November 11, 1965 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
©
Shelton Mason County Journal. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 6 (6 of 20 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
November 11, 1965 |
|
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader ![]() |
/:
PAGE 5a
BI:IELTON--IvIA ON COUNTY JOURNAE---Published in "Christmastown, U.g.A.", Sheldon, Washington
Thursday,
Use Journal Classified Ads -- They Pay
SHELTON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAL--
Bills
Blotlors
Booklets ..........................................
Door IIfg. Ass'n.
Simpson Timber Company is one
of seven major northwest firms
which have joined in forming the
Fir & Hemlock Door Association,
a new trade organization incor-
porated in Oregon and dedicated
to developing standards for the in-
dustry as well as to promote the
products of its members.
Don Fowler of Simpson was
elected secretary-treasurer of the
new association. Paul Eklund of
E. A. Nord Co., Inc., Everett, is
president; Herb Warwick, Clear
Fir Products Company, Spring-
field, Ore., vice-president.
THEIR THREE FIRMS along
with Buffelen Woodworking Com-
pany, Tacoma; Nicolai Door Mfg.
Co., Portland; St. Regis Paper
Co., Tacoma; and West Coast Door
CO., Tacoma; comprise the char-
Ler membership. Any firm regu-
!arly engaged in the manufacture
3f fir or hemlock stile and rail
doors and having national distri-
bution of their products can join.
At its first meeting the group
signed a management contract
with Western Wood Products As-
sociation of Portland, Oregon,
which will perform certain services
for the seven-member trade asso-
ciation, including promotional and
technical assistance lathe general
supervision of FHDA s approved
Circulars programs•
I N A N N O U N C I N G formation of
FHDA ~klund listed the following
Vouchers purposes:
1. To foster cooperative effort
among those in fir and hemlock
stile and rail door manufacturing
rro rams to further the interests of the
members of that industry.
dbills commercial2' To establish and maintain
Han standards for sizes,
styles and grades of stile and rail
doors, and promote standardization
Pamnhlels of quality in manufacture.
3. To procure and furnish its
members such statistical and oth-
P,ioe Lists er information as will apprise them
fairly of the condition of the in-
~H dustry and of their markets and,
insofar as possible, enable them to
B, earls distribute their products with full
In |='J'|"~"~ knowledge of actual conditions.
4. To promote a greater and
VlI~IIlUli~$ more widespread use of the pro-
ducts of its members and to foster
Law Briefs sumersand proteCtin suchthe use.interests of con-
5. To assist in the development
a,,m,"ame:en's of improved manufacturing tech-
niques in the industry.
6. Generally, to sponsor and
adopt from time to time such mea-
Pod Cards auras as may seem
desirable
to
protect and advance_ the industry.
Letterheads ,, Legal Publication, s
NOTICE
Note Heads NOTICE IS HERE IVEN that
the regular monthly meetings of the
Board of Commissioners of Public Hos-
pital District No, 1 of Mason County
g C will hereafter be held at 10:00 a.m.
Filin ar_s on ,lie fourth W dnesday o, eae,
every month in the County Commis-
sioner's Room of the Mason County
Legal Forms Cou.bousesigncd Sbclton wa il,ogton•
Menu Cards
Meal Tickets
Order Blanks
Laundry Lists
Window Tags
Show Printing
Visiting Cards
Shipping Tags
Business Cards
Menu Booklets
Business Forms
Store Sales Bills
rleooption Cards
Gummed Labels
Dance Programs
Posters, all sizes
Auditor's Reports
Social Stationery
L'mission Tickets
Ungummed Lah?ls
Envelopes, all k,nds
Wedding Invitations
Financial Statements
227 W. Co,ta
--- : I i i I i lilii il
• ~ I I _I i II ,
DICK ANGLE, Secretary
CAt HOPPER, Clerk
11/11-18 2t
CALL FOR DIDS
Sealed proposals will be received at
the office of the City Clerk-Treasurer
City Hall, Shelton, Washington until
11:00 a.m. on Monday, No~enbcr 22,
1965, at which time they will be pub-
licly opened and read aloud by the
City Clerk-Treasurer, for:
Furnishing 4,000 lineal feet of six
inch diameter Class 150.
Cast Iron Water Pipe and misccllan-
eoUs fittings and valves.
The City Commzssion reserves the
right to reject any or all bids and
to waive all informalities.
City of Shelton
ALMA K. CATTO
Clerk-Treasurer
11/11-18 2t
ORDINANCE NO, 739
AN ORDINANCE ADOPTING AMEND-
MENTS TO THE MOTOR VEHICLE
LAWS OF THE STATE OF WASH-
INGTON, BEING CHAPTER 155 EX-
TRAORDINARY SESSION LAWS OF
1965 BY REFERENCE AS PROVID-
ED BY CHAPTER 184 OF THE SES-
SION LAWS OF 1963. AND RE-
PEALING ALL ORDINANCES OR
PARTS OF ORDINANCES IN CON-
FLICT THEREWITH.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY
COMMISSION OF TItE CITY OF
SHELTON AS FOLLOWS;
Section 1, Amcndnmnts to the Motor
Vehicle Laws of the State of Washing-
ton, being Chapter 155 Extraordinary
Session Laws of 1965 are hereby
adopted by reference as the Niotor Ve-
hicle Laws of the City of Shellon, pm'-
suant to Chapter 18.i of the Session
Laws of 1968.
INTRODUCED at regular ConmliS-
sion Meeting thc 2rid day of November.
1965
PASSED in regular Commission Meet-
ing the 9th day of Novembe-, 1965.
F. A. TRAVIS. Mayor
DAVID L. KNEELAND,
Commissioner of Finance
ELROY NELSON,
Commissioner of Public Work~
Attest:
Alma K. Catto, City Clerk
Apl)roved as to form:
Jolm C, Ragan
City Attorney. 11/11 It
NOTICE OF IIEARING FINAL
REPORT AND PETITION FOR
DISRIBUTION
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR
MASON COUNTY
In the Matter of the Estate of WIL-
LIAM HOWARD PADDEN, Deceased,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
GENEVA PADDEN, as Executrix of
: the Estate of WILLIAM HOWARD
PA~)DIffN, has filed in tim office of
:the Clerk of said Court her Final Re-
port and Petition For Distribution.
l asking the Court to sortie said .R,e-
port, and to discharge said Executrix,
and that said Report and Petition will
be heard on the 19th day of November,
1965, at 9:30 a.m., at the Courtroom
in the Mason County Courtbousc. at
which time and place any person in-
terested in said Estate may appear
and file objections thereto and con-
test the came•
DATED this 22nd day of October,
1965,
LAURA M. WAGENER
Clcrk of Court
By Teckla Vermillion, Deputy
JOHN C. RAGAN
At.orney for Estate
Title Insuramc Building
Shelton, Washington 10/28 11/4-11 3t
EASTER LILIES BLOOM
Easter lilies blooming in No-
vember were reported this week
by Mrs. Mintie Ahern, 228 S.
Fourth St., Shel£om Mrs. Ahern
7 ....... • !i/
Ph. 426.4412
I I
FROM BOOKS--As a I~art of the observance of means of telling other people about these charac-
National Library Week Oct. 31-Nov. 6, sixth grade ters. Other grades in the school made book re-
giris from Evergreen School dressed up as char-ports, made book jackets and put on pantomimes
acter___~s from so____m_ee of thei____rr favorit______ee book___~s as a of books______:,
R.ap'd C 1A T F
1 ontro nswer o orest
Fire Control Efforts In State
OLYMPIA -- Dense clouds of fire-fighters to get on-the-spot re-
smoke overhang the entire west- ports f~om the scenes of fires.
ern slope of Washington and Ore- All these methods of modern
gon, from the Cascades to the technology are enabling the De-:
Sea," the story began in the Sap- partment of Natural Resources to
lamber 12, 1902, issue of a Seattle keep fire losses at a minimum on
daily newspaper, state-protected land.
More than a hundred fires rag- Analysis of th~.~ fire season rac-
ed that dry, Windy day. They took ord for 1965 reveals that the larg-
an estimated 35" lives and de- est number of fires (94) in East-
stroyed billions of board feet of era Washington were •attribt~ted
timber. Nearly 150,000 acres was ~o i!gnmmg, tta~lway~ sparKea
devastated in the first 48 hours me Jargest numoer o~ zires in
a olt area of Western Washington (222)
of a fire in the Y c • ' " •
Clark county State-wide, other major causes
--- - " ...... ome of fires were debris burning out
Tne sky was pz~cn oLacK in S •
...... a-d of control (206), smokers (167),
areas, a zlery rea m oLners, n ~.~ .o~.~.. ~oo~
a yellowish green over some c a - ,.~ ...... - _ ..
..... d .he larges~ numoer oi ares oc-
at towns many peopm prays ,
.." ...... curred in the Departmentment of
tearing ~ne ena oz me worm. Natural Resources' Vancouver dis-
It was not the end of the world, trm w
' " "% here 238 fires buzzed over
it was the beginning of an organ 1 1
• .' "' .- 7 acres. But the greatest dam-
lzed forest fne control effort m a
• ' " ge occurred in the Croak district,
Washington state, where 32 fire,~ blackened 423 acres.
The next year, 1903, the. state Other district reports were:
legislature passed a law to pro- Cathlamet, 10 fires, four acres;
vide fire wardens and patrolmen. Ch'ehalis, 69 flies, 41 acres; De-
' ' he states mmg 28 fries, eight ac~es, Elba,
SINCE ~IltAT time t • ." ' " "'. ' " '~,"
• ' nd suDoression 45 fires, 68 acres; Enumelaw 32
fzre detectmn a ............ :
n hi hl devel ares, xl acres, l, ones O~ ales
techniques have bee "g y - " ,'" :, ~. ' ~,
e t~me most 40 acres Kelso, 123 fries 47
oped. At the pres nt " , . " * ; " ,. ',,
te fores landac~es Montesano 22 fries 15 ac
of the state and priva " t ' '" /; • , . ' ',. , '"
~otected b the les, North Bend, eight hres 16
in Washington is p" y ' s• . ",
f atural Re aczes, Pint Angeles,31 fries, 19
state Department o N _ .... z , .',
d nd Cornm~ssmnez acres Pint Olchatd, 72 flies, 22
sources, tin el' La ' " '* • ....... ~;
~ . ~ acres Sedro Woolley 46 fires 57
~rt L ......... .. '
.......... acres; Shelton 54 fires, 45 acres;
A IOK al; the Ilre oalnage record.. '..' .... ' . , ' " •
............... ~UlLan 30 ilres 3~ acre,;; Thurs-
since ±u2~ twnen ~ne state nrsL . -2 .. :L~ "* ,...,, '
ton, q,5 llPes .tot}acres" Wluapa
began keeping accurate record) is "9 .... ' "-' ....".?
...... t C'" e of 2.. ilres,, a~ acres" [GO]Villa, ~'~6
a gauge or Ine eI e A:IV ness ~ .~ . ' .....
....... nres .l~ acres• ~)eer [~al'l( .t3o
mooern ilia zlgnung i(~cDnlques. ~" S' ()" "' ~"" " ' "
, Ill'e,,,2 acres; u~iiensmug, 74
Dunng the first five ye us of ~ s~"
• ' ' :' . ~ ' fi "e,., o5 acres; Glenwood, 47 fires
record, 1928 through 1932, forest 18 acres
fires damaged an annual average
of 203,971 acres of state and p,i-
vats land In Washington. During
the most recent five-year period,
1961 through 1965, the average
yearly damage from forest fires
was 3,973 ac~cs.
The average fire during the
years 1928 tnroogl~ 1932 burned
137 acres. The average fire in
Washington during the past five
:~ears damaged less than four
acres. And the average fire during
the 1965 fire season damaged only
1.1 acres.
As of October 15, the end of the
official 1965 fire season, ther4 had
been 1,234 fires on state-protected
land, with dmnage to a total of
1,368.4 acres•
The number of fires recorded
this year is about the same as
the number recorded decades ago.
The annual incidence of fires fluc-
tuates f~om about 500 to 2,000.
Although there are just as many
fires breaking out these days,
quick spotting and suppression has
greatly reduced the total damage.
The Department of Natural t=~e-
sources, which protects about 12~
milton ames of forest land in
Washington, has a state-wide net-
work of lookout towers, fire crews
and fire wardens.
About 500 young men are hired
by the Department each summer
to fight fires: Eighty-four lookout
towers are manned each fire sea-
son. About 140 fire wardens are
hired to issue fire permits to pri-
vate citizens, check loggers and
truckers tools for fire safety, and
enfot'ce other fire safety regula-
tions.
'£HE DEPARTMENT maintains
more than 3,000 miles of forest
access roads~~or speedy transpor-
tation to tim fire. The crews trav-
el in special busses. The wardens
use four-wheel drive vehicles
equipped with water tanks and
pumps to combat spot fires in
rugged forest tin rain.
Large water tanker trucks and
bulldozers are used at the scene
of fires. A PBY bomber is on
standby during the fire season to
drop water on relatively inacces-
sible fires. A cargo plane is avail-
able to drop supplies to fire- fight-
ers. ' .
A radio network 'provides rapid
communications between lookouts
and fire crew headquarters. A
mobile weather station enables
bedrooms, Anglcside area. Inquire
611 South 13th, phone 426-6138.
S 11/11 tu~
WILL ACCEPT bids for bru~l-~-l~'l~~"
ing rights on 50 acre tract near Shal-
lot Fo~ lnfornmtion call Jack D.
a" t~A-] I A ',nS~ Ol wilts
Denny t ~ ~ o ' ~-.~.,t ' " "
20721 4:th South, Seattle, Wash. 98148.
11/11-18
FOR SALE --- 2Va-year-old Shetland
gelding. $50. Call 426-6910• S 11/11
FURNISHED two-bedroom house trail-
or for rent or for sale, Call 426-4420.
said she put. four lily bulbs out in O 11/11 tin
her back yard last spring. One is
now blooming, she said, and the GOOD USED UNDERWOOD (electric)
typewriter, pica type, $95. Call Anti,
pthera all have buds, 426-8272. 11/11-21
Rev. Knautz
Here Jan.
REV. EOGyNy ~,. ~NAOTZ
Rev. Eugene Knautz, pastor of
tltc First Baptist Church here has
announced that he will leave Jan
:1 to become pastor of a church in
: Yakima.
! Rev. Mr. Knautz came to Shelton
:in November, 1957 from Lcwiston,
Idaho. During his years here he
has been active in a number of ac-
tivities including Kiwanis Chill
Red Cross, community guidance
groups, the Shelton School District
Advisory Committee and President
of tl~e •Mason County Ministerial
Association.
He was instrumental in organiz-
ing the Fisherman's Club a men's
group which meets each Sunday in
the PUD auditorium•
HE AND HIS WIFE, Lyla, have
tl~ree children, Kenneth, a teacher
at Leavenworth; Jenny, a teacher
at Redmond, and Dick, a sopho-
more at Shelton High School.
He is a native of Washingtbn
and attended the Bible Institute 0f
Los Angeles, Bellingham Business
College, Whitworth Colleo'~,e, rio,,." m
which hc has a B.A. degree, and
took advanced work at Berkley
Baptist Divinity and Pacific Luth-
eran University.
He has specialized in pastoral
counseling for the past 12 years
and has spent considera,ble time in
counseling on home and marriage
problems.
A committee from the church,
l~eaded by Dr. Herbert Hergert, is
seeking a. replacement for Ray.
Ir. Knautz.
SCHOOL DOARD
(Continued from Page 1)
eat that the district purchase 40
acres of property on Mt. View
which has been offered by John
Kneeland for $40,000. The motion
to table the recommendation was
nmde by Heuston, who stated that
it should not be considered until a
comprehensive plan for expansion
of the district's facilities had been
developed.
A letter from William Brickert
was received in which he asked to
be relieved of duties as head bas-
ketball coach in the Junior High
School.
On the recommendation of the
superintendent, the board named
Gary Karlberg as head basketball
coach for the junior high and Eu-
,gene Wehunt as assistant.
PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Byron MeClanahan told the board
he had requested an attorney gen-
craps opinion on whether or not
the use of $26,000 in a swimming
pool fund for development of ath-
letic fat'ilities needed a 40 per cent
voter turnout to validate it. The
proposal was approved by the vot-
ers in the Nov. 2 election, but, the
voter turnout was not large enough
to validate the election if it need-
ed 40 per cent.
McClanahan also recommended
to the board that a potification of
dismissal be sent Robert Daly, who
had been hired as school psycholo-
gist and had been in the ¢tistrict
about five days at• the start of the
school year when he left. Daly
would then be eligible to request
a hearing before the board if he
•desired.
-- Laz•son presented to l.he board a
letter he had received from James
Vander Steep, Centralia, in which
he presented his claim for legal
fees of $1,582.90 in connection with
his employment in negotiations
concerning the prohlems between
the board and the superintendent.
Heuston stated that the claim
should be submitted on a district
voucher before formal action is
taken.
The board was informed by Mrs.
Hilhnan that the district is issuing
interest bearing warrants since it
does not have enough money in
the treasurer's office to pay all
claims•
The situation arose from the
purchase of seven new school bus-
ses and repair work done on some
of the building roofs which is to be
paid for through money from spe-
cial levies which will not be col-
lected until the 1966 taxes.
20 Per Cent Here
Of Foreign Stock
NEW YORK (Special) .... The
new immigration bill, just passed
by Congress, brings up the ques-
tion of how much immigration
there has been into Mason County
in recent years.
How many people from foreign
countries have come to live in the
local area ? How many other local
residents, although born in the
United States, have foreign-born
parents ?
Despite the fact that people have
been arriving here at the rate of
about 270,000 a yea," from all cor-
ners of the world, over 80 percent
of the population have an Ameri-
can ancestry of three generations
or longer.
The rest are of "foreign stock."
This desig'nation takes into ac-
count those who were born abroad
and those of foreign parentage
who were born in this country.
IN MASON COUNTV, accord-
ing l o the Commerce D~:partmen('s
most recent figures, 19.6 percent
of the local population are of for-
eign stock.
In other parts of the Pacific
States, the proportion of people of
foreig stock is 24.6% It amounts
to 22.9~ in Wasltington.
Looking at. the Ideal picture
from the other Niewpoint, the fig-
urea show that 80.4 percent of the
Mason County population are na-
tive-born Americans, two genera-
Lions or more in depth.
The new immigration law abol-
ishes the national origins quota
system that has heen in effect
That s ~stem pezm~tted
,inca 1920. ,~'.~,'~ ' '
additional people from foreig~
countries to enter the United
States at a rate proportionate to
the number froth that country al-
re~adv living here.
INSTEAD, priorities will be giv-
en to close relatives of American
citizens, "~o mentbers of the pro-
fessions arts and sciences, to
needed wm'kers, to refugees from
communism and the like.
As a safeguard, aliens will not
be permitted to come into the
country to take jobs here unless
the L~bor Department certifies,
on an individual basis, that Amer-
icaa~ workers are not available for
the ~particular Job.
HIMLIE REALTY, WILLOI)'I',
OFFICES GO TO MT. VIE%V
When they open for brininess
next Monday morning, Himlie I~e-
alty ~Ild Willour in3u]'ance ~.,ffiees
will be located on Mt. View im;tead
of downtown.
Both will share as they do now
at 116 N. 2rid Street, quarters in
Lhe new addiLion to the Rex Fh)or
Fire ep rtment
Gets One New
VoJ nteer
A turnout of only two persons
for a meeting last Thursday which
Fire Chief Alhm Nevitt hoped
would increase the ranks of the
Shelton Fire Department Volun-
teers was reported.
NeviLt said one of the two young
men who attended the meeting
had signed up as a volunteer.
The meeting was held at the
Jaycee Hall• The Jaycees had as-
sisted the Fire Chief in setting up
the meeting and sent out 80 letters
Covering building at
Highway North,
parking facilities
off lee space are the
Each member of
staff owner Vines Hi~
men Dick Knauf and
,qnd secretary Wilma
will have iris own office,
DL's CORNER
The big government
week i~ why (lid the
in the Northeast? Whe~
ideal asked us to
think he meant for us
far. What acLually he
the Northeast no one
sure at this time .
local news • . . The
TAVERN is now tinder.
management of Bob
Jim l?orco, both
coma. Bob will handle
cad and Jim the
Pizza's will be served
a variety of live
said, "Just what the
is wtmt they'll have in
pair formerly ran the
era in Gig Harbor
BEAUTY SALON
second try a£ opening,
to young men they thought might la Winter said, "The
be interested, was suddenly called
The department presently has 11 my mother was ill. I
no one was m cove
men on its vohmteer roster, a num- . ......
• 01: I.~UCK, ~Eella •
ber which Nev,tt hopes can be 1 wner " "-" ~I
doubled. Anyone interested can y, o . o~ne
contact the chief at the fire hall says win a ~urKey
, , , ' DOWling. JUSI: coal
FIRST CLASS for debails . . . Bus
The first session of an eight-ses- lea:.ving for. Olympia;
i • • "~. oany Tronl Erie t~ ~
s on training school for fn'emen ......... o(
brought out 31, Fire Chief Allanv~C:cl~°n'f-°r^~no~°t
Nevitt reported. The first session ~ ~ ~ ,~ ~u~ ~ ]
of the classes was held Monday :~,:,~',,~°n~n,,,~enne~t
g ~: L the Ilre nail "l'rle nero: ses- ...,,.~..,~. +~,~ ^¢v,,~ an(
Tmnin e ~ ss w,uye zz.now closed Saturdays.
• g ou~ we e l"t men Irom Inv wo~tr dax, ht~,,rs ar
the Shelton department, 11 from ~'n ~"~'~ ~-.'~Reck~
Union fire department, four from~ ~ ......... -%=~'=;'WI'
th ' manager o~ ~;w~
e Sm~pson waterfront operation ............... hiS
one from McCleary, two from Ar- ,~v..,,..,= m~ ~.,~.~'~;' ...... at
cadia fire department and two ,,,,*, .~ ~,,~ ~v~-'-~:'~'''~'"~'=[~'~'~=e~:7"~-"l~
from Copalis in Grays Harbor • Y ..... 'n
• . long . . . ~arr (3as~, ,
County who were making up a MTLLER'R R~C}E D]~]
n~et~:g:hey had missed m then" =rag an .all-Americans
• one week only. YoU
iiAO~O~ need a new pair of sh~
mu,nmu, a fLUP h~l~2a~:n°,~i~ags~P.Sh°y
ATERH00N. GOOD
luShelt°nffptnfemsekasdi found thoir ing his pre-holiday coa'
• rent as day and night mighty good bargains
in lasL Sunday's Evergreen Tl'av- B & R SALES has
e]ettes bowling eompetiLionat matLress sale on no~.
South' Bend. sizes and price rant
In the morning pairing against hard to beat... DEAI
Pacific Lanes they couldn't get the says only 20 portra
, hrlstr
sleep out of their eyes and dropped days left til C '
all fore" points. In the afternoonreminder but if you
competition they perked up and picture of the family,
I took three of four from Harborhurry . George v~
i Bowl behind the 515 series of At- of EELLS & VALL]
dis Claussen Ardis ,also had top ANCE CENTER, says
series in the morning but it was value--feature for i
only 493. you'll choose RCA ViC
Verna Johansen had mot'hint-of- home . . . That's ---3
ternoon counts of 420-449, Marg week, but be sure an~
Tobler 426-~5,
~:~],,~0)~i~t~,.4].~I',[~7~O1~[E. You will be
369, and Phyl Ziegler 426~03 ....... • ...... ,~ ;
THE OLDEST?--"Pop" Rutledge, 99, tells Rep.
Hansen that he is her oldest supporter in Mason C,
the open house honoring the new addition to the
Offioe Tuesday afternoon.
~4
The bride sele'cted her wedding paper troU.S_ ib
wedding accessories from Art Point StuaW ,
Your new life deserves the finest! We inVi.teffl: .e
.see the latest wedding designs, beautiful scr Pt 0 ti
rags, quality papers, napkins, champag .e
gm ses and other accessories in the Art yore
~rce! with our comph~e_~*~
Virginia Courtenay's etiq
boomer, Ask fox yoar copl' .