November 27, 1942 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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November 27, 1942 |
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Page Two
Try a Journal Classn‘ied Ad—
Phone 100
Marga:
@215 .
raw/i I
For Your Home Decoration!
'ama
MIRACLE WALL FINISH
coat of Kem -Tone Wall
Finish covers wallpaper, brick;
Xalllboard, painted surfaces.
pples easily. Dries in
hour. Washable! one
You don’t need a brush who
you use Kem-Tonc. Just roll
this muscle wall finish right
overyour walls quickly, easily
smoothly—with the clever:
new Kern -Ton -
e Roller
Rem-Tone Trims enhance the
beauty of Kem~T .
walls. Gummedone fimShed
Sumwm- WILLIAMS
PAINTS
i
(
l
l
Auto License
Continued from Page One
However, those applying must
have their this year's white slip
and also the number of their fed—
eral license stamp in hand when;
applying; with this the renewal
forms are simpler and will take
less time to’ put through at the
office.
New Registration Spot
An innovation this year which‘
residents
will be appreciated by
of the northern section of Mason
county, including Belfair, Tahuya,
Dewatto, Allyn, Victor, Grape-
view and along the Canal to Un—
ion, who may save
one evening of each week. County
Auditor Deyette with an assist-
ant will be at this office each
Monday night from December 7
to January 4th, from 7 to 10
stickers to issue and receive the
,license fees. Any other citizens of
the county who may find this
more convenient may register
there, but all other registrants
must appear at the Auditor‘s of-
fice in Shelton during usual office!
, hours for their
licenses for the
new year.
MEETING POSTPONED
The regular November meeting
,of the Hood Canal Sportsnien's
Association has been postponed
because of the Thanksgiving holi-
day.
DAUGHTER Bo'I—‘CN
Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Wilson
:of Route 1 are the parents of a
baby girl born Monday at the
hospital.
Cleanliness Guardian
of Production
When work clothes are clean—
ed frequently there is less
chance f o r disease carrying
dirt to hold up production. Not
only is cleanliness essential to
health throughly laundered
work clothes last longer and
look better. Our reliable met-
hods include treatment which
removes all stubborn particles
of dirt and grime. Stepped-up
production is necessary to Vic-
tory . clean, healthfully
clothed workers are important
to production.
Mason County Steam
Laundry & Dry
Cleaners
One Xmas gift that’siv'prtority-rated
by every man in civvies! We’ve a grand
selection of shirts for you to choose
from for his wearing
many months to come. All sizes an
sleeve lengths.
M. HM. NEEDHA
EN’S, WEAR
l
l
very important and necessary faC-;
i
i
. S. Defense Savings Bonds and
wwmflwwxfiwxfixxzsxxawsfifiggaaaxxawaaeaamzasflmxgfi; ‘
l
._,____.r\_,_..,_L—__~‘,_\ ,.._» -._ -_—_____.
l mull l
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Milk Production Necessary
To Winning The War l
The United States must produce .
milk. not only for our own nation,
but for all. of our boys in the
service in foreign lands. This is a,
l WHAT OUR READERS l!
l
l
i
l
I
tor in the big job of keeping our
boys in top fighting form.
The milk supply is decreasing“
at a very rapid rate due to the:
unprcccndcntcd slaughtering of”
{our dairy herds, which have taken 1
gasoline .on i
1
years to build up. 3
The farmer and dairymen of to—
day are the forgotten men. being
forced to sell below parity prices
{and compete with defense indus-
The dairyman’s barn is lit up,
long before daybreak and late atl
lnight, because it is necessary for
i them to fulfill their part of aiding
the war effort, by furnishing milk
to service men, defense workers,
homes, hospitals and other public
institutions. i
l All these dairymcn ask is the
right to employ sufficient help to
keep operating and increasing,
necessary production to help win;
this war. ' i
This can be done by putting ev-f
fiery county arid state on a stan-'
dard ceiling price basis on both.
butter fat and retail fluid milk,
urathm' than the continued piracy
brought about by the unfair dif-
ferences in ceiling prices in neigh-i
boring counties and cities. l
Should one county feast while;
her neighbor is fasting? Because
,of swivel chair officials dictating
; the policies of milk production and
distribution, who probably have
never been on a farm or in a
milk plant.
i The independent producers and
ldistributors wish to thank the
following organizations for their
help in trying to adjust the un-
fair ceiling price on milk. If fluid
milk is to continue being distri-
lbuted in this city every organiza-
tion must get behind this impor-
i tant problem.
All organizations and citizensl
are asked to send any suggestions‘
lOl‘ resolutions to the Mason Coun-
ty Journal, who are cooperating
‘100 per cent.
The following have already of—
fered their support and are actu-
ally helping to remedy the situa-
tion: Mason County Journal, Fred
H. Bell, Donald Razan, Arvidl
Johnson (Skokomish Valley Dis—
tributorsl, Pomona Grange of Ma-
ison County, Local 38 I.W.A., Shel-
ton Merchants, Sawmill Workers
,Union, Active Club, State Repre-
'Sentatives Charles R. Savage and
Dr. U. S. Ford.
1 We are asking that everyone
give this project their support.
Any and all suggestions will be
cheerfully accepted. The present
gas and tire shortage makes a
house to house canvass impossible
so please send your suggestions in
to the Journal or phone 100.
i
l
There are no "rookie" dollars.l
Send yours to the front! Buy Um
Stamps!
T‘
A.
. .c'ii. >4 &'
pleasure . . ~. for
'
portance of the lumber industry in the war scheme, and,
‘tv waveq now that this is falling down, has turned attention to en-
o‘clock, supplied with forms andl ' D '
iwas all hilt paralyzed‘ , , , the Patrol System,” Howardl
After the war began and the feverish bulldlng pro- Gaines, Troop 2 of
Olympia;
gram started it was all for steel and lumber was tabooed, , “Badges and
Insignia" by Rune
lagging in the fast and furious and more or less wasted ‘ Soutmastern by
Senior Scout Bob
demand for lumber new short in the billions.
ldidates although the chance of winning is slight unless
take heed and reform. l w L
When all the correspondents writing out of Washing- 131- More. 1o 11
ton are telling more or less of the same story, with varia-
c21353‘ykeéleéfig}; " i; B‘
tions, there must be something in the stories, some of them Warbergers’
' j: 14 13.
quite disturbing to the people who are doing their bit in Cash Grocery .
14 mi
scrap gathering, air watching and going WlthOUt ,th haVe 13350“ t
------------------------------- -- 13 14
f‘quite recently expressed their disapproval Of What IS gO- 1,3330%;
""""""""""""""
" I;
ing on in political Washington. ‘ Monday-"Scores
risers .
DRAINING MASON COUNTY MANPOWER Quality Cleaiier’s 2, Forrest 1 ,
’-"—— . i Mason Laundry 1, Werbergcrs
Tuesday another'contingent of our Mason County boys 2 ' ’
started on their way, some seventy of them, and another of any League w I
l
the same size is due to go in the December draft, which Associated
_________________________ n 20' 16‘
may remind us, including the home families, that ~this Cammarano 15 15
county has suffered a, heavy drain of its virile manhood Munros';
....... .. .. 13 17‘
during this year until there are not enough left at home ‘Reed D“'
""‘Ré;fiigé """"" “ 12 .lsl
to man the ship and carry on the civilian serv1ce on the Munro's 2’
As‘gomted 1 ‘-
home front. ' Cammarano 3, Reed 0.
Whether it is best to take so many away from home, High game, Werbergersy
1947. '
1 women, are called upon to do added duty wherever they
SHELTON-MASON COUNT}; JOURNAL}
SHELTON-MASONJ COUNTY JOURNAL fSCOUT Minus 1
:33:*:::32.'2.:‘:::::::" , SCHEDULED FOR
'Clllllllls TODAY?
Member of Washington Newspaper Publishers“Association
Junior Scout Leaders by the;
and National Editorial.Association.
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Shelton, Washington
1score will descend upon Chehalis
‘thc day after Thanksgiving to en-
GRANT C. ANGLE, Editor J. EBER ANGLE, Manager 1
gage in their Annual Green Bar;
Tisiiihioiciéiifnéwshonor RICHARD WATSON, Adv. Mgr.”
,Conference. These Boy Leaders
from troops throughout the Tum-
Subscriptlon Rates :’
$2.00 per year in advance; 6 months $1.25: outside Mason County $2.50:
Canada $3.00; Foreign $3.50.
water Council will discuss the‘
LUMBER. ILLS DUE TO GOVERNMENT ,carefully planned program of.
. i leadership w- designed to make
——
. ‘ ~ - itheir troops as highly effective as;
The administration has now come to realize the lm- ipossible m helping the
war effort.
Many Topics
Topics to be discussed will in-
iclude the following: “The Patrol‘
cour ment j , lSystem and How It Works” by
age Of the nduStry 'Senior Scout Keith Chase, Troopi
_ Before the war began for this country the lumberim Chehahs; “The Senior
Patrol.
industry was scourged by regulation both by governmentiLeader and the
Patrol System”|
and by conflicting labor organizations, held down by bu- .by Senior Scout
Ivan Briggs of’
I . , .
I. au 1. i1 I. ' ' ' =Troo.p 6, Olympia; ‘The Duties of,
e c ats, p oricd y laws and cou t dec1s10ns, untll lt‘,a Scribe and Their
Relation to
is demanding 100 per cent of all possible production and
ILangeland, Troop 25 of Shelton;
until recently when the bureaucrats finally learned the “The Patrol
Loaders Job and the
yalue of lumber both in place of vanishing steel, and the , Weekly Patrol
Meeting” by Senior,
thousand andone places. fortlmber 1n the war program. Scout Tom Rogers,
Troop 20,
By this time the spiralling of wages had turned much Chehalis; “The Job
of Quarter-l,
labor into the rush, double-cost jobs and robbed the camps Eiltitggack
Sefifip 502%“
and mills of their labor, untll at this late day lumber ls “Duties 6f a
Junior' Assistant’
, Quick, Troop 22, Chehalis; “Coun—
Into this picture comes the demand for plywood for.Cil Acmiiies" by
Senior SEW“
Harry Bragg, Troop 4, Olympia;
many new needs and this industry is found short of the “The Council
Office and HOW to!
special veneer logs in the Northwest, espeCIally spruceGet Information,”
Leigh Van Et-
from the Olympics; yet this needed raw material is still . ten, Troop 2 of
Olympia; “Games
frozen in the hills of the forest reserve and for all of these ,and Game
LeaderShlp" by a mem' .
ber of the Councxl Staff; “My
lumber industry 1115 the government alone is responSlble. Trip to Philmont
Scout Ranch at!
Cimarron, New Mexico” by Seniorf
' Scout Harold Wolf, Jr., Troop 68,
Yelm.
r _ , , I Meet Begins at One
On December 8 the general election for city officers; The conference
program will
will be held, according to law, in spite of the fact that officially get
under wlaykwith 11‘:ng
, is ra ions a one o’c oc on ri-
there 3118 no OPPPSmg 9%?dliates for Ehofie chofiei at the day, November
27th at the Scoutl
City primary. It ls possr e, owever, o ave 3 1c er can- Lodge in. Cllehausl
Citizens of,
g V lChehalis have opened their homes
there is a poor turnout of voters, as in past elections. ,tO care for the
ScoutS’ lodgings
. . ~ and for part of their meals.
It 18 Just as well to pass out the hint that those who, Topics will be
presented during.
have failed to vote in any of the_fall elections will have Friday afternoon
and evening and;
their names removed from the registration rolls automatl- Saturday morning,
with each
cally, and must go to the trouble of reglstering anew to topic 09mins; in
for considerable
vote in any future elections, state, county, city or school.
éllvgfiugasgfzfigknoon Field Tri S
Perhaps this fact will cause the voters to patronlze the ‘ to p
I points of interest and Chehalis
polls on December 8th. :1ndustries will be taken.
i A curtain will be rung down
lupon the proceedings with a five
PERHAPS CRITICISM WILL CHECK ILLS io’clock Banquet Saturday evening
(put on by the Scout Mothers Club
_ . l‘of Troo 22. Adult Scouters of
Since the recent general elections there has been much the Conic“ are
invited to this
criticism of the administration actions on many subjects, banquet. The
guests will include
. u ' ’ U r)‘ i I
and failure to act Wisely, and the fact that much 15 comlng {blunt/1 tTom
Martin, Councu
. . reSl en .
from New Dealers and those fmendly ls a hopeful Slgn for'l R. S.
Epperson, assisted by Rev;
unprovement and Sp'eedlng the war progress- 'Huntel‘ McKain,
Scoutmaster of:
When Democratic senators and congressmen speak out Troop 68 of Yelm, and
the council.
boldly as some have since their defeat at election, of the staff will act
as advisers to the}
red tape, abuses, favoritism and cramming of Civilian force
Iconference' _
in Washington to equal those in arms, and the waste mg BOWLING .
building, the jockeying on rubber, gas and foods, and con-l
fusion of the people, it should warn the administration tol ,
1942 NON-VOTERS LOSE REGISTRATION
I
Ladies Standings
A
___A . -. .
News Brevities
From Harstlne
By Mrs. Earl Harriman
Harstine Island, Nov. 23 "7 Mr,
and Mrs. Earl Callahan and son
of Bainbridge Island were week
end visitors at the Lee Carlson
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mathewes and
.son Norman of Seattle, were call-
ers at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
H. G. Sinclair.
Mr. and Mrs. George White of
Seattle were out over the week:
end at the August Carlson home.
Grange met at the school house
Friday evening and the main .ord- ‘
er of business was election of of-
ficers. Those being elected were:
Master, John L. Hitchcock; Over—
seerer, Ed Wilson; Lecturer, Beu-
lah Hitchcock; Steward, Lee Carl-
son; Assistant Steward, John J.
Johnson; Chaplain, Bessie Hitch-
cock; Treasurer, Roscoe Page;
Secretary, Jessie Simmons;
sistant Steward, Mabel Harriman;
Ceres, Altha Page; Pomona, An-
na Carlson; Thora, Hulda Wilson;
3 year Executive Com., J. C. Sim-
mons; 2 year Executive Com., 'Irv-
ie Wingert; Home Economics, Ce-l
lia Glaser.
Journal Want-Ads—Phone 100
Gate
Keeper, Hugo A. Glaser; Lady Ar- .
Sitka Spl'llCl',
plane wood of the world,
' sea a ration of high stré
weight, being stronger ill
1 pound, for pound.
One inch of West C0 ‘
is over four times as of '
sulation as an cq'uivaléll
11088 of building brick. "
’1.
army» . .;
Dancing 9:30 to ‘
Friday, November 27'," ’ N9V¢m
the fat“
if
N
6..
’. 'b—DI)v_ll\iva v __
Linimenl
B A El C l ‘
SHELTON
VALLEY
Sponsored by
Shelton Eagle, .
Rau’s Orcllest‘
Saturda 7, Nov?
'Admission 35¢ —-— T21)r
Total 40¢ per person
fiwfiwfiflagmxxatflflafifiéfixflaflas- a
it
Sée our
ppsted
ceiling
and the duties of supplying the needs at home and the needs mghgh
individual total stewart
abroad is not now the question. They have been called and '47s.
soon will be on their way, many of them overseas and into . High
' ' e who are left includin the 181-
the fightmg Zones’ and thos g High total, Cammarano, 2756.
High game, Munros, 1004.
High individual total, P. Fred-
son, 606.
High individual game, P. Fred-
son, 218.
individual game, Kubik,
can best serve. Henceforth there must
be no wasted time,
either here or over there.
_ SOME BRIGHT SPOTS “OVER THERE”
LARSONS SELL HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Larson have
sold their home to Miss Rachael
Knott, local nurse, and have mov~
ed to the Wilson apartment. They
There are more bright spots in the war torn skies of
the world, or at least the skies over which we have most
concern, and such news. as our people are permitted to have
prices
’- ‘
mwxwwmfimsswzsx .
' 0 He’ll bless you for
y o u r thoughtfulness
and downright g o o d
taste if he finds these
pajamas ’neath h i 5
tree on Christmas
morning! '
ARROW
‘ S H l R T S
$2.25
up
VanHeusen
SHIRTS
:‘i‘
or
ARROW, BOTANY and WEMBLEY TIES
GLOVE 3f
Paj ama: 211:“
, tates, 5
$ 4;, .
cuts for
11 l
I, 'roport
ounts
Solid Colors '9
Smart Pattc ,mP‘ll‘e 1
all regular sizes .ayments
wfely.
.01! do I'll
ank to el
I’ be issual
any serv
K ABO
THE STOR H“
For: MEN B n
is growing more encouraging each day; but it is noted that plan to build a
new home in i
the enemy is still dug in. at all fields and still must lee-dug Walker Park
Addition .on the i i a; , ti, SHELTO;
out, which means a. long and ainful process. The boys waterfront afterthe
war is over. i r , H H , , a ~ I a .
“over there” are giving. a goo ' account of themselves... ._ __
____N:F§W j
better than, we are domg at home» C9lle°tlve1¥
WW\\\\\\\\\\\\\R\\“R“lllllllll"llflIlIf/Illlf/IWIZWZWfl/i' R
YOUR
An observer promises airplanes for every garage in § = ' ' ‘ ‘
' ‘ if. 5.. mm“
1952, but who wants to wait that long to fly high? § 0’ k v . . urge“
of
~ ~ g (3/0,“ an sg‘lvmg,
I V K" ' .l . l. ‘ ‘..¢..o”o.
' ' § , ,0 ~‘ 0 o o
We Are Again- Servmg \ 5'53 Céwgfl/qf‘flo/mfigys -,
. Deliciousiflamburgers
MADE THE WAY YOU LIKETHEM
Shelton: Sporting Goods.
.' Fishing and Hunting Equipment,
.____..——-
WWW\\\\\\\\\\\\\\“\“WRHIHI"llllllINIIflIII/Illll
We are Now Wholesale Distributorslfor’
Quakes sea-r:
MOTOR on.“ v
AND OTHER PRODUCTS
PIGMON Morons
f, * ,r
\\ M
i
. t
KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOUR
lée was! céeefl/g’zqflzfis'éies
This genial Kentucky bourbon will add
good cheer to any Thanksgiving celebra-
tion. And you’ll be especially thankful when
you discover how moderately priced it is. '
"CMERFULAS ITS MME”.
National Distillers Products Corp., New York
WWW/ll/II/I/I/IWWH I‘ll llllllllll\\\\\\\\\\\ \
cfi
#-
I
90.4 Proof '
Aree
"1N CHI
.. :“:»:«:«:«:o
Subject
Lecture
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