16
Special supplement to f spotlight . July 10. 1001 Celebrating the 70th birthday of the City of Scappoose •`*- Lll `We worked from 5:30 in the morning until 7 or 9 o'clock at night' milk- ing and making butter. `It took too much labor.' Amold Tarb®ll `They (the Czechoslo- vakians) were looking for a better life. This was suppose to be God's Country., Hol®n Barta ==-=±-. --ry'.h `When we heard that Sputnik was launched my husband and I came down here and sat in the hayfield with our dog. We looked up and saw Sputnlk go by.' I,®n® Wa''S `In 1950 I went hunting again and when I came back I was mayor.' Henry KIIng

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Special supplement to

f spotlight .July 10. 1001

Celebrating the 70th birthday of the City of Scappoose

•`*-

Lll

`We worked from 5:30

in the morning until 7 or9 o'clock at night' milk-ing and making butter. `Ittook too much labor.'

Amold Tarb®ll

`They (the Czechoslo-

vakians) were looking fora better life. This wassuppose to be God'sCountry.,

Hol®n Barta

==-=±-.

--ry'.h

`When we heard thatSputnik was launchedmy husband and I camedown here and sat in thehayfield with our dog.We looked up and sawSputnlk go by.'

I,®n® Wa''S

`In 1950 I went hunting

again and when I cameback I was mayor.'

Henry KIIng

-

PAGE 18-Wedn®8day, July 10, 1991 The Spotllor`t, Scappooso/St. Heleng, Ore.

EAF`LY TPANSpol]TATION - Sidewheelers and sternwheelers carried early Scappoosorosldents up river to Portland or down river to Painier. The boats carried cargo, too.

Table of ContentsS®,vlng lh® Olly 27

'In 1948 I went deer hunting, and

when I came back they said I was onthe city council,' former mayor says.

`S.ar ot lhe game'

Scappoose athlete remembers glorydays when football fields were `allrocks and dirt.'

`==--I--_==+=`N®w land, new IIte

Helen Barta came from a SouthScappoose community rich inheritage and tradition.

Roots run d®®p 29With 82 years on the lam.IIy farm inScappoose, Arnold Talrbell has richmemories ol early Scaippoose.

Firs. w.re the schoolsAs Scappoose was settled, i irst therewere schools. As area grew, schoolsystem grew to match it.

31

On 'h® co,®n

Trto cover pliotographwas taken ln early 1915from b®hlnd and above theWatts House, ln the (ore.ground, which ls now Soap.pooso City Hall. The pt`otoshows the downtown area,the railroad tracks and themain street, now U.S. Hlgh.way 30.

Hot 8ummor wlnd9 car.lied a tlre througli tt`e com.munlty ln 1915, lovollno rna.ny Tesldonc®s and much oftl`o commorclal dls`i.let.

Congrats Scappoose onyour 70th!

We're celebrat.In8 our26th year in business!

© LARRY'S SHELLSll.I U.S. HWY30inscAPPOOSE 543-6974

LC HALL TRUCK LINE,lNC.

``Congratulations Scappoose"

1230 Deer Island pd. St. Helens

Happy BirthdayScappoose

from

The City of St. Helens

CongratulationsScappoose!

§fsf}AV!AV"W#»rfeti-.-xp-w#".SEFIVING COLUMBI^ COUNTY SINCE 1..a

F`®ady Mlx®d Concrete . Cfuehed Rock^eph •11 . S.nd . Gr®v®l . FIII M.I.rl®l

ec^P-E543-7',1

d.P_Fee3„J5e27

roRTunD2,1+799

lffiRt £S£3PpPA°RSTEs::= Congratulations Scappoose!

Mom. -F.i. 0:30-6:30S1.1® Columbl. Rl-.I Hwy.

.cL.oS;: D8:s33F5Av 5 43-6318

Congratulations,City of Scappoose!

We're proud to be a partof this vital, gr

livable comm

See us at our boothat the Pow Wow and

Airport Appreciation Day,and enjoy a famous and

delicious SCAPP00SE SANDWICH!

Scappoose City Clubnich Alli§on, President

The spotlloht, Scappooso/St. Holen8. Ore. Wednesday, July lo,1991-PAGE 19

Langdon has long history herelnez Lan8don, born in 19cO.

said her paren(s came to Scap-poose to escape the perils of(arming in the Midwest.

Her father had a wheat f ield inKansas. One evening he went totown and got a reaper to bring inthe wheat, and left it sitting out,they didn't have a shed, over.night-

"There was a hail stoim that

night that (ook the canvas off thereaper." she said. It also smashedthe wheat crop

"He tack the reaper back totown to the store, sold tt`e horsesand whatever else he could andended up in Portland with hiswlfe, I our children, three trunksand $3cO.''

That was the beginning of along history o{ Alice and lc,Wickstrom .n the ScappooseCommunity.

The Wicks(iom Planin8 Mill,located where the fire statio.i isnow, operated from 1902 un(il1910. and supplied much of thelumber for Scappoose School,built jn 1908, said Langdon.

"Dad had a mill or some kind

of timber buslness whe.ever hewent." she said. "He started log-gin8 with oxen and ended with atrain ln Washington "

A f lume, using wate. I ronScappoose C.eek, broiight lum-ber down to the mill. Porch postsmade by a trained lathe opera:orand produced on a iare turninglathe we.e sold all over O.e8on.

She remembers their home,built in 1903, located close towhere the U,S. Post Off Ice is now,as the f irst home in the a.ea withindoo. wa(er and pliimbin8

'.D.d pl.v.d the accord.o.Iand `re sqtiar. c=f`ce€ t#i theI.r.a.a.rn. wd l.dedon. -no•till he. - Sc=-=-=-:lie. oo. farI ron (he ..fit ham.I

`ve would slng, pull taffv or roast

pednu:i ``i:r a!! the r`€,gh-3c.(kh„

ofLa8##hod-#baked on HaMoween that (hechildren would decorate with fac-es and then take to elderly peo-ple ln the community.

Some of her favorite memorlesare of the perpetual battle be-tween students and teachers inschool

"Kids had pets back then," she

recalls. "We had one teacher whowore long skirts and was very'e'igious."

She said one boy in the classhad a pet chipmunk he would

Soo LANODON, paoo 27

=#:`,'..1*.

Landmark towerThis wlndmill and water to`^/er stood .I the Will Watts (arm

close `o tr`e current lcoatlon of the St.nfou.a p..rlt on theeast slde ol the railroad tTack8, sold Inca LJnodah, .1. rfuremomb®r9 much aboiit the early dayg Of Scapp-.

The wlndmlll. hlgh atop a f ir tree, pumped wateT Into thetank u8od by `h® tralns that reoularly plckod up ancld®llverod pas9onoers from sovoral stops ln South ColiimblaCounty and provided transportation to Portland.

Lanodon sold the tower 8`ood as a landmark for thosearrlvlng liom polnt8 south on the traln. .`When you could seethe tower, you knew you were coming to Scappooso," saidLangdon.

BPINGINO DOWN LOGS-This llume brought logs down lrom the woods `o the Wickstrom PlanlngMIIl ln Scappoo9o usl.io water from Scappooso Crook. The mlll was located close to the currentlocatlon of the Scappooso Flro Statlon.

St. Helens Masonic Lodge No. 32Ancient Free and Accepted Masons

Established in 1860 Chartered in 1862Congratulate the City of Scappoose

on their 70th Birthday.

231 S. First St. Helens, OR

Happy Birthday Scappoose!from

DF]. HAYES-serving the community since 1981DP. KELLY.serving the community since 1985

33721 E. Columbia Ave.

Dr. Hayes 543-3181 Dr. Kelly 543-52110r

yffr'-&fl4:J

© TICOR TITLE lN5URANC€

Congratulations on your70th Anniversary

50 Plaza Street, St. Helens543-5220 397-2250

Washington Federal Savings Bankis proud to be a partof the -unfty.

P/Ovicllng a tamily ancI business ervlronmerl: `:'70 yeas.

ERE-anlsBmSCAPPOOSE - 543-6336

52313 Columbia Rrve/ Hwy

ST. HELENS - 397-3000465 s. columbia Riv.I rtry' EEE

geffairparfu

Pow WOW!Wo'v. Com. A Long Way Now!Our staff would like to extend

their Congratulations to Scappooseon their loth Birthday.

++

Beckv Mlke.h Sue s.ansbu(`Brad walborn Sherrl 8Iadle`

res o8I. Vlc^` Dun*elBonnle Mares Kav \` I8I`.

S2395 Col. RII.I Hw|.Sc.rm.. . 5.3~

-IMichelle Mare`Lorrle Oberrneler•Kar. Engslrorn Vn8r• Phvlli. Iullus, Owner

515 Col. Rlv.I Hwy.Sl. H.ton. . sol®310

•Two Locations To Serve You..

PAGE 20-WednoBday, July 10. 1cO1 The Spotllgh`. Scappoo8usl. Holon8, Ore.

Scappoose= Rich ln historyby K.tliy Erichonpubli.her, Th. Sp®tli8l`t

From the late 1820s, whenScappoose pioneer Tom MCKav(irst chose the Scappoose plainsas a source of hay and pasture forthe horses f ol the post at FortVancouver, to the present. therehas been suiprisingly littlechange in the lile ol the residentsof the Scappoose area.

Certalnly the area has beenmodernized over the years, withall the trapplngs of 20th Centuryprogress. But the land aroundScappoose was prized for hayand pasture then. and much ofthe dikeland, reclaimed f Tom an-nual flooding, still meets thoserieeds today.

In his book, '`The History ofScappoose," Scappoose historianJames loring Watts introducesthe reade. to MCKay and to manyof the other early pioneers of theScappoose region. Watts, born toJames and Rose Watts in Scap-poose in 1905, was educated lnScappoose schools and was aUniversity of Oregon graduate.Completed in 1979. his history otthe area coveis the yeais be-t`^ieen 1982 and the early 1930s.

The Watts name is (amiliar stillto residents of the Scapi)oose vi-cinity. James Watts' gieat-grandparents crossed the countryon the Oiegon Trail bv coveredwagon, aiiiving in Scappoose in1852.

Before the settlers came.though, the area around Scap-poose was much prized by thelnd`ans o( the Chinookan Tribes.Indeed, their second most im-portant chiei, Cassino, had hisv.llage here For many Years. the--+,s#oo¥pT=n=#,feasts. races, trading and gamin8.

When he established his horseranch in the eastern plain5 area,Mcl(ay created no stii with thelocal Indians. They knew andrespected him, and MCKav andhis Indian f.lends coexistedpeacefully (or many years

More settlers arrived .n thearea in the carly 18sOs ^rrlvin8In the area to stake land claimswere men i rom the lludson's BayCompany They were soon fol-lowed bv covered wagon pion-eers including \MIIiam Watts, hiswife, f ive sons, a daughter andnephew-

Those ea.ly settlers had (amili-aT names Residents of the areatoday s(IIl reco8nlze the roll`Watts, GIlmore. Meeker, John-son, Lange. Tetz. Komning, Shat-to. Kammeyer. Fieeman. Ray-mond, Otto Miner, ^dams. Hen-eyman. f lakes, Watson, Calla-han. |P West. Rabinskv, Helmul-ler, Shoemaker, Neuman, Wick-strom, Jobin and Dahlgren arejust a few of the settler's f Tomearlier times, whose names arefamilia. today

Progress of a sort came to thearea with these pioneers. Once

•Financial Services .Payroll.•Bookkeeping .Personal.•Business/Co.porations.•Income Tax Service.

•Tax Planning.

ts. At You. C®nvenience

Mays PlazaSt. Helens3976993

52461 Col. Riv Hwy.Scappcose

543-7193

Fertile land and denseforests drew settlers herethey arrived, the began tradesand vocations to support thearea's needs F:irst to be builtwere brlck kilns, and they wereciuickly followed by a sawmill,cooperage, salt cairn, creaiTiery,shingle mill. blacksmith and ma-ny dairies

T.avel and transpo.tatlon werea vital .equirement for the con-tinued settlement of the area.and they were made considelablveasier in 1856 when ST Gosabuilt a dock, store and post o(f iceon his clalm on the MiiltnomaliChannel, the presen`rdav slte ofB.own's Landing Boats (raveledilp and down the river and on thechannel, carrying supplies intoarea re5idents. providing trans-portation, and loading up withcordwood and later milk to besold in Portland.

In add`tion, lots of freight andpassenger trains passed throughScappoose, and an extensive lum-

ber operation developed in theChapman area, which shlppedlumber oilt b`/ rail car

Settlers f ron a va.Iety of cul-tures arrived in the area, andethnic se(tlements dotted thearea. The South Scappoose areawas settled primarily by Bohemi-ans (Czechoslovakians) afterJohn and Barbara Havlik awived.The couple wrote to newspapersback east, urging other Czechs tomove to tlie area Familie5 withnames stlll f amiliar arrived tosettle the South Scappoose com-munity, including Stasnas, Ko-vaks, Kou(cks, Mlkeshes, Flshersand Kokcarniks.

In the late 1880s. a bona tidebusiness community was estab-Iished in Scappoose. The Wattsand Price Store was establishedin 18ee, and was quickly followedbv a saloon, blacksmith shop andlivery stable. In 1894, the busi-

streets. By now. the city hadgrown to include a bank, postoff ice, meat market. cafe andpoolroom.

Soon to follow we.e a ba.bershop, hardware store and a hotel

THE WATTS AND PnlcE STOPE - was the focal poln` of thebu8lnoss commiinlty boolnnlno ln the 18808. Tlio 9`or® was part ofthe bu8lno99 community destroyed by tlr® ln 1915.

NOTIONS, Dl]Y GOODS -The Watts and Prlco Store had 1` all. Sot-llers could got canned goods, fabric, nollons, hardware and

Gooseberry

Ei+.+!i

PatchWe Haveunique

HandcraftedC'`fts

For Everyone!

cl^rT cONsioNwlNTs397-2695

WE SERVICE

ALL BRANDSTVS, VCRs a

MICROWAVES

foodstufls at the orocory that was establlshed ln 1888. The storeoven housed the city post otllco, ln tl`e area below the brooms.

`\ ,Come in and

Every Day Discounts of

30-Coo/a0 F F R#i,'All MERCH^NDISE„7-

• checkout(: Ou'daily

lunches and' Summer Catering

@ Neds,.,.Desserls a Deli Edibles

397.1320

`Iloh`, Scappoo8o/St. Holene, Ore, Wodneeday, July 10, 1991 -PAGE 21

Watts saw changes"The changes that occurred

over the veais often came SograduaHv, you didn't notice thatthe changes were taking place."said Irene Watts, former teacherand librarian (or the ScappooseSchool District

Watts transfered to Scappoosefrom a school in Eastern O.egonin 1935 There, she taught untll1950 and then served as the highschool librarian until she ret`redin 1970

She marrled James loringWatts, a descendant ol the pio-neer f amilv that helped found theClty of Seal)poose James loringWatts wrote The History of Scap-poose. an 841)age book on thetown's colorful hlstorv.

^t the high school, she taughthome economics and social stud-ies When she f irst moved toScappoose ln 1935. she shared ahoiise with fou. othei schoolteachers who we.e good /rlendg

Like mos( of the teachers in thedistiict, Watts found herselfSpendin8 her evening hours grad-ing da.Iv assignments

"We didn't have any prepara-

tion periods like they have to-day," she said. "We would teachseven classes a day, 8o home,cook dinner and spend the nightgrading papers "

Watts said she telt lucky thatshe didn't teach math, Engl`sh ortyp,ng-

Education is always changing,Wa(ts sald, and often the ruleschange as well Watts said thatwhen she was teaching, 8I.Is nev-er wore pants or slacks to schooland (he boys halrcuts were al-*.y. abo`n. dhe colL)I.

The (1.S*oo.T`. *..e run .ither..t form.Imf. .nl] tl`. 20L2SStudents in ..ch clas"- nc`ertolled b.cL ro tA.

s today are still

good. (here are lust a l'ew badapples ln the bunch

^ p.I .LL+r:- io e±±c±±came in Oc`. 1957, `when deUSSR launched the Sputnikspace sattelite.

Although Watts was retired bythen, she said there was a greatdrive to lmi)rove science andmath curriculums at schools

"The government went all

guns t`o on math and science."she said, adding tha( today thecountiy is trying `o catch up withthe Japanese and German educa-tional systems "We alwavs haveto catch up wlth someone "

For her and her husband. whowas also a teache. in the district,the launch of Sputnlk mean(more than just new educa(ionalprograms. It also meant theycould do some star gazing in ahaytield where Grant WattsGrade School is now located.

I,eno Wa''S"When we heard that Spii(nlk

was launched, my husband and Icame down here and sat ln thehayf ield with our dog," she said."We looked lip and saw Sputnik

8o by. It looked like a shootings(ar.,,

The Watts also owned a busline which contracted businessf ron the school distiict. TheWatts route featured SauvieIsland and the Dike They alsoowned a I/uck line whlch wouldmake frv. to 5ii dailv `rlp5 IntoPortl.rd from ttl.e p.c(le pl.ntTh-I e`.in..Il` .ald tlie.. *I`ooltnL-

11 \`atts mar3te3 3i-i' I.-t.:I-

drove one of the school buses,kept books for the truck line andtaught at the school

"The pickle plant had a con-

trac( with the Army to supply thepickles and we had to get theshlpments out every day." shesaid. "The pickles were stored inthe coolest part of the ship,which was the hull, so they had tobe put in f irst "

The plckles we.e stored ln thecoolest pa.I o( the sl.ip becau`eit viould go through the PanamaC.hal o.` the way to the Ea`tCoot

•'1 €Iiess (hot dldnt "ant to

FmsT WAns HOUSE - Bullt ln 18cO, thl8 was lho flrst home ofthe Wa`18 Family ln Scappoco®. WHllam Watts. hls wlto, tlvo sons,daughter and a n®phow arrlvod ln the Scappoo9o area ln themld.1850s. Scappooso Hl9torlan James Lorlng Watts has complleda hlstory of tlio town.

CongratulationsScappoose

from

ACE HARDWARE33454 Sw chlnook plaza 543.6283

"Congratulations

Soappoose"from

KAR'uTH ENTERPRISES

33281 SW Evergreen way 543-3794

Happy Birlhday ScappooseCongratulalions!!

70 years of continuous 8rowlhand many more to come

Springlake Mobile Home Park

Davld Scha.i, Owner,i.Manager

"ABIRTHDAY

\^/E§TEF]N E]AIVI<

is 87 years old...and

City ot Scappooseis 70 years old

Come into the bank Friday,July 12th and help celebrate.

Coffee & cake will be served all day.

fouthColumbiaHvy.,Scappoose,OR9705sO530

PAGE 22-Wodncoday. July 10, 1991 The Spotllqht, Sc.ppoo80St. Holen8, Ore.

Dutch Canyon memoriesAs far back as Thomas Kirtland

can remember, his family wouldmake the (.ip into Scappoosef ron their farm on Dutch CanyonRoad, abou( f ive miles f rontown.

Kirtland, no`^/ 74, remembersthe road made of thlck lumberplanks, known today as ''p.imelumber."

The wooden road was only bigenough for one carrlage ol car, hesaid, so when t`^ro vehicles met.one would back up to the closestwide spot, and they would sit andtalk, catching up on the latestnews of the community, beforecontinuing the journey

''We were related to a lot of

people," said Kirtland, who isretired and lives on (ive acres o(the original family farm.

He said the monthly trips totown kept the familv in touch,and allonred them to pick upsacks of f lour or take potatoesinto market

His grandfatlie., ^aron Kirt-land. lived on a Wisconsin Indianiese.vation and mar.ied thechief 's dauglitei, said KirtlandThe famous outlaw Jesse |ameswould stay ovemi8ht when hewas in the area, and once gaveKirtland's grandiatlier a .44 calib-e. pis(ol in exchange for lodging.

Aaron Kirtland came to thePortland area in 19co and soonpurchased 40 acres in Dutch Can-yon.

Tom Kirtland's parents, Rosaand Edward Lester Klrtland.raised produce to support thefamily and feed the f arm animals,but Edward Kirtland was primari-Iv a logger, taklng timber to theWatts and Price Mill.

The Watts f amllv established asaw and grist mill on Scappoo5eCreek ln the late 1800s. and bv1900. they owned seveial lumberand sawmills in addition to mostof the nearby tlmberland

ot rickets. a childhood disease Ofthe bone, he remembers therewas a lot of work on the farm

"We mllked 20 goats a day

during the depression," he said.The familv fed calves and soldthem, and had a large garden toraise sugar beets and carrots forthe stock.

Kirtland said liis {ather used anold Maxwell tracto. for farming.'`The steering wheel fell of f so we

steered with a monkey wrench,"he recalls

The family's Model-T Ford wasclassiei, with a selttstarter buttonon the f lcor.

Kirtland attended South Scap-poose Grade School, wheie thegrange hall on Dutch CanyonRoad is now, about two milesf .om their farm. When he wasyoung he walked to 5chcol. butlater he remembers there was asmall school bus that picked upthe students.

DUTCH CANYON HOME-Thomas Klrtland has lived on aportlon of the family'9 orlglnal larm tor the past 15 years, ln DutchCanyon on Scappoose Cr®ek.

He said there were about 30 inthe elemen`arv school. and hisc!a55 was the lar8e.t. Iea`-ing the

giaduated.Klrtland lef ( high schcol be-

caiise of IIlness, and s(ayed hometo work on the farm. He receivedhis general equivalency diploma.15 years later. .

The towrn of Scappoose hadsome fasclnations for a Young.ster Kirtland remembers therewas a pool hall and a bee. parlor,and he used (a like to watch theblacksmith shoe horses

One time when he was about30 he returned home loi Christ-mas, but decided to stop bv Andy^nderson's saloon on the wayhome, located where the WigWan Tavern now stands.

"The Johnson's and the Whites

were always feuding, and theywere big suckers," said Kirtland.

When Kirtland came I`nto thetavern one of the Johnsons cameover and said "That's my liiend,"and hit the other man right overKirtland's head.

He said he headed for a safelocation to watch the ensuing bat-tle, and noted that Andy Ander-

behind the bar.Kirtland held a variety of jobs

around the Northwest and evenmaiia3ed a marke( in Bi.ming-ham. ^la`, for three veers.

He longed to return to thefamily home, and fo. the past 15years has resided close to the endof Dutch Canyon Road next toScai)pcoe Creek.

He iecalls a happy childhoodwhen he could drink out of thecreek wi(hout fear of contamina.lion and when trees weren't lndanger of dying f rom chemicals inthe ai,"When we were young, we

traveled through the land follow-ing deer tiails," he muses. ``Nowthe roads can take ca.s to Vemo.nia and tliie Coast."

"When I was a boy I would sit

under the trees-churches neverinspired me so much. It was as ifGod was Shourlng me his won-ders,'` said Kirtland.

THE MODE OF TRANSPORTATION - Hor8edrawn wagons and caTTlao®s wore u8od a8 vehlcles totransport pa88ono®r8 ln the early days. 11 was rough oolno, too, on tr`e dlrt or plank ioad8 ol the area.

Happy BirthdayScappoose!

The best is yet to Come

Rep. Bruce Hugo

Happy Birthday Scappoosef rom the staff at

Raincountry ProductsByron. Casey, June, Sue, Dee & Becky

A leader in Norlh West environmental productslot eight years.

33439 NW Fhalrle. Scappcosc

The SDotllcht. +ScaDDoo8e/St. Helon8. Ore. Wednesday, July 10,1091-PAGE 23

It's Pow Wow Time!There will be no shortage of

iovaltv in south Columbia Coun.ty next week, when the 30thAnnual Scappoose Pow Wowtaltes over downtown Scappoosefor f lve days of festivities.

The summer celebration,scheduled (or |uly 10.14, willonce again feature a junior courtand a senior court. Tlie corona-tion of both courts is Scheduledto begln at 7 p.in. on Wednesday.July 10, in the Scappoose MiddleSchool Gymnasium

The crowning of the juniorcouit queen and the senior courtqueen will officially begin the1991 festival.

The junior court consists o{Sally Tate, Veronica Stotts, Tif-fan Kellar and Rebecca Njoro8e

The senior court is made up ofMichele Morgan, Teria Biggs, Jes-sica Coddington and ^ndrea Mur-aY.

Sallv Tale, the lo-year®Iddaughter of Scappoose residentsDennis and Peggy Tate, decidedto try out tor the junior courtbecause her older sister, BrandyTate, was the 1989 Pow Wowqueen."I thought it was fun and excit-

ing for Brandy so I wanted to doit," she said.

This fall. Sally will be enteringthe fifth grade at Otto H.H. Peter-sen Elementary School. She likesstudying science and math. Herinterests and hobbies includehorseback rldlng. collecting po.-celairi doll., boo/I.n8 and takingca.e Of tlle famllv.. farm animals

She I.a.kl evena..Ity lute togo to colle€. and S.ud`/ to be-

old daughter o( Scappoose resi-dents GeoJge and Peggy Stotts.(houeh` tl.at be.ne on the iuniorcourt would be a 8ood way tomeet friends.

"I thought I should become

involved in the communlty," shesaid.

Her hobbies include reading,swimming, playing the piano andbelng witti her f riends

She will be entering the sixthgrade at Petersen school. Shelikes studying rna(h, art andreading. She hopes to attend col-lege and become a doctor

Tiftan Kellai. the 11-yeai®lddaughte. of Scappoose residentsBv.on and Casey Kellar, thoughtthat being on the Pow Wowjunior court would be a worth-while and exciting activity inwhlch to take part.

Kellar. who will be attendingScappoose Middle School as aseventh grade student, likes tostudy reading, math and English.

In her spa.e time, she likes to

Rpyalty to reign over thefotlr days of Pow Wow

I.ide horses, .Cad books. paint anddraw. She would IIke to become ateacher, painter o. a pediatrician.

Rebecca Njoroge. the 12-vear-old daughter of Warren .esidentsPeter and Chris Nioroge, decidedto try oilt tor the iunior coul.t

1991 Queen tojoin long listThis vear's queen will loin

the ranks of other Po`^r Wowroyalty who have reigned ov-er the celebration since 1959.

The f irst city gathering washeld that year, in conjunctionwith the Oregon Centennial.The f irst real Pour Wow, how-ever, was held the iiext year.and the first Javcee-sponsored event was held in1 961 .

Following is a complete listof all the qileens of the Scap.pcose Pow Wow:

Vonnie Johnson, 19cO; Di-ane Brundage, 1961; JoanI(nusel, 1962; Sharon Olsen,1963; Gail Davis,1964; NancyBrooks. 1965; Nancy Gid-din8s, 1966, Lucinda Ci.st.1967. Kathv Nalvasil, 1968.I -.... Tolfn.a, 19.OT. Brend.

a Donovan. 1972;Bernadette Heiselt. 1973.Kathv Slceum. 197.. |eann.eBarter. 1975; Anne Erickso.I.1976, (no queeri, 1977t Lyr`-ette Ballev. 1978; /ulie Mar-tln. 1979, Linda Buchanan,1980, Brenda Dougherty,1981, Shannon MCNabb.1902, Betty Jo Conley, 1983;Sand`/ Creswjck, 1984; Su-zanne Tavlor, 1985; RaquelLammels. 1986; RonNelleConlev. 1987; ^n8ie Hudson,1980, Brandy Tate,1989. JulieHod8es.1990

because she thought it would bea f un opportunity to take part tna community event like the PowWow

Njofo8e will be entering theseventh grade at Scappoose Mid-dle School in the fall. She IIkes tostudy math, art and social stud-ies.

In her spare time, she works

Royalty ready for coronationHEADY FOB THE BIG NIGHT - The Scappcoso Jaycoos PowWow junlor court, plcturod above, and the sonlor court, plcturodbelow, will take part ln the coronatlon ceremony, schoduled (or 7p.in. on Wednesday, July 10, at the Scappooso M[ddlo Schoolgymnaslum. The |unlor court queen ls selected based on buttonsales, wl`llo the sonlor court queen seloctlon !s based on buttonsalo9 and on 8peoch®s presented dilrino Pow Wow week. Thejuniot court 18. from the loft, Sally Tat®. Voronica Stolts. TIllanKollar and F`obocca Njoroo®. The 8®nioT court is, lront to beck,Michelo Moroan. Jce8lca Coddlngton. TorTa Bicos and And.a.Niimy. Ttie courto wlll relon over

1991 Pow Wow ScheduleW®dn®.day, July 10

Pl.ylaed C.mlv.I Famlly Nloh` Dlecoun`8 .....Ou..n.e Coron.tlon Scappooso Mlddl® School.O`...n'. T..n D.rue.

A` Boo. Garden. N.E. Flrs` a WIIllamo,w/D`l. sO po. p®.son. $5 couplo

Thured.y, July 11

P',,I,nd Crml,,IB.er a.rd.n. se cover

Flock muslc by Split Image. 7-11 p.in.

Fnd,y, JtJ'y 12

Playland CamlvalKld'. a&mco

At En`er`alnment C®n`®r, b®hlnd pollco 9t®tlonJul'k,, P,nd®

Noon.10 p.in.•..., p.in.

e-11 p.in.

Neon.11 p.in.e p.in..Mldntollt

Now.Mldol.htI p.in.

p.in.Pool8tratlon begin8 a` 4:30 p.m„ 2nd & OWo Strcols

wcoic try spin lmquAt En`ortalnment C®ntei

B..r a.rd.ri Covet seFlock mu8lc by llf® on Mars, 8 p.in..1 a.in.

9:30.'1 p.in.

e p.in..2 ..in.

S.Iurday. July 13

Conoreoa`ional Church Br®akfastScappooso Conor®gational Church

Povv Woi.r arond P.T.d.

7.10:cO A.M.

FIool8`ratlon at SHS from a:30.11:cO ..in., judoino al 10:cOPl,yl.nd C,ml'®'Sc.ppo®co 70th BIrthd.y P.rty

Cak®cut`lno ceremony et Clty HallIAlnl lndl.i` Pow W®w En`ertalnmerit C®ntor .....Corlor.O.llon.I Cl`ureh Dl.in. EnteTtalnm®nt Canto..Nu.lc by DJ Entortalnm®nt CenterBe.r a.rd.n sO Cover

Music by Or. Corri.a BIueoTass R®rnedy, 2.7 p.in.Ilot Loos contest. Koo Toss, ®`c. at 7 p.in.Orloin®l rock music by PTlsone., 8 I).in.-1 a.in.

sond.y, July 1.

P',yl,nd C,mly,ICongreg.tlon.I Cl`urcl1100th B lthd.y.J.ycco Fl.unlon Plcolc Airport ParkAlrp®rt ^ppr.cl.tloli D.y

Sceppooso Industrial Airoark

Nhe.Nkfolo.I3.5 p.in.

• S-, p.in.• 74 p.in.e-11 pin.

1 p.in..2 ..in.

Noone p.In.I . '2,cO p.in.

10 ..in.4 p.,n-

out at the Columbia River Gym-nastlcs Academy. She likes towatch movles and spend timewith her I .lends

She would eventually like toattend college and become apediat.Ician.

The selection of the iuniorcourt queen is based on festivalbutton sales

The selection of the senlorcoilrt qiieen is based on buttonsales and on speeches glven bvthe princesses to representativesf.om the city and local civlcservice groups prior to the festi-val. The princesses will speakabout their favorlte birthday.

Each member of the Seniorcourt is also expected to searchfor businesses interested in serv-ing as sponsors. Sponsorshipfees help pay for the oii(f its theprincesses wear and the ac(ivi(Iesthey take part in before and af terthe (estival.

This is the second straight yearMichele Morgan has served as amember of the senior court. The15-year®ld daughter of Scap-poose residents Dennis and Mari-an Morgam

Morgan, who will be a Sol)ho-more at Scappoose High schoolin the fall. joined the 1991 courtbecause she likes to p.omoteScappoose and fel( that being aPow Wowr p.incess was an excel-lent opportilnity to do that

^f ter she completes hl8hschool, Mor8an plans to attendcollege and p`.nue a c.rev .san actre... a .portsw..ten or a.poe b'o.dc.St.,

^^ort.n .. .po.tso..d bv St

Electric, Ste.nfeld's ProPro(ision Engia`ing \`airenCon..imr lr..i. De+.8ne. C.b.Ito.Oreeo.i M.at Co . C.role's Place,Ro.drur.nor Gas & C.ocery. O.S.S\-stems and Jim and linda`1cconnughv

Te.ra Biggs. the 16,year®lddaughter a( Scappoose residentsTeri`/ and Shellv 81gg5. iolned thecourt because she f elt i` wasImportant `o become a part o(the community and to particl.pate in the annual Pow Wow fes.tivi'ies.

^t SHS, she is a member of 0.-egon Student Sat etv on theMove. the Key Club. and the FlagTeam. She likes to study al8ebia.biolo8y and geography

When she ls not in school. shellkes spending time with childrenarld f riends She also likes to gosee movies

^f ter hi8h school, Bi8gs hopesto attend coHege and work tow-ards a career as a math teacher.

Biggs sponsors Include Sun-shine Pizza. Rose Valley Market,Taylor"ade Products, See BeeClass. Larry's Shell Servlce, Baue.Insurance. Fled and Elyse I:rie-mark, Longfellow's Inn andTeddy Beai Day Care Center.

/essica Coddin8ton, the 16-yearold daughter of Scappooseresidents Michael Coddingtonand Elizabeth Meyert, iolned the1991 Po`^r Wo`^/ court because shewanted to become more involvedin the community and i(s actlvl-ties

Coddington will be enteringher junior year at SHS this tall.She likes studying algebra andbusiness classes. She js Involvedin the Spanlsh Club and the skiclub

Outside school, she likes to gohorseback riding, sno\^/ skiing andto watch horro. f ilms.

^fter she I inishes hi8h school.she plans to attend colle8e andearn a degiee in accounting.

See COURT, page 28

PAGE 2.-Wedn®eday,July '0. 1cO1

Festival celebrates birthdaysParades, carnivalsh:,gha'#gnhuta,'ec%#t:aetsion

"lt's Our Birthday, Let's Pow

Wowl" is the theme a( this year'sPour Wonr celebration, to be heldWednesday through Sunday. July10-14.

Parades, carnival rides. foodbooths and the beer gardens willhighlight this year's (e5tival ^1-though this is the 32nd year of theannual event. it is the 30th yearthat the celebration has beenorganized by the Scappoose Jay-cees. ^lso celeb.ating a birthdaywith this year's Pow Wow is theCitv of Scappoose, which is cele-b.ating its 70th yea. as a clty

The celebration will be set upon property adjacent to the BUT-lington Northern Rail.oad trackson NE f irst, for carnival rides andthe beer garden, and ir` the city.sgrassy area adjacent to the Pub-lic Services Building and CityHall.

W®dn®ed,y

Activities get underway at 4p.in. on Wednesday, when Play-land Carnival begins its opera.tions. The queen's coronationceremony is scheduled for 7 p.in.in the Scappoose Middle Schoolgymnasium.

On the senior court this yealale Michele Mor8an, Terra Biggs,`e5sica Coddington and ^ndreaMurray. One of those giils willbecome the queen and will reignover this year's festivities,

Membeis of the junior courtare SaHy Tale. Veronica Stotts,Til(an Kellai and Rebecca Nior-Oge.

Alter the coronation. thequeen'5 teen dance will f ollow in

until 11 p in.

ThursdayOn Thursday, the carnival iides

will start at noon and will runilntil 11 p in. The beer garden willopen at 6 pin. and will remainopen until midnight, Music willbe performed by "Split Image"until 11 p.in. Beer garden admis,sion each night will be $3.

Frld®y

On Friday, the carnival wlllonce again start operating atncon, and will riln until midnight.

Highlight of F.iday's festivitieswill be the annual junior parade.whlch will begin at 7 p in Regis-(ration for the event wjll begln at4:30 p.in. at the comer of Secondand Olive streets.

On the entertainment stage,'`Split lma8e" wiM perform f Tom

9:30 to 11 p.in "Life on Mars"will be appearing in the beergarden from 0 p in to 1 a in Thebeer garden will close a( 2 a.in,

SaturdayThe senior parade is scheduled

for neon on Saturday, and willonce again make Its way dowrnU.S. Highway 30. Registrationwill begin at 8:30 a.in. in theScappoose High School parkinglot.

Saturday is ''City Day," and theCity of Scappoose will officiallvmark its birthday with an openhouse featuring birthday cakeand punch f ron 3 to 5 p.in. in thecity hall courtyard. Members ofthe Scappoose Historical Socletvwill be cu(ting and serving thecake. From noon to 5 p.in., theChildren's Museum in the base.ment of city hall will be open forviewing Curator clara Neelandswill be al the museiim to answerquestions.

The carnival rides will be oper.ating f ron noon (o mldnight on

Soo POW WOW, page 25

E='

QUEENS OF POW WOW PAST - The Scappoo9o Clty Club ls

:#tki'vnaq.s'°orr:::mpea'rapd°oYSY:owduq,::e,nosr;°atrj:d°a}`.SjL',°ya!3?u''nothe

The Spotlloht, Scappooae/St. Hol®n8, Ore.

HAPPYBIRTHDAY

SCAPPOOSE-~. +0 Years Old--and ®Iowlng

HAPPYBIRTHDAYPOW WOW

30 Years old and not Slowing!

HAPPYBIRTHDAY

SHFCU SCAPPOOSE BFIANCH

15 Years Young and still Growing!

SC^PPOOSE111 & L,l',®' SL

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The Spo`Iloht, Scappco8e/St. H®l®no, Ore. Wodncoday. July 10,1991 -PAGE 25

PC,NN W ONI u,in.apt,,Saturday.

''Dr. Corn's Blue Grass Reme.

dv" will perform in the beergarden from 2 to 7 pin. A kegtoss and "hot legs contest" willbe held at 7 p.in and ''Prisoner"will entertain from 0 p.in. to 1a.m„ and the be-er garden willclose a( 2 a.in

^ctivities will wind down onSunday, with carnival rides oper,ating f.om noon to 6 p.in. TheScappoose Javcees wlll hold areunlon I)icnic at ^i.port Park at1 p.m„ and the second-annualAirpo.t ^ppreclation Day will beheld at the Scappoose Airport(see related story).

Fe5tival€oers will also find en-tertainment and food booths. ^tpress time, the followring boothswere scheduled

Saigon Oriental Kitchen, orien-tal food; VCJ's Famous Meatpies.'`Cajun" food; OSSOM, dunk

tank; S & S Design, handmadeIndian jewelry; Scappoose PoliceDepartment, information booth;Hit and Run Paint Ball, fiiing

paint balls, proceeds to RlversldeIndustries, TranswesternHellcopters, Alrport AppreciationDay in(ormation booth, Big' AI's,handmade lollipops; ScappooseGty Club. "Scappoose Sand-wich;,,

Goodies by Gary, food booth;Bob Caswell Memorial Pool Funbooth, food boottl featuring ham-bu.8e.s and teriyakl sticks;Mom's Place, elephant ears;Chapman Grange, bingo; Scap-poose Senior Citlzens, foodI/aller; Gn-b Box, Mexican food,

Scappoose Fire Department,information booth; The Wiene.i,T.hirt booth, Saturday only; Bowand Arrow Club, Indian cia(ts;May Kay Cosmetlcs; Pepsi Com-pany, Pepsi products booth; 8 &M Concessions. T5hirts, CascadeCanteen, food booth featu.inghamburgers and curly I rles;

Soccer Club. car bash; LisaWilliams, oil paintings and prints,teddy bears and Indian jewelry;Davld Seaw.igh(, Navajo FryBread; Stray Cat Creations.frames made f ron Oregon barnboards,

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PAGE 26-Wodnooday, July lo,1col Trl® Spotlloh`, Scappooea/St. Holone. Ore.

Airport celebration is SundayThe advantages of having an

airport near Scappoose win beone of (he major themes of thesecond-annual ^irport ^pprecia-tion Day, scheduled for Sunday,July 14, at the Scappoose Indus-trial ^',pa,k

^ct`vities will Include a fly.Inbv the Northwest ^ntlque ^i.,plane Club, food booths andp/esentations by li(e Flight heli-

copters, ^Ir Care of EmanuelHospital. Wallace Av`ation andthe Port of St. Helens.

The event, scheduled from 10a in.4 p.in. on Sunday, wlll Offi-ciallv end the 1991 ScappoosePow Wow.

Appreciation day gives airportrepresentatlves a chance to showlocal residents what is available,

hal Churchits centennial

Members of the ScappooseFirst Congregational Church willcelebrate the centennial oi itslncorporatlon on Saturday, July 13,with a special pancake b.eakfast

Church members wlll alsogather on Sunday, July 14. tor thepiesentation of a historical dra-ma and the cutting of the 100thbirthday cake.

Pancakes, sausage and juicewill be served from 7-10.30 a.inat the cliurcli. located at 52339Columbia River Highway. Break-fasts will be $2.95 for adults and$1.50 for children under 12.

Proceeds from tlie breakfastwill go to the Scappoose FoodBanlt at St. Wenceslaus CathollcChurch

A cake{uttlng ceremony willbe held at 12:30 p.in. on Sunday,|uly 14, follo`^/ing the morningchurch service, conducted byPastor Dale Grubb.

Parishioners will be performinga d.ama depic(ing the inco.pora-tion of the church, its growth andchanges over the 100 years o( ex-lster'ce.

Performances wlll be at 11 a.in.and at 7 p.in. at the church`

The drama wlll also be per-fom.d .I 7 p.in. on S.a.Iday.

Book, plant saleis July 12,13

The Friends of the ScappooseLibrary will hold a book andplant sale in lront of the librarydu.ing Pow Wow.

The sale will run from 11.30a.in to 8 p in. on F.jdav, July 12,and from 9 a in. to 8 p.m` onSaturday. |uly 13.

COURT

From peg® 23She is sponsored bv BiH's Kwik

Video. Sauvie Island Kennels,Triad Cons(ruction Meifert Ken.nels, Wigwam Tavern, G&BNursery, St. Johns Auto Sales andjason Construction

Andiea Muirav. the 16-yeai®Iddaugh(er of Scappoose residentsGlen and Analee Murray, hadbeen thinking about trying`outfor the Pow Wow Cou.( for quitesome time before she f inally tookthe advice of f riends who were onthe court in the past.

She said she likes meeting newpeople and likes to speak in frontof people during Pow"/ow weekShe works at Pizza Vendor andreceived a scholarship to attend(he Business Week Summer Pro-gram at Lint ield Conege.

^t SHS, Murray likes to studygeometry. woodshop and biolo-8y. She hopes to attend collegeand become an accountant.

When she is not studying, she iseithe. running, swimmlng, horse-back riding, shopping or spendingtime with her friends.

Murray is sponsored by P&CThriftway. Lois Ladies Fashions,Pizza Vendor, Hi-School Pharma.cy, Kim's Video. Rivercity Sport-ing Goods, Ichabod's Restaurant,Brown's Landing, Columbia Feed& Supply, Inc., and Flowers byDa,lene.

|ulv 13, at the Scappcose PowWow Entertainment Centei. lo-cated behind the police station.

The church was oflicially (ar-med on May 18.1891. Accordingto church spokesman Llnda Me-shell, the anniversary celebrationwas going to be held in May, butbad weather f orced the churcli topostpone the event.

^dditional informatlon is avail-able by call.ng Me5hell at 543-7548 or the chu.ch at 543-Sloe.

Cruise Night ison July 13,14

Owners of cars and hot .odsboth old and new will have anopportunity to showr off theirwheels during Pow Wow week inthe first{ver CruiseNight andShow & Shine

The Cruise Night is scheduledfor 7-10 p.in. on Saturday, July 13,wi(h registration scheduled tobegin at 9;30 a.in. at the PizzaVendor. Registration lees are .5per vehicle.

Trophies will be presented {oTCoolest C.uiser. Bes( `S0s Cruise..'L-t== -:=T--Lil a I--==i=l..Choice. The ciuise will begin atthe Pizza Vendor, with driversheading down Fourth and FifthStreets to High School Way. Par-ticipants will take thelr cars f .omHigh School Way to U.S High-way 30, tumin8 of( at WiMiamsStreet. The Cruise-ln will end atthe Pizza Vendor.

The Show & Shine will be heldfrom 10 a.mJ p.in. on Sunday,July 14 at the Scappoose lndustri.a' ^'rpa,k.

Trophies will be presented tothe diflerent class participants,alon8 with club participationDash placques.

The regis(ration fee is $10 pervehicle. ^dditional in{ormation isavailable by calling John Chuckat 673-5692 or 2264731.

HANGING 0N - Playland Car.nlval will progont 9om® ol llsbest rld®s durlng Pow Wow.

'tt.in

according to Betsy Johnson, ow-ner of Transwestern Helicopters,lnc.

"The I)u.pose of the day is (o

help residents of the area under. [.i``.-;i)stand the value and economic <aLimpact of the airport," Johnsonsaid. "We want this part of thecounty to know that we have a(.acility like this available."

Helicopter rides and airplanerides will also be availablethroughout the appreciation day.

Biplanes and antique alrplaneswill be on display, along withdesigns by the Experimental ^ir.c.aft Design Club. Antique auto-mobiles and motorcycles will beon display Souvenir Tihirts willbe for sale and food vendors willbe selling edibles

Additional informatjon is avail-able by calling 543-3121. Day, Scheduled lrom lo-a.in.4 p.in. on sunday, july 14:

AIl]P0l]T APpflECIATION - The Scappooso lndustrlal Alrparkwlll Show Its all durlng the second.annual Airport Appreclatlon

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The spotlloht, Sceppooeust. H®I®no, Ore. Wodn®sday, July lo,1991 -PAGE 27

Henry KIlng

ln days past, politics wasmore of a personal th'Ing

Henry Kling, Scappoose mayor Back then the council met lnfor t`^/o years in 1950 and 1951,can measure his political rise inhunting trips.

"ln 1948 I went deer huntlng,

and when I came back they said Iwas on the city council," hereca„s.

"ln 1950 I went hunting again,

and when I came back I wasmayor "

Klin8. the oldest living ex-Mayor Of Scappoose will be (heGrand Marshal of the Ciand Pa.lade Saturday. .nd will celebiateat the city'5 birthday party. . 30p.in. Saturday &t Cit`/ H.ll.

Kling remembers that runningthe city was a I.(tle

or instance, he'd been gettinga lot of complaints f rom ci(izensalon8 Oak St/eet between Thirdand fourth st]eets. that the streetwas a mess because the oak treeswere in the way

"I got tired ot seeing their

faces, so I got my cat and wentdown and knocked oiit threeoaks." he said.

'`1 donated my time and only

charged the p.operty owners $5apiece-and one died withoutpaying.„

Kling said that when the woo-den water pipe from Dutch Can-yon needed to be replaced heand the lest of tlie city council.men worked two days to replaceT|

"lt cost me $200 a year to be in

city government," and when helet I he remained active in Kiwa-nis and other community groups,but he stayed out of politics.

LANGDON(From 1'®g® 1®)

smuggle to school in his pocket.''One day he roHed hazelnuts

up I iont under her skirt." saidLangdon. '`The chipmunk wouldrun up, get the hazelnut andcome back to his pocket." Thechildren all took great delight inpu(ting one over on the straight.laced teacher.

Langdon attended the t`^/o-room grade school on West laneRoad for one year, and thenstar(ed in Scappoose Schoolwhen it first opened in 1900.

She participated in the Oebat.Ing Society and the ChoralCroup, competing with otherschool groups at th County f air.

Langdon's family was her toppriority. and except for a briefstint in the Steinteld's Plant dur-ing World War 11, she lived on thefarm with her husband lesterlan8don and f amily and tookcare of her mothe. and father and(he stock and the garden.

the old tire hall. and had to backthe f ire (ruck out to make roomtor the (olding chairs.

He sald the population of thecity was 650 then, and the citybudget was se,500-"and we hadto vote on $3,500," he sald.

Kling, 86, worked as a log€erand retired at age 65. He mar.ieda Scappoose girl in 1939. andthey are enjoying tlleir 52nd yearof marriage

When the playing I ield was rock`'Dungey was the star o( the

game." concluded a 1937 articlein Tl`e Oregonian about a Scap-poose High School footballteam's win over Jefferson HighSchcoL

fu|'inba`chka`sc%?ae'J:etosuccahpdpo#::to lead the Indians (a a 126 winovei the heavily-tavored PortlandSchool.

Del Dungey, 72, remembers hisexploits as a Scappoose athleteand as a member ot the U S NavyI cotball (Cam.

From 1934-1937, Dungey was afoul.year letterman. During hissenioi year, he was the captain ofthe football team and the trackarid f ield team. He was also a star-tine guard for the school basket-ba„ team.

In track, he was a high hurdlerwho went (o the state track meet.

His fondest memories, ho`^rev.er, were made on the footballteam.

'`Our football field was all

rocks and dirt," he said `'Therewasn't any grass on the I ield atall.`,

He was probably the ultiltiate-utility player foi the (cotb.llteam. He caMed the si8nals,backed up the line, punted theball, played defense and won(back for punt returns.

The Scappoose football teamplayed against teams f rom Port-land schools and other schools inNorthwest Oregon. The Scap-poose bunch did its share ofw,nning.

''We were a real tough team,"

he said. "Wo played everybody inthose days."

The team even played St He-Iens High School in those days.and the flames were always a big

Congratulations Scappoose!

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Featurlng Archery Equipment and Supplies

Let us grow with you and your archery needs

Call u9! Mlko & Shall Brown54se258 52975 NW smltti Rd.

V.F.W. No. 4362and

the Ladies Auxiliaryhas been serving the community

since February 1975

Happy loth Birthday Scappoose!

._ . _ _ i_ :

event in south Columbia County.One of (he joys in plavin8 in St.Helens was that the high school,unlike Scappoose, had bleachersfor fans to sit. In Scappooseeveryone stood

Scappoose and St. Helens splitthe four games that were playedduring Dungey's four years atSHS.

"lt was alwavs a big game," he

said. "Everybody shu( do`^rn the(wo towns and went to the

After high school, he went (ott`e University Of Oregon in Eu-gene, befo.e he enlisted in theNavy. After basic tralning ln Ida-ho, he was sent to Bainbridge,N.Y , where he played football forthe U.S. Navy.

^s a collegiete athlete, for theUofo and Navy. he was one ofthe top punters ln the country`

Hls team played agalnst Army,as well as the New York Clantsand the Chicago Bears

`ji .. ± in-

THE FmsT TEAM OF SCAPPO0SE - ln those days. the Soap.poose Hloh School varslty football squad played its games on rockand dlrt f lolds, but not on the grass lields as teams do today.

Happy Birthday .Scappoose!

from

RGR AMMOA part of your c;ommunity

30869 Holladay Rd. 5436546

Hit & RunPaint War Games

wishes Scappoose a`'Happy 70th Birthday "

543-3880 - owner Bob Shano

Serving the community since 1986

Congratulations Scappooseon your 70th!

from

8&8 Market32284 Soap.rv®rn. Hwy. 543€048

PAGE 28-Wodnoedey, July lo.1091 Th. Spo`lloht, Scappooeo/St. Holon8, Ore.

New life and new land forSouth Scappoose Czechs

As a child grov`ring up in theCzechoslovaklan community insouth Scappoase, Helen BenoBarta doesn`t remember thatthere was any cultu.al tensionamong classmates in the primaryschools or among adults.

"You never felt you were any

dlfferent," said Barta, 70, whostill lives in south Scappoose,close to St. Wenceslaus CatholicChu.ch which served f Tom thebeginnlng as the spiritual andsocial hub for the community

The Havliks, immigrants (ronCzechoslovakla to Nebraska,we.e the f irst Catholic (amilv tomove into Scappoose They wereso taken wlth the area that theywrote about it in the Czech news-pape.s, encoiiragin8 other .mmi-grants to loin them''They were under ^ustriao rule

and most of them were peas.ants," said Bar(a "They werelooking for a better IIfe This wassuppose to be God's country."

Barta sa.d the shared cultureand shared reli8ion bourid thecommuni(y together. but didn'`separate them from the rest ofScappoose.

"Some chlldren didn't know

how to speak English un(il theys(a.ted school," she said She said

*.

sermons at St Wenceslaus weredelivered in-the Czech languageuntil 1936

Barta attended f iist and se-cond grades a( Scappoose GradeSchool, but then St. I:redericgrade sch6ol was built in StHe'ens.

^ftel eighth grade Barta andthe other Catholic children re.turned to the publlc system inhigh school, and she said every.one got along just f ine

Residents of the communltyowned small farms and grew p.a.duce. They also sold milk andeggs to the local stores

Barta remembers all of theproduce stands along old Polt-land Road, which was the mainhi8hwav then. seulng frult, vege-tables and f lo`^/ers during theseason.

He. father, John Beno, workedat the Pope and Talbot LumberMiM in St Helens. and life athome cente.ed around keeplnggood I ood on the table

Barta remembers helpin8 hermother, Mary Beno, "We put upbeans. pickles and pork and veal- we had to can because therewere no freezers until much la(erwhen they piit the lockers in Scap-pcose," she said.

...1'\:

M.Ik, cream and eggs stayed inthe cellar, and she sald her fathe.would bring home a block of ice(or the icebox

She said they had a cow andchickens and had homemade but-ter She wonders at her mother'sabllity to turn out marvelousangel f ood cakes on a woodstove

^s a chlld she swam in theholes along Scappoose Creek.went to the IIbrary. iolned 4H.showed at the Columbla CountyFair, and went to movies in one OfSt` Helens two theaters.

"Families competed at the fair

and were proud of what theyentered," she sald

Soc.al events of ten took placeat the church. "The Slovak grouplived in Linnton and would comeout and Czechs I ron Portlandwould come out." she said Theywould host d.nces and card pa.-ties

"lt wasn.t really a hard lile."

she said. Even though she g.ewup in an eia that didn't havetelevision Or easy access to poTt-land, she said the sou(h Scap-poose families, making a new lifein a nowr land, suppo.ted eachother.

"They came to be with each

othe.," she said.

'-rh ..-.. `. --X -- ``.. '.-

SECOND GRADE, 1928-Holon Beno Barta was a student of Vera Price, teacher of thls ScappcosoGrade School class. Barta ls the fourth Student from trio left, second row from the bottom.

tBhYa,83/iTho?r°:Pa3:8:;na°n®dr8d:nwdnT=re°°d;i:r;btfr:nRe,?:,rt#t%8i:riy#°::tah|::%t:,'d;'.®:n,#%:®ar&|pooso, the boats canrled dalry products and cold wood up the rlvor to Portland.

Helen Barta

Happy BirthdayScappoose

from

Mccormick Piling & Lumber Co.

33669 E. Crown zellerbach Rd. 543-5127

HAPPY BIPITHDAY SCAPPOOSE!

4 ` R9LE+E_apFIE~ATIN-a

543-5060 397-1450

Happy Birthday Scappoosefrom

St. Helens/ScappooseSeptic Tank Service

and

Hudson Portable Toilet Serviceiun422-9998

DR's ANDREOTTI & WRIGHT, PCFamily Dentistry

Dr. Robert Andreotti, DMDDr. Kimberly Wright, DMD

"Congratulations Soappoose"

33465 SW Maple 543-7166

The Spotlloh`. Scappooears`. Hol®n8, Ore. Wodno®day, July to,1991-PAGE 20

82 years on the farmTarbell roots rundeep in Scappoosewith history Ofstock, dairy farming

Arnold Tarbell has lived on theTarbell farm north of Scappooseall of his 82 years

The stock farm that started outas goo acres in 1908 was eventual-ly pared down to 674, and nowTaTbeM lives on 2'/I acres. and hist`^ro daughters are still on theoiiginal farm.

Raising milk and stock cattle inthe early part ot the centurymade for Ions days, Tarbell re-ca„s.

"We milked 84 of cattle by

hand," he said. "We hired youngSwiss boys. They made goodmwkers," he said.

^Ithough communication wasrudimentary with the Swiss im-migrants, Tarbell Said they weregiven a place to live and mealsand monthly pay in exchange formilking duties,

Belore World War I, when la-bar became scarce, the Tarbellfarms supplied St. Helens withcommercial butter. ''We workedI ron 5:30 in the morning until 7or 9 ..'clock at night," said Tar.bell, milking and making butter."It took too much labor," he said.

After the wa. the family raised•horthom cattle. "I'd turn thecalves loose ln the moming andthey would come f lying down tofind their mothers-and wouldalmost alwavs 8e( where theybelonced.''

Tarbell's parerits, ^lbert H. andlenny 1. Tafoell, moved to ttiearea to be nee. her sLster. ^IIce,

Happy 70th Birthdayfrom

your friends at

COLUMBIA CARE CENTER

FARMER'S INSURANCEServing Scappoose

for 21 Yearsl.

543-6351

51961 Col. F]iver Hwy.

Arnold Tarbell

wl`ere the school programs wereheld. Tarbell especially remem-bers the big stage curtain thatwas raised and lowered by ropes.

There were plays and partiesfor school kids. and a basketballteam plaved Clackamas, St.Helens. Vernonia and Rainier,practlcln8 in the old barn adja,cent to the school that had a goodf loor and electr.c liBhts`

Tarbell remembers that the=+a::=.¥±iia:++TL-,|h,band wanted to log. Tarbell said.

Because his aunt and unclewere enamored with the Vanktonarea, they convinced thei. rela.lives to move out, many of whomweie living in Maine.

^lbert and Jennv cameWarren area in 1915. butf amilv members settled inton.

"Most of the Yankton popula-

tion is originally f ron Maine," hesaid His grandfather helpedbuild the Yankton BaptistChurch.

Tarbell remembers that thetamily did a lot ol tiaveling. Thetrip into Scappoose was tieacher-oiis around 1918. The highwayfrom Portland stopped at N.EColumbia ^venile, and took ajagged route ou( West LaneRoad, over a covered biidge andunder a railroad overpass beforeconnecting with Old PortlandRoad into St. Helens.

"At the old Honeyman place

under the railroad tracks, youhad to blow the horn and blinklights to let people know youwere coming," he said. ''lt was sosteep you couldn't see aroundthe co,ne,.„

The trip to Portland was amajor trek also. "The road was sobad you couldn't go any fasterthan 15-20 miles per hour." saidTarbell. He said the trip took 1 '/Ihours, and at Rocky Point Road,it went right through a rockcrusher, where they loaded therock onto trucks.

`There was no yellow or white

lines and no sides to the load,"said Tarbell. The load was only16 feet wide.

He said he also traveled toPortland on tt`e trairi, f ron theHoneyman Station, and by boat.A train could get him to Portlandand back in a day.

Tarbell attended WarrenGrade School and ScappooseHigh Schcol.

The Watts and Price GroceryStore, where the Flakes Buildingis now. had a big hall upstairs

ap

fa!` --i, `

plied school boys with mechani-cal drawing, a8riculture and com.mercial printing type classes.

No`^r Tarbell is a retired electri-clan and lives in a home on thesite wheie the original housestood until it burned down

He glow/s a little grain for thefai.s, and has been a driving forcebehind the development of theColumbia County Falr`s antiquefarm equipment displ.v and de`

.irmstratfro.

I-.. B.,::-

r=F± |ii=

EARLY PETROL-Thlg Union gas statlon, ostabllstied b®foro 1933ls located where Larry.a Shell now 9tands. Early motorists carrl®da tlvo gallon can to tlll botoro po`urlng lt Into lho auto's gas tank.

Happy BirthdayScappoose

from

DR. TAYLOF] & STAFF52485 SW First

543-3136

Happy Birthday Scappoose!from

St. Helens - ScappooseChamber of Commerce

174 S. Col. F]ivor Hwy.St. Helens 397ee95

S.rving tlie coliimunities since 1918

Congratulations Scappooseon 70 good years!

from

. Kessi BI.os.Servlng Scappoose over 35 years

TO CELEBRATESCAPP00SES'

70th BIRTHDAY!

20 % off !#:Ti?::"Bring Your Wampum"

AndWe'// POW-WOW.J"

@ala'4> JV:a4b anid g;;him,•Arlt.Iques & Collec:tibles

OPEN: Wed -Sat 10-5 i;:'u8¥ynA°pt;:'

Caill 543-2466 or 543-2739"11 0® mar

t.I-Xmr, o`mer 52352 St Flut sai]poe.e

July 10, 1cO1 The Spotlloht, Scappooso/St. HO'®ns' O'o.

FAMILY HOME-Inoz Lanodon was only three years old when this photograph was taken in 19ce oftrio Wlckstrom famlly on the front porch o( `h®lr new home ln Scappoos®. Lanodon sold lt was theI lrst area home wlth Indoor riinnlno water and plumblng.

STAF]T OF F]ABINSKY ROAD -F]oad bulldlng was Important job for (lrst rosldents of the area. Sprlngand wlnter f looding made many aToas unroachable, and roads muddy and LmpQosablo. For a tlmo,plank roads were used to trans|)art passengers and suppllos.

LOGGING IN IATE 1800s - was prlmo omi)Ioym®nt. Dense local forests provld®d resource for enter-prlslno loggers to cut and 8®11 cord wood. The wood woo 8hlpped out by boat and by roll.

MEIFERT KENNELS.52745 E. Honeyman Rd.

wislles Scappoos® a "Happy loth"

543.6398In business for 5 years

Happy Birthday Scappoose!from

FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

(Celebrating 100 years)

52347 Columbia River Hwy.

Happy BirthdayScappoose!!

Jan Hildre.h Assoc., Inc.33729 SE Elm

543.3151

Serving the communlty tor 15 years.

Happy 70th ScappooseI--Wallac® Avlatlon

9cO AlrpoPOO

Bodell PrecisionManufacturing lnc.

(Formerly Bodell's lnc.)

wishes Scappoosea Happy loth Birthday!

543-3817

Happy BirthdayScappoose!

Pieper Ramsdell Agency"Serving Columbia County since 1938"

61 Plaza st Helens 3970714

Bea'sDolls & Collectibles

Offering Antique DollsSales, Repair and Appraisal

Serving Scappoose for 20 yearsDutch canyon Rd 543-2198

The Spotllght, Scappoo8o/St. H®lon8, Ore. Wednosdey, July 10,1991-PAGE 31

1891 CLASS at Wo8t Lane School, whlch was the lirst organized schools tor I)oys and girls. The schoolwas built on donated land on West Lane Poad.

From the first were schools^lmost f.om the flrst settlers in the Scappoose

area, schools for children were located wi(hdone(ed land, donated labor, and teachers thatworked for little more than room and board.

The gronrth of the school system in Scappoose(ollow/S the 8.owth of population and require-ment bv residents (hat top quality education bemade Ova.lable for their children

The ct`roriologv belon/ was comp.led with thehelp Of Bob Ndsor`. malntenance soper`riser forScappoose School.. "The llism/ of Scap-poose." bv lanes Lo..ng Watts, and l|S.an/complled for the eoth

•1es3: The f irs( organized school for boys and

girls was b`iil` on doriated land on West laneRoad.

•1es3-1e92: A one+oom school was built atthe end of Gosa Lane, close to where Brown'SLanding is now. When the building becameover{rowded anothe. school was blillt on Co`in-tv line Road for child.en f.om Multnomah andColumbla counties.

•1ee4: South Scappoose School District wasformed in Dutch Canyon.

•190S: South Scappoose Grade School, nowthe Dutch Canyon Ciange. was built.

•1906: Chapman School was established in abunk house a( the loeeing camp.

•1900: Scappoose School was built, with roomfor eight grades and a four.veal high school atthe current site of Petersen Elementary School.

•1903: Warren School. ori8inal four+oomsand gym.

•1913: A one .oom school in Chapman wasbuilt, and a.second rooin added in 1919.

-`._.r=r= -__=ai.*1`JI, -.I-`. ,

•19sO: Scappoose Union High School wasbuilt, now Scappoose Mlddle School.

•193e-39: The brick addltion was added toWarren School.

•1945: Scappoase Grade School was enlargedand the main complex of what is now PetersenSchcol was biiilt.

•19.5: South Scappoose School Districtclosed and ioined Scappocee School Dlst.ic`,

•1.SO: Chapman school closed. and ChapmanSti.d.na io.n.d the Scappoose School District

•1es2: The tap I loo. was .emo`red I .om the- hoo' be-

•195€: A new wlng was added to the east sldea( Warren Grade School

•1.S7ee D and C w.n8s we.e added toScappcose G.ado Sct.ool. and tl.e 8ymnas.urtiwas mo`red to its present locatio.i

•195e: Scappoose Grade School renamedOtto H.H. Petersen Elementary Scl`ool. after aformer principal

•1962: Grant Watts Elementary Schcol wasbl'ilt

•1967.68: The district, which was comprised ofindividiial grade school and hi8h school dis-trlcts, unit ied to become Scappoose District 1Joint, under one school board.

•1971: The new Scappoose High School wascompleted and the old high school became themiddle school.

•Mid 1970.: The original portion ot Scap.

poose Grade School was demolished.•1979: A wing was adde-d to Grant Watts

( Iementary Schcol•19.3: A wing was .dded to Scappoose HIgh

School.

FIRST SCHOOL BUS ln the 8tato was ln Scappoose, wlioro tlio lior8edr®wn conveyance carrlodcr`lldr®n Into town from r®moto roolons of Dutch Canyon and Chapman.

MULBERRY BUSH

PRESCHOOL

wishes to thank youfor your support the last 13 years!

52482 SW 2nd 543-3535

Happy 70 years!from

WATER-TITE

CONTINUOUS GUTTERS

PO Box 82 543-7688

Congratulations on your 70th Irom

AllstateInsurance

33448 NW Watts 543-7991

Con8ratulations!

on their ``70th"from

O.S. SYSTEMS, INC.

Happy BirthdayScappoose!

fromOREGON MEAT CO.Serving Scappoose tor 10 years

543.310153195 Col. f]iver Hwy.

"Happy Birthday!"from

STEPHEN SCHEER, D.C.GARY DOMBY, D.C.

and staf f

serving Scappoose for 8 years52401 Sw lst 543-3195

CongratulationsScappoose

from

JAY WHIPPLE, Atty. at Law

a part ol the communlty slnco 1965

52561 Col. FWor Hwy. 543-2405

PAGE 32-Wodn®eday, July 10, 1cO1

HISTOPIY(From p.ce ae)

But in 1915, fire destroyed al-most two blocks Of the businessdistrict. Because the town had noestabljshed tire protection. whenthe blaze began, it was soonfanned bv strong winds. andspread through the communitv,destroying the store, boardinghouse, blacksmith shop, a con-tectionery and six homes.

The memory of that {iie stayedst.ong in the minds a( city resi-dents, and in 1920, when the fi.stspecial electlon was held, thefirst mayor, I.C. Watts. and othercity residents joined to8ethei toestablish a citv water system thatwould provide a ready supply ofwater for other f ires - and therewere f ires For in Scappoose, Inthe last century, re5idents couldcount on t`^ro things almost an-nually -somewhere there wouldbe a f ire, because vlrtuaMv all thestructu.es were made of wood;and the creeks, channel and riverwould f lood. It's not .ecorded ifany I ires and flooding occurredat the same time. -

The Scappoose area was grow-ing The c.tv charter was estab-lished on Nov 1,1921. and muchg.on/th and progress followedThe city founders soon estab,llshed streets and side`^/alks f orthe bi8€er community, and street-Iights arrived in 1924 ln 1926. af .re alarm sv5tem, a two+A/heelcart with a hose reel, a.rived, andelectric lights came to houses in1927 The library followed soona' te,.

Community life centeredaround the two chu.ches in thearea (Flrst Con8regational Churcliand St Wenceslaus Cathol.cChurch) and re5Idents enjoyedplays, concerts. basket sorialsand square dances

As the years passed, more busi.ne!ses came to the ar.a. but thegrowrth was prima.IIv in residents

who lived in the area and workedelsewhere.

Progress continued to changeand shape the area. Steam boatsand stemwlieelers gave way toroads, both d.rt and plank Thoseroads were s-ucceeded bv a twig(-ing. tuning paved load, and (i-nally by four lanes ln the late1980s. The pastures in (he eastgave way to gravel mining opera-tions, and more Of the grow(h anddevelopment moved to the westhills area

But the .esidents of the Scap-poose area are still an lndepend.ent lot who preler to live "out" o{the established me(ropolitanarea in an area that is still iich intradition and history.

|Much ol the intormalion in .hiss.ory was drawn from "The Hisloryol Scalppoose," by Scappooselamas Wa..s Lorin8, which re-mains lhe delinilive work on earlytimes in the south Columbla Coun-'y area.I

Two unidentmed men from

gRToiRTtr .

GBAVE DEDICATION -Dignitaries oathorod to dedicate the oravosilo ol Thomas MCKay, Scappooso plonoer. MCKay's grave lslocated at the end ot Freeman l]oad.

FmsT CHURCH - The Scappooso Community Church, later tob®como tllo Flr9t Congrooatlonal Church of Scappoo9o. Thechurcl` 18 coloblatlno 1`8 contennlal thl8 year.

Tt`o Spotllqht, Scappooeofst. Holon8. Ot®.

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2175 Columbia Boulevard St. Helens 397-1061