September 24, 1970 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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September 24, 1970 |
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Open House
To Be Held
For Parrs
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Parr will be
guests of honor at a reception
celebrating their 50th wedding
anniversary on October 3 from 2
p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Hidden
Haven Clubhouse across from the
airport.
Hosts and hostesses will be
their five children and their
respective husbands and wives,
Mrs. Coral Norsby of Bremerton,
Donald Parr of Seattle, Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Parr, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lanman and Mr. and Mrs.
Kelly Nutt.
Married in Towner, N. D. on
October 13, 1920, the Parrs came
to Shelton in February, 1946
where Ray was employed as a
carpenter until his retirement nine
years ago. Both are active
members of the American Legion
and the Forty and Eight.
They have 22 grandchildren
and five great-grandchildren.
Sashayers
Will Dance
On Saturday
and Mrs. Ray Parr on their wedding day.
The regular meeting of the
Salty Sashayers Square Dance
Club will be held at 8 p.m.
Saturday at the fair grounds, and
will be followed by a dance at
8:30 p.m.
Caller will be Ed Matthews,
Bremerton, who is also
conducting classes in square
dancing on Wednesday evenings at
the fair grounds.
Club members Les and Jessie
Elliott, Bennie Berndson, Alice
Thomas, and Bert and Geneva
Deyette attended "Piersen's
Previews of Coming Rounds" at
Hagen's Barn near Renton from
10 a.m. until 5 p.m. on Sunday.
The group dined in Brad's
Restaurant in Kent.
anized Church of
Latter Day Saints
Was decorated with
and white blooms
and green ribbons
of Virginia Ann
of Mr. and Mrs.
of Hoodsport,
Olsen, son of
Kermit Olsen of
The double ring
performed at 8
29 by Lawrence
made by Earlene Waiters. Serving
were Mrs. Maxine Lindsey, Mrs.
Arlene Nesbitt, Mary Nesbitt, and
Mrs. Joanne Grubb.
Mrs. Phyllis Snead took
charge of the guest book while
Misses Luann Byrd and Angle
Bobo and Mrs. Steve Van Tuyl,
cousin of the bride, attended the
gift table. Scrolls were passed by
Jeff Matye, foster brother of the
bride, and by Russell Nesbitt of
Olympia.
The bride is a graduate of
Shelton High School and of Dietz
Business College. The groom was
graduated from Sitka High School
and is a member of the Sitka
Police Department.
After a trip through Glacier
National Park and Canada, the
couple is at home in Sitka, where
a reception was held on
September 12. As a surprise to
her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Matye
of Hoodspdrt attended.
attired in a long
appliqued with
her two-tiered
Was held by a
She carried a
Pink and white
Was escorted to
r before 100
a-law, Sandy M.
of honor was
length emerald
~vei t h matching
r flowers were
and lighters of
tile Ann Nold and
~Ster sisters of the
Were dressed
nile green crepe
lPieces.
pink crepe
~ons was Lisa
and niece of
Curtis, a former
the bride, was
hompson of
rest man, with
remerton, and
Independence,
Gladys Glover
st, and the
eve" and "At
SUng by Miss
~n crepe with
wearing a
was the
The groom's
length blue
ge of white
• ceremony a
in the church.
ents in a color
White and green
ly Mrs. Minnie
es Stapleton,
white cake
roses was
More Talent
Know,
You To
& Sew!
) " 9:30 a.m. I
" 7:30 P.m.
i
Knits I
26-6627
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Kendall Olsen
Group Instruction & Private Lessons Available
Starting Monday October 5, 1970
Union Hall - 2nd & Grove Sts.
BEGINNER - INTERMEDIATE - ADVANCED
New This Year - Special Pre-School Class
4 yrs. :ld &up
USTA Qualified Instructor
For Information Call 426-6373 or 426-8615
Soroptimists
Announce
Commiffees
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Parr
Woman's Club Begins Year
The Hood Canal Federated
Woman's Club held its first
meeting of the new club year
from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the
clubhouse in Potlatch last
Thursday•
Mrs. Claude Dugger,
president, gave the welconiing and
selected as her club theme for the
Year "May the mountains lift
your eyes and the hills demand
your climbing". Mrs. Bert
Sjohohn showed slides taken in
Sweden and displayed articles
brought from a recent visit there.
The Club is sponsoring Boy
Scout Troup l 11, whose
Scoutmaster is John Darn. Also
sponsored are the Hood Canal Hi
Riggers 4-H club and the Hood
Canal Pre-school, which meets
twice weekly at the clubhouse.
Mrs. AI Celestine, a club member,
is in charge of the Pre-school
program.
Chairmaning the
Old-Fashioned Sale held at the
clubhouse last Saturday was Mrs.
Charles Meadowcroft. Funds
raised will be used to develop an
Interpretive Center on the club's
property•
Hostesses for the Luncheon
held at the club meeting were
Mrs. A1 Celestine, Mrs. Theodore
Richert, Mrs. Carl Gleason, and
Mrs. Donald Culik.
I
I .........
By Jan Danford
Although I don't
Condemn the fad,
Nor label it
As "'good" or "bad",
l, persomtlly,
Do not care
To see on men
Long flowing hair.
I think the Best Man
Ever born
Would look much better
Shaved and shorn.
It has boen said that we, as a
community, are too concerned
with hair. The point is well taken.
However, it should be
remembered that the obsession
with the subject is not limited to
the Shelton area nor to present
times.
Humans throughout history
have been abnormally interested
in hair - the color, style and
texture of it; the length of it; the
lack of it.
Commerce is pathetically
dependent on these fanciful
filaments of protein. There are on
the market products to straighten
the stuff and chemicals to make it
curl; lacquers to spray it stiff, and
conditioners to restore its
softness; potions to promote its
growth, and lotions to facilitate
its removal; formulas to add
color, to change color, to remove
color.
Those with blond hair dye it
dark; those with dark hair bleach
it blonde• Those who are graying
use color restoratives and those
who aren't "frost" their hair.
Innumerable establishments are
devoted solely to the styling of
this controversial material, and
wigs are big business.
There are undoubtedly things
which are more important than
hair, but try telling this to a lady
whose new permanent looks like a
nylon-bristled magnetic duster;
tell it to the over-bleached and
the under-curled, the
skimpy-tressed and the
bushy-headed; tell it to the girl
with the fresh-washed head and
the last-minute date who has just
dropped her wig in the bathtub.
After telling it to all these
people, try telling it to a
bald-headed man.
When the whole world seems
against you
And you simply cannot win,
Let ring your laughter merrily
And face life with a grin.
Just keep that smile upon your face
And people will commence
To look at you as though perhaps
You didn't have good sense.
PIONEER
School
enu
Week of Sept. 28-Oct. 2
MONDAY-Weiners &
scalloped potatoes, apple crisp
wltn whipped topping,
buttered corn, bread and
butter and milk.
TUESDAY--Baked beans with
bacon, hot buttered corn
bread, spinach, carrot sticks,
peaches and milk.
WEDNESDAY--Beef roast,
mashed potatoes, gravy, Brussels
sprouts, fruit cocktail and
milk.
T H URSDAY--Toasted cheese
Sandwiches, peas & carrots,
orange juice, pumpkin pie with
cream and milk.
F R IDAY--Baked hash,
orange-raisin muffins, green
beans carrot and celery sticks,
ice cream and milk.
Supplemen t yottr child's
diet with vitamins from
,.,--, ,._...-1
i ii i
Evergreen Square
At the June meeting of the
Soroptimist Club of Shelton,
President-elect, Bernadine Duffey,
appointed the following
committees: Attendance, Edith
Savage: Finance, Ruth Boysen,
Evelyn Fagergren; Education,
Virginia Grout; History, Betty
Spivey;Public Relations, Mae
Grant, Chairman, Jane Brown;
Service Objectives, Lucile Wojahn,
Chairman, Neoma Frisken,
Frances Frint, Jerry Chapman;
Sunshine, Jeanette Hansen; Ways
and Means, Jane Brown,
Chairman, Iva Cook, Ruth
Boysen, Betty Spivey, Neva
VanValkenberg.
There were no business
meetings during the summer but
weekly work parties were held
during the month of August and
September in preparation for
hostessing the Seventeenth
Annual District No. 1 meeting to
be held in Alderbrook Inn
October 10 and 11.
At the September business
meeting delegates to the
conference were elected,
Bernadine Duffey with alternate,
Mac Grant; and second delegate
Jane Brown with alternate Neoma
Frisken.
Dorothea King, Director of
District No. 1, met in Shelton
with officers to finalize plans for
the conference and to look over
the conference sight.
Regional Governor Peggy
Cause and several members of the
Bremerton Club attended a work
party to check on their role in the
conference.
PTA Slates
n House
The Evergreen PTA will start
the year with an Open House in
which parents will meet teachers
and visit classrooms. The event
will begin at 7:30 p.m. today in
the school auditorium.
Mrs. Dennison, school nurse,
will give information on the
Rubella Clinic to be conducted in
the school on October 5. The flag
salute will be led by Boy Scout
Troop No. 60.
Officers for 1970 and 1971
are Mrs. Gerald Salisbury,
president; Mrs. John Monger, first
vice-president; Mrs. James Eaton,
second vice-president; and Mrs.
Peter Janda, secretary.
Grange To Meet
The Fair Harbor Grange will
hold a potluck dinner and regular
meeting at 6 p.m. next Thursday
in the Grapeview Fire Hall.
Mrs. Louise M. Ewart will
show a film of her summer trip to
Spain and North Africa, and a
mini-Fair will be held in which
each member will display an
article of his own creating.
A vote will be held on an
amendment to by-laws.
our warm, ,'e~;'::;
waterproof, ,,
"do-it-themselves boot
No wonder the InsulAir Tempest Boot is so popular all over America! For it
gives little feet the lightest, warmest protection of all-and is so easy to slip on
and fasten, that even your toddler can do it alone. Fits snugly over snowsuits and
pants. And InsulAir's seamless, air-cell construction actually locks out cold and
locks in body warmth! Put your youngsters in the InsulAir Boot today.
"The Fam//y
Shoe Store"
SHELLI THOMASON took a first place trophy for basic
strut and a third place ribbon for military strut in the
Evergreen Valley Baton Twirling contest held in Seattle on
September 13.
Robinettes Take Trophies
The Mason County
Robinettes Parade Corps took
first place in the Jr. Parade Corps
division of the USTA sanctioned
Evergreen Valley Baton Twirling
Contest held at Chinook Junior
tligh School in Seattle on
September 1 3.
Members attending were
Shelli Thomason, Stacy Martin,
Terrie Moran, Teresa Fernandez,
Gayle James, Laurie Byrd, Vicki
White, Traci Hanson, Donna
tlerrick, Kim Brewer, Kristi
Manke and Rita Warren.
Winning their first contests
entered in individual competition
were Shelli Thomason, who won
the first place trophy for basic
strut and the third place ribbon
for military strut in the 12 to 14
year class; Vicki White, taking
second place medals for both
basic and military strut, in the
nine yearold or younger group;
Teresa Fernandez, second place in
basic strut among the ten and 11
year aids; Laurie Byrd, third and
fourth place ribbons for basic and
military strut witilin the same age
group; Terrie Moran, fourth place
in military strut in the 12 to 14
year class; and (,ayle James, fifth
place for basic strut among the
ten and I 1 year aids.
The Robinettes will hold a
party at 4 p.m. on Monday in the
Bordeaux school multi-purpose
roonr at which new instructor
Kathy Chodora will be introduced
and registrations taken for new
memberships. All interested
persons are welcome, and advance
notice of attendance will be
appreciated as refreshments will
be provided and a twirling show
will be presented.
q'he Robinetles have a
w.indow display in Miller's
Departmefit Store.
~ :~#;~ :~: %:/~ i: i¸¸ ~
GREAT YARNS
BY
SElll
AND OTHER FINE
i
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1
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Also
RUGS
STITcHERY
NEEDLE-POINT
CREWEL EMBROIDERY
KNITTING, ACCESSORIES
i
OPEN lO TO 5 MON.* SAT. t
FRI. TILL 9 l
Thursday, September 24, 1970- Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 15
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