May 27, 1965 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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May 27, 1965 |
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21
27, 1965
Published in "Christmastown, U.S.A.", Shclton, Washington
Enlored as st!(!ond class mn|ta,r nt the p os! off it,! :it Shelhm. VdaMfingh,a, .q858,t
under Act of March 8, 1873. Pub lishrd weekly at '-'27 West Ctda,
20 Pages -- 3 Sections
10 Cents per Copy
Festival Co, eludes
at fire pre- Friday night saw the Premier
note Sal- Night show in the Junior High
Auditorimn well attended. About
ned officially patton than in past years.
the corona- 15 acls, including western singers,
in folk singers, dancers, a maKician
be- and instrunlental music delighted
the audience. Sponsoring the pre-
honorary mier night were the Shelton Jay-
certifi- cecs.
speaker Crowds lined the s~eczs ~atm--
Shelton- day morning to watch first the
by Master Paul Bunyan Junior Parade and
Forest Fes- ident-emeritus of the Forest rest- Logg,ers Show where top pe;'Jurm-
21st annual ival Association. ers in logging sports thriiled tim
i'A'OVj(].
Festival Association President
Clive Troy, commenting (m this
yl;tr's snc, c(~ssfill Fe:+tival, said
"A (olmnunity is jlldg'ed by the
spirit and enthusiasm of its resi-
¢,elll~>;, lheh' wiItinglless I.(i WOl'X
anti .~;a('rifiee for tilt'+ f~'ood OI~ all.
This :tititude, \\'c are proud lo .~;ay
i;: prevalent in Mason Cotmly. Vee
Itl ¢ proud i,o IiVC ilCI'C slid al'c
privileged l,o stlate in kills almos-
Preliminary
School
Is Approved
The Shclton School Board Tries-
day approved a prelimhlary
budget
for the 1965-66 school year of
$1,627,0.13.93, up somewhat mor~
than $350,000 over thc budget for
the present year.
@
@
.+p,
11
The new $5,000,000 sa.wmill to
• be built by Simpson Timber Corn-
.... pany in Shelton is one of che most
significant investments ever un-
dertaken by the Company, offic-
ials said this week.
i Plans for the huge project, which
will take tbree years Lo complete,
were announced" May 19 by C. H.
Bacon, Jr., Sinlpson presi(tent, at
a comnmnity luncheon honoring
the Company's Diamond Anniver-
smT last Wednesday.
It is the largest single plant in-
vestment ever made by Simpson
in Shdlton. In addition to con-
stn|cting the new mill, it: involves
a major remodeling of pushbut-
and 1:30 p.nl., Mondays through
Fridays throughout the summer.
Child~"en under 12 are not allowed
on the tours altd women arc ad-
vised to wear low-heeled shoes.
Gl'is- others were an extremely cleveronstration of modern logging
Strop- and unusual floa.t depicting inmethods demonstrating how rap-
an Indiarln~iniaturc moving parts an old-idly a tree farmer machine can
dance linle high-lead logging operation hook onto and takc logs cvcr a
Satur- entered by Local 38 of the In- bumpy route
ternational Woodworkers of Ant-
cries in the non-commercial floats
division, and the Marcus Whit-
nlan junior high school baild from
Port Orchard in the bands dirt-
Public sion.
of local Speaking cf banns, an ac, colade
caravan, certainly must go to the Shelton
and North Mason school bands for
: carav~, their anpropriatc "uniforms" for
local res.this occasion. Inslead of their
out to normal fornlal attire, these bands
TOMMIE KIMBERLING EDWARD COKELET
were dressed in jeans, sports shirL'~
and tin hats. One of them was
playing, so very properly and un-
doubtedly sincerely, "I Don't Want
To Set The World On Fire".
FOR.EST FESTIVAL Queen
Patsy Bixenmann and her royal
court--princesses Nancy Stodden
of Matlock, Teddi Travis, Pan)
Tuson and Joan Quimby of Shel-
ton+.--rode the parade route on as
lovely a fhmt as lms ever grg, ced
the Paul Bnnyan parade. Put to-
gether by Rayonier Incorporated,
EDWARD LATHAM
The board at the Ma+y 18 nteet-
mg approved a revise(i teacher's
salary schedule which provides for
salary increases for all teachers
(Colllilllll!d on pttg'P 5)
PHILIP CRAMER
~l|d ~l- the long, graceful "royal throne
0~"1 1
~[~0 I on wheels" was decorated ill green,
white and sih, er with a huge raiL-
ered gold crown outline sum-pun(l-
No. 3 Will
ins the queen, who was beautiful-
ly gowned in a halg flowing darR
"'eraorial £.cen robe over her glistening
white dress. On her head she wore
the beautiful gl'ecn crown of Miss
Keep Washington Green.
This was a non-competitive
0~ (~OII1- float.
The complete list. of parade
an- prize winners as nnnoune.ed by
the judges more than an hollr
• cglllar after thc end of the parade:
I~I,OATS (commercial division) :
~llo'. SWeel)stakrs..Sinlpson Timber Co,
~l t~ Section A: first- --Simps(m Tim,.
O ber Company.
Section B: first--McCleary 2nd
Growth add Bear Festival.
Section C: first--Deugh~s li'i~
Cl~l'istmas Tree Ass'n.; , seegnd--
Olsen FLlrniture Company.
(C0ntilnlC(I on p;lg(' ,5)
GREGORY MOWE
Eight ontstan(ting S h c l t on
\Vorking Circle sttldents, today
~VCI'(! nalned \vinnel's of $(i00 h]!al']¢
E. l~.ced Sehohu'ships l'rml~ Sinlp-
';,(in 'Pin/])er C()nl] lilly [t)r the 196~"
66 ;tcadt!lllie yeal'.
The
~tnl]OllllCenlellt \vas nlade l)y
b'l'td Sne gl'ove of S}IclLoI|, sccrc°
ta~ y of the sehohtr;dlip botH'(l.
l)Ill'Jng the 19 years of Lhe ILeed
'226 awards
;~,cholarship pt'ogram, ctttst nvliag
]l~tve been IIl~t(Ic to
M.ii(lcnl.~ lit the areas whcl'e
Simp-
SOIl lla+'-I
its Illajo ' ()t)erati(als'
Award \~,il|ners a 'c fFce t.() attel](I
!ally se}lcu)l of their c]loicC add
s!t dy any st| ~j,'cL
I The xvillning stlldellts \+'ill bc
i h,mort~(t at 1/ (li]lller ill She, lLon
,hmc 14 following a field trip to
Silnl)sotl forest att(l nlanufacLuring
opcraLions
Their parents and lo-
('al conuuittecs who helped in Lhc
selection proceSS aisu will be ill-
Vited to the dinner.
Thl year'e w .nera are:
LAWRENCE POWELL
l~tlward i)avis Col¢clcl, 17, son
of Mr. and Mrs. lfldward B. Coke-
tvt of Beifair; a 1965 graduate of
North Mason High School, Coke-
let plans to sit|dr Oceanography aL
the Univ('~rsity ()l" \Vtsh~,,,~
l'hT "" ," ' ~ ...... ~ton.
. lip ~. (ra,ner, 19 son of Mr.
t:il(1 l~ll'S. Harold 0, Cranler of
Shelt,tm; a ]963 gra(htaLe of Shcl-
ton High SChool, Cralner will be
a junior at the University of
~;;i~h ,i st,,d,,ing,ngi,,ce,iug.
' ' " Se(:Oild ttWal'd,
'['onlndc l'hhva, rd liinlla,rling, 18,
son of Mrs. Ethel Kinlberling of
: ington.
AWOL from the Royal Cal)adian
Navy are back in their home-
huld after bcing picked tip here
Saturd,~y afternoon.
Depu£y Sheriff Bill Boot became
CAR~NTRY' HOM~
suspicious when hc saw two paa-
i sengers in a motor freight truck
era'cute through here betwe' n
Port Angeles and Tacoma. He bc-
came suspicious after noticing the
passengers in the trucl~-since these
trucks do not norn~ally carry pas-
sengers.
Ho stopped the truck and was
not sa.tisfled With the answers he
got from the pair, Roger Cyr, 18,
Deadline for applicants sceking
consideration for the annual car-
pentry class home project is next
Tuesday, reminds chairman Jacl.
Gray of the Veterans House Coln-
mittee.
So far no applications have been
received, he said, for the pro-
ject which provides free carpentry
labor by students of the higit
school manoal arts classes instlmc-
~and Janie ~Villianls, 16. ted by Arne Johnsen.
They were brought to the Applicants need not he mill-
Sheriff's Office where questions tary service veterans. All an ap-
revealed that Cyr wan AWOL fromplicant needs for consideration iv
the Royal Canadian Navy and Miss asmlranee that he can carry
Williams was listed as a runaway through financially and has a lot
from her North Surrey, B.C.in Shelton on which to build his
honle.
%' •
h°2e~wces of a local
They were held until Saturday . . architect have
evening when they were picked tip been vohmteered this year for the
by Immigralion Departnlent offi- first time, Chairn)an Gray said.
rials from Seattle and taken to Applications should be adclressed
Seattle where Canadian authori- to the Veterans House Coonnnit-
ties picked them up. tec, Shclton.
Mcnlorial Day services, under
the sponsorship of local veLerans
organizations, will be held at 1
p.m. Sunday in the Veterans Cenl-
etcry.
Speaker for the program will
be State Rep. Charles Savage.
Roy. Horace Mounts of the First
Methodist Church will give tap
invocation and benediction.
The seventh grade band, raider
the direction of Robert Dcthlc[s
will provide the music.
The firing squad for the core-
ninnies will be from Company B,
35th Engineer Battalion ~rom 1,'t.
Lewis.
LARRY COl)WIN will bc mast-
cr of cerenlollies.
VcLerans orgauizations wllich
will be represented are the Vet-
crans of Foreig~l Wars, American
Legion, 40 and 8, World War I
Veterans, Navy Mothers, Gold
Star Motllers, V]B'W Auxilhtry and
American Legioll Auxiliary.
All city, county, state and fed-
eral g, ow,rnnlcnt+ , offices will bc
closed Monday
In observiinee Of
the holiday.
Most SllelLon businesses will bc
closed Monday~ for the holiday
also.
Tile Post Office will ol)scrvc
its nsual holiday nlail sche(lulc
witll nlail coming inlo the I'osL
Office and being dispatched, but,
no city or rural mail delivery.
all will bo distributed tu Po t
Office boxes.
Schools ill the ShetLon district
will have school Monday, making
up for a day lost during the snows
last wintm'.
The lVIason Count.y Comnlission
a.nd the PUD 3 Comnlission which
normally meet oll Monday---will
hold their meetings Tuesday
llCXt week tnsLead.
Mcnmers of the Shelton Yacht
club are looking forward to the
Memorial Day cruise when they
will drop ancllor at Pro Bay for
I~, 5 p.m. boat-llop pOthlck and
overnight anchorage,
off saw, two bandmills leight and
;nine feet), two edgers, two trim-
liners and two resaws. It. will hart-
dlelogs up to28 feet hmg; f~')nl
15-60 inches in diameter and there
will be a pond rtsaw for splitting
logs over 60 inc~ms.
(Continued on page 5)
Gerald O. McPllerson, 21, Sitka,
Alaska, and Richard A. Bruce, 19,
Los Angeles, Calif., were arrested
by Shelton Police Tuesday night
and are being charged with burg..
lary of the Towne Tavern Monday
night.
Police were called to the tavern
to investigate the break-tl~ Tueso
day mm~ning. They discovered en-
trance had been gained by knock-
ins out a window in the slde door
leading ~ to the alley and then
crawling through the opening. A
key front the bar was used to Ullo
lock a bark storage room.
The itents takcn incldded four or
five cigarette lighters, 40 to 50
packs of cigarettes, a three-piece
hlggage sct; eight boxes of prizes
for punch boards, an •electric mix-
er, a rod and reel, a box of candy
and some nickles and pennies.
Most of the merchandise was re-
covered from a garage at the
home of a relative of one of the
:two arrested.
The two young men were be-
ing held in city jail Wednesday
morning, but, officers said, they
would be transferred to the couno
ty jail.
FIRE CALl[,
A fire broke out in the home
of Verlt Bedcll, 1587 Dickinson St.,
at, 10:30 a,.m. Satul~lay. Answer-
ing the eail wero the Arcadia Fire
Department, Shelton Fire Depart-
ment and the Departnlent of Nat-
ural Resoul~es.
You Don't Have to FIGHT to SWITCH to
Where "YOUR DEPOSITS ARE BUILDING MASON OOUNTY~'
For your added convenience
mem0er F.D,I.C.
OPEN SATURDAYS 10:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.I
I I ][ I g ] I I I I [ I I | I . --H~ I ~ ,..
TERRYL TURNKR DOUGLAS SOU~
.Gregory Robert Mowe, 19, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mowc
of Ehna; a 1964: graduate of Ehna
High School, Mowe will be a soph-
omore sLudying math :it the Uni-
versity of Oregon. This iv his sec-
ond award.
Lawreilre A, Powcll, 18, soil
of Mr. and Mrs, Dave Powell of
Shclton; a 1965 graduate of Shel-
ton High School, Powcll plans to
nmjor in religion or busincss at
either Pasadena College or West-
nt,mt College.
i)oug!as J. Soutllard, 18, son of
Mrs. H(len G. Southard of Monte-
sano; a 1965 gradaute of MonLe-
sam) High Schoof, Sodthard plans
to study pre-nledicine at the Uni-
versity oi Washington.
Terryl Lee Turner, 18, dauglffer
of Mr. and ~f[rs. Robert Turncr 0t
Shelton; a 1965 graduate of Shel-
trot High School, Miss Tm~er
plans to study math aL Denver
University.
Bay Commmtity Club
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