Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1961)
MM. JMury IM" Pa We The Women Ditw M TkA C..l...4n fOf:f DM Leaves $25,000 I IIV itfll,, I III? UUUIUQII UVIIC, EJU3lle To Two Boxers By RITII M11.1.ETT Newspaper Enterpribe Amah. "I guess I might to be unhappy," says one of my women readers. "I am one of tlwse poor unfortunates the suburban housewife stuck off in my split-level prison, abandoned each morning by a hard working husband and school-age children and left to my own frustra tions and sense of inadequacy. "Maybe I'm just loo stupid to be miserable the way the maga zine writers claim I am but the Irulh is 1 love my life tlie way it is. "In the first place what is so lonely about the suburbs? Who can afford to be alone in the suburbs these days with the price of sub urban lots what they are? I can look out the windows of my house and count at least a dozen houses and I know the housewives w ho live in every one of them. "There is someone handy for companionship any time that I can knock off for a coffee break "There's a car in my driveway I can hop into any time I like and take off from the four walls that are supposed to be driving me i crazy but happily aren't. "There's a telephone handy, too, that will connect me with the busy, bustling outside world I'm supposed to be so cut off from. "Daily papers, magazines, books, television, and radio keep me in touch with the world outside my suburb. "I have a garden to work in when the fancy strikes me, com munity work to do, friends to keep in touch with, a home to run. a husband to love and children to keep life eternally interesting. "So why do I keep reading about the unhappy lot of tlie lonely suburban housewife? Just what women in tlie world have more to be thankful for, I'd like to know?" LOl'lSVllXE. Ky. (AD Tav ern operator John L. Lynch, M, left income from his fcii.OM) es tate to his two boxer dogs. Ding, 10, and Husty. 5. Mary Lou (rant, a neighlxir, said Mrs. Lynch had left $3 WW fur the dogs when she died last March. Lynch died Dee. 20. Tlie money will go to charities when the dogs die. Soil Test Lab Hikes Charge An increased charge for "rush order" soil testing at the Oregon Stale College soil testing labor atory has been announced effec tive Jan. 1. Higher costs for giving priority attention to soil samples makes Tiny Room Looks Much Larger By VIVIAN BKOWN atives perhaps and other extrane- Al N'rwsfeatures Writer ous objects that aren't needed. How can you make a small' f )0ll have a small room, lake room look larger? advantage of modern innovations Many one-room dwellers try tojwhen jt oonles l0 decorating, cram into a small space objects! rwi buv or use somethinc be- ,t:alf 1. ... ......1, K..U... irm:.. ... . , it necessary to charge $5 for rush i"'-" ' """ cause you always naa it at orders compared to $2.50 for the thesit-prw ide d by generous rel- nume, Limit lurnismnes to mH't'ssarv -w .,,.,ii, standard soil test, stated Dr. L. A. Alban, OSC soil scientist in charge of tlie laboratory. Each soil sample receives from five to seven separate tests as it moves through the laboratory. Any break in this orderly flow to move in rush orders lowers operating efficiency and increases testing costs, Alban explained. Rush requests have accounted for as high as 10 per cent of the laboratory's volume at times, he said. The laboratory expects to process about 6,000 soil samples from throughout Oregon during the coming year. Heaviest run on tlie laboratory and most rush orders come just prior to spring fertilizer ap plications. Alban said the labor atory also receives some rush or ders in the fall for recommend ed lime applications. Testing normally takes three weeks from the time samples are received at the laboratory until farmers receive fertilizer recom mendations based on the test. Last minute testing before fer- Series Set vertible couch and chairs. Newer narrow drawer cabinet units of fer space economy, and can hold A new series of short courses ijj useful for television, objects of has been set up at Oregon Stala'art. a arm, macazines. College to help persons in tliei - ... ..inlin(I vo... . food indurt.y gain a better under- (he same coor as (,)e wa),s o standing of basic food processing I ke your 100m look ,wk.e as principles, reports Roy E. Moscr. , . .;, OSC extension fruit and vegetable; a do.it.,ourselfer ta , one. K , ' . 1 ... . . , ., room apartment involved bone The series will consist of threei . , matcnin- noors courses o one week each spon- sored by the Department of Food r , , with all the bulk bedding. New er cedar chests are ideal for the purpose. There are chests to match any decor, Early Ameri can, French Provincial, and some with an Oriental flair. One mod ern captain's chest, available in red or black, may be used with a matching two-drawer item, if more storage is required. It can serve singly as a window seat or used chest on chest. Many chests can be used as coffee and end tables. I'se upper wall space for shelves to hold books, clock, can dlesticks, other items. A shelf around the room can hold a col lection of glass, pewter, rocks, shells. All Work Guaranteed To Satisfy! BROWN'S Plumbing & Heating 2244 S. 6rh TU 2 4156 RENT th HOST Electric Brush parts water to one part Use plastic, rubber or wa- ..i c-..i, i-i it paint S.- IS M.IIVIUIJCU I , f .1, with tlie others to follow,'" ". oil putlit. 1 ine not work with paint should be thin enough so that when it dries the natural of the wood will be evi- 19H in 1962 and Via. The co'irses are designed for workers and supervisors in com- cessing fruits, vegetables. i??"1- W,h,,e 8'ves a" an,"uc4 meals, or lish. Moser said. The ,sh 'j' 6f r. After basic principles covered in the ,he nr ,s dry. coat U with a four -year food processing course !dear transparent varnish, then at OSC will be briefly covered , wax and 'ou can moP " clean during short course sessions. after that. The first course will cover orin- lf lhe Painl k to a tilizing often forces the laboratory Ljpipj cf science and engineering'y011 can 1 ,ne grain when you to telephone findings to county ex- usc( jn the manufacture of food,ie!iPe,''n1ent on tne firs' hoard. tension agents who then make fer- basic chemical facts used in food, add more water. processing, basic principles of lilizer recommendations for the tested fields. 'fruits and vegetables, how these Late March and April requests! principles affect processing quali are causing most of the labora-lty, and the role of the food tech- lory bottlenecks, Alban said. Sam- !nologist in the food industry. Fed- to put the bright light. There arc pies receiveo in January ana reo-icral, stale, ami industry grauinfj smaii, cnic lauies avauaoie sun A tabic may be more practical than a desk in a tiny room. It can be used for eating, writing, rending, and it's the ideal place ruary slwuld get back to farm- ers well in advance of spring fer tilizer planning, he added. and standards will also be cov-,able for the purpose. Some offer ered, as well as a review of cur- washability and are impervious to rent literature in the food process-stains. While formica can go with Best way for farmers to avoid inc field. everything Choose comfortable the spring rush is to take soil The other two courses will cov- dining chairs that may double for samples in the fall immediately er basic principles in packaging, company seating, after harvest w hich allows plenty 'quality control, bacteriology, heat There should be a convenient of time to get testing results and'transfer and use, sanitalion. mar-;place to store blankets, pillows, arrange for needed fertilizer pur- keting, nutrition, and food lawsjlinens for the convertible bed so thases before spring. 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