October 2, 1975 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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October 2, 1975 |
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Mason Lake
The first weekend in
September-found the home of
Andy and Dodi Horde full of
excitement with family members
gathering. Their daughter Pat and
her husband Lt. Col. Holdener,
with daughter Janis, came from
Huntington Beach, Calif.
Daughter Andriene and husband
Bob, with daughter Andriene and
son Bob, came from Mercer
Island. Son Mike Horde with wife
Mary and daughters Koya and
Dodi arrived from Vernon, B.C.
Grandsons Richard and Eric
Hovde with wife Charlotte and
their children Jodi and Peter, the
two great-grandchildren in the
Horde family, were also present.
This family gathering was to
celebrate Andy's 79th birthday.
Even if this news item is late,
Andy, we wish you much
happiness and good health in the
years to come.
Mary Hanson, Dodi's sister
from Edmonds, has visited the
Hovdes many times and has made
many friends around Mason Lake.
We are all sorry to hear that she
fell and broke her hip and is now
recovering after surgery at Stevens
Memorial Hospital in Edmonds.
Mark your calendars for
October. The Ladies Auxiliary
will hold its rummage sale at the
PUD building in Shelton on Oct.
3. MBC membership meeting will
be Oct. 10 at 8 p.m. Family fun
night at the MBC Club will be
Oct. 11 at 8 p.m. The Ladies
Auxiliary will hold its meetings
on Oct. 8 and 22 at 8 p.m.
Recently Gordon and Ruth
Hathaway, accompanied by
relatives, went deep sea fishing
and Gordon still is proudly
relating the story about the big
fish he caught. He had quite a
struggle landing his 3 5-lb. salmon.
Seems you do better at sea than
on our lake, Gordon. Some
fishermen around here are lucky
in landing fish and some are not
so lucky.
Violet Corlis of Seattle and
Nellie Schoonover of Ella were
guests at the auxiliary meeting
last week. Violet and her husband
may soon be making their
permanent home in our area.
We have in our midst a family
which recently moved out here
permanently. We wish to welcome
A| and l-lelten Cook, formerly of
Tie0ma. Mr. Cook retired from
his job as a supervisor on the
waterfront. Hellen sews as one of
her hobbies and they both love to
fish and hunt and are thinking
about getting serious about rock
hunting. They also are card buffs
and enjoy playing all card games.
Trees, shrubs, hedges,
trimmed, removed.
871-1366 Port Orchard
The Cooks have a son and
daughter and seven grandchildren.
We wish you many happy years in
your retirement in our area.
The Cooks have had company
from Germany, Arthur Nylander,
who made the trip over here to be
present when his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Grant Nylander, celebrated
their golden anniversary recently
in Tacoma• Their daughter,
Yeddie Bisbee of Florida, was also
present.
On Thursday the Cooks
entertained all these people,
including Hellen's sister, of
Shelton, for the day.
Lawrence and Nellie
Schoonover of Ella are
houseguests at the home of Curt
and Verna Heath this week. They
have enjoyed many side trips with
the Heaths and are making good
use of the dry, yet not so hot, fall
days.
You are all invited to the PUD
building on Oct. 3 for the Ladies
Auxiliary's rummage sale. You
might find just what you've been
looking for at a low price. Hours
are 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. This project
raises money for support of our
fire department and aid car.
AI and Lela Rodewald are
home again after a short trip to
Michigan. They visited Lela's
nephew and family, Robert and
Marion McGaffin of Lake Tahoe,
Mich. Lela had a chance to attend
a bridal shower for her niece who
will be married later this month.
Other friends and relatives in
Michigan were also visited. They
did a lot of sightseeing and
walked around the beaches of
Lake Michigan, the largest of the
Great Lakes. It was interesting
to hear that the very fine white
sand dunes provide the sand used
for manufacturing of glass. They
also visited Lela's nephew, Bruce
McGaffin, in Wyoming, Mich. and
relatives in Grand Rapids and
Hadsonville.
They enjoyed weather very
much like ours, but on their flight
home they did experience some
rough weather, the tail end of
tornadoes and high winds that the
East had been suffering. With all
this unsettled weather their flight
was late in arriving at Sea-Tac.
The first great news the
Rodewalds received when they
returned was of the~rival of
their third great-grandchild.
ANOTHER BREAK-IN
In addition to the three
break-ins at Tahuya River Tracts
reported in last week's paper,
another was reported Sept. 22.
Two blankets, a trailer jack and a
radio were reported missing
following a break-in of the trailer
of Vernon Parks. One thousand
board feet of 2x4's were reported
stolen flora Tahuya River Road
property Sept. 22.
I HEFTS REPORTED
By CASEY CAUGHIE
After securing a fast 20 points
early in the first half the Bulldogs
held on while Eatonville ran 14
points in the fourth, finishing
with North Mason out in front for
a victorious Homecoming game,
20-14, last Friday night.
North Mason seemed to play
itself out at the end of the first
half as the charging Cruisers
turned on in the second holding
the Dogs deep in their own
territory. 'We've got to find out
what happened to us in the 2rid,"
said North Mason Coach Phil
Pugh, pondering the slow finish.
"It's just plain inconsistency."
Two hundred seven total
yards were gained by the
unbeaten Bulldogs, mainly in the
first half, topping Eatonville's 132
yards.
Fumbles plagued the Dogs in
the second as they turned over six
out of seven, causing unnecessary
damage. This barred the home
team from passing its own
45-yard line all through the last
half.
"I saw both Orting and
Charles Wright (both unbeaten in
league play) and I feel we're in
their class," said Phil Pugh. "C.W.
has some good players and they
have been running up big scores,
but we can play them. But if we
play like we did in the second
half, we'll get blown out of
there."
It was North Mason's three
lightning touchdowns that made
their night successful.
~-- A recovered fumble punt by
senior Ron Burrows set the stage
for Dave Hope's 19-yard run for
the goal. Bob Miller made the
touchdown possible by throwing
a crucial block in the play.
Moments later Burrows
received a 25-yard pass from
quarterback Dave Hope for the
second 6-pointer.
The third blitz came after
Burrows intercepted an Eatonville
pass. The Hope-Burrows" pass
combination struck once more for
25 yards. This time Burrows
pulled the ball down in the end
zone while being covered by four
Eatonville defenders.
Things ran downhill from there
as North Mason fumbled the bail at
the beginning of the second
half. "Our defense played inside
the 30 the entire second half,"
commented Pugh.
The mighty North Mason
undefeated record will now be
put to the test as they come up
against Charles Wright in Tacoma
tomorrow night.
FOOTBALL STATS.
Score by Quarters
North Mason 7 13 0 0-20
Eatonville 0 0 0 14-14
Scoring
NM -- Hope 19-yard run (Miller
kick).
• NM -- Burrows 25-yard pass from
e"
-- Burrows 25-yard pass from
Hope (Miller kick).
Eatonville "-- Osburn 1-yard run.
Eatonville -- Heard, 33-yd. pass
from MoGehee (Heard run).
Beer and liquor were reported
~ st°len fr°m residences in Sn°°ze Ttmm Stati~ie$ N145~1 E
/- Junction on North Shore Sept. First downs 6
Yards rushing 33
! CALL ME" I car was reported broken Passesatt-com-int 9 27-11-;
" / " " /f i into on North Shore and small Passing yards 207 132
o Glass replacement * A D ,d.J
• Custom storm sash
& screens
Hood Canal Glass
275-2623
Call any time
DRIVER
AND CAR NEEDED
North Mason School
District is looking for
someone with car to
transport students from
Trail's End Lake to South
Shore school bus stop.
Five round trips daily
(approximately 25 miles a
day). Approximately $175
me. 275-2881.
III II
i i
Haul Rock Bulldoze
Fill Dirt
B&D
275-2080
J,- Work.
• if.l/dozing
Episcopal Church Welcomes You
ST. HUGH'S -- ALLYN -- Sunday 9:15 a.m.
ST. NICHOLAS -- TAHUYA -- Sunday 1 ! :l 5 a.m.
Come As You Are
Belfair Chamber of Commerce
Meeting October 8th, 7 p.m.
Belfair Cafe Everyone Welcome
• e•e•e•e•e•e•e•e•e•e•e•e•e•e•e•ellolen•lon• neB~=l
Bay Oxbow Custom Cabinets
• JOHN C. DALBERG. •
i The Finest In Oak Cabinets me
275-3109 ALLYN, WA. em
!•nOn OllOllO•Oll•nonol• me-PomOmelO-Ile•omouomellene
Sn/der & Sons
No job too small or too large
, Slabs, sidewalks, foundations
curb & gutter
¢R5-3325
I
Belfair
CR5-2195
CR5-2113
=
MAJOR & SMALL
Make appointments
after 4:30 p.m. for
Service Calls
Lowell Gunselman
275-675]
Page 4 - Huckleberry Herald section of Shelton-Mason County Journal - October 2, 1975
Fumble-fumble lost 7-6 4-3
Yards penalized 33 99
Individual Stats, NM
Rushing TCB NYG Avg
Dave Hope 9 -6 -.7
Jim Enochs 4 23 5.8
Craig Bishop 7 30 4.3
Bob Miller 11 58 5.3
Bruce Medelros 2 5 2.5
Scott Davis4 37 9.3
Ran Burrows 1 8 8.0
Passing PA PC PI Yds
Hope 9 4 1 52
Receiving Rec Yds Avg
Burrows 3 55 18.3
Miller 1 -3 -3.0
Individual Stats, Eatonville
Rushing TCB NYG Avg
Brian Feldtman 4 -11 -2.8
Roger Ellif 3 -7 -2.3
Russ Heard 4 0 0.0
Brad McGehee 5 6 1.1
Joe Osburn 10 37 3.7
Tom Guske2 8 4.0
Passing PA PC PI Yds
Feldtman 1 1 0 2
Guske 1 0 l 0
McGehee 25 10 1 130
Receiving Rec Yds Avg
Heard 4 28 7.0
Swede Ostrom 2 51 25.5
D. Cunningham 5 53 10.6
VOLLEYBALL
In the girls' first encouter of
season play on their home floor
they fell short to Orting, 15-11,
15-8, Sept. 23.
"Our first games are always
hard on us," said North Mason
Coach Jan Johnson, "We've got to
work on it."
Eatonville then played NM
two days later and proved to be a
tough contender. North Mason
took the first game of three by a
four-point margin, 15-11, and
then Eatonville rallied for a 15-5
comeback. The last game was
fought hard with NM turning up
again on the short side, dropping
the set by a dose 15-13, making
the Cruisers victorious.
"We have some hard work
ahead of us, but we can bring
ourselves back to a better
position."
The girls have eight games left
for their season and have just
begun to gather their abilities.
VETERANS' COMMITTEE
The Veterans Day Committee
of Kitsap County will meet at 10
a.m. Sept. 27 to further plans for
Veterans Day on Nov. 11. All
veterans organizations and
auxiliaries are requested to
attend. H. O. 'Whitey" Domstad
was appointed as chairman at the
last meeting. The meeting will be
at A.L 149, 4255 Cambrian,
Bremerton.
DANGEROUS DRIVING
Two complaints of a tan
vehicle running a school bus stop
sign and red lights on Highway 3
south of Belfair were received in
the sheriff's office Sept. 23.
By DOROTHY TOBEY and ANN WESTBERG
The fall season is with us now
and we're all enjoying a beautiful
Indian summer. Everyone seems
to be busy canning and preserving
garden produce to be enjoyed
during the cold and dreary days
of winter. Even the chipmunks
and bluejays are busy gathering
nuts to put into their storehouses.
Eugene Hill has arrived home
after three months working on a
tugboat at Valdez, Alaska. He
flew to Valdez via Anchorage as
this tug is stationed there. He was
not very impressed with Valdez so
was glad to get home.
Ralph Welch has just returned
'home after a 2,000-mile trip to
points south. He traveled over
White Pass and Satus Pass and
along the Columbia River,
following the Old Oregon Trail,
then on to Pendleton and south
into Idaho crossing the Snake
River and then on to Silver City
as far as La Mar. His travels then
brought him into Nevada where
he visited historical Virginia and
Carson Cities. From there he went
to Hillsboro, Calif., to spend a
few days with a niece and family
before returning home. He also
made a trip through the Gold
Rush country in the eastern part
of California.
Weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Edwin Grigg were longtime
friends Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sherry of Seattle.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nowotny
from Long, dew spent a few days
visiting with the Orville Kagers
last week.
Our Grapeview Volunteer Fire
Department was called to a brush
fire which got out of control on
the Thomas Road last Monday
afternoon. The site was being
cleaned up by loggers. A
helicopter was used to pick up
buckets of water afrom nearby
Orchard Beach area to pour onto
the fire. Someone timed the
helicopter and it took just three
minutes to get the water, dump it
and be back for more.
Don't forget to call us if you
have any interesting news to share
with your neighbors and the
community. Call one of us at
426-3866, 275-2120 or 426-4940.
We would appreciate your
cooperation ! Thanks.
North Mason
High ,chool News
By SHEILA COBEN
Well, congratulations to
Queen Cindy McElhaney and
King Craig Bishop. They were
crowned at the Homecoming
coronation on Sept. 22. For
Homecoming Week this year the
Girls Club made each day a
certain type of day to promote
school participation. Monday was
"sucker day" and Tuesday was
"grub day." Wednesday was "hat
day" and the annual "box lunch
social." This is where the girls
made lunches that were auctioned
off for a money-making project.
$137 was made, thanks to all the
girls involved. Thursday was
"professional day" (dressing up
like a professional doctor, etc.)
and Friday was "blue and white
day." Also on Friday a
community dinner and the
Homecoming game against
EatonviUe followed. To wrap up
the week, the Homecoming dane•
was held on Saturday at the
elementary school gym. Many
thanks to the students who
participated this year. You made
it well worth having.
On Sept. 30 the North Mason
chapter of the National Honor
Society had its first workday of
the year. The workday was made
up of students who hired
themselves out for at least $1.50
an hour and worked for whoever
sponsored them. The money
made by the Honor Society
students goes to help pay for field
trips the members will attend.
Honor Society officers for the
year are president, Dabble Burke;
vice president, Cathi Marsh;
secretary, Sheila Cob•n; treasurer,
Casey Caughie.
JACKET GONE
A black leather jacket was
reported lost or stolen from a
pickup in the Tee Lake area Sept.
23.
Bear Creek
Mini Mart.
OLD BELFAIR HIWAY 275-6222
Hours: 10 a.m. to 9 D.m. 7 days a week.
We may be small, but we have it all -- from
feed to yarn and groceries too!
BONDED LICENSED INSURED
--= JESFIELD CONSTRUCTION
= CONTRACTING • BUILDING
i CONCRETE WORK
r= P.O. Box 11
! Belfair, Wash. 275-6684 Jim Jesfield
Serving families
in this
community
since 1909
5303 Kitsap Way
Lester M. Lewis, Sr.
FUNERAL CHAPEL
Call us collect from anywhere ES 7-3836
Lester M. Lewis, Jr
.... mill
John & Pat's Tackle Shop OF ALL YN
Member of Northwest steelheaders
Cortand Certified Fishing
Pro Shop
Retail & Wholesale
EffecUve Oct. Ist, 1975, our shOp
hours will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Wed. thru Sunday, until
1st of April, 1976.
Arts & Crafts
From Cathy
10 a.m, to 6 p.m.
Tuesday thru Saturday
Closed Monday
t
Canal life.., south
By MAC McKINNEY
ManY summer residents are to entertain on
taking advantage of our "Indian John
summer" weather by coming out and the writer
for the weekends. The South Clu b Z one
Shore area had many guests. Wednesday
There were also waterskiers. Fox Res
Caution again to the skiers - writer, Mac, from
please keep away from the boat to a cabinet
and crab buoys - otherwise morning at the
someone will have a bad fall and near Tacoma.
get injured. Dean Briggs
D r. a n d Mrs. D. R. in the woods
McClanahan pulled into their dog. The
summer home last Friday with a after having a
new boat, "A Beauty." Mr. and
Jack Bishop has been busy party for a
painting Mrs. H. L. Jensen's Saturday, a
house, deck party.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Myers have Randall
beea entertaining company from sitting on the
out of town. Lois Beckman and home
Jeanne Reed also have had guests, went down
What a beautiful time of the year What a sight!
Timbedand classification plan
At a special meeting on Sept.
24 the Timberland Regional
Library board of trustees heard an
extensive report on the nearly
completed classification plan of
Timberland positions. Gary
Hulbert of Donworth, Taylor and
Company, Seattle, explained how
the plan has progressed.
Timberland employees had
completed questionnaires and
been interviewed before the
position descriptions were
composed. Most employees have
now been assigned a job
description, title and tentative
salary range.
made for
levels of
education within
Halbert
salaries re
Timberland's
salary schedule
convenient
The
is expected to
project early
will then present~
the classificatio~
2 board meeting.
Bayview Mobile
The Largest Selection of Mobile
in the Northwest
Quality Rex-Bilt Single and Double
on Display. Consult with Jim Yoest, Burti
AI Logan.
Open daily except Sunday 9
GORST 377-4461
Fall Improvement
SALE DATES -- OCTOBER 2 - OCTOBER 5, THURS., FRI.. SAT. & SUN"
Hours." 7,30 a.m, - 5 p.m. Daily & Sat. -- OPEN SUNDAY8 a.m. to 4 P.#'
AT BAYVIEW LUMBER SALES & BREMERTON LUMBER
IPIClAI IqllZl$
DURING OUR ROUND-UP SALE
* GRAND PRIZE-Hand Carved Entry Door
* BATH ROOM VANITY
Rea, V.,.o $59"
* K-LUX 2-DOOR TUB
ENCLOSURE
Retail VeI#I s39"
* DISSTON CORDLESS ELEC.
GRASS SHEARS s14.
Ret il Value
RETAIL
VALUE
=129
Chok~ of Styles
Come in
and fill out
a ticket
Drawing Sun. 4:00
ALUMINUM COMBINATION
Reg. $7.90
SALE
CARVED
6 to choose
from, reg.
$129.99.
• Protect your
front door.
• Avoid Drafts
• Self-Storing
• Easy to
Install
REG. 549.45
SAVE s 10.00
• INSULATION
• DOORS
• ROOFING
ATCO
Bayview Lumber Sales & Bremerton
HEAD OF THE BAY
117
373-7111