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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
November 13, 1942     Shelton Mason County Journal
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November 13, 1942
 
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r 713, ployee :tra fit of the ‘ any, One ' ngton P1 .dcr the ‘ mission totl’ucted of West Coast: unployeesv OWE , Comfort 1’ upincss SIGNS lOUQUETs here an lwar Th N ' .. -.. . . . e avys eight month 53:13] (5114:2352? Cirrgfif; course turns out radio technicians :hold u Kr d Ction' Not that are years ahead of commer- ware a"? Cleanlingsso «Essential to Cial radio‘ '. But no matter what your trade \ . missile trades: or Navy a “fir .1 tter Our reliabgle met_ you: See your _Navy Recruiting .llIlIllllllllllllllllllllllll and t t hich Sign?“ offices ,m the 01d Capitol ‘3 Yea men W building, Olympia. 7E M I ,uction. MERICAR % : MUG oo ing, scientifi shave soap: "3 nd exhilarfl' tput"pep" ‘ .An illustr ‘ Early Ame , ‘oudly decor" . ' ed pottery 9‘ ' ‘ lg Store lilllllfillllfllfllllflmmn .m! 09; DM ? .l nings into “flu , along ihc -r~ e on the mi l iy all your ‘1, , » millions ‘ ‘c. rechstyle5 brics 1' Fall W i or flared 4' )r plaids! chool Si)’ Got“ 2. DRE 'ACKETE» ‘ lei! n . ’- vfl . Earl‘é‘igiig‘ Basalt”: fit cess (7",195 a... 522: to 14- \\ i011 ;‘ Peasant i Snow 5'14. are these, ltS'. Line a wmber “ d other college Of Western red cedar. °3PS are of Sitka spruce. Handstand and bleacher 10 West the Seattle baseball parki i" iness - Guardian A “of Production wOl‘k clothes are clean- , 5 all stubborn particles find grime. Stepped-up t10n is necessary to Vic- clean. healthfully ‘ Workers are important ‘ ‘1 County Steam ' undry & Dry Cleaners ‘13,.17942. .-.__.._.,_ ._,__......_.___ L.-. ‘11 ron rain 5 , mi iinivésitycof with} Opportunities i For Enlistment In Seabees Good; Opportunities for enlistment at 1advanced ratings in the Navy are l the. best Since shortly after the outbreak of the war.' Many specialties which have been‘ {closed for months are again open . to enlistment, included in this ca- tegory are the ratings of store— crews currently keepers and yeomen. bees) again in all classes high as chief able to skilled struction trades. Pharmacist‘s Mates .and men interested demand. fered for the young [taking an important When using either sweeper or a broom [ are most important the rug together. a Will pauenl To every family in Mason County with members in the Armed Forces of the United States. If a member of yourvfamily is in the Army, Navy or Marines, please come in and allow us to present you with one of these placques. F. E. BEC‘KWITH Shelton, Washington The Construction Battalion (Sea— ratings are all wide open. ldeterminate time, with ratings as petty officer avail- men of the con-, ito become hospital attendants, or; laboratory technicians are also in; Then there is the fine deal of— ested in radiokthe Navy’s ultra- high frequency outfits Which arel place in this IN HOSPITAL Miss Donna Rodgers was ad-l mitted to the Shelton hospital on Wednesday for medical care. I is important to sweep the rug crosswise, not lengthwise, to saVe strain on the warp threads, which Larrity 0n Haywire . . . ' “It made gladsome readin’ to my ‘, ould eyes t’other day, when I saw 1 ,by the papers that in a war indus- i try shop they run short of regular u weldin’ rods, and made good shift l with haywire instead,” said Old Lar- , rity, the bullock. “The news said I the haywire had worked so well the 1 shop would go right on usin’ it for 1 certain weldin’ jobs. “It was, of course, a shop for a big loggin’ outfit,” the ancient and honorable bullock continued. “No one but a practiced hull of the are needed. , woods could have thought of .such in learning’ a thing. He was true to tradition, the bull was. For the rise of the loggin’ industry to its present salub- rity began with the invention of the hay-balin’ machine. for an in- men inter- fix with haywire was thing hangin' of horse thieves. woods. 1 figgered. So it has. Haywire for Everybody . . . a carpet on a rug, it hay so hayWire was in holding also absent. Wha pants. LISTED BY great care as part of the nation' rubber conservation plan. ‘ CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ember 15. ‘God, a house ’not hands, eternal in the heavens." lBaker Eddy, we ative‘ statement: acknowledging the supremacy Spirit, which annuls the claims Imatter, that mortals can lay off mortality and find the indissol- uble link which establishes man forever in the divine likeness, i separable from his creator." Shelton Pharmacy '1 MURDAV MORNING 1 November 14 Under Management of L. D. Hack The Old Proprietor BOTH MR. AND MRS. HACK THEIR OLD FRIENDS SOLICIT A SHARE OF Y WILL BE PLEASED TO SEE ‘ AND MEET NEW FRIENDS. THEY OUR PATRONAGE. What the old pinetops in the Lake States couldn‘t beyond fixin‘. i In the pineries it was used for ever’- from gallus-patchin’ to the “Haywire in the old West was, of course, a prime appurtenance of i bullteam loggin’, and for horse log- gin’ with big wheels over in the pine. I mind back in 1912 or so when I saw my first gas tractor, a wheel rig, in the woods. One day its cam shaft broke out in a death rattle. The puncher bound the cams solid with haywire somehow, and the rig worked on. That settled it for me. If the tractor could log on haywire, it should stick in the , “No less than five years ago," ' Larrity ruminated on, “I figgered haywire was on its last legs, so to speak. The horse had become rare in loggin’, and without him baled was minus in the camps, and might be called virgin haywire was on the market, to be sure, but no real logger would trust it. He de- manded haywire that had passed i the acid test of bindin‘ compressed alfalfy together through much rough handlin’ and hard travel. This, he could rely upon, to bind a frayin’ choker rope, or to uphold histin lTIRE INSPECTION RULES ARE A SERVICE PLACQUE . Washington’s passenger auto ltires are about to have their ills diagnosed frequently and with ___——._ . The least cut or bruise will be |sent up for immediate attention, ————-—-————"7"‘ , This verse from Romans, “The earnest expectation of the crea- ture waiteth for the manifesta- tion of the sons of God," is the iGolden Text of the Lesson-Ser— mon on “Mortals and Immortals” which will be read in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, Sunday, Nov- Included in the Lesson—Sermon; is this verse from II Corinthians: “For we know that if our earth- ly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of made with ‘In. “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary find this correl- “It is only by -M “The depression, also, took hay- I wire out of the woods and into use by everybody. It got so you could I go into any dime store and buy a coil of virgin haywire for home and family use. Jallopies were held to- gether and kept in use with it. Fur- niture, long fallen apart and thrown away, was put together again and made better than ever it was, with haywire instead of glue. And so on. “But it was haywire by courtesy only. Production of it run wild, and got into evil hands. The old- time makers of haywire, who had catered only to the hay-balin’ trade With a quality product, found them- selves up against a slew of haywire shoddy on the market. Racketeers , wormed into the once—proud indus- try. It was a sad day, indeed, when haywire for everybody become the rule. It got so that a family logger, mindin’ the kids while his wife was ViSitin’. wouldn’t trust haywire for even pinnin’ up diapers. o GoVernment Haywire . “That was also the time of gran- diferous Government projecks. I forgit most of them, but I remem- ber one call the Federal Art Pro- , jeck. There was a piece in a maga- | zine, with pitchers, which I still got I somewheres. Some sculptor by name of Broncussy or Bugoosy, or the . like, had worked up a system of I, makin’ statues out of haywire. All they looked like in the pitchers was i just haywire all looped and twisted like a kid would do playin’ with it. But the Government art projeck people took it up. How far they went I ain’t ever learned, but I wouldn‘t be surprised if they got enough haywire art stowed away all over the country to bale a year’s ‘3 hay supply for all the mules in the Army. “As one who learned great re- speck for haywire in his early youth in the woods, I'm proud to hear of it in proper use again, with a bull of the woods applyin’ it as a weldin’ rod. I‘d never go so far as to claim haywire can win the .war. But proper haywire can help." OPA FOR PUBLIC and while the job of'keeping the tire in good running order exceeds in size anything of its kind ever 5 undertaken, it is‘ expected to go forward With less inconvenience SHELTON-MASON COUNTV {dimmer ~ .Beginning at midnight November 28 every person in the country over 15 years old will be entitled to a ration of one pound of coffee each five weeks, Regional Price Administrator Harry F. Camp an- nounced. is no reason for anyone to run to the corner grocer, put the squeeze on him and try to force him to help a boarder. There. is absolutely no excuse for hoarding coffee at this time. coming rationing now because we are going to have to talk to a lot of people in the coffee industry and elsewhere about the adminis— tration of the rationing program. Naturally, stories and rumors will be creeping around about what we JOURNAII H “vs Pickering Nots Reported Here, Carl Berger, of Fort Lewis were, guests Sunday of Mrs. Lillie Cam-i eron. Mr. Ike Brubakcr, of Bre- merton, was also a caller at the Cameron home on Sunday. Mrs. Elmer Wiss spent Saturday afternoon at the home of her daugther, Mrs. Roy Longacre in Shelton. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ax made a combined business and pleasure trip to Olympia . Going by boat.- Pvt. James Cameron of the Troop Carrier-Command, is now at Bowman Field, Ky. He was senti there from the Reception Cent- er Ft. Lewis and wishes to be re-. mombered to his friends. . Mr. and Mrs. Irvin VVoodall and son, Victor, were dinner guests; Friday evening of lur. and mra‘. Max Hanlon, of Olympia. Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Ball, of Minerva Park, were calling on friends here Friday. Mrs. J. LaPage, of Tillicum Beach, spent Wednesday with Mrs. ‘ San Francisco, Calif. Nov. 10A~ “Meanwhile,” Camp said, “there “We're announcing the forth— propose to do. Most of them will be entirely garbled and thus create more confusion and hysteria than Elmer “rs even now exists on the subject of Mrs Hélsh Sh for Yet r d S t coffee. We are therefore stating umay' “or: Sestue afgepesperax‘d: What. we pm“ to do so that, ing several days at the home of pum‘c can get the Story Str‘ng Miss Grace Peterson. Mrs. Mamie. and fromTfin Officm“ source‘ 'Nicholson of Agate, looked after 6 Coffee Story ,thin S in M g “The coffee story is thiswforl Mg and Claud H 1 ten years before 1941 we consumed we‘nt‘ to Tacogsé Sundae ‘51:: about 13 lbs. of coffee per capi- their son James B. Hugo“ “‘Iho ta per year. Last year, due to ab- 1 is in the St. Joseph,s Hovspita} normal demands, this figure Jump- with a broken vertebrae in his :21 $342332?higepggggingguéifizz neck. While roofing at Fort Lewis -0n the stormy Monday he slipped at the rate of about 12.5 pounds . annually. Therefore, a ration of}and {611' landmg head foremOSt' one pound each five Weeks per per- ‘ son over 15 certainly is not a drastic reduction.” the rationing program by the War Production Board after it became Consumers will get their first ’l apparent that the available coffee coffee ration by surrendering the, supply in retail stores—~65 per last stamp of their war ration: cent of normal was insufficient book No. lAr-the book now used to meet consumer demands. This, only for sugar rations. Subsequent the WPB said, was largely due to rations of coffee win be on cou—i excessive buying by consumers. pons taken in sequence so on to-i The 35 per cent curtailment of ward the center of the book. Spe- deliveries to retail stores resulted cifically the stamp numbers are from a WPB limitation order re- 28 down to 19. No book on which quiring restriction on sales from the age of the holder is stated at‘ roaster to wholesaler to retailer, 14 years or younger will be valid for the coffee ration. Use of the book for sugar will continue ex- actly as in the past. Those who did not obtain War Ration Book, America. No. 1 may get them from their: local war price and ration boards. now. 1 Transport Difficulties I I OPA was directed to undertake; ginning of rationed sales. He is recovering rapidly. Shafor’s absence. which resulted in turn from lack of ships to bring coffee in normal quantities from Central and South All sales of coffee at retail will ‘be frozen at midnight November 21, for the week before rationing starts, in order to permit retailers to stock their shelves for the be- \Veckcnd guests of Mr. and Mrsi Bob Cameron were her parents} ‘ T T Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gray, of Sel- E ah , and her brother and family,‘ . (By Virtue, E, Ilanlon) ‘Mi‘. and Mrs. Dale Gray and: Mrs, Pascoe and Mrs. Menhan-,daughter, Juanita, of Black Dia—i ette, of Tacoma and Sgt. and Mrs. i mond. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Drosclier: and son, Jerry, of Olympia, Mr.: and Mrs. Roy Longacrc and baby‘ and Miss Dorothy Wiss, of Shel-' ton, were week-end guests of Mr and Mrs. Elmer Wiss. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Gene Smith of‘ Olympia were guests Sunday of. her mother, Mrs. Lillie Cameron, Mrs. S. Nelson and Mrs. Elmei i Wiss spent Thursday afternoon. with Mrs. Francis Ax. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wiss were‘ guests Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. George Wiss, of Walker's Park. Seattle were visiting home folks and friends here Saturday. Mrs. Lillie Cameron spent sev- eral days during the week visit- Mr. and Mrs Stanley Smith, oft Pagel‘ijle .YOU ARE COVERED for any ac- cident for $.25 per day. Longer time the rate is cheaper. Herb Angle. Agent. W ing in Olympia and Tacoma. HOME LOANS O Convenient Terms 0 Reasonable Rates 0 NO DELAY Mason County Savings & Loan Association Title Insurance Bldg. '0 O O O O 000.00.09.90. appointment. 000 to the average motorist than an cost so small as to make it a bar- gain to the car owner in terms of extended tire life. The first inspec- tion must be completed before January 31, 1943, under mileage rationing which goes into effect November 22. ' Details of the inspection to be given each tire every 4 months inspectors, including tire service by Henry B. Owen, State Direct- istration. The inspection includes: inspection record. all tires on car. 'sure in each tire. 4. Recording of reading on tire inspection record of of of-true wheels. n- tire sidewalls and treads. 7. Check tires for cuts, breaks, wheels, faulty brakes, and. excessive wear of kingpins bushings-and wheel bearings. 8. Obtain information paired. tion, the inspector signs the in to exceed 25 cents for each pas senger vehicle when it is unnec require about 15 minutes. inspectors will and will newal of gasoline rations. 40-Mill Group . The tremendous majority rolle the state’s weekly newspapers, [hundreds of volunteer important daily man of the. 4Q-Mill Tax .Lim iCommittee said today. “The editors {the voters of the necessity lenacting the 40-Mill Tax Lim Law' and they devoted much space to setting forth the facts about .l property tax limitation in -th ler and every Other Citizen of lWashington owes a debt of grati- .tude to the state’s press for help- is lstate. Every home and farm own-i ling to retain the 40-Mill limit,"i i Syford said. DRUNK DRIVER i l i charge, ordinary car grease job, and at a , by an estimated 100,000 approvedl and garage men throughout. the; country, were made public today or of the Office of Price Admin— 2. Listing of serial numbers of 1. Check of ration book and tire% 3. Check‘for correct air pres-i speedometer 5. Check for bent rims and out;i 6. Check for cuts or breaks in general condition of and evi- dences of wear from badly aligned unbalanc- 'ed wheels, camber malalingment,l _ f r o m driver as to whether any tire hasx been injured inside, and not re-l 1f tires pass this visual inspec- continue in operation. A fee for spection record and the car may l~tliis service may be charged not essary to remove any tires. OPA estimate that each inspection willi ,Where visual inspection reveals probable serious tire ailments, the require removal of the casings for closer scrutiny, prescribe the necessary repairs which must be made be- fore inspection approval is given. The completed inspection report will be required as a basis for re- Pays Tribute 5 To N'eWSpapers up for.the 40-Mill Tax Limit Ref~ erendum No. 6 in every district in the state was made possible on- 1y by the generous cooperation of and I and by thet workers who gave unselfishly of their timel and effort, H. F. Syford, chair- . of Washington ,made it their business to inform of re- Ted Depoe of Shelton was fin— ed $10 and costs in Justice court last week on a drunken driving i l l l I I They d i 1 i it it SIMPSON LOGG 'SHELTON AND McCLEARY, WASHINGTON “Soldiers of pwcgucl‘im ” Company’s game got the dough. The war’s going to last a long so don’t be a sucker and wear yourself out. Other guys are laying off so why shouldn’t you '3” can’t fire 9 ' Hitler’s agent whispers: “Why you—take it easy. Why play the ? Have a little fun now that you’ve The worker that falls for this on the payroll of the Axis: Remember this, the sailors on the high seas and the marines on Guada- canal have tough jobs to do. They won’t let you down by laying off and going to town. I'- ._.( “MERRY CHRISTMAS from Our Darling” Let .your baby's photo express the family's Christmas wishes! Especially to those too far away to visit often. Open evenings by Andrews Photo Studio 0 >900 00.0. OIOOOOOO COO. ’00.”.N.”.N.OO.”.OO.”.”.”.”.”.”.”.”.”.QO.”.”.”.N.N.”§ kill yourself ? time guff is really If we are to win this war we must fight on both fronts—the fighting front and the production front. Every worker is a soldier of soldier of production is not one that “soldiers” on i ' the job. Every man-day lost to production is a day worked for the Axis. ‘ production; however, a _| / \ fl ING COMPANY I «~‘Qexliiar-