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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
May 5, 1949     Shelton Mason County Journal
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May 5, 1949
 
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FRISKEN&apos;S FUEL KIDS oum oa. le 6ucw [ J A FlEND;:) MAN, IT HEA,'I' A ONLY ( GOOD OIL CAM ./ / . Take the pain out of chilly nights and mornings by putting cold to rout. We're ready to deliver a full tank of fuel oil at a momen't notice. Keep your tanks full of oil and your home will always be warm. Simpson Salmon Derby Beckons: Opens May 15th Rules are being" isstted this week to Simpson Logging Company employees for the second annual Simpson Recreation Association ,almon derby, opening :May 15, HuRls Hokonson, recreation di- rector, said the 1949 contest is be- ing sponsored for employees and members of their families. Two five-horsepower Johnson outboard motors are heing offer- ed as main prizes to the anglers who catcil tle largest King and Silver sahnon. *1'o open the contest to more McCleary entrants, the rules this year include :fish caught in the Chehalis river. Other bouhdm'ies are in Hood Canal to as fat. north as Seal Rock and in Shelton bay waters from Oakland Bay to Ar- cadia Point in Hammersley Inlet. Fish may be weighed at the fol- lowing official weighing stations: Smith's Marine at +Union, tim Grove near HoodsporL Saeger's Grocery on Arcadia road and Mc- Millan's market in McCleary. An entrance donation Of $1 from each angler will be placed in a fired ......................................................... prizes, STORAGE TANKS 50 to 1,000 Gallons for new burner Installations. t GO TO CHURCH SUNDAY for purchasing additional Hokonson said. The two main prizes are being offered by the Simpson Recreation Associa- tion, This year's contest will run from May 15 to October 30. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W. L. Pct. *GBL Hollywood ........ 20 14 ,588 ..... San Diego ........ 19 14 .576 ,5 Sacramento .... 17 15 .531 :1 Oakland ............ 18 17 .514 2 Los Angeles .... 16 17 ,485 31 SEATTLE ........ 16 18 .471 4 San Francisco.. 16 19 .457 4, Porand ............ 12 20 .375 7 *Games behind leader. PREP TRACK RESULTS Olympia 78, Shelton 35 I-Ioqulam 62, Aberdeen 50 Bremerton 73, South Kitsap 49 Raymond 50, Valley 44, South Bend 18, Naselle 15. Ilwaco 8, Le- barn 7. North Kitsap 86. South Kitsap 51, Central Kttsap 14. ii Draw a Better Card with * 0J200Fi00$D / THE g Cl' I1 Tailored by, Meri00 FABRIC THAT'S PLANH£D FOR VALUE[ t i J You can't beat that top ace.., espedall X • when it's the resuh of the combined efforts of Garfield and Merit. The Garfield! "Ace", Tailored by Merit is a suit that re£esents thoerfect combination of] magnificent fabricby Garfield and meticulouA tailoring by MeriI. It's a valu in men's elothitig that can't bebeat, Come i. and see qp • o hand,ome lectiom+0nl X + T SYnADIKmARK STORE +MAY 14 s ,,M. HOURS 11 A.M. MEN S WEAR 123 RAILROAD PHONE 4g4. € SIDELINE SLANT S , by BILL DICKIE ADVANCE GUARD l a back injury and kidney bruise !4 KNOCKOUTS FEATURE LEGION SMOKER, TEe AND LAVIGUER WIN Spectators Mtting in on lhe fourth American l.eg'ion amatem' I t)oxing smoker tri(lay niKht left I Lincoln gym t+easona|)iy well pleased with tile ehtertamment • provided them by tile seven-bout . card despite a disltppoinLitlCllt in the main event. Faihn'e of the a(lvertiqcd Sent- tie rival for Ed "Buster" Berge- SOil to ShOW Ill), forcing fl last- minute substitution, left lhe dis- appointed feeling which almost offset the otherwise entertaining , card. DICK BOTII()M of Shelton, al- though he had not been in train- I ling and was in no shape to take on such a rival, stepped into the ring with Bergeson and pnt on tt good exhibition just so the card could he filled out. No attempt to reach a decision was made and Bostrom was rotmdly applauded for his gener- ous gesture and the game exhibi- tion he staged against the :finely trained and razor sharp Bergcson, Two other :Mason cotmty scrp- pers had their han(ls raised in vic- tory, one by a technical knockout, the other by decision. IIARIIY LAVIGUEI{, 146 pound newcomer to Shelton, scored the TKO over C. M. Dachler, 146 of Bremerton in the second ronnd of a battle which provided plenty of fast action while it lasted. Joe Tee, highly popular 147 pound Camp Grisdale Indian youttt was awarded a three-round verdict from C. E. Wirth. 147, of Brem- often, in a scrap packed with ac- tion all the way. It was the semi- windup event. Two of the better fights on the card were the third and fourth bouts with Jim Bennett 131, of ........ o ...... Seven Bremert()n fighters, un- de)' the management of Joe Kalina of the Kitsap I.ke Club, and three Seattle trtttlers, under the dive(,- Lion of ted Call eL' the Elks Cliff), participated on the card, The snmker wa, promoted by Fred B. Wivell post of the Am(q- ican Legion with Conunander Vern EatOn acting :is matt,h- rtlal(er. It was tile fou)'Lh in a series of smokers the Legion has sponsored to raise money for its athletic fund. the main activity it finances being junior legion base- ball. * JUNIOR HIGH TRACK Centralia 157:, Chehalis 51i Coontz 60, Dewey 49, Central Kitsap 15 JUNIOR HIGH BASEBALL Dewey 10, Central Kitsa I) -I Coontz 9, Central Kitsap 8 South Kitsap 3, Dewey 2 o$ - ! SICKS' SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. See it! Drive it! L.::i € Shelton's exodus to the annual bowling wars of the spring+--the Northwest International Bowling Congress+.-began last weetflend and will be finished this weekend. If the clean-up contingent can out-do the advance guard it will bring home some of the "loot," for the first weekend party didn't fare badly, although tYwas hardly sen- sational. --The girls were the most suc- cessful. Members of the Mac's Corner quintet, champions of the feminine city leagu this past season, all participated in the Northwest International Wom- en's Bowling Congress on the Central Alleys in Portland. As a team they shot a 2035 pin score, which won't return any- thing, but Rubye Frisken and Imra Dickie are in lin for chunks of the prize change when the final lists are completed May 15, Rubye left Portland topping the Class B singles with her 512 score while Imra was among the top five in the Booster diviston singles with her 430 and headed the all-events with a 1297 aggregate. The all- events crown has gone to lower totals than that in past years, al- t[mqgh last year a 1442 won. She was 198 pins over her , nine games. Both should be in the rflon *:+' somewhere when the final ac- counting is made two weeks hence. Helen Smith, Frankie Fredson Southmayd and Ruth Edgley completed the Mac's Corner lineup while Emily Keir of Ritner's Corner was the sixth to fill out the doubles. Frankie roiled a 202 in the doubles for the best single game hit by any of the Slleltonians. Bill Smith and his W,H.S. Elec- tric team, second place winners in the men's city league this past season, rolled in the Class B com- petition on the Rose City alleys in the NIBC at Portland but had a ba night. Charlie Cole's 549 was the best total, a 202 being his top effort. Thin coming weekend Shelton's best goes after the big prizes in tile Class A or open division of the NIBC when the Simpson Loggers, consisting of Al Ferrier, Mark and Ken Fredson. Bab Stewart, G. A. Gustafson, and Paul Fredson, seek the team, singles and doubles rowns. ,;, * * One of the rooters lending mor- al support to Shelton's entries in the NIBC at Portland last week- end was Elwood Frydenberg, who used to tote one of the top aver- ages in Shelton pin circles but now lives and bowls in Vancouver, Wash,, where le works in a ply- wood plant. DES AND HIS DISCUS Those discus throws of 150 feet, more and less which Des Koch has been making this track sa- son have raised the question+in some quarters" as to how they com- pare with college marks in the event. Actually, they cannot be com- pared with college competition, howsver, because the high school discus differs both in weight and size from the college platter, the prep dish being about 11V2 ounces lighter and a little larger in diameter. Des uses a college discus often for practice, in fact throws one ex- clusively in his final practice be- fore a meet to make the high school missle feel lighter when he uses it in competition. Des throws the college weight discus between 130 and 135 feet in his practice throws, which is not in competi- tion, and most of the college dis- cus winnerg in the Northwest schools this year have been win- ning the event with heaves of ap- proximately 140 to 145 feet. Dave Dalby was throwing it 155 up to 164 feet last year at tim U. of W. All of which makes Des look mighty good, considering the fact he is just a junior and still two years away from college age yet throwing the heavier platter with- in ten feet of winning college dis- tances. SPORTS SHORTS Speaking of the discus, a new record in the event for Hoquiam- Aberdeen meet competition was Get Friday night when Orbrey Weiland of Hoquiam hit 140 feet 11a£ inches as the Grizzlies shaded Aberdeen, 62 to 50, m • m First casualty of the fastball season befell Bob Turner of .the Kitap Dairy club before the sea- son even opened in a practice game Friday evening. Bob will be hos- pitalized at least two weeks with as the result of a base-running collision. Van6ouver high school lost its  veteran athletic coach last week when Marshall "Dutch" Shields re- signed to move into the head coaching" position at Clark Junior College. The city fastfall league will be missing seve'al familiar faces-this season with Homer White and Earl Lumsden moving to Oregon on new jobs, Bob Fletcher kept ont of town in his new sales pro- motion position with Simpson, Buck Price and Gene Hanson re- tlrin from the ranks in favor of golf, and perhaps a few more we'll discover once the season is under way nicely. If you're going to see the Husky football team in action next fall here are the various per-game prices you'll have to dig' up for ducats to the six home games on Washington's schedule: Sept. 17( Utah. $2; Oct. I Notre Dame. $5: Oct. 8, Oregon State, $3; Oct. 15, Stanford, $3; Oct. 29, U.S.C., $3; Nov. 15, W.S.C., $3C Season tickets are no saving, be- ing $19, but also include two fresh- man games and also bring the guarantee of the same +seat ea( gaI:i:id, entanlolY  t h?c at iUoni: ro tic i! accept ng pp ' " - ets before June 1, according to A.S,U.W. ticket manager Ivan Travis. Seattle. scoring by a 'FKO over Jim Bolton, 130, of Bremerton in the second ronnd; and Jim Stev- ens, 155. Seattle, hitting" the can- vas twice in the second for eight. counts and once in the third for a nine cotmt to lose to Ed Benn. • 155, of Bremerton. by decision. TILL ANOTHER bout which 'failed to go the distance, there were four in all, returned Ernie Davis 126, Seattle. victor over R. L. Conway, 126, Bremerton, by a technical knockout after Con- way hit the deck twice for nine counts in the third canto. The curtain raiser also lasted less than the full three ronnds when M. L. King, 155 Bremerton, stopped his fellow Bremertonian, Red Hyer, ,150 pounds, in the see- end round for a TKO victory. It was the slowest fight on the card. Planning A Trip? We save you all the Incon- venience of routing and ticketing, on Plane, R.R. or Steamship. No Service Charge World-Wide Connections Call Olympia ravel Service, ely. '6228 OLYMPIAN HOTEL Olympia, Wn. _ - _ + Eren Better titan it L When you observe its fresh and fleel ]('r l,cauty, it might seem uniwliewd)le ++hen ue say that the ]9.19 I'ontiac is excn hettrr than it h)ok, ll,t after ¥OIi'XP cxperiencc<l its really exciting l)er. forths;ice, lve'rt" sllre you, tOO, ill agree tilat in basic goodness, it surl)asscs its mn g,.M looks! It's hard to believe a eat" so lmv.l)riced couhl conibine tilt" flashing sh,ekness of Ihmtiac's new $to, ling.., the gra('ious conffort of l'ontiac's new 'deit and l)!acc your order. Shelton Motor Vision-Aire interi<)rs.., anti sm,)othn<',s of l'ontiac's Ride. Add to those unique 'ziug" . . . the c('onolny and <)f l'eniiac's famous iml)roved six cylind<'r engines . . and driving cnjoyntcnt of GM at extra eo,;t) an<| you've got irresistible! There's no belter / 233 South First Street, Shelton, Washington SEE US FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING OLYMPIC FURNITURE Walt EIIiott, Owner AUTO TRUCK FIRE Farmers Insurance Group PHONE 654 Bill Pearson, District Agent ELECTRICAL SALES AND SERVICE Wiring - Installations - Repair RAY L. DREBIS Phone 766-R-2 So. Olympic Highveay , , ,, ,, IlIMII I[BfflIK = AROWN BAKERY (Our Own) Loving Brothers Ira, Duane, William EELLS & VALLEY APPLIANCE CENTER Merrltt Eells George Valley Phone 25-J Power Line Construction Co. Jaok Chilum, Mgr. Mt. View WHITE SPOT Jim Bleeoker CLIFF WlVELL 8 TEXACO SERVICE 100€/o Veterans The Veterans' Corner Complete Men's Apparel And Shoes MILLER'S MEN'S SHOP Vern Miller, Owner Simpson Employees Federal Credit Union SAVINGS & LOANS For Simpon Employees Bill Pearson, Treas.-Mgr. SH ELTON'S FRIENDLY STATION BILL MILLER'S SERVICE Richfield Products Bill Miller, Owner STOP-INN CAFE Jack Wallace, Owner Dewey Daniels PACIFIC RADIO CI, ANIC Mt. View - Phone 842 RAY'S SERVICE RICHFIELD PRODUCTS USED CARS 100% Veterans BOAT8- RENTALS - REPAIR SMITH'S MARINE Jim and Pat Smith UNION PHONE 242 BOB ERVIN MOTORS 100% Ex-Se rvicemen FOR FUEL OIL PHONE 326 Union Oil Products Gle.n Roeuel Jr, VET'S DOIN'S Pacific Northwest veterans are reminded by the Veterans Admin- istration that the VA can not pay for out-patient medical treatment by private physicians unless the injury or illness in service-con- nected and then only if prior VA authorization is obtained. Many veterans, the VA points out, are receiving such care with- out proper authorization in the mistaken belief that the VA will pay the bill. They must, however, either contact the VA personally or have their doctor get permis- sion from the chief medical offi- cer of the appropriate VA region-: al office before beginning out-pa- tient treatment. In cases of emergency treat- sent, prior authorization is not required, but the treatment must I be reported to the VA within 15 days by the physician to assure payment by tim VA, P.ONE 162 CITY CAB Mel Robertson FOR FIR DRUG STORE Russ Hunter, Manager CALL 697 FOR Dick's City Delivery Dick Gardner, Opt. t For Home Deliveries Call 26 BOB KOLAR Distributor of Kitsap Dairy Products Milk - Cream - Butter UPHOLSTERING LITERAL TRIM SHOP Audra Literal Phone 145 GORDON'S MEATS HOODSPORT t Gordon Bayoe, Owner Your Directory Of Veterans Doing Business In Mason County Complete Automotive Repair VIEW AUTO REPAIR (Opposite Skating Rink) Mt. View Phone 838 BANNER & BURNETT SHELL SERVICE 1st & Cota - Phone 940 FOR FINE CAKES AND PASTRY SHAFER'S BAKERY Walt Sherr, Owner ' "Our Aim Is to Serve You" SERVICEMEN'S MERCANTILE 407 SOuth 1st John Hunter, Manager DWIGHT MORRIS MEN'S WEAR 123 Railroad Ave. - Phone 4g4 DEN'S SPORT & CYCLE SHOP (Formerly Sleyster's) Don Woods, Owner Groceries -Meats UNION MARKET Roy Watson, Owner UNION 242 CRAIG P. ELIOT ELECTRICAL ENGINEER Quality Wiring K Street - Mountain View P:O. Box 1, Shelton, Phone. 788. WEE PAUSE CAFE ALLYN Dick Valley, Prop. t EATON! Vern LES Hillcrett Auto Ed 320 , Neal T ] EXPER Ray = 207 + , .