PAGE 6 JOHN AND EULA PETITE: SHARING 51 YEARS OF TOGETHERNESS In Grand Ronde, nestled just off highway 18, along the South Yamhill River, sits the home of John and Eula Petite. Inside, sitting in a brown comforter chair and watching a TV daytime soap rests John. Eula and John, both Grand Ronde tribal members, have been married for 51 years. It is a good day for John. His feet are a bit sore, but otherwise he feels fine. His health goes up and down since he suffered a stroke in 1980. John was born in 1906 in Grand Ronde. His parents are Henry Petite, Clackamas, and Jane Leno, Rogue River. He was one of fourteen children. He attended the Cloverleaf School, just west of Grand Ronde, until the sixth grade. But work and moving ended his public education. John's first job was as a waterboy for the railroad builders in the Valley Junction area. By the time he was 17, he was involved in the timber industry. It would be his lifetime career. He began by splitting wood for the donkeys, and then moved on to become a "whistle punk" for the loggers. A "whistle punk" was a person who blew the steam whistle signals to the loggers, explains John. He then moved on to become a hole digger for the chokers for a short time and eventually became a choker setter. He later became a "hook tender", a crew boss, while working for Murphy's Lumber Company. The lumber business had him working for operators, such at Polk Operating, and working in locations along the Columbia River, and around Tillamook and the Grand Ronde area. When John first began in the lumber business, the trees were enormous, perhaps "eight to ten feet through", said John. Most were Douglas Fir, but Noble Fir, Hemlock and Cedar were also cut, said John. In those days, clearcutting was common practice. The crew would work "patches" perhaps 20 to 40 acres. It would take some time to clear a "patch" since the trees were so large, said John. Close calls have left their mark on John. In 1939, a near miss resulted in his left arm being broken. A steel plate was put in his arm. In 1965, he broke an ankle and it was wired back together. Another time, an accident resulted in his sternum being broken diagonally. His heart was almost punctured. One time, John was helping to straighten a trailer loaded on a logging truck. They were pushing the tailer by hand while John was standing under the trailer reach when it dropped. There was so much "drop to it, it hit me on the head", said John. The accident resulted in ' both of John's ankles being sprained. He received quite a jolt which he didn't feel much in those days, but feels these days with a sore neck, John said. John retired from the lumber business in the 1970's. In 1980, he suffered a stroke and remained in intensive care for about four days, but recovered quickly. Eula was born on November 27, 1911 in Salem, Oregon. She was the 14th and final child of John B. Hudson, Kal apuyan, and Magdeline (Hattie) Sands, Rogue River. Eula's family was originally from Grand Ronde, but moved to Salem where her father, a blacksmith set up a shop, while the children went to school. When Eula was about one year old, her grandmother became ill and the family returned to Grand Ronde and lived in the Agency area. She lived there until about age 12 and then her family moved to her grandmother's original land allotment, where her and John live today. Eula recalls visiting her grandmother when she lived on the allotment lands and peeling and gathering Cascara (chitam) bark to sell for spending money. Chitam was used as a popular cure-all medicine, said Eula. She also remembers picking a lot wild blackberries, huckleberries, and going to the coast to pick a blue lake berry during the summer months. Before Memorial Day, Eula remembers her family climbing Spirit Mountain to pick wildflowers. The flowers were gathered and made into bouquets to place on graves the evening before observance. "You couldn't say a word in the cemetery," in those days said Eula. . Oar If 1 i iy-. - - " , - H- J i - - - - - - "- x. Slf-,- in -i "-V mini mwrf - r nat.HMAn.wr! m..,iiia-ilmsiem.--. v-i LtoR- George Powers, Ed Powers, Andrew Kenworthy, Walter Kenworthy and John Hudson