August 6, 1920 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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THE MASON C JOURNAL PA'E THREN
"Nothing Like It"
says the Good Judge
A little of this real to.
bacco gives a man more <
satisfaction than he ever €
got from the old
kind.
The full, rich, real to-
bacco taste lasts so long,
you don't need a fresh
chew nearly as often.
That's why it costs you
less.
Any man who uses the
Real Tobacco Chew will
tell you that.
Put up in two styles
RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco
W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco
€.:..:..:..:.:+.....+:.... -.-x-'.:.:':.:
y . ;!_;
€i" I
ti County Correspondence i!i
?
I LOWER MATLOCK
]h'. and Mrs. Wm. Evers and chil-
<lren, Charles and Edith and Mrs.
George Evers and daughter Mary,
motored to Aberdeen Saturday.
Mrs. Annie King and Victor and
]Vhu'garet King visited Mr. and Mrs.
John Sells and family of Oyster Bay
;Sunday.
Mr. Win. Johnston and children,
_Alice and Warren of Skokomish, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Peterson and daugh-
ter Dorothy, Mrs. Rier and daughter
:Ellen mad Walter and Irene Platz
of Friken's Y, all spent Sunday with
the Rediska family.
Misses, Ruth ,and Hazel Bateman
,spent tle week-end with their folks
M.r. and Mrs. Asa Bateman and fam-
ily.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Jacobson and
sons, Arnie, Ray and Paul, spent
:Sunday aftel,noon visiting Mrs. C.
:Petersons and Nelsons'.
Preaching services were held here
:at the school house Friday evening
y Preacher Killen.
Mr. Ass Bateman and daughters
Ruth and Hazel, visited Rediska's
Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Helin and
:family, visited Sunday at the August
.Johnson home in Skokomish.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Rediska and
Dora and Isabella, Mrs. Beck, Mrs.
Archie King and (laughter Margaret
:and Mrs. Hattie Bateman, spent Mon-
day afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
,(]ill.
Mrs. Pereie Anderson, Mr. Alvah
2VIcKibben, were Ms(lock callers Sat-
rday.
Mrs. Leonard Anderson and Mar-
garet King, called on the Rediska's
"£hursday.
Mrs. A. S. King and daughter,
visited John 'Valley, Friday afternoon.
Monuments
I Call and see our large stock
i or write for prices. We
I rect Monuments anywhere.
] PUGET SOUND MARBLE
! & GRANITE CO.
l' 2006 First Ave., Seattle, Wn.
" T
SHELTON VALLEY
Marvel Wandell of Shelton, visited
at the Winsor home, last week.
Alma Bennett left Saturday for
Puyallup, where she will visit with
relatives and friends for a couple
weeks.
H. A. Winsor and family spent
Sunday at the G. E. Hickson home
in Dayton.
Little John Kneeland had the mis-
fortune to fall from a horse and
break his leg Sunday, while visiting
at the home of his grandfather, Mr.
John Kneeland in Shelton.
Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Shelton at-
tended Eastem Star Lodge in town
Saturday night.
Mrs. Frank Bennett, spent Sun-
day at the home ;of Mr. and Mrs.
Dewey Bennett.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Oswin and
baby of SheltOn, called at the sharer
and Winsor homes Monday evening.
Earl and Irene Shearer of Charle-
ston, are spending the week with
their grandparents, Mr. and. Mrs. J.
Sharer. They motored uu Monday
with Mr. and Mrs. Will Shearer
who are enroute to Vancouver, B. C.,
for a weeks visit with the former's
daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Smith of Brerherton, are accompany-
ing them on the trip. Mrs. Smith
is Mr. Shearer's sister.
l
SKOKOMISH VALLEY.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Mongrain and
William Deyette of Skokomish Val-
ley, have fine new barns looming
Russell Craig, salesman for le
Garlock Packing Company in Seat-
]tle, was a visitor last week at J. C.
[Mongrain's, while touring his terri-
[tory along the Canal.
I J. V. Mayrand, salesman for the
• Imperial Candy Co., was visiting his
sisters, Mrs. J. C. Mongrain and Mrs.
J. A. Fleury, in the Skokomish Val-
ley Monday.
Skokomish Grange will hold its
regular meeting Saturday evening:
i t
ALLYN
CLOUDING THE ISSUE.
Ah'eady there has been started in
Eastern Jefferson County, in Island
County and some of the districts
bordering on Puget Sound what ap-
pears to be a well defined plan to
cloud the issue in regard to the com-
pletion of the Olympic Higlvay, and
the Highway itself. Organization
with that as its ultimate end, regard-
less of whether all of thd,promoters
have that diroct pUrpose, has been
begun.
In this little scheme, or move, or
innocent proposal, or by what ever
name it may be referred to, there
is a movement which not only is far
from cooperation of the district con-
eelmed for completion of the Olym-
)ic Highway, but one which well
might wreck the plans to see fin-
ished at an early (late the connect-
ing link, the section between Lak
Quinault and Forks. Jefferson coun-
ty proposes to get Island county and
the counties on the east of the
Sound interested in a project for
establishment of a ferry system be-
tween the head of Port Discovery
bay or Port Townsend, the islands
and the mainland to the east. '}
scheme is that this would connect
the Olympic Highway with the so-
called Roosevelt Highway through
the northern part of the state, and
the promoters point out that it gives
another inlet into the road around
the Peninsula, and declare it will
bring more tourists, as those from
the east side of the Sound and Seat,-
tie can take the ferry across to Port
Townsend or Port Discovery bay an:
be at Lake Crescent in a few hours.
Granted all its promote1 claim
for the scheme is true, it has been
just such schemes as this that have
revented so far the completion of
the connecting section of the Hi
way. In fact the others have con-
cerned the Olympic Highway itself
even more directly, for they have
been ' for the improvemnt of sonw
particular part of the road, while
this is a proposal to add a new sec-
tion to it. Funds securable for tne
Highway have been split up to build
or rebuild a bit of road here and
another there, or for some project
such as the Lake Crescent road,
which well might have waited until
the bigger project was carried
through. Of course this is not en.
tirely chargeable for all the failure
to get the road built. The last leg-
islature, from various funds, appro-
priated a total of some $300,000,
which should have been sufficient
to open the road to the Queets. We
will be lucky if it is graded and
gTaveled as far as the now proposed
five and a half miles, including the
building of the Quinault bridge.
There has been fault in this, but to
fix the blame is not intended at this
time.
But this much must be done the
scheme of the district mentioned
must be forestalled before it has
gone so far as to divert attention
• from the main undertaking. We must
I
secure the completion of his road
within the next six years so it can
be paved as proposed under the road
bonding measure, referendum No. 1,
and no pet schemes of anyone, and no
individuals or organizations plotting
to interfere can be allowed to stand
in the way.--Hoquimn Washington-
inn.
LOGGED OFFI Curl and son returned
Mrs. Curl continuing her
few days at the Waldron
LAND
There will be a dance at the Allyn
school house Saturday night, Aug-
ust 7th. Dance $1.00, cake and cof-
fee will be served. "Moonshine"
strictly forbidden on school grounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Curl and son Myron,
made a trip to town Friday. Mr.
Saturday,
visit for a
home,
For sale in this County to Actual
Settlers on easy terms. Price
$5.00 per acre and up. Write for
map giving all information.
Weyerhaeuser Timber C0.
Tacoma, Washington
i i Hoodsport
LumberCo.
Our new mill is now tom-
plete and ready to handle
any and all orders for rough
and dressed lumber. Address
HOODSPORT LUMBER CO.
Hoodsport, Wash. Nick Ward
Manager.
GOMPERS ON SOCIALISM.
After thirty years' experience
studying Socialism in Europe and
America, with a personal acquaint-
ance with leaders and their doctrines
and after the study of their propa-
ganda, both in German and English,
Samuel Gompers said in 1914 to the
Socialists who were then trying to
gain a foothold the Ame,can;,
Federation of Labor:
"I know too, what you have up
your sleeves and I want to say (bat
I am entirely at variance with your
philosophy. I declare it to you, I
am not only at variance with your
doctrines, but with your philosophy.
Economically, you are unsound; so-
cially, you are wrong; industrially,
you are an impossibility. '
THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER.
In commenting on the attack of a
metropolitan daily which attempted
to belittle the political influence of
the country weekly and daily over
the land, Harr Hammond, editor of
the Byron, California, Times, one of
the livest and most progressive
papers in the eountT, says.
"While the country paper is small
it is doing just as much, in its way,
for the progress and development of
the section it serves as any of the
larger papers ,and in some cases a
great deal more because, as a rule
the bigger the paper the more its
opinions are dominated from the
counting room, something never
thought of by the country weekly,
which boosts its locality all the time
without thought of receiving pay for
such service.
"The people of a country eommun:
ity swear by and not at thmr re'cat
paper. It carries far greater weight,
politically and otherwise, with them
than does the uaper of metropolitan
p_retentions. The country weekly is
closer to the hearts of its readers
than is the
newspapers."
WHY SUFFER SO?
Why suffer from a bad back, from
sharp, shootin twinges, headaches
dizziness and dmtressing urinary ills'.,
People around here recomen{
Doan's Kidney Pills. Could ydu ast
for stronger proof of merit ?
Mrs. G. A. Plympton, 1005 S. Pros-
pect Ave., Tacoma, Wash., says: "A
few years ago I was in the hospital
for an operation and after I got out
my kidneys began to bother me a
great deal. I shall never forget the
miserable backaches. My back Was
so lame and it hurt me so terribly, I
could hardly go. That constant pain-
ing and aching in the back seemed
to take all my strength and ambition.
My kidneys were weak and that fre-
quently caused swellings of my hands
and feet. I was awfully bad off when
a friend told me about Doan's Kidney
Pills. Doan's helped me from the
start and I steadily improve& I
kept on using them and in a short
time they had 'completely and perm-
anently cured me."
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy--get"
Doan's Kidney Pills--the same that
Mrs. Plympton had. FoaCer-Milburn
case with the larger Co. Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
"i-he Olym ic/.ine
Good Baking
Is in Good Making
Bread made with Flour
is tasty and tender to the last crumb.
If the folks appreciate good baking--and
we know they do--it is worth while to
insist on getting
"Easy to make and easy to bake" are hot
cakes made from Pancake Flour.
reakfast is the favorite meal wherever
Wheat Hearts are served.
There.ts an Feed scientifically balanced
to meet the requirement of each variety and of
every coadltion of your livestock or poultry.
FLOUR FEED CEREALS
FACTS ARE DEMANDED
ON NORTH DAKOTA BANK
More than 21,000 voters have pe-
titioned Governor Frazier of North
Dakota that a fair examination of
the affairs of the Bank of NotCh
Dakota be permitted.
Nonpartisan league banldng has
made numbers of depositors uneasy
7
as well as causing some suspicion of
other state ventures, so they petition
for "a fairly 'constituted committee
to make a full and complete examin-
ation of the affairs of the Bank of
North Dakota, the Drake mill, the
Workmen's Compensation bureau and
the Home Builders' association and
to give such facts as can be
rained."
The petition further sets forth that
"The fact that the managers of the
Bank of North Dakota,the Compen-
sation bureau anti the Drake mill, re
sorted to the technicalities of the law
in order to lrevent an examination
'of the bank instead of welcoming a
full and complete inspection, is cans-
ascer- ing suspicion and }ustifiiable dis-
tlst."
Economy and
Service
These are the big factors to be
considered in the purchase of an auto-
mobile for both business and pleasure.
And they are the Ford's best points.
For business they are essential, and
for pleasure they are a continual
source of satisfaction. It's good to
know that your car is giving you the
most for your money.
Consider the Ford in view of the
coming School Transportation Con-
" tracts to be awarded soon. It's the re-
liable car for hauling school children
. and may be furnished with a special
body which will greatly increase the
capacity and is easily converted.
Wlerever "Economy and Service"
count as they do with you and I, the
Ford is the only car to be considered.
Wall ace J 0hns0n
Motor Co.
0N n LT ' I//// 1o( @OST. I- .'--...' /I I 11,1, INOTHiN ON
\\;
t
4LLO . HATTIE !YEP, TBtS iS
a. i' 6errm" COOLED 0
WHAT DO YOOI'HINI OE MY
Lit: COOLtHG S'YST'EI ?J""-
'NOT VffRY €UCt i
YOU 60o5E l --)
WHAT DO YOU " I
i' liHil',ll O V ii'tE 1
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