1
10 A - SANDY (Ore I POST Mon A pril 21, 1975 (Sec. 1)
Putt-putt golf added to Mt. Hood Lions lot
Wemme is the scene for many
activities on the mountain
The Mountain Players were
to open their production of
"Great Western Melodrama"
and the farcial "Miss Woodland
Beauty Pageant" with a family
performance April 18
There will be cabaret per
formances of the plays April 19
and May 3 and a "suds and
sing' May 10
A wide variety of money-
making projects provide funds
for the Lions’ support of
programs for the blind and
handicapped
Last summer the service
group built restrooms for the
handicapped at Lost Creek
They’re digging holes in the
Mt. Hood Lions Club parking
lot.
Frames for nine holes of putt-
putt golf were a weekend
project for the Lions headed by
president Ray Thornberg.
They’re filling some holes
with light posts for the parking
lot on the three-acre site
The
Lions building in
z
Campground
On the summer agenda are
chuckwagon breakfasts 4th of
July and Labor Day weekends
A M e m o ria l Day weekend
barbeque is planned with the
possibility of a turkey shoot
Newly-elected are:
Pat
Kasch. president; Roy Bunting,
secretary; Don Thornberg,
treasurer; Bob Zwick, first
v ic e -p re s id e n t;
D w ayne
Brown, second vice-president;
and F red Thornberg. third
vice-president.
Directors
include
John
McCardle. Norm S tau ffer,
Denny Luce, Stan Tausher and
Stan Lythgoe W’allv McKenzie
is "tail twister "
New forage crop
seeds released
A new forage crop V a rie ty -
Checker Chewings Fescue—
has been released by the
a g r ic u ltu r a l
e x p e rim e n t
stations of Oregon State
U niversity and Washington
State University.
The OSU station also has
released
another
forage
variety—Lucky Ladino Clover.
Both varieties were developed
by OSU agronomist Rod V.
F ra k e s . Seed fo r them is
available through the Oregon
Foundation Seed program at
OSU.
The new fescue variety is
expected to be used in turf
areas, p a rtic u la rly in the
Northw est, New England,
North Central States and Great
Britain.
Work on it began in May,
1964, when 83 sources of fine
fescue
m a te ria l
were
established at the Hyalop
Agronomy Farm near Cor
vallis.
In the t i r f testing program
since 1965, Checker has been
performing in the top group of
varieties in areas where it was
tested, including Yorkshire,
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t he CLACKAMAS
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England.
Somewhat
slower
in
emergence
than
some
v arieties, it exhibits good
ground cover when established,
has an acceptable dark green
color and is fine leaved. Some
tolerance to leaf spot has been
reported.
Lucky, the new clover
variety, is an outgrowth of
Oregon Ladino seed provided
by H.H. Rampton and Harold
Finnell in 1961. Five genotypes,
selected from a 2,376-piant
population, were crossed.
Lucky, the result, has no water
m ark on the leaf, a common
trait of most Ladino clover,
giving it rapid identification.
"Tests indicate that Lucky
not only is an acceptable seed
producer and forage producer
but also can take the place of
Oregon Ladino where there is a
need," said Frakes.
"Lim ited data suggests that
it will produce equally as well
as the original variety and
perhaps better than certain
other v a rie tie s
c u rre n tly
a v a ila b le ," the agronom ist
said.
& CORN KING
. At
JU 2» *
PU TT-P U TT GOLF’ course is being built
by members the .Mt. Hood Lions Club,
Workers on the nine-hole course include
from left Pat Kasch. Stan Lythgoe. Jack
Breast exam ination
program at hospital
BEAM is the theme for a
public education program on
the symptoms of breast cancer
S ta n fo rd p a re n ts
d in n e r A p r il 23
Speaker at the Stanford
University parents dinner at
the Portland Golf Club Wed
nesday. April 23, will be John
Bunnell, associate dean and
d ire c to r of freshm an ad
missions.
His
talk
is
title d
Admissions—Myth & M irth."
All parents of new students
are encouraged to attend.
The event is sponsored by the
Stanford Mothers of Portland
and Mrs. Robert Carl and Mrs
Frank Chown are in charge of
reservations. Deadline is April
17.
Dinner will be served at 8
p.m following a cocktail hour
at7 p.m.
o oo
Better Credit Information
New
consum er
cred it
legislation was passed in Oc
tober and has been signed into
law This law may help you. If
you are buying a home, you
must be given the closing costs
at the tim e the creditor makes
the loan commitment, not at
the actual closing as previously
required.
whicfris being sponsored by the
W oodland
P a rk
Hospital
Auxiliary in cooperation with
the American Cancer Society.
Sessions will be held at 9:30
a m.. 1:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m
Wednesday, April 23. in the
hospital auditorium.
BEAM stands for "breast
examination—a m u s t"
The BEAM program helps in
learning the techniques of
breast examination for symp
toms of cancer.
In an u ndertaking of the
Woodland
P a rk
Hospital
A u x ilia ry 's observance of
National Volunteers Week.
D r. P h illip A lb erts, ob
stetrician-gynecologist on the
Woodland
P a rk
Hospital
medical staff, is serving as
ihedicai
adviser
to
the
a u x ilia ry in planning the
program
The
a u x ilia ry
recently
purchased a teaching model on
which breast exam ination
techniques are demonstrated.
A volunteer physician from
the Woodland Park medical
staff will be present at each of
the three sessions to answer
questions.
There is no charge. Advance
registration must be made by
callin g
Woodland
P a rk
Hospital, 255-1313. ext 355
Woodland Park Auxilians, Mrs.
Jacqueline Crighton and Mrs
Ruth Lowitt are co-chairmen.
I ■
i
WILSON*
SMISAtt
$4 49
VlB < ■
pk G
Vermaas and Fred Thornberg. It is on the
three-acre site of the Lions building in
Wemme.
■
W ILSO N 'S
CORN KING
ALL BEEF
12-OZ PKG
W ll SON'S C O »N KING
WILSON 5 CHUNK STVlt
CANADIAN
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PKG
More travels from
Hoodlander Gudge
by Claude Gudge
vagabond reporter
It has been five and one-ha If weeks since
I left. Here I am at “ finisterra” (land's
end)—and it is. Here, off Cabo San Lucas,
the Pacific Ocean meets the Gulf of
C alifo rn ia (Sea of C ortez). P retty
generally, this makes for rip tides and can
get pretty rough, but fishing is great.
H a v e n 't seen a U.S. newspaper,
television, or heard a U.S. radio program
in all this time I've done this before, and
come back to the same old situation Never
really lost any news, ideas, or even a work
word
Last Tuesday 1 climbed the hill to see the
condominium sites at Posada Concepcion.
A tremendous view, with the units buili
into and blending with the rock cliffs with
thatched roofs But a long, steep trek—or
drive—to beach and boats.
A long straight road acroas horrible, but
beautiful desert took us to Ciudad Con
stitution. Here are great areas of
cultivation with pumps and irrigation
producting a great variety of produce A
novelty in all this vast desolation
Can't understand how they can pump
such tremendous quantities of water—
surely not enough rainfall to replenish the
underground reservoirs.
More straight desert road, then hills and
curves downwards toward the Bay of
LaPaz.
About 100 miles from LaPaz the motor
started missing With fingers crossed, we
limped to E l Cardon trailer park and
electricity! Apparently the plugs failed
and I almost spent the night in the d e s e rt-
then what? Would have been horribly
inconvenient at the least.
Electricity at E l Cardon let me charge
batteries, save propane, and play the
stereo Don't realize the blessings of such
things until you spend a few weeks
without.
To downtown LaPaz for margaritas and
seafood dinner in the open waterfront
restaurant at La Perla Hotel.
Trailer parks here are about ten percent
full, and all businesses are complaining
about lack of tourist trade. With gas at 61
per gallon and ferry rates doubled, it's just
too expensive for great hordes of tourists
to come this far
This is the end of the trip south, from
now on all driving will be back towards
home, however much time that takes
A short drive to a mile of deserted public
beach gives us three or fours of surf and
sun, to deep darkening the tan Hot, but
breezily pleasant, and this is one of the
mast beautiful beach areas in the world.
Miles of white sand, with rocky
headlands, and sheltered coves Us sun
worshippers seek beach and sun, while the
elderly, the natives, and the imbibers sit in
the shade for siesta What a life?
This is the first place, this trip, where
I've spent a typical Mexican night.
Rixisters crow, dogs bark, and broken
mufflers foul the beautiful tropics
Incidentally, we crossed the Tropic of
Cancer a few miles down the road, so we
are in the tropics
Monday we finally tore ourselves away
from the beach and end of the world and
headed north. An uneventful drive put us
back in LaPaz We won't really be back in
a civilized area u ntil Ensenada—a
thousand miles, and a few days away.
Better mail this Mail service is good out
of LaPaz. but spasmodic elsewhere. Until
we cross the great desert, adios
Cottrell Doings
by Mrs. H. H. Watkins
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Warner of Radford
Road joined members of the Warner
family at a fam ily reunion on Easter
Sunday held at the Carl Neumaan home on
Kelso Road. Around SO family member
enjoyed a bountiful pot luck dinner
Mrs. William Booth enjoyed a visit from
her daughter Lucile O'Mera of Wasco on
Easter They attended Easter services at
the Pleasant Home Methodist Church.
Mrs Zelda Hix and Helen Wilkinson of
Portland visited Sunday and also stopped
by the Dwight Wilkinson and Fred W ar
ners home
Walter Howard's brother from Tuscon,
Arts, passed away He had taught at the
university there for 32 years
R.W Hasselman of Gresham, and Mrs
Elberta Faust and son and daughter of
Estacada visited the W.W. Howard home
Friday.
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MT. HOOD
Downtown Rhodondron
MT. HOOD Lions Club building parking lot gels some new
lights with Kay Thornberg at the wheel of the backhoe.
The building Is the scene for many activities including
Mountain Players production.
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