Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current, April 07, 1966, Page 12, Image 12

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TH! SANDY (Orc.) POST Thur«., April 7. 1*44 (S>C J(
Öregon State öame Commission News
The field director of the
Seven College Conference
Program for Admission and
Scholarships — Miss Anne
Greer — will visit Portland
April 28-29. »e’ll talk with
junior and senior high school
students concerning the op­
portunities offered by the
seven eastern women’s col­
leges of the Conference.
Representing Barnard, Bryn
Mawr, Mount Holyoke, Rad­
cliffe, Smith, Vassar and
Wellesley, Miss Greer will
explain academic advant­
age«. scholarship opportun­
ities, and entrance require­
ments of these liberal arts
colleges, which are located
in Massachusetts, New York,
and
Pennsylvania.
Miss
Greer, a 1964 graduate of
ML Holyoke, will arrive in
Portland, Thursday, April
28. Mrs. Richard F. Porter,
2605 S, W. Montgomery Dr,,
is making the arrangements
for her visit.
It’s a known fact that steel­ it takes place. Studies of wild
head — and salmon as well — populations verify these wan­
return to the stream of their derings. We would assume that
birth when they reach adult­ the straying is Just as pre-
hood. This la the normal scheme valent anting the wild fish as
of things according to Nature's it is with hate hery-released
plan.
fish.
Why
But as with all normals, there
are exceptions to the rules and head decide to home into a river
the errant wandering, of some far from their place of birth
at these fish Illustrates graph­ is an unanswered question. It
ically how Mother Nature in­ is certainly the exception to the
sures that runs of these great rule. We can only surmise that
fish will populate all suitable it 1* one at Nature’s laws, a
waters. We don’t know when or law fur continuity and perpet­
where the first salmon or steel- uity of the race.
head originated. We do know
Oregon bird hunters enjoyed
they now inhabit every river on
the west coast suitable for their fair gunniag in 1965, but cer­
living.
tainly not up to the excellent
How they extended their range shooting of the previous sev­
to include these waters is a eral years. The take was done
moot question, but we surmise on both upland game birds and
it to be the result of exceptions waterfowl, according to the
to the normal. It would also ex­ story told by hunters during the
plain repopulation of a stream annual game survey recently
iestroyed by some catastrophe. completed.
According to reports, around
We don’t know if these errant
fish just lose their sense of 90,000 upland game bird en­
direction or make a deliberate thusiasts took to the field last
journey to explore and pioneer fall tn quest of pheasants,
new waters. Whatever the rea­ quail, chukars, and other upland
son, some do stray and wind up game birds. These hunters re­
on the spawning beds of rivers ported taking just over 838,500
many miles from the home upland birds of all species. In
stream or the stream of birth. 1964, hunters reported taking
In 1963 a smelting, year-old around 1,136,000 game birds.
steelhead about six inches in
No seasons were held last
length and marked by the re­ fall for blue, ruffed, and sage
moval of the left ventral fin grouse, which in itself would
and the right maxillary bone reduce the total take of upland
was released by the game com­ birds by quite a bit. Actually,
mission into the Sandy River. hunters normally take about
She was a young winter steel- 30,000 grouse during a season.
head
reared at the com­
The big drop in take, howev­
mission’s Gnat Creek Hatch­ er, was for chukar partridge
ery. it time, she moved out of and quail. Hunters reported
the Sandy and into the ocean. taking about 112,500 quail com­
In early spring of 1965, this pared with 230,800 In 1964, and
female, now adult and measur­ 68,800 chukars compared with
ing 26 1/2 Inches in length, 194,500 the previous year.
entered the Columbia to begin Hunters participating did some
her first spawning run to per­ pretty good shooting, as evi­
petuate her race. She bypassed denced by the take of about 6
the Sandy, moved on up the chukars and quail per man.
Pheasant hunters enjoyed a
Columbia, and turned into Hood
River. No one knows why she reasonably good season In spite
selected Hood River, but this of the low production of ring-
was the stream ot her choice. necks west of the Cascades.
hunters reported
Here she was captured and Statewide,
tagged by game commission taking more than 326,200 pheas­
personnel at the Powerdale Dam ants which was about 10,000
on Mirch 9, then released to birds less than the previous
year. Pheasant hunters aver­
continue her spawning run.
aged just over 3 birds per man.
Apparently,
she then re­
Dove hunters took about 163,-
turned to the ocean, spent an­
other summer and winter at 000 of these tricky little bomb­
sea, and returned to spawn a shells averaging just over 10
second time early this spring. birds each, while pigeon gun­
Stoce her first run was made ners reported taking 105,000
to Hood River, one would as­ bandtails for an 8-blrd aver­
sume that this would be re­ age.
Waterfowl hunting success
peated. But this wasn’t the case
was down slightly from 1964,
at all.
Instead, the big female en- according to reports of hunt­
tered the Sandy River,
the ers. The kill totaled 349,000
stream of her original release. ducks and 43,600 geese. This
She was captured the second was a drop In total kill of
time on March 6 by Wendell about 9 per cent from the prev­
Stout, gamo commission fish­ ious year.
Only 44,700 hunters gunned
ery biologist, as she moved
into the trap at the Marmot Dam the marshlands last fall, a con­
fish ladder. She carried tag No. tinuation of the decline in the
00190 which had been placed number of waterfowl hunters
in her dorsal fin at the Power- from the peak of 77,000 reach­
dale Dam the previous spring. ed in 1952. The survey showed
It Is doubtful that this wan­ that waterfowl hunters spent
dering steelhead will survive just over 6 days each in the
to make a third spawning jour­ field during the season.
Mt. Hood Budget
Hearing Apr. 14
A hearing on the proposed
1966-67 budget for Mt. Hood
Com-nunity College will be held
next Thursday, April 14.
The hearing has been sched­
uled by the Multnomah County
Tax Supervising and Conserva­
tion Commission. It will be at
7 p.m. in the Health and Educa­
tion building, 122nd and Gllsan.
Locale of the hearing is in
line with the Tax Commission's
new policy of bringing hearings
out into the districts affected.
The special levy to be sought
by the district in an election
April 21 is for $496,376. This
amounts to roughly 2.9 mills.
Total budget requirements
are $1,705,690 but tuition and
fees, plus federal and state
funds provide the lion’s share.
Biggest expense item
is
$601,775 for teaching expen­
ses. Some$3OO,OOOisearmark-
ed for development of the hoped-
for campus at 148th and Halsey.
Dr. Earl Klapstein, college
president, estimated the cost
at about $9 per year for the
owner of a $10,000 home.
The budget is predicated on
a student enrollment of 750
next faU.
Cascade Sales,
Earnings Show
Upward Trend
Cascade Corporation sales
and earnings continued their up­
ward trend during the second
quarter and first half of fiscal
1965-66, reaching new highs in
both periods, Robert Warren,
president, informed stockhold­
ers Wednesday.
Consolidate sales of Cascade
and its foreign subsidiaries
during the six month period
ended Jan. 31, 1966 totaled
$7,665,394
while
earnings
amounted to $484,268, or 66
cents
a share on 730,480
shares outstanding.
Sales of Cascade's domestic
operations In the same six
month period totaled $6,065,-
236, up from sales of $3,813,-
139 during the six months end­
ed Jan. 3, 1965. Earnings of the
parent company totaled $401,-
195, up from $196,114 earned
during the same prior six month
period.
Consolidated sales in the sec­
ond quarter also set a record.
Sales amounted to $4,076,859,
up from $3,588,535 in the first
quarter.
The outlook, Warren added,
for the third and fourth quar­
ters continues bright Back
orders on Jan. 31 totaled more
than $4,000,000.
Additions to both Cascade’s
plant near Gresham and
in
Springfield, Ohio, are now about
completed and the company Is
installing new equipment, War­
ren stated.
Besides the wide choice of
containers, you also have a
choice In milk itself. There’s
regular whole milk, skim milk
with most of the butterfat re­
moved, 2 per cent milk con-
tabling 2 per cent butterfat;
buttermilk; chocolate milk; and
flavored drinks like the eggnog
available at holiday time. Milk
is one of man’s most noursh-
ing foods, and its refreshing
wholesome flavor makes it a
fine drink anytime of day.
ney. The odds against it are
far too great. But is makes one
wonder where she might go If
she did live to deposit her eggs
for a third time.
Wandering or straying sal­
mon and steelhead are no stran­
gers to game commission fish­
ery biologists. All salmon and
steelhead released by the game
commission are marked for
future identification. From this
marking program, it has been
learned that these fish stray
from the home stream much
more than
previously sus­
pected. Mostly, the strays move
into
adjacent streams
or
streams of a nearby watershed.
However, some stray long dis­
tances from the homing river.
This winter several marked
steelhead taken by anglers from
the Salmon River were ori­
ginally released into the Alsea
and Siletz fish in the Alsea.
Wilson River fish have been
taken from the Trask. Hood
River steelhead have been re­
ported from the Sandy. And so
it goes, with reports of strays
in many rivers along the coast
and Columbia River.
We don’t know exactly how
common this straying is among
wild populations of salmon and
steelhead, but we do know that
Game biologists trapped and
marked more than 800 deer this
winter in a continuation of the
study on deer movements and
distribution.
Subsequent ob­
servations
of these marked
animals will give valuable in­
formation on their movements
as the animals move back and
forth from summer to winter
areas.
Trapping took place on five
big game ranges this winter,
with all animals captured now
wearing bright - colored neck­
bands and numbered eartags.
Winter ranges which were the
scene of trapping operations
and the number of deer cap­
tured at each include the Poke-
gama range in the Keno Unit,
113 deer; Sprague Unit, 202;
Northside John Day, 93; Crook­
ed Creek in Lake County, 258;
and Devil’s Garden near Fort
Rock, 136 deer.
Outdoorsmen are urged to re­
port any marked animal ob­
served, Indicating the location
and date of the sighting and the
color of the neckband, if possi­
ble.
the winter with the spring wind­
up on the tske of steelhead
eggs now tn progress. So far,
more than 1,791,500 steelhead
eggs are in the hatching trays
for the coming year’s produc­
tion. Almost 600,000 of these
are from summer steelhead
stocks.
At the present time, well
over 18,800,000 eggs sre now
in the process of incubation.
These Include a variety of spe­
cies including steelhead, cut­
throat, brown trout, kokanee,
and rainbow trout. Heaviest
production is on rainbow trout.
Other fish produced include
Mackinaw,
Atlantic salmon,
Chinook and silver salmon.
More than 2.2 million koka­
nee eggs were imported from
British Columbia, Washington,
and Montana. It is anticipated
that additional kokanee eggs
¿Births
will be received at a later
The Oregon Gama Commis­
date.
sion recently received a fine
In addition to eggs on hand, bit of recognition of which all
most ponds and raceways are Oregoniana can well ba proud.
teeming with youngsters grow­
The recognition was tn the form
ing for release sometime thia of a Zulu war spear, or "aa-
coming summer. Yearling trout sagay" as It Is called, present­
total well over 3.5 million. ed by the Natal Hunter a and
These are the fish which will Conaervation Aasoclatlon
of
be ready for anglers when the South America aa a token of
trout season opens April 23
ita appreciation for services
and through the summer. An rendered over the years.
additional 4.4 million fry and
The award waa presented to
fingerlings are on hand for lake W. D. Toomey, Consul General
and stream plants later in the for the United States, by A. P.
summer."
Austin, Honorary Secretary,
Steelhead plants are already during the aasoclatlon’s annual
under way at several game banquet held in Pietermaritz­
commission hatcheries. These burg, Jkiuth Africa on Oct. 16,
youngsters are released when
1965. Toomey in turn preaent-
they approach the smolt stage.
ed the token to the game com-
Approximately 1,400,000 prime
miasion upon hia recent return
smolts will be released this to the United States.
spring, of which about one mil­
In presenting the “aasagay”
lion are winter-run fish.
and plaque on behalf of the
A* Nationally Advortiood en Tolovlolon
Guitar with amplifior,
coe'
RELY ON OUR
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PANOVITE
Hunting aafety and traffic
safety are alike -- always fig­
ure the other guy is crazy.—
Portland (Ore.) Journal.
No finer quality made than the
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A
WHILE THEY LAST I
Guitars
REXALL
REXALL
REXALL
Arguments over who la poor
aeem to be waged mostly by
people who definitely are not.
-Champaign - Urbana QH.)
Courier.
SURPRISE BUYS Sp'?
(Not an our
THURS. MARCH 31
thru SAT. APRIL 9
Pit**
penny!
Daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Wade leplay, 1411 \E.
160th Pl., Portland, March 27.
Twin sons to Mr, and Mrs.
Joseph L. Tolbert, 119th and
Birch, Troutdale, March 30.
Daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
David KIRoy Henderson, 20140
N. K. Sandy Blvd., Troutdale,
April 1.
Daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Hixlney Lee Maulding, 19880
S, K. Stark, Portland, April 1.
Egg-taking
operations at
game commission fish hatch­
eries are almost complete for
Guitar Outfit
We
Seii
association, Austin stated that
the asaistancf and advice of
ths Oregon Gam* Commission
through the years has been in­
strumental in «parking inter­
est in Natal tn the sound prin­
ciples of game management,
and the Impetus to apply theae
principles which will be felt
in South Africa tor a long time.
Austin advised Toomsy that
he had visited the game com­
mission in 1960 and was deep­
ly tmpresaod with the develop­
ment of the principles ot game
management and conservation
Consul
Gsneral
Toomey
stated in a letter to Phil
Schneider, state game direc­
tor, that the assistance rend­
ered by the commission has
enhanced the imige of Ameri­
ca in Natal, and added his per-
sonal appreciation tor the of-
torts.
GHKSHAM OKNKKAl.
HUOTTAI.