July 27, 1967 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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July 27, 1967 |
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Multi-Service
Center Has
Activities
A free dance sponsored by
the Multi-Service Center was at-
tended by approximately 100
youths July 14. Music was pro-
vided by "The Stolen Goods".
There is going to be a hike
for tecn-agers August 5, at Satir.
case above Lake Cushman. The
hike will be sponsored by the
four Multi-Service Centers of Ma-
son and Thurston Counties.
Transportation and lunch will
be provided. The hike will last
from 9:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m.
The teens held a car wash at
John's Richfield Station July 22
to earn money to help Y.O.C.
youngsters attend the hiking trip.
The car wash was a success
and the teens wish to thank eve-
ryone who brought their cars in
to be washed and especially
want to thank John's Richfield
Station for the use of their fa-
cilities.
The baseball game scheduled
for July 19 was cancelled due
to rain. The Mason County Multi-
Service Center teenagers were
to play against the Yelm Multi-
Service Center teenagers.
Two films about children will
be shown July 31, at the Multi-
Service Center. The titles of the
films are "Frustrated Fours and
Facinating Fives," and "A Long
Time to Grow." The films will
start at 7:30 p.m. and coffee
will be served. Chuck Wallice,
Head Start Consultant, and Mrs.
Virginia Saibel, Director of Head
Start, will be guest speakers.
Mrs. Ruth Tuson is organizing
will he provided. Phone: 426-2568.
The Mason County :lfulti-Ser-
vice Center is displaying a new
flag donated by the Veteran's
of Foreign Wars. The flag will
be used to slart each meeting
held in the center with the flag
salute.
Mrs. Spute from the Employ-
ment Security Office in Olympia
will be at the center every Thurs-
day, from 1 to 4 p.m. She will
be interviewing and counseling
lmrsons interested in employ-
ment.
The Advisory Board held a
special meeting July 20 at the
center. They disc and okay-
ed having two fun nights a mon'h.
These two nights will be on the
first and third Saturdays. There
will be cards, bingo, and games.
OPERATING an intriguing "master-slave" manipulator is
one of the fascinating activities this summer in Seattle at
the Pacific Science Center's special exhibit. "Nuclear Sci-
ence and Oceanography." Ordinarily used for remote-con-
trol handling in nuclear research laboratories, the equip-
m, ent has been installed at the Science Center for visitors
to operate. Many other demonstrations, films, and ex-
hibits are incorporated in the special two-month show
which will continue daily from 1 to 9 p.m. through Labor
Day.
Thousands Visit Science
Center This Summer
Thousands of visitors have
toured a giant exhibit hall at
Seattle's Pacific Science Center
so far this summer and more
are expected from throughout the
state.
The reason for their visits is
the special two-month Nuclear
Science and Oceanography Ex-
habit which opened July 1 and
will continue from 1 to 9 p.m.
daily through Labor Day.
A broad range of exhibits gath-
ered from throughout the nation
helps to explain the two theme
topics, both decmed to be vitally
important to the future growth
of the state.
,,,e board members are going :In addition to the more than
: ug tlei’ .white ehta 2squa. feet of exhibit
'from home for prizes/ .... : :..,'Itae dSVotei to the summer
:::A Ix)tluck dinner is planned
for the third Saturday in August.
This will be on one of the Fun
Nights at the center.
Senior
display, the Pacific Science Cen-
ter, near the Space Needle at
the Seattle Center, also has its
many other exhibits 'in operation.
Demonstrations and special
films also play an important role
throughout the surtmmr. Aug-
menting the nuclear science ex-
hibit through the end of July
will be the continuation of fas-
cinating "This Atomic World"
demonstration lectures three
times daily.
Taking over the Science Thea-
ter stage for August will he
NASA's "Spacemobile" programs
covering what is new in Amer-
man aerospace activities.
Science Center Director Dr.
Dixy Lee Ray emphasized the
many changes which have been
made since the 1962 Seattle
World's Fair days by stressing
that only a few of the best ex-
hibits still remain.
I
FAT OVERWEIGHT
This amazing slenderizing for-
mule, available with no pre-
acmption, can help you become
the slim, trim person you want
to be! Simply take a small Su-
per Slender-X tablet before
each meal and between meals,
if you get hungry. As you take
Super Slender-X and cut cal-
ories, you are on the way to a
more attractive you! And you
get none of that "keyed up"
nervous feeling you can get
with other tablets. 20-day sup-
ply, $2.98; 40-day supply, $4 98
Now, also available, Slender-
X Swallow Tablets. Guaran-
teed by:
NELL'S PHARMACY
Fifth and Franklin Streets
Mall Orders Filled
ii
Citizens To
Have Day
Senior citizens who attend
the Southwest Washington Fair
Aug. 19, will find a special treat
in store.
It's their day, and in their
honor, all fairgoers 65 years of
age or more, will be adn-itted
free of charge to the afternoon
grandstand show, the lively Ju-
nior Wrangler Stampede.
The 1967 Southwest Washing-
ton Fair officially opens Tues-
day morning, Aug. 150 and con-
tinues for six days.
Another highlight of the day's
schedule will be a visit to the
grounds by Washington's Secre-
tary of State A. Ludlow Kramer,
official representative of Gov.
Dan Evans, it also is designated
as Governor's Day at the Fair.
Kramer will arrive at the fair
office at 1 p.m. and after a
tour of the grounds and exhibits,
will attend the afternoon grand-
stand show.
Booster buttons for the 1967
fair went on sale July 12 for
one month. The $2 buttons en-
title the wearer to enter the
fairgrounds as many times as
he wishes during the six-day
fair. Without the button, the fair
goer must pay gate admission
each time he enters the grounds,
Such new areas as Mathema-
tics, Pacific Northwest plant
ecology, supersonic transports,
and aerospace have been added,
she pointed (>at, as have many
demonstrations and films.
Features of the 1967 summer
exhibit which has been drawing
so many visitors include a "three-
ring" Life Science Radiation
Laboratory with demonstrators
and a large U. S. display on
deep submergence s y s t e m s
shown to the public for the first
time.
Other highlights include "mas-
ter-slave" remote control manip-
ulators, information on how glass
is being used in Navy undersea-
craft, models of a water desalin-
ation plant and of nuclear pow-
erplants, and much more.
BRAKE
and
FRONT
END
14 POINT
SPECIAL!
$ 22
Regular
$9.95
VALUE
Here's What We Do ...
* Inspect and clean brake
drums
* Clean and adjust brake
shoes for full contact
Clean, inspect and repack
front wheel bearings
Clean and inspect grease
seals
Clean and inspect wheel
cylinders
Inspect and refill master
cylinder
Inspect shock absorbers
Check front end camber
Check front end caster
* Check toe in
* Adjust toe into factory
specifications
* Inspect muffler
Inspect tail pipe
4r Inspect steering linkage
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
SHAUB.
ELLISON
125 E, GROVE
426-3333
II
L
Pace 14 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, July 27, 1967
Home Building Should Show
Improvement, Meeting Told
What's ahead for home build-
ing?
Many people have expressed
disappointment over the sluggish
rise this spring, and concern for
the future is rising as interest
rates turn up again and predic-
tions of tight money conditions
increase.
Hom building is on schedule,
according to Charles E. Young,
Western Wood Products Associa-
tion Director of Economic Ser-
vices and Market Research. The
projection for 1967 that was pre-
sented at the Annual Meeting in
San Francisco called for 1,300,000
private non-farm starts with
600,000 in the first half and 700,
000 in the second half.
Actual starts in the first five
months were 465,400 and only a
slight improvement in June over
May's figure of 132,800 would he
needed to hit the first half esti-
mate squarely on target.
Unfavorable comparisons with
year-earlier figures have come
to an end, says Young. The re-
ported non-farm starts for May
were actually ahead of May, 1966,
by 600 unS, or about A of 1 per
cent, and permits issued in May
for consla'uction of single-family
homes were ahead of May, 1966,
by 500 units, or about 1 per
cent.
The 1966 starts dropped sharply
after May, so the months ahead
will show favorable comparisons,
Young points out. Actually, the
700,000 private non-farm starts in
prospect for the second half
would exceed starts in the sec-
ond half of 1966 by 37 per cent.
'One good reason for expecting
increased starts in the second
half of 1967, Young added, is
the recent restoration of acceler-
ated depreciation for multi-fam-
ily rental units. This is a highly
important factor in the return
on investment in rental properties.
Coupled with the very good
flows of funds into savings insti-
tutions in recent months and the
rising tide of young married
households needing apartments,
the stage is set for a rapid in-
crease in construction of apart-
ment building, both low-rise and
high-rise.
Average demand for housing
in the three-year period from
1968 through 1970 will probably
be 1,750,000 units in 1968 to 1,
950,000 in 1970, fifty per cent
above 1,300,000 in prospect for
this year. ,'
Although such steady progres-
sion is most unlikely in the
manic-depressive fields of home
construction and mortgage finan-
cing, the underlying demand
clearly exists, according to
Young.
James On Forest
Holt Completes
Army Course
Army Pvt. Gary IV£. Holt, 20,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton L.
Holt, Shelton, completed nine
weeks of advanced infantry
training July 14 at Ft. Polk,
La. His last week of training
was spent in guerrilla warfare
exercises.
During his guerrilla training,
he lived under simulated Viet-
nam conditions for five days,
fighting off night attacks and con-
ducting raids on "enemy" vill-
ages. He was taught methods of
removing booby traps, setting
ambushes, "and avoiding enemy
ambushes.
Other specialized training in-
cluded small unit tactics, map
reading, land mine warfare, com-
munications, and firing the M-
14 rifle, Mr60 machine gun and
3.5-inch rocket launcher.
History Group
Dave Jam'es, vice president
for public affairs of Simpson
Timber Company, Is a newly
elected member of the Board of
Directors of the Forest History
Society, Inc., it was announced
this week.
The society is affiliated with
Yale University of New Haven,
Connecticut.
A continent-wide program of
writing and publishing the his-
tory of North America's forests
in cooperation with 45 leading
university libraries and archives
is conducted by the society.
IT'S EASY to build a wood
patio close to the ground. Use
concrete piers for footings and
run beams over them. Then add
the deck boards on top. Douglas
fir 2x4s laid flat, with one-eighth
inch spacing, make fine deck
boards.
Mason County
us,ness Directory
Auto Glass
Expert Installation
JIM PAULEY, INC.
5th & Railroad Ph. 426-8231
,m,|
Landscaping
Lawns, rockeries, trees,
shrubs
Free Estimates
Top soil, tilling, leveling
SUNSET LANDSCAPING
Herbert Baze 426-4718
Auto Parts
* Automotive Machine Shop
Parts for all cars and trucks
24-Hr. Service on Parts
Les Fields Auto Parts, Inc.
229 S. 1st St. 426-3351
Auto Repairing
n . Major Overhauls
[ Brakes & Ignition
[ Welding & "lme-ups
[ Special Winterizing
I ED'S SERVICE
142 W. Cots 426-3926
Bulldozing
I Land Clearing * Road Building
I Excavating * Grading
Terracing * Leveling
| DAVE'S BULLDOZING
I " Dave DIck
I 426-4360 * Shelton
I
Masomry
i Fireplacem
[ All Brick and
I Block Work
] MASON'S MASONRY
Phone 426-2278
Beauty
I Complete Hair Care
Wigs - Wiglets - Switches
Merle Norman Cosmetics
Free Demonstrations
ELAINE'S BEAUTY SALON
6th & Lau,rel 426-4582
Paint
I C and C Paints
Co'-Ca-Wall Co'-Ca-Namel
A-Plex Brslla-Plex
GRAYSTONE of SHELToN
7th & Park 426-3344
ii I
Draperies
Custom Made
Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed
J. C. PENNEY CO.
306 RR Ave. Ph. 426-8283
ii
prUHSele:a Rubinstein
Cosmetics
Prescriptions
Hypo-Allergic Cosmetics
NEI L'S PHARMACY
5th & Franklin Ph. 426-3327
Rental Service
Almost Anything Anywhere
Bulldozers - Loaders - Pumps
Folding Banquet Tables
& Chairs, Hospital Beds, Etc.
LEW RENTS
2216 u. 4th, Olympia, 357-7731
Travel
Air - Rail. Steamship
$ Bus - Hotels - Tours
No Extra Charge for
Our Service
Angle Travel Res, Center
401 Railroad Ave.
426-8272 426-4134
IIII
Electrical
Fairbanks-Morse Pumps
Electric Heating
Westinghouse Appliances
SHELTON ELECTRIC CO.
419 Railroad h. 426-6283
TV Service- "
I Radio -
Phonographs
CB 2-way Radio
LEROY'S TV SERVICE
Mt. View Ph. 426-a172
i iqll
Floor Coverings [
a Linoleum
Tile
Carpeting
$ Formica
REX FLOOR COVERING
Mt. View Ph. 426-2292
I I II II I
Rayonier Sales,
Earnings Steady
Second quarter sales and
earnings of Rayonier Inc. re-
mained at the same levels as
the first quarter. Sales and earn-
ings for the first half of 1967
dipped below those for the same
period in 1966.
Total sales for the six months
through June 30, 1967, were $91-
552,934 compared with $101,854,-
814 for the first half of 1966.
Shipments of chemical cellulose
and paper-making pulps totaled
480,223 tons. Shipments for the
same period in 1966 were 518,-
778 tons.
Net earnings were $7,958,860
equal to $1.28 per share of com-
mon stock on 6,230,354 shares
outstanding June 30, 1967. For
the same period in 1966, net
income was $10,269,711, or $1.68
per share on 6,107,376 shares.
The Board of Directors de-
clared the regular cash dividend
of 35 cents a share payable Aug.
15 to shareholders of record on
July 28.
WANT TO BEAUTIFY an old,
cracked patio? Cover it with
three-foot squares of wood deck-
ing. Each square is made of
2x4s nailed over 2x4 supports.
They're easiest to build with the
help of a jig. Pressure-treated
Douglas fir lumber is recom-
mended.
Higher Minimum
To Go Into Effect
The Washington State Depart-
rtmnt of Labor and Industries
today advised that most Wash-
ington employers will be faced
with paying the new minimum
wage levelof $1.40 per hour for
errployees 18 years of age or
older. The new minimum wage
level goes into effect on July
30, 1967.
The 1967 Extraordinary Ses-
sion of the Washington State
Legislature amended the Wash-
ington Minimum Wage Law to
reflect the new July 30 level
and further provided that the
minimum wage in Washington
State rise to $1.60 per hour Jan.
1, 1968.
No other alteration in the
Washington State Minimum Wage
Law was made by the recent
legislature. All exclusions, pro-
visions, and exceptions previous-
ly provided in the act' remain
in effect. There has been no
change in the provisions for wo-
men and minor employees who
have been exclusively provided
for in one of the 13 Industrial
Welfare Orders now in effect.
The Department of Labor and
Industries urges employers who
m'ay have questions regarding
the amending of the Washington
State Minimum Wage Law to
consult with the staff of any
one of th,
Industries
out the state ,
Em
by either
Wage
ing
may be
eral
Those
federal
make
and Hour
1 ?.1
attic, WaS
Unde
ROTC
Cadet
3, sun
tending
Ft. Lewis,
Underwood
ington
m:an, WaSh'
He is
training
tioning
jects.
Manufacturer's
SAVE $50 to $
The famous Lynch Manufacturing Co. had to make room for their fall
merchandise. This is a Real Sale on quality merchandise'
These are all good sets,
Top grade covers,
Fine tailoring and construction.
o
m
No Gimmicks !
A A
2PECE SECTIONAL On e only with oose Sn u
5" foam cushions, Scotch Guard cover and
Shepard Casters. Was $399.50 ........................ SALE
96" THREE CUSHION SOFA -- One only, $1
Quilted, with Shepard Casters.
L
Was $279.50 ........................................................ SALE
2-PIECE SET One ,only with 86" Sofa
and matching chair with arm guards.
Was $339.50 ........................................................... SALE
2-CUSHION SOFA- One only ,$q
with Grade 12 Cover, Foam Rubber Cushions
',
and Spring Edge. Was $219.50 .................... SALE
2 ONLY SOFAS With Factory Select Covers
in Good Quality Construction
Each ......................................................................................
LOVE SEAT -- One Only $
with Two Cushions.
I
Was $269.50, Now Only SALE
EARLY AMERICAN WING-BACK One Only $1
with Two Cushion Flounce, 37" Back, Wood Trim
£
and T-Cushions. Was $319.50 ........................ SALE
96" SOFA One Only with Grade 12 Qover, $1
3 T-Cushions made of Foam Ruber and Spring
£
Edge Construction. Was $299.50 .................. SALE
HURRY! . . .
THE SERTA MATTRESS
IS STILL ON I
KELLY FURNITIJ
Isχ & Mill Sts. 42'