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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
December 21, 1967     Shelton Mason County Journal
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December 21, 1967
 
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. RAY RICE, president of Beta Zeta ter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha, was pre- ing a check for $415 to a member of ePtional Foresters, Inc., when the above ,o was taken Mrs. Lois Kimbel, an 0 member, and Ed Kroh, director of Ex- tiOnal Foresters, (kneeling left) posed with the group. Each year at Christmas time the local ESA chapter presents all pro- ceeds from a ways and means project to the group. This year $15 presented to the chapter by the Shelton Branch of the Se- attle First National Bank, in memory of Mrs. Ruth Toney, swelled the total to $415. ................ ¢ ..... :i ........... t DAVE ROSE High School Spotlight * lCareer in Forestry will be hurdles and 100-yard dash for I,.e day if Dave Rose, Shel- the third season this spring. :?lgh school senior, carries His subjects are German, busi- [h with his present plans, ness law, literature, civics and i/t tends to attend Olympic Col- second year woodshop. He is a following graduation and member of "S" Club. 'in that subject. A 5 feet 10 inch, 143 favorite hobbies are fish- Dave has blue eyes andP°under'brown .tlcl hunting, which is not hair. He was born July 10, 1950 ing. in Shelton. He is the son of Mrs. has lettered in wrestling Bonnie Rose Anderson and |rrrack. He turned out for makes his home with his grand- 'Uag in his sophomore year parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mll participate in the low Smith of Skokomish Valley. His only brother, Marty, is an SHS graduate. ]00ses Bar Exam l[rY Strankman, a 1958 te of Shelton High school, passed the California ar exam. He is presently .lttg the University of Call- |',a San Francisco. Strank-  the son of Mrs. Myrtle |'xraan, Shelton. Best Food Buys Listed • The United States Department of Agriculture's Plentiful Foods list--a monthly guide to com- modities in best supply--has been announced for January. Included in the listing by USDA's Consumer and Market- ing Service are broiler-fryer chickens, potatoes, grape juice, fresh oranges and grapefruit, dry split peas, and eggs. Broiler-fryers have been desig- nated the feature items for the month. Concord grape juice, of- ten considered something of a "luxury" food purchase, also is currently available in sufficient quanity to qualify it for special emphasis. The 1967 fall potato crop has been estimated well above aver- age, with the harvest augmented by ample storage stocks and an anticipated good winter crop. Marketings  of .......... crop oranges:ialso will • be above average, despite a volume about one-third less than last year's record breaker, and January is the principal harvest month for grapefruit. The plentiful supply of dry split peas results from a combination of high production and a drop in exports during 1967. Above-average production of eggs, resulting in plentiful sup- plies, is expected to continue through January. Democr00 Club To Meet Tonight • John Fullerton, Port Angeles, will be the featured speaker to- night at the Mason County Demo- cratic Club meeting at 8 p.m. at the PUD Auditorium. Fullerton has been a leader in the Democratic Party for several years and is now President of the Clallam County Democratic Club but this will be his first speech in Mason County. Savage said Fullerton is an accountant with offices in both Port Angeles and Port Townsend. Savage announced that the im- portant business of the meeting will be the election of officers for the coming year. Course rtnan Second Class Dav- rk, Jr., USN, son of Mr. . David S. Clark, Shelton, raPleted a refresher train- se off the coast of San Calif. aboard the anti- "e warfare support air- atrier USS Yorktown. | IdELTON VALLEY | RANGE HALL iiiat.,t Dec. 23 Toppers Masons To Install Officers • Mt. Moriah Lodge No. II F&AM will hold its 104th instal- lation of officers at 8 p.m. next Wednesday in the Masonic Tem- ple. Lodge will open at 7:30 p.m. for all Masons. A special invitation is ex- tended to all Masons and friends to attend the installation. Re- freshments and an hour of fellow- ship will follow. Those being installed include Fred E. Ferris, worshipful mas- ter; Victor T. Ellison, senior warden; Edward B. Auseth, ju- nior warden; WB Louis O. Lar- son, treasurer; WB Arnold L. Cheney, secretary. Alex E. Smith, senior deacon; Robert L. Tobey, junior deacon; Charles Morrison, senior stew- ard; Loy A. Hicks junior stew- ard; Jack W. Powell, marshall; Thomas L. Savage, chaplain; and Claude H. Rhodes, tyler. Taking part as installing mas- ters will be WB George B. How- ard, WB T. J. Watts and, WB William. M. Brickert. WB Clar- ence Grunert will be installing marshal; WB Horace Crary, in- stalling chaplain; William Batchelor as installing secretary; and Mrs. Loui Larson, organist. Lock Your Car Reminder Given • "So you had a good shopping trip and all those nice packages are stacked on the back seat of the car. Just one last stop to go. Wait: Before you leave your car, better put those packages in the trunk . . . why tempt fate or auto thieves." The Hood Canal Federated Wo- man's Club, working on the na- tional Automobile Theft Preven- tion Campaign, reminds you that more than 500,000 cars were stolen last year and more thou- sands broken into. Always keep your car free of temptation. Remove the ignition key, lock valuable items in the trunk and lock you car, they reminded. No Action On Figh'l" • Shelton Police and Prosecuting Attorney John C. Ragan said no further action has been taken0n an incident in which John J- son, 19, Shelton was injured when struck by an iron ladle during a disturbance Dec. I. Johnson told police he was struck by Steve Bllner after he had used a garden rake to break out a window and enter a home on which he was paying the rent for Mrs. Sandra Winters. Mrs. Winters and Bliner were in the home and would not admit him, Johnson told officers. Prosecuting Attorney John C, Ragan said he had reviewed the case, and, that none of those in- volved had filed a complaint With his office. Also, he said, Johnson had refused to give Police a written statement to follow up the oral statement he made in the hospital. Vance In Korea • Army SP/5 Carol G. Vance, whose wife, Verla, lives in Shel- ton, was assigned to the 2rid Infantry Division's 702nd Main- tenance Battalion at Camp Rice, Korea, Oct. 24 as a mechanic. COS M ETforu C S (" question and answer series on cosmetics is brought to you as a courtesy by Nell's Pharmacy to help you in your choice in the proper cosmetics. PURPOSE OF' EYE LIGHTER Q. What is the purpose of eye lighter? I-row should it be applied ? A. Eye lighter is a versatile form of eye makeup that can be used in any one of a num- ber of ways, either as a base for other eye makeup or to create special effects. It can also be used to lighten a color- tone shadow. Used as a base for other eye makeup, eye lighter will make your eyes look larger and livelier. If your eyes are too close together, use eve lighter at their inner corners. If your eyes are too deep-set, use eye lighter over the shadowed areas and darker eye makeup Just Under your brows. MAKEUP FOR A BLONDE Q. I am a blonde with rather sallow skin. What shade of makeup and lipstick should I ue? A. Use a face makeup that is in th( e pinkish-beige family. Avoid any makeup with a yel- low tone. Today's linsticks---many of which are llght pastelslend temselves to almost any com- plexion tone. You should therefore choose your lipstick according to the costume you are wearing, not according to your own coloring. Vief Narn Civilians Given Sho÷s • DANANG (PAO)--"We shot 1,300 Vietnamese this morning," said Hospital Corpsman First Class Dale Oster of Cumberland, Md. Bullets were not used however. Instead, the "weapon" was a jet innoculation gun loaded with plague vaccine. The 1,300 Vietnamese, most of them Montagnards, were from the mountain district of Mlnh Long, 20 miles west of Quang Ngai. They were innoculated against the plague by a four man team from the Preventive Medicine Unit at the Naval Support Activi- ty, DaNang. The team has been giving plague shots to Vietnamese at Special Forces Camps and in nearby villages through I Corps for the past month. "We started at the request of the Special Forces," said Hos- pital Corpsman Second Class Thomas A. Rau of Shelton, Wash. "This is the plague season, and they asked us to innoculate all the Vietnamese in and around their camps. Actually, we've spent most of our time shooting in the villages." "It took us about four hours to innoculate the five villages in the Minh Long area," said Sea- man John Duvall of I_)uisville, Ky. "We started about 8 a.m." Du- val continued. "The first place we set up shop was at the dis- trict schoolhouse. Then we went on to four other local district headquarters in the area." "The children were quite co- operative, but we had some trouble keeping them in line. They kept crowding around to watch each other get innocu- lated." "The adults were a little hisi- tant to come up at first," said Yeoman Third Class Dennis Cag- ner of Niagara Falls, N.Y. Besides giving shots, Rau also took throat cultures on some Viet- namese to determine the preval- ence of meningitis bacteria. "Innoculating against plague is only a small part of our job," said Oster. "Besides irmoculat- ing against many diseases, we also spray large land areas with insecticides, map areas of heavy pestilence and make lab tests on insects and animals." YEOMAN THIRD CLASS Dennis Gagner gives a plague shot to a Montagnard worn- an in Yinh Long, 20 miles west of Quang Ngai. (U. S. Navy photo by Dave Hough) Win Beef • Winners in the beef fund rais- THERE WERE 13,061 business ing by the Eagles were L. H. failures in the United States in Asche, front quarter of beef; Mrs. 1966. The average dollar loss per TediDePoe, hind qu.ter of beef failure was $106,091. and W. J. Strutz, harn ,.i: Christmas Slippers Shoe Dep÷. e Suede Slipper with colorful fleece collar. Sizes 5-10 in colors Gold, Blue &. Green. only s7 Short Sheer slipper with fleece collar. Sizes 5-10 in colors Green, Pink & Lilac. only $5 Leather Slipper with fur collar scuffs. Sizes 5-10 in colors Pink, Beige, Blue and Multi-color. only $4" i illl WARM HER FEET WITH FURRY SLIPPERS by Tru-Stitch 3rd and Railroad el Everyone giveS Watches for Christmas ACCUTRON SPACEVIEW "G" Clear view dial arrangement, waterproof,* sweep second hand, luminous hands and dots, black Py- thon strap. $125.00 ACCUTRON "223" Sweep second hand. lu- mi 0us dots and hands, applied markers on dial, alligator strap. $125.00 What's so special about watches, anyway? They're made up of mainsprings and hair- springs. Balance wheels. And a lot of other delicate mechanisms. It's those things that make a watch run. Be it fast or slow. Or maybe not at all. So why give someone an ordinary watch? You could give an Accutron® timepiece instead. Accutron has no hairspring. No mainspring. No balance wheel. They've been replaced by a tuning fork. The tuning fork does everything ordinary watchworks are supposed to do. Measure time. Only it does it more accurately. By vibrating 360 times to a second. And sending the hands around the dial so precisely, we can guarantee monthly accuracy to within a minute, t About 2 seconds a day. Could a gift be more perfect? BECKWITH'S The old-tashio/le balance wheel principle is used in all watches, not the Accutron movement. The Accutron toning fork makes possible the first ate,antee Of accuracy ever liven. Jewelry • Gifts 502 W. Franklin 426-3283 "When case. crown and crystal are intact. Easy Credit of Course "We will adjust timekeeping to this tolerance, if necessary, Guarantee is for one full year i Thursday, December 21, 1967 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 7