June 16, 1949 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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1949.
SHELTON-MASON COUNTY JOURNAIJ
I III I I I
"ItOUS]NG
G. I. LOAN
:ONLY s200 DOWN
YOU A HOME
$5,000 TO $10,000
Rent Now Available
George Real Estate
North First St. -- Phone 46
"FOR/,t)" HOUSE--
I WA N-f-TH BEST"
house deserves top quality Fuller
,here it is, in a wide range of beau-
new €olorst
: ,A,OUS elilLL(Rru_...___
:E PREPARED PAINT
finer all.purpose house "paint"
CIRCUS COMING
HERE JUNE 28
Streamlined from the front door
lo tile backyard in order to give
A nlcl it{tin anmscmeni lovers the
finest in circllS talent alld enter-
tainment, Seal Bl'OS. circus and
trained animal exhibition is sched-
uled to show in Shelton for two
performances on Tuesday, June 28.
The tented city will be erected on
tim Mt., View prairie next to the
White Spot.
Among the many features Lo be
with the Seal Bros. circus is the
beautiful and highly trained liber-
ty hor.qes trained and presented by
Lhe incomparable trainer of fine
horses, Bud E. Anderson; The Ban-
tis, presenting their new sensa-
tions on the tigllt wire; The De-
Kohl Trio, a classic in the arL of
juggling; The Fuller Farhily, dar-
ing feats of bareback riding;
IAoyd Center, performing difficult
and unusual contortion routine;
Chief Keys and his company of
Choctah Indians, presenting acts
of skill and grace, knife throwing,
.shooting and roping, attired in
their colorful Indian regalia; Wil-
hemina, ponderous p e r f o r ming
Pachyderm, tops the greatly en-
larged animal exhibition which in-
cludes scores of trained and edu-
cated ponies, monkeys and dogs,
and to the delight of the children
of all ages will be the contingent
of fun-making clowns.
Performances are scheduled to
start at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. with
doors opening one hour earlier.
Texans Visiting With
Relatives In Shelton
Mrs. G. L. Hills and her two
daughters, Nanette and Beverly,
from Amarillo, Texas, are visiting
with Mrs. Hills' mother-in-law,
Mrs. Albert Hawkinson, on Cap-
itol Hill.
Mrs. Hills and her daughters
will be here from six weeks to two
months. During their stay they
plan to visit places of interest in
the Northwest.
Several Grangers
In County Attend
State Convention
Sevc;'al i'allgcl'S fl')lLl ]l:-;ri;
county attended the (;(}L}I alliltill
Washington State Grange conven-
tion at Pullman June 6 to 11.
Present were 677 delegates from
granges in the state and 71 f-,'om
Pomona granges.
Attending were bh'. and MJ'..
Charles Savage, Mr. and Mr.:. N.
W. Newkirk, Kearney Collins,
Miss Mary Frutige'r, Mrs. Augu:!;ta,
M]'s. Thehna LocrLscher, Mrs. Elv:
Duffield, Peter Nordwell. ]L;III:D
Prescott and C. W. Stret'kenl):tc.
Reports to the separate grange.;
will be made by delegates, Ralph
Prescott said.
" Among the speakers at the con-
vention were Governor Arthur 13.
Langlie and ¥ilson Compton, pre:-
ident of Washington State Col-
lege.
The next state assemby will be
in Everett in 1950. The National
Grange wil meet in Sacramento,
Calif., in November.
BELFAIR BARN GETS
SINGER EDDIE KIRK
Eddie Kirk, singing sensation in
the western field, will appear in
person for a show and dance at
the Belfair Barn on June 21.
Eddie has long been familiar to
western fans as he has appeared
in over 25 motion pictures. He was
featured on a regular radio show,
has played on the Gene Autry
show for almost a year, and has
toured the country with the An-
drews Sisters.
The entertainer now heads his
own group of musicians and is
looking forward to greeting his
friends in this area.
CANAL GARDEN
CLUB MEETS JULY 7
Next meeting of the Hood Canal
Garden club will be on July 7 at
the home of Mrs. Frances Radtke
at Lake Cushman. The session will
begin with a potluck lunch at 12
o'clock.
[e '" .,W FULL'It LOU'S RADIO Women will wear original bats
HITECTURAL coLORS mad of/flowers. All are a.ked to
mo'e--o[n accent colors tar your bring an original poem There will
Can Serve You Best be prizes for hats and poems, and
I
fines for those not bringing them.
home. bee them today- BECAUSE Visitors are welcome.
WE USE Sixteen members we;'e pve.ent
U I$ YOUR HOUSE WHITE ?
s,e, .Fulle r Pure Prepared Outs, de
nlte..the white house paint
that cleans itself.
SPECIAL JUNE 17 & 18
In 5-Gal. Calls $6 II
1
5
Per
Gal.
• Top Grade Parts
GIVE
Q Guaranteed
Service
AT
• Prices You Can
Afford
Honest Business
Frances, who is the daughter of
at the June 2 meeting tt the home
of Vera Linscott on Lake Cush-
man. Members and visitor;3 enjoy-
ed lunch and a talk on wild flow-
ers given by Virginia DeBard.
Club President Alice Iadl brought
a cake and a pie for use in a
contest.
Home From G.H. College
Dave CasLagno and Frances Al-
ger returned home recently from
Grays Harbor College, Aberdeen,
where they were both freshmen.
Civil Service Printers
Wanted By Govermnent
The i;'edertl Civil Sevvice an-
I],)llt}Ct!N l!'l: e.Killililliol'tS le'ding
tO ])!'(,ltH!o! :! al)poil'ltlEellL ill the
[,:I,%i.}::II: ()[ IEtli:}llflo cOIlIFf,sioF ,
.i' J!) [t'illlvF, cyIiTI![C;' },) ( N',;tllHn }:{nd
bLip!sit/ xv;;'licr have l)cel isikled.
t'er;ons (le/;il'ir) K l)ermailent po-
F,;ti)ns of this kinl in the fe(leval
service will have au opportllniLy
to fi].o o.' a. civil service exam-
inution loadill K t9 probational ap-
1)oi:tl}ellt with peFDlaP.ent classi-
fied civil .:ervice sbttus. Receipt
of apl)licatiop.s close June 23.
Positions to be filled are at
[.re]erton )rt(t I)orL Towlsend.
lW;IFt:he: ' ia'/o: Dii-tlioU ll/;ly ])e Ob-
i:i,,d I'(,:: I'. ')k M,;rphy "It the
Shelton posioffiee.
Shelton Rgdeo Club
Holds Celebratiens
The ShelLon l.odeo Club has
spent almo;t a eoml)lete month
in celebr:tion of the .succc;s of
the odeo they l);'o(lueed the Sun-
day following' Fo:.e:t Fe.:tival.
The celebration started when the
club attended a dance one Satur-
day following the rodeo. They
trouped to the Purl Angeles rodeo
produced by Price Fletcher on
Sunday and Memorial Day aL the
Port Angeles fair grounds.
Last Sunday members of the
club visited the Long Lake rodeo
to celebrate the birthday of re-
porter Betty ltill.
:Next Sunday the club has
:planned a small play day at the
Island Lake rodeo grounds, where
everyone is invited to bring their
horses and join in the fun. No
admission will he charged, and all
spectators are welcome.
Former Sheltonian
Wed At Sunnyside
Mr. am[ Mrs. Val Sienko of
Shelton attended the wedding of
Mr. Sienko's brother, Jogeph Sien-
ko, Jr., of Pc Ell to Plyllis Plumb,
Sunny';ide, Wash., Tuesday, June
7, at Sunnyside.
The forz)ml double ring cere-
mony was performed in the First
Methodist Church with both Mr.
and Mrs. Sienko as attendants.
Following the wedding, a recep-
tion was held.
The groom was formerly em-
ployed at Rayonier lncorpo]'ated.
Ie is now attending WSC, where
he will be a senior next fall. His
new bride also is attending WSC,
and she will be a junior.
A Navy Suppy Center building
at Norfolk, Va., is large enough
to house and support with elec-
tricity and telephones a town of
5,000 people.
,,. Is Good Business Mr. Russell Alger, was active as
1. editor of the college yeat.ook, f
LOll I-,'q[llN The Nautilu:s. She was offiliated
I IklPll ....... with Nu Beta Phi sorority, for
Mt View Phone 675 W which she was secretary.
• " Dave is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Go To Church Sunfla" Charles Casts•no, Bayshore. He
¢e tO gO Y was, yell king and on the track
• j team. ,(x
• ...... .... mm ....
R A D I 20th CENTURY FOOD STORE
HILLCREST to save brake linings
DEMONSTRATORS Friday and Saturday, June 17 - 18 .......
Combination o , '
$275 -_ SPECIAL:' $199.50 SUGAR .......... 10-lb. sack 89 €
,nol,raph (chairside), CER 0 .......... .... bottle 21'
POWDERED PECTIN
-- SPECIALS109.50 M.C.P. or SURE JELL 2 pkgs. 23 ¢ "j
HUNT'S APRICOT OR PEACH
PRESERVES ....... l-lb. jar 19 € -"
CARSTEN'S SNOWCAP this way
$125-. SPECIAL $69.50 SHORTENING .... 4-lb. pail 75 € ....
Players
Play 45-Minute Records
$31.50 __ SPECIAL
$9.95
OFF ON ALL
MODEL RADIOS
In Stock
A'PPLIANCE DEPARTMENT
TTLE EENCING
• 20 ROD ROLLS
high - Reg. $17.85 - SPEC. $11.95
high Reg. $19.50 SPEC. $12.95
'high - Reg. $22.35 - SPEC. $15.95
- Reg. $24.95 - SPEC. $16.95
IADWAR E DEPARTMENT
Established 1895
MISSION BRAND
COFFEE... 2-lb. tin 95* 1-lb. 49 € with
HUNT'S
CATSUP .......... 2 bottles 25 €
NALLEY'S TANG ........ pt. 27¢
The Perfect Dressing (Qt. 51€)
NALLEY'S DILLS .... 24-oz. 35¢
Crisp - Delicious
NALLEY'S POTATO CHIPS .... 4½-oz. 23¢ A Product of
Fresh - Crisp- Delicious
NALLEY'S BEEF STEW ............ 30-oz. 69¢ Standard of California
Just Heat and Serve Why worry about
Ill i
grease melting and
• FRESH PRODUCE • creeping into brakes?
Fresh, full ears
Cal. Klondike (Cut lb. 5yz¢ ) • Corn ........ 4 ears 25¢ IPM Wheel Bearing
Watermelon .. lb. 5¢ | Frm Red Grease stays in bearing
CantaloupesThick Meated .. lb. 8¢ •l Tomatoes 2 lbs. 29¢ reservoirs while it seals
out foreign matter, pro-
tects wheel bearings.
CHOICE MEATS ot only that, RPM
FRESH BEEF Wheel Bearing Grease
TONGUES" lb 39¢ l bi tes it li
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . u r ca as C---n-g-S
SKINLESS OR REGULAR to vital wear spoLsl
WEINERS lb 45 €
............... . Distributed by
GOOD SELECTIONS
COLD CU'IS lb 49' C C COLE
• • • • • • • • I o • • • • $ •
LEAN MEATY 122 SOUTH THIRD ST.
BOILING BEEF lb 33 € SHETON ASH.
......... " Telephone 87
| I
,egion Motorists
To Have Guides
At Seattle Meet
The 1949 Legion State Conven-
tion Corporation this week com-
menced organization of a traffic
safety and guide committee to as-
sist out-of-town Legionnaires en-
tering Seattle for the forthcom-
ing Legion State Convention, Sep-
Lmeber 8 Lo 10.
According to Henry R. Kruse,
Seattle, president of the corpora-
tion, the fiuge caravan of expected
visitors to the Seattle conclave will
be handled as speedily and safaly
as possible upon entrance into the
city. The safety and guide com-
mittee will have members sta-
tioned on all incoming highways to
show drivers, unfamiliar with Se-
attle streets, the quickest and
safest route to hotel accommoda-
tions.
"The committee will work on
relay shifts. After directing the
ear driver to his destinati&L the
guide will immediately embark in
a special auto which will return
him to his station. Legionnaires
will be stationed at each guide
point, thus assuring complete ser-
vice," said Kruse.
Thomas Jefferson and John
Adams died on the same day, July
4, 1826.
Pa9
-- WHILE THEY LAST-
NEW HAMPSHIRE CHICKS
$14 per 100- 15 ¢ Each Le,s*haOHu.dred
,t
Because one of our hatcheries has over-
set its incubators, we are able to offer Lhis
Special Price JUNE 20 thru 24
--Please Order In Advance-
WAGENER FEED STORE
219 First Street Phone 28
\\;
from
Penney's
A neat cord effect in flzose
sensational new pastel
colors ! SanforIzed, mer.
cerized. Widespread col.
hrs. Dad will love theml
Buy a eouple for Father's
;;/NCRAFT* TIES, 1.49
*esl U. S. PaL Off.
frinlse will not exceed 1%.
WHITE BROADCLOTH SHIRTS ........ [' 2"-
14 PAIR MEN'S OXFORDS
CLOSE OUT OF 3 STYLES ............................................................ PAIR
Sizes 6 to 11
5,00
GIFT SUGGESTIONS
#
FOR DAD
owncrft Belts ................ 98¢
owncraft Suspenders ...... 98¢
{Mtton Slack Socks,
Argyle Pattern .............. 49¢
Rayon Slack Socks ............ 39¢
nit Briefs .......................... 59¢
Rayon Undershirts ............... 39¢
?;hits T Shirts ..................... 79¢
larathon Hats .................. 4.98
Printed Jersey Ties ............. 98¢
port Shirts ........................ 3.98
REDUCED!
50 Only
WOMEN'S
DRESSES
4.88
2.Piece Knits -Summer Fabrics
Marked Way Downl
: -
7 PAIR BOYS' OXFORDS
Size
1.,,+ 3.00 .a,r
i . i ji, i