27, 1963
CLUB CALENDAR
PLAY Club. a 54-hole medal play com-
petition at full handicap with a
angle there 36-hole break-off point to deter-
front this mine finalists.
Tournament chairman Bud Pau-
is going to ley tues all entries in the Presi-
tournament dent' Cup play to get their mat-
19th Hole ches under way as quickly as pos-
sible.
Otherwise the 19th Hole Club's
monthly meeting last Wednesday,
at which pay-offs earned during
the recently-completed league
schedule were distributed follow-
mga picnic-style dinner, was held
last Wednesday at the Bayshore
Clubhouse.
Jack Gray's team champmns ann
Oliver Ashford as individual point-
leader took the major accolades
in the winners' circle.
%VALICER IN gTATE PRO
The Shelton-Bayshore Golf
course is without its skipper h,s
week while pro-manager Ray Wal-
ker competes in the annual state
open golf tournament at Spokane.
FEM HOLD LOW NET
This week's ladies' day play
Tuesday was for 10w net score, m
which Gert Batstone and Ruth
Heuston tied for honors.
ih
PRICE
ONLY!
.LON
mildew, ond
ready.
31ue EYed
rett
CO.
Wlth
r Co.
426-2036
MERCHANTS LOSE
SHARE OF LEAD
Shelton Merchants squandered
nine hits and lost a 4-3 upset de-
cision to Binger's in Olympia Fast-
ball League competition last
Thursday.
The defea.t also dropped the
Shelton club out of its share of
first place. Shelton now has a 3-3
record, is tied for third.
Shelton outhit the losers. 9-5.
but couldn't make the blows ef-
fective until the final inning, when
a two-run rally almost pulled the
decision out of the fire.
Tonight Shelton is slated against
the Mercury. Marauders. Thurs-
day's short score:
RItE
Shelton ............... 000 100 2--3 9 3
Binger's ............ 301 000 x--4 5 2
Batteries--Nutt and Swearingen;
Turner and Michael.
MEN'S TRIO LEAGUE
W L
Touchables .................... 26 14
Flin[stones .................... 22 18
MIMO ............................ 21 18]
Alley Oops .................... 21 19
Prairie Roosters .......... 201,, 19a/,a
Lucky X ...................... 19 21
Vagabonds ...................... 16 24
Hopefuls ........................ 14 26
High game--Morley Preppernau
221.
High series Morley Prepper-
nau 791.
MIMe 5 (Morley Preppernau
791), Alley Cops 0 (Larry Ziegler
648); Lucky X4 Ed Dunbar 671),
Pra2rie Roosters 1 (Webb Rest-
vold 6751: Touchables 4 (Guy
liller 693}, Hopefuls 1 (Bob Henz
609) ; Flintstones 3 Max Mikkel-
sen 633). Vagabounds 2 IL. L.
McInelly 712).
TRIPLE
PLAY?
BEAT
IT
cial Services Rendered
ONAL ATTENTION
from our Shelton Office
z= m = m m = i • mlm m m =
t3H ALL THE BASES WITH
LOANS
COLLECTIONS []
3rd
2n
[]
DEPOSIT BOXES
S at current annual rates
DIVIDENDS AT
4%% @
four times annually
Shellon Branch
County Federal
& Loan Association
to $10,000.00 by the F.S.L.I.C.
P.M. Monday thru Thursday
to 5:30 p.m. Fridays
lice Branch Office
ay • 313 Railroad Ave
Shelton, Wash.
I0XEs • Private, Confidential, Economical
SHELTON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAL-- Published in "Christmaslown, U.S.A.", Shelton, Washington
u
lamo]{d-(%l)itali-zes-Ol Sl{e H;oi{- Gelmrosit.
Skokomish Comebacks JAY ELLS DONATE DECISION
Nip Queels, 6-5; ttex!
Action J),t Xaholah iii :!/ )! :. ili
S,,o,omish earn,, from b00,hind : ', i i , :
hess against bis teammates of the
twice Sunday to shade Queers, 6-5. ii
in a Puget "Sotmd Indian I,eague Shelton jm]ior legion bail team. Norll Betrozoff hetted a triple to
SUN BATHING SEA LION. Humans weren't the only sun
bathers during Shelton's recent hot weather as you can see. This
large seal was caught in the act lounging on the dock of Dr.
B. N. Collier on Arcadia Point last Friday.
Lucldess Legionaires Lose Pair
BURIEN CAPTURES TWIN BILL
Single inning 4-run outbursts in \\;Vingard walked in succession to
each game failed .to salvage either
end of a twin bill with Burien for
Shelton's junior legion ball club
Sunday afternoon on Loop Field.
Burien motored home with 7-4
and 5-4 decisions in a pair of well
played tussles.
The visitors showed a stout hit-
ting batting order which, during
the 14 innings of play, rapped
three home runs. three doubles
and one triple among a collection
of 22 base knocks.
Roughed up hardest was Shel-
tows No. 1 pitcher, Bill Sloan,
who was bruised for 15 blows, in-
cluding two of the circuit clouts.
the triple and one double.
TALL BOB Towle. pitching the
second game, held the hard-hit-
ting Burien swingers at bay until
the last inning before yielding the
winning run. Then a bit of per-
centage strategy went awry.
Facing the tailend of the bat-
ting order, Towle fanned the first
hitter, hit the second and the No.
9 man sacrificed the runner to
second to give a two-out chance
to Cry Rehmann. Bm'ien firstsack-
er who had been blasting the ball
hard all day. A lefthanded hitter,
the strategy was sound to walt:
him. But righthanded hitting Rick
Almberg sliced a ground single to
his off-field and Rick Broadhead
raced home with the winning mar-
ker.
SHELTON SCORED all four
runs in the second to take a 4-2
lead as A1 Wagner led off with
a single, Larry Powell. mking his
debut in the Shelton lineup, bunt-
ed and was safe when Wagner
beat the attempt to force him at
serene. Terry Kodnun and Tom
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RAUSCHER'S
force in two runs and Brian Sny-
der singled two more across.
Burien had opened with a pair
in its half of the frame one un-
earned, on three hits and an er-
ror, then tied it in the third when
Dave Blomgren slashed a home
run to rightcenter behind Jim
Gottberg's double.
That's hmv it stood until the
fatal seventh.
IN THE OPENER the visitors
took a 7-0 lead into the last in-
ning before Shelton finally came
to life. Walks to ken Landis and
Kadoun batting for Mike Sheedy
against a lefthanded pitcher, an
error on Denny Bailey's roller to
second, two more walks to Wing-
ard and Snyder. and singles by
Sloan anl Terry LaBissoniere did
the trick.
It could have been an entirely
different ball game had LaBisson-
cerc's snmking smash to rightfield
in the sixth been six feet either
way instead of directly at the
rightfielder. With the bases full
at the time it would have been
good for four runs.
This evening, at 6:00 o'clock.
Shelton hosts Hoquiam on Loop
Field.
The box scores:
FIIINT GAME
Barien ab r h
Rehnmnn lb 4 2 3
Ahnberg s 4 1 3
Kier rf 4 n 1
Broadhead e 4 0 0
lsaacson If 4 1 0
lonlgPen 3t) 4 l 2
Gottborg cr 4 1 3
Valenta 2b 3 0 2
Anibal p 3 1 1
Soriano 1) I 0 0
Gray p 0 0 0
Totals 35 7 15
ShMton ah r h
3.ringard ss 3 1 1
Wag her rf 2 0 1
Snyder 3b 3 0 ]
Sloan p 3 0 2
LaBsnier cf 4 0
Richards c 3 0 0
Landis lb 3 I 1
M.Sheedy If 1 0 0
a Kadoun 0 1 0
Iailey 2/) 3 1 0
Totals 2,1 4 7
a walked lor Sheedy in 7th
8('Ol11.] BY INNINGS
Burien 3 n 0 1 0 l 2 7
hits 't 2 2 2 0 2 3---15
Shelton 0 0 a n n 0 4--4
hits 1 1 0 0 0 2 2--- 7
SUMMARY HR-Rehmann. Anibal.
3b-Rehmann. 2b-Kier Wingard. RBI-
Valenta 2. Anibal. Gottberg. Kier.
RehB'lann. Wingard. Wagner? Sloan.
LaBissoniere. SB-Gottberg 2. Ahntmrg.
Broadhead. E-Valenta. Landis. Sny-
der. IP-Anibal 5, Soriano 1 1./3. RRF-
Soriano 3. Sloan 5. Winner-Anibal. SO-
Sloan 4. Anibal 1. Soriam) 1. BB-
Sloan 1. Anibal 4. Soriano 5. WP-
Anibal 1. DP-Sheedy to Riehards. Is-
aacson to Broadhead. Blolngl'en tO
Valenta to Rehnmnn. LOB-Burien 8.
Shelton 9. U-Jack Stewart. Roy Kim-
bel.
SECOND GAME
Burien ab r h Shelton ab r h
Rehnmnn lb 3 0 0 Wingard2b 1 0 1 l
Ahnberg ss 4 0 1 LaBsnier ef 4 0 0
Kierrf 4 0 0 Snyder3b 0 1
Goitberge-lf 3 ] 2 [ Sloan lb 3 0 0
a Bergman If 0 0 0 [ Wagner rr 4 1 1
Blomgren 2b 3 1 1 [ Powell ss 3 1 0
Isaacson lr-e 3 1 1 [ M.Sheedy if 1 0 0
Yeakel 3b 3 I 1 ] Bailey If 2 0 0
Broadhead ef 1 I 1 Kadounc 2 1 0
Watsonp 2 0 0 Towlep 2 1 1
Gray p 0 O 0 [ Tota'ls 26 4 4
Totals 26 5 7
I
a ran for Gottberg in 6th
RCORE IIY INNINGg
Burien 0 2 2 0 0 0 1--5
hits 0 3 2 0 0 1 1--7
Shelton 0 4 0 0 0 0 0--4
hits 1 2 0 1 0 0 0--4
SUMMARY -- -I-IR-Blmngren. 2b-
Gottberg. Isaaeson. SH-Watson Win-
gar. RBI-llomgren 2. Ahnberg,
Broadhead. Snyder. Wlngard. Towle.
E-Watson. Sloan. Powell. IP-Watson
6 plus. RRP-Vatson 1. Towle 3.
Winner-Watson. SO-Watson 5. Towle
4. Gray 2. BB-Watson 3. Towle 2.
tlB-Broadhead hy Towle: rP-Watson
1. DP-Towle to Wingard to Sloan.
O LUMBER 0 HARDWARE O PAINTS
1 mile off highway on Cole Road
Cole Road Builders Supply
Cole Road Ph. 426-8224
baseball game at Skokomish.
Despite drawing goose-eggs for
the final three innings, Sl<okomish
hung on for a hard-earned tri-
mnph after scoring what prover
ix) bc tile victory-margin run m
the fifth on Tom Gouley's single,
a walk. and two fieldcr's choices
on which Tom beat t.i]e attempt
to get him at hoth third and home.
Skokomish had just taken the
lead for the second time with a
3-run burst in the fourth activat-
ed by a wall( to Mel Smith anti t
boot on Mikc Davis' grounder
which set up run-scoring singles
by Pete Peterson and Rick Mil-
ler
QUEETS GOT the game's ini-
tial tally in the first on two sin-
gles sandwiching a hit batter but
Skokomish snapped up the rcins
in the second with a pan' on Tom
Gouley's lead-off triple followed
by Smith's single and Davis' dou-
ble. Queets hopped ahead in thc
third with two tallies on a double.
error and single, setting lhe stagc
for the Skokomish come-from-be-
hind efforts in the fourth ana
fifth.
Queers shaved thc margin LO a
single run with solo tallies in the
sixth and seventh, the first on
a pail" of singles, Lhc last on a
pair of throwing errors and a fly.
JIM TOBIN preserved the vie-
tory for starter Ronnie Peterson
with a fine piece of relief work
in the late going, yielding only a
two-out single in the ninth for
Queets' final hope.
Skokomish sees its next action
at Taholah. this Sunday for a
league game, then will participate
in the annual 4th of July tour-
nament July 4-5-6 on thc Taho-
lah diamond.
Sunday's short score:
R H E
Queets 102 001 100 - 5 9 1
Skok. 020 310 00x - 6 10 a
Batterics - H. Penn and B
Sampson: R. Petersen, Tobin ant
P. Peterson.
MIXED DOUBLES LEAGUE
.V L
Rock Chuckers .............. 21e 10e
Gold Brickers .............. 17 15
Cherry Pickers ............. 15 17
Alley Pups ...................... 15 17
Slow Starters .................. 15 17
Twisters .......................... 12z 19%,
High games -Verna Johanson
196. Jack Sampson 212.
High series - Vern Johanson
445. L. L. McIne]ly 586,
Gold Brickers 4 Merle nydc]
461), Cherry Pickers 0 (Rick De-
yette 431; Slow Starters 3 t L.
L. McInelly 586}. Twisters I (Don
Knudsen 4561: Rock Chuckers 2
,Rick Sharpes 470. Alley Pup
2 (Sam egg 423). 'mr
Brian pitched himself quite a
F, }tnle d ()\\;'1 at Raymond last
Thnl'sday night bul came out a
7-(; loser because his defense let
him down miserably. Not a single
one of Raymond's seven runs was
earned, so slovenly was the field-
ink behind him.
%VORNT OF IT IS, Brian start-
e(t the pattern off himself. In the
second inning for example, he
struck out the first two batters.
walked the third and yielded a
single to the fom'th. The fifth
tapped dox\\;m firsl base way and
Brian covered the bag as ken Lan-
dis fielded the ball. But on the
throw Brian dropped the ball and
it rolled far enough to allow the
rllnners to take an extra base.
XSrhell Tom \\;Vingard failed to drop
the gate on a roller to short both
scored to knot the count at 2-2.
Shelton had tallied solo markers
in the first and second, on Win-
card's hmg double over the left-
fielder's head behind Mike Shee-
dy's walk and on singles by Ter-
ry LaBissoniere and Terry Ka-
donn and a wild pitch.
Raymond scored a single run in
Ihe third without a hit-on a hit
batter, a stolen base on which Ka-
doun's throw sailed into the out-
field, and a fly to right.
NHELTON Teen the lead with
a 4-run blast in the fifth. Mike
Sheedy got a life on.an error. Sny-
der and Bill Sloan singled succes-
sively to left and Landis singled
to center, the first trio scoring
v'ith the aid of a throwing error
and a passed ;)all, Landis winding
up at third and checking in on
LaBissoniere's sacrifice fly to
right.
The lead lasted quick, for Shel-
ton donated fonr runs right back
in Raymond's half. Snyder seem-
ed in good shape when he got two
of the first three batters out.
left and scored on Carl Gelding'S
single t() right center.
Shelton outhit Iaymond. 8-5
and had three earned runs. but
they still pay-off on the dents on
home plate, regardless of how they
get 1here.
The box score:
Nhelton ab r h
M.Sh,'edy 2b' 3 2 I
WingaPd ss 4 0 1
Snyder p 3 l 2
Sloan 3b 4 1 1
Landis lb 4 I 1
LalssnieP cf 2 ] 1
T,Sheedy rf :t 0 0
Kadoun c 3 0 1
Towle If 2 n c,
Totals 28 6 8
Raymond ab r h
Betrozoff 3b 4 1 2
C.Golding 2b 4 0 2
Hasu cf 3 1 n
Evans rf-lf 3 0 0
D,Gol, ding If 4 0 0
Iyall ss 3 1 0
Cll)s]IW p-c ] I 0
Strtmtr c 3 2 1
t(,arling l} t} 0 0
Benulieu If 2 0 0
XVebb rf 0 1 0
Totals 27 7 5
SCORE BY 1NNINGg
Shelion 1 1 0 0 4 0 0----6
hils I 2 1 0 2 I 0--8
laynlond 0 2 1 0 4 0 x--7
hits I l n 1 2 0 x--5
SUMMARY-- 3b-Betroztfff. 2b*Ving-
ard, Snyder. SH-LaBissmfiere. Evans.
KBI-Wingard. Landis. LaBissoniere.
Betrozorf 2. C. G(}ldillg. Evans. SB-
tadotm. Towle. Betrozoff. C, Geld-
ing. Hasu 2. Iyatt. E-Wingard 3, M.
Sheedy. Snyder. Sloan. gad,ran Ci
Gelding, Iyall. Beaulieu. IP-Clapshaw
5. RRF-Clapsllaw 3. Snyder 0. Hear-
ling 0. SO-Snyder 8, Clat)shaw 5. BB-
Snyder 4. Clal)shaw 2. Hem'ling 1. WP-
Clal)shaw 2. Winner-Clapshaw. HB-C.
Goldin 1) Snyder PB-Kadonn 2, DP-
Iyall to C. Galdin t,) D. Gelding.
LOB-Shelton"5. Raymond 8,
" It ta.
r "' Pend.
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rotor, end extens/o'to 23" ] "%
pa¢kogo for ,moll gorde# 1% "i, I
ehaln-drivu transmission Ito I I
dolly., .qulvol.,,., o 4 p I /
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%,, j ,,,'
Saeger Motor Shop
on Hillcrest
I I
USED
I
TOTAL PERFORMANCE:
CARS
:!:> ::i:!:ii:: i:: i:!::!i
Ford
'59 CUSTOM 300 4-DR.
V8 AUTOMATIC
PAGE 7
...... i
Ford
I
1960 FAIRLANE 500 4 DR. I
I
V-8 Automatic
Ford
'61 Galaxie 4-dr. V8,
automatic trans., power
steer. & brakes, etc.
Ford
1959 BUSINESS COUPE
6 CYL. STICK
00Voiks
1956 2 dr.
clean
Ford
Crestline 2-dr. HT.
V-8 o.d.
JIM PAULEY INC,
5th & Railroad
Phone 26-8231
Evenings Call
Bu Rose -- 426-2156
Bob Wolden -- 426-3261
501 Railroaff Ave.
,..,, , ,
JIH PAULEY, INC.
This steel-edged pothole is probably the world's toughest test
of a car's suspension. We drive into this car killer at 30 mph,
locking our brakes as we go so the wheels can't rol through
the hole as they normally would. The car stains against the ar
edge of the hole with such impact that it literally bounds out.
If you added up the cumulative effect of all the jars and iolts
your car's suspension system experiences in years of normal
driving, Rwouldn't malch the impact of one trip through the hole.
Yet a Ford must run this testlhree times lo prove its strength.
How can a Ford take it? Because Ford's front suspension has
extra beef in spindles, springs, suspension arms--In fact, it's
about 20 pounds heavier than the front suspension of our
principal competitor's cal'.
We don't expect you to abuse your car the way we do our test
cars. But, however you drive, you'll welcome the extra strength
f a total performance Ford. Ford streng/h is tested in a thousand
ways m Ford's laboratories and proving grounds--and in open
competition in the world's loughesl rallies and stock cal events.
F@RD
FOR 0 YI;ARS TH[ SYMBOL OF
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MOTOR COMPANY
solid, silent SUPER TORQUE
Look at Ford's astounding record in open competition this
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combination of strength, balance, precision control and road-
clinging suspensioncould roll up so many wins.
Before you buy any new car, test-drive the solid, silent Super
Torque Ford. If you haven't driven one lalely, you can't really
know what a new Ford is like. Make this important discovery: if
it's built by Ford, it's built for performance...total performance.
., .: " :k i :.'''-:? :': '; : z '
ii:" :.:>. ,"'
FORD GALAXlE 500]XL SPORTS HARDTOP
IF Y011 KNEW WHaT
THIS "";;CAR KILLER KNOWS...YOU D' BE ILqlVING A SOLID, SILENT SUPER TORQUE FORD