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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
November 28, 1946     Shelton Mason County Journal
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November 28, 1946
 
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Thursday, November 28 Food Lockers NOW AVAILABLE FOR USE ling and iust around comes sleet, slick Are your tires in tion to meet these challenges? Drop ia morrow for the plete and--the best service from C, RAUSCIEER & 1528 Olympic Hiway PHONE 585 at Mt. View Lockers OPEN WEEK DAYS 7:30 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M. H. F. Boysen -- Phone 62-R SCHNEIDERS PRAIRIE DANCING SATURDAY NIGHT Now Sponsored by Mason County V. F. W. Post SMITH BROS. DIXIELAND BAND Playing Request Numbers and , Music To Suit All Dancing Tastes LUNCH AND BOTTLED BEER SERVED Dancing 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. $1 Per Person, Tax Included MOTORS heat with oil. Standard Stove Oil ll T b"00l ....  Chrysler - International dro;)"sa-fuil drop-oi:hca;l Tb,| S* PAR[ - SERVICE' uniform home-heating for you Wi Standard fuel oils--and it,s:trouble We Are Equipped to Repair and Rebuild free, clean, economical oil heat.  All Makes of about it today! Cars - Truck - Tractors and Heavy Logging Equipment C. C. Cole ') 123 South 3rd St. In Our Telephone Shclton 87 TEW SERVICE ,BUILDING > SOUTH FIRST AND MILL STREET Electric Welding i PHONE And Brazing i 465-W Motor Testing by the Latest Sunmaster Method hod =asses00 1 --- 'S Rayonier MenAll Trail Loop's Lone Feminine Entrant RAYONIER LEAGUE W L Research Girls .......... 19 14 Supervisors .............. . 18 15 Maintenance .............. 18 15 ]lectricians ................ 18 15 Chemists ...................... I7 16 Office .......................... 17 16 Grease tJalls .............. 13 20 Ileach Plant .............. :12 21 High game:-Ernie Lembel 200 High total--Ron Dodds 545. Continuing their mastery over their masculine rivals, thc Re- search Girls found themselves all alone atop the Rayonier bowling league Monday night after their 2 to 1 victory over the tailend Bleach Plant while their co-hold- ers of first place last Week, the i Supervisors, were suffering an add-g'ame setback mt the hands of; the Office despite Ron Doddsl league pacing three-game total. 1 The Supervisors dropped into a i three-way tie for second placet with Maintenance and the Elec- tricians, both 2 to 1 victors re- spectively over Grease Balls and Chemists. Individual stars of the night's matches were Joe Holt for the Office, Ernie Lemley for Super- visors, Cecil McKinney for the new leaders, Bob Lemke for Bleach Plant, Joe Rank and Tiff Skelsey for Maintenance, Bud Kenyon for Grease 13alls, Clarence Bare for the Electricians and Jess Tobler for the Chemists. The lineups: Research Girls (2) BI. Plant (1) Handicap 9331Handica p 669 Price 3001Lemke 436 Dummy 390 Wllden 380 Mays 272 Rains 371 Cormier 291 Fztiger 407 McKinney 345 Lunsford 329 Total 25311 Total 2582 Office (2) Supervisors (t)' Handicap 609 Handicap 41: Holt 502 Dodds 545 Dunseath 417 t Moore 326: Peacher 413 McCann 368 Briggs 371 Young 461 Thorpo 4251Lemley 527 Total 2737 Total 2644 Ma ntenanoe (2) Grease Bails (1) Handicap 297 Handicap 657! Westlund 481 H. Cole 429 Dummy 4441 Kenyon 490 Rank 5031C. Cole 318 Temple 393 Devlin 287 Skelsey 505 Wright 368 Total 26231 Total 254 } Electricians (2) Chemists (1) Handicap 507E Handicap 717 Stevenson 447t Biehl 340 Dummy 423] R. Eager 325 Kneeland 417[ J. Eager 363 Carlson 408 Dielle 409. 493 Tobler 482 Total .26951 Total 2629 Sparks Between Walls Cause Powerhouse Fire Fire Chief Deer reports that the department was called out Thursday vening, November 21 a little after 8:30 to the Joint Power House machine shop, where sparks frOm a welding machine caught fire between the Walls. There was slight damage done to the walls only. NEED COAL Order Now I U Tono and Monarch QUICK DELIVERY P.O. Box 1046, Phone 7454 Capital .City Fuel " Olympm, wash. Budget If Desired!! ted and in- 'e. We are !, the rapid v positions pr them. Lg. school ming to s are up- We urge y of the / MACHINES Electric Calculator Comptometer Burroughs Bookkeeping Electric Mimeograph Adding Machines accepted after .lege type, Ac- al experts,  confident w training f the class - :L WRITE SCHOOL lg" og__00d bad'weather driving try tanklul 00of, Shell Premium Shell Premium forwlnter-isone of .the many, good things made available by Shell Research. It results from many different power componentsselected and tailored or your sped.tic climate. Result: Wherever you live, Shell Premium for winter, delivers , swift cold-weather starts. Greater moto acceleration,, More miles of smooth, good bad-weather, driving eJ " Shell Premiam costs more to make tm its €ost m you is no PH0 -- "greater han other pl.e1um gasolines. Next time you 11 up, try OLYMPIA 4"UA. ' a tankful Of Shell PraJum--you'll nd it worthwhile.   .... tyo ealei: help you to.  bad-weather ,driviaq SWELTON-MASON COUNTY JOURNAL WHITE, CARDINAL HIGHCLIMBER INSPIRATIONAL •AWARD WINNERS Teammates accorded two hon- ors to Halfback Gene White and one to Center Ken Cardinal as members of the 1946 Highclimber football team enjoyed a turkey dinner Tuesday evening and voted on inspirational awards for the season. White, the team's leading scor- er, ace ball carrier, and signal caller, was voted the Active Ctnb's inspirational award and was also elected honorary captain for the season by his teammates, while Cardinal won the Hermes hloclt- ing and tackling award. The squad gathered at the sen- ior high school cafeteria to enjoy a turkey dinner cooked by Princi- pal George Hermes as a reward he promised them before the sea- son if they won the Central Lea- gue eharffpionship, which they did. Members of the squad who .played in first team games during the season were invited and, with the  assistance of the coaching' staff-- :Norm Hillyard, Grant Packard, Chet Dombroski and Ray Patrick .... plus Music Director Lynn Sher- wood, School Janitor Don Pahner and Sports Writer Bill Dickie, consumed two complete turkeys, a. corresponding amount of dress- ing, and the mashed potatoes, gravy, beets, buns, milk, pie and ice. cream to round out a man's sized meal. Coach Htl]yard said after the feed that 21 members of the team had played enough ball to earn their varsity football letters, in- cluding Halfback White, Center l Cardinal, Ken Carlson, Bob Berg,' Wayne Gibler, Nm'm Lange, ends; A1 McBride, Bill Hunter, Carl Sundsten, Norm Buck, tackles; Jack Graham, Mel Newman, Dave Eager, and Cecil Crowe, guards; Bob Rice, Bob Cleveland, Don Fraser, Paul Koch, Clarence Cot- trell, Gene Wells, and Harold An- ker, backs. Nine of the group are seniors, including White, Berg, Sundsten, Berg, Lange, McBride, Hunter, Graham and Anker. Woodard Awarded Inspirational Cup by Blazers Squad members elected Clar- ence Wvodard, quiet and capable halfback, inspirational leader of the Shelton junior high football team this week, the only honorary award accorded on the Blazer roster. CoaCh Ray Patrick announced that 20 members of the 1946 Blazer squad, which won one game, tied one, and lost four, had played enough to earn first team letters. 'They are all ninth graders and include Ginger Deer, Warren Edgley, Don Cleveland and George Hunter, ends; Chuck Pennington, Jim Hunter, Chuck Berets and Martin Foules, tackles; Jack MaN linger, Bob Strobe, Stewart Lough- nan and Dick Endicott, guards; Ken Smith and Ed White, cen- ters; and Bernie Heuer, Roy Lev- ett, Clarence Woodard, Des Koch, Ted Dale and Norman McClaflin, backs, 60 Out For Positions On Blazer Hoop Squad Sixty aspirants fogpositions on the Shelton Junior High varsity basketball squad responded to Coach Ray Patrick's call this week and will compete in an in- tramural schedule for the next three weeks during which Patrick and Assistant Coach Loren Bez- zo will select the 25 to 30 players who will compose the varsity ros- ter. After the varsity squad is se- lected the remaining lads will con- tinue ,to play intramural basket- ball in which their play will be kept under observation so any lad showing development sufficient to warrant it will be promotedto the varsity. IDELINE LAN'IN by BIL. L :DICKIE Those rosy countenances you may have noted on Jud Hollo- way, Gene Browning, Loule Key- set and a couple other members of Rayonier's central lab chem- ists s'taff Since last s eek stems from the Rose Bowl football team their old alma mater, the Expansion Pains Pose Problems For City League Growing pains have ah'eady af- 'flitted the city basketball league, less than a week after its organ- ization. In place of the six entries which ,the circuit laid plans for at last week's organization session, nine • clubs are now in the market for berths in the casaba loop, forcing a complete revamping of operation plans for the season scheduled to .get under way December 9. Added starters which have ask- ed for berths i the league in, ad- dition to the original six entries include MeConkey Pharmacy and Kimbel Motors, both previous en- trants in the league, and Belfair, the latter coached and managed by Walt Slmonson, former Pacific Lutheran College basketball lumi- nary. Whether all three of the addi- tions can be handled in the gym time available to the league is a problem which hasn't been com- pletely solved yet but a revision of the original plans which called for a 20-game schedule in split seasons is being made to aecomo- date at least an eight-team lea- gue on a 14-game split-season schedule. If one of the three added entries does not drop out and a nine-team league can be worked out satisfactorily a 16-game sche- dule will' be dated through the addition of gym time on those Fri- day nights when the high school basketball team does not play at home. .At any rate, the league .will. open its schedule December 9 in the new gym with three games and follow with three in Lincoln gym December 11. Monday and Wednesday triple-headers in the: new and Lincoln gyms respective- ly will be regular features of the ,league schedule with additional games on those Fridays available, Over 50 players turned out for the season's first conditioning workout in the new gym Monday night, many signing up with teams that evening. Another workout was held last night in Lincoln gym and next  week additional conditioning is scheduled for Mon- day in the new gym and Wednes- day in Lincoln gym, both starting at seven o'clock. The six original entries in the league will wear the insignias of Burgoyne Photographers, Rayon- ier, Olympic Plywood, Morgan Lumber, Needham Men's Wear, University of lllinols, now poss- and Pantorium Cleaners, esses. By winning the Big Nine i The league schedule will be an- title In Its 20 to 0 victory over :nouneed in these columns next Northwestern last Saturday, the week, insofar as the dates can be ' Imni earned the right to play th Pacific Coast Conference champion U.C.L.A. Brnins In the Rose Bow1 New Years Day, and |lOosen In the central lab there's a bloc of tickled chemists who'll im brewing a strong potient of ntor;al support for the mid-west- erners come Rose Bowl day. Guess there'll be no comparison of the Shelton and Olympia prep football teams possible after all, for like a lot of other high school grid clashes scheduled for last woe end, the Olympia-St. Mar- tins tilt was cancelled by snow and impossible field conditions, thus eliminating the only chance for comparison of the Bears and Highclimbers against a common recent opponent. set until the high school playing dates are deterrnined, which won't be until December 14, Returns On Xmas Seals Already Start Comin Mrs. Lois Davldson reports all Tuberculosis League Christmas seals are now out through the marl and some returns have ah'eady started to come in. Health bonds have also been sent out and it is Imped there will be a fine response on the part of the public for both of them as 13 per cent more money is nepded this year to again have the mobile X-ray unit visit in Shelton and give their free examinations to anyone inter* ested, in the county. WOODSMAN ADVISES HOUNDS US---E IN SEARCH Iff)R LOST HUNTERS (Port Townsend Leader) A well-known Olympic Peninsu-i la.woodsman who has spent, much time in this area's wildest re- gions during nearly half a cen- tury residence here, declared Mon- day that tragedies involving lost hunters can be averted if the hunters' companions and authori- ties will immediately take steps to put blood hounds on the trail. Ben Northup of Brinnon, who resided in the primitive. Cleatva- ter region of the west end most, of his life, believes the two hunt-i ers lost in the west end during the recent elk season could have been readily found if steps had been taken to obtain use of blood- hounds. As it was, both hunters were  found, but one, who disappeared the first day of elk season, was in a near-demented condition when he turned up two days later, and the other was missing four days before he found his way to. habita- tion. Northup resided at Clearwater I from the time his family settled l there in 1897 until moving to Brin-i non in 1941, except for a year and! a half spent in Oregon. He is a member of a small gl-oup of ex- pert "river runners," who nego:. tiate the treacherous west end t0r rents in dugout canoes. NumerW ous times in the past these fam- ed boatsmen have been Called on to recover bodies of drowned hunters, fishermen and others lost in the rivers. Northup, who was in the west end during elk season, said one of the lost men became separated from a hunting party in the vicin- 'itY of Christmas Creek and that night fired signal shots and was heard calling in the dark. Before help could reach him he wandered out of heitring range and it was not until two days later that he was found near the Snahapish river by two hunters, He was in poor mental and physical condi- tion when iound, having discard- ed his shoes and other items of clothing. The other missing hunter dis appeared, on the upper Quinault on a Monday and was not found ,until Friday. He had kept his head, Northup said, and found his way out of the woods, but only after much difficulty. The Brinnon man declared that many of the hunters who go to the west end are almost .totally unaware of the wild condition of the country, and it is possible that some may become lost or injured and may never be found, "No time should be lost in wait a day weather conditions may completely wipe out the trail. >' " Olympic Plywood Grabs Commercial League Pin Lead COMMERCIAl, LEAGUE W L Olympic Plywood ............ 17 13 Lake Cushman ..................... 16 1.t Mell Chevrolet ................ 16 .1 Kimbel Motors .................. ]6 14 Local 161 ............................ 15 15 Pantorium ........................... 15 15 Morgan Lumber. ............... 13 17 Grunert's Service .............. 12 18 High g'ame---Barney Morgan, 22l High total-.-Norm Westlund, 559 Olympic Plywood became tim Commercial bowling league's third leader of its ten-week-old season when the venecrmen slipped past Lake Cushmau Resort on a C()rl - bination of their own 2 to 1 tri- umph over Local 161, the resort- men's whitewash defeat at the hands of Pantorium Cleaners, and h:imbel Motors odd game loss to tailend Grunert's Chevron Service in last week's matches. It's a shaky hold the plywood crew lms on the circuit's top rung, however, for last week's results left the whole eight-team field jammed within a five-game spread and a very short winning streak or a similiarly brief losing skein by any team could turn the loop upside down in no time. Lake Cushman sm'rendered its leadership after suffering its see- end straight coat of calcimine, with southpaw Jack Stewart largely to blame, his 553 total being second high among the in- dividual marks of the night. Norm Westhmd of Local 161 hnng np the best at 559 but it wasn't goad enough to offset the average-fat- tening scores hit by Hans Bohn ;and Nick Daviscourt for theply- i wood aggregation. Local 161 ac- [tually outrolled the new league pace-setters inotal pins but all the margin was piled up in one game while the veneermen made slim margins of 15 and 22 pins count for game victories. Cellar-holding Grunert's Ser- vice edged Kimbel Motors on tile scoring of Joe Rank, Clarence Bare and Dan Cormier, while Mell Chew'Diet checked a long losing streak with an odd game verdict over Morgan Lumber on strong pinwork from Gas McNeil and Ro- land Gerhardt. Barney Morgan's 221 top single game of the night went for naught for the lumber- men. The lineups: Morgan Lbr. (1) Mell Chev. i21 handicap 279[ handicap 345 MarvMor, 4141 Babcock 460 S.White 476 Dundas 392 .MelMorga n 410[Toney 398 C.Morgan 4021 McNeil . 436 B.J.Morgan 4671 Gerhardt 458 Total 24481 Total 2489 Plywood (2) Local 161 (1) handicap 357 handicap 252 Funh. 516 Friend 493 Bohn 425} Oliver 376 Daviscourt 4421Dittman 485 Dickie 407! Wright 452 M.Smith 462 Westhmd 559 Total 2609 Total 2616 Grunert's (2) Klml,el's (1) handicap lOS I handicap 348 Bare 5161Pearson 489 StI'uthers 4681Hanson 447 lnk 536[ Frisken 485 C'e 423t PItmter 412 Cormier 509[ BudEarl 90 Total. 620! Total 2571 Pantorlum (3) C.sbman (0) handicap 306[ handicap 246 Lindberg 4.86[ A.Robinson 525 Besch 479! Roles d30 Keever 434 Howard J.Stewart 39]. I L.Carlson 485 C.Robinson 553 Durand 2700 Total Page 7 475 Total Uncle Of Sheltoniaus Passes In Centralia Death of Albert Noble, 76, in Centralia last week after a three- year illness claimed the life of an uncle of two Shelton residents, Harold J. Noble and Avis I. Sae- ger. Mr. Noble had lived in Olympia and Lacey for many years before moving to Centralia. Last rites were hetd last Saturday in Olym- pia. AUTOMOTIVE PAINTING GLASS INSTALLED RIDLEY'S Body and Fender Works PICKUP and DELIVERY SERVICE WORK GUARANTE'ED 1 Mile South On Olympic Highway ROGERS BROS. GARAGE Phone 218R.2X D-A-N-C-I-N-G SPONSORED BY GENERAL WELFARE CLUB EVERY SATURDAY NIGIIT From 9 P.M. to Midnight Memorial Hall Music by General Welfare Club Orchestra NOW OPEN SAEGER'S GROCERY 1 Mile From Log Cabin Service on Arcadia Road +.__ Complete Line of Groceries Open 9 a. m. to 7 I I, m, Daily, Sundays and Holidays Bremerton.Tacoma Stages The Finest In Moto Coach Transportation PORT ANGELES - SHELTON - OLYMPIA South Bound Port Angeles ................ Lv. 9:15 a.m. Sequim .......................... 9:45 a,m. Quilcene ........................ 10:40 a.m. Lilllwaup ...................... 11:31 a.m, Hoodsport .................... 11:41 a.m, Shelton .......................... 12:10 p,m, Olympia ........................ Ar. 12:45 p.m, Connection To and From Bremerton at Junction Connection To and From Port Townsend at Qui|cene BREMERTON - SHELTON - OLYMPIA North Bound Ar, 5:35 p.m. 5:08 p.m, 4:25 p,m. 3:18 p.m. 3:12 p.m. 2:45 p.m. Lv. 2:05 p.m. NORTHBOUND DAt LY 60UTH BOU N D Leave" Shelton 7:00 a.m. 9:45 a.m 12',30 p,m 3:30 p,m 7:00 p.m, Leave Olympia 8:30 a.m. • 10:45 a.m. 1:45 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. :' Via Allyn Leave Shelton • 8:15 a.m. 9:15 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 2:30 p.m. 5:45 p.m. 9:45 p.m, Leave Brerrmrton 8:15 a,m, 11:00 a.m. 2:00 p.m. '3:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 9:00 p.m. * No Sun2ay ur Holiday service. Charter Work a Specialty , CONSULT YOUR LOCAL AGENT Depot at First & Grove Phone 162 438 ...................................................................................................................... 2548 PHONE 19 / For Your HEATER - CIRCULATOR - , OIL STOVE- FURNACE WE'LL FILL UP YOUR TANK R'OMPTLY WITH BETTER BURNING, MORE .DEPENDABLE ASSOCIATED FUEL OIL FOR YOU We Have a SUPPLY of STORAGE TANKS from 50 to 1 000 gallons for new  il burner lnstallatiot)s Frisken Oil Co. Mason County Distributor for As|0olated OII Produ'¢ts 30 YEARS OF MOTOR CAR-IMPROvEMENT Now On Display at