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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
June 5, 1942     Shelton Mason County Journal
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June 5, 1942
 
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Page Tell -‘¢~- -‘--‘- .‘n‘u‘u‘u‘u‘n‘u‘a '7. lift-3 3y %mi2it Grouts Return , After 28 Years Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Grout, who recently settled in their home recently purchased near Union, are. really returning to their old home section after an absence of 28 years. Mr. Grout was the son of Silas D. Grout and was living" in Shelton in 1907 and was night clerk in the \‘v'ebb Hotel the right it burned with loss of a dozen. lives. although he aided many guests in finding their way out. ' Mrs. Grout was Beatrice Bag- ley. her family residing here ‘ while her father was master me— ‘ chanic for the Phoenix Loggingl Company at Potlatch, and they were married in Shelton. For the ‘ past 21 years they have lived Valsetz, Oregon. where Mr. Grout. conducted the store for a logging l WASHINGTON, D. C.—-'l‘he following table issued by, the Treasury, 3 Department is intended as a savings yardstick for the average income”, It suggests how everyone of the 48,000,000 employed persons in the United States may partici- pate in the war effort through the systematic purchase of Defense Savings Bonds. ‘ “The job ahead of us is far bigger than most of us realize,” Secretary Morgenthau declared in making earner. the table public. are ready to do their part to win the war. One of the ways we can do much more is by, intensifying our' effort in the purchase of Defense Bonds.” ‘ l While persons without dependents may be able to Set aside more than the suggested figures, persons\ with several dependents, or with other heavy, family; obligations, may be unable to save at the suggested rate, the .TreaSury Department pointed out. SHELTON-MASON eopNTY JOURNAL .»1 “I know that the American people '4—H Rally Fete sat the Bceville School lmuso an ' work, and Mrs. Beerbauer on her for the proposcd fair. Held_At Beeville, Beeville. June, 2 'l‘lll‘ Hatchery, Deckerville and Beeville .lAH clubs Work brill: dorm at the U. S. gave an interesting and success— FON‘SL SOI'VICO Laboratory at 1111 rally and demonstration (lily Madison, W‘jsc” and what 21 with about l0 persons attend- ing. Di‘lTIOUStY-tlU0“S and Olltm'tillll‘ had numerous conferences with, merit numbers, alternating _\\'lth Officials; of the Bureau of the, accordion numbers by Lillian Budget and members of the, Ford, a talk by County Agent Clinton Okerstrom 0n 4-H club work with 4-H clubs, and a dis-l cussion on possibilities of holding a community 4—H fair this fall comprised the interesting pro—. gram, which was topped off by a picnic lunch. ‘ Tentatively, a date during the last week of August was chosen It takes 15 tons of blueprint‘ paper for every destroyer turu- ‘ ed outmproportionately more for large vessels. Smith Helps Secure ‘mcans to the development of for», est products, including plywood, , Congressman Martin F. Smith has ‘ . his Lumber Lab Movies \Nashington, D. C, March 127~1 Realizing the importance of theh House, Appropriations Committee, l and working in cooperation with ‘i, colleagues from other lum-é '* ber producing areas, succeeded inl obtaining an appropriation of $1,- 000,000 for the continuance and' expansion of this laboratory pro- i, and I if ,= gram. Congressman Smit'l his colleagues also succeeded in having $2,500,000 appropriated for ‘ .i'orest fire protection, the federal} funds to supplement state funds ; ' ‘for the same purpose. These twol , appropriations are the largest that have ever been made for I, the Forest Service Laboratory 1 thousand different ‘ growing in the irregular masses: breaking. lumber purchase of hills , Philippine mercial value. and it, MASON COUNTY CREAME Friday: heel ' woodsl In connection with 3 :1“ All: mgggggggm i N, 11; For BDNI k QUALITY DAIRY PRODUCTS MILK —— CREAM —— BUTTER VILNO. Use SW Iliad for Retail Milk Delivery Phone 26 \‘_ I‘cu‘eo‘n‘ee‘nv‘ev‘n‘ ..‘iu‘u\-nxns"n‘.“sv\-u‘.-\.-‘..\n.‘..\..‘-.\u\. z 2 ! Z Z l l l l l l l l 2 l l l l l l l l l l and milling concern which isl . about closing its operation and! And hon. Numb”; Mr. Grout has concluded it is time If Weekly One Save: Your He Pei-spoon: Each TotblAnnuel- I, to retire himself. His son Curtisi EarningsArei EachWeehl WillSaveI IncomeGl-onm 'Snvmge: ‘ Grout, now employed at the Navy $31?) if) 3311‘; “fig ség'gg z'ggg' 3g fig'gég'ggg Yard, also recently purchasted a} $5“, 524') 2;; 22:33 lgjflgzggg 2:322:21333 h . n h. r“ ‘Oto $30 1.5, . ,, 6, , -——» Bomeh 0 e candl' at Pa 1Cla; saom 340 2.00 104.00 7,774,000 808,498,000, . “ac l 340 to 550 4.00 203.00 5.794.000 1,205,152,000 w———' $50to 360 6.00 812.00 8.007.000 988,184,000 1 :0 gig-33 labial ill-3:032" ’ ,' , ' 3mm 0 0.00 . . , , .0 ' liFTS ausnmss “m” mm" M“ owl“ .3033 1'333'838 sells-3°: . y - ' 100 to 51'0 20.00 . . . , 0 ,s . o __ 5 Jerse) Show FlrStS 3158103200 35.00 1,820.00 Eggggg 2'542.s:o,ooo " A——-—— vcr $200 . . _ . . . . . . . -- . .000,0 0,000 To Wiwll—owned jerseys captured -—-——————- five first places in the spring “Jaw” ‘10'215-"1'000 Gé‘lnd offhcfdrag-down fee" show held Friday at Chambers u.i.sovzuuiuifififiiiifilci Io~27un~l MNO.DBS-818 Prairie by the Mason-Thurston ing. and feminine beauty with Life. The Life Bro Wardrobe— Sports-Life, Day-Life, Night-Life *«ossurcs charm, not for iusl one hour but ulwuys. Lifts E ’o l ad new comfort “I ms 6 , Jersey Cattle Club.’ Firsts taken were grand cham- pion bull, grand champion cow, junior bull calf, four-yearufld cow, and junior yearling ‘Approximately 50 head of pure- ‘bl‘ed jerseys were exhibited in 12 classes. lo youthful firmness, remolds ic feminine loveliness, :epo- rates as fashion approves. "Lumbermen’s Mercantile Co. $1.25 to $2.50 57min; MATTRESSES Comfort For Keeps s395°- Karr Unit Guar. anleed l5 years. (JOVV. ‘ This will be the last call for you to get Spring Filled Mattresses. The manufacture of these was stopped by the government May 15. We have a good stock on hand and will sell them as long as OORUON HORLAND, NINA MAE STUCK HONORED AT JUNIOR HI Sixty~seven letters were earned by Shelton junior high athletes during the 1941-42 sports season, lwllile Gordon Hopi-and and Nina Mae Stuck earned the boys and ,girls inspirational honor awards for all—around ability in athletics, 'scholarship, extra-curricular ac- ‘ tivities and leadership. The honor awards were an- nounced at the annual closing asselllbly held at the junior high last Friday. The athletic earned were: m- Baseball—John Milosevich, Jack Beckwith, Len Savage, Merle Mi- letters 'chaelson, Ray Phillips, Warren , .Layton, Duane Cracola, Willard VVivell, Gordon Smith, Benny Peckham, Gordon Hopland, Don Daniels, Ken Johnson, Bob Allan, Lloyd George, Bob Smith, George Booth, Tony Nelson, Joe Parsons and Louis Lumsden. Trackaulian Howarth, Jack Griggs. Len Savage. Don Dan- iels. Wendell Spinharney, Ken Johnson, Chuck Renecker, and John Cole. Basketball v—— Wendell Spinhar- ney, Len Savage, Harold Wilson, Warren Layton, Julian Howarth, Jack Beekwitll, Rusty Viger, Bob Smith, Ray Phillips, Hal Richard- son. Benny Peckham, Gordon Hopland, Don Daniels, Don Wil- Process FOund To Make Fuel Of Forest Wastes Seattle, June 1———University of Washington chemical engineers are putting the finishing touches on a machine that converts waste I wood into shiny black briquets suitable as a fuel for smelting . iron or steel or as a substitute for coal. Two graduate students in chem- ical engineering, Lyle Pollock and Donald Myers, have perfected this ,simple and inexpensive process by .which they hope the dead trees, branches and slashings left in Washington woods after logging they last, activities may soon be stoking ‘ the furnaces oflwar industries. A . Prof. W. F. Beuschlein, who SPRING AIR ------------ -- ‘aided the boys in their research, explained today that the wood is ground into chips and placed in a jrotary drier which removes the SLEEPMASTER .............................. ._ $39.00 , water and heats the wood until it 1'1gnltes. The flaming material 1s Other Spring Filled Mattresses ...... $19.50 dropped mt" a retort Where! ‘lacking air, it turns to charcoal. Tar is used as a binder when the charcoal is molded into bri- quets. The finished product is a hard, clean, high grade fuel. The Washington state planning council financed the research. 1 .00 to 3.95 There‘s Variety in Straws this Season. Light as a breeze, fit for Comfort and Bright with Color. _ * Ther’e really so lightweigtht you don’t know you’re wearing them. Colorful Puggries and Rib- bon Bands add to their good looks. Come in and let us show them. - son and Louis Lumsden. FootballmJim Smith, Joe Par-l sons, Les Olds, Don Daniels, Hal Richardson, Louis Lumsden, Bob, Smith, Ray Phillips, Tom Phil— lips, Jack Beckwith, Duane Cra- cola, Julian Howarth, Rusty Vl‘ l l l ger, Gene McGuire, Norm Oliver, Len Savage, Chuck Walton, Wen- dell Spinhamey, Don Weyand, Warren Layton, Larry Cardinal, Harold Wilson, Joe VanOverbeke, Cordell Hopland, Tom O‘Neil and Dick Berg. Charles Bake: Shelton Valley, Hurt In Alaska By Una Winsor Shelton Valley, June 2—At the regular meeting of the Grange Thursday night, David Swanson SALMON..............2cans39¢ TEMATDESTS. . . . . . . .. 6 cans 89¢ Emporium, Solid Pack. No. 21,1. cans MILK..................doz.l.O3 Carnation tall cans (case $4.05) was elected delegate to attend the . annual state grange conventionl 2 in Wenatchee next week and Ar-g “‘ ‘ ' ' ' ' ‘ ' ' dice Bennett is alternate dele—| Reliance 125—ft. rolls gate. ' A. W. Robinson of Lake Cush-r SYRUP ...................................... .. 5'“). can man was a WSW-01:13“ Wednesaay Staley’s Corn and Cane. (No. 21;; 31¢) 8131;311:133? of his aunt Mrs- SHORTENING ________________________________ _, 3—lbs. 59¢ Mrs. Charley Baker received ' 2 k g 31¢ [word last week that Mr. Baker; H ..l _____________________________ _. I) - ‘ hsdul‘mdfirgontelamagor Digerati?“ Luckies. Kool, Chesterfield (carton $1.55) a e ospl a in ewar . e . t ,4. 'left here about six weeks ago to» '''' '; """""""""""" " ’2 pkgs' 25’” ‘run a pile driver for the Alaska, DOll‘lanS, Sensation. Avalon (carton $1.25) Railroad Company and was injur- ____________________________ .. lb. led on the job near Seward. Calumet Jack Holman and Marie Schuf—- , fenhauer received their diplomas} "ANILLA ‘ 7;": ------------------------------ " 8'0z' Thursday evening, along with 105i 01d Engllsh Imm‘tm“ lother graduates from the Irene S. ________________________________________________ .. qt. .Reed high school in Shelton. As! Beuvs Ripe Olives yet their lans are indefinite for lthe summepr. ‘ I - - — - . - - - - - - A A 2 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Horst and family moved during the week end from their home on the Dee— gan road to Isabella Valley where they havebought 80 acres. Mrs. Pat Guerin, of Olympia, and her sister, Mrs. Lyle Bassett, of Shelton, spent Thursday after- noon with their aunt, Mrs. H. A. Winsor and daughters, Mrs. Dew- ey Bennett and Ava and Una. Winsor. Joe Kneeland, who is now chief cook at Rau’s Inn on the canal near Union, was over Monday for an over night visit with his mother, Mrs. Signe Kneeland. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Rutledge were disappointed when they re- ceived word the middle of last week from their daughter, Mrs. Ina Fort, that plans Were chang- ed and she would not be trans- fering from her work in the treasury department at Washing- ton, D. C., to the Portland of- fice. However, she plans to come west during a month’s vacation in the late summer. Chris “Corky” Shafer is spend- ing part of the week here with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Shafer, while his mother, Mrs. Albert Shafer, of Shelton, has gone to Pullman to see her brother, Clifford Moffitt, gradu- ate. He plans to enter the ser- v1ce soon. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cooke, in company with her brother, John Insel and family of Gig Harbor, enjoyeddinner and a visit on Dec- oration Day at the Insel brothers farm on Lake Isabella. ‘ Mrs. Charley Baker, accompan- ied by Miss Peggy Cormier, of Shelton, made a business trip to Bremerton Tuesday. Jean Baker spent the day in town with her aunt, Mrs. Dan Bennett. Ex-Gov. Martin Bank Director Clarence D. Martin, former gov- ernor of the State of Washington, was elected to the board of direc- tors of the Seattle-First National Bank last week, to fill the vacan- cy occasioned by the death of E. B. Deming of Bellingham‘. Former Governor_ Martin has spent his entire life in the State of Washington, having been born at Cheney where, from small be- ginnings, ,he built up a grain busi- ness established by his father into a large flour milling operation known as the F. M. Martin >Mill~ ing Co. He has extensive land holdings in Eastern Washington and has been active in civic and public affairs in Cheney of which he was Mayor many years, and Spokane. serving on the board of the old Spokane and Eastern Trust Company and, more re- cently, on the Advisory Board of the Spokane and Eastern Branch. l l PEAS .................... _. ‘ 20 Mule Team EGGS 2 Strictly Fresh Local Special BUTTER Wild Rose 90 Score Fishers Blend, Drifted SnOW BORENE . . Picksweet, All Green. No. 303 calls 010 RANGER’S’ 97” BIRTHDAY SALE 20 MULE TEAM PRODUCTS Reliance Golden Bantam No. 2 .................... .. 12 cans 1.49 SUNSHINE Borax ____ 2-Ibs. Krispy Crackers bat: Boraxo ____________ __ 15¢ 2’:b:Graha-‘ms 63¢ Borax **** " z'lbs‘ 33¢ I gurrgn WAFERS lb. 21¢ DUTCH CLEANSER ...................... .. Scans 25¢ ROSEDALE PEAS—No. 1 cans ...... _, 2 for 25¢ SWEETHEART 3 23¢ 1 bar 01¢ SOAP TOTAL __________ -24.: den. '14:: 2-“). 89c CRISCO-SPRY 3-lb. 710 Pure Vegetable Shortening, 6-Ibs. ...................................... __ 1.41 . . pkg. 590 Soap Powder, 4—lb.-5-oz. pkg. BUY nnrnnsn STAMPS irons! LUM BERM EN’S ‘ M EREFINTI LE E RIP. WHEAT 2 pkgs. Breakfast Cereal 150 Sheets KRAFT CHEESE 2-lb. Brick, American, Swiss . 0:] the ever-l - ar'S grislj ii? the attacl ‘ Week and ter off Neal womb. Sheltox -, I‘esldents a efellse “Mon to chi , , prelmredness . ' meEt possib this area. ,,"0t aim-mi; Quart all th , prove r. ‘t can ha 'M CARRYING MY SHARE mVICTORY . aRd to pl: in{"tl‘uction p< MaCe in th me. bd be in re . . . . I. lack'outs You are Interested in keeping food prices doWI1 (l b I , e prepa anon shoult so are we. Working together, we can accomplish? purpose. For instance, you can help us to helP save money by getting all your daily food need reminds res one time; by using a shopping bag or basket to (“It or an, serve paper which is needed for victory; and th , , they should buying only your normal requirements. We’ll 9 \seek the nea pass the resulting economies along to you in‘I prices every day of every week. ‘ ORANGES ... . . . . 10-1155. 5 “ New Valencies GRAPEFRUIT . . Arizona Seedless CUCUMBERS Hot House PEAS 2-lbs. 1‘ ,m' 1, Well Filled llghts. and SPINACH . . . . . . . .. 3-lbs. 1 ; away fror . lvlns. Fresh a if re SPUDS . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-lbs. your. Shafter White, U. S. No. 1 ight are off ASPARAGUS . . . . . 2-le. ‘T Sumner No. 1 LETTUCE . . . . . . . . . . head Local In .. LOCAL STRAWBERRIES 0, MAKET PRICE » w MEAT DE PA n'm EMT. E223? SLAB BACON . . e l he s: Armours, All center cuts . lb. 400' “e HAMBURGER . t l 1.023 when di lb 200 »- he: kn I I ; ‘ n (.3 9“ Fresh Ground i ’ DOG FOOD . . 3 cans 230,0,3'8t1’l Lucky Dog it saute: BEEF BOII. .. . . lb. 116‘; Brisket , “ii MUTTON ROAST ............ ._ lb. 18¢ 1.3113131 WIENERS .......................... ._ lb. 25? 3 idtfigpgg SAUERKRAUT .............. .. 2-10.15¢{ am; an .. ,BACON SQUARES ........... .. lb. 23i 'utgegfiuiiél LINK SAUSAGE ................ ._ lb. 29‘] P M BOLOGNA ................... .... .. lb. 29." rotor FORMAY ...................... ._ 3-lbs. 6% “n8 A; ,lin , irfg pa