Notice: Undefined index: HTTP_REFERER in /home/stparch/public_html/headmid_temp_main.php on line 4394
Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
April 24, 1941     Shelton Mason County Journal
PAGE 8     (8 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
 
PAGE 8     (8 of 8 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
April 24, 1941
 
Newspaper Archive of Shelton Mason County Journal produced by SmallTownPapers, Inc.
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader




( l Page ght RE—ADMITTED PATIENT Andrew Peterson of PotlatchlEmploy'erS' > : Vinnie was readmitted to Shel-l ton hospital yesterday for further: Questlonnalres , ..z-atmcnt of a shoulder injury. PARAMOUNT THEATRE Shelton, Wash. ‘r Olympia, April 17. w Question— ‘aires will be mailed to all ‘Nash- iington employers within the next gfew weeks who will be subject to 3the state unemployment compen- isation act after July 1 to secure ,lthe information necessary to es—I ‘tablish their accounts on the date‘ ithe new act becomes effective, {Commissioner Jack Bates of the iOffice of Unemployment Compen— lsation and Placement announced PAULETTE today. The 1941 session of the state ~ [legislature amended the unem— Friday Saturday “N ployment compensation act to in- ; clude employers of any individual iafter July 1, 1911, without re- igard to the duration of the em— :ploymeiit or the number of per“ i sons employed. . The only exceptions to the ‘ coverage provisions are those ac.- lcordcd agricultural labor; domes-i tic service in a private home; linembers of the crew of a ves- Camera Club Meeting Scheduled On Monday The Shelton Camera club will hold its next regular meeting this looming Monday in the Courthouse starting at 7:30 o’clock. The usual print competition among members of the club will be held and a program being ar- ranged by Harold \V'Vatkius Will be enjoyed. Americanization At Schools Here Monday Members of Fred B. Wivell American Legion post will put on Americanization programs at the Shelton schools next morning and afternoon in follow- ing out an annual custom. es, etc. Employer coverage under the unemployment compensation act :5; now practically identical with that of the Federal Insurance Con- tributions Act, more commonly known as the Old Age Survivors and Insurance provision of the Monday ‘ SHELTPNTMASQN COUNTY , JQURNAL,,- STEPS IN BECOMING NAVAL AIR CORPS PILOT RELATED IN CADET This is one of a series of articles compiled from coo-- ccrpfs taken from letters written by Cadet Donald W183, ,Florida, to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lantz Wiss, in Shel~ ton, in which much of the routine of the training whichl Naval Air Corps recruits go through while being fashioned , into experienced flying men for Uncle Sam. is related; l We only have a month of ground as one of the eyes of the fleet, gschool left but .7. becomes more as the saying goes, complicated and more work is lgiW’“ “5 t0 d0~ ' and to the flanks of a ship to The courses hm"? be?" 9"9Wd' learn whether any enemy is near Gd LOgemer and given 1“ a or not and if so to report his posi— . minimum of time so that later on “on by radio and the“ await furm lthe whole day will be availablelher orders_ 1 {01' flying- In time of war it would be saf-i I Jan. 20,1941 sent to a heavy Cruiser for dutyI l The duty entails scouting ahead; l : I should be through in squad- ex. than fighter duty even tho we 5m” 1 in abou‘ two Weeks 0" ma)" i are required to do dive bombingfi , l 1be less if everything goes well and i I am anxious to get a crack at: I is done at a much more I l DONALD WISS’ LETTERS V l l -. stationed at the U. S. Naval Air Station at Pensacola,l from then on the rest of the work ‘ that as it requires a pretty goodl , X'apld l ship to stand the gaff and I want? "1941'- Ionkfiold a! tan" Magma v A Fummoun- Pinon Ilfi‘lllml - s 7', ,mj'f —- SAVE THE TAX! The April books will not close until the end of the month due to the higher sales tax going into effect May lst. Buy Now! Save! SUN SUITS and BEACH TOGS 59¢ Ages 1 to 4 l Fine count, fast color per- cales in new red, white and blue patriotic colors. ~ Cotton Jersey Suspender SUITS 1.00 Basque or appliqued Shirts and Suspender shorts in gay pastels. . gMBED Chenille ‘SPREADS 1.98 Special! 90 x 105 size If you want plenty of Chen- ille, beautiful colors, some- thing unusual . . here’s your buy!! fl 'Stl; government employes; a min- : usual course of an employer’s busi— Social Security Act. Starting about July 1, Mr. Bates said that the Unemployment Com- pensation Division would advise covered employers in what man- ner the act applied to them in- sofar as the matter of filing re- ports and the payment of contri- butions were concerned. Employers who do not receive official notification of their speci- fic resuonsibilitics under the new act within a reasonable timi- after July 1 are asked to notify the De- partment of Unemployment Com— pensation, Olympia. or in the employ of his parent;‘ a parent in the employ of a son or daughter; insurance agents: or solicitors on a commission basis only: newsboys delivering papers on the street or from house to‘ house; members of certain non— profit organizations; casual labor not in the usual course of an em— ployer's business (this does not include temporary labor in the. ness) and certain n'iiscellaneous specific payroll exemptions such as retirement pay, dismissal wag- VEBY SPECIAL VALUES We’ve hand-picked all of this Spring’s nicest clothes for little girls and boys, from birth to kindergarten age. Of excellent quality, they’re s e n s i b l y . priced. Brother & Sister SLEEPERS To bed they go in fig- ured cotton crepe . . . Ages to 8. 79¢ Solid pastel color . . . Ages 1 to 4 69¢ Baby Sleepers . . . with the feet in them. Ages 1 to 3. 79¢ PLAY TOGS and COVERALLS 59¢ . . . for small boys and girls. Ages 1 to 6 years. Percales, Chambrays and Covert cloth. Laundry proof rubber but- tons. BUTCHER BOYS SLACK SUITS . with contrasting Slacks Batiste Dresses, hand embroidery trim. Ages 1.95 5 mos. to 3 years. Other Slack Suits . and up most styles SALE of DRUID $ Sheets 811: 99 size Seldom reduced! One of the finest muslin sheets made! Smoother, firmer and stronger. (1) Hand-torn for true, straight hems that stay straight. (2) Strong tape selvages that resist ripping and tearing. (3) Laundry tested to stand up under 4 years of weekly home washings and iron- ings. 81 x 18 ...... ..$1.19 SALE!! 42 X 36 Cases 72 x 108 $1.10 25¢ each Quilted MATTRESS PADS Clean white sanitized covered cotton pads to protect the mattress and give added comfort. Washable. 39 x76 Twin Bed sizes .............. .. $1.19 1.59 Size 57 x 76 I clip. i Jan.2'7, 1911 i I passed my “33” hour check iSaturday and got an up and some] Every welcome praise from thel check pilot. There are lots of boys being sent , home now and there is such a mob f coming in. They are. tightening: down a little bit because with so; much material here they can af—, ford to pick the best and still have plenty. a My check pilot taught me a‘ few things about stunts when we ' ‘checked and I thought I was} ithroughly indoctrinated into them. I ’ He dove and got about 150 mph. then pulled straight up into a vertical stalled position and we started to slide back and then we flipped over onto our back and he came out and started a slow roll but zoomed upside down and turn- I ed at the same time. We did four l times in a row! It's time for lights out now. We get up at 5:30 and do calisthenics now and the day is really crowded. , Fol). 4, 1941 % The ground school course is ,about over and when that is out lI'll have either a morning or an Eafternoon free for some time, un- , til I get the squadron I’ll ultimate- lly go to. | At the present time I’m flying :formation every day for three <, hours with two other boys. : It‘s lots of fun but rather tir-' ‘ing because of the constant con- icentration necessary to hold po- jsition. We started out flying fair- lly loose but have tightened up {now and fly with our wings about fifive to ten feet from the other 1guy’s fuselage. g In smooth air we get closer than lthat but it is a little dangerous ibecause if one of us were to drop I‘a little a prop would probably dig 33. hole in somebody’s wing. i We make three take-offs an ghour and in formation which calls ffor a certain amount of judgement 130 that the leader doesn’t run a- ;way and leave his two wing men. i We break up our for‘rhation ‘from 1500 to 2000 feet by form- ,ing a right or left echelon and ——————— m__-_ [then peeling off just as in the moves and it is a lot of fun. I got an "up" on the stunt— check hop the other day and it includes all the stunts, such as, loops, sanp-rolls, falling leaf, cart- some more if a guy wants to. to master. They must be done with great precision and the next one must be like the last. ‘ You start at 80 Kts, pull up at the top have 40 Kts. and then come out exactly 180 degrees from where it was started without los- ing any altidue and keeping the ball in the center at all times. I can do them pretty well and tried some at night the other night when I had a couple of hours’of night flying to put in. ' I‘ll check out of Squadron 1 sometime next‘ week and go over to another where they use ships I I have't seen but one poisonous 'reptile since getting here and 'that one crawled under the doors of the hanger and we pulled him out and got him striking at a stick and then finally killed him. He was small but very potent, so the men said. Feb. 5, 1941 I’ve been flying in a three- plane section in formation. The three of us have a check on that tomorrow and after that just 5 hours more flying time in sqaud- check then. Then an exchange of the 235 h. p. ships for 600 h. p. jobs and . it will surely be a welcome change, 00. .I put in a couple of hours of night flying the other night and had a lot of fun—nothing but a thousand lights under me and 6,000 feet of clear, cold air. Feb. 8, 1941 This Saturday morning ground ,school has been stricken from the llist of activities and I am writing letters to everybody. I will be getting out of Squad- ron 1 in a counle more flying day: as the work is about completed lthere. I put in nine hours flying a three -plane-formation and had a barrel of fun. It was new and exciting to line up in position and take off tw gether and form in echelon and one thing another in the air. We fly with our wings over lap- ing and peel off when it is time ito come back at the end of the hour. Feb. 23, 1941 I passed the last check on pure flying ability last Friday and have lordered my uniforms. The ships I’ve been flying have lfour fifty horse-power and serve zas sort of a transition from the former “Yellow Perils" to the high ,powered jobs that I start flying [ tomorrow. 4 I feel almost like an airplane l pilot when I get to steering around all that power. Mar. 319“ Ihave been assigned to a speélfic duty now, that of observation and. with 600 h. p. ‘ ron 1. Of course there is a final. to fly ships built that way. l After finishing squadron two! which I will have finished by next? Tuesday, weather premitting, I will have about three weeks in : squadron 3 taking up blind fly-l ing~and flying the beam and thenl to squadron 5 for about 5 weeks; to finish up the training here. The i work is really interesting now and l l I like it fine. i There is a possibility that with the duty 1 have I will be able to} come home awhile every year. Ii have heard that the cruisers each} go to dry dock for 2 months every year and that pontoons on the! ships are changed for'whcels and! that for the two months the pilot! can write his own ticket. There are only about 2 to 4 ships to a cruiser so we will be pretty; much to ourselves. My roommateu’ got the same duty as I and we: will probably be flying together. Mrs. L. fiittg ,Entertains Club Out At Pickering By Virtue E. Hanlon Pickering, April 21.%Twenty- three ladies gathered at the home of Mrs. L. A. Fitts Thursday af- ternoon for the regular meeting of the Pickering Homemakers club. Two new members, Mrs. Walter] Scofield and Mrs. Jay Cole, werel l welcomed into the club bringing the membership now to twenty— sxx. A very pleasant afternoon of visiting ‘and fancy-work was en- joyed. [Delicious refreshments were served. The next meeting will be"with Mrs. Maldor Lund- quist on May lst. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Strong of Seattle, were at their cabin on Pickering Pass from Thursday un- til Sunday. ' 5' Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan of Peta— ,lunfia, Ca1., were recent visitors at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Scofield. Mr. and Mrs. Maldor Lundquist and family spent Easter with Mr. and -Mr‘s. H. Bradshaw of Port Ludlow. . Private Martin Prins of Fort Lewis, and .Mr. and.Mrs. L. E. wheel, immelman and'split 8'5 and Hill and daughter, Lola May of Grand Coulee, visited at the home The wing-overs are about the of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Fitts from . hardest maneuvers for some boys 1 Thursday until Sunday. ‘ Bob" Bellman, who is attending school in centralia, spent the spring vacation with his mother, Mrs. Arthur Beck. 9 Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Strecker and daughter, Joy, Mrs. R. B. Shadduck, Mrs. Angelo Fias- chetti and daughters, Janelle, Barbara and Holly, all of Taco- ma, spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. George Carlson and family. Mr. and Mrs. Frank 1!. Chitty and daughter, Bessie, Miss Verna Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Re 11115 and family of Hoquiam, and Ray Austin of Oakland Bay were dinner guests Easter at the Claude Hanlon home. l Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Harriman, and Miss Christina Roberts spent Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs.: LaPage. ' ? Dick Lewis and Lawrencef Barnes of Anacortes,~ were home‘ from Thursday until Sunday. 1 Miss Laurice Jones is spending a week in Seattle with her sis-i ter, Mrs. Lawrence Gosser. I Mrs. Lillian Cameron and Mrs! Claude Hanlon spent Wednesday in Olympia. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnson of! Shelton spent Sunday at the LaPage home. . l Mrs. Geo. Carlson attended thei Federated. club meeting held ins the Methodist Church in Shelton.l Mrs. Frank Morton and son: Bob, and Mr. and Mrs. Francis. Hushek of Tacoma, spent Easter thh Mrs. Josephine Hushek. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Droscher‘ and son Jerry, Mr. and Mrs. Roy' Longacre. and Miss Dorothy Wiss of Shelton were guests Easter of; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wiss. “Mrs. S. Rempel and son Ainley, ,VISited friends in Hoods- port-on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Auseth: spent Friday evening at the Han- lons. Mrs. ‘Elmer Wiss was a lunch-i, eon guest of Mrs. Chas. Wiss ini Shelton on Monday. | Mr. and Mrs. Ted LaPage and( family of Bremerton, and 'Mrs.. Thompson of Spokane, spent East- er With Mr. and Mrs. J. L‘aPage. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Chittyrof :; Hoquiam, and Mr. and Mrs. Claude l Hanlon called on Mrs. J. P. Rudd‘ Sunday afternoon.- . Mrs. Isabel Droscher and son,’- 3011, spent the weekend in Seat-g Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Harris, son: Howard and daughter Alverta ofI ‘Seattle, called on Mr. and Mrs.| claude Hanlon and family Sun- 1 day. The . twa families were ; neighbors in_'Stevens County. i Everyone, is cordially invited to the community get-together at the schoolhouse S a t u r d a y evening, { April ,26th. Each one is.request-,' scouting. If I do not happen toled to bring a cup and spoon. A ,draw instructors duty. I will be small charge will he made for re- For children . . . cooking. Serve with cream . . . . Wheatena The natural wheat cereal. Cream 0f Wheat 28-..; New 5 minute cooking. I-Ias embryo plus added wheat phosphorus, calcuim ' Rolled Oats Fashioned or Carnation Quick Cooking. Albers , Old Welc Tune In ~ Wheaties Doz Soup WAXED PAPER. . ZOO-ft. rolls 25¢ Cut-rite Pablum hot or cold. 18—02. requires no milk or pkg' 22—ozs. Baby Foods pkg. iron. 3-lb. pkg. ome Back Baseball Broadcast Over KRSC HEINZ—STRAINED Choice Of Kinds .. ____________ _. 87 Apricots Mixed Greens Applesauce Pears and Asparagus Pineapple Beans Peas Beets Prunes Carrots Spinach Beef and Liver Tomatoes Vegetabie Soup MILK DUDS . . . . . . .. 1-11). box 25¢ .A delicious chocolate covered caramel. 5 NEW churn-fresh TOMATO SAUCE. . . Seaport brand Snowdrifl It’s Wesson-Creamed . 1 Morning Fresh! . M FRUITS VEGETABII New Potatoes 8‘1” Shafter Whites Radishes or Onion .............. _. 3 bu. 5¢~ Locals Local Spinach ._ 3—lbs 10¢ Large green leaves Asparagus 2-lbs. 19¢ Sumner grown, long stemmed MUTTON Prices effective Friday and Saturday lb. 150 ROAST Young Mutton Shoulder [[6 OF MUTTON MUTTON STEW . . lb. 90 MUTTON CHOPS 2-lb. 370 lb. 180 Fresh PORK SAUSAGE Thursday, April”, = 3-lb 51¢ 6-H) 1.01 ... 6 cans 25¢ WESSON OIL qt. can 43¢ Arizona seedless. lb. 200 Your Complete Department Store 26 AND 285 ivy. BABY F00 Libby‘s, choice 0f k ’ 9 is 1 'm BROOMS “Big Value" GOOd 4 sew; ........... .. CATSUP I t i.’ Reliance, 14-02. 130’ 212mm, _________ MINCED CL"- x V Razor ' lb. cello bag QUICK ARRO‘N- SOAP FLA E' '1 Pure strawberry,' 1‘35 Le loganberry, 1-1b d and 1 2 Jars -------- " ' r es S, Ja hi Apples ................. .toare Winesap gm Oranges ...... _. 1041’s , iffé Navels, large size Jea Grapefruit , Morrell‘s Sliced Bacon Frye’s Wild Rose Piece Bacon Short Ribs Uty Of Beef ..... M c: Fresh Caught he c, Ling Cod s it; Pork Liver §~ 1“ 10 Drum Dixie