Image provided by: Friends of the Sandy Public Library; Sandy, OR
About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1974)
Thun., March 7,1974 (Sec 1) SANDY (Ore.) POST - 19 I R e fre sh e r d riv in g course a t MHCC On Monday and Tuesday, March 11 and 12, car people 55 and over will have a refresher course in driving at Mt Hood C om m unity College Studio Theatre. Class hours w ill be from 11 a m to 3 p m both days and will stress defensive driving, refresh knowledge of the older and new laws, stressing ways of avoiding accidents in ever- increasing traffic Through pictures and lecture the course is presented by WELCHES ELEMENTARY 6th grade science students, 142 years after Samuel Morse invented the telegraph, rediscovered this long forgotten form of communication. They brought materials from home to build senders and receivers. Yaw p la n s Baby clinic comes here cancer trained personnel and made available nationwide through the national A m erican Association of Retired Persons, and in this area through the Gresham chapter. In terested persons should call Tom Walker, president of Gresham chapter AARP at 665- 9522. ooo There is only one thing people like that is good for them: a good night's sleep. --E W. Howe. kick-off Page Y aw , G resham , is chairman for the 1974 Crusade Against Cancer kick-off lun cheon March 8 Approximately 300 Crusade leaders fro m C lackam as, C olum bia, Multnom ah and Washington counties are ex pected to attend the no-ha6t event at noon at the Portland Hilton Hotel. F eatu red w ill be Dennis M organ, singing star and volunteer for American Cancer Society. of the health department closer to the people in the Sandy area. The clinic is held in the basement of the Immanuel Lutheran Church and is open from 1 to 3 p m. the second Thursday of each month. This is a real service to the parents of this area since it saves many miles of driving to get to the health department at Oregon City. The clinic will not be held in Sandy during June, July, and August, so it is important that anyone intending to have a child checked should call for an ap pointment now The Well Baby Clinic w ill be held in Sandy only three more times before the summer break Its next opening will be on Thursday, March 14. This means if your child, three years of age or younger, needs a medical check-up or immunizatons, you should make an appointment now by calling the Community Action Desk at 668 4746. Since last September, D r. Hollister M Stolte, director of Clackamas County health department, has been coming to Sandy once a month to bring the services Hoodlan PARK PLAZA PRICES EFFECTIVE MARCH 7, 8 & 9 Highway 26 at Welches Road Wemme, Oregon / USDA CHOICE WELCHES ELEMENTARY school students strung wire from their science room to the library and on to the social studies room, setting up an old fashioned com munications link between these remote areas of the Pacific Northwest. Traffic deaths attributed to not using seat belts Oregon recorded a healthy decrease in traffic deaths in 1973, but the decrease could have been even greater if more people had used safety belts. A report issued today by the Motor Vehicles Division notes th lt 28? SPivMft» ^aksehgers killed in traffic last year were in vehicles equipped with belts but, according to police reports, the belts were not in use at the time of the fatal crash. The report also notes that another 161 d riv e rs and passengers died in vehicles in which there were no safety belts available, or at least police reports did not indicate their presence The division report said 116 of the occupants k ille d were thrown from their vehicles at the time of impact. Since studies show it is five times safer to remain inside the vehicle than too be thrown out of the car, many of these people would have lived had they been wearing safety belts, the report said. Based on many studies, there is good reason to believe that many of those killed by impacts inside the car also could have been saved had they been wearing safety belts, the report said. Use of safety belts will not prevent all deaths or serious injuries in crashes, the report noted, because some crashes are non-survivable. Last year, 43 people in Oregon died even though they w ere w earing safety belts What is not known, the report said, is how many people are alive today because they were w earin g safety belts when crashes occurred. Seat belt successes are not easily documented, but special studies continue to indicate deaths could be reduced by 25- 35 per cent if all motor vehicle occupants used safety belts, the report added. Plywood industry backs Forest Service efforts The A m erican Plywood Association has commended he Environmental Protection Agency for its decision to allow controlled use of D D T against he tussock moth However, the issociation expressed strong iisagreement with statements nade on Feb. 26 by EPA Ad- ninistrator Russell Train, in *hich the U. S. Forest Service *as criticized for poor planning if forest pest management. At a news conference in Seattle, Train said that Forest Service efforts to develop alternatives to D D T for control if the tussock moth “have been almost totally inadequate—to the point of dereliction." Bronson J. Lewis, executive vice president of the Tacoma, Wash., based plywood as sociation, term ed T ra in 's criticism of the Forest Service “absurd " He said the Pacific Northwest staff of the Forest Service has conducted an ex tensive evaluation of many ither chemicals, backed by laboratory and field research. “The Forest Service has done a commendable job,” he added. “But they need four to five times the amount of money yet iro v id e d for tussock moth research At the root of the problem is the failure of the Congress to adequately fund the Forest Service for all types of forest m anagem ent, in cluding the destruction of pests and the control of disease.” Lewis said that the EPA decision to allow emergency use of D DT in the forests of Washington. Oregon and Idaho “is welcome even though it comes only after hundreds of thousands of acres of productive tim b e rla n d have WESTERN FAMILY MANDARIN 11 O Z .T IN FRESH FRYERS SM O R EG O N G R O W N PAN READY 69 : swiss : STEAK c : top mb : STEAK oven USDA CHO»C£ THICK CUT BONELESS LB. FLAV. R. PAC FROZEN Frozen Pens Chinese Dinners { Booth Shrim p COMBINATION DINNER ■ ■ r 0 * and SHRIMP 12OZ PKG. • USO A CHOICE ROAST -, LUNCH »Aas ■a P I T (h oloo. All bwl ¿ OI R IK A I b oloo. «olom . axG. IB. X FROZEN KUBLA KHAN bisfdfmk * C BREADED ROUND 10O Z.PK G . * 10 OZ PKG. 40 | EA. EA. EA. FISHER'S 40 OZ. PKG. ■ Adb. r a iiu j wui«|uiia «a 4A 19‘ I B IIM O I CELERY BANANAS V ' V. KRAFT MINIATURE 10 V¡ OZ. PKG. SNAPPY TOM COTTAGE 16O Z. TIN ------ \ n AddHtofXjl Ot 22‘ U m * 3 Ti*» por coupo. Coupon good thru Mor ch 9 ,1 9 7 4 14 O Z .TIN COMET SCOURING CLEANSER ’W I 3J» 1 2 + 3 (ST-12) ,,.lO 3 9 FOlGER'S ,.l4 4 9 GROUND COFFEE -3 *’ A0> VEG. SOUP MIX NESTLESQUIK PLANTER'S (WITH PEANUTS) WITH COUPON ’.S’ Z ” UPTON'S ITALIAN STYLE CHOCOLATE FLAVOR C « 04 - 1" <«11 MIXED NUTS ,Z*1 COCKTAIL PEANUTS ,s 7 9 ‘ SCHOOL SCHICK SUPER CHROMIUM INJECTOR RAZOR BLADES 1 f A < 9 VALUABtl COUPON * bmrt On« tor p*r coup© « Arfdm onolotHAR Coupon good thru Mort h 9 1 9 7 4 I 16 oz. PKG. M IS S IO N DINNERS J SCHILLINGS Mocoroni & Cheese ,„ ..,$ 1 0 0 PKGS. I DRISTAN $138 COLD TABLETS BTl. of 24 | EM PIRIH ------------ COMPOUND 41 TABLETS FOR HEADACHE RELIEF PKG of 50 “aCSîN VAIUABU 'COUPON i Additional at 4 /8 8 I,mil 4 b o o p w « * * * ih 9 1974 Ctupon 9 oo<j rt>n' Potato Chips H i Ho Crockers BEH CAY CHEST RUB V - SCHICK SUPER CHROM DOUBLE EDGE PKG of 5 WELCHES BLUE BELL SUNSHINE GREASELESS RAZOR BLADES LUNCH 4¿1 a ft, 49‘ «K l Calif. Minneola 23° FOlGER'S GROUND COFFEE VAlUABlt COUPON «a 3 > Tángelos White Onions TOMATO COCKTAIL c 1 Jumbo Size Fresh Bunch lb. been needlessly destroyed.” He added th a t the E n vironmental Protection Agency and those who oppose D D T use “must bear the responsibility for the en viro n m en tal and economic losses suffered to date, and for the probable need in 1974 for D DT use in larger quantities than would have been required if the epidemic had been controlled last year.” MONDAY, March 11 Cheese Pizza ala-toast Green Beans Mushroom sauce Celery Chunks Peaches Milk TUESDAY, March 12 Sloppy Joes on Buns French Fries Calico Salad F ru it Jello Milk W EDNESDAY, March 13 Vegetable Soup Cheese Sticks Egg Salad Sandwich Gingerbread Milk THURSDAY, March 14 Baked Beans w -Franks Carrot Chips Hot Buttered Biscuit Maple Bar Milk F R ID A Y . March IS Tuna Noodle Casserole Buttered Spinach Hot Buttered Roll Half Banana Milk FULL CUT I CREST REG. OR M INT TOOTHPASTE 7O Z.TU BE VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE lOo» BTl HAND LOTION $ 1 1 I OLD SPICE STICK DEODORANT LA REPTO BISM OL 94* antacid TABLETS 7?. 4 h a . 94’