North Mason
trip to Seaftle.
High School News
By RONA HARPER
I
Last week we only went to
school three days because of
Thanksgiving vacation so there
isn't much to write about. Befor~
the Sr. High was excused at 1:00
p.m. on Wednesday most of the
students went to the National
School Assembly held in the gym.
The program was presented by
Bob Handloser who showed his
film, "Cycle-logic" about bicycle
tours and races. It was interesting
but everyone was quite impatient
to get home. "
The football awards were
presented at the football dinner
held Monday night. The award
winners were: team captain -
Bruce Landram, inspiration - AI
Baselt, Mr. - Defense - Mike
Diltenburg, most improved -
Tom Ball.
The Senior Play turned out
very well and everyone involved
would like to thank Mr. Merrill
for the great assistance he gave in
helping to present it. A big thanks
also goes to Mr. Haydon for the
help he gave. Saturday night after
the play Mr. Merrill was presented
with a plaque from all the
members of the cast and stage
crew showing their appreciation
for the tremendous job that he
did.
The Girls' Club had a bake
For Sale
Sectional davenport, good
condition; overstuffed rocker
with ottoman; pink shag rug
and pad, 8'x8'; patio bar with
stools; small club chair. Phone
days CR5-6170 or CR5-6229.
11/25-12/2
sale last Tuesday put on by the
Sophomore girls. The Girls' Club
representative for the
Sophomores is Jan Lackey.
The Girls' Club is still selling
candles. These make lovely gifts
at a reasonable price and their sale
also helps support the Girls' Club
activities.
NUISANCE ON A BIKE
A complaint was received in
the Belfair Sheriff's office on
November 27 of an Allyn youth
racing up and down the middle of
a road in the Allyn area with a
rider behind wearing no helmet.
GETTING ACQUAINTED
Mrs. Barbara Catron, fifth
grade teacher, is a graduate of
Pacific Lutheran College. She has
been teaching in the North Mason
district 3 years.
Mrs. Catron resides in
Grapeview with her husband
Stanley and two daughters, Diane
and Cindy. Her special interest is
sewing.
THIRD TIME
For the third time in recent
months a sign containing the
family name identifying a
summer home on the
Allyn-Grapeview Road has been
destroyed by vandals. The latest
destruction was reported to the
Belfair Sheriff's office on -
November 28.
SCHOOL ENTERED
Grapeview school was
burglarized again by a food thief
according to a report received by
the Belfair Sheriff's office on
November 22. Turkey, butter and
hamburger were stolen from the
school's freezer.
Authorized dealer for
RAICHLE & LANGE SKI BOOTS
Make reservations now for Ski School equipment
!
KITSAP SPORT SHOP
617 No. Callow
Bremerton
j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Illl~~~l~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Ill~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~=
- BONDED LICENSED INSURED -
_. --.
- CONTRACTING • BUILDING .~
- CABINET WORK • CONCRETE WORK' =
-- =
-- Ben Jesfield P.O. Box l 1 Jim Jesfield =_=
--= CR 5-2652 Belfair, Washington CR 6-6684 --
-~~W~fill~l~~~~~-
SUNDAY, December 5th
9:45 a.m. Sunday School. There is a class for everyone.
tl:00a.m. Morning Worship Service. Observance of the Lord's
Supper.
7:00 p.m. Youth Fellowship Meeting.
SUNDAY, December 12th.
ll:OOa.m. Morning Worship Service Conducted by youth in
observance of Youth Sunday.
3:00 p.m. Dedication Service of Yc'lth Center. Reception and
Open House following. The public is invited.
YOUTH CENTER SCHEDULE THIS WEEK
FRIDAY, After Wrestling Match until 1:00 a.m.
SATURDAY, After Basketball Game until 1:00 a.m.
SUNDAY, 1:00 to 5:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m.
P.O. Box 407, Belfair Weshington
Wendell L. Harder, Pastor
Parsonage Phone
CRestview 5-2162
Church Phone
C Restview 5-6262
Saturday, November 20, the
Cornucopia 4-H art project group
ferried to Seattle to tour the art
galleries and shops of Pioneer
Square. In the afternoon they
took the famous Seattle
underground tour.
Accompanying the girls were
art group leader, Mrs. Maxine
Morse and Cornucopia leader,
Mrs. Jean Sharer. Members who
made the trip were Tina Nelson,
Kathy Stice, Kathy Baldy, Patsy
Sharer, Eileen Kronquist, Lisa
Kronquist and Julie Morse. Mrs.
Gloria Kronquist and daughter,
Stacey, also went with the group.
The girls are currently
working on a jewelry project. At
their Monday meeting last week
they made tray favors for Altyn
House residents.
COUPON SPECIAL
BELFAIR ONLY
DeLuxe
BEEFY BURGERS
- OR -
MILK SHAKES
FOR
0 And copy
of this Ad
news
W
g power
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Everything! You'll be overwhelmed, Mr. Advertiser, with the
terrific results from display advertising. From the moment
you begin advertising you'll see the response. For more sales,
bigger profits advertise in the Huckleberry Herald. Call CR
5-6680 to have a space salesman quote you our advertising
rates• No obligation, of course.
available for three days in December
The third annual Santa Clause
Steam Train will be operated this
year on Sunday, Dec. 5; Saturday,
Dec. 11; and Sunday, Dec. 12,
1971, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
the Puget Sound Railroad
Museum, Snoqualmie Falls, Wash.
Two genuine steam
locomotives from the Roaring
Twenties era will pull old
passenger cars and cabooses, some
dating back to the 1880's, one
mile into the woods, where Santa
will be waiting in an old bunk car
on a siding. Everyone will visit
Santa, receive a gift and a candy
cane, then proceed to the kitchen
car and have some cocoa (or
coffee) and cookies by the old
coal stove. Then, back on one of
the trains for the ride back to the
depot.
The fare for this is 25c a head,
babes in arms up to Great-Aunt
Granny. Last year, hundreds of
the visitors complained this fare
was too low. They were right, but
you see, the Puget Sound
Railroad Museum is NOT a tourist
attraction run for profit. It's the
life dream of about 250 "railfans"
who just couldn't stand to see all
the old steamers scrapped or
propped up on a park. Their
dream has come partly true (the
Museum is far from finished)
because the general public pays
money to ride their trains during
the summer. This Santa Claus
Steam Train is their way of saying
"thank you". If they could afford
it, they'd run it for free. For
those who think the fare is too
low.., well, donations are
tax-deductible. Several ofthe
locomotives were donated by
logging companies.
The crowds that showed up
last year for the Santa Train
presented real problems and
dangers to the Museum. No one
was turned away, but operation
after dark through crowds of
excited children was just too
risky. The volunteer crew
resolved, "Never again". So this
year, no tickets will be sold after
3 p.m. Participants are asked to
come early.
To get to the Railroad
Museum, follow Interstate 90
about 30 miles east out of Seattle.
Two miles before North Bend,
turn off at the left-turn lane
marked "Snoqualmie, Snoqualmie
Falls". Take either branch of the
Y. Turn left again after crossing
the railroad tracks, onto Highway
202. Proceed about ~ of a mile
through the town of Snoqualmie
and look for the sign on the left.
By BONNIE MC GILL
Awards given at the last Cub
Scout Pack Meeting went to Craig
Byerley who received his Bear
badge and Golden Arrow. A
recruiter badge went to John
Norman for recruiting Brian
Rosenau into Cub Scouting.
Bobcat pins were given to
Mike Eigner and Brian Rosenau
who could not attend the
previous ceremony.
In the Webelos Den, Dan
Hannan was presented his Artist
Badge and an Aquanaut Badge.
The attendance ribbon went
to Den 1 for their 100%
attendance of parents and cubs.
The theme for November was
"Early Colonists" and each Den
presented a skit about the
pilgrims and early settlers.
All dens had table displays
showing the items they had made
during the month of November.
The December Pack Meeting
will be held on the 16th in the
Multi-Purpose room at 7:30. The
theme for the month-will be "A
Cub Scout Gives Goodwill" and
each boy is requested to bring an
item of canned food to be put
into a basket that will be given to
a needy family.
Coming up during the next
Zenith Color/B & W TV-RadiosLHi.Fi's
CHANNEL MASTER ANTENNAS
SERVICE ON ALL MAKES
Have Tubes -- Will Travel
CR5-6244
HOURS: 10- 6:30 DALLY--SAT. ONLY: 10-1:30
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Union Oil
REG. GAS 35.9
PREM. 39.9
Open 10 to 10 Daily (Mon. 10 - 6)
__ _ Ill I I
II
May we be of help in
suggesting your Christmas Needs?
Jig saws -- Drills -- soldering kits -- Fishing Reels
-- Case Knives -- Jet Car Washers -- Table Tennis
-- Horse Shoes -- Corelle by Coming Ware --
Electric Bean Pots -- Carving Sets.
MORE SUGGESTIONS NEXT WEEK
ERNIE & HAROLD ARIES
CR 5-2031 8:30 -- 6:00
The Museum is about V4 mile
upstream from Snoqualmie Fails.
Those coming from Tacoma and
south may use Highway 18, the
Auburn Cutoff, to reach
Interstate 90; turn right onto
1-90. Those coming from Everett
and north may use Highway 2 to
Monroe, then turn right onto
Highway 203 to Fall City, then
turn left onto Highway 202 to the
Museum. From the east, use 1-90
across Snoqualmie Pass to North
Bend, then turn right onto
Highway 202 to the Museum.
year will be the annual Blue and
Gold Dinner. This event is the
highlight of the scouting year.
Any of you mothers who would
like to help out, or be chairman
of the dinner, please get in touch
with your Den Mother and she
will give you further details.
Also, sometime in late April
or early March, Pack 513 will
hold the Pinewood Derby Race.
Look forward to hours of family
fun carving and painting a derby
car. The race itself is truly
exciting and more thrilling than
the Indianapolis 500 with an
engraved trophy for the winner.
The Pinewood play offs for the
district will be held on April 22.
See you at the Pack Meeting in
December.
Officers remove
dangerous caps
A deputy of the Mason
County Sheriff's office and a
State trooper removed some
blasting caps from a garage in
Grapeview after a complaint was
received from the Grapeview
resident. The woman said the caps
had been left in the garage by a
previous resident, that she had
called five times to ask him to
take them away but had received
no action and she was afraid her
small children would be injured
by them. The caps were disposed
of.
GETTING ACQUAINTED
Robert Caughie, fifth grade
teacher, is a graduate of the
University of Washington. [te has
been teaching in the North Mason
school district 3 years.
Mr. Caughie resides on South
Shore with his wife Anita and five
children, Richard, Mark, Casey,
Jennel and Ross. His hobby is
working with plastics.
•.. trod Boy Seouts do too--
to why not YOU!
Weekend housekeeper
Companion
for Elderly lady.
CR5-2658,
Call evenings
tfn
Services held for
Sylvia A." Godwin
Funeral servies for Sylvia A.
"Tib" Godwin, 69, of Tahuya,
were held last Friday in
Bremerton. She died November
23 in Harrison Hospital.
She was born June 28, 1902,
in Caledonia, Pa., to Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Munn. She came to
Washington 50 years ago, and had
resided in the Tahuya area. Her
husband, William, preceded her in
death in 1963. Her son, William
Patrick, also preceded her in
death in 1952 in a drowning
accident.
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs. John (Gretchen) Crowell of
Brinnon (Jefferson County); a
granddaughter, Mrs. Michael
(Patty) Fleury of Belfair; two
great-granddaughters; her father,
Edwin Munn of Renton; five
sisters, Mrs. Glayds Sulis of
Renton, Mrs. James (Kathryn)
Deleo of Port Townsend, Mrs.
Myron (Juanita) Fisher, and Mrs.
Larry (Nellita) Eymen, both of
Salem, Ore., and Mrs. Violet
Rodger of Kent.
Father A. L. Born officiated
at services with burial following at
Twin Firs Cemetery, Belfair.
The family suggests that
remembrances be donated to the
American Cancer Society, in care
of Mrs. Ron Danielson, 2328 7th
St., Bremerton.
A REMINDER
from Boy Scout Troop 513 for a
cleaner environment: keep your
furnace clean and adjusted
properly.
./¢Trn ~s .~l.
of Belfair dies
James A. McClure, 62, of
Wilkerson Road off the Old
Belfair Highway, was
prounounced dead on arrival at
Harrison Hospital in Bremerton
where he was taken by the Belfair
Aid car on November 23.
Mr. McClure was born Jan. 9,
1909, in Princeton, Ind., to Mr.
and Mrs. James D. McClure. He
married the former Leona Berry
in Toledo, Ohio, Sept. 10, 1929.
The couple resided in Michigan
and California before moving to
Kitsap County in 1948. Mr.
McClure was a woodsman for the
Alpine Evergreen Co. for 23
years.
Survivors include his wife, of
the family home; two sons, James
of Seattle and Gary of Gorst;
three daughters, Mrs. Ruth Noll
and Mrs. June McClure both of
Seattle, and Miss Laura McClure
of the family home; his mother,
Mrs. James R. Foster of Indiana;
23 grandchildren; and two
great-grandchildren.
ALLYN HOUSE
NURSING HOME
Has opening for
I Woman and 2 Men
Registered Nurse on Duty
Allyn, Wn.
C R 5-2171 426-3795
"Not The Fanciest
Just the Friendliest"
TUNE-UP AND
Labor Plus Parts
and Cleaner.
Reg. Price $18.95
CR5-2991
Pendleton® points to fashion with a
long tradition of quality in pure virgin
wool. $17.50-$22.00
Also Pendleton
Jackets ............$24.00-$30.00
Vests ................... $ ! 6.00
Scarf ..................... $5.00
Caps ..................... $5.00
Robes ................... $20.00
e_A toe
MARY WRIGHT
PHONE CR 5-2033
Paqe 6 - Huckleberry Herald section of Shelton-Mason County Journal - December 2, 1971 December 2. 1971 - Huckleberry Herald section of Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 3