July 8, 1943 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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July 8, 1943 |
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Page Four
_.._...
DRUNK DRIVING
Milton Lough, Allyn, was fined
$75 and costs and had his oper—
ators license suspended for a year
bprustice M. C. Zintheo on a
charge of operating his car while whose machinery
under the influence of liquor. He " breaks down may get swift, help
W515 arreSted by City Patmlman 'on priorities through direct action
Pam Hughey 0’1 the Fourth- by the War Production Board,
i ,Joseph E. Gancy, WPB district
UNDER, INFLUENCE I manager, announced today.
Mary Henderson, Vaughny was, _“We can’t, waste crops by let—
fined $75 and costs and had her . tmg farm machlnery stand Idle
drivers license revoked by Justice for 1301‘ Of repalrs ~°r
replape'
M. C. Zintheo, on a charge oflmentsv" he dedared-
driving while under the influence If farmers are threatenffd Wlth
of intoxicating. liqudn She was;delay because of confusmn on
arrested July 5 by City patr01_ 5 priority rights on the part of 10-
man Ralph Pigg.
‘ Farm Machinery
i Farmers
contact the emergency rating sec-
tion of the War Production Board
office in the White—Henry-Stew-
'art Building, Seattle, immediately
{even by telephone or telegraph.
“Some farmers and suppliers
imay not realize that on the ma-
, jority of replacement parts no
ipriorities are required," Gandy
,, said. “In the few cases where
'gpriorities are needed, this office
will issue an emergency rating to
; keep farm machinery in use.”'
' Refrigerator
Service
All Makes
NASH
BROTHERS
Phone 334 123 So. 2nd
Former Kamilche
, Resident Passes
Word was received Saturday of
the death of Fred Moyer Sr., aged
68, on May 22 at a hospital in
Dillingham, Alaska. He is sur-
vived' by his wife and two sons,
Fred and Donald, all of Dilling-
hain, Alaska, and a brother and
two sisters in Ohio. Mr. and Mrs.
.Moyerrformerly lived at Kamil-
che.
Mrs. Robert Rawding and chil—
dren of Olympia, spent the week
‘ end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. S. Griggs.
Mrs. George O‘Malley
..v ate
I MILLO’S
QUALITYMARKET 4‘
GROCEREES
FRESH MEATS,
FRUITS
FINEST FOODS AT
BEST PRICES
is the
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. George O’Malley
and son and Mr. and.Mrs.; Rich-
ard Derkin of Tacoma, were
. guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. George O’Malley over the
week end;
Mr. and Mrs. King and son of
HmsPORT Olympia spent Sunday at the
lGeorge O’Malley home.
. . '. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Otto and
:son spent Sunday with relatives
at Little Rock.
FRED WALKER DIES
Funeral services were held in
Seattle Wednesday for Fred Wal-
ker, formerly of Shelton. Inter-
ment was made in the local cem—
etery.
M
JUNIOR RED CROSS
The Junior Red Cross will con-
tinue their regular weekly meet-
ings at Bordeaux school on Tues-
days at 10 a. m. and Lincoln
school on Wednesdays
same time.
HOME.
LOANS
O Convenient Terms
0 Reasonable Rates
. N0 DELAY
at the
DRUNK DRIVING
Roy Shafer, Shelton, was fined
$100 and had his drivers license
suspended for one year on a
charge of driving while'mider the
influence of liquor. The arrest
‘was made at Hoodsport and Jus«
iticc W. A. Magoon tried the case.
Mason County Savings
& Loan Association ‘
Title
Insurance Bldg.
mu THE sermon or TIIE u.s.musunv
W‘EVEIIIEIIEIEFTIIEI. upturn coggmv. ._ .-
TH‘E first day of July, 3- great sales campaign
opens at your J. C. Penney store. All through the
month.every '
with alltheir hearts and hands to sell the War Bonds
of our country.
Side by side with clothing for every member of the
than and woman in our stores will work
family, or every home front need, we will feature
War Bonds and Stamps at every counter, in every
department of our‘ stores.
We still can sell you anything you want for yOur
wartime family needs. But we want to sell you War
Bondse—the very best piece of merchandise We have.
For while we are still here to serve you, we serve our
country first. ' '
So buy War Bonds at Penney’s‘ thisjulyl They
are the best investment for your money in the whole
fiery/rags A
. J. I. Illltv I... Inc-
—.
‘ Replacements Sped
lcal merchants, the farmer should.
guest of her children in Tacoma!
AWS Column
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(Continued from Page One) I
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PURPOSE OF AIRCRAFT
RECOGNITION
The purpose Oi" attending these
laircraft recognition classes is to
Erecognize aircraft in flight. I
To the observers who attend
‘these classes, the Army hopes to
help them in aircraft recognition‘
land upon completion they will
lfind that their reporting effi- .
lciency is much higher than in‘
the past.
l Sgt. Walter Schmitt,
i Sector Sergeant.
i =1: :1: :i:
i MA’I‘LOCK OBSERVATION
POST
A meeting will be held by the,
observers of the Matlock observa— ‘
tion post at the Grange hall Sat- ‘
1urday night, July 10th, at 8:00,
'p.m. All observers are asked to;
attend this meeting, bring yourf
passes and a friend. A good time
will be had by all.
:11 * :1:
1
, i
Announcement of a 13-stationi
i
Mutual broadcasting system hook-
the rebroadcast of the .
up for
ihalf hour “Eyes Aloft" radio pro-
lgram at 8 o’clock p. m., each
Thursday, has been made by Sta-
ltion KMO Tacoma, which will
Ioriginate the broadcast.
The new arrangement will carry 1
the slbw, which is produced forv
[the volunteers of the Aircraft2
Warning Service on the Pacificl
Coast, to all Washington and Ore- I
gon listeners. Seven of the stations l
carrying the rebroadcast are.
[Washington stations, the othersi
in Oregon. The program is the;
product of the, National Broad-l
casting Company‘s Western Divi-
sion in Hollywood and-originally
‘ aired oVer a Pacific Coast NBC
is . . . , For Northwest Are
lfiftvzor; at 6 o’clock p. m., on ‘
on a S. l
v Word received at Fort Lewis
this week from the headquarters
of the Army Ground Forces an-
nounced that Maj.,Gen. Alexander ‘
‘M. Patch, commanding general of
the Fourth Corps, would be the
director of the corps maneuvers
i
l
j pro-Aviation Cadet insignia.
l
Chief of Air Staff for Personnel.
family to enter the service. I I
acquire reserve status during their
fruiting office.
The following Washington sta-
Vtions will carry the MBS Thurs;
day rebroadcast: KMO Tacoma;
ILKGY Olympia; KELA Centralia;
,KXRO Aberdeen; KRKO Everett;
'KIT Yakima, and KOL Seattle!
A‘slilELTQN-MASON country JOURNAL-
Releused by U. S. War Department Bureau of Public Relations
FIRST TO WEAR PRE-AVIATION CADET INSIGNIA—E. Gil-
bert Bad'ker, 17-year-old Washington, D. C. High School senior, is the
first Army Air Corps Enlisted Reservist to wear the newly designed
The silver—and—blue lapel button, which
will be available to all young men accepted for pre-aviation cadet train-
ing is being presented by Brigadier General J. M. Bevans, Assistant
Barker is the fifth member of his
Prospective aviation cadets who wish to
of the nearest Aviation Cadet Examining Board from any Army re-
17th year may obtain the address
: Huge Army Maneuvers Scheduled
a This Year
Bend. Private land owners will-
ingly turned over their property
to the Army to do their part in
accomplishing this important ob-
jective. The Army loudly praises
each and every one of them for
He was a concert pianist before he joinedi f
l
l
the U. 8. Crop Corps
l
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l
I
l
s
l
l
.
.
l
l
I
I
l
.
i
j] . Mariana
lame/043a, we:
WAR £1]an
Wags!
No quadruped of the K9 contln~
gent used by the Marines, the Army
or the Coast Guard is purchased.
They’re strictly volunteers for the
duration, loaned by their masters
and mistresses. These dogs are
taught to hear and smell and see
enemies where humans cannot.
They are invaluable at night.
Seabee Recruiter .
In Olympia Friday
n
U. S. Navy Civil Engineer Corps
will be at the Olympia Navy re-
lcruiting station all day Friday of
0
men 1? r the Navy's Construction
Battalions (Seabees).
Men between the ages of 17 and
50 with experience in the con-
struction and building trades who!
can pass the induction physical
iexamina’tions are eligible for en-
listment in the Seabees.
Chief Wright, recruiter in,
lcharge of the Olympia station lo-|
urges all men interested to call
lat the recruiting station before
I[Friday to fill in the Bureau of)
"Yards and Docks form, which
must be done before interviews
witlrLieutenant Devon.
. said.
‘ from
f Lieutenant L. E. Devon Of thel
this week to interview and rate '
cated in the Old Capitol 'building,l ,3
thesaurus
’FUEL
.Wood Fuel I, Wages
(Umliiunql from pagr- one) ’ “Cent 0‘
— 1
No. 14 which went into 112%: Cf”
March 1, COVch all forms of a yeag All
fuel from presto—logs to $3 " rto Coali
including slabwood, cordwood’y -., and I l
ends, shavings, edging. ho '7 c011m
fuel and mill waste. y, heuSeah ]
Action was taken, Day insular 0
plained, because a serious ' m1 Whig};
shortage threatens the “ v
West.
m.
“The Northwest uses 4 m ., V
cords of wood annually,” V
“OPA has been -'
monthly reports of wood On A .
1209 wood fuel deale .
Washino‘ton, 714 in Oregon; ‘. ,
129 in 2ldaho. They report 25' a
cent less wood on hand than ' ‘
had the same time last yea"
to OPA Firewood Ration '
‘ Frida:
MOUNTAIN VIE Men...
CHAPEL me“: Rita
of .
Christian and , WY FE
Missionary Allianée FLICI
Sunday School ~~ 9:45.
Morning Worship 11:00
Message to Christians.
:11 never
of this 1
“ivening Evangelistic Se
7:45.
Prayer S e rvic e and
Study Thursday evening 73 ' Mond:
Studies in the book of ROIr1
. . . .
“Waiting on God brings ” .Benn
to our journey’s end quicker « Ryo;hl;:
than ou r feet.”
‘
WILLIAM BERG,
Pastor
ME
AN 11‘
WOR
.2“... .. i .
CONCRETE PI
SEWER PIPE » , .
CULVERT PIPE , ~Friaai
a
i—_.
l
l
I
l
i ' Winifred McDonald,
V. 'these two volunteers of the Air—
i craft Warning Service.
‘ : shouldrealize that the
- must plot the pip in an awkward
IOregon stations are KUIN Grants
Pass; KOOS Marshfield, KRNR
Roseburg; KWIL Albany, KAST
Astoria and KWLK Longview.
, KOMO and KEVR Seattle are
,the only Washington outlets for
z the Monday NBC broadcast. A 10-
cal rebroadcast also is heard at
Bellingham over KVOS, 8 o‘clock
' ,p. m. on Fridays. l
=l< *
.POS’I‘ NOCTURNE
It’s eight o’clock. All‘s well.
The sun has set and spread itsi
afterglow
Across our quiet sky, and even‘
ing’s spell
Settles around the Post. A homing
plane I
Has been reported, and the hom-
ing birds
Report themselves to their Com-
mander.
All is well. l
It’s nine o‘clock. All’s well.
Dim lights from little windows
gem the dark
Where babies sleep, and tender
mothers tell
The older ones it‘s time to go
to bed.
No fears of night alarms disturb
their rest.
They know Observers keep the
evening watch. 1
All’s well.
It’s ten o’clock. All’s well.
The weary country folk put out
the lights. I
Night closes in and little breezes
swell '
The eerie chorus of dark sym-
phony.
A lone dog barks; an owl hoots
in the wood;
Inside, the fire is warm, the
clock ticks loud.
All’s well.
l
l
Eleven now. All’s well.
This is the hour when sleep
seems to compel
The weary head to nod, the eyes
to rest.
, the stars,
That seem to echo still the An-
cient plea of one
Beset: “Couldst thou not Watch
one hour?”
All is well.
. . So, lest you sleep, get out beneath l
l
th’s twelve o'clock. All‘s well.
lNight broods; the stars in
Heaven’s bell
Marching their nightly course,
proclaim the truth.
‘New rulers come and go. New
orders rise.
Man cannot change the pattern
of the skies,
.‘ Nor cancel any living work of
God.
All’s well.
Arcadia Observation
Post.
, s :1: >1:
PLOTTER OBSERVER
TEAMWORK
Although separated by many
5 miles in actual distance, the plot:
l ter and the observers are brought
ver close together through the
me ium of telephone. In order to
, transmit all the necessary inform-
l
1" .ation in as short a time as pos-
sible, the highest degree of co-
operation should exist between
They form a more efficient
{team if each considers the diffi-
. culties and limitations of the oth-
‘ or. The plotters should not try to
extort more information from the
observer than he feels justified
in giving sincexobserving is Often
handicapped by weather condi—
tions. Similarly the observer
plotter has
more to do than just repeat what
the observer reports. The time’re-
quired in handling flash mesSages
is often increased when the plotter
1position on the filter board.
Above all the smoothness of op-
eration depends on the patience,
tact and politeness of both plot-
ter and observer, especially as
there may be inexperienced per-
sonnel at either end.
RECEIVES INJURIES
Bert Wood, Simpson Logging
Co. employee, is receiving treat-
ment at the Shelton hospital for
injuries received from a car acci-
dent near Bayshore.
[west and thousands of troops ofl
lweeks the troops will start moving
'military observers will be on the
to be held in the Vicinity of Bend,
Ore., in September and October.
,The maneuvers will be the largest‘
ever held in the Pacific North- ,
every branch of the service will
participate. Within the next few
into the area in preparation for‘
the gigantic field problems.
General Fatch’s headquarters
Will be at Camp Abbott, 20 miles
from Bend.
For two months the eyes of the
entire Army will be focussed on
the Bend country. High ranking
sidelines to check every detail of
training operations. S e a s o n e d
troops from Fort Lewis, already
primed for combat service, will
participate. It will not be an Ar-
my game, but a grim rehearsal of
what is expected to come when
the men face the real thunder of!
contact with the enemy. i
In recent years large—scale op-
erations of a similar nature have!
been held in Mississippi, Louisi-l
aria," Texas" and Tennessee. The ,
Northwest maneuvers will equali j
or surpass them in magnitude, of-
ficers at Fort Lewis state.
Bend area ,was selected becausel
it offers every type of terrain fori
combat operations. More than,
10,000 square miles of land area|
will be the‘arena—larger than the '
entire state of New Hampshirel
The gigantic task of settingl
aside this vast area was accom-I
plished through the cooperation of
Oregon state officials, county of—l
ficials of Oregon and citizens ofl
FATHER DIES l
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Stephens
were in Centralia Thursday at-
‘tending the funera1.of Mrs. Step-
hens’ father, Anton Charleston.
Pecple s Respnnsuhilily
Eight billion dollars of the 13
billion dollars in this Second
War Loan Drive must come
from non-banking sources, so
the responsibility for the bulk
of this 13-billion-dollar drive
rests with the American public.
Indications are that Ameri-
cans generally nced only to he
reminded of this responsibility
and how much they should lend
their government in order to
reach this goal. Americans are
backing up their fighting men
on the battle fronts. They are
supporting the Second War
Loan. “They give their lives
. . . You lend your money.”
*
mam/m an my.
WAR ENDS
*
MOSqm’Io Bar
Among the casualties returning to
the United States from the Solomons
are men who have lost their hear-
ing, not from injury, not from shock,
but. from attack by insects upon
men who have been without mos-
quito bar protection.
.14
We’ll never know how many lives
this mosquito bar has saved and you
probably never will know just how
much good your purchases of War
Bonds have done, but you should
know that regular and increasingl
purchases are necessary.
U55. Trc‘llSltI'y Department
Thel-
, their fine patriotic spirit. v _;. W D
The selection of General Patch b I ~ ietric
as director of the maneuvers is ANDREW NORDLING DIES 4’“. Johi
I
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 1 p. m. from Witsiers,’
Funeral Home for Andrew G.‘
hailed with enthusiasm by the
thousands of officers and men in
. F ualit and
the Northwest who will be in the or y
‘ I‘Tsn
field for the combined combat lghbdldrigd ifiimslgrfil' Oily (313ml)
3' E°°n°my
maneuvers. General Patch only re— Interment will ba ' ebl e .neSdaY-
.
cently returned from Guadalcanal e “1 ympla. —See——
Several K9 training stations are
maintained by various branches 01*
our fighting services.
You may not have a dog to send to _
war but you can send your money.
Buy War Bonds.
where he was in command of Un- l
ited States troops in their heroic!
conquests of the Solomons. He
came to Fort Lewis early in June I
and succeeded Maj. Gen. O‘scar W.
Griswold as IV Corps command-
SHELTON
CONCRETE
PRODUCTS 00'
PAINTING — PAPERING
DECORATING
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
er. General Griswold assumed 1,7,5, Treasury Depar‘meng Seventh St.
Bridge
General Patch’s post in the South George LaRouye Phone 123
Pacific, Rt. 3 Box 233
' Journal Want-Ads—pnone 100 5
1
0 r of
ve 1 pu deg I ]
wh° “a have to? Erie“ e I . . . or
. - We the be A 133% N America we have rationing—4d!e a" 5
year All $3215“ ' ties have sible syStem‘ for even distribution 0f
1
mixtures 10070 by , es in 61 1... foods and supplies among all the
peoplc'
bsorbe f mt” . . N° . '
are a f our “tire-13 ' air In the news columns of this new it; ,
e tage 31.09 e 0 f h you find the rules of our ration system. In . I ]
Pero ‘ 1'. 9°)“ (1 0“ eds ’ . facts '
- tho rdel‘e Dds , b advertising columns you find the t
i.‘ been w re' Simply 6 your go do? what goods are available, when
and whuni, .
5“" Vegans Naz' k can we AS Advertising is a modem means of
commyoa f
S . . (the ing, “ha . “St-109 ' cation. lAdvertising says, “Here
is where
hpme , eryt laws , “9 death may get what you need.” There is n0 °_ :0,
r
supp-LIES ha‘le n fraid of “3215 way for merchants and consumers to Set
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thing ' we I am not a see the igether so quickly, at so little cost. .
“0 “no 11.,” to U dwfi’,‘
1- 3.3 Re. to Advertismg allays conquion. A
. {a holll 11 saves you time, trouble and moneY-
but 1 your purchases from the advertising 691 it”;
beaten of your newspaper and you’ll shop “’04., .
[greatest advantage because you’ll 1‘“ l
advance f‘what, where; .. when and, !
much.’f
Prepared for"
SKETCH-MASON COUNTY JOURNAL
By men whose business is communication through advertising
PA-CIFlC ADVERTISING ASSOCIATION
. i