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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
March 11, 1965     Shelton Mason County Journal
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March 11, 1965
 
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PAGE 14 SHELTON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAI --Published in "Chr st na. to rn, U.g.A.', 8helton, Washington i, ,i, m- Thl :::. L /i?:~ i:! ii¸ i i . !i' ~i L¸ !:i¸ i "p 0! Sk " t To igh! Feolowsha okommsh To Mee n By Mary at Mill Fellowship of ttle Comnmnity tcr and family, Mr. and Mrs. Sinm- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson, Church will meet at Lhc home of on JacoL. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Valley, and :Mrs. Eric Sjoholm Thursday aL Mr. and Mrs. Keit,~ ztursL and Mr. and Mrs. Vern Miller look 8 p.m. Mrs. Mary Hunter will he family of Arcadia called at the advantage of the go.d weather co-hostess and Mrs. Louise Huds-tmme of Mr. and Mrs. 13ill Hunter Sunday and drove to Chch,'tlis peth of Laeey will give a demon-Monday evening, where" they enjoyed a dinner at stration on decorative stationery. " Mr. and Mrs. George Barkley the Kit Carson restaurant. :Mrs. Greeta Van Clea ve and, Tinl 'A, ete diruler glleat:; el! Mr. and Mr. and Mr:~. Eri(: Sjohohn drove to tloodsport Sunday afternoon where they visited Mrs. Laura KEEPS OUT COLD, • LA~'rs FOR YEARS HOLDS IN HEAT, _. Saves up to 40% on fuel r~~Vs.1:..a,t, ct.EAR Sq. ~d, --WE HAVE GENUINE FLEX-O-GLASS-.. Plus Such Other Winter Protectors as: Aluminum Windows • Storm Doors Storm Window Kits A.,;elqon. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Stanley and son H.~¢ndy of Shelton were Sm~- day dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dona!(I I)oak. The Desk's grand- SOIl, Mike, .fl,1o was a we(;kend guest. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Donaldson were dimler gucsls of Mr. and Mrs. John Banks of Arcadia Sun- day. . . Mr. and Mrs. George Richert ot Olympia visited his parents, Mr. and Mls. Ted RicherL Sunday af- ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Valley were dinner guests of Mr. an¢l Mrs. Alvin Hulbert Saturday eve- ning. Wilt. AND MRS, DON Miller of Seattle stopped for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Johnson af- ter attending a convention in Port- land, Ore. Mr. Miller was one of ihe three salesmen chosen for his outstanding accomplishments. Miss Edith Johnson will be the guest speaker at the 11 a,m. ser- vice of the Skokomish Community Church. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Johnson entertained with a dinner for Miss Eva Lloyd of Chicago who will be Miss Edith Johnson's co-worker ON MISSIONARY ASSIGNMENT 8rs. Horace Describes Trip oChile0n Medical " " Trip The following letter is from :Mrs. Zella Mounts, wife. of Rev. Horace Mounts, who is spend- ing several months on a mission- ary assignment in Chile. Mrs. Mounts, a graduate laboratory technician, is helping to set up a laboratory and teach native Chin can \v~unen some of the basic hos- pit'd ]at)oratory procedures for a mi'~'fion hospital, Netwa Imperial, Chile. De'.u' Friends in Shelton: I thought you might be inter- csted in some of my impressions and experiences since coming to Chile on tiffs special mission proj- ect .As I sit to write this letter ttmre is a very definite nip of fall in the air and l expect the trees will begin to turn color within the next weel¢ or so. It takes time to develop a per- spective on the traveling I ,did from the Portland ,Airport Mon- day morning, Jan. 19, and my ar- on their retm~ to Columbia, South America, where they are serving as missionaries. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Arvid John- son Mr. and Mrs. Haldane John.. son, and the honored guest, Miss Lloyd. Insulation • Weather-Stripping CUSTOM CRAFTED 14' cumc FOOT LUMBER OOMPANY (EVER!) REFRIGERATOR PHONE 426-4522 FREEZER ON WHEELS- ROLLS OUT FOR could. First a word about the air travel which I can now catch at .least a glimmer of how one might get the bug. There is a sensation to jet flight, at 30,000 ft. covering 610 land-miles-per-hour with :6 take-offs and .landings that is gripping and I'm sure that the most sophisticated travelers have the same sensation of ,power and. rival in Nueva Imperial, Friday, Jan. 29. To be a woman and to be alone on your first trip abroad in the confussion of a new language, airports with lines and regulations, taxis and stran- gers for new friends, is a tension producing situation. I cannot say I enjoyed it in the sense of re- laxation, but I did absorb all the experiences a n d im~pressions I i feel two things in Mexico City .... i t h e emphasis on education. I schools, teachers, books, and stu- dents, and the erection of build- ings throughout the city. Every block seems to have some con- struction in progress. I was very pleased with the emphasis on art and color. I saw a gaily pattern- ON HILLCREST I MrODJEL CTF l14F EASY CLEANING P oomy fresh food refrlgeratorsection * pacious freezer with room for 103 lbs. ' of frozen food . . • Never needs defrosting--anywherel REFRIGERATORS ON WHEELS... an ex- : Over 21 sq. ft.of shelf area a Hotpoint feature, makes cleaning, sweep~ • Twin Crispers hold nearly bushel elusive Separate butter bin. Built-in egg stor ge off,sits and vegetableShalf .. ilk mg and waxing a snap. You'll never dread moving • Dee , door shelves hold ,gaimn m your refrigerator againl containers without squeezing CHECK THESE OTHER HOTPOINT ,SPECIALS/ Other Hotpoint refrigerators start as low as $368.95 Sce these additional premier specials HOTPOINT ELECTRIC RANGES from ......................................................................... $138.88 HOTPOINT AUTOMATIC 15 LB. WASHER .............................................................. $248.95 HOTPOINT AUTOMATIC DRYER from .................................................................... $148.95 HOTPOINT FOOD FREEZERS from ..................... : ...................................................... $178.95 [e~h & ValJey Appli~=¢e Second and Cota @ Where You Get The Best ,Deal, By George Phone 426-4663 imastery that the World War lI !pilot recorded in "High Flight." There is a mystery about the con- quest• of space, distance and time. fi_nd the element of fear. A'LL THE WAY I WAS blessed with good window seaLs and for the first Lime I saw ML. I!ood, Jefferson, the Three Sisters, Cra- tcr Lake, Shasta and Lm~sen in one hour and a half. Tim char- acter of the land changes rapidly once you leave Los Angeles fo'r Baja, California Barren, un- inhabited coastlines, flat, then .with rugged nude hills and mmnl- tains into Mexico City. Mexico City itself is overwhelm- ling with "six million people i apread out one story high. Free- ways remind one of Los An- i.geles..Only the poor replace the i vast middle classes of our cities. My hostess was a charming 24 year old women who is a profes- i sor and research worker in geog- raphy aL the University. We had a good tour of the University. The students were starting to xegiaLer ~o the administration building was a busy place while the rest of the campus was rath- er quiet. Can you imagine 70,000 students registering with at least 15,000 being turned away for lack of facilities? Everywhere you ed open-wall construction which turned out to be .the side of a multi-storied parking lot. Most businesses ps well as the more elaborate are exponents of mod- ern architecture. The feeling is an entirely different one from the modern art at home. The col- ors give .it a sense of intense warmth and life. In all three capitals (Mexico City, Lima, and Santiago) I maw the modern and beautiful next to the ancient and sordid. Across the street from the upper-middle class Mexican homes with access to the University campus, were the homeless ones who lit fires to keep warm while they slept at night. At least they had the fire for part of the night. None of the homes have equipment for heat and it happened to be very cold while I was there. The foothills surrounding the city had snow on them the morning I left. It was a pleasure to see the museum of Modern Art: the chapels of the great Cathedral of which to nmst used that day was the chapel of the Black Christ; the residential area built on the volcanic rock where through open gates we could catch glimpses of the fabulous rock gardens o~. the wealthy; a brief look at the two downtown Methodist churches and the bookstore which houses the literature production for the Methodist and other cooperating Protestant denominations f o r Central and South America. I left Mexico City Jan. 23. The midnight ride through the city by taxi was almost surrealistic-- streets absolutely deserted of peo- ple and traffic in such an im- mense population area. Night life is certainly locked up. One last- ing picture is that of the locked fence, whether it be .wood, stone, ,wrought iron or steel--the homes and stores have the same plan-- the enclosed fence with the lock, ed gate, which I take as a com- mentary on the economic and moral conditions in a city that is said to be still growing at a rate of half a million a year. The streets are well-lit and the city was beautiful from ,the air, even at 4 a.m. It was a sweltering day when r landed at Lima with my sweat- er and coat. Quite a contrast of weather and city. I stayed at the Colegio Maria Alderado, a Meth- odist school for .girls, and met a host of interesting people. I went to Sunday school, church, and a Woman,s Society meeting at which the U. S. Ambassador to Peru spoke. That evening I at- tended the devotional ,service at the home-headquarters of the Wy- clif Bible translators. They main- tain this house in Lima as a re- treat from their main working area in the Amazon jungle area of Peru. One ~of their members had Just reached and obtained custody of a boy from a tribe whose ,langUage ~has never been written. They have been trying unsu¢cem~fully to ,make this con- tact through the years, so every- body was excited at the news. I visited two museums in Lima and in one they had set-ups of the actual roonts of the Spanish con- quistadores and 'those were a whole history in themselves. The Indian relies through the cen- turies are amazng. The textiles and pottery really bring the ar- cheology you read about to life. One of the most impressive features of South America from the air is the V~tness of the con- tinent and the sparsity of popu- lation outside the capitals. Over the northern :part of Peru is the most forbidding, and occasionally in the folded hills you could see some cultivation and perhaps a little.piece of road. The distance from one visible bit of human habitation to another gives one the concept of isolation of the mountain Indians. Arrived in Santiago on Jan. 26 and my Chilean life began with the Lowerys meeting me at the airport. I got the four boxes of medical equipment through cus- toms without duty. Apparently that was nl,ost unusual and a lucky break, for it was the talk of the next three days in Santi- agO. I think it was just luck, but that luck was a two-edged affair, since my personal baggage was apparently lost. (To be continued next week) Southside Girl Is ' ,'. I ' "'. ' I suppose ~ol'YlMrs],|[I)UTISID |k|ll|(hl .... ; to have their \Vhiic stocks ; I)oolcs up to date by tile next and 1)inl¢ carnations decorated thc meeting. Theclub insets at 1Luth Asbury Methodist church in T'~- Ann TroizersApril 7. coma for the ceremony perf(n'med Arcadia club met at the heine by Rev. Miller Feb. 13 of Miss of Opal Asche Wednes(tav with Sally Hall of Arcadia and Larry V¢ilma Delong, Vi HusLon, i)auline Biil'Noll. Miss Hall is the daugh- Emsley, Margaret Asche, Margar- ter of Mrs. Wilma Monroe of Sun- cL Willidson. Mary Albaugh, Jean nyside and the groom's parents \¥eiander and son, Zehna Hodgson, a~'e Mr. and Mrs. Bill Nell of Ms- Avis Saeger is a new member of pie Valley. The bride was given the club. Mmcmbers played games away by Richard Miller of Arcad- and winners were Mrs. VCalter ia., the bride made her wedding \¥elander and Mrs. Axci Willid- dress that was ballerina length ,;on. Zelma Hodgson won the door of satin, v-neck sheath, sleeveless prize. Tile next meeting will be with an over-dress of nylon lace, heht aL Avis Saeger April 7. round necl¢, three quarter slceves VISITING MR. and Mrs. L. I-I. and veil of net. Asche Wedne,~day were Mr. and The bride carried a bouquet of Mrs. Jinl Baker of Seattle. pink carnations. Mrs. Miriam Cas- Friendship club will meet at the kin was matron (if honor, Augusta home of Phyllis McCniston March Miller of Arcadia took the place of 17. The club met at Pearl Giffords the bride's motl~er. Roger Nell of last Wednesday. Yakima was the groom's best Southside G~'ange Degree team men, whilc the ushers were Don had practice Wednesday at 8 p.m. Nell of Shelton and Rex Nell of for the First and Secoud degree. Maple Valley. Southside Grange Degree team A reception for the newlyweds travels and puts on the First and Look place in the church, and fen- Second Degree at Shelton Valley Lured a four-tier wedding cake March 12. with bells on top. Three tiers had Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Her- largo frosting roses with silver rick and family of Arcadia Sun- leaves and the fourth tier was day for dinner were Mr. and Mrs:' decorated with white sweet peas Sam Herrick of Belfair. with pale green leaves, the cake Spending the weekend with tim was baked and decorated by Polly Bob Herrick children was Andy Swayze of Arcadia. Medcalf. Assisting were Helen E. Miller WIR. AND MRS. ROY Bruin- cut and served the cake and tak- bough and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence mg care of coffee and punch were Madsen Thursday visited in Men- Donna Peacock and Tary Parr. tesano and Elms. Taking care of tile guest book was Guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Kim Nell, in charge of ti~e gifts Putvin and Rose Ann Monday and and opening them were Mrs. Helen Tuesday were Rev. and Mrs. Le- E. Miller and Mrs. Lowell Miller. Roy Kellerman and daughter of Guests attending were Mrs. H. Oak Harbor. , E. Miller, grandmother of the Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred bride, Helen Miller, aunt of theStuck of Cole Road Thursday for bride; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Nell, dinner were Mr. and :Mrs. Wayne groom's grandparents; Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Miller and son, David; Bob and Betty Nell of Shelton, Polly Swayze and Jim Leah and Susan of Arcadia, Wayne Brown, Marybell Brown, Marilyn Brown, Jim Brown, Douer Brown, Lillian Brown, Earlene Cobb, Jeanne Cobb, Maxine Davis, Janice Daris, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Earcrett, Mol- ly Davis, Jim Davis, Betty Nell, Elaine Collins, Erna Benson, Ray and Anita Benson, I-Ia,~ey Ben- son, Elmer and Janet Nell. Bob Nell, Jack Brown, Bruce and Lor- raine Pagel, Roger and Sandra Nell, Angels Parker, ,Toe Cobb and Ralph Nell. The newlyweds are making their home in Shel- ton. MILL CREEK lVhat Nots 4-H club is havina" a bake sale Satur- day at the Thriftway store. Silver Stars met last Tuesday evening at the home of Ralph Barickman. The club's snmlal par- ty will be held March 27 aL Little Skookum Hall. It will be a potluck dinner starting at 6:30 Dan. Live music will be flUn~k~hed by Mr. and :Mrs. Wall Allen and orches- tra. Bell Riders and friends are invited. Bud Eveleth was a visitor at the Silver Star meetin~ and showed slktes. Mr. Eveleth showed the Appaloosa film on Chief Jo- seph's trail ride in Oregon. Silver Stars are having a trail ride March 21 at Ralph Bariek- roans at 12:00 o'clock. The ride will be about 20 miles. The Rock Candy Mountain ride is postponed until April 4. Georgia Ma~mett's horse "Babes Lil Angel" fouled Sunday un Ap- paloosa stud with a blanket ac- ross his hip and a white star in his forehead, the new little boy has been named "Barbecue Son- ny", "Son" for short. Georgia Magnett is a member of the Sil- ver Stars. LIVE WIRES 4-H club member,~ Ig record Stuck of Hoquiam Atkison and dau SLopping by and Mr. and Mrs. Ray ,]anice Sunday Charles BoLls. A HL)gB A, ND ~4ENPECKED UNTIl CACKLE¢~ IN HIS If you ask us, that the best pla¢ expert quick Come in and The oleanest way to heat your home Is with ELECTRIC home heating--the modern system ares heat instantly, silentiy, automatically. Electric heat Is as clean as electric safe and silent, too. With warmth-by-wire, there's no fuel, no requirements, no flue, no fumes--just the even that you can control, room by room, with indl thermostats. Your walls, your draperies, furniture will stay clean longer. Ask for the facts about the hom~ heating tomorrow that's here today--clean, quiet, electric heat. mcL last Wednesday a~l discussed .,SON P D NO the state conference and.different campships to go over, and also COUNTY , = discussed some ldnd of community .set, lee for Easter and also dis- cussed some kind of a money rals- JACK COLE, president; TOM WEBB, vice tng project. 4-H'ers discussed ED TAYLOR, secretary JERRY Demonstration Day which is on March 27. All 4-H members are to LIVE BETTER have their demonstrations plan- ned by the next meeting so they can give them and everyone is am persuasive message. •/ SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED BUICK DEALER. AUTHORIZED BUICK DEALER IN Tills AREA}, SHELTON MOTOR s First St., Shell.on, Wash, #1 ........... TUNE IN LOWELL THOMAS AND / :'ii -/