Thu n ., March 23, 1972 (Sec. 2) S A N D Y (Ore.) POST - 7
LAWN
SPECIAL!
o need to feel lonely.
SALE PRICE
FULL 50 LB. BAG
Reg. $4.95
5395
• Greens your lawn fast!
• Balanced formula for local soils.
• Iron and other essential trace
minerals added.
• Covers 5,000 sq.ft.*
‘ Heavy feeding - supplies
50% more plant food than
other brands.
MEMBER PACIFIC COOPERATIVES
0 0 0
P > G R E S H A M CO-OP
RON BECKER of Boring stands beside the
car which earned him the first Multnomah
Hot Rod Council Show Car Trophy, a 1964
candle-apple red El Camino pickup. He
665-9151
325 N. E. 242 Dr.
SELECTING A DOCTOR
a la w y e r, o r b a n k e r o r fu n e ra l d ire c to r
The last mentioned is by no means the least important of the pro
fessional people a family may need from time to time. Bateman
Funeral Chapel has a record of proven help and dedication to
Gresham area families that makes this important decision much easier.
-
*
^ u n e i a / W /ia /n i
Weather-protected area for fam ily visits.
520 W. POWELL BOULEVARD
• GRESHAM •
PHONE 665-2128
was awarded the trophy for accumulating
the most points in individual auto shows all
over the West Coast last year.
Boring man takes
show cor crown
A Boring resident has won
the first Multnomah Hod Rod
Council Show Car Cham
pionship.
Ron Becker, who helps build
and paint race and show cars,
was recently awarded the first-
year trophy for accumulating
the most points in auto shows
all over the West Coast.
Becker, who works for
Custom Paint by The Beard,
took seven first places and two
seconds last year in auto car
shows in Portland, Spokane,
UBIE IS BACK
...O b le is h a p p y to w e lc o m e a ll his fo rm e r
custom ers, as w e ll as th e n e w . He w o uld
lik e to in tro d u c e you to his...
> Excellent Food • Quick Service
• Courteous Friendly Staff
*109
LUNCH
’’'e°,mo*Phere
: « «»*■•
Sat. & Sun.
k*1.79
Beve roB®
in
4 to 8
Weekdays
Including
Sat. & Sun.
And
Holidays
o®'*
CHILDREN
Under 10 yr«.
B A N Q U ET
FACILITIES
O B IE 'S
Restaurant
antenna com plete the ap
Seattle, Bend, Roseburg,
Eugene, Vancouver, B.C. and pearance of the machine.
The interior is white, with
Oakland, Calif.
It was his first year of show four-inch long white fur car
car competition and his 1964 El peting, white bucket seats and
Camino earned numerous wood grain accessories. The
trophies in custom pickup bed of the pickup is also
judging, for the best paint job covered in white fur.
and a best custom engineering
Becker explained his plans
award.
for building a new, full-custom,
His candy-apple red Camino 1964 El Camino this week,
contains 60 different multi
Remodeling efforts will in
colored panels in the overall
body paint and carries a 327- clude chopping the car’s top,
cubic-inch, fuel injected Cor extending the front and back
ends of the body, restyling the
vette engine, vintage 1965
Becker him self built the interior and dropping an
fiberglass, tip-off front end that Allison V-12 aircraft engine into
covers the 425 hp power plant, the bed.
which boosts headers, an
The car will move on four, 18-
up lifters and all-chrome ex inch wide tires below a com
pletely chromed undercarriage
posed parts.
The engine has been blue and will be set up to vie for
printed with a Crower racing sw eepstakes
aw ards
in
cam, has 12-1 compression regional auto shows.
ratio and drives a Muncy 4-
Becker said h e’ll be in
speed transmission to a posi- Vancouver and Victoria, B.C.
traction rear end.
next month to show his
All body chrome has been machine and in Reno in May to
removed from the Camino, all exhibit it there.
body seams have been filled in
He’s just purchased a 1959
and the undercarriage has been Corvette, which he plans to
completely detailed out (i.e., show along side his Camino.
cleaned, painted, etc.).
The “Vet” will soon be
Other goodies which earned wearing a paint job to match
Becker his box load of trophies
the Cam ino’s, a com plete,
include
special
racing custom interior and a 350-cubic-
suspension, special springs,
inch engine with a four-speed
sway bars, heavy duty ad trans.
justable
shocks,
Micky
The young Boring man will
Thompson
racing
tire s
mounted on chrome wheels and have ample time to get ready
for the road show circuit after
Javelin door handles.
Flared and radiused wheels his Reno engagement, since the
well's," a^Dodge"Charger fill ’c ap normal season does not
for gas and a Buick Riviera under way until next fall
ow n
personal
Sandy
Boring
T routdale
G resham
schedule.
It
tells
Sandy gardeners
may fo rm club
ia o i
11:30 to 4
Weekdays
In the year ending June 30,
1971, 41 million tons of fertilizer
were used in this country, 4 per
cent more than in 1970.
74c
Under 2 yrs.
Free
S.E. Division at 122nd. Portland
and 1 8 th a n d M c L a u g h lin
*We S p e c ia lize In F a m ily D ining
Sandy area women interested
in gardening are invited to a
coffee from 10:30 a.m. to noon
Tuesday, April 4, at Sandy City
Hall.
The Clackamas District of
Oregon Federation of Garden
Clubs hopes a garden club can
be , formed
in the
IV IH IV U
1(1
»-••V. area.
Everyone—whether she has
an acreage, a home in town or
only a houseplant or window
bow—is welcome, according to
Margaret (Mrs. Hans) Breck,
district director.
“The club won’t be limited to
just experienced gardeners,”
Mrs Breck said. “One of the
purposes of joining a club is to
learn new things."
Garden club activities
elude growing and arranging
flowers, (lower shows, craft
demonstrations, speakers on
conservation and horticulture
and community projects.
One garden club, Touch and
Gro of Oral Hull Foundation for
1 IIIV 1 ,
w
a a
l» -
the D Blind,
was
begun 111
in H the
Sandy area last year and the
C lackam as and Multnomah
districts have built a garden for
the blind at Oral Hull Park. If
you are interested in the Sandy
club but c a n ’t attend the
morning meeting, you may call
Daisy (Mrs Emanuel) Miller,
area membership chairman,
665-2231, or Mrs Breck, 654
6151.
Teens m ay have
p o o r fo o d h a Teenaeers
b its
Teenagers should know that
r . .
.
L
Although thre is an abun wise eating habits contribute to
dance of food in the United the vibrant personality—that
States, many teenagers need glad-to-be-alive feeling—that
im proved diets, says Bill get up and go feeling,
Winkenwerder, youth nutrition Winkenwerder emphasizes
specialist with the Cooperative
Teenage girls are notorious
Extension Service at Oregon calorie counters It therefore
State University.
become important that they
T
een ag ers’ poor
poor eaung
eating learn t0
T eenagers
the calories that
habits are
‘o. rs* £ they do eat count for them
ping meals, particularly break,
calories”
fast, inadequate planning.of
f
f(xxlg with jm.
family meals; lack o par
(
ticipation as a family at meal ^ Teenaged boy, an d girls
time; poor selection of snacks; mugt
aware that ,f they
fad diets; and not enough time wgnt tQ {eel and )ook good it ig
to eat meals
important that they replace
C o n s is te n tly , r e p o r t s many of the foods they eat that
Winkenwerder, studies on the are high in sugar and fat with
nutritional status of teenagers more of the foods that ire ig
have shown that the older the in proteins, m ineral» an a
child, the poorer the diet, the vitam ins, concludes OSU s
teenage girl is the poorest fed vouth nutrition specialist
member of the family; the IF YOU FLY DON T FATTEN
Fish and chip shops in Britain
n u trients most commonly
lacking in the diets are calcium are off limits to US airmen
and Vitamin C; and that stat toned there Under a weight
obesity and overweight are austerity program, the food
pressing problems among this was found too fattening for the
servicemen's diets
age group
schedule
the
sam e
day
and
m ak e
your
life
a little
easierJ
T R IM E T
It's the w a y to go
now.
»