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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
October 30, 1942     Shelton Mason County Journal
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October 30, 1942
 
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‘ October so, “19,472,. 1 I w «u . . . {Pulp Mill Waste to Lt. John S T 0 Win l l l , t. 3 Liquor May Make i ridge,“ War Use Alcoho lalry, Fort a l l Seattle, Oct: 15~WAlcollol vital‘ Margie 80 1 Mrs. Harve , rance Award .. ,, . " n D. C., Oct. 20% W 81‘ “1 (3‘: 'Ch' would ha“, made {in the manufacture of explosives 1: gusgflfi f Lieut. Ray Vernon and synthetic rubber can be ob- SOY; of Love] 0 died in an airplane l tamed from waste. liquors of sul-. lfite pulp mills at very low cost, iDr. Joseph L. McCarthy, instruc- tor in chemical engineering at the years ago at Fort Lewis, 1‘ $10,000 in government Was vetoed today by was revealA eon when th. “nary "3pm .. Universitv 0-" VVash'h to ~nd‘_, :ards of the: Roosevelt. Gated today 1 lug 11. 1 1 1 0 date has * was a National Guard .1 itc pulp industry Ed to active service. n '. v , f, receive {:11 Was eligible to apply for Mggg‘oezgo €01,111: 1 -e; D, D, a" ll insurance, the Presi- :,§..,. ’13., ugn I Mr. and Mrs; ," ed the Senate that the; “Caricaflmaénesimg ,. Tflylr,l'>‘,K ‘ Administration ,records; ‘ 3,”, recovery pro- 1 Miller, Frfi, ‘10 such application ' said Williams Bl“ would have created all my, who has served. ioplmd. Cl! * presumption that Jones ‘, as research associate in the Lig- Nlrs. Dan ' ‘v for and w's grantedinin and Cellulose Research Lab-l I : needs.» This, the President f oratories of the, University, has l Eml- Alldy “' establish an "unwrsul made an extensive study of syn-. " He noted that thelthctic rubber manufacture. Speer Hon t Home Lasfi‘ Robe Palmer R0. embers of week end in , gogggg’gllil hadv becom‘t‘l; The Northwestis surplus grain . w 23‘“ errlmen 3 may also be conSldcred a possible I i raw material source for the man— Ve has an echo in Shel-l mg the wrecking of a; lhe woods north of town i if. ufacture of synthetic rubber, ac—' cording to the chemist. I “In planning for production of? leer. CB-M- I, ,0 years ago, in which synthetic rubber,” Dr. McCarthyi le tollowmg lies and Lieut. Nelson said, “two problems must be con-- )_Tl1eodore_ . lives, The two men lladl sideredfithe dire, need of the na- flllélei Fiat?“ inducted mm the Na- l tion for rubber, and choice of they ‘Chiliirig Jan ard Observation Sqllad-ngls.tt_l:~’fgfonts; for economlcal Pm", Bremerton; pokéme’ and It appears: noun no i now and after the: iudson and _, Perfected their govern- ‘ U t t I, ha of Aber .l‘flnce.) The widow has It??? .répfr. of. the BamCh; the Navy H med Saul Haas, Conec_ ; (.Ol‘llll‘ll‘ utl anc..tigating the. rub- , Mar. k ‘toms’ Seattle. lbt‘l- program for the preSident,; JOl‘le 1" ledvised that a plant capable of lmer, and V __-__.W iproducing 30,000 tons per year ofi rts. ' " lBuna S, a type of synthetic rub- iber. should be looated in a grain area under control of a group. “Such a plant. if located in the Pacific Northwest along with a‘ .3! Jeanne '5 lcliool Affa , al‘ol Jeanne Cottey Coll i * I. ATRE l local l l Nevada, M04 tire factory, would probably very; ce-president uncarly supply the peacetime rub—T fuage Club. t Saturday, Oct. 30-31 Iber demand for Washington, Orenl of Mr. and; . lgon, Idaho and Montana." l 3f Shelton. I Dr. McCarthy believes that syn—I l tllctic rubber is here to stay, even . though raw materials are costlyl ton Berle, Brenda l l int present. “It is the history off I J oycc e.‘ ' IiSPERiNG » ._ GHOSTS” “John Shelton, John Smother , :1 s. H. Dull 2 visiting her . They plan letime. any chemical process," he said“ “that after a certain length of, time the quality goes up and thel 'price goes down.” Lodge Has I adine, Willie Best r;—r-~A—--;‘—.—-—’-—— lversar . v . 1' ebekahg held It 5 a SCAREW Y” '1 I last Friday ‘- he lodges 4,1 Averages $4.90 I l l Mom-Tiles. I honoring Mrs. Helen "we sunday 2:15 Twenty nine million feet of tim- l charter me ‘ ' Iber was cut on the Olympic Na? 'riday, Octo Payne. Batty (ii-able. tional Forest during the period: 'ill be prescnt ' victor Mature i July 1 to September 30, according‘ “(1 party at 4‘ . jto Supervisor Carl B. Neal. Thisi l. Refreshm, represents a value of $142,000 orl . in FDOTLIGHT I‘ ' ENADE” l Jane W’yman, James Son, Phil Silvers an average of $4.90 per thousand, board feet. Seventeen sales were{ in opration during this period, cut- ting mostly spruce and Douglas. Say It I. n ,‘ fir as an aid in war production.I LHBELgo, leal Treat that can't . Neal states that during the eyd rang . be Beatll same three months period the RnAL Daggla . Olympic made. seven sales amount- r " l ' a r ‘ l PITAL sou int, to 30 million feet for $46,000 or an average of $9.90 per thous- and feet. The largest sale was 17 million feet of Douglas fir fori $218,660 to E. R. Gehrke, Jr., in Indian Valley, near Port Angeles.1 ed anywhereb .etlnesday-Tliursday 13 Floral SPIG FEATURES , a : H dwa . l ar ‘7 CAPE FROM l __ __ , . MARRIAGE LICENSES:L ' 'l n CRIME Dave Lewis, Shelton and Amy, ' -J§;;'_hggh0Tra“s’ chterson, Shelton; Chester 'A.’g ‘“ 9 "Morris, Shelton and Mary. WilSon,l ,a THRILL-FILM . l . ___and__ iBremerton and Nettie Marie Er-iI 3win, Brcmerton; Ernest Kittel-Il »:' POSTMAN Shelton and Lillian Camer-; ,fl. jon, Bremerton; Donald B. Gros-l 6 VITA- : Nu: KING” 3 I‘dTi-avls, Brenda :hong, Shelton and Phyllis Nob-I Spencer Charters, i lctt, Shelton. i S» H , TONsiiliidfirll'iY , l tanley Al‘dre‘l‘" ‘ Gary Werberger, son of Mr. andl NEWS William Werbergcr. under? g. lwent a tonsilectomy at the Shel-i ton hosnital on Monday. I Re-Elect . . . , U. S. FORD; M. D. ' Dozen Democratic Nominee . gull; REPRESENTATIVE l ' U. s. FORD . .. . . . . . ‘ (Paid Advertisement) { l - presentative Democratic Ticket ...... .- now.- 'Man who knows where 3° and how to get re- ............... : When he gets there. 72‘ ........ .. n0 .............. paid Advertisement Cliff Wivell’s' CERTIFIED ' COMING FURLOUGH WAITED wvith the U. S. Army, ‘ so he can come back and see “the I ‘much that it’s hard to really Iof heck. I think this winter lput a harness on him and make , Since the Castlios have been there Shelton; William Christ Bluhm,.' Idispatcher at' the Chico, «the Yard sheet metal shop I the young daughter active in Red lN Elisa-luff BY GEORGE EIDEMILLER i More than anything else in thei future, Master Sergeant George' Eidemiller, former Sheltonian now stationed “somewhere in Alaska”, is lookingl forward to a prospective furlough sta tes" once more. . In a letter to a Journal staff member recently Sergeant Eide— miller writes: “They keep us on the jump so! do the things you would like to and should and so many things have happened that I hardly know where to start. “First. though, I do very much enjoy the good old Journal and all the events and happenings that take place down there. The papers are only about three weeks old when they get to me, but we are used to getting news that is his- tory by the time it gets to us. ‘It’s always good news and inter- icsting news if we haven't heard it before. "You know I am a sourdough now as I have been up here over I a year and gosh it seems like at least a dozen saw the good old states. Unless something happens I will be out on a 15-day furlough in about six weeks. Gosh, am I happy over that! It will be like coming into a new World. But I won’t believe it until I am on the boat. You get so you never plan from day to day because one never knows what will happen tomorrow. Our experience up here has proven that. We never let down on our ceaseless vigil. We know only too well what has happened to other places like ours. “We do have periods of varia-' tion. I have been out fishing, and I mean fishing. That is something we are fortunate to have up here. Believe it or not, but the other morning a couple of my men were coming back from mess.‘ and» l years since I last found a big black bear in their- quarters. “I have an Alaskan husky that is about a year old and sure full I’ll him tow me on skiis. "I got a 48-hour pass recently and went up to APO No. 942. The trip was grand and I sure had a lot of surprises. First I looked up Paddy Morrison, that evening I was invited over to Jack and Florence Castlio's and we spent a whole evening just talking about Shelton. It has been seven years and three since Paddy has. Also the same evening I saw Charlie Baker . . never realized there were so many Shelton people up here . . . Opal Gruver (can’t think of her married name), Dewey Bennett, I was unable to see them but would like to have. “The time went all too fast and I had to come back the next day to my station. “I have been under the weather for about three weeks . . . the re— action to yellow fever shots. Can you'irh'agine being shot for that- ‘up'vhéreTIt sure takes the pep out of" you and the diet you have to follow is slowly starving me . lost 15 pounds, but I' was too plump anyway . . . Weighed 195 before. It‘s this country that agrees with me. ROGER STOY DISPATCHING AT CHICO ARMY AIR BASE Through high grades made on examinations, Roger Stay, volun- teer soldier from Rayonier’s’ Shel- ton plant, has earned the duty of Calif, army air. base, letters to his wife, the former Sue Abeyta, relate. His duties are to keep records of all plane flights from the base and flying time put in by air ' corps pilots. He writes that a number of other Sheltonians have been sta’: tioned at Chico, including Bob Lund, Willys Oliver, Ralph Paulé son, Jack Kelly and Tom Ogden} In ciVilian ranks, the Roy Dan; iels family is now living in Chi- co, too, making quite a Shelton fraternity in .that city. . . .Mrs., Stoy left here ,today‘ to 30111 her husband at Chico. I BELFAIR FAMILY REALLY- SERVING UNCLE SAM I (From Bremerton News-Search- light) ‘ On'e son missing since the sur- render of Bataan, another son: servmg in India and a third sol- idier in Fort Benning, with the father working as a Yard boiler- maker, the mother working in and Cross work—that is the record of the Joseph J. Taylor family of in National Defense. . Their son, Vance Wilbur, was in the Philippines when the .Taps invaded Bataan and Corregidor. |His relatives have not heard from Ehim Since. He is serving his third hitch. In a sympathetic letter from the adjutant general of the Army, dated May 22, the major .genel‘al commanding said that all efforts to locate the missing sol- dier have proved ineffectual, but that the Japanese government ' was expected to comply with an iagl‘eement with the Red Cross in ,Genev-a With the furnishing of in- formation. The next of kin are "r . 'o . I .f . EXAOO SERVICE PRODUCTS COMPANY High Grade Fuel and Deisel Oils. PROMPT SERVICE Isl and Franklin Phone 397 Representative in Mason Connty for .I eligible for an allotment from the Day Of the missing service man I The Parents and young sister lofvthe missing soldier are hope- . fulubut grieving. ’. .The“ suspense is awful,” they lsald» but this is war and we lmust bear it bravely, just like ,thf3 brave boys who are in the thick of the fighting . . . We dread 5596111}; each list of casualties, but .for one year, 5 have hope every time the mailman ibrings a. letter.” k A. brother, Corporal Joseph D- l'Ijaylor, kimWn better as “Dave.” writes from India which was his last ponit of call after many changes in recent months. Un- lowances- he now receives $113 a. month. He was also in Austra- W‘________.___.__...___.__._—I Belfair. all of whom are engagedl der the new ruling, and with al-» SHELTON-MASON COUNTY JOURNAI} YOUR DIMOUT (These official instructions f Defense Council apply to the entire Zone of Restricted Lighti ng—most of Western Proclamation No. 12 is effective. Clip the instructions, 2 post them in your home or store and see that everyone ,- in the family or place of with them.) FOR HOMES: Pun your with the bottom of any lights in the room. To play safe, , pull shades all the way down. If your home is in the area “visible from the sea,” shades must be all the way down. If you have venetian blinds, close them so lations, all serving to delay the: as to throw any light downward. Porch lights, yard lights: Shield them so all the I light goes down and none goes straight out sideward ' or upward. With your eye at the level of the bottom of the light shield, you should not be able to see the light. Use light globes of the lowest possible wattage. ' They must not give more than one foot candle of light 2 on the ground. This takes- a light meter to check ac- curately, but it is a weak light and you would strain our e es trim to read newsorint b it. ii y y g " y lto higher paid jobs. FOR FARMS: Exactly the same as above. Pull down your shades. Putin low-wattage bulbs and shield all , outside lights. This also applies to poultry houses and l barns. FOR BUSINESS PLAC 'work. No outside electric be visible to the eye when ing, must shine downward ‘tions on automobile lights sea are unchanged except hicles. ' federal laws. , 'EX=R.A.F. ‘signs or buildings are permitted, and no light may throw rays sideward or upward. Lights must not throw more than one foot candle on the ground or sidewalk in front of the establishment, even if it is the general light coming through the window from inside. And no. lamps, reflectors, diffusing globes or inside signs may , the door or window- glass. In other words, all rays of light from any of these sources coming out of a build- ward. So if your lightS'are-now visible from'outside, you can do one of three things. You can raise the lights, shield each one at the light itself, or paint or otherwise shield the upper part of the door or window glass. INDUSTRIAL PLANTs, STREET L I G H T s. HIGHWAY LIGHTS AND TRAFFIC LIGHTS require more technical handling, and specialists are available through Defense Councils for consultation- The restric- Cooperate in the Dimout. Instructions apply between Sunset and Sunrise.- Violators are ' subject to severe penalties under state and , , lNSTRUCl‘lONS Washington—where Public business becomes familiar l shades down at least level E55 This will take some signs or floodlighting of i held level with the top of and not sideward or up- i in areas visible from the for certain emergency ve- l ,..,._..._.._—..——._. FEAR PLAYS ODD. TRICK Fear is a peculiarly Selective thing, Walter Emsley of Shelton learned as a member of the Civil- ian Technical Corps, attached to the Royal Air Force in England. Emsley, invalided out of the serv—V l lLarge Supplies Of FeedlAlfc Now Available Here, Dairymen, poultrymen and live-. stock feeders will find large sup-' plies of feed grains available in the state this year to aid in’the food production prOgram, states R. M. Turner, extension economist, State College of Washington. On the other hand, supplies of hay are smaller than last year and in many districts much of the qual- ity is low from poor haying wea- ther. Farmers who buy feed can now take advantage of the large crop of wheat, barley and oats being" harvested in the state by stocking "up in anticipation of future. needs. With ‘ barley prices in' Eastern Washington considerably lower than at this time last year and the expected continuation of feed wheat sales by the government, feed prices should be fairly stable during the coming feeding season. Also advanced purchases of these grains by feeders Will tend to ease a difficult grain storage problem in grain producing areas. The 1942 production of grain other than wheat in the Pacific Northwest is expected to exceed the 1939-41 average by 42 per cent, largely because of the great in- crease in barley acreage. The large supply and the increased use of feed wheat provides another important source of feed grains. Roughly 506,000 tons of wheat were fed in the Pacific Northwest from the 1941 crop. Grain-con- suming animal units are also about 15 per cent larger in 1942. Lowered slipplieS of hay and roughages in relation to increase ed numbers of livestock may be offset in many instances by lleav-' ier feeding of the large grain feed supplies. The extent to which this supplementing can be ‘done de- pends upon the amount of grain being fed and the relative cost of feed wheat and other concentrates. l lia. He says the cost of living is high in India where half a pound lof coffee costs six rupees and [eight annas, or about $3. Other ithings are proportionately high. The heat, he says. is terrific at times. The food is excellent and the life is exciting. His letter was dated April 30. Jimmie. the third brother, has been in the Army four years and is now with a parachute com‘ pany in Fort Benning where he is having plenty of excitement and likes the life. He doesn't know when he may be ordered to foreign duty. l MAN i DECLAREs! ice by bombing injuries, is now a shipyard worker having been re- jected for service inthe merchant marine. because of his disabilities. When the “show” is roughest, and one would eXpect to have a few qualms, Emsley 'found, the excitement and action of the mo- ment leaves no, room for fear. ,Then it sneaks up'at odd moments. Emsley wasn’t afraid. for in— stance, he explained, while bombs :are dropping all about him. He was too busy stamping out incen— diaries. That was 'just a few sec- onds before 'a. 1500-pounder smack- ed ‘him against a brick wall. But Emsley knew fear when he stood idly on the cliffs above Bourne- mouth Watching what he thOught were Spitfires coming home, only to look up and see the Swastika on a plane barely skimming over his head. Detectors Avoided That plane, having come across the Channel at an altitude so low as. to avoid the detectors, bombed a building. killing Seven R. A. F. fillers, before anti-aircraft could get into action, Emsley related. Debris from the building itself caught the plane, which circled crazin and crashed into the Chain nel. ' i i There was also the night on the trip over When everyone was call- ed to aé-tibn'stat'rons. A submar- ine had been sighted, and'there Was time for fear. But on the second day out a submarine had s’unk one of the accompanying de- stroyers and everyone was too ex- cited- to be scared, Emsley said. Emsley was injured in South- ampton last April when he with 14 other Americans of the Teth~ nical Corps, Were in town during the third of'four successive night raids. The 1,500—pounder landed about a bl0ck away, throwing Emsley against a brick wall. causing con- cussion of the brain, dislocating his hip and “punching a hole in my stomach.” Emsley did not know anything about the next night’s raid, but'he experienced "six or seven more before has was dismissed from the hospital Seven weeks later. After a long conva- lescence he was released to return to the United States. “And seeing the States was the biggest thrill Of 311." Emsley said. .T,___V \VOOD HOUSES LAST A U. S. government laboratory states “a wood house will last as long as its owner wants it to last provided he gives it reason- able care." There are houses in this country that were built in’ Colonial times, out of lumber and timber locally available, that are still occupied and in'good condi— tion after 200 years. more or less. lilwnils HEARS i the Kiwanis Club Tuesday with, a special program featuring Lieutl Commander H. L. Mason, U.S.N.l R., from the Bremerton navy yard . who opened with a review of his I an troubles in keeping up the vastl employment needs of the yard and the steady come and go on .the jobs which hamper the oper— building and repair of navy ves-., sels urgently needed for foreign, waters where the fighting is now.| with the demand of war industry and competition for men with or without skills. the conflict of or-v ders to draft boards and the con- fusion of placing men at jobs best, ‘Bremerton, all pointing to an ec~‘ onomy of waste of men and mater- people complicates the for the Yard, of which only one phase is the inability to house and absorb the colored people who are coming out from the East. and deferrable men he pointed out that there is more or less conflict. among the boards. Women com- .' need for workers in some places, affords the prospect that even that Navy Yard may i , for twenty per cent of female per- l lsonnel. The national guess is that; , there are 63 million men workingi forty million .in industry and an- other ten million needed, in war industries. of 215i: observance, stressing thei need for a new faith in the Navy, in the crucial detailing some of its past achieve— i merit through the years. Now we are facing a total war, a global; war, unlike any of the past, andtneSdayi NAVAL OFFICER 5 ON EMPLOYMENTE “Navy Day” was celebrated byi als, aggravated by the floaters: Housing Bad i Having to deal with all types or: situation Speaking of selective service ng into the picture to relieve, the have to find use while active will claim another ten million. mom. H013; Communion on .the‘ ., Reviews Navy Day li‘irst Sunday in the month, 5 Commander M ason devotedl Second Wednesday in t h c I most of his time to a review, of‘monlh: Meeting of St. avid‘:: ,Navy Day from its inception ianuich l 1922 on October 12, the birth date? , to mist, Hood Canal Community Church Reverend C. A. Pickering, Theodore Roosevelt, tests ahead and l our Navy is bridging the oceanl gaps to join with our allies to: save human liberties the world‘ lover. All America appreciates thel good work the Navy is doing, andl all patriotic citizens cooperatingi New Opportunity In Radio School ! Offered by Navyi The Olympia Navy Recruitingi fStation announces an urgent need‘ >for men between the ages of 17‘ -and 50 to qualify for the U. S. Navy Radio Material school. rI‘he leight months of intensive training , d is equal to three years of col- ’ lege radiq and sound engineering, Successful course qualifies a student for the rating of chief. petty officer, with' base pay of $133 and all allow—, ances. This ultra high frequency field of radio is so new that there isi absolutely no way of learning its A simple qualifying examina- ition is given in arithmetic, alge-, bra, plane geometry, physics, elcc-l tricity and shop practice. A grade. fitted, the housing at centers like i, Siitrzlfiitpgr petty officer. 160 per cent to 75 per cont can, ,ries a rate of third class pettyi lofl‘icci' upon enlistment and entry into the radio school. ‘ The qualifying test, known as} l,the Eddy test, is taken at the: :Glympia recruiting station, Room £113 Old Capitol building. The pa—i fpers are sent to Chicago for cor- j greeting, and the station notified at l *few days later of the rating made I .. Sby the applicant. ‘ Recruiting i t. that men may he enlisted into the i ' U. S. Navy up I of induction into the draft. st. also. Episcopal (lhurcll (Legion Memorial Hall) Rev. Frederick A. Schilling, Rectory in Olympia, Phone 7440 ‘. Sunday: 7:30 p. m. Divine Wor- service ‘. ship; Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Church 11:00 a. m. Evening Service 7:30 p.-m. Praise and Prayer Service Wed- Matlock Mission Church Sunday School 10 a. m. Morning Services 11 a. m. Evening Services 7:45 p. m. asked by radio course consists of nation. completion of the l pounds. , have been A grade of from officers point out‘ to their actual day i r Rector l and Ser- Evening Prayer Minister 7:00 and 7:30 res ectfully. Rev. Joseph P. Shafer Poultry facilities for County Poultrymen who have raising fryers are Agent Oker- strom to do their part in raising the 200,000,000 extra fryers need— ed to help increase the meat sup- :ply. This. is a quick method of I increasing the meat supply of the Sonic eel‘t‘ car“ local __ Page Five“ wan-a... men Asked ,To Raise Fryers proper A heavy breed chick will con- sume about 12 pounds of feed dur- ling the first 12 weeks at which ;time it should weigh about three poultrymen ing them to four ELECTION l in the best way they can by buy—y ing stamps and bonds to enable, the government to carry on and! meet the great test ahead. He, concluded with the statement thatl everyone is called upon to carry. his or her full share of the bur-i den, each with his life at stake} and all must reaffirm our faith in each other and our common? cause. Farmers Answer Demand For More Meat In Country Farmers are definitely respond-' ing to the nations call for morel meat, despite the present short- ages in some areas, reports Coun-i’ ty Agent Clinton Okerstrom. ; The summer months are natur-l ally the lowest meat marketing‘ months during the year, he point- ed out. With the Agricultural. Marketing Administration purch-l asing over 825 million pounds ofl pork during the first half of 1942, plus ,the army and navy purchas- es of pork and beef, plus the fact that the average family now hall more money to buy more higheri quality meats, all goes to make the present shortage. Figures of, federal inspebted beef show that1 the civilian families had 450 mil-i lion pounds of beef available this“ year as compared to 515 million' pounds last year. Recent surveys show that, this; nation has the greatest potentiall beef 'supply in its history. On January 1 farmers had 74 million; head of beef, three million more; than a year earlier. Also at the same time there were seven mil- liOn more hogs. The 1941’, fall pig; crop which will be slaughtered in i late summer was 18 per" cent! largergthan the previous year, plus I a'25 per cent increase in the 1942i , cord, adds 62 million pigs to the’ supply already on hoof. Also the sheep supply is 1.6l. million head above last years sup- l cent larger than any previous re-I ply. l Cows Already On Winter Rations, Due To Weatheri In order to maintain field pro-, duction of milk most dairymcn find it necessary to start cows on regular winter rations now, re- ports County Agent Okerstrom. Most pastures are completely dried , up so little forage is secured. Dairymen are advised to supple- ment this lack of feed before milk production drops too severely. 1 When production drops off be—‘ cause of lack of feed it is usually impossible to secure but very lit- tle increase when going onto win- ter feeding. Simple grain rations consisting of equal parts of oats, barley and wheat, along with a 30 to 35 per cent protein meal will make a ,satisfactory ration. A grain ra- tion consisting of 18 to 20 per cent protein is needed for feed- ing with most lforage crops pro- .duced in this county. i In all cases the, amount of l i l l l There are wood frame houses in : Europe that were built before Co- !lumbus discovered America and will continue to serve their own- ers for an indefinite number of years to come. Try a, Journal Classu‘ied Ad— want to SELL - grain fed should be in line with the amount of milk produced. 1 Keep your milk production up by supplementing poor pasturage with silage, green feed or regu- lar winter rations. If you \Vish to Sell you'll Have to 'l‘ell——Jourual Want-Ads. spring pig crop, which was 1.5 per ‘- l LIGHT BEER, A PRODUCT or NATURE, AND A REFRESHING. BEVERAGE for THOUGHTFUL TOLERANT PEOPLE Tune ln‘on The Democratic Victory Rally Saturday, October 31 —— 8 m. The State’s leading Democrats and leading supporters of President Roosevelt‘s Victory Program will speak, including Congressman Magnuson, Coffee, Knute Hill and Senator VVallgren. Stations KMO, Tacoma; KOL, Seattle; KXRO, Aberdeen; KGY, Olympia REFEEEl’IIIWIS 233516 ‘24 These referendums assure you full and free investiga- tions of your county gov- ernment by grand jurors, uncontrolled and unham— pcred by any county official. The grand jury is your means of examining into the conduct of your coun- ty’s business. TUESDAY, 3,, ~32 I and five pounds in 12 to 14 weeks. i With the present demand and good price for fryers. anyone hav- in earnest. - t t- l- . intr suitable facilities for fryers . i ions excc t e , He stated in substance that ' gaigglgles uamb Opga mwmmog, 1 should consider this DroJect. employment is a national mess, I school ' b ; Hatcherymen have indicated they would furnish the chix if there was a demand for them. A new poultry pointers entitled “Emergency Broilers and Fryers iRaising in Vl'ashington" will soon be available. Hood (‘aiial Community Church Hoodsport, Wash. Sunday School, 9:45 am. Preaching Service. 11:00 in. Preaching Service, 7:00 p. in. Wednesday Prayer Meeting. Rev. Pickering, Pastor vxswous WELCOME: OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY. OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON, U. s. a, 1 ‘ QIMWJHINK MORE FAIR PREPO‘S‘RI? The Mason County Pomona Grange proposes that oh the board of Commissioners of Public Utility District No. 3;. in EEiEhsE£° “ LABOR as, REPRESENTED By , GEORGE CLIFTON FARMERS BE REPRESENTED BY R. W. STRIKE HAS ANYONE MADE A MORE FAIR PROPOSAL? Thebemcn are capable, efficient and sincere Lets remember the P.U.D. does not belong to any individdal, any click, or any political party. It belongs, to the public. THE VOTERS lN ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTY ARE URGED TO VOTE FOR ALL THREE CANDIDATES Mason County Pomona Grange P.U.D. Committee CHARLES SAVAGE ED. WILSON NELS C. NELSON (Paid Advertising)