The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, June 25, 1960, Page 7, Image 7

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IVERSON'S DAIRY FARM at Umpqua, pictured above. Is
one of the lorgest producers in the state of Oregon. About
: 350 head of cows ore milked on this farm, which has
modern sanitary facilities for handling of the milk.. (Pic
tures this page by Bob Leber of Photo Lab)
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ALL MILKING is done by machine, as shown above. The
milk runs from the machine through clear pipes. It is
not touched by human' hands at any time during the
. operation. Each cow is thoroughly washed before each
milking. .
PUMPING INTO TANKER The milk is transferred to
; this tanker pick-up truck, which also holds the temperature
; of the milk. All the milk is transfered by pipes and never
exposed to the air.
Melrose Family Is Back
From Trip To Minnesota
; By NETTIE WOODRUFF
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Burke and
two sons have returned to Mel
rose from a trip which took them
to Miltona, Minn., where Mrs.
Burke and the boys visited rela
tives while Mr. Burke went to Chi
cago, 111., to attend the national
Moose Lodge convention.
Family Movis
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Griffin and
family have moved to the Goertzen
place which they have purchased.
The Charles . Beecroft family,
which had resided there, have
moved into their newly built home.
The Melrose Church Bible School
had a successful season with an
average attendance of between 140
and 150 youngsters.
The Dinky Creek 4-H Club of
Melrose met this week at the home
of its leader, C. F. Wulff. Plans
were completed to start the mail
box painting project June 25.
Mrs. D. D. Rainville and family
have left to visit in Portland.
Kenyon Rtturns
Bob Kenyon has returned home
after completing a year studying at
St. Francis Seminary at Troutdale.
Edgar Allard of Williams, Calif.,
was an overnight guest in the home
of his sister, Mrs. Clyde Kinyon,
ana lamuy.
Mike and Pat Hagan of Southern
California are visiting their grand
Barents. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ha
gan, who brought them here while
returning from a vacation trip.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Ryther and
son, Tom, attended to business
Sunday at Reedsport.
Mr. , and Mrs. Leroy Blair and
dauehters have moved from Doer-
ner Road to Roseburg. They were
assisted by her mother, Mrs. John
Hall and Mr. Hail, wno are visit
ing from Wilmington, Calif.
PRIZEWINNERS FROM
Quintus Park Subdivision-Open House '
PlavhsiiM C.N. Currier, 1420 J. E. Jockton Ivors P. Mworita
Fuller Paint Dale Etlif, Rr. 3, Box 500 Gernrtten Bldo.
O. E. Steam Iran Barbara Richardson, 533 Clover Lane COPCO
Dining Room Firture Geo. H. Bryan, Idloyld Rt., Boi e05 Coon Sply
Dog-A-Matic Cindy Ellis, Rt. 3, Box 500 Trowbridge Electric
Kitchen Fixture Bruce At Mollis, 846 S. E. Glenn MadsonStokes
, We received 1 57 completed Questionnaires about home construction.
Our methods of construction or controlled by your Ideas ond
preferences. Thanki a lot.
IVAN P. EDWARDS
BUILDER-DEVELOPER ORehord 3-7493
Our paving work has started. Watch for contest rulas for J
f uesslnf what day and hour the aavinf will be completed.
COOLING TANKS The milk is stored in the holding
and cooling tanks. These tanks keep- the milk at j low
temperature and insure against flavoring' by spoiling.
Business News
Lumber Price
Index Continues
Slight Decline
Crow's Lumber Price Index con
tinued to decline in the two-week
period ending June 23, with pine
area species contributing the most
to tne downtrend.
Green- fir dimension prices have
leveled off in standard and better
grades, Crow s reported, although
prices . have continued to lose
ground in lower grades of green
stock. Boards are also quiet in fir,
while plank and timbers continue
to oe firm.
Dry dimension was only slightly
weaker. Crow's reported, with
prices off mostly in standard and
better fir. Lower grades of dry
siock were steady, ana dry Hem
lock prices showed little change.
Pme boards lost mice eround in
all grades, Crow's reported, as low
priced plywood continued to cut
into former board markets. Shop
grades of pine and white fir were
also on the weak side, as millwork
plants across tne country contin
ued to operate on a part-time basis.
Crow's reported plywood prices
as being unchanged, with no
strength evident in either sanded
or sheathing.
The industry average of $77.26
was down $9.94 from last year's
$87.20, a drop of 6 cento ' in two
weeks. Green fir of $58.12 was
down $12.64 from last year's $70.76,
a drop of 24 cents. Dry fir, off $4.
52 for the 12 months and 4 cents
for the two weeks, stood at $90.92
down from last year's $95.44. WPA
species at $86.52, were down $9.44
tor tne year ana $1.52 for the two
weeKS. - - r
: WORK BASKET TO MEET
The Work Basket, Woodmen
Circle, Umpqua Grove 51 service
club, has postponed its July
meeting until July 11 due to the
holiday. The grove social will be
next Monday at the home of Jessie
Brown in Sutherlin. The next reg
ular Work Basket meeting will be
July 19 at the home of Sarah Cy
rus on Highway 42, reports cor
respondent Phebe HcGuire. -
Safeway Employes Get
Start As Huge Spider
Drops Off Banana Stalk
The fellows at Safeway'i City
Drive In Market could hardly Do-
hevo their eyes when mon
strous spider dropped of a
stalk of bananas they war un
loading earlier this week.
The eight-legged creature mea
sured about five inches or so
"on the move," one of the em
ployes said, and the employes
were doing mora moving than
the tpidor. , : . .
While the arachnid bora e re
semblance to a tarantula there
was soma question as to just
what type of animal it was. The
men didn't let It stay around
long enough to call in an expert.
They disposed of it promptly.
I Dormant spiders and snakes,
even boa constrictors, are not in
frequently found In large ship
ment ot bananas. -
Glide Girls Win
4-H Scholarships
Seven girls from Glide are at
tending 4-H summer school at Ore
gon State College, each having
been awarded a scholarship by dif
ferent organizations.
All five members of the 4-H
erouD. The Sineine Needles, led
by Mrs. Taylor McCord were hon
ored. Ruth Hinshaw was given a
scholarship by Douglas County
Bank; Iona McCord, by U.S. Na
tional Bank; Janet Anderson by
4-H Leaders Assn.; Donna Weaver
by the North Umpqua Home Eco
nomics Unit and Barbara Miller
whose donor , wasn't immediately
known. .
Tynya 5 Wright of the Happy
Workers 4-H group, led by Mrs.
Melvin McCord, was honored by
the Dougettes. Helen Moore, who
studied and worked by herself,
was awarded a scholarship by the
romona urange.
Linda Moore, home on vacation
from Southern Oregon College, left
Friday for Ashland to join other
students to attend two separate
weddings of SOC students at Lake
view. Miss Moore then returned to
Ashland to attend summer school
at the college, reports correspond
em Mrs. Arthur sselhy.
W. T. "Aly" Allen
Consultant
for
OREGON
FUNERAL PLAN
ORchard 2-3273
1535 N. E. JOHN
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Sat., June 25, 1960 The News-Review, Roteburg, Ore. 7
Modern
Dairy
Practices
Stressed
For June Dairy Month Observance
.ito-A -j aV4t fclr-ojfM-
TANK TRUCK -Milk is piped from the tank(truck into
the milk room at AJmpqua Dairy. It is piped into large
holding tanks, where itjstested for burterfat and flavor.
J a,-v 't- f WW00f
MILK ROOM Next the milk goes from the hplding
tanks- through the pasteurization and homogenizgtion pro
cess, whioh pasteurizes the milk in 16 minutes. From this
process it' is bottled Into quart, half-pint or half-gallon
icontainers. . .'
T n V fe U f K r v
ir- -im : I
ICE-CREAM Milk' used in plant production of other
products is pumped from the milk room to other parts of
the plant through stainless steel pipes. These pipes are
cleaned at least twice daily and are always under rigid
inspection. Above is the ice cream room where the mix
has been prepared ond 'ice cream and novelties will be
made. , ,
Equipment Needed,
Inspection Rigid
For Serving Public
June is "Dairy Month" and
modern dairy nraclices have enmn
a long way from the time when
most people had their own cows
or milk was delivered in almost
any kind of a container that was
handy. ,
Today, rigid inspection throueh
state regulations are necessary to
serve the public. This inspection
and need for special equipment
to handle the product starts with
the dairy farm itself, and continues
right up through the milking barns
ana tne processing ana aistriDO
tion centers.
From the cow to the customer,
milk must be kept under constant
watch and must be handled by
trained and competent people for
quality control. The milk must be
tested many times tor quality ana
flavor before it gets into the car
ton or bottle for delivery. Pictured
on this page are scenes showing
the process by which milk is pro
duced and made ready for delivery.
The large Iverson's Dairy Farm
at Umpqua typifies the dairy farm
of today. Its milk is processed for
distribution by Umpqua Dairy,
which also has Ice cream, butter
and cottage cheese making facilities.
COTTAGE CHEESE Milk is pumped into the cottage
cheese room, where it is processed into cottage cheere..
When the curd has formed to just the right texture, cream
'is added. Then the cheese is pumped through the filling
machine into the cartons. -
Threat To Society
Seen In Divorce
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)-Dl-
4U.AntAn lha atahilifv nt nil
society as well as the home, a
Roman i Catholic cardinal saia
Thursday night. ;
"Divorce laws are the enemy of
tu onniBll-forl nnri . : ennnomic
state," James Cardinal Francis
Mclntyre told delegates to tne na
tional , ' Catholic Family . Life
Convention. '
"No government has the right
to break the bonds of a contract
of Divine origin," he said.
. faolinal - MnTntvra nf Ti An
geles criticized the United States
focal svsfem for what he called
its "overrcadiriess to seek civil
redress in times of distress,
wrecking what might otherwise be
Those who . seek to patch up
marriages in the divorce court
''seek the impossible," he said.
Mexico To Alaska
Coast HiwayEyed
OLYMPIA. Wash. (AP) Rep
resentatives of West Coast states
end British Columbia have been
invited to a meeting here July 20
to discuss promotion of a "Pacific
Trail" highway skirting the ocean
from Mexico to Alaska.
Gov. ' Albert D. Roscllinl wrote
Thursday to Premier W.A.C. Ben
nett oi uritisn Columbia and uovs
Edmund G. Brown of California
Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon and
William A. Egan of Alaska. He
asked each of them to send an
administrator to the meeting.
As he envisioned it. the route
would extend from Lower Califor
nia to the McndenhaU Glacier near
.IT'LL BE A LOT BIGGER THAW THIS Box contains a scale model of a radio telescopo .
which will be the biggest in the world when it's built this fall In Danville, 111. The Uni
versity of Illinois wilt construct and operate the telescope under the sponsorship of the Office
of Naval Research. The telescope will cover- a BH-acre natural valley. Ita 160,000 squara
feet ot receiving area will be covered with an asphalt liner and a wire-mesh reflecting;
suriaceiFourwpodenl.tower I0S feet tall lll carry 300 feed elements to the big "ear."
Army Pay Hike
Set July 5th
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A pay increase averaging 7
cents an hour will go into effect
after July S for 824 employes of
Army and Air Force Installations
in the Portland area, Rep. Walter
Norblad (R-Ore) said today.
He said the Air orce wage
Board had announced the i in
crease, which will go to 83 employ'
es at tne ucaver uepot at uiai
skanie and 452 at the U. S. Engi
neers at Portland.
See PACIFIC FOREST PRODUCTS For
MOULDINGS STUDS PLYWOOD PAR WOOD PARTIX
PARTICLE BOARD PREFINISHED PLY HARDWOOD FLY
., BEAUTIFUL PARTUS WOOD BLOCK FLOORING
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
DRIVE OUT AND SAVE
Cross the bridge south of Winifon and turn east -ot
the Pacific Plywood lign.
Del McKay. Mar. PHONE OS 9-8781 Ed Stevenson, Sales
General Motors New Compact
Beit Handling Best Riding
Because of Knee Action On All
. Four Wheels. We Inrite You l
To Come In And Drive It
You Will Be Under No Obligation
AT YOUR
FRIENDLY
DEALERS
HANSEN
MOTORS
Juneau,