use it accordingly.
‘ Make-up Expert
At McConkey Pharmacy
Giving personal advice on the
problems of skin care and new
fashions in make-up, a represen-
tative from the Richard Hudnut
Salon, Fifth Avenue, New York,
will be at McConkey Pharmacy
all next week.
In connection with this demon-
stration a trial offer of Dubarry
face powder is being featured by
McConkeys. More details may be
found in an ad in this issue.
E THINK IT AMERICA’S RIGHT to ask Why there’s“
not as much butter being sold as before.
We think it’s our duty to tell you.
First, as every American knows, our Government needs to be sure
of getting a vast amount of butter, milk and cheese for our growing army
and navy. So our Government has had to freeze a part of all butter
inventories.
Second, our men abroad, and many in the ranks of our allies, are
requiring vast amounts of butter, milk, cheese and other dairy products.
The President has'told us that a million and a half Yanks are already
'
abroad, with the number growing every week. You can well imagine what
this means in the reallocation of America’s butterfat supply.
Take cheese as just one example. Before the war, the U. S. had to
import 50 million pounds annually. It appears that in 1943, we will have
to export 400 million pounds! Obviously, a considerable amount of but-
ter-fat that went into our table butter must now go into cheese to keep
our fighting men well fed.
All over this country, dairymen have pitched in. Here in Washing-
ton State we’re working as hard as we know how to boost 1943 produc-
tion as high as it will go. That’s our part.
It isn’t our place to tell you your part. But if you’ll permit us,
we’d
like to say just this
much:
Don’t be tempted to “hog” butter. Never buy more,
nor eat more at meals than you normally. would.
'And whenever a neighbor family runs short of butter or any other
Hairy product share with them what you have been able to buy.
The Americansth of “help your neighbor” is what made this
'country. That same spirit on your part and ours will help to keep
butter
on every table.
Washington State
Dairy Products Commission
l
with all th
thy soul, and with all thy mind,
SHELTON-MASQN COUNTY Jousting
l Delayed News
I From Dewatto
By Mrs. P. W. Nance
Dewatto, Feb. 1—Well, we have
been snow bound in the Dewatto
Valley for two weeks. The bull-
dozer and crew opened up the
roads yesterday, passing by the
l
7"~l».nce place about 5 p. m. coming :
ind the crow went out
trump llilé
purl am Olympia to
tie last Tuesday, the
' .ncir truck had stall:,d
the day before. Mr.
vumgham’s water pipes froze
up and'they had to cook on their
heater and carry water for house-
hold purposes, as well as for their
cow.
The roof of Monroe Nance’s
warehouse fell in. Some of the
neighbors had their car and other
things stored there. I have not
about‘
: ‘-
l v v
37 Million Homes . . .
When this cruel war is over and
the lights go on again. the sawmill,
business will do a sudden about-
face. It will be from one customer
;-—the government-to 26 thousand
‘ ~" retail channels of distribution.
What happens in that change, and
after it, will affect the life of every
', person in the Pacific Northwest.
Nothing in the post- war outlook,
1 l
looms with more importance for all
branches of business and industry in
the region. Forest products in nor-
mal times make up more “courage-
and revenue of railroads and ship-
ping than all other products of Ore~
I gon and Washington together sup—
ply. Payrolls, local taxes, farm mar—
kets, retail trade, highways—all get
: their main support from nationwide
trade in products of the big timber.
The 26,000 retail lumber dealers
of the United States are the dis-
tributors who have sold the lumber
that has gone into the nation’s 37
million homes. Most of those homes
will be in the market for replace-
ments, or remodeling, or repairs that
heard how much damage was done .
there.
Colds are the order of the day,
but most of us are able to keep
going by using household reme-
dies. Fortunately no one‘. has re-
quired a doctor’s care and that
is fortunate indeed, for we haven’t
been able to get through the snow
since the 19th of January. We
have had no mail service since
January 18th. We thought it
would be through but “not yet.”
The coldest day here was Janu-
ary 22nd. The temperature was
four degrees below at 9 a. In. On
January 18th it was one degree
above and that is pretty cold for
i Washington. One might go on and
ion with our annoyances. Needless
,to say everyone was discommode
[but took it in their stride, each
lhelping his neighbor as much as
he could.
' Kiwanis
(Continued from page 1)
sought after but in Mr. Ford’s
opinion the legislature will try
to hold this reserve for future
emergencies. He does not expect
any reduction in social security
taxes because of its nice reserve,
for the same reason.
The three large cities and sev—
eral others which have experienc--
ed a large boost in population bow; .
cause of war industries are de—
manding half of a. 4 million ap-
propriation because of the alleged ,
increase which is to a considerable
‘ extent around rather than within.
leaving the other half to meet the r
1. needs of smaller cities and coun—~ I; ~ u
ties who also have trouble, 'for *
,streets and roads, schools and
‘transport, and increased salaries
for public workers to hold them.
The several forestry measures
governing timber sales, carry a
Irider of handling of state, tide.
, liastsido agricultural and also the
iTi‘iivcrslty lauds um. controlled
' by thvzi' raga nts, with the Metro~
,pollloll lease land.“- i'rl Seattle
.V‘fl’llljl'l ‘.--.'1!i bu :. bone of conten-
Lion.
:' rum tutu-w
2' in .~.;;~.-ul;ci' solar-ski to the
lp'ilp :rzul («indium hills: winch lie-‘-
lr- ' as loss iz'uporlunt than
;., :r-mn .‘lltu-s‘, and not
on. m, but he believes
l .‘ mam-c m‘ 'lElS section
§2ze "Np mills and the Coming,
ler "'43s, on. or. pulp, and
mm. an." should be made
now 31' iii? cunning of Migc and
' Inuit-4.11mi after the not to
population and industry
‘vi‘..h'vvest, increasing ilw
.lUlS and calling for
air power produc—
ue of the favorable
_ Slie‘iton and Mason
_’ an (no picture of the fu-
md urged increased atten—
to progress of the pres-
.au 1:: l"'ifltl-":l’l to he future. that
‘ i5 {Lilll‘ad.
l The speaker was secured and
mtroduced by George Adams, for-
:mer representative, who is now
; Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms of the
7 Senate, and taking an active part
;in legislative affairs at the ses-
. Sion.
‘Claude Danielson and Kenneth
Blanchard, former members, and
iHarold Ahlskog, new member,
gwere welcomed to the club.
{H'W‘T‘l
wxpu,
l l i n":
l CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
“Soul’f is the subject of the Les-
son-Sermon which will be read in
all Christian Science Churches,
lSunday, February 14.
Golden Text, Psalms: “My soul
shall make her boast in the Lord;
the humble shall hear thereof,
and be glad. O magnify the Lord
with me, and let us exalt his
name together.”
This Bible selection in the Les-
son-Sermon is from Mark: “— . . .
thou shalt love the Lord thy God
y heart, and with all
and with all thy strength: this is
the first commandment.”
A correlative passage from
“Science and Health with Key to
the Scriptures" by Mary Baker
Eddy, follows: “What are the de-
mands of the Science of Soul?
The first demand of this Science
is, ‘Thou shalt have no other
gods before me.’ Having no other
gods, turning to no other but the
one perfect Mind to guide him,
man is the likeness of God, pure
and eternal, having that Mind
which was also in Christ.”
Anti-Aircraft Searchlights
The range of the anti-aircraft
searchlights used by the U. S. army
~is 5.5 miles and the reflecting mir-
‘rors, 60 inches in diameter, cast a
fbeam of 800,000,000 candlepower.
__,_.__.
First Inaugural in N. Y. . _
The first inaugural ceremonies of
l George Washington were held in
l the front portico of the Federal,
‘ building in New York, April 3, 1789.
l
l
l
l
l
|
\
l
l
I
l
will require lumber, immediately
after the war. Three million families
will then be in the market for new
homes, according to th e experts,
who also predict that over a million
new homes will be built each year
for the first ten years of peace.
Practically all of that business will
flow through the retail lumber yards.
Provincialism Plus . . .
In 1934 a Federal survey showed
that buildings on our six million
farms were for the most part going
to rack and ruin. Another survey
in 1938 gave an even more dismal
picture. Farmers will have money
for repairing barns, poultry and hog
houses after the war, and for new
buildings. Thousands of retail
dealers serve this lumber market.
Here in the Douglas fir region
we’ll come out of the war with
America’s largest single supply of
timber for the production of home—
building and farm—building lumber,
plywood and shingles.‘The thousand
Service Stations Get
Gas Coupon Warning
Service station operators who
accept pre-dated gasoline coupons
face a suspension order which will ,
cut off their supplies, the regional 1
Office of Price Administration
has announced.
Reports have been received by
mills of the region may go right
on producing for the farm and home
market without plant and machine
conversion. 80 per cent of our land
can find economic use only through
these outlets. No 0 th er industry
ysupports so many communities over
so wide an area of Washington and
Oregon as the forest industries sup-
port. Building will be our post-war
job:
Yet in our public outlook, as it is
orojected by our regional planners,
;polit1c:ans, newspapers, radio an d
lrelated public mediums, the retail
lumber dealers of New York, Iowa,
California and other states are given
no part or place.
This is nothing new. It is an old
h a b it of Northwest provincialism
that cannot be m a t c h e d in any
other industrial region. .It is pro-
vincialism plus.
Service Record . . .
In the industrial areas retail lum-
ber dealers have had a vital war
job to do in workers’ housing. Rural
dealers are shock troops on the
farm front of food production. All
are serving within rigid war re-
strictions, on duties rated as essen-
sential to the war effort. Normal
profits are in a dimout for the dura-
tion, and the operators and em-
ployees of the hometown lumber
'yard cannot hope for the glory of
“E” awards.
It was money from millions of
lumber sales by retail lumber dea1~
crs to individual consumers that fed
the economic growth of Oregon and
Washington—that built the sawmills
and logging operations which are
now supplying War lumber. And it
is from such retail lumber sales that
the money for Northwest payrolls,
taxes, local farm markets, railroad
and shipping business, and for for—
estry programs must come when we
are at peace again. '
26 million acres of Douglas fir
forest plus 26 thousand retail lum-
ber distributors provide the simple
basic formula for economic prog~
ress in the Pacific Northwest after
the war.
SEATTLE VISITORS
? Mr. and Mrs. Frank Travis
were in Seattle early in the week,
.where Mr. Travis attended the
meeting of the Northwest Hard—
ware and Implement Dealers As—
sociation.
the OPA that some service sta-
‘tions are accepting coupons be-
fore they become valid.
,,,
S
1,,-
IM
i
.
i
l
l
l
l
, voort:
cal War Price and Ratioz. Board.
‘ mercial usors. February 16, 16, 17 ;
Whaler, bf February
ply to your local iuel oil dealer fa . '»
isumed during the period from‘.
g June
v will prevail.
ition form from your local ration.
, stitutional uses, cooking and light-
(ing, Form R-1103.
e—Oil for cooking or lightingr
é ments,
___-Thursday, Eebrfi'uarykllLl Sag)”,
Oil Ration
(Continued from page 1)
lwhen away or at night.
I Z‘Have burner, flues and “
lney inspected, keep free of s
. 3—Insulate tanks and pipe
Knight. 4~Lower water temperat
In county schools hours of reg- 5—Check hot water fauce
istration will be from p. m. to leaks.
5 p. m. and 7 p. m. to p. m. Onl 6——Seal cracks at wi
the 17th the afternoon hours only 5 doors. ‘
; 7-Keep fireplace damper
Here is what to do about fuel ed. .
oil rationing, according to Nagel-; 8—Close shades and drap
; night.
r 9——Shut off heat and-keep I
closod from unused rooms.
IO—Wear warmer clothing'
Home users, February 15, 16, 3 keep lower temperatures i
17 at Lincoln El‘fid": school. house.
Institutions, industrial :itui com-v 5
0
w’ 9 *3
00.»,
ndow
How to Register ,
Dealers, February 13. 14 at 30‘
Journal Want-Ads are m
at. local War Fries and Rationj {1.0;}: value in every issue .v
r?
Board. 1 (Vi:
it. together with a certified stato- a A
Get Registration Form
merit from him of the oil con—'
If you do not receive your reg» i
istrnti 1 form, by mail, from your ‘
13. then r-u—I
MlllilllN
Til EA TEE
Shelton, ill/ash
1, 1941 to May 31, 1942.?
You also may get your registra-
Fridav and Saturd~
TWO FEATURES
“ROMANCE OF
THE RANGE”
board. Be sure to get your regis- ‘
tration form and fill it out com-
pletely ‘before you register.
Get the Right Form
a-uPrivatc dwelling, Form R-
1100.
b—Apartment or rooming house . R°y R°gers
of four or more apartments or __ and __
rooms. Form R-1101.
c—Oil for industrial or com- :4
mercial non-heating p u r p o s e s, MAISIE
Form R—1102. l
d—Oil for agricultural and in‘—l
HER MAN”
Sunday to Wednesd
only, Form R-1103A. W0 FEATURES
Measure Your Home .
a»#What to measure: INCLUDE i
all essential living and sleepingI
rooms, closets, bath, halls and.
lstairs: DO NOT INCLUDE base—'
attics, recreation rooms,
sun porches, garage, sleep por—
ches, work shops or laundry.
b—-How to measure: Measure
lthe length and width, up to the
lnearest foot of each room to be ,
heated. Multiply length by width‘ "
to obtain square feet. . I
c—Record your measurements
‘in square feet for each room on
your ration registration form . . . .
“CALLING DR. '
GILLESPIE”
“BEYOND THE
BLUE HORIZON ’-
—plus—
“THE SPIRIT O
STANFORD” ‘
‘you’ll find the right space with
Iinstructions how to mark it.
Inventory
When fuel rationing began, Feb-
A forest area that is protected from fire, insects and
disease, and is managed for continuous production is a
on individual properties. This is a voluntary undertaking
of private land owners, in several states, conductedunder
the laws of the reSpective states and in co-operation with
existing forest and conservation agencies. '
ruary 1, you should have measur- —a“d""
.ed the oil in your storage tank
. regardless of the amount of “LAUGH
oil on hand you MUST register.
' How to Save Fuel Oil
l 1—Turn your thermostat to low
BLUES AWAY”,
TREE FARM. Smas.
“There is today a popular movement on the part of so In
State governments and private operators to stimulate After
second-growth in cut-over lands. This is known as the and
tree farm movement.
, Imore
The lumber industry is encouraging Tree Farms as and}
one means of. assuring intensive protection 'fromfire,‘ and had‘
the application of improved forest management practices and a
The Simpson Logging Company considers the estab-
lishment bf forestry practices suited to continuous forest
production an obligation to its dependent Communities. To
this end we have competent foresters whose entire work-is
devoted to the study and application of proven forestry
methods. ’
FARM. To us, timber is a crop. It grows-serves and
grows again.
We consider all of our holdings as a TREE
lull ‘l’
\— v.-- - , ‘ ‘
OGGING COMPANY
SHELTON AND McCLEARY. WASHINGION . “a”:
. . .