March 14, 1963 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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March 14, 1963
ason Teachers Plan Trip To f
co During Spring Vacation
Freelin
completely differ-
?ring vacation, ob-
and customs in
tn Store for a group of
teachers &nd lnenP
with special
The trip, some
the planning, was
Mason Super-
Johnsen. to of-
a chance to ex-
tral and educational
of the same in-
country.
many of whom
Spanish lessons
are looking for'-
22, when they will
Airport at 5:30 a.
City where
at the Lu-
have been made
Office of Educa-
Embassy At-
Bush. for observa-
schools in Mexico
rill also be tours of
:factions of the city
the University of
HIGHLIGHT of the
of the Eng-
where child-
American colony of
their education.
:ent of those attend-
from Central
g advan-
bOrtunity to use the
which is not
system.
COunds like a fabu-
and Belfair is
surge of Mex-
when the
31.
emphasis in the
On youth, with dis-
t of the local store
.by the Girl Scouts
Onal Scout Week.
at the Belfair
of the Chuck
4-H Group.
put up their
and Saturday
of their lea-
troops making
the days set
Homem ak-
day and Citizen-
Safety, Interns-
and Arts and
;unday, attending
choice, girls
of the
Creek Com-
;chool the Full
the Community
urved bar Scouts
Standard First
with their
of the Motor
of these am-
are also plan-'
training
Scout salute to
and their hard-
Club
Scene Of
Fete
Neff Vance
and Mrs.
Hoodsport cele-
Wedding anni-
open house
House at
5 P.m.
and tables were
ated With daffo-
About 200
club house
congratula-
years of
Gilberts
embers of sev-
Canal. Re-
served to the
Club held
meet-
Friday eve-
th party in a
tables of
high score
and
to Mat-
Schmidt,
Schmidt and
won
begin to
foot as
tint at the
t and
JStesses for the
CLUB
Commn-
Six-
roll call.
inted for the
HI
Will be held
Chll:
HOod Canal
hostess.
Club will
meeting
meeting
,er at 11 a.n{.
, Vera Short-
be Served at
:Mrs. Flof
Will be the
ternoon.
hold their
Hi gh
March l-S.
Called to or-
the meeting
will be
used oil
March
movie
)rt school
admis-
tad students
cream will
SSiOll.
SCEVA
after
:amily in
Merryman
Vane:s,
is a eous-
working leaders.
CREDIT FOIl FINE work also
qoes In the Chuck Wagon Raiders.
ruder the leadership of Mrs. David
Raines. In addition to thei,: win-
-low display, which features each
,nember's drawing of his or her
norse, there are exhibits of other
-H projects undertaken by group
members, ribbons won. and a large
"visible horse" used in study of
lhe animals, Susan Collier. Katha-
Den Riedle. Sbaron Davis. Patty
Raines, and Connie Sidwaski were
the members responsible for the
display.
The group will sponsor fihns on
Worms Botts. Lameness and ttle
Birth of a Foal March 15 at 8
p.m. at. the Beat' Creck Community
Clubhouse. Dr. William Sherrod of
Tacoma is coming to show" the
films, and all horse owners and
those interested are invited to at-
tend. Children under 16 should be
accompanied by their parents.
Cathy Riedle was the group's
candidate for Papoose Roundup
Princess.
Eastern Star Social Club is plan-
ning its next meeting for March
27 at the home of Mrs. Matthew
Bischoff. Hostess will be Mrs. ¥.
H. Travis and Mrs. Jack Schlange.
The Elementary P.T.A. present-
ed its Life Membership award to
Mrs. Thomas Davis for her many
years of active service to the or-
ganization. Mrs. Merl Lamb an-
nounced tl, winner with a clever
poem at last Thursdays meeting.
Mrs. John Matson, Mrs. Hn,nnah
Matson. and Mrs. Charles Kovak
were in Oak Harbor last Friday
and Saturday to visit Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Burls and son. Craig.
The Burts. she is the former Bon-
nie Matson. have just moveq to
Oak Harbor from Coupe,,,,
where they have lived since Jim's
return from overseas duty early
in the year.
Best wishes for speedy reco-
veries go to N. C. Butterfield,
now at home: and Mrs. Ehner
Beard who it is hoped will be back
from a stay at Virginia Mason by
the time this paper goes to press.
And don't forget to buy Girl
Scout Cookies and attend tire Min-
stral Show next Saturday even-
rag.
Regional Library
6ors Humerous
Gifts During 1962
Gifts. gifts . .and more gifts.
That was the story for 1962 at the
South Puget Sound Regional Lib-
rary in Olympia. They were re-
ceived from all sorts of unexpect-
ed sources aud will enable the
library o further extend its ser-
vices to headquarters, bookmobile
and branch patrons.
One of the more interesting do-
nations is a set of Great Books
of the Western World. valued at
$350, and published by tile Ency-
clopedia Britannica. This is the
first tinle that this well-known
collection of 54 volumes has ever
been awilable to Rcgional Library
patrons. It was a bequest from
the estate of an Olympia woman.
the !ate Mrs. John A. Kalbach;
The collection includes Volume
1, which sets forth the concept be-
hind publication of the set. that
the great ideas of Western civi-
lization should be available to
everyone.
¥OLUIES 2 AND 3 are the
Syntopicon which enables the rea-
der to follow a specific idea
through the centuries. Other vo-
lumes include Aristotle, Plato,
Gibbon. Kant, Darwin, and Freud,
among others. Individual volumes
in the set may be checked out for
a period of fern" weeks.
Also in 1962. the Olympia Jun-
ior Women's Club initiates a pro-
gram whereby the club gives a
new children's book to the library,
every time a baby is born to one
of its members.
New babies of club members
honored to date are: Hark Randall
Mager. Janet Kay Larse. Melaina
Susan Mazzei, Sandra Kay Gard-
ner, Bradley James Fleutch. and
Gary Dean Masten.
Other local gifts included a copy
of "Maihnan, U. S. A.". written
by the president of the National
Association of Letter Carrriers-
William C. Doherty, and given by
lhe local branch 351.
"Funeral Customs the World
Over" by Habenstein and Lamers,
given by Selene & Eros, a local
mineral home.
TttERE %VERE also many gif',s
from individuals of books on nurs-
nK, mariue engineering, current
selections from book clubs, and
etter paperbacks.
Newspaper subscripfions donal.-
ad included the Olympia News and
The Christian Science Monitt)r.
rhe !eeal chapter of the Daughters
ff the American l-l, evolution gave
Jm library a subscription to the
DA.R Magazme.
Bound volume, of Handweavers
cr
md Craftman Ma,,,azine. 1.951-1957
,-ere donated by Mrs. Mat'jorie B
Gil!iland, Mason County bookmo-
DII " patrgn.
Also during 1962, Olyjnpia Ju-
qor Programs. Inc. provided book-
'arks f,r tire Children's Romn,
,vhieh listed books tied in with
• t- "1¢1 , '
, u, .ion s plays,
Library patrons are already
hcekhlg Otlt new records made
tvaHable under a policy instituted
}aLe in the year by Columbia lge-
cords. More tha.n $600 worth of
2OV" records \\;vere received. This
',ins (>abled the library to provide
record service at both the geim
and Bueoda brancies.
Locally, an exceptionally fine
recording of Handels Messiall was
iven to the library just before
Christmas by the Capitol City Mu-
sic Cltlb in honor of the late Eve-
lyn Nelson Gooding. The stereo
album is done by the Mormon
Tabernacle Choir and the Philadel-
phia Orchestra under the directim
of Et,gene Ormandy.
Alfred Kraig, head librarian,
has :stressed that the Regional Li-
bl tl alw S ' "
"i "y • vy, apprecmtes gifts
from patrons and friends of the i
library.
I
SHELTON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAL Published in ":Christmastown, U.S;A.", ,Shelton,, Washington
. - = I I / / ' I
tmmmm mmmmmummmmmmu
• |
Woman's Club
i What's Doing "
i Among Our
i SERVICEMEN
,' i , , Page3
Speaker Slated
The next meeg;ng of the Hood
Canal Woman's Club will be held
next Thursday at 11 a.m. at the
year were running behind the
Potlatch clubhouse, A luncheon
will follow served by the Lilliwaup
Saw Mill Lumber pereen< of the 1958-62 average.
Orders averaged 155,128,000 b. f.;
Orders Deorease shipments 143,374,000 b. f.; weekly
averages for Jamlary were pro-
PORTLAND, (Special) Or- duction 142,865,000 b.f.. 89,8 per
ders at Douglas fir region sawmills cent of the 1958-62 average; of
for the first two m0nths 0f,; the :tiers 146.833.000 b.f,; shipments
same period of 1962 by some 30 t33.113.000 b.f.
million feet, accordingto West Two months of the 1963 eunm-
Coast Lumbermen's Association. lative production 1.301.220.000 b.
IN DOG POUND -- Tammy Hulbert. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hulbert. is interested in the dog.s her father brings to the
dog pound he has built since starting work as Humane Officer
for the city of Shelton January 1. These two dogs were there last
week. Hulbert says he has had seven or eight dogs since Jan. 1
and has found homes for most of them.
Long.Time Oo00m00y
Residen| Jee
Liegei In Arizona
A ]ong-lirle i\\;7asc)n Colinty ]'e: L
dent and the, county's fh'-4t certi-
fied "tree farmer" left this winler
to n?ako' his home in Arizona.
Joe Liegel, alomg wiih his
brother Jack. su-m'ted in 1913 .h:
carve a faFnl ()lil of logged-off
timber land 10 miles southwest of
Shelton.
Through the years, li]c brothers
round that; they could not keep
ahead of the tree; and began tAlt'U-
ing them into a ('asia (:cop.
In 3vlarch. 1963. they weie
a'Avarded the firkxl Ire. fa]un cer--
[ifical,e in Mason Counly,
Joe LmZoI w;,s born ill N(>',\\;"
Yorlt S[2a, t( Hn(] calllc io ()!ig(D
in 1911 and i,)"7ashillpTlOll 111 1{)5:;
alter tile pireha:;c of lhe firs, l.lnd
or Iho farm Ire )l)d lu:4 blolhci d',>
veioped.
Meets Next "'::<
The 5zbeiton Clmpiev ()f the An,-
ricau P.hododcnd.oit 5i(:t-h: v \\;vii{
meet at l).ltl, next 'Pp, esd,ty al the
PUD building.
An i:at, eve.i in.',.: lU ogran, tm vtlo-
(lo(tcndr,m hybrids \\;viii be ;:,],-eli by
Mrs;. Bell Bri:;gs. V] ', 1o1 ;kre \\;vcl-
conic.
P:{E-g( L ,O(}L F i,'A
ere-school eTA wili 17)ce't }/. >
p.nT. uext M,)nday al tilt, }lye-
school. 1226 Bayviow. Guest ,,< ..,-
or will he Mrs,. .lan,. Wind:-;t)v *,"
{D.e COllnl]" ex'l("l:<{()13 Oi'{!t't).
tilt 00afloi00s To
Sporl 00;orest Festival
PuNi61I This Year
Thousands of brcakfast tables
will support the publicity of the
1.963 Forest Fcsl, ival for 30 days.
Pbe Manon-Kitsap Dairymens As-
:-;oci;t{:i(]l l:as made plans to do-
note one side of their half-gallon
Darigold milk cartons to puMicize
the Festival
Bud Knutzen. Dairy manager
said. *'This publicity will begin
about :10 days before the Festival
is to be held. May 23-25."
The dairy distributes its prod-
ncs throughout Mt',son and Kit-
sap counties.
Thor,,, )'(, anm'oximatety 10.000
half-gallon cartons of milk sold
per day.
1,'OllSl l,;l RESIDENT
RE'I'ITIINS Fell VISIT
Mrs. ,%vbil Taylor, former Shel-
m rc':,idctl{, i visiting for a
IID{II \\;vith old friends in and
a,otil?d town 5;he will be spending
s'm;a:, , ]}el' time with heF son.
.'!Ir;I.y Tgivloi' ,(f Central Park.
aso former Sheltonian.
5i'.'-, Taylor reports her daugh-
let. lleien Smith. who also lives
:,' L,:l)c(',',i(le has been quite ill re-
cen!,!y.
t'EIA) TRiP leO]{
t()(";C 1OUNDS ,"i()l)N
Etc!to, r-ek]v)nnds will lneet
tT l.{) a.n. March 24 at the Me-
:noria] Papk in Eucoda for a field
trim The destination of the trip
will he de!ermined at that time.
COMBINATIO
DOOR
Chang.s from Storm
Door to Screeu
Door...
IN SECONDS"
AS LOW AS
FULL I" THICK
• SAVE SPACE--All inserts stm/on door dl tear
e SAVE WORK--Slidi,g Pn.e!s lib ot for eosy wosMng
• END RATTLES--Panels cushioned i. wool pile weather-
.ripping
• VENTILATE TOP OR BOTTOM
SOLID, HEAVY AL[IMIRUM
for yeors o[ tuMe-free
P .ill.lillilllllllll liillilllllil
Dexter D. Day, seaman, USN0
son of Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes E.
Day, Union is serving aboard the
anti-submarine warfare aircraft
carriers USS Bennington, present-
ly engaged in sea trial operations
near Puget Sound. The Bennington
recently underwent extensive over-
haul a the Puget Sound Naval
Shipyard, Bremerton. Wash.. and
is slated to rejoin the Pacific Fleet
in March.
Airman 2/c David Knutzen ar-
rived in Shelton Tuesday on a 30-
day leave from the Air Force after
spending the past 20 months in
Japan. He will return to Japan
after his leave to complete the
last IA years of his enlistment. A
1959 graduate of Irene S. Reed
high school, he iS the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Knutzen of
1.923 Summit Drive,
Coast Guard Lt, J.G. Robert A.
Ferguson, son of Mr, and Mrs.
Glendon A. Ferguson, Shelton. has
reported for duty as a student na-
val aviator at the Naval Auxil-
iary Air Station. Whiting Field,
Milton, Fla.
Student are trained in preci-
sion flying, the use of radio eqmp-
ment and air-to-air gunnery.
Upon completion of the training
members. The lower order file. reported
Mrs. Harriet Gunkel of Lilli- G. C. Edgett, executive vice pre-
waup will be in charge of the sident of WCLA. reflects the Se-
program. She wilt present Mrs.
Florence Ross. Captain of the Ju-
venile Bureau of King county who
will talk on "Youth and Citizen-
ship."
lenlbers are urged to remem-
ber their five dollar Club Main-
tenance donation which they are
supposed to have earned the past
month under the "Invest a DoN
lar--Earn Six" project.
student aviators are assigned to
Training Squadron Five at Sau-
fley Field. Pensacola, another step
in winning "wings of gold" as R
naval aviator.
GETS HONORS
Cadet, Third Class. Laurence H.
Seiners, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard E. Seiners. Grapeview,
won academic honors after com-
pleting the final term examination
held in January at the Coast
Guard Academy in New London,
Conn. Cadet Somers is a gradu-
ate of Irene S. Reed High School
in Shelton. He was appointed a
cadet in the United States Coast
Guard in July of 1961, after suc-
cessfully completing the entrance
examinations held in February o
that. year.
f,; two months of 19+62, 1 267,676,-
000 b. f.: two months of 1961.
1.195.306.000 b. f.
rious competition from British Co- Orders for two months of 1963
mmbia ranis. Canadians have step- break down as follows: Rail and
ped up their shipments to the east truck 959,506,000 b. f.; domestic
coast, he stated. Production for the I cargo 219,880,000 b.f.; export 80,-
first two mn',t", "*'tly I 388,000 b, f.; local 36.170.000 b. f.
over the same period last 5a. The industry's unfilled order file
The weekly averaga -stood at 617,265,000 b. f. at the
Coast lumber productton in Fern,, I end of Februaru, lumber inventorT
ary was 161.010,000 b.f. or 101.2 I at 994.289;000 b. f.
I I I " I
LIVE MUSIC
At The Organ
Every Friday and S00turday Night
THE:00VETS CLUB
II I
-- For Members Only --
IE I I I I
OIC :SIZE sI
mattress 7-feet long by 64eet wide.
Pair of split Box Springs 7-feet Iog
by6-feet wide for easy handling.
:::K ::.: i,
OR TWO SIZE Sleop S,t,
ONE LOw PRICE
King-Size and Twin-Size mattresses havc ertical-
stitched, non-sagging borders and •sntart turning handles,
plus heavy woven, damask ticking! Quality
constructed in keeping with this fine sdlection.
Either Group Complete
Pair of standard Twin.Size
Blanket
KING SIZE ;,,
FURNISHINGS
ALL 7 King-Size Aeeessories- Only .... $7-9,95
Select one of these BIG lleeping values today|
Olsen Furniture Co.
King-Size Bed Frame
328 Cot00 Street
Phone 426-4702
featuring Fran_kie l00dtke