June 3, 1965 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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June 3, 1965 |
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Cosmetics
for
YOU
d answer set-
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POWDER?
that the pur-
er is to "set"
lat it Will stay
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trpose as loose
al I~Owder ng.
~Y it gener-
OWder puff
Remove
resh puff or
Will not
3Urse, it is
the day.
school
Ritz.
BODy,
be-
and a "hand
USually rich-
Protect tile
;ng effects of
cnlol-
Sales educa-
COsmetics.
CHANGES
stel pink
my lips
On. What
they Wear
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NEW CHURCH---This is an architect's drawing of the new church ,3f the North-
side Baptist Church to be constructed at C Street and Highway 101. Ground-
breaking ceremonies are planned for 3 p.m. June 13 at the church site. The
first construction will includ a residence type building to house a temporary
sanctuary and classrooms. A nursery service will be provided. Rev. E. A.
Ormsbee, Bremertonp is minister in charge of the new church.
Hermes, Departing
Teachers Honored
AI Farewell Party
Principal George Hermes re-
ceived a farewell gift and other
teachers leaving the ShelLon High
School faculty this year were hon-
ored Kucsts "It a good-bye party
hchl aL The Bavarian ill" Tacoma
Tues(lay night.
Approximately 60 teachers and
staff memhe]'s, with husbands and
wives, enjoyed German food which
is the specialty of tile house.
Principal Hermes is transferring
his administrative talents to the
new GarrctL Heyns High School
which will start operating at the
V~ra shing'Lon Corrections Center
next fall and several of the high
school faculty are going along
with him to staff the faculty and
administrative personnel. Three
other teachers arc leaving the
ShelLon so}real system completely.
FROM
Scar
This word derives from the
Latin and Greek cschara, which
I:][onlor nsod to nleau "fire
place." Thus, in ancient days,
scar signified the ,~eab resulting'
from a burn.
Later, the word acquired its
prescnI, more gener:d meaning
the mark left by any wound.
Neil'sPharm
Hood Canal Lions
new year is being planned by the
Hood Canal Lions Club tonight at
:the Hood Canal Woman s Club in
Potlatch. Performing the official
ceremony of installing the newly
elected officers and directors will
be Cliff HalfhiII, President, Lake-
wood Lions Club and Zone Chair-
man elect C-l, Multiple District
19, Li¢)ns International. Acting as
Master of Ceremonies for the La-
dies Night affair will be Doc Vet-
ters of the Willapa Harbor Lions
Club.
The new officers and directors
to commence their term July 1 are
Gene Spaulding, president; Bob
Michaels, first vice president; Tom
Matyc, second v~e president; Walt
Henderson, third vice president;
Ed Furlong, tail twister; Matt
VanLaanen, lion tamer, and Doc
McSweyn and Jack Grubb, direc-
tors for two years.
Re-elected to serve for another
year is Les Hein, secretary-trea-
surer and continuing to serve the
second yem" of their two yea}, term
as directors are Bob Nesbitt and
Joe Frint. Retiring after doing
much to organize the Hood Canal
Lions Clnb Oct. 22, 1964 and after
establishing the club as an active
service organization is Charter
President, Milo Dilley.
The dinner meeting is scheduled
to start at 7:30 p.m. with enter-
tainment to be provir)ed in the
usual Lions ~.tyle. Dancing will top
off this importallt occasion.
Hospital Commission
Working On Hill.
Burton Application
The Mason County Hospital
Commission is working toward
its first deadline in getting its ap-
plichtion in for Hill-Burton feder-
al funds for the construction of
a new hospital here.
The ~eadline for the initial ap-
plication is June 30.
The federal funds are expected
to provide 40 percent of the costs
of the new hospital and funds
from a bond issue approved by the
voters May 11 60 percent.
The Hospital Commission will
hold a special meeting June 15
at 7 p.m. to complete the final
work on the initial Hilt-Burton
application.
Emergency Ph. 426-2165
Fifth & Franklin St.-~426-3327
Open Daily 9:30 to 7:30
Saturdays -- 9:30 - 6:00
Union Employees At
Rayonier Gel Pay Hike,
The 21,500 west cos'st members
of the Association of Western Pulp
and Paper Workers today (Tues-
day) received an automatic ten
cents an hour, across-the-boar, t
wage increase, it wan announced
by William R. Perrin, AWPPW
president. The union represents:
employees at the Rayonier Re-I
search Lab here.
This increase was called for in
the contract negotiated last fall,
followin?~ a 13-day strike by the
young paper lmion, between AW-
PPW and 48 west coast pulp and
paper mills.
The dime increase brings the
base pay for men covered by the
contract to $2.575 per hour and
for women to $2.345 per hour. It
will, as an example, raise journey-
men mechanics to $3.59 an hour.
Present contract will be reopen-
ed in March 1966 for negotiation
of wages and conditions.
Credit Union Moves
Into New Building
The Mason County Federal Cre-
dit Union was in business in its
new qnar|er.~ :4t t;'om'th and Cedar
Tuesday although a few construc-
tion details remained to be com-
pleted on ~:he new building. "
The credit nnion moved from
iis ipr'cvious 'location of South
Fourth St. between Railroad and
CoLa over the weekend.
Manager Harry Ross said all
open house in the new building
is plalmed as soon as they arc
settled in the new quarters.
....................................
Extension Service
Back In Post effice
Tile Mason County Extension
Service office has nloved back
into its quarters in the basement
of the Post Office building.
No word has ~'een received hy
local Postal officials as yet as
to when the Post Office will be
moving back. een
The Extension office had b .
quartered, in the Govey Building•
during the expansion and remod-
eling of the Post Office building.
The move was made last week.
pa e 5
EE (,O CeAe, Open House Set For Housing Development
11~" V,'~lit!:l I H~t ~)Ot!ll Ill~/,le ill (he
inca in l.q.lO.
'l'~Ic li"}d 5:(,i'll ',v:I:~ collected
f~'()r,~ l i:o ~-':.:: fl :' '. t ,:.'c.~ in 1962 m~d
phmtcd in {i~e "~Vei)ster Nursery
:H ()ls'm},ia. '['t:c t)ces Dilated
fill}~" I!,i,: '.o~,t ,..,(,t'e [,'llr,(~II J')'()/ll
tilt' il HI'::(!I'V t;',iA y(~llr au(t Hl'e
ll~,(~:;i , , "},ictl \,'OF(~ llse, d in the first
~l'(;~ ('~;I :~.1 i, ,n I l:is spring with
:-,llint:,,':~ fFOBI the gl•afied trees.
"Pl'~e i~:oce',-:.~: fi'(;m tile g~';!l'lhlg
• : t'~' fi:'::l ~ls(".tl)l,' sccdliug's took
!! I~[ ~t,vL,n yCal'S.
If s:~c,:l f'.'om the higher elcva-
~ ...... !'P'~ l':l'il ~.U~bcFcd and
plallted, it would have tqken about
-15 .year~ ()r m~,~c 1~) W.~I seedlings
fl'onl their first b;ead p!odll(~tion.
This rcsults hoc:4~=se the tree
nlusl be aboui 1.5 years old before
it i'eaehc.~ ,'1 sl;/t~(~ of 121atlu'ily at
which it will produce cm~es.
The bud tips which were grafted
in tilt, seed o} C}l'l rd \\'e~ (! ['l'oll~
trees whici~ ha(i already gone
through this maluring process and
were ready to prodllce seed as soon
as tile grafte6 buds acquired some
growth.
Eventually, tile seed orchard will
produce a sufficient amount of
seed and seedlings to take earc of
the reforestation requirements in
the two National Forests.
Art Thomas, who is in charge
of the reforestation p~ogram for
the U.S. Forest Service here, said
that about 1,500 acres are re-
nlanted each year in the Shelton
Ranger District.
THE REFOREST&TION is done
either by direct seeding with seed
extracted fronl cones er
by hand
planting of the small seediings.
The hand planting is done by
two crews of young men employed
by the Forest Service for the pro'-
pose.
One crew operates out of Shel-
ton and the other lives at the Sat-
sop Guard Station three miles
above Camp Grisdale.
The crew from the camp is
headed by Foreman Ed Laney.
The area which was planted
with the seedlings from the Seed
Orchard production this year was
in the 1,900 to 3,000 foot elevation
in an area which had been logged
in 1959:
Reforestation planting in start-
ed in the fall as soon as it becomes
wet enough to insure the best sur-
vival and continues until the snow
falls. It in restarted in the spring
and continues until it becomes too
dry for good planting conditions.
In addition to the seed produc-
tion aspects of the Seed Orchard,
research work in the genetics of
Douglas Fir, cross breeding, fer-
tilization and insect control have
been started.
Each of these projects have the
potential of coming up with some
ansvcers which could make the
trees which are planted following
logging in coming years better
adapted and carrying the heridity
to l)rOduce a crop of timber faster
:than their ancesters (lid muler the
i varying infhmnces of Mother na-
ture.
Bottle Drive Nets
Scout Troop $47.50
Troop 110 Boy Scouts cleared
$47.50 on their recent bottle drive
and in additi0n picked up a full
pickup truck load of non-return-
able bottles which wero taken to
the city garbage dump, troop of-
fleers report.
The project was undertaken ,to
rai,m funds for an extended trip
into the Olympic mountains this
summer on which the Scouts will
carry dehydrated foods. Additional
money Will h~ve to be raised to
finance the project am tim bottle
drive profits will not be sufficient,
~ ':!! ~. N~ :, L:~., *' ~ ~ ..... :
WOODLAND MAI',IO~ H%S;DKNCE---One of the
first home purcl;asers in the new Woodland Manor
subdi,.ision were Mr. and IVlrs. Dave Groll, recent
newcomers fram Olympia. Mr. Groll is pro-manag-
er at SeatLl~c-Fi~st National Bank's Shelton branch,
Theics is one of the first of an eventual 42 new
Puhlic opc:~ house is being held
this weekend at: a major new
home-huilding development near
Shelton.
The first seven of an eventual
42 new homes in the Woodlan'd
Manor subdivision have been com.
0leted and ~hrSe nmre are under
construction at this time by West;-
gate Builders of Olympia.
HAROLD SCIINAI)Ell,
Safeway Courtesy ~rinner
MEAT MANA(IER A!~ARDED
COURTESY CLERK HONOR
Harold Schnader, meat depart-
ment manager at Safcway's Shel-
ton store, was awarded the May
"courtesy clerk" honor for this
ilistrict.
homes planned for construction by Westgate 13:=ild-
ors on the 40-acre development. The public is in-
vited to open house at one of the new residences tt~is
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.,
or any evening from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
:~{ '* ¢ I!¢ :!:
Open house in one of the com-
pleted homes is being held every
day from 7 to 9 p.m. but this Fri-
:lay, Satm'day and Sunday the
()pen house hours cover the conl-
plcte day frgm 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
WOODLAND MANOR is locat-
ed on a 40-acre tract on tile
Shelton Spring Road, which con-
nects the Island Lake Road and
Schnader, a Safeway staff mem-
ber for the past• six years, was
honored at a luncheon and tour
of the Safeway distribution cen-
ter at Bellevue ahmg with several
other district courtesy award win-
horN.
With the selection of a baro-
meter for his special award,
Schnader became a member of the
Seattle division Courtesy Club.
He "rod his wife iluth have two
children, one of whom, Loft, at,
tends Bordeaux school in Shelton.
CItEI)IT UNION MOVES
INTO NEW BUILDING
trodI) officers said.
Menmrial Day weekend was no
CAMP OUT 0 (,LT DEGREE
Cub Scouts from Pack 110 ~'~ill T , a
have a caml0-out at Callanan parkAmong those getting degrees
Saturday night and Sunday morn- t from Washington State Univers-
ing. The Cubs will meet at the lily Sunday was Margaret Joe
park at 8 ~.m. Saturday. I Price, Shelton. "
holiday for Mason County Federal
Credit Union staff members.
During what would normally
kave been a 3-day .weekend the
Credit Union moved its volmnnous
records and files from the Govey
Building into its beautiful new
home at Fourth and Cedar streets,
where it was ready for business
this Tuesday morning.
Manager Harry Ross said no
date has been firmed up as yet
for a. public open house but one
is being planned for as early a
date as possible.
Work Opportunities
Listed For Jobless
Manpowe: Development Train-
ing Act projects for aircraft work-
ors are now open to qualified ap,
plicants in the following occupa-
tions:
!. Production Electrician
2. Final Assembler
3. Draftsman, Mechanical
Anyone interested in one of
tl~cse training programs should
contact the Washington State Em-
ployment Service office h)cated at
406 South "~Vater Street in Olynl-
pia for fu,t-her information or
call 352-4881.
Manpowe:' Development Train-
ing Aet projects for Nurse Aides
a.nd a refresher course for Cle, r]~
Stenographers will start during
June 1965 in the Olympia area.
For further information please
contact the Washington State 13m-
ployment Service office at 406
!South Wa(er Street, in Olympia
or dial 352-4881 for further infof
nmtion.
Highway 101 at the Shelton air- i
port~ The developn~,~nt is I~est
reached by going to the Airport ,~!i
Grocery and turning rightfor ~,;i
about a half mile. r :
Three bedroom residene(.s in the
subdivision are designed for sale i
at less ti, an $15,000 a,,d i
fireplaces and garages along with
all the other normal home lea- :i
tures.
The LaBissonierc Agency i": ex-
clnsive repzesentative for \Vesi-
gate Builders in the sale of \,Vood-
land Manor homes.
SAVINGS BONDS
"Savings Bonds sales in Mason
county amounted to $12,313 during
April," Vohmteer County Savin.~s
Bonds Chairman, L. A. Carlson,
said here today. "State-wide salos
were strong with purchases of $5.-
384,542 last month and $20,5~;7.-
237 for tile first four months of ti~,~
year," he continued.
i:!;
AT
'61 Galaxie Htp.
'60 Rambler Sta. Wag.
'59 Rambler Sta. Wag.
'56 Pontiac Wagon
'53 aids Htp.
'52 Chev. Sedan
'53 Ford Sedan
'65 Polara, 3000 miles
'(;5 Coronet, 3000 mi.
BgY DODGE
They're Dependable
PAULEY MOTORS
Front & R.R.
Phone 426-8183
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