April 16, 1970 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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e
al Log
eXtensive program to
mote aerial logging in
forest areas has been
:hed by the Pacific
st Region of the U.S.
The program will
Unplemented by the end
would be considered inaccessible
using conventional logging
methods. A survey of the
Region's 19 National Fbrests in
Oregon and Washington shows
that perhaps 10 to 15 per cent of
the commercial timber lands fall
goal will be to
use of skyline logging
which will require less
and will cause
to soil, water, and
in this category.
"It is important in this day of
intense concern for the
environment to promote the use
of aerial harvesting systems,"
Connaughton said, "and at the
US
Oregon where the need is greatest.
Those Forests are the Mt. Hood,
Willamette, Umpqua, Siuslaw, and
Siskiyou.
Teams from these five Forests
will be trained to carry out
programs on the ground using
skyline logging systems in which a
carriage transports logs over the
ground to the landing area. The
four-or-five-man teams will be
composed of persons with
different professional training and
same time meet the Nations' experience, such as engineers,
systems such as growing needs for wood products, foresters, landscape architects,
and balloons will provide particularly for housing." soils scientists, and biologists.
; of harvesting in the Many National Forests have They will be trained to work
:I the Pacific Northwest been making skyline logging sales as a team, with an interchange of
tying the land in as near for some time, notable the advice and knowledge in their
isturbed Condition as Olympic and Mt. Baker National fields. The first training course
Regional Forester Forests in Washington. Now, an will be at Portland from April 27
aughton. Also,
give access to
,'r that otherwise
decorated the
of the United
Church for the
)inner of the Mason
unity Concert
Hostesses for
is held annually
in the group's
~Paign, were Mrs.
and Mrs. Bill
in the preparation
the dinner were
~son, Mrs. Clyde
Powell, Mrs.
Herrick and
Mr. and Mrs.
ler Provided the
Smeltzer, who is
!nity Concert
this area, was a
will be at the
lUarters at Dean's
will assist at
campaign in
ookings for the
ed
the Shelton Jaycees
attended the
Jaycee
in South Bend
awards.
was elected
e Vice-President.
Mills won
COUple award and
ading Jaycee
Wife award was
and
year Jaycee
by Mrs• Mills.
were
Mr. and
and Mrs. Jerry
andMrs. Mike
andMrs. Dick
• and Mrs. Dick
Lange,Jack
aycees won the
award•
and Arnold
~n named to the
ed Advisory
)mmittee, which
cants from the
a. and makes
.d~°ns to the
chairman of the
m .Green Poster
~:al Jaycees. The
POSter contest
est Festival
t resident was one
~n,a Utilities
~' v lOyes recently
Years of service.
~', a POWerhouse
"Lmna City Light's
• -ect a pin and
D Y~ars of service.
~re recognized for
" Years of service.
:inatra
Llocker
~quel V,/.Ich
Ill ¢ 9fl"
r/and
effort will be made to increase the
number of such sales, beginning
with five National Forests in
coming season.
She reminded the group that
Community Concert membership
cards purchased in Shelton will be
honored by other Community
Concert associations all over the
United States. Memberships for
the coming year may be
purchased until noon Saturday•
M rs. Laurence Starr,
president, announced that May 26
had been set as the date for the
Opera Workshop. This will be a
bonus concert for all who join the
association for the 1970-71
season. The Shelton High School
choir has been invited to perform
with the Seattle Opera association
for this program•
through June 5. A great variety of
subjects will be taught, from
ecology to economic analysis.
Instructors will come from Forest
Service offices in Washington,
D.C., and Berkely, California, in
addition to Portland. Forest
Service offices at Missoula and
San Francisco also will be
represented. Training will include
field trips and test problems.
The Regional program headed
by Virgil W. Binkley, will be tied
in closely with timber industry
persons, equipment
manufacturers and others.
Binkley came to Portland last
year from a forest engineering
research post in Seattle• tie is a
graduate in forest management
from Colorado State University
and holds a master's degree in
logging engineering from the
University of Washington. A
helicopter pilot himself, he has
been involved in research dealing
with helicopter logging, as well as
balloon and skyline logging.
Hurry! Supplies may be limited!
Prices good Thursday through Saturday Only
COLOR PRINTS
From slides. Reg. 50¢
NOW
BRECK NEW SHAMPOO
18 Oz. Regularly $1.98 NOW
BAYER ASPRIN
100's. Regularly $1.07 NOW
ALKA SELTZER
Regularly 73¢ NOW
--
13 Oz. Regularly $1.64 NOW
CREST FAMILY SIZE
Toothpaste. $1.05 NOW
MAALOX SUSPENSION LIQUID
Regularly $1.59 NOW 98
OGILVIE HIGHLIGHTS SHAMPOO|7
Regularly $2.75 NOW $11
SQUIBB THERoGRAM $49
Regularly $7.45
'"'"'" $9
Regularly $1.10 NOW
I m l s Pharmacy
5th & FrSgn :l n'm'sa"d'426-as27
A DIFFERENT X-Ray machine was recently installed in the
Mason County Health Department offices here through the
cooperation of the Health Department and the County
Tuberculosis Association. Here, looking at the new machine,
are Dr. Jud Holloway, finance chairman of the TB
Association; Torger Lee, President of the TB Association, and
Dr. J. V. DeShaye, director of the Thurston-Mason Health
District. The X-Ray machine was purchased at Ft. Lewis to
replace a worn machine which had been in use previously.
The TB Association agreed to underwrite the cost of the
machine. The machine is used to give free chest X-Rays in the
Health Department work and in the TB control program.
Science
s Are
Program
High school sophomores
interested in space science now
have an opportunity to compete
for participation in a unique
national Space Seminar to be held
July 12-18 at NASA's Kennedy
Space Center. Fla.
Sixty young men, one from
every state and ten foreign
countries, will be chosen for their
outstanding school leadership,
community service and science
interests in a nation-wide
competition now underway.
Applications can be obtained
from the Olympia office of the
Boy Scouts of America at P.O.
Box 1308, Olympia, or 5737
Linderson Way, Tumwater. The
competition is open to all youths,
not only Explorers, who will be
finishing their sophomore year
this spring•
The Space Seminar is being
sponsored by Pepsi-Cola
Company, and the ttugh O'Brian
Youth Foundation in cooperation
with the Exploring Division of the
Boy Scouts of America and the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration at the John F.
Kennedy Space Center. Explorers
are members of the high school
action program of the BSA.
Judging will be done on a
local and national basis by
volunteer Exploring leaders. The
winners will be flown to ('ape
Kennedy for the intensive
week-long 14-hour daily seminars
dealing with every phase of the
space program. NASA officials
will be on hand to conduct the
seminar and for informal
discussions.
Highlights of the seminar will
include boarding the
6V2-million-pound Crawler Rocket
Transporter for an inspection
while in motion; a special briefing
on the Apollo 14 mobile
launcher; ascension of the launch
umbilical tower; and entrance to
the Apollo command and lunar
module simulators.
O'Brian began sponsoring
youth programs in 1958 after he
visited Dr. Albert Schweitzer in
Africa• He came away from that
stimulating trip with a desire to
create something that would
benefit youth. He founded the
ttugh O'Brian Youth Foundation
that has since conducted seminars
on a different subject each year.
For example, last year the Hugh
O'Brian Youth Foundation and
Pepsi-Cola sponsored an
oceanography seminar for
Explorers at the University of
Miami's Institute for Marine
Sciences.
"The Foundation's purpose,"
explained O'Brian, "is to accent
the positive; to pat the good boy
on the back and let him know
there is a reward for being a
responsible member of the
community. We do this by
seeking out young men in their
formative years and providing
opportunities, through yearly
seminars in a variety of fields, for
their leadership abilities to emerge
and develop and to motivate
others when they return home."
Volume I, Number 3
Shelton, Washi,ngton
April 1970
If savings are handled via
payroll deduction, credit is
always given from the first day
of the month, regardless of when
the credit union office receives
the check.
Life Savings Insurance is an
extra benefit provided all
insurable members of the credit
union• It is furnished at no
direct cost to you, to encourage
you to build up your credit
union share account, and to give
you and your family an extra
measure of security. This and all
other membership benefits are
available to you. Here's how it
works.
You receive life insurance
without charge to you for each
Newly-engaged couple, Andrea Brown and Bob Tibbits, listen as
Bernadine Duffey explain~s many benefits of new account they have
just opened.
dollar in your credit union share
~ acc ount, up to the first How many members of your Andrea will graduate from the
::~[ $2,000.00, if it was on deposit family belong to the credit Metropolitan Business College in
't/" before you were age 70, and union? Did you know that Seattle, in May. Bob is in the Air
f while you were physically ableeveryone in your immediateForce, stationed at present in
to perform the usual duties off a m i 1 y i s e 1 i g i b le f o r Idaho. Being members of Credit
membershi ~ Yes the children Union families they are well
4, your livelihood. P'- '
I~ On shares on deposit from toow Credit Union membership aware of the advantages their
~l~ age 6 months through age 54, can and should be a familyCredit Union has to offer• And,
~' dollar for dollar covereage isaffair in fact, they may be in a
In these days of easy credit position to offer us some tips
,,, provided, lesser amounts of we're deluged with offers ofafter they become a d!usted to
coverage are provided on deposits
made before age 6 months, and credit plansfor everything, budgeting a Serviceman s pay.
; from age 55 thru 69. Once Teenagers are targets, too, for Most of us feel it's difficult
i Ila covered, shares continue to bemany kinds of buy now-pay to save, but more and more
f rtunatelcreditumon members are
covered as long as they are left later schemes. Un o Y " '
m an finding out that ~t s possible
! "MON~TI2OU~ MnNTY" in the account, regardless of age some of them are lacking" Y ..... .
ne and Here are five tips which we have
I ----~!1~.1--1"~'~'1 .~u'w .... or physical ability. (4463) real appreciation of mo y " " , "
| Itle rnycnetK tater With all this going for you, its wise use, and fall victims to given Andrea and Bob, and
credit abuses would now like to pass on to
your credit union says, money
| Don't let "Monstrous Monty" eat away all cannot buy happiness,-but From around the country, you' ,
your hard earned paycheck each month, on those sound financial planning right though, we hear that some of 1) Set up a 'spending plan
| unex-ected bills now can assure a favorable the most successful money so you ll know exactly where
P " e a . . future rather than a frustrating and the newly-marrieds are those 2) Include something for
We try to encourag 11 credit union members one managers among the late-teens your money goes.
| to save systematically with a certain amount set So, why not get started soon who have been family credit "savings" in your spending plan•
| aside each payday, or whenever you can. Saving on a new savings program for union members for years. 3) Even a small amount,
They ve learned about thrift and saved regularly, will soon add up
| systematically helps you avoid financial you and your family, proper use of credit from their to a tidy sum. (5694)
p . g
| problems later by saving more money sooner. We ........ - ............ - ......arents and their credit union 4) Don't let loose chan e
$ care about our members financial security and the | "" -- "t A good example of this is a just slip away; use a coin saver.
| security of every member s family. That s why I | 1OU aon new account being opened in the 5) Let the credit union help
| have taken this opportunity to ask all of our [ have..to bee above picture, by Bob Tibbits you save-and remember, you
and Andrea Brown, our young can usually save on interest
| members to begin setting aside a small portion of | a millionaire engaged couple, who have their when you borrow from the
I the paycheck for their credit union share (savings) | to earn our wedding date set for June. credit union.
J account. [ highest
[ _ ,, | Interestl $$SSSSSSSS$SSSSSSSS$SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS$$$$- $
I~AY YO~U~%% / ~ Loot Unclaimed!
[ [ ]} ' Two numbers were hidden in last month's'
/ Taxes? publication and both went unclaimed. The .$
I / $ unclaimed numbers belonged to William Bailey,
i U $ who is employed by Batstone Funeral Home and $
This is the time of year$ Floyd (Danny) Watters, who works as a Lab. 1
i.J ~~-~l ~ | when the first half of our ~ Technician at ITT-Rayonier. Sorry men!! $
YOUI2 CREDIT I I~anM s property taxes are aue. a
ISEE ...... ._ ~.#| .l~.#l ~11 / credit union loan is much $ this $
B " ne into " . cheaper than delinquent
y putting mo Y your savings account taxes would be Did you $ Because the March $s were unclaimed,
$ month's hidden figures are worth $10 each. You
[ you will earn at the current rate of 5½% paid [ know that the interest on $ have until the 10th of May to alert us; if you see $
sem 10 da s f r dehnquent taxes amounts . . .
| i-annually. Get Y of free dividends o [ " $ your $$ account No in $$ this $$ issue-Good $
Lm°ney dep°sit%by 10th °f each m°nth" / to 10%??...? SLack- $.
Thursday, April 16, 1970 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 13