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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
March 1, 1973     Shelton Mason County Journal
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March 1, 1973
 
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KRAMER put tile reader of those who have Vnplished much, witnessed events, or known interesting and enables us to share ariously. The Library has several which have been its collection of more ,000 books about iting people. e best selling Memoirs of Sir 5,000 Nights at the the reader into the of opera and into ackstage dramas the sees. Here is a very into life in an rFrom the Nets of a Salmon Eric Forrer writes of attitude and nee and what he says is tale, part love song and dangers of and part chronicle of the of his fierce desire te Ingenious Mr. OUgh, Geoffery aim has been to glamorization, as he plain facts of Thomas OUgh's life are entertaining in His life had all the of a gay, romantic, historical novel and tile makings of a lively colorful film. W.A. Swanberg recounts in fascinating detail the career of ttenry R. Luce and the impact of Time, Incorporated on our world in Lute and His Empire. The book is alive with vivid portraits of the men and women close to Lute and it portrays and assesses an extraordinarily elusive man who was one of the most powerful men in America. Swan Among the Indians by Lucile McDonald is a fascinating in-depth biography of an amazing man, James G. Swan, who did the first scientific research among the coastal Indians of Washington Temtory. ttere are authentic and warmly human insights into his daily life with the Indians, his work with Governor Isaac Stevens on the Indian treaties and his now priceless collections of native arts and crafts for the Smithsonian Institution. These books and many more are available at the Shelton Public Library. The library is open from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday. MANKIND ARE an incorrigible race. Give them but bugbears and idols - it is all that they ask. William Hazlitt rail e moves n By CARMEN YATES ttARSTINE - Since last fall when Jack and Marilyn Laubach and their two boys purchased their permanent home they have been spending every spare moment and even spare second they could squeek out of everyday and every week to complete the numerous and at times it seemed like endless projects they wanted to accomplish prior to the move (Marilyn says her dreams still wear her out due to the fact she can't seem to quit painting). So over the big three-day weekend with the aid of some very marvelous friends, they plunged in and made the big move. Although the two places are only but a matter of a few blocks away, a move is still a big job and isn't diminished by such things as a short distance. Then the family had a week to make a semblance of order out of the furniture, personal possessions and other things prior to last weekend. And that was when the rest of the family's belongings were due to arrive from the warehouse where they've been stored since the Laubach family moved to the island from (Talifornia. For the boys, Evan and Gary, it was almost like having Christmas all over again. Opening the boxes and going through them to find possessions they hadn't seen for 1o these many months was somewhat like slipping an extra birthday in this year. By the first of this week Marilyn thought things were beginning to fall into the right places for the most part. The whole family was beginning to have hopes things would settle down into a nice comfortable routine. The Jarrell's Cove Marina Boatcl has some new temporary residents, namely the John Hankinn family who moved here this past week from Oldtown, Idaho. Hankinn is employed in construction, which means frequent moves, so the family feels they probably won't be here much more than two or three months. The ttankinns have three children. The oldest youngster is a boy who attends school in Shelton and a girl at Pioneer. They also have a preschool boy at home. Welcome, folks. Ted and Elsie received a call last week that another close and long-time friend has died. Elsie and Mrs. Dean Wenner have been friends since before Ted and Elsie were married. They drove up to Anacortes last Saturday to attend Our bridal registry ... to make sure your gift is just right. you'll find most in patterns and 'n all our giftware. * Free Parking * Free Gift Wrap 5th & Franklin 426-3283 see dance group at sc Approximately 2,400 Mason County students will be in attendance at the Shelton ttigh School gymnasium today, Thursday, for a pair of special performances by the First Chamber Dance Company of New York. The FCDC is in the state of Washington in a third annual tour for Washington State Cultural Enrichment Program audiences. The tour tiffs year has been made possible by the CEP in cooperation with the Washington State Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts Coordinated Residency Touring Program. Students from the Shclton. Hood Can'd, Grapeview, Kamilche Valley, Pioneer and Southside school districts viewed the performances in Shelton. Approximately one hundred high school students from Mason County traveled to the Seattle Center Playhouse on February 27 and 28 to attend special perforlnances of the well-known stage play, "The Tavern." The play is produced by the Seattle Repertory Theatre and presented by the Washington State Cultural Enrichment Program in a series of 16 performances for students. Sixty students from Shelton were joined by students from Mary M. Knight and North Mason school districts at the performances in Seattle. Lowrey ORGANS & PIANOS . RENT OR BUY ON EASY TERMS MUSIC BOX 205 Cota 426-4302 _ ~ ~ ~ .,~b" ",~b ~ ~ ,eI~ CLEAN SIDEWALL RADIAL DARTS ON~HSHOULDERS TRIPLE TEMPERED NYLON CORD CONSTRUCTION Size 6.50x13 blackwall tubeless plus $1.73 Fed. Ex. Tax and old tire. OTHER SIZES LOW PRICED Sizes TOO! 7.75x14 8.25x14 7.75x15 8.25x15 plus $2.09 to $2.30 Fed. Ex. Tax, depending on size, and old tire. t ALIGNING 'qCK TIRE SfI|Vl¢! I • $tk and East Main 19th and pacific Front end Grove 28 gumell Ketchikan, Alaska Puyallup Tacoma Shelton Ilremerton • BRAKES • BATTERIES • BALANCING • RECAPPING Srrt,ing \'m.tbu'c l XlolrJri t ./ r Or'or 'cam ew ome the funeral. They had planned to stay until Sunday evening, but another friend received a call from the island while Ted and Elsie were out to dinner with friends saying that the marina was having pump problems and there was no water. They gave the Porters (their caretakers) a number to call for help and by the time they arrived home in the middle of the day on Sunday the problems were all solved. Gordon Larsen returned home late last week after spending all week back in New York on a business trip. When asked about the weather back there he seemed very happy to be back home on Harstine Island. Can't understand why! The only thing he said about the weather was that it was five degrees above zero and it snowed a good share of the time he was back there. Come to think of it guess that is enough of a good reason to appreciate the mild Washington weather we've been having. Although it may be a little wet around the edges, at least the 'wet' doesn't have to be shoveled. Last Friday a group of gals held an impromptu surprise party for a former island lady, Mrs. Edith Smally. Those attending included Thora Seward, Helen Lammers, Beulah Hitchcock, WASHER Model WWA 7000 COLOR TV 18" FREEZER Model CA 12 on isJan Hilda Williams, Margy Archer, Sherry Waite (granddaughter of the guest of honor), Dot Smith and Lila Peugh. Don't forget this week is bookmobile. Location at the old island schoolhouse. Also a last minute reminder that Women's Club is today. The hostess for today's meeting is Shirl Larson. = =- __--= i i _=_ Kamilche Grange Hall Every First & Third Music by the Tune Toppers : March 3 --9:30 p.m.-2 a.m. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - = = To Help YOu Know and Appreciate... i --=--. I = i = = i i = = I I i _= i i i i = = i = = = i I i i FRED CORNELL I i = = I Fred Cornell joined the Shelton Police Department in May of 1972 just as the weekend of Forest Festival was E upon us. At that time he became a probationary patrolman.Z = Fred, a native of California, began his education at E Loma Linda University in Riverside, California. His education was interrupted by two years in the Army. After his honorable discharge from the service, Fred and his wife i moved to Washington. After over five years as a private investigator both in the Los Angeles area and in E Washington, Fred began his career in law enforcement. in college he majored in physical education, but took classes in narcotics and dangerous drugs, defensive driving, accident prevention, breatholizer, and numerous others. He i plans to continue his education in law enforcement. ! Fred and his wife, Jan, a native of Kansas, and their two "i I Washingtonian sons, Todd and Robert, like living and working in Shelton. Patrolman LUMBERMEN'S Young dedicated officers such as Officer Cornell make Shelton a better place/for all of us to live and work. _= == I = I I ! OF SHELTON 1st & PINE STREET - __= == ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I~~~~~~~~~~~~I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i- 000 Prices reduced to make room for new models/ Hurry, limited time. First time ever, so hurry out to Lanning's at Hoodsport for fabulous floor model SALE! DAYS ONLY - FRI. & SAT. Model SM 150N RANGE Model TA 12 SN in Hoodsport Phone 877-9729 "It pays to drive to Lanning's" WINTER HOURS: 10 - 6, MON. - SAT. If you want to save, see a Lanning's deal! E-Z Terms, Free Delivery Thursday, March 1, 1973 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 17