4 THE SANDY (Ore.) POST Thor»., Jon« 5, 1969 (Sec. 1) Obituaries S.D. H er early life and schooling was at Wallbay, Mabel Henrietta Egnew, 78 South Dakota. On May 23, o f Rt. 2, Box 367 Boring, died 1914 at Lemon, S.D. she suddenly on May 28, married John Hall. Mr Hall Mrs Egnew was born Mabel died in 1918. On Dec. 25, Henrietta Krauser at Wallbay, 1920 at Mobridge, S.D., she married Walter Egnew. Mr. Egnew died in 1952. In 1937 they left South Dakota, and moved to Oregon, making their home in the Sandy, Boring community where they have lived until their deaths. She M o r n in g S e rv ic e s 10 30 o m S u ndoy School was a member o f the Pleasant 9 1 5 a.m Home Baptist Chruch. A C o rd ia l W elcom e is E xtended to A ll The surviving members o f her family include 5 living PASTOR WALTER LUEDTKE children. Walter H. Egnew o f 668 4991 — Home 668 62 32 — Church B o r in g . M rs . B e a tric e Papasadere o f Portland. Mrs. Marjorie Kerii o f West Linn. The Chapel of the Hills Mrs Ester Davis o f Rapid City, Between S andy a n d B rightw o od S.D., Mrs Mavis Helt o f A C om m unity C hurch w ithou t P o rtla n d . T he re are 10 a m em bership. g r a n d c h ild r e n , and 8 •O b W i ' l Be W e lc o m e ’ g re a tg ra n d c h ild re n . T w o Bible School 9:45 a.m brothers and three sisters also M o rn in g W orshp 1 1 00 a m survive, Herbert Krauser o f Evening Service 7 8 15 p m Lemon, S.D.; Jack Krauser o f Bible Study (Thurs. 7 30 o m Portland. Mrs. Ester Storms, o f Thv Portland, Mrs. Viola Gehrlick 6 2 2 3260 o f Portland, Mrs. Rosalee Rossman o f Los Angeles, Calif. Funeral services were held Saturday, May 31. in the Chapel o f Carroll Funeral Home, Vault interment Forest Lawn Cemetary. Rev. Owen Douglas offered services. Mabel Egnew Immanuel Lutheran Church Episcopal Services St. Raphael's Chapel Scenic A ve., Sandy F a m ily Service 10:30 a.m R ev. A lb e rt Jenkins 665 6435 Community Presbyterian Church S unday School 9:4 5 a m M o rn in g Services 1 1 a m W estm inster Fellow ship H igh School G ro u p 7:0 0 p.m N u rs e iy C a re D u rin g W orsh ip P u sonage 66 8-45 94 REV. E. L. NEUENFELDT St. Michael's Catholic Church Sunday Mass 10 a.m - 6 p.m. Father C a rl G im p l 668 4446 C orner Strauss & Pleasant Sandy, O re gon Sandy Seventh-Day Adventist Church Proctor and U n iv e rs ity S abb ath School M o rn in g Service 9 30 a m 1 1 00 a.m You A re W elcom e G eo rge Pastor W C ham bers 668 4990 — Home 668 61 44 — Church EPISCOPAL SERVICES AT ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC CHURCH W em m e, Oregon Every Sunday 5 p.m. Father V ictor Gil Jion 665-9442 Lena S. Denbo Lena S. Denbo, 74, Rt 4 Box 1682, passed away in a Portland Hospital Jude 2 after a short illness. She was born in Neb. She moved tri Gresham in 1937 and has made her home here the past 32 years. She is survived by her children, Leonard, Gresham; Emery, Sandy and Mrs. Alta Lucas, Gresham. Eleven grandchildren and 13 great g ra n d c h ild re n , her b ro th e r, John Schleeter, Bertrand, Nebr.. Sisters, Mrs. Emma C layton and Mrs. Minnie Scheel, Bertrand, Nebr., Mrs. Dora Bevelhimer, Sterling Colo, and Mrs. Mary Smallfoot Gresham. Funeral Services w ill be held Thursday, June 5, 1:30 p.m. at Bateman Funeral Chapel with Private Vault Interment at Forest Lawn Cemetery. 3aisy E, Avery Mrs. Daisy E. Avery. 89, late o f Sandy, Oregon died May 27, 1969, in Gresham, Oregon, following a stroke on May 20. Mrs. Avery was born Ella Daisy Carothers, near Clarence, Missouri, Sept. 15, 1879. At the age o f four, she came to Oregon with her parents and they settled at Rocky Point near Springwater. Later, the family moved to Oregon City and then to Portland where she was married to Talleyrand Avery, Feb. 26, 1908. S u rv iv o rs in clu d e two d a u g h te rs , Mrs. G lenna Connell, Sandy; and Mrs. Pearl B ix e l of R e n o ; fo u r g r a n d c h ild r e n and one great grandchild. Funeral services were held at Lincoln Memorial Park Chapel, Portland, Monday, June 2, at 3 p.m. with interment at Lincoln Memorial Park. * * * Cart Stolen Armand Martins. 16955 SE D ivision, reported to the sheriff’s office June 2 that a four-wheel cart had been stolen from the yard back o f his shop He plated the value at $100. SERVICE WE GIVE !■ INSURANCE WE SELL . . . -Georg« Morgan Local Raprasantativa The personal insurance counsel and advice of a local agent is important to you in plan ning a complete insurance program. WALRAD Sandy, Oregon INSURANCE AGENCY 668-4421 Eastmont To Rebuild Adventist VBS Starts Monday Eastmont Lanes, Gresham bowling establishment badly damaged in a fire last week, definitely will be rebuilt. Vera Fowler, owner, said this week that the $250,000 loss is covered by insurance and that repairs w ill get under way soon. She said the alleys would be open by Sept. 1. A fire o f still-undetermined origin did heavy damage to the building last Monday night. Mrs. Peters said it appears that the blaze started in the ceiling o f the dining room, perhaps in the air-conditioning unit. A c tu a lly , Mrs. Fowler ( explains, the alleys themselves were not too badly damaged, except by smoke and water, since the flames were confined largely Ao the west end (dining area) o f the building. Bible School Dated At Baptist Chapel — rc * ¿/MW VIEW ACROSS ROAD from Sandy Ridge Cemetery looks northwest Tall tree in background is a European Ash brought here from Switzerland as a sapling in 1878 by Matthew Zogg, Sr., grandfather of Pauline Forman. (Post photo) Daily Vacation Bible School , at Sandy Baptist Chapel will start Monday, June 9, and SANDY CHRISTIAN continue through Friday. June WOMEN'S CLUB 13. Hours will be from 9 a.m. to noon. Theme o f this year’s school will be ‘ Believing God’s Book.” In addition to Bible lessons, the school will include song time, with old and new songs; handcrafts in each department, consisting o f papercrafts and the making o f plaques with appropriate verses to go with the lessons; ar.d refreshments for all. Any child from age four through the eighth grade is, welcome to attend. Darlene G. Dodd Awarded Funds Gardeners Set Outdoor Exhibit The 15 annual Outdoor Exhibit o f Trees. Shrubs. Herbs and Ferns o f the Columbia River Gorge will be planted around the Daughter’s o f the American Revolution fountain on the Scenic Columbia River highway June 6 16. Each spring members o f the Columbian Garden Club o f the Springdale Corbett area, with the help o f the staff o f the C o lu m b ia Gorge Ranger Station, label and display specimens collected through the gorge. Students Sell Festival Pins Gresham Princesses who will ride on the Gresham float in the Rose Festival Grand Floral Parade and members o f the hand are busy selling Festival buttons. Jim Patrick Chamber o f Commerce chairman o f the float project said Gresham had been given 1,750 buttons by the Festival Association. The monev w ill be kept local to pay expenses for entering the float and the band. Thev sell fo r« . The hand is a compoaite o f musicians from the three high schools in the Gresham Union District. Health Facts Daily combinations of a var iety of foods are more im portant than any single food in providing adequate nutrition. Don Lane has resigned as baseball coach at Revnolds high and w ill be replaced next spring by Jim Wolf Lane w ill remain in the Reynolds system, moving up in to a d m in is tr a tiv e vice principal at the high school. Wolf has served as jayvee baseball coach as well as assistant in football. He graduate o f Sandy high school and Pacific University where he competed in baseball and football. Jess Stevens, presently a member o f the Reynolds faculty, w ill move in to replace Wolf as jayvee coach. He aided with the Reynolds frosh thia year. Your local newspaper keeps you in formed of what's happening in your area — com munity events, public meetings, stories about people in your vicinity. These you can't — and shouldn't — do without. HOW THE MONITOR COMPLEMENTS YOUR LOCAL PAPER The Monitor specializes in analyzing and interpreting national and work news . . . with exclusive dispatches from one of the largest news bu reaus in the nation's capital and from Monitor news experts in 40 overseas countries and all 50 states Dog Falk O ff Cliff, Found A fte r 15 Days BILL ROBERTS The May 16 luncheon meeting o f the Sandy C.W.C. found the club with a queen. Special feature was a “ Queen for a Day” . Merchants o f the Sandy area helped make one woman o f the club a very happy queen. She received many nice gifts including a dozen red and white carnations from the club. Mrs. Mary Chester was the lucky one given the royal treatment. She was encircled with a red velvet cape and crowned queen by Shirley Dyal, chairman of the club. Also on the program was a talk on the “ Do’s and Don’ts o f Perfume” by Helen York. Music was by Andrea Bristlin from Cascade College, who sang and accompanied herself on the piano. Dick Walker, president o f the Oregon Rug and Mattress Co. was the speaker. Another feature o f the club is the Prayer and Share time on the second Wednesday o f the month. The June 20th meeting o f the Christian Women’s Club will be held at 7 p.m. in the high s ch o o l c a fe to riu m . Husbands and teenagers will be in c lu d e d in th is dinner meeting, tickets are $1.75. There w ill be very special music and a special feature all will enjoy. Speaker for the evening will be Bill Roberts. Bill is a former Shakespearean actor and Broadway star. He is a graduate o f the University o f Texas. Bill and his wife Barbara lived in the Brightwood area about ten years ago. The public is invited but reservations must be made by June 14. Call Sharon Logston, 668-6131 or Shirley Dyal. 668-6338. Lane Drops Lancer Job AIT. GRANGE -926 Why The Christian Science Monitor recommends yon read your local newspaper Darlene G. Dodd, Estacada, Members and invited guests with Maybelle Wesselink as TRY THE MONITOR — IT ’S A PAPER w as a w a rd e d a $ 3 0 0 enjoyed a most delightful reader, Jan Neuenfeldt, Edith THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL ENJOY scholarship recently by the evening on May 26 at the Weidman, Ruth Berg, and Viola Oregon S tate Employees Grange Hall on Sleepy Hollow Sim m ons as actors. Very The Christian Science Monitor One Norway Street Association. She was one o f 19 Road. realistic sound effects were Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. 02115 students to receive scholarships Following the 6:30 pot luck provided by Evelyn Anderson. Please start my Monitor subscription for the period checked below. I enclose and grants-in-aid throughout supper, members o f the Sandy The history o f our country ________ (U.S. funds). Oregon. Women’s Club presented a in song was portrayed by □ 1 YEAR $26 □ 6 months $13 A n n o u n c e m e n t o f the program. Kathryn Fox, accompanied by O 3 months $6.50 awards was made by Jerry A pantomime, “ And the Dorothy Hansen at the piano. Name. Liebertz. president o f the Lamp Went O ut” was given, A silent auction ended the Street. association. evening and gave a small boost C ity. to the treasury. V io la Sim m ons, Publicity State. .Z IP C ode. PB-17 Chairman Church Notes “ Behold, I create new heavens and a new earth; and the former shall not be remembered, nor come into mind.’ This verse from Isaiah is part o f Sunday’s Christian Science Bible Lesson-Sermon on “ God the Only Cause and Creator.” A correlative passage from “ Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures’ by Mary Baker Eddy states; ‘ This s c ie n tific sense o f being, forsaking matter for Spirit, by no means suggests man’s absorption into Deity and the loss o f his identity, but confers upon m an e n la r g e d individuality, a wider sphere o f thought and action, a more expansive life, a higher and more permanent peace.” A ll are welcome at First Church o f Christ, Scientist, 1525 W Powell Blvd. Services begin at 9:30 a.m. Sunday school also begins at 9:30 and there is a nursery for small c h il d r e n and in f a n t s . IB Children o f the community, ages 5 to 15, are invited to attend vacation Bible school at th e S andy S eventh-day Adventist Church, Proctor and University Streets, June 9-19, Pastor George W. Chambers announced this week. Enrollment will be held between 8:30 and 9 a.m.. Monday, June 9. Classes will meet from 9 a.m. to noon week days, and w ill include craft and nature study as well as Bible study on the subject of “ God’s Loyal Friends” . There will also he supervised games to assist the children in using up excess energy. Pastor Chambers said that there is no charge and that children o f any faith may a tte n d . Special graduation exercises w ill be held 8 p.m. Thursday, June 19. Everyone is welcome. Any child needing transportation to the V.B.S. sh o u ld c a ll 668-6758 or 668-6233. A b o u t 5 5 ,0 0 0 federal employes w ill retire during the current fiscal year. There were 5 3 ,0 0 0 retirements during theprevious year. “ T u ffy ” , a four-year-old the river. Robert Dix and German Shepherd, is back Harvey and Ron Wieprecht all home this week trying to o f Troutdale, worked their way regain some 50 pounds she lost to shore and Ron. a Boy Scout, while stranded on a Sandy climbed the c liff to rescue the River c liff fo r 17 days. dog. Her involuntary fast began The starving dog meekly May 9 when she strayed from accepted the remainder o f the the home o f her owners Mr. canoe trip to Troutdale where and Mrs. Jackie Beatty o f she was fed before the rescuers Springdale, and apparently fell set out for Springdale to find to a tiny ledge o f the Sandy her home. River c liff below the Former T u f f y ’s excitem ent on F r a n c is c a n school a t passing the former Franciscan Springdale. Seminary at Springdale where T uffy was trapped on the the Beattys are caretakers tiny ledge for 17 days with no caused them to tum in where food and only occasional rain she was greeted by Mrs. Beatty water. A fter frequent checks who said, “ T u ffy , is that you?” with local humane societies This week T uffy is rapidly and the police, her saddened regaining her weight and seems owners gave her up for dead none the worse for her long and got another dog. ordeal. On May 25, the weakened _ T uffy (dwindled from 85 to 35 c pounds) was spotted by three men traveling by canoe down s Rainbow Order I To Install I Eastmont Club j £ Sets Meeting I BATEM AN FUNERAL CHAPEL, Gresham 520 W. P o w e ll B lv d . 10300 N.E. Hancock Street In Gateway i J ***' “ “• Woodland Park Hospital I To be installed are Carla X E schright, w orthy advisor; Janine Clum, worthy associate a d v is o r; Brenda Z iegler, charity; Barbara Bloom, hope; Laurie Brown, faith; Susan Arnold, recorder; Donna Case, tr e a s u r e r: L o ri R ic k e rt.c h a p la in Brenda W illey, drill leader; Laura Keller, love; Diane Stanley, religion; Chris Williams, nature; Debbie Herbel. im m ortality; Cydni Scofield, fidelity; Gail Wetherbee. patriotism; Laurie Driver, service; and Vicky A r n o l d , m u s ic ia n . The installing officers are Carla Z ie g le r, w o r th y advisor; B arbara Loomis, chaplain; Linda Quinn, recorder; Cheryl L e w is , marshal; and Mrs. Margaret Corw in, musician Mother advisor o f the group is Mrs. Barbara Case and the past worthy advisor is Barbara Loomis. by K E N B A T E M A N S entim entalist or not, if you ever saw or see the tra d itio n a l service a t the shrine of the U nknow n S oldier in A rlin g to n N a tio n a l C em etery on M e m o ria l D ay, you w ould hove or see moist eyes, q u iv e rin g lips, a tig h te n in g o f the th ro a t in reverent silence. The story b e h in d the story o f the Unknown S o ld ie r is d ram a w ith o u t e q u a l on an y stage It starts firs* w ith N ew York C on gressman H am ilto n Fish in tro d u cin g a House Joint Resolution to have an u n id e n tifie d , k ille d in actio n A m erican S oldier re turn ed from France fo r re in term ent a t A rlin g to n . The d ra m a continues w ith A d m ira l Dew ey's fam ous Flagship " O ly m p ia " commissioned to re turn the bo dy to A m erica w ith M a rine escort. In story book m anner, the d ram a relates the care w ith which a n o n y m ity was m ade certain . how the selection was mode . . . how an o rd in a ry A m erican, a C hicago o rp h a n , as a S ergeant in France was chosen a n d o rd e re d to w alk into a room a n d place a b o u q u e t o f roses on one o f fo u r u n id e n tifie d caskets . . . how S ergeant Y ounker place d the b o u q u e t an d thus m ade a selection which he la te r described as G od 's choice The tom b o f the Unknown S oldier is m ore tha n a sym bol of sentiment. It is an A m erican voice w hich gives thanks to the g lo ry o f G o d th a t we as A m ericans, can a n d d o respect the ho nor a n d m em ory o f our d e p a rte d ones, soldiers a n d civilians a like . hospital napp enirtgs I The Order o f Rainbow for Girls, Hoodview Assembly No. z 78, w ill install their new o ffic e rs at the Troutdale Masonic Temple June 8 at 3 | p.m. | A THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK MUST CHILDREN FEAR A HOSPITAL STAY? To answer this question, let’s look at what often makes youngsters afraid of hospitals. For years, the institutional atmosphere of white wallsi starched, efficient and busy nursesi impersonal mschineryi and the sudden disappearance of parents has been a frightening experience for children undergoing hospital care ar.d treatment for anything from the common tonsils removal to unplanned emer gency care. WHAT CAN BE DONE TO CHANGE THE ATMOSPHERE? Well, no one enjoys being sick. However, the Pediatrics Depart ment atmosphere can be changed to make the stay as cheery as possible. The brand new 16-bed Pediatrics Department at Wood land Park Hospital is a good example of a new psychology in hospital care for children. Here’s what has been done: • • • • • • • The walls are color-coordinated. Furnishings are homey — not institutional. Each room has a television set. The floors are entirely carpeted. Nurses wear colorful floral print smocks. There is a playroom for children well enough tobe out of bed or crib. Visiting hours have been relaxed and, in some cases, the physician may allow the parents to stay overnight with their child. • The Pediatrics Department is separated from the rest of the hospital. WHAT ELSE IS NEW IN PEDIATRICS? Modern electronic equipment has enabled provision of more ef ficient and economical care of the youngster. At Woodland Park Hospital: • The nurse can electronically read the child’s temperature from the corridor. • A remote-control hypothermia blanket can lower the child’s temperature. • Individual room temperature can be controlled according to the doctor's prescription. • U here necessary, electrocardiograms may be taken without the nurse having to enter the room. The Eastmont Golden Age d u b w ill meet Tues.. June 10 v . . • • in the social hall o f the ln general. parents can help hospital staffs alleviate the fear child- ren have of hospitals. Children should be exposed to hospitals. Gresham United Methodist ’ | whenever possible, before the need for hospitalization. They should Church from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. After a sack lunch, table be encouraged through their schools, youth organizations, or games are scheduled | individually by their parents to visit the hospital to form positive A ll senior citizens are I impressions, in v ite d to a tten d . For î transportation call 665 1192. 1 — I I i.