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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
October 2, 1942     Shelton Mason County Journal
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October 2, 1942
 
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1942.7 £92“ 2' I October 2, . a “-m..._,,s_.,_.,«..w.rv_s..NV 4......._..V.. ._«-._-a_.. .. , . . mv. x. ._ i \ V0. d R’eturng . land, Calif, where she Visited herlI ,._.,. :eting 0f ‘, '2" - w - 3 husband, Shelley F. Reed, who is, ‘ 5 held (1)!“ ‘ T0 Lallf'l a motor machinist mate, 2an class ’ leg/$533 , ,F. Reed returnpd this} in the Coast Guard, and is sta-l ‘ . 1 mi Jo 'l' a short trip to Oak— tioned near Oakland. l Fredermk Alla“ Goodwmv 39' ii: . ’and Elizabeth A. West, 42, both of Port Townsend, I at Shelton, ; Sept. 29. . I I igBusineSS’ s ' James J. Smith, 29, Shelton, and with Mrs I. I ‘(Rose Mildcnbcrger, 25'), Seattle, at l Sept. 29. r, You buy War“Smeps from tallup, at Shelton, Sept. 28. Three— .lames Arthur Booth, 25, U. S. . h be; ; Shelton, .Sept. 29. 1’ 00m William Harding, 35, Auburn. l W. M. Patterson, legal and day wait waived by order of h ll 5 ' S ' T‘ S e eerce Tallons .Army, and Arline Belle Chialvo, or the 14flL I I g ‘, 1 , ;and Charlotte Kavanaugh, 32, a . lBI'yan Mawr. Wash, at Shelton, ill/label Miller, legal, both of Puy- Judge D. F. Wright. l 24, Shelton, at Shelton, Sept. 28. l .l. McFarland, legal. Marysville, ' \Nash, and Martha Murray, legal, lOakland, Calif, at Shelton, Sept. Shell Dealers- l. l 28. l In color on cloth, these at Sham“ Sept' 25' l l l l Keith L. Evans, 19, and Carol Pierce, 18, both of Shelton at Shelton, Sept. 22. John A. Hickman, Anthony Balazic, 20, Bremcrton, and Audrey Freeman, 17, Shelton, insignia are great for sewing l on youngsters" sweaters, shirts or jackets. Start a collection. 18 Seattle, While they last, you get one of and Netta Jean Levagood, 15. these regulation Air Corps Shelton. at Shelton. SCPt- 19~ Squadron Insignia—the kind Eugene Emmons, 55, Denver, Colo., and Pearl Gee, 50, Savanah. Missouri, at Shelton, Sept. 23. W. W. Wilbur, 33, and Bertha [Rollins 33, both of Gig Harbor, l at Shelton, Sept. 23. actually on fighters and bond)- ers—FREE every time you buy a War 5mm? from your Shell Dealer or Shell Service Station. Anewinsigneouteachweek. ['1 This Week-— BOMBARDMENT DW 1, SQUADRON 0W 0W 1' l Canada is now the world's g largest producer of maple ’ ducts, and the industry is organ- ized on a sound basis. About 50,- 000 farmers in eastern Canada take part in the annual harvest of maple products which is one of their most profitable farm woods crops. H on. COMPANY, INC. coo- 1 Only . . . Eli URTH 522— does a room With ONE COAT COVERS WALLPAPER, painted walls, wollboard, basemen' walls. APPLIES EASILY with wide brush or wilh the Kem-Tone Roller-Kooler. DRIES IN ONE HOUR . ; room furnish-1' ings may be replaced imediolely. MIXES WITH WATER . ; :mo lurpenline or solvenl lhinners needed; WASHES EASILY— with ordinary wall cleaners.“ ONE GALLON DOES-THE AVERAGE ROOM. GALLO N PASTE FORM 93¢ A QUART $ , _Eem-Tone paste . l gals. Kem—Tone , mfidy-to-use—only . , 'LE [[5 'N 1 HOUR - ns null"b . I . ONE COAT COVER b I L‘ ' 7a.. > . For Kitchens, Bathrooms, *0 Woodwork You save when you paint—and long after —with Sherwin- Williams SWP— Amcrica’s most Rich-looking, lug. trolls, smartly color- ful, Sherwin. Williams Semi-Lustre Wall Finish has 5S 2e pro— e1Y~used brand of house paint. _ ,. 3M remarkable ease of application Long been the favorite for kitchen and e V; Palating'tlme and labor. Its tre- bathroom walls, and for woodwork 1h dous covering powers save paint. throughout fife 1'{0m6- Let us show you ., ‘ Well-known durability saves your Semi-Lustre In Its many nd _ e from weathering, beautiflfl 001°“ and tints- $3' lis "Y, expensive repairs 5 ASk us for a. free c0101‘ p!“- No ‘-‘ savcs frequent re- card, GAL. ltS )n, ' : SHERWlN-WILLIAMS SHERW'N'W'LL'AMS , SEMI-LUSJ RE Hillel. pt- ‘ ‘ of I'S. l l l SHELToN-MAsQN COUNTY Whistle Punks . . . “They were already gone far from what they used to be, and now with the war puttin’ ladies in the woods, as i hear from some parts, the whistle punk is a vanishin’ race,” said Old Larrity the bullcook. “I mane the whistle punk as I knowed him in the full splendor of his fettle, whin high-lead loggin’ was in its prime. Whin whistle punks began to go as dellygets to thim Yout’ Congresses in Washin’ton, the end was in sight. Now, wit' wimmin at their jobs, the end is here. “The work of whistle punkin’ it- self was niver so tough It was but standin’ all day in a spot and keep- in’ a eye peeled for hookjender or riggin’ slinger and passin’ on, wit' jerkwire or electric tootsies, the signals to the yarder engineer— once, twice, or in combination of toots, as the signal happened to be. “But the thrue whistle punk made great glory of himself at his work, partickerly when he was often it. I’ve known thim in their heyday so tough they would even scorn to read the Police Gazette, and to hear thim talk you'd suspect they liked nawthin’ so much to eat as a keg of track bolts soaked in coal oil, wood alcohol, and snufi. t 1 “You could always tell a whistle punk’s cap, even when he was from under it, for the bill would be wore slick from its bein‘ pulled down over wan eye and wan ear. Like- wise you could tell a thrue whistle punk by hearin' wit’out seein’ him, for in a common conversation he would out-curse an Irishman speak— in’ of the King of England. And whin _he’d spit, the resultin’ effect was what I wance heard a forestry professor in camp call a ‘cosmic disturbance’. “I've heard a whistle punk of but 17 years call a rugged camp push ‘boy‘ and get away wit‘ it. All of the race was powerful hard to hold down when stove-loggin’ was on in Harold Simpson Now Represents WCLA At Capital Announcement of the appoint- ment of Harold V. Simpson as permanent representative of the West Coast Lumbermen’s Asso- ciation in Washington, D. C., was made by the Association this week. Mr. Simpson is a native and product of Oregon, while a large share of lumber industry exper— ~~ Wiener: was ac- quired as Secre- tary and Assist— ant General Man- . ger of the Sea- board Lumber ;Company of Se— ;attle. Born at lAshland, Oregon, ihe completed his , education at the University of Oregon, graduat- ing in 1923. He saw front-line ‘ service with the Artillery in World War I. “Mr. Simpson is well equipped by his practical experience in lumber—which includes two years of sawmilling, one year in the New York market, a long term in export lumber, and a period of trade promotion in the United Kingdom—t0 take charge of the Association’s Washington office. Wartime relations of our industry with the Federal agencies are of execeptional importance. An ade- quate supply of lumber is one or the first essentials for successful prosecution of the war, and it is the purpose of the industry to give the government all—out co- operation in lumber supply, “While the Association has had good representation in Washing- ton since early in 1940, it has not been on a permanent basis. The 7 work was headed for a. year by H. W. Murphy, now operating dime. tor of the Bureau of Grades, and is at present under R. T. Titus, WCLA Director of Trade Exten- sion. It has become evident that the work of the Association in Washington must be continued af- ter the war. Construction pro- grams already loom large in post- war planning. This means more work. for West Coast lumber, “Another post-war probability is wide expansion of the recipro— cal trade policy of Secretary Hull, 'in which West Coast lumber also has a. vital interest. The industry looks forward to recovery of its world markets. The- immense storehouse of mature Douglas fir timber will serve as a source for reconstruction of a war-t0rn world as well as it is serving the nation’s war effort now.” Olympic Timber Total Still Vast l Hoquiam, Sept. 14—Latest for- est service figures received by the Hoguiam chamber of com- merce show a large volume of merchantable timber in western Washington. Western hemlock predominates with 8,137,241,000 board feet in Grays Harbor coun- ty; 11,169,970,000 board feet in Clallam county, 1,423,805,000 feet in Mason county and 9,369,213,000 feet in Jefferson county. Clal- 1am and Jefferson counties also have large stands of Sitka spruce. greatly in demand by the aircraft industrY- . - Totals for four counties includ- ing western hemlock, western red cedar, Sitka Spruce, Pacific silver fir and other species are: Grays Harbor, 17.053.002.000 board feet; Clallam. 24295391000; Mason 6,- 471,731,000 and Jefferson 24,069,- 591,000. UNDERGOES OPERATION Frank Gordon of Shelton under- went a major operation at Shel- ton hospital Monday, JOURNAL M... ,. talk, the thrue whistle punk corn— l unexpired term of Miss Beatrice Miller, who has resigned. monly had but wan text. “It was always how he told the hook tender to go chase himself; or the timekeeper where to head in; or how he inhaled a quart of reds-ye :it wan sittin’; which is to say that iii": text would always be the wonderful deeds and amazin’ adventures of the whisle punk himself. “The true whistle punk was nivcr satisfied with simple snoosc. He would first prime his lower lip wit' snuff, and thin wad in plug tobaccy. On Sundays he’d smoke a cigarct al the same time, blowing smoke from nose and mouth to wanee, and tryin’ to blow it also from his ears. His boots iver had the longest and the sharpest corks of anny in camp. Whin he stagged his pants it was 0 good four inches higher than anny others were stagged. Whin he painl- ed his slicker ag’in’ the rain, the whistle punk painted it red. “Yet I saw but wan punk come to grief, and he had the owdashus tim- irity to ask a proud camp cook by the name of Swanson why it was , Danes was so much smarter than the Swedes. Swanson hailed from Stockholm. The chef trun the punk in a tub of bread dough and would have baked him but for a tender- hearted timekeeper puttin’ in his oar. “Choc’lit bars were the weakness ' of even a thrue whistle punk. Wan could be tellin’ how he wance made a solid meal of canned heat, or be passin’ unseemly remarks on the forebears of the samp push; but poke a choc’lit bar at him and his tough tales and loud blattin’ would ' stop in the instant. It was always worth a nickel. t t 0 “Then the Uplift struck whistle punks and they begun to sind ripri- l sintatives to Yout’ Congresses and the like. Now the war is doin’ thim in. Wit’ wimmin on jerkwires and tootsies, the whistle punk as I knowed him is gone wit‘ the wind." RAYONIER BUYS- STATE TIMBER Olympia —— Approximately 27,— 100,000 board feet of timber on the south fork of the Calawa river in Olympia. National forest for use at' its Port Angeles plant has , been sold to Rayonier Inc, forf $246,307.50, announces Carl Neal,l, park supervisor. l The stand covered approximate— l 1y 960 acres and included: Doug-l l l las fir, 13,400,000 board feet; western hemlock, 7,200,000 board feet; western red cedar, 250,000 board feet, and Sitka spruce, 6,- 150,000 board feet. ill/11‘s. Hatcher Named l Red Cross secretary! issued to Mrs. Grace Anderson,‘—-—~— Mrs. 22:13:11?“ secretary 0f the Masonl $1000 in a superior court order I tion . l . n. , , , the bunkhouse. Whin he was let to boom 1.,c,1.tl_y, to oomplcn : transfer company managm, was { Journal Want-Ads—Phoiie 100 Journal Want—Ads—I’hone 100 N this war-torn world, today looms Page Seven ANDERSON ESTATE l If you Wish to Sell you'll Have I Letters of administration werel t0 Tell—Journal Want-Ads. widow of the late Albert W. An- YORPII-WP Misery of S. A. Hotelier has beenl rderson, and her bond fixed at Red Cross chapter by ac- chapter executive the ; llrday as l signed by Judge D. F. Wright Sat- of the the estate of the late l proba ted. LIQ UlD. TABLETS. SALVE . NOSE DROPS The Student Band of Irene S. Reed High School, one of the finest in the state, is facing an emergency due to a shortage of available instru- ments. Government restrictions on new instru- ments and the graduation of many members of last year’s band has created a shortage of . trumpets, Clarinets, trombones and saxaphones If You Have A Band Instrument which is not in Use, Bring it in to Our Store. We will sell it for You to a Student who needs it. I'. E. BECKWITH GIFTS and JEWELRY But we of the Forest Industries are large. There is little opportunity also preparing for tomorrow—as we to think of tomorrow and .the pursuits have been for years . . . planting mile of peace. lions of new trees . . . practicing forest The men and women of the Forest Products Industries—like others pro- ducing vital war material—are busy with the present, devoting their ut¥ most to winning the war—completely management to provide for regrowth . . . devoting great tracts to “tree farms”, stocked and protecred for the years to come . . . guarding millions of acrgrs against the forest’s worst enemy -— e. . . . speedily. Here’s what that means: Producing billions of feet of lumber for building l cantonments, war plants, war-workers’ homes . . . and airplanes; wood pulp for explo- sives, cartons and paper and scores of other things needed on the battlefronts of the world. And, at the same time, plywood for "P. T.” Boats providing enough timber to take the load off metals needed for guns and the engines of war. That is our big job and we’re doing it. ********%********* SIMPSON LOGGING COMPANY SHELTON Allll McGLEAllY, WASHINGTON