Thurs., June 16, 1977 (Sec 1) SANDY (Ore.) POST - 7
obituaries
from page 1
Geothermal resource
Gladys Smith
< environmentally sound
heated water could be in fulltime use
•'The beauty of it is is that if we have the
resource we'll need no new technology,”
said Haul Howe. “ Piping is an everyday
thing, and there are plenty of heat ex
changers that could be used ”
In addition to providing hot water and —
saving fossil fuels, geothermal technology
has
tremendous
environmental
im
plications
Davidson noted that the
resource is totally clean, pipes could follow
existing roadways such as Highway 26and
on-site facilities would consist of little
more than a low profile well head
“ Environm entalists ought to be
positively pushing geothermal,” said
Davidson *‘ It fits in exactly with their
philosophy-clean air and clean en-
vironment with no ecological damage.”
Diagram shows how geothermal energy
heats w a te r
Summer activities to start next week
at Welches Community School
Summer fun activities at
Welches Community School
begin next week
A series of outdoor events
designed for parents and their
children are slated this sum
mer
Parents are invited to spend
a relaxing summer day at
Wildwood Park with their
children
“ Since school Is out and
many of us have few close
neightors, le t’s bring the
children together to play and
picnic,” suggests Community
School coordinator Reva Cox.
Jan Lake, leader, will meet
the group at the play equipment
at the park from 11 a m. to 1
p.m. Wednesday, June 22, July
6 and July 20
On alternate Wednesdays
Tara Holt will take a group of
parents and their children on
three Mt Hood Lake outings
The group will meet at the
Community School trailer at 10
a m. to carpool to the following
lakes: Wednesday. June 29,
Frog Lake; Wednesday, July
13, Timothy Lake; and Wed
nesday, July 27, Trillium Lake
Parents are invited to join the
group and swim, fish, hike,
picnic and explore nature
firsthand with their children.
Several day hikes designed
especially for children and
their parents have been
planned this summer.
Leah Behan will lead two
hikes from 10 a m to 1 p m
Thursday. June 23 and July 7.
Those going will meet at the
Community School trailer.
Hoodland residents are urged
to grab pack and hiking boots
and Join Roger Deaver for hike
Tuesday, July 19, 10 a m. to 1
pm .
Those going will meet at the
Zig Zag Ranger Station.
Join Tom Cox and Shelley
Butler Friday, July 29, 10 a m.
to 1 p.m., meeting at the
Community School trailer, for a
short hike.
Those going w ill collect
natural clay to make a pinch
pot and a hand print.
Several
activities
this
summer are geared toward the
gathering and preserving of
foods. Participants will carpool
to u-pick fields, orchards, and
gardens to gather berries,
fruits and vegetables for home
canning, freezing and drying
Kids may come too.
A first meeting of the group
will be held 10 a m Tuesday,
June 21, at the Community
School trailer, to outline trips
for the summer.
Do you want to can or freeze
fruits and vegetables this
summer, but don't know how to
begin?
Have you had years of ex
perience behind the canning
kettle and blancher? Beginners
and
experienced
home
preservers will get together to
share recipes and tips 11 a m.
Tuesday, June 21, at the
Welches Community School
trailer.
An evening of volleyball for
high school students and adults
will be led by Jay McAllister
beginning 7 p m . Wednesday,
June 22. at Wildwood Park
volleyball court.
Have your blood pressure
checked free by Leah Behan,
registered
nurse.
Blood
pressure clinics will be held
from 1 to 2 p.m. at the Com
munity School trailer on June
17, July 15, Aug 19, and Sept.
16. This service is open to all
ages
Soccer for kids has been
tentatively postponed until a
new leader can be located.
Jaime Machado, who led the
class this year, has moved from
the mountain.
If you have a child who was
planning to play soccer, please
call Reva Cox, 622 3397, and
leave your name so that you
can be notified if a new leader
is found.
The Com m unity
School
potluck picnic is slated from 6-9
Gladys Smith, a resident at
9045 SE 347th, Boring, died
June 12 in Gresham She was 80
years of age
Mrs Smith was born Gladys
Carothers in Little Salmon, Ida.
on Feb 24, 1897 When she was
5, her family moved to Eastern
Oregon where she attended
school
On Jan 31, 1923, she was
married to George Smith. They
moved to Estacada to live for a
year before moving to Boring to
make their home on Bluff
Road Mr and Mrs Smith had
lived there for the last 53 years.
She is survived by her
husband, George M Smith;
four
children:
Raymond
Houston,
Sandy;
Trumond
Houston, California;
Ralph
Houston, Boring; and Emily
Mason, Portland; ten grand
children and eleven great
grandchildren.
Funeral services were held
Tuesday, June 14, in the chapel
of Sandy Funeral Home.
Private vault interment was at
Cliffside Cemetery at Sandy.
p.m. Friday, June 24, at
Wildwood Park west kitchen
Hood lard residents are invited
to join your neighbors and
fnends for an evening of food
and entertainment.
Thos attending are asked to
bring
a
fa v o rite
dish
(casserole, salad, dessert,
e tc .), table service and
beverage.
Those unable to cook may
bring
something
helpful
(watermelon,
fruit,
bread,
cheese, pickles, etc.).
Children are also invited. To
register for these activities,
call Reva Cox at622 3397
Ray Allen
Ray E arl Allen of Fort Rock
and a former Sandy resident
died at his home Tuesday at
age 82
t1
Dirk Mohrman
MHCC offers CPR class
• How to make your marriage
stick
or sticky” is the theme of
from
the
Heart
Association.
000
Mt. Hood Community College
Each CPR class is divided the Tuesday, June 21. Sandy
Salad dressings work magic
is sponsoring a series of weekly
cardiopulmonary resuscitation into two three hour sessions Kaffee Klatsch at St. Michael’s as marinades for meat and
poultry. The experts recom
classes beginning June 21 and from 7 to 10 p.m. on Tuesday Hall in Sandy.
Thursday.
Special
Speaker for the evening will mend marinating flank or
continuing through the sum and
Saturday classes also are be Dick Mohrman, a Gresham chuck steak or chicken in
mer
or Caesar salad
minister who just recently Ita lia n
The classes will be taught by available upon request.
returned from conducting dressing from one to six hours
an Oregon Heart Association
Enrollment for each class is seminars in Poland. The 7:30 Then pop on the barbecue grill
instructor and w ill cover
meeting
has
been and brush with the marinade
emergency treatment for heart limited. Those interested can p.m.
attack, drowning, electrical preregister by calling 667-7181. designated as men's night All while cooking A unique and
shock and choking victims. Registration will also be taken men and women are welcome delicious flavor is the result
Graduates of the classes at the door Tuesday evenings in to attend.
receive
a CPR certificate room E127
Art displayed at college
Watercolors and original
prints by 24 Pennsylvania
artists are on display In the Mt.
Hood Com m unity College
Center through June 22
Many of the art works depict
a Pennsylvania setting and all
are examples of contemporary
art from the Keystone State All
of the works are for sale, with
prices ranging from 065 to $850
The college center has three
other art exhibits scheduled for
the summer months: June 23
July 22, Association of College
Unions Northwest Students
E x h ib it; July 25-Aug. 26,
MHCC
Area
All-Com ers
Exhibit; Aug 29 - Sept 16,
William Hartner Water Color
Exhibit.
The College Center is open
Monday through Friday from 8
a m toSp.m*
Charles Cravens
returns from Hawaii
Mr. and Mrs Charles A.
Cravens
of Sandy
have
returned
from
Honolulu,
Hawaii, where they were
guests of Southwestern Life
Insurance Company at the
flrm ’a 1977 agency convention.
Agents with outstanding
service to the company and its
policyowners during the past
two years were invited to at
tend the April program at the
S heraton-W aikiki Hotel in
Honolulu.
Cravens, Southwestern Life
representative in Sandy, was
recognized as a member in the
firm 's Century Club and
President's Honor Club
Ervin Wallis
Ervin Edward Wallis, a
Boring resident since 1946, died
in a Portland hospital June 9.
Wallis, 74, was born in Blair,
Okla. He was raised in
Oklahoma where he attended
school. After completing his
education, he began farming in
Oklahoma
He
m a rrie d
Ruby
Hollingsworth Aug. 9,1922.
In 1946, they moved to Oregon
to live in the Boring area
Wallis worked for Reynolds
Aluminum in Troutdale
Wallis retired from Reynolds
in 1971. He and his wife were
Requests submitted
At a June 20 meeting of the
Clackamas County Board of
Adjustment two local requests
for land use modifications will
be reviewed.
In one case, George Bruns
has asked to increase the
maximum percentage of lot
coverage from 15 to 15.7 per
cent to allow construction of a
home.
The lot in question is on the
north side of Fairway Avenue
about a third of a mile east of
Welches Road.
In the second request, Jerry
Hagen has asked to build a
single family home on land not
designated for Exclusive Farm
Use. Hagen’s request affects a
lot on the south side of Ericson
Road about one quarter of a
mile west of Firwood Road.
older.
Also included are special races such as
the Media Medley, the Safari Sweepstakes
and the Woodchoppers Derby
Elimination races for the different age
brackets begin at 3 p.m. with the special
races start!ng at 7 p.m.
For a complete set of rules and an entry
blank call or stop by Sandy Appliance and
T V., 38955 Proctor Blvd , 668-4468
Remember, all entries must be in by
June 24.
All right, kiddies and grownups, get set
and get ready for the World Championship
Pet Rock Race to be held in Sandy on July
8.
Deadline for all entries for the second
rock race is June 24 so now is the time to
round up a rock and get him (or her) in
training for the big race.
Racing divisions include rocks with
keepers under 10, between 11 and 15,
between 16 and 25 and for keepers 25 and
theme of Kaffee Klatsch
& Ì1
great-grandchildren.
Services were Friday at the
Sandy Community
Presby
terian Church with family
co m m ittal and interm ent
following at Forest Lawn
Memorial Park.
Arrangements were made by
Carroll Funeral Home.
Rocks to roll In July race
Making marriages work
Before coming to this area,
Mohrman worked for several
years on a transdenominational
basis conducting charismatic
teaching seminars in various
countries as well as the United
States
Mohrman worked with Dave
Wilkerson as a member of the
board of the original Teen
Challenge of New York City
and served as chairman of the
Chicago Teen Challenge Board
He also served as vice-
president of the Nicky Cruz
Outreach for Youth.
Mohrman married his wife,
Ruth, in 1950 The couple has
three children: Rick, 21; Cindy,
17; and Cheryl, 12.
Music for the men's night
program will be provided by
“ We Who Believe ”
For more information, call
668-7614 or 668-6015.
Allen was born in Cripple
Creek, Colo., and spent his
early years in Colorado and
Kansas In 1920, he married
Mary Baker at Ormel, Colo.,
and in 1937, the couple moved to
Lebanon. A year later, they
settled in Sandy. His wife dicu
in 1971.
He spent time as a farmer
and a logger and was also a
member of the Sandy Com
munity Presbyterian Church
His hobbies included baseball
and fishing
Survivors include; four sons,
Rex of Estacada, Roy of
Wichita Falls, Tex., Lon of
Vancouver, Wash., and Lee,
San
Bruno,
C a lif.;
one
daughter, Mrs. Shirley Wilson,
Fort Rock; two brothers, Elvin
Allen, St. Francis, Kan., and
Orville Allen, Hanson, Idaho;
two sisters,Mrs. Velma Owens,
Anacortes, W ash, and Mrs.
Violet Owens, St. Francis,
Kans.; 22 grandchildren and 10
CRAG sets
meeting
ooo
Spices, herbs and spice
blends keep best when stored n
tightly closed containers in a
cool, dark and dry place. Avoid
putting the spice rack near a
kitchen range or in bright,
warm lights.
Virginia Smith
Virginia Lee Smith, Rt. 1,
Box 230AAA, Eagle Creek, died
Monday in Gresham at age 59.
Mrs. Smith was born in
Doniphan, Mo., to William and
Minnie West. In 1936, she
married William Smith at Pine,
Mo., and the couple moved to
Astoria in 1945, then to Portland
until residing at Eagle Creek in
1973.
Survivors
include:
her
husband; three sons, Robert of
Yakima, Bob of Gresham, and
Donald of Eagle Creek; three
daughters, Dorothy Verdick,
Hawaii and Geneva Wrisley
and Reva Stauf, both of Port
land; four brothers. James,
Astoria, Edward and George,
both of Illinois, and Charles,
Nebraska, two sisters, Mildred
Davis and Irene Wells, both of
Illinois; and 18 grandchildren.
Services were Friday at
Bateman Funeral Chapel with
interment following at Lincoln
Memorial Park Cemetery.
ÎG Â T Ë i
II
BUXTO N'S
Lee M e a t C o m p a n y
S a a d y SSS-4S3S
On June 21, the Columbia
Region
Association
of
Governernts (CRAG) will meet
to discuss sewage alternatives
for the Columbia River region,
including the Sandy and
Gresham area.
The meeting is part of
Project Clean Water, a two
year program designed to
create an area plan for waste
disposal
As a result of the meeting,
Project Clean Water staff
members will recommend a
plan for the area to be
presented before the CRAG
board of directors in Sep
tember.
The meeting will be held at
the M and M Restaurant, 137
North Main, Gresham, at 10
a m. All interested community
leaders are invited to attend.
active in the* Mt. Hood Christian
Center in Gresham.
He is survived by his wife.
Ruby; children; Ladonna
Com er,
Gresham ,
Betty
Malone, Portland, Gladys
Sprouce, Boring, and John
Wallis, Boring, a sister. Lona
Mae Ragland, Texas; 13
grandchildren and nine great
grandchildren.
Fam ily graveside services
and
interm ent
were
at
Douglass
Cem etery
with
memorial services at Mt. Hood
Christian Center June 12.
Sandy Funeral Home was in
charge of arrangements.
The family requests that
memorials be made to Mt
Hood Christian Center, 3445 SE
Hillyard Rd., Gresham.
Custom Slaughtering
Grain Fed Locker Beef
Cut, Wrapped & Frozen - Locker Packs
Cattle Hauling on Tuesdays
We Do Our Own Cure & Smoking
I
I
■I
B
H
THRU!
S O ’T e T H l
POSTTlMGl
AT 7 3 0 PM !
Air Condmooed Club Skyvi«* ■
At Fairview Park m Portland |
ME 223rd and Halsey St n
sorry I
c h ild re n u n o e r 12 n o l adm.tied ■
™ Racing Monday through Saturday ™
IM U tTN O M A H l
I h h m b m I
COAST TO COAST STORES
... to ta l h a rd w a re
H IS
D A Y IS S U N D A Y J U N E
Sandy,
Oregon
1 9 th
20% O ff
On all Rifles and Shotguns In Stock
Good Selection to choose from
Monte Carlo Madness
Our Mont« Corio Solos Spectacular is continuing full swing ot Carlson
Chevrolet.
We promised Chevrolet Motor Division that If they gave us 40 extro
Monte Carlos we'd quickly dispose of thorn. We re "rod, hot and rolling
with o special price of only M W for a very wall equipped Monte Corio.
Wo also hove 20 now Monte Carlo's wRh air conditioning for only MOO ad
dltionai. These come In o variety of eelers and are Identically equipped,
except for those with air conditioning. Please remember that these ore not
snipped" models.
.. .
.
.
Pleose consider that tha 1971 AAonte Carlos that will show In October
will be over 13 Inches shorter with on I Inch shorter wheel base ond about
750 pounds lighter. The ’77 Model will be the lost normal slxe AAonte
Carle" The olnly thing thot will be laroer Is the price.
We olso have o huge Inventory of w
n ,w *77 Chev trucks, both 2 ond 4
eel drive models fo’r work and ploy— plus a great selection of oil of tho
groat Chevy cars. The trucks will net change— except for a price Increase.
We try harder to get the best possible value for our customers, so for
tho best possible selection, price, service ond financing, try us on for
price ot
PETE
Â
CARLSON
668-4101
SANDY
M itc h e ll
300
Reel
18”
Priced right
For Dad.
59
QT.
.V alvoli HE
10W40
VALVOLINE
The motor oil of champion». 10W40,
766-1200
LIFE VESTS
Straight weight».
10W, 766 1 50 7;
2OW. 766-1606; 3OV9. 766 1622 4W
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m . fo 7 p.m.
Sunday 10 a.m . to 4 p.m.
IN T H E H E A R T OF
H E R IT A G E SQUARE