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About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 1969)
n THE SANDY (Or«.) POST Thur»., Feb 27, 1969 (Sec. 1) D O N’ T U T T E R Eblens Sing A t Dinner C arry a littcrbag for t r a w l . trash in your ca r or boat. A clean Pacific Northwest isu p to by you. G e o rg e M a c A le v y Members of Immanuel Lutheran Church. Sandy, enjoyed a Fellowship potluck dinner after services last Sunday at noon. Exhaust System Service Several brought their hobbies and displayed them. Drive Shaft Alteration M ufflers M ade To O rder Ten members o f the Ladies Aid presented an Easter parade o f fashions and modeled their “original” dresses. G e n e r a l Shop Cutting & Welding Tubing Stock I 1/«" to 6" Special guests were the Eblen trio o f Sandy high school, who sang several numbers, accompanied by Carolyn Caneberg. l ’/i miles east of Sandy, 2 blocks to rear of House of Wong FOSTER LONGSTREET 6 6 8 -4 9 0 0 We Give HOODLAND DIST. CO. Green Stamps UNION HEATING OILS SERVING H O O D -LA N D A N D SANDY AREAS NOTES BY THE WAYSIDE. . . Classified Business, Professional Directory For Your Card In Thi» DIRECTORY — Phone 6 6 8 -4 4 4 8 NURSING HOMES C H A IN SAW S Í loving Core for the Aged & Convalescent H O M E D TE ORCHARD CREST NURSING HOME Sales and Service Sandy Lawn & Garden 668-6235 110 E. Proctor One Mile South of Sandy on Bonstedt Road OPTOMETRIST MT. H O O D REDI-MIX Ready Mix Concrete - Crushed Rock - Send end Gravel Phone 6 6 8 -6 5 1 5 Plant Located at Firwood Junction CONSTRUCTION DR. ROBERT D. SCHOUTEN OPTOMETRIST Office Hours 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Daily Closed Thursday and Sunday Mt. Hood Dental Bldg. 668-4313 415 E. Pleasant Ave. Sandy PHYSICIANS N . B. ERICKSON Construction end Equipment Road Building, Rocking, and Excavating Rental Available 668-4315 Firwood Rd., Sandy 24-Hoor Nursing Care for ambulating and bed patients. Physicians on call. 6 6 8 -6 3 3 6 CONCRETE READY M IX FURNACE REPAIR ELTON D. LEAVITT, M .D Physician and Surgeon Office Hours: 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Daily except Wed., Sun. Sat. 9-1 P.M. 668 4117 MEDICAL BLDG., SANDY FURNACE REPAIR W . A. NOEHREN, M .D . CHUCK MILLER Service and Parts Prompt 24 Hour Service SHORTY'S CORNER Coll Collect 668-4106 or 668 4595' Physician ond Surgeon Office Hours: 2 to S p.m. Mornings by Appointment. Closed Set. 668-4156 Mein St., Sandy ROCK CREEK. SAND RANDY'S TV SERVICE A N D GRAVEL Fest — Efficient Guaranteed Work Barker Plaza - Sandy Phone 668-671 1 LAW N and GARDEN Crushed Rock, Fill end Top Soil 6 5 8 -3 1 3 8 SPORTING G O O DS SANDY LAW N & GARDEN SANDY CYCLE CENTER Honda and Ski Doo MOWERS SALES and SERVICE We Repair All Types of Small Engines free Storage Avoilable with Service 668 6235 110 E. Proctor NURSING HOMES BAUNACH Home for the Aged Veteran* • Social Security Welfare Gracious living on limited Income Fine Food 6 6 8 -6 1 9 0 M c G uire nursing ho m e 6 6 8 -4 6 3 3 Home for invalids, convalescent patients and those needing nursing care Martha C. McGuire, R.N. New and Used Sales -Service Under New Menegemen» M ARX & CHASE Registered Land Surveyor Registered land Surveyor. Surveying, Map ping, Subdivisions. Office located at . . 2 25 E. Burnside Ext. APPRAISALS Tax Problems Buyers or Sellers Condemnations Testimony UNIVERSAL REALTY APPRAISAL 646 5261 227 3358 P O Box 3605, Poitland, Oregon» 97208 8 o nt - 6 p nt 204 I . Proctor Sandy, Oregon BUILDING QUALITY HOME PLAN SERVICE Custom Builders • Designers Stock Pions or Custom A S ad d le R e p a ir O pen Tueidoy Through Saturday Gresham APPRAISERS SANDY SHOE SHOP W i l l c o n tin u e e ll Shoe 663-351 1 Or 6 6 8 -6 3 1 8 SURVEYOR Hg-Aii S H O E REPAIR -Parts 108 W . Proctor O RAN H. DENHART A SONS Sandy, Oregon 661 4669 — ■ W ■■ ■ Friday A Sun. O n ly Feb. 2 8 March TEOMKAM HMb THROWS THE WILDEST BfACH PARTY S K I THfYJHVENTED THE BIKINI ANO THE BEATIH ftfe D fe r JH û CO -N * D o o n O pen 6 :4 5 Friday — 1:00 P.M. Saturday and Sunday N O EVEN IN G SH O W O N SUNDAY PHONE 6 6 8 - 6 2 1 1 It was almost a surprise baby sh ow er for Mrs. Bill , Richardson o f Sandy. She would have been more surprised if one of the guest hadn’t come to her home by mistake instead o f going to the home of hostess. Mrs. David I-eith. The culprit was assured that such errors lent spice to the occasion. The shower feted the birth of the Richardson’s son, James Alan, who joins a brother, five-year-old Chris. Guests were: Margaret R ic h a r d s o n , M arg Frederickson, Nancy Barker. Norma Triplett, Barbara Sandstrom, Gail Lofgrne, Bernadine Stoll, Joanie Creager, Mrs. Levan and Lillie TenEyck. Estacada Girl Wins Scholarship Constitution do not move over to the Old Country where there is no 2nd Amendment. It seems to me it would be an ideal place for them. They might get in on some of the millions o f dollars we spend over there to get them out o f their periodical messes.” 4c * * * * * * * SUNSET THEATRE Sandy, Oregon Franklin Another very controversial bill sent to the Fish and Game Committee, o f which 1 am chairman, is SB 62, which would create river trails open to hikers, horseback riders, and possibly to motorcycle riders, on given river stretches. The t ails in question would be financed from highway funds. Sounds good doesn’t it? But it so happens the Clackamas and Willamette River stretches involved include much property assessed for building purposes and are taxed accordingly. Some of this frontage has been selling for over $100 per foot. Much of it has already been developed and includes many fine homes. The idea of condemning an eight foot right-of-way through acreages purchased for home building and through front yards o f homes previously built has raised a storm o f protest. The matter may have been settled ere this article appear1 4 c 4'4 c 4'4'4‘ * HEADQUARTERS FOR BASEBALL and TR A C K SHO Ifs th e 1969 WILSON SHOE a ÇARDEN ÇLVB Mrs. George Gentemann, E s ta c a d a , director for Clackamas District o f the Oregon State Federation o f Garden Clubs, has announced a district board meeting Friday, Feb. 28, at the Arrowhead Golf clubhouse, beginning at 10 a.m. The board includes district officers, district chairmen, and a f f ilia t e d district club presidents. Club presidents unable to attend may send alternates. Mis. Marvyn Ambuhl, Lake Oswego, is looking for district club members to serve as hostesses for the Northwest Nuserymen’s association show at the Pacific International Livestock Exposition Building in March. Hostesses are needed for the following schedule; Friday, March 14, noon-2 p.m.; 2-4 p.m.; 4 6 p.m.; 8-10 p.m.; Saturday, Match 15. 4-6 p.m. Passes will be supplied for the volunteers. Members are asked by officers to start “readying” plants for the plant sale at the Clackamas District general meeting scheduled for the West Linn Inn, Monday. March 31. ★ A V O ID BLISTERS w ith according to coach's requirements Soldier Promoted Upon Com petition o f a 10-week course in photo lab p r o c e ssin g , th e Army promoted Marshall H. Audas. son o f Mr. and Mrs. Troy \udas, Sandy, to SP/4. Audas is now stationed in South Korea with the USA Strat. Command. ★ Early Selection for pre-season break-in period GwW A DIVISION OF GORDON STONE, CIOTHIE» 40 EAST SECOND ST. - GRESHAM HOT CORN DOGS I (Ready in Less Than a Minute) I O f . r ‘1 , Red Delicious APPLES Red Delicious APPLES ORANGES POTATOES j APPLE CIDER Christine Kishpaugh. an Estacada high school senior, has been named winner o f the business education scholarship sponsored by the Clackamas County 1-egal Secretaries association, announced Miss Linda Bennett, scholarship chairman. In addition to the local award, which may be used at Some time during the night any accredited business school. Miss Kishpaugh now becomes a of Feb. 22 a car at McRobert« candidate for the $1,000 Ford, 24300 SE Powell, was scholarship offered by the stripped o f its carburetor, National legal Secretaries- distributor cap and wires, aaaoclation. Joan Ruse o f West according to a Gresham police Linn high school was selected report. Value was placed at Î $109. as alternate Car Stripped E ^ p a n c rl CIAÜM by STATE SENATOR JOHN J. INSKEEP It seems to me that in my six years as a member o f the State Senate, we have never been faced with so many controversial and highly emotional measures. The concealable weapons registration bill is one o f them. I find the following excerpt from a Creswell, Oregon resident, opposing the bill, o f special interest because it comes from the heart. “ I am opposed to Senate Bill 178, and I wish to state my reasons why. I will quote my “ s i d e - k i c k ’s f a t h e r ’s commentary - a Methodist Minister, bom and raised in Maine, over a hundred years ago. The Founding Fathers put the 2nd Amendment in the Constitution as a safeguard they had had too much trouble ii Europe where they were not a llo w e d an y personal protection. We have persons in this country that would change it; the Founding Fathers knew that too but they figured if their descendants didn’t have gumption to fight for their righLs they didn’t deserve any. I wonder why some people that d o n ’t like our Shower Almost Surprises Mother SAND and GRAVEL TELEVISION Instant Earnings PROUD OF HANDIWORK is Clark Belangy, Sandy, who has spare time hobby of making beaded mosaic picture. The one shown here took him three months to make. Clark says his hobby keeps him busy, as the pictures sell faster than he can make them. (Post photo) *2 2 -3 1 8 4 or 6 6 5 -2 1 8 8 A sea of unbroken clouds the new day. A quiet dawning plow, and the severed linkt o stretches inland from the ocean with little display ushers in the civilization below will once to th e C ascad es; overlit day. Full sun from again be open. And with it smooth-bottomed and even at above and full sun returning come the skiers and the players a great height, leaves clearance from the reflecting snow. in the snow. Soon the slopes above tLe mountain tops. East Through slitted lids you above will be dotted and the sky is clear and stars show observe until you remember tracked, and shouLs will ring out across the snow fields. through the deep blue of the sun glasses in your kit. Snow giants stand like great Another day’s sport will have winter’s sky in early morn. Behind the bulwark o f Hood, sentinels on the outposts o f the begun in the new powder the sun, unseen in the west, is forest and troop in ranks up snow. The fury o f last nights storm above the horizon. Watchers in the shallow ravine to taper off the west see first the dark into the unmarred snow fields doesn’t seem possible now silhouette faintly edged and above. The Alpine Firs and when all about is the quiet the clouds faintly illumined. Mountain Hemlocks are massed whiteness, unmoving except Then the dark flanks catch fire solid on this west side with for the skiers wake. Only a pennon of cloud and the peak is etched in red. snow. Their drooping plumes narrow Dusky red light runs across the leaning to the east. Long streaming to the east from the cloud bottom and the bold shadows lie down the western peak itself mars the blue o f the sky. All around are the white black inverted shadow o f Hood slopes from the slanting sun. moves out on the clouds above. An advancing roar and clad mountains, the Cascades The black shadow slowly clamor tell o f the approaching in winter. greys and dims until the underside o f the cloud layer is a uniform ashy rose. For a brief instant the orb o f the sun itself shows seemingly impaled on the peak and then slowly disappears behind the cloud layer above. The wintry sunrise has come and gone. The sun itself has made its brief appearance between earth and cloud and now only the grey light o f a winter day indicates its presence. More clouds move in from the west and a lowering sky darkens. Now the peak is hid from view. At Timberline, the Now, earnings on savings at the Benj. Franklin begin the day of deposit, any day swirling tendrils o f cloud dip of the month, at 5% per annum compounded and touch the lodge: the entire and paid quarterly with insured safety. This upper half o f the mountain is means earnings of 5.09% in a year's time. completely enshrouded. The Open 9 to 5 Monday through Thursday, and danger time for ail those on the 9 to 6 on Friday. Closed Saturdays. We pay the postage when you save by mail. mountain has come. Naught but the swirling mist now turning to snow can you see. Luckily, you stumble into a tow cable and follow it down until you find where you are. • A V IN O S A L O A N A B IN . Finally you arrive at the ROBERT H HAZEN. Pres • 12 OFFICES • HOME OFFICE 517 S W Stark A-frame at the foot o f the tow , Portland, Oregon 972 04 • Phone 224 3333 Gresham Office—Dale Brown, Manager and you once again get your 55 N. Roberts, 665-3158 bearings. The clouds rise and it snows harder; the wind picks up and it stings your face with driving snow. Nothing for it but retreat to the lodge and wait for a let up. If it comes, you can leave for the towns down below to the west. You might be snowbound overnight. It has happened before. Let it snow us in. We can camp on the COMPLETE lodge floor someplace tonight. LINE When this blizzard blows itself OF BOTH out. think of that beautiful new powder to ski in. The blizzard blows itself out fast and with the wind, the wrack o f cloud and snow push eastward leaving the late night moon to dominate the scene. Above the lodge towers the mountain, all white and pure. Frost sparkles glisten here and there as moving snow captures for a moment and throws back AT COMPETITIVE PRICES into the air shattered bits of moonlight. The wind is down and the snow lies still. A pinkish light, quickly turning ★ Proper Fit by professional fitters yellow, then white, announces (N avel and Sweet 26 lb. Box *2.95 *1.95 This Year) *1 2 6 lb. Box (Eastern 5 0 lbs. Oregon No. 2) Bucket 5ack Gallon Jug *2.50 *1.50 Choice Shrub* will be in starting March 1 All plant* will be first quality only. Low priced, no cold weather demege J A N Z BERRYLAND W est End of Town W< Sandy, Oregon I I I I I I I I