December 4, 1975 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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December 4, 1975 |
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JACK AND MARGE DENNY of Mason Lake will celebrate
their 25th wedding anniversary at an open house to be held
at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Mason-Benson Center on Mason
Lake. Hosting the event will be Barbara Brewsaugh and the
couple's children who are Roger, Ross, Sandra and Russell
with his wife, Peggy. All friends and relatives are welcome. A
late dinner will be served.
MR. AND MRS. DENNY were married on December 2,
]950, in Plains, Montana. Since 1969 they have lived in the
Mason Lake area, where they now own and operate Denny's
Mason Lake Marina.
Salon will meet on Monday
Mason County Salon No. 508 the 7 p.m. dinner will be Mrs.
Eight and Forty will meet Wendell Brickert. Christmas gift
Monday in the home of Mrs. exchange and entertainment are
Martha Witsiers. Co-hostess for planned.
nnlversa
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Compton
will be guests of honor at an open
house to be held in the home of
their niece, Mrs. Morris Smith,
1705 Mark Street N.E. Olympia,
on December 14 in observance of
their fiftieth wedding anniversary.
Friends and relatives are
invited to drop in between the
hours of 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. It is
asked that no gifts be presented.
Hostesses for the
reception will be the couple's
daughter, Lorraine Hite,
granddaughters Teran Heck and
Lilia Brinson, and niece, Mrs.
Morris Smith. The Comptons have
five grandchildren. They were
married on December 19, 1925 in
Cbehalis. No gifts please.
Alice Palmer
will play
Former member Afice Palmer
will lead the singing of carols at
Sbelton Garden Club's Christmas
meeting to be held at noon
Monday in St. David's Episcopal
Church. She will also play an
original composition.
A potluck luncheon will be
followed by the exchange of
small, homemade gifts. Hostesses
will be the misses Rose and Dora
Fredson, Mrs. Florentine
Connolly and Mrs. Jean Eliot.
Bazaar slated
Dazy Mays 4-H Club
Christmas bazaar will be held
Saturday in front of the Penney
Store. There will be a bake sale
and a homemade craft sale to
start at 10 a.m. and end at 6 p.m.
Craft items will include
macrame plant hangers,
potholders, Christmas stockings,
candles, yarn animals, and
Christmas decorations.
On November 25 the Dazy
Mays 4-H Club met at the Willis
home with Joey Dowty as a
visitor.
Pam Ahlf called the meeting
to order. Leslie Schumacher led
the flag salutes.
The next meeting is set for
December 13 and will be a
Christmas party to be hdd in the
Hughes home. Tracey Hughes and
Pam Ahlf will prepare the dinner.
By Reporter Jane Gibson
pa
is plann
THE FIFTIETH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Compton will be celebrated on December 14.
THE COMPTONS were married on December 19, 1925 in
Chehalis. They will be honored at an open house to be held
in the Olympia home of their niece, Mrs. Morris Smith.
~k
men
oul
orm
mon
examlna
ions
Monthly self.breast
examinations should be a routine
part of all women's lives from the
time they're in high school, says a
coordinator of a clinic at
University Hospital, Seattle,
formed to teach women how to
perform the examinations.
"Women should be as used to
examining their breasts as they
are to brushing their teeth, taking
their birth control pills, or locking
the door at night," said Laura
Hurd. a registered nurse.
'We figure that women are in
the best position to note any
changes in the textures of their
breasts. But to be able to do that,
they have to know what they're
looking for."
The Breast Health Clinic
opened in April at the University
Hospital Family Medical Center.
It is held from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
on Mondays and is staffed by
nurses with special training.
Clients are not charged a fee and
must make appointments by
SANTA'S DINNER, sponsored by Tiny Tim Orthopedic
Guild, will be held in Hoodsport Community Hall on
Saturday evening with Santa in attendance between the hours
of 6:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Pictures of Santa Claus and
children will be available. A chicken dinner will be served
from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m. with bazaar items and baked goods
offered for sale. Pictured with Santa are Jan Mazzoncini, left,
and Kathy Wood, secretary and treasurer of the group.
Have your
once a yea
It's free at Beltone
Come to see our Mr. Roy Pearson
consultant for
'HEARING AIDS
Mr. Pearson will be here
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1975
9:30 until 1:30 p.m.
at HY-LOND INN -- 426-8277
If hearing is your problem...
® IS YOUR
ANSWER
418 S. Washington, Olympia, 943-9650
calling 543-9490.
"Focus of the dinic," Ms.
Hurd said, "is on education. We
teach women when to examine
their breasts, how to do it, what
to look for, and what to do if
they find a lump or an
abnormality. If, during the
session, a woman finds that she
does have something unusual, she
goes back to her doctor or we
refer her to a community
physician.." Of the 69 clients who
have visited the clinic to date, Ms.
Hurd said that only five had
found abnormalities and that
none had been cancerous.
The clinic visit takes one
hour. The first 30 minutes are
spent viewing a film produced by
the American Cancer Society and
Amaranth Club
to meet Monday
Amaranth Social Club will
meet at noon Monday in Fir Tree
Park for a potluck lunch and
exchange of gifts. Those attending
should bring table service.
in a group discussion about breast
anatomy and the normal changes
that occur. The second part is
spent in a private session where a
nurse teaches the client the
self-examination.
Ms. Hurd said that 95 percent
of breast lumps are discovered by
women themselves.
Women who develop regular
breast examination habits often
find cancerous lumps early
enough to survive them.
"In this country," said Dr.
Roger Moe, Associate Professor of
Surgery at the UW School of
Medicine, "the majority of lumps
are about one inch in diameter by
the time they're discovered.
"It is possible, depending on
the size and characteristics of the
breast, to feel these lumps when
they're less than one-half inch in
diameter - or even pea-sized."
Dr. Moe, who helps train the
Fellowship given
Christine Dawson of Union
has received a fellowship at the
University of Washington.
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Page 8 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, December 4, 1975
Breast Health Clinic nurses and
serves as a consultant, said studies
have shown there is an 85 percent
five-year survival rate for women
whose breast cancers are
discovered early.
About 96,000 new breast
cancers are discovered each year,
Bazaar today
A bazaar open house by the
United Foursquare Women will be
held today in the basement of the
church located at 910 Dearborn
Street on Hillcrest.
Opening at 11 a.m., afternoon
hours will continue until 4 p.m.
with the bazaar to be in progress
between the evening hours of
6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Handmade items for
Christmas giving will be featured.
"The Full Year Serw'ce Store"
220 West ¢ota
Playdoh
Reg. 1.59 .... NOW 99*
Life
Reg. 9.98 .... NOW $599
Monopoly
Reg. 8.49 .... NOW $525
orses were once
'When I was ten years old,"
reminisces Ora Chamberlin, "I
rode a horse 14 miles to a post
office to collect the family mail.
We lived 40 miles south of Miles
City, Montana, on a homestead.
"I started riding as a
six-year-old," she continues, "and
four years later I could ride just
about anything. Whenever Dad
bought a new horse I was told to
stay away from the animal, but I
never did - as soon as Dad left
the place I was on the horse!"
Ora Chamberlin was born in
Iowa, but before arriving in the
State of Washington as a
17-year-old bride whose husband
served in the U.S. Army she had
lived in Missouri, Kansas,
Montana and the Dakotas.
"Dad was a farmer," she
explains, "and the grass was
always greener just over the next
hill."
From 1918 until 1938 Mrs.
Chamberlin resided in Seattle
where she was employed as a
cook and as a waitress. She next
lived in Camas until 1944, and
after a year in Bremerton came to
Shelton. She was once a saleslady
in a department store, and from
1945 until 1963 worked in a local
shoe repair shop.
Her two children are Roberta
Holley of Seattle and Audrey Wirl
of Shelton, who is now cared for
in an illness by her mother. There
are eight grandchildren and eight
great-grandchildren.
"They are my biggest
interest," she states. "I often visit
my daughter in Seattle."
Mrs. Chamberlin was once
adept at needlepoint but because
of a broken arm that failed to
heal properly she can no longer
pursue this hobby.
"I really love to cook," she
declares. "I guess that's my hobby
now!"
She also revels in recollections
of her childhood, when she
milked six cows and walked four
miles to school. Women's
Liberation came too late to allow
Ora Chamberlin to attain a unique
honor.
"I was invited to ride in the
Miles City round-up," she states
proudly, "but my folks wouldn't
let me do it."
Her Hobo Bread is very like a
cake. She always bakes a double
batch to be cut in several portions
and frozen. She sometimes
substitutes dates for raisins.
Hobo Bread
In a large mixing bowl pour 2 C.
boiling water over 3 C. raisins.
Add 4 Tbsp. butter or margarine,
4 tsp. soda and 2 C. sugar. Allow
to cool and add 1 tsp. salt and 2
lightly beaten eggs. Add 4 C.
flour, mixing well. Add 1 C.
walnut meats. Two bread pans
should be sprayed with a
non-stick product or greased with
butter or margarine. Fill pans half
full and bake at 350 degrees for 1
hour or until an inserted
Magic Window
Reg. 6.25 ................................ NOW$425
O RA CHAMBERLIN
Montana homestead.
oo
$6,000,000.00 Man s,n4,
Reg. 13.49 ............................. NOW ll~
Aurora AFX Race Set
Reg. 43.00 ............................. NOW 532°°
Battleship
Reg. 8.49 " . .......... NOW $525
Breyer Horses ....... 15% OFF
Christmas Wraps
Reg. 1.98 ............................... NOW$137
remembers childhood da'
toothpick comes out clean. Half
of the required raisins may be
white to make a lighter colored
loaf.
Peanut Brittle
2 C. sugar
½ C. water
I C'. white coin:syrup
Cook until a bit dropped into
cold water forms a hard ball and
will crack. Add 1 lb. raw peanuts
with brown skins. Continue to
cook until golden brown. Remove
from heat and add 2 level tsp.
butter and 1 tsp. vani.!la. Mix well
and add 2 tsp. soda.
and bubbling spread
cookie sheet. Break
when cold. It is
only raw peanuts, and
will not be successful
brown skins are left ot~
A grave illness
Mere unorthodoxy
from the prevailing
to be condemned. The
such voices would be a ~
of grave illness in our
SHELTON STORE
All California Lines
At-home elegance.
of
Loungers. It's
and 20% nyl
delicate floral
with luxurious
Limited sizes ia
Reduced from
$
There's
something
at Kathy's.
Juniors
• Misses
• Queen
/
1 18 North Second St.
and
Kathy's Innovations
on the Canal - Union