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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
October 14, 1999     Shelton Mason County Journal
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October 14, 1999
 
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TWO BIG DAYS at the county fairgrounds saw back-to- back Gig Harbor Kennel Club competition. At top, golden retrievers go through their paces; at left, a Saint Bernard waits for its round In the ring while other contenders, at right, get primped and groomed Page 22 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, October 14, 1999 for showing. Catering to the culinary needs of the crowds, meanwhile, are (from left) Erin Higley, Raina Shelton, Katharyn Shriner, Michelle Grenz, Molly Brennan and Renee Grenz, members of the local Frog and Sole 4-H Club. Dogs, handlers here for kennel club show It wasn't OysterFest, but 6,000 people showed up at the Mason County Fairgrounds last weekend all the same. More than 1,300 dogs showed up at back-to-back Gig Harbor Kennel Club competitions Satur- day and Sunday for all-breed dog shows and obedience trials. They brought along their owners, han- dlers, groomers and vendors that hyped everything from doggie vi- tamins to neon-colored toys and, of course, numerous variations on the standby pooper scooper. Motels were filled and restau- rants were packed by the on- slaught of visitors, and the show offered entertainment to a host of onlookers who watched the pam- pered canines go through their paces for the judges. THREE LOCAL judges, Mary Roudebush of Belfair and Richard and Nancy Byrd of Shelton, were among the experts who assessed the competitors. Local canines abounded. Among the competitors in hound competition were R. and L. Wag- goner's whippet, Castelcrest's In Your Dreams from Shelton and Anne and Wade Duffy's whippets Windstar's Bellatrix and Wind- star's Betelgeuse from Shelton. Competing in the working-dog category were Matlock residents Viktoria Edwards' and Wendy Sorrell's akita Suarashii's GC tieart's Desire, Sheltonian Terri Houston's boxer Candy Kisses Holiday Treat and another boxer, Candy Kisses Chevy Blazer, co- owned by Houston, K. McIntosh and J. Martin; Belfair residents Pete and Marti Hillius's bull mas- tiff Knightsarmor's Princess Decker; and Shelton resident Tammy McLaughlin's doberman pinscher, Deerun's Eclipse. More working dogs entered were Rottweilers belonging to Sheltonian Margaret Thompson, Armenihaus Armani V. Serenade; Shelton resident Karen Cannard, Serenades A Dubld'lite V. Queans, Grapeview residents Laura and Frank Rosinski, Ros- lar's Final Frontier, and Laura Rosinski's and Sheryl Hedrick's Roslar's Felicity V. Pioneer. IN TERRIER competition, lo- cal entries included Dwayne Thompson and Pam Madsen's Australian terrier pup Teann's Hobbit Pippin Took of Shelton, Marge Ford's Australian terriers Teann's A-D's Blue Audie M., Teann's Little Red Dragon, Valley View Freeway Dash and Ch Ah'Z's Buster Browne, all of Shel- ton; and Sandra Dunlap's smooth fox terrier Rebel Hill's Secret Code of Shelton. Toy breeds entered included Shelton entrants Toni Strasburg- er's, Paula Carroll's and Shannon McClure's Italian greyhoud Blackacre Res Ipsa.:sir Jacket: Tahu-a residen . ,,, Dressen's Japanese chi_.  Demand Chaos and Oh MY. _,, dandDaream. Belfair resident' Simon's and Mary " er's papillon pup yIarin'] elin Man, SheltonianS # L,. .00c00ard wi,00te. mac's Charming• Polly, at¢' Charming Dolly and  Charming Panda; Shelon jSt san Holdeman's porner.am. Tai-Mai Shui-San; Shel°sTs ana Solano's Porner_Sner  Just One Look and a y0 Je# co-owned by SolanO aB- Cook. tered included a by Shelton residentS and Vivian Hulick Islander John Stra schipperke Sheltonian entered two canines ing dog tervuren pup tion and her Shammoons Hot tered in herding ten Thompson's Thompson's gi Carrera's Adrian haus. Obedience-trial eluded Wanda mon's papillon Titian Kalinda. UFO expert will speak at Timberland libraries The tabloid headline might read "UFO man LIVE! at the Library." But we'll content ourselves with something a little less sensa- tional and just say an investiga- tor of flying objects will explain the unexplained in two local ap- pearances. The first is just across the county line in McCleary to- night and in Belfair on November 4. He will make several presenta- tions elsewhere in the live-county Timberland Library System. James E. Clarkson will discuss the size of the cosmic neighbor- hood and who our neighbors might be in his presentation. He'll define UFOs, or unidentified fly- ing objects, and what the evi- dence is for nonhuman intel- ligence on Earth and, perhaps, elsewhere. ENIGMATIC questions and the exploration of possible an- swers will be part of Clarkson's slide show, lecture and discussion for teens and adults at seven Timberland libraries in the next several weeks. He'll be at the Timberland li- brary at 100 Third Street in Mc- Cleary at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Oc- tober 14, and will show up at the North Mason Timberland Library at 7 p.m. Thursday, November 4. The Belfair library is at 23081 NE State Route 3, Belfair. Clarkson is a Mutual UFO Network investigator and state section director. He specializes in Northwest UFOs and other mys- terious cases in the area. His pre- sentation will cover investigation and classification of reported en- counters and topics such as gov- ernment secrecy, cattle mutila- tion, crop circles and alien abduc- tion. "Clarkson focuses on a basic understanding of the complexity of the subject while keeping a log- ical perspective," says Leanne In- gle, a Timberland spokesperson. "He applies the investigative techniques he used in over 20 years as a law-enforcement officer to his Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) activities." He will en- courage audience ern their own research an extensive them do just that, MUFON, SHE international tion of volunteers research the phen as unidentified was founded in son has been a mere 1987. "Its volunteers range of profe from scientists and doctors and priests as people who have an getting to the bc mystery," Clarkson saYS' " Not valid with any other discount. Coupon must be acceptance of proposal. One coupon per customer. Valid Aug. "Careful Job Site Clean-Up" 427-8611 2136 Olympic Highway North, Shel' FOR $22 1 FOR $122 2 loads ANY SIZE crushed rock delivered into Shelton. We deliver ye Special savings to outlying areas Kennedy Call for details! 426-4743 Creek Located on Highway 101 Quarry between Shelton and Olympia TWO BIG DAYS at the county fairgrounds saw back-to- back Gig Harbor Kennel Club competition. At top, golden retrievers go through their paces; at left, a Saint Bernard waits for its round In the ring while other contenders, at right, get primped and groomed Page 22 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, October 14, 1999 for showing. Catering to the culinary needs of the crowds, meanwhile, are (from left) Erin Higley, Raina Shelton, Katharyn Shriner, Michelle Grenz, Molly Brennan and Renee Grenz, members of the local Frog and Sole 4-H Club. Dogs, handlers here for kennel club show It wasn't OysterFest, but 6,000 people showed up at the Mason County Fairgrounds last weekend all the same. More than 1,300 dogs showed up at back-to-back Gig Harbor Kennel Club competitions Satur- day and Sunday for all-breed dog shows and obedience trials. They brought along their owners, han- dlers, groomers and vendors that hyped everything from doggie vi- tamins to neon-colored toys and, of course, numerous variations on the standby pooper scooper. Motels were filled and restau- rants were packed by the on- slaught of visitors, and the show offered entertainment to a host of onlookers who watched the pam- pered canines go through their paces for the judges. THREE LOCAL judges, Mary Roudebush of Belfair and Richard and Nancy Byrd of Shelton, were among the experts who assessed the competitors. Local canines abounded. Among the competitors in hound competition were R. and L. Wag- goner's whippet, Castelcrest's In Your Dreams from Shelton and Anne and Wade Duffy's whippets Windstar's Bellatrix and Wind- star's Betelgeuse from Shelton. Competing in the working-dog category were Matlock residents Viktoria Edwards' and Wendy Sorrell's akita Suarashii's GC tieart's Desire, Sheltonian Terri Houston's boxer Candy Kisses Holiday Treat and another boxer, Candy Kisses Chevy Blazer, co- owned by Houston, K. McIntosh and J. Martin; Belfair residents Pete and Marti Hillius's bull mas- tiff Knightsarmor's Princess Decker; and Shelton resident Tammy McLaughlin's doberman pinscher, Deerun's Eclipse. More working dogs entered were Rottweilers belonging to Sheltonian Margaret Thompson, Armenihaus Armani V. Serenade; Shelton resident Karen Cannard, Serenades A Dubld'lite V. Queans, Grapeview residents Laura and Frank Rosinski, Ros- lar's Final Frontier, and Laura Rosinski's and Sheryl Hedrick's Roslar's Felicity V. Pioneer. IN TERRIER competition, lo- cal entries included Dwayne Thompson and Pam Madsen's Australian terrier pup Teann's Hobbit Pippin Took of Shelton, Marge Ford's Australian terriers Teann's A-D's Blue Audie M., Teann's Little Red Dragon, Valley View Freeway Dash and Ch Ah'Z's Buster Browne, all of Shel- ton; and Sandra Dunlap's smooth fox terrier Rebel Hill's Secret Code of Shelton. Toy breeds entered included Shelton entrants Toni Strasburg- er's, Paula Carroll's and Shannon McClure's Italian greyhoud Blackacre Res Ipsa.:sir Jacket: Tahu-a residen . ,,, Dressen's Japanese chi_.  Demand Chaos and Oh MY. _,, dandDaream. Belfair resident' Simon's and Mary " er's papillon pup yIarin'] elin Man, SheltonianS # L,. .00c00ard wi,00te. mac's Charming• Polly, at¢' Charming Dolly and  Charming Panda; Shelon jSt san Holdeman's porner.am. Tai-Mai Shui-San; Shel°sTs ana Solano's Porner_Sner  Just One Look and a y0 Je# co-owned by SolanO aB- Cook. tered included a by Shelton residentS and Vivian Hulick Islander John Stra schipperke Sheltonian entered two canines ing dog tervuren pup tion and her Shammoons Hot tered in herding ten Thompson's Thompson's gi Carrera's Adrian haus. Obedience-trial eluded Wanda mon's papillon Titian Kalinda. UFO expert will speak at Timberland libraries The tabloid headline might read "UFO man LIVE! at the Library." But we'll content ourselves with something a little less sensa- tional and just say an investiga- tor of flying objects will explain the unexplained in two local ap- pearances. The first is just across the county line in McCleary to- night and in Belfair on November 4. He will make several presenta- tions elsewhere in the live-county Timberland Library System. James E. Clarkson will discuss the size of the cosmic neighbor- hood and who our neighbors might be in his presentation. He'll define UFOs, or unidentified fly- ing objects, and what the evi- dence is for nonhuman intel- ligence on Earth and, perhaps, elsewhere. ENIGMATIC questions and the exploration of possible an- swers will be part of Clarkson's slide show, lecture and discussion for teens and adults at seven Timberland libraries in the next several weeks. He'll be at the Timberland li- brary at 100 Third Street in Mc- Cleary at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Oc- tober 14, and will show up at the North Mason Timberland Library at 7 p.m. Thursday, November 4. The Belfair library is at 23081 NE State Route 3, Belfair. Clarkson is a Mutual UFO Network investigator and state section director. He specializes in Northwest UFOs and other mys- terious cases in the area. His pre- sentation will cover investigation and classification of reported en- counters and topics such as gov- ernment secrecy, cattle mutila- tion, crop circles and alien abduc- tion. "Clarkson focuses on a basic understanding of the complexity of the subject while keeping a log- ical perspective," says Leanne In- gle, a Timberland spokesperson. "He applies the investigative techniques he used in over 20 years as a law-enforcement officer to his Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) activities." He will en- courage audience ern their own research an extensive them do just that, MUFON, SHE international tion of volunteers research the phen as unidentified was founded in son has been a mere 1987. "Its volunteers range of profe from scientists and doctors and priests as people who have an getting to the bc mystery," Clarkson saYS' " Not valid with any other discount. Coupon must be acceptance of proposal. One coupon per customer. Valid Aug. "Careful Job Site Clean-Up" 427-8611 2136 Olympic Highway North, Shel' FOR $22 1 FOR $122 2 loads ANY SIZE crushed rock delivered into Shelton. We deliver ye Special savings to outlying areas Kennedy Call for details! 426-4743 Creek Located on Highway 101 Quarry between Shelton and Olympia