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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
March 15, 1962     Shelton Mason County Journal
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March 15, 1962
 
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Thursday, March t DONKEY r BASK nBALL SCHEDULEO HERE0000HON: &apos; l)ombroskiDiamond ...... , ... /Hopes Pinned: On 'I O b nlar,00,n.., ready th,s 00ea, to 26 Lellermen Lustre With IIO()1 ]HLAIITY -- Another Tip-off time Is 8:0{)on(0ok eVelllilg 01' t;lugh-provokhlg rail' 'fteaalls' recruited • from the Shelton Fa.ulty and the Llons ple court a,ttlcs i in store for S|!npson : Recreation AS{MIII' MILton (]Ollllly flUl-lover. 9et (loll plell agIn.t ol!e illlother. Mondi!,y, nlghl when the She!ton Fe ltralilt lre Imposed up- Llon. ilgaln Sl)Onsor d Inkey on tram memberk" Ill tills ba,kel:ball hi the Sllelton gym- .game" you can push aldst- , .. gle for the ball by any kllo.a me4tiod sh0rt'" of sluggh|g£--aald ahythl.g can lmppem Donkey hasketbll is , elnbtn&fl6n of rodeo, c.lrcus ad bgketball. The trained qllalrlltis lnchld- ed 19ng-ea.d critters of all tem- peraments aJid description. One ts a  "Clown"; another is a "bal- •  PROTECTIOI . r • t you're nn avid sports- mau you've probably i vested quite a bit of money ill your sporting equip- men(, This equipment is expensive.., doubly so if you have to replace it be- cause of damage or loss It costs very little to insure your sporting goods against many hazards. See us for details. Angle Agency Herb Angle Angle Bldg. Dick Angle HA 6-8272 B ArNA CASUALTY ANI[I SURETY COMPANY 10urrFONU. CONNECTICUT ker", =L third Is a plain old stub- born jackttss, and, of course, one of the rowdy "rover boys" is (alWays among the cllection. Some: of tiles4 doztkeys lmve Imea ,,plttylng,, tt least 15 sea- sons (usually about 125 gables per tour), so they probably lmow as much about tim slmrt as some of'file '!iayers" tJmy'll squire trOlmd tile eottL Be- sides the ent,rtmnent 11 pro- vides, next Monday night's game will raise fmlds for the Lions Clnb famous chRdren's eye con- servatlon project s well as a needy chlldren's hot hmeh fired. CLIMB00 FACE BL00K TRACK OUTLOOK; SOPHS GET CHANCE Highclimber track and field ath- letes are about to get bucked off :the high-horse they've ridden to 20 consecutive triumphs in dual, tri- angular and quadrangular meets since Coach Bob Sund took over the reins. This just doesn't shape up as a good track year in Highclimber- ville. Sund will have only seven letter- men back from la.t year's de- fending Seamount league champ- ionship squad and two of those seven are doubtful potential for this year. Nevertlmless, the Climbers very likely will run their string to 21. for they are schedulec to go to Buckley to nmt White River one week from today to open the 1962 schedule; The Hornets have Httle sting, athletically, this year. SUNI) will have to depend on sophomore graduates of last: yea:Hs district champion- ship Blazm track sqtlad anct do i ............. Illllll I I I Ill I I I II I II Illl Ill I II Ill I I Watch Your Friends "Play" DONKEY BASKETBALL a magician's jpb o£ slmffling a- terial around to patch tp weak events if the Highclirnbers are to have much success this spring. Of the seven retracing lettsrmen the best ranked only 8th in scoring last year. He is John Sells, the mighty-mite shot putter who is still favoring his. throwing arm, broken late ht tim season last year. The arm bothers Sells still and he may have to limit his shot putting to three or four throws a meet and forget any aspirations to toss the discus. Hurdler Gary Simons probably will have to doduty in the century, hurdler Corky Peterson will prob- ably be used only in the highs and pressed into se/ice in the broad md high jumps, and discus-throw- er Gary Combs developed into a shot -putter. That leaves Joe Waters for the sprints and low hurdles and Gary Shelton for the middle distances. Stan Johnston, 440 and mile relay letterman, probably won't: turn out, according to present indica- tions. • SOME OF last year's near-let- ter-winners, such as Ricky Durkin and Jim Lament in the pole vault, and LeRoy Austin in tle middle distances and sprints, plus such promising sopromores as sprinter Dan Olson and half:miler Brian Brickert will have to come thz in a big way to give the Climbers any kind of punch. After the White River meet Shelton will entertain Curtis in a Seamount dual session here March 29 (all Seamount meets are on Thursdays this year) for the first home qOinp, etition of the season. Highlight 6f the home schedule will be the second annual Shelton Invitational meet April 28. This will be a niffht meetl Coach Sund is trying to figure out when he cn work in the an- mml inter:class track meet, so far hasn't come up with the answer. Hatchery salmon in open rear- ing ponds are susceptible to sun- burn. But it's r0ore than just a painful expel'iece-'-a" 25' o 40' Per cent loss of' yeatqing fish hu= oc: curred in some hat¢l]eries.. devote their efforts and talents to l)utting the Highclimbers back on tim baseball pinnacle from which they fell last year. After a record of winuing or tying for their conference title in 17 of the past 18 years (and finishing second that other time), lhe 196] Climbms slcidded to fmu'th place in the final Sea- mount league baseball standings. Getting back on the pinnacle will be tough, for title-winning Curtis has everyone back, but the Clinlb(n'S liave Capable pitchiu' in the right arms Of Ken Droscner, Bill Sloan and Bruce Cowan, plus some strong bats weilded by first .baseman Wayne Carlson, outfield- ers Hhnk Rose' and Bill Smith, who all hit over .300 last year. COAl)l:| CHT Dombl:oski ex- pects impraved iitting from Dr0s- cher, who may have to catch when he's not pitching; Sloan, who handled third base more tlian he pitched last year; outfield- ers A1 Wagnel and lalph Hoard and infielder Gary Peter- on, all of whom benefitted from a season of junior legion ball last summer{ The other returning letter win- ners are infielder Rich Watson and outfielder Scott Elliot(, who did not play junior legion ball and were marginal ltter wimmrs in 196:L Two others who saw some var- sity action last year and should give strong accounts of themselves this year are mitfielder Mike Sheedy and first baseman John Anderson. Sheedy played junior legion and improved rapidly dur- ing the summer. DOMBROSKI'S main problem will be filling the catching post, vacated when Bill Dennis trans- ferred to Port Townsend, and the second base vacancy left by Roy Kimbel's graduation, plus the bat- ting power supplied by Kimbel, Dennis and Jerry Bloomfield, who respectively hit .378, .392 and .415 as the top three batsmen on the 1961 squad. Bloomfield was tile No. 1 pitcher last year but Droscher, Sloan and Cowan are capable to taking up that slack. PHILLIPS FLAILS INDUSTRIAL 632 INDUSTItIAL LEAGUE W L Lumbermen's Merc ...... 27 9 20th Century ................ 22 14 Clary Trucking ............ 17 18 Morgan Transfer . ....... 17fi 18½ Grant Lumber ................ 16 20, Pantorium Cleaners ...... 15 21 Cole's Mobil Service .... 15 21 Shelton Motors .............. 14 22 High games --- Jess Phillips 245, Ade Wright 233, Dan Densley 231, Ray Walker 221 High series -- Jess Phillips 632 Ex-baseball pitcher 3ess Phillips (still active on the diamond as a softball shortstop) found the strike zone with reglzlarity in Industrial bowling league play last week for a 632 series. He was nigh the 200 marlc in his openers at 199 and 188, then really breezed his hard one in for: a 245 wind-up. Net result was his 20th Century Thriftway club poc- keted a 3-1 vie(cry over Cole's Mobit Service, whose 'Ade Wright just missed the chazned eitle at 598 when he sandwiched a 162 middle game between 233 and 203 efforts. In other matches Dan Densley hit 231 and Ray Walker 221 as their Shelton Motors and L.M. lineups spilt a 2-2 decision, Grant Lumber (Al Longacre 521) and Pantorium Cleaners (Mark Fred- son 546) won 3-1 victories over Clary Tucklng (Wayne Clary 488) and Morgan Transtk,.r (Wal t Rae 520 ),. WOMEN'S 12:30 LEAGUE Nell's Pharmacy .............. 59 37 'Edward,s Salon .................. 54 42 Phil's Richfield .............. 48 48 Econ-O-Wash .................... 31 65 High game-:-Lois Aibrccht 180. High series.--Lois Albrecht 495. Split picks---Dot Barnaby 5-10, Vera Bishop 1-7. Blazer Track Picture As Conditioning Opens. Bill Briclcert opened his eighth season "s Blazer track eolleh last week with a rceo)'d [ilrnollt of 314 aspiranl.s :rod a record illl- cleus of 2(} reLurning leltermen fronl last year's dislricL ch'tmp- ionship squad. His lettermel nucleus is well bahmced in the B and C divisions YEAR Sbel- ?,,'2:oX:n;r::?; ..,ottjol.,stouE,iiott,00,00d .iChKen ton high school basket:ball teams o:tch ye:ll" :lbollt slate [Ottl'nalllent lime? It yotl have ally ideas, coach Jerry Vermillion would like to hear them, t t i. Highelinll)ers dropped a frustr:l.ing 74-50 decision to South Kit:sap Friday niglt at tim West I Central l)ist{'icl plavolTs in the iWes/ 'll'Clllel'tOll g':'n{nasiunL \\;Vha{.ever the pr,ff)lem in, it seems to be a continuing thing. This is the fourth consecutive }'eat' / Itle Climbcrs have been victimized i in dislriet competition, the brink of a slate tourney berth. And the jinx marehts on. 'No Shellou team ]las ever nlade it to the state despite a pt!eponderanc, e of pole Valllters, one of t\\;VO Of \\;vholn may he useftll ill fillillg' a dearth ill the I llo¢)p show. A division., II "tile d)ig'ger-uldep'{ SllELTON HAl) IIEATI/IN the group Brisker( needs, besides l)Ole I \\;vile5, Wolves two limes previolts- vaulters, some help in the discus, ]ly this sea.;on, but when district broad jump and low hurdles [ time roils around there is no ' lrlis A division lettermen inelnde i.tougler team than South Kitsap. Bill Bats(one and Fred La)ldnt Coach Orville Anderson's bunch Olson have i)layl their last bns- ketball game for Shelton high. South swished 23 of 47 field goal attempts (48 percent) to 21 of 55 tries t33 l)ereenl  for Shell(re. The wi,mers made only two more field goals than did Shelton, }ml made up the point difference at the charily line. The Wolves converted 28 of 38 while the losers connected on a measly eight of 21 shots. The SCOl'ing Sllllln];lry: S. Kitsap 74 Shelton 50 Hodgen f Carlson 9 Covey 24 f Smith 5 Foster 13 c Pcterson 16 Lovely 11 g Sloan 3 I:oivi:t 7 g' Simons 2 South subs Pierey 7. Lurid 4, Wong 8, l)arli:ig. Shelton sul)s ..... Goodl)asler 5, Caa'te 6, Elliot(, Watson, Jo]ulston 2, Olsoa, Ander- .qon 2. Score by Qua.rters South ............ 17 20 15 22 74 ( weights ) and T o m L o w e (sprints, all possessing' two pre- vious letters, plus single letter winner Steve Archer (1)oh vault),. Mike Byrd and Gregg Souli(,re (high jump), and Perry Ro.e (low hlu'dles and still and gth g'rader-- the others are all 9th graders). TIlE B I)IVISION h's four two- letter wi,inO.s coming back in Jer- ry Wetlund ( pole vault and sprints), .lira Sells (sprints and weights), Tim Sehnitzm' (spri(ls) and Mike Brickert (jmnps), plus single letter winners Jim D. An- derson (low hurdles), Mike Bliz- zard (sprints), Lnrry Dittman district 180-yard sprint ehamp), Jeff Haskins (pole va:ult, Ron LeBresh (shot put), Rich Loving pole vault), Van Phillips (high jumpl, Bob Sergant (sprints/, Paul Shefler (sprintg, Sieve She- fler (pole vaulti, and Daron Ta.,- lot (pole vault). Buzzard, LeBresh and Loving are 8th graders. In the C division four returning lettermmL all 8th graders, are' back: Jerry Brown (pole vault), Duane Fagergrer, ( shot put), Eddie Keenan (sprints), and Col- lin err (high jump). OF TItE TOTAL turnout, an unexpectedly heavy participation from the 8th grade of 48 boys helped swell the record total of track aspirants this year. The 9th grade contributed 43, the 7th grade 35. Schnitzer, Buzzard, Sergant and Brickert comprised a Class C relay team wl]ich set a new district rec- ord last year. They'll be competing in Class B this year, however. , The Blazers first meet is sched- uled in early April, giving Brick- ert almost a month to prepare his charges. There will be au 8tt school in the competitim this year --- St. Martins ..... to furnish rivalry to the Blazers, Washington and downed North Kitsap, 51-40, Sat- urday night to earn their tourney .tickets. South Kitsap bounded to a 6-0 lead during the irst 45 seconds "of the contest before the Climb- ers could ever get their eager hands on tile elusive ball. The ,Volves never trailcd throughout the encounter. The Climbers doggedly fought their way back to within two points. 13-11, on forward Wayne Carlson's jumper shot with two minutes to go in the quarter, but South stretched the advantage to four by the end of the fh'st frame 17-13• Smooth Wolf forecotu2; man Dave Covey potted t0 points In the first eight mizlutes. TIlE 'O/eLVES LEFT no doubt as to their intentmns after two periods. They outse¢red Shelton 20-(,} and left the court for half- time intermission with a 37-22 lead. A big factor in South's suc-' cess in ttle first half was the fine rebounding of 6-2, 200 pound cen- ter Wayne Foster. Another braw- ny lad, Shelton's Jim Goodpaster, Checked into the line-up in the second quarter and nmscled it out with Foster under the boards the rest of the way besides getting five points. Foster finished the game with a whopping 20 z'e- bounds. The second half was almost a carbon copy of the second quar- ter as South maintained control all the way. The Wolves held a 52-33 third round bulge. Climber center Corky Peterson sparkled in the second half for nine points and did a creditable job of re- bounding. COVEY TOPPED ALL scorers with 24: points. Other double fig- ure pointmakers for South were Foster, 13, and guard Steve Love- ly with 11. The only bright spot in Sholtoll's dim performance was Shelton .......... 13 9 11 17 50 Singer wins Trailblazer 'Hare Scramble' Sunday Derriell Singer nabl)e(t top iron- ors in the Shelt(n Trailblazei's Motorcycle Club "hare scramble" last Sunday. Singer topped A1 Pile, Ed John- ston, Paul Jollnslon, and Rick . Sharpe, fellow club members, and Ehna's Vaughn Hogan, finishing in that order. Jefferson of Olympia, Miller and the play of Peterson, who tallied Hoi)kins of Aberdeen, North , ....... s ""-d arnered 14 re- Thurston, and Hoquiam. bouTd'. ......... ' ................................ I It was the final hoop appeai'- Perhaps pure reason without lance in the Red and Black of the heart would never have thought of I Highclimber uniforms for seven God. --G. C. Lichtenberg I Shelton seniors. Carlson Peterson, NEW BLUE ! THURS - FRI. - SAT. OPEN 6:45 SHOW ,f R/DE THE CREST OF THE WAVE/ JOIN EL¥1S It P/p00z PARADISE OF 30Nf i CO-HIT "ALL IN A NIGHT'S ELECTRICAL ::i:::; :::: ::: ELECTRIC NO, 3 .... i::iiii!iiii!L HEATING of Mason County. J; i!i:.:i!: i!i!! I S B ETTE R !iiii]iiiiiii!iii!iiiiiiiiiii)iiiiii.!..x " ALL WAYS president; Ed Taylor :: :::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::: :: ::::::::::":%::::::::<:"::;:;:;:;:;:;::;:;";::r :::, W e b b, c o m rn i s s i o n e rs [iii}:.i::ii:[ii[i}{::i!ii[::!iii!i!i:::!:ii[:!::);!::. Danielson, manag As clean as sunshine itself With electric heat tl soot or smoke to soil niture and draperies.' stay clean, your hoe' lovelier longer. Public Utility 347,000 owners prove... It's value that puts Valiant on the, best.sel/ee !isff HONDAY, HAR¢H 19 00=00 P.M. SHELTON GYH featuring the combined forces of the SHELTON LIONS & SIMPSON REC. ASS'N against the SHELTON SCHOOL FACULTY for the benefit of the Lions Club EYE CONSERVATION PROGRAM and NEEDY CHILDREN'S HOTLUNCH FUND ADMISSION -- Adults $1, Kids 50c FUNNIER THAN A OIROUS WILDER THAN A RODEO I5, 1962 r,s. R adushes' ireen Onions ',tOm'nia Long white .... W Potatoes 5 : FANCy ,nesap Ballard T 1962 JOHNSON MOTORS I N0r, Fun - M0re F.tilre$ LE LAY, AWAY NOW THESE LOW PAYMENTs WILL HOLD YOUR MOTOR FOR JUNE 1st DELIVERY WHEN YOU ASSUME • 'RE'UL/R MOITHLY PAYMENTS JOHNSON 3 $4.00 pc, Month JOHNSON 5 $6.50 .r Month JOHNSON 10 =900 • Month JOHNSON 18 $10.15 per Month JOHNSON 28 $13.00 per Month JOHNSON 40 Eleotramatio $17.00 ,e, Month JOHNSON V-75 Eleotramatio $28.00 .er Month SAEGER MOTOR SHOP ON HILLGREST BE Make book on it. What follows is fact-not fictlon-and no names have been changed to protect anybody, Chapter I  starts with style. It asks who is the only compact ever to receive the Society of Illustrators' award for esign excellence. Answer= The Valiant Signet 200-America's lowest-priced h.ardtop with bucket seats-that' whol Read o.n ,.. Chapter .11 talks about performance. The Valiant can, and has, run circles around every Competitively priced compact, including"ti; Falcon, Co,air and Lark. All of which leads many to suspect they know the plot-Valiant is priced with the so-called "super.com- pacts." Not so, reveals the surprise ending in Chapter II1. Valiant is priced competitively, model for model; with Falcon, Corvair, Rambler and Lark. Why not drive one this week? Could be you'll wan to join those 347,000 folks for whom Valiant's a kind of love story that is continued every month. The title 1 of our story= NOBODY BEATS VALIANT FOR VALUEi) Freestone HI Vah'an00 EAp