December 24, 1964 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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SH'ELTON--MAg0N 30URNA -- Pu.b|!shed in "Chr stn as!Own, ghe!fon,_Wash!ngton
Thursday, December
Greeting by
SHERI CHAPPEI,L
.... Age 10 Mt. View School
Barbara Strickland
Eleanor Stephens
Lynn Nutt
Toni Gardener
Gary Engebretson
Dick Nelson
Larry Schneider
Charles In-3ham
John Haukom
iFt"5
Stewart's Foodliner
Age 11
Greeting by SUZANNE ROESSEL
Evergreen School
MAT TEAM HOSTS
MONTESANO MONDAY
Highclimber wrestlers retm'n to
their home mats for the first time
since Dec. 2 when they host a
strong Montesano squad in Shel-
ton.gym next Monday evening.
They have a road trip to make
first, however, going to North
Thurston tonight {Wednesday, De-
cember. 231 for their third en-
gagement of the current season.
:~o far Coach Larry Weir's squad
has tangled twice witlz Tumwater,
taking a 32-16 victory at home
and gaining a 22-22 draw at Turn-
water with a flu-weakened lineup.
TIDES OF THE WEEK
Computed for Hood Canal
Oakland Bay tides are 1 hr. and
50 rain. later and plus 3.0 f,t.
Friday, Dee. 25
Low .............. 3:24 a.m. 1.4 ft.
High .............. 10:37 a.m. 12.9 ft.
Low .............. 5:16 p.m. 4.3 ft.
High .............. 10:33 p.m. 8.3 ft.
Saturday, Dee. 26
Low .............. 4:23 a.m. 3.0 ft.
High .............. 11:23 a.m. 12.5 ft.
Low .............. 6:19 p,m. 3.1 ft.
Simday, Dec, 27
High .............. 0:17 a.m. 8.4 ft
Low .............. 5:28 a.m. 4.5 ft.
High .............. 12:06 p.m. 12.i ft.
Low ..... ~ ........ 7:13 p.m. 2.0 ft.
Monday, Dee, 28
High .............. 1:51 a.m. 9.1 ft.
Low .............. 6:38 a.m. 5.8 ft.
H~gh .............. 12:47 p.m. 11.7 ft.
Low .............. 8:01 p.m. 1.0 ft.
T||e.~day, Dec. 29
High .............. 3:03 a.m.
Low 7:47 a.m.
High .............. 1:24 p.m.
Low .............. 8:42 p.m.
Wednesday, ,~c. 80
Hig~h .............. 4:00 a.m. 10.9 ft.
Low .............. 8:50 a.m. 7.2 ft.
High .............. 1:59 p.m. 10.9 ft.
Low .............. 9:19 p.m. -0.3 ft.
Thursday, Dee. $I.
High .............. 4:44 a.m. 11.6 ft.
Low .............. 9:46 a.m. 7.5 ft.
High .............. 2:33 p.m, 107 ft.
Low .............. 9 :,~3 p.m. -0.7 ft.
SHELTON VALLEY
GRANGE HALL
Sat., i}ec. 26
MUSIC BY THE
TUNE TOPPERS
- -- -- ~ ' ...... _ I1$1 -- II II --
From Christmas to Christmas
the whole year through is a
to the
$4.50 a year
inside Mason CoUnty
$5.00 ayear
outside Mason County
We send a gift card with
each gift subscription
SPEARED ~PECIMEN--Bill Johnson holds the 5-foot-2-inch
long wolf eel he speared while skin diving near PoweH River,
B.C., on a recent outing enjoyed by a group of Hood Canal Seals
Diving Club members. This beats by two inches the largest
previous wolf eel taken by a club member, Dean Perry, who was
one of the travelers on this trip, with his wife and two daughters,
Cathy and Patty, and his ~on, Steve and .his wife of Eatonville.
Roy Dunn Jr., who is leaning from the window of the truck,
and Rennie Mason completed the internationa~l expedition. In
addition to spearing several sizeable ling cod, the Seals also
enjoyed diving ,on two sunken ships ~ the area. One wa¢ the 100-
foot-plus-long one-time rum-runner, xMalihat, the other a former
American gunboat, the U.S.S. Heron. The picture here was taken
by Mason, a member of the Seals Diving Club for less than 'a
year.
/
WI H
Bilter Dr.bs B azers.
$ .reak Eed
JUNIOR I!1(;I1 BA,~KETI~AI,L
~V 1, pr pa
Hopkin:~ ................... :~ 0 103 67
Mille|' . ........................ 3 0 151 78 [
Hoquiam ................. 1 ] 80 65
Washingt.,m ........... : 1 5:489
SHELT()N .............. 0 2 ~2 73
Jefferson 0 2 5.1b5
Centralia .................. 0 2 5(;83
Last Week
Miller 45. Shclton 29
Hopkins 44 .Icfferson 28
I]oquiam-Centralia postponed
Miller's B()bkiiLens were well-
warmed ul) and started fa:~t a~
they on{scored the Shelton Blaz-
ers, 45-29. in :t southwest Wash-
ington junior high haskeibalI
game in A1)erdeen last Thursday.
The Kittens found thcnL,;elves
sporting a eomfo:'la]~le 17-8 lead
by the cud of the first six-minute
period and coasted to their third
straight, high-score triun~ph of
the schedule. However. the 45
points the Kittens produc~,d was
somewhat beh)w the 5:' they oot-
'ched in each of Lheir previous
games.
Blazer scorinp; was paced by 8th
grade reserve Mike LaMarsh witl~
nine points while another 8th gra-
der, Chris Close was runner-up
with seven tallies. Coach Walt
Clayton used his 8th grade unit
most of the way after the first
quarter and lauded the way it
performed against, the hmky Mil-
ler squad.
n tile tmderclass game~t Miller
scissored tile ll-game viclo].y
,~tring Shelton's 8Lh grade ~,anz
had acumulated over the pasl, two
years with a tight 33-29 decision.
Miller's 7th graders made it a
clean-sweep for the home forces
with a 30-25 verdict.
The Blazers hosted Hoquiam
yesterday about Jomnal press-
time, now will be idle until after
the first of the year•
The lineups:
91h GIeAI)F, GAME
Miller 45 Shelton 29
Brudvik 4 f Swisher 5
Donovan 14 f Swope 5
Vekick 10 c Malloy
Augustine II g Sparks 5
Fraser 4 g Donaldson
Subs: Miller--Ancich 2. Feuer-
stein, LaCroix. Chopin. I~odwcll.
Shelton---LaMar,d~ 9. Cl~)~e 7, D::n..
iels 3, Austin, Purvis.
Score by Quarh;rs
Shelton 8 8 6 7- --29
Miller 17 13 8 7-45
LEAGUE OPEH$
Shelton's brand new city bas-
ketball league opened play last
Thursday with eight entries on a
once-a-week schedule in which...a
trippleheader will be played in
Lincoln gym and a single game
in the spanking new corrections
Center'recreation hall each Thurs-
day
;Tim Lincolr~ slate has game
times of 7:00, 8:15, and 9:30, while
the singleton at the Correction~"~
Center starts at 8:00 o'clock. The
teams will play a 14-game sched-
ule.
Opening night action found the
Corrections Center" entry giving
indication,of being¢ a definite title
threat after taking a 62-54 de-
cision from Skokomish Valley,
along with 20th Century and
EeUs & Valley Center, which bat-
tled to a double overtime before
the grocers snatched a 61-59
squeaker on Rich Loving's two
foul shots.
ANOTHER POSSIBLE title-
contender, ff it can beef up its
bench a bit, is Verle's Sporting
Goods, which managed a 53-35 trl-
umph over John's Richfield inspite
of having to borrow a player to
open the game and then going all
the way with only five players
when the fifth did arrive.
The Skokomish Renegades, pac-
ed by Guy Miller and Ronnie Pet-
erson with 17 and 14 respectively,
downed .K.amtlche, 48-38 in the in-
augural night fourth game after
coming from a 20-12 halftime def-
icit. /
The score was knotted at 55-55
and 57-57 at the end of regula-
tion time and the first overtime
in the 20th Century--Eells & Val-
ley thriller. In both overtimes
Henry Dean tied the score for the
losers after Bill Sloan and Jim
Sells bagged baskets for the gro-
cers. Then Loving sank the two
foul shots which won the nod.
DEAN WOUND UP with 25
points, a total which shared high
point honors for the opening night
with Greg Martin, a talented pi-
I
AKe 11
vot for the Corrections Center.
Sloan and John Sells had 21 and
20, Bill Cox of E & V and Herb
Baze of Skokomish each 18, Dan
Olson 16 for John's, Jerry Bloom-
field, Bob Ashley and Roger Hog
15, 14 and 13 respectively for
Verle's, Nason 14 and Olsen 12 for
WCC for other outstanding open-
ing night scoring totals.
Verle's and the Corrections Cen-
ter had things their own way
after sizzling first quarters.
Verle's broke away for a 28-11
lead and WCC punched out a
22-8 head-start. The Corrections
Center squad is coached by Jerry
Knutson, former Shelton junior
high athletic mentor now teach-
ing at Pioneer grade school.
The opening night lineups:
W.C.C. 62--Martin 25, Nason
14, Olsen 12, McCoy 3, Renion,
Maney 4, Shearer 2, Bambert 2,
Miles, James, Kenward, Coopper.
SKOKOMISH 54--Vic Matson
4, Herb Baze Sr. 18, Bud McDow-
ell 2, Bernie Long 4, Charlie Mil-
ler 20, Gene Avey 4, Alvin Mat-
son 2, George Adams, Ken Cham-
berlin, Herb I~aze Jr.
VERLE'S 53---Jerry Bloomfield
15, Bill Sloan 4, Tom Coleman 7,
Roger Hoff 13, Bob Ashley 14,
Durand.
JOHN'S RICHFIELD 35--O1-
son 16, Noble 6, McMorris 1, Stro-
em 5, Osterberg 2, D. Spilseth 3,
L. Spilseth 2, Oakes
RENEGADE 48 'Ron Peter-
O ERTB E
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Greeting by JENNY EAGLE
Mt.
/
son 14, Gary Peterson 7. Bill
Smith 8, Dave Lewis 2, Guy Mil-
ler 17, Pete Peterson 5.
KAMILCHE 38 Troy West 7, I
Roy West 4, Jery Westlund 5, .:rim
Richards 0, Floyd Barnes 6, How-
ard Wilson 2, Don Clary 10, Gary ,
Drescher 0. f
20th CENTURY 61--Bill Sloes
21, John Sells 20, John Orr 7. Jim i
Soils 4, Rich Loving 9, Gary
Schneider 0.
EELLS & VALLEY 59---Henry Grade 5
Dean 25, Gordon Jay 1, Jim Cross
2, Bill Cox 18, Buck Dronen 7,
Fred McGee, Ron Ahlf, Rich Cor-
mier, Butch Drones, Gene White
and George Hunter.
Gr~eting by TONY JUDAH
Evergreen
FRONT & RAILROAD AVE.
Age lOZ~
Greeting by MELISSA BERGESON
Mt. View School
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