April 7, 1949 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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Pae 6 ......................
FOREST FESTIVAL POSTER AND
SLOGAN CONTEST RULES GIVEN
_, , , ,,,, , , Rules for tile poster and slogan
.............................................. ..... "-- ........... i contest sIonsor6d by American
kk][7 T''II' [ l.egion Post 31 in connection with
J,l12J T¥ Vl['lllJ%./llk the Forest Festival have heen an-
nonnced by Oscar R. Levin, com-
mittee ehairnlan.
THE POWI'I':I, and slogan must
be original and effective in tie-
IIAIIOLI) WI,EMAN has been
ilalnetl Ilqnor velldor of the
hellon Ihluor store, 317 ,hnlI.Ii
l,'irMt street, hy the hlte liquor
llolrll. The allpotntnlent wa tlll-
nonllcell Monday. 'liseili,utn re-
• PkC es. Cliff Collins. ......
L I [ _ ii II
THINGS AS THEY SEEM
l!.'t,'|lt illU"d ]'l'ulll ]')tl'l! C)IIC)
lind oet;asions of gel, together are
generally frnitful of a friendly re-
ationship that brings many ecru-
infinities t.loser to each other. It
il a fine part of the "We 13mid"
t,l'ogl'anl of Kiwanis,
@
ING County juvenile alllhori-
tie.'a ahmR with officia.ls of
lhe "WashingToll State Liquor Con-
trol Board, alarmed at the wide-
spread and growing use of aloe-
hell(' beverages I)y teen agevs set
some traps la;d, Saturday night
and were rewarded, tnlfortlllatdy,
\\;vith a prize bag of culprits, all
of whom were dragged into eolwt
wilh their parents. Setting road
ldocRs at scenes near rnl'tI dance
llalls, ears of youngsters were
.',tot)ped, ,,iearched and hi almost
every case was beer and liquor
ftmnd and ¢oofisr.ated. The de-
pressing part of the wboh, llling
was when llittlly of the youngsters
admitted that tile bottled goods
had been given them by tlleir par-
ents, a fact tlmt lends trutll to
the cormnonly shared belief that
it is not delinquent youth but
delinquent parents thai are re-
sponsihle for Ihe dlsintcgrat.ion of
juvenile morality. No eonnnulfity,
let alone Shelhm, has any right to
point a fhlger of scorn at King
COllnty beealtse of tile week end
evehttlons slid until law enforce-
ment officials tare a realistic at-
litllde, and parents exercise eoIl'le
contl'Ol {}ver youngsters, Lhis
\\;caVe of ytlnthflll license shall
eontimm, wrecking the reputal:tons
and characters of fine boys and
girl&
@
I(;I:I I)cl,aey, forrnc|'ly a re-
l)resentativc ()t' the State of
Wushillgl()ll Ill the natillnal lower
hOltttC Of (_'OIII'CSS. all(] kl fol]t)wer
of that train of thoug/lt that has
nlllch tO criticize in lhe America, n
way of thinffs, still cotltlnues to
clntter up the Anlerh'an scene
with his actiVitms. I)eI,aty who
left tit(> scene of his forme) tri-
mnphs and defeats to a:.;sist lhe
political anll)itions of Henry Wal-
lace, bccallle director of the Pro-
grcssive ps.rt, in Ohio, giving tllat
COlliel'VtitlVe old state tile hene-
fit.s of some of the stuff tim m-
polled Ja, mcs A. Farley Io fasten
Ihe tag of "Soviet of Washing-
ton" on the Evergreen state. Ear-
ly this week and in the news of
the press, is publiMle(I ftlrthcr
iHaehhlatlons of DeLacy. Tile
t:orlller Washington cclilgl'cssnlan
'as a]'Ilon." :12 persons arrested
tor violation of a eom'l l)an
sign and slogan, using the idea
of forest fire prevention a.' the
thenle, l)osters are to be lnatle
on cards not less than 15 inches
by 21 inches in size. Paint, crayon,
pastels, cItarcoal or ink may be
tlsed.
Entrants will be (livided into
three divisions: (1) junior, 6th
and 7th grades; (2) int:ermediate,
8th and 9th grades; (3I senior,
10th and llth grades, All etl-
trants nlllsI be attending school
in Mason county.
Those subnfitting entries are to
write on the I)auks of the posters
their name, address, age, grade
and name of choo]. A committee
will act as judges, anti their deci-
sions will be final.
ALl, EN'I'IIIES must be in Ihe
bands of tile principals of tile
respective :;chools not later thall
9 a.m. May 5. Prize-winning pos-
ters are to be retained by the
Forest Festival committee for dis-
play and pul)lieity Imrposes.
Awards in tile senior, interl,.md-
iat and junior divisions are as
tollows: livst prize, $6; se('.oll(|
prize, $4; third. $3; fourth, $2,
end fifth prize, $I.
( D EAT H 8 II),
Carl Rose Funeral
To Be On Saturday
A resident of Skokomish Val-
ley for ;15 years and of Shelton
for three years, Charles T. t'tose
died at his honle April 4, and
lhe funeral will be held at 3 p.m.
April 9 from Vitsiers Funeral
lionle with the lcvercnd Wayne
,Vright in charge.
Born ,It ly 9, 1880 ill llelgehlad,
Norway, Mr. ltose came first to
l{()llgalllt, at1([ in ],Qfl7 moved to
Everett where lie WnS nlarried.
Fl'onl Everett Mr. and Mrs. Rose
eanle to Skokomitdl Valley in
1911, where tile home waa made
ontil 1916, when they moved into
Shell.on.
Mr. Rose was a menlber of tho
c'u'pcnters union in Shelton.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs,
Emilie H.ose, Shelton; two sons,
,lames E. Rose, Shelton, and Tho-
mas R o s e, Hoodsport; seven
daughters, Mrs. Fred Satoria, Mrs,
lobe)'t Sta)'R, Mrs. Patrick Me-
Carthy, Mrs. Leonard Perry and
Miss Mabel Rose, all of Seattle;
Mrs. Rol)ert Grant, Larehnmnd,
N.Y., and Mrs. Earl Whitten,
Bridgeport, Texas.
He also leaves two brothers,
Captain Harold 1Lose and John M,
H.ose, l,os Angeles, Calif.; two
sisters. Mrs, Martins Garber and
Mrs. Thora Fister. Los Angeles,
and 11 grand children.
Interment will be in Shelton
]Vlc2lrtal Park,
MRS. EMMA LOUISE COOK
Fllncra] services for Mrs. EnllTla
L.misc Cook were held from Wlt-
siers Funeral home April 2 with
the Reverend Wayne Wright of-
ficiatinff. She died at her home
on Route 3 April 1.
Mrs. Cook was s resident of the
Shelton community for II years,
She wag born December 27 of
1886 in Decatur, Ind. A member
of Southside Gl'ange and Navy
Mothers, she to(,k an active part
m conlnnmity affairs. Her sons
operate the Cool< Plant Farm.
She leaves her husband, Wil-
lianl P., Shelton; motber, Mrs. Sar-
all Westerfeld, Shelton; three sons,
William V., Henry W., Arthur A.,
all of Shelton; a daughter, Mrs.
Aileen B. Sehroeder, of Shelton;
two brothers, C. C. Desterfcld,
Sllclton, and Wiltiam A., of Albu-
querque, N. M., and seven grand-
children.
IntcrmenL was in Shelton M.enl-
against picketing In connection I orial Park.
with a Cohmlbns industrial strike. I ........................
DeLaey i6 slill m jail in lieu of
$5,000 which was nol inlmediately
furnished. In the case of I)eI,acy
it might wcl] be said lhat what
.. Ollio's gain is certain a stroke
u( fort|lne for the State of Wash-
illgl.on.
Mitchell Outhnes
Road Financing
Problems At Union
I'roblems of county road financ.
'ng were outlined by Roy Mitchell
,If Belfair. second distrtct commis-
sioner, at a meeting of tim Hood
Canal Improvement Club in the
Union sehool house Monday nigbt.
Mitchell said unusual costa of
keeping roads cleared durilNg the
snow and freeze period, followed
by extvnstvc repairs to thaw dan>
uge, would handicap all road pro-
grams in thc eotnlty this year. He
i'romiscd Union residents atten-
*,tun would be given to roads ill
that comnmnitY which need care.
Mttchell revealed plans for his
distriet d0blg its own truck and
CHARLES P. WATERS
A resident of Shelton for 32
years, Charles P. Waters, of 805
Allegheny street, died April 2 at
a local hospital, and the funeral
service was at 2 p.m. April 6
frmi Witsiers Funeral Home. I
Mr, Waters was a watchman at.I
Reed NIiH two. He was bon on
March 16. 1886. in Tennessee.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs.
Mamie Waters Shelton; two sons,
Frank W. and Charles S., of Shel-
ton; two brothers, Will of Shelton
and Frank of Tennessee; a sister,
Mrs. Dora Lanning, Skokomish
Valley, and three grandchildren.
Pallbearers were Roy Ashley,
Abe Meek, Charles Elson, Harold
Watson. Charles Doh]man. an(J
Ellis Wells. lntc,'ment was at
Shelton Memorial Park.
CODY C. WOOLLARD
('ody (2. Woollard, a resident of
Lake Nahwatzel district, died at
his horn(, April 1, and the body
was taken to the University Fu-
neral Parlors in Seattle. Mr.
Woollard was born Oil December
25. 188,1, in Franklin cotmty, Kan-
sas.
l.ractor lstntenance as a cost-Cut- He leaves his wife, Mrs. Nell S,,
ting practice, The improvement' Shelton: a daughter, Mrs. I.ura
club, lcaded by i-rar[an Blake, Menessee, Edmonds; a sister. Mrs.
l)residcnt, cxiiresed thanRs to Gertrude Berna.rd, Seattle; a
Milchell arm his road crews for brother, Bcrle. Sea, I) Lake, and
('n.rc g|w')) the Union community one granddaughter.
loads durhlg the heavy snows. , .....................................
The improvement club is work-) ROBERT E. RHINES
lng on a program to obtain speed. Th,: infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
linl t. and pedestrian crossing signs
in Union. Throttle-goofy drivcr I C'alvin Rhinos, of Shelton, died at
a local hospital March 27 about
are rCl)ortcd /nenacing chlldren
who wa k :dong the h ghwsy lead- 12 hours after birth. Graveside
sorvlt'es ",vel'e. conducted for Rob-
illff to the Union school al)'. ert E. Rhines at 4 p.m, March 28
tn,.)a('hcs. ' at Shelton Memorial Park with
C. Nolan l;tson. a inenlbel' of
the Uoion t4chool bo;)l'd, anllourlecd
tllc board will meet with com-
Jttll'llty represenl.M.tveN hi the
re:heel IIuuv;e Friday mght to dis-
CIIS,; IJOpIOVOlll('llt of the grOlllldS
and usr ()l: the )hl tchor)l bulldillg
L01" t'olIlllllllli|y l)urpo(,s.
N OU| Of evcry l0 l'PIidel's COIl-
suit tim Chtssifie(1 SccLioll to bqy,
aell or trs(]c. Let a chssified
t(l work for you. Phone 100.
'rhe I,SMll (Landing Sllip Me(li-
Ilnl I.o('l(ol. } h;Is gllll1Jle, |)l)telltJlll
tO f!YC dc;,;tr(,)ycr.
the lleverend J. O. Bocce in
eIlarKc.
b'llrviving are lhe p;trelfl.s, two
sisters, l,edinc and Cherry, aH of
Shclton; grandparenls, Mr, anti
Mrs, H0nlcr Rhtn:s )f lrenwl'b)ll.
a)ld Mr. and Mrs. Doyle ]Iof[lllltn
ul l'ort Or¢.]lttrd.
Your beaell cabin will be m BIG
DEMAND this mmlmcr it you
worl't he umng it, gent it with a
('lasdfied ad. f hone 10t).
t Nnvy helicopters are invahtsble
for I1)() JJ); Rcy pcrsollnel bctwecll
i i i i
u v, nem"'o"men" " forh°nles'ald andto thefiVeblind.were on the lists
Siege Is Checked ] "T.,: ,,,,M.,,,, 0,," persons
' . r'ecoiving general assit-'.tatlee, how-
(C,)ntinue(t trom page I) ever, has decline(l (',,,el' re('ent
of generM alld old-age assistance, I Weeks fls more lnen a)c returning
aid to dependant children and to to work," Mrs. McBride said.
the blind, while one is a half-time "Passage of Initiative Me,sure
,Vol'kel'.
"Most pressing problem facing
\\;Velfare workers today is unem-
ployment," Mrs. McBrtde said,
pointing out that many of those
unemployed in January still have
not fmmd jobs.
In January 783 persons were
............... SHELTON:MASON COUNTY JOURNAL
172 has increase(:t the nmnl)er of
cases in the county receiving aid
of some sort," Mrs. McBride in-
dicated.
JAY-ETTE MEETING
A regular meeting of the lay-
ettes will be held April 14 at the
i
Hoodsport Lights
((,'olltinuotl froth I)tge l)
ket: sep:u'ately. Apl)lc l)ie, hot
dO;;'s alld ('ofl'ee will tie avilil:tble
for tt:e ill,eli withoitt I*aF[1](?l'S.
All, .MONEY above the ex-
penses will be thrown into the
"lig'/lts for t-Ioodsport" pool.. These
nlo(lern ]a]l]:)s can be adjusted to
1)ut the light where it is l,lost
needed. The (:()st of lighting the
main :treet in Itoo(lsport will be
high. but thc effort will (It:) nmch
to decrease the danger of high-
way accidentG Jaet.:SOll indicated.
receiving aid of some kind. A total
of 186 county residents got gen-
eral "tssistance, 393 received old-
age assistance, 190 dependent
children were being cared for, 14
were receiving care in foster
home of Mrs. Rex Howry.
It might be a "white elephant"
to you, but a GOOD BUY to
someone else. Sell it with a
classified ad. Phone 100.
Hospital Notes
CLINIC HOSPITAL
I'aticnt admitted to the Clinic
i]opitql for trcatnmnt lhis week
inchtd('d Mrs. Martin Remnaen,
[;ob Cleveland, Herman Ahern, H.
M. Babin;ton, 13aby ]:{osenlary
Bare and Jimmy Watson.
Among those released this week
were Marvin Biehl, Mrs. Robert
Berge, Mrs. W. S. Sallee, Mrs.
Fleming Byars, James Horan, 13e-
lores Rutledgc, William Young,
Mrs. Archie Dronen, Robert Cure-
minga, Jr., and Mrs. I. R. hlc-
"All Mason t:ounty residents Mullen.
should be interesled in thts pro- . ..................................................
jeet," Jack,.on said, '"rod every- Club plans to install milk bottles
one is invited lo t)arLieipate in in the stores with a slogan read-
the affair tonaorrow night." ing, "What will you give for
T h e HoodsporL Commercial watts ?"
Well Drill
Water Wells -- Test
OUR WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEE0
Bedeil Drilling
LAURENCE BEDELL
(formerly Davidson Drilling Co.)
Route 3, Box 101, 8helton
:,:.:..":i S&IgWAY ].::.-...:
they're "bustin" out M o vet"
at SAFEWAY
Highway, Golden, extra fancy
CREAM CORN ....... l-lb. can 2/23 ¢
Pure, fresh rendered
FLUFFO SHORTENING .... 3-lb. 69'
Libby's, for 'tasty economical meals!
CORNED BEEF ........... 12-oz. 43
Libby's Sliced - Serve with Cottage Cheese
PINEAPPLE ........... No. 1 tin 15 ¢
Guaranteed fresh! Finost quality (Quart 73¢)
NU-MADE MAYONNAISE .. pt. 37 ¢
Good quality toilet tissue at a aavlng price!
SILK TISSUE ............ 3 rolls 1 7'
Strawberry, Raspberry, Cherry, Orange, Lemon and Lime
JELL-WELL ................ pkg. SA €
"Mariani" Santa Clara, ready to eat
DRIED PRUNES ...... 2-lb. pkg. 29 =
Baking Needs
Royal Satin, all-purpose
Shortening .... 3-lb. 83¢
Cherub or Darigold - 2 for 23¢ .
Evap. Milk tall es. 5.49
Kitchen Craft (5-lb. 49€1
Flour .......... 10-lb. 83¢
Nalley's, Treasure
Pickles ........ 12-oz. 2¢
Rose-Dale Sweet
Pickles ........ 25-oz. 43¢
Town House, 46-oz.
Grapefruit Juice .. 25¢
Stmny Dawn, 46-oz.
Tomato Juice ........ 25¢
Sugar Belle, 20•oz.
Sweet Peas ............ 19¢
Miscellaneous
Fluff-I-Est, fresh
Marshmallows lb. 29¢
Kraft, delicious
Caramels ...... l-lb. 39
Good qnality, saving price
Choc. Drops .... lb. 29¢
Societe, Jelly Bird
Candy Eggs .... lb. 35¢
Snowy Peak (plus" dep.)
Ginger Ale .. 2 qts. 29¢
Roma. Sherry or
Port Wine ........ 5th 99¢
Acme or Raniier (Cs. $3.59)
Canned Beer 2 for 31¢
Milky Way or Oh Henry bars
Candy Bars .. 4 for 15€
CIGhRETES
Camels, Lucky Strike
(Carton $1.69)
PKG 17
READY DRAWN
FRYERS
Grade, "A" feet and
Head Removed
lb. 63€
PICNICS
Short Shanked, Smoked
Morrell or Rath
6 to S-Lb.
lb. 43 ¢
U.S. "Good," standing
Rib Roast lb. 69¢
U,S. "Good," fresh - Lb.
Ground Beef. 49¢
Round Bone. houlder
Pork Roast lb. 47¢
Medtunt. fresl Pacific
Oysters ............ pt. 67¢
Pan.ready steaks
Salmon .. lb. 65¢
Pan-ready steaks
Halibut .. lb. 53¢
Ready to cook!
Sole Filet. lb. 39¢
Skinless
Wieners ............ lb. 49¢
CUDAHY'S GOLD COIN - EASTERN
SLIL;D BACON
U.S, GRADED "GOOD," BLADE CUT
" " POT ROAST
BEEF .........
lb. 49 ¢
lb. 49 ¢
Del Monte
FRUIT COCKTAIL
Five luscious fruits35
perfectly blended. €
30-OZ.
l)el Monte
CREAM CORN
Thick and creamy, golden
2/29
Corn. €
17-OZ.
Del Monte
EARLY PEAS
Early Garden blended sizes,
Fancy 2/3 €
Quality.
17-OZ.
Del Monte
BO¥SF00ERRIB
"'°"
--finest quality.
17-OZ.
NOB HILL COFFEE
Vacuum-pack quality and flavor plus
store-ground freshness and thrift
2 89'"'"46'
LB. PKG.
AIRWAY COFFEE
Mild and mellow- the world's
most popular flavor in coffee
2.,85' ';:::44'
FRESH BUTTER
Guaranteed Quality, Parchment J J¢
Wrapped. Good Quality at a
Saving Price! Lb.
LUCERNE MILK
Grade "A" Homogenized or Reg- L6"AII¢
ular. Fresh every dayl
It's richer. Qt.
Lucerne Half & Half pt. 19¢
Lucerne Coffee Cream ½-pt. 22¢
Blossom Time Cot. Cheese lb. 25¢
MRS. WRIGHT'S BRL00
w.,. o. w.o., oo.,o.00 ..0o 21=
with lots of milk and sugar l/,lb.
LARGE EGGS
co=
Large Size Eggs. Guaranteed. DOZ,
Libby's. M
Yakima
' Peachel
12.0Z.
Harper
halves in
syrUl
30-OZ.
Libby's
$rves,
tastln
I.LB.
Special Daa
bars at a
special '
Pricel rl
0,,*****r Pure, mild, floating
IVORY SOAP
large
The wonderful fragrant toilet soap
CASHMERE
FOr lovelier complexions
PALMOLIVE SOAP•
Granulated, Concentrated and Economical
PEETS SOAP .........
The soap that does everything!
DUZ SOAP ...... 20-oz.
EDWARDS i
Rich Coffee always tastes bet-
terand Ed" 2 99'
wards is al- LB.
ways rich I
LB. 54¢ 4-LB. $1.97
TU BAGS Canter, black, 49€
(16 bag pkg.)
48 BAGS
Round, golden, party crackers
IIMERS. '
TEA " ' "
lb. 2S €
Always fresh and crisp. 1-kb.
HI HO CRACKERS... 29 ¢
PRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY & SATUR-
DAY. APRIL 8 & 9, 1949, SUBJECT TO
MARKET CHANGES AND STOCK IN
SHELTON. NO SALES TO DEALERS.
SORRY, WE MUST RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
ASPARGUS
U.S. No. 1 Fancy
All Green
lb. 17Vz€
Florida
Lar
lb.
SPINACH, washed, trimmed
CARROTS, fresh snaptop ......
. RADISHES .................. 3
YELLOW DRY ONIONS,
SWEET JUICY NAVELS! MESH BAG
NAVEL ORANGES .....
FRESH, CRISP, UTAH TYPE, ALL EDIBLE
CELERY ................
FANCY RED RIPE, WONDERFUL SLI(ER$ !
TOMATOES ............. •
Armour's Treet
All meat there's no waste.
"'"' 39'
la.OZ• CAN
Baby Foods
Strained and homogenized.
,.,,,. 3/25=
4Va .Oz.
CANS
I eanut But(er
Peter Pan you'll like its
extra smoothness! 34
12-OZ. €
II I I _
i. _=__.L . ............... JL ......... -- I