Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current, November 21, 1968, Page 6, Image 6

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    T H f SANDY (Or»., POST Thur»., Nov. 21, ,96« (S«c. 1
SELL YOUR HOUSE WITH A CLASSIFIED
G u n R e g is tr a tio n
P ro c e d u re s T o ld
NEED OFFICE HELP? LOOK IN CLASSIFIED
HOOD THEATER
"YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD THEATER"
401 E. Powell
Gresham
665-0604
5 BIG DAYS — WED. THRU SUNDAY
Thursday Night Adult Admission Price $1.00
WAIT DISNËVS
NEVERAgjHL
MOMENT
EDWARD G.
*
DOROTHY
DYKE ROBINSON PROVINE
T ÍC M N IC O L O » '
—Also—
d Í s IÍ ey -^JF
'ÍS
R H I l
i
T b c h r u r o io r
Starts Nov. 27 — 12:45 p.m.
Sidney Poitier in FOR LOVE OF IVY
Opens. W ed., Thurs., Fri. at 6:45 *
Saturday and Sunday 12:45
- Continuous Showings —
Ronnie Robertson as Fred Astaire and Marei Langenbein as the
feminine interest in a scene from "Astaire Time" starring Ronnie
Robertson. This is one of the spectacular productions from the 24th
edition of Holiday on Ice that will be seen in the Coliseum in Portland
from December 4th thru the 8th.
SHORT LOCAL . . .
The William Govers have
started a youth group Sunday
evenings at Boring Community
United Methodist church.
Copeland Says:
Door-Up!
Sandy
Public Library
PRE-HUNG
DOORS
V K
Backboards
__ 2
TWO LOCATIONS
J.W.Copeland
THE
FARMERS'
OWN
STORE!
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
Û
HARDWARE
•
GOLDEN HARVEST FERTILIZER
•
MINERALIZED SUGAR LIME
•
COOP TIRES & BATTERIES
•
FARM CHEMICALS
•
STEEL FENCING
•
FARM SUPPLIES
•
DOLOMITE
Custom Services
Available
Spraying and Dusting
. . . Fertiliser,
Ume and Dolomite
Special
Mixe»
Bulk Service1
Plant Pickup
Delivery
Service
Delivered and Spread
3 GRESHAM
M em b er Pacific Cooperatives
"Sure Sign for Farmers"
325NX242Dr
Friday, Nov. 22nd
BREAKFAST
LUNCH
DINNER
P.S. Sorry for the
inconvenience, glad
to serve you again
HOURS
Cub Scout News
Pack 248
by Lloyd Boswell, Cubmaster
The public is invited to attend
the Pack’s regular monthly
meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday,
Nov. 21, in the Sandy grade
school gym.
Main event of the evening
will be the auction of cakes
baked by cubs and their dads.
The sale will be conducted by
Glenn Short, professional auc­
tioneer.
Fathers
and sons baking
cakes for the sale are requested
to deliver them before the start
of the meeting.
There will also be a white
elephant sale.
The Pack now has 104 boys
registered. Seventy-four cubs
helped distribute and pick up
Goodwill bags.
7 am . to 10 p.m. Mon­
day thro Thursday. F ri­
day, Saturday, Sunday
til 1, p.m
COFFEE SIOP
Mt. Hood Highway at Highway 212
k u m m iiiiin n m n u iiu m n T m
How many times this year will it call you downstairs?
Eunice Barnum, Librarian
BASKETBALL
r
the nearest Alcohol A Tobacco
Tax office and a number will
be assigned.
After obtaining the number,
the owner Is responsible for
affixing it to the firearm or
device before completing the
registration form. Additional
information may be obtained
by contacting the nearest Al­
cohol & Tobacco Tax or other
IRS office.
The Bookworm
^95
Mahogany
Detailed procedures for reg­
istering machine gun, sawed-
off shotgun, sawed-off rifle,
silencer, deactivated war tro ­
phy and other destructive de­
vices were announced today by
A. G. Erickson, District D irect­
or of Internal Revenue for O re­
gon.
The Gun Control Act of 1968
requires that weapons and de­
vices of this type must be
registered with the Internal
Revenue Service by December
1.
Erickson said that copies of
registration Form 4467 are
available at Alcohol it Tobacco
Tax and other IRS offices.
The forms are prepared in
three copies,
two of which
should be mailed to the Direct­
or, Alcohol & Tobacco Tax
Division, Internal Revenue Ser­
vice, Washington D.C. 20224.
The third copy may be kept
by the owner of the firearm
or destructive device.
Firearm s or destructive de­
vices should not be brought
to an IRS office to be reg is­
tered, Erickson said.
Under the new law all fire ­
arms and destructive devices
requiring registration must be
identified by a serial number.
If a firearm or device does not
have a serial number, the own­
er should phone, visit, or write
kxxxxxsxsxxxxxcexxsxxxxxxxxxxxxxj
CO-OP
665-9,5,
“ Ranch Under theRimrock” ,
the new book by Dorothy L ar­
son McCall, is one of the most
popular books in the library and
has a waiting list of readers.
Some fiction favorites are:
“ Christy” by Catherine Mar­
sha 1; “ Topaz” by Leon Uris;
“ North to Yesterday” by Rob­
ert Flynn; “ The Chosen” by
Chaim Potok; “ A City of
Bells” by Elizabeth Goudge;
“ The Gabriel Hounds” by Mary
Stewart; “ The Eighth Day” by
Thornton Wilder.
For history readers we have:
“ Champoeg, Place of Transi­
tion” by J. A. Hussey; “ Land
of Giants” by David Lavendar;
“ Tough Men, Tough Country”
by Ellis Lucia.
New Biography: “ Thread in
the Tapestry” by Sarah Church­
ill; “ At Ease” by Dwight D.
Eisenhower; “ No Man Like
Joe” by Harvey E. Tobie; “ To
My Daughters with Love” by
Pearl E. Buck.
About Nature and Animals:
"M enagerie Manor” by Gerald
Durrell; “ Beasts In My Bed”
by Jacquie Durrell; “ CongoKtt-
abu” and "Animal Kitabu” by
Pierre Hallett; “ The Language
B arrier, Beasts and Men” ,
by Elizabeth B, Mann.
Travel: “ Gypsy Moth Circles
the World” by Sir Francis
Chichester; “ Three Tickets to
Timbuctoo” by Halla Linker.
This is a small sample of
the many good books in your
Public Library.
Since this is National Book
Week, we wish to call to the
attention of adults and children
that reading habits acquired at
an early age result in a life­
time of pleasant recreation and
education. Your library has
many Award ant new children’s
books. Books of poems for
children are also a fascinating
new world of words to be ex­
plored. As an example, here is
an excerpt from Eleanor Far-
jeon’s “ Poems for Children.”
POETRY
“ What is poetry: Who knows?
Not a rose, but the scent of the
rose;
Not the sky, but the light in the
sky;
Not the sea, but the sound of
the see;
Not myself, but what makes
me
See, hear, and feel something
that prose
Cannot: and what it is, who
knows?”
Another tx-A of poems,
clever enougn ,o be enjoyed,
also, b y adults is ” A Snails
Failure Socially” by Kaye Star-
bird. Here is part of one poem,
“ A snail’s a failure socially,
Which means you very seldom
see
A crowd of happy, laughing
snails
Collected all at once.
The reason’s this: when asked
to dint
A snail could answer “ Yes”
or “ fine,”
But If he lived a field away
The trip would take him
months.”
T h e n um bers a re a g a in st yo u . T h e
a v erag e fam ily g ets 1465 calls a year.
A nd if only o n e -fo u rth of th e m h a p ­
pen w hile y o u 're u p th ere , t h a t ’s 366
trip s for 1968.
A pproach N o. 1: K eep ru n n in g
d o w n stairs.
A pp ro ach N o. 2: G et an e x te n ­
sion telephone.
C o st of A pproach N o. 1: N ot hing.
E x c e p t m ay b e a y e a r's ru n n in g an d
fru s tra tio n . (A nd, o f course, th e risk
o f a d o c to r bill w hen you land in a
h e a p on th e la n d in g .)
General
C ost o f A pproach N o. 2: A ro und 4
c e n ts a d a y . (W hich is a b a rg a in —
you a lre ad y pay a b o u t four tim es
th a t for y o u r regular phone.)
T h e re is no A pproach N o. 3.
A pproach our business office o r
ask th e m an on the telephone tru c k .