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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
December 18, 1975     Shelton Mason County Journal
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December 18, 1975
 
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A GROUP from Exceptional Foresters and Exceptional Manor sang several Christmas carols for Shelton Chamber of Commerce members at the chamber meeting last Thursday night. Shelton Chamber of The program, he said, has at its meeting at included selling cordwood, work IBroiler Thursday evening, for Simpson Timber Company three members to the and other companies and various trustees for two-year heard John Schreiber, of the Exceptional describe the program of I. as trustees were Scott 1, Carol Mallory and Walter had been recommended nominating committee. committee report by Jerry Swartos. told the group lional Foresters would its 18th anniversary 23. members of the board of Robert Kimbel and Sel have served for the Schreiber said. purpose of the group, he to bring the mentally self support. has been executive of the group for the past other projects which raise a part of the funds which are used. The budget for 1975, Schreiber said, will be more than half a million dollars. The group gets $8.32 a day for care and maintenance of the residents and also have $9.50 per work day funded for programming for the next nine months. The group at present has 37 employees on the staff and has 16 vehicles. The program now has a facility for women, Exceptional Manor, located on the freeway south of Shelton in a former nursing home. : = i~ii:ii:~¸ ~!~! '~ii! i i,ii ! ~i~ i!,~,i ':'~'i ,~i~,I .... ~ Schreiber said each of the 86 residents is programmed to do what they can. There is, he said, no vegetation as is found in other institutions. The residents of the program, he said, come from 13 counties in the State of Washington. Christmas presentation set Special lighting, sound effects and narration from Scripture will enhance the Christmas program at the Skokomish Community Church. The program, entitled, "He is Lord," uses key events in the life of Christ to portray God's great act of love to all mankind. The youth and their sponsors° worked together to develop and prepare the program. They will present it December 21 at 7 p.m. The public is welcome to attend. program has grown, he today there are 86 The budget in 1967, he $18,000 and the provided a day care only for a few young )70, he said, the group to take over formerly occupied ton State Patrol Sanderson Field. program received the an intermediate care in 1970 and in 1972 a congregate care facility is funded by the of Social and Health es for care and John Schreiber IWA F I.W.A. Local 3-38 will holds it annual Christmas party December 21, beginning at 2 p.m., at the I.W.A. Union Hall, Second and Grove Streets. There will be entertainment and favors for the children, and an appearance by Santa Claus. I.W.A. Local 3-38 members and retired members and their families are welcome to attend. Be.of Belief in a cruel God makes a cruel man. Thomas Paine I I isa erl Disaster victims in 21 Washington counties are now eligible for long-term, low-interest loans from the U.S. Small Business Administration following President Ford's December 13 disaster declaration for areas hit by recent heavy flooding. Daniel B. Ward, Regional Director, SBA, Seattle, said in addition to Grays Harbor, King, Lewis, Skagit, Snohomish and Whatcom Counties, which are federally declared major disaster areas, SBA is authorized to assist disaster victims in all adjacent b~unties. These include Chelan, Cowlitz, Island, Jefferson, Kitsap, Kittitas, Mason, Okanogan, Pacific, Pierce, San Juan, Skamania, Thurston, Wahkiakum and Yakima Counties. "We consider three factors in making disaster loans," Ward said. "Did you own it? Did you lose it in the disaster, and can you repay the loan?" Eligible are most home or property owners (including mobile home owners), residential tenants and businesses of any size. Religious, charitable, or nonprofit organizations are also eligible. Farmers and stockmen are not r A SQUAXlN ISLAND TRIBAL ENTERPRISE THREE DAY SPECIAL! Friday, Saturday, Sunday only fresh crab from Westport! Crab Quantity Limited * Authentic Silver & Turquoise Jewelry * Smoker's Gift Sets * Hand Beaded Indian Moccasins * Cigarettes $3.70 Regular Length Carton NO SALES TAX! Open until 8:00 p.m. Christmas Eve. Closed Christmas Day. Now Open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Kamilche Trading Post from Highway 101 on McCleary Cutoff 426-9960 Pocket 20 Reg. $36.95 Pocket 40 The pocket Instamatlc With two-position focusing for great closeups. AUtomatic electronic eye and electr° 'AtoLqUtter. Ready-to-s tfit. Reg. $74.95 oans availa Je eligible for SBA disaster loans and should apply to the Farmers Home Administration. Ward said the purpose of an SBA disaster loan is to restore homes or business property as nearly as possible to pre-disaster conditions. For homeowners, loans may be used to repair or replace real estate, furniture, household belongings and other personal property. A disaster business loan may be used to repair or replace buildings, fixtures, machinery, equipment and inventory. The current interest rate for SBA disaster loans is 6-5/8 percent. Maturities are geared to an applicant's ability to repay, up to a maximum of 30 years. Assistance and information is available from the SBA Seattle District Office, 710 Second Avenue, Seattle, telephone (206) 442-5534. Roy Amos, 22, Shelton, appeared in Mason County District Court before Judge Carol Fuller Friday and waived extradition to California where there is a warrant for him on felony charges. Shelton attorney John C. Ragan had been appointed by Judge Fuller to represent Amos in the extradition action. He had been arrested by sheriff's deputies last week on the California warrant. I Drawn by Marilyn Cook Bordeaux School Next week's Journal will be the traditional holiday greeting edition, featuring drawings by grade school pupils. To order your greeting, call Display Advertising, PH. 426-4412 II I I Pocket 30 Ready for holiday pictures! Automatic electronic shutter plus drop-in loading. Camera, flash cuber Kodacolor II film and flash extender. Reg. $57.95 Kodak X-35 Kodak's handy Instamatic for great color pictures. The camera that takes flash pictures without batteries. Reg. $51.95 The New Vivitar System 35 Includes: * 220/SL 35mm Reg. SLR Camera with through-the-lens viewing $458.90 and exposure metering, ~* 50mm/fl.8 lens • 135mm/f2.8 Telephoto lens * 2X Teleconverter • 102 Electronic flash S * Enduro molded case • Black or chrome styling camera shop photo finishing kodak dealer art supplies custom framing 124 North Second Shelton Really free It is true you are not allowed to go out of here, but inside the Bastille you are as free as any man in the world. Jean Francois Marmontel Motorized 9" HomecrafP Saw, wings and stand, ready to run Model 34-580 Just $159.99 A terrific workshop starter. Compact yet versatile and loaded with quality features. Tackles big and little jobs; rips, crosscuts, miters. Great for paneling a room, cabinet building, any job where power and accuracy are important. Sets up in minutes. UL listed. Features? You bet! • Overload protected motor de- velops hp, 3450 rpm. • 100% ball bearing equipped. • Cuts 2" stock; at 45°. • Safety blade guard. • Fast setup. No electrical con- nections or adjustments. • Rips to center of 30" board. • Lockable power switch. • Work height on stand, 33 '. • 22" x 32" work area with wings. • Self-aligning rip fence W' Single- Model 4200 !1 Model 4500 607 S. 1st Men,- Set, 8-6 ii New shoes from H & H SHOES in Olympia certainly puts pep into your father in the morning. They sell FAMOUS NAME BRAND WOMEN'S AND MEN'S SHOES at Discount Prices. H & H SHOES 411 W. 4th Ave., Olympia ! un er an rl mas Model 4300 Model 4400 g Saw Model 968 e Open Friday 'till 8 p.m. Shelton 426-4415 Thursday, December 18, 1975 - Shelton-Mason C¢)unty Jour~ai Page 11