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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
May 7, 1959     Shelton Mason County Journal
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May 7, 1959
 
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16 PHONE HA 6-4582 i Now Available New White Color Toner Litlstick by Merle Norman Cosmetics ! ................ i Attention Medium.Price Car buyers L LiT LITTLE SKOOKUM A pot- luc.k dinn(w celebrating the 781h birthday of Paul ll)ittman Sr. was held in the conmnmity hall Friday evening. Mel-nb(rs of the family :)Feb!silt VVeFO: Mr and Mrs. Harry I)ittma]x a, tl(! grandeilildreu, Brook, Nane.y and Mark Johnson; Mr. and Ml's. Archic Dittnlan and children Larry, Bobby, Jane and Joan; Mr. and Mrs. I'aul Dittman Jr. and chihh'en, Rodney, Stanley, Linda and Christine and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Collins and Gary. For an f:vening of enjoyment, i plan on ttirzlillg ()tit for the (lance +at Little Sl[ookum hall this Satur- day night+ The Jim Blzzard's of gTtELTON-MAgON CO[TI' .IOURNAL -- Published tn "C.hrlstma.sto.,m. [.,.A.) ") Paul Dittman Cellulose Found in Trees Has Many Honored at Uses Through the Miracle of Smence Who,, ,+,++,. + +o+++.0.>+ +,f+,,,., + Dinner r ,,+,.. +,,c+ o, ,+,,.c, .,. +,... ,,+,, ,,,,+.,,,, ,o,,,,,, t,,,, I+,,ig)at well have gotten ,ts !iulal/one at,tht,rity .rep,)rts "no hot or I i I i i III I II One '59 Luxury Car is Not Longer, Not.Wider, Not Higher--P-00riced New kind of luxury car on a 117-jach whev.lbaso--As I 4wk Which medium-price aar, mgeh as two foc shorter and hundreds of dolla less i nn I I than other medlum.tMced cars. Try Ambassador Per- u I • is+easiest to park? nalized Luxury: individually adjustable front seats. IE • has top power-to.weight ratio _ • costs least to bay and oporater Tet Oar Sest--AMBA$SADOR I"-8 A • has ocial higllest resale value? ,+ by Rambler AP'lii 270 HP Ambassador V-6 UMBEL MOTORS INO, 7o, SO, First St. --HA 6-3433 MAY I$ SAFKTY CHECK MONTH ...CHECK YOUR CAR.,,CHECK YOUR DRIVING pine. J WIIETIIEII YEN or no, tilt+ Army l isn't saving. But a fern) of cellu- lose +"(he chemical from the tree" I might have .provided the final 'charge for flinging the mi:+sile into Ii)(rpelual orbit  round the sun. I . ' C )For mlro-cellnl(Jse, a powez'tul .x- }plosive, is but one of the. many rises to which science lilts put the tree's major chenllcal. ey sense to m" Ehe= "Ye ."nOw cat take advanl,age of some of i chest ra will be featured. |IOME AGAIN + and feeling ranch better thi.q week are Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Braz who were both hospitalized htst wcelc Mrs. Braz contracted a bad case of flu last Sunday following the birth of "her little son Shane in the Shelton General Hospital. Husband Eddie was not to be outdone and was ad- mitted to the same hospital on Wednesday, also with the flu. Mrs. Braz and baby Shane returned home Saturday and Mr. Braz was released front the hospital Mon- day I nnght add tile new baby is doing fine. Suffering from a touch of .flu and trying tu celebrate a birthday on the same day was the plight of l'amela Sells this Sunday. Those :l)rescnt for her birthday besides her parents, the John Sells, were I her grandparents, Mrs. India Sells and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Robin- son. Pamela was unable to even eat a piece of birthday cttke. i Mr. and Mrs. A1 Lord had din- ner with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sharpe in Shelton, Saturday evenlllg. • UNDAY, MRS. Lord's sister and brother-on-law, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Cowan, of TacoIDa, visited the Lords. Mrs. Cliff Roundtree spent Tues- day evening In Shelton, visiting Mrs. Chris Fisher. NATUNDAY evening, Mr. and Mrs. R0undtree attended the Cen- tral League track meet in hel- ton. Their son, David participated in th event. Sunday visitors of the Alfred Rolavs, were Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carperiter ef M0ntesano. Joan and Davis Chappell and daughters, of Aberdeen, spent the weekend with Joan's parents, the Walter Aliens. borrow by check with R EADY-C)REDIT repay month y 0nly 10% of what you owe lle: "We'll imy tile dentist.., get the " and buy sons new ch)thes. We'll need She: "That ]eaves $700 we'll still hayed " ' ' nthl I We won t be ttapped to big+me y pyments, He: "It we don't uee our account again this month, our eRhor.., only $50 the first monUl, second payment will b only $45." You know whyT' gei "Later on perhal we can use our aCcount to take She: "Of course! With Seaflrst Ready-Credit we repay a VaCation. Wa'll + have plen1[y of Credit available.' monthly only 10% of what we actually owe." *Plus low I% role on the loon bolonce ond nomlnol service chorge!. • SHELTON BRANOH 203 West Railroad Avenue • Phone HA 6.8291 MMa FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE GQII(kR&T|Q For further details bou Seafirst Ready-Credit, vsit, telephone, or write... in onr civilization than any other basic conunodity with one excep- tion: water. AN conlnlon its clay, as ahundant as air, cellulose is likely to be in the food you eat, the clothes yon wear, the car you drive, even in tile filter of your cigarette. It is in the photofilm you shoot, the bed you sleep in +- and in scores of places you would least expect to find it. A finished cellulose product can be as soft as plush--like rayon or surgical gauze. Or bard and tohgh like the casing of your telephone or the steering wheel in your C,LI '. Too, it can be durable and shock resistant like Tyrcx cord for your auto and truck tires. IT MAY BE transparent as it is in cellophane---or a powder in a detergent where  locks out dirt. It might be the Casing of a hot dog, a "leatberette" case for a camera or the coating of a vita- min pill. It couhl be the lining in your best shoes, the substance of a sponge, a tool handle or a plastic dish or cup. It is in lacquers and four shotgun shells and in just about every corner of your home+-- perhaps your home itself. Chemically, cellulose is a carbo- hydrate The foinula for its basle unit is exactly the same as the sulg:rf"g>:;o ? 'e, nfinus one me- cellulose molecule is made up of hundreds of these bsic units linked together in long chains. PHYSICALLY, cellulose is more easily descriled. It is the skeleton of all plantlife-of the rose as well as of the giant redwood; of grass, shrubs and weeds. (For tea- runs of economy, commercial cel- lulose comes flm trees.) How- ever, its simplicity stops thet. As a very basic fmTn of living mat- ter, it holds one of Nature's hlgh- ly guarded secrets. For scientists have yet to make a particle of cel- lulose synthetically. Perhaps that's why they approach it with such healthy respect. Nonetheless, wit hin the past century, millions of tong of cellu- lose from western hemlock and southe pine -- two popular sourCes--have been tuted out for hundreds of industries producing over 6500 useful, every-day prod- ucts. Science calls cellulose a "poly- mer", or giant molecule. It is from the chemistry of polymers that come all our synthetics, plastics aaiTl "miracle" fibers in tbmr wlde pallette of lors and textures. As a natural resource of unim: aginable potential, cellulose is unique in that it is replenishable. Unlike minerals or petroleum, ,cel- Inlose is readily replaceable---sim- ply by growing new trues. ONE COMPANY', Rayonier, which processes over a billion pounds of cellulose a year, main- rains vast tree farms in the U.S.A. and Canada where the land is re- seeded in a dynamic and continu- ing conservation program. The same company also con- ducts extensive research,, explor- ing the possibilities of cellulose as well as its potentially interesting "kissin' cousins" o n l y recently named the "silvlchemicals." Researchers here believe these silvichemicals -- t r e e chemicals other than cellulose--can even(u- ally become to the forest products industries w h a t petro-chemlcals today re to the oil industry: valg- able co-products. Rayonier is now marketing five of them. One, for cxample, Is important to ell well drilling No one knows, and fewer still will predict, what the future of t h e s e amazing chemicalsthat- grow" may be. However, in thai zdstes of the cellulose lndtmtry erhaps lies a new way to help eed the human race. For right ow some of the these silvichem- icals are pl)viding a ew origtp for animal feeds. And thole are hints that whole f  m i 1 i e s of cehmical-mediclnal compounds may emerge from this new science of Silvlehemtstry. SUCH TREE chemicals as tall oil, another cellulose co-product, account for a varied group of in- dustrial chemicals whose applica- tions, though numerous, are grow- ing vigorously, Tall oll is now in hundreds of products ranging from paints, varnishes and lubri- cants to linoleum and soap. Meanwhile the expanding uses of cellulose tell milch tbout the scientifid pi, o'us Of a country and .even m02re about its living standard. For cellulose is intimate- ly associated with better living: the more consumed, the higher a nation's qtapdard of living. IN THE U.g.&. for example, we use about 430 lbs, per person a year--the world's top consump- tion. On ,the other hand, a Russian ,comrade' squeaks by o!l jtt 7 lbs., and Red China uses a scant hree pounds per capita amltlally: ut a Chinese living in Fi-ee For- mosa consumes 14 lbs. a year! The chemists at Rayonier, larg- est American cellulose producer, are the least inclined to make pre- dictions. However, they Will go this far: "There is no limiting reason why chemicals from trees can't be further developed and marketed to help fill almost all the basic wants of the human race. at economical prices." A pretty star- tling statement when you analyze i it. ISN'T IT amaglng what science finds in tree DRIVER FINED $135 Edwin Gosser, 23, Shelton was fined a total of $135 Movday night in the Shelton police court. He was charged with violating the financial responsibility law, driving without It license and neg- !igent driving. is attorney gave notice of ap- i+  th vkdtto ’4 th Iluaa- ciaf responsibility law, lheltnn, Washin ' Hod Canal Club Party Honors Former Officers anHOO D2ePrO.aTs plAn::i; I)’ 11:1 Hoodsport members at the 32nd anniversary of the Hood Canal "vVonlans Club which was h(,ld at the Colonial House in Shelton, April 28th. Twenty-nine women were present to enjoy the evening of fun and enteI'tainment. • THE TABLES were (tecorated With green dog,ood blossoms, in Ruby colored bottles and the pro- grams were made of white art paper cut in the shape of a dog- wood l)lossom and glittered with pink and gold. The corsages were also of dogwood with the centers in pink glitter. Making the ,theme a "Jewel Tones" I)inner in honor of their 32nd anniversary : Blanche Callahan acted as Toastmisttess. President M r s. Edith Kraus gave a welcome speech at the table. Past Presi- dents and charter members were introduced and each given a Cor- sage. There were 3 past presidents and 3 charter members present. !Past presidents were .... Mrs. Dor- othy Ashbaugh, Mrs. Elizabeth .Robinson and Mrs. Rosie Smith (2 .barter nlembers were, Mrs. Christine Ahl, Mrs. Anna Dickin- son and Mrs. Berta McKiel. Mrs. Oletha Stark has been the club's Secretary for 14 years. A poem ill her honor was composed and read by Mrs. Elizabeth Rob- inson who came from Tacolll to be there. A pTogram' of Skits and Music were enjoyed Mr. Hans Schmldt played a Medley of Songs on the Piano. Mrs. C6rda Watson played old time songs for community singihg. The hghlight of the evening was a kit put on by the Lilll, waup group, called the "Fountain of Youth'., which created much merriment. Spouting Fountains were acted by, Mrs. Zoe Sceva, Mrs. Francis Moake and MrS Kathrine Beardsley. Others in the act were, Mrs. Jennie Heft, a real- estate man, trying to sell a beati- tiful Garden With spouting Foun- tains to prospective buyers. Mr. and Mrs. McGillicuty, acted by Mrs. Mettle Backland and the Mr. was l's. Christine Ahl. Mrs. llene Ager was a Secretary for the Realestate man. Hoodports Skit was "The Old Grey Mare aint What She Used to be," acted by Mrs. Cecil Gilbert, Mrs. Rose Millo, Mrs. Dorothy Swanson, Mrs. Anna Dickinson, Mrs. Flora Lockwood and Mrs. Vera Linscott. The lovely home and Gardens of Mrs. Maude Crosby on Hood Canal, a few miles east of Twaroh State Park, will be open .to' the Hood Canal Womans 'Club and their Friends to play cards or to just visit. A Silver offering will be given for the benefit of the Hood Canal Womans Club. This is Mrs. Crosby's way of making dollars grow for the club's treas- ury. Refreshments will be served Traffic Deaths Less Here During !959 Ms.'on County i." fllllong nille counties in the state in which a l'e(hlCti(n in traffic deaths dllring the fil'st four nlonths of ttlis yenr, as compared to a like perio(l in 1958, has heen reported. State Pa- ll'el Chi(,f t’.oy A. Betlacl sai(I. '"]'his ).ec()r(I is most COlHnel(1- able," Bethtch stated, :'and every official an(I citizen in Mason County can be jn:tly 1)roll(I. It is beeatlse of t'ecords such as this that the state, nt the end of the first four months of 1959, has had an overall reduction in traffk: deaths. Officials responsible for traffic safety are appreciative of this contribution." At the end of April, one death had occurred in Mason County,' four less than during the first four months )f 1958. Streekenbaeh Plans Wisconsin Trip Commissioner C. W. Strecken- bach will leave this Friday to visit his family in Green Bay, Wi. The commissioner has five brothers and sisters who are still living including one sister who is celebrating her 50th wedding an- niversm3,+ and reservations will be accept- able. Please call Mrs. Ann Rowe or Mrs. George Brewer for reser- valions. MRS. CIIOSBY'S artistic ability is expressed in her home and flow- ers and everyone will enjoy her lovely Azaleas and Rhododendrons which are in bloom at this tbne. The party will be on Thursday, May 14 at 1:30 p.m. .. _* 18-in. 2-h.P, i ! 2-Cycle 18-in. 4-Cycle 22-in. 4-Cycle 15 GRIMES & McNEiL Body & Fender Works 3rd & Grove Dial 6-8264 DETTER TAStlNO. + BETTER FOR YOU awsmr.sohble. Jadudla4t dbo.lvL., atacda and )amin" s tm,,, • ISJO, DAiltV QUN NATIONAL OI[VI[LOPMINT I), DRnRV QUEEH FIRST AND ALDER Shelt0n, Washington Da'a Queea* is the ment for today's people of all ages. Dairy Queen malts, shak and other taste treats at# you fresh from the flavor. Made from milk, Dairy Queen has ! mills **, more erals and muscle-toniC# than an equal serving cream. Fewer calories fattening, too. Come in today... Dairy Queen IS betrl : qDId  k • Ilek or n dah'y products made onl: 16 PHONE HA 6-4582 i Now Available New White Color Toner Litlstick by Merle Norman Cosmetics ! ................ i Attention Medium.Price Car buyers L LiT LITTLE SKOOKUM A pot- luc.k dinn(w celebrating the 781h birthday of Paul ll)ittman Sr. was held in the conmnmity hall Friday evening. Mel-nb(rs of the family :)Feb!silt VVeFO: Mr and Mrs. Harry I)ittma]x a, tl(! grandeilildreu, Brook, Nane.y and Mark Johnson; Mr. and Ml's. Archic Dittnlan and children Larry, Bobby, Jane and Joan; Mr. and Mrs. I'aul Dittman Jr. and chihh'en, Rodney, Stanley, Linda and Christine and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Collins and Gary. For an f:vening of enjoyment, i plan on ttirzlillg ()tit for the (lance +at Little Sl[ookum hall this Satur- day night+ The Jim Blzzard's of gTtELTON-MAgON CO[TI' .IOURNAL -- Published tn "C.hrlstma.sto.,m. [.,.A.) ") Paul Dittman Cellulose Found in Trees Has Many Honored at Uses Through the Miracle of Smence Who,, ,+,++,. + +o+++.0.>+ +,f+,,,., + Dinner r ,,+,.. +,,c+ o, ,+,,.c, .,. +,... ,,+,, ,,,,+.,,,, ,o,,,,,, t,,,, I+,,ig)at well have gotten ,ts !iulal/one at,tht,rity .rep,)rts "no hot or I i I i i III I II One '59 Luxury Car is Not Longer, Not.Wider, Not Higher--P-00riced New kind of luxury car on a 117-jach whev.lbaso--As I 4wk Which medium-price aar, mgeh as two foc shorter and hundreds of dolla less i nn I I than other medlum.tMced cars. Try Ambassador Per- u I • is+easiest to park? nalized Luxury: individually adjustable front seats. IE • has top power-to.weight ratio _ • costs least to bay and oporater Tet Oar Sest--AMBA$SADOR I"-8 A • has ocial higllest resale value? ,+ by Rambler AP'lii 270 HP Ambassador V-6 UMBEL MOTORS INO, 7o, SO, First St. --HA 6-3433 MAY I$ SAFKTY CHECK MONTH ...CHECK YOUR CAR.,,CHECK YOUR DRIVING pine. J WIIETIIEII YEN or no, tilt+ Army l isn't saving. But a fern) of cellu- lose +"(he chemical from the tree" I might have .provided the final 'charge for flinging the mi:+sile into Ii)(rpelual orbit  round the sun. I . ' C )For mlro-cellnl(Jse, a powez'tul .x- }plosive, is but one of the. many rises to which science lilts put the tree's major chenllcal. ey sense to m" Ehe= "Ye ."nOw cat take advanl,age of some of i chest ra will be featured. |IOME AGAIN + and feeling ranch better thi.q week are Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Braz who were both hospitalized htst wcelc Mrs. Braz contracted a bad case of flu last Sunday following the birth of "her little son Shane in the Shelton General Hospital. Husband Eddie was not to be outdone and was ad- mitted to the same hospital on Wednesday, also with the flu. Mrs. Braz and baby Shane returned home Saturday and Mr. Braz was released front the hospital Mon- day I nnght add tile new baby is doing fine. Suffering from a touch of .flu and trying tu celebrate a birthday on the same day was the plight of l'amela Sells this Sunday. Those :l)rescnt for her birthday besides her parents, the John Sells, were I her grandparents, Mrs. India Sells and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Robin- son. Pamela was unable to even eat a piece of birthday cttke. i Mr. and Mrs. A1 Lord had din- ner with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sharpe in Shelton, Saturday evenlllg. • UNDAY, MRS. Lord's sister and brother-on-law, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Cowan, of TacoIDa, visited the Lords. Mrs. Cliff Roundtree spent Tues- day evening In Shelton, visiting Mrs. Chris Fisher. NATUNDAY evening, Mr. and Mrs. R0undtree attended the Cen- tral League track meet in hel- ton. Their son, David participated in th event. Sunday visitors of the Alfred Rolavs, were Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carperiter ef M0ntesano. Joan and Davis Chappell and daughters, of Aberdeen, spent the weekend with Joan's parents, the Walter Aliens. borrow by check with R EADY-C)REDIT repay month y 0nly 10% of what you owe lle: "We'll imy tile dentist.., get the " and buy sons new ch)thes. We'll need She: "That ]eaves $700 we'll still hayed " ' ' nthl I We won t be ttapped to big+me y pyments, He: "It we don't uee our account again this month, our eRhor.., only $50 the first monUl, second payment will b only $45." You know whyT' gei "Later on perhal we can use our aCcount to take She: "Of course! With Seaflrst Ready-Credit we repay a VaCation. Wa'll + have plen1[y of Credit available.' monthly only 10% of what we actually owe." *Plus low I% role on the loon bolonce ond nomlnol service chorge!. • SHELTON BRANOH 203 West Railroad Avenue • Phone HA 6.8291 MMa FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE GQII(kR&T|Q For further details bou Seafirst Ready-Credit, vsit, telephone, or write... in onr civilization than any other basic conunodity with one excep- tion: water. AN conlnlon its clay, as ahundant as air, cellulose is likely to be in the food you eat, the clothes yon wear, the car you drive, even in tile filter of your cigarette. It is in the photofilm you shoot, the bed you sleep in +- and in scores of places you would least expect to find it. A finished cellulose product can be as soft as plush--like rayon or surgical gauze. Or bard and tohgh like the casing of your telephone or the steering wheel in your C,LI '. Too, it can be durable and shock resistant like Tyrcx cord for your auto and truck tires. IT MAY BE transparent as it is in cellophane---or a powder in a detergent where  locks out dirt. It might be the Casing of a hot dog, a "leatberette" case for a camera or the coating of a vita- min pill. It couhl be the lining in your best shoes, the substance of a sponge, a tool handle or a plastic dish or cup. It is in lacquers and four shotgun shells and in just about every corner of your home+-- perhaps your home itself. Chemically, cellulose is a carbo- hydrate The foinula for its basle unit is exactly the same as the sulg:rf"g>:;o ? 'e, nfinus one me- cellulose molecule is made up of hundreds of these bsic units linked together in long chains. PHYSICALLY, cellulose is more easily descriled. It is the skeleton of all plantlife-of the rose as well as of the giant redwood; of grass, shrubs and weeds. (For tea- runs of economy, commercial cel- lulose comes flm trees.) How- ever, its simplicity stops thet. As a very basic fmTn of living mat- ter, it holds one of Nature's hlgh- ly guarded secrets. For scientists have yet to make a particle of cel- lulose synthetically. Perhaps that's why they approach it with such healthy respect. Nonetheless, wit hin the past century, millions of tong of cellu- lose from western hemlock and southe pine -- two popular sourCes--have been tuted out for hundreds of industries producing over 6500 useful, every-day prod- ucts. Science calls cellulose a "poly- mer", or giant molecule. It is from the chemistry of polymers that come all our synthetics, plastics aaiTl "miracle" fibers in tbmr wlde pallette of lors and textures. As a natural resource of unim: aginable potential, cellulose is unique in that it is replenishable. Unlike minerals or petroleum, ,cel- Inlose is readily replaceable---sim- ply by growing new trues. ONE COMPANY', Rayonier, which processes over a billion pounds of cellulose a year, main- rains vast tree farms in the U.S.A. and Canada where the land is re- seeded in a dynamic and continu- ing conservation program. The same company also con- ducts extensive research,, explor- ing the possibilities of cellulose as well as its potentially interesting "kissin' cousins" o n l y recently named the "silvlchemicals." Researchers here believe these silvichemicals -- t r e e chemicals other than cellulose--can even(u- ally become to the forest products industries w h a t petro-chemlcals today re to the oil industry: valg- able co-products. Rayonier is now marketing five of them. One, for cxample, Is important to ell well drilling No one knows, and fewer still will predict, what the future of t h e s e amazing chemicalsthat- grow" may be. However, in thai zdstes of the cellulose lndtmtry erhaps lies a new way to help eed the human race. For right ow some of the these silvichem- icals are pl)viding a ew origtp for animal feeds. And thole are hints that whole f  m i 1 i e s of cehmical-mediclnal compounds may emerge from this new science of Silvlehemtstry. SUCH TREE chemicals as tall oil, another cellulose co-product, account for a varied group of in- dustrial chemicals whose applica- tions, though numerous, are grow- ing vigorously, Tall oll is now in hundreds of products ranging from paints, varnishes and lubri- cants to linoleum and soap. Meanwhile the expanding uses of cellulose tell milch tbout the scientifid pi, o'us Of a country and .even m02re about its living standard. For cellulose is intimate- ly associated with better living: the more consumed, the higher a nation's qtapdard of living. IN THE U.g.&. for example, we use about 430 lbs, per person a year--the world's top consump- tion. On ,the other hand, a Russian ,comrade' squeaks by o!l jtt 7 lbs., and Red China uses a scant hree pounds per capita amltlally: ut a Chinese living in Fi-ee For- mosa consumes 14 lbs. a year! The chemists at Rayonier, larg- est American cellulose producer, are the least inclined to make pre- dictions. However, they Will go this far: "There is no limiting reason why chemicals from trees can't be further developed and marketed to help fill almost all the basic wants of the human race. at economical prices." A pretty star- tling statement when you analyze i it. ISN'T IT amaglng what science finds in tree DRIVER FINED $135 Edwin Gosser, 23, Shelton was fined a total of $135 Movday night in the Shelton police court. He was charged with violating the financial responsibility law, driving without It license and neg- !igent driving. is attorney gave notice of ap- i+  th vkdtto ’4 th Iluaa- ciaf responsibility law, lheltnn, Washin ' Hod Canal Club Party Honors Former Officers anHOO D2ePrO.aTs plAn::i; I)’ 11:1 Hoodsport members at the 32nd anniversary of the Hood Canal "vVonlans Club which was h(,ld at the Colonial House in Shelton, April 28th. Twenty-nine women were present to enjoy the evening of fun and enteI'tainment. • THE TABLES were (tecorated With green dog,ood blossoms, in Ruby colored bottles and the pro- grams were made of white art paper cut in the shape of a dog- wood l)lossom and glittered with pink and gold. The corsages were also of dogwood with the centers in pink glitter. Making the ,theme a "Jewel Tones" I)inner in honor of their 32nd anniversary : Blanche Callahan acted as Toastmisttess. President M r s. Edith Kraus gave a welcome speech at the table. Past Presi- dents and charter members were introduced and each given a Cor- sage. There were 3 past presidents and 3 charter members present. !Past presidents were .... Mrs. Dor- othy Ashbaugh, Mrs. Elizabeth .Robinson and Mrs. Rosie Smith (2 .barter nlembers were, Mrs. Christine Ahl, Mrs. Anna Dickin- son and Mrs. Berta McKiel. Mrs. Oletha Stark has been the club's Secretary for 14 years. A poem ill her honor was composed and read by Mrs. Elizabeth Rob- inson who came from Tacolll to be there. A pTogram' of Skits and Music were enjoyed Mr. Hans Schmldt played a Medley of Songs on the Piano. Mrs. C6rda Watson played old time songs for community singihg. The hghlight of the evening was a kit put on by the Lilll, waup group, called the "Fountain of Youth'., which created much merriment. Spouting Fountains were acted by, Mrs. Zoe Sceva, Mrs. Francis Moake and MrS Kathrine Beardsley. Others in the act were, Mrs. Jennie Heft, a real- estate man, trying to sell a beati- tiful Garden With spouting Foun- tains to prospective buyers. Mr. and Mrs. McGillicuty, acted by Mrs. Mettle Backland and the Mr. was l's. Christine Ahl. Mrs. llene Ager was a Secretary for the Realestate man. Hoodports Skit was "The Old Grey Mare aint What She Used to be," acted by Mrs. Cecil Gilbert, Mrs. Rose Millo, Mrs. Dorothy Swanson, Mrs. Anna Dickinson, Mrs. Flora Lockwood and Mrs. Vera Linscott. The lovely home and Gardens of Mrs. Maude Crosby on Hood Canal, a few miles east of Twaroh State Park, will be open .to' the Hood Canal Womans 'Club and their Friends to play cards or to just visit. A Silver offering will be given for the benefit of the Hood Canal Womans Club. This is Mrs. Crosby's way of making dollars grow for the club's treas- ury. Refreshments will be served Traffic Deaths Less Here During !959 Ms.'on County i." fllllong nille counties in the state in which a l'e(hlCti(n in traffic deaths dllring the fil'st four nlonths of ttlis yenr, as compared to a like perio(l in 1958, has heen reported. State Pa- ll'el Chi(,f t’.oy A. Betlacl sai(I. '"]'his ).ec()r(I is most COlHnel(1- able," Bethtch stated, :'and every official an(I citizen in Mason County can be jn:tly 1)roll(I. It is beeatlse of t'ecords such as this that the state, nt the end of the first four months of 1959, has had an overall reduction in traffk: deaths. Officials responsible for traffic safety are appreciative of this contribution." At the end of April, one death had occurred in Mason County,' four less than during the first four months )f 1958. Streekenbaeh Plans Wisconsin Trip Commissioner C. W. Strecken- bach will leave this Friday to visit his family in Green Bay, Wi. The commissioner has five brothers and sisters who are still living including one sister who is celebrating her 50th wedding an- niversm3,+ and reservations will be accept- able. Please call Mrs. Ann Rowe or Mrs. George Brewer for reser- valions. MRS. CIIOSBY'S artistic ability is expressed in her home and flow- ers and everyone will enjoy her lovely Azaleas and Rhododendrons which are in bloom at this tbne. The party will be on Thursday, May 14 at 1:30 p.m. .. _* 18-in. 2-h.P, i ! 2-Cycle 18-in. 4-Cycle 22-in. 4-Cycle 15 GRIMES & McNEiL Body & Fender Works 3rd & Grove Dial 6-8264 DETTER TAStlNO. + BETTER FOR YOU awsmr.sohble. Jadudla4t dbo.lvL., atacda and )amin" s tm,,, • ISJO, DAiltV QUN NATIONAL OI[VI[LOPMINT I), DRnRV QUEEH FIRST AND ALDER Shelt0n, Washington Da'a Queea* is the ment for today's people of all ages. Dairy Queen malts, shak and other taste treats at# you fresh from the flavor. Made from milk, Dairy Queen has ! mills **, more erals and muscle-toniC# than an equal serving cream. Fewer calories fattening, too. Come in today... Dairy Queen IS betrl : qDId  k • Ilek or n dah'y products made onl: