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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
November 2, 1967     Shelton Mason County Journal
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November 2, 1967
 
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Rayonier Employees Given Service Awards City Asked To Vacate AIIc:y • Employees of Rayonier's Olympic Research Division who have completed five or more years of continous service were honored at a dinner at Alder- brook Inn Oct. 26. Dr. Edwin L. Lovell, Manager of the Division, presented awards to 26 employ- ees who this year have com- pleted terms of continuous em- ployment ranging from five to 30 years: Ronald L. Ahlf, Leona I. Einarsson, Thomas P. Maty.e, Laurence D. Starr, Jesse A. Tob- ler, Jim D. Wilson, five years; John G. Denison, Robert A. Kramer, Norman A. Trotzer, 10 years; Ernest R. Fuller, William R. Jackstadt, Frank Make, Rich- ard L. Wokojance, 15 years; Ray- mond D. Brown, Harold O. Lov- greni Marvin D. Lund, Alfred J. Miljour, Marvin D. Morkert, Ber- wyn B. Thomas, Kyron K. Wil- son, 20 years; Moody Bacon, Jr., John A. Eager, 25 years; Ken- neth i% Gray, Frederick B. Ris- tine, Henry G. Robertson, John C. Steinberg, 30 years. In addition to those receiving awards, invitations were exten- ded to 92 employees now wear- ing service awards. Other hon- ored guests included retired em- ployees Roy Boyd, Curtis Cam- mack, Arnold Cheney, Sr., Ray Morkert, and Albert Windell. Break-Ins Investigated • The Shelton Police Depart- ment and the Mason County Sher- iff's O f f i c e are investigating three break-ins which were re- ported Monday morning. Police were told Merv's Tire Cap had been entered by break- ing in the door on the northwest corner of the building. The burglars got $345 and four new tires. The Sheriff's Office was noti- fied that the Gott Oil Co. and B and R Oil Co. offices on Bay- shore had been entered. A gun and a flash light were taken from Gotts and about $20 in change from B and R. The safe at Gotts was damaged when whoever broke in tried to get it open with tools from the oil company. In both cases, the front doors to the offices were broken in. Legion Makes Project Plans • Time is pressing close to the deadline for the American Leg- ion's second annual Vietnam Christmas gift project, Post 31 Commander Jim Grimes pointed out yesterday. Post 31 seeks the names and addresses of all Mason County men who will be serving with U.S. military forces in Vietnam at Christmas so the Legion can send each a Christmas remem- brance. Relatives and friends of such men are asked to send names and addresses to American Leg- ion Post 31, P.O. Box 8, Shelton, imraediately. The gifts (tinned fruit cakes) must be prepared for mailing at Post 31's meeting Nov. 21, Commander Grimes ex- plained. I USED CARSI '66 Custom 2-Dr. Sedan '65 Ford Fairlane Wagon '65 Mustang '65 Volkswagen Sedan '64 Plymouth Valiant 4-Dr '64 Ford Custom '64 Chev BeI-Air 4-Dr. '64 Falcon Futura Cvt. '63 Ford Falcon Wgn. (2) '63 Ford Fairlane 500 4-dr. '63 Mere. $55 2-dr. Hdtp. '62 Plym. Valiant Walton ,62 Volkswagen Bus '58 Pontiao 2-Dr. Used Trucks '65 Dodge Cab-Over P.U. 1:2 Ford Fal°°n Ranohero Ford 4on '61 Dodge I/2.ton Pick-up '60 GMC %-ton Pick-up '60 Ford Crew Bue ',57 Ford Crew Bus '55 Dodge 2-ton Van '55 Ford ¾-ton Pick.up '49 Chev Y2-ton Jim Pauley's ! Bob-Jim- Bill- Dick i About 80 per cent of the em- ployees of the Olympic Research Division have been with the Com- pany for five or more years. Dr. Lovell presented a resume of past and future activities of the Division, pointing up the im- portant part Research plays in the overall welfare of Rayonier, and discussing the status of the Division's building program. The local employees' excellent safety record was also noted, with the expressed hope that each em- ployee would continue to "think safe". Legion Makes Plans For November Activities • November leaves little lax time for American Legionnaires of Fred B. Wivell's Post 31. Two important meetings are calendared for both the men and their ladies' Auxiliary unit, one of those sessions to be joint. Tuesday the men and auxiliary ladies hold separate business meeting in Memorial Hall. The men will, among several sub- jects on Commander Jim Grimes' agenda, lay plans for culminating their second annual Vietnam Christmas gift project. The joint gathering is tabbed for Nov. 21 and will be dedicated to law enforcement agencies. Representatives of city police, county sheriff's office, State Pa- Ro÷ary To Presen÷ Film • The Shelton Rotary Club is planning the presentation of a narrated color film on Switzer- land for 8 p.m. Nov. 16 in the Junior High Auditorium. Narrator for the film will be Anton B. Lendi, a native of Swit- erland and well-known commen- tator on that country. Proceeds from the program will be used in the Rotary for- eign student program. Admission will be 25 cents for elementary school students and ASB card holders from High School and Junior High. For adults and other students, the charge will be 50 cents. trol, and other law enforcement offices will be guests at a "Law and Order" program. At this same meeting the Vietnam Christ- mas project will carry a promi- nent role. Following the program the ladies auxiliary will serve refreshments. The auxiliary girls came home from the annual 4th District fall conference, in Tacoma, with an- other outstanding award, the Unit of Distinction Certificate presented by National Headquar- ters for being the first unit in the Department of Washington to reach membership quota for 1967. The presentation was made to Unit 31 President Mildred Lakeburg by Department Presi- dent May Dams of Everett. Mary Dobson and Gladys Grimes were other Unit 31 rep- resentatives at the Conference. Commander Grimes, Adjutant Ruth loore, Finance Officer Vin Connolly, and Past Commander Mel Dobson represented Post 31 at the men's district conference. Next Monday Unit 31 will send four representatives to the 4th D i s t r i c t Council luncheon at Lacey which will feature reha- bilitation activities of the Legion Auxiliary. President Lakeburg, Secretary Mamie Earl, treasurer Alice Hill, and rehabilitation c h a i r m a n Florentine Connol- ly will be those representatives. Later in the month Unit 31 will be host for the 4th District at the annual Christmas party for American Lake Veterans, one of the biggest undertakings of the year. In Block On Angleside • The Shelton City Commission Tuesday night received a request for the vacation of an alley be- tween Euclid and Wyandotte Streets and Second and Third Streets. The request stated that because of a misunderstanding of where the alley was located in the block, buildings have been built on the alley right-of-way. Street Superintendent Bob Tem- ple told the commission there is an alley cut through in the clock, and, some utilities are using al- ley rights-of-way in the area. City Attorney B. Franklin Heuston advised the commission to wait until it received a deed to the property on which the alley is physically located before proceeding with the request for vacation. Park and Recreation Board Chairman Arnold Fox told the commission that plans for out- door fireplaces at Callanan Park were progressomg and should be done before the first of the year. Fire Chief A1 Nevitt told the commission the fire loss in the Chamber To Have Ladies Nigh÷ • For the first time in quite some years the Chamber of Com- merce will hold a meeting where the wives will be the guests of honor. The date is Nov. 9 and the time and place will be 7 p.m. at Alderbrook Inn. The program for this event will include a dinner which will be followed with a talk by Fred LePenske, School Relations Su- pervisor for the Boeing Company of Seattle. LePenske has been with the company for a number of years. Each Chamber member will receive a special letter setting forth all details for the event. city for the first 10 months of 1967 was only $525. Finance Commissioner Dave Kneeland reported that a pre- liminary report on the audit of the city books for 1966 by the State Auditor's office showed everything to be in proper order. The commission will meet Wednesday next week since Tues- day is election day and has been declared a legal holiday. Tea Honors Foreign Students • Travel posters and foreign dolls were the decorations in the PUD Auditorium Sunday for the reception honoring foreign stu- dents attending Shelton High School. Floral arrangements of au- tumn leaves and crysanthemums were made by Mrs. Thomas Ris- fine. Honored at the reception were Robert Emeras. French student sponsored here by the American Field Service and Judy Stratford, an Australian girl sponsored by the Rotary Club. Members of the student AFS Club who assisted with the re- ception were Margie Tylczak, Norma Schroeder, Jana Barnett, Don Bearden and Beth Quimby. The reception was a joint ef- fort between the groups who sponsor the students here and women from women's church groups in the community. MULTIPLY your speedometer by one and a half and you will find out approximately how many feet you are traveling a second. At 40 mph you are traveling 60 feet per second. November 2,1937 Thirty years ago, something happened--and that something is affecting your life today. q ... '..:..  -.-- Today is Rayonier's birthday. Exactly 30 years ago, three small companies merged and became Flayonier, a company that is now world famous. Considering its short history, one of the aspects of Rayonierthatisamaz=ng is its economic impact on you, your family and your community. In only 30 years, Rayonier has poured nearly two billion dollars into its plant community areas. By paying wages, salaries and taxes, and by paying for fringe benefits, raw materials, supplies and new construction, Flayonier is continuously pumping money into the local economy. In 1966 alone, the people who work for Rayonier earned close to 50 million dollars. , ,,, ,d/, ,y6 '14, I ,,,' ,,,  . .  ", ' Ill c._ © ll" ) Today, Rayonier employs more than 5,000 people, and its steady growth constantly opens up new and better jobs for you and your neighbors. So all of us have a lot more to look forward to. Afterall, you're only as young as you feel, . , . and we're feeling 30 years young today. , " L Rayonier Incorporated, Northwest operations at Hoquiam, Port Angeles, Seattle and Shelton, Washington Page 2 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, November 2, 1967 Action On Log Export Problem Urged hearings," she said, Forest Ser- expert business. While 11 • Rep. Julia Butler Hansen today in Washington D.C. urged government experts to move quickly on the problem of export of logs to Japan. .The Congresswoman, addres- sing the Washington D. C. Sec- tion of the Society of American Foresters, said about the log-ex- port problem: "Time is running out. Our country has been in trouble many times from our failure to solve a problem before it becomes a crisis." Mrs. Hansen asked the foresters to sit down with representatives of various government, business and labor groups to try to de- velop a "constructive policy" on log exports. "Someplace in between the ex- treme policies being suggested," she said, "there is room for compromise and orderly develop- ment." Mrs. Hansen raised several questions about some of the pro- posed remedies, such as Initia- tive 32 in Washington State, a measure designed to cur b log exports : 'We have a sizeable plywood trade with Japan. Will placing a ban on log exports adversely affect these sales? Then, there is the larger question of foreign trade. If Ja- pan cannot buy logs from the U.S., will she turn to Russia who can supply them? This is only a possibility, but I think the State Department and other government agencies need to probe this question further." The Congresswoman said an- other problem is deciding which, if any, log exports could be re- stricted. Limiting private log sales to Japan," she said, brings up the question of invading free enter- prise. Sales of logs from govern- ment lands pose other problems," according to Mrs. Hansen, who is chairman of the Appropria- tions Subcommittee on Interior and Related Agencies, which has fiscal responsibility for the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management. "D u r i n g my subcommittee vice representatives have testi- fied how difficult it is to even estimate how much Forest Ser- vice timber is being exported. There is no way of accounting for these logs after they have been scaled." Mrs. Hansen said that, in answer to a request, the Forest Service supplied the following information: From January, 1966 to September, 1967 the highest possible estimate" was that 32 million board feet of logs hauled over Forest Service roads in Washington State might possi- bly go to Japan." As chairman of the Interior Appropriations S u b c o m m i t- tee, Mrs. Hansen said she was continually concerned about For- est Service timber sales, be- cause Forest Service lands arc the balance wheel of economic health and stability in so many areas of the country, particularly yis not diversified and forest pro- in communities where industry is not diversified and forest pro- ducts are their sole support." These communities." she con- tinued, usually do not have de- fense installations or defense con- tracts to bolster their economy." The Congresswoman read to the foresters several headlines from Third District newspapers which reflected the seriousness of the log-export situation in Wash- ington State. She then summar- ized: On the one hand, some state mills are facing closure because foreign competition has forced up the price they have to pay for logs, their raw material. Mills are being hurt by the in- creased export sales and result- ing log shortages. But on the other hand, some lumber-r e 1 a t e d industries are profiting from the expanding log: ers have lost jot workers have been jobs. Log-shipping a greatly helped our ] ment." In closing, Mrs. four questions she can foresters shoU themselves and th agencies should be answers to: 1) Is our rate of tion, tree farming, cient to insure flow of export denuding this resource that is only to the economy of our nation but watersheds ? "Where is the b kig oint and decision-m _, P  es  as to whether our u- ber mills should b order to develop a o dustry, and vice versa" 3) "What degree of timber should there be competition between and domestic prod bei- products? 4) What is the anS'e ' dilemma of prices for logs a) as theY' upon the shortage o 10P' domestic producers dd o amounts of moneY ties from govern ..3" receipts in lieu Nfxs. Hansen urged the Land Law Review o evaluate the 1 ter These revenues de counties are becon ig : creasingly large P school and highwa formulas. Since sch projects benefit f.rc timber sales, this  in the tot to be considerc export picture." value loves a jersey! " 10.99 Live-a.little [ Wear Dated®.. NO-IRON Acrilan ® knit is bonded to acetate. And GUARANTEED * for 1 full yr. 14-20. guaranteed for one full year's normal wear, Refund,,, or replacement by. 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