September 25, 1947 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
©
Shelton Mason County Journal. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 2 (2 of 16 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
September 25, 1947 |
|
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader ![]() |
SHELTONSHAI)EDAT00 6 "-"---"
The HOOD CANAL This ore++ .., be +Lo++00WUellOn ]I
NEWS SATURDAY AND MONDAY, OCTO.E" ,,'"ll]+i:i .-
Vnlo., Wash. Dr. Glenn W Lenders, Optvmet Id,11,m,ll I
Walter L. Marble
INSURANCE COMPANY
Life and Personal ccident
and Health Insuraneec
1903 Stevens Phone 709-J
i t L ,
Lamon's Trail and Guide Service
Headquarters 1019 Cots, Shelton -- Phore 771
Trail Trips Into Heart of Olymplos
BASE CAMPS: Staircase Resort, Lake Cushman,
and Waumila Lodge, Oort Angeles
Discuss Your Hunting Trip Plans
With Us Now
. Factory Approved
Chrysler - Plymouth - International
SALES PARTS - SERVICE
LJ J
We Are Equipped to Repair and Rebuild
All Makes of
Cars - Truck - Tractors and Heavy
Logging Equipment
In Our Service Building at
SOUTH FIRST AND MILL STREET
Electric Welding and Brazing
PHONE 601.
KIMBEL
MOTORS
Munro's Shoe Store
125 RAILROAD AVE.
Former Location of Needham's Men's Wear
'ilL'!II I(lllfl'lllill I +1' ' ' " " .......
It's | The Miracle
Here = Model of Today
t
MAJESTIC WIRE RECORDER
RADIO-PHONOGRAPH
Come in... hear your s169.es
own voice on wire ............
Featured Exclusively at
Olympic Furniture Co.
8/4 RktPoad Phoneg4
SEE U8 FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING
II I I I IIII I I II I III
Spectacular Pass
Scores Touchdown
For Highclimbers
Despite a feeble offense which
netted only 40 yards on the ground
and 50 in the air, the Highelimb-
ors gave the Olympia Bears 48
minutes of worry and trouble on
Stevens Field Friday night in the
traditional opefiing game between
the two prep football rivals, but
turned up with the short end of a
7 to 6 final score.
Both touchdowns were made in
the late moments of the second
quarter with Shelton's far the
more spectacular. The Bears had
crossed the Highclimber goal
with three minutes to go in the
first after marching 58 yards fol-
lowing a punt exeharge. Five run-
ning plays and two passes brought
the score witht Bink Hedburg
southpawing a pass to the right
to Bob McCabc for the last 11
yards. George Jenkins booted the
try-for-point squarely between the
posts for what proved to be the
winning point.
After the ensuing kickoff the
Highclimbers were forced to punt
and it seemed no chance remained
for a store, but the Bears fum-
bled on their own 39 and the alert
Shelton line recovered. On the first
play Ken Carlson took the ball on
an end-around play and shot a
long, beautiful pass which fell true
in the speeding Glen Anderson's
arms and the 'midget Higlzclimber
scatbaek was downed one yard
from a score. With seconds re-
maining, Bernie Heuer punched
across on a quarterback sneak.
Point Effort Fizzles
Then while Coach Norm HIIN
yard tried frantically to get Des
Koch, his sophomore placekicker,
off the bench and into the game
Bob Rice attempted to buck the
extra point across and was stop-
ped cold.
Early in the same period the
Highclimbers suffered a bad break
of their own making which prob-
ably cost them a touchdown and
tim game. With fourth down and
two yards to make on Olympia's
13, Rice cracked off his own right
tackle for six yards and what
have been a first down on
ii iii
SEASON TICKET SALE
TO CLOSE NEXT WEEK
Shelton football fans have just
one more week to purchase their
season tickets to all Hlghclimb-
er home games for the reserved
seat ducats will not be on the
market following the Elms
game, Principal George Hermes
of Irene S. Reed high school an-
nounced.
The season tickets are selling
at $3.75 which includes the
tax,
and entitle the h'olde}to the
same reserved seat for all home
games. The best 320 eats in
the grandstand have been set
aside and numbered for season
ticket holders.
All the Highclimbcr home
games will be played at night
under the Loop Field lights
starting at eight o'clock'and in.
elude games against Elma Oc-
tober 3, Raymond October 10,
Poulsbo October 24, and St.
Martins Preps November 11.
I I I I I III I I
the Bear seven, but this crucial
gain was cancelled by an offside
penalty and Olympia held on the
next down.
The Bears, too, fumbled d beau-
tiflfl scoring chance early in the
first quarter when Roy Elmquist
dropped a pass on Shelton's ten
with a clear field in front of him.
And as the game ended Olympia
was knocking at the touchdown
door again with the ball on Shel-
tows four after completing an ll-
yard pass from Kirk Evans to
George Barney.
The entire second half was
heavily in Olympia's favor with
the Highcllmbers seldom getting
their hands on e leather, being
forced to punt ntinually when
their ground play failed to func-
tion effectively against the strong
Olympia line.
Line Play Outstanding
The game was a battle of two
fine forward walls with the Bears
holding' a slight edge in offensive
strength. Defensively the High-
climber line often played brilliant-
ly and during the battle threw
Olympia backs for a total of 33
yards in reverse. Center Ken Car-
dinal and Tackle Johnny Miller
were particularly good in a gener-
ally fine performance by the line
from tackle-to-tackle.
Olympia held the edge in most
of the statistics as well as in-the
final score, ten first downs to
three, 131 yrds from rushing to
7, a net of 98 to 40 on the ground,
and a fractional edge in punting,
averaging 26 yards plus on six
punts to 25.4 on nine kicks .by
the Highclim)ers. Shelton gained
50 yards in three completed pass-
es of ten attempted against 40
yards on three completions in 11
el, tempts by the Bears. Olympia
wan penalized 35 yards to Shelton's
20. The lineups:
Olympia (7) Shelton (6)
Elmquist .............. E ............ Cottrelt
Morris .................. E .............. Carlson
Schilling .............. T ................ Iiller
Jenkins ................ T .................. Crow
Winkelman ........ G ................ Eager
Wilson ................ G ............ Newman
Lindskog ............ C ............ Cardinal
Barney ................ Q ................ Hexer
Evans .................. H .................. Rice
Hedberg .............. H .......... Anderson
McCabe ................ [ ............ Jackson
Substitutions
Olympia--Long, Normoyle, West-
berg, Wenzel, Eaton, Burgwin,
Rockey, Canfield
Shelton .... Cleveland, Skagen,
Clary, P. KoctL ChriStensen, Wells,
Levett, Davldson, Valley, Buck,
Bom'gault.
See r i n g
Olympia 0700---7; Shelton 06006
Touchdowns---McCabe, Heuer.
Try-for-point Jenkins (place-
ment,
i
A large battleship carries 8 mil-
lion pOundS or more of armor
plate.
by BILL DICKIE
INTER-CITY FASTBALL
One fastball season has hardly
stepped off the rostrum to make
way for football and some of the
boys start thinking about the next
one.
Such a fellow is R, M. Van
Riper of Olympia, who dropped
into the Sideliner's bailiwictl one
day last week to let it be known
he is working toward an inter-city
fastball league for next year
which would include ten teams
from Shelton, Olympia, Centralia,
Cbehalis, Aberdeen and Hoquiam
if plans go as currently outlined.
Van Riper was laying the
foundation work for the league,
sounding out prospective spon-
sors of teams in the six towns.
His idea included single entries
from Shelton and Chehalis, two
from each of the other four. All
games would be played under
lights, probably as doublehead-
ers, giving both entries of the
four two-team towns opponents
on the same night. In the case
of Shelton and Chehalis three
visiting teams would play on the
same night, although such de-
tails as those would bealtered
to suit the situations which
might arise.
The two Olympia and Centralia
sponsors are already on the line,
according to Van Riper. Other de-
tails of the proposed circuit will
be forthcoming during the com'ing
montts as they develop and if a
Shelton sponsor comes forth.
Personally, the Sideliner likes
the idea strongly and hopes the
league materializes in some form
or another.
SPORT SPARKS
One day after he had signed and
returned the contract which bound
him to the Tacoma Western In-
ternational League club, Maw
Cartwright received a contract
from Tony Robello, head scout for
the St. Louis Browns, who hd
signed Carl Sundsten to a St. Louis
contract a week previously, Mary
had talked with Robello when the
Browns scout wan negotiatig
with Sundsten and had been told
he would receive a contract from
the American League organization,
but it was too long in coming and
the Tacoma offer seemed to be
more what tm wanted than what
Robello had promised him so
Mary signed it. The husky Shelton
infielder felt bad" at first as the
Browns had promised to keep the
two Sheltdn boys together as far
as possible and they would have
liked to start their professional
careers as teammates, too, but el-
Cleaners, PlywOod
Shoot Upward in
Commercial Loop
COMMERCIAL LEAGUE
W L
Simpson Electricians .... 5 1
Pantorlum Cleanern .... 5 1
Olympic Plywood ........ 4 2
Morgan Lumber ............ 3 3
Moll Chevrolet .............. 3 3
Local 161 ........................ 2 4
Grunert's Service ........ 2 4
Kimbel Motors .............. 0 6
High game--Joe Rank 208
High totalErnie Anderson 529
Matches Oct. 1
7---Local' 161 vs Kimbel
Morgan vs Grtmert's
9-Plywood vs Electricians
Moll vs Pantorium
Pantorium Cleaners and Olym-
pic'Plywood swept upward with
second week cleansweeps in com-
mercial league bowling play, the
cleaners rocketing into a first
place tie with Simpson Electric-
ians and the veneermen shooting
intb third place as the res01t of
respective three,ply triumphs over
Kimbel Motors and Local 161. ¢*
Pantorium was buoyed by Ern-
ie Anderson's league topping 529
total and Emery Lindeman's run-
setup 524 total, not to overlook
some strong assistance from Oene
Lindberg. The plywood's victory
was a case of all five kegelers hit-
ting above their opening week av-
erages while the Local 161 crew
had a bad night in that respect.
The other two matches brought
odd-game verdicts to the Elec-
tricians over Grunert's Chevron
Service and Moll Chevrolet over
Morgan-Eacrett Lumber. Every
member of the Electrician lineup
topped his previous week's aver-
age while Bud Kenyon and Joe
Rank managed to save one game
for Gruners. Rank's 208 was
best single game of the night.
Wally Dundas personally took
charge of MeWs opening game
win, then Alex Toney and Norris
Rau sizzled to win the finale for
the C.hev boys after Bugs Daniels
and Charlie Cole had taken the
middle tiff for the lumbermen.
The lineups:
Moll Chev. () Morgan Lbr. (1)
Handicap 392 Handicap 249
Gerhardt 418 Giblet 440
Tony 435 H.Daniels 435
Rau 44 C.Cole 461
Wiseman 442 Mrv Morgan 362
Dundas 467. R.Anderson 467
836 853 909 25981689 915 810 2414
Electricians (2) Grunert's (1)
Handicap 816 Handicap 141
M,Leman 407 Bare 516
Boardman 422i Stthers 479
McClymont 351[ B.Kenyon 444
Calkins 3861D.Cormier 433
Coburn 384 CRank 519
889 952 934- 2766 982 871 775 2532
Plywood (3) Local 161 (0)
Handicap 618 Handicap 264
Fletcher 379] Friend 474
Ahlskog 402 Oliver 402
Holt 411 Lunsford 377
l ter considering the aspects of both
contract Mary in satisfied he took
the Bent of the two.
Pressing duties with the adult
night school cla.ses,,: which keep
him occupied three evenings each
week, have forced Cliff Hawkins
to give up his duties as ansistant
to Ray Patrick, junior high foot-
ball coach. His place on the ath-
letic staff has been assigned to
Bob Hedges, new manual arts in-
structor at the junior high.
Local alums of Pacific Lutheran
College are all steamed up over
the 1947 Lute football team, which
reportedly was impressive in its
14 to 0 victory over St. Olaf of
Minnesota last Saturday in Ta-
coma. Cliff Hawkins, Frank Wil-
lard, and Torger Lee, among other
Lute alums in these parts, are ex-
pecting big things of PLC this
year.
One of those little things which
always seem to plague the High-
climbers when they play Olympia
in football popped up again Fri-
day nigit to help the Bears ring
up anotler victory over Shelton,
Cdach Norm Hillyard has a pretty
fair placekicker in sophomore Des
Koch from last year's junior high
team, but Des was sitting at the
opposite end of the bench from
the coach and Hillyard couldn't get
him onto the field quick enough
after the Highclimber touchdown,
and that might h'ave cost Shelton
a tie score.
WHAT'S BECOME OF--
Harry Trout, )mnky one-eyed
tackle who played a lot of fine
ball for Highelimber football
teams of 1936 aud 1937 under Jim
Jensen, is now living in Hoquiam,
Is married and the father of a baby
daughter.
Rayonier Lineups
Swing Calcimine
Brush Liberally
V7 L
Supervisors .................... 5 1
Office .............................. 5 1
lIaintenance .................. 4 2
Chemists ........................
Grease Balls .................. ' 2
Bleach Plant .................. 3 3
Research Girls .............. 0 6
Electricians .................... 0 6
High game--Jess Tobler 195
High total--Art Jacobsen 527
Shutout night served to boost
the Supervisors and the Office in-
to a first place deadlock as the
second round of competition was
written off in the Rayonier bowl-
ing league Monday night:
Every match was settled by a
3 to 0 count as Supervisors com-
manded Research Girls, Office
outfigured Bleach Plant, Main-
tenance short-circuited Electric-
ians, and Chemists dissolved
Grease Balls.
Jess Tobler banged away two
neat scores, one being best sin-
gleton of the night, in leading the
Chemists triumph, and Art Jacob-
son topped the league in individ-
ual total to pace the Maiqten-
ance victory. Supervisors had, Er-
nie Lemly in the van for two
games with Frank McCann and
Frank Hawks chipping in with
timely aid in one, while the Office
simply won because it wasn't
quite as bad as the Bleach Plant.
The scoring:
Chemists (3) Grease Balls (0)
Handicap 713i Handicap 521
Lynch 368] C.Cole 497
Peach 490/Kenyon 503
J.Eager 4441P.Sharpe 285
Perkins 3091Zeitler 397
Tobler 505f Wright 405
862 973 994 2829] 827 945 836 2608
Maintenance (8) Electricians (0)
Handicap 375[ Handicap 567
Rank 495 Frutiger 406
Jacobsen 527 Bare 307
Steihler 471[ Jonson 317
Temple 4181Killeen 442
Skelsey 436[ Carlson 455
872 944 906 2722/842 845 807 249
Office (3) Bleach Plant (0)
lanaicap 639 Handicap 633
Thorpe 415 RLemke 326
Peaeher 358
Dunseath 397
Briggs 357
Holt 459
889 891 845 2625
Supervisors (3)
Handicap 705
Lemly 478
Moore 360
]YlcCann 394
Hawks 434
K.Wolden 384
Carl Raines 365
Lunsford 384
Mahaffey 321
765 821 827 2413
esoareh Girls (O)
Handicap 999
Mays 300
Gray 208
Pace 241
Cormier 321
Muller 240[ Price 350
850 926 835 2611] 764 831 824 2419
Canal Sportsmen
Meeting Tonight
A speaker from the State Fish-
eries Department is expected to
_highlight tonight's meeting of the
Hood Canal Sportsmens Associa-
tion, which resumes the club's
monthly meeting schedule after a
summer layoff.
The session is scheduled for
eight o'clock in the Hoodsport
sclmol with M. C. Stark assuming
his duties as president, along with
other new officers.
Other short talks on the pro-
gram being arranged by President
Stark are expected from State
Game ProteCtor George Farqu-
hat and a representative of the
State Game Department assigned
to the new Skokomish Valley fish
hatchery project.
40 and 8 Meeting
Slated forTonight
Mason County Voiture of the
Forty and Eight will hold their
regular monthly promenade to-
Jessup 382 Wright 425 night at the organization's club
Dml" tie 461,Jacobsen 426 rooms in the Hotel. Shelton, ac-
8 15 659 813 197 758 2368 cordmg to a notice msued b Cor
89lp232nl () [Kimbel Mot. (0) respond ant Reg' Sykes. Y
Handican 2401Handlcan , 497[ A retresnment period has been
Lmdberg 485tW Pearson 492 arranged for 6.30 o clock with the
.,_=,vr 408, B.Phfillips , 442 I dinner and business meeting fol-
Keir 438IJ Pson. 3471lowing thereafter. AI members
E.Anderson 529t Dummy 393 ' of the voiture are urged to b'e
IAndeman 524 C.Berets 353 present for this important sess-
845 883 896 26241828 812 884 2524 ion.
Continue Sluggish
Pin Scoring Pace
CITY BOVLING LEAGUE
W L
Pastrime .......................... 4 2
Associated Oil .............. 4 2
Lake Cushman .............. 3 3
Simpson Log .................. 3 3
Active Club .................... 3 3
Beckwith Jewelry ........ 3 3
Electricians .................... 2 4
Lumbermen's Mere ....... 2 4
High gameAllie Robinson 216
High totalO. A. Gustafson 570
There was little to choose
among the eight city league bowl-
ing entries after the second week's
rotmd of nmtches had bees fin-
ished Friday night, with all oing
by the odd-game route to "leave
the defending champion Pastime
tied with Associated Oil on the top
ruP-g.
Scoring continued to be slow
with a 600 total still to be re-
corded in the circuit. G, A Gus-
tafson topped the individuals with
a 570 total but it failed to bring
his Lumbermen's Mercantile squad
victory over the Aetivians who
put Mary Carter's scoring to good
llSe.
Ai]ie Robinson edged several
close pursuers for the best single
game but his 216 count still fell
three pins short of winning that
game from Pastime as Lake Cush-
man went down twice before the
title defenders, whose consistency
and Rip Allen were too much for
the erstwhile Commercial league
titlists.
The other matches brought vic-
tory to the Electricians over
Simpson Logging Company, and
to Beckwith Jewelers over As-
sociated Oil. The jewelers earned
one by three pins on Ron Dodds
score, the Electricians one by sev-
en pins with a dummy score high
for the game.
The lineups:
Active Club (2) L.M, (1)
Handicap 510[ Handicap 309
Williams 365 R.Stewart 517
Stevenson 415 R.Gustafson 391
Petersou 423, Ashbaugh 376
Price 429,1McCaslin 413
Carter 533 Gustafson 570
880 888 907 2675 820 787.969 2576
Pastime (2) Cushman (1)
Handicap 105 Handicap 285
Allen 562 A.Robinson 544
Staley 479 A.Carlson 493
l(opperman 483 L.Carlson 383
Dotson 546 Durand 461
Ferrier 514 Joe Forrcst 508
879 934 876 26891864 931 879 2674
Beekwlth (2) Associated (l)
Handicap 114 Handicap 234
Merric,k 479 Tucker 438
Doddn 5¢4 Skelsey 499
Deer 420 Frisken 401
W.Earl 462 / Holt 452
Bayley 492[ Daniels 554
825 848 838 2511 799 845 934 2578
Electricians (2) Simpson Log (1)
Handicap 303 Handicap 171
LH.Woods 468 Aronson 514
L.Westhmd 458 Hokonson 466
D.Woods 476 Snelgrove 504
B.Smith 443 Peterson 461
Dummy 486' P.Fredson 470
907 878 849 2634 851 893 842 2586
I I i . -- - •
HOME
I
GOOD CLEAN
COME ONE -- COME
AT MEMORIAL HALL
Every Sarurday Night -
Dancing 9 P.M. to 1 [
SPONSORED BY GENERAL WELF/"- . r:ll
SANDE
In Our Loc
Mountaix
ON THE OLYMP]
MAILING ADDRESS- F
Charles Weirauch
p B©
en/oy BEEI00
refreskme#t
"It00 tke
THI ORIGINAL risk
ING COMPANY,
All the skill
and knowledgo
that go into making
ES
L 0 A N S Boston Jan shoes at+
used in producing this super . NOW I-]
• Slax howling shoe. Full range of ,
"k Convenient Terms sizes and widths, a Slax exclusive.
,ReasonableRaes +"Z/l OMES FI
Mason County Savings M|1i11,,,Ir+, M--..-.Ir
Tore,
.......... " ......... t ..... ":'" P J,i
.0 et +nelton u,ag. /j,(
Title Insurance Bldg. .
' "'' ' - ' " - • MR. CAVA
MR. RAW
Frazer
On the New
ttere Tuesday
for Personal C
AT 1305 El
-GAI
This is the Frazer Manhattan
Amerlca's Newest Fine Car
Made by Kaiser-Frazer Corporation, ManufacturerJ of .
- .J •
THE ONLY 100% POST-WAR AUTOMOI
COMPARE THE
WITH ANY OTHER CAR ON THE
S, L. PEARSON and
Mason County'ffca'ler for Kaiser-Frazer ProduCts
120.East Pine....---_. Sheldon ........
This P ostA
THE GATt
12--M
RI)I+ YOUR I