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About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1949)
THURSDAY, JANUARY THE SANDY POST, SANDY, OREGON Page 4 Pint-Sized Domi i gress and stamped that message as a vigor ous call for action. Though he knows as Entered at the p.ostoffice at Sandy, Oregon, as i well as any Oregon citizen the fiscal prob- second class mail m atter. Published w eekly on | lems of the state, Gov. McKay did not for a Thursdays. I minute view those problems as beyond Editor and Publisher I solution or as matters that should stymie the Tom B. PlirceU By Dick Horton Advertising Manager I continued progress of the state. Richard P. Horten Special! ......News Editor Frank Calhoun Rather, our'new governor insisted that R ig h t or w rong, I w as su re Keep Some j the state budget can and should be balanced w rong la st w eek w hen I tabbed American H e alth is u n e q u a le d a n y Handy! SUBSCRIPTION RATES w here in the w o rld .H e lp in g to m a in I and at the same time provisions can and Dr. D. M. B ram w ell fo r th e Ki REXALL COLD TABLETS YéÈFly in” Clackamas and Multnomah tain this high s ta ndard is an im p o r should be made for needed building at state w anis vice presid en t job. Bob Relieve discomfort, fever ¿ « »nA ties j,........................................................... $2.00 D uncan h as th a t duty, w hich is ta n t R e xa ll duty . Saving you m oney due to he a d ÄT Oregon, outside Clackamas and Multnomah 2.50 I institutions, for a broadened program of fa r from little, It also m eans th a t a t t h e v é r y s a m e tim e J5 another. j® bounties, per year .................... conservation and .development of natural n ex t y ea r Bob will be president. Box o f 30 íh Northwest and Pacific Coast States, outside resources and for a far Tigger program of My apologies to you, R o b e rt ^O regon, per year.... ........ ................ ...... 3.00 T alk about g ettin g th e ru n highway building and improvement. Outside Northwest and Pacific Coast States, T he Pow-W owers g o t it Gov. McKay’s suggestion that a means be around. «E year J r - 4.00 la st week w hen th ey m et w ith t e s te d Pain Relievers found for using présent income tax reserves C ounty S h eriff R eaksecker and as ■ a special; fund earmarked for public S tate T raffic, E ngineers Al H ead POWER SHORTAGE IS REAL CRISIS— Johnson. The shortage of elêcchiüal energy in the building sounds like an excellent one. It and B ut Val Pow-W a t Lowest Prices. owers now h av e a indicates his realization that if we do not northwest has reached-a point where it now m uch b e tte r idea of w h at those constitutes a real crisis and has removed now make provision for expansion of state gentlem en spend th e ir tim e and all doubts from the mincd&of those who have institutions, we will find it increasingly dif our m oney doing. Walter W iese tacks sheeting te the front porch of his m inia F red said he did n o t have scoffed at suggestions that such a shortage ficult—if not impossible—to do so at some enough ture house . . . a m idget nine inches high could walk in th e m oney to give us law en later date when the growing load upon these was imminent. All utilities are pleading 100s front door. forcem ent. F ro m his ta lk it sound w ith'the public to conserve on use of elec institutions has reached new- peaks that ed th a t he and hi^ d eputies spend trical energy between The hours of 4:30 and would be even inore trying than are the m ost of th e ir tim e p p e ra tin g th e C a r p e n t r y county jail. T h a t’F d lso w here our 6: 30 p. m. as the only rtieans of staving off present overloads. m oney goes. And th a t’s no good. The plan unfolded by Gov. McKay for an actual blackout oX 3practically all of the “Slip-stick a rtis t” is w h a t Big M id g e ts calling together representatives of the for northwest. Chief Jack Greenwood nam ed th e estry ancl*agricultural departments, fish and of- nails h av e been used th u s far. I f you are ab o u t n in e inches sta te highw ay engineers. Al and Demands for electrical energy naturally tall and can’t find a place to live, | T hey a re no. 20 brads, fro m % game and hydroelectric commissions and Val knew m ore fac ts ab o u t condi Increase in the late afternoon hours, when on th e Loop th a n th e Pow- your housing difficulties a re I to % inches in length. lights come òn in homes, offices and indus other state agencies as a “governor’s advis tions 100s Wowers,- m yself included, could about to be solved. ory committee” will ring a hell with the T he boys saw tin y sh in g les f rom trial plants and when mamma starts prep Go to . th e ca rp en try shop of dream up in a m onth. Mrs. Jen- aration of the%evening meal. And with nor publié. It should go far toward elimination ney Welch called th ese facts cold Sandy H igh School and tr y for chunks of fir com plete even to th e A bout th re e size one of th e eight m in iatu re n ecessary tap er. mal usage, already taxing the capacity more of intra-departmental misunderstandings statistics, and th a t th ey were and grievances which have blocked many B u t Al and. Val th rew aro u n d a houses stu d en ts of C harles W. | th o u san d are req u ired to cover than it is possible to produce. 25 ta b le ts “ vV ideas fo r Pow-Wowers-. to di F rasier, shop in stru cto r, have» th e ra fte rs of each house. «jjfeFurthéy aggravating the,, situation and progressive steps in state affairs in the past. few been building since Septem ber. | T he houses p ro b ab ly w ill be p u t gest. “W ould sp eed ' zones step Co-operation from the state legislature is (Speeding w ith o u t en fo rcem en t?” They are scheduled to be complet- j on display in S andy sto res w hen i precipitating the present crisis is the fact W at cold- weather has frozen ¿streams and essential to the success of the broad program i asked Al. “How m uch hindrance ed th is sp rin g and w ill be p ainted com pleted th is spring, Mr. F ra s ie r BARGAIN BUYS AT ____ such zones cause to u rists ?” and decorated to your own speci- ( said. B u t in te reste d p erso n s a re fivers high in thq mountains and no snow Gov. McKay has outlined. That co-operation ! would fications. | cordially invited to inspect th em Jo h n Mills slipped in a few REXIILANA COUGH SYRUP, reg. 9 8 c .. . . . . . . . . . . 8 ounces is melting to suppléé a normal flow of is practically assured from the make-up of licks fo r a stop lig h t'in Sandy T h e eight houses are being bu ilt i in th e school’s shop, NASAL SPRAY w/ephedrine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 ounces water to feed thé "penstocks of power dams the assembly and from the fact that its. lead w hich w ere n eatly b u t effectively by 20 hoys of Mr. F ra s ie r’s pre-J Public W elcome end maintain maximum production of elec ers aré starting off the session with a zeal Side-stepped. Jo h n prom ised.them ' vocational ca rp en try class. T he J «You.re m ore th a n w&lcome to DEFENDER NOSE & THROAT ATOM IZER___ . . . . . .special Z.Jf KANTLEEK HOT WATER BOTTLE, 2 heal style.. ........... 3.25 stru c tu re s are based on plans o f com e in &nd w atc h -u s w o rk /- the trical energy. Until the weather softens up and interest in a progressive programHhát 'm o re later. . , , ., B ut all in all th e sta te engineers full-sized hom es and a re com 1 plete 1 in KANTLEEK FOUNTAIN SYRINGE, deluxe, red rubber. . . . . . . J. 2 J stru c to r said. and a heavier water,XioW starts down the is comparable to that of the governor him w ere ¡to th e la st ca rp en try detail. I ostly right. SACCHARIN TABLETS, '/x gr. . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . 100's 2Zff The p ro jects can be seen any streams, thé shortage of energy will con self? It appears at the outset that Oregon’s W h m e really w an t f o r 't h e P lum bing, electrical w iring and I tim e betw een 8:45 a.m. an d 4 p.m. new state administration is off to a good Loop a is t a w fo SACCHARIN TABLETS,1/, g r . . . . . . . . . . ___ . . . . . . 1000's W C tinue critical. u r lane divided h ig h o th er such system s will n o t be p u t M onday th ro u g h F rid ay , h e added. KLENZO LATHER BRUSH, reg. 1 . 0 0 . . . . . . . . ............ 89c Industries, businesses and private homes start and that it will be one of action and way- w ith underpasses or over- into them , however. H om eless L illip u tian s w ill be Carpentry Taught SYMPHONY WHITE LA W N CABINET, 36 shts., 36 env........... must co-operate by using as little “juice” öccomplishment the benefits of which will heads for pedestrians. T h a t w on’t given firs t p rio rity w hen th e come today, b u t it is som ething P u rp o se of th e p ro jec t is to • houses a re o ffered fo r ren t, Mr. as possible during the'feritical hours between i continue to accrue for years to come. e r a th a t w e should all be w orking teach the class th e v ario u s tech F ra sie r declared solem nly. 4:30 and 6:30 andif the cold weather holds for. U ntil th a t tim e com es th e re niques a ca rp en ter w ould need to I STATE WITHHOLDING REPEAL IS much longer it ni.^ÎfeconÿSinecessary to ex alw ays will be congested zones. know. Lou N orene urged th a t.s o m e T he houses a re b u ilt to a scale tend the period of earefùiusage to all day. SOUND— LEN’S Bills to repeal the Oregon state income th in g be done now to p ro tect th e of 1% inches to one foot and j Even so little as a single 100-watt light pedestrian. Lou h as a good ques stan d about th re e fee t high. Since turned off in your home will help prevent a tax withholding law were among the first tion, b u t Pow-W owers w ere n o t tth e end of th e ir C h ristm as vaca RIGGING SHOP complete breakdown. In your own inter to. be introduced in the new session of the able to g et an y definite answ ers. tio n 'm o s t of th e stu d en ts have O p e n 7 c l a y s a w e e k a n d s m n e s t o c k . lo g g in g h a r d w a r e . a n d Those sta te engineers h av e a been com pleting th e roofs and ap W est, có-óperate to the fullest extent possible. state legislature. Based upon experience w ire ro p e . W e m a k e u p a n d r e p a r c h o k e rs o f a n y k in d a n d do Most of us remember what a blackout is since the law went into effect, prompt action tough job try in g to sa tisfy every plying siding to th e ir models. k i n d s o f s p l i c i n g a t th e - s h o p a n d one. Al told Lou and the re s t th a t T he houses are m ade of fir, from those first days after Pearl Harbor. favoring the repeal appears to be a sound he. o n t h e j o b . L o c a t e d .1% m i l e s e a s t and Val would probably recomr- except fo r th e siding, w hich is o f B a r to n s to r e o r tw o m ile s w e s t Wei can prevent a recurrence of that exper move. of E a g le C re e k s to r e on M a in mt; , m end zoning and m ore congested saw ed out of rejected Venetian h ig h w a y . in e withholding feature of the Oregon ¡zone signs, b u t th a t th e y w ould’ blind sla ts of P o rt O rford cedar. ience if~we all co-operate, but it is certain: L. W VERBURG law whs enacted in the hope of bringing into ' have to m ake som e m ore w ith Koch Gives Fir to T o m e if we do not. C re e k state coffers important increases in income the slip-stick .before anything All th e fir lu m b er w as donated Rt. 1. P h o n e E s ta c a X a would be done. ■ by W alter Koch. A bout 20 pounds WE’RE PAYING FOR FOREIGN LUMBER i tax,' especially from the thousands of tran- R ay Beeson deserves a ro und of fo r his job as presid en t It may be news to many of our readers j eient farm and lumber workers who are em- applause of th e Sandy C ham ber of Coni ] ployed in the state each year. While it has thfct, despite lQr$ er Jjimbejr prices gnd shut merge; d u rin g 19.48. .A lo t Qf Wprk downs of many Oregon-mills, they are- pay resulted hi some' increase in collections, the w ithout much- help. ' biggest result has been one grand headache ing for many millions of feet of lumber pur chased from foreign nations. The reason for farmers and other employers and an it may bé news is because they are paying it overburdening of employees in the tax de O regon Is Chilly through federal taxes, which in turn are partment with red tape and details, which / ^ C h e v r o l e t spent by federal agencies and hence they— if ironed out would undoubtedly cost more A fter Service ih 'Cur readers and the nation’s taxpayers— than the increased collections will total. H aw aii,.V et Says actually have no direct contact with- the - Repeal of the withholding feature was SLEEPY HOLLOW—A recent purchases they are making in competition i’ecoihmended by Gov. McKay in his in- g uest a t th e hom e of Mr. and Mrs aughrai message and 'there- is little doubt 'with tlieihs elves’. Leo B urgass w as’ S/SgL Melyyn H ere’s the gist of it. Export lumber bus hub what the legislature will .act quickly to Dowell, b ro th er -to Mrs. Burgess. S erg ean t Dowell h a d ju s t received iness in days prior to the war was a free, carry out that recommendation. his discharge from the U. S. Air independent enterprise. The success or fail o n th e w o rld ’s t o u g h e s t P r o v i n g G r o u n d Corps a fte r spending six m onths A few Crusts' of dried- bread or burned toast in ure of a lumber export tifin largely depend Texas and 27 m onths in the ed upon the initiative and ability of its man tossed out your kitchen windows will pay H aw aiian Islands. A lthough he’s glad to be home, agement. Today, the export business is con rich rewards in the joy of watching winter ean t Dowell says, th e w eath trolled by our government through export robins and other birds feed upon it during S er erg h ere seem s p re tty frig id afte r these chill winter days. licenses' arid through restrictions imposed so m an y m o n th s of tropical sun shine. upon other nations as borrowers or recip Sgt. Dowell is now living a t th e ients of cash gifts by ECA and the Export- Surprising, isn’t it, how much longer -the hom e of his p arents,, Mr. and Import Bank. days seem already—even though the short Mrs. M. C. D o w e ® f D over Road. These agencies tjiaye felt that lumber est day of the year was only a month ago. Visit. Forest Grove prices were too MgfPahd that all lumber The east wind Kelps to drive away clouds Mr. and Mrs. Tffemas McEach- produced in thia,^country should be used and give us the sunshine that add hours of ron paid a holiday visit to the hom e of Mrs. M cLachron’s sister here, primarily for the construction .of brightness to each day. and brother-in-law-,-.-Mr. and Mrs. homes. As a result, they have made restric W. C. Ray, of F o rest Grove. What Other Editors Are Savin í tions. on their loans and gifts which forced Mr. and Mrs.' C harles Jondie the creditor nations to buy lumber from THE REAL LGW-DOTVN ON 1949 and tw o d aughters, from Lony, other countries. Worse than that, our own i Ralph P. Stuller in Coquille Valley Sentinel- We Wis., a re , visiting Mrs. Jondle’s government agencies have been purchasing have read to date exactly 17 “F o recasts or Bus b ro th er and sister-in-law, Mr. and Outlooks fo r 1949,” including The S °ntinel’s Mrs. Leo Burgess. T he Jondles lumber-for shipment outside our borders iness own R eger Babson’s rep o rt on th in g s to come and plan to m ak e th e ir .hom e near from other nations, chief of which is Canada, w ere, now ready for th e S ale m .n u t hatch. Brightwood. If you can read ’em and not ween, read ’em and where stumpage is far less costly than here Mrs. L ottie Blevins is hom e now - y our ? ead until the la st rem aining a fte r a holiday visit w ith relatives and wages are considerably lower. Recent ° ff ? i;h aPsody of cacophony, then you in A lbany and Salem. u, j examples include a purchase of 20,000,000 read them and tell us. To date you get this dope: feet of spruce from Canada by Ireland,’us +h 1OKk g°?-d' Things win drop a little, but ing ECA funds and the purchase by Great the pickup by m ilitary expenditures will boost us T h e S p r a y e r Y ou anger, it m ay be inflation in 1949, not deflation Britain of 120,000,000 feet from Canada with D And so on. i. funds directly or indirectly deceived from sumh<tn ho™ua0f the boys who get Paid a nice fa t W a n t b r the United-Stafès. BS- +;° dcw-ldei us poor yokels say th e peak of WaiS reached, it’s down from now on, no Oregon members of congress already are depression, but som e recession. And so on making pleas for changes in the restrict ivc I a g6t Vi.e real scuttie-butt fo r you we took D o ty policies of ECA and government purchasing a tn p across the street to Bill’s Place and sat down a tji pmpchle table, and h ere’s the forecast fo r 1949 agencies. They msqd all. the support they hoTn,e nks Wiil k ?eP the m °n ey in Í949. It will can get from homeC^Letis give it to them. t?ffihUikehgæe" — °r CheC-kS' Y0'1’11 have Ifé A lT H Y M y s TH E SA N D Y PO ST R IG H T o r W RONG SAVE klenzo AN ÿ _W A N T IS Efiiç plus 6 OZ5. pJ„j Mi 31 * 33c 7500Ì.U;, Re9- 3.Ò0 Í¡eí Low Ä eP 24 gold oofdi, 24-énw. Bayer’s. Aspirin *»9. 70tì '2 ói , j porn Anacin Tablets íoos SOc »ft»***«****;»* « **«**•«•<* r« »t e »«ft»*«* «*«<•»*•< t » »< *« n « * 1» ? Houses ior Homeless n HAM b or Dell9h'blly-Sie«i,( Bexoli Ml I aspidi U nexcelled (or , j j b o m ordinary ife 5 gr. Tablets '00', <1 U? iti.’ e Jilt»; A-.treolimni ||¡ to your HotlDr'i’iik If he prescribes, skill of your (mi ñiadst is "ofyooii u- _ a.- aw ay from Lew is W ilt O1L Sl< Peter$on. and fhey’U tak e on a nice note and in terest to boot. Charge accounts will — be due in th irtv days and people will get paid or they won’t like it . I t will still pay off to get 1500 pinochle h u t vood « g a r s will be h ard to find, and the salm on ru n on the Coquille w on’t be as good as the spring Chin ook ru n on th e Rogue. T ourists will crab about the condition of the CoQuiJUe-Cfin^ o gi i G iccery stores will find business people buying lo th e s ^ to to 'w e ïr clothing will see people buying c clothes wear iOreS,a" ” continue to blam e appliance dealers fo r selling too ^ , o yBWaS? lng m achines. (However they w on’t advertise to get people back to the tub w ashing days. ) Ducks will continue to be high in 1849, and deer WilA t0 th e gro u n d, but obscured b y ‘brush w m nt t Rn°ger Ba? S° n Wil1 keeP wr h in g and so n t h J ? P,o gno.sticators such as K iplinger and the others who w rite for N ation’s Business B u sin o ^ Week, and Tim e m agazine Ubines§- bu sin ess n A - ^ !L °£ ST,U wil1 go both °n the top of your ^ i J?myd on t0P oi ak such forecasts fo r 1949. T h is low priced compact Hordie Duplex Special Straight Frame Sprayer provides am ple capacity j !and pressu re for ail general spraying including spraying of '’“ ’ k * : ’ “ ’ ' h o u s e s , DDT a p p lic a tio n s in dairies and barns.. Delivers 6 to § G.P.M. at 4 0 0 pounds pressure. ! R e a d ily tra n sp o rted on a n y vehicle. h essel \A /H E N you see the 1949 Chevrolets, a ’ T glance will be enough to tell you they re new—ail n e w -in jin e and contour, in beauty and style. And when you look inside, and under the hood, and beneath the chassis, you’ll see that their newness is not merely in outward ap p earan ce, but in design and engineering and construction as well. economy. X The Ly fhe engineers and tech- nicians c of the G eneral Motors Proving mcians Ground—the . largest, most comoietelv e< equipped, outdoor testing laborator Y ry in th automobile world. Here, before a single new 1949 Chevro n iJ n R- &est Beatt Sturne jbarr hhere ¡North Assoc Epeak 1 P-m Béctur Bible,_ feargi |;0f Mr Dover i from & r ’s Some .W h e e l Is a y s , ‘ ; gettini its REiiABiufl and sr WAS PROVED Nw er fend! ’■Pvt. P a I fecha Ccawt, Medici thai fcjfy tn » ¡tin ! Owssia î-'Qoi let went into production, expen1. models w ere -tested—made to show they possess., in g rea ter measure thon s* j all those qualities on which Chevrolet built its leadership. In short; the G eneral Motors Ground tests a re your assurance fhot y, new-model Chevrolet has proved itsW®* mo"! through many months and monyi thousands of miles of rough hon' . But, . to . a lot of - people - ’e z 1949 Chevro let is already old. They know what it wi do, and how exceedingly well it will do it— they know all about its performance, its comfort, its power, safety, durability and Soon you will see the new Chevro ej and when you do, you will see a only new, but tried and true. Im plem ent Co. Repairs Service Phone 229 Gresham, Oregon i the COSMETIC ITEMS SUBJECT TO TAX General Párpese “ McKAY CALLS FOR ACTION * The inaugural address of Douglas McKay ♦»as governor of Oregon confirmed the convic- <tions of his many supporters that he would he a man .of action in the governorship. It ♦ gave' every indication that Gov. McKay is 1 fired with- ambition to give Oregon one of J the best administrations in its history and ♦ th a t he will apply to that purpose all of the energy, business acumen and resourceful- <ness that has won for him signal success Z;in the business world. ♦ Gov. McKay knows Oregon intimately, he * has unbounding faith in the state and its ¿people. He has studied the needs of the 's ta te and the desires of its people and devel- isoped from that study a program that is for- ^ward-loQjiing and far-reaching. Every-part of Gov. McKay’s inaugural ad- ♦ d r e s s fairly teemed with the spirit of pro- sipce càuse ’•18 site 1 e w o ld ^3 O regon j