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6/23/07 - News Hopper

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12 June <strong>23</strong>, 20<strong>07</strong> <strong>News</strong><strong>Hopper</strong> TM www.structuralbuildings.com • Locations throughout MN • licensed, bonded & insured #7133The Old School – Tamarack, IIPHILIP NEESE“At Tamarack School, wewere more advanced thansome schools,” explainedMel Johnson. “Our janitorwas assigned the job of cuttingSears and Roebuck andMontgomery Ward catalogsinto appropriate size piecesand he then put the piecesneatly in a box in each ofthe outhouses. In the 1930swhen the depression hadeased up a little bit, theschool board ordered toiletpaper rolls. As soon as theyarrived our teacher, ElizabethOsterlund, demonstratedthe use of this newtissue. “You are to use onlyone piece of this tissue! Seehow easily it comes apart.”She then tore the tissuealong the perforated line.”The boys and girls wereeach given one roll of thistissue. The girls were sonervous, trying to followthe teacher’s instruction thatone of the girls dropped thewhole roll in the toilet! Wethought there would be bigtrouble over that, but welearned fast at our school!”Kenneth Lake recalled havingsoup and sandwichesfor lunch. At that time therewas no cook, so the teachernot only provided this foodbut prepared the food aswell. “Her soup was sogood and the smell of thatgood food made it hard toconcentrate on our studies.In some of the homes foodwas a little scarce and somechildren were in too big of ahurry to eat breakfast. Manyof us had chores that camefirst. All of us loved thathot lunch and our plateswere clean when the mealwas over.”Mel Johnson tells of thetime Eugene Peterson’s nosewould not stop bleeding. “Itwas in the winter and therewas snow on the ground.Art Johnson decided to takematters into his own hands.He picked up Eugene byhis feet, held onto his heelsand swung him around andaround. Blood was flyingout of his nose and the crimsonspray made a huge contrastingcircle in the snow.When Art set Eugene downthe nosebleed had stopped,but the scene in the snowlooked like a scene reminiscentof a chicken withits head cut off. No one whosaw that healing was likelyto ever forget it!”Gene Boyes rememberedhis brother, Jim being indoctrinatedat school. “ArtJohnson held Jim upsidedown over the edge of therailing of the front porchwhich was about six feet offthe ground. Jim was in thefirst grade but he didn’t cry.He just wiggled a lot.”“One day I crawled intothe concrete culvert underHighway 210,” related Gene.”Some of the big boys cameup and kept me penned inthat culvert and I tell you,I thought the end of theworld was coming whenthose huge semi-trucksrolled over the highwayabove me.”Sharon Johnson Hutarsaid, “I don’t know whatthe attraction of the porchrailing was but many of us,including myself, wouldstick our tongues on thatpipe when the temperaturewas below zero. Of courseI was stuck on there and Ihad to wait until my bodytemperature warmed upmy tongue enough to getloose.”The Tamarack school wasbuilt and ready for childrenin the fall of 1914. Theschool was constructed atthe cost of $6,000. It wasbuilt according to the plansfrom Book A, Rural Schoolsin Minnesota Plans andSpecifications. Design threewas used. The school hadone large classroom witha divider and some smallerrooms for a library, coats,etc.At Tamarack School recently to share memories of the ‘good old days’, l to r: Kenny Lake,Jack Kelly, Gordon Steffer, Darell Berg, Eino Latavala, Mel Johnson, wheelchair is Art Aho,Sandra Aho, Maryln Steffer, Marty Berg, Art Latavala, Gene Boyes. PHILIP NEESE PHOTORecord numbers at KanabecHospital’s community picnicOver 800 people receiveda meal in two hours at KanabecHospital’s 5th annualcommunity picnic in May.Perfect weather broughtpeople outdoors and, althoughthe line was almostalways long, guests wereserved quickly due to severallayout changes. Therewere three food lines, easierto handle food (large cookiesfor dessert instead ofcake, for example), andmore hospital staff on handto help.In hopes that next year’scrowd is even bigger, morechanges and upgrades arealready being planned fornext year’s picnic.Winners of the drawingwere: First Aid Kit - SheriRoeschlein of Mora; ThermosKit - Darrel Dahlin andRochelle Holland, both ofMora; Chair - Robert Manleyof Milaca and Sharon Schoumakerof Quamba; Cooler- Phyllis Haase and MaryMcCarthy, both of Mora; FireExtinguisher - Sue Schillerof Hinckley.AITKIN:East of Aitkin on Hwy. 169-210Now Open Daily 8:30 - 5:30Mondays & Fridays til 7 p.m!218-927-32<strong>07</strong>M C GREGOR:Downtown Next to TracksNow Open Daily 8:30 - 5:30Mondays & Fridays til 7 p.m!218-768-3032ANNUAL CLOSEOUT!All Vegetable PlantsBuy 1, Get 1 FREE!Includes Patio Tomatoes!Annual Flower 4 packsand Wave PetuniasBuy 1, Get 1 FREE!Shrubs of the WeekPotentillas Bright yellow,white or pink flowers all summer long!Buy 1, Get 1Half Price!All 4.5” Potted AnnualsBuy 3, Get 1 FREE!Hanging Baskets,Deck Gardens &Flower PouchesBuy 1, Get 1 Half Price!Perennials of the Week:All Groundcovers - Many tochoose from for sun or shade: Snow on theMountain, Bugle Weed, Creeping Buttercup,Creeping Phlox, Lamiums, Sedums, PeriwinkleVinca, Creeping Thymes,& More!Buy 2, Get 1 FREE!GREAT RIVER GARDENS FISHING CONTESTCOMING JUNE 29 th - JULY 1 ST . STOP IN FOR FOR DETAILS!Fresh Produce! We’re picking Asparagus thru June. We have our own fresh picked Radishes, Lettuce,Spinach, Peas, Peppers and Zucchini available now! Coming Soon :Cukes and Strawberries!Bulk Mulch: In addition to our selection of bagged Cedar, Cypress, Colored and Natural WoodChips, Cocoa Beans and Rice Hulls, we have bulk Western Red Cedar Wood chips and rice and easy tohaul 6 yard bales of Western Red Cedar available at the Farm!Pavers and Retaining Wall Block now available at the Aitkin and McGregor Garden Centers We are adistributor for Anchor and Rockwood concrete products and can get anything they make.Natural Stone Now Available: Limestone steppers, wall block and boulders available in Aitkin.(Other materials available to order.)Landscaping: We do landscape plans; foundation plantings, shrub borders, perennial gardens, tree planting - treesavailable to 18’ tall; patio, steps and wall installation with natural stone, block, boulders or timbers; rain gardens andlakeshore restoration; sod installation and seeding for lawn establishment, sprinkler systems.

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