June 27, 1974 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
©
Shelton Mason County Journal. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 12 (12 of 30 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
June 27, 1974 |
|
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader ![]() |
TROPHY WINNERS in the Bucky Beaver
Poker Run held at Lake Cushman on June
16 are left to right, back row: Bruce Buck,
oldest participant at 63 years; David
Stratton, third place in men's division; AI
Pile, second place in men's; and Ken Carrico,
first place in men's; front row, David
Voeller, second place in children's division;
Jeff Laird, third place in children's; Vincent
Crump, first in children's; Bonnie Lipke,
second place in women's division; Patsy
Beusch, first in women's; Billie Gunderson,
third in women's division; down in front:
Pat Gigstad, youngest rider at eight years.
The fourth annual race was sponsored by the
Lake Cushman Sales Company and drew 234
entrants. The contest began at the Division 9
park where the cyclists took off on a 40-mile
trail which took them behind and over Dow
Mountain and around to a finish at Lower
Lake Cushman Park. Participants found the
dusty trail much easier to ride than in
previous years when they were up to their
necks in mud. The poker run was not a race.
Four checkpoints were set up and at each
check point and the finish, drivers drew a
playing card. The best poker hand
determined the winners.
uu~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~u~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~u~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• 0
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~u~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FAMILY TWOSOME
Men's Hi Game: L. C. Leman 201
Men's Hi Series: L. C. Leman 555
Women's Hi Game: Karen Baxter
! 72
Women's Hi Series: Betty Grindle
443
Boy's Hi Game: Scott Manke 188
Boy's Hi Series: Scott Manke 522
Girl's Hi Game: Tammy Baxter
132
Girl's Hi Series: Tammy Baxter
337
Standings: 1. Leman-Grindle
~026; 2. Baxter-Baxter 5476;
led 3. Manke-Manke 5471,
Carr-Carr 5471; 4. T&B Benedict
5389; 5. Duffy-Duffy 5226; 6.
Lund-Lund 5157; 7. Keith-Keith
5043; 8. Baker-Baker 4912; 9.
L& A Zimmerschied 4825. 10.
Morton-Morton 4737; 11.
Grindle-Grindle 4515; 12. J&G
Benedict 4510; 13. Rose-Rose
4467; 14. Dunbar-Dunbar 4164;
15. Brown-Brown 3535.
TUESDAY SUMMER TRIO
Women's Hi Game: Jackie Brown
189
Women's Hi Series: Linda Swope
519
Kathi Dils 2-7-10 split
Final Standings: Gotchas
30-6, Mamas 22-14, Terrible
Three 21-15, Streakers 20-16, We
Try 181/2-171b, Jolly Js 18-18,
Darn Balls 16-20, Lady Bugs
141b-21V~, Team Ten 14-22, Pin
Rollers 6-30.
Terrible Three 4, Judy
LaMont 446; Team Ten 0,
Mardell Hickman 346; We Try 4,
Leslee Cochran 399; Darn Balls 0,
Jackie Brown 487; Mamas 1,
Linda Swope 519; Gotchas 3, Pat
Boad 499; Jolly Js 1, Julie
Coleman 471; Streakers 3, Joan
Engen 443; Lady Bugs 3, Kathi
Dils 442; Pin Rollers 1, Sharon
Cook 379.
FAMILY TWOSOME
Men's Hi Game: Ray Duffy 204
Men's Hi Series: Ed Dunbar 514
Women's Hi Game; Betty Grindle
176
Women's Hi Series: Betty Grindle
506
Boy's Hi Game: Marc Grindle 202
Boy's Hi Series: Marc Grindle 476
Girl's Hi Game: Lori
Zimmerschied ] 78
Girl's Hi Series: Earl
Zimmerschied 392
1. Leman-Grindle; 2.
Manke-Manke; 3. T&B Benedict;
4. Duffv & Duffv: 5. Lund-Lund;
6. Baxter -Baxter; 7. Keith-Keith;
8. Dunbar-Dunbar; 9.
Baker-Baker; 10. L&A
Zimmerschied; 11. Carr-Carr; 12.
Rose-Rose; 13. Grindle-Grindle;
14. Morton-Morton; 15. J&G
Benedict; 16. Brown-Brown.
Use of any type of fireworks
is prohibited in the National
Forests as of June 25, according
to Regional Forester Theodore A.
Schlapfer, U.S. Forest Service.
The prohibition has been
adopted under provisions of a
federal regulation and applies to
all National Forest System lands
in the Pacific Northwest,
Schlap fer said.
The regulation states the
"discharge of any kind of
fireworks" is prohibited except
where a forest supervisor or his
authorized representative has
issued a written permit.
The Office of General Counsel
has interpreted "discharge" to
include the igniting of any
glowing, smoking, exploding or
spark-emitting device that
produces a glow, combustion or
Missionary to
be speaker
Linda Banner, missionary
daughter of the Ben Banners,
local residents, will be at the
Skokomish Community Church
to describe some of her work in
the mission field June 30 at 11
a.m.
A potluck dinner will follow
this service. All friends and
neighbors are welcome to attend.
Pastor and Mrs. Howard
Spear, of the Skokomish
Community Church, are attending
the Village Mission Conference at
Cannon Beach, Oregon, this week.
Dorothy Todd and Tony
Nelson nabbed first low gross in
Bayshore Golf Club's two-ball last
Thursday.
The teams of Georgia
Nelson-John Long and Joanne
McComb-Keith Simpson tied for
second low ~ross.
Gert l~atstone (with Rex
Beatty) had the long drive for the,
women. Jim McComb (with Lila
F~odel) had the men's longest tee
shot.
Doris Christey and Leo Martin
were closest to the pin on number
three. Mable Long and Bob
Brooks took the "most for the
money" tide.
Hal Allen and Pat Beatty won
low net. Second low net was the
team of Ray Christey-Betty
Olson; third was Bill
Batstone-Helen Rice; fourth was
Ran Ellis-Stella Allen; fifth was
Bob Kieburtz-Rose Mary James.
sparks. In addition to
conventional fireworks, items
such as sparklers, smoke bombs,
glow-worms and similar fireworks
are included in the National
Forest closure.
Violators will be cited before
a federal magistrate.
Fireworks have been a
continuing cause of fires in the
forests each summer, Schlapfer
said.
Sport salmon
limit is back
to three
Director of Fisheries Thor C.
Tollefson announced this week
that the bag limit on sport caught
salmon immediately reverts back
to three fish following a
restraining order issued by Judge
Hewitt Henry in Thurston County
Superior Court on June 17.
The judge's ruling was based
on an action brought against the
department by the Charter Boat
Association who maintained that
the lowered bag limit of two fish
would do irreparable harm to
their industry.
The bag limit in punchcard
areas one through five had been
lowered on June 15 from three to
two salmon in a Department of
Fisheries Regulation which was an
attempt by the department to
comply with the recent Federal
Court mandate of Judge George
Boldt to provide the treaty
Indians a larger share of salmon.
The judge did not make any
ruling with regard to whether or
not the reduction in the bag limit
would contribute more fish to the
Indians.
Tollefson said the three-fish
bag limit would be in effect until
further notice.
Peggy Anderson
Local
A Shelton resident, Mrs.
Peggy Sue Anderson, has been
promoted to the management
position of operator services
supervisor in Pacific Northwest
Bell's operator services office in
Olympia.
In her new position Mrs.
Anderson will be ~_n charge of a
group of operators.
Mrs. Anderson and her
husband, Carl, have two children.
Local girl going to camp
Karen Donna Bittle, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Bittle,
Union, will be among the
hundreds of handicapped children
to be enjoying summer camping
fun in 1974 at camps sponsored
by the Easter Seal Society for
Crippled Children and Adults of
Washington.
The Easter Seal Society
operates two major resident
camps, Camp Easter Seal-East on
Lake Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, and
Moran Easter Seal Camp on Orcas
Island, and a number of day
camps throughout the state.
This year marks the 25th
anniversary of the Easter Seal
Society's summer camping
programs for the handicapped.
Irene Conca District
legislative candidate
(Continued from page one.) rewarding experience no mat
precincts of Thurston County.
There are two positions for the
House up for grabs in the district
this fall and she chose Chadie
Savage's seat instead of Paul
Connor's because she wanted to
run against Mason County's
representative. Filing opens in the
last part of July.
what happens."
It's that kind of an
that makes her say her
race is going to be fun.
doesn't expect any
"I like Charlie," she said. She's 1
optimist, she added.
"I'm going to run to win."
Watergate will not affect her
as a Republican, she said,
"because Watergate has nothing
to do with the 24th District and
the Legislature."
"What do you think of the
whole mess?" we asked her.
"I think it's a whole mess,"
she answered.
at competitive rates
Conca doesn't think
Watergate is strengthening or
ruining the country. She is
encouraged that the country will
get some election reform at the
national level as a result of the
scandal, she said.
Working in politics is very
enjoyable, said Conca. She won't
get discouraged with the system
once she is in it, she insisted.
"The satisfaction to me will be
that I have tried to do
something," she said. "It will be a
U-HAUL
Shelton ...... 426-5962
Rt. 2, Box 70
1 Block North of Bayshore
Golf Course
There will be a special meeting
of the Board of Commission-
ers for Mason County P.U.D.
Friday at 9:00 A.M.,
June 28, 1974 at the P.U.D.
office.
William
rs. Thel
Willia
PREP DOUBLES
Men's Hi Game: Doug Tratnick
120
Men's Hi Series: Scott Stidd 335
Women's Hi Game: Kitty Barry
129
Women's Hi Series: Alice Tomas
316
Moore & Tomas 4581, Barry
& Cole 4361, Barry & Moore
4339, Lynn & Watters 4336, Cole
& Tratnick 4332, Barry & Barry
4265. Johnson & Coleman 4264,
Skaggs & Stidd 4234, Glarer &
Glarer 4207, Johnson & DeRoche
3357.
PREPS DOUBLES
Men's High Game: Russ Moore i3 1
Men's High Series: John Skaggs
351
Women's High Game; Kitty
Barry 118
Women's High Series: Kitty Barry
322
Moore & Tomas 5426, Barry
& Moore 5313, Cole & Tratnick
~220, Barn/& Cole 5203, Lynn &
atters, 5190, Skaggs & Stidd
1~83, Johson & Co!eman 5139,
rry & Barry 5093, Glover &
(3lover 5079, Johnson & Deroche
4229.
i8oz.
i size
the pick of nature's
garden in its gentle,
fragrant lather
Heirs Pharmacy
E mergency Ph. 426-2165
Fifth & Franklin St.--426-3327
Open Daily 9:30 to 7:30
Saturdays -- 9:30 to 6:00
ALL-FROsTLESS
Sales
66 LBS.
I II I
Page 12 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, June 27, 1974
3-DOOR DESIGN
HELPS SAVE
ELECTRICITY
ADJUSTABLE
COLD CONTROLS
LOWEST PRICE EVER!
17 CU. FT. FROSTLESS
REFRIGERATOR
WAS
329.95
* Seperate cold controls for freezer end re-
frigerator sections
e 3 adjustable shelves • Twin crispers
o Reversible door with m•gnetlc gaskets
o Ice maker option•i, extra
15.2 CU FT. FROSTLESS
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
Was
289.95
• Like 17-cu. ft. above except there are two
shelves, 1 door shelf
• Plus it's only 6a-in. high to fit under most
built in cabinets
• Ice maker optional, extra
ALL FROSTLESS SIDE-BY-SIDE
3 DOOR, 22-CU. Fr. REFRIGERATOR
• Save now on this big energy saverl Handy
3rd. door lets you get at most often used
food easily---helps keep cold from escaping
• Ice maker optional, extra
i
i
Sale
Sale
Sale