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About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 4, 1969)
THE Sandy Post Hollywood Comes to Estacada -<1^ x'S r- TXi *1 .¿H* ^ U K GREAT WAY £ __ TO THE MT. HOOD PLAYGROUND Vol. 31 14 pages SAN DY, OREGON, TH U R SD A Y, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 New Numbering Due Rural Homes A new s y s te m fo r numbering houses in rural Clackamas county is being developed by the Clackamas County Planning Commission. However, according to James Hall, county planning director, it will be at least two years before any changes will be made in Sandy area numbers. Forest Funds A llo tte d C lackam as county will receive $1,736,872.42 as its share of receipts from National Forest earnings during the 1969 fiscal year. North-south streets will be Hall explained that under the new method, rural route numbered beginning at the and box numbers will be Multnomah county line and eliminated. Instead, all houses will be an extension of will have a street address based Portland numbers, starting in on a single numbering system the county at 8500. encom passing the entire The new system, Hall said, county. A small section in the will make it easy to give a northeast corner of the county, house a correct address, already using an extension of regardless of where it is th e P ortland num bering located. system, will be exempt from The planning director noted the change. that before the plan is put into Incorporated cities in the effect it will be necessary to county will also be exempt, rename several roads in the unless they choose to join the c o u n ty th a t now have duplicate names. new system. The new system has been Under the new plan, house w orked o u t with postal numbers will begin with zero in the westernmost area of the authorities and is expected to county, a point about five facilitate rural mail delivery. The first changes will be miles west of Wilsonville, and proceed east increasing at the made on all rural routes of the rate of 1000 numbers per Oregon City postoffice, then by other postoffices. section. S in g le copy 10c No. 36 Sandy River Water Quality Hearing Set Final action on water quality standards for the Sandy, Clackamas and Molalla rivers is expected at the Sept. 26 m e e tin g o f th e E n vi o ro n m e n ta l Q u ality Commission. A large number of people were present at a hearing last Friday when a proposal for setting water quality and waste treatment standards in the three rivers was aired. Motions to make some changes in th e proposal allow ing for short term variations in temperature and tu rb id ity du rin g logging dredging, construction or other legitimate uses and activities were approved. , An a b u n d a n t fo o d s substation for the Sandy area was set as a major objective when a group of interested citizens with EOE Community Organizer Alyce Warburton Regional Forester Charles A. Connaughtcn said the >tal Is $11.5 million greater than last year’s allocation to the counties in the Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest Region. Payments are proportioned according to National Forest acreage, with counties using the money for public roads and schools. WITH THREE SCHOOLS now operating in the Sandy Elementary School District there was bound to be some opening day confusion as to which children went where. Primary Principal Verne Buhler was on hand Tuesday morning to help solve the problem of Firwood (?), Sandy Ridge (?), or Sandy (?). (Sandy Post) A public hearing will be held by the Board of Directors of Columbia Willamette Air Pollution Authority to take action on recommendations of t h e s ta ff th a t use o f wigwam-type waste burners be prohibited after April 1, 1970, in special control areas. The meeting will be held at 9:30 a.m., Sept. 26, 1969, in room 200, City Hall Annex, at 420 S.W. Main St., Portland. A ll o p e ra to rs of wigwam-type waste burners in the tri-county area of the CWAPA region and other interested persons may attend. Those wishing to be heard at the hearing should notify St. Jude's Shrine Consecration Sunday The Right Rev. Thomas David Somerville, Bishop Coadjutor of the diocese of New 'Vestminster, Vancouver, B.C., will consecrate an outdoor shrine at St. Jude’s Home, Sandy, on Sunday, Sept. 7. The public is invited to attend the services which will start at 11 a.m. The shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham in the gardens of St. Jude’s is the only one of its kind in America. The statue is an exact duplicate of the original found in the ninth century in the Norfolk area of England. The English shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham is the most popular pilgrammage site in the worldwide Anglican Church. Hunter Safety Classes Listed Classes in gun handling and hunter safety for juniors will start tonight. Sept. 4, 7 p.m. in Mr. Hanson’s room at Sandy Elementary School. Instruction is free and open to boys and girts age 12 through 17. Aug. 20. eligible persons in the area are At the present time those not aided by the program who are eligible to receive because they do not have the abundant foods now have to means of transportation to travel to Gladstone to get the Gladstone. food staples. Many otherwise T o e sta b lish such a su b statio n in Sandy will req u ire solutions to the problem s of transporting, storing and distributingfood In bulk as well as refrigeration for a portion of it. Federal and county rules of procedure must also be met. CWAPA by Sept. 24. Also considered at the meeting was the continuation The special control areas of the Teen Age Center here, under consideration cover all programs for the aged, and areas within six miles of the ways of meeting emergency b o u n d arie s o f P ortland, needs of people for food, Maywood Park and Milwaukie, clothing and medical care. and within three miles of the All Office of Economic boundaries of Canby, Estacada, Gladstone, Happy Valley, Lake Opportunity programs require Oswego, Molalla, Oregon City, that those who are to be Sandy, West Linn, Fairview, helped participate In their Wood V illage, Gresham, planning. For this reason, a Clatskanie, Rainier, St. Helens, meeting of those eligible for the abundant foods program Scappoose and Vemonia. and interested Sandy volunteer citizens will be held Tuesday, Sept. 9, 7 p.m. at the Sandy A c tio n C en ter. B rother Andrew, SSP, will act as moderator. A neighborhood public Interested individuals and meeting to discuss the causes representatives of organizations and conditions of poverty in are also invited to attend. An Clackamas County will be held. immediate objective of OEO The meetings, sponsored by work in the Sandy area is the t h e C lack a m a s C ounty form ation of an advisory Community Action Program volunteer committee to help will be at 7:30 p.m. tonight, Mrs. Warburton and to help Thursday Sept. 4, at the Sandy select activities most likely to Service Center, 109 Shelley be of aid to persons of low Street. income. Wigwam Burners Hearing Slated The payments being mailed to treasurers of the two states represent 25 percent of the receipts from all resources and uses of the National Forests, in clu d in g tim ber harvest, grazing, minerals, recreation, power, and other land use. Oregon counties since 1906 have received a total of approximately $255 million, w hile Washington counties have been allocated $107 million as their share of National Forest earnings. STAR IN MOVIE being made near Estacada is Sandy schoolboy Mark Naylor. Others are, from left, Cameraman Bill de Deigo, Jim Barton, Estacada chief of police who plays the part of a policeman, Director Oliver Drake and Producer William Hunt. (Post photo) Abundant Food Program Eyed for Sandy Area T h i s y e a r ’s r e c o r d total-$42,945,079.91-will be divided among 30 Oregon and 27 Washington counties with National Forest lands. Only four other counties in the stale received amounts larger than that allocated to Clackamas c o u n ty . They are: Lane, $ 6 , 9 5 2 , 3 0 6 ; D o u g la s , $3,652,000, Linn, $2,231,787 and Klamath, $1,742,000. F or five years before assuming his present post as B ishop Coadjutor, Bishop Somerville was secretary of the Anglican Church. He will arrive in Sandy Saturday and remain here as a guest of the Society of St. Paul until Tuesday, Sept. 9. The meeting is sponsored by t h e C lack a m a s C ounty Community Action Program. H. Paul Jaeger, Executive Director, for the organization said the purpose of the meeting will be to enable the people of the county to participate in planning the agency’s programs for 1970. Baker Realty Moves Office Chuck Baker Realty has moved to 515 Proctor in Sandy. Baker had been in business many years on the Old Loop Highway east of Gresham. He was until recently associated with Art Marcus. The unique black and white real estate signs with smiling Baker pictured on them are familiar to the area. Baker’s operations cover properties in Gresham. Boring. Estacada, Troutdale Corbett and Sandy. He specializes in farms, acreage, subdivisions and homes. His associates are Walt S tone and Finney Wall, Gresham; Chuck Lutz, Sandy, and Ed Carrigan, Portland. Aid Agency Plans Meet Zone Change Permits Plant W IT H S C H O O L S O P E N IN G T U E S D A Y , Sandy youngsters trooped back to classrooms w ith varying degrees of enthusiasm. Some were eager, some reluctant, and some just shut their eyes and hoped for the best (p01t photo) I A zone change from C-2 to M-2, permitting manufacturing h a s been approved by M u ltn o m a h C o u n ty Commissioners for 25-acres located at the intersection of Marine Drive and the Banfield Freeway near Troutdale. Requesting the change was the Ginter Corporation, owner of the property. The applicant sought the change for the purposes of building a light metal fabrication plant. Work at the site has already begun. They have moved part of i H n llv w r v w l t/v Hollywood to Pci Estacada A H ollywood producer William Hunt who has lived part-time in Estacada for the past six years decided to make a picture in his favorite Oregon Country. He s e n t fo r som e Hollywood professionals to play the “heavy" parts but has used local people as much as possible. The star of his movie is Mark Naylor, Sandy school boy. Also an important part is played by Tom Cherry, senior at Gresham High School. He is a nephew to Bill Hunt, the producer. One of the actors from Hollywood is stunt man Boyd Stockman who has been seen in m any Western movies including “The Shakiest Gun in th e West,” “Men without Mercy,” plus more than 100 others. Another Hollywood veteran actor in the production Ls Dave Kupp. The director is Oliver Drake who has directed more than 300 features including TV’s Cheyenne and Lassie. The camera man is Bill de Diego who has worked for Walt Disney in many pictures. Hunt said the picture is a Walt Disney type story called “The Mightiest Clydesdale." It is a story about a young boy with a horse who goes to live w ith g r a n d f a th e r . The grandfather dies and boy decides to go to town. He gets into trouble and becomes a ward of the court which ordered his horse sold at auction. The bov steals the horse and tries to escape providing the chase scene. During the chase lightning causes a tree to fall over the pursuing police car. The boy then is torn between escaping or going back to help the policeman. He goes back. The p o licem an , incidently, is played by Estacada’s Chief of Police Jim Barton. Hunt has taken about four weeks to shoot the picture vfhich he hopes to have com pleted by Wednesday. However, there will be several week’s work in the cutting and editing room and it probably will not be ready for showing until early December. Hunt said he plans a preview for the local area. He has been pleased with the cooperation from local people and plans to make two pictures a year in the area. Some of his actors and technicians have liked the area so well that they too are buying homes near Estacada. This picture and the others planned are independently produced and will be offered for sale. Hunt said Walt Disney S tu d io s w ere enthusiastic about the story and others have shown interest. Hunt says that what he’s really selling is Oregon. He is uninhibited in his praise for the area. W E A tH E R Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Sept. Sept. Sept. 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 H 72 75 78 83 93 92 77 L 50 45 47 47 50 54 53 Pr. .00 .00 00 .00 00 .00 .00 ANNOUNCES CHINA PAINTING CLASSES STARTING SEPTEMBER 15th REGISTER MONDAY SEPTEMBER 8th FOR f)AY OR EVENING CLASSES A CHINA PAINTING DEMONSTRATION WILL BE GIVEN MONDAY SEPTEMBER 8th FROM 1 P.M. TO 3 P.M. AND 7 P.M. TO 8 P.M. BE SURE TO SIGN UP MONDAY SEPTEMBER 8th SIGN UP HOURS FROM 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M. CLASSES TO STAjlT SEPTEMBER 15th T IK I T R E A S U R T t E M P L E , IN C I M IL E S E A S T O F S A N D Y AT A LO E R C R E E K IMPORTED GIFTS...VISIT OUR KING'S CORNER HOURS MONDAY thru THURS FRIDAY thru SUNDAY 10 P.M. to 7 P.M. 10 P.M. to 9 P.M.