o Or O O O O O The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, June 19, 1931 - ' 7 ?gs? n I Mj i " v m-im - 1 ti"v FMiiVp'r , i , tAJi.H. .., ,M, ..Tna-- RODEO DAYS NEAR Looking forward to rodeo dayi, th royal court of the 1962 Crooked River Roundup itopj to drop a coin in the wiihing well at Chrittmai Valley. Girls who will reign over the rodeo in Prineville Aug. 10-12 are, left to right, Carol Houston, PHneville; San dra Miller, Culver; Karen Jonos, Powell Butte. Additional timber sale hit by Forest Service chief WASHINGTON (UPI) Forest Service chief Edward P. Cliff warned today that the sale of more national forest timber to the lumber industry might have a further depressing effect on the market. But Cliff told the Senate Com merce Committeo that his agency would try to sell the full allow able cut to help moct complaints by the lumber industry that H could not got enough logs to keep mills in operation. "It might have a further de pressing effect on the market un less demand improves," he told West Coast senators who ques tioned him for two and a half hours on Forest Service timber Railroads begin layoffs to offset wage increases CHICAGO UPl Five of the nation's m a i o r railroads an nounced Monday tlu-y have be Run employment cutbacks to off set costs of wage increases award ed this month to nonoperaling personnel. At loast two other lines planned layoffs. The Rock Island Lines an nounced that 300 off-train em ployes have been laid off and up to 150 mote will bo fiuloughed within 30 days. The Northern Pacific said it laid off M workers Inst week and more would loso their jobs. The Milwa.ikeo Kond said nt least 300 off-train employes could expect layoffs. The Missouri Pa cific said Its layoffs wero undei way but cave ne estimate of the number of persons involved Wavne Johnston, president of the Illinois Central Itailroad. said his lino would cut 6.0 persons from its ayroll. The St. Umis and San Fran cisco (Frisco! Railway said il planned a wink reduction equal to the increased wage cost result ing from the 102 ce.ts an hour average pay boost given 450.000 nnoornting employes in a con tract settlement this month which was recommended by a presiden tial emergency hoard. A spokesman (or the Great Northern Railway said it has not yet decided upon lavnffs but we won't say there won't be" any. The Santa Fe Railroad said it has not yet cut back i'. pa) roll but higher costs and cargo slumps may force "adjustments." sale policies. Cliff said the outlook for in creased demand was "not too en couraging." He noted that fore- easts of more housing starts were not being reflected in the lumber market. The committee, under Sen. War ren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., wound up a long series of hearings on the problems of the lumber in dustry. The hearings, presumably called to study the impact of lum ber imports from Canada on the U.S. lumber industry, ranged far and wide in covering other prob lems of the depressed domestic Industry. Mori Attacks Red Tap Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., re newed his attack on the Kennedy administration, saying it was guilty of "red tape and delay" in taking action to help the de pressed lumber industry. Insisting that his criticism of Cliff was "wholly impersonal," Morse termed the Forest Service chief's statement "a Forost Serv ice snow job." The Oregonian wont on to at tack the Forest Servico as hav ing been granted too much au thority. Ho recommended setting up an independent appeals board to provide an "effoctivo check or. the agency's power. Sen. Thomas II. Kuchel, R-Calif questioned Cliff sharply on what steps it would take to make more timl)er available when it could be done to help an individual commu nity, particularly in Northern Cal ifornia. Cliff said the Forest Service had allowed bigger cuts in some areas, notably Northern Ida ho, but said it was "not a healthy thing" to exceed tho allowable cut except when lasses could be "recouH"d" after economic con ditions improved. Advises Ordtrly Salts "The most significant contribu tion we could make is to sell (lie full allowable cut and to do it In an orderly way." Cliff told Kuchel. He said that when the current fiscal year ends June 30. the Forest Service would have sold 1.4 billion hoard feet of its 15 billion allowable cut for Cali fornia. Sen. Clair Fugle, Ii-Calif., con tended that the Forest Service was not allowing timlier to bo harvested when It was "ripe." Likening timber to a poach crop. he said it had to ho cut when it w;is ri(e and should not be left to he "harvested by iire and the insect lumber company." Cliff said it was not possible to sell all Die timber that would he made available on that basis. He said an effort was made to get rid of overripe and diseased trees while it was still possihW to sal vage them. DEMAND HEIDER'S FUNERAL HOME Hill & Grnhj Sts. Phone EV 2-5552 day or nite We are never undersold, knowingly! Bend, Oregon CRANE CAUSES DELAY SHREWSBURY, England (UPI) A crane landed on the main run way of Shrewsbury Air Force Base Monday and delayed all fly ing for almost an hour while air men chased it. They finally cap tured the bird and sent it to the Chester Zoo. ' O o ou Student group" reports arrest in Mississippi CLARKSDALE, Miss. (UPI)-A group of northern college stu dents who wanted a first hand look at Mississippi segregation customs said Monday they were arrested for their troubles. A white attorney accompanying the biracial student group said he and the four students were held incommunicado for about 20 hours by authorities who asked a white coed if she ever had sexual relations with a Negro. I just couldn't believe that something like this could happen in the United States, said Vicky Burroughs, 21, of Greene, Iowa, Miss Burroughs, a student at Coe College, said she "answered all their questions about my rela tionship with Negroes except their last 'did I ever have sex ual relations with a Negro?' "I felt it was unnecessary to answer that," she said. The others arrested were Ne gro coed Jean Johnson, 21, of Des Moines, Iowa, and two white stu dents from Oberlin College in Obcrlin, Ohio, Davis F. Campbell, 19, Tulsa, Okla., and Philip K. Ensley, 18, Westchester County, N.Y.. The attorney, William L. Higgs, 26, of Jackson, Miss., said he and the others were arrested Sunday night when they left a meeting in a Negro church. ' They told us they were arrest ing us on suspicion," said Higgs, unsuccessful congressional candi date against Rep. John Bell Wil liams, D-Miss. Higgs, a Harvard graduate, said the group was taken to the Coahoma County jail and held for "investigation of conduct threat ening a breach of the peace." We were held incommunicado for almost 20 hours," Higgs said. "It was just like a Russian po lice stale." Campbell said he was asked if he ever dated Negroes. "I told them I did," Campbell replied. The students said they came here to study Mississippi's racial situ ation first hand. ftobtrt? Kennedy hat eomrWt Estcs cast on WASHINGTON (UPI) Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said Sunday the administration has to take responsibility for the BUlie Sol Estes case because some of the officials involved were ap pointed by it. But Kennedy said the admini stration must also .x given credit for taking the lead in the investi gation of Estes and his financial empire. Plans for annual rockhound Pow Wow made at Prineville Special to Th BulUtln I style. PRINEVILLE Intensive prep- No charge is made to the gen- arations are currently underway , eral public to attend any pro- for the annual gathering of rock hounds of the northwest at their annual summer Pow Wow, to be held for the fourth consecutive year at the Crook county fair grounds, according to C. H. Rob inson, Pow Wow chief. The fairgrounds will be opened for campers July 2, with the Pow Wow officially scheduled for July 4-8. Between 2,000 and 3.000 per sons are expected to attend the conclave of rockhunters. Campers will be met at the fair ground gates immediately south gram, or to visit ine row wow displays. Groups join in weekend outing Eleven members of a Sisters Cub Scout pack took to the woods last weekend for an overnight out ing, accompanied by members of the Bend Civil Air Patrol, U.S. Forest Service, and Lelco and Barclay loggers. Men and boys joined forces dur ing the evening and competed in numerous contests at their camp site at Canyon Creek. Winning the cooking test was ". . .before this became a na- Gerald Garrison of the Forest tional question we arrested him, j Service. Harold Rollins of Lelco he was indicted, (and) action was 'was second, taken against the various Individ-1 T.plrn ad Rivlnv WfTftrs tnnV " - -" j --6B-- irnnnn pales liiniiimidLciv buuiii ' . . ... . .... uais when it was found that they; first place in the horse pulling " prineville bv a reception and lnS ln !,alcm u'" rece,ve ?, Ior ngement committee headed . . , M tit : tntn Tvnh Vallov from thp wpst. fli Shrnvpr Pnnpvie. I J , Big set Valley road The Oregon State Highway Commission at its June 27 meet- opening on Tygh have acted Improperly, said. Kennedy Kennedy made his comm&ito on a televised interview. A House subcommittee will re sume hearings Tuesday or Wed nesday in its investigation of Estes' government grain storage operations. A Senate investigations subcommittee plans to start a pub lic inquiry the following week into all aspects of his dealings. Kennedy emphatically denied that the administrati 1 has tried to cover up the Estes case. He indicated the administration wns willing to "take responsibility" for those officials appointed by his brother, President Kennedy, who have "violated their trust." He said there were a lot of peo ple working for the federal gov ernment and as long as you have human beings, you are going to have some kind of corruption." Man killed by falling limb THE DALLES (UPI) Donald E. Wetmore, 42, The Dalles was killed Sunday in an accident near Friend, about 20 miles south of here. He was cutting a limb when another limb fell and struck him. SUIT OF ARMOR NEEDED LONDON (UPD-An item in the personal column of the Times of London today said: "Gentleman requires suit of armor. Even Brand 'X' considered." contest, with the Forest Service and CAP taking second. ln the egg throwing contest, CAP and the Forest Service won first place honors, with Barclay and Lelco lowers winning second. Cub : :iits attending the over night outing were Larry Garrison, Dennis He'n?y, Lyle Hammack, Garry Huff, Stanley and Steve Miller, Daniel Sanders, Albert Shrum, Jeffery Smith, Steve Rol lins and Erwin Trowbridge. Magazine puts spotlight on area's angling "Fishing the Deschutes ' Coun try" is the title of an illustrated article appearing in the current issue of a new motor publication, "The Traveler," published in San Francisco. It is the featured article of the month in the magazine. "Just south of Bend on the sun rise side of the Cascades lies a land of lovely forest-fringed lakes, clear mountain streams and whitecapped peaks," the article relates in preface to a 10-page re port on the Deschutes country. Featured picture is one taken at East Lake at sundown, with a vacationist looking across a fleet of boats toward the Paulina high lands. Another picture shows the Three Sisters and Bachelor Butte across Crane Prairie reservoir. A map is used in a "June tour of the month" article. arrai by Mrs. Staffing of a Pow Wow office in side the gates is being arranged. All rockhunters are to register upon arrival, and will be given a program, a general summary of the Pow Wow and rockhunting maps at the registration desk. The special feature of the Pow Wow, an array of tail-gate dis plays, is to be arranged as rap idly as Pow Wow members with specimens to show or sell, arrive on the scene. No fee is charged to tailgating, though anyone plan ning to engage in this lively ex change and sale of rock speci mens must be a member of the organization, Robinson states. The regular program of the Pow Wow includes field trips to the rock hunting areas in the vi cinity during the day. A number of guided trips are planned in ad dition to the free-lance search for new and different specimens with which rockhounds state the area abounds. Each night of the Pow Wow, impromptu programs will be held at the fairgrounds, climaxed with a planned program on the final night. July 7, to be emcee'd by Robinson. Among side attractions of the Pow Wow will be a fluorescent display of rocks, owned by Elroy McCaw. Meals will be served from the 4-H kitchen by women of the - Prineville Rotana Club, with the exception of Saturday and Sunday morning breakfasts, which will be served by the Prine ville Ridge Riders, in buckaroo on the route of U.S. 197. This project will extend from the Tygh grade summit, a!;out 12 miles south of Dufur, down to Tygh Valley, a distance of 5.9 miles. The plan calls for construction of two main travel lanes with an additional lane provided for slow moving vehicles. Some detours will be provided during construc tion, but in various locations tra vel will be routed through the contractor's operations due to the roughness of the surrounding ter rain. A new reinforced concrete bridge will be constructed over Butler Creek. While the structure is being built, traffic will be rout ed around the site on a detovtr. An oiled surface is to be cdn structed on this section of high way at this time, with asphaltie concrete pavement to be placed at a later date. This project, which will probably be the most costly on the entire routes of eith er U.S. Highway 197 or U.S. 97, is being financed jointly with fed eral and state funds. It is sched uled to be completed by the fall of 1963. Another project on the route, generally known as The Dalles California Highway, an important feeder into U.S. Highway 97, calls for grading and paving of 4.96 miles of the highway between Eightmile Creek and Dufur. Climbing lanes are to be provid ed. The location follows the pres ent alignment, in general. f . ., ...,... ... , ,; j. . --. - - " ' "'''''y'''W"'W"y3twy ., ..fumrrmmommir ' ' . " ... , , ;.Tiv. s i t . . ; - ' " . j - ? v.. ; t 1 , ' s ! a- ' i ' i ' ' a ' ' . . t ' v i ' ' ' ;.V 1 , ' v '''. y ' . ft-'". C ' 1 ' . -'Vk ' '-S; '-"-'j cj: .? ' - v " ''' V ':X' " HOW tO run a household Without much running: Today's wise housewife saves her energy and her disposition, gets twice as much done in a day. A convenient bedroom extension helps her run errands, tend to club and church work, devote more time to her home and family. For all its daytime privacy and nighttime security, a Princess extension phone in color-for example-costs only ?2 a month plus tax and installation, Take stcpto save steps-make "order bedroom phone" the first important call you make. (C&y) pacific northwest bell o 0 (3 Q o o a o