The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 06, 1951, Page 3, Image 3

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    Oregon Standards of Milk1
i Sanitation R ival Federal
R ules, Peterson Declares
milk to two or more cities with
their own milk inspection the de
partment of agriculture, after con
ference with authorities of all cit
ies concerned, shall determine
which city shall carry on the in
spection of the dairy farm and milk
produced and shall make provision
for interchange of inspection in
formatvn; between the affected
cities. ?
In case of emergency creating a
milk shortage, the department may
permit the free movement of milk
anywherfc , within the state.
A new section provides for year
ly instruction and examination of
milk inspectors employed by the
rarer?
m
0C3
Oregon state's standards and inspections on milk sanitation and
quality are as high or higher than Ihose provided by the U.S. public
health service, E. L. Peterson, state director of agriculture, declared
Saturday.- v. .
The statement was In response to a Portland request for comment
en amendments by the 1951 legislature to the state fluid milk code,
c contained in HB 319.
"his bill does not take away
St m any city the right to inspect
Its own milk supply if it so de
sires, Peterson continued, except
that the city is, required to meet
t?"' ' state's minimum standard of
s. jtary regulatory inspection.
"The standards of milk quality
end sanitation over the state of
Oregon have shown very marked
improvement since 1945 when the
state first entered the field of
Jluid milk regulation in which the
rtate also had authority over city
inspection," he said further. "On
the initial surveys by the state
under that law, no city in Oregon
was meeting fully the level of the
rtate sanitation and quality stand
ards? All cities having their own milk
irspection service were approved
urder the 1950 survey conducted
the department. These are
I rtland, Eugene, Salem, Medford,
Klamath Falls, Astoria and Pen
' !ton. . '
B eked by Dairymen
This bill was sponsored by the
O.egon Dairymen's association and
the Oregon Dairy Manufacturers
association to do four things:
Flrengthen the authority of the
Ftate in the field of milk sanita
tion; bring more uniformity in in
terpretation of fluid milk regula-
. tions; eliminate duplication of in
spection of dairy farms and rnilk
plants; and define clearly and
permit better enforcement of pro
visions already L-. the act.
Point one amounts to whether
the state or the U. S. public health
rcrvice shall call the turns on milk
sanitation in the state of Oregon,
sid O. K. Beals, chief of the state
.department of agriculture division
of foods and dairies.
On another angle, Beals says
that because of the complicated
pattern in the movement of fluid
milk, it is unlikely that a city
in western Oregon could physical
ly inspect all the milk entering that
c'ty. As a matter of fact, the city
of Portland is not now inspecting
all milk entering that city. At
present seven milk plants (from
The Dalles, Forest Grove, Aloha,
Oregon City, Deer Island, and Mc
Minnville) are sending over one
.million pounds of milk per month
from 106 shippers, inspected by the
department, into Portlalnd for
processing and packaging. This
milk is returned to milk plants in
the six cities for distribution in
those centers. But in the Portland
processing plant it is co-mingled
uith Portland inspected milk des
tined for distribution in Portland.
Permit Movement
Amendments permit - movement
f fluid milk anywhere in the state,
regardless of systems of inspections
t origin and destination, provided
eny city may inspect, on a perma
nent basis, dairies anywhere in the
state supplying milk to thai city.
When a producer is selling fluid
Now with my new
SONOTONE, I hear
through a tiny jeweled
pin with no clothes
rub noise and no strain j
to HEAR clearly. And I
now more than ever I
before nobody knows I
I'm deaf."
SONOTONE
W. F. Dodge, Consultant I
1933 State Street
i Phone 3-9485 I
FREE
-it
Please send mc free book-
let telling the exciting I
storrof tbeoewSonotone.
Name-
I
Addrs.L.
I
.------- --I
City.
ft JIUH.U Jin
V fiOfSUCKANDCQ J XLi
MOTHER'S
KENMORE TANK-TYPE ALL METAL
fP n re a n r ro
vj u u 11 LiNj
)
COMPLETE WITH ATTACHMENTS
DIlHiil .. O
NEW Jio)
Complete Set of Cleaning
Attachments!
New, Streamlined Light
weight Design " -.
Longer, Stronger Flexible
Hosel
Cleansing Air Filter Inside
Tank!
3.00 Down
5.00 Month
Call 3-9191 now .
cr iis this coupon
Sears. Reebaek and Ce.
S5 N. Capitol SU I
SjUrm. OrecoB I
-J M ft J . . 1 t ' .
further infenMtiee leaiaf Ike new K tumors ' !
! MBMllMMfll - !
a j . a
i stkot ot t
i dry.
STAT
-J
550 N. Capitol
Phono 3-9191
department cr any efty navlnf It
own milk inspection service.. In
spectors now on duty are blanket
ed in for. the first year; after thai
all inspectors must complete the
course. ( c- . ,
pica's ' said maximum bacteria
count per milliliter allowed Sy
the Oregon regulations for milk for
pasteurization is 80,000 while 200,
000 is the maximum for the USPHS
standard ordinance which the city
of Portland was operating under.
prior to 1943. "Milk delivered to
the consumer under Oregon stand
ards must be under 20,000 per mill
iliter s while i the maximum al
lowed by USPHS is 30,000.
CARR PURCHASES
HUBBARD Ted Carr has tak
en over the "Snack Bar" here and
has remodeled the interior. ' He
will open, for business Monday,
May 7, with meals and short or
ders. .'';., I
Crown Zellerbacli J
Borrows Money - f
For New Pulp Miilf
The wall Street Journal in its
f Friday issue reported that Crown
Zellerbach corporation has bor
rowed $20,000,000 from institu
tional investors to use in the con
e traction of a new pulp null in
the northwestern part of the
United States.
As reported in The Statesman
ten days ego. Crown is consider
ing in Clatsop county if an agree
ing Clatsop county II an agree
ment can be made with the state
for a cooperative agreement on
timber .of state forest lands there.
Completion of the financing indi
cates the corporation is planning
prompt action in connection with
this pulp mill.
Tha Statesman. Salem. Oregon. Sunday. May 8. IS51-
U
pp!y
Said Sufficient
Tires will be in ample supply
to meet all essential civilian needs,
it was predicted in Salem Saturday
by Robert H. Bolanos, local B. F.
Goodrich store manager, on his re
turn from a two-weeks company
merchandising clinic at Akron,
Ohio. ' ; , .,
Bolanos said his company called
attention to the increasing supply
of synthetic rubber from American
plants and expressed the belief
that ' all cars essential to owners
livelihood will be "kept on the
road despite the present shortages
caused by booming tire demand
and heavy government stockpiling.
more
i"1 si!
tea
"1V I
t ' nil H':iA
mm I 9 A
It
fsl DATER
more
A i
n i
13:
f
ICED TEA"
tttfolt
I , : 1 - - .
w
SNOW TOP
Listen to!
I :
"Sally's i
i ' " '
Serenade"
Dick naymes
"Fashion Flash
es", 'Woman ef
the IVeek .Quix,"
Free iPrizes. i
'. I ! :
i -
MonJ Thru. Friday,
11:25 A. M.
OPEN
FRIDAYS
UNTIL
9 P. M.
K J.
. . . as seen in Mademoiselle, Charm and Seventeen!
All so highly-styled to be new and different . . ;
so lightly priced to keep your budget in order
All Junior Sizes . . v 9 to 15
ICED TEA . , . beautifully basic Sanforized Bates 7
chambray. In butternut brown, grey and aqua. $10$Q
DATER ... From suntime to moontime . . .Sanforized
Bates chambray. Butternut brown, grey and aqua. $10.08
SNOW TOP ... cool and frosty. Sanforized broadcloth
1 in navy, green and brown. $0.90 -
THREE COLOR HARMONY . . . a sun-kissed color trio that whirh
around your hem and heightens your bodice. $1098
SHEER DELIGHT . . . like wearing a bit of a breeze.
In sunyellowy aqua or lavender sheer chambray. $10.93
1 .
THREE
COLOR
HARMONY
SHEER
DELIGHT
Charge it, of cowse!
If you have a charge account at
; any store in Salem, you can charge
it at Sally's.
w
COURT AND LIBERTY
tj frnv'( .trjn.i.s frimiii avi : w,. .