Frank D. (Bud) Pauley, 58,
owner of Pauley Motors here,
died at Mason General Hospital
Monday.
He was a life-time resident of
Shelton, and was born here Feb.
18, 1913.
He lived in Shelton all of his
Fife except one year while
attending Centralia Junior College
and during duty in the U. S.
Army in World War 11.
Mr. Pauley was a member of
the American Legion, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, Shelton-Mason
County Chamber of Commerce
and the Bayshore Golf Club.
He had operated Pauley
Motors, the local Dodge
dealership, since 1951.
Survivors include his wife,
Barbara, Shelton; one son,
Donald, Shelton; a sister, Mrs.
Marie Kneeland, Shelton, and two
brothers, James, Shelton, and
Joseph Courtney, Hoquiam.
Private Funeral services will
be held at 2 p.m. today at
Batstone Funeral Home with Rev.
William Andrews officiating.
Burial will be in Shelton Memorial
Park.
The family requests that in
lieu of flowers, donations be sent
to the Intensive Care Unit of
Mason General Hospital or the
Mason General Hospital Auxiliary
Scholarship fund.
i: i
i
Frank D. Pauley
Ballot ihorh Reason
Is Told By Auditor
The shortage of ballots in two
precincts came because of
miscalculation m her office as to
how many voters would cast
ballots in the two precincts,
County Auditor Ruth Boysen said
this week.
it was reported alter lhe
election last week there was a
shortage of ballots on the
Legion Slates
Law Night
Law enforcement officers will
be the speakers at a joint
American Legion and Auxiliary
Law and Order Night program at
8 p.m. Tuesday in the Memorial
Itall.
The speakers will include
Sheriff John Robinson, Police
Chief Frank Rains, District
Justice Court Judge Glenn Correa,
and ('apt. Robert Erhart, head of
the Washington State Patrol
Academy here.
kach will talk about their
respective offices and some of, the
Grapeview School Board contest
in Lake Precinct and on the
Grapeview Port District in voting
in Grapeview Precinct.
The number of ballots which
were short would not have made
any difference in the outcome
in either case.
Mrs. Boysen said her office
had tried to guess the number of
persons who would vote in each
contest in each precinct, and, that
in these two, they had
undcrestimated. The estimated
number of ballots was based on
the number of persons who had
rot ed in the district in the
precinct two years ago.
She staled she was attempting
to keep expenses down by
keeping the number of ballots
printed somewhere near the
number which would be used.
Special Meeting
The Mary M. Knight School
Board will have a special meeting
at 8 p.m. Nov. t5 to install
newly-elected school board
"re'embers /
Air Flights Brought
Into Tree Patrol Work
A new addition to the
Christmas Tree Patrol by the
Mason County Sheriff's Office
this year is air surveilance, Chief
Deputy Tom Creekpaum said this
week.
The tree patrol is a
cooperative effort between the
Sheriff's Office and the Douglas
Fir Christmas Tree Association.
Chamber To
Hear Speaker
Phase Two of President
Richard Nixon's wage-price
control program will be the
subject of the Shelton Chamber
of Commerce meeting at 7 p.m.
tonight at Heinie's Broiler.
Speaker will be Mrs. Jane
Vimmerstedt, Taxpayer
Representative for the Internal
Revenue Department.
She will discuss the overall
wage-price program and
particularly any decisions which
have been handed down on Phase
Two of the program.
Chamber officials remind
members, wives are welcome at
the monthly membership
meetings.
There will be dinner at 7 p.m.
followed by the program at 8
p.m.
Book Sale Set
A sale of used books will be
held in the PUD auditorium on
Tuesday from 10 a.m. until 4
p.m.
Conducted by Chapter B,
PEO, the sale will raise funds for
International Peace Scholarships
to bring girls from foreign
countries to the PEO-sponsored
junior college in Nevada, Mo.
The tree growers provide the
funds to pay off-duty officers to
patrol areas in which trees are
being harvested.
Creekpaum said the air flights
are being made by Tony Sexton,
Olympia, who is employed by a
flying service there.
Both day and night flights are
being made, he said, with the air
effort being worked in
conjunction with the ground
patrol.
If the pilot sees something out
of the ordinary from the air, he
contacts the Sheriff's Office
which then can have it checked
out by someone on the ground.
There will be patrols at
various times, both during the day
and at night, until the tree harvest
season is over, the officer said.
UGN
Given
The Mason County UGN fund
drive is at about 10 per cent of its
goal at $2,279, it was reported at
a luncheon meeting Monday for
heads of the various divisions of
the campaign.
Secretary Betty Ann
VanderWegen reported that as of
Monday noon, there was $538
from the business division; $872
from the payroll deducation
division; $25 from the
government division; $250 from
the professional division and $584
for mailings.
Campaign solicitors are
continuing work in getting the
fund drive completed.
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Page 2- Sh.lton-Mason County Journal- Thursday, November 11, 1971
Being
Kelvin (Kelly) Coots
Shelton Police and the Mason
County Sheriff's Office are
continuing to check out possible
leads in the disappearance of
Kelvin (Kelly) Coots, 10, here
Oct. 11.
Kenneth Coots, the father of
the missing boy, recently returned
from Montana where he and the
boy's grandfather, Raymond
Wells, went to check out a
possible lead.
Coots contacted two men at a
bar near Troy, Mont., who had
seen a boy who answered the
general description of Kelly in the
company of an older couple in a
light-colored foreign-made car.
The people had headed east.
Coots went as far as Kallispel,
Mont. before returning home.
Shelton Police said the
identification from the two men
in Troy was not positive and that
they were continuing to follow up
possible leads.
Police said they were planning
to send fliers to states east of
Montana in the continuing effort
to find a trace of the boy.
The reward fund, which has
been started in an effort to find
some trace of the boy, has a total
of $769.46 in cash and pledges.
The Seattle-First National
Bank here is taking donations to
the fund.
~~~~~~~l~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~~~ll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~l~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Zoning Ordinance Hearing Held
There were no strong voted to leave the record openmeetings in various areas of the
objections, and considerable until 7 p.m. Nov. 17 for anyone county last month.
support for a proposed county who wished to make written Connolly said the planning
zoning ordinance at a hearing comments on the proposed commission will, at its Nov. 17
before the County Planning ordinance, meeting, consider recommending
Commission Tuesday night, The phmner said some minor the adoption of the zoning
County Planner James Connolly changes had been made in the ordinance to the county
said Wednesday. original proposal after public commission.
Connolly said the commission
Write-In
Candidates
Elected
Frank Rains
the Southside
F. E. Spaulding to
Port Cc
the Nov. 2
County Auditor
this week. ' ;
Both were
no candidate had
time provided for 1
Mrs. Boysen
received 28
Tokar, also a
She stated
the largest
votes in the
although there
did receive voteS. :i
CHANCE:
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