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Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
July 29, 1999     Shelton Mason County Journal
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July 29, 1999
 
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City commission roundup: Shelton officials eye charges on development for infrastructure By JEFF GREEN for growth.' In other words, those Mayor Scott Hilburn said city between Fairmount Avenue and exceed $8,230 and will take During the next few months, generating the new demands on services such as water, sewer, Turner Street; weeks. [. Shelton city staff members will infrastructure should pay for it stormwater, transportation and * Adding a right-turn lane off The city is required examine system development rather than placing the burden on parks, as well as schools, should Olympic Highway North at Sev- state to have a wellhead charges or impact fees to pay for the existing community." be considered in the "first tier" of enth Street and other improve- tion plan that identifies urban services such as roads, wa- The state's Growth Manage- discussions. Fire protection needs ments; logic systems that provide ter and sewer lines needed to ment Act gives cities the ability to should be considered in a second * Improvements on Eighth it uses. serve residential growth, finance infrastructure improve- tier of discussions. In addition, Street between Alder and Birch * Authorized Director Shelton Planning Director Paul ments through impact fees calcu- Hilburn said he wants the city's streets next to the library; and ministrative Services Rogerson brought the subject be- lated to require new development planning advisory board involved • A project at the David Shel- vin to transfer funds as fore Shelton city commissioners to pay for the added roads, water at some point, ton Pear Orchard and State from the city's reserve fund to its MEMBERS OF THE SI-YA-YA Intertribal Drum Group for discussion Monday. "As new and sewer lines, schools and other THE COMMISSION passed a Route 3 that will involve water- provement fund to pay for watch the ground-breaking ceremony of the Squaxin development increases demands facilities needed to serve it, Ro- resolution adopting the city's Six- front access, atrail, park-and-ride financing costs of the Island Museum Library and Research Center. From for urban services, it is important gerson wrote. Year Transportation Improve- lot and other work. vic Center project that left are Mari Stone, Bear, Dale Clark and George Krise. that the city examine all avail- SHELTON HAS never adopt- ment Program, which is revised able options for financing the new ed impact fees of any type, the annually. IN OTHER business at their bndcSSUe approved by v0,1 lit' e "ty will issue commissi f meeting Monday, the commission- bonds, which Colvin thinl: M infrastructure needed to serve planning director noted. In many The top five projects on the list ers: Tribe's library gr°wth'" R°gers°n wr°te in a cases' the city has asked that tax" include: memo to the commissioners, payers and ratepayers continue to * Approved an agreement with be ready in September, to "Traditionally, new infrastruc- foot the bill for new infrastruc- • Adding a signal and other Robinson and Noble, Groundwa- the current expense ture has been paid for by the gen- ture to serve growth, he added, improvements at the intersection ter and Environmental Geolo- Colvin told commissioners to be museum eral public through taxes or utili- Rogerson asked that the city's of WallaceKneelandBoulevard gists, of Tacoma to assist the city by transferring the funds, ty rates. More recently, the equity senior-level staff members be and Shelton Springs Road; in defining the contributing areas will save $50,000 or more of this approach has been called asked to participate in the discus- * Adding a pedestrian path, re- to watersheds that provide water the cost of obtaining into question," he wrote. "Many sions during the next several taining walls, barriers and drain- to the city's wells and Shelton nancing from a a lending The Squaxin Island Indian The tribe has already raised now feel that 'growth should pay months, age on Olympic Highway South Springs. The work is not to tion. Tribe broke ground for its new $900,000, more than a third of Squaxin Museum Library and Re- the projected cost of the building, search Center July 21 in Ka- said spokesperson Theresa Hen- • • • • •  milchc, dcrson. A fund-raiser is set for Legislators hsten to 00rate c00t00zens The 13,000-square-tbot, $2.% September 10 with singer Rita million project is now being con- Coolidge headlining a fund-raiser may make laws on release of info' structed as part two of the three- concert, salmon bake andraffle of part Tu Ha'Buts Cultural Corn- Native American art at Little plex. Waiter Schacht, project ar- Creek Casino. Tickets for that chitect, said the buildings are event will be available soon, lien-  DitC; longhouses built in the traditional derson said. There will also be an style with modern improvements, art auction at the Burke Museum Representatives of the banking nancial information to telemar- Potlatch, listened to charges of Sheldon said the state needs nancial privacy has skyroc d:: rYofm a esdvaerb:lrrvg:s2g::; . " 7rglttonsby:h:o 'rlZen: b?s.lt:o p::::t:h " " • . i tri, 1 in Seattle on September 11 to t c ke c e privacy thm ye.ar The complex is located near raise funds. Senate Commerce, Trade, pr:a .... " The msue became highly 1 I ct. Klah-Chi-Min Drive off Old "The entire Tu Ha'Buts Cultur- residents July 23 at a hearing m Housing and Financial Institu- Washingtonians from corpora- "The bankin in ustr h o " " . n'  K . lympia The banks are accuse ns mlt ee embers, in- tions that profit from selling per- understand how im ortant it is e l Jiees' Olympic Highway in Kamilche al Complex concept represents O d tio Corn t m g d y as t clzed this year when Shelto ' " ' "n n " P dent Albert Newman su ra( adjacent to a small stormwater the tribe's heritage on a grand of selling customers personal fi- cludl g Se ator Tim Sheldon of sonal customer information, for personal information to re- Olympia-based bank after it I * retention pond that suggests the scale," observed Don Chalmers of  main private," Sheldon said "We legedly divulged his name, I Do ' shoreline location of the original SparrowHawk Consulting, who tribal settlements, has worked with the tribe in plan-  .= _=_ ML= t m-  ,= ....... ,=, ML ,= ,A= ,= need a system in place that re- dress, bank account numbS, ! Slr 1111 T Irll I1  R 11 1 1-  1-  quires a customer s explicit ap- bank balance to an insUr'  • THE FIRST TWO groups of ning its campaign to fund the mpjl.j.. I# I#P proval before any personal infer- company The case goes to 0 '  I the ground-breaking ceremony complex. • .... •  usa matron, especmlly financml infer- m November. .. bli L were the tribal elders using four- THE PLAN FOR the center A* 4b lh 1 :, ? b a:: " or Sheldon said local res 0 foot-long clam forks and the involves an interwoven system of  11 T q#    mat l ele.ased y one.  ' N tribes' children using smaller exhibits and resources that sup-  W j[j[j[ -l-i- V J[J[J[  j[ S e do stud a h!l t estrict should contact him at his  , IIW  curb the release ox banking liner- oia office at (360) 786-7668 • Rich, clam tbrks, ports the tribe's architectural tra ....... ,,; • . matron may be introduced to the ward concerns or complJ  The third group consisted of dition. Project architect Waiter The Southmde S/ehool Dmtrict rollment, staff' mix, budgets, con- nature of the year 2000 issue, its nt" l,slt,.e  - oeSs,no  ....... abou nnancmi pravacy wiolsd . tri,, [)an Lopeman, chairman of the Schacht, who said the tribe's plan received a clean bill of health tel- flict of interest, open public meet- effects will not be determinable ....... " .............  ": ] lowln a r utln st e a t v  ine sae Aorney enerals o me Aorne eneral Tu Ha'Buts project; Ken Min- makes the museum-library "a " g o " e at udi co - ings, transportation and more. unt'l the year 2000 and there-  .............. Y .... I" $vw Uiilce reporea ma me numoer burner lroeclon ince a naert, president of South Puget unique place" bridging the tradi- ering the period from September They also evaluated Southsides after. Accordingly, we do not pro- . .... e  t o consumer complaints aout fi 551 4636 b Sound College; Schacht; Karen tional concepts of museums and 1, 1996 through August 31, 1998. internal control structure, includ- vide assurance that th d',s, rict is " " • 'tr Munro, who represented her hub- libraries. "In the areas examined, we ing cash receipting, disburse- or will be year 2000 ready.  ' I band, Secretary of State Ralph "In a contemporary interprets- found the Southside School Dis- ments, accounts payable, payroll Southside School Board mem- , /N. | S Munro, and James Nason, profes- tion of the plank house archetype, trict complied with state laws and and property and equipment, ber Mel Kirpes is confident the nor of anthropology at the Univer- the museum and library are locat- regulations and its own policies "We did not audit how the dis- district's computers, which are sity of Washington. All of these ed together in a single, great hall and procedures," state auditors trict is addressing year 2000 is- relatively new are Y2K compli- T/ participants assisted the tribe that integrates the two func- wrote. "Duringthe audit we spent sues relating to its computer sys- ant. A computer network estab- with the project, tions," he continued. "The design a significant amount of time look- terns and other electronic lished at the school within the The building already standing marries the visual, experiential ing at staff mix, enrollment and equipment," auditors noted. "The past two years uses Windows 95 It's Hard To StopA Tame: • Sales • Service * Installati0# !, TM is the Intergenerational Cultural qualities of an exhibit gallery transportation reporting. We year 2000 issue refers to the fact or higher software and would be * Repairs* Heatig*}r ! ' Center. A future hmghouse will with the accessible, educational found the district established a that many computer systems and Y2Kcompliant, Kirpes added. Conditioning, RefrigeratiO . be used for tribal government of- characteristics of a reading strong system for accurately electronic equipment cannot rec- The district's system for paying rices, room." recording these types of data." ognize the difference between the bills is done through the state of • 426-9945 • 754-1235 * 1-800-400-9945 : ( The auditors looked at district years 1900 and 2000. Washington and there shouldn't OLYMPHCI21OW  '] }l. Kronnagel's death expenditures, travel expenses, en- "Because of the unprecedented be any Y2K issues there, he said. M in is ruled a suicide Tot'sll ...J ,death r....attributed to A 73-year-old Keyport man suicide at 11:07 a.m. on Thurs- swmm,ns ,re,sn oojec000000 * died Thursday morning near El - day. A 2-year-old boy died last ing to District 5 Chief Richard fendahl Pass on the Belihir Ta- Jesse Wood told deputies he Thursday after swallowing a for- Knight. huya Road, apparently of a self- was working just up the road eign object at his Shelton homo. Mason County Coronor Martha woo,,00 to ao ,oe P..o.oo w. 00eo,.idt00e.°og..r..io Colonel Edward L Hubbard Ret head. 10:55 a.m. but didn't think much rushed to Mason General Hspi- gested an object which she did not * Y * Undersheriff Gary Crane said of it. Crane said Anne Meyer ,f tel by a medic unit from Fire Dis- identify. He died at the hospital that Julius Kronnagel left a note Puyallup told deputies she was trict 5, The call for help came in of pneumonia related to the inci- behind that read, "Please take me driving by with her two teenage at 11:41 p.m. Wednesday, accord- dent, she said. and attend a free program about the human potential to the Navy hospital morgue. I sons, Todd and Chris, when they saw a gun, some blood and a man amKronnagellanoutpatient.wasDOgisincar."retired from lying on the ground,,,The medics said when they Dinner to benefit "" potential," Hubbard says, "is nothingmore than a the U.S. Navy. Deputies of the got there the body was still warm Of mind, and that potential is controlled by two things " Mason County Sheriffs Office re- so apparently it did happen Hammers m uy'-m-"- ceived a call about his apparent around 11 o'clock," Crane said. I If you would like to learn about those "two things," please plan to attend our free program with Colonel Islanders g-'ann'n-" "° " invited to a vided, Hubbard. spaghetti dinner to benefit the The Hammers and their five Bob and Dolores Hammers family children have been homeless [ Former Vietnam Pew Edward L. Hubbard is an children's carnival onSunday, Augustl, atthe40et since the Shelton apartment internationally known speaker dedicated to helping 8 Club, 113 Cots Street. building in which they resided others realize their full potential. He spent six years, The dinner is from 3 to 8 p.m. was closed down by city and state seven months, and 12 days as a prisoner of war. It by donation and the menu officials, who decided it was no Children will get their kicks at many new activities for tykes, in- features spaghetti, salad and longer safe to inhabit last May was that experience which truly changed his life, the sixth annual children's carni- cluding the opportunity to visit rolls. Live music will also be pro- 14, and as a result, the lives of countless others. val from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Satur. with firemen and their truck. A #J a day, August 14, at the Harstine photographer will also be present -- ' N Author of Etc. pc,from the Box: The Wonder of Island CommunityClub. to take pictures of the kids with a ISAv E 30 0 MOB I HumanPotentia, Colonel Hubbard's number one Harstine Island Women's Club, The carnival received many do- through a better understanding of the true human will offer games, food, refresh- nations and support from local potential. ments, a fortune teller, prizes and businesses. Smply by owmng, not leas,ng, your propane tank, Date: Wednesday, August 4, 1999 Attain Baumgartel Investment Representative you will pay less for propane. Give us a call today Time: I 0 a°rr, 821 West Railroad Avenue, Suite A, Shelton and you'll start saving NOW! Place: Mason County Senior Center, 426-0982 • 1-800-441-0985 WE DO BUY PRIVATE MORTGAGES r00t00ll"e" Sound rrp"-o-ane su west Railroad www.edwardjones.co Deeds of Trust and Real Estate Contracts Uoo, SC CONTRAC00 EQUITIES H,i, hveprogramisFREE, butseatingislimited. Toreserveyourseat, Edwa dJ 2116Padfichve. 753 or for more information, please contact our office, r ones. 426-105 9 c, or stop by today for reservations, s I,,aiidu.l h,..,o, Si..,S'P Ask for Bill Fox Page 2- Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, July 29, 1999 City commission roundup: Shelton officials eye charges on development for infrastructure By JEFF GREEN for growth.' In other words, those Mayor Scott Hilburn said city between Fairmount Avenue and exceed $8,230 and will take During the next few months, generating the new demands on services such as water, sewer, Turner Street; weeks. [. Shelton city staff members will infrastructure should pay for it stormwater, transportation and * Adding a right-turn lane off The city is required examine system development rather than placing the burden on parks, as well as schools, should Olympic Highway North at Sev- state to have a wellhead charges or impact fees to pay for the existing community." be considered in the "first tier" of enth Street and other improve- tion plan that identifies urban services such as roads, wa- The state's Growth Manage- discussions. Fire protection needs ments; logic systems that provide ter and sewer lines needed to ment Act gives cities the ability to should be considered in a second * Improvements on Eighth it uses. serve residential growth, finance infrastructure improve- tier of discussions. In addition, Street between Alder and Birch * Authorized Director Shelton Planning Director Paul ments through impact fees calcu- Hilburn said he wants the city's streets next to the library; and ministrative Services Rogerson brought the subject be- lated to require new development planning advisory board involved • A project at the David Shel- vin to transfer funds as fore Shelton city commissioners to pay for the added roads, water at some point, ton Pear Orchard and State from the city's reserve fund to its MEMBERS OF THE SI-YA-YA Intertribal Drum Group for discussion Monday. "As new and sewer lines, schools and other THE COMMISSION passed a Route 3 that will involve water- provement fund to pay for watch the ground-breaking ceremony of the Squaxin development increases demands facilities needed to serve it, Ro- resolution adopting the city's Six- front access, atrail, park-and-ride financing costs of the Island Museum Library and Research Center. From for urban services, it is important gerson wrote. Year Transportation Improve- lot and other work. vic Center project that left are Mari Stone, Bear, Dale Clark and George Krise. that the city examine all avail- SHELTON HAS never adopt- ment Program, which is revised able options for financing the new ed impact fees of any type, the annually. IN OTHER business at their bndcSSUe approved by v0,1 lit' e "ty will issue commissi f meeting Monday, the commission- bonds, which Colvin thinl: M infrastructure needed to serve planning director noted. In many The top five projects on the list ers: Tribe's library gr°wth'" R°gers°n wr°te in a cases' the city has asked that tax" include: memo to the commissioners, payers and ratepayers continue to * Approved an agreement with be ready in September, to "Traditionally, new infrastruc- foot the bill for new infrastruc- • Adding a signal and other Robinson and Noble, Groundwa- the current expense ture has been paid for by the gen- ture to serve growth, he added, improvements at the intersection ter and Environmental Geolo- Colvin told commissioners to be museum eral public through taxes or utili- Rogerson asked that the city's of WallaceKneelandBoulevard gists, of Tacoma to assist the city by transferring the funds, ty rates. More recently, the equity senior-level staff members be and Shelton Springs Road; in defining the contributing areas will save $50,000 or more of this approach has been called asked to participate in the discus- * Adding a pedestrian path, re- to watersheds that provide water the cost of obtaining into question," he wrote. "Many sions during the next several taining walls, barriers and drain- to the city's wells and Shelton nancing from a a lending The Squaxin Island Indian The tribe has already raised now feel that 'growth should pay months, age on Olympic Highway South Springs. The work is not to tion. Tribe broke ground for its new $900,000, more than a third of Squaxin Museum Library and Re- the projected cost of the building, search Center July 21 in Ka- said spokesperson Theresa Hen- • • • • •  milchc, dcrson. A fund-raiser is set for Legislators hsten to 00rate c00t00zens The 13,000-square-tbot, $2.% September 10 with singer Rita million project is now being con- Coolidge headlining a fund-raiser may make laws on release of info' structed as part two of the three- concert, salmon bake andraffle of part Tu Ha'Buts Cultural Corn- Native American art at Little plex. Waiter Schacht, project ar- Creek Casino. Tickets for that chitect, said the buildings are event will be available soon, lien-  DitC; longhouses built in the traditional derson said. There will also be an style with modern improvements, art auction at the Burke Museum Representatives of the banking nancial information to telemar- Potlatch, listened to charges of Sheldon said the state needs nancial privacy has skyroc d:: rYofm a esdvaerb:lrrvg:s2g::; . " 7rglttonsby:h:o 'rlZen: b?s.lt:o p::::t:h " " • . i tri, 1 in Seattle on September 11 to t c ke c e privacy thm ye.ar The complex is located near raise funds. Senate Commerce, Trade, pr:a .... " The msue became highly 1 I ct. Klah-Chi-Min Drive off Old "The entire Tu Ha'Buts Cultur- residents July 23 at a hearing m Housing and Financial Institu- Washingtonians from corpora- "The bankin in ustr h o " " . n'  K . lympia The banks are accuse ns mlt ee embers, in- tions that profit from selling per- understand how im ortant it is e l Jiees' Olympic Highway in Kamilche al Complex concept represents O d tio Corn t m g d y as t clzed this year when Shelto ' " ' "n n " P dent Albert Newman su ra( adjacent to a small stormwater the tribe's heritage on a grand of selling customers personal fi- cludl g Se ator Tim Sheldon of sonal customer information, for personal information to re- Olympia-based bank after it I * retention pond that suggests the scale," observed Don Chalmers of  main private," Sheldon said "We legedly divulged his name, I Do ' shoreline location of the original SparrowHawk Consulting, who tribal settlements, has worked with the tribe in plan-  .= _=_ ML= t m-  ,= ....... ,=, ML ,= ,A= ,= need a system in place that re- dress, bank account numbS, ! Slr 1111 T Irll I1  R 11 1 1-  1-  quires a customer s explicit ap- bank balance to an insUr'  • THE FIRST TWO groups of ning its campaign to fund the mpjl.j.. I# I#P proval before any personal infer- company The case goes to 0 '  I the ground-breaking ceremony complex. • .... •  usa matron, especmlly financml infer- m November. .. bli L were the tribal elders using four- THE PLAN FOR the center A* 4b lh 1 :, ? b a:: " or Sheldon said local res 0 foot-long clam forks and the involves an interwoven system of  11 T q#    mat l ele.ased y one.  ' N tribes' children using smaller exhibits and resources that sup-  W j[j[j[ -l-i- V J[J[J[  j[ S e do stud a h!l t estrict should contact him at his  , IIW  curb the release ox banking liner- oia office at (360) 786-7668 • Rich, clam tbrks, ports the tribe's architectural tra ....... ,,; • . matron may be introduced to the ward concerns or complJ  The third group consisted of dition. Project architect Waiter The Southmde S/ehool Dmtrict rollment, staff' mix, budgets, con- nature of the year 2000 issue, its nt" l,slt,.e  - oeSs,no  ....... abou nnancmi pravacy wiolsd . tri,, [)an Lopeman, chairman of the Schacht, who said the tribe's plan received a clean bill of health tel- flict of interest, open public meet- effects will not be determinable ....... " .............  ": ] lowln a r utln st e a t v  ine sae Aorney enerals o me Aorne eneral Tu Ha'Buts project; Ken Min- makes the museum-library "a " g o " e at udi co - ings, transportation and more. unt'l the year 2000 and there-  .............. Y .... I" $vw Uiilce reporea ma me numoer burner lroeclon ince a naert, president of South Puget unique place" bridging the tradi- ering the period from September They also evaluated Southsides after. Accordingly, we do not pro- . .... e  t o consumer complaints aout fi 551 4636 b Sound College; Schacht; Karen tional concepts of museums and 1, 1996 through August 31, 1998. internal control structure, includ- vide assurance that th d',s, rict is " " • 'tr Munro, who represented her hub- libraries. "In the areas examined, we ing cash receipting, disburse- or will be year 2000 ready.  ' I band, Secretary of State Ralph "In a contemporary interprets- found the Southside School Dis- ments, accounts payable, payroll Southside School Board mem- , /N. | S Munro, and James Nason, profes- tion of the plank house archetype, trict complied with state laws and and property and equipment, ber Mel Kirpes is confident the nor of anthropology at the Univer- the museum and library are locat- regulations and its own policies "We did not audit how the dis- district's computers, which are sity of Washington. All of these ed together in a single, great hall and procedures," state auditors trict is addressing year 2000 is- relatively new are Y2K compli- T/ participants assisted the tribe that integrates the two func- wrote. "Duringthe audit we spent sues relating to its computer sys- ant. A computer network estab- with the project, tions," he continued. "The design a significant amount of time look- terns and other electronic lished at the school within the The building already standing marries the visual, experiential ing at staff mix, enrollment and equipment," auditors noted. "The past two years uses Windows 95 It's Hard To StopA Tame: • Sales • Service * Installati0# !, TM is the Intergenerational Cultural qualities of an exhibit gallery transportation reporting. We year 2000 issue refers to the fact or higher software and would be * Repairs* Heatig*}r ! ' Center. A future hmghouse will with the accessible, educational found the district established a that many computer systems and Y2Kcompliant, Kirpes added. Conditioning, RefrigeratiO . be used for tribal government of- characteristics of a reading strong system for accurately electronic equipment cannot rec- The district's system for paying rices, room." recording these types of data." ognize the difference between the bills is done through the state of • 426-9945 • 754-1235 * 1-800-400-9945 : ( The auditors looked at district years 1900 and 2000. Washington and there shouldn't OLYMPHCI21OW  '] }l. Kronnagel's death expenditures, travel expenses, en- "Because of the unprecedented be any Y2K issues there, he said. M in is ruled a suicide Tot'sll ...J ,death r....attributed to A 73-year-old Keyport man suicide at 11:07 a.m. on Thurs- swmm,ns ,re,sn oojec000000 * died Thursday morning near El - day. A 2-year-old boy died last ing to District 5 Chief Richard fendahl Pass on the Belihir Ta- Jesse Wood told deputies he Thursday after swallowing a for- Knight. huya Road, apparently of a self- was working just up the road eign object at his Shelton homo. Mason County Coronor Martha woo,,00 to ao ,oe P..o.oo w. 00eo,.idt00e.°og..r..io Colonel Edward L Hubbard Ret head. 10:55 a.m. but didn't think muc h rushed to Mason General Hspi- gested an object which she did not * Y * Undersheriff Gary Crane said of it. Crane said Anne Meyer ,f tel by a medic unit from Fire Dis- identify. He died at the hospital that Julius Kronnagel left a note Puyallup told deputies she was trict 5, The call for help came in of pneumonia related to the inci- behind that read, "Please take me driving by with her two teenage at 11:41 p.m. Wednesday, accord- dent, she said. and attend a free program about the human potential to the Navy hospital morgue. I sons, Todd and Chris, when they saw a gun, some blood and a man amKronnagellanoutpatient.wasDOgisincar."retired from lying on the ground,,,The medics said when they Dinner to benefit "" potential," Hubbard says, "is nothingmore than a the U.S. Navy. Deputies of the got there the body was still warm Of mind, and that potential is controlled by two things " Mason County Sheriffs Office re- so apparently it did happen Hammers m uy'-m-"- ceived a call about his apparent around 11 o'clock," Crane said. I If you would like to learn about those "two things," please plan to attend our free program with Colonel Islanders g-'ann'n-" "° " invited to a vided, Hubbard. spaghetti dinner to benefit the The Hammers and their five Bob and Dolores Hammers family children have been homeless [ Former Vietnam Pew Edward L. Hubbard is an children's carnival onSunday, Augustl, atthe40et since the Shelton apartment internationally known speaker dedicated to helping 8 Club, 113 Cots Street. building in which they resided others realize their full potential. He spent six years, The dinner is from 3 to 8 p.m. was closed down by city and state seven months, and 12 days as a prisoner of war. It by donation and the menu officials, who decided it was no Children will get their kicks at many new activities for tykes, in- features spaghetti, salad and longer safe to inhabit last May was that experience which truly changed his life, the sixth annual children's carni- cluding the opportunity to visit rolls. Live music will also be pro- 14, and as a result, the lives of countless others. val from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Satur. with firemen and their truck. A #J a day, August 14, at the Harstine photographer will also be present -- ' N Author of Etc. pc,from the Box: The Wonder of Island CommunityClub. to take pictures of the kids with a ISAv E 30 0 MOB I HumanPotentia, Colonel Hubbard's number one Harstine Island Women's Club, The carnival received many do- through a better understanding of the true human will offer games, food, refresh- nations and support from local potential. ments, a fortune teller, prizes and businesses. Smply by owmng, not leas,ng, your propane tank, Date: Wednesday, August 4, 1999 Attain Baumgartel Investment Representative you will pay less for propane. Give us a call today Time: I 0 a°rr, 821 West Railroad Avenue, Suite A, Shelton and you'll start saving NOW! Place: Mason County Senior Center, 426-0982 • 1-800-441-0985 WE DO BUY PRIVATE MORTGAGES r00t00ll"e" Sound rrp"-o-ane su west Railroad www.edwardjones.co Deeds of Trust and Real Estate Contracts Uoo, SC CONTRAC00 EQUITIES H,i, hveprogramisFREE, butseatingislimited. Toreserveyourseat, Edwa dJ 2116Padfichve. 753 or for more information, please contact our office, r ones. 426-105 9 c, or stop by today for reservations, s I,,aiidu.l h,..,o, Si..,S'P Ask for Bill Fox Page 2- Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, July 29, 1999