| April 17, 1942 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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April 17, 1942 |
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Page Six.
ESTATE IN PROBATE
Judge D. F. Wright admitted
the estate of the late Clara Mat—
ron to probate in a superior court
order signed Saturday and named
Mrs. Elva F. Price as executrix to
act without bond as provided in
the will.
Now
YOU
SEE IT
5
It‘s no trick of magic to
keep your clothes looking
as the day you
them! Spots and
disappear under
Creases
pleats in
shape
. colors take on
Revitalize your
drobe by fre-
to our estab-
illiu
‘EJean Barrett, 8
l Dies At Hospitall I p
8; daughter Killed in Canada
I Jesse Barrett, sue-5
'cumbcd at Shelton hospital Sat-l
l Jean Barrett?
Mr. and Mrs.
urday.
Last rites were
Monday from Witsiers
Home by Rev.
Methodist pastor, with burial in
Shelton Memorial Park.
Pall bearers were Ronald Dodds,
Floyd.Borst, Glen Edgely and
Leonard Tiffany.
Jean was born at Shelton,
January 31, 1934. In addition to
the parents, a grandmother, Mrs.
F. E. Barnes, of Toppenish, sur-
vives.
Mrs. Skelsey, Gin;
Come Here For VlSlt
Ted Skelsey, former Shelton
newspaper man, returned to Long
Reach, Calif. Saturday after
bringing Mrs. Skelsey and their
two daughters, Natalie and Jac-
queline here for an indefinite vis-
it. They have rented the A1 Fisch
cottage on Hood Canal.
Mr. Skelsey reports 5'. great deal
of war activity in Southern Cali—
fornia.
Hillcrest Red cm.
Sewing On Two Days
Hillcrest ladies wishing to sew
for the Red Cross will find work
in the Lutheran Church on Wed-
nesday and Thursday each week,
reports Mrs. Nina Miller, sewing
‘(1li rman of the Red Cross pro-
duction department.
Mrs. J. Vv’. Graham and Mrs.
NT Y
‘ Earns
R. F. Eddy are in charge of the
Wednesday sewing while the Lu-
conducted ; of
Funeral '
Robert Maulden,
gFormer Kamilche
Boy, Doug Dean
Dauglas Dean, a former Shel—
Kamilche, was killed
Thursday at Dauphin, Manitoba,
when a Royal Canadian Air Force
plane he was piloting crashed, ac-
cording to the Associated Press.
l Another aviator, not identified
‘in the AP story, also died in the
accident. Dean had rcceivcd his
,wngs 1:: March and held the
rank of sergeant. He was slated
to leave for active duty on the
‘war front in a few days when
the fatal crash occurred.
’ he young man’s mother, Cor-
delia Dean, was married to
Frank Taylor of Kamilche before
[the family moved to Tacoma
I some five or six years ago. Daug-
ilas finished his schooling in Ta-
lcoma after starting here, where
he was widely
the graduating classes of the past
two or three years.
l
l Ted Donaldson
' f“ T “‘ v
l Eat-Shelton Boy,
Dies in Action
Another former_Shelton boy,
iTrose (Ted; Donaldson, has giv-
en his life for his country, the
Navy informed his mother Mrs.
Ida Isobel Donaldson, ol'l
Seattle, this week.
Young Donaldson, a junior lieu—
tenant in the Naval Reserve, was
awarded on March 12 the Navy
llOW'
EMisses Olympic
Fishing, Writes
i Bob Bednarski, of Mr. and
. . l . .
l ton school student and resmlent ,3 Mrs. Stove Bednarski of Summit .
last “ Drive, is going to make up for .
the time he is losing from his
usual fishing pursuits in the
Olympics during his hitch with
the Navy, he writes home.
His last letter home
how “I’m
am putting on weight . . . I bet
,I’vc gained 20 pounds since I’ve
been in the Navy. I like it, and
related
I haven't seen anything really
called work yet.
“Gee, it‘s sure hard to write
anything I can’t say anything
about myself or what I’m doing.
I would sure like to be home for
the opening day of fishing sea-
son, but I will make up for it
after this is all over. Boy, I‘m
going to go in the Olympics and
acquainted with live on the country . . .
"I suppose you heard we got
a raise. It started since the War
and adds 20 per cent to our base
pay. That sure will help. Say hel-
lo to everybody for me.”
Bud Walton Heine
On RCAF Leave
Another phase of his training
as a Royal Canadian Air Force
aviator completed, Leonard (Bud)
Walton arrived home last week
l end to enjoy a two-week furlough;
with his para. 5;, Mr. and Mrs.‘_
L. A. Walton, and friends in:
' Shelton.
He reports next to an RCAF
Bob BedmuskiS
feeling fine and sure/
-sfisL'Jéou—MASQN COUNIUQQB
l
+ To
H
For Securing the Most Points on New Subscriptions from just last Saturday
,;,,“0
Morning, April ‘11,.to this Saturdaynight, April 18th ' ‘
l
4
l
‘theran ladies are handling
Thursday sewing.
sasuusssuuuuu
E
E
hoes row: CAR swam
If so, you probably need accurate wheel balancing.
It’s a long story . . . .w'e haven’t‘space to tell it"here
.. .. but wheels must be in static balance and in
running balance, too.‘ ‘
We correct for- botha Our service is
inexpensive, and stops shimmy, tire
gouging, and wheel tramp. 'If you’re
all worn out after a day behind the
wheel, if your car “goes into a dance”
at certain speeds, you’ll find the answer
in this service. Drive in today.
Al Huerby [Motors
5th and Railroad
assessessamuauueasssssaaseuuan
fish
Ltd.
aconsensuasueanaesussaeeaas
gwsaausuuuuuuuuuuuznuuu’
O Now—more than ever before—those railroad
warning signs should be rigidly observed; night and
day. A fleet of powerful Union Pacific locomotives
are hauling precious cargoes over the Strategic
Middle Route, connecting the East with the West.
Rolling over the rails are shipments of materials ior
armament plants. trainloads of troops and supplies.
They must go through without delay. America's
welfare — and your welfare— are at stake. Please.
then. be extremely careful when approaching rail-1
road crossings. In that way—you. too. can ‘help.
For information concerning passenger and freight
transportation, consult local representative.
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD
7am Mg
V
~—...- . I ...
the
consensusu
i first mentioned.
aerial bombardment of the
Vite Naval Base in
pines.
ity where death occurred.”
Lieut. Donaldson began his
schooling in Shelton, when his
father, the late Trose Donaldson,
built the first Shelton power sys-.
tem, later bought by the West
Coast Power company.
union} California—
Visit Is Shortened
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Elliott and
Mrs. Miles Elliott returned to
Shelton Monday from California
after being called home by the
death of Mr. Elliott’s father in
Olympia. They had been visiting
Miles Elliott at McClelland Field,
army aviation supply base near
Sacramento, and had enjoyed a
trip through the huge base on
special pass, although denied en-
try to any of the buildings.
The day after they left to re—
turn north, Miles obtained a ten--
day furlough and is now here for
a visit, arriving in time to attend
his grandfather’s funeral
nesday.
Walt Lunsford Called
To» Navy Athletic Post
Walt Lunsford, former Shelton
coach and teacher now located at
Centralia, reports next Monday
at Annapolis, Md., to begin ser-
vice as an athletic instructor in
the Naval Reserve, according to
reports from Centralia.
Mrs. Lunsford, the former Ma—
rie Berry,
her daughter will remain here
while Mr. Lunsford receives spe-
cial training as an athletic
goes to one of four colleges
throughout the nation as an on-
sign.
ShelttiTiNavy—Boy~
Breaks His Ankle
Tim Lee. Sham—n boy aSSigned
to the U. S. Asiatic fleet, is now
at Honolulu -while recovering
Lee. of Route 1, said. No details:
of how the injury was received
Marvin Pcarcey’s Hip j
‘Eroken- Aét Army Camp
Reports reaching friends and‘E
relatives here tell of . a broken,‘
hip suffered recently at Forty
Benning, Georgia, by Marvin .
Pear-coy, Shelton man serving
with the 4lst Armored Infantry.
The injury is expected to keep:
him hospitalized for over two,
months. ‘
Stan Wyatt Sent To .
Stan Wyatt, son of Mrs. Anna,
Wyatt of Shelton, has been trans-
ferred to the Great Lakes Naval
Training Station in Illinois as an
instructor in the Navy’s new,
physical hardening program head-
ed by Commander Gene Tunney-l
after undergoing several weeks,
preliminary training at Norfolk,‘
Va.
OlynTfiifiJTofi‘éér i
Succumbs At 87
Edward Elliott, 87. father of
Edward Elliott of Shelton, and
resident of Olympia for 52 years,
died at the home of his daugh-‘
her, Mrs. Edith Achley of Bend, 3
Oregon, Sunday. Funeral services i
were held at Olympia Wednesday
with burial at the Masonic Cems‘
etery there.
Deceased was born in England!
and came to this country in 1891,
locating on a homestead near}
McClcary and in 1901 moved to;
Bush Prairie. moving to Olym~§
pia in 1912. He is survived by his
widow, daughters, Mrs. Winifred
Carson of Graham, Wash, and
Mrs. Dora Belieu of Cottage}
Grove, Oregon, and sons Arthur,
Elliott of Edmonton, Alberta, and
Harry Elliott of Olympia and one'
great grandchild, Mervin Elliott
iVv'ingard of Shelton, besides those
Cross for distinguished service in .‘ ,.
action during the first Japanese E an “em near Calgary for ms f"
Ca—
the Philip-
No details were given concern-
ing the time and place of Lieut.
Donaldson’s death, but said “his
remains were buried in the local-'
composed of photographs and pic—:
Wed-1 tures of servicemen are drawing;
I
l
lone of mounted photographs of
daughter of Mr. and:
Mrs. Clay Berry of Camp 5, and;
iShelton high school baseball play-
in-
structor in the naval reserve and ience of twice making round trip
l flights
fDieg'o as tailgunner in a big Navy
3the mid-Pacific islands, he relat—
led this week upon arriving home
confined to a government hospital to the Northwest
from a broken ankle, his latest;
letter to his mother. Mrs. »Mina>
were given.
Great Lakes By Navy, '
, are mild as finest imported castiles.
nal four months training which
will qualify him either as a com—
missioned pilot officer or a ser-
igeant pilot, highest non-commis-i
sioned rank, he He has been
at an RCAF training school near
Vancouver Since the first of the
year, had his preliminary and,
ground training near Edmonton.
Upon the completion of the four,
months at Calgary the Shelton:
active duty over. he said.
l
I Trained. Mechanics:
F‘ivc men experienced in auto-
mobile mechanics, parts distribu-
,tion, bookkeeping, or lubrication
{are sought from Mason County
'by the U. S. Army as this area's
quota of 8,000 men for mechan-
l
l
x
I
l
l
l
I
ithe American Automobile Ass’n'
lto recruit for it, Al Huerby, Shel-
ton car dealer, informed the
Chamber of Commerce last week. '
Up Servicemen’s Display
boy will get his; assignment for”
.
Army Seeks 51.00;] t
.ical service the Army has asked‘
Andrews, MERE—rut },
Two attractive window displays:
public attention in Shelton now.
The Andrews Photo Studio has
men in all branches of the serv-
,ices taken by the studio, while,
:The Journal has two display win-
dows decked out with photographs
‘and snapshots of Shelton and Ma-
.son County boys in the various
branches of the Army.
i2 Bomber Flights—To
Hawaii For Sheltonian
‘ After but months in the.
,Navy, Bob Waldburger, former
er, has had the enviable exper-
to Honolulu from San
bomber ferrying ammunition to
on a ten-day furlough.
Bob is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Max Vlr'aldburger of Kamilche. He
was mighty tickled .to get back:
he said, as
“this country sure looks good af-
ter what I've seen.”
Swan your dishes,
Daughtei', dear,
And rough, hands.
0 Yessirree, Swan’s baby-gentle suds
And fast? They come twice as fast
as old-style floating soaps {last longer,
do more work. ‘
Swan up and save! Swan upand rave!
i
Tune in every week: GRACIE ALLEN
GEORGE sums - nun. WHITEMAN
-———_
NEW WHITE FLOATING SOAP
LEVER IIOTHIRI COMPKN'. CAM-RIDGE. "5.5-
w .
so‘fiuammood lava
Good Housekeeping
Quirwzmno‘k‘“
[.
l I
ll!
‘
t
NAL,
. .7 -v ___._ ___
SCHEDULE OF POINTS
New subscriptions turned in between Thursday morn-
ing, April 16, and o’clock Saturday night, April 18, will
count points towards the NEW’ $10.00 CASH prize cam-A
paign as follows: '
1 Year, 8 Points 2 Years, 16 Points
if every detail of this is not perfectly clear to you, get in
touch with the Campaign Manager immediately.
HERE is YOUR t‘irronrumrv
CAMPAIGN NOTES
Parents, and other adult members of the candidates’
families, are urged to interest themselves in actively help—
ing their candidate to win one of the prize bicycles. The
prizes in this'campaign are. valuable and the training and
experience the candidates receive from this work is inval—
uable. Parents are invited to come to the office with their
' candidate and get information from the Campaign Man-
ager. Your child needs, your help to win in a campaign
with such enthusiastic competition as this.
Winners of all prizes will be announced by the judges
who will make the final count of votes on the closing night
of the‘ campaign.
By the first part of next week the Campaign Manager
will'be able to give you lists of subscribers for any place
you intend working. ‘Ask for the lists you want as they
Will be a big help to you. I
The Campaign Manager is in the office every day
and also each evening from 7 to 8. On Wednesday and
Saturday. evenings the campaign office will be" open until
9 o’clock. Come in often for information and assistance.
Whoever wins the $10 Cash prize in the NEW cam-V
paign for securing the most NEW subscriptions by Sat—
urday night will receive this prize in addition to the cash
commission or bicycle he or she Wins in the original cam-
paign." ‘
Ask the Campaign Manager for any information you
want. Com‘é in often ,(or telephone or write) for any help
you need. '
A NEW subscription to get new votes and points must
be from someone who is not now taking ‘he Journal. It
must addene name to our list.
Anyone can pay you a subscription and you may get
the subscriptions 'from anyone, anywhere. Past-dim, delin-
quent, advance, 'and“ new subscriptions all count youvotes.
' There is no ‘ofie whoi‘canno’c pay you.
See the prizes on'Idisplay. Make up your mind. which
you Want. Then" work for it-e—you can WIN ANY prize
you want with the. right effort. ‘ ' ' ';
s
MW
26 mm or $1 0
u w ‘0 It I ' 2, 21“ re Load I
o , . re Gas Tax
‘figurgiriried.
REPQRT DAYS
RMATlON, call on, telephone oil, erite CAM PAIGN MANAGER
JFriday,
“Opens in
a“ .1. March
tI’ll-regular
' Mann. G
, “Ema Ferris
v d Harry De,
.._
‘. “Y Dance L
., _. mm ,Commu
£1nee. for
Fe Easem
ind and car
pet. , the lime
. e men of Es
\, k. rdIan of Mai
: 4
n on
f love
et al, for Val
mDiC Arenuv
‘ wand Im;
a; proper
appear
sud no on
.55 moved
0‘5: Vacatioi
dLand a:
“lion floquorTi
QRBC. No. 8]
fl Pusey, Pi
lVed and f
hilrned.
mgs‘iay, Mai-c}
t
. em lgursuant
from
h.
..
. .Tront
'1?“ E. Paul
W Deyette,
,., :CCthFred
’i e .d.
Intent pan O:
.dmckinson w.
“Jollrned.
I “day. March
1 membi
For ' -- ‘be
2 Years
01$ng and
,p h e
SPECIAL sussonirriou PRICE ' sear...
' ‘0‘ MPaul
. Urned
«9&2 ,. V
, ason C
Every active candidate in Thé Shelton-Mason 0°. “.urffedrequest
Jouma‘l’scfimpaign is sure of a prizeubut that: is cull/w
. , _ . , I‘lgl‘ahting E
of‘the splendid-offer this newspaper is melka In 90 ,2; W apprO‘
tio'nv-with- this big sunseriptiomcampaigm{may special, gjvumed
scriptia‘n price, outlihcdfabove, is made ‘for‘t‘hesidurati
he'd); , March
this campaign only, whi'chrende omSaturday-r may 2; an: fig!!! gcrfir
1
H ; _. . . ‘v .- l. .‘ v. 5',“ o ' . 10 m
A WONDERFUL OFFER FOR SUB/SGRJIBER5““9:.M h
.. . n u ton’, fig am”;
. 1 Sign “shad,
-.........,.«- ukuloggidmissiom
1,,n aisned.
Right where you are if you’ll git-up-and-git, ~°n
And hustle and rustle and do
And put your heart in it, and never say quite-—
There’s plenty of good things for you!
The prizes are waiting right here to be got; r
You’ll find them wherever you. are, _. eceived
By proving, if you’re a “go-getter” or not,
A flash in the pan—or a star!
,Liquor (
of llcense cot
ch‘rom Emery
. ,, .. k a?“ and Lel
The croakers are croaking about the “hard times, , Tavem'
And how things are hopelessly "punk." M10
They‘re mourning the shortage of nickels and dimes .
But that kind of junk is the bunk!
And while they are buzzing about “biz” being bad,
The “wise ones” are hopping about, ‘ "
And copping the prizes right here to be had—
'And putting old “hard times" to rout! .2 R
_ _ ' _ ' 1,2 to fommenc
It‘s always hard times, If you‘re thinking that way, $0.13 1‘} Own?
And prospects are gloomy and blue, from‘ 03"
Dept. 0
But while the sun’s shining, if you will make hay, at Fred H.
You‘ll get What is coming to you!
Don’t let hard times floor you, and steal your good "‘ “(Ponds
Haw
Don’t dream about “green fields afar"; “den 2' 22~ 2-
We know you’re: a winner—410w show us some pep/. -e
Make good on the job where you. are!
. _. V I' rnish.
Encourage Your friends and relatives to see the " I
bicycles, on display in the Angleh‘Bullding, Shelton: ‘»
they will, get behind you more solidly if they see at,
hand what fine gifts” you are Working for."_an't if“.
that all new subscriptions you get' by this Saturday“,
also “count regular votes for the cash"'coinmissian§.
the bicycle prizes besides points for the Speciaf.
Campaign Prize of $10“in Cash: -' .‘ '
Every Wednesday and every Saturday are REj .
DAYS and each and every candidate is expected to ‘ 'Ura
in at: least two subscriptions on each Wednesday {1115 ' ":V
"ce'
Saturday. Each candidate is POSITIVELY REQUIR.
turn in all subscriptions he or she has on geaeh”~~We.
and each Saturday This is the rule" of the campaign .
it will be strictly adhered to. Candidates living '0“ n
Shelton city'may send their Saturday reports in M0? fl ,
mail and their Wednesday‘report's‘in Thursday‘s 111.9111 ,1
they will count the same as though they were in the I "3
paign office by 9 o’clock' on the report: nights. Those ”‘
dates living outside Shelton city-L‘but‘who attend
in Sholton~gmay bring their reports to the Cam
Manager during the noon hours on Thursday and M0“,
WESTQFOODS
F" PRICE:
Corner 4th and Railroad"
Shelton V I 2 " I
c:
k .
Shelton, Washington
107 South Fourth
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