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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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SEEM): ’ “C J a” October 30, ill-1:2. worry abO. . .__ 1 .c ar 'is used 'v a. _ MERRITT EELLS IN PNa'med 0“ , iARMY RESERVES ulp Committee, Merritt Eells, son of Mr. and l p :Mrs. Roy Eells ,was a week end ce of war lllfQI‘maUOlllvisitor at their Shelton home. announced the fOl‘Tllfl- Merritt is now enlisted in the Ar- ‘ Puget Sound pulp and my Reserve and is now attending try committee of the the Edison Vocational School in n Cou business . i action as $10): board. iScat.tle for special instruction in strict No. ‘Ouston; Rayonier, 1110., 1 radio- Of San Francisco, wasi"""““”""”""""’*”‘"""""'_ “"‘ named on the com-i was formed to help WPB Officials n until I I i plan action affecting pulp and :. that he l‘thWest industry group paper manufacturing. IO" and I ' ~~— ~ District ‘e consid- '2 ince that friend to I ed to “go 7 Y- ‘ ial condi- . " nd oblig- deavoring u l it is per- ‘ 'A to do so. -’. Bichsel . REFERENDUM rs on the g I, elson District he“ you know ~——— ctsdbom it . - - - fr '1‘: 1": ‘ EIlENDUM #22 is designed to improve the com- V“ fition given to injured workers and their depend- , The present, law is shameful—Washington below "other states in providing for workers ,3 d in indélsgry. fl. " E PROVISIONS of Referendum #22 were passed f: if? t are file last Statelegislators and approved by the eI'nor. Selfish interests blocked the measure and i gram hed it back upon the people. That is why we are :lllng- voting on Referendum i? ii? *1? i" ERENDUM #22 will force the selfish groups in u'try to clean house and supply adequateprotec- 0nd safeguards for working men and women. fr 1:7 T} ington, EREND}IIM_~_#22:-.has ,the s'upport of the better rovern" ent of mdustryiltself, as well as the support of 5. P and progressive minded citizens in general. .thll to I ; g, {I {3, to sup- ' rm, be_ , WORKEIIKSHOE WASHINGTON make up a vital 1 maxh of the war effort—their work IS vital. No 4. lIy-rninded citizen denies their right to decent “ty to' i . Pensation‘ when they are injured on the job. .ce.” a a” a '- ERENDUM #22 Provides FAIR compensation for red workers with no extra charge to General Tax ' ers. VOTE FOR REFERENDUM #22 : in MUTUAL NET WORK Oct. 27th-29th-30th ' n: KOL - KMO KFIO — KELA 8.45 P M o O O ' ~ KXRO - KGY - KIT . KWLK ions KIRO - KFPY—OCTOBER 28—9:30 P.M. :ecutivc ' ac— ction in the and distri— ace's “Free elves to see lis historic conduct of dent Roose- iC Program 'k and vote ; for office )art of the y work for . my to give . 3 of Wash‘ Paid Advertisement :1 appeasers , vn our wk 5 l our allies, :ry sacrifice >le-heartedly n European most taxing”, a just tax 3 we endorse a graduated sales tax in as ourselveS lales tax 35 e burden On More Than 2 as vitally listration 0f of the De' oration wilh ics for chll' on for vit?l of For _ M "Will Be Required by fioner State Ballot Measures "inter General Election November 3rd Assessor .v mstable AQOIHST State Measures Except 40 Mill Tax Limit Save Tax Dollars for War Purposes -7- a - ,7 __v....~ VW~#.,-..._,_W.._. ,— .__._ l stead, with meals that were often The Best-Fed Men on Earth . . . “Meals make the man,” old proverb of the woods, and the modern logging camp table is a ser- mon of noble proportions and pro- digious variety on that text. No man feeds as well as the logger. The table of the family man whose wife is a wonderful cook cannot afford so many varieties of eatables and pot- ables at one meal as the groaning board of the logger’s cookhouse pre- sents. The billionaire cannot eat so well, because food is only half of the story of good eating; it depends also upon lusty appetite and prime digestion; and these gifts of the gods are possessed by practically all loggers. Ham, Eggs and Cake . . . The point may be well illustrated by a familiar dish—ham and eggs in the morning. A breakfast dish more enjoyable, particularly in the woods, cannot be imagined. But for full en— joyment, ham and eggs demand a rugged morning appetite in the first place, and in the second, ability to digest such solid provender with neatness and dispatch. The logger at breakfast is supplied with ham and eggs in wholesale quantities. Often he consumes them wholesale, with stacks of hot cakes, various fruits, cereals, doughnuts, and of course several cups of coffee thrown in. Another point is on cake. This prime bakery item is a feeble and degraded thing, as it is commonly encountered in restaurants. Even the good housewife, following reci- pes in women’s magazines. too fre- quently makes cake that is only fluff and goo. But your logging-camp baker turns out cakes that a man can get his teeth into and which yet mingle lightly with the more solid grub already downed. The best pies, also, are made in the woods. Cream Puffs in the Pines . . . Brought up on a dry-land home- says an reduced to spuds and water gravy, my first logging-camp meals were amazing and wonderful indeed. I was seventeen before I saw and ate my first cream puff. It was in Mon- tana. The camp chef was called “Cream Puff Fatty,” because of his famous specialty. He was a one- Fifty Millon Dollars INCREASED STATE TAXES State Ballot Measure Committee SIMPSON LOGGIN GROUP INSURANCE EXPLAINED BY COMPANY . The accomplishments of group iinsurance in protecting employees lof Simpson Logging Company dur— ling the part 19 years are recount- ed in a statement issued by Mr. C. H. Kreienbaum, executive vice president. In arranging for a program of group life insurance, effective Sep— tember 1, 1923, the Simpson Log-' ging Company was one of the pioneer organizations in Wash- ington in providing protection for families in the event of the death of the bread winner; today it is among the largest in the state, on the roster of group patrons. Group insurance records tell the story of the company’s substan- tial growth, as well as of the greater protection of its person~ nel. At the inception of the group life insurance plan, 525 employees were protected by $475,000 of in- surance; at present, through ex- pansion of the organization and through liberalizations in the plan, $2,507,500 of protection is provided for 1,093 employes. Under the original plan, am- ounts of insurance for individual employees one year or more in service ranged from $500 to a maximum of $3,000, according to ltheir occupational classification, with the Simpson Logging Com pany paying the entire cost of the insurance. A revision of the programk effective May 1st last, allOWed to subscribing employees .— \ sHELjron all my experience was a cook in the Northern California sugar pines who was as big and tough as James J. Jefi’ries. He was called “Stove Lid” Malarkey for the fame of a battle in his younger days when he whipped a mob, using two stove lids in lieu of brass knuckles or pick handles. The Malarkey hot—cake breakfasts I never can forget. l logging camp chefs to make a book, as what old logger cannot? Does supreme master of corn pone and Johnny cake? If so, have you ever eaten any kind of corn bread else- where to compare with his? A Hint to the Tourist . . . kitchen in Oregon or Washington. vaster variety of eatables and pot- legged man with a dour disposition. A cream pufi was the last thing you’d think of in connection with him. But I’ve never sampled better ones that he turned out amid the Bitter Roots. The king of hot-cake makers in i l l l I can remember enough stories of any reader remember Bob Graham, No visitor from the east should fail to look into a logging camp You will see mammoth modern ranges; a multitude of every con- ceivable pot and pan a cook could wish for; wonderful assortments of crockery. You will also find, close by, a storehouse that contains a ables than you’ve ever dreamed of for your own table, even if you happen to be vulgar-rich, like a radio crooner. There will be an elec- tric icehouse big enough to garage a General Lee tank. If your luck gets you to the dinner table, you will find before you what would amount to a half-dozen separate dinners in a first—class hotel, and you may pick and choose at will from all of them. And they will be served by a young lady, immaculate in hair-do, dress and apron, pleasant to the eye and congenial to the Soul of a hungry man. You will need no phoney appetizers. The tang of the wind in the trees and the odors steaming up from the tables will be enough, even if you haven’t a half- day of falling timber to your credit. Work in the woods is, of course, the greatest appetizer known to man. , I G EMPLOYEES «MASON COUNTY J OWAIZ .———-,....._—._.A Am,”— i lbe pleased to show this film be-A Cushman Social Club Plans To Resume~ Doings By Frances letkc } Lake Cushman, Oct. 26—Mrs. E. Radtke, president of the club this year, is to give the next party at her home November 4. Mrs. Rea Howry will be assist- ant hostess. Miss Josephine Yarr of Shelton Planting Of New Forests Shown In Color Film Olympia, Wash., Oct. A graphic story of the State of Washington's forestry program was unreeled here today at the first showing of “Trees for the Future,” a 30-minute film in technicolor taken for and by the State Division of Forestry under over the week end. The film shows men of the for— estry division collecting cones in various areas of the state. As the Oregon returned home last Week awry unf.°1ds' dlt Showssge canes with glowing accounts of the fall .emg dehvere at the . te 1“” harvest. The crops Were unusually itol .ForeSt nursery' being dried large, which is pleasant news. m Runs land the seeds removed Nuts are becoming increasingly by. thresmng' and the“ the Feeds important to the war effort as befipg Ijun through tile de'w’nger they constitute an excellent sub- w 101‘ “moves the wmgs' stitute for meat which will soon A scene in the seed storage be rationed, cellar reveals .shelf upon shelf. of Though the winter rains seem wife glais Jax's’ El“; “014mg to have‘begun in this district, they ml 1.0“5 8??“ t Van?“ will not bother the Allie Robin- specxes of conifers. Later, the film son family who are enjoying a follows the nursery crew at. work, fine big d‘eer ’ preparing the ground, planting . the seeds wholesale; and still later MR and, Mm {301) 531‘)?“ of shows the seedlings being weeded Shelton Vlsrlted MI“ 5”“ 5 p3,?” and watered, millions of them. :23? 36:}, dtnhde I‘gjékKiggeth T112133; Taken months later are scenes Went hunting with two Seattle depicting the nursery crew har— , , . . v ~ h a._ b friends in the Price Lake Vicm- eStmg t e ye I 01d trees y ity and returned jubilantly dis- means of a machine, and tieing . , , . . them into bundles for transporta- Playmg a 5‘p0mt bu°k welghmg 175 pounds. tion to lands devastated b forest . . . fire. The crew then spreayds out, Rush Igmsc‘gt CHM]?! ":1 “0"; m k Was mg on, . ., W1 er us- eepmg alignment and movmg band. who is attending officer's across the burned-Over acres, .. planting seedlings as they 301 2:23:81? school for a three month eight feet apart' from 600 to 680 Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Schull and to the acre. l of work sorremrszl wars: .3: Shown m scenes taken at trees entS. MI‘. and Mrs. Durham of planted five and more years ago . Tacoma Which now form a rugged young ’ H . forest, thick, sturdy and growing a Spill: tigd wail?" engum Igfigllg: taller every day' GOOdyear Bald with her sisters family Mr. and that trees fhus planted total more Mrs Harry Shelton Mn Harry than 12 mmwn'. and.the number” Shelton’s grandfather was the Will be substantially increased by man for whom the town of She]- this fall’s planting. ton was named ' is (igoggefimaicizeg dridtittgfingilnlg The young “1‘5 0f the high for mnning'in most grade and school Sunday school group have. . , or anized and all themselves the high school projecmrs' ‘We Shall “lime Gilards?" They will meet at the Linscott home Monday eve— dents who operate nut ranches in fore school groups, service clubs, and others,” Goodyear said. “One of our men will accompany the film and will describe the various forestry operations as they are thrown onto the screen. Applica- tions should be made to the State recreational purposes. of the picture and were of the opinion it would be highly effec— ¢——- ——.___. amounts varying from $1,500 to! '$5,000, in accordance with their earnings. For each participating employee, $1,000 of insurance is provided at the expense of the Simpson Logging Company, which also pays a substantial portion of ‘the cost of the remaining protec— tion. At the same time, the proba- tionary period. for. new employees was reduced from one year to three months. When the group life insurance program was revised, 3 plan of group accident and health insur- ance, first adopted in July, 1937, to provide weekly payments to ‘employess during ability resulting from non-occupational accident ori sickness, was continued. Group accidental death and dismember-i ment insurance, providing pay-l ments for the accidental loss of; life, limb, or eyesight, was made; a. part of the program. With in-i dividual amounts of this protec-. tion equalling those for group life; insurance, the Simpson Logging- Company presents $1,000 of the ~ coverage to subscribing employeesl and shares the cost of the remain- ing portion. “Important: as these facts and lfigures are, in illustrating the i extent of the company’s employee- {protection program," said Mr. iKreienbaum, “they do not tell the {story of group insurance in ac- tion, the provision of funds when they are urgently needed. “During the 19 years, benefici— aries of 169 deceased employees of the Simpson. Logging Company received $195000 of group lifeI insurance; under the revised plan‘| the average of such payments would be somewhat higher. Much as we have regretted the loss of? these employees to the organiza- tion and to their families, it is gratifying to know that through group insurance the Widows and, children of many employees were! saved from want. I “That they were thus saved is established by records Which re- veal that of the 169 deceased group-insured employees, 105, or per cent, had no other life linsurancc, so far as is known. ‘Thus, but for the protection the l l company provided, there would have been a lack of funds in many instances, even for the payment of funeral expenses or doctors’ bills during an employees’ last illneSs. “Also important to employees and their families were payments totalling $36,673 in the past five years to 576 insured employees temporarily disabled by accident or sickness. These payments have helped to defray household ex- penses in, the absence of the pay envelope, as well as to pay doc- tors’ bills, and have enabled em- ployees to return to work in bet- ter physical and mental condi- tion. “In view of the accomplishments of these plans and of the great need for the protection‘ of em- ployees and their families, the Simpson Logging Company is glad to contribute substantially more than one-hal fof the cost of the entire group insurance plan. It is gratifying to know that more than 90 per cent of the eligible person- nel have subscribed to the pro- gram.” ELSON BROTHERS USING V-MAIL FROM AUSTRALIA Mr. and Mrs. Fred Elson of Shelton report they have been hearing regularly each week by V-letter from their two sons, Lewis and Gene, who are with the same Army company in Aus- tralia. Division of Forestry at Olympia.’ Foresters and others who saw. “Trees for the Future” at its pre _______,________._—.———————-—-——-——-~ reforestation is being carried on by the State. N VAST areas, best suited to the production of timber, trees are being planted, protected, grown, and harvested like any other crop. Long past is the fol harvests for the future. _-c.__ -...__.._.. .. ,_ _.._,.,..___,_ .. -~-_.r .,.__._._. ldirecuo“ 0‘ T' 5' Gmdyeal'v su' visited Miss Betty Jean Linscott lpervlsor of Forestry. l l i Those of the Cushman rcsi-J I Hannah Donahoe i -Were held this afternoon from the ning and meet each Monday for miere were unanimous in praise of the continuity and photography tive for informing the public how period when forests .Were cut to provide fields for agriculture. .This is no longer necessary and the land now classified as forestland can be kept intact for the purpose of growing more trees. We are in an era of managed forestry, and the forest industries, looking ahead, plan for the continuous production of tree crops. We have learned that trees are a crop and, as such, can keep on producing use- ...A ._..'v.___.. M... .. - ._..__ . MILES ELLIOTT TO .BECOME AVIATION CADET Sergeant and Mrs. Miles (Bus) ,- , ‘Elliott arrived in Shelton this Méfteéaigafilmis ODfoxlcEEE: \week from McClelland Field, near known resident of the Cloquallunl I sacramenm' to spend ten days Vis' ,iting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. district passed away gamma-Y at iEd Elliott, and bringing word that her home, and memorial serv‘ceslupon his return to McClelland Whitesidc chapel' Rev. H. E Field he Will become an aVlatlon Mowe’ pastor of the Christian icadet, but where he will report he church, officiated, and interment ihas not yet beef) informed was in the Masonic cemetery. Born at Middlepoint, Ohio, on February 18, 1860, Mrs. Donahoe had resided here for 38 years? She was the widow of Eugene Donalloe, who died years ago. . Mrs. Donahoe leaves the follow- ing sons and daughters: Mrs. R. O. Beckwith, Harstine Island; 3 John Whiting, on the home place; Warren Whiting, San Diego, Cal.; and Eugene F. Donahoe, Aber- deen. A brother, George 0. Sands, resides at Port Angcles, and there are 17 grandchildren and 11 great- grandchlldren.——Elma Chronicle. Buried At Elma MILLO’S QUALITY MARKET * GROCERIES FRESH MEATS FRUITS FINEST FOODS AT BEST PRICES LAWRENCE BERNERT NOW IN ENGLAND Relatives here have heard from Lawrence Bernert, former High-l climber football player, from Eng- > land telling of his safe arrival ml that country With a recent U. 8.. Army contingent. l l l HOCDSPORT New Arrivals! Beautiful Framed Pictures 39¢ u. 1.25 Colorful florals are the center of all attraction for gift giving. COMPLETE DISPLAY OF BOXED COSMETICS FOR GIFTS 29¢ .0 1.00 CHOOSE YOURS NOW WILOOX lOc STORE V SIMPSON. LOGGING COMPANY SHELTON and McCLEARY WASHINGTON,