June 17, 1965 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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June 17, 1965 |
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JACK DYER
Pezcy M Pio
6017 S,E. 86th Ave
r i 0i'
She~to. ligh t# luates
BOB BENNETT JANET MARANVILLE MOLLY TAYLOR MELODY MORGAN
PAM BOARDMAN
:,: !i: ]:/:
TERRYL TURNER EDWARD LATHAM LARRY POWELL
PAM TUSON
ROSS ROBB
CAROL EMSLEY
VIRGINIA CRUMB
BOAD
DENNY BAILEY
ED DAWSON
Shelton
diplo-
exercises
which
gYmnasium
chapter, Terryl Turner, Jill Jef-
fery, alternate.
Shelton-Mason County Journal
Scholarship for outstanding work
in high school journalism, Gcorgc
(Mick) Wagoner.
were SHELTON - MASON COUNTY
~ry, Melody Zonta Club, four-year coniinuing
schohu'ship, Karlene Rutledge,
1964 graduate, second award.
High School Girls' Club Jean E.
rson, chair-Carpenter scholarship, Colleen
:d. Shrum.
*resented byFort.y and Eight, Voiture 135,
School prin-four-year pre-tc~xching scholarship.
Conuie Ells.
Shelton Lawyers scholarship,
presented Cheryl Bead.
;udy club. Shelton Coaches Association
scho!arsl-,ips Ed Dawson Fred La-
mhip ire- Mont, Bryan Brickert (]964 grad:
Lawrence uate) and David Sund (1961 grad-
uate ).
~ c awards, Hood Canal PTA Robert Bergc
Memoritd sclmlarship, Virginia
I bert Bert- Cru~)ab,~
' Shelt0fi General Hospital Auxil-
Cheryl Bead iary scholarships, Connie Ells, Pa-
tricia Parker, and Patvieia Caul-
)el scholar- field (1964. graduate).
and Sharon Southside PTO scholarship, Jack
Dyer.
y Na- Ma,~on County Grange scholar-
Molly ship, Carolyn ~a~u:~eth.
National Honor Society pre-
u'ship, tcaehing scholarship, Elaine Zehe,
Jill Jeffery, alternate, Pan] Me.
University
scholar.Comb, runner-up.
National Honor Society Scholar-
ship for any field other than teach-
ing, Robert Bennett, Lawrcnc~
Hen- Powell, alternate, and Edward
Evers Latham, runner-up.
Iota Chapter of Delta Kappa
Gamma pre-tcaching scholarship,
Ka'thie Smith.
Elks Club of Olympi~t leadership
award, Lawrence Powell, scholar.-
ship award, Terryl Turner.
Washington State Grange Home
Economics Scholarship, Carolyn
Auseth.
n, Mark ]~. Reed Scholarships, Ed-
ward Latham, Lawrence Powell,
Terryl Turner, Phillip Cramer,
(1963 graduate, second award).
State Col-
Elaine
Ose, 8hel-
SCholar.
start within the next six weeks to
two nlonths.
CASH OUTLAY for the two
purchases plus the new building is
approximately $150,000, Slettc-
dahl indicated.
Tentative plans schedule .the
opening of the new Nattonal Bank
of Mason County building early
next year, hc said. Although archi-
tects for the new bank building
have yet to be contracted, tenta-
tive constructiou design includes a
two-story structure with two drive-
in banldng facilities•
The building committee compos-
;cd of bank directors Siettedahl
Ed Taylor, Oliver Ashf,)rd and La-
Bissouiere will interview archi-
tects Monday "at which time one
will be selected," said S]el.tedahl.
The National Bank of Mason
Comity has occupied the nld Jom'-
nal office at 107 South 4th Street
since its opening last October.
THE ARTICLE
rY'S NEWEST
IT'S FUTURE
on This Page)
BANK
%(
/
CAROLYN AUSETH
KATHIE SMITH
COLLEEN SHRUM SANDRA LYMAN DICK EVERS ELAINE ZEHE
PAT PARKER
CONNIE ELLS
FRED LAMONT
Rayonier Fotmdation scholar-
ship, Robert Bennett.
National Merit Scholarship let-
ters of commendation, Sally Ad-
runs, Kathryn Flower, Janet Mar-
anville, Mii~e McNeil, Tcrryl Tur-
ner and Leslie Weston.
ans
Cinder Fallout
Project
Simi)s0n Tinlber Corn!tony an-
nounced Wednesday it u ill invest
$300,000 in air-improvement de-
vices at Simpson. Power Plant to
redlme Cinder fallout in Shelton.
; "(-)}irel; J. Ashford, plant man-
ager, and Max Schmidt, Jr., Simp-
son area spolcesman, outlined the
company's pz'ogram Wednesday
morning at a meeting with Mayor
Frank Travis and representative
businessmen.
"It is a pleasure for us tu an-
nounce we have completed a Slll'-
vey of tim problem and m'e now
going to proceed with an effective
and feasible remedy," said Ash--
ford.
ASHFORD ESTIMATED the
installation of cinder collectors,
automatic combustion controls, a
new covered fuel bin and other
equipment will take about six
: nlonths.
Bccanse shutdowns exclusively
for powcr plant work would re-
quire closing all Simpson plants,
putting hundreds of men but of
jobs, the cinder-reduction equip-
mcnt installation program will be
dovetailed with regular operations.
Schmidt recalled that the powe"
plant originally buit by Henry Mc-
Cleary Timber Company and Ree(!
Mill Company in 1926 began serv-
ing the Rayonier Pulp plant wt]en
it opened in 1927.
AFTER SIMPSON BOUGHT
out Henry McClcary Timber Corn-
?any in 1941, the power plant was
run jointly by Simpson and Ray-
chief until 196,t, when Simpson
purchased Rayonier's intcrest in
the plant.
"We have recognized the prob-
lems of air-I)orne cinders and have
had enginers working on the prob-
lem for many moz|ths," Ashford
adde(1. "We have surveyed simila~
problems in a number of Wes-
Coast industrial centers. ()ur pros
gram for air improvement is based
on these findings."
"No sy.~;tem within economic
feasibility has been found for ab-
solute removal of all combusti°n
)articles. However, the program
we are undertaking will reduce the
discharge to acceptable limits and
Will meet existing codes found sat-
isf~etory in other industrial com-
munities.
"We are setting out to get the
best possible results, and expec:t to
spend $300,000 b e f o r e we arc
through installing control equzp-
79th YEAR--No. 24 Published in "C.hristmastown, U.S.A.", Shelton, Washington 16 Pages-- 2 Sections
Thursday, June 17, :1.965 Entered as sOeolld class matter at the p oat oft'ice at Shelton, Washingtou, 98584
under Act of March 8, 1879. Published weekly at '2'27 West Cola. :1.0 Cents Per Copy
Fund To Aid
Kidney Machhm
For Local Ma.
merit."
THE SIMPSON POWER plant
is the hea]'t of Shelto]Cs i~dustrial
manufacturing combinaliol~s in tilL; ::: :i
~Vcst. Its boilers utilize waste
woods and barlc unstfitablc for ~: .... :
pcoducls, converting them into
stcmn and elictrieity serving ever)' ....
plant on tl~e waterfront.
The
enormous amo!lntS of steam
required for drying hnYiber, ven~{e:~ ,;:
an~i insulating ho'trd and electri:~
I),)wer ucedcd for li~mdreds of gi,
ant motors \vlfi(;la turn saWS,
)a, thcs, presse',~ and conveyors
would supply energy and light to a
.¢city of scve~:al l.ho/lsand people.
Mechanics of the "Bud Frankliri
Kidney Ftmd" were set up Tues-
day night at a meeting of Seattle
Kidney Center representatives with
local residents interested in help-
ing the Shelton young man who
is suffering from a ehlonie lddney
FESTIVAL MEETING
The Mason Cotln~;Y F°restt
Festival Association will race
at 8 p.m. today in the PUD
Conference Room. A discussion
and evaluation of the 1965 For-
est Festival will be th¢ buslnen
of the mseting.
aihnent which will not let him
live long nnless he can receive help
from a lddney ntaehine.
Contributions to the fund may
be made at the Shelton hranch of
the Seatile-First National Bank.
A public meeting at which the
operation, costs, treatment, and~
other details of the kidney machine
will be explained b,V Earl Rice, bus-
iness director of the Seal tle Kidney
Center has been set up
for next
Monday evening at 7:30 p,n~. Me,
moria] llall,
At prcs(nt it costs about $10,000
a~ year. pe, r,~ ~)zlt:i(:!rtt for. t wice-a.
week treatments with a kidney
machine. Franldin, ~a Sheit0n high
schonl graduate and Korean con-
flict veteran, will be eligible for
treatment at the Veterans Hospital
in Seattle as soon as the hospital
establishes a machine as eouip-
ment, but that ]nay be a year'yet.
Franklin is the son of Mr. and
l~Irs. V. E. Franklin of Island
Lake and lives at 'Island Lake him-
self. He is married and the father
of two children. Not now able to
work, he can be rehabilitated if
he can have the services of a kid-
hey machine but he does not have
the funds for this treatment nor
even for transportation to Seattle
where he can get it. A move to
Seattle to get proper care may
be necessary.
• The Shel{on Navy Mothers Club
~s spearheading the kidney fund
drive. The senior class o'f 1965
has conti'ibutcd $300.
O
|1
CALLANAN PARK DEDIcATED---With this rib-
bon cutting ceremony Sunday afternoon by Park
Board Chairman Arnold Fox, left, and Mayor Frank
Tvavis, Callanan Park was officially dedicated and
turned over to the city by the Jaycees who have
carried on an extensive project the past three years
d.'o,oped. The ri..on outt,.g at
y'completed Little League baseball field
was the onoluding .th romonju whtoh,,allo
•
The Shelton School Board has
requested the resignation of Super-
intendent of Schools Robert Quig-
gleAt a board meeti,a~ Monday
night, Quigg]e indicated he does
i not intend to ,comply with the re-
quest i
The request for the resignation
[of the superintemdent was revealed
I at the,lneeting,when Dr. Douglas
E. La:rscn, bo~xrd chabman read
a copy of a 0ne-paragraph letter
which ht~d be~n delivered to Quig-
gle ~lday. "Ihe letter, signed hy
all fi~ '~)f. t:he m~mbeL:@.of:,tl]e.
school 'board, aMeed that Quiggle
submit hi{~ resignation effective
on or before JUne 30..It did not
specify reasons for the requested
resignation.
Quiggle, through his attorney,
.Elvin Vandeberg, Tacoma, who
~as pzesent at the meeting, stated
thai: he did not' in(end to resign,
and, that if the board wished to
dismiss Quiggle, a formal set of
reasons could be presented and
proper hearings held,
Quiggle came to Shelton la.~t
July 1 from C01ville to take over
the superintendent post from re-
tiring R. W. Oltman.
THE MEMBEHS of the board,
by a unanimous vote, refused to
accept tt:e resignation of Dr. Lar-
v, on as chairman of tile board. Ill
a letter submitted to the board
June 8, Larson had indicatcd lee
would re:~ign as chairman effective
July 13, but would remain as a
member of tile board.
Read at the meeting Monday
night was a letter from Ray Cole-
man, a bus driver-maintenance
man for the district the past fou.r
years, asking for a board hearing
¢)]~ his dismissal by Quiggle.
Coleman,,~ in his letter, said he
had been asked to resign, but.
lind been given no reasou by Quig-
g'le. ,
The, board instmmted Quiggle
to keep Coleman on the payroll,
and submit a request for his dis-
missal aJ~ ~'~,h ~pe~i:flc reasons
Coleman is to get a copy of the
superintendent's request and rea-
sons 10 days before any formal
hearing is 'taeld, acording to the
board's instructions.
Quiggle stated at the meeting
that he had told Coleman the
reason for his dismissal was be-
hind-the-scenes t|'oublemaking;
Dr. L(trson, in answer to a ques-
tion on the legality of contracts
issued earlier this n'~onth to teach-
ers in the district, explained the
circumstances suri:'ounding the dis-
puted contracts and the reason
they were recalled and new con-
tracts issued.
lIE SAID that the contracts
were found to be illegal in the
section which provided for added
salary earned in the 1964-65 school
year and to be paid in the 1965-66
school year. It is not possible to
• pay an obligation incm'red in one
fiscal year out of money from the discovery that tile payment of
the nexL fiscal year; ' the money ( ut of next year's bud-
Dr. Lawson said that the added get was illegal, it was also fonnd
amount was what was to haw in checking the anaount spent for
been dist.ributed to teachers under ceri.ifieated personnel thLs yettr,
an agreement made when the final that thin: amount exceeded by
budget was adopted last Octobersome $3,000 the 76 pc.- cent: provid-
in which 76 percent of the budget odin the budget under the agrcc-
cxclusive of transportation andmerit.
cafeteria costs, wa.~ set aside for The bo'~rd voted to ran'chase sev
certificated personnel with any en new ~'('hool bl'lSS~S";t ;he~ n~aet"
n] )hey left over at the end of the in." Monday ~icd~t
em,~el]t fiscal year to be distrib- "" T~.--"':,( ::"^"'°"v"
uted to the teachers in some w ty. . ~'We ,o-iv passenger Dusscs,
_ " . " Iour with gasoline n~ot.oz~s and one
At that time, lmrson said, the x~,l. - ~ , .......... -
' "'.' ,_ " .... Lt • ~I, (U( S~,I, \VIII ~ pln'cnase(1
.... s " , . . , ,' t xentional bnsses ~ill ~,::i;m~ha',-
time it was t0 oe oetermined amo I ' -- " ;
, ed from Jma Pauley Inc Shelt~
how {his could be legaily done, ' ' ' , " ", ~ ' , •
he cont]actsfez the bus,es
The c(,nu:'sci.s for the 1965-66 " ~;"
year which had been distributed 1were awarded on the recom-
to the tcache.rs and then recalled, Imendation of Lewis Taylor, coor-
had coWafned all added salary of] • t I "~ t t'o fl(IVt
...... , , dmator of rans2( r_aA_n __'_)___
I$100 for each teacher plus an addl- I ...........
tional" $10 fin:" each yeaz- thes, had rues openeo at, 1:lie Jnne. ~ meeung.,
been with the district Total cost of the busses on the b,d~
~Earson said that in" addii.ion t:o wil! be $106,327.
June
rogram
Shelton's 1965 summer recrea,.
tion swim program, for city and
Mason County youths 6-16 years
old, will get underway Monday,
June 28, at the Pool Nuotare.
Randi Tuson, who directed the
1964 ' program, will handle the
classes again this summer assist-
ed by pool owner-manager Lee
Kiefer, Leam~e Armstrong, Lynne
Stevens cud Coralie Anderson.
Mrs. GeOrge Magnett wilt take
charge of bus transportation du-
ties to and from the pool.
Although an eight-week pro-
gram is hoped for, funds have
been appropriated to take care of
only six weeks of classes. Money
for the two-week extension lnllst
crone from public donations ear-
marked for the swim program.
Kiefer plans to start the donation
ball rul]ing at the outset of the
classes when lie will donate one
night's pool proceeds (4-10 p.m.I
each week until the completion of
the program.
Seven hour-long classes will be
run Monday through Friday from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Instruction for
non-swimmers, beginners and ad-
vanced beginners will start at 9,
10 and 11 a.m. mad 1 and 2 p.m.
daily. Intermediates will swim
from 12-1 p.m. Ti~ose who are at
least .1.2 years old and have p~ssed
their swimmers test plus all jun-
ior life savers may swim from 3-4
p.m. At1 of those students wishin~y
to participate in the
, progra.m are
asked to bring their swinmaing
cards (if you have them) z~s well
. a parents' permission slin
(which may be clipped out at th;.;
end of this story) on the first day
of ela.sses, June 28.
Students will be charged 15¢ per
day for bus maintenance and pool
operation, Pick-up points for the
bus will be Bordeaux school at 20
minutes to the hour, the old IAn-
coln school at 10 l?lilltltes to the
hem" .':~ud Mr. View school at 5
minutes to the hour. "
The permission slip (clip out) :
SUMMER SWlM PROGRAM i
Name .................................... , ........................................... Age..,,: .................. j
!! Address .......................................................................................................... j
[ Telephone ................. ............................ .'"" ....... '": .......................................... i
] Type of Swimmer. ......................... i .............................................................
Parent's Signature ...................................... ' ....... ~ ........................................
I
I
included a visit to the Sheiton Rhododendron So-
ciety's plantings and the presentation of the sym-
bolic key to the A fran',e rest room building by
Jaycee' president Larry Hansen. Although the
ceremonies were dampened by occasional showers,
a good crowd turned out for the dedication. Two
exhibiti,on ball games followed the formal dedi~.,
tion ~er(=moni~=,
SEE THE ARTICLE
ON MASON COUNTY'S NEWEST BANK
AND IT'S FUTURE
(Story on This Page)
NATIOHAL BAHK
of MASON OOUNTY
Member F.D.I,G.
,H
;:;J
i:i