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30,196
SI-IELTON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAL-- Published tn r%'rhr sfmasfown, U.N.A.", Shelton, Washington
PAGE lg
IS NO BETTER THAN
WATER SUPPLY BEHIND IT
AID IS NO BETTER THAN
THAT SUSTAINS IT
of hearing, we invite your in-
: of our qualifications to fit your
and to sustain service for as long
Beltone. One service you may
--- FREE and without obligation --
analysis of your hearing.
to see our representative
Mr. Harry Bodenschatz
and Valley Appliance Center
, & 12 noon Fri., Oct. I, 1965
to explain to you ,all the ways
We can serve your hearing needs with
HEARING AIDS
Daniel E. Bruner
4th Ave. Olympia
357-3521
ii
By Death In
By FRANCES CATTO
LILLIWAUP -- Indian Beach,
south of Liliwaup, lost another at
its old-time residents in the death
of Eugene N. Sandahl at the age
of 84. Mr. Sandahl, who passed
away in a Seattle nmsing home
Wednesday of last week following
a stroke, had a cottage on the
beach just north of the old Peter-
son home. It was almost two years
ago that because of failing health
he went to live in the Danish
Nursing Home at Des Moines.
Born in Brainerd, Minn., Mr.
Sandahl came to Seattle in 1885
and retired to his beach place in
1953. He was a nurseryman, a for-
mer president of the Northwest
Florist Association, and continued
up to the time of his death to
supervise the floral exhibit build-
ing at the Washington SLate Fair.
He was a member of the Masonic
Lodge•
He is survived by a son, Carter
N. Sandahl, Port Orchard; three
grandchildren and three great-
grandchildren. Another son, Roby,
died about two years ago. His de-
ceased wife, Hulda, was a sister
of the late S. Josephine Peterson.
Selwices for Mr. Sandahl were held
Tuesday in Seattle.
It was not long after the tram
of the century that the Sandahls
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4th & Raih'oad
426-8665
established a summer camp on In-
dian Beach, enjoyed by the family
and friends from Seattle. They
used tents and an abandoned cedar
built Indian house for shelter, slept
on beds of fragrant evergreen
boughs ¢ before the days of ain• mat-
tresses and sleeping bags}. When
they ran out of supplies, they went
by boat to the then-thriving little
community of DeWatto across the
Canal.
MRS. WALTER S. ALLISON
lnd Mrs. O. K. LinScott were hos-
tesses at the successful pinochle
party given Friday night in the
Lilliwaup community hall by mem-
bers of the Lilliwaup Community
Club. Seven tables were in play
and refreshments were served at
the close of the evening.
First prize winners were Mrs.
Stella Morken and Roland Will-
son; second, Mrs. Roland Willson
and Frank S. McIntyre; pinochle,
Mr.'.and Mrs. Roland Willson, and
the door prize went to T. Byron
Miles.
Sunday the Lilliwaup commun-
ity hall was the scene of a happy
family reunion honoring the 90m
birthday of Ernest Leimback, fa-
ther of W. A. (Jack) Leimback.
Nearly 50 were present, including
members of three families who
were neighboring friends when all
lived in Montana•. The guest of ho-
nor makes his home in Auburn. "
Through a typographical error
in last week's Lilliwaup column,
the 90th birthday of Mrs. Frank
Robinson was called her 19th.
Laughing, Mrs. Robinson com-
mented that that was the reason
she accomplished so much the next !
day--she was "only 19". Her fam-
ily is having an open house for her
Sunday afternoon in the Patlatch
clubhouse of the Hood Canal Wo-
man's Club.
tIENRY MOURIK, who had
been ill and in a Seattle hospital,
is reported to be improving and
has been at the Seattle home of
Mrs. Mourik's daughter during
convalescence.
Mrs. Walter S. Allison was hos-
tess at her Triton Head home Wed-
nesday to members of her bridge-
luncheon group. Mrs. H. J. Range
and Mrs. Carl Hanson were hostes-
ses the previous week when the
bridge players met at the Hanson
mine at Ayock Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Taylor of
Seattle, ~on-in-law and daughter
of Mrs. Kate Davis, left for home
Sunday evening, after spending
several days visiting Mrs. Davis in
Lilliwaup. Mrs. Davis also had the
pleasure of a week's visit just
before school started from her
granddaughter, Judy, daugllter of
the HoberL Hedricks of Shelton.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Robinson
and two daughters of Bellewm
spent the weekend at the Lilli-
waup home of Clarence's father,
Allie W. Robinson. Father and son
did a little grouse hunting togeth-
er.
Going to visit Mrs. ~ance's
brother, Glen Kee, in the Veter-
ans' Hospital, Mr. and Mrs. Nell
Vance went to Vancouver last Fri-
day. Her son, John Burg of Ta-
coma, drove to Lilliwaup and took
the Burgs to Vancouver. Kee,
whose home is in Medford, Ore,
has been a patient for more than
weeks in the hospital, where
PORTABLE TV's
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4th & Raill~oad
426.8665
LONG CUQUMBER---Thls 22-Inch cucumber, grown in the Den-
ver Bearden family garden in the Skokomish Valley, is held by a
neighbor, Peggy Bechtold, along side a 24.inch ruler.
KOOKY TWINS---Metropolitan papers have made much out of
less than the freak of nature grown by Shelton Chamber of Com-
merce President Max Schmidt. The Siamese-twin cucumbers pic-
tured above, and the oddly joined carrots, grew in the Schmidt
garden on Arcadia Road. Quite fitting and proper for a Cham-
ber of Commerce chief, wouldn't you say!
Cub Scout Meetings
Scheduled Sepl, 28
, fo,Sh~lte°ni~65Ci:b5 S c~:U:,p$,(:g,r'i ~t~,
J meetings in each of the city grade
schools on September 28.
All boys in the 8 through 11...
yem' age bracket interested in the
Cub Scout program are invited
to attend.
Arrangen~ents for the meeting's
are being made by S. W. Vander-
: ~regen, vice president of the Tmn-
water Boy Scout Comlcil for the
Mason district, and Hugh Graver,
member of the executive board
and district commissioner.
L. S. Christofero, member of the
Boy Scants of Americ't list, tonal
st,o£f from Porthmd, and Tmuw:~-
ter Council executive Palfl Jenkins
were in Shellon Tuesday confer-
ring with local Scout officials on
the Cub program• Final plans for
the initial meetings in Lhe grade
schols will be lnade at a steer-
ing commitLee session next Tues-
day.
Psalms To Provide
S©ienfis2 Text
"Teach me, O Lord, tile way of
thy statutes; . . . Lurn away mine
eyes from beholding vanity."
These verses from Psahn 119
form the Golden Text for a Bible
Lesson on "Unreality" to be read
in Christian Science churches this
Sunday. Passages from the Bible
and the Christian Science textbook
will bring out some of the differ-
ent ways in which men discover
the supremacy and power of spir-
itual reality.
Included will be these lines from
"Science and Healti~ with Key to
the Scriptures" by Mary Baker
Eddy: "Evil is not supreme; good
is not helpless; nor are the so-
called laws of matter primar:¢,
and the law of Spirit secondary
• . . The Psalmist saith: 'The Lord
on high is mightier than the noise
of many waters, yea, than tlm
mighty waves of the sea'" (pp.
207, 505).
Indiana has more than 150 cov-
ered bridges.
FROM
THE LAST 3 FEET
Millions of dollars a year are
spent by pharmaceutical maml-
facturers to move merchandise
from their plants to wholesale
warehouses and to retail out-
lets.
With :111 ti~e problems of tnan-
ufacture and transport of these
important products, it remains
for the proiessional retail phar-
rnaeist to move the product the
most importa.nt but shortest dis-
tahoe. This is the last three feet
of counter space between the
pharmacist and his valued cus-
tomer. In this transaction, the
pharmacist serves in the best
tradition of his profession for
he serves tile public with his
knowledge, reliabi!ity and high
ethical standards to help the
sick.
He serves the manufacturer
in his adept trundling' of their
product and he serw~s himself
and the mamzfacturcr in return-
ing a profit on the transaction
thaL enables both to render
even more valuable services at
some future date.
The value of the last three
feel of counter which results in
the sale and what transpires
there cannot be underestimated.
It is the very reason for our be-
ing.
I]eil's Pharmal
Emergency Ph. 426-2165
Fifth & Franklin St.--- 426-3327
Open Daily 9:30 to 7:30
Saturdays --- 9:30 - 6:00
Plant bulbs now for Spring Flowers
No. 1 TULIPS --- 80¢ doz.
No. 1 HYACINTHS---3/49¢ 6/99¢
Daffodils-- Narcissus
Crocus -- Snowdrops
For forcing indoors we have
Paperwhite Narcissus 5 for 39c
Chinese Sacred Lilies 5for 45c
219 So. 1st
426-2412
he underwent si~rgcry and is re-
covering nicely.
Enjoying a visit from Ernie's
nephew he hadn't seen for about
20 years, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Campbell of Shelton were enter-
taining Robert Bergault of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., over the week-
end. They were out to spend an
evening with the Starr Whites,
brother-in-law and sister of Mrs.
Campbel! and all went out to din-
ner together in Shelton.
WITH INVITATIONS to two
weddings on the same evening,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ing solved it
by each attending one of them.
Saturday evening Bill went to a
wedding in Long Branch, while
Lois Ing, accompanied by son Tom
and son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and 1Y[rs. Fred Butts, attended a
wedding reception in Bremerton.
The groom at the Bremerton cere-
mony was an old family friend.
BHtTHDAYS have a way of
covering more than just one day
of celebration and such was the
case following the recent recep-
tion for the 98th birthday of Mrs.
Allie Anl in Eldon. Unable to at-
tend the big party, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Hall of Tumwater called
the following week to greet Mrs.
Ahl and wish her many happy re-
turns of the day.
With them was a niece and her
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Newcomb of British Columbia. The
Newcombs have been coming ,to
Washington many years to visit
Mrs. Ahl, as well as their aunt.
At one time, many years ago,
Mrs. Hall was a neighbor of Mrs.
Ahl and her niece lived with the
Halls and went to school one win-
ter at the Eldon school.
Also coming to greet Mrs. Ahl
that day were Miss Chloe Sut-
ton and Mrs. G~:aham and her
granddaughter of Port Orchard•
Miss Sutton was a teacher in the
Eldon school in 1910. At the time
of Mrs. Ahl's receptiou, she was
unable Lo attend because she was
busy writing a brief historical
sketch of the beginnings of Port
Orchard for the Bremerton Sun,
honoring the 75th anniversary of
the incmporaiion of Port Orchard.
While here Mrs. Strong was
happily introduced to seafood
dishes made from native Lilliwaup
clams and oysters, including clam
chowder, steamed clams aud oy-
sters Rockefeller.
Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Lawson
who have been occupying tile Sce-
va apartment-cottage, are moving
this week into the larger cottage,
the former home of the late Mrs.
Zoe Sceva. Son and daughter-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. Jack E. Sceva
of Salem, Ore., were here over
t~,~z weekend, making arrange-
ments for the move, They will re-
tain the apartment for their own
UtNt.
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