May 22, 1975 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
©
Shelton Mason County Journal. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 10 (10 of 34 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
May 22, 1975 |
|
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader ![]() |
Sheryl Sund
Betty Andrews
Paul Wing
Diana Cook
Jacquetine McKim
e
Four outstanding students
from Mason County have been
named recipients of $800 Mark E.
Reed scholarships from Simpson
Timber Company.
The four are among 12
students selected for scholarships
this year from Simpsoh's
Washington and Oregon operating
areas.
Announcement of the awards
for the 1975-76 school year was
made by Mike Hanlon of Shelton,
scholarship board chairman.
The winners selected from 65
applicants, are:
El abeth M. Andrews, 18,
daughter of the Reverend and
Mrs. William F. Andrews. She is a
1975 graduate of Shelton High
School and plans to attend the
University of Puget Sound.
Diana M. Cook, 18, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph N. Cook of
Matlock. A 1975 graduate of
Mary M. Knight High School, she
plans to study special education
at Western Washington State
College.
Sheryl A. Sund, 19, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Sund,
Hoodsport. She is a freshman at
Seattle Pacific College, studying
elementary education and special
education. This is her second
Reed scholarship.
Paul W. Wing, 19, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William S. Wing, Union.
Wing is a freshman at the
University of Washington, where
he plans to major in engineering
or forestry. He is also a
second-year scholarship winner.
Hanlon also announced that
Jacquelin L. McKim, 18, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G.
McKim, Shelton, was selected as
an alternate Reed scholar. A 1975
Shelton High School graduate, she
plans to attend Centralia
Community College and study
radio-television production.
Awards will be presented at a
banquet June 16 at the Tyee
Motor Inn near Olympia.
THESE TWO LITTLE SHAGGY DOGS were raised together,
but they'll settle for separate homes. Both are friendly and
affectionate pets; both are six-and-a-half months old and
both are females. The dark pup is a terrier, the other a
poodle-terrier mix. Among many fine dogs available at the
city pound this week is a German shepherd-hound crossbreed
year-old male. He's big, beautiful, boisterous and dark brown
with white markings. A real dog for an outdoor man. The
pound fee is $3 and each dog purchased will be eligible for a
free examination at Shelton Veterinary Hospital. Call
426-4441 for more information.
Tuson earns wings
The son of a Shelton couple
has been awarded silver wings at
Vance Air Force Base, Oklahoma,
following his graduation with
honors from U. S. Air Force pilot
training.
Second lieutenant Andrew R.
Tuson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Rodger A. Tuson, received the Air
Training Command Commander's
Trophy and the Academic, Flying
and Outstanding Graduate
Awards for his flying proficiency,
academic achievement and
leadership qualities.
He now goes to Luke Air
Force Base, Arizona, for flying
duty in the F-4 Phantom.
Lieutenant Tuson graduated
in 1969 from Shelton High
School and received his B.A.
degree in psychology in 1973
from the University of
Washington in Seattle.
His wife, Roxann, is the
daughter of Ms. Constance
Higgins, Monterey, California.
Mrs. Tuson's father, Robert O.
Higgins, also lives in Monterey.
II
Mason County Federal Credit Union • 521 RR Ave • 426-1601
IIII I II
rlson
Edward R. Thomas, Shelton,
was committed to the
Department of Social and Health
Services for a maximum of 15
years on a charge of second
degree burglary. The sentence was
imposed by Judge Robert Doran
in Mason County Superior Court
Friday.
Thomas had pleaded guilty to
the charge April 22. He was
charged with breaking into a
house in the Arcadia area in
November, 1971.
Deputy Prosecutor Gary
Burleson told the court after
Thomas had appeared in court on
the burglary charge shortly after
it had happened, he had left the
legal Publications
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON PETITION
FOR AWARD
No. 4589
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
WASH INGTON FOR MASON
COUNTY
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ESTATE OF ANTHONY E.
LAWRENCE, Deceased.
A petition for an award in lieu
of homestead has been filed with
the Clerk of this Court. Said
petition will be heard June 20,
1975, at 9:30 a.m. in the
courtroom of this Court.
Elaine Province
MASON COUNTY CLERK
/s/Betty Thompson
Deputy Clerk
Presented by :
/s/Joe L. Snyder
JOE I_ SNYDER
Attorney at Law
P. O. Box 26
Shelton, WA 98584
Attorney for Estate
given or ur
area and a bench warrant had
been issued for him. He was
arrested February 28 of this year
in Olympia, the deputy
prosecutor said. in the meantime,
he had been convicted in King
County of the sale of heroin and
had been placed on probation and
was on probation at the time of
his arrest on the Mason County
warrant.
Budeson said the pre-sentence
report recommended that Thomas
be committed to the custody of
the DSHS and that the
prosecutor's office concurred in
the recommendation.
Shelton attorney Gerald
Whitcomb, who represented
Thomas, told the court he had
been acquainted with the young
man since he was first charged
with the burglary and that the
biggest problem was that he had
limited education and training
and that he had received little in
the way of probationary help.
Whitcomb said it was amazing
how Thomas could have been
arrested and convicted in King
5/22-1t
lary
County without anyone knowing
about the Mason County warrant.
Judge Doran said
commitment was the only
sentence he could impose in good
conscience and that he would
recommend that Thomas be kept
at the Washington Corrections
Center here where he would be
assisted in getting additional
education and training.
Button designs
are on display
The winning designs in
Forest Festival Button Design
Contest are being displayed in the
lobby of the Mason County
Federal Credit Union building.
The first and second place
designs are being displayed.
The festival buttons are now
on sale. The buttons admit those
who buy them to the Loggers'
Sport Show at the fairgrounds
May 31 and to other festival
activities.
You Should Know...
CLINT WILLOUR
In buying life insurance you are
not spending more money, you
are saving more money.
NORI ttWEsrFRN NAI IONAI.
LIFI- INSURAN('F ('OMPANY
HOME OFFICE • MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
Ph. 426-8 139 ,v. A.o .A,L.O*O
For all your insurance needs.., we're here to help. Commercial Insurance,
Homeowner, Farmowner, AUTO, Boat, Health & Life, Pension Plans and
Mutual Funds.
You'll smile with Safeco.
R. Craig Chapman, Associate
506 Franklin St.
Shelton
Page 10- Shelton.Mason County Journal - Thursday, May 22, 1975
The City of Shelton, at its
commission meeting Tuesday,
received a claim for $3,000
damages from John Thomason,
85,233 S. 8th Street, for injuries
he received when he fell on a
sidewalk on Cota Street between
Fifth and Sixth Streets.
In the claim, which was
submitted by Shelton .attorney
Glenn Correa on behalf of
Thomason, it was stated the
sidewalk in that area was broken
and uneven which caused the man
to fall and to break one knee and
cut the other.
;chool board
district
hearing set
A hearing on proposed
revision of the Shelton School
District director district
boundaries has been set for 8 p.m.
May 27 in the Evergreen
Elementary School auditorium.
A proposal for revision of the
director district boundaries was
submitted to the Shelton School
Board at its May 13 meeting for
comment.
The proposal was prepared by
Arnold Miller of the Intermediate
School District 113 staff.
After the public hearing, the
county committee will take
formal action to approve or reject
the proposal.
The revision of the director
districts has been done to
incorporate the Kamilche area,
which was annexed to Shelton
two years ago, into a director
district and to make the director
districts more equal in
population.
The proposed changes will put
board members Arne Johnsen and
Judith Barr in the same director
district and will leave one district
not represented.
Miller told the Shelton School
Board that Johnsen and Mrs. Barr
would continue to serve out their
terms until they expire in 1977 at
which time filings would have to
be by people within the new
director districts.
The other three board
members, Dr. George Radich, Dr.
Mark Trucksess and Tom Weston,
are all in one of the new districts.
All three will be up for re-election
this fall.
The commission rejected the
claim and turned it over to its
insurance agent.
City Attorney B. Franklin
Heuston told the commission he
had been contacted by the
attorney for the Hy-Lond about a
hearing on an appeal of a Planning
Commission rejection of the
Hy-Lond's request to turn part of
its parking lot into a park.
Heuston suggested that a
hearing date be set for sometime
in the last two weeks of June.
City Engineer Howard Godat
told the commission he had
prepared a list of regulations for
the application of waste oil as a
dust palliative on city streets.
Godat reported he had been
informed by the State Highway
Department that the state was
about ready to turn over to the
city the part of the old Highway
101 from First and Alder to the
North Shelton Interchange to the
city since it was no longer being
used as a state highway.
The commission accepted the
bid of Jim Pauley for $2,993.50
for a compact pickup for the city
humane officer. The acceptance
came after the apparently low
bidder in bids opened earlier, Mell
Chevrolet, withdrew its bid after
discovering an error in preparing
the bid.
Art Nicklaus,
Mell, attended the
state the bid
withdrawn.
Crushed
Gravel
Top Soil
Beauty Bark
Eddie Kn
Give Heart Fu
American Heart
The quali , you want at
a price you can afford!
SAVE $3.00
,"""ACCLAIM PAINTS are made for YOU' ',
SPECIAL VALUE PURCHASE
The next best thing to
DUTCH BOY- at BIG SAVING ,,,.
i i iilii
Reg. 8.99 SAVE $3.44
Gal.