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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
May 14, 1970     Shelton Mason County Journal
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May 14, 1970
 
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right, accepts the Barnaby Award for in youth work from Don Ahrens, past Nimrod Club. The award is the highest r service to youth. J left, president of Shelton Nimrod YOuth activity award to Roger Anderson s annual awards banquet May 2. Roger Anderson, left, and Don Johnson, wives at the annual Nimrod Club Ichard Yunker also won a youth activity ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Shelton three runs. Another run was well in a earned in the fourth on a homer, Park. and one more run would have been the been scored but the shortstop for the picked the man off at home. 13-1 The fifth stanza saw two Mead Samuel base hits yield one l~e, Mead run, and in the sixth, a double Singles andafter a walk tallied the first of and four runs, then with two men on, runs, a home run scored three more. The bases were loaded in the and seventh when the Athletics' tics, all pitcher walked the batter to force seven a man home. A fielder's choice scored two more runs, and finally m every the slaughter was over, Mead second Samuel the victor. and On's seven Shelton in tUel a run to on, the SCored Mt. Moriah Lodge No. 11 F. & A. M. Saturday, May 16 Stated Communication Lodge Opens 8 p.m. Edward B. Auseth, W.M. Arnold L. Cheney, Secretary h lltY SAVINGS CENTER family have savings n various parts of the How much more to have it all at Capital. ot only for double rewarding dividends, for personal, friendly Ilroad, 426-8211 |lympla |ncouver -- Shelton East Bremerton rm East Bremerton took ten firsts, 12 seconds, and ten thirds last Friday against the Climbers in Bremerton to hand Shelton a 93]A-51Y2 loss. The loss set the Climbers' league record at 4-3. Senior Randy Lewis, hot off a second in the pole vault at the Shelton Invitational, won three events. He was one of two triple winners in the meet. The other was Dan Knott of East, who ran to a sixth place a week ago in the Invitational in the 220. Lewis went one foot shorter than his highest in the pole vault to cop first in that event. His Invitational performance of 14 feet even ties the senior record at Shelton and is Rand's best. He went 38'2" in the triple jump, and 19'1" in the long jump for the other two firsts. Knott and his Knights swept four events to run away with the meet. Knott was first in the 220, I00, and discus. The Knights swept the 100, the two mile, the javelin, and won the 880 relay. Rob Settle, the Climbers sophomore sensation who went to the Invitational in the high jump, tied his own sophomore class high hurdles record when he ran the 120 yard race in 16.6 seconds. Settle was second in the high jump, where he went 5'4". His personal best in that event is 5'10". Rocky Nutt, a junior, won the Shelton Nine Loses To East Held to two hits, Shelton's Highclimbers dropped another Olympic League decision to East Bremerton, 4-1 in Bremerton last Thursday to go 44 in league and 8-5 for the season. Two doubles were all that the Climbers got. They were both in the seventh inning, when Shelton tried to come from a 4-0 deficit. Curt Stracke hit in Brad Jones with a two-bagger after Jones had doubled. East struck quick in the first inning to get Climber hurler Jim Corey for three runs. Three singles, two errors, and a base on balls spelled trouble for Shelton, as the Knights picked up a 3-0 lead in that initial inning and were never threatened. Milovich of Eash kept Shelton under control with his 11 strikeouts and two-hit pitching. The:t~flfghts got another run in second, and never scored again. low hurdles and tied for third in the high jump. Nutt was also a contestant in the high jump at the Invitational. Another junior and member of the Climbers' delegation to the Invitational, Gary Burger, won the 880 with a 2:09.9 time. Shelton's other first came in the mile relay where junior Don Gardner, Chris Elmlund, Paul Rogerson, and George Lemagie teamed up for the win. Lemagie anchored the quartet with the fastest time of 55.1, after he had taken second in the 440 with a 53.9 time. Elmlund was the only other member of the relay team that placed in another event. He was third in the 220. Sophomore weightman Tom Brigham had two seconds. He was second in the discus and shot, with throws of 128 feet and 47'9" respectively. Climber distance man Rich James had a third in the mile, and Tracy Armstrong was third in the pole vault. Mike Hays placed third in the 880, and those were the 19 out of a possible 51 places that Shelton got. The meet ended the Climbers' league season with a 4-3 win-loss record after sweeping it last year, 6-0. Subdistrict is next, on May 14 and 15. District and State will follow on the next two weekends. Here is a summary of the results: HH-Settle (S), Hegland (E), Means (E); 16.6 100-Knott (E), Porch (E), Fojtik (E); 10.5. Mile-Beventson (E), Jarstad (E), James (S); 4:44.5 880 Relay-East; 1:36.0. 440-Morgan (E), Lemagie (S), Fojtik (E); 53.0. LH-Nutt (S), Ferguson (E), Blah (E); 23.4. Shot-Mill (E), Brigham (S), Smith (E); 48'10". HJ-Heglund (E), Settle (S), Nutt (S) and Bean (E) tied for third; 5'6". 880-Burger (S), Machinsky (E), Hays (S); 2:09.9. LJ-Lewis (S), Blatt (E), Machinsky (E); 19'1". 220-Knott (E), Porch (E), Elmlund (S); 23.9. 2 Mile-Jarstad (E), Berentsen (E), Schrull (E); 10:29.8. Mile Relay-Shelton; 3:43.8. Javelin-Maiers (E), Ranger (E), Bratonia (E); 144'0". Discus-Knott (E), Brigham (S), Crosswhite (E); 134'7". TJ-Lewis (S), Heglund (E), Bratonia (E); 38'2". PV-Lewis (S), Marks (E), Armstrong (S); 13'0". By losing to South Kitsap Monday, Shelton almost eliminated any hopes of a first place finish in the Olympic League baseball standings. The Climbers outhit the visiting Wolves 8-7, but lost the contest mainly because of two extra base hits by South, and they suffered their fifth league defeat in nine outings, 3-1. South got to the Climbers' pitcher, Brad Jones, early in the game when Jones walked the first batter and gave up a triple to the third batter of the inning. That scored the first run, and Jones retired the side to end the first half of the inning down 1-0. Kevin Dorcy was the first batter up for Shelton in the first, and he got on base on an error, but the next three Climbers went down in order and South maintained the 1-0 lead. In the second, Jones again had some trouble with a man o11 base. He had a single hit off him and then a fielder's choice got that man at second. However, the man on first went to second on a passed ball and luckily two ground balls ended the inning for South. Curt Stracke led off the bottom of the second with a walk. He was followed by Mike Bac who sacrificed Stracke to second with a bunt. Rusty Corey was on base on an error, and Stracke went to third. Bruce Cole got the Climbers' only RBI when he rapped a single to score Stracke, Corey going to third. Elmer Herrel, who went three for t hree for Shelton for the afternoon, bunted his way on, but could not squeeze Corey in and two quick outs finished the Climbers' hopes for that inning. Jones had little trouble for the next three innings until the sixth, but then neither did the Wolves' hurler, and the score was still deadlocked at 1-1 when South stepped up to the plate in the top of the sixth. The Wolves' pitcher got a base hit, and a pinch runner was sent in for him. The runner stole a base, and two outs later he scored when John Witt singled. Shelton had threatened with two hits in the fourth stanza, but had not been able to score. Rusty Corey led off with a smashed double to left field, and Elmer Herrel bunted once again to get on first. Corey moved to third, but the rally sputtered. The Climbers' side of the sixth was dominated by South's pitcher, who struck out two. South attempted to sew the game up in the top of the seventh and final inning when they scored another run. The first man singled, then Mickey Reece doubled to score him. Jones took care of the rest of the side, but the damage was done. Shelton needed two runs in the seventh to tie it up, and three to win it. Herrel led off with a cleanly hit single, and was put out at second when Kevin Dorcy hit into a fielder's choice. Jim Corey tried to keep the drive alive with a single, and Brad Jones walked to load the bases for Mike Nutt. However, with the winning run on first, both Nutt and Curt Stracke fanned, and the game was over, South winning it. It was the second time this season that the Wolves had dumped Shelton. Jones, who had not given up an earned run in league up until this game and had lost two games because of his team mates' errors, was the loser again. He struck out five in seven innings. Last year, Shelton led the league in errors. This year, they got off to a fast start, making few errors and bombing their IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Bowling News IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII TUESDAY TWILIGHT LEAGUE Men's High Game: Lionel Leman 213 Men's High Series: Lionel Leman 519 Women's High Game: Helene Redman 173 Women's High Series: Betty Schimschat 475 Tom Cats--3--1, Tom Olson 450; Alley Cats--l--3, Harold Redman 424; Poodle Dogs--3--1, Lionel Leman 579; Bulldogs--l--3, Norman Schimschat 504. Standings: Poodle Dogs 3--1, 2176; Tom Cats 3--1, 2140; Bulldogs 1--3, 2156; Alley Cats I--3, 2124. LOWRY & PIANOS RENT or BUY on Easy Terms Johnny's Music Box Open 'til 8:30 p.m. Wed. & Thurs. 205 Cota 426-4302 .--.---......-- ~_- - - - - - - - - -_-_- If you've enjoyed natural gas comfort during the past winter, why not enjoy year-'round • • • People who heat their homes with natural gas know how pleasant it can be to have healthful, air-circulated, easily-controlled warmth throughout the winter. Why not also enjoy the advantages of another function natural gas performs best-complete temperature control? Families who already have whole-house year-'round gas air conditioning are enthusiastic about its many advantages, not the least of which is its comparatively economical operating cost. Why don't you add gas air conditioning and enjoy the benefits of And the equipment is greatly improved. The intense blue flame of natural gas activates compact units that have fewer moving parts than flameless models. That means fewer chances for mechanical interruptions: a better guarantee of trouble-free operation. Your present heating system may constitute half of a cooling-heating unit. But even if it doesn't, conversions are practical, desirable and economically feasible. Cascade's air conditioning specialists will gladly discuss every angle of an installation to meet your particular a combination gas cooling-heating system? Now first costs are lower, needs. No obligat ion. FINANCING AVAILABLE...Time Payments for Your Air Conditioning Investment ALL-YEAR COMFORT WITH NATURAL GAS opponents with a potent scoring attack. Then they started making errors and fell from the top spot in the league to the third position. At the start of the season, the Climbers had several batters near five hundred and at least eight above .300. The pitching got tougher and the batting averages fell, as did the number of extra base hits, which hurt their scoring power. Box score : ab r h rbi Dorcy, K. 4 0 0 0 Corey, J. 4 0 I 0 Jones, B. 3 0 I 0 Nutt, M. 4 0 1 0 Stracke, C. 2 1 0 0 Bac, M. 3 0 0 0 Corey, R. 3 0 1 0 Cole, B. 3 0 1 1 Herrel, E. 3 0 3 0 spencer TracY Sydney poitier Katherine Hepburn Church 9 10 East Dearborn LEWIS B. WYSONG, Pastor Sunday School .... 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship . . 11:00 a.m. C. Y.'s & Cadets .6:00 p.m. Evening Service .... 7:00 p.m. Bible Study (Wed).. 7:00 p.m. Mt. View Alliance Church Sunday School .... 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship . . 1 l :00 a.m. A. Y. F ........... 6:00 p.m. Evening Service .... 7:00 p.m. Prayer Hour (Wed.) . 7:30 p.m. EARL EVERS, Pastor NORTHSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH Phone 426-3827 123 W. C St. at Olympic Hwy. Rev. Paul Butterfield Sunday School ............................. 9:45 a.m. Worship .......................... I I a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Training Union ............................. 6:30 p.m. Midweek Service ....................... Tues., 7:30 p.m. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Arcadia and Lake Boulevard ED CHAMBERLAIN, Minister Bible School ...... 9:45 a.m. Famdy Service .....7:30 p.m. Worship ......... 1 l:O0 a.m. Wednesday - Bible Study and Prayer 7:30 p.m. Child Care Service Available at I l :00 Service First Church of Christ, Scientist 302 Aider St., Shelton, Wash. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Church 11::00 a.m. Wednesday evening testimony meetings 8:00 p.m. Reading room located in church. Reading room hours 1l:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Mort. & Fri., Wed. evening 6:45 to 7:45 Fishermen's Club P.U.D.'AUDITORIUM - 3rd & Cota / l From 9:15 ~.tm. to 10:30 a.m. every Sunday I SUNDAY, MAY 17, 1970 Bible Study: REV. JERRY LARSON Speaker: TO BE ANNOUNCED .. --lr.n~ St. David's Episcopal Church Fourth & Cedar, Shelton, Washington The Church is always open for meditation end prayer. 7:30 A.M.- Holy Communion 9:30 a.m. -- Church School and Adult Bible Class 1 ! :00 A.M. -- Divine Worship Faith Lutheran Church 7th and Franklin WORSHIP: 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. CHURCH SCHOOL: 9:30 a.m. Christian Worship, Fellowship, Education, Service Kenneth Robinson, Pastor Phone 426-8611 MT. OLIVE LUTHERAN CHURCH MISSOURI SYNOD 206 E. Wyandotte EDWIN C. ZSCHOCHE, Pastor SUNDAY, MAY 17, 1970 Divine Service 10:30 Sunday School and Bible Class 9:15 Confirmation Service Theme: "A CHRISTIAN STANDS ON HIS OWN FEET" First Baptist Church (CONSERVATIVE) Fifth & Cote Sts. Rev. Jerry Larson, TH.M. Tel. 426-8461 Sunday, May 17, 1970 11:00 a.m. "JESUS WEPT" John 11:28-40 9:30 a.m. Bible School 6:00 p.m. Youth Groups 7:00 p.m. "GIFT OF PROPHECY" Morning Worship Broadcast over KMAS 1280-- 11:00 a.m. SHELTON ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1521 Monroe St. Meson Younslund, Pastor Sunday School ...........................9:45 a.m. Morning Worship ........................ 11:00 a.m. Christ's Ambassadors ...................... 5:00 p.m. Evangelistic Service ....................... 6:00 p.m. Wednesday -- Family Night ................. 7:00 p.m. REVIvALTIME, Sunday, 3:00 p.m. KGDN Thursday, May 14, 1970 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 17