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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
February 13, 1969     Shelton Mason County Journal
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February 13, 1969
 
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S helton High School: Hoodsport: Girls' Club Gets New Constitution Salmon Eggs In Foster Home During Hatchery Renovation Daughter Tea to be held on April 24. FESTIVAL BUTTON Becky Holland wen the Forest Festival Button design contest. This contest is held in the high school art classes. The bst de- sign is used to decorate ihe merest Festival Buttons• NURSING St. Joseph's School of Nursing will have open house Feb. 17 and March 2. This is for girls interested in nursing. GIRL OF THE MONTH Virginia Medley was chosen as January's Girl of the Month un- der the title of Service. CARNIVAL The date set for the French Club-German Club Mardi-Gras - Fasching is Feb. 25. Foods typical of the two coun- tries will be served along with root beer and hot dogs. There will be game booths and other booths, display tables and sales tables. By SIGRID CRABTREE GLS CLUB Feb. 6 a Girls' Club meeting was held. Business which was discussed included the new con- stitution Which was drawn Ul) after the old one was found last fall, and the Girls' Club Tolo. A COpy of the constitution was Passed out to all the girls at hee.begirllling of the meeting. =,e are six articles which ex- i PlAin the functions of Girls' Club, the jobs held by the officers and executive board .The bylawseets Phined the different ev Lilliwaup: Mike Bloedel Headed Which are sponsored by Girls' umb. These events include the InStallation which is held at the beginning of the year to install the new officers. Parents and guests may be invited by the new members The Homecoming Dance held For Duty In Vietnam ir r the homecoming game -'IS' C lub provides the band, By FRANCES CATTO phoned that they could not come. tickets, chaperones, and pro- gr:s; a TB drive is held dur- th  fall to raise funds for ti0n.vLa °n County TB Associa- nn:: .the father-daughter Ban- -=t Is a dinner held in the ev_fati:g for SHS girls and their U.. '. as gtests. The Tolo is us- .... Ay'ed. in early spring. It is thenvltes the boy dance and • umer-daughter tea is held conjunction with the Home COnornics De artment. o ROUSE p At eb..: ..8 was open House Day la eld College. hi,h house is a time wnen $21, a house will be held at ue,,Pacific College Feb. 15. io COllege conference for jun- "-uege°^" " ,.uelng held at Olympic  eb. 18 Students who °te! this must "have a 2.5 GPA average. al)LO ; F:bneG. iris' Club Wolo will be T,rm 8- 11 p.m. wih "'ll bemeraes,,, of this year's Tolo Progr. Little Arrows". The e,.. ms are being made b ,Ja rs of the Girls' Club. Y Toloraan in charge of the , " H:ris Sytsma. d'J le Tolo is a ,irl invites be qlce h^'-  " Y the CA., ra annually usually in ,. rjy spring arlls h,,, Year the band rovided J me G' ' P Und',, iris Club will be "Sal.in "ma."^ a dance band from Ta- be his year something new will added A ueen a ' Will . : q nd king in  VCted for as couples come 8- V&L PRINCESSES f07, Or girls selected nonfinces •  rrlncesss for the Forest Fes- UVal. T.eThe Princesses are senior irls g • cho°rest Festival Queen is -" worn these girls. le°ing events which Girls' _ Will sponsor are the Tolo b. 15; Father-Daughter Ban'- arch 27; and the Mother- • LILLIWAUP .... Another Lilli- waup vicinity man headed for duty in Vietnam is Mike Bloedel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blocdel. Mike left from Sea-Tac airport Wednesday of last week, after a 30 day leave and was on his way to Coronado, Calif. Here he will be given special survival and orientation training for a few weeks and then a leave of a couple of weeks before going to Saigon. Mike, whose U. S. Navy rank is ETN 2, is in top secret communications work. It may have been a hard win- ter on your plants and shurbs, but Mrs. Lloyd Reeve of Reeves Nursery on the Triton Head road suggests a hopeful outlook. Mrs. Reeves advises homeown- ers not to dig everything up now just because leaves look black or brown and plants or shrubs seem to be in bad condition. Wait and see. Your azaleas and rho- dodendrons may have buds turn- ing dark and dropping, but there will probably be new growth and buds, even though they might not bloom in the coming sea- son. Some perennials may look bad, but she believes in giving them three or four months before deciding on the amount of freeze damage. Mrs. Reeves, herself, lost a few of her better varieties of primroses, but she put some in the greenhouse and says that new middle leaves may come from the plant's crown. Don't give up, but give everything more time before digging up things. At the nursery, the Reeves are anxious to get at the soil under the snow, as ordinarily this is the time they would be planting seeds. Time to take off that win- ter overcoat ! Members of the Lllliwaup Community Club never give up. They are planning again for a meeting. The one slated to be held at the Elmer Edwards home last Friday had to be postponed because of snow which hit other areas more than Lilliwaup. Mem- bers living south of the Lilllwaup WEEKEND DESERT FLOWER "SO-DRY" ANTI-PERSPIRANT in Spray, Creme or Roll-On 112 PRICE SPECIAL- Oese Flower Beauty Bath Bath Oil for Dry Skin l/Z PRICE SALE Feb. 21 the potluck supper, bus- iness meeting and card party are again scheduled with high hopes of enjoying t h i s community gathering which members have greatly missed this year. The meeting will be held in the com- munity hall, starting with the supper at 6 p.m. and President Edwards is expecting a good turn out for the business and social evening. If again, weather proves to be a deterrent (massive?) members can watch the paper or call the president for information. Ten o'clock shoppers will get the early pick of the baked good- ies offered for sale next Satur- day morning in Hoodsport by members of Elinor Chapter, OES. The bake sale will be held at WaR's Marine Supply. Fishing news is about non-ex- istant these days. At Rest While Park they can't even get through to their boathouse yet, and the Earl Mauges have both been ill with colds and flu. One day recently we saw Wes- ley Wright, who lives up the IAttle Lllliwaup Creek Valley, sit- ing on his folding canvas fishing chair. Fishing? Oh, no. It was his rest chair in between per- iods of shoveling snow from the long road going into the Wright home from the highway. At times Mrs. Wright took up a shovel too and one time we saw him with another assistant, his grand- daughter, Patty Wright of Shel- ton. He kept it open through all the storms and pileup from high- way equipment. This was a long road "that had no turning." Fred E. Johnson, well-known 87-year-old retired logger of Jor- stad Creek, is now a patient in the Fir Lane Nursing Home at Shelton. WIND &WEATHER HAND & BODY LOTION 1/2 PRICE SPECIAL Nell's Pharmacy 5th & Franklin 426-3327 By DONA O'NEIL of the Chit Chat Club, Mrs. John Laramie an(l Mrs. James Dean HOODSPORT -- After three years of full time bookkeeping it's back to reporting Hoodsport happenings and doing chores at home. Off to the moth balls with the wool suits and high heeled shoes and back to the slacks, sweat shirts, and garden gloves. On with the news. FINCil CREEK After three months at hard labor, Finch Creek has under- gone quite a face lifting through the courtesy of the tate Depart- ment of Fisheries. Fifteen hun- dred feet of twenty-four inch concrete pipe-line has been re- plac.ed with a thirty-inch steel pipeline. Finch Creek is the "fresh water" source for the Hoodsport Salmon Hatchery. During this renovation the hatchery was shut down which necessitated a temporary foster home for the salmon eggs in stock. The eggs were trucked to the Adams Hatchery in Purdy Canyon. The project should be complet- ed in another month. Meanwhile some of the young fish, already hatched at the foster home, have been moved back to Hoodsport. The fisheries construction crew has nearly completed the pipe- line and now will be building rip rap along the creek. This larger pipeline greatly increases the fresh water capacity for the hatchery, thereby greatly increas- ing the salmon population poten- tial at the hatchery. IT NEVER SNOWS IN WASHINGTON Believe it or not these words have been said. Well it may not snow in Washington, but it sure snows in Hoodsport. And what a welcome for a vacation- ing Iowan making her first trip to this great evergreen state. For weather like this Mrs. Lucille Van Buren could have stayed in Sioux City. And to add insult to injury, she spent her second day here helping her daughter, Mrs. James O'Neil, chip ice out of the driveway. This netted her nothing better than a bad cold which in turn limits her grand- son spoiling capacities. Mrs. Van Buren is here for a few weeks to see her new grandson, Pat- 'rick Michael, and to attend the graduation ceremonies of her son, Chuck Ferguson, from boot camp at Fort Lewis. When asked how she likes Washington, Mrs. Van Buren says that the oysters are real good. Perhaps she will come again in the summer - if there is such a thing anymore. BIRTHDAY PARTY With appropriately decorated rocking chairs, a cane and shawl for each, and nine well wishers and everyone is welcome to at- lend. The fashions will go on and Don Collins could find no obvious reason for the situation celebrated their birthdays toget- her. Mrs. Merle Lindgren played host to the lively group in her home at the (;rove. Mrs. IAn- gren's mother, Mrs. William Woody, was special guest for the evening. The girls had a gay time rocking away, chatting and drinking coffee. FASHION DEBUT .Tulle Si,umons, seven year old oaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Niel Simmons, Jr., will be making her fashion debut with her mot- her, Donna, Mrs. T. I. Noten- boom and Mrs. Stew Evans at the Olympia Community Center March 5. They will be represent- ing the Tiny Tim Orthopedic Guild in this style show featur- ing Mc Calls patterns sponsored by the Olympia Area Council. The proceeds from this produc- tion will go to the Children's Orthopedic Hospital in Tacoma parade at 8 l).m. and $1 dona- tions will l)e accepted. All of this and refreshments too. Anyone who would like to attend the pro- gral)] slay make arrangements by c(mtacting Mrs. Tom Connal- ly of Ih)odsport. The next meeling of the Tiny Tim Orthopedic Guild will be at the home of Mrs. Ron Goes in Hoodsport. Feature of the even- ing will be a "White Elephant Sale". Remember the date, Ma. 13 at 8 p.m. FIRE STATION MYSTERY AnybcMy for p(xl - of water that is. A game of pool was pro- hinged long enough Saturday to carry on a mop up oixration in the garage of the fire station. For some unknown reason the floor was covered with three to four inches of water. But there wasn't any water standing in the pool room• Dutch Notenboom and no other solution than a mop J.st Arrived! A Carlo00l of the World's Most Dependable Appliances from Shop Mell Spec/a/ Value - Showdown-Savings We've dug out of the snow and found over 60 NEW Cars and Trucks - 63 USED Cars and Trucks. See: Art Nicklaus George HasBrouck Wally Dundas Darrel Andrews Earl French for fhe Besf Deal on Lorgest Selection Ever! Quick Parts & Service Men. - Sat. MIC Ins. Rental Cars M II Chev-O/ds , "ino. 1927" /I and bucket. Well it beats fighting fire. FAMOUS LAST WORD8 "Don't worry Forence, I know how to drive in the snow." After bearing of the increasingly bad road conditions, Mrs. Notenboom and Mrs. Jim Jayne decided to hightail it home early from their 20 for about thirty cub scouts from Pack III who will be at the) skating rink in Shelton at 6:30 p.m. with their den mothers Mrs. Ron Goes, Mrs. Richard Laney, Mrs. Ted Itichert, and den father Ed Johnston. And so in el(ing let's hope that next week the topic of con- versation will be the sunshine. shopping spree in Shelton. About Zm'EW yK- I two miles from the Potlatch Park the Notemboorm car hit slush i LIFE INS= , and began to slide. It ended up in a snowbank and was followed  ! shortly by another car. Every- I I one was retrieved without the Dick Kervo aid of a wrecker and all pas- FIELD UNDERWRITER sengers and groceries survived the incident in fine condition. I Life- Family- Mortgage | But the snow bank, as of this , " edio, ! . writing, is not doing too well.  Bus. 943-1214 - Res. 491-2376 I CUB SCOUTS ROLL ON  5804 Pacific Avenue Roller skating will be the name - Laoey, Washington of the game the evening of Feb. m-.l.D.,,.-.,m.,, Here's the Sale you have been waiting fore It happens once a year, our floor is JAMMED with a carload of new, dependable Maytags at savings you will like[ FAMILY-SIZED WASHER i?:*' • Just loaded with features! • Two- speed wash and spin • 3 water temp. selector • water level con- trol • safety switch. II III II _ UP TO sl I Ill FAMILY-SIZED DRYER New "HALO-OF-HIAT" DRYERS with ex- clusive ELECTRONIC CONTROL ELIMINATES ureder-drylng and averbaklng. Trimmer than previous models by 3 inches-.-yet this New Generation wonder has the same big capacity as the New Genera. teen Washer. Its special Electronic Con. tree reacts to the moisture in your clothes. The dryer shuts off at the pre- selected degree of dryness you desire: Air Fluff, Domp Dry, Permanent Press or Regular. For MOM on 00alentir e s Day SAVE MAYTAG DISHWASHER I 2nd&CotsStrset. APPLIANCES • TV e STEREO • FURNITURE -o.,,,-, -- -- --  --  [ J L_ -- IIIIIII - III II Thursday, February 13, 1969 - Shelton-Mason County Journal  Page 11