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February 11, 1971 Dayton Tribune | |
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Mr. Dale Thurman's mother,
Mrs. Daphne Thurman left Sun-
day for her home in Coos Bay.
She has been staying here for
two months to care for Mrs.
Thurman after her surgery.
Over the weekend Mrs. Frell
Zink was visited by her mother
and sister, Mrs. Francis Watson
and Mrs. Lynda Puckett from
Portland. They had a nice visit
and watched the Apollo moon
shot. Last Sunday Mr. and Mr~
August Scheel and their son, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Scheel visited
from Vancouver, Wash.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wolf and
family are being visited by her
folks, Mr. and Mrs .Steven Ma-
felky from New England, North
Dakota and they visited some of
her cousins Sunday, Mr. and Mrs.
Dean Brown of Newberg and Mrs.
Ivan McCollrster of Portland.
Monday morning Mrs. George
Wise called on her sister-in-law,
Mrs. Cecil Rupp in McMinnville
and Mrs. Edith Sohrweid.
Saturday supper guests of MY.
and Mrs. John Troutman were
brothers, Mr. and Mrs. Bill John-
son and Mr. John Johnson from
Sheridan.
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Ray Tag-
gatz and family were visited by
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Pa-
trick Odell and Kerry and Kelly
from Portland.
Mrs. Paul Stephenson spent
three days in Portland with her
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Hanson and also called on her
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James
Roberts. Saturday Mr. and Mrs.
Geozge Meitzen brought Miss IAn-
da McCracken with them to
watch wrestlin,g on TV at the
Stephensons' home.
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Edward
g
By ORVAL COFFE
Priem and their daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Pierce of McMinn-
ville had a picnic on the beach
and roamed down the coast.
Mr. Bob Hance returned home
from the hospital Saturday. Their
daughter was joined here Tues-
day by her husband, Mr. J. D.
Landrum and daughter Gloria
from Yreka, Calif.
Mrs. Edith Gram's sister, Mrs.
Harriet Brown of McMinnville
was stricken with a stroke a
week ago Friday and is in the
Physicians Medical Center.
Sunday M r s. ~Marvin Ruth
called on Mrs. Jim VanDeWalle's
grandmother, Mrs. H. Ballard
who is in Physicians Medical Cen-
ter from a stroke and also visited
Mrs. Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Clark were
visited over the weekend by his
sister and brother, Mrs. Ruth
Peek of Stayton and Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin Clark. They all attended
the ~ st anniversary of the Prints
and Plaids square dance club in
Dayton.
Sunday the Clarks and their
houseguests were joined by Mr.
and MrS. Kenneth Clark and Mr.
and Mrs. S. E. Welch of Beaver-
ton and Betty Shawhan from
Carlton to celebrate the birthday
of Mrs. Peek and Ewin Clark,
beth on Feb. 8.
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Murphy of Grand Island called
on Mrs. Ethel Scoggan and took
her out to dinner in Salem.
Last week Mrs. Annie Ashley
moved into a new apartment in
Aloha. She has been stayirtg with
relatives after her house burned
down in August.
Jan. 16 Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Johnson attended the party in
Beaverton for their son, Vernon
THURSDAY, FEB. 11, 1971 ~ THE DAYTON TRIBUNE,
used to babysit with them.
Many Lafayette residents were
very concerned about the South-
ern Calif. earthquakes as they"
have relatives down there and
several residents are there nosy
for the winter.
Friday Mr. and Mrs. C. E. John-
son and her sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar Youngberg were Saturday
dinner guests at the home of
their sister, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Owens in Carlton. Friday even-
ing Johnsons were visited by
their daughters, Mr. and Mrs.
George Pritchett and their grand-
dattghter Tummy Burnham from
Carlton and Mr. and Mrs. Hom-
er Anderson of Eugene. Homer's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. 3ohn An-
derson called. Orval Coffey called
to visit as he used to go to school
with the girls and their brother
in Yamhill. Saturday dinner
guests were Andersons, Pritch-
etts, Chris Johnson of Beaverton,
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Burnham of
Carlton and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Johnson and family from Lake
Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Vern John-
son stopped by on their way to
Coos Bay, Miss Donna Anderson
and her fiance, Lydon Mintlight-
er on their way to Washington
and Dick Pritchett on his way
home from Monmouth. Monday
noon Mr. C. E. Johnsn was badly
burned from a trash fire. It flared
up and burnt the back and side
of his neck and head and set his
shirt on fire. Mrs. Johnson and
Mrs. Burnham and Tummy took
h~m to the hospital where he was
treated and released.
New Serial Levy To
Be Sought By School
District 40 For Rooms
$17,000 For County
And Cities Park Use
Committee Learns
By Orval Coffey
The Inter-Agency Committee
for Land and Water Resources
met Feb. 5 in room 106 at the
Court House. Clarence Coughran
was the Chairman for Yamhill
County. It was attended by Clar-
ence Terry who is the Lafayette
representative and three mem-
bers of the Lafayette Planning
Commission, Mrs. Floyd Mock,
Paul Stephenson and Orval Cof-
fey.
Morris Majors, chairman of the
Board of Commissioners gave a
talk to start the meeting off by
telling the representatives there
were $17,000 in funds available.
The funds are available to the
cities on a matching fund basis,
50 percent from the fund and 50
percent from the participating
city.
Lafayette spoke of the work
needing to be done in Terry park.
NevCberg is building picnic ta-
bles and benches in Crabtree
park, plan to develop their spring
for the new pool and are working
on their new 2~-acre Chehalem
park. They also spoke of the
new shooting range in the quarry
next to the park.
Sheridan will put in a new cul-
vert and underground wiring and
sprinkler system.
Willamina has no project.
The c o u n t y representative
spoke on the 14 county parks and
a parking lot in Stewart Granville
park, Grand Island park, repairs
in Locks Road park and flood
damage in Baker Creek park and
on the Green Thumb program.
McMinnville is placing under-
ground wiring in the city park
and proposed work in the Cozine
~, Johnson's 48th birthday. There] The School Board for District PaNkxt meeting of the Commit-
|1 were 14 guests. 140 drafted a resolution at its tee will be M:rch 26
Big John's Care /I Two weeks ago Saturday Mrs.[meeting Monday night proposing[' "
/ IDan Gibbon had a slight heart at- [ a $150,000 a year serial levy to I ~
LAFAYETTE tack. She is feeling fine now. run for three years. Vote on the[|.~ u. LT r
Serving MexicanchickenFOOd~---Steak Tuesday on his way to Aberdeen, proposed levy would be the same I =aYstte IlU
Complete Menu Wash to get on his ship, in Pe
Ell, Dan Gibbon's pickup truck
brakes locked, caught on fire and
wercked and burned the pickup.
Mrs. Gibbon drove up and ,got
him and visited some old friends,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Jackson and
daughters, Sherry, Debbie and!
Penny in Raymond, Wash. She
BAKERY INCLUDED
Place order ahead to ensure
freshness for homemade
bread and pies.
Open Mon. thru Thurs.
6 am to 7:30 p.m.
Fri. and Sat. 6 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Closed Sundays
on feeder and fat cattle
DAYTON LIVESTOCK CO.
DAYTON, OREGON
PHON E 864-2287
FEED YARDS
If You Have Income Tax Problems
Us Help You
Telephone 538-2148
x1 1%, E. FIRST
NEWBERG
day as the district's 1971-72 bud-
get election.
According to Supt. Richard
Schwalenberg, tentative object-
ives of the serial levy would be
to add five classrooms at Newby
School, four classrooms at Mem-
orial School, an arts room at the
high school, a covered play area
at Adams School and for gener-
al remodeling.
The School Board in other ac-
tion approved a state-initiated pi~
lot program of self analysis
aimed at improved education for
the McMinnville district.
According to Raymond Speul-
da, of the State Board of Educa-
tion, the program, first of its kind
in the state, will involve three
basic steps.
First, district personnel and
members of the community will
decide what they believe Mc-
Minnville school should accom-
plish.
Second, classes, curriculum and
other educational factors tailored
to the objectives will be devel-
oped, tested and, if promising,
put into effect,
Third, the district will be eval-
uated by outsiders trained for the
job. Speulda described this step
as an "educational audit."
The district will have the as-
sistance of state board personnel,
Supt. Schwalenberg said.
He said the pragram, recently
accepted by the district's staff,
will begin immediately and run
officially for three years.
ads offer values
Donates Trees 'For
City Watershed
Committees were named by
Mayor Bob Vaught in a special
Lafayette City COuncil meeting
Monday evening, Feb. 8. Coun-
cilwoman Peggy Wise was ap-
pointed to the Public Protection
committee; Jim Bosshardt and
Edwina Meitzen, Water and Park
Committee; Mrs. W~se and Man-
uel Gill to Sewer and Streets
committees.
The Council also agreed to
meet the first and third Mondays
of each month, starting in March.
A representative from the city
fire dept the Chax~nber of Com-
merce and the Planning Commis-
sion will be asked to attend the
third Monday meeting to provide
communications between the var-
ious groups and the Council.
Mayor Vaught reported on the
Council of Government meeting.
COG is a voluntary association of
local governments who join to-
gether to work on problems of
mutual concern. In a restructur-
ing process, small cities will band
together to elect one voting mem-
ber to COG and each town par-
ticipating will be assessed at a
rate of $1'10 per 1,000 population,
based on a total figure of citizens
in the towns involved.
A report on the compilation of
all city ordinances now underway
by the League of Oregon Cities
was also made by the mayor. A
total of 297 ordinances datirtg
from the founding of the town
will be repealed, amended or kept
to bring the ordinances up to
DAYTON, OREGON ~ PAGE $
date. August was tentatively set
for the completion of the taslc
Also discussed at the Council
meeting was Resolution 7~-1 re-
ferred to the council by the plan-
ning commission recommending
a fence ordinance. No action was
taken pending proposed changes.
At a previous meeting the
Council had authorized purchase
of 1,000 Douglas F~r seedliags for
$20 to be planted on the water-
shed. The Forest Service was un-
able to provide them and Mr.
.Glen Brooks of Lafayette offered
to donate the trees. Valued at
$110 the trees will be twice-trans-
planted trees and will arrive Sat-
urday. Local volunteers will plant
them on the watershed as soon
as weather permits. Anyone in-
terested in helping in this proj-
ect please call George Meitzen
at 864-2519 or 864-2310.
LAFAYETTE MAN ON NEW
EDUCATIONAL COMMITTEE
Gene Scheutze, Lafayette post-
master, has been appointed to
represent the city of Lafayette
on a new organization, the Edu-
cational Council for School Dis-
trict 40.
Similar organizations have been
set up in other school districts to
opn up line of communication be-
tween educational administrations
and the citizens Of the commun-
ity.
At the first meeting of School
District 40's advisory committee
last Thursday, it was reported
there were 1.19 youngsters listed
on the school census tabulation
for Lafayette.
v v v ~v v v v Y v v ~ v ~
USED PIPE
& FITTINGS
IA" to 6" Diameter
~" - 6c I 1~" . 25C
sA" 10c I2" 30C
1" 10cI 2" 30C
1 " . 17c I3" . 45c
Acoustical Ceiling Tile 10c sq. ft.
Fluorescnt Lites, 4-ft. w/tbs $7.50
Storage cabinets and shelving
Formica Top Receiving Counters
Bricks, 3 c uncleaned; 6 c clnd
Wash Basins wlfxtres $5 to $7.50
Toilets complete $12.00 up
~Water Pumps from $35.00 up
Hot Water Heaters $10.00 up
3x12 Planks & Timbers $50.00 M
No. 2 Dimen. Lmbr $40 to $55 M
lx6 TAG and Shtplap $40-$55 M
Drs w/Hardware & Frame $4 up
Plate Glass View Wndws .80c sq ft
Window Sash, Many sizes 80c up
NEW BLDG. SUPPLIES ---
Hrdbrd Panels, 4x8x~" $1.66 sht
Chipboard Pnls, 4x8xS/~" $2.25 sht
15-1b. Bldg. Felt $2.40 roll
Roll Roofing 45-1b 65-1b 90-lb.
Black Drain Tile 24" lengths
2" Din. 5c ft.---3" 8c ft.--4" 10c ft.
EoS. ,NO.
4952 Portland Rd. Ph. 364-6151
SALEM, OREGON --
Open Saturdays 8:00 to 1:00
4~