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About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1973)
N a tio n a l G u ard establishes blood bank > w w w w w w w w e w w w w w w e w e e e e e e e e Hoodland Happenings v.uim iei m c n aru tvimci, the A d ju ta n t G en eral of Oregon announced the for mat ion of the first statewide m ilitary blood bank in the history of Oregon The Oregon National Guard Blood Bank will he one of the first in the nation The bank, to be established through the Oregon T r a il Chapter,American Red Cross, will be available for use hv all Army and A ir National Guard personnel, their families and parents In the past, several in dividual units had established local blood banks, but this will be the first concreted statewide effort. M em bers of the 1249th E n g in eer B a tta lio n and H e a d q u a rte rs D etach m en t from Salem w ill kick off the project, July 26, at Camp Rilea. T H E T A B L E S W E R E crowded with T h e e v e n t w aa held at the Liona Club Blood mobile units also will p m M i getting all they could eat at the Mt P a v ilio n a t W e m m e . visit the 41st Infantry Brigade Hood Lions Club breakfast last weekend I Post P h oto ) d uring th e ir su m m er en cam p m en t at F o rt Lew is, ooo o oo ooo Wash , Aug. 16. Connecticut and N orth Seven out of 10 supermarket It took about 3Vy hours (or a Other units throughout the farm er to produce a bushel of shoppers save trading stamps, Carolina recently voted to drop state have been encouraged to Veterans Day as a Monday credit donations to the m ilitary grain in I BOO Today, leas than according to a recently com h olid ay, changing the ob blood bank at any Red Cross pleted national survey five minutes are required servance back to Nov 11. draw, or as a command effort. FRAN HAS D E C ID E D TO take a week off so here goes with the substitute - ooo H AVE B EEN wondering for several months about why the State built the weigh stations on Hwy 26 near the Brightwood turn-off, so decided to see what goes on I was met by Oregon State weighmaster David McArthur who „ J * * ? and explained the whole operation to me Weighmaster McArthur comes up with this there are eleven weigh.ng stations rom Mt Hood to the coast of Oregon and a team of 9 wei«h masters that man the stations The reason we seldom see them in operation is that they operate on 6 hour shifts and man them at various times TTiis is to make sure that willful violators of laws and safety standards will be checked All trucks are checked whether they be bread trucks, logging r?rakSh L P t T many types of Perm its depending on the cargo hauled During my visit, a bread truck was checked who had hauled bread to the Mt to see if he was in fact hauling cargo ^ Cad ° n h‘S return tr,p Several logging trucks were checked and in one case one truck was required to put an ad ditional safety chain on a log All trucks are checked for safety light, permits, and safety Gas tax increases Tax on nearly 106 million gallons of gasoline was IN W U M M . O a iC O N HOOOLANO N .A ZA AO Highway 21 P R IC fS E FFE C TIV E TH U R S ., FR I. <* SAT. JULY 1 2 , 1 3 4 1 4 at Welches Road d im m i, Oregon FRESH, O R E G O N G R O W N Fresh, O re g o n G ro w n FRYER Fresh, O re g o n G ro w n 70 Legs or Thighs M e m b ^ ^ o ^ m te ^ G r o c e n J n c ie < > ie 8*3 Breasts o e i monte Boneless USDA Cho»<e Btm. Round Steak I4 O Z ^ BOTTŒS Borse*' USDA C N x e Beef Oven Roast W H O LE B O D IE D H O O D RIVER Ground Round Quo*.»/ Red Snapper 7£ M O RTO N’S FROZEN M IN U T E M A ID $100 WESTERN FAMILY, 3 SIEVE FANCY PEAS S I 00 IDAHO GEM, FROZEN M e a t Pies 8O Z $100 PKG 6 . J 1 Orange Juice Hash Browns $ 2 IB PKG FO R S W E E T , J U IC Y N O R T H W E S T -G R O W N Cucumbers C A L IF O R N IA . FRESH SPAGHETTI 1 > 6 — $ 1 ■ 0 0 IS 0 2 T IN S "S A N TA ROSA' valuable FANCY BSKT LB ■ C O U P O N i'r'T!i:n ,» $ 2 ‘ 7 tin Ma SOFT MARCARINE..........5 2 CHEESE..............................1 0 % - ^ With '5 0 / CHIU CON CARNE d »tww Sol J«4g 14 JO* Í COUPON »’•’‘V fl’i »5 0 / T in s BEEF STEW W A K E up fo o d flavor I t o d o lo n a I I5OZ ton DESSERT TOPPING 4i 49 CRESCENT With CINNAMON ROLLS........ r C IQ 3 9 iO l TURES H U N G R Y JA C K T ir " i1 V A L U A H L t BUTTERMILK BISCUITS C O U P O N ™ ‘W Excedrin Tablets 59 BOTILI OP 36 I Bottle pe* « V A tU A B U KRAFT MAYONNAISE With Coupon COUPON T ' ' ' T | ! l ’ »i Vitalis Hair Spray $ |0 9 701 FORM EN DRY C O N T R O ! l » t l : W r th T IN hm» O n» Tw p»» toupon AddHtona) • * ’ 1 1 4 Coupon fo o d *Stw So* July 14 MAT JJ A Coupon 8 02 TUBES ! 25 ASSTD 4 WHITE 4 1 s F IN E S T O U A U T Y of 74 Cougon good 0»v So< July 14 »S* 3 HAT 7 J A Y ÎW 2 PAPER TOWELS 32 02 JAR Ju m b o R o d. Suave Cured Shampoo Bandages loby, Egg. Golden Bonus Pack l i Oi lotti» Box o f 8 0 6 6 4 e 6Q< WW w > INSTANT COFFEE ....... COUNT BTIS. 1 * 0 pM 0 depov 6 02 JAR KRAFT ROKA DRESSING .. 8 02 B it m is s io n dinner MACARONI 6 CHEESE .. No Box Tablets S ■ 19 36 ▼ ■ » COUNT 00 DADS 28 o Æ F O IG E R S ZEE 1 I ROOT I2 O Z PKG BA H A R D IweH I Boa pe< tougea AddHionoi •» >♦ Covpor good Itku So« Jufy 14 4 VANILLA WAFERS 52 4 07 BLACK PEPPER Coupon 16O Z^ TINS NABISCO oj ACCENT Angel Food RRix Whil. Assorted Flavors 89 NAUEYS Uny Crock»* Chocolate SYRUP HALF GALLO Coupon p VALU AB LE ICE CREAM D A R I G O I D O R K R A f t R A N D O M W E IG H T N A U E Y S (W IT H B EAN S) I Tie. HERSHEY S SHUN FLAVOR 4OZ JAW INST ANT COFFEE.. IM P E R IA L Folger's Coffee •»•2 07 f e gm 2FO .29 Cherry Tom atoes 39 — I TA STER S C M O K X F R E U e D R IE D riTiW it E* m F Green Peppers PLUMS 7 1/4 02 PKG Intensive Care 1 • 4 TQ« 69* 47 t ^9 ■ collected by the Oregon Motor Vehicles Division for M ay, despite rep o rted gasoline shortages in the state. C hester W O tt, Ad m in is tra to r of the M o to r Vehicles Division, says the May gailonage figure represented an increase of slightly more than four per cent over April this year and an increase of slightly less than four per cent over the same month a year ago Although more gasoline was sold in M ay than in any other May in the state’s history, Ott says the ag ency’s reports received from motor vehicle fuel dealers reflected a change from a year ago M ajor dealers, such as Arco. Exxon, Mobil, Shell, Standard, Texaco and Union, reported increases in gallons taxed, but a few independents showed sharp decreases when com pared with May last year One independent, fo r example, paid 80 per cent less tax this M ay than last May when gailonage dropped from 1.7 million gallons to 350,000. Another reported a drop of 75 per cent when gailonage dropped from slightly more than two million to less than 500,000 Ott said the May report was slightly distorted by the fact that tax reports had not been received from a few licensees at the cut-off date for compiling m onthly statistics F ig u res from these reports will be in cluded in the June report. Visitors w elco m ed home - g r o w n , slicing F R A N C O A M E R IC A N T any ° ‘ he[ SaM y measures During two 6 hour S hs . checked Whe" « k e d why two stations. McArthur explained that all eastbound trucks such as tankers and domestic trucks were indeed checked the same way lagging trucks from Medford or other areas are required to have permits to haul from this area which would seem an added protection for our local contractors A L A R G E ' C R O W D tu rn e d out for the annual M t. Hood l.ions C lu b 's chuck wagon b re a k fa s t last w eekend. H e re m e m b e rs o f the Lions (T u b p re p a re som e of the good food lor th e ir guests. M Hoodland PARK PLAZA I «22-3332 • 9 oi loby Powder 02 laby Oil Recent visitors to the home of Mrs Lydia M ark wart weie M r and Mrs Gunther Eichorst of Munich. Germany. Eichorst is a cousin of Mrs M arkw art. The Eichorsts were guests of M r and Mrs Ted Foster of Lake Oswego, who brought them to Sandy Friday, July 6, tor the day. Eichorst is em ployed by the B a v a ria n government as a statistician ooo The a v erag e college graduate makes nearly a-------------- ---------------- j $250.000 -— more in his working lifetim e than a high school graduate W H ILE CRUISING the Mt Saturday night, stopped at the n0* T^ ‘ and “ * Bud Meadows the Portland car dealer and AJ Rose, the gas tycoon from the 76 station, Hoodland shopping center in deep chit-chat Bud explained that he was enjoying his summer home on Welches road After a few cups of coffee cruised up to ZigZag to hear “ Rich and Bill do their thing ’ Met Dwayne miwic ah^ (P° pular Portland Newscaster, Channel 6 enjoying the a ? bassador^DrnaLE T ° i P E 9 P LE ~ T , Hi8h school student Am- 3 gr°UP °f h,gh SCh°°l StudCTts “> tour Europe and act as our Ambassadors They were selected on the basis of their high school record, their ability to relate to others personality, high standards and were carefully screened and selected A group was selected from the Sandy High School including April Wright. Peggy Bouray and Susy Johns *« -e sent on tours to such interesting places as Washington D C. and after a complete tour of the capital they departed for London where an orientation was scheduled and our Ambassadors were introduced to their English host families since the schedule of activities is much too long for this column I will simply touch on the highlights. The group left on June 17th and at this writing they are in Vienna, Austria. { They have been to such places as Holland and Paris and the tour will now include Moscow in Russia. They will tour Red Square the Kremlin, Pioneer Palace, Pioneer Youth Camp, an evening attendance at the ballet or concert has been requested Then On to Leningrad, Helsinki, Copenhagen, Hamburg and Berlin They will tour East Berlin and West Berlin They then will fly to Amsterdam where they will fly to the United States. WOW — what a trip. ooo ALL THE A C T IV IT Y , you see at the Timberline Rim sales office is the Mt. Hood React Team Through the courtestv of Scott Brown an arrangement was made for free use of the’ building until such time as the Timberline sales office is needed This group of C B radio operators have set up a Safety Break Coffet Station in the building for motorists Free coffee is served and road information, Highway conditions and directions are available. Since the Mt Hood React team have received their charter they have set up a coffee rest station at the Lions Hall over the Memorial Day weekend Now. they have set up a 24 hour a day safety station rest stop operating every day. The station is manned around the clock by members and is headed by president A1 Johnston At this writing, they have served well over a thousand cars and served countless cups of coffee, tea, and juices This is a non-profit organization. (Donations are accepted). A L IT T L E OF THIS AND T H A T - Mrs Jim Seward and their daughter Kathryn Ruth (Little Bear) flew to Iowa Tuesday for a months vacation where they will be entertained by friends and relatives - New bachelor on the Mt., is A1 Prescot, former Port land shoe executive and biggie A1 is recovering from surgery Val and Joe Wohlfiel celebrated their 28th wedding anniversary - AND HOW ooo THIS W R ITER HAS M E N TIO N E D - on several occasions in this column about the unlicensed dogs that run in packs killing sheep, calves, goats and pet kid goats, etc. Now one has started on chickens - Ken Walker Brightwood, oil dealer, had his chieken yard broken into by one of these dogs and 57 chickens were destroyed The dog was shot and killed on the spot We will again suggest that the Clackamas County dog control truck spend a day in the Brightwood area and round up these killer dogs ooo L RAN N O RTHRUP Doing the column next week send in your items to her by calling 622-4685 So long for awhile Gary G irl Scouts hold camp “Take Shelter Under the Cloud " will be the theme for the 1973 Homestead Day Camp to be held July 16-20 at the Homestead G irl Scout Camp at Rhododendron It is open to all girls from first grade through high school age Camp activu °s wilt include s*nging. games, and crafts, plus hiking and outdoor ac tivities The week will be c lim a x e d by an overnight campout to be held at the end of the session, after the campers have learned about the woods An open house will be held the last day of camp The public will be invited to attend, and view the displays of crafts such as beading, w eavin g, inacrame. and leathercraft Homestead camp, now in its fifth year, is owned by the Columbia River G irl Scout Council, which sponsors the camp The land was donated by M r. and M rs J W a lte r Creighton It is located off Highway 26, between Zig Zag and Rhododendron M ary Ann Elliot. Brightwood, will be the camp director The fee for the day camp is $3 50, as of July 1. The hours are 10 a m to 3:30 p m For further information, call Mrs C aro l K onell at 622 3140 Receipts have been mailed to those whose registration ap- plications have been received has not received a receipt by the registrar Anyone who should contact Mrs Konell C A M P D IR E C T O R M a r y Ann E llio tt, of B rightw ood, talks to d ay c a m p e rs at llo m rs te a d G ir l Scout day c a m p to be held at Rhododendron July 16-20. (Own Photo I C o m m is s i o n s e ts m e e t i n g d a t e The meeting of the State H ig h w a y C o m m is s i o n scheduled fo r 9:00 a m , Tuesday, July 10 has been cancelled, it was announced by Glenn L Jackson, chair man In its stead, the new ly created Oregon Transportation Commission will hold its first meeting at 1:30 p.m., July to in Room 123 of the Slate Highway Building Jackson has beer designated chairman of the new commission The Oregon legislature recently passed HB 3166 which established the new Oregon Transportation Commission and abolished the State High way Commission and several other commissions concerned with transportation It was effective July 1.