Notice: Undefined index: HTTP_REFERER in /home/stparch/public_html/headmid_temp_main.php on line 4394
Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
September 4, 1947     Shelton Mason County Journal
PAGE 11     (11 of 16 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
 
PAGE 11     (11 of 16 available)        PREVIOUS     NEXT      Jumbo Image    Save To Scrapbook    Set Notifiers    PDF    JPG
September 4, 1947
 
Newspaper Archive of Shelton Mason County Journal produced by SmallTownPapers, Inc.
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader




,wWW V V"pV qr VV  V V V'V atlock AAAA A A,IAAA • ville Club met on the home of Mrs. m. Those present Phyllis Brchmeyer; 5an Boothc, Lottie Adams, Ra.het Val- 7e, Geral4inc Ford, ,ier and the hostess. he brought the two cases that the club ¢ at the first P.T.A. 1o and cake were hostess. Nickel ex- ken by Phyllis Breh- meeting will be with d on Sept.. 11. • s. Harry Lee, Miss . Elvin Martin and • of Rochester, and nsley of San Cruz, unday guests of Mr. L Eye, and later in d at the Sam Nye 's. Hugh Woleott of Saturday callers at n home. and daughters, to2 ne, Mrs. Daisy Jack, Mrs. Warren Hunt- ranet and Evelyn of .re Thursday callers tiel" home. I-IOIISC of Tacoma aughter, Gloria Val- she could attend fter spending the been received here /[rs. Ernie Adams of the parents of a frnest Stanley, on rust 30. She is the Mr. and Mrs. Sam L Bill Black and son end in Tacoma. don't forget that tzt is meeting night. We TAtK We Maybe put your ice in don't ARE busY make ii service ISED--an' sible, phone 123 $. $,d 4, 1947. ,LER • ET FORM Moles. Money Compounded natural food. for 30 years. loe- 'lA FEED CO. q,.,,v,• .€, v v v v v .v ,it .v v v ,.r ,qr v v. v v v v ,qp ttarstine Island (Crowded Out Last Week) Well, children, just one more wcck of vacation and you will all be trudging back to the building of learning and teachers and buss- es and getting up early, etc., and where has the vacation gone ? Mr. and Mrs. V¢inston J. John- son have been entertaining Mr. Johnson's sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Porter of San Pedro, Calif., who have been up here on their vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McMan- erny and children of Aberdeen visited with Mrs. Mary Carlson last Wednesday with Mrs. Mc- Manerny and children staying over for a several days' visit with her mother. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Griffin of . Olympia spent last Wednesday af- ternoon visiting his aunt, Miss el- lie McCoy. Mr. Griffin used to Parts.Accessories Lacquers- Enamels LINING--MUFFLERS E US FOR YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS REBUILDING  BORING  LATHE WORK Brake Shoes Relined Automotive Machine Shop , SUPPLY CO. i tltornobile Accessories, Oil, Tires, Batteries WHOLESALE AND RETAIL First St. Phone 126 go to school or, the Island many years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe F. Page had as guests last week end Mr. and Mrs. Turner and children of Marysvillc, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Harriman and Mrs. Glen Harriman, .Jr. and son of South Side drove to Aber- deen Monday to see the new granddaughter at the Ottcrstad home and also to take Donnie Otterstad home. A week ago Sunday Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Gillette took their niece, Mrs. Howard Babcock, and daughter, Patricia, from Montana to Winlock. The Gillettes spent the night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Rayton in Curtis. The next day they went on to Ilwaco and Astoria visiting relatives. They returned home Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Williams have moved to their new home, the old Ben Lorenzen place. That new Pontiac took Mr. and :Mrs. LeRoy Fessler and son on a few days' vacation trip over the Fraser Rivet' drive in Canada last week, the first vacation trip in several years, so was greatly en- joyed by all. We see Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sim- mons are driving a new Hudson pick-up truck, which makes sev- eral new automobiles added to Harstine since the first of the year. Martin Goetsch launched the boat he built recently and it made its trial run last Sunday to Ta- coma. It 4,re looked nice going up the bay at half speed. Mrs. Wilbert Jacobsen and children of Randle visited at Oscar Jacobson's recently. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Housen and famil'y of Seabeck visited at the Ed Wilson home Sqnday. Last Friday Mrs. W. E. Gillette entertained some of her old friends from East Olympia. Those coming for the day were Mrs. R. E. Robey, Mrs. E. Moody, Mrs. C. Moody, Mrs. Ritzenthatter and Mrs. Lola Peck. I The Glaser brothers, Joe and Bud, were at the family home on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Hugo A. Glaser. Use the Journal Classifieds-- they really get results! by Olympic Motor Sales ClaA. "/oo SAW in" BUTT t5 -tHAT P 00 CAN re'x22" HAVE IT/ Framing (OMPLETL i ters . Ever.Wearing .. s precu, Norpae's all,aluminum, u l;Y € pmly-- economical answer 1o bu, . duded easily ere¢ledno need to .P balanced good for a lifetimel It ;id door different iiiley flgOi's for buildings. Reserve one ::,,'-,, E NEED USED EARS NOW! 00li'L,h :NO [ LA ....... • .... F we will Buy *°ur Car °r Equity! cv00iol,00 SUPPLY Will Sell Your Car and Get You All Cash! (1"ovmerl Misketla Refdgeray°)S"d*l am le G{t;a e Set-uo at Our I  I SIIOP OLYMPIC FOR A BETTER DEAL r S p g - b"l" :| 5 Miles West of Olympia at shelf9 : Liberal Discount to the Trade ..... pHOnE 9690 -- OLVMPIt the opening Miles Out on Matioc  FROZEN FOOD LOCKERS +0 H Jr 11 '11 n. I ,IFORNIA PRODUCTS AND Ww,ii : ,e're here to serve yo¢ Hudson is (1 SHELTON-MAS0N COW.TOY JOITRNAL i 6 CIVIL SERVICE POSITIONS NOW OPEN FOR APPLICATIONS Examinations wereannouneed last week for six differ- ent Civil Service positions with the federal government. The positions will pay sal- Substltnto College aries ranging from $8.48 per J day to $5,656 a year, with extra differentials for night work. Field, Recreation Jobs Federal Civil Service announces examinations for appointment to the positions of Field Examiner, $3773 p/a; and positions in the Recreational Activities s e r i e s, $1954 to .$4902 p/a. Persons who desire peYmanent positions will have an opportunity to file for a Civil Service exam- ination leading to probational ap- pointment with permanent classi- fied Civil Service status in these positions in the Veterans Adminis- tration in the States of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. Applicants for tl]ese examina- tions will be graded on the basis of their experience, education and training. No written test is re- quired. Applicants must be between the ages of 18 and 62, except that these age limits may be waived for veterans and under certain conditions for war service indef- inite employees. Further information on these examinations and the necessary applicaion forms for applying may be obtained from the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Veterans Administration, Branch No. 11, Exqhange Building, Seat- tle 4, Washington; the Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Ex- aminers, at any first' or second- class post office; or from the Di- rector, Eleventh U. S. Civil Serv- ice Region, Room 4, Central Build- ing, Seattle 4, Washington. Ap- plications for these positions will be received until Sept. 12, 1947. Engineering Aids And Coal Mine Inspectors The United States Civil Service Commission last week announced examinations for Engineering Aid and Coal Mine Inspector for mak- ing probational (permanent) ap, pointment to federal positions. The salaries for engineering aid positions are $3,021 and $3,397 a year. The .positions to be filled are located'in Washington, D. C., and in ndarby Virginia and Mary- land. To qualify, applicants will be required to pass a written test and, in addition, they must have had at least 41A years (5 years for the $3,397 positions) of subpro- fessional or professional engineer- ing experience. At least 1 year of this exper- ience must have been in a special- ized branch of engineering. Ap- propriate college study in engin- eering may be substituted, year for year, for the required exper- ience. Credit Given Pertinent study in other insti- tutions above the high school lev- el wil receive appropriate cre4it.' Training in engineering in the armed forces will be accepted on the same basis as civilian train: ing. The coal mine inspector posi- tions pay $4,149 and $4,902 a year and are located throughout the coal mining sections of the United States. Applicants must have had 6 or 7 years of coal mining ex- perience, part of which must have been specialized experience in coal mining operations. For the $4,902 positions this specialized experience must have included the direction and en- forcement of modern coal mine safety and health programs and must show that the applicant has administrative ability and the re- sourcefulness and initiative to perform and direct large scale I mine inspection work. That motor car of yours deserves the best kind of service: If it's new, good care now will save you money later, and let you enjoy your car longer. If it has served you long, careful service attention now will help preserve its value for trade in. Those are two reason why your Hudson dealer is a good man to know. He is an established, independent business man with a reputation for efficient operation. His men are trained to give you Hudson Pro- tective Service. He has a well-balanced stock of genuine Hudson parts. There you have four more reasons why you should see your Hudson dealer, for a new car, used car or service on your present car. A Hudson geuler to serve you wherever you go Wherever you o, you're never far from this sign which identifies author- ized Hudson dealer and service establishments. Whenever you drive m a Hudson dealer's place of business, you get the friendly attention and skilled services of one of ,. nmrc than 3,000 dealer- ships qualified under the most exacting standards in Hudson's 38-year history. tludson has one of the largest, soundest organl- zations in the industryl INC. MOTOR SALES 627 South First Street College study in engineering may be substituted for part of the general experience. No writ- ten test is required, but appli- cants must prepare and submit with their application a 250-word description of some phase of coal mining. The maximum age lim- it, 48 years, will be waived for persons entitled to military pref- erence. Haywire Art .... swamped by the haywire shoddy After a i'ound of mutual back- that came into the market. Rack- patting over the nice work of the eteers wormed into the once strict- public in f(rest-fire prevention ly honorable industry. It got so through July,. especially in the that a family logger, minding the holiday week-end, Fire Warden kids while his wife was shopping, Haggerty and I settled down for a wouldn..t even trust haywire for bit of sociable gab. It was a cool pinning up diapers. yet sunny afternoon on the boom "I truly hope," said the veteran pond. We sat out on the catwalk warden, "that the haywire on yon- bench. The the Warden spied a der boom chain was made for Full information and applica-ihaywire link in a boom chain, hay-baling and not to sell over the counter." . , • .. Final Divorces Two final divorce decrees were signed by Judge D. F. Wright in Mason County Superior Court session August 26. Divorces became final for June Raeelis from Emanual Racelis, and Jack Eaton from Esther Eaton. I til further notice but persons in- :Bugs Goosey, or some such handle. The first railroad in the state of Page 11 MOVING AWAY? Good luck to you--and make the Job easier for yourself by letting us take care of the transportation of your ef- fectsanywhere in Washing- tonl terested in being considered for !positions to be filled immediately should file their applications with the commission not later than September 9, 1947. Alaska Jobs Open In Air Communications The Civil Aeronautics Adminis- tration has openings for 200 qual- ified single men as aircraft com- municators in Alaska, at starting salaries of $3,306 a year, it was announced today. Successful applicants will be assigned to the 45 airways com- munications stations operated by the CAA in Alaska for the safety of civil and military flying. The men selected will be in line for even£ual promotion to higher grade jobs paying up to $5,656 a year. Additional earn- ings are possible in all grades through authorized overtime be- yond the 40 hour week, and thru the 10% night differential. Basic Qullfletlons Basic qualifications for the jobs are the ability to transmit and receive International Morse Code at minimum speed of 30 words a minute; to touch typewrite at 35 words a minute; and 18 months of aeronautical communications ex- perience or an acceptable equiv- alent in education and experience. Applicants other than veterans must be between 18 and 40, and in good health, particularly with regard to hearing, vision and speech. Applicants should send Form 57, which is the standard appli- cation for Federal employment obtainable at most post offices, to the CAA Aeronautical Center, P. O. Box 1082, Oklahoma City 1, Oklahmna. Will Take Tests If the applicant appears to be qualified, he will be asked to re-' port to the nearest CAA com- munications station for tests. Appointments will be made on a temporary basis pending the hold- ing of examinations by the Civij Service Commission. Five weeks of orientation train- ins will be given the appointees at the CAA Aeronautical Center in Oklahoma before they are sent to an Alaskan post. They wiPl be expected to remain in government service in Alaska for at hmst 12 months following their appoint- ment. Bremerton Jobs Open A Federal Civil" Serwce an- nouncement of an examination leading to probational appoint- ment in the position of Trackmn was made last week. Persons desiring permanent po- sitions of this kind in the Federal service will have an opportunity to file for a Civil Service exan, ination leading to probational ap- pointments with permanent classi- fied civil service status. Receipt of applications closes August 25, 1947. ' The entrance salary for this pomtmn m $8.48, $8.96 and $9.44 per diem. I Positions to be filled as a result of this examination are in the Puget Sound Naval Base, Brem, erton, Washington. Applicants must have passed their 18th birthday but not their 62rid on the closing date for the receipt of applications, except that age limits may be waived for vet- erans and under certain conditions for war service indefinite employ- ees. Further information on this ex- amination and the necessary ap- plication forms may be obtained from the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, PUget Sound Nayal Shipyard, B r e m e r t o n, Washington; the Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, at any first- or second-class post ofifce; or from the Director, Elev- enth U. S. Civil Sercice Region, Roofs 4, Central Building, Seat- tle 4, Washington. Hoodsport Has New School Staff Hoodsport school opened Tues- day morning with a general as- sembly of students and parents. Mrs. Frances Radtke, school all- "rector, led the assembly in the flag salute and the singing of America after which she ex- plained about the finishing of the new building wing and what is to be expected for the coming year. She then introduced the new s c hoe 1 principal, Richard K. Sparks, who spoke of school pol- icy to be observed and in turn introduced the other new teachers. Each class followed their teach- er to the classroom and another school year was well launched. Local Man Aboard Alaska-Bound Sub Russell C. Evans, chief water tender, U.S.N., husband of Mrs R. C. Evans of Route 2, Shelton, is serving aboard the submarine tender USS Nereus, which is on an extended training cruise to Alas- ka .and the Aleutian Islands. The Nereus, along with four submarines of the Pacific Fleet is scheduled to visit Adak, Pribiloff, Kodiak, Seward, and Juneau, in the course o;f the cruise. "Me, I couldft make shape or sense out of the haywire statuary, but it was likely good, for the pic- tures were in a magazine that cost four bits and they took up three full pages. "As one who learned mighty re- spect for haywire when a fuzz- faced big-wheel heister away back yonder In the short-log country, I take pride in this here progress of haywire. I'm for haywire art, yesiree, whether I can savvy it or not. I like to see haywire branch out." llaywlre History . . . "Over 20 years ago I figured haywire was on its last legs, so to [ speak," Haggerty reflectively con- I tinued. "The horse was getting to be rare indeed in the logging bus- iness. Without the horse baled hay was minus in the camps, and so haywire was also absent. What I've already called virgin haywire came into the market during the big depression, when some smart operator in the steel industry saw new business for the wire mills in all the patching that was going on everywhere. "I remember a monster con of this virgin haywire being brought into a family logging camp back in '33, for some needed fixing-up around the homes. Only the youngest and boldest among the young family loggers ventured to try it. The old heads demanded haywire that had stood the acid tet of binding compressed alfalfa thrdugh much rough handling and hard travel. This tried and true article could be trusted by the old head to bind a frayed choker, fortify a Tin Lizzie, patch a boom chain, hold up tin pants, and to serve in other vital uses. "I mind back in 1912 or so, when I saw my first gas tractor, a cleat round-wheel rig, in the woods. One day a sound like a  death rattle banged from its cam shaft. The puncher bound the cams solid with haywire. I'd had my doubts on gas tractors before that, but I figured if one of the rig hs could 10g on haywire, it be- longed in the woods. And I was right. Dime Store Haywire... "In the depression everybody finally got to using haywire," Haggerty reminisced. "Soon you could go into any dime store and buy a coil of haywire for home and family use. It became the mainstay of the jallopy. Literally millions of jallopies were held to- gether years beyond their natural time by haywire and nothing but haywire. "But much of it came to be haywire in name only. The pro- duction of virgin haywire ran wild and got into evil hands. The old- time makers of haywire, who had catered only to the hay-baling trade with a quality product, were Iowa was constructed in 1855. SHELTON TRANSFER 221 S. 2nd Phone 66 ATTENTION FARMERS AND HUNTERS The Mountain View Lockers will stay open on Sundays through the months of September and October for your convenience. MT. VIEW LOCKERS H. F. BOYSEN PHONE 62-R See the HOME FREEZER on display GIBSON also GIBSON REFRIGERATORS OIL FURNACES DUOTHERM OIL CIRCULATORS KRESKY BURNERS OIL-O-MATIC UNITS SIMPLEX IRONERS GAS RANGES GAS, WATER HEATERS immediate installation SHELTON GAS COMPAN v II IIII C. C. COLE, Mgr. 122 South Third St. Phone 87 I II I I I I II I TRASH-- Those discarded things .around your home are needed by people who are no longer able to find such articles in the stores CASH-- Selling used household articles, business equip- ment, etc., is the easiest way to raise money. Quick as a FLASH-- A "Journal CLASSified Ad Will send buyers to your home or place of business. I I I Phone 100 I I I I II I I /%