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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
April 14, 1949     Shelton Mason County Journal
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April 14, 1949
 
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t@ SICKS&apos; SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO., SEATTLE, U.S.A. Maybe You want to Buy A cow; or a horse, or a pig, or Maybe You Want to Sell A mule, or goat' a , or some chickens, or Maybe You Want to Buy A car, or a bicycle, or a tractor, or Maybe You Want to Sell Some furniture, or some lumber, or some clothing, or Maybe You Want Some Property or you have something Maybe You'll Call 100 and try a Journal want ad --Well there won't be any maybes about what'll happen! Just try it once. The Journal Our Complete Stock of T-TETIpON-MA,.gON COT.TT," ,TOIyP.JAL .................. LAKE FISHING .... WILL OPEN SUNDAY ,t and AT20 Sp00ncer I00ke Vies II with Lake Cushman t For Angler lnteresti I l,alce CusbmaJl han a strong conll)etttor in Spenccr L'.tke for top favor alDOll Ma'4on County angle).' fm the opcnia of the 1949. f)'o.h wat,.,r fi.)hinK sc:,on next Sunday. CJiveli the rotcnone treatmcnL in the Pall of 1947 to clear it of scrap fisll, Lake Spencer was re- planted with rainbows by tile blame department iu the sprmg of 1948 and the wo)'d has lc'lkcd ()tit that tim I)roject ha: been n. com- plete sucvc'ss "Hid tile )'estoeked lake m abouu(ling with big troul this year. L])eneel' \\;'/a.'] cio.,;ed to fishing last year to give the rain- bows a oh:tact to grow and mnlti- ply unimmpered, and althougti no official word has been made, it's one of those well known secrets that tests taken in recent weeks of the Spencer rainbows have amazed even the fish experts• Lake Cushman, of course, will draw its usual qm.ta of opening day anglers, in fact reservations have been sold out for weeks at this favorite silver trout spot. But Spencer. is the water on which the fishing fl'aternity will keep its eye this season. Lost Lake is another spot which will draw heavy play from the opening day anglers. Heavy plant- ings in the past few years have improved fishing conditions in most of the waters of Mason County and virttmlly all the lower lakes will have their fans. Closed waters for' Sunday's gen- eral opening include lower Lake Cushman and Panhandle Lake, while two others, Trail's End Lake and Turtle Lake inear the airport), are reserved for young- sters under 16 years of ag'e. The high level lakes of Lower and Upper Dry Bed, Elk, Jeffer. son, Scout, and Snider will not be open until May 22, when the streams become eligible fishing areas. PASTIME BLANKED, FAILS TO CLINCH OLYMPIA Nil-HANDICAP W L Pastime (Shelton) ............ 30 :12 Steak Houae ...................... 27 5 CflItal Cigars ................. 26 ?Jd  ?cke'n COop ................... Tranulat Service ................ 11 " 28 23 Routid Table ........................ O 4#2 Witti tlu'ee tight decisions go- ing agahst them) PaStime falid to e|lflCh the Olympia no-handi- .cap Iwl!! league title ,}onday iMht t, loih]g a 3 to 0 decisio to Caplttl Cigars, r' ' Pa,$t[rae, meets Chicken t CoOp Monday night in the final mteh Of th schedule and ieeds one vie- tot'y to wrap up the championship. Only Slim Gustafson was up to form as Pastime lost verdicts by siX, 34 and 25 pins Moiday to the Cigars. Gustafson hit 593 With a 209 top game. MeanWhlle sec- ond place Steak House won a 2 to 1 decision from Tramtm Ser- OUT Tackle Dk¢00DUNT CASH SALES ONLY • 'Z All our Salt and Fresh Water Fishing G'ear Ammunition, Mostly Rifle Shells and Shotgun Shells SHELTON REOREATION &' ,'00',::,,00TSPORTIN6 GOODS SIDELINE SLANT S by BILL DICKII= SPORTS I)FPI)EI{ Tony Vlastelica, Aberdeen's rec- ord settring basketball scorer, has another year of high school, start- ing his senior year next fall hut the repro'Is indicate he hasn't an- other year of athletic eligibility because he will pass the. age limit before next basketball season. [.ay Patrick directed the High- climbers Monday night (tm'inl:, tlir 4 lo 0 victory over North Kitsap, while Coach Norm Hill- yard was absent (m a hurried trtp 'l.o Calit'tnia. Patrick in cnjoymg lluaccllStOlTle(t v a c It L h)II fl'onl coaci]ing duties this sl)rmg at Lhe junior high, having fulfilled his allotted sports assignment during football and basketball season, Paul Koch tossed the discus for the first time in competition at Hoquiam last Friday and hL, heave of 108 feet earned fourth place and What turned ont to be a highly valuable post, inasmuch as the Highclimhers edged Mon- tesano by but one point fro' see- end place in the quadrangular lneet. That si)ortsmansh|p trophy I)askethall dinner slated for ., Olympia will be hehi Monday nigllt, April 25, instead of Taes- day, April 26, as anm)unced last week. 'rile news release from Olyml)iar high school was faul- ty. And correcting another recent mistake, that 147-foot 3-inch dis- cus throw of Des Koch's against South Kitsap and Peninsula three weeks ago was not a Southwest Washington prep record. Ben Hedges ot Centralia tossed tile plater 149 feet 11.z inches last year and another Centralian, El- mer Messenger, has tossed it 149 feet 8% inches this year, so all Des can claim at the present writ- m is an all-time Highelimber mark. Plans for the 1970 Pantorium Cleaners city league basketball I team were a hit upset when George Valley's baby arrived two weeks ago and turned out to be a girl. Four of George's teammates te:iln hall hike ilw ball ()itl- of-hollnd 11| mhifh)or tvh(-iber tile silo! i mad(, or Illi,..sed. The ,,4eCOl[(] l'tllO ('IlilUt' !N sip]- pier. :.s it. nicl'oly provides thaL the blll] i:.; It) I,i' l)lll. II1|(1 pla 1tl the' tart of eili'h (tilali(!l ' l,y [!le ecntel'-jnnlp, lieretofove, lha i(';IDJ havinK po.'sesion (,f the phcre at the cad of the fh':t an(I thii'd qiIRrt.er.i keI)l losgo.N>:itiil ;t. I 1 ]l" itillowing qilltl'tPl" N|itl'te(I lind Dill the hall ill plqy l•ronl olli-of-I)Ollnds lit inid fhilir. Tile first l'/llo shi)llid In, :tn ('f- fet'tiv(, lilC;!lly; I)f" .<UOl)lJin:4 wh()h,- sale f(mlin, by toa)ns t)',li|in: its ilw gtHlle )IOItFH it:4 end, Tht.rc li;t; been entirely leo lnucii of it. al- nlost evel'yone ll'ees. and it. has eanged gaines to be draggcd Oily intelur)inably, often ,poiling ellmr- wise interesting and well-played contests. Mac's Corner Wins Women's Pin Title Despite 3-0 Defeat W()MFN', BOIVIJNG I,EAGUE (Final ,ihilidi I)g ) W I, Mac's Corner. ................ 49 35 Cash ( rooery ........... 4 36 Fields AlllO Parts .......... 45 :19 Pastime ........................... 43 41 titner's Corner . .............. 43 .11 Old Mill .............................. 41 43 McConkey F'harmaey ........ 36 ,18 Pantoriunl Cha riers ..... 31 53 Ill series Hazel Ferrier 473 Hi ganle Lodga Kimbel 203 MAC' eeRIER backed into the :1948-49 women's bowling leagl e championship Tuesday night, win- ning the pennant despite a 3 to 0 defeat at the hands of Les Fields Auto Parts because second place Shelton Cash Grocery h)st n pair of decisions to McConkey Pharnt- acy. Tlie grocers h)sl a heart-break- er in the finale, a mven pin (lefi- c)t keeping then] from tymg for ' Gavareski Second In Rayonier Pin Meet; Tidweil Wins ' \\;Vilh "l hrilii" rt (,h) dng galno of 2!)1 ('harlie Tidw(.ll of (;l•iiys liar- bet division (.;q)l.urcd first place I :IH(! ('ill•ned $1:5 ill the annilali l#.aVollicr l))corporated four-l!anlc handicap singles bowling totlrna- :ilcnt held on the Sholton Recrea- tion alleys lasl Saturday and Sun- day. I Hc wound up with a 90:1 aggre- ?:it(' c'(msis{ing of 765 pins actual :rod 1,'),6 handicap to top a field (I" (.)5 entri(,s. :% 151 iiv(,)'agc kcgc- h,r. Tidwell seor0d g nnles of 196. 150, 165 and 25! for his winning total. His victory places hi, name on the troohy which the Grays Har- bor division will hoht until next year's tournament. John Gavareski of Shelton divis- i(tn was secolld with nn 889 aggre- gate on 769 actual and 120 handi- Call and earned $75 cash. Five oth- er Shelton division entries were among the 16 prize winners, Clyde b'agcrgrei earning sixth place with 690-148-838 and $35. Art Jacoh- on ninth with 67:1(144-817, Willys 1 " Oliver twelfth xith 680-12-8()8, I Roy Peacher 12th wilh 615-192- 807. and Harry Cole 14th with f 565-2,10-05. I The best aetnal-pin series was rolled by D. D. Rhebeck of the • Timber division with 781, which 'earned him a gold medal. Hard luck with splits cost him a flock of pins, but he nmnagcd td shoot I t 218 opening game by picking! three of four splits. :He had two more splits in his second game but managed a 181. He earned fourth l place and $50 with an aggregate I 853. I The 16 prize winers were: C. L. Tidwell, GH ........ 765-136-901 . John Gavareski, S ........ 769-t20-889 Fletcher Ilke, PA ...... 690-180-870 i D. D. Rhebeck, T ........ 781- 72-853 Bill Paulsen, PA ......... 636-216-852 Clyde Fagergren, S ...... 690-148-838 C, S. Holderman, GH .... 712-108-820 C. S. Holderman, GH .... 712-198-820 A. "vV. Jacobsen. S ........ 673-1,t4-817 Joy Metcalf, GH .......... 708-:108-816 Ernest Virginia. PA .... 671-149-811 Three,tiny, American MEETS AT 8 P. M. IN 1st and 3rd From where I sit ... There'll Alwa' a "Gc "Harry the Hermit," a. lie's called, came into (own last week and, as usual, caused quite a stir. He h)oks like a cross belween Santa Claus and Daniel Boone. We had a frieadly glass of beer together and I asks him. "Dofi't you ever get annoyed at the way some people laugh and stare s you go by?" "Shucks no," Itarry says. "Only while they're laughin' at me, l'm feelin' a mite sorry for them. Imagine--folks so ungrown- up they can't see I'm really just • the same as they are nnderneath," From where I ln0r0 "civilized" who make fun tented, right without and What's others whose different from Ma or act the same, but in a abould we Copyriglf!. 1949, Unit'ed States on this past season's Pantorinm team---Ken Fredson, Jim McComb, Jim Rose, Dick Dodge--all have sons and they were pulling for George to produce the fifth to I make a complete team, There's I still a chance if Warren Woods, another present day Pant°flus I phtyer, ha8 a son when the is-i "pending bles;ed event occur8 in his family, Then maybe Susan Valley can be the feminine re- spiration for the. Pantorium Clean- ers of 1970. Northwest basket,ball mus. be improving. Never have so many teams from this part (ff the coun- try participated in national play- offs and"tournaments I(s t}]ts'past sc, ason. The li,;t inehldcs Oregon State in the NCAA, Colleg'e of Puget Sound in the NAIB, Gon- zaga in the national C'ttholic, Olympic of Bremerton in the,jun- ior college tournament, Apine Dairy, McChord Field and East- ern Washington College of ]Bdu- cation in the national AAU,  and Everett in the national Veterans ()f Foreign Wars championships. O "()DE TO A WORM '° " State Game Cm0missioners. cre- ated the makings for many a family argument by setting the opening df the 1949 lowland fresh water fishing season to fall on Easter Sunday, and many a !hus- band Whose thoughts will bd far afield will have to sit restlessly through a Church sermon next Sunday 'instead x of casting his baited hook into his favorite fish- ingwaters, Which reminds us of a poem written by Jack Eaton, local sportsman, under the title head- mg this item. it goes like this: Oh. ye poor and lowly worm, Who crawls upon his tummy, The looked upon a a germ, With two heads you're no drea- my. You add a richness to the earth, For beatlty you'll ere toil, to Aid the flowers join in mirth, When they'll grow in any soil. And the you're cut in two by hoes, And pecked up hy a chicken, Yet on you go, and goodness knows, Why you will ne'er be strioken. Til the day you're finally taken, From earth you called your hoffte, i How your heart will be achin', For your rLchness in the loam. Then you're put upon a hook Poor worm I'll bet yon're wish- in', You're far away from any brook, And the guy who took you flshin'. , $ NEV¢ IIOOp RULES Recent Changes in basketball rules v0ted-%y the national rules committee which met in Seattle during tle NCAA championship playoff inchlde two maj(r 'alter- ations fans will /)ave to t,e a(.*- Cllstonled tO next season. Most important is the action taken to curb late-gane rough- nes and fouling. To halt this practice the rules committee de- creed that fouls committed after the automatic time-out (two min- utes before the end of college games, at the first official's time- out or dead ball that occurs after the ,fli'st,/flY$ minutes of the final quarter 6f ' high school games) shall be treated as technical fouls, although charged as personals against the offending players. In other words, Instead of blivlilg ibt choice of shooting the fe slmt or taking It ont- of-boands (as the rules had al- loWed), now a team can do both. 9Pho new rule specifies the title. Hazel Ferricr bowh.d lhe night's top series at 473 but it couldn't bring victory to the gro- cery girls, although her 170 op- ener did win a 13-pin verdict However, Marie Newman won the second for the pharmacist: and everybody was off in tile low- scoring closer. MEANWltlI,E, Mac's humped into a red-hot Fields chlb. Edna Temple led off with a :182 opener, Ruth Jacobsen followed with 157 to win the second, and finally Lod- ga Kimbel produced a 203 finale., Lodga's' was the top game o[ tile night. Other farewell n]atcheq foand RiLner's Corner bl;aLing I'astime fol a 3 to I) defcaL which tied the two clubs for fourth 1)biee :tn(I tailead Pantorium Cleancr dump- ed Old Mill into sixLh phtee by wmning all three. Terry Edmk,ton paced two of Ritner's trimnphs and Dot Willour and Emily Kier Joined forces for the other, while Pantorium won behind Mary Dawson ill two games and EsLller Berets in the other. Climbers Whip Eagle Net Team Dave Lamon and Louis Des- champs turned loose a blistering four-game conlebactt tO win the final match of the day and give Shelton a 3 to 2 verdict oer Ehna or the tennis court.s Tnesday af- Lernoon. Lamon and Deschamps, playing as the Highclimber No. 2 doubles team, were down 2=4 in the sec= ond set after having won the. first, 6-2, when they unleashed their brilliant rally and dosed <)tit the maLch in fern' sLraight games to win, 6-4. Donnie Cole, No. 2 singles man, also made a fine comeback to aid the Highclimber cause. After los= ing Lhe first set, 4-6, Cole ot np steam and breezed to 6-1 vic- tories in the next two sets to win the" match. By winning, the IIighclimbcrs balanced their net books aL two triumphs against two losses, Sat- urday Shelton goes to Port An- geles, Tuesday to Olympia. The scores Tuesday: SINGLES Don Knudsen (St beat Taylor (EF, 6-1, 6-0. Don Cole (St beat Sheets (El, 4-6, 6-1, 6-1. Jerry Thayer (El beat Bob Ashley (St, 6-1, 6-:1. DOUBLES Taylor-Thayer beat Knudsen- Cole, %5, 6.,4. Lamon-Deschamps (St beat Graham-Lamb ( ), 6-2, 6-4. Raynier Alley l:ague Chooses 1949-50 Officers Ah'eady looking ahead Lo next season, the Rayonier bowling lea- gue became tie first local pin cn'- etllt to elect officers for the 1949- 50 season last week. W. F. McCann was chosen pres- ident, Stu Steehler vice-president. and Vern Halbert. secretary- treasurer. Simpson Rifle League Shoots Thursday Night Simpson Rifle League 7]11 go into the second round of its sched- ule Thursday night under the Shelton high school gym with Me= Cleary, Reed Mill One, Reed Mill Two, Shops and Shelton Teachers In competition. McCleary won the opening round last week with a team score Willys Olive)', S .......... 680-128-808 Roy Peachcr. S .............. 615-192-807 Harry Cole. S ................ 565-240-805 ..... 695-108-803 1)on Paulson, PA .... , Fred Radke, PA .......... 514-288-802 The trophy and gold medal were both put up by the Paper MiD News through its editor. Harry EI- liott, and both will be fornmlly pre- sented by the respective divisions in which he winners are employed. KENNEDYS RETAIN AMERICAN TITLE Skat.in" against ' the t)'ongest competition of their careers, Peter and Karol Kennedy, fornmr Shel- ton grade school sLlldents, suc- cessfully defended their United States pairs figure skating title at Colorado Springs, Colorado. Saturday night. Peter and Karol won the title last year for the first time and told their grandfather. Mike Ken- nedy, Mason County jailer, in a telephone conversation jttst after retaining the championship that t h e competition at Colorado Springs Saturday night was tougher than any they had e- countered in any of the Duitl01'ous other kating championships they have entered. HEAD THIS For Your Easter HARD p Lead th Easter Parade in ; I top. quality fel$--Stledjll;*t,., ,'. ; for your profile -- Priced / right for•your ur...v'Snap: / brims arid rol 'r[lls n tan, i cj rey, brown. Dwight MEN'S WEAR 123 Railroaki PhOne .q FOR YOUR OP00$N00 DAY Newton NYLON and SILK Fishing Lines For Your Opening Day Limit SPECIAL LAKE TROLLS AND SPINNERS -. All Kinds and Sizes Lightweight 4onverse SPORT BOOTS $10.85 SPLIT BAMBOO FLY 'RODS', ' Hooks and Leaders, Baskets; Boxes and Salmon Eggs I" . aL ....... _ I , 4 : .. a . €'.. I, I I $12.50 to $22.4)0 SOUTIt OCEAN BA i $i', WE FISHING AN0 of 788, followed by Reed Mill Two ..... 774: Reed Mill One. 762, and Shops, 705. Teachers are shooting Don's Sport & Cycle this week for the first time. Har' old Cramer, Mill Two, topped in- dividual scoring last week with 183. League shoot. nre to "l)e hehl Lawn Mowers Shttrpened Bicycles Reprirel - that a player f0uled after the for six weeks and aggregate 233 COTA STREET PHONI automatic tllile-nout tthali take scores will determine the team ) -- L_ .......