Image provided by: Chetco Community Public Library; Brookings, OR
About Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1957)
BROOKINGS—HARBOR P I L O T THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1957 PIONEER LIVES HERE Bill B esser, 80 year old pion dirt on your fingers. e e r, has come to Brookings to B esser’s early years w e r t make his home. He is a one-time spent as a sailor, knocking a- Medfordite who has spent much round the world. He was hos of his life In Alaska. He returned to Medium, .itnai- pitalized in San Francisco when the 1906 earthquake struck there decided that It would be tte r and he got out of bed to help re to live by th*' sea. He said that he picked out a b’ •< scue a number of children tra p p’d in an nmhanage. He later spot on the m ap--H arbor—end worked as a laborer chipping then moved over. H< currently Is caring for some of the Stout m ortar from bricks knocked property, which takes care o f down by the quake. his Ridging. After his stay in southern O re B esser, whose 80th birthday gon, he went to Alaska, working if not far away, still feels sturdy for the Alaska Engineering com and active, although perhaps not mission, which started the Alaska juite so spry as in the days he Railroad. He bought a homesite cleared by hand nine acres of in what then was a tent city near land on the Kenai Peninsula in Anchorage, and lived on the same location until his most recen t Alaska, hauling topsoil for his trip "outside" g a r d e n on a yoke on his "The winters in Alaska arc toe shoulders. long", he said. He added that HONEST DIRT nights in Alaska are already coLd The Anchorage paper quoted •and that "I feel b etter already* him as saying, ’’Don’t be- afraid lince arriving in Oregon. of blisters and getting honest_ He was born along, the Pilco- mavo river in Argentina, the sor of a Swiss mother and a Germai father, who him self had beenborr in Montreal, Canada. "My family traveled much", he explained, "and maybe that’s way I have a wander lust, to o ." In addition, he had the home stead on the peninsula, and for w ith S U R P R IS E 112 years he reached it oy rowing across the swift waters of " tre acherous Tun again Arm, and down the twisted ebb and flow of Cook in let," according to the Alaska paper. I He also was a fisherman for p tim e, and recalls one day when 36,000 salmon were caught in a handtrap. ENGINEER VISITS Paul Corak, engineer from the Soil Conservation Service area bffice in Grants Pass spent July 31 working with D o n a ld C. Greeves of the local office in Gold Beach. A number of drain age and irrigation projects intht Wedderburn, Langlois and Floras Creek areas were checked dur ing this visit. ■at, «kA.« THE club. ****************** B esser lived in Medford for ibout two or three years, s ta r t ing about 1910. He helped clear land for fruit ranches during the time of the arrival of "colonists and later heloed build some oi the first s*d«-walks in Medford. ROWS TO HOMESTEAD OLYM PIA ♦ “I T S MCKENZIE WORKS OVER LIBRARY I AWN Tom McKenzie, local sand and gravel man, and a member of the Brookings Library board work ed over the Library lawn this Sunday, to prepare it for aland- scaping job that the Azalea G ar den club will arrange in th e near future as a project of the Besser has been called >u. "Alaska pioneer" by the Anchor age Daily Times, which record ed his advantures since arriving in Alaska in 1914 when he left there recently. BORN IN ARGENTINA W ATER THAT MAKEb it II so r e f r e s h in g CARLES Boon will take basic at Ft. Ord Calif, and then will return home on leave before reporting to his next station for a course in con struction equipment operation. Halves--Wh«le or Shank COME ON IN — AND L E T ’S GET ACQUAINTED! Pork S te a k s 39< Milan J . Boon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Boon, box 98, Brookings, has enlisted in the U.S. Army Engineers under the '»Reserved for You" program for high school graduates, accord ing to SFC Richard L. Johnson of the Coos Bay Army R ecruit ing Station. pen in g AT GROUND BEEF ENLISTS IN ARMY WE ’RE HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF A NEW MEAT MARKET AND LOCKER PLANT HERE! RANP PURE Hap Lewis was really surprisec when a group of friends, and his woods crew held a surprise b irth day party in his honor Saturday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Barnes. About 26 were in attendance at the party-, and Hap was presented a custom made bow, quiver, and a dozen arrow s. ***************** 59 OD AMS 63* LB. WE STRESS PLENTY OF LOCKERS AVAILABLE In the near future CARLE'S Quality Market & Lockers hours 9:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M . NORTH BROOKINGS