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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
April 1, 1965     Shelton Mason County Journal
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April 1, 1965
 
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1, 1965 C[lacges Larre.y,. , SHELTON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAL-- Published hi "Ohristmastown, U.S.A.", Shelton, Washington NEW EQUIPMENT --- Three members of tile PT~ purchased eight new raincoats, 10 new hel- School Patrol at Mt. View School show off new mets and 10 vests. Left to right are Peggy Smith, equipment they recently received. The Mr. View Mike Sheetz and Chuck Wicken. The Shelton City Commission Tue::day night appr~)ved tile vaca- tion of a half-block section of llth Street in Angleside and re- jected a request for tile establish- ment of a trailer court. The request for vacation was approved by a 2-1 w)te with ]V[ay- or Franl{ T'l'avis Jz'. voting against i" • t. the vacation of 11th Street flora the alley south to Harvard Street had been requested by L. L. McInelly. McInelly told the commission the section of street there was so steep that it would be impos- sible to construct an adequate street there. City Sul)ervisor Pat Byrne rec- ouunended tllat tile vacation be granted with the city retaining a 15-foot utility easen~cnt and pro- viding fro" a~ turn-around at tile end of the half block of l;he street from tile alley north to May Street which is llOV~; ill use. • TRAVIS Sill} he was opposed to tile vacation on tile basis that the city, while it did not sec any need for opening tile street now, might open it ill the future. The l)rol)erty owners, he said, have full use of tile street as hmg .as it is not opened. Tile comnlissi,,m voted to follow the reeomnlendation of lhe Cily Planning Commission m dens, liCK, Patti Biglev, Bclfair, a permi't to establish a'trailer court at the end of Cots Street. Ttle Planning Connnission ree- ommen(ted the denial of lhe re- quest for a concliiional excel)Lion .,oui Mik!ethun Graveside Rite Dies At 80 Years For Ward Baby as signed by A ,12-year resident, Lout N. Baby Cynthia Ann Ward died in Mason Miklethlln, 219 Satsop street, died Tuesd~i/y.il~ tile Childdren's Ortho- or Court li, ri(lav' ~rged With giving at 80 years of age last l,'riday in pedic hospital in Seattle. She was t~ong a ehe(k fov the Shelton General hi)spiral. He born in Shelton March 26, 1965 'lstlnas Tre(m la:;L wa.,; born March 11, 18S5 iu South anti was the daughter of Mr. and hock i,q uo good. Dakota. i~rs. David Ward, 2020 Adams sinai Lcber \~t,( ILev. Carl Carlson ('.on(luetcd thc street. secutingAttorney funeral service which was held at A gravcside service was held at than. ' ~s 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Bat,stone2 p.m. Wednesday ill Holy Cross COurt Friday \v:..- I4'uneral tlotne. Burial was in eetnetery with "Father "M a r h VlCClanallan askin~a Shelton Memorial Park. Weic.hm'ann officiating. ai~n of a (lefcrre'd He is survived by tln'ee daugh- Besides her parents survivors in- rian IIeath. . Lers, Mrs. Irene But!cr, Union, chide two step-brothers, Michael O d.., th ln q'e.,mtlv Mrs. Ruby Gales, Spokaqc and and Steven Sullivan and two step- Mrs. M. ,Stacey Rose, Shelton; sister,q, Jean and Diaue Lulliv/tn, ~rged With first' de- nine grandchi'ldren and seven all at tile family home; grand- great-grandchildren; one brother, pareuts, Mrs. Evelyn Berman, t also signed a dis- Antone Miklcthun, Shelton; and Spokane, and Donald Ward, Le- erred sentence giv- one sister, Mrs. Vern Tompkins, veta, Colo. P two years ago.Minneapolis, Minn. .......... ~L .......... Allyn Resident Imop Infant Sucuumbs Here Taken By Death Gottlieb Stock, 88, died Monday The funeral semice for Wendell U d|lIsa" ~@rs in the Shelton General hospital. A K. Loop, dr., infant soil of Mr• resident of Allyn since 1909, he and Mrs. "Wendell K. Loop, was was born ill F~ast Prussia, Get-held at 9 a.m. Weduesday in St. many May 19, 1876 and came to Edward's Catholic church with the United States in 1904. He Father M:ark Weichmann officiat- For Your choice at owned and operated Stock's Will- ing. PAULEY el3, until his retirement ill 1947. The infant died Monday at the Inch Therewill be a gravestde service family home. He was born in at 2 p.m. today in the Victor cem- Shelton January 29, 1965. The fam- Chev. Impala etcry, ily lives at Route 1, Box 329. l Ord Falcon Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Besides his parents he is sur- Nellie Stock, Allyn; six sons, rived by his grandparents, Mr. VOlkswagen William and Henry•of Gig Harbor, and Mrs: Herbert Loop, Bremerton, Fred of Allyn, Carl of Bellingham, and Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Nault, ~eda.lI Julius of Grapeview, and Russell Sr., Shelton; great-grandparents, to zoning regt lalions on tile basis that since Bigley did not intend of Port Orchard; fotu• daughters, Mr. and Mrs. H. Enzo Loop, Bel- 01ds Scdall 8 Mrs. Anna Baker, Mrs. Emma lingham, and Mrs. Ruby Crane, Smith and Mrs. Edith Stennett, Shelton. POrd Sedan R all of Taconla, and Mrs. Martha ......................... P0rd Sedan aollcy of Allyn; 17 grandchildren • and ;~ g!'eat__-_gra___nndchildrcn~ . Son-In-law- 0f erc. hardtop" Rites Pending.For Journal Founder e0rdChev' Seda. Ehner J. McBride Dies In Tacoma Volkswagen Se,'vJcc., for Ehner James Me. Edgar John Murnen, who mar- I{ardtop arise are pending from the Bat- ried a Shelton woman and was a stone feuneral Home. Mr. McBride brief resident of Shelton shortly POrd Sedan died Tuesday in the Shelton Gen- after ~Vorld War I, died at th'e eval hospital: Ile lived at 202~:, age of 76 in Tacoma recently. P0rd Wagon rest 17'i~{e and had been a resi- His wife was Mary Angle, (lent of Shelton the past two years, daughter of the Journal fonnder, ]~01"d Se(lau Fie was born lit Moreland, 'Idaho Grant C. Angle. She died ill 19- ~-~0rd 5'ral'ch 4, 1910. 61. He is survived by three sons, Mr. Murnen came to Shelton as two daughters, four brothers and a timber buyer for Wcycrhaeuscr Retractable three sisters. Timber Company for a short per- Politiac Wa,gon led. He maintained his mem~bcr- Ord Wagon Clarence Glassey sl ip in Mt. Moriah Masouic Lodge of Shclton ever since, He retired in Soda. Taken By Death visor.1954 as Weycrhacuser land supcr- T~U~g~t Clarence A. Glassev, 7:1, died He was a 1913 graduate of the last Saturday in tile Shelton Gen- Univ~rsitv of Washington college oral hospital. He had lived in offores(ry, a member of P~;i Shelton the past 24 years and Lrpsihm fr~ternity, the Society of I}odge Ton ma,a Ilia home at Route 3, Box Amcriean Foresters tile Down- lilt, i/2 ~OI! 't26. He was horn Feb. 17, 1892 town Tacoma Kiwan'is Clt,b, and m DeN Metrics, Iowa. A vetere.n was a charter member of Xi Sig'- l~;Ord 3~ T l)f World \~'ar I, he was a member ma Phi, national honorary forest;'y -~ 4 .011 ef the local Veterans of Foreignfraternity. He was also a member [O0Pd l/ r~ \Vars and Worhl \Var I Voter- of Afifi Temple of the Shrine. /2 IO~1 arts. Survivors include a sister, a lilt. ~ ~L'Oll The ftmeral service was held at daughter, a son, and 12 grand- 11 a.m. yesterday ill the Batstone children. l,'uneral Home {vith Roy. Mason | Younghmd officiating. Burial was PA&EY,"m©, in the PlIyalhlp eemetery. * ' County,s He is survived by his (~,ife Mrs. Lemse Sanders atv Olas oy, Shcllon: one son, Dies In Bremerton DealerJoseph C. G'lassey, Shelton; two to connect to the city sewer sys- daughters, Mrs. Jolm Hardin, Den- Mrs. Lmdse Sanders, 73, a vis- tern, pollution migbt be a prob- Railroad vet, Colo., and Mrs. Willialn E.itor ill Shelton many times, died lem. Tile planning ('omnlission al- Ib DICK Leetler, Lcwellen, Neb.; 14 grand- last week in the IJorton Nursingso cited the lack of adequate space children attd21 great-grandchil-Home in Brcmcrton after a long for the cst-lblishment of lhe trailer dren. illness, court in its recommendation for The Shelton Hotel .............. Funeral sol'vices and interme, nt denial. { were held ill the Forest Lawn The comnlission received a let- Billill., ,,... , cemetery in Bremerton last Sat- ter signed by Herbert Angle, Ghmn B - s VUtsme, in the best tradition urday. Cot rea, Ai LaBissoniere and Dick anquet facilities for large and small groups• Mrs. Sanders is stuwived by Souliere recolmnending tile estab- ba neing Friday & Saturday Nights three brothers, S. W. NeSS,s. el 'ruPert lishment of a four-way stop sign Orchard, R. J. NeSS, esRedding, at. Fourth and Railroad, tlle wide- Calif., and Conrad N , y,,- ning of sections of Fourth Street pia; two sisters, l~frs. Vera Haas, and that the city check into the Sessloll~" Turtle Lake, North Dakota, and amount of material heing left on s' Jam 3-6 p.m. Saturday Mrs. Marie McKay, Shelton; and the sidewalk in front of 'i~a.ylor a. step-daughter, Mrs. Bernadine Langlie of Bainbridge Island. ITA Here are the facts. Compare Dodge Coronet with other cars in its price range! LIST PKICE* $2217'* I $2156 $2230 CONSTRUCTION OVERALL LENGTH HAKE AREA SUSPENSION 145 117" 204,2" 195.2 Sq. in, Torsion.Bar Unitized 120 115" 196.6" 168.9 sq. in. Coil Body/Frame 12[} 116', 198.8" 126 sq. in.Coil Unitized Electric. THE COMMISSION took no ac- tion on the first two sections of the letter, but. instructed the clerk to write Taylor Electric advising them that the city has an ordi- finance against leaving mm'chan- :disc and other material on file 'sidewalk. Street Superintendent Bob Tem- ple 'reported that the city water tanks are being inspected. The Capitol Hill t~ank is being h)wered and inspected now, he said, and when it is completed, the Angle- side tank will be done: The water is lowered in tLetanks during the inspection, Temple said, so that during the time the inspections are in progress, some resi0ents lnay have lff~v water press'tire. T]'avis announced that: George Hunter had been appointed as act- ing fire chief during the leave of absence granted Fire Chief T. E. Deer. JOB OPPOI{TUNITIESI Employnlent openings reported by the Olympia office of the Em- ployment Security Department this week inchlde dictating ma- chine transcriber, public relations nlall, lrlain|.ena nee lnan, dairy h'lnd, drafl snlau (architectural), waitress, reKistered nurse, book- keeper, laboratory techniciau, col- leetor, journeylnan automobile nle- chanic, caseworker s, st'atisLical clerk, regislered nurse, right-of- way agent, hospita.I nm'sing c(m- sulLanl, lifeguard, legal secretary, a.uditor, PBX opera.lor, clerk slen- ographers, forest engineer, licens- ed prac.t.ical norse, housekeeper, I)abv sitters. ~/cconutant, clerk- typist, and commission salesman. Weather, ]Iigit l,ow I recip, Mar. 25 .............. 50 :!5 .02 Mar. 26 .............. 45 37 .04 Mar 27 ............ ,17 ,i2 .03 Ma,'. 2s .......... :/. aa 40 .0s M::tr. 29 .............. 53 40 .46 Mar. 30 .............. 54 :~7 .02 Mat'. 31 .............. 54 37 •02 Readings are for a 24-hour per- Iod endh~g at 8 a.m. ~r 2 door ~edans. 6 cyl., and Paration and [. H, and 0. Slate al equipment are not included. **And that's where the Dodge Boys sta._.~ to deoll Shelton PETE BUECHEL IS 61VEN STUDY GRANT Page 3 The First Annual Hood Canal Lions Club Broom Sale will begin at 7 p.m. Friday, and will covet" the area fronY Lilliwaup to, and in- eluding. Union. The Lious Club members will call at each home with household brooms which they will sell for $2 each. The proceeds of this sale will go to the Lions Clubs local sight conservation activities which in- clndes buying prescription lenses for clfildren who need them but cannot afford them. The County Health Nurse keeps in touch witil the club and wheu word is re- ceived of such a case the Lions purchase the glasses for the child. The Lions also contribute white canes for the blind or a share of the expenses for attendance by the blind to the seeing eye clinic. The proceeds of this sale will also go to community a.nd civic betterment projects one of which will be financial assistance to the school in the construction and erection of a tennis court at the Junior High School. Help the Lions sweep up lots of contributions from their First An- nual Broom Sale. Wednesday Nighlers To Hear Of Schweitzer It Pays To Use Journal Want Ads TlALL FAMILY MEN lese rings are all Hand-nladc and Hand-set: to your wifc's individual need. M()ther's Day is May 9th. Order NOW t~:/ have on time. Pay $3.09 down and only $5.00 ntonthly. PERFECT GIFT FOR OTHER ( grandmother) A ring with the proper birthstone for each of children Army Sp/4 James L. Armagost, n The next meeting of the Wed- (or grandchi/dren) .......... esday N~g'ht.et's will be April 7 SOIl OI IV[I'. anfl Ivlrs. ~oran W. in the Fil~e~,lace D .......... A permanent memento for • ~' J~.uu~lt UI (:he Armagost, Shelton, and other Methodist church. Tile speaker will mothers and grandmothers of members of the 3rd Armored Div-be Dr. John Rejester of the Uni- their most beloved possesdon o,o the children. A lifetime brilliant ision participated ill a three-week i versity of Paget Sound. The sub- synthetic birthstone for each of field traininff exercise at Hohen-ject of his talk will involve thethe youngsters is matched to the fels, Germany, which ended Marchlife and work of Dr: Albert months of their birth~, Addi- 8. Schweitzer. Dr. Rejester ?~as spent tional stones may be ordered During the training exercise Ar-many yeaxs studying this great each time the stork arrives. The magost received extensive instruc- man, has visited Dr. Schweitzer twin gold band, permanently Lion in weapons firing~ and small at}d has seen his hospital. Slides unit tactics and uuder sinlulated ,.....,-wlIllhbesSh°wn of this visit. The joined, signifies the holy bond coral)at conditions. I ', "." cordially inviled to lisLen of matrimony, .......... , __ ~ to the story of one of the lear r~e ts t'eg'luar~y ass)gnv, u .s ~t " • ~ g'. In 10K white or yellow wlth i;s~'l iii;!:!'//'ll::!!i TM !i: omhenti¢ birthstone for ,he ka~alHna2qt~;;rt~liSisiCg:PsP4tsl~'~; ml s ad b;~llt.n auth PETE BUECHEL lfantry near Gelnhausen Gcr- "s ~ , ' be served at birth-month of each child • * * 7:30, x"~':_u_'~ P,,;gr~m_22 8'"~*~'^ ---^------ -" p.m. %stone ring ...................... $14.88 Gets JollPnallsln Grant ninny. ¢ "* * lI'ldannaa Second (]lass Rol)ertSERMON TOPIC 2-stonering ...................... $19.88 3-stonering ...................... $24.88 Pete Buechel, 1961 gradtmte of J'. ]lu~, ,~on of ,~II'. and .Mrs., E,.I- HOW Chr, ist was revealed 4-stonering ...................... $2g.88 Shelton high school, has won a win..Hu.ss, .~.ne!ton, asslstea m through prophecy to be a s~viotlr5-stonering ...................... $34.88 two (al ,'t ~m(nng tne iNlntn ]M:alln( Expeat fol the x\ -y ; " g "ant from New Yorker~ : " ~ "" . '" ' qlole World will be ox. mag'~zine to study at any accred- l;ton,~.~,y Brl.gafle at D~ .Nang, Re- plained Sunday at Shelton Fi~'st pUDU (T ~,let IN1 lnl V~nlle selvln S ited school of journalism he wish- -~ ' ~ ; ' ' .'." ' g Chri:tiaa CInu"ch /D. s ~ ~l)oal'd the nnplnblOUS'"landing' Rev C r ec 'ithin five years of his grad- . , a [ . harles "~i~ton ,)as,,,,. Jewelers uation fzom coflege ship dockUSS Vancouver will deliver ill ' e ~' ' ' "; .... " " "., ' " .... ] . " • e s.rmon htled Th~ 125 Railroad Ave. Bucchel told the Journal Tues- Dining the five days of landing[Christ of the Cross". It will also day night he plans to enroll at ?per.'~tions. !!le Vancouver condue-]show how Christ's entire ministry Shelton -- 426-6644 Colun~bia University in New York tea around-tne-clock operations to showed him to be the messiah and 118 Fifth Ave. East City probably a. year after coin- taut ashore equipnlent and supplies how his lninistry ended by his giv- in Olympia --- 357-7300 p]cting his pi'esent studies at the for the Brigade. ling ef his life for m ankil{d. [ University of Puget Sound in 1966 ........................................................................................................ He is tn'~(sident-elect,,f Sigma N{~ !IJIII~[[HH~[[[[[[u[H~][IIHMI~[I[H[[]{][~[[I[]]I][II[u][~]]l]][[~][I]I][II]]III[I[[~I]]]][{[[I[[[[]]I~II~IIHHIMIIu{[[[[II[[[III[[ u][I~III[I[[]~I]]II[[[i[[[IIH[I~i][R[I[{III[I]iIHII]]I~j[~!I[[i[I[]II~![]I[[[[[~II[II[~II([I[I[][I[][I[~[[I[~III[[I[[I~II[[[][I~ fraternity ~at UPS for the 1965-66i school term. Bucchel atlended Olvntpic Col-] I Icge in Bl'elllel'tnn for" two yc&tls ill I~ after his graduation from Shelton .... high school then transferred to :' UPS for the past two ycsrs. HeI Ill'wed varsity football at bothI sch'()ols for' tl{os0 four years and l was a 3-year letterman at Sllel- ton high. He is tbe son of Mr. and Mrs. teritz Buechel, who live on Star Route 2, Stielton (near Dayton). ~'ur#itur~ Ya/~ By Rod Olsen ' BALANCE call be achieved in roonl ill a variety of wa ys, even where you have "mixed" your furnish- ings. Color, of course, is a bfisie niethod • . . deciding on a unified color scheme and following it through. • An old rhyme makes a good rule to remember: "Something dark, something light, some- thing dull, something bright." A well-decorated room will ,have something of each---but not in the same proportions. You don't get "balance" bY uuseing equal parts of dark and bright col- ors, for in- stance. Ordinarily you Would use Smaller areas of dark against a la I•ger, lighter back- ground. Use your small quanti{ies, to(), as in v decorator pillows or tndtal'ac- t t nts S ? "', . uch as brass. You ean acttieve t nity and ban ancc. through other devices. Try u,s!ng lamps in pairs (not more than tWo pairs in ally one ] don1 ) ) • • I air off a couple of' handsonle ehairs, perhal)s piek- ing up a coh)r used in the print on the sofa o/" in your draper- ies. Such tricks will provide unity even if the furniture is cf~ different pqriods, i Per that lmndsonlc pair of chairs, lanlt)s Ol• tables . . . or the finest fur~fishings f(ir every !'09m il~ Y9ur llom¢, stop ill and': t)rowsc through our disphtys. You'll find nmch to see . . . and expert help with your decorat- ing problems. I I !~/~]SN 4th and Cota The Board of Directors of Thurston County Federal Savings & Loan Association have declared a regular quarterly dividend at per annum, payable March 31, 1965. Ill ccordance with customary practices, this dividend has been credited to members' ac- counts. ]I 11 1 Ihl tlt II,lhl II!11 lillllllhl I,,,l I d II1 II,,,l;I lllt,l,,lllhll lll, lllll ,I,II1 l,lIlllhl lllIttllthllllllll