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November 14, 1963
SHELTON--MASON COUNTY JOURNAE--Pulflished in "Chrf.@ma.tow,)l, U.S.A." Shelt, on. Wa.shinon
PAGE 15
Crowd Turns Out Fe
Y Frances Catto
-- Good attend-
the potluck supper,
and pinochle par-
Lilliwaup Commun-
night. Thirty-eight
to enjoy the supper
the business session.
chairmaned by Mrs.
in the absence
illness, of the presi-
Leimback. Attesting
of the club's
tables were in play
)chle party following,
a new series.
were made by Mrs.
and Karl Lins-
prizes were awarded
and Mrs. Frank McIn-
finochle" hand were
Mottle Baeklund
Nicholson. Mrs.
won the door prize.
Were Mrs. Cecil Gilbert
Kaare.
EVENING. Nov. 22,
of the next pinochle
series. Hostesses for
will be Mrs. Maybelle
Mrs. Erna Martin. Re-
wilt be served and the
some 20 years ago
school district
with the Hoodsport
the local school pro-
buildings were given to
the Lilliwaup
Club has served well
center. Neighbor.,
have kept the
growing and made
in facilities.
from the days of
stove and the dark,
kitchen, were
other night by your
was a member
Paint, fresh
new cooking
including electric
(Wait-
installed) have modern-
where the best
spread out their pot
s. An oil heater has re-
old stove in the large
the same clock looks
scenes of neighbors
together, whether
program, a town
pinochle party.
changes were made
f years ago when Mrs.
was president.
Jennie Hoff, Steve
Schmidt, the ener-
used a paint brush
was painted outside
She, herself, bad do-
k"
- tchen paint, which
a transform that area.
now 41 members and
secretary, predicts
be quite a few more
all dues have been paid.
are urged to attend
club events.
-UP and vicinity was
at the meeting
of the Hood Canal Gar-
, held in the woman's
at Potlatch. Members
found the program
potluck hmcheon an
and timely one.
Krause of Potlatch
the clever at-
materials for home
and :Mrs. Josephine Pet-
again inspired
learn the craftsman-
Yule and holiday
a retired florist,
the making of
)ieces and corsages,
greenery and ribbon
effective manner.
'e found that her beach
pre-Christmas per-
of ideas for their
as she is well
ingenious use of up-
the first Thurs-
Liiiiwaup Club ileeting
lr
day of each month (except Jan- chial virus infection from which
uary) for an ll a.m. business ses-
sion followed by a potluck hm-
cheon and proKram. All interested
women are welcome and urged to
join.
The November meeting of the
Hood Canal Woman's Club will
be held Thursday, Novernber 14 in
their Potlatch chtbhouse. Voting
o,n revisions in the constitution and
by-laws is scheduled for the bus-
iness session, startino" at II a.m..
to be followed by luucheon and a
program.
Mr. and Mrs. Start White spent
the weekend on Bainbridge Island
and celebrM:ed their wedding an-
niversary in conjunction with
Staff's cousin. Mrs. Royal Sen-
kpiel and her husband, who were
married on the same date and
hour as the "Whites. They spent
Saturday evening with the Senk-
piels and on Sunday had dinner
with another cousin. Mrs. Conrad
Welfare. and her family, also res-
idents of the island.
A venison dinner, hosted, by the
Dave Collins aid the Allie Rob-
inserts, entertained their Hoods-
port friends. Mr. and Mrs. Archie
Calahan and Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Hale Friday night. The Lake Cush-
man home of the Collins was the
scene of the dinner party, which
climaxed the deer hunting season
for the lucky hunters.
SIX SLICE cutthroat trout re-
warded the Sunday Canal fishing
efforts of Bob Burman of Seattle,
I¥ith his family. Bob was enjoying
the three-day weekend at the home
of Mrs, Burman's mother, Mrs.
Allie "W. Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. Sig Anderson were
overnight guests Thursday of Mrs.
Anderson's daughter, Mrs. Arnold
Tahja, in Tacoma. Two birthdays
were celebrated on this occasion,
Sig's and that of the Tahja's old-
est son. Alan. Sunday the Ander-
sons went to Quilcene to have
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Germeau,
Mrs. Jack Johnston returned
home Tuesday from a trip to San
Francisco, where she visited at
the home of Jack's brother, Floyd
Johnston. With them. she spent a
weekend with friends in Santa
Cruz and enjoyed the places of
interest in San Francisco. An avid
gardener, Mrs. Johnston especial-
ly liked her trip to the ,Conserv-
atory of Flowers. It was "Paris
Week" in San b'rancisco, and there
was an exhibit of the Eifel tower
=nade of flowers. Tb:ey toured
Chinatown and went to the zoo,
acquarium, the new Crown Room
of the Fairmount Hotel and the
ocean during her stay..Enroute
home Mrs, Johnston made a stop-
over in Medford. Ore.. at the home
of an uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs.
Glen S. gee.
Mr. and Mrs. Barney Zahl had
their son. Mike. and his friends,
Miss Donna Doty and Rob Kent
of Tacoma, as weekend visitors.
Mike is a student at the Tacoma
Vocfftional"school and is study-
in highway and civil engineering.
gunday g-uests at the Zahls were
Ed Claybaugh and Harold Pier-
son. also from Tacoma, Mr.. and
Mrs. Zdhl each caught salmon
Friday, one a 12 and one-half
pound hooknose.
Prosser friends. Mr, and :Mrs.
Sanford Ware. arrived Monday for
a few days with the Roland Will-
sons at Holiday Beach. The Will
sons returned last week from a
trip to the Prosser area, where
they picked grapes and visited
members of their family. They
visited their son-in-law and daugh-
ter: Mr, and Mrs. Darwin Lain-
bier in Benton City and their son.
Lee W*illson. and his wife in Yak-
ima. They reported an unusually
good grape season over there, also
apples.
J&CN LEIMIBACK of Holiday
Beach" is recovering from a bron-
he has been suffering for several
days, but is not yet able to re-
turn to his work
Travelling some 900 miles for
lheir hunting lip beyond the Fort
St. James area of Canada, Sig
Anderson and Bob Anderson of
Jorstad Creek. each came home
last week with a moose. The men
left Oct. 26 and retm'ned Nov.
,5". They must have seen plenty
of game. since they literally
"chose" to shoot a medium sized
animal, considering the meat bet-
ter than in the largest moose.
While ner husband. Steve Ahl.
is elk hmlting up in the Hoh riv-
er territory, Mrs. Ahl, accompanied
by her sister. Mrs. Mary James
of Bremerton. has been visiting
with old friends on the Canal.
They made their headquarters for
the weekend at the Lilliwaup Mo-
tel and made the most of the op-
portunity to see old neighbors.
They were breakfast guests Mon-
day of Mrs. Kate Davis and lun-
ched with the John Aaros. They
stopped that afterneon to see Mrs.
Frank Robinson and her, daugh-
ter. MI,. Jack Catto. Mrs. Ahl
and her husband are living at pre-
sent at the home of their daughter
in Poulsbo.
Mrs. Fred Martin of Beacon
Point entertained members of the
Social Club of Elinor chapter,
OES on Tuesday of last week.
There was a good turnout for the
potluck luncheon and meeting.
Reports, vague and not yet
tracked down have been circulat-
ing about several elk being bagged
over the weekend in the Lilliwanp
swamp.
Construction Rules
Changes Noted By
Julia Hansen
Congresswoman Julia Butler
Hansen announced this week that
the International Conference of
Building Officials has accepted 15
lumber industry recommendations
which would change the Building
Code affeeIing construction in
about 1.000 cities.
Mrs. Hansen said that she ex-
pected, the changes in the code
to aid the lumber industry in
southwest Washington consider-
ably. She said that the recom-
mendations include requests as fol-
lows: (1) the use of fire-retard-
ent treated wood for 1-hour per-
manent non-bearing partitions in
several types of buildings, (2l the
external use of heavy timber con
umns and the approval of other
changes in building requirements
which would result in additional
use of timber products. _
The Congresswoman said tlmt
the aecer)tance of these amend-
ments will mean that the building
codes in about 1.000 cities will be
changed and that the result will be
increased interest in lumber for
homes and office buildings.
"By allowing fire-retardent
treated wood for such items as
studs in partitions and suspended
ceilings, a whole new market can
be opened up for lumber and wood
prodncts m several mid-western
and western states." Mrs, Hansen
said. "This certainly is a welcome
development partic{flarly when wc
remind ourselves that there has
been a net decline of nearly 29.000
sawmills with the consequent de-
cline in employment over the 15
years, 1947 to 1962."
@ Seconds may mean lives in
case of fire. Junior Fire Marshals
urge you to write down the col
reet number of your local fire de-
partment and place it near your
telephone. Know the location of
the fire alarm box neai'est your
home.
Question
Can Pontlacs possibIy keep cn
getting better
and better.and better?
Answer
....,
More than 70,000 people bought new Pontiacs
and Tempests during October.
.SEE WHY AT YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAc DEALEg
SHELTON MOTOR GO:.
233 So. First St. Shelton
Douglas Fir Lumber
Production Ahead
Of Last Year
PORTLAND (Special)---Though
sawmills of tlm Douglas fir reg-
ion trimmed output seasonally by
6 percent in October from Sep-
tember, they edg'cd ahead of 1962
with a ten-monti] volume of 6.817,-
559.000 board feet.
Orders tiros far in 1963 are still
off from last year by 1.2 percent, i
but at 6.890.423.000 feet. are ahead
I
of production by one percent.
These are key comparisons in the
October summary isstied by the
West Coast Lumbermen's Assoc-
iation.
Unfilled orders actually gained
in October from the previous
month, rising by month's end to
519,696,000 feet. or 13 percent
ahead of last year. Mills lightened
their inventories by 3.6 percent
from a year ago to 81,8,580,000
feet.
Shipments stayed slightly ahead
of output, but are down by less
than one percent from 1962.
Cargo sales to Atlantic and Gulf
coasts failed to dent Canadian do-
minance last month, the ten-month
total of 6"75.783,000 feet remaining
15 percent behind last year's.
California cargo and export
sales are both up this year to
an almost identical 379.000,000
feet. Exports are up 25 percent,
and west coast cargo 16 percent.
However. local sales at 301,155,000
feet are down slightly.
TIlE WEENLI r average of West
Coast lumber production in Octo-
ber was 162,001,000 b.f. or 101.8
percent of the 1958-62 average.
Orders averaged 173,969,000 b.f.;
shipments 167.811.000 b.f.; week-
ly averages for September were
production 171,618,000 b,f., 107.9
percent of the 1958-62 average; or-
ders 175,754,000 b.f.; shipments
165,794,000 b.f.
Ten months of the 1963 cumu-
lative production 6.817.559.000 b.f.;
ten months of 1962, 6.751.922.000
b.f.: ten months of 1961. 6.582,018,-
000 b.f.
Orders for ten months of 1963
break dov.m as follows: Rail and
truck 5,136.877.000 b.f.; domestic
cargo 1,072,689.000 b.f.; export
379,702,000 b.f.: local 301,155,000
b.f.
The industry's nnfilled order file
stood at 519.696.000 b.f. at the
end of October. lmnber inventory
at 818,580.000 b.f.
Estimb&es %overing the third
qnarter of 1963 have been revised.
Lake Nahwatzel Has Abundance
]Of ilk Hunters OverWeekend
By Joann Tnl)per
LAKE NAHWATZEL - Elk
season opened last Saturday ]not-n-
inK, with lmnters from far and
wide coming down the road. It
looked like a freewqy. Saw some
beautiful bulls go through and it
looks real promising for the rest
of the season which closes Nov. 17.
' Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Hansen last Sunday was lbick
\\;Vats(m arid Larry Lindberg of
Seattle.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. McClanahan
of Shelton visited Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Cooper last Thursday.
Weekend guest at the Coopers
was Mrs. Cooper's son, Hans Mak,
Tacoma.
Last Sunday Mrs. William Price
and children, of Port Angele and
Mrs. Ronald Thomas of Shelton
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spring-
el'.
Thursday evening Mrs. Dick
Tupper and Mrs. A1 Tupper at-
tended the bridal shower of Miss
Susan Hail, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs: William Hall, of Kamilche
Point. The shower was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fonzo,
Shelton.
SPENDING TIlE weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Ford xnas
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Taylor of
Olympia.
Steve Crape, Elma, who is at-
tending college at Centralia vis-
ited his grandparents, Mr. and
lV[rs, Ford last Sunday and Mon-
day. With no school Monday the
children ail enjoyed the three days
off. John Tupper, who is going to
Olympic College at ,:Bremerton,
enjoyed his day off from school
by spending a few days up at
Deer Lake with a hiking club
from college.
Sunday dinner gamsts at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Allan Hick-
son last Sunday was James Hick-
son and girls of Dayton. Mrs.
James Hickson is in Colorado visit-
ink her mother who is ill.
Eddie Dawson. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Dawson accompanied
the DeMolay boys from Shelton
to a DeMolay Conclave Convention
held at the Scottish-Rite Masonic
Temple in Seattle over the week-
end.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Dawson and
daughter, Mrs. LeRoy Smith and
children. Jim and Linda attended
the Homecoming game in Shelton
last Friday when Shelton won
from East Bremerton.
Mr. aml Mrs. Clifford Reeve
took theh" children. Rodney, Ran-
dy and Pa:lla to Woodland Park
Zoo in Seattle last Sunday. The
children enjoyed the day, and see-
ing all the animals.
SATURDAY DINNER guests at
the Tuppers were Mr. and Mrs.
Art Pahner. Mallock and Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Linton of Brinnon. who
are spending a week at the Resort
while Linton is ell( hunting with
Dick Tupper.
Visiting Mr_ and Mrs. Hector
Barbour last Thursday were Mr.
and Mrs. Herb McLaughlin of
Shelton.
Sunday dinner guests at the
Tuppers were Mr. and Mrs. Art
Palmer of Matloci:. The occasion
was to celebrate Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Tupper's wedding anniver-
sary.
@ Greatest fire losses occur dur-
ing the winter months, many due
to malfunctioning heating" units.
Your Junior Fire Marshal asks:
has your furnace been inspected
and cleaned within the past year?
,Christmas
Card
Assortment
From
50 for Sl°°
Also photo greeting orders taken
Christmas Merchandise Arriving Daily
Neirs Pharmacy
, ,, , i i
Covey Bldg.
4th & RR.
You'll agree
DA
/
LD
Butter
No substitute can match the flavor and "::i
i; .g nutritious goodness of Darigold Sweet
/ ii Cream Butter. Cookies, cakes 'n all your
. baking will taste better with Darigold
tl :: .% :.: c .2::..-:.-.: ..
[;).,.... ;.%.. Butter....,
....... \\;tpt/ .
" %\\;I A.V ., .,,o,, do,,, o,..r.,,o,., ,o,.,
Be:t Bugs !
I ..ICES NOVEMBER 14-15-16 Tgl00,"JIT
!
h EFFECTIVE , ,
*"°" FRYERS
BODIED
31"
Cut-Up Pan Ready ............ Lb. lb
'RIB ROAST o.s. c,.o,oo .................... 79*
RIB STEAK o.s. ChOioo DAHTEES
or 00ood ........................ ,_b. 79*
SPARER|aS ,ire, 49'
Lean, Fresh Lb, 49* Boneless
.................... Smoked .................... Lb,
IC ke lilt 3/'1
,COFFEE CAKE
Hungarian ............ 39" Pure Salad 0il 29 €
APPLE CIDER 00OTT00E
Shur-fresh ............ . Gal. ,,. Mayonnaise- 39 <
KRAFT'S 24jZ a
Cottage Cheese 19'
AMERICAN HERITAGE cop
VItLU ME
,,,, S flOW'S i
' CLAM CHOWDER 15 oz,
NABISCO TV COOKIES
GRAPEFRUIT
c,oo ,',.wheels ,,v+ oz 2/89'*
Choc. Fudge Sand. 16-oz ..... SUNDAYS
CAMPBELL'S SOUPS
10 I/=-oz. Tins ............................
Fancy Arizona 8 Lb.
A.B.C. SODA CRACKERS Tangy Sections for Piio Bag
Salads
Fros, ,. cr,,0 25' L
16-ounce Package ............................
CABBAGE """ 5
HOTCAKE SYRUP Crisp Heads €
from Oregon ............................................ LB.
.o, w.,,os ,oo, 3t'z 5'
Frontier 22-oz. Bottles ........ Mature
DAHISH SQUASH ,o,,oo<,o,
PANCAKE MIX Winter Meals ................ LB.
,eft, O,ooko, 49* IIOHAIHE <:'°° 19
4 Pound Bag .................................... , Green Heads t
Mild in Flavor .................................... Each