ENGAGEMENT of Wretha Rhodes to Bob Wilkowski
announced on Tuesday evening at an engagement party
the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Rhodes.
Rhodes is a Shelton High School senior and her fiance,
le son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wilkowski, is serving with the
in Pearl Harbor. A summer wedding is planned.
Feature Writer,
JAN DANFORD
long
night before Christmas
of Cadillacs
through my head.
were hung
the chimney with care -
merely one
a large greedy pair!
Christmas morning
sought
socks to discover
Santa had brought.
Mrs. Eddie Bac
To Hostess Guild
Donnie J. O'Neill Orthopedic
Guild will meet at 8 p.m.
Wednesday in the home of Mrs.
Eddie Bac With Mrs. Vince Himlie
as co-hostess.
On December 16, 16 couples
attended a Christmas buffet in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
Manke.
Art Club Officers
Will Be Elected
Officers for 1972 will be
elected at the meeting of the
Shelton Adult Art Group to be
held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
the PUD building. Helen Knudsen
and Gall Edminston will
co-hostess.
aPping one stocking,
bright Christmas star,
twinkled the title
amy new car!
A cup of cooked cauliflower
provides vitamins A and C and
contains only about 25 calories.
in Santa
until
',in the0tlaer
the bill.
There comes a time in the life
every big ugly old red sedan
the ultimate insult has been
, when upon whose
and dented back the final
has been at long last loaded.
For my valiant vehicle, whose
head was rusted but
lbowed and whose tattered
had functioned faithfully
I more than 190,000 merry and
ehievious miles, the crippling
was delivered by a service
attendant.
was transporting a saddle at
I stopped for gas. The
glanced into the back seat
hooted with derision.
"If 1 drove a heap like this,"
~guffawed, "I'd carry a saddle,
That did it. Her spirit was
She settled into a sudden
from which no amount of
could lure her.
attempted to tempt her with
of high-octane gasoline, to
avail; she received a
of fancy motor oil,
tt rallied not.
From that day forward she
herself firmly into a
rtyred enjoyment of her
brake linings and her
The Hood Canal Garden Club
members, under the direction of
their president, Mrs. llene L. Ager,
made from baby food jars 165
Santas which were filled with hard
candy and placed upon Christmas
Day dinner trays in Mason General
Hospital, Fir Lane Terrace
Convalescent Center and Shelton
Manor Nursing Home. Twenty-five
of the novelties were also given to
the children of Rogers School.
Women assisting in the project
were the Mesdames Mattie
Backlund, Jenny ttoff, Frances
Moake, Erna Martin and Maxine
Visser of Lilliwaup; the Mesdames
Virginia Allison, Anna Johnson,
Mac Dean and Anne Rowe of
Potlatch; Mrs. Jennie Hutchins,
Shelton; and Mrs. Bessie Stolen
and Mrs. llene Ager of Hoodsport.
Students Named
To Honor Roll
Named to the Dean's Honor
Roll in Wenatchee Valley
Community College is Janet
Stroshine, the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll Stroshine of Shelton.
)tic carburetoritis. The old ,,,-L,
'ar became a bit of a Potl Planned
'l~ochondriac, happily adding A~o~' potluck and regular
ailments to those that meeting will be held by the
too real.
As I joyfully welcome the
Year, wending my daily way
an auto that is clean and warm
k dry, I am swept with waves of
tersweet nostalgia at the
g thoughts of my
Veterans of World War I Barracks
No. 1462 and Auxiliary in the
Memorial Hall next Thursday.
DRESSES
DPW To Meet
old red wreck, now fading, Daughters of the Pioneers of
1971, irretrievably into the Washington will meet a"
) . .. . t noon on
oI my none too silent past
" " • January 6 in the Timbers
Restaurant.
of the things
resolved to do
ineteen hundred For variety in cooking frozen
seventy two vegetables, use bouillon instead of
those that I should water for the cooking liquid
rights, have done
neteen hundred Eggs should be stored with
seventy one. the llarge end up.
. ~UUiD qmllb ~ .qlm..~p .~nb .OD .~ .~lllP .OD .q~..~b .qmb .~D .,lmD ~
CLINT WILLOUR !
~o:~ ~! riii:i~ !i ~iil, ~h~reeniw2u~riii I
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Y
O0
in
am
laze
Having ham for New Year's
Day dinner? Then you'll be
interested in Ann Zimmerschied's
famous ham-glaze.
While stationed in Hawaii
with her Navy-career husband,
Norman, Mrs. Zimmerschied was
noted for her holiday ham
dinners.
"Sailors stopped by to say
'Happy New Year', she recalls,
"and we'd always ask them to
stay for dinner - I just added
another potato to the pot!"
Ann and her husband, now an
officer at the Washington
Corrections Center, came to
Shelton six years ago after his
retirement from the Navy.
"We first saw the state of
Washington in 1955," Ann
reminisces. "When we traveled
across this beautiful green land we
decided that this is where we'd
live some day."
Born and reared in the state
of Virginia, she says: "It's
beautiful there, but I'll take
Washington any time!"
Although Mrs. Zimmerschied
was active in Civil Defense while
in Hawaii, and was a member of
Navy Wives Club, she no longer
holds membership in any
organizations.
"1 am too busy just trying to
keep up with my daughter's
activities," she explains.
Ann chauffeurs
eleven-year-old Lori and the
neighbor girls to various school
and church affairs. They are
active in the Assembly of God
Church.
"I enjoy bowling," Ann
declares, "and I often substitute
but I don't bowl regularly with
any team."
She sews, making all of her
daughter's clothing and most of
her own. She crochets, and she's
learning to knit.
The Zimmerschieds have two
older sons, Gene and Gerald, both
mplime
ANN ZIMMERSCHIED is famous for her glazed holiday
ham. Her poodle's name is Gidget.
of whom were graduated from
high school in Hawaii, where
Gene attended college for one
year. There are now three
grandchildren.
" We lived in Hawaii for six
years," Ann states, "and 1 became
friends with a Chinese woman
who taught me wine-cookery.
"1 also learned about raw
fish," she continues. "It's served
with a dipping sauce that's hot
enough to cook the stuff!"
Although Ann and her
husband see eye-to-eye on most
things, including a pet poodle
named Gidgit, they cannot agree
on the pronunciation of their last
name. He says "shide", with a
long "I"; she says "sheed".
Her recipe for ham-glaze was
acquired long ago from a friend.
Ann has altered and perfected it
to suit her own taste and she finds
it a favorite with all who try it.
"It looks beautiful," she
states, "and tastes as good as it
looks!"
ILENE L. AGER of Hoodsport, right, and Mattie Backlund
of Lilliwaup pose with a few of the 165 Santa Claus
containers made by the members of the Hood Canal Garden
Club. Mrs. Ager is president of the group and Mrs. Backlund
is treasurer.
Pineapple Ham
and Yam Glaze
Mix together
1/2 C. melted butter
1 C. granulated sugar
V2 C. brown sugar
3 Tbsp. corn starch
3 Tbsp. lemon juice
¼ tsp. ground cloves
1 Heaping Tbsp. prepared
mustard
1 9-0z. can crushed pineapple
3/4 C. maraschino cherries, plus
juice for extra coloring and flavor.
1½ to 3,/4 C. sherry, according to
taste
Cook over medium heat until
sauce thickens; allow it to cool.
Arrange yams around ham and
baste with cooled sauce, covering
yams well. Turn once during
baking and baste again. Decorate
top of ham with whole cherries,
using whole cloves to secure
them. Across center top of ham
arrange sliced pineapple. Peach
halves may also be used as a
garnish, or alternate slices of
apples, peaches and pineapple.
The recipe makes sufficient glaze
for a large ham; or glaze a small
one and freeze the extra sauce.
Annual Clearance
SHOE SALON
::i:'~?N~,~ Values to Values to V?llues to
,~ DO 00 i or
sale Priced Sale Priced Sale Priced
~'~i!i::iiiiiii:i!ii::iii!!::
PERSONALITY! BEVERLY! SBISCAI CROSSTOWN!
These famous ~ames alone tell you what
/~ fabulous values are yours at these low sale
pricesl The Season's Best Styles, Colors
and Materialsl All sizes but not in all stylesl
Scholarships
Are Awarded
Central Washington State
College students from Olympia
and Shelton have been named
winners of the first Alva E.
Treadwell scholarships, presented
in honor of a business
administration professor who
retired this year after 34 years
service to the college.
David L. Padgett, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Padgett of
Olympia, and Gary M. Holt, son of ...................
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Holt, Rt. 2,
Shelton, were selected for $125
scholarships. Holt is a senior
majoring in accounting and .........................
finance.
Mrs. Pi'outy
To Hostess
The next meeting of the Navy
Mothers Club will be held at 7:30
p.m. next Thursday in the home
of Mrs. Ray Prouty, 1519 Center
St.
On December 13 Mrs. Victor
Franklin hostessed a Christmas
party and dinner in her Island
Lake home. Attending were the
Mesdames Daisy Underwood, Nell
Dahlman, Mildred Prouty, Eunice
Sharp, Clara Stuck, Elen Evans,
lla Chase, Mary Baxter, Gertrude
Westcott, Ada Gustofson, Hester
Ogden, Mabel Aitken and Bertha
Johnson.
Rich Walker
Engagement
Announced
• Mr. and Mrs. Richard B.
Robbins announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Mattie Fuller Robbins, to David
Adrian Tatosian, the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Haig A. Tatosian of
Bedford, Mass.
"I hope to be a golf pro like
my dad," says Rich Walker, the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Walker.
Rich works for his father on
the Bayshore golf course during
the spring and summer months.
in The Planning
Approach a seed display with
anticipation. Think how much
fun you're going to have picking
and choosing the perfect flowers
and vegetables, the perfect color
schemes and taste ticklers.
Packets of flower seeds
usually are at the top of the
display rack, those of vegetable
seeds lower down. The alphabet
starts at the left of the top row of
packets and continues, first to the
right, then down to the left of the
next row.
This makes it easy for you to
find the packet of seeds you wish
to grow.
When you reach the vegetable
seeds, the alphabet starts over
again. But in this part of the rack
you'll find that some seeds are in
packets while others are in small
boxes. The seeds in boxes are
those that are large, like corn,
peas and beans. A packet
wouldn't accommodate enough of
these to make planting worth
while.
Usually a box full of these
large seeds is sufficient for 50 feet
of row. But look on the backs of
the boxes and of the packets for
vital statistics - they're in print as
are also directions for sowing and
time to start seeds, indoors or
out.
With modern methods of
printing, colors of either
vegetables or flowers, particularly
the latter, shown on the faces of
the packets, are quite accurate.
Thus, if you want to
formulate a certain color scheme,
you can hold 3 or 4 packets
fanwise, as you would playing
cards, and have a fair idea of what
plant or flower seeds will look
like side by side.
Remember that best color
schemes allow one color to
dominate so perhaPS you need a
second packet of the flower with
that hue.
Vegetables can be
color-schemed too. Consider the
attractive arrangement in George
Washington's garden at Mount
Vernon. There green and red
cabbages alternate in the row, a
striking and thoroughly practical
idea.
You might try arranging your
garden using Ruby lettuce, with
red leaves, in alternate rows or
parts of rows with a green leaved
variety. Or grow purple-podded
Royalty snap beans alongside the
more common, green-fruited
kinds. Try it! "
Club Will Meet
The Eastern Star Social Club
will meet for a noon potluck
luncheon in the Masonic Temple
on Tuesday.
I Spotlight
Golf and other sports head his list
of hobbies, and he also enjoys
music, especially rock-and-roll.
"1 used to play piano and
drums", he states, "but no more
- now l'm just a listener."
Walker studies civics, senior
English, typing and physical
science, with a speech class this
semester to be replaced by
Sociology later in the year. He
will attend either Western
Washington State College or
Washington State University.
Born in Renton on April 2,
1954, Rich Walker came to
Shelton just in time to begin his
education in Pioneer School
where his brother, Neal, now
attends second grade and his
sister, Teresa, is a sixth-grader. He
has an older brother and sister,
both Shelton High School
graduates.
Rich is president of Boys'
Club, for which he served as
secretary in his junior year and as
representative as a sophomore. As
a sophomore and a junior he
participated in basketball and in
golf. He has for two years been a
member of S Club and of Honor
Society.
Dinner Slated
The Christmas dinner of the
Shelton Rock and Mineral Society
will be held at 6:30 p.nL today in
the PUD auditorium. Ham will be
furnished by the club, with the
balance of the meal potluck.
Call Us About d~/~--"~
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426-2646
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Thursday, December 30, 1971 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 7