October 15, 1970 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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October 15, 1970 |
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M. Knight
LILLIE
school football
it again. They won
game this season over
42 to 12. Tuesday
Pioneer at Pioneer.
of this writing, the
known. They are
nlake this their third
win a trophy.
the MMK Cross
• Team attended a
Elma Golf Course.
more than fifty
Participating. On the
0LSON
WAUP Bob
a '70 LTD, was
his Ayock Beach
4 a.m. Wednesday.
rd boys, Ron and
adjoins the
up when the young
starting the car
Parked out behind the
the car roared out of
road and onto
¢, the boys rushed into
and awakened their
Phoned the state
reported the theft.
Were reportedly set
Culprits managed to
and got as far as
they were picked
~ttle police. The
informed of the
and made the trip
Wednesday evening
They reported no
car, which had
Y two fourteen year
escapees
said he had learned
~-Ver again would he
Mocked, even in his
Robinson home on
Was the scene last
of a combined
;on, when Mrs.
and the 25th
y of her
son-in-law were
and friends
Bob and Jean
~Vue were married
tlka'acoma Oct. I 1,
graduates of the
Washington. They
of three children,
Alice.
Bellevue to help
double occasion
~of the Burmans,
erbert Johnson and
Doudna and
Sunday the group
Mrs. Burman's
Mr. and
and their family
were used in
table centerpiece
for the buffet
foliage against
Wall harmonized
lors predominating
Robinson
Shields of Indian
entertained at
Thursday in her
t. Guests included
Cotter, Dave
L~ion Way
943-0460
FirShop
1/4" Pop
;1.69
tELING
~r~d ends
up ea.
CORES
Cedar
1.19
IG TILE
'Only
White
Ft.
ool
II Game
Mary M. Knight team were Brian
Clevenger, Randy Reeve, Richard
Lillie, Larry Chappel, Ray
Rothrock and Tim Trimble.
Oct. 14, the seniors hosted a
swim and dance party at Pool
Nuotare.
The first and second grades
had two parties recently. One was
a party for Machelle Swanson.
Mrs. Welsh made gingerbread men
for refreshments. They also gave a
farewell party for Kent Davis,
who left Oct. 9 to join his mother
in New Zealand. They are hoping
Collins and Allie Robinson of
Lilliwaup; Mrs. Bessie Hale of
tloodsport and Mrs. Archie
Calahan of Panorama City.
Orthopedic
Members of the Blanche
Radtke Orthopedic Guild met
Wednesday noon at the beach
home of Mrs. Allie Robinson.
The annual election of
officers of the Lilliwaup
Community Club will be held at
the meeting Oct. 16.
The evening will start off with
a pot luck dinner at 6 p.m.
followed by the program and
election with pinochle to follow.
(Held From Last Week)
LILLIWAUP At the
Lilliwaup Community Club Oct.
2nd meeting hostesses were
Maxine Visser and Frances
Bartolac. There were five tables of
pinochle, and first prize winners
were Frances Moake and Ernesto
he will write to them and tell
them about his new home.
Mr. Shafer presented their
room a plastic farm from the
Audio-Visual Department in
Olympia to help in their unit on
agriculture.
The third and fourth grades
are learning what goes on in the
world by studying news events.
They are also trying to improve
their penmanship.
There are some colorful new
vests appearing in the halls as the
seventh and eighth girls' crafts
class complete their crochet
project. Some have learned to
count their stitches before they
finish a piece, and inevitably some
learned it later.
Oct. 13 was a hard luck day
for those who were absent, for
that was the day for having the
school pictures made. Packets of
the pictures will be available for
purchase in time to use them as
Christmas gifts.
Ah h h... Today is the day.
That six-weeks stock-taking time
- report cards. And it will be
three long days before the
teachers willbe available for
talking with everyone about
them. Oct. 16the students will
not be in school. The teachers will
be going to professional meetings
to refresh their knowledge, learn
new ideas and procedures and
compare their work with teachers
from all over the state.
The Juniors are going to give a
Hallowe'en party Oct. 30. The
Sophomores are on a
money-making kick. They had a
car-wash on Friday and Sunday,
Oct 9 and 11. Oct. 20 they are
going to show a Walt Disney
movie during the noon hour in
the library. The freshmen are
having a bake sale Oct. 21 and 22.
Aaro. Roland Wiltson and Edna
Itaines took second prizes. The Cancer
Group
300 pinochle award went to
Ernest ttaincs and Stella Morken
and Evelyn Nicholsen won the
door prize.
The next meeting which will
be held on Oct. 16 will begin with
Pot luck supper at 6:30 p.m. The
business meeting with election of
officers will begin at 7 p.m., to be
followed by pinochle at 8 p.m.
The new supply of Kukbuks
are now available. In addition to
many delectible recipes, the
Kukbuk also contains interesting
facts a'nd handy hints of use to
all. ......
FRUSTRATION FISH
Hood Canal has been literally
jumping with fish this past week
or two. Obviously working their
way up the (7anal, and waiting for
the rains that will send them up
the rivers to their ultimate
destiny, they can be seen - and
heard - as the big hook-nose
silvers leap and roll.
Anglers all along the Canal
have been trying their luck, with
not too much of it, as it happens.
Lures, plugs, coho flies,
everything that can be bought to
tempt the fish have been tried.
Land office business for the
sporting goods stores. But not
much luck for the fishermen.
With the fish all but jumping into
the boats, it has been a most
frustrating experience for most.
Has Meeting
]'he 1970 Fall Conference of
the Washington Division of the
American Cancer Society was
held on Sunday, September 27, at
the Double 'Free Inn at
Southcenter, Seattle.
Standing Committee
Chairmen and Branch Chairmen
of all County Units in Western
Washington were invited to this
Conference and was attended by
approximately 85 members of the
Society.
The theme of this meeting
was, "Hope is in the Air." Many
lives are being saved. But in the
U. S., more than i00,000 men
and women die annually who,
with present knowledge and
techniques, mLght have been saved
by earlier detection and diagnosis
and proper treatment.
Those in attendance from
Mason County were: Mrs. Bobble
Goodwin, vice- president in
charge of field operations for the
county, Mrs. V. T. Connolly,
Memorial Chairman; Mrs. E. H.
Faubert, Service Chairman; Mrs.
Ewtlyn Fagergren, who works
with the medical staff: Mrs. James
Thurman, Branch Chairman for
Hoodsport: and Mrs. Carmelita
Shackleford, Branch Chairman for
Belfair.
_ | _ _ _
/
Virginia Clocksin
Feb. 17, 1967 -- On a motion by Representative
Slade Gorton "that the house resolve itself into a
Committee of the Whole to consider
appropriations WITHOUT RECORDED VOTES".*
VOTE FOR
PUBLIC INTEREST!
Vote For
Democrat for
. STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Information is derived from the "United Labor Lobby", a
publication of the Washington State Labor Council.
(Pd. Pol. Adv. by Mason County
Labor Council, Darrell Sparks, Chairman)
Shelton High School
Hans Brinker and the Silver
Skates is the Children's Theatre's
first production of the season and
went on the road on Monday. The
play will be presented here on the
night of Oct. 15 at 7:30 p.m. in
the Reed auditorium, admission is
25 cents. On Oct. 13 it will be
presented to students at Bordeaux
at 12:45 p.m.; Oct. 14 the play
will be presented to students at
Hood Canal school at 12:55 p.m.:
Oct. 15 it will be presented to
students at Mountain View at
12:45 p.m. and then to the public
in the evening. Oct. 19 the play
will travel to Renton.
The play was written and
directed by Guy Hodge and Vicki
Buckley who both have been in
drama for several years. The story
was adapted from the childrens'
story which is about a young boy
taking on the burdens of
adulthood when his father is
injured in an accident.
The cast for the play includes:
Dan Nye and Len Morris as Hans
Brinker: Debby Shawver and
Wendy Erhart as Dame Brinker;
Julee Archer and Kathie Stickley
Gretel Brinker, and Dennis Graves
as the doctor.
Other members of the cast
include Maxine Schmidt, Jim
Erwin, Dee Williamson, Mike
Bevis, Joe McClanahan, Sandy
Baskin, Kim Nicklaus, Jenny
Jenson, Jim Caulfield, Terry
Clark, Rahn Redman, Randy
Wiltman, and Scott
Miltenberger. The technical
crew includes Jim Erwin, Randy
Wiltman, and Jeff Bean. The
class's instructor is Dean Tarrach.
Girls' Club
"Today is the first day of the
rest of your life" was the theme
of Girls' Club Installation held
Oct. 2 at 11 a.m. in the Reed
Auditorium.
Installed into their office were
Kathy Kelley, president who was
installed by Mrs. Barbara Martin,
Girls' Club advisor; Debbie
Pierson, vice-president; Joyce
Turner, secretary-treasurer.
Representatives installed included
Kathy Nold and Debbie Cox,
senior class representatives, Pam
Tabor and Nancy Dayton, junior
class representatives, and Lora
Maynard and Valerie Strickland,
sophomore class representatives.
The committees and their
chariman were also introduced,
they are Lounge, Dena Stracke,
chairman, and Terry Ramsfield;
Elections, Jenny LaMarsh and
Debbie Allen, chairman, and
Timmy Tembruell and Gall
Hasbrouck; Bulletin Board, Gall
Hasbrouck ; Programs, Kathy
Nold, Debi Gesche and Sandy
Baskin.
Taking care of the Girls' Club
this year are Marl Ninnis and
Connie Fredson. Acting as
musician this year will be Peggy
Stevens.
Kathie Stickley provided the
entertainment with a song she had
written and House of the Rising
Sun.
No School
There will be no school
Friday, as it is a Professional Day
for teachers to attend special
workshops or classes to gain ideas
which would be useful to them in
the classroom.
PSAT
Next Tuesday Juniors will be
taking the Preliminary Scholastic
Aptitude Test at 9 a.m. in the
Multi-Purpose room. The price is
$1.50 which must be paid by Oct.
19.
Senior Ball
Plans are underway for the
senior ball which will be held on
Nov. 20. At present students are
submitting themes and are signing
up for committees.
Exchange Students
This year Shelton has two
exchange students from Japan.
Hiroko Yokoyma is the AFS
Exchange student and Fumiko
Nakoyasu who is the Rotary
Exchange student. Hiroko is from
Tokyo and Miko is from Osaka.
Hiroko is staying with the Cliff
Starkey family and Miko is living
with the Jim Pauley family.
Causes
ilow come POLLUTION suddenly
rates the headlines? What happened;
True it has been going on ever since
there were steel and aluminum mills,
glass furnaces and fertilizer plants.
Kaj Rohan of Denmark travelled over
Europe and gave the answer in his
world famous book on FLUORIDE
POISONING pronouncing it NO. 1 air
pollutant on account of the lung
damage it caused.
Why was America silent? Big
business was ruling the land. Andrew Mellon, then Secretary of
State, with all the health bureaus in his department owned the
mills that were belching out tons of the poison, strewing the land
and water with their deadly plant wastes. Damage suits ran into
the millions. A clever attorney was hired, the Mellon Institute
was set up as a searcn party to solve the desperate situation.
Conveniently a rumor came to hand of a town in Texas where
minerals were saving the teeth. In the analysis there was a trace of
Fluoride - CALCIUM FLUORIDE. The word rang a beII. The
story of the Town Without a Tooth Ache was heralded over the
nation preparing the way to sell their tons of waste - not the
natural where only a trace was to be found among hundreds
times its amount of true health giving minerals to balance any
harm the trace would do - but SODIUM FLUORIDE THE RAW
WASTE CHEMICAL. WHO WOULD KNOW THE
DIFFERENCE?
It became a magic word - a new federal bureau was set up
called THE FEDERAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION (now
known as the Department of HEALTH EDUCATION AND
WELFARE) with the Mellon clever attorney at its head with
thousands of Health Dept. salesmen and thousands, yes millions
their disposal. Still no research to find the difference. The Public
Health Service held out. They were a little leery of tarnishing
their good name. Three cities were fluoridated to show them, but
no go.
The doctors had their new wonder drugs, so the dentists were
first sold on it. The Wisconsin director took the lead, canvassing
the other states for a sell-out, to convince the P.H.S. to get on the
band wagon. The Law Dept. of the George Washington University
found the story in the Wisconsin Archives 7/68. At the 1950
national meeting their chief was 'Button Holed' along with his
dental assistant committed themselves to its sale without a single
research. The same year he became head of the World Health
Organization. Pages could be written by world over researchers
but censors kept them silent.
Pollution was one of the Public Health responsibilities. They
were so busy selling fluoride that they did not take time to learn
that there was no sewage system that could neutralize the poison
and it went from city to city gathering potency. Wild Life 2,
3/70 gives the picture, "POLLUTION WAS IN THE 7TH
SUB-BASEMENT - WITHIN A BUREAU - WITHIN A
SERVICE - WITHIN A DEPT. OF THE P.H.S." sealed and
bottled up.
1959 pulled the cork. St. Joseph complained of the Missouri
River to deaf ears. Kansas took a hand. The HOAX WAS
EXPOSED. Pollution was taken out of their hands. The
Environmental Bureau was set up with N.Y. engineer Charles
Johnson at its head. He was quickly joined by "'MR. CLEAN" of
Illinois of the Dept. of the Interior which had been champing at
the bit to get at it.
Now Ralph Nader the New Consumer Advocate has taken up
the cudgel proclaiming wherever he goes that the P.H.S. should
take a new look at the responsibility that they assumed. To
re-evaluate their stand, proceed with their long overdue research
and answer the pile of questions that they have received (as well
as confer with their many duped endorsees who are making life
miserable for those who ask for medical freedom).
In the meantime THALIDOMIDE AND FLUORIDATION
will head the list to go down in history as the most far-reaching of
all their mistakes.
Ethel B. Dinning
Shellon Safe Water Crusade.
During the year she will also live
with the Jim McComb family, the
Vince Himlie family and the
William Duemling family.
Hiroko's classes include
Civics, Senior English, Typing,
Speech, and Math Analysis.
Miko's classes include: Typing
I, Short Stories and Grammar, U.
S. History and Math.
No w is the time to
Wind~.w~ Ooors.'Porches & Breezeway~
PROTECTION
:lear, Flexible
o~, 36c:
Also in 4 ft. widths i,
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PRINTS
KODACOLOR DEVELOPING AND PRINTS
12- EXP. ROLL
20- EXP. ROLL
With Coupon
lcW:,=:,.,.]
With Coupon
Without
Coupon 89c ]
Offer Expires Oct. 31
Redeemable Cash Value I. 20 of One Cent
With Coupon
Without l
Coupon $1.57J
Shelton's Discount Store Where You Always Save More!
l Cota 426-2818
(
Thursday, October 15, 1970 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 15