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MASON COUNTY
DISTRICT COURT
Judgments in Mason County
i District Court Judge Victoria
Meadows' jurisdiction during
the past week include:
Driving under the influence:
Danny S. Nygaard, 1855 Lake
Boulevard, Shelton, $2,210, 365
days, 364 suspended, second
count, $925, 365 days, 320 sus-
pended; Ryan J. Kurts, 1800 Sid-
ney Avenue, Port Orchard,
$1,285, 365 days, 364 suspended.
Reckless driving: Tyson Ed-
ward Williams, 1120 North
Shore Road, Belfair, $250, 365
days suspended.
Negligent driving: Valentin
Acevedo-Castro, Shelton, no
valid operator's license, no in-
surance, $1,100, 90 days, 74 sus-
pended; Darrell Lynn Hatta,
2306 15th Street, Bremerton, first
degree, $200.
Driving while license sus-
pended or revoked: Mathew S.
Aitken, East 520 Pickering
Road, Shelton, third degree, $300,
90 days, 80 suspended; Dagoberto
B. Cervantes, 1836 Summit
Drive, Shelton, third degree,
$150, 90 days, 75 suspended;
ttumberto B. Gomez, 3126 Sum-
ner, Hoquiam, third degree, no
insurance, $749, 90 days sus-
pended; Terry L. Patton, 80
North Lakeview Drive, Hoods-
port, third degree, $150, 90 days
suspended; John R. Roney,
Hoodsport, third degree, no in-
surance, $630, 90 days suspend-
ed; Angela M. Painter, 221 En-
deavor Lane, Shelton, third de-
gree, $150, 90 days, 70 suspended,
and escape in the second degree,
90 days, 70 suspended; Paul D.
Nedoroscik, 3705 Hope Street,
Bremerton, third degree, no in-
surance, $500, 90 days suspend-
ed; Amy Frances Noreen, 205
Turner Avenue, third degree,
$195, 90 days suspended.
No valid operator's license
and failure to appear (FTA): Jo-
sef Sinkykik, 419 Queen Anne,
Seattle, no insurance, $1,I26;
Martin Lopez-Ventura, 1907
Olympic Highway, Shelton, no
insurance, speeding, $1,626.
...... No ltabllity'tnoe .Alber -
to Lopez-Rodriguez, 302 Oak
Street, Shelton, $480; Diane L.
Sudar, 182 East Soundview
Drive, Shelton, $599.
No liability insurance and
FTA: Linda P. Ziranda, 910 East
' Shelton-Springs Road, Shelton,
no registration, no child re-
straint, $669; Adria N. Swenson,
East 71 Catfish Lake Road, Shel-
ton, $527; Rusty T. Morris, 1378
White Cedar, Port Orchard, $527;
Richard Allen Baker, West 870
Lake Road, Shelton, no seat belt,
$592; Robert J. Ableman, 11259
Denny Avenue SW, Port
Orchard, $527; Phith Neth, 6252
Agate Road, Shelton, $646.
Unlawful fishing in the sec-
ond degree: Alfred J. Waiters,
14125 150th Place SE, Renton,
over limit Dungeness crab and
undersize Dungeness crab, $152;
Vieto J. Samuel, 13965 SE 248th
Street, Vashon, fishing for trout
out of season, $95; Robert L. Jeff-
lies, 230 SE Crater Road, Shelton,
no shellfish license, unlawful
possession of oysters in the shell,
$152; Jon David Moore II, 14197
Colony Avenue, Burley, fishing
in closed waters, $25; David Le-
roy Milton, 1017 Capitol Way SE,
Olympia, fishing for crab in
closed waters, no license, $300,
90 days, 89 suspended', James A.
Barband, 2919 South Lake Crab-
apple Road, Marysville, posses-
sion of undersized Dungeness
crab, $76.
Minor possessing and/or con-
suming alcohol: Francisco G.
Castro, 414 South Seventh Street,
Shelton, $450, 365 days, 335 sus-
pended; Rachael Dawn Mc-
Manus, 2010 Parkside Avenue,
Bremerton, 90 days; Jason N.
Powell, 701 SE Mezine Lane, Port
Orchard, possession of drug par-
aphernalia, $450, 365 days sus-
pended; Karyn G. Fosdick, 1221
West Birch Street, Shelton, dis-
orderly conduct, $550, 365 days,
344 suspended.
SHELTON
MUNICIPAL COURT
Judgments in Shelton Munic-
ipal Court Judge Carrene Wood's
jurisdiction during the past week
include:
Driving under the influence:
Phan Soeung, 1715 Holman
Street, Shelton, $925, 365 days, 363
suspended, and driving with li-
cense suspended in the third de-
gree, $350, 90 days, 85 suspended.
Driving while license sus-
pended or revoked: Christine A.
Besiada, 310 East Skookum
Drive, Shelton, second degree,
$390, 365 days, 360 suspended,
five in day jail.
No liability insurance: No in-
surance: Robert Wayne Wil-
lard, East 70 Pickering Place,
Shelton, no seat belt, $588.
Failure to transfer title within
45 days: Andrew T. Noreen, 716
Arcadia Avenue, Shelton, no in-
surance, expired license plates,
$887, 90 days, 89 suspended, one
community service.
Assault in the fourth degree:
Jose Valentine Hernandez-Chi-
real, 404 North Eighth Street,
Shelton, domestic violence, $420,
365 days, 335 suspended, 30 in
day jail.
Malicious mischief in the
third degree: Shane R. Samsel,
216 Euclid Street, Shelton, $400,
365 days suspended.
MASON COUNTY
SUPERIOR COURT
Divorces Granted
Brian Dale Deyette and
Frances Joanne Deyette.
Steven Earl Robbins and Lisa
Marie Clay.
Sara Ann Vanzanen and
Brent Allan Vanzanen.
Scott Richard Reeves and
Constance Carole Lee Eby.
Victor James Rorabaugh and
Diane L. Rorabaugh.
New Cases
Jeannette E. LaBresh against
Antonia Jordan and American
States Insurance Company, mis-
cellaneous.
Larry Peterson and Judy Pe-
terson against Melody l lnsell
and Scott A. Ellsworth, unlawful
detainer.
Rose V. Tefrey against John
Anderson, Carolyn Anderson,
Timmie A. Navarre, Melinda
L. Navarre, Norman Wilkins,
Patty J. Bius, Kay J. Joy, Jean
Joy, Robert Barstad, Elaine Bar-
stad, Harley B. Stickley, Vivian
D. Stickley, quiet title.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
Belfair Adult Family Home, In-
corporated, tax warrant.
Washington Department of
Revenue against Classic Homes,
Incorporated, tax warrant.
Thomas O. Jensen and Shir-
ley L. Jensen against Margaret
Camacho, unlawful detainer.
Mill Creek Floral Greens, In-
ternational against Lennie Mor-
ris and Susan Morris, commer-
cial.
Ohio Casualty Insurance
Company against Barry R. Doo-
fan and Jane Doe Doolan, com-
mercial.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
W.E. Aerotech Services, Incor-
porated, tax warrant.
Allied Credit Company
against Guy Fox and Jane Doe
Fox, transcript of judgment.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
Cheri Bonita and Gene Bonita,
tax warrant.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
Grant Myron Richards, tax war-
rant.
Marcia E. Holliman against
Miguel A. Luengo and Margari-
ta P. Luengo, unlawful detainer.
Washington Department of
f
Revenue against Erickson Elec-
tronics Company, Incorporated,
tax warrant.
RH&L Realty against Loucet-
ta Torres, unlawful detainer.
J. Frank Schmidt Jr. and
Evelyn Schmidt against George
F. Heidgerken, Jacqueline Ray
Heidgerken, the United States of
America, Washington Depart-
ment of Labor and Industries,
United Rentals Northwest, In-
corporated, Portland Invest-
ments Commercial Real Estate
Corporation, Southern Pacific
Transportation, Wayne Halseth,
Lillian Halseth, Feenaughty
Machiner Company and David
Hilgemann, foreclosure.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
Andreas Walter Peasee, tax
warrant.
COUNTY
BUILDING PERMITS
New construction over $5,000,
shoreline work and other major
projects receiving permits dur-
ing the past week include:
Randy Parker, 5928 North
Lake Cushman Road, Hoodsport,
residence and deck, $59,457;
Charles Budd, 472 North Finch
Creek Road, Hoodsport, install
ramp bridge, $13,000; Jim Mann,
283 East Gray Avenue, Shelton,
residence, deck and garage,
$142,018; Darrell Mcbride, 4480
East Rasor Road, Belfair, mobile
home, $45,000; Scott Dumas, 81
East Galway Road, Shelton, resi-
dence and deck, $73,393; Arlene
Liles, 180 SE Clematis Avenue,
Shelton, mobile home, $30,000;
Rob Timborsky, 181 East Dalby
Road, Union, residence, $30,056;
Aired Ardon, 81 East Warbler
Court, Allyn, residence and ga-
rage, $87,338; Steve Loyer, 306
East Leffler Loop Road, Grape-
view, garage, $16,952.
Dean Nelson, 680 NE Beck
Road, Belfair, carport, $6,014;
Kary Heuer, 101 NE Lilac Lane,
Belfair, mobile home, $66,250;
and Harold Kemmerer, 121 East
Gary Melody Lane, Shelton, ga-
rage, $12,714; Everett Nichols,
133 SE Whinery Road, Shelton,
mobile home, $49,595; Paul
Heath, 220 East I;rerrolq Drive,
Shelton, garage, $10,728; Melvin
Savage, 1790 NE Tahuya Black-
smith Road, Tahuya, mobile
home, $30,000; Scott Haskel, 1470
East Grapeview Loop Road,
Grapeview, remodel, $27,008;
John Doebel, 261 SE Kamilche
Shores Road, Shelton, retaining
wall, $8,607.
No value was listed for the fol-
lowing projects:
Washington State Corrections
Center, 2321 West Dayton Airport
Road, Shelton, mobile home;
Hama Hama Company, 301
North Lon Webb Road, Lilli-
waup, deposit 250,000 cubic feet of
slide material.
CITY
BUILDING PERMITS
New construction and other
major projects receiving permits
during the past week include:
Richard and Janet Thornbrue,
1028 Buena Vista Avenue, reroof,
$6,210.
SHELTON FIRE
DEPARTMENT
July 21:7:49 p.m., 1304 West
Cota Street, burn investigation.
July 26:4:09 p.m., 1125 North
13th Street, smoke investigation.
SHELTON POLICE
Tuesday, July 20
A woman on Euclid Avenue
said a man left a message on her
answering machine about guns
that tear people up.
A burglary was reported to an
apartment on Johns Prairie
Road.
Wednesday, July 21
A caller requested extra pa-
trols on the west side of the new
civic center now under construc-
tion at FiRh and Cota streets.
A caller from Shelton Middle
School asked police to take a look
at a battery in her trunk that had
caught fire.
Thursday, July 22
Police responded to the report
of a disturbance in which a teen-
age boy threatened to stab
someone on the 1500 block of
Washington Street.
A caller reported loud and ob-
scene music coming from a
house on the 100 block of Laurel
Street.
Friday, July 23
An elderly woman was said to
have collapsed in front of the
Shelton Post Office.
Tires and wheels were report-
edly stolen from a vehicle on the
2100 block of Laurel Street.
Saturday, July 24
Police were asked to break up
a fight outside the Old Mill Creek
Motel on State Route 3.
Sunday, July 25
A burglary was reported to the
BP gas station on Olympic High-
way North.
Monday, July 26
Police were asked by a caller
to arrest a men on the 1000 block
of Cascade Avenue who threw a
hamburger at his girlfriend.
A caller from East Birch Street
said a vehicle was damaged by a
repossession agent.
MASON COUNTY
JAIL POPUITION
The Mason County Jail, which
was designed for 45 inmates and
refitted in 1989 to house 65,
recorded populations as follows
during the past week:
Wednesday 106, Thursday
110, Friday 111, Saturday 110,
Sunday 110, Monday 108, Tues-
day 105.
Efforts are currently under
way to increase the capacity
again.
MASON COUNTY
SHERIFF OFFICE
Tuesday, July 20
Fire District 4 responded at
7:54 a.m. to the report of a fire at
365 SE Arcadia Road.
A burglary was reported by a
caller from East Rasor Road in
Belfair.
Wednesday, July 21
Fire District 11 conducted a
burn investigation on East
Brockdale Road.
Fire District 16 responded to
the report of a brush fire along-
side West Shelton-Matlock
Road.
A caller from West Cedar
Place in Elma said his dog was
shot and that a neighbor had been
threatening to kill it.
Thursday, July 22
Fire District ii responded at
5:04 p.m. to the report of a brush
fire at 90 East Blevins Road
North.
Fire District 4 responded at
6:13 p.m. to the report of a fire at
5700 SE Lynch Road.
Skokomish Tribal Police re-
sponded to the report of an alter-
cation involving 15 juveniles, a
gun and a blonde.
A burglary was reported to a
home on NE Riverhill Lane in
Self air.
Friday, July 23
Fire District 4 responded at
1:47 p.m. to the report of a brush
fire at 591 SE Arcadia Road, and
Fire District 11 responded at 2:39
p.m. to the report of a fire at 751
West Fairgrounds Road.
A burglary was reported to a
home on East Sleaford Road.
Guards at the Mason County
Jail said a person was throwing
his wheelchair against the door.
Saturday, July 24
Fire district 4 responded at
6:16 a.m. to the report of a brush
fire on SE Lynch Road and at
6:39 a.m. to a request for a smoke
investigation at 1830 SE Crescent
Drive.
Burglaries were reported by
callers from NE Riverhill Lane
in Belfair, from SE Binns Swig-
er Loop, from State Route 106 in
Belfair and from North Ducka-
bush Drive West in Hoodsport.
Sunday, July 25
Fire District 13 responded at
6:34 a.m. to the report of a struc-
ture fire at 870 West Lost Lake
Road.
A caller from NE Riverhill
Lane in Belfair reported finding
a credit card and the makings of
a pipe bomb following a party
broken up by deputies.
A caller from North School-
house Hill Road said a 30.06 rifle
and a .357 Magnun were miss-
ing from a gun cabinet.
Deputies were asked to inves-
tigate an assault involving two
inmates at the Mason County
Jail.
Monday, July 26
Burglaries were reported to a
home on East Savage Lane in
Grapeview, a place on North As-
piel Lane near Shelton and a va-
cation home on NE Manke Road
in Tahuya.
A Lake Cushman caller report-
ed finding a blonde woman and a
man in boxer shorts in a cabin
without authorization to be there.
An East Blevins Road caller re-
ported someone shooting at her.
A caller from NE Boad Haven
Road in Belfair said someone
had stolen her gun.
A caller from SE Arcadia
Road said a 10-year-old suffered
powder burns from hammering
a bullet or some other explosive
device.
Correctiom
Routine restaurant inspections:
In the recently-printed report
on Mason County Health Depart-
ment inspections of food-hand-
ling establishments, a score was
misprinted for Bobaloo's in Bel-
fair. The total violation score
was eight, not 10.
KNOW WHAT YOUR BENEFITS ARE THROUGH LASOR & INDUSTRIES FOR ON-THE-JOB HEARING LOSS!
If You Work or Worked Around Loud Noise Such As:
• Driving Trucks • Engines • Etc.
• Saw Mills • Jack Hammers (Even Retirees
• Chain Saws • Construction can be eligible)
Your Potential Benefits:
• Possible Lump Sum Compensation • Hearing Aids & Batteries
To discuss eligibility call this toll free number:
Page 26- Shelton-Mason County Journal- Thursday, July 29, 1999
THE HOBBLE SKIRT
"One of my favorite memories was concerning women's s"
frage coming in at the close of World War I," says Bob. "There
was quite a division of opinion, even among women, as to whe th°
er women should vote or not. And this had an impact on th0
fashion during the World War I years.
"The hobble skirt was the last statement of the traditional
women - of the idea that girls should grow up to be ladies ad
boys to be gentlemen.' And it was a sheath that went down. |
very narrow. Well, it covered the limbs to the ankles and then I f
was tied in with an elastic band that allowed them to 'hobble
along. |
"And since it was sheathed all the way down over the upP ¢
limbs and the hips it of course caused some interest to the #s' i
And so hips were seen to be, uh, provocative - I guess is the way
to put it." He laughs.
This almost subliminal sexuality was all the more apparent to
a Freudian psychologist the likes of Bob, of course, when tle
skirt was observed in its most common context - accessorized bY
way of a tiny, pouchlike and almost erotically feminine purse
known as a reticule.
Another typical hobble skirt accoutrement, says Bob - a d
one particularly evocative of the traditional and often repressi
sentiment of those opposed to the women's suffrage movement
was the rather haughty set of long-handled eye glasses comm0S"
ly wielded at social events such as the opera.
Known as lorgnettes, they lent an air of superiority to the
wearer, who thus was seen as being sufficiently distanced fr0
the commoners" that she could observe without them with#
active participation.
"But, anyway," says Bob, "a hobble-skirted woman ws}
absolutely dependent on her male escort to help her uo int0
a carriage, to assist her up some stairs. Otherwise she'd fall'
and get hurt."
Was the hobble skirt intended to help women be modest - ¢
quite the opposite?
i
"Well, of course, you know, says Bob, grinning that gri_:
again, "that the attraction for the opposite sex is a combmatitio
of both..."
AFS seeking
host families
American Field Service is seek-
ing host families for the world's
oldest and largest not-for-profit
student exchange organization•
The service depends on host
families to provide nurturing and
supportive home environments
for students aged 15 to 18 who
are interested in sharing their
culture and learning about that of
the United States.
Single- and two-parent house-
holds with young children or
teens, single people and couples
without children or whose chil-
dren are grown, all have some-
thing to offer an AFS student,
says AFS volunteer Sally Ann
Wells. "AFS prides itself on the
careful selection, orientation and
support we provide to our stu-
dents and host families," Wells
says.
AFS was founded in 1941
volunteer ambulance drivers
World War I and World W
who believed the way to e
future international peace v#
create "an elihtened lobsl
munity through internation
.ta
dent exchanges," Wells 0
Now, 50 years later, more
270,000 students::om over I '
countries have een AF.;
change students. More
10,000 participate in the prO
-from 28 states hoping for p!l
ment somewhere in the l!
area.
People interested in hostitl
exchange student or who
additional information o
can phone Wells at (503)
1868 or call the AFS Infor#
Center at 1-800-AFS-IN
Protect Your
Weapons
& Valuables
from Theft or
Fire with a
I
OPEN
Mon.-Sat.
8:30 a.m.-
5:30 p,m.
from Cannon
ON DISPLAY NOW!
Capital City
Stove & Fan Center
21 18 Pacific Ave., Olympia •
MASON COUNTY
DISTRICT COURT
Judgments in Mason County
i District Court Judge Victoria
Meadows' jurisdiction during
the past week include:
Driving under the influence:
Danny S. Nygaard, 1855 Lake
Boulevard, Shelton, $2,210, 365
days, 364 suspended, second
count, $925, 365 days, 320 sus-
pended; Ryan J. Kurts, 1800 Sid-
ney Avenue, Port Orchard,
$1,285, 365 days, 364 suspended.
Reckless driving: Tyson Ed-
ward Williams, 1120 North
Shore Road, Belfair, $250, 365
days suspended.
Negligent driving: Valentin
Acevedo-Castro, Shelton, no
valid operator's license, no in-
surance, $1,100, 90 days, 74 sus-
pended; Darrell Lynn Hatta,
2306 15th Street, Bremerton, first
degree, $200.
Driving while license sus-
pended or revoked: Mathew S.
Aitken, East 520 Pickering
Road, Shelton, third degree, $300,
90 days, 80 suspended; Dagoberto
B. Cervantes, 1836 Summit
Drive, Shelton, third degree,
$150, 90 days, 75 suspended;
ttumberto B. Gomez, 3126 Sum-
ner, Hoquiam, third degree, no
insurance, $749, 90 days sus-
pended; Terry L. Patton, 80
North Lakeview Drive, Hoods-
port, third degree, $150, 90 days
suspended; John R. Roney,
Hoodsport, third degree, no in-
surance, $630, 90 days suspend-
ed; Angela M. Painter, 221 En-
deavor Lane, Shelton, third de-
gree, $150, 90 days, 70 suspended,
and escape in the second degree,
90 days, 70 suspended; Paul D.
Nedoroscik, 3705 Hope Street,
Bremerton, third degree, no in-
surance, $500, 90 days suspend-
ed; Amy Frances Noreen, 205
Turner Avenue, third degree,
$195, 90 days suspended.
No valid operator's license
and failure to appear (FTA): Jo-
sef Sinkykik, 419 Queen Anne,
Seattle, no insurance, $1,I26;
Martin Lopez-Ventura, 1907
Olympic Highway, Shelton, no
insurance, speeding, $1,626.
...... No ltabllity'tnoe .Alber -
to Lopez-Rodriguez, 302 Oak
Street, Shelton, $480; Diane L.
Sudar, 182 East Soundview
Drive, Shelton, $599.
No liability insurance and
FTA: Linda P. Ziranda, 910 East
' Shelton-Springs Road, Shelton,
no registration, no child re-
straint, $669; Adria N. Swenson,
East 71 Catfish Lake Road, Shel-
ton, $527; Rusty T. Morris, 1378
White Cedar, Port Orchard, $527;
Richard Allen Baker, West 870
Lake Road, Shelton, no seat belt,
$592; Robert J. Ableman, 11259
Denny Avenue SW, Port
Orchard, $527; Phith Neth, 6252
Agate Road, Shelton, $646.
Unlawful fishing in the sec-
ond degree: Alfred J. Waiters,
14125 150th Place SE, Renton,
over limit Dungeness crab and
undersize Dungeness crab, $152;
Vieto J. Samuel, 13965 SE 248th
Street, Vashon, fishing for trout
out of season, $95; Robert L. Jeff-
lies, 230 SE Crater Road, Shelton,
no shellfish license, unlawful
possession of oysters in the shell,
$152; Jon David Moore II, 14197
Colony Avenue, Burley, fishing
in closed waters, $25; David Le-
roy Milton, 1017 Capitol Way SE,
Olympia, fishing for crab in
closed waters, no license, $300,
90 days, 89 suspended', James A.
Barband, 2919 South Lake Crab-
apple Road, Marysville, posses-
sion of undersized Dungeness
crab, $76.
Minor possessing and/or con-
suming alcohol: Francisco G.
Castro, 414 South Seventh Street,
Shelton, $450, 365 days, 335 sus-
pended; Rachael Dawn Mc-
Manus, 2010 Parkside Avenue,
Bremerton, 90 days; Jason N.
Powell, 701 SE Mezine Lane, Port
Orchard, possession of drug par-
aphernalia, $450, 365 days sus-
pended; Karyn G. Fosdick, 1221
West Birch Street, Shelton, dis-
orderly conduct, $550, 365 days,
344 suspended.
SHELTON
MUNICIPAL COURT
Judgments in Shelton Munic-
ipal Court Judge Carrene Wood's
jurisdiction during the past week
include:
Driving under the influence:
Phan Soeung, 1715 Holman
Street, Shelton, $925, 365 days, 363
suspended, and driving with li-
cense suspended in the third de-
gree, $350, 90 days, 85 suspended.
Driving while license sus-
pended or revoked: Christine A.
Besiada, 310 East Skookum
Drive, Shelton, second degree,
$390, 365 days, 360 suspended,
five in day jail.
No liability insurance: No in-
surance: Robert Wayne Wil-
lard, East 70 Pickering Place,
Shelton, no seat belt, $588.
Failure to transfer title within
45 days: Andrew T. Noreen, 716
Arcadia Avenue, Shelton, no in-
surance, expired license plates,
$887, 90 days, 89 suspended, one
community service.
Assault in the fourth degree:
Jose Valentine Hernandez-Chi-
real, 404 North Eighth Street,
Shelton, domestic violence, $420,
365 days, 335 suspended, 30 in
day jail.
Malicious mischief in the
third degree: Shane R. Samsel,
216 Euclid Street, Shelton, $400,
365 days suspended.
MASON COUNTY
SUPERIOR COURT
Divorces Granted
Brian Dale Deyette and
Frances Joanne Deyette.
Steven Earl Robbins and Lisa
Marie Clay.
Sara Ann Vanzanen and
Brent Allan Vanzanen.
Scott Richard Reeves and
Constance Carole Lee Eby.
Victor James Rorabaugh and
Diane L. Rorabaugh.
New Cases
Jeannette E. LaBresh against
Antonia Jordan and American
States Insurance Company, mis-
cellaneous.
Larry Peterson and Judy Pe-
terson against Melody l lnsell
and Scott A. Ellsworth, unlawful
detainer.
Rose V. Tefrey against John
Anderson, Carolyn Anderson,
Timmie A. Navarre, Melinda
L. Navarre, Norman Wilkins,
Patty J. Bius, Kay J. Joy, Jean
Joy, Robert Barstad, Elaine Bar-
stad, Harley B. Stickley, Vivian
D. Stickley, quiet title.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
Belfair Adult Family Home, In-
corporated, tax warrant.
Washington Department of
Revenue against Classic Homes,
Incorporated, tax warrant.
Thomas O. Jensen and Shir-
ley L. Jensen against Margaret
Camacho, unlawful detainer.
Mill Creek Floral Greens, In-
ternational against Lennie Mor-
ris and Susan Morris, commer-
cial.
Ohio Casualty Insurance
Company against Barry R. Doo-
fan and Jane Doe Doolan, com-
mercial.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
W.E. Aerotech Services, Incor-
porated, tax warrant.
Allied Credit Company
against Guy Fox and Jane Doe
Fox, transcript of judgment.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
Cheri Bonita and Gene Bonita,
tax warrant.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
Grant Myron Richards, tax war-
rant.
Marcia E. Holliman against
Miguel A. Luengo and Margari-
ta P. Luengo, unlawful detainer.
Washington Department of
f
Revenue against Erickson Elec-
tronics Company, Incorporated,
tax warrant.
RH&L Realty against Loucet-
ta Torres, unlawful detainer.
J. Frank Schmidt Jr. and
Evelyn Schmidt against George
F. Heidgerken, Jacqueline Ray
Heidgerken, the United States of
America, Washington Depart-
ment of Labor and Industries,
United Rentals Northwest, In-
corporated, Portland Invest-
ments Commercial Real Estate
Corporation, Southern Pacific
Transportation, Wayne Halseth,
Lillian Halseth, Feenaughty
Machiner Company and David
Hilgemann, foreclosure.
Washington Department of
Labor and Industries against
Andreas Walter Peasee, tax
warrant.
COUNTY
BUILDING PERMITS
New construction over $5,000,
shoreline work and other major
projects receiving permits dur-
ing the past week include:
Randy Parker, 5928 North
Lake Cushman Road, Hoodsport,
residence and deck, $59,457;
Charles Budd, 472 North Finch
Creek Road, Hoodsport, install
ramp bridge, $13,000; Jim Mann,
283 East Gray Avenue, Shelton,
residence, deck and garage,
$142,018; Darrell Mcbride, 4480
East Rasor Road, Belfair, mobile
home, $45,000; Scott Dumas, 81
East Galway Road, Shelton, resi-
dence and deck, $73,393; Arlene
Liles, 180 SE Clematis Avenue,
Shelton, mobile home, $30,000;
Rob Timborsky, 181 East Dalby
Road, Union, residence, $30,056;
Aired Ardon, 81 East Warbler
Court, Allyn, residence and ga-
rage, $87,338; Steve Loyer, 306
East Leffler Loop Road, Grape-
view, garage, $16,952.
Dean Nelson, 680 NE Beck
Road, Belfair, carport, $6,014;
Kary Heuer, 101 NE Lilac Lane,
Belfair, mobile home, $66,250;
and Harold Kemmerer, 121 East
Gary Melody Lane, Shelton, ga-
rage, $12,714; Everett Nichols,
133 SE Whinery Road, Shelton,
mobile home, $49,595; Paul
Heath, 220 East I;rerrolq Drive,
Shelton, garage, $10,728; Melvin
Savage, 1790 NE Tahuya Black-
smith Road, Tahuya, mobile
home, $30,000; Scott Haskel, 1470
East Grapeview Loop Road,
Grapeview, remodel, $27,008;
John Doebel, 261 SE Kamilche
Shores Road, Shelton, retaining
wall, $8,607.
No value was listed for the fol-
lowing projects:
Washington State Corrections
Center, 2321 West Dayton Airport
Road, Shelton, mobile home;
Hama Hama Company, 301
North Lon Webb Road, Lilli-
waup, deposit 250,000 cubic feet of
slide material.
CITY
BUILDING PERMITS
New construction and other
major projects receiving permits
during the past week include:
Richard and Janet Thornbrue,
1028 Buena Vista Avenue, reroof,
$6,210.
SHELTON FIRE
DEPARTMENT
July 21:7:49 p.m., 1304 West
Cota Street, burn investigation.
July 26:4:09 p.m., 1125 North
13th Street, smoke investigation.
SHELTON POLICE
Tuesday, July 20
A woman on Euclid Avenue
said a man left a message on her
answering machine about guns
that tear people up.
A burglary was reported to an
apartment on Johns Prairie
Road.
Wednesday, July 21
A caller requested extra pa-
trols on the west side of the new
civic center now under construc-
tion at FiRh and Cota streets.
A caller from Shelton Middle
School asked police to take a look
at a battery in her trunk that had
caught fire.
Thursday, July 22
Police responded to the report
of a disturbance in which a teen-
age boy threatened to stab
someone on the 1500 block of
Washington Street.
A caller reported loud and ob-
scene music coming from a
house on the 100 block of Laurel
Street.
Friday, July 23
An elderly woman was said to
have collapsed in front of the
Shelton Post Office.
Tires and wheels were report-
edly stolen from a vehicle on the
2100 block of Laurel Street.
Saturday, July 24
Police were asked to break up
a fight outside the Old Mill Creek
Motel on State Route 3.
Sunday, July 25
A burglary was reported to the
BP gas station on Olympic High-
way North.
Monday, July 26
Police were asked by a caller
to arrest a men on the 1000 block
of Cascade Avenue who threw a
hamburger at his girlfriend.
A caller from East Birch Street
said a vehicle was damaged by a
repossession agent.
MASON COUNTY
JAIL POPUITION
The Mason County Jail, which
was designed for 45 inmates and
refitted in 1989 to house 65,
recorded populations as follows
during the past week:
Wednesday 106, Thursday
110, Friday 111, Saturday 110,
Sunday 110, Monday 108, Tues-
day 105.
Efforts are currently under
way to increase the capacity
again.
MASON COUNTY
SHERIFF OFFICE
Tuesday, July 20
Fire District 4 responded at
7:54 a.m. to the report of a fire at
365 SE Arcadia Road.
A burglary was reported by a
caller from East Rasor Road in
Belfair.
Wednesday, July 21
Fire District 11 conducted a
burn investigation on East
Brockdale Road.
Fire District 16 responded to
the report of a brush fire along-
side West Shelton-Matlock
Road.
A caller from West Cedar
Place in Elma said his dog was
shot and that a neighbor had been
threatening to kill it.
Thursday, July 22
Fire District ii responded at
5:04 p.m. to the report of a brush
fire at 90 East Blevins Road
North.
Fire District 4 responded at
6:13 p.m. to the report of a fire at
5700 SE Lynch Road.
Skokomish Tribal Police re-
sponded to the report of an alter-
cation involving 15 juveniles, a
gun and a blonde.
A burglary was reported to a
home on NE Riverhill Lane in
Self air.
Friday, July 23
Fire District 4 responded at
1:47 p.m. to the report of a brush
fire at 591 SE Arcadia Road, and
Fire District 11 responded at 2:39
p.m. to the report of a fire at 751
West Fairgrounds Road.
A burglary was reported to a
home on East Sleaford Road.
Guards at the Mason County
Jail said a person was throwing
his wheelchair against the door.
Saturday, July 24
Fire district 4 responded at
6:16 a.m. to the report of a brush
fire on SE Lynch Road and at
6:39 a.m. to a request for a smoke
investigation at 1830 SE Crescent
Drive.
Burglaries were reported by
callers from NE Riverhill Lane
in Belfair, from SE Binns Swig-
er Loop, from State Route 106 in
Belfair and from North Ducka-
bush Drive West in Hoodsport.
Sunday, July 25
Fire District 13 responded at
6:34 a.m. to the report of a struc-
ture fire at 870 West Lost Lake
Road.
A caller from NE Riverhill
Lane in Belfair reported finding
a credit card and the makings of
a pipe bomb following a party
broken up by deputies.
A caller from North School-
house Hill Road said a 30.06 rifle
and a .357 Magnun were miss-
ing from a gun cabinet.
Deputies were asked to inves-
tigate an assault involving two
inmates at the Mason County
Jail.
Monday, July 26
Burglaries were reported to a
home on East Savage Lane in
Grapeview, a place on North As-
piel Lane near Shelton and a va-
cation home on NE Manke Road
in Tahuya.
A Lake Cushman caller report-
ed finding a blonde woman and a
man in boxer shorts in a cabin
without authorization to be there.
An East Blevins Road caller re-
ported someone shooting at her.
A caller from NE Boad Haven
Road in Belfair said someone
had stolen her gun.
A caller from SE Arcadia
Road said a 10-year-old suffered
powder burns from hammering
a bullet or some other explosive
device.
Correctiom
Routine restaurant inspections:
In the recently-printed report
on Mason County Health Depart-
ment inspections of food-hand-
ling establishments, a score was
misprinted for Bobaloo's in Bel-
fair. The total violation score
was eight, not 10.
KNOW WHAT YOUR BENEFITS ARE THROUGH LASOR & INDUSTRIES FOR ON-THE-JOB HEARING LOSS!
If You Work or Worked Around Loud Noise Such As:
• Driving Trucks • Engines • Etc.
• Saw Mills • Jack Hammers (Even Retirees
• Chain Saws • Construction can be eligible)
Your Potential Benefits:
• Possible Lump Sum Compensation • Hearing Aids & Batteries
To discuss eligibility call this toll free number:
Page 26- Shelton-Mason County Journal- Thursday, July 29, 1999
THE HOBBLE SKIRT
"One of my favorite memories was concerning women's s"
frage coming in at the close of World War I," says Bob. "There
was quite a division of opinion, even among women, as to whe th°
er women should vote or not. And this had an impact on th0
fashion during the World War I years.
"The hobble skirt was the last statement of the traditional
women - of the idea that girls should grow up to be ladies ad
boys to be gentlemen.' And it was a sheath that went down. |
very narrow. Well, it covered the limbs to the ankles and then I f
was tied in with an elastic band that allowed them to 'hobble
along. |
"And since it was sheathed all the way down over the upP ¢
limbs and the hips it of course caused some interest to the #s' i
And so hips were seen to be, uh, provocative - I guess is the way
to put it." He laughs.
This almost subliminal sexuality was all the more apparent to
a Freudian psychologist the likes of Bob, of course, when tle
skirt was observed in its most common context - accessorized bY
way of a tiny, pouchlike and almost erotically feminine purse
known as a reticule.
Another typical hobble skirt accoutrement, says Bob - a d
one particularly evocative of the traditional and often repressi
sentiment of those opposed to the women's suffrage movement
was the rather haughty set of long-handled eye glasses comm0S"
ly wielded at social events such as the opera.
Known as lorgnettes, they lent an air of superiority to the
wearer, who thus was seen as being sufficiently distanced fr0
the commoners" that she could observe without them with#
active participation.
"But, anyway," says Bob, "a hobble-skirted woman ws}
absolutely dependent on her male escort to help her uo int0
a carriage, to assist her up some stairs. Otherwise she'd fall'
and get hurt."
Was the hobble skirt intended to help women be modest - ¢
quite the opposite?
i
"Well, of course, you know, says Bob, grinning that gri_:
again, "that the attraction for the opposite sex is a combmatitio
of both..."
AFS seeking
host families
American Field Service is seek-
ing host families for the world's
oldest and largest not-for-profit
student exchange organization•
The service depends on host
families to provide nurturing and
supportive home environments
for students aged 15 to 18 who
are interested in sharing their
culture and learning about that of
the United States.
Single- and two-parent house-
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teens, single people and couples
without children or whose chil-
dren are grown, all have some-
thing to offer an AFS student,
says AFS volunteer Sally Ann
Wells. "AFS prides itself on the
careful selection, orientation and
support we provide to our stu-
dents and host families," Wells
says.
AFS was founded in 1941
volunteer ambulance drivers
World War I and World W
who believed the way to e
future international peace v#
create "an elihtened lobsl
munity through internation
.ta
dent exchanges," Wells 0
Now, 50 years later, more
270,000 students::om over I '
countries have een AF.;
change students. More
10,000 participate in the prO
-from 28 states hoping for p!l
ment somewhere in the l!
area.
People interested in hostitl
exchange student or who
additional information o
can phone Wells at (503)
1868 or call the AFS Infor#
Center at 1-800-AFS-IN
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