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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
May 14, 1964     Shelton Mason County Journal
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May 14, 1964
 
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t, 1964 Ask obs provide ler of per- was an- Guy E. Bur- at Seattle. Collected on on a second regular ~'o.e or on ldary jobs e regular and un- month in All at(on Survey and in 356 the country 18. Cen. Who will inclu(Te ~, Shelton. of age is like know the back, far. la Shelton home on all makes SHELTON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAL--Published in ¢:Christmastown, U.KA.", Shelton, Washington PAGE 13 News From VFW, Legion, WWI Vets V.F.W. Post 1694 meets this Friday night at 8 p.m. ill "Memorial Hall with attention foeused main- ly on the coming Forest.Festival and the dinner to be sponsored by the post and auxiliary, Memorial Day services and tll~ yearly Poppy Day sale. Another topic for attention will be the Department convention next month at Spokane. Other subjects will come up, too, so try and nlakc this meeting. Last meeting Eugene Ell(son lost $50 by not being present. At- tendance is a necessity to pick up the chips. Albert Pinney is still at Walla Walla, where his wife has moved to be with him. He is out of the lmspital but has to check back in periodically. We all miss him and are really having to work bard at the many jobs Al took care of. Pu- get Sound dampness probably will prevent his ever returning here. For those who may want his address it is: Albert D. Pinney, 914 Effama Street, Walla Walla, Washington. * ;;: WITH h'EW OFI~ICERS due to take over this June, following the Department conventmn, we find V.F.W. Post 1694 in capable hands. Moritz Ted Schmidt, well known Mason County logger, will be in the commander's seat. He served in the Far East with the Army in Korea. Senior vice comnlander-elect is Orin Brumbaugh, who served with the Army in France in WWL One of his main jobs will be member- ship, so if you arc eligible and wish to become a Vet contact him at 426-4206. Junior vice commander is How- ard Swope, logging truck driver at Camp Govey, a Navy veteran of ~VWII, whose main job will be in the VFW youth program. A~ Chaplain will be Flor Minoza, who served in the Pacific Theatre in WWII with the Navy, Re-elected as Quartermaster for the seventh time is Larry Goodwin, an Army vet of Italian action in WWII; and appointed for the second term as Adjutant is Darrell Sparks, an- other Army vet in Italy. One of the most impm'tant posts to both the VFW and the public will be that filled for the second year by Les Miller, our Service officer. /=[is job is one the VIeW stands for, to help veterans, their dependents in any way possible. He can bc reached by calling 426- 4884. Commander-elect Selmlidt asks tim cooperation of every nlclnber in carrying out the nlany post pro- jects. They are numerous but if all do their share no one needs be heavily burdene(i, fo,' we are a large organization and will con~ tinue to grow, and if remaining servicemen who have not yet joined our ranks wilt do so we could grow considerably more. If we can promote better youth pro- jeers our time will be well spent and we can stand a httle taller it we can say we have helped them. LICENSED__ AND BONDED and Remodeling Healing,.. Mortals And Immortals Is S©ie.list Subject Mortality is a dream from which we need to be awakened, This is tile theme el the Bible Lesson to be heard at Christian Science churchcs on Sunday. The subject will bc "Mortals an:l Immortals,'~ and the Golden Text is from Ephe- sians (5:15): "Awake thou that ~qeepest ,and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light." Selections fronl "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy will include this: "Mortal existence is a dream; mortal existence has no real en- tity, but saith 'It: is I.' Spirit is the Ego which never dreams, but understands all things; which never errs, and is ever conscious; which never believes, but knows; which is never born and never dies" (p. 250). High School Students Make Trip To Science Fair In Seattle; Two Awarded Scholarships By Tom Dale A majority of the students in the high school {raveled to Seattle to get a second look at the Science Center. The tour was unhampered by the crowds that were present last year. W'e left the school at 9 a.m., arrived at the Center at about noon and after about five hours, we were back at the school at 9 p.m. The tour included all of the experiments and exhibits at the Center and a short visit to the Chittenden Locks and the Woodland Park Zoo. Paul Conner, State Representa- tive, has accepted the invitation of being guest• speaker at commen- cement. He will speak during the graduation program at the Mary M. Knight gymnasimn, 8 p.m. May 27. Bill Stodden and Jackie Landis were chosen by tile Alumni Schol- arship Committee 'to receive a ~_xrant of $75 to be used for college penses. Bill plans to attend Grays Har- bor Junior College next fail. He is interested in scientific sub~ects. His most time conmmling pasttime is athletics. Bill tm'ns out fro" all the school sport.s and once in a while can be seen writing a sports cohmm for the annual or school news. Jackie plans to attend Simpson Bible College, San Francisco. Be- cause she plans to become a sec- retary, she will take a general cotlrsc. She has been secretary of the student body for the past two years and is a good student in typing, shortlmnd and bookkeep- ing. Tom Dale was selected alternate for the scholarship. ADDITIONAl, scholarship news wa(s made when the Mark E. Reed ~cholarship committee interviewed five of .the top scholars of the senior class. The students intel'- viewed are competing with top students from Oregon and Wash- ington for total of 111 scholar-, ships. Work on the Fm'est Festival float from tile Mary M. Knight School was started Monday. The theme of the float will be 75 years of educational progress in the community. On the float will be models of the first schools in the community. Three other older schools will be clustered around our new, modern school. Also on the float will ride the grade school princess, Janice Gwi- nette, accompanied by other girls dressed in attires depicting the different eras of dress. GRADE SCltOOL NE~VS By Donna Owen ].~t & 2nd Gratleu: The first and second graders made packages and glittered cards for Mother's Day. They went to Point Defiance Park on a field trip last week. All of the children enjoyed seeing tile animals and flowers. They had a lovely picnic hmch and each one dropped a penny in the "wishing well". On the way home they stopped at tile B & I Circus Store in Tacoma and rocTe on all of tl~e rides there. Mrs. Ralph Cook, Mrs. Herb Brehmeyer, Jr., and Mrs. French went along on 1he trip and Mrs. DeFoer drove the bus. Everyone had a wonderful time. 3rd & .llh Grades: Last week the third and fourth grade boys beat the fifth and sixth gra'de girls in a baseball ga:me. This was quite a feather in their caps as tile fifth and sixth grade girls had previouMy beaten the fifth and sixth gradc boys. Pat SinClair received a reward for being the first fourth grader to lealm the multiplication tables. He also had more gold stars than anyone else. Tim Trilnbie and,'l~d Aires were the first two third graders to learn the multiplica- What's Doing Among Our SERV EEMEN • ill• •: SECOND LT. Jack S. Melntyre, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Mclntyre, Hoodsport, has been awarded his silver wings upon graduation from U.S. Air Force navigator training at James Connally AFB, Tex. Lt. Mcln- lyre is being assigned to an Air Training Command (ATC) unit at Mother AFB, Calif., for train- ing in electronic warfare train- ing. ATC trains airmen and of- ficers in the diverse skills re- quired by'the nation's aerospace force. His wife, Brooke, is the daughte¢ of Mr. and Mrs. Orval Anderson, Shelton. ;it * :;: IJowell D. Graves, seaman, I/SN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd W. Graves, Shelton, is serving aboard the unti-submarine war- fare aircraft carrier USS York- town, operating out of Long Beach, Calif. She presently is un- dergoing refresher training off the coast of California. Refresher training is conducted periodically to ensure the combat readiness of Yorktown. Vernon C. Stuck, chief boats- wain's mate, USN, soil of Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Stuck, Shelton, re- turned to Long Beach, Calif., Ap- ril 8 aboard the dock landing ship USS Point Defiance alley assign- ment with the Seventh Fleet in the Far East. While in the Fsr East, Point Defiance participated in three ma- jor sea, assault exercises, includ- ing a joint American-Republic of China operation called "Back- pack" Pvt. Tim Hurst, soil of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Hursl, Shelton, re- cently finished basic training at Fort Ord, Calif., ant! is now sia- Uoned at Fort Gordon, Ga., where he is assigned to Headquarters and Headquarter Co. and working a.~ a, t£~ine6 m~/ehine operator at Data Processing. Before his induction he was Llowell i). Graves, seaman, USN, :~,m of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd \V. C~l'aves, Sheltou, is a nlelllber ()f tile anti-submarine walfarc air- craft carrier USS Yorktown which recently was designated the out- standinK ship of her class ill the Pacific Fleet. It was tile second consecutive year that the Long Beach, Calif., based carrier has 1,een awarded the Battle Efficien- cy "E" by the Commander of tile Naval Air Forc.e for ihe Pacific Fleet. :;: :I: Dexter !). l)ay, seaman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes E. Day, Union, is serving abonrd tile anti-subnmrine wa]'fare suPI)ort aircraft carrier USS Bennington, operating out of Long Beach, CaN iforn ia. Bennington is ln'esently operat- ing in the Far East. on six months of duty witil tbe Seventh Fleet. She is scheduled to visit the port of Yokosuka, JZil)an, ill the near future. Phillip J, Serafford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Scrafford, Shel- ion, (xnnpletcd basic training Ap- ril' 17 at lhe Naw0 Training Cen- ter, San Diego, Calif. The nine-week training includes naval orientation, hi,'.;tory and of ganization, seamanship, ordnance and gunnery, military drill, first aid and survival. Sgt. Orville. E. Wright, son of Mr. and Mrs. \Vesley B. Wright of Hoodsport, competed in the U.S. Army, Europe, Championslfip Small Arms Matches held in Gra- fenwohr. Germany, April 2-14. '/'he marl~smen, representing 13 ma- jor commands of the U.S. Army in Europe, competed for rifle, pis- tol and automatic rifle cAlampion- ships. Sgt. ~Vrighl, a squad lend- er in IIeadquarters Company of the 21st Infantry's 1st Battalion, entered tim Army ill Janlmry 1.955 and arrived oveINeas on this tom" of duty in November 1962. The GETS AWA R I~---Cadet Te~hni. cal Sergeant Steven t;. ScrmHut, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Schmidt, Jr., Shelton, was pre- sented the. General Dynamics Award by W. Gerard Banks, at the 13th Annual Air Force Re- serve Officers Training Corps President's Review this week at the University of Puget Sound. The General Dynamics Award is presented annually to the Sophomore Cadet who has demonstrated out-standing qual- ities contributing to military leadership, and who has been se- lected for Advanced Air Force ROTC. Cadet Schmidt, an Ele- mentary Education major, also was awarded the University of Puget Sound Drill Team Cadence Award which is presented to the Basic Cadet member of the Drill Team who has distinguished himself by outstanding part(c(. pat(on and enthusiasm in Drill Team activities. An added honor was bestowed ,on Schmidt short- ly after the President's Review when Lt. Col C. H. Peterson, Professor of Air Science, an- nounced that he has been select- ed as Drill Team Commander for next year. Don G. ~Benuett, Seaman Appren- tice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon W. Bennett, Shclton, is now serving aboard the destroyer tender PRAIRIE touring tile Far East. Tile USS PRAIRIE (AD-15) is fleployed with the U.S. Seventh Fleet. Franv|s IV. Ake rs, electrician's mate fireman apprentice, USN, Eon of Mr, and Mrs, Fl'ancis C. Akers, Hoodsport, participaled in the Seventh Fleet exercise "Crazy Horse" ahoard the attacl¢ aircraft carrier USS Kitty Ha.wk in the Far East. The operalion was designe(t to test the capabilities of the attack carrier striMng force in conduo.t- ins operations in support of a limited war situation v4kile defend- Time You Get A Catalog From a Discount e" House Showing You How Much You "Save" ". Think About This ... FTC BANS WATCH AI)S WITH INFLATED PRICES Benrus, Waltham, Gruen Ordered Not To Create False Bargains At Retail By a Wall Street Journal Staff Reporter WASHINGTON -- The Federal Trade Commission ordered Benrus Watch Co., Waltham Watch Co., and Gruen Industries, Inc., not to misrepresent the retail prices of their watches. The agency ruled that the companies listed watches at artificially high prices to help retailers give a false impression o): cutting prices. Commissioner Phillip Elman~ writing for the agency in the Gnl: en case, said the company con- ceded it "pre-t.icketed mcrchm~dise with retail prices it knew to bc grossly in excess of what the merchm]disc would actually com- mand in the retail market." . . . Instead, they were "deliberate fabrications made at tile dclnana of certain retailer cu~omers . . . who were bent on deceiving" the buying public with the offer of non-existent bargains." Sinlilarly in the Waltham case - the conamission found tliat tempo any officials "know that the re- tail prices set forth on catalog house slmets and tickets attached or accompaning watches furnished by them to catalog house custo- lncrs are appreciably ill excess of the highest price at which substan- tial sales are made in thch" trade area by those customers." Benrus and Belforte were also ordered not to lnisrepresm~t guar- a.ntees and the composition of watch cascs, noL to overstate shock resistance, m~d not to use "allowance certificates" in a de- ceptive nlaullcr to create a falne "savings". Lreet Journal 1964 The Watch Names That Don't Appear in "Wholesale" Catalogs Are Sold and Serviced only by Jewelers Authorized to Sell Them tion tables. 5th & 6th Grades: The fifth and sixth grade teacher, Mrs. ~aubert, wrote to Guy. Albert Resell(n( sonic time ago asking" for pamphlets about the State (ff Washington. They arrived last week and all eli the students are enjoying them vory much. 7th & 8th Gnldes: The seventh and eighth grade boys took part ill the Mason County track meet, May 5. Alvin Owes got a first place in the high jump and a fifth place in broad jump. Tom Oien took third plume in the 50-yard dash, class A. Tony Koonrad took a third place in the high jump. The team took fifth place in botll relays. working with data processing ma- chines for Simpson Timber Co., in Seattle. His address is: Pvt. Tinl Hurst, US 563"G4583, HQ. & HQ. Co., USASESCS, Fort Gordon, Ga. 30905. Norman J. Petereit, fire control technician third class, USCG, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude A. Petereit, Shelton, is a nlember of the crew that earned the Unit Citation aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Coos Bay March 30 at Porthmd. Coo~ Bay received the award for her participation in rescuing mer- chant ,~eamcn "from the ill-fated British Merchant Vessel Ambassa- dor ila late February in a North Atlantic storm. sergeant is a 1949 graduate of El- in~" against air and sublnarine at- lensburg High School. tack. ) JOURNAL 1 eve_____ry ot h e r lipstick in th.__ee world @ GLISSaIIDO by T I QOLUMBIA BOYS BIKE I COLUMBIA 61RLS BIKE FOR 12 YEAR OLDS & OLDER In one lipstick... a mix of separate oolors...do what no colors ever did before ! Two colors in the stick.., merge, converge, blend on your lips ! Create a never-before depth of color with dazzling overtones, be- witching undertones. No one lip- stick could ever give you such depth of color. No two lipsticks could blend so harmoniously. In 9 never-before color combinations. Lipstick 2.50 plus tax refills 1.75 plus tax, Open ~onday and ~riday evenings II~ h~! 's " Be ' ~v. 205 Cota St. Phone - Saturd 6 PAGK GOGA GOLA I VITtl PURCItASE OF 8 GALLONS OF GASOLINE 3 BIG ,t FREE DRAWING 4 FIRST LINE GOODYEAR TIRES SHOW DRIVERS LICENSE 1 MAY 21-22-23 FRONT & GROVE STS. e