November 3, 1949 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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SMITH. BADGLEY ARE LEADERS
S
AT CLOSE OF IMPSON DERBY
Pa,ge 2 ......
IL .i .. , i i
Shelton Air Service
TICKET AGENTS
For
West Coast Air Lines o.,t,,,ard too, or winne,' n i.e
For Reservation :;eeoml Ytnnliarl Simpson Salmon
Phone 25-J ])erl)y were annolmced today as
Frances (;7. Smith of MeCleary
............................................. in the King division and Dan G.
1};idRley of Olympic P]ani. Shel-
1011, ill the Silver division,
llokie Hokonson, Simp:'.on l,o::-
ginL Company reerealion direc.-
for, saht Smilh hroughl, in t 35-
paired Kink from Ihe Chehalis
riw'r on O:tober 25 to nose out
his brother, Clifton D. Smith, also
of McCleary, for first place.
Badgley caught a, 15-pound 14-
ounce Sih'er on Hood (;anal Sep-
temher 25, and no heavier fish
had come in when tile contest
closed on October 31• Badgley
and Smith eac will receive a 5-
horsepower outl)oard motor when
prizes are presenled at the Col-
..................... ,------.,; ........... , ........................ . ................................................................................
LIFORNIA
tRUIT INDUSTRIES. LTD., SAN FRANCISCO
OUR CltRISTMAS BICYCLE
STOCK HAS 00,RIVED
Famous Sehwinn and Columbia Makes
From
$3a5o
and up
o
Boys' and
Girls' Models
In
16, 20, 24, 26
Inch Sizes
Also the Huffy Convertible
FOR BEGINNING RIDERSEquipped with extra rear
wheels removable when the knack of riding has been ac-
qul red.
Wagons - Sleds - Tricycles - Strollers
Extra Parts For All Wheel Toys
DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EARLY
()N OUR I,AY-AWAY PI,AN
DON'S SPORT AND CYCLE SHOP
223 Cota Street Phone 243
The Power
qHuTON- Y[AON COUPx " ,TOURNAT5
onial Tlon.e, She]ion, next Man-
(lay evenin.P,', NOvcl/lher 7, 'it 8
o'clock.
Hal€orison said $5 phH}t prize.q "
w,l, ,,e ..v.rde. to ,.e fo,lowing: Mac's Corner .00ains
C)lynsl fit' l'l:lnt 'l'hnrnas E.
N,,,:,,,n, ll,. ,,,. Kin00,, and, Ground On Smoke
C. V. To:lph, 13 lh. 12 oz. silver.
Woo(lfil)er, Central ,;:ngineering I Shop, Old Mill
an(t Iey;e:.ll'('})I,llwrence l,atham, . ,
22 U. 12 oz. l(in', >ln(I (lie) Wit- WOMEN'S BOWLING LEAGUE
:Li] hTOl'.),':lll :lltl MrH. Clint MIf-I W L
flirt, each ll ll). 4 oz. silver.
McCleary ('. I:). Smith, 27 lh.
12 oz. King, ;tn(] ,la)nes M. Mills,
14 lb. 12 oz. dlver.
Joint: Power and Mill TWO ....
Cliff Col!lira Joint Power, 21 ]b•
14 oz. King. and Albert Bell, Jr.,
Power, 13 Ill..q oz. sih'er.
Mill 'Pwo Jim Baxler, 11 lb.
6 oz. King, allll l,e() Flick, 1'1 IlL
7 oz. silver.
lLaih'on(I, Shops and Simpson
In(hmtries .Mrs. O. D. Duran(,
l:Zaih'oad, 1.2 lb. 3 nz. King, and
Paul Hur:t:. Railroad, 15 lb. sin
Vet.
Boom and Scah, rs-.-.Buek Arm-
si.rong, 11 lb. 12 oz. KinK. No
silver entry.
Grisdale Fre(1 Ferris, 20 lb.
I0 oz. King, aml Gene Klinger, .12
lb. 6 oz. silver.
M'fin Office, Forestry and For-
(,st Engineering--Fred Snelgrove,
12 lb. sih'er. No King entry.
ttokonson said this year's con-
lest drew mo)'e than 300 Simpson
employee entries. Sports movies
will he shown at tile prize win-
ne)s' mcetinv on Monday night.
| • j - [f ............ ,-,,-.-
Sheltom
I.O.O.F.
No. 6S
Meets Every Wednesday
8 p.m.
I.O.O.F. HALL
Visiting Members will be
Cordially Welcomed
TIIOMAS ,T. WATTS. Jr., N.G.
Thomas C. Myor,% Secretary
f
Ruby Rehekah Lodge No, 75
Meets 2nd & Fourth Fridays
P, EULAH IIELSER. N•G.
IIELEN COLE, Secretary
Smoke Shop ............ l,t 7
Old Mill ..................... 13 8
Pastime . .................... 11 10
Mac's Corner ............. 11 10
Cash Grocery ............ 10 ll
McConkey Pharmacy 10 11
Fields Auto Parts .... 8 13
Ritner's Corner ........ 7 14
Hi game-LaVonne Cole 174
Hi series Frakie Southmayd
.192.
Matches Tuesday
7 Old Mill vs Mac's
Smoke Shop vs McConkey
9- Pastime vs Grocery
Fields vs Ritner's
SMOKE SHOP and Old Mill
held their one-two position, a game
separated, atop the feminine city
bowling league, but a new chal-
lenger loomed, to threaten their
positions after Mac's Corner had
moved into a third place tie with
a 3 to 0 victory over Fields Auto
Parts, tile only clcansweep hung
up in Tuesday night's play•
Frankic Southmayd spurred the
Mac's victory pace with a 492
series which was the best of the
nigllt, and Helen Smith and Rubye
Frisken gave her vnhmble help
along the way.
SMOKE SHOP won from Shel-
ton Cash Grocery with Esther
Berets and Rena' Tucker in the
lead roles, Old Mill seared over
Pastime behind Edna Robinson and
[nez Dodds, lost the last one by
three pins to Pauline Staley's big
game.
MeConkey Pharmacy earned the
odd game from Ritner'a Corner as
LaVonne Cole supplied the punch,
closing with the night's best game
at 174.
PREP I'OOTBAI,L SCORES
Shelton 27. North Kitsap 0
Camas 32, Chehalis 0
Vancouver 13, Centralia 0
Kelso 7, Hoquiam 6
Olympia 19, Longview 6
Bremerton 50, Stadium 19
Bellinghalru6, Everett 0
Central Kitsap 26, Port Town-
send 7
So. Kitsap 31, Port Angeles 0
St. Martins 14. Elma 0
Montesano 38, Raymond 7
Seattle Prep 27, Bellarmine 7
that made Buick Fa,m, ous
ratios as fast as better fuels came
along.
So perhaps you'll want to re.
member, when you hear the term
"vale, e-in-head," that this is the type
of Imwer that made Buick famous.
If others want to climb on the
bandwagon, we say "more power
to them"--and no pun is intended.
But Buick has been doing more
with valve-in-head right from the
start.
And--we might add--it stands to
reason that Buick is not through
making this type of engine better
and helter.
F you want to know what's "the
newest thing" in automobile
engines, look at the Buick engine
pictured here, and you'll see the
words "valve-ln-head."
But it happens that this isn't new
with Buick. As a matter of fact,
the valve-in-head engine was in.
ventetl back in 1902--U. S. Patent
No. 77109S--and immediately,
Buick adopted the principle, which
became the first in a long string of
"Buick firsts."
Not everyone went for the idea--
then. In spite of the fact that this
engine "breathes" more freely--
gets fuel in and exhaust gases out
more easily--others hung onto
their pet ideas.
Then came the airplane, with its
need for maximum power from
every drop of fuel--and every
maker of internal combustion air-
plane engines adopted the valve-
in-head principle.
And more recently-wlth the hope
that higher-octane fuels will be-
come available -- a lot of automo-
tive engine designers are taking a
new look at the valve-in-head idea.
But iust for the record, we'd like
to point out that Buick got there
first.
And ever since, Buick has gone
steadily ahead, building up a name
as "valve-in-headquarters." Buick
engineers reshaped pistons to put
Fireball wallop in these engines.
They stepped up compression
AtfORt C,£fAg/,Y ThWN EYgR A JJ
&'f:.: YOUR KEY TO GREATEe VALOE (GJ
e
If
U'hon be)tier automobllos are built ilI/ICK will build them
rune In HENRY I. TAYLOR. ABC Ne:work, every Monday evening, ,
BOB ERVIN MOTORS
Sheltn,.Washington .--- Phone 673 South First and Mill Streets ....
ALll[ Ill I I _ I II I I II I I I I I
St. Martins, Monte
Win; Highclimbers
Resting This Week
CENTRAL LEAGUE
W t, T pf pqpts
Montesano .. 3 0 l 77 20 7
SHELTON .. 3 1 0 60 51 6
ISt. Martins .. 2 1 0 47 20 ,I
Elms ........... 1 2 1 26 35 3
Chehalis ...... 1 2 0 , 21 2
Raymond .... 0 .1 0 121
Scores Last Week
Shelton 27, North Kitsap 0
St. Martins 14, Elma 0
Montesano 38, Raymond 7
C amas 32, Chehalis 0
Games Friday
Chehalis at Montesano
Raymond at Elma
BOTH SHELTON and St• Mart-I
ins rest this week as they prepare'
for their big Armistice Day night
game on Loop Field in a battle
to settle second place in the Cen-
tral League standings.
It could be a championship af-
fair for the Highclimbers, should
Montesano lose to Chehalis this
Friday evening. The Bulldogs are
favored, however, in view of their
recent performances and also be-
cause the game is at Montesano.
Montesano thrashed Raymond,
38 to 7, at Raymond last week and
appear to be traveling in over-
drive since their 7-7 tie with Ehna
a month ago. Chehalis will have
to play much better ball than it
has the past two weeks, when the
Bearcats lost to Ehna, 13 to 0, and
Camas. 32 to 0.
ST. MARTINS proved it will be
a mighty tough rival for the High-
climbers next week after knock-
mg over Elma, 14 to 0, at Elma
last Friday night.
With the open dates on their
schedules this week, both Shelton
and the Little Rangers should be
at full strength for their big Ar-
mistice Day struggle, giving all
cripples a chance to recuperate.
This will be especially welcome
to the Highclimhers for it will
give Des Koch a chance to recup-
erate further from thee muscle
HIGHCLMBERS USE EVERYBODY
WHILE TRAMPLING VIKINGS. 27-0
Shelton's 27 to 0 thumping of
North Kitsap on Loop Field Fri-
(lay night brought several "firsts"
into the Higllclimber football rec-
ord for 1949.
It was, in one case, the first
time this year the Highelinlber
defense has been able to Iceep its
goal line nnerossed, although there
w-m a close shave on that score
when the visiting Vikings had a
first down on the Shelton nine
in the last quarter against a re-
serve line.
In another case, the game mark-
ed the first time this season Shel-
ton has made its passing attack
function for a scoring play. In
fact, this happened twice, with
Bob Eacrett throwing to Bob
Phillips on each occasion for
touchdown ])lays of 51 and 53
yards, o
EACRETT AI,O got in on an-
other "first" by searing his in-
itial tonehdown of the season on:
a quarterback sneak for Shel-
ton's opening points.
Several members of the High-i
climber squad got their first
starting assignments of the year, i
several others got their first
chance to play in a varsity game
this year as Coach Red Smith
cleaned his bench completely in
the last quarter.
The Climbers cracked the ice
toward the end of the first quar-
ter with Eacrett driving the last
foot-and-a-half on that sneak play.
The march had started on the
North Kitsap 32, where Jimmy
Miller had recovered a Viking
fumble. Phillips picked up the
major part of it with a 17-yard
sprint around right end, and Des
Koch (who said he wasn't go-
ing to play?) netting another
eleven to the four-yard line. Des
kicked the extra point•
THE SECOND TALLY came in
the early moments of the second
quarter on the first Eacrett to
Phillips pass. It originated on the
Shelton 49 after Jerry McCord
had intercepted a North Kitsap
pass on Shelton's 43. Koch's kick
missed on the conversion.
Be t h remaining touchdowns
were registered in the third per-
led. The Highclimbers tool( the
second half kickoff right back.
strain which kept him out of the
Montesano 'une However he Jack Davidson ran the kick back
t-¢ . , , • .
n m 1 ke a cr to Shelton s 33 then Ph]lhps
(lid 't look u(', i , ipple on - . ....
that 80:yard run against North I, shook a 42-yard scamper out, of
Kitsap last Friday, so the rest this I ms system to Nor(t1 Kitsap's 25.
week should put laim right back. on I Koch and Phillips• made. craven, in
to, p p yh slcally. [tw° plays, then. Dawdson mrcled,
left end for the last 14. Des
again booted the conversion.
Five plays before the end of
the quarter the Eacrett to Phil-
lips aerial combination connected
again for 53 yards and the final
touchdown, with Koch splitting
the posts for his third conversion
in foul' tries. The Climbers had:
gained possession on their own
44 after a Viking punt.
SHELTON RESERVES played'
virtually all the last quarter and
showed stout defensive ability to
thwart North Kitsap's best scor-
ing opportunity %f the night. A
bad pass from center gave Koch
no chance to get off a fourth
down punt and the Vikings gain-
ed possession of the sphere on
Shelton's nine. Questionable quar-
terbacking which hurled the Vik-
ing ball carriers into the middle,
of the line four times in a row
returned the ball to Shelton's
possession on the six.
The game's longest run was
made by the supposedly lame
Koch, who rambled 80 yards nn-
der full steam to cross, the North
Kitsap goal just before the first
Mill 1 Jumps Into
Simpson Pin Lead
SIMPSON BOWLI/4G LEAGUE
W L
Reed Mill 1 ................ 14 10
Lumbermen's Mere... 13 11
Engineers .................... 13 11
Reed Mill 2 ................ 12 12
Office .......................... 12 12
Olympic Plywood ...... 12 12
Research ...................... 11 13
Woodfiber .................... 9 15
Hi game--Pete Roberts 202
Hi series--Marl Fredson 552
Reed Mill 1 mounted the ros-
trum in Simpson league bowling
play Thursday night by edging
Lumbermen's Mercantile, 2 to 1
while the Office was taking a 3
to 0 drubbing from Olympic Ply-
wood.
Plywood's victory over Office
Engineers 2 to 1 verdict over Re-
search, and tailend Woodfiber's 2
to 1 nod over Reed Mill 2 all con-
spired to tighten up the standings
considerably.
MILL 1 MADE the top rung
phll on Paul Fredson's pinwork,
with help from Del Sergeant and
.Virg Westman. Plywood's shut-
out nod was gained with Ray
Phillips, Earl Lumsden and Jim
Simmons in alternate hero roles
and the Engineers scored with
Glen Robertson "and Fred Snel-
grove doing the trigger-work.
Mill 2 had the night's top indi-
vidual scoring from Pete Roberts'
202 and Mark Fredson's 552 but
still lost to Woodfiber when Char-
li Cole, Gene Tuckex and ten
Walton pooled their efforts.
1420 Coyotes Bite Dust
In October's Program
• Seattle.--A total of 1420 coyotes
were accounted for by the state
game department during the past
month, Walt Neubrech, in charge
of the department's predator con-
trol program, said today.
Predator hunters took 1132 of
the animals, with game protectors
and a few special hunters taking
the rest.
Fifty bobcats, forty-six red fox
and two predatory bears were
among the other predators taken
by these men.
Top coyote hunter during the
month .was Melvin Williams of
Omak with 128. He was followed
by Merle Williams of Republic,
103; Kermit Bergevin, 96, Wen-
atchee; L. A. Kramer, Toppenish,
87; Merle Hooshagen, Pomeroy,
84; John Galbreath, Twisp, 84,
and Douglas Buchanan, Cusick, 73.
Tides of the Week
Computed for Oakland Bay
(Hood Canal tides are one hour
and 55 minutes earlier)
Thursday, November 3
High ............ 5:36 a.m. 12.5 ft.
Low .............. 11:01 a.m. 4.5 ft.
High .............. . 5:55 p.m. 13.6 ft.
Low .............. 11:38 p.m. 1.0 ft.
Friday, November 4
High .............. 6:22 a.m. 13.1 ft.
Low .............. 11:42 a.m. 5.2 ft.
High .............. 5:14 p.m. 13.4 ft•
Saturday, November 5
Low 0:06 a.m. 0.2 ft.
Higl 7:01 a.m. 13.7 ft.
Low 12:23 p.m. 5.8 ft.
High 5:31 p.m. 13.3 ft.
SURday, November 6
Low .............. 0:33 a.m. -0.5 ft.
High 7:41 a•m. 14.1 ft.
Low 1:01 p.m. 6.5 ft.
High 00i00,00iaL Novemb00,5:51 p.m. 0013"2 ft.
Low 1,:03 a.m. -1.0 ft.
High 8:20 a.m. 14.3 ft.
Low 1:41 p.m. 7.0 ft.
High 6:13 p.m. 13.1 ft.
Low TuSeday, November 8
.............. 1:35 a:m. -1.3 ft.
High 9:02 a.m. 14.4 ft.
Low 2:22 p.m. 7.5 ft.
High ": ............ 6:38 p.m. 13.0 ft.
LowWednday, ovember 9
.............. 2:12 a.m. -1.3 ft.
High '9:49 a.m. 14.5 ft.
Low
High .............. 3:11 p.m. 8.0 ft.
7:07 p.m. 12.8 ft.
half ended only I.o he called olll -'
6f-hounds o)I the Viking ,i9. The
1)leaeherites on tile soulh ,dtle or
the field gave Referee Glen An-
derson a stiff raspberry for the
(.all, claiming Des had I)een a
couple of feet inside the bound-
ary and that the official had
mistaken a Shelton blocker or a
Viking tackler, both of whom
(lid go over the chalk mark, for
the out-of-bounds m a*r k s he
charged against Koch.
DEFENSIVELY, the play of
Tike Hillman, Jim Hunter, and
Jim Miller stood out for the
Climbers, while on offense Jim
Leggett, Ginger Deer, and Ihmt-
er did some better than average
hlocking.
The lineups and statistics:
.helton (27) North Kilmq) (0)
J.Miller LE R Lindsey
Hunter LT R R.Iveron
W.Miller I.G R Walker
Hillman C Jull
Bueehel RG L Frylchohn
Strobe RT L Sale
Austin RE L Alldredge
Eacrett Q George
McCord LIt R Jorgensen
Davidson RH L Alyea
Phillips F Crowston
Sul)stitutions
Shelton---Wingard G, Dale IT,
Koch F, Coleman G, Yarr G, N.
Miller H, Mallinger T, Lindgren
E, Simmons E, Leggett G, Deer
G, Coutts E, McCowan E, Loop
Thurd V,
Armistice
D A
by Hood Canal Paid
AMERICAN L
MAS
UNION, WA
FRIDAY
$1.75 per couple
WILBERT
Re
Eq,
Assurance t
Life
R
F, Eads T, Wetter T.
North Kitsap--Hagen, ttansen,
Tonsgurd, Olsen, Lofgren, Camp-
bell, Andresen, Patterson, Mm'-
phy, Pedersen, Whitford, Morgan.
Scoring
Shelton ................ 7 6 14 0-27
North Kitsap ........ 0 0 0 0-- 0
Tounchdowns---Phillips 2, Ea-
crett, Davidson.
Conversions---Koch 3 (by place-i
ment).
Offlelals
Referee--Glen Anderson. Um-
pire---Bill Vinson. Linesman .....
Murray Healy.
STATISTICS
Shel. N.K.
First clowns .................... 11 7
Yds. from scrim ............. 216 :133
Yds. lost scrim ............... 32 36
et yds. scrim ..... . ......... 174 97
Yards passing .................... 110 9
Net yardage .................... 284 :106
Passes attenpted ............ 9 8
Passes completed ............ 3 ;I
Passes intercepted ....... 1 1
Punts .................................. 4 0
Average plmt .................... 34 24%
Penalties ............................ 5 6
Yards penalized .............. 25 40
Long term, low
Farm and
Home
AIdercroft
Phone.
DEDICATED
II
//
!
'1 1
I "
WI'
MEN'S
123 Railroad .
GrOLDSBOROUGH FISH LADDER AMONG 11
STREAM IMPROVEMENTS MADE IN STATE
Yes tern Washington salmnl °ver its storage dam on Goldsbor-
streams have been completea. Y[. gh Creek. It replaced an older,
the state department of fishemes, [ less efficient ladder. Resident En-
b Direc l gmeer Lo
it was announced today y " . . uis C, Van Arsdale was
or Alvin Anderson, m charge. Stream migrants in-
-. ". .." -'Ichuck _ "tion, similar projects were
• une project, on ne e Falls, completed on Stringer Creek, near
rover soucneam: o ram *he de= zt.Ymond, in Pacific county" Da-
I was constructea 3oinuy Dy ooo Creek near ChimacJm in
par tments of f..lsheries._andi:am Jeff_eon county; at Ballard locks,
a cos o ,uuu. "ne -1o nr eattle- on Squalicum Creek,
ladder scales the City ot L " near Bellln,
mish water upply dam anq re_- Adverse st,=-- ^-m ..... ar
stores to natlve runs of. . largely re*---,, ^-*,-^-,,-
.,^ neemeau trou aLd. cut off '_sa!raon population in Western
, o spawning gfo}_m uii t the vv,anmgton, Anderson declared,
w,u.re }unlclpany- __fne projects, In overcoming
u., an ne luu s. -tan-made obstacles, are going to
"Fis already have pasSed.l .ea. o salmon in te streams
the ladder and we feel that zc revolved ,, ,. .......... 7
...... in-' - --, - am. Tney are 3ust
IT'S AMAZING BUT IT'S
ONLY $24 "gs
Buys a Steelhead-Weight
S PUN00 FlSld00NG
With Mildrum Guides and TiP
• :; i
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A COMPLETE I'1
BAROMETERS
An Especially,Appreciated Christmas
Gift For Any Sportsman
Congratulations and Good Fishing Dt
J. E. STANSBURY, Route 3, Bo
WINNER OF OUR OCTOBER DOOR PR tj ,I
A SPUN-GLASS FISHING ROD >
JACK STEWART'S
SPORTING GOOrDS
119 No. First Phone 680 For
OPEN EVENINGS TO 8:30 P.:IV[.
AND SATURDAY MORNINGS AT 9 A,
WRAPPING"
MAGIC
For Your
GIFTS
e,
/
We Have the Most Glittering ArraY
Christmas Wrappings You've Ever v-
And how much easie7 it is to shop °i
the selection is complete and avoia '
minute rush.
Yule-Printed Paper . . . Jewel-TO'W"
With Matching Tags... Stickers .nu -
"Fixings"
But you'll have to see to .appreciate'
our store tomorrow.
.MASON COUNTY
Stationery, Office Supplies and
.... -118N';2m-'reet-.