March 20, 1975 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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March 20, 1975 |
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YATES
Grange will hold
meeting this coming
kv •
. emng. The business
rill be preceded by a
Dinner is set for 6
at 7:30 p.m.
Women's Club
acceptance of the
the Pickering
an islander; at least, at heart...
always.) And, yes, four grade
school youngsters went along.
Call it a private field trip, or
whatever you want to, it was
indeed a learning experience. For
how often does a rural student
have the opportunity of attending
a professional performance where
the child is as close to one of the
each gal chose her own brand of
cuisine. The decision between the
various cuisines such as Mexican,
Chinese, Italian, Texas barbecue,
seafood, Japanese, Mongolian,
and others was equal to the
choice between 44 flavors of ice
cream.
They were also an audience
for entertainment during lunch.
Clean-up day is set performers as these girls have By coincidence it was Senior
two days prior to the been? Citizens Day at the Seattle
the policy each year, From beginning to end it was Center. A live band was providing
be a bake sale "along a very special day. It all began the very listenable, toe-tapping
and white elephantearly Wednesday morning with enjoyable familiar tunes from the
carpools forming at various points
the big day, after on the island, as had been
n!icipation, finally pre-arranged. The weather left a
ts now a glowing bit to be desired, but all in all it
40-plus island gals. could have been a whole lot
make an error, worse, too. The numerous cars all
gals who went to reached Seattle at various times,
not still be residents, but the gals convened at the Food
an islander, one remains Circus for lunch. At that point
good 'ol days. Tables and chairs
were arranged on all four sides of
the dance floor so we could all
watch the "young at heart"
having themselves the time of
their lives.
For many of the gals
attending it was like old home
week, seeing and visiting with
ATH
Limerick Board of
net March 15 and so
items were to be
and decisions made that
board has
March 22 at 9:30
se.
meeting of the
members will be
and there are some
by-laws to be
must be correctly
up in court if
d members'
this year aald new
board will also be
meeting. Persons
contacted and are
on the board if
Albedyll, Mildred
aek Boyd, Myrvin
, Leo Nault, Lou
Lois Roth and Sig
Day Dance
a nice crowd and
NEW
ssional
chain
for
nets
Cover it all with our
homeowner's package.
See or Call
Arnold anc
Smith Insurance
117 E. Cota 426-3317
ru
the music was good. Many of
those attending enjoyed Ernie's
special Irish menu of corned beef
and cabbage before the dance.
The Men's Golf Club
Committee met Sunday morning
in the pro shop. Earl Mackin,
president of the Golf Club, with
the cooperation of his officers,
has planned many events. There
will be at least three home and
home games with other clubs as
well as the tournament.
The weekly competition on
Sunday mornings will have three
starting times. Frist flight, 7 a.m.;
second flight, 9:30 a.m.; and third
flight, noon.
The Ladies Golf Committee
el
also met at the pro shop March 16
with Doris Mackin, captain, in
charge. The ladies are planning
three and possibly more
invitational games with nearby
clubs. Esther Wells and Jo Boyd
are on the social committee for
the Ladies Golf Club and are
planning a card party for April
26.
The Leprechauns, the Lake
Limerick girls' bowling team,
went to Yakima a week ago for
tournament play. Ralph Bennett,
sponsor, went along to cheer the
girls. There will be more
competitions to enter before the
results are known.
gets request
Application has been received
by the Seattle U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers office from Frank G.
Breuer, Portland, Oregon, for a
Department of the Army permit
in accordance with Section 10 of
the River and Harbor Act of
March 3, 1899 for work in Hood
Canal near Union.
The work is to construct a
deck and pier, drive piling and
install a float for a private boat
moorage.
The applicant has agreed all
construction debris will be
disposed on land in such a manner
that it cannot enter navigable
water and work in navigable water
will be done to minimize
turbidity which tends to degrade
water quality and damage aquatic
life.
The decision whether to issue
a permit will be based on an
evaluation of the probable impact
of the proposed activity on the
public interest. That decision will
reflect the national concern for
both protection and utilization of
important resources. The benefit
which reasonably may be
expected to accrue from the
proposal must be balanced against
its reasonably foreseeable
detriments. All factors which may
be relevant to the proposal will be
considered; among those are
conservation, economics,
aesthetics, genoral environmental
concerns, historic values, fish and
so ' wildlife values, flood damage
E II'ISE
taler, narcotics,
he , kidnapping
,, ,2rid lement court decisions!
'1~211)- It not inereasin b accident
" art~ t° g Y " ' r
,,,~lt t',- .me Specif c causes and these ~ :~,i :;
~,~,th~ f;e~ltic solutions Public awareness
U
,*'rlrt~ r ~-tOr$ and
~'~h" ll~ it - Persons escalating the
crOIlin9 it~,necessary first step to ~"
Veteran in the " nfor
a Deputy U.S. Marshall. a State Trooper,
f-speak on
prevention, land classification,
navigation, recreation, water
supply, water quality and, in
general, the needs and welfare of
the people. No permit will be
grante , unless its issuance is
found to be in the public interest.
Preliminary determinations
indicate the issuance of a permit
will not be a significant federal
action and an environmental
impact statement will not be
required.
Comments on these factors
will be accepted and made partof
the record and will be considered
in determining whether it would
be in the best public interest to
grant a permit. Comments should
reach the Seattle Corps office not
later than April 17 to insure
consideration.
OUR CRIME PROBLEM"
March 25 -- 7:30 p.m.
BOrdeaux School Auditorium
Shelton
lults $1.50 Students $1.00
by John Birch Society
friends and acquaintances some of
them hadn't seen for a number of
years. Besides the gals who are
present residents, we were joined
by many former islanders who
now live in Olympia and Tacoma.
Then, too, some of the island gals
had friends from off the island
join us for the fun day. Former
islanders included Maigaret
McCulloch, Naomi Lohrer, Jewel
Doeing, Vera Pelzeland and Ella
McAuliffe.
After lunch and browsing
around the gift shops on the
balcony and basement of the
Food Circus, everyone headed for
the Center Playhouse and the big
event of the day. When they had
all located their seats, the
excitement mounted, waitip.g for
the lights to dim and. the action to
begin. Needless to say, the most
exciting part of the whole day
was when Shirl Conway Larson
made her first entrance on stage.
Taken from the stage play,
''Hello, Dolly," the
"Matchmaker" with Shirl playing
the title role as Dolly Levi was a
fun-filled play. Naturally we all
thought Shirl did a fantastic job.
Afterwards the whole group
of gals, all 40-plus, went
backstage to visit Shirl in her
dressing room. Of course, they
didn't all fit, but there was a large
room backstage where they spent
quite awhile chatting with the
actress. Before any of the group
left a couple of pictures was taken
for tb~ Women's Club scrapbook.
Many went backstage to sec
the sets and how the rew)lving
stage works during the plays.
Then it was time to head back
home after a very special day,
thoroughly enjoyed by all.
1 am happy to reD)rt that at
this writing we have two islanders
back home after an extended stay
in the hospital recently. Ted Ness
returned home the first part of
last week.
Dorothy Eno is back home
following recent surgery at the St.
Peter Hospital in Olympia.
Max and Charleene Smith of
the Pointe returned last week
from a trip to California where
they attended the wedding of a
young couple who grew tip with
their two sons. The bride was the
daughter of the police chief of
Huntington. She married "the
boy next door."
Charleene warned anyone
who might be headed into
California to really observe the 55
• ..TREY EZ:NVtOIIdE "9.1E SUPJ'S I VS
WtTH CAR : I 0tOXtl AflO
MOISTURE TO 6ROW WOOO FOR
HOMES PAPER PROOUCI"S---
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RE, I, IEt(4¢,8 RFa$OURCE-- 07f, ISDWILV
REFORESTEP BYMIMI, EI#ER61ZEO
SUId I10 A ODN'flMUIA CYCLE~
III III I I
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mp.h. speed limit And, she
added, they really take note of
( 1 ) a bright-colored car: (2) a
sports car; and (3) an oul-of-state
license. Being that they qualified
on all three couuts, she said they
really were a consl.31/t target. On a
downhill grade just across the
border she was "nailed" jusl as
the speedometer barely touched
the 60 mark.
They stayed a total of ten
days and visited their friends, the
Don McAllisters, and alst~ lhe
Petrella family. The latter c~,uple
own a grapefruit ranch ulld was
also Max's former boss who
retired a year ago.
Weatherwise, rain was t)u the
menu each day while they were
down south. Needless to say, the
brilliant sun they el~cOunte;cd
upon their arrival home made for
a terrific homecoming!
Three island girls joined the
rest of the Camp Fire Girls group
on a three-day outing this past
weekend. Polly Campbell, Jane
Erickson and Lisa Yates were
among the 12 girls who left
Friday evening fl~t the Camp l:ire
Lodge located between Ol3mpia
and Tenino. Their ch:|pe,ones
were Harry and Sharon Cook.
Don and Flora Knoop helped to
provide the transportation both
going down Friday evening and
coming back Sunday afternoon.
Buddie Budd made the long
jaunt down from where he is
currently living and working in
the Province of Alberta, Canada
to visit his brothe~, Johnnie arid
Alice Budd. lie arrived here
sometime m the wee hours of the
night Friday and headed north
Sunday.
Dorothy Barnett headed for
Tacoma accompanied by her
twin sons, David and l'hfllip,
along with Phillip's wife and
David's girl friend, last Tuesday
evening. The