September 18, 1969 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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Legal Publications
NOTICE OF BOND SALE
MASON COUNTY
STATE OF WASHINGTON
LIMITED GENERAL
OBLIGATION
HARTSTENE (HARSTINE)
ISLAND BRIDGE PROJECT
BONDS, 1969
$73,000.00
SEALED PROPOSALS will be
received by the Auditor of Mason
County, as ex officio Clerk of the
Board of County Commissioners,
at her office in the Mason County
Court House, Shelton,
Washington, until 11:00 o'clock
a.m. (PDST) on OCTOBER 14,
1969 and immediately thereafter
all bids received will be publicly
opened and considered at a
meeting of the Board of County
Commissioners then to be held in
the Commissioners' meeting room
at said Mason County Court
House for the purchase of
$73,000.00 of "Limited General
Obligation Hartstene (Harstine)
Island Bridge Project Bonds,
1969," of Mason County,
Washington, authorized by
Resolution No. 1966-2, adopted
August 22, 1966, and Resolution
No. 1969-40, adopted September
15, 1969, of the Board of County
Commissioners, for the purpose
of providing funds for strictly
County purposes, to-wit, to
provide the remaining funds with
which to complete the Hartstene
(Harstine) Island Bridge Project.
The bonds will be dated
November 1, ]969, will be in
denominations of $1,000.00 each,
will be numbered from ] to 73,
Inclusive, will bear interest at a
maximum effective rate of not to
exceed 8% per annum, payable
semiannually on May 1 and
November ] of each year, interest
to maturity to be evidenced by
coupons to be attached to the
bonds, will be payable, both
principal and interest, at the
office of the Treasurer of Mason
County, Washington, at Shelton,
Washington, and will mature
serially, annually, in from two to
ten years, as follows:
Bond Nos.
(Inclusive) Amounts Maturities
1 to3 $ 3,000 11/1/71
4 to 8 `5,000 ] 1/1/72
9to 13 5,000 11/1/73
14 to 23 10,000 11/1/74
24 to 33 10,000 I 1/1/7,5
34 to 43 10,000 ] 1/1/76
44 to `53 10,000 11/I/77
54 to 63 10,000 11/1/78
64 to 73 10,000 11/1/79
The bonds shall be issued
without the right or option of the
County to redeem the same prior
to their respective maturity dates•
Mason County has, by order of
Legal Publkations
..%%%%%%%%-... --%%%%%%%%
it s,. Board of County
Commissioners, irrevocably
pledged itself to include in its
budget and to levy taxes annually
within and as a part of the tax
millage levy permitted to counties
without a vote of the people,
upon all the property in the
County subject to taxation, in an
amount sufficient to meet the
annual and semiannual payments
of principal and interest due on
the bonds as the same shall
become due, and the full faith,
credit and resources of the
County have been irrevocably
pledged for the annual levy and
collection of said tax and the
prompt payment of the principal
of and interest on the bonds as
the same shall become due•
Bidders are invited to name the
rate or rates of interest which the
bonds are to bear, not exceeding a
maximum effective rate of 8% per
annum, and each bidder is
required to and shall specify:
Ca) The lowest rate or rates of
interest and premium, if any,
above par at which the bidder wilt
purchase the bonds; or
(b) The lowest rate or rates of
interest at which the bidder will
purchase the bonds at par.
Coupon rates bid shall be in
multiples of either 1/8 or 1/10 of
1%, or both. No more than one
single rate of interest may be
fixed, for any one maturity. The
maximum differential between
the lowest and highest coupon
rates named in any bid shall not
exceed 2%•
For the purpose of evaluating
the bids only, the coupon rates
bid being controlling, each bid
shall state the total interest cost
over the life of the bonds and the
net effective interest rate of such
bid• Only one coupon will be
attached to each bond for each
installment of interest thereon,
and bids providing for additional
or supplemental coupons will be
rejected.
The bonds shall be sold to the
bidder making the best bid,
subject to the right of the Board
of County Commissioners of
Mason County to reject any and
all bids and to readvertise the
bonds for sale in the manner
provided by tawL and no bid for
less than the entire issue shall be
considered.
All bids shall be sealed, and
except the bid of the State of
Washington, if one is received,
shall be accompanied by a deposit
of $3,650.00 either in cash or
certified or cashier's check
payable to the Treasurer of Mason
County, Washington, which shall
be promptly returned if the bid is
Legal Publications
not accepted. The bonds will be
delivered to the successful
purchaser within forty days after
the sale date, and in the event the
bonds are not ready for delivery
by such date, the successful
bidder shall have an option to
cancel his obligation and to
receive prompt refund of his
good-faith deposit check, or may
agree to an extension of such
delivery date, and not less than
seven days' advance notice of the
time and date of delivery will be
given to the successful bidder. If
the bonds are ready for delivery
and the successful bidder shall fail
and neglect to complete the
purchase of the bonds within
forty days following the
acceptance of his bid, the amount
of his deposit shall be forfeited to
Mason County, and in that event,
the Board of County
Commissioners of Mason County
may accept the bid of the one
making the next best bid. The
bonds will be delivered to the
successful bidder at the office of
the Treasurer of Mason County in
Shelton, Washington, or in
Seattle, Washington, without
expense to the successful bidder,
or at such other place as the
successful bidder and said
Treasurer may mutually agree
upon, at the expense of the
successful bidder.
The County will cause the
bonds to be printed or
lithographed and signed and will
furnish the unqualified approving
legal opinion of Messrs. Roberts,
Shefelman, Lawrence, Gay &
Moch of Seattle, Washington,
relative to the issuance of the
Legal Publications
bonds, without expense to the
successful bidder, which opinion
will be printed on each bond. A
no-litigation certificate in the
usual form will be included in the
closing papers.
DATED at Shelton,
Washington, this 15th day of
September, 1969.
RUTH E. BOYSEN,
Mason County Auditor and
ex officio Clerk of the
Board of County
Commissioners
9/18,25-10/2,9-4t
NOTICE OF
BUDGET HEARING
There will be a meeting of the
Commissioners of the Port of
Allyn at Cady's Real Estate office
in Belfair, Washington, at 8:00
P.M. on Thursday, October 2,
1969 to fix the final budget for
the year 1970.
Anyone may attend and be
heard at the meeting.
E• F. BERBERET
Sec., Port of Allyn
9/18,25-10/2-3t
NOTICE
OF SPECIAL MEETING
There will be a special meeting
of the Pioneer School Board on
September 25, 1969, for the
urpose of fixing the final budget
or the 1969-70 fiscal year.
All persons interested are
invited to attend. The meeting
will be held at the Pioneer School
starting at 8:00 p.m.
GERALDINE C. BROOKS
Clerk of the Board
9/18,25-2t
"'THE FORUM"
Now Appearing
Thurs.- Fri.- Sat."
9p.m. to l a.m. at
THE BARB
South Sound Center, Lacey
i
Legal Publications
NO. 3761
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON FINAL ACCOUNT
In the Superior Court of the
State of Washington for Mason
County (In Probate)
In the Matter of the Estate of
Joseph V. Simpson, Deceased.
NOTICE is given that the Final
Account and Petition for
Distribution has been filed with
the Clerk of the above Court and
the Executrix seeks settlement of
the account, distribution of the
estate, and discharge, which
matters have been set for hearing
on Friday, 17 October 1969 at
9:30 a.m., in the court room of
the Probate Department of this
Court.
PEARL L• SIMPSON
Executrix
B• FRANKLIN HEUSTON,
Attorney
Angle Bldg.
Shelton, Washington 98`584
Phone 426-4672 9/18-1t
NOTES
FROM
NEIL
NO COMPROMISE
When it comes to health
care, there can be no
compromise with quality.
When you or your loved ones
are sick, only the finest in
medical and pharmaceutical
services is good enough.
Our credo is to provide only
the highest quality of
pharmaceutical products --
dispensed with the utmost of
pharmaceutical care. You can
be assured that when you or
yours are in need of
pharmaceutical service there
will be no compromise with
quality, for good health is truly
our most precious possession.
Neirs Pharmacy
Emergency Ph• 426-216,5
Fifth & Franklin St. -- 426-3327
Open Daily 9:30 to 7:30
Saturdays-- 9:30 - 6:00
Day in. Day out. Same old order.taking world. Wouldn't it be nice to have an Escape Machine?
Introducing the totally new.
Cutlass Supreme from Oldsmobile.
The 1970 Escape Machine
Imagine you cruising around town in
this sleek beauty. Proud?-you'd better
believe it. This trim new personal
size Supreme lets you move up to
Olds elegance without leaving the
low-price field. But then, that's
your secret-a secret luxuriously
hidden under that formal new roof
and elegant lines. And there's Rocket
V-8 action that won't quit-thanks
to another Oldsmobile exclusive:
unique Positive Valve Rotators.
Cutlass Supreme-one of 29 Olds
Escape Machines inviting you
to make your escape. Oldsmobile:
escape from the ordinary.
that delivers elegance
in a trim new size.
See Youngmoblle Thinking for 1970 at your Oldsmobile dealer's today: Toronado, Ninety-Eight, Delta 88, Cutlass, 4-4-2 and Vista-Cruiser.
Page 14 - Shelton-Mason County ,Journal - Thursday, Setember 18, 1969
6M
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MIAI OF |I¢|LLiN¢I[
Olympic College
SHELTON-HOODSPORT
EVENING €OU
Fall Quarter-1969
COORDINATOR: Bernard Dorcy
•
REGISTRATION: Will be in the classroom during the first c!aSs ,nil
starting Sept. 22, 1969. Classes will meet in the high schOOl "",
• " nim ="
scheduled elsewhere. Check the schedule to determme which g ,,.,
class meets, come that night, and register in class. For registrauu",
please bring the following information:
Social Security Number Local address :i
Place of birth Name of first high school attended
High school graduation is NOT required for registration.
WHO MAY ENROLL: Any person 18 or older may enroll in
without special arrangements. Students under 18 must get
permission at registration.
CREDITS: All Olympic College courses carry college credit.
courses listed 100 and above are college transfer courses;
courses below 100 are developmental courses. All courses maY
in degree programs at Olympic College. All courses may be
high school completion credit.
FEES: All classes are $6.00 per credit unless otherwise stated.
credits on the schedule and multiply by $6.00 Fees are the
credit or non-credit classes. Credit fees do not include
supplies, equipment, and textbooks. Non-resident fees are
credit. Fees are due at registration.
REFUND OF FEE POLICY: If through no fault of the schools, a
wishes a refund, 80% refund will be granted between day o'
and October 9. After that date, no refund will be grant
wishing a refund MUST make the request.
FURTHER INFORMATION: Please call Shelton 426-3502,
Olympic College 377-3891, Ext. 268.
COURSE TITLE CR. DAY ROOM TIME
ADULT ED. 33-- HAND KNITTING
2 W A-13 7:00-9:30 Kennl
This course is designed to teach the basic rules of hand knit fashions. Also
for the difficult figure with special emphasis on finishing techniques.
ADULT ED. 50 -- BASIC COMMUNICATIONS SKILLS
5 T-Th A-17 7:00-9:00 RhOdeS
This program is designed to hell adults learn the fundamentals of arithmetiC,
grammar and reading. Almost every job and the chance for advancernen
upon the completion of elementary school through the eighth grade, in, -t
offers exactly that opportunity and it is free! /
ADULT ED. 40 -- DRIVER TRAINING oo Chamberldn
' "
A course for adults who want to learn how to drive a ca a
take the Washington State driver's test. A non-graded course. Fee $,5i)-
ART 90-- GENERAL ART
2 M A-I 3 7:00-9:00 art such as
A special course for adults who wish to explore several areas in the field of
design, water colors, oil painting, etc.
BUS. EC. 111 -- TYPING FOR SPEED AND ACCURACY
3 T-Th A-1 l 7:00-9:00 Sims tlleif
to imP rove
This course is designed for students who have had typing and wish /
typing ability.
BUS. EC. 115-- BEGINNING SHORTHAND
3 M-W A-I t 7:00-9:00 Godwin
Shorthand for the student who has not had high school shorthand. /
BUS. EC. 124-- OFFICE MACHINES
4 T-Th A-, 7:00-9=00
Control and operation of adding machines, calculators, and bookkeepin
ENGLISH g0 -- REMEDIAL ENGLISH Mitrovl¢ll
5 T-Th A-tO 7.00-9:30 EngliSh 101 of
Beginning writing and grammar review for students unprepared for /
needing high school credit.
ENGLISH 1 00 -- WRITING IMPROVEMENT itrevi¢ll
3 T-Th A- i 0 7: 00-9: 30 M -e¢luatelY
Simple organization of sentences, paragraphs, and themes for students inau
prepared for English 101.
HISTORY 104-- HISTORY OF THE U.S. TO 1865
5 M-W A-1,5 7:00-9:30 Grin:,;;on ;n d _..11
A survey of the political, social and economic forces involved in the founa-r:./1
oeveiopment of the United States from the colonial period through th
LAW ENF. 1 03 -- THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE
3 W A-I 7 7:00-10:00 AIIWin e, msti¢
A course designed to give a working knowledge of the rocesses of cripi.n,% " ano
P • nJz==*"
and procedures of the local, state and Federal courts, their orga
jurisdiction, y
LAW ENF. 122 --CORRECTIONS AND THE COMMUNITY
3 Th Lib. 6:00-9:00 Frsnk betW,
A study of the problems of the released prisoner; inter-relationshPSof P =r0''
institutional programs and his subsequent experiences; place and functlo - /
pre-remase centers, and half-way houses.
LAW ENF. 124- INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINOLOGY °
3 T Lib. 6:00"9:00 It in(:!,(li0 )
This course is designed to provide an introduction to field of criminologY a boY
a history of theories of criminal behavior, development of criminology ="
knowledge.
MATH 91 a -- ELEMENTARY ALGEBRA
7 0-9"30 RiVer ,., tP e
.5 M-W A-16 :0 • _ ,,, reV'U"
This class is designed for the person who has had no algebra or neeoS "
first semester of high school algebra•
PE 1 15 or 215-- CONDITIONING
I M Gym 7:00-9:00
Activities to promote general all around physical fitness.
PSYCH 100a --SPEED READING AND RETENTION .rtur .
2 M-W A-9 7:00-8:30 t #flfl ';
T6di lrpe nf CUgSej n°tnh j nnC;ua: ien g f thee stud:n:;; taob iet Y stall, Ca°nPl; e:;,- t
PSYC H 2 21 -- SOCI AL PSYCHOLOGY
5 M-W A-IO 7:00-9:30
A study of the effects of society and social groups on the individUZ
individual on groups. Emphasis is put on attitudes, their d
influencing, andways of measuring.
SPANISH 101 or 102-- ELEMENTARY SPANISH
.5 T-Th A-9 7 : 00-9 : 30 Mod¢lJ, I¢IIM
pronunciation and speaking a€l
The •fundamentals requisite for good
knowledge of Spanish.
T & I 22 --SMALL ENGINE REPAIR
2 W Mike's Shop
Repair and maintenance of small gasoline engines.
7:00-9:3
HOODSPORT"
ADULT ED. 50 -- BASIC COMMUNICATION SKILLS
S T-Th Jr. Hi 7:00-9:00 .,.
This program is designed to help adults learn the fundamentals of artth,,e '
grammar and reading. Almost every job and the chance for advance'Tls
upon the completion of elementary school through the eighth graoe.
offers exactly that opportunity and it is free!