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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
March 31, 1949     Shelton Mason County Journal
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March 31, 1949
 
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31, 1949. MACHIHE the month for use own home. extra charge for or pick.up of $6.00 Per mon'th. co, DELIVERIES GER CENTER Olympia G ILocal ttigh School Journalists Meet With Press Clinic I h'ene S Reed Itigh School will [be represented at tie annual Pa- cific Slope School Press Clinic, to be held at the University of Wash- ington, April 1 and 2, by Margaret Baldwin, journalism instructor, and tt'te following local staff mem- t bers: Barbara Bates and Harold Carr. A number of other Shelton students plan to spend Saturday at the conference. Ernest Haycox, nationally- known author, will be the principal .'peaker at a banquet for the high school journalism students and ad- visers, to be held at the Edmond Meany Hotel, Friday, April. The conference for young news writers is sponsored each year by the school of journalism, at the University of Washington, and dur- ing the two-day meeting prob- lems in the field of high 3chool publications are discussed by lead- ing journalism teachers. Delegates from the eight west- ern states will be in attendance. The Henry Suzzallo Library on the University of Washington campus is receiving nearly 10,000 serial publications. The university of Washington has the first wlndtunnel specifi- c:ally designed to test bridges, aero- dynamically. TO SAVE PEHHIES on EGG MASH yourself how the savings you can sometimes to offset the extra profit you can make Just one extra egg per bird every month a dierence ot ,1.1 pet bag. ][,eL these figures 1'ovo tqik°m hen eats about 40 Ibs. of Larro Egg Mash Therefore, ! ton of egg mash will feed 50 Leghorns for I year. 50 hens x I more egg ffi S0 month. 50 extra eggs per month x 12 eggs per year from I ton of mash. -50 dozen x 45€-$22.50 ,.ore income ash. n be fooled by a saving in price? See how high gg Mash makes profits jump? Put your lock on results/ EPARTMENT SHELTON-MASON COUNTY JOURNAL WEE POTS gHOW SNAGS ,HAPELY TALENT AUTOMATIC WASHIER WITH THE that saves up te gallens of water per load to the size of the load. All you do is set a l= a Trade-Mark, Beg U S Pat. OR. t m t F0aturesl Only Laundromat kas ttwml at- he of E. SLANTING FRONT--No awkward bending or stooping when loading or unloading washer ... the loading shelf is a time and work saver. $1NGLfDIAL €ONTROLI opera- tions performed automatically: Starting, stopping, filling, water temperature, washing, rinsing damp-drying. INCLINED BAIIC|T--.JI improve. ment over all known washing meth- ods. Inclined Basket ivss a wash° ing action that is amangly affidont, $1LF- CLEANING--The Iundromat has no lint trap. Wash and rimm waters keep interior sparkling dem. Wayl ANYWHERE/No bolting to Floor... No Vibrattonl CHURCH SUNDAY Furniture Co. hone 94 FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING _ '' qwy morning , Monday Ihrolh Rridkly ... AI Iqetwemc EYE-CATCHING appeal Is promised at the will'partray an employee of McDonkcy's' Drug Wee Pots show, to be presented March 31 and store. April 1 and 2 at the Junior High Auditorium. A graduate of Irene S. Red High School in Miss Maxine Holman, pictured above in her 1947, Miss I'Iolman, 19, lives near Arcadia. She full Wee Pot costume, will bewitch the roving is employed at Sprouse-Reitz store. (Photo by eye of Dr. B. B. Shot (Stan Parker). She also Burgoyne). TUBERCULOSIS TESTS SLATED i FORMER SHELTON FOR BOYS AND GIRLS IN APRIL I HmH ATHLETE DIES Tests to find' tuberculosis among high school, junior high and pre- school boys and girls will be con- ducted in April, Mrs. Vern David- son, chairman of Mason County Tuberculosis Association, has an- nounced. To he sponsored by the tuber- culosis association and the health department, the skin tests will re- veal tuberculosis infection that may exist among some of the youngsters. HIGH SCHOOL students will. take the Mantoux test, and the pre-school groups will be given the patch test: These will tell whether or not tuberculosis germs HIGH SCHOOL SCOOPS PRESS CLINIC The editor of the Saghalie, Bar- bara Bates, and the sports editor, Harold Carr, will be official dele- gates to the annual Pacific SloPe High School Press Clinic tomor- row and Saturday at the Univers- ity of Washington in Seattle. The Pacific SIope School Press is sponsored by the U: W. school of journalism, and its membership includes high .school hewspapers from the eight western states. Tours, talks, discussions, demon- st rat tons, Ttm'a, buets and entertainment are slated for the two-day clinic. In addition to the two official representatives, who will take in the entire two-day conference, 12 other journalism students will at- tend on Saturday. JUNIOR PROM Plans are under way for the annual Junior Prom April 29.. The committee chairmen are as fol- lows: Merle Lindgren, general chairman; Jack Valley, Margaret Walton and Barbara Bates, 'dec- orations; Loraine Andrews, music and entertainment; C h a r 1 e s Brown and Charles Kinsey, coke bar; Donna Demmon and Laura Ashbaugh, invitations, programs, patrons and patronesses; Norma Davidson, corsages. All students who have signed up to work on the Junior Prom will be assigned to a position on one of these committees, accord- ing to Miss Dorothy Hawthorne, class adviser., • • t IIONOR SOCIETY DANCE April Fool's day will be observ-[ ed in fine style tomorrow night i at the Honor Society dance in II the new gym. Beverly Mead, Sally Widrig, Mary Ann Keenan and Ann Hul- bert are in charge of decorations. Gone Wells is head of the enter- tainment committee and Leah McGraw is taking care of the ad- vertising. SCHOOL SNOOPS The journalism and office prac- tice classes are busy this week preparing the third edition of School Snoops. The eight-page mimeographed paper will be ready for distribution tomorrow at the cost of ten cents per copy. TRACK RECORDS An attractive track record board was displayed in the main hall last week. This board shows past records of Shelton track athletes who were outstanding. The board measures 39 inches deep and six feet long. It is made of mahogany with alder molding and record plates. The board was a joint project of art and shop studenL. Pat McGrmty Visits Friends While On Caner Society Trip Visiting his ather-in-lawl Frank Robinson of Lilliwaup, and other friends on the Canal, Patrick M. McGrady. of New York, has been touring the Northwest ill behalf o the American Cancer Society. During the war when McGrady was in service, his wife, Grace, Stayed in Lilllwaup where they both are well knoww McGrady indicated that cancer research has made greater ,trides during the past four years titan in any two dccades before that. At present the University of Washington, Washington State College, Seattle University and University of Oregon are carrying on interesting research. The American Cancer Society will conduct a money-raising drive in April for .$14,000,000 to carry on its research, are in the body. I IN CAIAFORNIA The Mantou× test, most corn-I George E. Schwartz, who start- monly used, consists of injecting ied his football career at Shelton a drop of germ-free liquid called high school during 1923, 24 and tuberculin into the outler layerai 25 and later rose to football star- of skin, usually the forearm. The ! dora in col}eye, died March 21 at patch test takes its name from a. Oroville, Calif., of cerebnat her- patch containing tuberculin that! is taped against the skin. Two or three days after the tests are given, the doctor looks at the place where he applied the tuberculin. He will then find that the person tested is one of two types: Nonreactor---No reaction to the tuberculin test means that no tu- berculosis germs are in the body. This finding is no guarantee of permanent freedom from infec- tion since germs may enter the body at any time. Therefore, per- sons with no reaction (nonreact- ors) should be rctested periodical- ly. Reactor--A reaction to the tu- berculin test means that tubercu- losis germs are in the body. At the time the doctor reads the test, the skin at the test place is red and raised. This reaction is not cause for alarm because it does not in itself mean active disease. It is, however, a definite indica- tion of Lhe need for an x-ray of the chest. Every person who is a reactor should be x-rayed period- ically. A CHEST X-RAY usually will reveal tuberculosis long before a person feels ill. It is a reliable aid in the discovery whether or not the germs are doing any harm to the lungs. Further examination by other methods is necessary before a definite diagnosis of tubcrculosiu can be made. The tests, for which arrange- ments have been made, will be giv- en on some date in April to be. announced later. orrhage. While Schwartz was a student in Shelton schools, his mother served as a teacher here. One of the all-time football greats at Washington State Col- lege, Schwartz was captain of his college team that played Alabama in the Rose Bowl in 1931. Orin E. Hollingberry, Yakima, former W. S.C. football coach, said, "He was one of the greatest players I ever had." Schwartz was familiarly known to students on the W.S.C. campus as "Elmer the. Great," Couga Coach Phil Sarboe recalled. Platinum, discovered in the early Eighteenth Century, was origin- ally used for coinage and inchem- ical :'rod industrial processes. It is now the most desired setting for jewelry. .... John Milton Shelton I.O.O.F. No. 62 Meets Every Wednesday 8 p.m. I.O.O.F. IIALL Visiting Members will be Cordially Welcomed THOMAS J. WATTS, Jr.. N.G. HARRY CARLON, Secretary Ruby r,bekah Lodge No. 75 Meets 2nd & Fourth Fridays C,I:ULAH }tELSER, N.G. ]IELEN C, OIAL Secretary 20th CENTURY FOOD STORE H I LLCR EST Friday and Saturday, AI)ril 1 and 2 Rosedale Sliced PINEAPPLE No. 2 can 33¢ Garths GRAPEFRUIT No. 2 tin 15¢ Lucky Don PEACHES .. No. 2 tin 25¢ Hunt's Fruit Cocktail .... 2' z tin 35¢ Bradshaw's HONEY ............ 5-lb. tin 79¢ Facial Tissues KLEENEX 300 tissues 27¢ With Electrene Bristles PERMA BROOM ..... ea. 1.69 Soap Powder- WITH CANNON CLOTH SILVER DUST .............. 34¢ Rinse, 'Oxydol DUZ .................. lye. pkg. 29¢ O FRESH PRODUCE • Radishes -- 3 Large Bunches Green Onions .... 14¢ Fresh Green Spinach .. 2 bun. 15¢ i TUNA White Star Solid Iack a-TI N 4S, I AA Lar0e I I °oz. I I so'l PURExalmm BLEACH I W-GAL. I 25' J Delicious - Ex. Fcy. & Fcy. Apples ...... 2 lbs. 35¢ California - Bunclles Broccoli ........ lb. 19¢ CHOICE MEATS STEWING HENS. 4 to b-Lb. Average FRESH OYSTEIS Medium Size ....... lb. 45' ..... pint 65' PORK NECK BONES. 2 lbs. 29' BOILING BEEF ......... lb. 31 € Lean and Meaty . GO TO CHURCH SUNDAY Tree Farm Co. Gets 514,000 Fir Seedlings To Plant South Olympic Tree Farm Com- pany received 514,000 year-old Douglas fir trees at Shelton dur- ing the past few days which will be planted on the company's tree farm in this section, according to Oscar Levin, company forester. The baby seedlings came from the Forest Industries Tree Nurs- ery at Nisqually where more than 8 million were grown last year for planting on private forest- lands in Washington and Oregon (luring this winl.er and spring. Hand planting is resorted to only where natural reseeding of the harvested forest areas fails because of destruction of seed trees by fire or other causes. More than 95 per cent of all Douglas fir lands reseed naturally from seed trees left for that purpose. It will take about 50U seedlings to plant an acre, the forester said, and the crop this year from the lumbernen's nursery will be sufficient to replant over 15,000 acres. More than one and a half million trees have been lifted, packed and shipped to tree farm owners from the nursery during the past two years. The U. S. Navy operates 36 Ground Controlled Approach units, r'Ane on fields outside the United States. The total of active American Legion posts throughout the world now has reached the record high of 17,241. ATTENTION LOGGERS!!! We Are HEADQUARTERS FOR LOGGING SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT $ WIRE ROPE • LOGGING TOOLS AND MACIIINERY Steel Construction Materials, Airco Welding Supplies, Re-Inforcing Iron, Pipe Fittings, Heavy Hardware, Lubrication Equipment, Etc. LUMBERM,EN'S MERCANTILE WHOLESALE DIVISION 606 South First St., Shelton -- Phone 805 SPRING RAYONS • .. Casual... and... Dressy... Styles . . . One Little Price ,.. Big Values ! Your casual embroidered butcher rayon, soft and pretty rayon prints Spring Time Colors Junior or Misses Sizes 8.90 Cash-and.Carry means real buys I PICTORIAL PREVIEW FASHION SHOW Sponsored By LINCOLN P. T. A. April 8, 8:00 P. M. JUNIOR HIGH AUDITORIUM Tickets Oll Sale April LUMBERMEN S MERCAN I LE J. C. t ENNEY CO. IN{:,. GO *TO CHURCH SUNDAY i