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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
June 24, 1943     Shelton Mason County Journal
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June 24, 1943
 
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-——~ ~—..- #WTIEPZSTEXJUM; 2:1; I 1 . , Mm.‘.«._fi_~ .L-_.-__._ __._.. ... _. K-J (r Reproducing Ferrets . Litters usually are born in May or 1 I Pomona Grange I June, and occasionally there will be a second litter in September. The period of gestation is about 42 days. The young litter range from 4 to l0. I “>0 the cent of the 1939-1942 ave- - Grange hall Saturday night the ’0nd Of the War. Good farm man-l orders, Shir SERVICE A large “mm attended an“ a Niitional Poultrv and Ega Indus- agonient now demands the care- 167,110,000 ' : denghmfl mm? was f‘nJOyedlnlfy tr; Food Advisd’l-y Commfitee and fiil and conservation of feed , Twentyflne Wegks of 19, 3.11' GOCd musm} da“c{’}g‘ a OC‘ 1‘“ I is also a member of other indus- SUIITS- I ulatlves productlon, 3,0765”. Clous -Sllpper “as senea bJore I trial committees, recently return— Beernink pays special tribute to b.f.; 21 weeks, 1942~3,781, H departing ‘ed from meetings in the national the way in which the “Farm. 21 weeks, 19414995333320 g of Christian and Missionary Alliance Rev. Richard Eckstedt, a missionary to Venezuela South America under the ., Scandinavian Alliance Mis- sion, will be guest speaker ' at both services Sunday, June 27 . ’ MORNING SERVICE 11 a. m. i EVENING SERVICE 7:45 p. m. “Where there is no vision the people perish.” William Berg, Pastor By Mary ‘Matthes will hold their meeting at Agate Auseth, who leaves for service in " the Army Tuesday, was held at While cutting wood last Wed- -nesday John Vanderwal slipped Mrs. C. P. Grindrod spent the week end visiting with Mrs. M. INickelson. She also attended the IGrange meeting. The children of Mrs. G. Whaley of Shelton, spent a couple days Ilast week visiting their relatives, the Vanderwals. Mrs. Tess Welch went to Seat- tle Monday to consult a specialist at the Swedish hospital. Mr. P. Fuesner and Mr. G. [Leeds left Sunday for Wenat- Ichee on a business trip. I Miss Evelyn Jacoby of Cincin- nati, Ohio, is now making her home, with her two brothers, Ju- Iiius and Milt. MASON C O U N T Y MOTORS OPEN ON SUNDAY. ——adv. Cliff Wivell’s CERTIFIED TEXAGO SERVIGE Representative in Mason County for Agate, June 22~—P0mona Grange , 'and severely cut his leg with the : "67 rate” . I _ FoodFroinyUS. Farms to Fred Many I Millions In Europe After War Ends than 500,000,000 people must be fed, largely by food from I More the Washington Clo—operative E‘ g I and Poultry Association. capitol convinced that the demand for this country to feed the world government officials,” he reports, “is to provide huge stocks of cer- eal and vegetable foods rather than meat as it takes more work to get the same food values in meat. A high percentage of the cattle, hogs, sheep and other live- stock in Europe has been destroy- ed aiid a considerable time will be required after the war to re-I is predicted that the eating habits of most Americans will be sharp- ly altered and that tighter food rationing is ahead since the gov- ernment purchasing of food must be increased so that it may fol- low on the heels of the Allied sol- diers. A still greater stress will be placed on food conservation and we will be urged to share the food with the rest of the world.” ‘Of special interest to poultry and dairy producers are Beer- nink’s statement that many im- portant feeds are not equal to the demand. “Feeds for dairy and poultry will probably have the iestablish European agriculture. It I , Washing Machine first priority,” he explains, “and4 SHELTQNMA§ON " COUNTY JOURNA‘L‘ ‘ Igrains, range, lawn clippings, kale, . carrots, mangles and skim milk. are gone for the duration and probably for sometime after the Front” in the State of Washing- ton has risen to the emergency INews Brevities' . From Tahuya ' By Effie L. Knowlton I Mr. and Mrs. J. S; Ahl enter- ? tained a group of intimate friends Iin farewell to Orvil Orcutt who Ileft Friday, morning for Norfolk, IVirginia. I Johnny Huson left Monday Imorning for Port Townsend to Ibegin training with the Coast IGuard. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hu— son entertained a large group of friends in farewell to him on Sat- Iurday evening. Mrs. Leslie Wyers and little daughter Frances Ann of Potlatch, spent several days with Mrs. Frances Huson last week. Lesly ning. Mrs. Green will entertain the noon lunch. ‘ Rendslands last Week. I Mr. and Mrs. Butterbaugh of ,Bremerton, were out to fish and i visit the Sebring family. tle, spent the greater part of' last ed supplies of the depression years came for them on Saturday eve-' 'sewing club Thursday at potluck, Mrs. Lou Barthelermy of Seat—I Service Complete Stock Wringer Rolls 'week with the Knowltons. The Olimpia III & Wool PRODUCTS COMPANY I I en leg. Mrs. Ranka Claire’s father and . mother have moved out from Se- High Grade Fuel and Deisel Oils cast has been removedI from little Tommy Finch's brok-I Young Forest Wardens Learn How It’s Done Using an increment-borer, audience of Junior Forest Wardens of the “Snoqualmie Falls area. A core of wood William Hagenstein, forest engineer, has a iiveiy and ' 1 V' ‘ . . 1 . . w . «)7 Ithe United States, folloumg the 1 behave them is going to be en— 168,621,000 board feet or (1132?, hilllsugdig' Xfil‘bljufl: I l'rli‘ilSC of occupied countries from ough feed to maintain the flocks cent ,of 1939-1942 average- I . 9 £11 111?; 3 1,1 "to “mm; a I , the Nazi rule, according to Harry and herds in the Northwest but i erg averagEd 180,25“) membub :11» 111ml. t t1 IJ. Beernink, general manager of then-1115 of peace and the unlimit_ jShipmentS, 1661353000. A pary ionoring -enne l ‘ H . . Ion a scale yet to be determined , and is carrying on in the face of , 497,322,000 b.f.; domestic : '7 V“ 1 I3“ airs'h‘ggfiggwfihggviemggfi '- will make the food strain acute. ,the tremendous difficulties of i}246,;1764,2802;76e630p0rt, 70, , I I a e $3 I . “Our government’s aim, as rc- I transportatlon and"5110rtages or I 0C3. I '. 2,1,8 Cflfii‘fiefinflound flected in the thinking of high I farm labor and eqmpment- Industrys unfilledi interested is removed without injury to the tree and from this core a histOry of the tree can be read in the cross—section of growth rings. Junior Forest Wardens in Washington now number several thousand. They are learning forestry on field trips like this and are also contributing time and effort to Keep Wash- It’s Up to the West . . . ' How big would a square box be, allowing for an inch thickness in each of the six sides, made of 15 billion board feet of lumber? Yes, 15 billion board feet—how big a square box would it make? That’s the 1943 war order for box ington Green by preventing forest fires in their communities. assignment. Typical was an 1. g. named Alva Johnston, whose Satur- day Evening Post article, “Seattle’s One-M a n Revolution,” published early in 1937, still stands as the most amazing miscellany of misin- formation ever printed about the West. I More Livestock. feeders should supplement wher_I Mr. and Mrs. Don Giles and' of West Coast mills. I i , I i e. ever possible, with homegrown daughter Patric1a, of. Seattle, , The bottleneck of lumb.‘ s spent several days VlSltll‘lg‘ the . duction remains in log supp Mean Trouble Unless feed grain'production in 1943 greatly exceeds current pro- spects, livestock feeders face an entirely changed feed-livestock situation for the 1943-44 feeding, year, state R. M. Turner, Exten-x sion Economist at the State Col-' lege of Washington. Feed supplies will be much less Lumber Avera r Up From 1942 Seattle, Wash.~The wee erage of West Coast lumb duction in May (4 weeKSI ‘averages for April were P ‘ tion, 164,497,000 b.f. (10%- Orders for 21 weeks Qt break down as follows:' ‘ i The I file stood at 1,104,623,009. b , the end of May; gross " I at 499,845,000. , I Changing war requirem. ' West Coast lumber were , Iture of the industry pict. ‘ May. '- , Due to our entry into Ifensive phase of the war. , Imand on the industry is If ’a great variety of materl I Ibattle service instead of t ’ struction lumber which f went into cantonments, factories, warehouses and; structures. Vast quantitie :and crating lumber will 7 quired to carry munition Iseas, through beach lan , I exposed dumps. Many m0 ing barges and special ta, boats will need West C0 her until the war takes a, . turn. There is‘ yet no prQ, ' decline in total velume of required for war. ‘A greallieI ;. of the total national requilf. i I is now being brought to the V ern industry, increasing a“ the great overall problem, I shortage of manpower woods. The industry is in a continuing struggle, ,. back to the production V01 ‘. 1942, which is again do =' ‘ the war agencies for 1943. .__..—- Presidential Success, 1 The order of presidentia j sion established by an ac ttl . and crating lumber. The War Pro- It was if} that aftiCIG that the plentiful'than they have been for gross, approved January NASH iereattgisfqnafiiidgifgn home Wlthl duction Board has thrown a far term, SkldI‘OW, first appeamd. the past three years, and in case is as follows, in the event. PROMPT SERVICE __ ' ‘_ heavier part of the order or. West- JOhFStOH apparently 8,013.}115 dope of a below-average growing sea- president and vice president lst and Franklin Phone 397 Phone 334 123 So. 2nd 9“ 10g g e” and lumber workers durmg three days Spent 1“ a Seattle Son this yeah the feed situation in I office: Secretaries of state. Journal Classified Ads Are Real Go-Getters — Phone 100 TIIE FIIIIIII Flloll'l' CRBBIES Ol'l . . . rABOUT. SIX MONTHS AGO, it was the privilege of the Washing- .ton Co-operative Egg and Poultry Association to launch a campaign in this state to encourage a greater recognition of the farmer’s part in essential food production during the war. Our slogan, “The Farm Front Backs the Fighting Front,” was her- alded across the state and nation. Newspapers, farm journals, clubs and civic organizations, state and federal agencies all picked up the ball and carried it in a way almost unprecedented. This movement did not halt with the end of January, “The Farm Front Month,” as proclaimed by the Governor of Washington. It . . . . , ,1 ,. ,. .~c : .. __._ still continues. The farmers of this state have responded magnifi- YEARS OF UULNESS OF TIMBERWVJEAWER’ .Qgpfiggtggggggggg I , ' OF PURE. DRINKING centl . to the demand for increased production. gbfgogggEgofimgcnon ARE INCREASED sy WATERWMEANS OF .. . . y‘ ' ‘ _ nowooplNAia‘éEL‘iEifhé’fffiéstfio gggllfflpfmcggm Juvenile Benefit As their part in the continuation of the Farm Front program, the 30,000 farm families who own and operate this Association have dedicated its complete facilities and personnel to the maintenance of maximum food production on the farms of this state. Its procure- ment as well as its marketing functions have been geared to meet emergencies that can be expected under, a Wartime economy,- - as. . .. «i v ..-|7.(h‘la~ for Revolution and w 0 rs e. The what it takes to beat the Nazis and . . . ' pieces were all written by literary the Japs, how to hang up their. dif— tlcularly Short 0f hay, roughagesi dues 1,11 4' hours! 2 gents who for the most part were ferences and give ’er snoose to back I and prom?“ Supplements- , I t S t u 8 h: 5 Visiting us for the first time. 'Not up the boys on the battle lines. Expandlng th PTOdUCtlon is glossy smooth I I one, to my knowledge, spent more That is to say, the West is show- largely resPOHSIble for the in- than our section of the timber in- dustry could normally be expected to carry. The pine mills are, of course, always large producers of box lumber. The fir mills, however, have never been set up for this business, but now they must take it. "The South, the Northeast and the Lake States can’t fill the bill for box lumber that the Government has put up to them. So some of their proper share has been put up to us, andvseemlngly withd‘ht any doubts that the Western fir and pine industries can make good, Well, why not? Since Pearl Har— I bor what large regional industrial group has made a better war record under the toughest imaginable han- dicaps, than the Western timber in- dustries? Where is there a brighter record of a solid production front of managers and workers? Of war Orders shipped and delivered on time? So Western loggers are reward- ed with a yet bigger and tougher war job. That’s how it happens with the Marines, who are also pretty good. Who’s Looney Now? Five or six y e a r 5 ago Easte‘rn newspapers a n d magazines w e r e p a c k e d with sensational articles that pictured the people of the West, including Californians, as on the run than-a week in the region on an hotel room. Seattleites say he did it with mirrors. Anyhow, in his article “skidroad” was distorted into “skidrow,” and was moved from the Main Street and Yesler Way area to the waterfront. N o w yo u s e e “skidrow” applied to every city’s rough'and rowdy district, in news stories and articles. Well, who cares? To get back to the point, a mob of ignorant and irresponsible East- ern journalists built up an entirely. false picture of the West in the de- pression years, out of the strikes, the “ham-and-eggs” movement, and so on—manifestations which we were showing in common with the rest of the country. It wassimply the old “Wild West” on a new angle. It was the bunk. The war has shown who’s crazy. The West Will Win the War . . . In all varieties of industrial war production it is the West that has set the shining example of keeping peace on the job. The West holds the records in ship and plane buildo ing and in lumbering, mining and oil production for the w ar effort. And amid the whole, production in the woods and mills, despite dire shortages of men and equipment, is outstanding. Western management and labor in war industries have shown the world how to team up to produce ing the world how to win a war. r V (Great §OURCE OF 'THE PRODUCT Soybean Meal Found Suitable Poultry Food Farmers will be interested in two recent Department of Agri- culture discoveries. Poultry nutri- tion specialists have found that soybean meal properly cooked is a promising substitute for meat scrap and other protein feeds of animal origin. Another discovery is that good quality, home grown legume hays, formerly considered too bulky for hog feed, may be. America; “ng0” THE UNITED STATES l6 By FAR THE BEST INFORMED NATION IN THE Wanna... ARE om; WEEKLY NEwsPAPEES AND cross 70 2,000 PAIL/E5 WITHA COMB/NED ClRCUlAT/ON 0F 58. 000, 000 PUBLISHED IN CONSERVATION TO THE WT. THIS ALSO AIDS CONSERVATION IN THE E'QRESTS—uTHE BERSHIP IN YOUR FARM COOPERATIVE ,used to reduce the amount of' ‘concentrates required in rations for growing and fattening pigs. Of three legumes tested. ground. soybean hay gave the best re- sults, when used for five to ten 1 per cent of the total ration. If you Wish to Sell you'll Have to Tell—Journal Want-Ads. WATER' FROM'ANV STREAM DRINKABLE OPA Sets June Car Quota for Coast The quota of new passenger automobiles for rationing in five western states was set at 6,665, and reserves at 868, it was an- nounced by the Office of Price Administration. Quotas and reserves by states follow! Arizona—317, reserves, 41; Cali- fornia—4,349, reserves, 567; Ne- vada—148, reserves, —819, reserves, 106; Washington —1,038, reserves, 135. , Nationally the quota was set} at 51,000, an increase of 1,000 over the May quota. ‘ 19; Oregon I I I Butter in Argentina Butter is made by the natives of I Argentina by dragging, cream in a skin bag behind a horseback rider. I \ . ier, and further increases are un- I I I , said. At the same time, livestock 1943-44 will be acute, Turner numbers were 11 per cent greater last January 1 than a year earl- derway, particularly for hogs and poultry. With prospects for feed grain production remaining unchanged, farmers can follow one of three lines of action in 1943-44. ( 1) They can continue the pres- ent high rate“ of feeding, thereby drastically reducing reserve feed supplies by the fall of 1944. (2) They can reduce the cur- rent rate of feeding, thereby cut,- ting down the per animal yields of pork, lard, eggs, milk and beef. (3) They can reduce the number of livestock raised. Feed grain supplies are being supplemented by large stocks of wheat, and some 275 million bush- els were fed during the year end- ing June 30, in addition to 30 million bushels of rye. Turner es-I timates around 325 million bush-k els of wheat will be fed to live- stock and poultry during the next marketing year. Since the wheat crop in 1943 is expected to be smaller, stocks of Wheat in re- serve will be substantially reduc- ed. Washington state has large stocks of feed grains, but is par-i I I I creased demand for feed grains. The pig crops this year may be as large as 125 million head, com- pared with the large crop of 105 million head last year, Turner said. The 73.7 million head of hogs on farms January 1, 1943, was 22 per cent greater than a year ear- I lier, and was the largest number on record. N _Song Copyright To obtain a copyright the song first must be published. Immediate- ly following publication Application Form E and a money order for $2 and two copies of the best edition I should be forwarded to the ‘Copy- right Office, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. Application forms are-obtainable from that office. IfI ; the composition is not reproducedl for sale, registration of the manu- script may be made. Send one copy I of the unpublished manuscript, Ap- l _ plication Form E2, and the stat- utory fee of $1 to the Copyright 0f- : lice. Throw your SCRAP into the fight. All proceeds of this Dancing 9:30 to 1:00 I I DANCE Sponsored by Shelton Aerie of Eagles SATURDAY, JULY 10 I to Juvenile Program OLD GYMNASIUM RAU’S ORCHESTRA war; the attorney general; master general; secretarieS I and interior. The secret-‘ agriculture, commerce 33'} 'l were not mentioned as these ments were not Organized. time. replace” our Sherwifl'. liams Enameloid stands, 3 class by itself 1 It’s so 93?, ‘ 7' give furniture, we 01:1?v Anyone can use it... eloid covers with on; V ‘ leaves no brush marks —' , surface r esis ts matting, f r ui t a c i d s , alcohol and alkali. Susnwm-WILLIAM’ ,5u5nwm-WILLIAM5 " IPA'mrs ______—__/‘ $100 DOOR PRIZE Dance to be Donated . 01' 1 Admission 75¢, tax 1" . 22,: