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t - SANDY ( O f ) POST Thur».. P t 3 L W
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] Children should
beware of plants
OBITUARIES
C ecil C. B oget
Funeral services for Cecil
C. Boget, former operator of
the Zig-Zag Inn, were held
Friday at Bateman Funeral
Chapel
Boget died at his Portland
home Wednesday.
Born Jan. 13, 1904, in
Kearney, Neb., Boget moved
to Washington as a young
man and worked in the tire
business
He purchased the Zig Zag
Inn in 1961, which he
operated until his retirement
in 1974. During that time he
was active in the Rhodo
dendron Lions Club
Survivors include two sons,
Wesley of Anchorage, and
Del of Richland, Wash., and
three step-children, M errill
Bartuff of Rhododendron and
Shirley and Lowell Bartuff,
both of Portland
Vault entombment was at
Lincoln M em orial Park
Mausoleum.
Leafe E rickson
H o rtto r
he was a member of the
Masonic Lodge in Millwood
and Eastern Star, Victory
Chapter in Spokane He was
a member of the Brother
hood
of
Locomotive
Engineers.
He is survived by his wife,
Eileen;
two
children,
Taymond E. Williams, Jr.,
Vancouver,
and Joyce
Beach. Spokane; one sister,
Helen Mahoney of Portland;
seven grandchildren; and an
uncle, John Mitchell, Sandy.
B ev erly R ichards
Beverly A. Richards, a
lifetim e Gresham resident,
died Friday at her home
She lived at 55 NW 11th
Ave She was born Dec. 21,
1915, in Troutdale and at
tended Gresham schools. She
had lived in the Portland
area for her entire life and
resided in Gresham since
1963.
Survivors include: a sister,
Shirley Thorud of Eagle
Creek; and a brother,
Landon Kaser of Sherwood.
Services were Saturday at
Services for two-month-old Bateman Funeral Chapel
Leafe Erickson H ortto r with private commitment at
Fischer w ill be held today Lincoln Memorial Park.
(Thursday) at 10 a m. in the
chapel of Sandy Funeral
E m m a M . R ig g s
Home.
The infant was born in
Funeral for Emma M.
Portland on Oct. 13. He died
of undetermined causes in a Riggs, 11730 SE 352nd Ave.
Boring, w ill be Thursday at
crib death Dec 17.
He is survived by parents 1:30p.m.
John Fischer and Pamla
She died Sunday in a
Horttor of Sandy; grand Portland hospital.
parents, Bud and Anna
Horttor, and Ronald and
Born May 28. 1914, in
Imogene Fischer; great- Aitkin, Minn., she came to
grandparents, Glen Horttor the Portland area in 1942 and
and Archie and Ida Pounds; moved to Boring in 1950. She
and a great-grandmother, was a member of the
Mrs. John Horttor.
Pleasant Home Baptist
Church.
A aron C. H errell
Survivors include: her
husband, Leslie; five sons,
Jerry of Brightwood, Arnold
of Oregon City, B ill of Sandy
and Don and David, both of
Milwaukie, four brothers,
George, Jim, Eugene and
Roger Tibbetts; and five
sisters; Margaret and Alice
Tibbetts, Opal Westling, May
Hensel, and Pearl Holmes.
Aaron C. H errell, 75,
Portland, died Wednesday in
a Portland hospital.
Born in St. John, Kan., he
came to the Portland area in
1923 For 35 years he was a
P ortland
F ire
Bureau
fireman until he retired in
1965 Herrell was a member
of the Gresham Elks Lodge
No. 1805.
Bateman Funeral Chapel
Survivors include;
his
is handling arrangements.
wife, Evelyn; four sons. Roy
Burial w ill be at Cliffside
of Troutdale, James of Cemetery.
Gresham, Charles of Sandy
and Richa rd of Portland, t wo
brothers, Enoch of McKenzie
M ary H o ffm eister
Bridge and Audi of Yakima,
Wash, a sister, Opal McCrow
M ary E Hoffmeister, a
of Spokane, Wash.; 10
former resident of Eagle
g randchildren, and one
Creek, died F rid a y in
great-grandchild.
Atwater, Calif.
Funeral w ill be 10:30 a m.
Monday at the Gable Funeral
Born
in
Edmonton,
Home in P o rtlan d w ith Alberta, Oct. 9, 1914, Hoff
meister came to Oregon in
H en ry R oy
1928 and was a graduate of
Estacada High School. She
lived in Eagle Creek until
“H a n k ” S k ogan
1971, when she moved to
Henry
Roy
“ H ank” California.
Skogan, a former Sandy
She is survived by a son,
resident, died of a heart
H offm eister of
attack in Seaside, Oregon G iffo rd
Portland; four daughters,
Dec. 13 at age 65
Mr. Skogan moved to Claudia Holcomb of Winton,
Calif, and Virginia Botsford.
Seaside from Sandy in 1952
He was a retired logger and Phyllis Robinson and Wanda
heavy equipment operator Sue Brown, all of Portland;
23 grandchildren and five
and an avid fisherman.
Mr. Skogan was the son of great-grandchildren.
Albert and Anna Skogan. He
Graveside services will be
married Ruth Folsom in
Thursday
at 10 a.m. at the
1949
Services were held at Forester Cemetery in Eagle
Creek
Chapel in the Sunset on Dec.
16 Burial was at Oceanview
cemetery in Warrenton.
He is survived by his wife;
one daughter,
Beverly
Skogan of Colorado; one
stepson, Dean Folsom of
Seaside; two sisters, Mildred
M in yard and M argaret
Skogan of B o rin g; and
several nieces and nephews
Each C hristm as season
brings w ith it numerous
warnings about poisonous
plants around the house and
yard.
“ While it’s a good idea to
be cautious about plants,
especially around sm all
children, I th in k people
should learn how to live with
potentially harmful plants
rather than avoid them,”
says Jim Green, Oregon
State University Extension
ornam ental
h o rtic u ltu re
specialist.
The benefits of plants when
they are properly and safely
used
outweighs
th e ir
potential to do harm, he
contends
O rn a m e n ta l
plants, both indoors and out,
are intended to add to the
beauty of the surroundings
and enhance the quality of
the environm ent. Green
observes
Any real threat usually
involves the curiousity of
sm all children. But the
wrong approach is to con
sider not having any plants
which might be dangerous if
eaten by a toddler, he
believes
“ Instead, just as children
are taught not to get into the
medicine chest, to stay out of
the street, and so on, they
must be taught not to eat
leaves, berries, flowers or
other plant parts not served
to them as food.” he said
The earlier children learn
not to eat any plants except
those grown fo r human
consumption the better.
Some ornamental plants can
have toxic effects when
eaten. M oreover, a ll o r
namentals are grown under
d iffe re n t pesticide spray
regulations than food plants,
and thus should never be put
into the mouth, Green points
out.
“ The w arnings about
poisonous plants are often
out of proportion to the
danger they pose,” says
Green.
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R aym on d E.
Funeral for Raymond E.
Williams, Sr., w ill be held
today (Thursday) in the
chapel of Sandy Funeral
Home at 1 p.m. Vault in
terment w ill be at Cliffside
Cemetery,
He died Dec. 17 at age 63.
Mr Williams was born in
Gresham on May 26, 1915 He
was raised in the Sandy area
where he completed high
school in 1935 and began
working in logging as a
timber faller.
On J a 29. 1936, he was
married to Eileen Kaufman
in Washington They lived at
Brightwood before moving to
Washington where he began
his career working for the
railroad.
After raising their family
in the Spokane area, the
couple returned to Oregon to
make their permanent home
near Sandy He continued
working for Burlington
Railroad in Portland.
While living in Washington
1
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Gateway Inn
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Mon.-W ed. 7:30
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COAST TO COAST STORES
t o ta l h a r d w a r e
3 M N fleecer Blvd. in Heritage Heere, Sandy M I-4815 Open 7 days a week
- OPEN SEVEN DAY’S A WEEK
Open Christmas Evo Doc.24 ’til 5 p.m.