May 31, 1962 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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' 1962
trade association in the country,
the United States Brewers Association, was organized in
glTETON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAL -- PuNished in "Chqstmatown,
HARYM.KNIG00OOL NEWS Beachcombers At
AllynKeep Busy
gymnasium proved none too large; I seeing trips aMW||
SH
to accomodate the crowd which:, Ishmd and on the mahfl=md, any
attended the final PTO meeting] * * *
of the year to see an all-school[ Mrs. Blanche Hmnmel firsL
progran of mmsual excellence on i] grade teacher, and Mrs. Octavia GaALeLnYubIwasVbsyoLnc°mber
1862--the same year that
IN WASHINGTON, on January 11, Walla Walla received its
charter. The town was booming, and by the end of the year,
more tllan eighty new buildings had been built. Folks toasted
their town's success with foaming steins of beer.
For then as now, beer was the traditional beverage
of moderotion. But beer means more than enjoy.
ment to Washington. The Brewing Industry con-
tributes more than one million tax dollars tO our
state each year--money that helps support our
hospitals, schools and parks.
TODAY, in its centennial year, the United States
Brewers Association still works constantly to
assure maintenance of high standards of quality
and propriety wherever beer and ate are served.
.i,,%";'!!=:!: i .... /7_
Wednesday evening, May 23. ' Killough, second grade, were tak-
Because of the extensive pro- en ill with flu last Friday morn-
gram, the hnsiness session was ing and unable to meet with their
confined only to necessary reports, classes. Shirlee Murphy substi-
the room count and the formal
transfer of the gave from retir-
ing president Herb Brehmeyer, Jr.
to the newly-elected president,
Clarence Creamer. The meeting:
was then adjourned, not to re-
convene until after the opening of
school next fall.
After a delightful series of
songs, skits, dances and music by
the elementary grades, the high
chool students presented a rib-
tickling group of original short
sketches called "Odds and Ends,"
which kept the audience in an up-
roar. Written and i produced by
Jack Hogben, it was a burlesque
on just about everything from
TV commercials to Matlock com-
munity life.
Tim tumuli senior chtss out-
ing is postponed until Jtme 6
because of tile numerous schooJ
rtctlvitles requiring their tten-
tion. The studets worked dur-
ing vation to earn enough ex-
pense mangy for m educttional
tour to Cmtadm Timy phm driv-
ing to Seattle where they will
take the bot trip to V|etorht
for da, then to see the beauti-
ful city of Wmcouver =rod re-
turn to Seattle. They are to be
clmperoned by Supt. nd Mrs.
E. O. French who idan to ltae
Luted for Mrs. Hummell and Mrs.
Moore llelped otlt in the second
grade room.
At this time of the year .the
students are not the only ones
whose thoughts at times stray
from education. Even superinten-
dents are not immune from a lit-
tle day dreaming on their own.
Mr. French has put his dreams h-
to tangible form by spending a
few weekends construoting a ply-
wood row boat. Using.a standard
stock plan, advice solicited and
unsolicited, plus some help from
Mr. Murphy's shop class, he has
a craft that is beauty in design I
and a marvel of the boat builder's
art. It is now receiving a coat of
paint and doubtless will be prom-
inent on local lakes and streams
during the summer.
WCTU POTLUGK
MEETING FRIDAY
The Women's Christian Temper-
ance Union will meet at 1 p.m.
Friday at the home of Mrs. Nena
Roberts for a potluck luncheon
meeting.
Each member is urged to attend
and bring a frien d.
IJNIT[:D STATES
BREWERS ASSOCIATION, INC.
Try A Journal Want Ad
its projects last Monday. Mrs.
Clay Jones is a busy chairman
of projects for the club this year.
Mrs. Jones, along with Mrs. El-
ma Anderson, Mrs. Fred Givens
and your correspondent planted
the flower boxes and hanging bas-
kets for Allyn House with ger-
aneums, lobelia and petunias.
The patients were much inter-
ested in the procedure and thank-
ed the club for our work and in-
terest during the year.
A generous word of thanks
should go to Bill Morgan of A1-
lyn for his help in rescuing a kit-
ten from a light pole it had climb-
ed in desperation one day last
week. The cat spent a miserable
day and night atop the pole and
would not come down by coaxing,
so Bill heard of the kitten's plight,
went home to obtain his climbers
and efficiently brought kitty back
to the ground, a muci frightened
little animal. Last reports were
the cat was well adjusted to life
on" the ground at tljs time and
showed no signs of its adventure.
MONDAY WAS shopping day
in Shelton for the Von Ostens
and Mrs, Margie Beeson. They,
and the children spent several
hours in that city, lunching, along
with shopping and visiting friends.
Mrs. MeOrady of Benson Lake
spent Wednesday in £his area call-
ing on various friends trying to
crease interest h furnishing the
I
l lntro,00ucinz.
"°
' C(.,lden Flake
= T[
I
1
, .,BLOT RMILK
:NEW ZIP ...
I
From every SIP
Golden Flake is o "wake.up"
drink. Or mix with equal part
of tomato iuice for a delight-
ful "Bu-Mato" Cocktail.
Golden Flake is the i d e a I
luncEeon drink. It refreshes;
it aids dlqesfion: it r-e-a-I.I.y
TASTES GOOD!
/
Buley waistline?... Aglass of Golden Flake half hour
before meal cue= appetite. Nourishlncj, non.faftenlng
milk solids fill dlet requirements.
I
II
another quality product
Kitsap-Mason Dairy
Your Farmer Neighbors
HA 6-44T3
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IIIlI
" Shelton, Waahinon
PIONEER WOMAN APPEARS
ON 'QUEEN FOR A DAY' TV
By ,=dly Taylor
PIONEER ..... One in a thousand
is considered rather long odds but
one of four in five thousand is
even greater.
Audrey Hammond, a finalist in
the "Queen for a Day" program
whiei was televised from Seattle
last Friday had these odds when
the number on her ticket was read;
fire hall here with comfortable
furniture. If an 5, one has a daven-
port, chairs or hassock in fairly
good condition they wish to con-
tribute tc the furnishing of Ron
Hall just bring them any day but
Monday. The barber will be glad
to let you into the hall to make
your delivery.
Various ones meeting there
would be muci more comfortable
with decent chairs and such to
sit on. Look in the attic when
you have time, there might be
a forgotten piece of furniture you
I migM like to contribute. Thank
: you.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Hansen of
Edmonds who have a summer
home near Grapeview were out
Wednesday to look things over
and called on old friends the Earl
Terrells here at Allyn. Pete re-
tires in June and is looking for-
ward to fishing and lazing around
here in these parts most of the
time.
ALLYN SCItOOL will hold its
mmual school picnic June 5 at
Simpson Recreation Area on Ma-
son Lake. Everyone here is in-
vited ff you have children in
school or not, make this a com-
munity picnic. The school has a
lunch slip. You can call the
school and the teachers will tell
you what to bring for your con-
tribution to the hmch which will
be served. A good time is always
the order of the day at these
school picnics so plan to come.
See you there.
The pupils in the lower grades
at Allyn school were fortunate
to visit the Zeitner Museum here
one day recently which they en-
joyed very much. The museum
ires many objects of interest and
is well worth the time and effoz
it takes to go to view this collec-
tion. Mrs. Blanche Zeitner is very
happy to show you around.
Another interesting trip the
classes ook was to the aquarium
at Hoodsport. The parents were
generous in providing transporta-
tion for the youngsters.
The upper room at the school
plan a constructive trip to Olym-
pia on Tuesday to see the capitol
and grounds and call on various
offices of our state government.
THE SAM CLEMENTS of "Seven
Cedars are happy to have visiting
them their daughter Beverly and
family, who have been transferred
to Ft. Lewis from Lauton, OMaho-
ma. M/Sgt. Walter Moringneau,
ho is making the army his ca-
ler: prefers the northwest sec-
tibn?of our country for duty. ()n
the way out here from Oklahoma
the family visited Walter's par-
ents in Arlie, Mont., fox. several
days, driving on to Spokane to
see Beverley's sister Shirley Vex,-
trees and family, then on to Pu-
yallup to visit Pat Baumgartner,
another sister and her family. Lit-
tle Judy is so glad to see her
grandparents and play on grand-
pa's beach once again. Almost
any old rock is of interest to her.
Mrs. Don Beeson was hostess
to Mrs. Jerry Beeson's children
while Jerry attended the national
PTA meeting in Portland recent-
ly. Jerry reports a very inter-
esting and constructive meeting
and felt very lucky to attend such
a gathering.
The Steve Boyces drove to Ta-
coma on Tuesday, taking the
neighbors along. The Boyces are
preparing their town house for
Fair visitors they expect to have
SOOn.
Too .bad the weather was so
cool and cloudy Saturday for the
parade. Sprinkled in spots and
didn't look promising at all. Sev-
eral from Allyn attended the For-
est Festival events after the pa-
rade. We thought Susan Kowal-
czyk, our princess from Allyn,
'looked real nice on the float. The
school children, along with the
committee, worked so hard on the
entry. Looked nice folks! !
Valley
00:ke
By
SKOKOMISH
and Mrs. Eric
a telegram
Betty, that she i
ple were
Yokohama,
stay there
his service in
Weekend
Mrs.
Mrs. Steve
Tami of
of Island Lake.
Mr. and
and family
weekend
Mrs. Arthur
The Hood
hood will meet
ning at 7:45
mish
House
Browns this
Mrs. Harold
WE ARE
float
Community
sented a grea
work by the
thought tle
the Hood Cans
beautiful.
Mr. and
are spending
home in the
Danny
spent the
parents, Mr.
Mr. and
of Shelton
guests of Mr.
holm.
Mr. and Mrs.
Island Lake
noon callers
son home.
Shelton
wasn't the
not rain
helped warm
taters. Senior
was won by
Gray's HarbOr
the Jr. trophy
Olson from the
one had a
Roberts,
ing his
in his moutt
before
stayed
was dismoun
camera
place
little dust
SUNDAY
for all
Ed Carney
to Roy for
trail ride.
was observe,
was more
he and Ed
smoke and
the last 15
with only
and as Leo
the
his horse
weight
Elms an
at the
Bill RobertS,
from the B
winning
Bill won
Molly won
4ths;
and three
good and
time. The
able to
flnior
mer. All
competing
Play
grounds.
at Ben
June 1st.
day will he
', The
approved
3rd A 25
Posse
she then realized that she was to
be one of 21 persons chosen from
the opera house audience (that
auditorium seats 5000 persons and
was filled }.
Speechless and numb Audrey
was led to the stage where assist-
nts on the program screened their
:wisies which were clipped to a
card. a few minutes before the pro-
gram began after all the 21 had
been briefed on timing, directions
and signals which, make the timing
correct for a National television
show, Jack Bailey came on stagb,
asked each person several ques-
tions and 'at that time the four
finalists were chosen.
When the curtain was pulled,
Audrey was asked to come out.
On rubbery legs, too dazed from
the excitement and realization that
she was on stage, Audrey stated
that she was glad the lights
blinded the audience from her
sight or she might not have been
able to answer the questions asked,
she was so nervous. Audrey did
nov become the Queen, however;
another lady was chosen but a
wondez:ul new Hoover vacuum,
pry pan, bake master, electric
shaver, and an electric blender
will bc coming her way as conso-
lation prizes.
AUDREY felt all the wishes of
her friends brought her such good
luck that she asked this reporter
to thank everyone for their kind-
sees. To conclude a wonderful day,
she hmched at Ivars and had
dinner at some wonderful restau-
rant that Audrey in all her dazed
condition couldn't remember the
name of, only that it was near the
floating bridge. Last was a mem-
orable crossing on the 11 p.m.
ferry to Bremerton. The space
needle, a blue and orange glowing
tower highlighting the brilliant
night lights of Seattle, grew dim
as the miles slipped by and was;
lost from sight; however this day I
will glow in Audrey's memory I
forever as the end to a wonderful, !
once-in-a-lifetime experience. ]
Miss Callanan reported that her!
children were quite impressed with l
their recent trip to Stan Johnson's !
dairy farm where .they saw babyi
calves bottle fed and the cows
milked. Then the raw milk was
placed in milk tanks which is
later taken to the creamery. After
the cows were fed their lunch the
children boarded the bus, and were
driven by Mr. Julian to Kneeland
park for lunch and a play period.
MRS. PAGES' room had a nice
field trip to the State .Capitol in
Olympia, May 23rd. Twenty-fivei
children, Mrs. Page, and four
mothers, Mrs. Lockwood, Mrs.
Fitzthum, Mrs. Lambert and Mrs.
Dodge enjoyed the State museum
then toured the Capitol building,
where they visited the Governor's
office, and rotunda where an
organist was playing. All the chil-
dren were complimented fbVthTr
excellent behavior and good man,
ners. Lunch had to be eaten in the
bus because of the rain. Roddy
Irwin was the patrol boy and Toni
Olson assisted the children during
the lunch hour.
The Forest Festival is over and
the hustle and 'bustle is now a
memory as well as the wonderful
parade with all the floats, march-!
ing units, bands, and horses. The!
Pioneer float was a lovely sight.i
coming down the street. That rep-
resented many hours of work and
planning and the children were
as cute as could be. Our lovely
princess, Claudia Irwin, in her
beautiful blue gown was sweet and
looked so nice seated on the.t con-
vertible. Don Gates did a nice job:
as driver of the unit and. that isn'£ i
an easy task. Thank you each and t!
every one who helped with ' the
float entry this year.
ANOTHER FIRST was awarded !
to the Mason County :Bell"Riclei-s'
for the largest mounted horse unit;
second place for the most .colorful
unit ent to the Syncopated Sea-
horses from Olympia, a 4-H 'z'oup
whose leader is Mrs. J. D. Dutton;
third award went to Mason CoUncj
Sheriff's Posse as the most uni-
form looking group. All the. r,ders
and their horses did very well alid
looked nice so the judges must
have had a difficult time daid.iTlg
the awards.
After the parade the Posse had port.
their annual horse show ougby the and bring
1 Small'size -- Ideal for
boiling White Shafte
TOE00
eXCellent forslaw
Cabbage
Squa:
ari
WE'LL GIVE YOU A
SIftER DOLLAR...
I1
FOR ANY OLD '
PAINT BUCKET I
hen yo
Step up the ladder
F0R TWENTY-FIVE wonder- Con
ful years "C and C has been , '
making paints in and for the € ses ,€©"e..
Northwest, To celebrate this iioti
Silver Anniversary, we II give you
ONE SILVER DOLLAR for any old paint can, egaz
size, brand or condition, when you buy a gallon of "C
paint of your choice at the regular price (25¢ towards a
If you're planning to buy TWO gallons, bring in TWO ol
ets, and we'll give you a SILVER DOLLAR for each
There is no limit. All we ask is that for each old paint c
buy from you, that you buya gallon of"C & C" paint frol00. "nut U
at the regular price. This offer good through June 16, 1962.
LAWTON LUHBER CO
420 So. First St.
n