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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1962)
o The Band Bulletin. Wetfnasday, July 25, 1962 -.7 ."L i -'"' .is?f. ? ; '--.ft 1: BEND FAMILY IN EUROPE Touring Europe at present are members of the Alva C. Goodrich family of Bend. From the left in this picture, taken at a stop at a London airport, are Sarah, Mrs. Goodrich, Mr, Goodrich, Sylvia and Rachel. Places to be visited include battle fields in Italy known to Goodrich in World War II. The family will return to Bend early in September. Lamb crop report indicates two per cent decline from '61 mark By Gaylord P. Godwin UFI Staff Writer WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Crop Reporting Board has esti mated the 1962 lamb crop at 21, 277,000 head, 4 per cent less than the 1961 crop, but 2 per cent above the 1951-60 average. The decline from the 1961 crop was the largest for any year since 1949. The lamb crop in thj 13 west ern states (11 Western states plus Texas and South Dakota) totaled 13,430,000 head, 4 per cent below Die crop in 1961 but 6 per cent above average. In Texas, where about 15 per cent of the Nation's lambs are produced, the 1962 lamb crop of 3,044,000 head was 6 per cent be low 1961, but 11 per cent above average. The 35 native sheep states pro duced 6,928,000 head of lambs this year, down 5 per cent from 1961 and 5 per cent below average. The Agriculture Department has abandoned for the time be ing any legislative propo sals which would lead to a mar keting program for the broiler in dustry. The advisory committee on broilers, established last Nov. 30. has been terminated. Present farm law exempts broilers from marketing agree ment and order provisions. The advisory committee was formed with the idea that the in dustry would agree on some sort 9 of recommenda:ions which would help stabilize the price of the bird. The committee met several times but could not agree on an over-all program. Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman announced termina tion of the committee in a brief statement. He said that "in view of tha narrow margin by which the committee approved recom mendations and the lack of agree ment on proposals discussed, the department does not plan to make any legislative proposals for the broiler industry at this time." The International Cotton Ad visory Committee in the July re view of the world cotton situation said production and, consumption of the fiber continue at high It. . els in many countries. Total production in 1961-62 was down only slightly from the 1960 61 record. Serious crop losses In India, the United Arab Republic, and Uganda were largely offset by record production in Central America, the Middle East, West ern Europe, and Sudan, and the bumper crop being harvested in Braz.l. July 1 stocks of feed grains and wheat were significantly below those of a year ago. It was the Irst decline for June since 1952, the Agriculture Department re ported. The department said corn ac counted for the major decline with 1 Shop Cashmans For Your Best HOT WEATHEi BUYS y Cool, Lightweight "e , . j Straw Hats A) , I Today's imtrttst Itylt. p" H," ' 1 and colors. Bt hero .' lf ! S early for be.t ..l.ction. 4) "C y REG. 2.95 to S.00 v" Reduced From Original Price f Entire Stock I Swim Trunks ( Chooit from our mag- B if nificont colliction of th I favorite styles In townl B ! REG. 2.95 to 5.95 I f Heat may have distorted rail in train wreck DIJON, France (UPI) - The train WTeck which killed 38 per sons and injured 47 near here Monday may have been caused by a rail distorted by summer heat, it was reported today. Engineer Michel Bosson said he sensed an "abnormality" in the track seconds before the crash. Investigating technicians said the wreck may have been caused by a rail "deformed" by the sun which has been baking the rail line for several days. A spokesman for the manage ment of the nationalized French railways confirmed that the dis torted-rail report is "one of the theories we are investigating. Five cars of the 85-mile-an-hour P a r I s - to - Marseille Express jumped the track, and one of them plunged 150 feet off a via duct into a rocky ravine. The dead and most of the seriously wounded were In that car. a 12 per cent drop below the July record holdings of a year ago. Stocks of corn in all positions on July 1 were 2,486,992,000 bushels. Wheat stocks in storage on July 1 totaled 1,304,275,000 bushels, 8 per cent below last year's record stock but 51 per cent greater than the 1951-60 average July 1 carryover. Barley showed the sharpest de cline for the feed grains at 20 per cent. Oat stocks were down 15 per cent, sorghum grain stocks down one per cent Sf'iffer drug reform urged by 5 Demos WASHINGTON (UPI) Five Democrats who think drug manu facturers are using Americans as unwitting guinea pigs to test new medicines have urged the Senate to stiffen Sen. Estes Kefauver's much-rewritten drug reform bill. The five Kefauver and Sens. Philip A. Hart, Mich.; John A. Carroll, Colo., Thomas J. Dodd, Conn., and Edward V. Long, Mo. said in a formal report late Tuesday that most drug prices are unreasonably high, "Today important patented drugs are being sold to druggists at prices which represent mark ups of 800 to 1,200 per cent," they complained. The five Democrats are a mi nority of the Senate Judiciary Committee which rewrote and wa tered down a drastic reform bill proposed by Kefauver after a 26-month-long investigation. The committee majority five Republicans and four Southern Di mocrats said the revamped bill aimed to meet President Ken nedy's March 14 call for better protection to drug users. Two members of the majority. Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen, 111., and Roman L. Hruska, R-Neb., wrote a separate reply to the charges of Kefauver and his backers. The tremendous healing power of today's prescriptions, the Re publicans said, have reduced doc tors' fees and hospital bills by eliminating or reducing the need for hospitalization. They said Kefauver and his sup porters also ignored the fact that even if all drug industry profits were eliminated the price of pre scriptions would not drop notice ably. Portland food prices decline SAN FRANCISCO (UPD-Food Prices in Portland averaged slightly lower in June than in May according to the Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statis tics. The Bureau's food index for the month of June stood at 104.2, down 0.1 per cent from May, but up 1.4 per cent from a year ago. The major factor in the decline was a drop of 1.1 per cent in the meats, fish and poultry group. Miscellaneous foods, eggs and dairy products were lower. Prices of fruiU and vegetables rose 1.3 per cent. Prices of cereals and bakery products also increased. SCREENS TRI-COUNTY WINDOW PRODUCTS EV 2-2824 or HI 7-7095 Goldberg urges WASHINGTON (UPI- Nederal mediators said Tuesday it is too early yet to determine whether a plea by Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg might speed up scttle mtnt of a strike of nuclear sub marine workers at Groton, Conn. Officials of the Federal Media tion and Conciliation Service con ferred all day Monday with rep resentatives of the 8.500 striking workers and the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics Curp. The talks resumed 'today. The six-day strike has hailed vork on 11 nuclear subs. Gold berg attended opening talks Mon Boy, 10, drowns ROCKAWAY (UPI) - Ten-year-old Jack Dale Dunn drowned in Lake Lytle here Tuesday after noon and his 11-year-old brother, Dennis, narrowly escaped the sjr.e fate in a vain rescue at tempt. The Tillamook County sheriff's office said Jack fell of a dock in to the lake. Dennis and Virgil Dunn. 15, found a raft and tried to go to the aid of their brother. However, Die sheriff's office said Dennis fell off the raft and iMWs-f- s " kv; ;!" ..vj.i.--' htS'-r twiiiT-irttnrtT i- -r- uuo cotion w cortex .-,.,..- ii r. . -r- j h i ' . p-Nj"''''"''' famous buys any time of year, now extra big II CS I -fGwi- 6S5i'. i.s at this special low pncel Come in, comparel U ft1! I L " ' S. full 81" x 108' or full Sanforized fitted . 1 67 , i H '-fe ' ! p"low 42" x 39" 2 for 77e ,:,n "nfori"ed f,iicd - " I rl' j NATIONWIDE PASTELS t - J-"." same famous quality as white in latest fash- r f -r; -r- ;.ti--'r ion colors: vellow, green, pink, blue, lilac. 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Nylon bound. Fawn, peacock, cherry, lavender, green. fast settlement in day morning with representatives of both sides and later urged a speedy end to the walkout. Goldberg said the strike was having a critical impact on the n.ition's defense program and hinted that if it continued, the government would be forced to use its Taft-Hartley powers. A mediation spokesman said separate meetings held villi offi cials of the New London Meml Trades Council and th company Listed until about midnight. The spokesman said the talks have been exploratory, aimed at form- in Coast lake was pulled to safety by an un identified motorist. The motorist apparently did not realize that Jack also was in the lake. Divers found Jack's body short ly afterward, but efforts to revive him failed. SIX ESCAPE REDS KRONACH, Germany (UPI) Western border police said Mon day six East German youths fled to West Germany last weekend and asked for political asylum here. WTO A n f 0 L4Z2Ao 10 88 BIANKIT ON IAY-AWAYI 1 in tmaW anMunll. Trmf th yov chag ovnt mny tifn fm Grofon tieup ul; ting a possible approach to-1 Astoria fit; 51 ward negotiating the main issues. Baker !:) 03 The strikers are members of 11 j Brookings 58 49 craft unions, all but one of them i Huriis ua 59 affiliated with the AFL-CIO. The ... ,. mi, i. 1, ..,.. n I Klamath Fa s 83 50 11th is a teamsters group. Ihej largest group involved are boiler-j Lakevicw 87 59 makers. Mcdford 101 61 Hie strike began Thursday and 1 Newport 61 48 the workers have rejected two: North Bend 64 51 tentative settlements a proved by Pendleton 104 75 their negotiators. Wages were not Portland 87 53 a primary issue. The principal is- Salem 94 50 sues were seniority, sick leave The Dalles 96 72 and employe insurance programs. Chicago ta 68 Under the Taft-Hartley Law, Miami 86 85 the President could obtain a back- New York 79 62 to-work injunction thai would halt San Francisco 57 52 (lie strike for SO days. 'Washington 82 67 Ask AL NIELSEN About TAX FREE INCOME Representing E. F. HINKLE & CO., INC. 1036 Wall St. EV 2-1421 WHITE 3 boo s SUPER VALUES I TEMPERATURES High Low Pep Bend 89 53