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Wanda Perkins
Wanda Genevieve Perkins, 87, passed away
April 8, 2009, at the Hood River Care Center.
A graveside service is planned for 3
p.m. Monday, April 13, at Idlewilde Cemetery. Chaplain Clyde
Sanda of Heart of Hospice will lead her service.
Wanda was born Oct. 23, 1921, at
Mountain Home, Idaho, to Warren and Mary Johnson. She spent her
youth and was married there in 1937 to Willis Perkins. At the
time of his death in 2004, they had been married for 67 years.
In 1947, Willis and Wanda moved their
young family to a small farm on Trout Creek Ridge near Parkdale.
Like most couples who came of age during the Depression and
World War II, they knew what it was to struggle and to survive
by hard work and sacrifice.
Wanda loved their farm and taught her
children how to work and accept responsibility. She also loved
to hunt and fish and joined her husband and children on annual
hunting and fishing trips.
Her family was her joy and she took
great pride in her children, her grandchildren, great- and
great-great grandchildren.
Wanda is survived by her daughter,
Kathryn Kowalski, of Mill City, Ore.; daughter, Mary, and
son-in-law, Bob Mahan, of Scottsdale, Ariz.; son, Wayne, and
daughter-in-law, Melanie, of Parkdale, and daughter, Janet, and
son-in-law, Clay Elliott, of Fairbanks, Alaska.
She is also survived by 17
grandchildren, 24 great-grandchildren, and three
great-great-grandchildren. Wanda was predeceased by her husband,
Willis, of Parkdale, and sisters Lillian Forsell, of Florence,
Ore., and Bonnie Sikes, of Portland, Ore.
From Wanda’s children to honor our
parents:
In Our Hearts:
They are not dead,
Who leave us this great heritage of remembering joy.
They still live in our hearts,
In the happiness we knew, in the dreams we shared.
They still breathe,
In the lingering fragrance, windblown, from their favorite
flowers.
They still smile in the moonlight’s silver
And laugh in the sunlight’s sparkling gold.
They still speak in the echoes of words we’ve heard them say
again and again.
They still move in the rhythm of waving grasses, in the
dance of the tossing branches. They are not dead.
Their memory is warm in our hearts, comfort in our sorrow.
They are not apart from us, but part of us.
For love is eternal,
And those we love shall be with us throughout all eternity.
The family suggests that any memorial
contributions be made in Wanda’s memory to Heart of Hospice and
sent in care of Anderson’s Tribute Center.
Arrangements are under the direction of
Anderson’s Tribute Center (Funerals, Receptions, Cremations),
1401 Belmont Ave., Hood River, OR 97031; (541) 386-1000. Please
visit www.ander-sonstributecenter.com to sign the family guest
book, and leave a note of condolence.
George Tamura
George Atsushi Tamura died April 9,
2009, at his home in Odell, Oregon. He was 93 years of age.
The eldest son of Katsusaburo and Michi
Tamura, George was born in Portland on June 15, 1915. Three
years later, the family moved to Hood River, raising
strawberries, pears, apples, peaches and cherries in Oak Grove
and Odell. Brothers Harry and Oscar and sister Alice joined
George in helping their parents on the family farm.
George graduated from Odell High School.
While his family was incarcerated at Pinedale assembly center,
Tule Lake and Minidoka concentration camps, George worked as a
mechanic.
On May 21, 1949, George married Hisako
Kaku and they farmed in Payette, Idaho, until 1951. They moved
to Hood River and farmed in Odell until 1955 at which time
George began farming in Parkdale where they lived until 1986.
George enjoyed working in his orchard
and driving the crop to the packing house for many years when
his son assumed the orchard operation. In his retirement years,
he and Hisako spent many hours caring for their grandchildren,
including attending their various sporting and school events.
They knew they could always count on
grandpa for taking them wherever they needed to be and were
always enveloped by his boundless love for them.
George is survived by wife Hisako;
daughter Patty Gilkerson of Hood River, son Ken and
daughter-in-law Nancy, of Hood River; grandchildren Trista
Tamura and husband Greg Guenther of Tucson, Ariz., Trevor Tamura
of Lake Oswego; Ian Gilkerson of Lynnwood, Wash, Ryan Gilkerson
of Hood River, and numerous nieces and nephews.
Respecting his wishes, family members
will share their memories at a private family remembrance of his
life. Interment will be at Idlewilde Cemetery.
Memorial contributions may be made to
the FJC/Liddy Shriver Sarcoma Initiative in care of Anderson’s
Tribute Center, 1401 Belmont Ave., Hood River, OR 97031 or
on-line at http://liddyshriversarcomainitiative.org/.
Arrangements are under the direction of
Anderson’s Tribute Center (Funerals, Receptions, Cremations),
1401 Belmont Ave., Hood River, OR 97031. Please visit
www.andersonstributecen-ter.com to view and print the obituary
and sign the guest book for family.
Mike Snodgrass
Oct. 15, 1954 - April 4, 2009 Michael
Lynn Snodgrass was born in Prosser, Wash., on Oct. 15, 1954, to
Ray and Mary Snodgrass. He was the second of four children and
grew up in Parkdale, Ore., where he attended Hood River Valley
High School.
He later made his home in Portland,
Ore., with his three daughters and was the owner of his own
business, First Funding Group Equipment Financing.
Mike was a loving father who spent most
of his time coaching his daughters’ sports teams when they were
younger. He was also an avid 49er fan and a Harley rider who
enjoyed boating, cooking, and making others laugh.
He is survived by three daughters,
April, Nicole, and Shannon; his father, Ray; brother, Ron; and
sister, Suzanne. He was preceded in death by his mother, Mary,
and brother, Steve.
A celebration of life will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday, April 14, at the Clackamas Community Club, 15711
S.E. 90th, Clackamas, OR 97015.
Jerry Bell
On Sept. 15, 1925, a son was born to the
Newtonia County, Mo., farm family of Sherman and Veva Bell.
Following local tradition he was stuck with a given name from
some long-lost ancestor that was impossible to spell, but could
somehow be shortened into a recognizable (and spellable)
Christian name. Thus the new arrival was named Jarrell, or Jerry
for the etymologically challenged.
Even though the Great Depression and the
accompanying Dust Bowl were still years away, life from the
beginning was not easy. Jerry, like so many young people of the
era, learned from an early age that if you didn’t work you
didn’t eat.
Some of his earliest memories were the
constant uprooting and migrating to the places work could be
found. There were no welfare agencies in those days and the
Bells had to go where the father, with little education but
great mechanical skills and a boundless work ethic, could
scratch out the living needed to keep the family going.
When Dad bought his own rig to establish
an independent trucking business, young Jerry would ride along
for many hours, helping out where he could and keeping his
father company on those lonely highways of the Midwest. This
gave Jerry the opportunity to absorb his most important life
lessons: the realities of hardscabble living, and a sense of the
honor intrinsic to hard honest labor. Self-reliance became
something of value; something to cherish. And once a permanent
home could be found, a commitment to the community became a
privilege, not a duty or a source of boredom and drudgery.
At the turn of the decade disaster
struck in the form of a Depression. But for those in the
heartland the economic effects were exponentially magnified by
the protracted Midwestern drought now known by its ominous
historical sobriquet: the “Dust Bowl.”
By this time Jerry’s family was residing
in Boone, Colo., in a large house built by Dad. Although not in
the “Bowl’s” midst, Boone bordered on the worst-hit drought
areas in the region. Month after rainless month stretched into
years desiccating the crucial topsoil. The prevailing winds
eroded the soil into fine “dust” creating the storms that could
remove the farmer’s economic lifeblood and deposit it thousands
of miles away. Farmer’s tools and technical knowledge were not
up to fighting nature’s wrath at this level of ferocity.
Combined with a global deflationary spiral already forcing food
commodity prices down to historic lows, a catastrophe of
biblical proportions was inflicted on the hapless farmers from
Eastern Colorado to Texas.
Dad’s truck business failed largely
because massive crop failures reduced the need to transport
those goods to market. But the immediate cause was the
insistence of the federal government that he pay all his taxes
immediately, even though it would send him over the financial
edge. This was one of the earliest triggers for Jerry’s lifelong
distrust of the folks in Washington.
Along with thousands of others, many of
whom were lumped together with the “Okie” pejorative, the family
decided to move West. On an earlier visit, Hood River had struck
them as a nice place to live. With an opportunity to work in the
orchards, it seemed liked the right place to start over. So in
1936 Jerry and his family moved to the place that would become
their permanent home. The days of a nomadic lifestyle, forced on
Dad by the exigencies of finding work and a place to raise a
family, were finally over.
Upon arrival, Dad settled everyone in by
“designing” and building a plywood and tar paper “garage” in
three days as the whole family participated. Emulating 19th
century pioneer days it was either that or be exposed to the
elements! While Dad went to work in the orchards, Jerry
started Park Street School.
The early days were a bit difficult for
Jerry, as the pronounced Missouri “twang” made him the butt of
school yard jokes. But it was not long before he found a skill
that eventually put him in demand all over the Hood River
Valley. Starting with a cheap clarinet, he graduated to
saxophone as he and friends such as Dr. Alan Henderson (still
resident in HR) put together “hot” dance bands, playing gigs as
far away as The Dalles. This part-time career became so
remunerative that by the time Jerry was a high school senior he
was able to buy not one but two cars.
Even in those early days, Jerry was
showing his future business savvy because at war’s outbreak two
cars gave him two sets of coupons for rationed fuel. He and his
group always had enough gas to get to the next event. Music
lovers in Hood River, The Dalles, or more distant hot spots like
Dallesport could count on hearing the strains of Jerry’s golden
sax on Friday dance nights.
Only 17 upon graduation in 1943, Jerry
anxiously awaited his 18th birthday as he would then be eligible
to join the Army Air Corps. He had already committed to the war
in the air, so as summer turned to fall, he was on his way to
Ockley Field for a tour that lasted until the end of the
conflict.
Unfortunately, the army being the army,
he was never given his overseas assignment and instead ended up
in advanced Navigation and Bombing training using top secret
equipment such as the Norden sight and ground sweeping radar.
Ironically, these were skills that the “brass” considered so
critical for the war effort, that the military technology
imprinted on his brain retained top secret status after the
war’s end.
In addition the protracted training
period scuppered the hoped-for overseas assignment after V-E and
V-J day intervened. Jerry had achieved the rank of lieutenant
through training in skills that were crucial to the war effort,
but it would be another six years before he got a chance to use
them.
Following a brief and memorable
“celebration” period, Jerry was hell-bent on starting a career
and marrying his sweetheart, Jo Anne. That made a fast run
through higher education a top priority. Entering University of
Oregon in the fall of 1946 he graduated in 1948 by taking summer
classes and heavy course loads.
In 1949 the newlyweds moved to Portland
to allow Jerry to gain the financial experience he felt
necessary to pursue his career. Unfortunately, after two years
with 1st National Bank and Securities Inc., another event
interrupted his career plans.
When the Korean War broke out Jerry,
like so many other veterans, was still a member of the Army Air
Corps (now the Air Force) Reserve. This meant another call-up
with his background in air combat technology making him a
high-priority prospect.
Even after the advent of the jet engine
for fighters, the old propeller-driven planes were still the
strategic bombing weapon of necessity. Targeting technology had
not advanced much so Jerry’s training in cutting-edge World War
2 sighting gear and relatively short stature made him the
obvious choice for assignment to the most dangerous job on the
plane.
After six months' additional training
Jerry found himself in the bubble nose of an A 26 bomber flying
the first of 55 combat missions (the maximum allowed) over North
Korea.
For the uninitiated, the terrors of this
war’s air combat were quite different than previous conflicts.
Fear of death or even the pain of dying took a back seat to
being captured. The guys were very aware of what happened to
P.O.W. s in North Korean camps. And even though the night
missions reduced the risk of attack by the very capable Mig 14
and 15 fighter planes, ground fire could be intense and Jerry,
sitting in his Plexiglas bubble, was closer than any of the crew
to the business end of anti-aircraft bursts.
With two crash landings and numerous
close calls to his credit, rotating back to the States could not
come too soon. A further six months' active duty and he was
ready to resume his career path. Upon leaving the service
for the final time, Jerry felt the siren call of Hood River
willing him back home. And when he arrived, family in tow, there
was only one career choice in his mind.
Harold Hershner had been a banker in
Hood River during the Depression. Even when the bank failed
under pressure from the economic tsunami, he demonstrated his
character by sacrificing his own financial well-being in an
attempt to make his depositors whole. The FDIC was not created
until 1936, so bankers and their clients were on their own.
The lack of government deposit
guarantees that currently allow depositors and bankers to escape
financial ruin, literally forced people out on the streets.
While most bankers were disappearing, Hershner was stepping up;
a concept that is unimaginable during the current crisis.
When Harold started an insurance and
real estate agency in the post-war years, he quickly
re-established a reputation for integrity and honesty. It was
this reputation that put paid to any other opportunities in
Jerry’s mind. Hershner also had a crackerjack partner/office
manager in Bessie Weber, further dispelling any doubts that this
was where he needed to be.
In order to strengthen his chances,
Jerry offered to work six months for free or until such point
that he could start earning his own way. Hershner accepted, but
typically found a way of paying Jerry regardless of the
agreement.
From there Jerry’s career took off. In
1960 he became a junior partner and a few years later
accumulated enough shares to become one of the managing
partners. Jerry’s energy and business savvy helped build the
newly named “Hershner and Bell” into a Hood River icon.
Even though the 1960s were a time of
some personal turmoil Jerry still charged ahead with life.
Besides building a successful career in real estate and
insurance he participated in the community by serving as
Treasurer for Hood River County from 1958 to 1962.
Through a series of illnesses and
mishaps, the “temporary” position of six months stretched into a
four-year drag on valuable time needed to fulfill the
obligations of a full-time job and supporting his family. But
because of his sense of duty and obligation, he doggedly
maintained an important function for the citizenry until a
replacement could be found.
Like many of us Jerry was a complex
individual. Beneath the obvious traits of a stubborn
micromanaging businessman he had a vigorous and inquiring mind.
His hobbies reflected this. His love of flying was actively
pursued in a partial ownership of several private airplanes with
like-minded friends. The wine bug bit him very early and he
became one the original “connoisseurs” in Hood River.
History, philosophy, economics, and
aviation technology also held a fascination for him.
In 1991 Jerry retired to a life of
gentleman orchardist, bringing his obsessive perfectionism to
the world of pears. For the last 17 years he has been coddling
Anjous, Forelles, Golden Russet Boscs, and others. Although he
could afford almost any home in Hood River, Jerry, being a child
of the Depression, chose to stay in his modest home in the midst
of his beloved fruit trees. Hard-wired to see disaster around
every corner, his version of an annual “rite of spring” was
predicting, in his “optimistic” way, a crop failure that never
came. To the end of his life he saved plastic containers, tin
foil, books and other items that we baby boomers would not give
a second thought to discarding. “You never know” was part of his
daily lexicon.
Jerry is survived by his three children:
Chris Bell, Janice Krier and Mark Bell. He also had seven
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
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