December 30, 1965 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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December 30, 1965 |
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December
.$
OUR OWN BAKERY
SPECIALS
FRENCH-PARTYRYE
................ Loaf
& Jerry Batter
pt. 35¢ qt. 69¢
BAKED FILE:SIt D&I Y
PHONE 426--3'377
%.
less, Cooked, Hickory Smoked
Rath ~41~ Ipil~l
Biackhawk v il~ I~i~l~
.:.. 3 b. Tin IilIIOInIW~
R"th ¢= An
BlackhawkV!ll ]I'IL
l~,..4 lb, Tin le~'V
f Glazed, Boneless
POUND
• . Fancy
Grand Flavor LB.
For Those Tasty Carrot
Sticks ...... 1-LB. CELLO BAG
SUNKIST
FANCY. ...............
' B L ON--MA O e ot.,,NTv J otmNAt -- Publishes in "C ,rlSt a to c !. v.g:,A.')Shelton, Was ta ton
I I , I Ul " .I , "~%;, ..... :ll,'ll'i]l III III I I U I" I I I
Golden Ripe No. 1
Save at Shop-Rite
Quality Is Assured
i/lr0 [
NALLEY'S ASSORTED --- CUP
SHOP-RITE'S TOP QUALITY VNF MEATS
FOR
FANCY RIPE
' EACH
CHiP DIPS . • • • , 49
BONELESS
Fully Cooked
Armour's Star
"Ham What Am"
8 - 10 lb. Sizes
Whole or Half
POUND
BONELESS . . . Genuine, Lean Canadian "Maple Leaf"
With Perfect Smoked Flavor... 5 - 6 lb. Sizes
In Cryovac --- WHOLE OR HALF ........................................ POUND
VNF U.S. CHOICE BEEF
FULL FLAVORED, FULL CUT
ROUNDS .............................. POUND
VNF U.S. CHOICE BEEF
RUMP ROASTS OR BONELESS
HEEL OF ROUND .................. POUND
10¢ Coupon in Pkg. Good for Buns
Armour's Star
Chef Boy-ArC-Dee Chef Boy.Ar-Dee AI(~
PIE sau.., Pep,, Pkg, 59'
Cheese Pizza, Pkg. mI'~
HAM OR CHICKEN ONO .wooo
...................... 4 y2oz. ~]W.t
ONION SOUP MIX .................... 3 Pkgs. Sl
MARSHMALLOWS Reg. or , .
Mlnature 4 Pkgs Sl
SNAC. 25
CRACKERS :. ........ , ............................ ,o oz. Pkg.
CHEESE KRA+,'S
............ 10 oz. Pkg.
SPAGHE I ,.iON 3 'Pkg,°z" $1
,. ............ 12 oz. Pkg.
/
SHOP-RITE
Top Quality,
F " • h "tasty
Chips! . • •
They're Shop-
Rite So You
Know They're
Good!
3-BAGGER
ORAiIGE U
, I ,, I II I ,
. I U ,.I I I I].:. I ..11 .......... I I1_. B
11
l I . L li II1. II. ,.
J~
LB.
41r
v
r
Minute
Maid
Frozen
lltNER$ '1
FOR A QUICK,
EASY MEAL .................. For
SPECIAL
OCCASION
FROZEN
4
OZ.
Pkgs.
KR FT'S
PHILLY
8 oz. Pkg.
DARIGOLD FANCY QUALITY
THERE'S NOTHING LIKE
REAL BUTTER! ........ POUND
CANADA DRY
ASSORTED
FLAVORS ....................
2B $,
OZ.
Bots.
PLANTERS COCKTAIL
FOR PARTY
SNACKS ....................
7 $1
OZ.
Cans
PACIFIC
PEARL
.... 4y -oz. Tin
SHOP-RITE'S-- A REAL
DESSERT TREAT
........................ I/2 GALLON
Whistles, Bugles, Daisies-Reg. Pk.
SNACKS . • 31=1
Shop-Rite Hot Dog or Burger Pks.
. . . 3/=1
Fast Pain Relief -- Reg. 61¢
ANACIN .,. . 49
Shop-Rite Garlic - 48 oz, Bottle
plus deposit --- Qts.
7 UP ,& COKE 5/=1
Nestle's--- l-lb. Box
QUHK . . . . 39
CRESCENT,SP!¢E
RACK SPECIALS---
ONION SALT,
BLACK PEPPER
ORANGE OR
GRAPE...
SUNNY JIM
I
46 OZ.
TINS
By DONA O'NEIL
LILLIWAUP -- This Christma~
cohunn of 1965 seems destined to
obliteration, for either circumstan-
ces, or destiny, whichever obstacle
preferred, has done its best to
stand in the way.
For example, Frances Catto,
regular Lilliwaup columnist, was
kind enough to seek out th~'ee
psges of news for her substitute
Columnist before she and her fam-
ily left on their holiday excnr-
stun Friday, But somehow, between
the Lilliwaup and Hoodsport post
offices the precious three pages of
typewritten news ended up in the
Union Post Office too late to be
delivered back to Hoodsport before
the Holiday.
Undaunted by this minor set-
back the fearless writer set dili-
gently about the task of phoning
for what was left of the holiday
news the day after Christmas, but
with sad results. Many phone calls
brought fruitless z~wards, for it
seemed that everyone had either
gone into hibernation for a recup-
, eration period, or had not yet re-
turned from their holiday jaunts
away from home. The possibility
of line trouble with the telephone
company was even suspected be-
;ause of the many unanswered
calls. A check with the operator,
the operator's supervisor, and the
supervisor of the supervisor dis-
integrated that excuse. Once again
more phone calls and alas--news!
FIRST IN THE telephone book
are Mr. and Mrs. John Aaro. H~v-
ing stuffed Old Tom the day be-
fore, they set about the ta;~k of
stuffing themselves on Christmas
Day. To sum it up, and to quote
Mrs. Aaro, they, along with her
sister Lois Heaton, "stayed home
and stuffed".
Mrs. Edward Furlong had just
returned from spending a week
in Richland with her daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hol-
man during the holiday season.
Lilliwaup may not be on tl~e
map in history clhsses, but evi-
dently Old Saint Nick found it
on his for he made his regular
annual rounds right on time this
;ar. It is rather debatable as to
whether or not he made it down
the chimney of the Wallace Smith
home but nevertheless young Ran-
dy Smith is the proud new owner
of an electric train, and his bro-
ther Jeff has a Fat Cat, For those
who may not be aware of it. this
fat cat has no hair. and does
not purr. This eat h~ positraction
wheels and r~ms on batteries~--
most of us old folks would call
it a "truck".
Mrs. Smith gathers great
strength, fortitude, and consola-
tion from the fact that the bat-
teries must inevitably wear down.
And then silence, sweet silence.
, The Smiths spent a bit of their
Christmas with Mrs. Smith's ram-
fly, Mr. ~znd Mrs. Clifford Bailey
of Chimacum and the rest of it
with Mr. and Mrs. Ha'.ry Smith
of Beacon Point.
And so Christmas has pa~ed.
Limbs of the once glittering
Christmas tree have turned to a
dry parched brown and now sag
In solemn resignation. Old Tom's
cadaver accepts its humble un-
cerimonious reckoning wrapped in
a coffin of newspaper a~d tossed
into the basket under the kitchen
sink. But this is not the end of
Christmas. It is but one Christ-
mas, and however precious it may
seem, there will be another. So
until the time returns for more
tinsel and toys our very best wish-
es for an abundance of health and
happiness through each and every
day.
And in closing, a post script.
This writer soon found that after
gathering what news there was,
the battle was not yet won. Early
Monday morning was covered with
snow, enough snow to make the
trip from Hoodsport to Shelton
take twice as long and go half as
fast. And then having arrived in
Shelton all in one piece without
even a bended fe.nder, another dis-
covery. No electricity throughout
the city of Shelton, power lines
down all over. Perhaps the pres-
.~es run without electricity? Very
doubtful. But anyway, you can be-
lieve that in spite of the results
of this column, this writer triedl
FOLGER'S
LB. 69 -- 2 LB. $1.37
INSTANT - 10 oz. $1.19
3 Lb. Tin
OVEN 28 oz.
B & M BEANS BA EO 3 89
............ Tins
DENNISON CHILIw'TH .EANS
............................ 40 oz.
COFFEE-MATE CARNAT,ON'S 69
............................ 11 oz. Bot.
CHUNK TUNA SNOW 4 Fo, 89
MIST ......................
EVAPORATED MILK OAR, O-O
........ Tall Tins
8/$1
TEA BAGS .os. CA. O,AN
......................... . Count 49
We Guarantee Everything --- Even Our Smile.
PRICES EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 29-30-31. LIMIT RIGHTS.
New Hours 9 - 9 Men. thru Sat. -- Sun. 1O - 7
Horton To Head
Heart Fund Drive
Ralph Morton of Shelton will
direct the February Heart Fund
campaign in Mason County, Carl
Olson, Bremerton, regional chair-
man of the campaign, announced
this week.
Horton sa~ld he is personally ac-
quainted with the work of the
heart Association through his
nephew, Dr. Vincent C. Kelley,
who has held_ct grant for reseat'oh
from the organization.
The county chairman will be ~-
sponsible for appointing those who
will direct the city's business drive,
the Feb. 27 Heart Sunday solici-
tation and special events during
Heart Month.
Cardiovascular disease afflict~
more people than any other ma-
jor disease entity, the Washington
State Heart Association reported.
More thaz~ 1t,600,000 adult Am-
ericans hs, ve definite heart disease
and an additional 6,900,000 haw
high blood pressure. Apart from
these thgre are 13,000,000 perso~u~
with suspect heart disease.
More than 35 percent of th@
Heart budget.goes toward researcb
intended to reduce thi$
toll. The Heart Association als0
1]elps to provide free dn~gs for
persons who have l~ad heart-dam-
aging rheumatic fever. A free
Cardiac Work Eyahmtion Clinic
is maintained for heart patients
hoping to return to work after
their illness.