September 9, 1965 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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' L 0N--MA 0N C t TY JOURNAL-- Published in "Christmastown, U.S.A.", helton, Washth o
PAt E 7
its second con-
Labor Day base-
by staging a
finish in Men-
to nip Warm
10-8.
team made
by drawing a
opening round
dons I, then
5-3. in Sun-
Gary Peterson and Jim Tobin fol-
lowed by Miller's first sing]e got
one in the first; Mike Davis dou-
bled, Alex Gouley was hit, Gary
Peterson walked to fill the bases.
then Davis scored as Gouley was
forced at third and Peters.n seer
ed on an error on Guy Miller's
grounder for a pair in the second:
and two more checked in during
the third on Ron Peterson's in-
field out and Alex Gouley's single
after Tom Gouley singled and Al-
bert Gouley walked.
MUCKLE,~HOOT got its three
markers in the sixth on a combi-
natlon of a.n error, a. double, a
walk. a single and a ground out.
Only the middle run was earned.
Gary Peterson d~ew foil]' walks
in the Smlday game, C, uy Miller
four in the titular tussle.
trailed Warm What More Can A Man Do!
.2 margin after
7-4 going into
the Sko-
strong finishes
hits, two walks
TO WIH OVER HcCLEARY
al! Burnett's doing.
e (his sixth hit of
),. Jim Tobin walk-
ned, then Tom
Miller was
was safe on
cleaned tl~e
and AI Gou-
Second timer was
That did it, and
the pitching
home a huge
in cash for its"
of the ninth.Just how much more one player
got tl',e bigcan contribute to his team's suc-
with a single, cess than AI Burnett did to the
second dou- Corrections Centers 9-8 Timber
League baseball victory over Mc-
Cleary last Sunday would be hard
to visualize.
In five trips to the plate he got
four hits---two home-rmm, a dou-
ble. and a single plus a. walk.
drove in five runs and scored
three;
On the mound he pitched 14
strikeouts, grabbed three pop
flies, and handled the relay .on. a
play which nipped a runner at
th'e' pIate, for a part in 18 of the
27, putouts,
It, is .no understatement to say
Burnett earned the victory, partic-
t{ie.rl.y a'ft~,r his second homer
came in the bottom of the eighth
inqing with ~t runaer aboard and
McCleary leading b~" 8-7.
TI~IIS CIRCUIT wallop, to deep
leftcenter, was a carbon copy of
the one be hit in the fourth, ex-
cept the bases were empty. That
one tied the score ~t 7-7. ~)&ve
Barr was aboard on an error ahea'd
of the.victory swat ill the eighth.
Both teams raced from the star-
ting blocks like they were going
to massacre pitchers right-and-
left:
.and Jim' To-
)ut Skokomish
sec()nd, R'on:
and a pair
:ed .up another
2-run, double
Rick Miller arid
a pair in the
Whittled away
Warm Springs
four frames.
secondround
~it 4-hit
only one
his own case
drove in
INNINGS
~"'"'-... 0 0 0 0 0 3 0---3
100 002 1--4
122 0 0 0. x--5
i""':122 100 x--8
Ross, B.~ An-
Tobin, 1~. Peter-
Andera0n. Baker,
l~aker. IP-D. An-
4, Miller
AItderson 2, l~.osa 1,
5. HB-Alcx
DP-Tobin to R.
~, Skoko-
:M;cCleary opened With a pair,
all its scoring in duplicated in the second, and rats-
trees. Walks to ed the ante to three in the third.
* * The Inmates met fire-with-fire,
scoring five in the first and so-
~kokomlHh ab r h los in the third and fourth.
G.Ptrsn. as-rf 0 1 0 Theu Burnett and his pitching
Tobln 2b 3 1 0 foe, Jerry Estes, got tough. Bet-
°~.Miller cf 3 0 0 ween them they created a small
l=tb Miller p 4 0 3 windstorm of flailing bats fl'om
T.Gouly 3b~ss 3 1 1 strikeouts. Estes added 17 whiffs
&b Ooul~y c 2 1 O for a game total of 31 by the two
l)avis lb 3 1 11 righthanders.
R.Ptrsn as-3b 3 0 0 BURNETT'S DOUBLE came
AXGouley lb 2 0 1~ith the bases full in the first
'Totals 23 5 6 and got th(~ Inmates off flying. It
scored two. Tom Scott followed
with another two-run double, then
Tom stole his way home for the
ab r h
110
:Peteraon 2b 5 10
Miller rf 3 1 1
CTOUley If 4 2 1
Mllr ss-3b 5 2 3
~in ss-lb 2 1 0
c 4 0.1
l)-3b 3 I 1
lb 000
as-p 4 1 2
Tdtals 3110 9
2 300 001--8
1 310 011--9
~' 002 06x--lO
012 04 x--9'
~[lli~, S. Miller',
Miller, Ron Pet-
(bunt). RBI-
2, T, Goutey
MInn[ck 2~ Da-
IP-Smittl 7.
RRF-Sm|th 6,
Qouley ~. Win-
SO-P~eraon
by Gou-
• 11~; Skokom~
IT
a" doctor't
inning's fifth run.
~;. :Burr~ettM walk . came in the
..second, and filled the bases betffnd
singles by Barr and: Jim Williams
(Jim had 3-for-4 for the game}.
BIG BOMBS for the Bears were
second baseman Bob Cole and first
baseman Ken Odle. Cole had four
hits. scored three runs and drove
in one. Odle had two hits, drove
ill three runs and sCored one.
Sunday's box score:
Mc('leary ab r hIVY.R.C.C, ab r h
Cole 21) '5 3 4 l~llrr c 3 2 1
Eveleth 3b 4 0 2 Williams 2b4 1 3
()die ib 5 I 2[ Pe|'raon cf 4 1 0
Estes p 5 01 Burneit p 4 Ill 4
Lan'.tlert c 3.1 0 Scott as 5 I 1
liamilhm sa 4 ] 1,Eubanks 3b 4 I 1
Soling cf 4 0 01Ward If 4 0 0
Miller rf 3 1 llReed rf 4 (I 2
Naaon If 3 l 0 Schultz Ib 40' 0
Totals 36 811 Tolals 36 912
sCORE BY INNINGS
"M~Cl(~ary . ............. 2 23 0 0 00 ] 0-- 8
hllp ................ 3 2 31 0 IO I 0 11
W.S.C.C ............. 501 100 02x---9
hits .......... 2 2 3I 0'21 1 x--12
SUMMARY: HR-Burnett 2, 2b-Bur-
nell Scott. Cole. SH-W, illlams. RBI-
.Burrleit 5, ~coit, 2. Williams, Odle 3.
Milh, r .2, Cole. Eveleth, SB- Cole 3.
Eveleth 2, Odle 2, Larabert 3, ].-Iam-
iron 3, E~es. Miller Scott 2. Burneit.
Eubanks, Reed. E-Willia!ns 3. Barr.
Burnett. Eubanks. Odle, Lambert SO-
Estea 17, BaVnet4 14. BB-Estes 4. Bur-
nell 6. RRF-Burnett 3, Estes 6. PB-
Lambert 3. LOB-McCIeary 8. WSCC 6.
Thomure Finds If
Tough At Nationals
Louis J. Thomure was back at
his Job in Simpson's machine shops
after returning last week from
his sixth trip to compete in the
National/Pistol & Rifle Matches
at Camp Perry, Ohio.
He added no new laurels to the
Two were out, and Scott became
a strikeout victim (the third of tbe
inning) to strand tile, trio.
Burnett had no part of the third
inning run. Fred Eubanks scored
it after singling, moving to third
on a steal and Dave Reed's single,
and finally checking in as Wil-
liams sii~glefl.
From then on the scoring was
II I I I'll I~1 I I II II I I I III IIIII _1 I I I
NINE MATCItES PLAYED IN
TITLE TOURNEY CLUB
Bob Turne~ became the first
:winner in the 1965 club champ-
'ionShip tournament when he beat
Bud Pauley, two-up, in the first
completed match last Saturday.
costa $3.00
~f not
ust ~eturn
CHEEKS & STEAKS--Sonny Salmi of Shelton battled this 120-
lb. halibut to a victorious finish after an hour's fight last Satur-.
day at Crescent Beach (near Port Angeles). Salmi was really
trying for halibut, too, using herring on 30-lb. test line. He fin-
ished it off with a bullet. (Wingard Sport Shop picture).
Eight oth~r matches were re-
corded over the holiday weekend,
reaving two first round matches
tn the championship flighf and
five in the second f!.ight to be
played by next Sunday's deadline.
Turner's success m'ade Pauley
the first entrant- in~ the thtr4
flight, which will be composed of
second flight losers. Turner will
play the winner, Pauley the loser
of the Darrell De~niston-$ill Dick-
ie match.
Two other secon4 flight ma~ch-
:es found Gary Nieloy knocking
off Jim Hartley, .t-and-3, and Bob
Olsen dropping Dan Carl, 3-and-1.
The Jerry ;Thompson-Gehe White
match will supply oppofients for
Nicloy and Hartley while JWn
:Archer vs. Jack Kimbel will d~tto
for Olson and Carl, Bud Knu~en
goes against Val Sienko and Glen
Robertson against Rudy lblakus in
matches which will pair their win-
ners~ and lose~s in the next round.
In the championship flight Tom
Weston, co-medalist with Sonny
Lowe in ~.he qualifying round, beat
Clyde Coots and now meets Ivan
IVl'yers, victor over Poo Hul~/ert.
impressive list Thomnre accumu-.
lated in his five previous trips to
Camp Perry. "I just couldn't seem
to get with it this time," he said.
"I had several 'cleans' but my V
counts were low, around four and
five, but it took eight or more to
get. anywhere. The competition is SILVERS BREAK LOOSE
getting tougher each year, too." AT LAKE CUSHMAN
He competed as a member of~ Highlight of this week's fishing
the 6th U.S. Army Reserve team. reports came from Lake Cushman,
In his five previous National where the silvers "have busted
Matches he won the I-~errick Tro- .loose".
phy in 1959 and 1962, both the Lois Reed reports from Lake
Roumanian and the Nevada, ih
1960, and both the NBPRP Bronze
and Silver medals in 1962.
A macllinist in private life,
Thomure is also an instructor in
Small arms for the 6333rd Special
Marksmanship Unit.
i[arly Fair Season
Cushman Resort that limits, and
near-limits w e r e commonplace
over the Labor Day weekend. Cut-
throat were 'doing well, too, at the
Upper end o'f the lake and in the
process of going after the cuts sev-
eral anglers latched onto small•
land-locked blackmouth salmon
ranging up to 18 inches and put-
tint up real scraps.
Duke Ammld, Hood'spm'~'~ hirer-
crate angter, signalled the surge
of good fishing with a near limit
of silvers last Thursday.
Lake Cushman also yielded a
9-lb. Dolly Varden to Walt Hallo-
way in the Staircase Resort pool.
Verle Schreiber and Andy A~-
derson, got in a good lick just
ahead of Summit Lake's closure
'this week by taking limits of sil-
vers using trolled Perrywinldes for
lures.
Hood Canal rewarded the salt
water addicts handsomely this
past week.
Heftiest catch, reported~ from
Hoodhport Marina, was Ray Ruth's
14-pound king taken Saturday.
Dave McGee had an 8-13 silver
~,efi Cater an' 11-8 kifi'g, Clyde
Ri~ffgs of Centralia an' 11-4 king,.
Kyle Fulton of Kent an 8-0 silver,/
Fran Tecca of Olympia a 9-0 sin
ver, and Verde Wi~gavd an ~-0 sil-
ver on dales ranging from Sept. 1
through 6th. C~rley Donovan of
Hoodsport had a string of good
fortune on three separate days,
boating f, ive kings ,and eilvers
ranging from 2-0 to 7-0,
Dodger and herring was the
principal lure.
* * $
PHEASANT, FIRST.TURKEY
HUNTS ARE SET
Pheasafit hunters will get a
split se,son for 1966, similar to
that of last year running throu~.h
Christmas, the State Game Depart-
ment announced last week.
General upland bird seasons will
open at noon Oct. 16' and close
again Nov. 14. Pheasants, Chukars
and Huns reopen to hunting Nov.
27 and continue open until Dec.
,26. Quail reopen only in eastern
Washington on Nov. 27 and run
to Jan. 9.
iii
The two losers are paired ir~ the
first flight, which will be formed
:of championship flight first m)und
losers.
Don, Pa~fley dropped Bob Coots
into the first flight and will get
his second round oppgnent from
the Joe Holt-Bob KiebUrtz match,
the loser being pai~dd against
C~ots. Heinie Hilderman look a 3-
and-2 decision off Fred Stuller and
Jack Stewart knocked off ~arry
Cole, 5~and-4, in two more title
flight matches. Heinie a~& JaCk
are paired in the championship
second round, Fred and Harry in
the first flight.
Guy B'eel~wifh will get his next
Opponent~ from fihe Sonny Lowe-
Ray Rice pairing~ Lowe is the de-
fending ehampicin. GUY bumped
Larry t,arson intb the first flight.
Larson meets th(i Lowe-Rice loser.
After next Shnday's d~adlineI
for openin~ matches, succeeding
rounds must be c~ompleted by SeP-
tember 19 and 2~ and October 3,
S° the championship can be settled:
by Oct. 10, tour~ament chairman
.Don Pauley ruled.
GOLF COURSE DIRECTORY"
I~SUE'D" I~r STATE DEPT.
Listing over 100 golf courses
in 85 cities of Washington, the
letest edition, of the Washington
State Golf Course vacation direct-
ory has been released by the Tour-
'ist Division of the State Depart-
ment of Commerce and Economic
Development.
Distribution of the Informative
new brochure is currently under
way and soon the Chamber of
Commerce should have sufficient
supply to meet public needs.
Roller Arena
NOTICE
Fraternal Bowhng League
SCHEDULE:
I'iday . 7:30 to 10:00 p.m.
-" $' li0.4 7:30 - 10:30 p.m.
Sept. 13, P.M.
For All Members and New Teams
IN MASON COUNTY
Pheasant daily limit is three
with a possession limit of •I2. A,
limited hen pheasant season will
be held in 1965 -Oct. 30 - Nov."
1.1 with the same arearestrict'ions'
and bag limits as in I964.
New for 1965 is the State'S; ffrst
turkey lmnt. Set on an experimen-
tal basis, the hunt is restricted to
shotgunners only in Stevens C0un-
ty only witb a bag and season
limit of one bird per lmnter. The
new season kicks off at noon Oct.
16 and is set to close at sunset
Oct. 17.
Restrictions on the turkey hunt
have been judged sufficient by the
Game Dept. to prevent the destruc-
tion of the turkey flocks. Game
biologist~ say Stevens County con-
tains af least 500 wild Mcrriam's
turkeys. Several other areas of the
state presently hold wild tnrkeys,
but populations have not yet built
to the size of the Stevens County
flocks.
1966 LAKE, STR'EAM
SEASONS ESTABLISHED
The State Game, (~ommission has
set April 17 at the lowland lake
opening date for next season.
Beaver ponds as well as some
'high l'akes in western Washing-
ton will open May 2.2.
Summit Lake, in Thurston
County, has been added to the list
of Silver 'lh'out Bonus watcrs~ giv-
ing a new total of 17 waters (in-
cluding, Lake Cushman)where .the
extra fish are allowed.
HOPES;
Discerning football fans, ghfing!
critical orbs on the action during
Saturday evening's game-condition
scrimmage session, detected a few
things which made tbeir eyes light
up a bit in auticipation of tbe
coming Higbclimber grid season.
They saw a remarkably mnooth-
working first string, considering
the iufancy of the season at this
point, annihilate the green-shirted
second lineup by four touchdowns,
at the same time giving up only
one fit'st down on defense.
This was achieved without two
letLern~en defensive luminaries,
wlmse return to action is expected
in time for this Friday night's
jambmee in B~'emerton. By Debt
ban, one 07 tim squad's best de-
fensive backs last year, is hamp-
ered by a deep mtlscle bruise on
one leg and 225-pound-jmfior tac-
kle Da've Gunter had a sprained
wrist, tte v~as kept on the side-
lines as a precautionary measure.
BOTH PROBABLY will see at
least .~ome action ir~ the Jamboree
tomorrow night, which starts at
8:00 o'clock in Bremerton's Mere-
crial Stadium with Shelton going
against South Kitsap in the first
20-minute period. South and East
Bremcrton take the stage for the
second period, then the Highclimb-
ers finish up the night's action
against East in the final sessiom
Coach Jeriy Mills, if this weel~'S
workouts don't proml)t him to dt~
otherwise, likely will start t~c
same lineup for the jamboree aC-
tion. Thishas an offensive back-
field of Bill Archer at quarte~',
Bob Milldr at full, Scott Swlsht~
and Mike Johnson at halves. On
the line Dale Downing was at
center, Ken LeBvesh and Dan
Barrom at guards, Dave Cox and
Dave Mendenhall (the transfer
from Seattle Prepl at tackles, and
Jeff Kieburtz and Brady White-
her at ends.
DEFENSIVELY, Downing mov-
ed to left end in place of Kie,
bm~z, with Whitener at the.other
flank, Cox and Mendenhall stayed
at tackles, LeBresh filled the mid-
dle guard ~slot, Barrom and Miller
became linebaekers, 'Swisher and
Mike Carper guarded: the wings,
TIMBER LEAGUE
I t
He had a two-rub homer and &
W L rf ra. double in his collection. The feat
Olympia .................. 1 5 151 74 raised his average to' .423 for the
SHELTON .............. 17 6 205 58 season.
McCleary ................ 13 11 139 113JERRY MALIA!)I~ banged .a
W.S.C.C .................. 12 11 118 1992-run homer and two doubles to
Rberdeen ................ 7 17 86 1127drfve in four runs a~(l scored
Bucoda .................... 4 20 77 206four, movin~ his average to .341;
Last S3mday - Denny Tem.plb had two doubl~
Shelton 18. Bueoda 0 in his thiee-hit collection, scored'
W.S.C.C. 9. McCleary 8
Aberdeen 9, Olympia.0 (fft)
Next Sunday
Shelton at Aberdeen
B'ucod~ at W.S.C.'C.
Olympia at M:cCleary
* $ =e
twice and drove in three; Jack
Mallory batted in three runs w~th
his two singles in tltree official
trips; and Snyder aided his own
cause with a double and a single,
which got a run scored .and ano-
ther d]iven in.
Timber-League title hopes fiam-Bloomfield's circuit poke wound
dd anew among the "Shelton Log-up the scoring for the day, MaN
gers after they overwhelmed Bu-lory's accounted for the two m~t~
coda, 18-0, and Olympia forfeited in "the third. Temple had two' hits
to Aberdeen in last Sunday's re- in the big second and Bloomfield
cordings, two in the productive fifth, open-
WORD IS OUT that the Capital ing the frame with a double' be-
City club cannot get a team to-fore closing it with his hornet'.
tether any longer and will have
to forfeit its three remaining
games---to McCleary, Shelton and
Corrections Center. If true, the
Loggers can ascend the throne
even without victory in their sea-
sdn finale at Aberdeen next Sun-
d~y.
Olympia is scheduled at Mc.. Snydcrp
Cleary in the schedule close]' but Temple lb
Shelton ab r hI l|deodanbr It
J,Blmfld. 3b 4 3 41Hickcy cf-lf ,~ 0 0
Kadoun as 5 3 llWhiteman as2' 0 0
Jr, MMry. cf 4 4 3Izs,)m2b 3 0 1
Ablf If 4 2 l!Perkina 3b 1 0 0
Jk. Mah'y. c 3 0 210'Neil lb-cf 2 0 ¢)
P.Bhnfld 21) 4 2 11McPhrson c-p 1 It, 0
'4:1 21Wall p-c 2 0
0
4 2 3! Studcmn, lf-rf 0 0 0
and Archer 'rod Johnson wer~
safeties. Only Swisher and Men-
deuhall are not lettermen.
Just where Gm~ter and Debban
.might fit into this defensive ar-
ray t~[o Climber coach wasn't rea-
dy to say yet, but this Week's
workouts might tell the sto!'y.
iV[ills was geaerally pleased witb
Saturdhy's scrimmage results.
Ther0 ,:vere rough spots, of course,
which d~ew ihe grid mentor's im-
l~e¢liate attention, and he was
disappointed in some phv, ses of
~h~ second.lineu,p's performsnce.
This week's attention will be
devoted entirely to polishing up,
with nothing new to be given the
squad.
JOIINRON'S rmming at half-
back was one ,of the highlights of
Saturday's scrimnmge. The stocky
speedster reeled off a 40-yard
touchdown run on the seventh
play, intercepted a pass and ran
It back some 80 yards to the 15
to set up another, and generally
disported himself like the Olympic
League's loading scoring of 7;1964
was expected to.
Archer's running also shone, es-
pecially on a 70-yard punt return
for a touchdown.,, His effective use
~f interference made it possible.
Archer's passing wasn't o]~ target,
but the dimness of tile twilight
hour mi~'ht have had something
to do with it.
Best passing of the evening
came from reserve quarterl)acks
Chief Clayton and John Koch in
;the seetio~l of the scrimmage pre-
,aeding. the first team's appear-
an~e.
Sophomore Koch connected with
a b6~utiful heave to junior Steve
I~ooney for a h)ng touchdown play.
Looney is a transfer who shows
varsity earmarks after two sea-
:soIm at Exeter Academv in ~ew
England. He played junior high
ball here as a quarterback before
going East, bnt M~lls is using him
as an offensive end and a defens-
i~a' winw.
Another sophonmre who drew
a good grade for his play front
Mills was middle guard Tom MaN
loy', Who broke througil for some
good tacldes.
* ~!¢
SEASON TICKETS
~VAILABLE NOW
Htghclimber football fans who
wish to be assured of a good seat
in the grandstand for this year's
four home games should pro'chase
a sea,on ~icket.
Athletic Director Bob Sund ha~
set aside 250 of the best seat~
,for season ticket hohters. Tickets
are $4 and will gtmrantee a re-
served seat•. They may be secured
has make-up games with Shelton Myers rf 4 1 1}Bennett rf 0 0 0 ~tt Shelton senior high.
and Corrections Center. Totals 1601Osbolt lb 200 .........................................
.., The Loggers were merciless on Totals ]6 00 1
.the .Miners Sunday and Bucoda SCORE BY INNIN(iS
threw in the towel after five in- Shelton .... : ............ L ............... 2 ff 2 0 8---18
hits ............................ 3 8 I 0 6--.-18
nings, having up to that point
touched Shelton rtghthander Bri- Bucoda ................................. 0 0 00 ()--~)
an Snytter for just one hit---a first
:inning two-out double by second
base,nan Isom to eenterfield.
SN¥1)EI~ STRU(~I{ out 10 and
walked five in the five frames.
Meanwhile, the Loggers cut
loose for two big innings, six in
the second and eight in the fifth
and' tossed in a pair of 2-run did-
oes in tbe first and third. The
bottom of t-he batting order went
down in order in the fourth for
the only non-productive inning.
Jerry Bloomfield celebrated his
return to action after a four-game
absence by rapping four hfts and
getting a pitch in the ribs in five
trips which got him three runs
scored and three more batted in.
Fraierna Order 01
Eagles 2079
hits .............. : ............... .1 0 0 0~0--1
SU'MM.ARY: HI~-J. Bloolnfield, Jer-
ry Malrol~y. 2b-J. Bloomfield, Jerry
Mallory 2, Temple 2, Shyd0r, 'Isom~
RBI-Jerry Mallory 4. Jack Malh)ry 3,,
J. Blom'l~0eld 3, Temple 3,. Ahlf, P.
T}loom fiehl. Snydcr. SO-Snydor" I01
Wall l, McPherson 2. I~,B-Snydcr 5,
Wall 1. RRF-Wall ]0,MePherson 0, IP-
Wall 21/3. Loser-Wall. HB-J. Bh)om-
field by Wall PB-McPher~on. Wall.
LOB-Bucoda 6, Shelton 5.
Meeting Place
Shelton Airport
8 p.m.
:2rid& 4th Tuesdays
Pre~sident
Curtis Cammack
Visiting Eagles Welcome
RECREATION REPORT
All roads are open aud logging
traffic continues heavy through-
out the Hoo~sport district of the
Olyn~pic National Forest.
Campgrounds have been receiv-
ing modbrate use during the week
but were filled to near-capacity
over the Labor Day weekend.
Stream fishing has slacked off
because of the low, clear water.
Fishing has been fair at Jeffer-
son La, ke;
A high pressure system contin-
ues to keep the fire danger high.
Forest users should be cautious in
building fires outside of developed
campgrounds.
HURRY... Supply Limited
$
Cant ct Bob $1md,. 450-8 61, at High School
I ~ll III II I illl Illl II I I I
eee
I!
O
• e
HR-2 Professional Formula
Shampoo Concentrate,
the one and only home rug
Shampoo especially created
for electric machines.
Freshel s colors, fluffs
up texture
"Makes Over 3 Gallons"
EACH
BOTTLE;
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 9th thru
SEPT. 11th -- AT THESE SAFEWAY
STORES ONLY--
SHELTON