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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
October 28, 1965     Shelton Mason County Journal
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October 28, 1965
 
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PAGE 4 SI-I'ELT01 --MAP0N COUN Y JOURNAL-- Publi he:l in "Ch e rnaSCown, U.S.A.", Shelton, Washington Thursday, 0 BUILDINfiS UP ADDITION TO LAB--Outside work is nearing completion on this addition to the Rayonier Inc. Olympic Research Division Lab- oratory here and inside work is ,progresing. Howard Fuller, Shel- ,'~n;,l~: cbntr;actdr fo~" the 'new lab addition which is being con- structed so a second story can be added at a later date if more space is required. ADDITION TO BUILDING--- This metal addition to the Rex Floor Covering building'on Mt. View will house added space for the floor covering business and somme office space when complet- ed. The new addition is on the end of the present Rex building. MT. OLIVE CHURCH--This is the new Mr. 0 I i v e Lutheran Church at Pioneer Way and Wy- andotte St. which is under con- struction. Contractor for 'the project is Howard Peck Custom Builder, Seattle. Construction was started last summer on the project which will cost an esti- mated $70,000. •• (/!: i; /i/ ::¸¸;¸¸:¸¸ :;• ¸:•¸¸¸: ..... ii:i;¸¸ :i:! Ti NEW CHURCH HERE--This is N. and C Street. The structure the first s ectlo n of the new Which is being built at present Northside Baptist Church Which iS a residence-type structure is going up at Olympic Highway which will house a temporary sanct~,ary and classroom for Sunday School until the full sanctuary can be erected. ,PILES AND STAKES--Right now, piling and engineering stakes mark the site which will be occupied by the new $5 mil- lion Simpson Timber Company sawmill on which construction has started. A contract for the building to house the mill has been awarded Westwood Struc- tures, Portland. Constructi,on of ~he building is expected to be completed early next year after which machinery will be install- ed. The mill is expected to start production on one of the two sec- tions it will contain early in 1967. County School Superintendent if the issue was not passed, in J. W. Goodpaster this week termed the 14-mill proposal submitted by the county school districts to the voters in the election Tuesday as one the school districts must win to stay even financially. Goodpastcr said he had calcu- lated the amount of money the county schoel districts would be short in the 1966-67 school budget ! Foggy conditions on the Shel- ton-Olympia freeway Tuesday morning were blamed for a six- vehicle accident which left one driver with a minor injury and several vehicles damaged. The accident cccured about 8:10 a.m. Tuesday about two miles south of Shelton on Highway 101. All of the vehicles were south- bound at the time Of the accident. The series of crashes started when Frank J. Nihart, 63, Shelton, stopped his vehicle on the freeway. A vehicle driven by Westley J. Newby, 44, Rochester, slowed to pass the Nihart vehicle and was !struck from the real" by a vehicle i ~riven by Carl W. Utter, 47, Olym- pia. The utter vehicle was in turn i struck in the rear by a vehicle driven by Raymond O. Shipley, 28, Olympia. A vehicle driven by Rich- ard Nelson Jr., 18, Shelton, swerv- ed to avoid the Shipley vehicle, but, sideswiped the Shipley vehicle. A car driven by Brian A. Johnson, 21, Shelton, struck both the Nel- son and Shipley vehicles. NIHART SUFFERRD a cut on his forehead and was treated and released from a Shelton hospital, the only injury from the crash. Damage to the Nihart vehicle was $10, while the Utter, Shipley and Nelson vehicles were total los,~es and the Johnson vehicle suffered $450 damage. Damage to the Newby vehicle was unknown. Christmas Seals Ready ToMail Christmas Seals ate all ready to mail to Mason County resi- dents. .' The 8 & 40. Salon m~t Sunday at the .Memorial Building to pre- pare the seals for mailing and accomplished the folding, stuffing and segregating .of the seal enve- lopes. TIlE WORK was under the di- rection of Mamie Earl, who has assisted with the project' for a number of years. A meeting of the committee in charge of the fund drive for the local Tuberculosis Association has been called for Nov. 8 by Arnold l,~ox, Christmas ~al campaign chairman. Purpose of the meeting is to set up an information bureau to inform the public of the import- ance of the Christmas Seal drive. Dr. William Schumacher, Pres- ident of the TB A,~sociation, sat(l he appreciated the help of the 8 and 40 in preparing the seals for i mailing. No| Guilty Plea Given To Assault Robert Allen Boynton, 19, Shel- ton, pleaded not guil't:y to a charge of second degree assault at his arraignment in Mason County Su- perior Court Friday. Boynton is charged with pulling a switch blade knife during a fight with another youth at a teenage dance Oct. 2. He will be tried during the February jury term in superior court here. Boynton is represented by GlennI Correa as his court-appointed at- torney. SAVINGS BOND SALES U.S. Savings Bonds sales in Ma- son County totaled $4,542 last month, Volunteer County Savings Bonds Chairman L. A. Carlson reports. Sales throughout the state amounted to $4,632,893 for :the month, an increase of 3.17 percent over sales for September a year ago, bringing total sales for the first dine months of the year to $44,359,868. rotmd figures, the ,~T, ounts are Ta- huya, $5,000; Southside, '$2,000; Grapeview, $6,000; Harstine, $2,- 000; Shelton, $45,000; Mary M. Knight, $3,300; Kam~lche, $2,000; Pioneer, $6,000; North Mason, $12,- 000 and Hood Canal, $15,000. THESE AMOUNTS, he said, are the difference in what~the district is getting for i966 in tax revenue at the present 20 pm~ent of full valuation as assesse~l valuation and what they could .'expect when the valuations were raised to 25 percent of full value if ~he assess- ment rate of 14 mills is approved. The loss would come in, he said, in that the state,/ when figuring apportionment money, will base local support 'on :the basis of 14 mills collected on a 25 percent of full value assessment. If a district is not collecting at that rate, it will just be short that amount of money from the minimum amount per pupil used in figuring appor- tionme'n'~ money. Goodpaster said ~h'at ff the 14- ,mill 'levy :proposal :is not approved, he believes that ~here would be ~nly o~rte,~, tW.o '~ltst~s t.n the county which wot~ld be able to op- erate without a special levy. He also commented that unlike a special levy or bond issue'pro- posal, the t4-mill proposal on the ballot Tuesday needs only a ma- jority of those voting to pass. The Annual Service Awards Din- ner for employees of the Olympic Research Division of Rayoniler In- corporated is being held at Alder- brook Inn tonight. Dr. Edwin L. Lovell, Research Manager of the division, will pre- sent awards to 30 employees who this year have completed terms of continuous employment with Ray- onier ranging from 5 to 35 years; Norma Anstey, Ronald L. Case- bier, June E. Anderson, Geral D. Rodgers, five years. William R. Barren, Andrew Bee- lik, Romeo J. Conca, Inez O. Dam- monn, Frances .M. Luhm, Ian Mc- Dermott, ten years. James K. Anderson, Elizabeth V. Coffman, Betty M. Cozza, Betty Hansen, R o b e r t G. Hodgson, Franklin W. Herrick, James R. Latimer, Ernest N. Maynard, Ruth Newman, L e n n a r t Osterberg, Charles J. Sheppard, fifteen years. Anthony Florek, John E. Jeffery, F. Earl Schmidtke, Mary I. Smith, Eugene A. Stansell, twenty years. Olavi Aho, Clarence H. Ander- son, Orval W. Anderson, thirty years. Walter Sivo, thirty-five years. Also being honored is Mrs. Mir- iam C. Christian, who earlier was presented her 25 year award by Company President Russell F. Er- ickson during a dinner at the Aber- deen Elks Club. About 82 per cent of the em- ployees of the Olympic Research Division have been with the Com- pany for five or more years. Invitations to the Alderbrook Inn dinner have been extended to 117 employees of the division with five or more years of continuous service, and to all retired era- ployees. Other invited guests in- clude F. L Bradshaw, Manager of the Company's Northwest Indus- ~rial Relations Division. Dr. Lovell will relate the high- ights of the activities of the Olym- pic Research ~Divislon during the year. Dinner music and entertain- ment will be provided. VFW Plans Bioyole :Safety P eot Nov. 8, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 3:694, Wfth the help of the Gh'l Seou~ Troop ~o. 313, will put reflecting tkpe on bycl- cles at the Bordeaux School Any- one wtCatng th~is/~kt'ety tr/pe may bring their bikes on this date aft;er school. The V.F.W. has undertaken this job in the past years with a re- warding success. Again the V.F.W. wants to m~ke it elea~' that this will n0t meke the bikes safe for night riding unless they 'have the required lights on them. The time and place will ~be post- ed on scho01 bUlletil~ .boards and announcer on School public-address systems. Evergreen and Mt. View schools will be served at a later date, it APARTMENT BUILDINGS-- Rapidly taking shape are the buildings which house a new l~t- unit apartment house on Mt. View being built by Lundstrom Building Enterprises, "l'ac,3rna. The new apartment units are be- tween J and K Streets facing Jefferson. Exterior ty well completed ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::"i i~i"~~:: '7": ......................... ....................................................... :: ......... i:~ ~¸ •i :: .i~ NEW BUSINESS '1 This new fessional building ing constructed bJ land on his prope View alon~ H structor' f,3r the. sLructures is tom Builder, ! SIDEWALK SUPES---Ty.p.ical of of razing the old Graham The- Lindsey, Henry the scores of onlookers who aLre huilding thi~ week were Gus year-old John watched the fascinating processNolarnyer. AIf Ribbans, Bob le~t to right). TRUSSES CO~E OFF---After knt top section of the concrete wall to building, the crane was used to trusses off and set them on a trUc away. CLEANING UP--After knocking smashing part of the walls doW~ work was in order before procee demo!ition of the old theater crawler tractor with a loader load of debris while on the I which was set on fire burns awaY" VETERINARY HOSPITAL EX- PANDS-Construction of an ad- dition to the Shelton Veterinary Hospital is ,p,rogressing with most of the outside work com- pleted and the contractor now busy on the inside. Contractor for the project Is Bell Construc- tion Co., Renton. ' BACK IN '26---Among the by- standers as the th'eater building was being razed this week were Jack Manley (in white p~nts) who was telling AI Dickinson how he remembers standing in a bl0ck-lohg line to get Into the theater on its opening night back in 1926.