July 28, 1949 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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1949. "
SHELTON-RIASON COUNTY JOURNAL
Pate 3
.o Other:
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IllIlllillltlli"IIII llIIlllll
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mR
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• Prices On
?,, •
TCH BOY
PAINTS
WAS NOW
WHITE, gel ......... $6.65 $5.58
OUTSIDE, gel $6.39 $5.58
PRIMER, gal... $6.39 $5.58
"DUTCH 13OY" PAINT IS BLENDED
TO STAY BRIGHT
CE TO BUY GOOD PAINT
PAI00 STORE
T. PHONE 800
District Tourney
Beckons Fastball
Players Next Week
CITY I,'A.'4TBAIJ, I,IA(/UE
W L rf ra
Kitsap Dairy .... 21 0 197 25
American Legion 8 12 139 136
lrayonier . ........... 7 14 100 135
V.F.W. Post ....... 6 16 60 197
Games Tonight
l)airy vs. Legion
V.F.W. vs. Rayonier
Forfeits featured city fastball
le-gue play during the past week
as principal attention of the active
players in the circuit turned to
the coming district tournament in
Olympia.
Two Shclton teams will play in
the tourney, the unbeaten Kitsap
Dairy being one and a picked line-
up tram the other three teams
wearing the Rayonier spangles
being the second.
The district meet opens next
Tuesday in Olympia and will con-
tinue until August 11 before the
district titlist is chosen. It is a
double elinLination competition, a
team having to lose twice before
it is out of the chmpionship con-
tention.
The only complete game played
in the local circuit last week was
Kitsap Dairy's 10 to 3 triumph
over the V.F.W. last Thnrsday
and even it was marked by mid-
game lineup juggling in the Vets
ranks after the American Legion
aml Rayonier had temninated
their game early with the Legion-
naircs leaxling, 5 to 0.
Both Monday night's games
were forfeited, the Dairymen get-
ting no opposition from Rayonier
and the Legion adding a victory
by the same method over the
Vets. The Legionnaires won a
practice game from a combined
Kitsap-Vets lineup, 8 to 5, with
Les Spilseth on the mound.
NEW SATSOP FISH HATCHERY TO
BOLSTER CHEHALIS SALMON RUN
(From Montesano Vidette)
Early completion of the new
Simpson • salmon hatchery and
rearing ponds at Matlock is indi-
cated by a call for bids, issued
last week by the state department
of fisheries.
The new project calls for an es-
timated expenditure of $100,000 to
SHELTON WINS ANOTHER EXTRA
INNING TILT, 5-4 FROM LACEY
Pete Bloomfiekl's clutch pitch -
ing and the generosity of Lacey
fielders kept the Shelton town I'()UISBO PLAYING
team's 1949 record unblemished IIERE FRIDAY NIGHT
by defeat Friday night, Shelton Manager Stan Armstrong an-
'winning a thrilling 5 to 4 ver- nounced Wednesday morning
dict in ten innings under the that the Shelton Senior Legion
team would entertain Poulsbo
Loop Field lights.
Lacey outhit ttte local I,egion-
naires, 14 to 7, but donated three
runs with loose fielding, includ-
ing the winning tally in the
tenth, but Bloomfield had it in
the jams and gave up only two
earned runs himself despite the
14 hits hc allowed the visitors.
Tlll'] RE,liLT was almost an
exact repetition of the 5 to 4 ten
innicqg victory Shelton won from
the Olympia Tigers just four
evenings earlier.
h'onically, tile winning run was
)roduced by a couple of south-
paw swingers off the .lefthanded
offerings of Toby Larson, after
ri..?,ht hantler Roy Madison hsd
kept the Shelton batters pretty
well subdued for nine innings.
%VAYNE rivAlrY led off the
tcnth 'for Shelton with a hot i
sniash which bored rigtlt thlugh I
third baseman's Tony Conies'
legs and then also trickled past
lefLfielder F r a n k Weatherby.
Clary wound up on third, from
where he scored as Stan Arm-
strong bounced a big high hopper
over the drawn-in first baseman's
head for a single which would
have been an easy out with the
infield in normal position.
LACEV DREW first blood witll
a pair of tallies in the second on
three hits and Jimmy McComb's
bad throw. Shelton retrieved one
on McComb's single and Bloom-
field's double in the same frame
and then took the lead in the
next canto when two infield bob-
bles and McComb's single scored
a pair.
Lacey knotted it in the fifth
when four singles registered only
one run, but Shelton promptly
regained the lead at 4-3 in the
bottom half when George Nak
walked, Buck Armstrong beat out
a rap off the pitcher's glove,
Clary forced Buck at second, and
Nak and Clary pulled a delayed
double steal.
Again the viaitors rallied for
a draW with an unearned run in
the eighth when two hits and
a walk filled the sacks with none
out and Nak juggled Dick Kon-
da's scorching blast just long
:-Now Ready To Serve You-
TON REFRI6ERATION
of the Olympic Peninsula Lea-
gue Frhlay night at 8 o'clock
under the Loop Field arcs.
lie also said that he is ten-
tatlvely scheduling Milt Clothier
fer the starting mound assign-
ment. Clotlder, who recently
eemlfleted eight years in the
Navy, where Ine pitched eonshl-
erahle ball, is the only mem-
her of the fh'e-man Shelton
hurling staff who hasn't slmwn
his wares before Shelton fans
y2!t t!,l_oy_9._r.. .............................
I I I
enough to lose the force at the
plate.
BLOOMFIELD pitched out of
the jam beautifully by getting
Contes on a pop fly and starting
a dolJble play by way of the
plate o Jimmy Ray's bounder.
Bloomfield was in hot water so
often that Mill Clothier virtu-
ally pitched a full ball game in
the bull pen, but Pete's stout
heart pulled him through safely
for Shelton's fifth triumph in as
many gmnes. The box score:
I,aeey ab r it o it c
Konda, 2b ........ 6 0 1 0 8 1
Contes, L 3b ........ 6 0 0 2 0 1
J. Ray, ss ........ 4 0 1 2 4 2
Hurd, lf-cf .... 5 1 1 2 1 1
Simmonds, lb .... 5 0 2 13 0 0
Finnegan, rf 3 1 0 2 2 0 0
Jorgenson, cf .... 1 1 0 0 0 0
Weatherby, If .... 3 1 2 2 0 1
B. Ray, c ............ 5 0 4 4 2 0
Madison, p ...... 3 0 1 0 2 0
Larson, p ........ 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals ........ 41 4 14 '27 17 6
Shelton ab r In o a e
Nak, 2b ............ 4 l 0 3 4 1
B.Armstrong', rf 5 0 1 1 0 0
Clary, ss ........ 5 1 1 1 2 0
S.Armstrong, if 5 1 1 3 0 0
Brown, cf ........ 4 0 1 1 0 0
Cormier, lb .... 2 1 0 13 0 0
McComb, 3b .... 4 1 2 2 2 1
Snyder, c ........ 3 0 0 6 1 0
Bloomfield, p .... 4 0 1 0 4 0
Totals ........ 36 5 7 30 13 2
None out when winning run
scored.
Score by Innings
Lacey .............. 020 010 010 0 ..... 4
hits ............ 031 240 120 1..--14
Shelton .......... 001 210 000 1 .... 5
hits ............ 002 111 010 1--- 7
SUMMARY: 2-base hits--
Bloomfield, Clary. Sacrifice hits
.... Madison, Cormier. Runs batted
in---McComb 2. Bloomfield, S.
Armstrong, Finnegan, B. Ray,
Madison. Struck out--Bloomfield
5, Madison 3. Walks--Bloomfield
2, Madison 2. Wild pitches--Mad-
ison 2. Hit batters--Finnegafl 2,
Jorgenson, Connier. Innings pit-
ched-.--Madison 9. Runs responsi-
ble for---Madison 2, Bloomfield 2,
Larson 0. Charge defeat to tar-
son. Stolen bases---Nak, Bloom-
field, Weatherby, J. Ray. Double
play--Bloomfield to Snyder to
Cormier. Umpires--Hemphlll and
Eacrett.
...............................
IIEAVY PLANTING
OF FISH IN 1949
The hatchery division of the
state game department liberated
37,951,046 fish during the past
fiscal year, helping provide some
of the nation's finest fishing for
the streams and lakes of the state,
it is reported hy Clarence Pautzke,
Chief of the department's fish
management division.
Figures compiled by Pautzke
and Cliff Millerbach, Hatchery
Supervisor, show that the plants
from the department's 22 hatch-
cries were as follows: cutthroat,
2,398,602; easten brook trout, 1,-
958,811; rainbow trout, 13,183,-
674; silver trout, 19,391,684; steel-
]ead trout, 787,396; silver san
First and Mill Streets -- Phone 942 Day or Night
• WITIt •
00MMERCIAL REFRIGERATION SALES,
INSTALLATION
lPor Taverns, Groceries, Fountains, Restaurants,
Dairies, etc.
tI'4LK-INS, REACH-INS, FLORIST BOXES, FROZEN
( FooD BOXES, DEEP FREEZERS, ETC.
I'IOME REFRIGERATION REPAIRS
0000SERVICE AND
.2
On All Makes of. Household Refrigerators
men, 196,263; a n d Iiamloops
EQUIPMENT BUILT:O ORDER trout, 34,616.
Lal'cr ntlnlbers than usual of"
.............. the fish were of fingcrling, and
even larger size wllen released,
--All Work Guaranteed Pautzke declares. The game de-
partment has been following' a
policy of retaining the fish in
SERVICE 24 HOURS A DAY EVERY DAY hatcheries as long as possible.
This has meant, of course, release
of larger fish and a better surviv-
al of tlmse planted.
provide 10 more rearing ponds, a
second residence, a pump house
and other facilities.
ORIGINAL work on the hatch-
cry began in 1947. " One residence,
a mnall power house and 10 rear-
ing ponds have already been con-
structed on a site near Matlock
between Bingham creek and the
east fork of the Satsop river.
Purpose of the hatchery is to
maintain and build the salmon run
throughout the Chehalis river sys-
tem. While this run has main-
tained itself on about an even bas-
is, the state department told The
Vidette, the new hatchery may be
expected to build it in time to even
g r e a t e r proportions. Ultimate
plans call for an additional unit.
THE SIMPSON hatchery will
provide the first means of rearing
salmon in this area since discon-
tinuance of the Humptulips ilatch-
cry two years ago. The old Satsop
hatchery at Shafer state park was
discontinued about 1938.
In both instances, the reason was
lack of adequate water supply for
rearing purposes, but the new site:
has excellent sources of water.
The present tendency in hatching
fish is toward smaller hatcheries
and larger rearing facilities, which
experience has shown results in
greater survival of the released
fish.
FIRST OPERATION of the
hatchery at Matlock is expected
to begin in September, and the
whole project will bc completed
next winter.
Each of the 20 ponds will be
started with 150,000 fingerlings, a
totsl of 3,000,000. In about three
months, all but 75,000 per pond
will be released. These will be held
for another three months, when
another release of the young fish
will cut rentainlng fish in each
pond to about 35,000. These, will
be reared to yearlings, resulting in
an annual release of about 700,000
yearlings, in addition to the young-
er fish. With this schedule, a
much greater survival of salmon
Is expected than has ever been ex-
perienced in this area.
The new hatchery will confine
its efforts to rearing salmon, with
the possibility of one pond being
dew)ted to steelhead under a re-
ciprocal arrangement with the
state department of game.
MORE SPORTS ON
PAGES 2, 6 AND 10
Bo/vling Drives
Re-0pened Along
With Drop In Rates
Bowling returned to Shelton's
recreational activities last Satur-
day when Paul Berets re-opened
his Shelton Recreation Parlors
drives after their annual mid-sum-
mer rosurfacing and refinishing.
There was more than just the
reopening to bring pleasure to
this community's kegling clan for
Proprietor Berets also annotmced
that bowling rates have been re-
duce( five cents a line- to 30c-
effective with the reoI)ening.
While the alleys resurfacing
was being accomplished the rest
of the recreation parlors prentises
also underwent a face-lifting. The
sporting goods department was
completely disassembled and re-
moved anti minor changes made
in the bar, giving the trundling
hang-out a fairly complete new
appearance.
No secrets in Journal classifieds.
They tell the world (inside Mason
County). Phone 100 and find out.
WILBERT S. CATTO
Representative of
Equitable Life
Assurance Society
Life Insurance
Retirements
Annuities
Long term, low interest rate
Farm and Country
Home Loans
Aldercroft Nursery
Phone 591-W
CARPENTER'S
UNION NO. 1800
Meets
2nd and 4th Wednesdays
at
Eagles' Hall
8P.M.
I-Iall Open Dally
:30 A.M. to 9:00 A.M.
Monday thru Fridays
Hall Phone 984
Bus. Agent Willis Burnett
Res. Phone 743-W
We are ?peda!/s'00 in
ANY MAKE • ANY MODEL
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Bring in y,,u," r.dio this
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Or reperneat$
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AUTHORIZED
MEMBER
IlilOlO
EI, E[Tltl[
i
MOOSE MEMBERS AND I AMILtLS
Are Cordially Invited to the
ANNUAL MOOSE LODGE )ICNIC
of Shelton, Hoqu'iam, Bremerton, Peril Angeles
Lodges
MAPLE BEACH ON LAKE ISABELLA
SUNDAY, AUGUST"
Starting at noon- Bring your own picnic lunches
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