May 14, 1959 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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4 Pablished In "Uhrtmastown U.S.A.." ,on
Past Forest Festlvcsl Queens - A Parade of
No. lLois Gibler 1945
No. 2---Marilyn Waklee 1946
No. 3---Bernadine Winiecki 1947
No. 4---Cherie Davidson 1.948
No. 5--Mary Carnea
GlascockTo Talk May 21 Dinner
A staunch defender of conmnmt- alton, representing the II Western
ty interests in public forests, Har- States and Western Canadn This
dy i. Glaseock, Jr., of Portland, associatidn will cele.brate its 50th
will be the main speaker at the aunlversary in .Spokane late in
15t'h annual Mason County Forest 1959.
anth serving one of its famous din-
ners under sponsorship of tile
Shel|on Chamber of Commerce,
also will fehture:
Hom)rs to Queen Andrea and
her princesses;
Honors to the 15 pioneers who
have been selected by the Mason
County Historical Society as rap-
i'etival btnquet honoring Queen
Andrea Kneeland and he]" court in
Mt, View ' School auditorimn on
Thursday night, May 21,
GI,A('OCK, a young man with
an oh:l organization's responsibili-
ties, is forest counsel of tln; West-
ern Forestry Conservation Associ-
Western Forestry brings togeth-[resentattves of this region's foun-
er the public and private forest lders;
agencies j the Wesl for annnal I Honors to tile 10 community
meei,ingslproblems facing prop-/Junlor princesses and their par-
er land agement and conser-lents, a.nd
vat,on of.hlber resources. .. I Honors to the Forest Festival
1HE BANQUET, timed for 6:30 ]committee workers who make pos-
o clock, with the Order of Amar-tsible Shelton's annual celebration.
When Pe00le Have A
Choice . . . .
Choose....
a r i g o i d
Products
In Slere After
Siore Throughout
The County
Where Darig01d
Oompetes , . .
It Winsl
Fresher Becrdse It's Local
Kitsap-Mason Dairymen's Assn.
THIRD AND GROVE • • Phone HA 6-4473
0. D. Durand
Rites Friday
O. I). (Ode) l}urand
Death claimed the life of one
of Mason county's lifetime citi-
zens, O. D. (Odel Durand, 72, 40,1
LaurO, Tuesday in Shelton Gen-
eral Hospital.
Mr. Durand was born Feb. 21, [
1887 In" Kamilche. He worked for]
the Fredson Logging Company in
1910 and Blakelev Logging Con]-I
pany in. 1914. He retired from }
Simpson Logging Company in
February 1957 where lie h)il i
worked as a train conduelor '
the previous 35 years. He was an
ardent fisherman and hunter, win-
ning several prizes in fishing der-
bies.
He is survived by his wife, Car-
rie, Shelton; two daughters, Mrs.
Frankie Millet', Olympia; Mrs. Er-
line Herlgastad, Seattle; a brother,
Joseph Durand, Stlelton; three sis-
ters, Mrs. W. R. Smith, Shelton;
Mrs. Gertrude Potts, Olympia;
Mrs. Grace Parker, Hoquiam, and
four grandchildren, Shelby and
Jeff Miller', Olympia; Lief and
learen Herigstad, Seattle.
l'uneral services will be held at
I p.m., Frid*ay from Witsiers Fun-
eral Home, under /.he direction of
the Rev. Robert B. Echols. Burial
will be in Shelton Memorial Park.
The family requests donations be
made to'the Heart Fund instead of
floral arrangements.
Pallbearers will be Jim Pauley,
Bud Pauley, Vin Connolly, Floya
Lord, Ed Faubert and Bob Snyder.
ttonorary pallbearers will be
George Drake, Clay Berry, Purl
Jemtson, AI Butler. Leland Hud-
son and Floyd Temple.
Former County
Resident Passes
Timothy, A. (Tim} Soule, 83,
passed away last week at Kenne-
Wick
Mr. Soule lived in Mason Coun-
ty from 1925 to t942 and was well
known in Shelton and the canal.,
He was employed here as a rail-
road engineer and also hacl the
school bus contract at one time.
He was born at Wtllipa, Wash.
on Augnst 4, 1875. Mr. Soule was
a pioneer of Willipa Harbor and
Ilved there from 1875 to 1915. He
was a charter member of the
Knight of Pythias and of the
I.O.O.F.
'uneral services were held at
WfI'gins and Sons Funeral Home
tnBeattle on Saturday with inter-
ment following in the Shelton Me-
morlal Park at 3 p.m. The Rev.
Charles T. Hatten officiated.
Mary E, Begtey
Ftmeval Today
Mrs. Mary E. Begley, 70, Gig
'Harbor, died Sunday ir a Tacoma
Hospital.
Mrs. Begley was born Feb. 26,
1889, in Crescent Mills, Calif., and
came to Washington state In 1918,
making her home in Gig HarbOr
since 1954. She was a retired
practical nurse formerly employed
at Shelton General and Tacoma
General hospitals. She was a
member of the Memorial Presby-
terian church and WCTU, Gig
Harbor.
SUrviving are her son, Edward
D. Begley, Shelton, three daugh-
ters, Mrs, Inez Hemley, Gig Har-
bor; Mrs, Rite Long, Tacoma;
Mrs. Mildred Deweese, Suntrana,
Alaska; a brother, Warner Brad-
ley, Califoruia; two sisters, Mrs.
Harriet Van Deren, Little Rock,
Calif.; Mrs. Jo Courtney, San
Diego, 17 grandchildren and 23
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will t)e held at
4 pro1., Thursday from Perkins
Funeral Chapel, Gig Harbor.. The
Rev. Don Griffin will officiate.
Interment will be in the Haven of
Rest, Gig Harbor.
Precious (ontaei
An alloy containing 90 per cent
platinum and 10 per cent rutheni-
um, which posseaao unusually
:high resistance-to wear and spark
erosion, is used for the contact
.points of aires'aft magnetos. '
.... : ..:
No. ll--Ariel Dunbar 1955
BRINNON
LITTLE SKOOKUM BAY By M,. T....al,.h
I The Bvinnon School bus was in-
The Bill Price family drove to volwd in a traffie oaccident Fri-
Brinnoll oll SI lldty and spoilt the day rnorning on tile way to school
afternoon with Mrs. Price's par- \\;vi}h 12 pupils. A car driven by a
ents, Mr. and Mrs, Fred Springer. lman from Clallam County, named
Mr.n. Ernest Moore spent Moth-iHughe s ,attempted to pass ]he
er's lbny at the home of her son, bus and hit a slick spot and ca-
I3m'L Moore, ill Olympia. Another reene(I beet.: and forth and turned
son, lrnest Moore, of Se:,ttle, and over, pinning the (lrivc.r ullder-
a daughter, Mrs. Vyrostek, of neath. Bill Ahnasi, who saw tim
Grays River, were also there for accident from Rainbow Lodge,
the occasion, llifted the car to get him out He
Saturday afternoon, Jimmylwas apparently unhurt. Bill Clark,
Sells att(:nded a skating pa,'ty i driver of the school bus, applied
honoring the birthday of Cilldy the brakes and the bus turned
Boad.
VISITORS AT the home of Dr.
and Mrs. Ryan this weekend, were
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Starkey and
family of Shelton who called on
the Ryans Sunday.
A trip to Centralia, made by the
Cliff Roundtree and Atwood fam-
Ilies Friday combined shopping
and a picnic. Although the wea-
ther was a little cool, the picnic
site was quite favorable and the
trip was thoroughly enjoyed.
MYRTLE COLLINS, Ruth Wal-
lin, Helen Stansbury and Vivian
Marcy got together for a shop-
ping excursion in Tacoma on Fri-
day.
Sunday morning visitors at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John Sells
were Mr, and Mrs, Burn Scole
and son, Ted.
Mr. and Mrs. John Blanton and
four little daughters, Kathy, Bet-
r Donna and Linda, called on
• and Mrs. Dan Lynch Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Roundtree
attended the sub-district track
meet in North Thurston Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Hudson re-
turned last Saturday from a three-
week vacation that took them as
far as Pasadena, Calif.
This past weekend the Hudsons
has as house guests, Mr. and Mrs.
Bryant of Seattle.
Saturday evening dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Al Lord were Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Sharpe and grand-
son, Steven.
A box oT freshly laundered and
folded clothes was found on the
Cole road last Thursday near the
Landsaw place. It appeared that
it may have fallen from the back
of a pick-up truck. The owner
may cmlm the box V telephon-
ing the Philip Hardies at HA
6-6584 and identifying the con.
tents of the box.
Timothy 00ule
Funeral Held
Graveside services were held at
3 p.m., Saturday in Shelton Me-
morial Park for Timothy A Soule,
83, Kennewick, who died Tuesday
of last week. The Rev. Charles T.
Hatten officiated at the interment
services. Fnneral services were
held earlier in the day from Wig-
gins and Sons Funeral Home, Se-
attle.
Mr. Soule was born August 4,
1875 in Willipa and had made his
home in Elden for several yearn:
before moving to Kennewick 15
years ago. During his residence
in Mason county he worked on a
logging compang railroad from
Elden. He was a rtired automo-
bile repair sho o foreman.
Surviving are his two sons,
S h e r m a n, Kennewick; Donald, !
Ketchikan; four gr'andchildren and:
five great-grandchildren,
completely aromld and stopped in
a flower garden. Tile 12 children
wel'e shakell lip but no one was
huz*t.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Sands of
Hawthorne, California, and her
sister, Mrs. Floy Gray of Avalon,
Catalina Ishmd, arrived Friday
fat tile home of Mr. and Mrs. T.
]B. Balch for a four day visit. Mr.
i Sands, an uncle of Mrs, Baleh, is
'on a Washington tour to visit rela-
tives and friends; On Saturday the
Balchs took their guests to Hur-
ricane Ridge and found it to be a
thrilling trip with the road in fine:
condition and snow still piled high
around the lodge.
On Sunday they all attended the
opening of the Port Townsend
Yacht Club in the County Seat.
Mr. Balch and his Uncle took the
cruisel" in Sunday morning to take
part in the boat parade in the aft-
ernoon. Mr. and Mrs Chester E.
Sparey also took part in their new
cruiser. They were accompanied
by Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kenny.
"Mr. and Mrs. Joe L. Kenny left
for a Northern tour last week but
after four and one half days they
returned home, as the weather was
too cold and they hit freezing rain i
and snow. They will make the trip l
in a month or six weeks when they
are assured a pleasure trip.
Mrs. Jay Swanson received a
letter from her daughter, Mrs.
Richard Townsend, mailed from
Paris, France• Mrs. Townsend re-
cently married to an Army pri-
vate, traveled to Europe to be with
her husband who is stationed at
Boblingen, Germany. Neither she
nor her three year old son were
sea sick on the trip over. At the
first point of call, the ship "Amer-
ica", United States luxury liner,
was delayed 22 hours for suspected
small-pox which turned out to be
chicken pox.
Mr. ana lvirs, russell Gross of
Morton were Olympic Inn guests
for a week. While here, Mr. Gross
worked on a donkey sled for the
Walter Kelly Logging Company.
Mrs. Gross joined him the last
:part of the week. She is a Grand
representative frmn the State of
:Illinois to the Grand Jurisdiction
of Washington and accompanied
Mrs. Walter Kelly, and Worthy
Matron Mrs. Ed Horn of Quilcene
Chapter, to Key City Chapter in
Port Townsend last Tuesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Chrlstiap
and four daughters, made a trip
to Seattle week before last. They
attended to shopping in Seattle
and took the girls to Woodland
Park for a sight seeing tour.
The Run-a-bouts from Hoods-
port will provide; the music for the
Booster •Club dance at Brinnon on
Saturday night May 1"6. All the
proceeds from this affair will go
Into the Firetruck fund for Brin-
non. $1.50 a couple -- $1.00 single.
No. 12--Karen Snelgrove
i/00i!iii0000iiii!ili?i!iiii!00ii!!00!00i00iiii00iii
• i
LAB MAN--Russ Hansen, laboratory technicia
General Hospital, is show here making one
that go on daily for patients at the hospital,
most of the tests locally and sends others wh
equipment to out of town hospitals. The he'
next to the hospital makes it handy for
over to be made. The hospital will hold an ope
day honoring National Hospital Week which
to 17. (Journal photo, Ztegler print.)
Army Tapes
To Be Heard
The PTSO will hold its final
meeting of the school term tonight
at 8:00 p.m. in the Junior High
School Auditorium.
An extremely interesting an d
informative tape recording made
up by the Defense Department,
will be played to the auoience.
IT IS AN investigation of the
mass surrender of U. S. troops
during the Korean 'War, and why
some submitted to "brainwashing"
or reversing to Communistic ideas•
This is the first time America has
beeh faced with such a problem.
How. to prevent such a problem
in the future is an all important
conclusion that must be heard to
be believed.
Anyone interested in the wel-
fare and raising of our younger
The Mother's Day program at
the Brinnon Church was conduct-
ed by the mothers of the commu-
nity with Mrs. William Whitney,
accompariist. Mrs. George Mueller,
Call to Worship and opening pray-
er. Ida Bailey, Scripture Reading;
Mrs. Duckworth, Morning Prayer;
Mrs. Rausch, Responsive Reading;
Offering, Mrs. Dorothy. and Mar-
torte Andrews. The Mother's Chor-
us inc]nded, Mrs. Ruth Mueller,
Mrs. John Udovich, Mrs. Royal
Rauch and Mrs. Duckworth. Mrs.
John Udovich also gave a solo.
Mrs. Marion Duckworth and Mrs.
Lea Britt gave testimonials. The
Mdther's Day sermop was present-
ed by Pastor Duckworth.
Msgr.
Talk
The Rt. RaY.
Casey will
three
Pentecost
Catholic
He will male.
sistance for the
the Phili
struction
war,
Masses will
and high
generation,
age of vital
The
6th grade
tend and
come at P.T.
prepare to
high school
THE NEW
the
troduced:
dent; Mrs.
vice presiden
Marvin
dent over
for another
will be
The retiring
years are:
ident, and
first vice
Smith,
ing served oe
Withstands
Because it
elevated
ni(
the jet burnel
the melting
naces are
degrees
4 Pablished In "Uhrtmastown U.S.A.." ,on
Past Forest Festlvcsl Queens - A Parade of
No. lLois Gibler 1945
No. 2---Marilyn Waklee 1946
No. 3---Bernadine Winiecki 1947
No. 4---Cherie Davidson 1.948
No. 5--Mary Carnea
GlascockTo Talk May 21 Dinner
A staunch defender of conmnmt- alton, representing the II Western
ty interests in public forests, Har- States and Western Canadn This
dy i. Glaseock, Jr., of Portland, associatidn will cele.brate its 50th
will be the main speaker at the aunlversary in .Spokane late in
15t'h annual Mason County Forest 1959.
anth serving one of its famous din-
ners under sponsorship of tile
Shel|on Chamber of Commerce,
also will fehture:
Hom)rs to Queen Andrea and
her princesses;
Honors to the 15 pioneers who
have been selected by the Mason
County Historical Society as rap-
i'etival btnquet honoring Queen
Andrea Kneeland and he]" court in
Mt, View ' School auditorimn on
Thursday night, May 21,
GI,A('OCK, a young man with
an oh:l organization's responsibili-
ties, is forest counsel of tln; West-
ern Forestry Conservation Associ-
Western Forestry brings togeth-[resentattves of this region's foun-
er the public and private forest lders;
agencies j the Wesl for annnal I Honors to tile 10 community
meei,ingslproblems facing prop-/Junlor princesses and their par-
er land agement and conser-lents, a.nd
vat,on of.hlber resources. .. I Honors to the Forest Festival
1HE BANQUET, timed for 6:30 ]committee workers who make pos-
o clock, with the Order of Amar-tsible Shelton's annual celebration.
When Pe00le Have A
Choice . . . .
Choose....
a r i g o i d
Products
In Slere After
Siore Throughout
The County
Where Darig01d
Oompetes , . .
It Winsl
Fresher Becrdse It's Local
Kitsap-Mason Dairymen's Assn.
THIRD AND GROVE • • Phone HA 6-4473
0. D. Durand
Rites Friday
O. I). (Ode) l}urand
Death claimed the life of one
of Mason county's lifetime citi-
zens, O. D. (Odel Durand, 72, 40,1
LaurO, Tuesday in Shelton Gen-
eral Hospital.
Mr. Durand was born Feb. 21, [
1887 In" Kamilche. He worked for]
the Fredson Logging Company in
1910 and Blakelev Logging Con]-I
pany in. 1914. He retired from }
Simpson Logging Company in
February 1957 where lie h)il i
worked as a train conduelor '
the previous 35 years. He was an
ardent fisherman and hunter, win-
ning several prizes in fishing der-
bies.
He is survived by his wife, Car-
rie, Shelton; two daughters, Mrs.
Frankie Millet', Olympia; Mrs. Er-
line Herlgastad, Seattle; a brother,
Joseph Durand, Stlelton; three sis-
ters, Mrs. W. R. Smith, Shelton;
Mrs. Gertrude Potts, Olympia;
Mrs. Grace Parker, Hoquiam, and
four grandchildren, Shelby and
Jeff Miller', Olympia; Lief and
learen Herigstad, Seattle.
l'uneral services will be held at
I p.m., Frid*ay from Witsiers Fun-
eral Home, under /.he direction of
the Rev. Robert B. Echols. Burial
will be in Shelton Memorial Park.
The family requests donations be
made to'the Heart Fund instead of
floral arrangements.
Pallbearers will be Jim Pauley,
Bud Pauley, Vin Connolly, Floya
Lord, Ed Faubert and Bob Snyder.
ttonorary pallbearers will be
George Drake, Clay Berry, Purl
Jemtson, AI Butler. Leland Hud-
son and Floyd Temple.
Former County
Resident Passes
Timothy, A. (Tim} Soule, 83,
passed away last week at Kenne-
Wick
Mr. Soule lived in Mason Coun-
ty from 1925 to t942 and was well
known in Shelton and the canal.,
He was employed here as a rail-
road engineer and also hacl the
school bus contract at one time.
He was born at Wtllipa, Wash.
on Augnst 4, 1875. Mr. Soule was
a pioneer of Willipa Harbor and
Ilved there from 1875 to 1915. He
was a charter member of the
Knight of Pythias and of the
I.O.O.F.
'uneral services were held at
WfI'gins and Sons Funeral Home
tnBeattle on Saturday with inter-
ment following in the Shelton Me-
morlal Park at 3 p.m. The Rev.
Charles T. Hatten officiated.
Mary E, Begtey
Ftmeval Today
Mrs. Mary E. Begley, 70, Gig
'Harbor, died Sunday ir a Tacoma
Hospital.
Mrs. Begley was born Feb. 26,
1889, in Crescent Mills, Calif., and
came to Washington state In 1918,
making her home in Gig HarbOr
since 1954. She was a retired
practical nurse formerly employed
at Shelton General and Tacoma
General hospitals. She was a
member of the Memorial Presby-
terian church and WCTU, Gig
Harbor.
SUrviving are her son, Edward
D. Begley, Shelton, three daugh-
ters, Mrs, Inez Hemley, Gig Har-
bor; Mrs, Rite Long, Tacoma;
Mrs. Mildred Deweese, Suntrana,
Alaska; a brother, Warner Brad-
ley, Califoruia; two sisters, Mrs.
Harriet Van Deren, Little Rock,
Calif.; Mrs. Jo Courtney, San
Diego, 17 grandchildren and 23
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will t)e held at
4 pro1., Thursday from Perkins
Funeral Chapel, Gig Harbor.. The
Rev. Don Griffin will officiate.
Interment will be in the Haven of
Rest, Gig Harbor.
Precious (ontaei
An alloy containing 90 per cent
platinum and 10 per cent rutheni-
um, which posseaao unusually
:high resistance-to wear and spark
erosion, is used for the contact
.points of aires'aft magnetos. '
.... : ..:
No. ll--Ariel Dunbar 1955
BRINNON
LITTLE SKOOKUM BAY By M,. T....al,.h
I The Bvinnon School bus was in-
The Bill Price family drove to volwd in a traffie oaccident Fri-
Brinnoll oll SI lldty and spoilt the day rnorning on tile way to school
afternoon with Mrs. Price's par- \\;vi}h 12 pupils. A car driven by a
ents, Mr. and Mrs, Fred Springer. lman from Clallam County, named
Mr.n. Ernest Moore spent Moth-iHughe s ,attempted to pass ]he
er's lbny at the home of her son, bus and hit a slick spot and ca-
I3m'L Moore, ill Olympia. Another reene(I beet.: and forth and turned
son, lrnest Moore, of Se:,ttle, and over, pinning the (lrivc.r ullder-
a daughter, Mrs. Vyrostek, of neath. Bill Ahnasi, who saw tim
Grays River, were also there for accident from Rainbow Lodge,
the occasion, llifted the car to get him out He
Saturday afternoon, Jimmylwas apparently unhurt. Bill Clark,
Sells att(:nded a skating pa,'ty i driver of the school bus, applied
honoring the birthday of Cilldy the brakes and the bus turned
Boad.
VISITORS AT the home of Dr.
and Mrs. Ryan this weekend, were
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Starkey and
family of Shelton who called on
the Ryans Sunday.
A trip to Centralia, made by the
Cliff Roundtree and Atwood fam-
Ilies Friday combined shopping
and a picnic. Although the wea-
ther was a little cool, the picnic
site was quite favorable and the
trip was thoroughly enjoyed.
MYRTLE COLLINS, Ruth Wal-
lin, Helen Stansbury and Vivian
Marcy got together for a shop-
ping excursion in Tacoma on Fri-
day.
Sunday morning visitors at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John Sells
were Mr, and Mrs, Burn Scole
and son, Ted.
Mr. and Mrs. John Blanton and
four little daughters, Kathy, Bet-
r Donna and Linda, called on
• and Mrs. Dan Lynch Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Roundtree
attended the sub-district track
meet in North Thurston Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Hudson re-
turned last Saturday from a three-
week vacation that took them as
far as Pasadena, Calif.
This past weekend the Hudsons
has as house guests, Mr. and Mrs.
Bryant of Seattle.
Saturday evening dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Al Lord were Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Sharpe and grand-
son, Steven.
A box oT freshly laundered and
folded clothes was found on the
Cole road last Thursday near the
Landsaw place. It appeared that
it may have fallen from the back
of a pick-up truck. The owner
may cmlm the box V telephon-
ing the Philip Hardies at HA
6-6584 and identifying the con.
tents of the box.
Timothy 00ule
Funeral Held
Graveside services were held at
3 p.m., Saturday in Shelton Me-
morial Park for Timothy A Soule,
83, Kennewick, who died Tuesday
of last week. The Rev. Charles T.
Hatten officiated at the interment
services. Fnneral services were
held earlier in the day from Wig-
gins and Sons Funeral Home, Se-
attle.
Mr. Soule was born August 4,
1875 in Willipa and had made his
home in Elden for several yearn:
before moving to Kennewick 15
years ago. During his residence
in Mason county he worked on a
logging compang railroad from
Elden. He was a rtired automo-
bile repair sho o foreman.
Surviving are his two sons,
S h e r m a n, Kennewick; Donald, !
Ketchikan; four gr'andchildren and:
five great-grandchildren,
completely aromld and stopped in
a flower garden. Tile 12 children
wel'e shakell lip but no one was
huz*t.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Sands of
Hawthorne, California, and her
sister, Mrs. Floy Gray of Avalon,
Catalina Ishmd, arrived Friday
fat tile home of Mr. and Mrs. T.
]B. Balch for a four day visit. Mr.
i Sands, an uncle of Mrs, Baleh, is
'on a Washington tour to visit rela-
tives and friends; On Saturday the
Balchs took their guests to Hur-
ricane Ridge and found it to be a
thrilling trip with the road in fine:
condition and snow still piled high
around the lodge.
On Sunday they all attended the
opening of the Port Townsend
Yacht Club in the County Seat.
Mr. Balch and his Uncle took the
cruisel" in Sunday morning to take
part in the boat parade in the aft-
ernoon. Mr. and Mrs Chester E.
Sparey also took part in their new
cruiser. They were accompanied
by Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kenny.
"Mr. and Mrs. Joe L. Kenny left
for a Northern tour last week but
after four and one half days they
returned home, as the weather was
too cold and they hit freezing rain i
and snow. They will make the trip l
in a month or six weeks when they
are assured a pleasure trip.
Mrs. Jay Swanson received a
letter from her daughter, Mrs.
Richard Townsend, mailed from
Paris, France• Mrs. Townsend re-
cently married to an Army pri-
vate, traveled to Europe to be with
her husband who is stationed at
Boblingen, Germany. Neither she
nor her three year old son were
sea sick on the trip over. At the
first point of call, the ship "Amer-
ica", United States luxury liner,
was delayed 22 hours for suspected
small-pox which turned out to be
chicken pox.
Mr. ana lvirs, russell Gross of
Morton were Olympic Inn guests
for a week. While here, Mr. Gross
worked on a donkey sled for the
Walter Kelly Logging Company.
Mrs. Gross joined him the last
:part of the week. She is a Grand
representative frmn the State of
:Illinois to the Grand Jurisdiction
of Washington and accompanied
Mrs. Walter Kelly, and Worthy
Matron Mrs. Ed Horn of Quilcene
Chapter, to Key City Chapter in
Port Townsend last Tuesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Chrlstiap
and four daughters, made a trip
to Seattle week before last. They
attended to shopping in Seattle
and took the girls to Woodland
Park for a sight seeing tour.
The Run-a-bouts from Hoods-
port will provide; the music for the
Booster •Club dance at Brinnon on
Saturday night May 1"6. All the
proceeds from this affair will go
Into the Firetruck fund for Brin-
non. $1.50 a couple -- $1.00 single.
No. 12--Karen Snelgrove
i/00i!iii0000iiii!ili?i!iiii!00ii!!00!00i00iiii00iii
• i
LAB MAN--Russ Hansen, laboratory technicia
General Hospital, is show here making one
that go on daily for patients at the hospital,
most of the tests locally and sends others wh
equipment to out of town hospitals. The he'
next to the hospital makes it handy for
over to be made. The hospital will hold an ope
day honoring National Hospital Week which
to 17. (Journal photo, Ztegler print.)
Army Tapes
To Be Heard
The PTSO will hold its final
meeting of the school term tonight
at 8:00 p.m. in the Junior High
School Auditorium.
An extremely interesting an d
informative tape recording made
up by the Defense Department,
will be played to the auoience.
IT IS AN investigation of the
mass surrender of U. S. troops
during the Korean 'War, and why
some submitted to "brainwashing"
or reversing to Communistic ideas•
This is the first time America has
beeh faced with such a problem.
How. to prevent such a problem
in the future is an all important
conclusion that must be heard to
be believed.
Anyone interested in the wel-
fare and raising of our younger
The Mother's Day program at
the Brinnon Church was conduct-
ed by the mothers of the commu-
nity with Mrs. William Whitney,
accompariist. Mrs. George Mueller,
Call to Worship and opening pray-
er. Ida Bailey, Scripture Reading;
Mrs. Duckworth, Morning Prayer;
Mrs. Rausch, Responsive Reading;
Offering, Mrs. Dorothy. and Mar-
torte Andrews. The Mother's Chor-
us inc]nded, Mrs. Ruth Mueller,
Mrs. John Udovich, Mrs. Royal
Rauch and Mrs. Duckworth. Mrs.
John Udovich also gave a solo.
Mrs. Marion Duckworth and Mrs.
Lea Britt gave testimonials. The
Mdther's Day sermop was present-
ed by Pastor Duckworth.
Msgr.
Talk
The Rt. RaY.
Casey will
three
Pentecost
Catholic
He will male.
sistance for the
the Phili
struction
war,
Masses will
and high
generation,
age of vital
The
6th grade
tend and
come at P.T.
prepare to
high school
THE NEW
the
troduced:
dent; Mrs.
vice presiden
Marvin
dent over
for another
will be
The retiring
years are:
ident, and
first vice
Smith,
ing served oe
Withstands
Because it
elevated
ni(
the jet burnel
the melting
naces are
degrees