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Elizabeth Jane "Beth" Zelfer - Classic Hits 100.7 KLOG

Elizabeth Jane "Beth" Zelfer - Classic Hits 100.7 KLOG HOME LISTEN LIVE NOW NEWS OBITUARIES COMMUNITY CALENDAR CONTESTS Enter to Win a Beautiful Bouquet Nominate Teacher of the Month Contest Rules BIRTHDAYS ADVERTISE CONTACT PUBLIC FILE EEO 0$0.00Listen Live Now Elizabeth Jane “Beth” ZelferHome News News Archive Obituaries Elizabeth Jane “Beth” Zelfer James Elton AsmussenJanuary 20, 2026Robert Roger CummingsJanuary 20, 2026 James Elton AsmussenJanuary 20, 2026Robert Roger CummingsJanuary 20, 2026 Elizabeth Jane “Beth” Zelfer Published by Katie Nelson on January 20, 2026 Categories Obituaries Tags

Elizabeth Jane “Beth” Zelfer: March 26, 1952 – December 30, 2025

SCAPPOOSE- Beth Zelfer was born March 26, 1952, in Vancouver, WA and passed away unexpectedly at her home in Scappoose on Tuesday, December 30, 2025. She was planning to meet friends for lunch later that day. She will be remembered for her warmth, humor, and boundless enthusiasm for the people and activities she loved.
Beth was the youngest of 3 children born to Fred and Cornelia Zelfer. She is survived by her brother Joe, sister Geraldine “Gerry”, and very special niece JoAnna (Craig), great nephews Kyle (Grace), Corbin, great niece Chenise, a great, great nephew, two great, great nieces, a large extended family, and many, many friends. She was predeceased by her parents Fred and Cornelia and her sister-in-law Peggy Zelfer.
Beth graduated from Oregon State University with a degree in PE and Health. Jobs were scarce in the early 1970s, substitute teaching didn’t pay bills, and being a night owl the graveyard shift at Multnomah Plywood in St Helens was appealing. She loved bantering with her crew, playing pinochle after the shift but soon realized turning sheets was not a long term proposition. Her interest in baking drew her to the apprenticeship program at Safeway. Apprenticing was progressing well until she started working in Vancouver and Camas. The longer drive required getting up even earlier and Beth hated mornings. She started leaning back to her educational degree. Teaching was in her blood; her mom, brother, sister-in-law, and sister were all teachers. Supplementing with Tupperware sales she picked up the required classes to be certified to teach grade school. She dedicated more than 25 years to teaching fourth grade. Teaching the curriculum but going over and above to make it interesting and fun. Catching flies in flight, playing the turkey nose game, finding the green on the Beaver bulletin board are treasured memories of her students and parents. Her room was always warm and welcoming. Beth coordinated the clam chowder fund raiser for many years to provide money for field trips. Using the Oregon Trail game allowed her students to experience history rather than just reading about it. To keep her skills current Beth earned her master’s degree mid-career. She worked tirelessly to ensure her students were well prepared for the classes ahead of them.
Beth was a pioneer and competitor in women’s sports. Playing volleyball on Brenda Foey’s team in high school and Sally Hunter’s team in college. She would tell stories of funds raisers for gas and their carpool adventures to games. Since the enactment of Title 9 in 1972 and the decades of fighting for fair and equal rights it’s hard to grasp that college women’s sports had no budgets. Despite the challenges she enjoyed the competition and the camaraderie. Returning to Scappoose after college she joined the women’s fastpitch league as a catcher, forming lifelong friendships. She completed her sports career playing slow pitch. Retiring from playing she remained an avid fan of the Scappoose Indians, selling tickets at games, the OSU Beavers of course and watched college and professional teams as much as possible. Beth enjoyed, worked on, and attended reunions and so wanted to get the fastpitch team reunited. To stay competitive, she became the game master, pinochle, board games, spoons, trivia, bunco… She always had a new game for the next get together.
While serving in Vietnam Joe sent Beth a high-quality camera that started her love of photography. She always had her camera with her for birthdays, family gatherings, every event. She would take the best candid photos, especially while assisting Dwight with his wedding photo business.
Beth had many talents, eager to try new things, always ready for a new adventure, and loved to tease. She was friendly, always smiling, and very welcoming to everyone. While taking tickets at the county fair she good-naturedly teased a guest with brand new cowboy boots; especially when he left and returned with different shoes, unaware that he was actually a fair official. Rather than being offended, he told another official she was the best thing to happen to the fair in a long time. I believe many whose lives were touched by Beth would wholeheartedly agree.
Color of the day for the celebration of Beth’s life to be held on February 15, 2026, 1:00 – 4:00PM at Scappoose High School is her favorite — purple. Wear a little or wear a lot in her honor and bring your stories to share.

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