July 1, 1965 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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SI:IELTON--I A 01 (20 :Y01TRI AE-- Publlshe l tn u hr' Mma,ifown, Bbelton, Washtn
• ¢" * 7"''¢r' ":':':~Z?'""* ;~
tic market for logs, State Land
TRACING CH'IEF JOSEPH'S ESCAPE TRAIL---Leo Bishop and
his borrowed horse "Potowatomie," a three-year-old Appaleosa be-
longing to Bud Eveleth of Ehna, started Monday on a five-day 75-
mile horse pack trek from Joseph, Ore., to the Snake River along
the same route used by Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce Indians in
the 1650s when the Indians were.escaping from the United States
Army. Although the Indian band continued all the way to the
Canadian border before it was captured, Bishop and the other
riders participating in the Chief Joseph Trail Ride will go only as
far as Dug Bar on the Snake, an encampment of the Nez Perce
before the Indians forded the river. Only Appaloosa horses, the
type used by the Nez Perce in the escape over 100 years ago, were
allowed for the ride which was sponsored by the Appaloosa Horse
Club, Moscow, Idaho. Appaloosas =nay be identified by their
spotted coloring. Bish,op, who said he anticipated good trout
fishing in the many mountain lakes and streams the group will
pass, said he expected a "very scenic" ride through the mountains,
rolling grass plains and the valleys of the Snake and Imnaha Rivers
along the old route. Bishop, who motored to Joseph with Sel Cook,
McCleary, and Cook's four-year-old gelding Appaloosa for the ride,
is a Ioagtime Shelton h;3rseman. He is a former captain of the
Shelton Sheriff's Posse and is now president of the Bell Riders
horse club in Shelton. Bishop said he planned to return to Shel-
ton Saturday.
R',)~hley M~yte, 1965 graduate of i
Shelton high school, reported for
Marine Corps boot camp at San
Diego last week. He will remain
there for 12 weeks of basic train-
inK. His brother, Rodgcr Mayte,
who graduated in Shelton in 1964,
enlisted in the Marines in Septem-
ber and left San Francisco this
week bound for duty in Hawaii.
Both men are sons of Mr. and
lVl:rs. Thomas Mayte, H0odsport.
Miss Orpha Mae Cockburn has
enlisted into the Women's Army
Corps. She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard T. Cockburn,
Matlock. Miss Coekburn enlisted
in the Army's "Graduate Special-
ist Program"' fro" a period of three
years in Aberdeen. After qualify-
ing for this program applicants
cimose the specific sclmol they
]want to attend. She selected a 12-
week Neuropsychiatric Procedures
School located ~tt the Medical Field
Service School, Fol t Sam Houston,
San Antonio, Tax. Prior to the
school enlistees attend eight weeks
basic training held at Fort Mc-
Clellan, Ala. Miss Coekburn is a
i recent graduate of Mary M.
Knight High School, Matlock.
F~rc Control Technician Third
I Class Norman J Petereit, USCG
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ciaude A. re-'
t~relt of Route 1, Shelton, is setT-
SALES OF STA
TJMBEe' DUE FOR BOOM
OLYMPIA--"With no foresee- jeojardizing the state's sustained
able decrease in the overseas de- yield management plans.
nlhnd and a centim~ed good (lomes- The exact amount of sales in-
tic mark(,t f, • lo~ ~' ate 'rod crease will be annomwcd hi several
ComndsMoncr I=leri L. Cole said
today sLeps are being taken to in-
crease the timber sale.,i fronl 'state
owned lands for Fiscal Year 1966,
For the period July 1, 1965 to
June 30, 1966, the Department of
Nal;ural Resources plans to sell
some 525,500,000 board feet: Com-
mia~ioner Cole maid the total is
a preliminary figure ~md that per-
haps it can be increased without
/
ment form notarizing too[< place last Thursday
in Ange's office. Bowlen, 17, was scheduled to
leave yesterday from Sea-Tar airport bound for
Pleasanton, Calif., and his new job. In Pieasanton
he will live in a youth camp with other corpsmen
18-21 years of age, taking up park maintenance
work 32 hours a week (with pay) and going to
school part time during his six months to two year
program. Bu[erd, the oldest of nine children in
his family, dropped out of school after completing
his eighth-grade year. The Youth Corps school
,offers courses through the high school level. Bowl.
en is the son of Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Bowlen, Route
One, Shelton.
tour and study.
THE STATE LAND commis-
sioner said Japan plans to continue
its present level of log exports
from the northwest for several
more years.
"The log export market along
with the good domestic demands
in 1964 resulted in the highest lev-
el of employment in the stkte's
forest industries in recent years.
Forest industry surveys show that
Washington is currently growing
more timber than is being harves-
Led," Commissioner Cole said,
The 525.5 million board feet pre-
liminary sales prospectus outlined
by the state is some 50 million
board feet over the Department of
Natural Resources' original sale~
plan.
SCHEDULED FOR SALE in
Fiscal Year 1966 by the state are:
about 409,500,000 BF of conifers;
some 62,500,000 BF of hardwoods;
and about 53,500,000 BF of thin-
ning sales.
"Already we have aLerted pro-
riding new sources of timber for
the local industries. The Board of
Natural Resources approved at its
|
ing aboard the Coast Guard ice-~K K tR~!I 0|~ =
breaker Eastwind, presently in Ar-
gent:a, l~ewfoundland enroute to
the frozen waters of Goose Bay,
Labrador.
At the approaches of Goose Bay,
the Eastwind will mal¢e a surface
ice reconnaissance before carrying: Skokomish rode the bandwagon
out her mission as an icebreaker:of Bob Miller's flossy one-hit
and escort ~;essel for cargo ships, pitching and a 16-hit bombardment
In mid-July, Eastwind will head of its own for its first Northwest
for Thule, Greenland for a brief!Indian League baseball victory
stopover before retuzming to Bos- Sunday.
ton Aug. 1. ! The feat was achieved at Taro.
ma, 10-1, against Portland Avenue.
Four-Lane Freeway
Addition Opening
Expeded Soon
Opening of the full ~-lane Lynch-
to-Cole-Road- section of the Shel-
ton-Olympia freeway will miss the
4th of July weekend by about a
week, a State Highways Depart-
meat official told the Jonrnal yes-
terday.
Construction Engineer D. I. Mc-
Murray said opening of the full 4-
lane section, slightly over twa
miles in length, is scheduled for
July 8 or 9.
BY THAT TIME, barring un-
forseeable interruption in work, all
four lanes will be in condition for
traffic use, even though minor de-
tails of final construction probab-
ly won't be fully completed until
late in the month, McMurry said.
Two of the lanes have been car-
tying two-way traffic for several
weeks. The work has been done by
the J. J. Welcome Construction
Company.
This will finish the present pro-
jection of the Shelton-Olympia
freway, although in the next bi-
ennium the highways budget calls
for l e-smfacing of the rest of the
INITIATED---Bob Leeds, son of'
Mr. and Mrs. Glen E. Leeds,
Shelton, was recently inl%iated
into Sigma Iota. a national hen-
orary for hotel and restaurant
majors at Washington State
LJ niversity,
It was a tight tussle through
five innings which was cracked
wide~ open by Skokomish's 5-run
uprising in the sixth. A 2-run fifth
had shattered a 1-1 deadlock which
had existed since the first,
MILLER HAD A BIG hand in
his ov~n,,-, pitching success by wav-
ing a 4-hit bat at the plate. He in-
cluded a triple and double in his
collection, drove in two runs and
scored another pair.
The run off his pitching was un-
earned, when a two-out infield
miscue allowed his walk to the
leadoff swinger to do the damage.
That equalized an earned Sko-
komish run in the top half whicn
Miller drove in with a double fol-
lowing Tom Gouley's single and
force-out on Glen Johns' grounder
and Jim Tobin's double.
Miller started the winning 2-run
rally in the fifth with a singe, scor-
ing on Mike Davis' triple. Mike
checked in on Dave Smith's
grounder to short:
THE BIG FIFTH was marked
by five Skokomish hits, which in-
cluded triples by Miller and Glen
Johns, singles by Tom Gouley,
Dave Smith and Alex Gouley and
walks to Bill Smith and Tom Gou-
ley.
Gary Paterson swatted a lead-off
homer in the ninth and a second
run scored after walks to Toni
Gouley and Tobin and two succes-
sive errors on ground balls.
Miller came within one out of
pitching a no-hitter. With two
away and one abosrd by a walk in
the ninth, Sam Satiaeum doubled.
Another walk filled the bases but
Bob ended the game with his sev-
enth strikeout.
Skokomish ab r hi Tacoma ab r'h
T. Gouley 3b4 2 3lJess-ss-c 3 1 0
G.Johns If 6 2 ltHerman 3b 4 0 0
Tobin ss 5 0 21John rf 4 0 0
R. ~,illler p 6 2 41Jadksbn cf d 0 0
Davis c 5 2 /jlyall ]b 3 0 0
D,Smith cf 6 1 liB. Satcm. 2b 4 0 0
A. Gouley lb 4 0 ]IS. Sst(.m. ss 3 0 1
Pulsifer rf 2 0 0lSparks p 2 O 0
B. Smith rf 2 0 llMellar p I 0 0
P. Petrsn. 2b 2 0 llBarnes c 1 0 0
G. Petrsn. 2b 3 1 ltGcorgc c 2 0 0
Totals 45 l0 161 Totals31 1 1
S('Olgl,J BY INNINGS
Skokomish .......... 1 0 00 2 50 0 2--;10
hits ............ 3 1 1] 3 5l 0 1--16
Tacoma .............. 1 0 00 0 00 0 0-- 1
hits .......... 0 0 00 0 00 0 1-- 1
SUMMARY : ItR-G. Peterson. 3b-
Johns. Miller. Davis. 2b-Tobin. Miler.
S. Sattaeum. RBI-Miller 2. D. Smith
2, T. Gouh.y, Johns. David. G. Peter-
son. SO-Miller 7. Mellm' 3. BB-bIlller
5. Sparks 2, Mcllar 2. RRF-MIller 0.
Sparks 6. Mellar 1
TI
Given the suppol¢ his slab con- gift runs
temporary received in the first lasted
game, Gary Andrews could have
pitched the Corrections Center to
a Timber League twin victory over
Bucoda Sunday.
However, where Bob McNatt
received strong fielding and bat-
ting support for a 12-5 Center tri-
umph in the olSener, Andrews saw
a potential shutout gummed up in
eight errors and a resulting 6-3
defeat in the nightcap. All six Bu-
coda runs came directly from de-
fensive miscues behind Andrews.
AL BURNETT featured the
Center's first game 9-hit attack
with a three run homer in the fh-st
which got things off to a running
start for the Inmates. Keith Ma-
son chipped in with three blows
and Tom Scott with two as the In-
mates tied their pinnacle in run
production for the season.
In the meeantime, McNatt es-
caped from the frequent tight
spots concocted by the ten hits he
allowed with only one serious em-
barrassment, Do~:~ Christensen's 3-
run homer in the sixth. This fol-
lowed a walk and a double. Bu-
coda scored solo markers in the
first (without a hire on a two-base
throwing error and two stolen
bases) and in the seventh (like-
wise unearned after an error and
two singles).
Tile Inmates retaliated in their
section of the sixth with five tan
lies on three hits (by Etcheson,
Scott and Hood), three walks (to
Williams, Hunt and McNatt), and
two Bucoda errors.
IN THE SECOND GAME, er-
rors on the first two Bucoda bat-
ters in the first inning led to two
CONNALLY RUNS
PERFECT RACE
Tom Connally piloted a perfect
aace to win the Shelton Trail-
blazers ten-mile reliability motor-
cycle run last Sunday with 60
points, the maximum possible.
Giving him a strong run for top
honors wasKen Simons with 55
points m:d Gib Johnston with 51
points. These three leaders were
trailed in order by Dan Kirk, 47
points.
Next event for the T, t ailblazers
will be a hare scrambles on July
11 at the Shelton fairgrounds.
ADULT-JUNIOR LEAGUE
(final standings) Pins
Chuck Sr & Jr Thompson ........ 9566
Betty & Joe Thompson ............ 9231
through for:'
fifth, on
Bucoda
the top of
on the ] .,el
That batter
after a walk
man's single
have come t~
brother. Ted
3-run circuit
The Inmati
in theh" hall,
and too late
Nason's sin#
ble were the
The split
a 3-and-4 rec
play. The b0:
B - ri:
ueoda ab
MePhersn 9b 41
K. Stdnmn e $
T. Stdnnm
2b 4
O'Neill p 4
D. Crstnsn ss 4
Perkins cf r 8
Ozbolt lb 3
D. Stdman If
Hartmaa rf
Totals
Btlcoda :
Hits
W.S.C.C. •
hits
SUMMARY :
l ('I1S(}=I.
Studeman, O~
RBI-BUraettl
SOIl,
,}=nan 2, IC
kins, Hart nl
Scott 2.
McNatt 8.
RRF-MeNal
StudemaI'- 2.~
Ihle0da
M(!Phrso=l 3b
K.Sidmn 2b
T.Stdma c
O'Neill lb
Wall P .
D.Crstsa ss
Porkin~ ef
D.Stdmn If
Hartman rf
Totals
f
FIRST YOUTH JOB CORPS RECRUIT--Dick
Angle (left), of Angle Insurance Agency, hands
over notarized federal government Youth Corps
enrollment forms t,~ Bufecd R. Bowlen, Shelton and
Mason County's first Job Corps recruit. In the
center is Alice Helenius, manager of thee Employ-
ment-Security office of the federal Department Of
Labor thnough whose office in Olympia Youth
Corps applicant.'; i:q'e screened and tested for job
placement in C,mljonction with President Johnson's
anti-poverty campaign. While more than 75 men
m the area have been interviewed, Bowlen is the
first to have been given a position, said Edna Sputa,
who has done much of the interviewing for the
Olympia Employment-Security office. The enroll-
KING SIZED dip stick, designed for M-48 ttanK
is used by Pfc. Lawrence Worland ,left, and Sp5
Roger Hoff for measuring the oil level in their
~fJl~Jli¢le, The rain(
mernber ot ¢om] any` .l =t
Batallion, 303rd Armor, Shelton, are currently par-
ticipating in field maneuvers at Fort Lewis as part
of two weeks of active duty training with the
,4lit InfantrY. ,Divlaio , Nations! Guard.
- LITTLE LEAGUE - Start & Sonja Ahlquist ............ 9135
Harold & Randy Churchill .... 9107 ~COF-F'
"¢i~Yoggingmeetingsale of theapproximatelyfirst pure 700,-pre" TWILIGHT "A" LEAGUE L Chris Thompson & L C Leman 9103 Bueoda ...........
J00 board feet. If this type of Hillcrest ................................ 3 1 Cedric & Curtis Casey ............ 8972 hits ...... !
sale attracts interest, we plan to C '
¢mce more on the market," Corn- Mt. View ........ : ..................... 3 1 Cisco Hicks & Dana Thmpsn. 8964W.S C.. - ........ ,
missioner Cole said. , MeCleary .............................. 2 2 John Sr & Jr Anderson ............ 8941 SUMMAItY:'
Skokomish ............ 1 2 Eddie & Gordon Hurd ............ 8889 sH-Hunt, O'N
Preliminary reports also indi- Brtnnon ................. i~i'i"i ...... 0 3 Nancy & Laurie Hurd ............ 8876 Burnett, pe~;
rate some 70 million board feet Weeks l{es{tits .... Vi Hicks & Mark Thompson 8617 Stud,reran,
Cliff & Mike Rumpff .............. 6461 Persson. Burnt
of scattered blowdown occurred Hillcrest 3, MeCleary 2
du/'ing the past winter. Par~ of High games--Eddie Hurd 196, o' l D. C~
this new blow.down will be sold Hillcrest 4, Mr. View 3 Sylvia Fonzo 157, Chuck Thomp-9. ail 4.
during l~iscal Year 1966. Mt. View 6, Skokomish 1 son Jr 179 I-1 FIartmaw
THE SALES OF blowdown from McCleary 17, Brinnon 5 ,, , High series Stan Ahlquist 516,~ ~.Stude~
2~ Sylvia Fonzo 412, Chuck Thomp-to stude~=~
the Columbus Day 1962 storm ie ~ Hillcrest tied the Twilight ' A' son Jr 476 ec r,-W,$'~
nearing completion. To date, about League lead into a knot by heat- _ .....
86 percent has been sold by the ~.R~2TmED Gresham, View 4-3 ]as~ week. The Hilltop-
state and another Six percent has onald ing previously undefeated Mt. Trophies will be awarded to-
been appraised and ready for sale. pers capped a highly su~zeessful night for first, second ansu ttlird'=~ Tu~
The 1962 Columbus Day storm week by taking another tight one places.
involved some 708,254,000 board from McCleary Tuesday niglit. SUND--~-~MIX---~- RSL
• feet of state-owned timber. The "A' League action will be halt- 6r~
sales of the blowdown timber in ed now fro_" several weeks during
the past 2~/,~ years has kept the
state's timber harvest high. a break before the five teams take Sand Baggers .............. 18~/~ 5~&
"With the compIetion of the up the second half of their game Beatniks ..... ................... 15~/~ 8~i
re~moval o~ this blowdowr~ timber, calendar. • • • Odd Balz ........................ 12 12
Wee Blew .................... 2 22
it. has been necessary for our De- al Forest in 1948. He transferred TWILIGHT. "B" LEAGUE High games --- Pat Parrish 194,
partment to increase our thinning to t;he Rigd0n District, Willamette L L. L. M:cInelly 228
and hardwood sales to meet the National, Forest, in 1955 and sere- Mr. View .............................. 5 0 High sets Pat Parrlsh 509,
anticipated demands, ed as timber management assist-Brinnon .................................. 5 1 L. L. McInelly 616
"By zevising our allowable cut ant until 1957. At that time heHillcrest ................................ 2 3
and placing more hardwood and was promoted to district ranger Southside* - ........................... 2 2 Putting a 228 closing touch to
thimfings on sale, I hope to assist at I-Ioodsport, Olympic National Skokomisif~ .......................... 1 3 196 and 192 openers, L. L. Mcln-
our local industries a~ well as ful- Forest, and filled that position un- McCleary* ............................ 1 2 elly shaped a 616 series in the
filling our sustained yield manage- til 1962. Warman's latest assign- Pioneer . ................................. 0 5 Sunday night mixed foursome
meat responsibilities," Commiso meat was that of recreation plan- • denotes--no results available summer bowling league.
sioner Cole concluded, ne~' for the Mt. Hood National For- That treated the leading sand-
eat, Portland, 1962-1965. for Southside-McCleary, and Mc-
Cleary-SkokomislL games this baggers to a 3-1 victory over sec-
week. end place Beatniks (Mel McGee
Weeks R~mtlts 516). The Odd Balz (Gayle Went7
Mt. View 4, Brinnon .2 489) jumped the WeeBlews (Ralph
Hillerest 14, Skokomlsh 10 Simpson 4471, 3-1, in the other
Mt. View 12. Pioneer 0 match.
Brinnon 29, Pioneer 1
Southside 16, Hillcrest l0 TUESDAY MIXED FOURS
W L
YOUNG MEN'S TRIOS Hot Shots ............................ 20 8
W L The "4" Pins ........................ 20 8
Brewers ................................ 22 10 Rolling Pins .......................... 16 . 12
i:.!'i~ ~:7' ::~ Sandbaggers ........................ 20 12 Question Marks .................. 13 15
15 17 Go Cos .................................. 13 15
.... ' ~' Thrust .................................... 15 17 The Four "L" 12 16
Jerks ............................................................
Terrible T's ......................... 14 18 The Duffers .......................... 11 17
Trojans ................10 22 The Four Marks .................. 7 21
High ga:m'es'''~i-'- Duane Wilson High games --- Stan Ahlquist
212, Larry Powell 203 231, Sonja Ahlquist 189
High set --- Duane Wilson 547High series--Stan Ahlquist 588, ::
.__----- Sonja Ahlquist 516
• Trojans 3 ~Larry Powell 477), D~
Terrible Ts 1 (Chuck ThompsonGo Gos 4 (Gary Cark 577), Four
491); Thrush 3 (Dana ThompsonMarks 0 (Nancy Grunert 351);
475), Jerks 1 (Ray BarringtonHot Shots 4 (Stan Ahlquist 588),
'~:!~ 447~; Sandbaggers 2 (Tom Fred- Four "L" 0 (Lloyd CIaN~ 5851:
son 440), Brewers 2 (Duane Wll. The Duffers 3 (Bob Olson 492),
son 547). Question Marks 1 (Ralph Simpsou
.................. 504); "4" Pins 3 (Gerry Geist
GETS DEGREE 498), Rolling Pins 1 (Jess Tobler
Gerald J. Spik0r, 1960 graduate 501).
of Irene S. Reed High School,
received his Bachelor of Arts de- HELD OVER 3RD
g'reo at recent commeneen~ent ex-
ercises aL Central Washington
State College in Ellensburg. He Is
Lhe ;;on of Mr. and Mrs. Jo]ln G.
Spiker, Shelton.. Lyle (Guitar), Stub (Piano) and
FRIDAY & SATUBDA
HELTON
GETTING READY---Henry Unger, maintenance man, was vacuum-
ing out letter pigeon-holes in the new addition to the Shelton p~=t "Where DiDi13~ I~
offl a whan "ah0t" by. g Journal photosraph0r Tuelday,