TOPS IN SAFETY Most recent group of Broolu-Scanlon, Inc., employes to win recognition for art outstanding safety record it the Logging Maintenance Shop group which has just com pleted 21,000 man days without a lost time accident. Brooks-Scanlon awarded each member thermos bottle. In the picture, bottom row from left, Walt Moye, Darrell Harmon, Lonnie Shields, Barney Bennett, Jim Edwards and Ray Ross. Top row from left, Harold Grass, Ken Robinson, Dean Lowe, Allen Morley, Wayne Banay, Chuck Freeman, Les Kribs, and Clint Kennedy. Not present for the picture were Bud Lacey and Pat Murphy, foreman. Wool prices expected to decline moderately during rest of year WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Ag riculture Department said today world wool prices are expected to decline moderately during the re mainder ot 1963 because of com petition from manmade fibers. ;In a review of the wool situa tion, the department said that dur ing the early months of 1963, world prices were the . highest since late 1957 and early 1958 for the finer grades of wool, and the highest since early 1960 for the medium snd coarser grades. De mand was stable for the lower-than-normal supplies, due to low er carryover stocks and smaller production. ' The department said consump tion can" be expected to remain steady through 1963. Total use of all fibers is increasing, the agency said, but wool's, share is decreas ing. ' The higher level of wool prices probably will result in a greater blending or substitution of man- Boys of Today Are The Leaders of Tomorrow .... and THESE boys are a step ahead in preparing for tomorrow through the training received in newspaper route management. A Bul letin route gives a young man overall business experience .... buying at wholesale, selling at retail, collecting, keeping records and learning salesmanship. . . . . he learns to shoulder responsibility, to bs dependable, to serve the public to manage profits from his route ... all valuable experience in preparing for tomorrow. ;l Boys, k . . IN BEND Circulation Dept.. The Bulletin Office The Bulletin, Monday, May 27, 1963 -pL jj made fibers. This, in turn, the de partment naid, will cause a mod erate price decline during the rest of 1963. Domestic use of wool, cotton, and manmade fibers In 1962 total ed 38.4 pounds per capita. This was 8 per cent more than a year earlier. The per capital domestic use of all three fibers Increased wool, 5 per cent: cotton, 4 per cent; and manmade fibers, 16 per cent. Of the total per capita do mestic consumption, wool account ed for 3.1 pounds, cotton 22.9 pounds, and manmade fibers 12.4 pounds. The crop reporting board said planted acreages of the nine vege table processing crops for 1963 total 1,531,000 acres. This com pares with 1,657,000 acres planted to the same crops In 1962 and 1,643,000 in 1961. The declines for tomaloes, sweet corn, green lima beans, and cab- bane for kraut from 1962 more APPLICATION 12 year and older throughout Central Oregon . ' . I .1. - -!- I l-.L - I ,1 I. y. are inreresTea in ine Training ana prom orrerea inrougn monoge- ment of a Bulletin route, place your application now for future y openingt. REDMOND Meet Our Are Supervisor at S3 W. Cascade. Daily, 4 p.m.; Sat., 2 p.m. The Bulletiiv Serving Bend and Central Oregon Bend girl sets European trip Miss Pauline Peotter, daughter of Mrs. Wilamine Peotter. 105 Drake Koad. will tour Europe this summer under the auspices of People-to-People on a two month "journey to international understanding." Miss Peotter, a student at Stan ford University, will visit Spain, Portugal and France as a People-to-People student ambassador. During her stay in these coun tries she will meet and talk with European students in lecture halls, dormitories, private homes and youth hostels to help promote friendship and understanding among her foreign counterparts. than offset increases indicated for snap beans, beets, cucumbers, green peas, and winter spinach. The Foreign Agricultural Serv ice (FASl estimates world cattle numbers total a record 1.1 billion head, and hog numbers total a record 496 million head. INFORMATION PRINEVILLE M.et Our Area Supervisor at the Dairy Queen. Daily, 4:30 p.m.; S.t., 2:30 p.m. and Arab federation seems in doubt BEIRUT. Lebanon LTI-Syria and Iraq's apparent second thoughts on Arab federation to day placed their proposed union with Egypt in serious doubt. Both nations' ruling Baath so cialist parties have given clear indications in recent weeks they are having misgivings about im plementing the union plan reached in Cairo April 17. An abortive attempt during the weekend to overthrow the Bagh dad regime has heightened the difficulties. Anti-Baath sources here said they believed "only a miracle" can now save the ambitious un ion plans which were to go into effect by September. Fear Demlnatlen Observers believe the Baath leadership is delaying movements toward union because of fears they would fall under the domina tion of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, who would be the president of the new United Arab Republic (U.A.R.). They believe the Egyptian lead er's demand that they form national front governments Is only a cover for the eventual easing out of their party. In recent testa between Baath and Nasser supporters In Iraq and Syria, the Baahista have won new strength. Reports from Baghdad have said the weekend trouble was en gineered by groups supporting Nasser, Earlier this month, seri ous rioting between Nasserites and Baath supporters broke out in Syria. Nasser Still Strong But Nasser still enjoys strong support in his two potential part ners, according to observers here, and the struggle is by no means considered over. Cairo's semi-official Middle East News Agency (MENA) said Sat urday night that 60 army offi cers and 120 civilians were ar rested in Baghdad after they tried to overthrow Premier Maj. Gen. Ahmed Hassan Bakr. MENA announced Sunday night from Baghdad that 10 retired army officers and two civilians were executed Sunday for resist ing last February s revolution, which brought Bakr to power. HOLD IT DOWN LEBANON, IND. (UPD-Rich-ard Rounder has patented an electric device that measures noise and flashes red when things get too loud on his job. Rounder is a school bus driver. if you H "i MADRAS ether communities, write directly to The Bulletin Circul.tien Dept. She believes By Oey Peul.y UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPI "-Christopher Columbus was a Johnnie-Come-Lately to the New World, accord ing to a woman student of arch aeology. Mrs. W.R. Irwin, of the faculty of the University of Iowa, has concluded from extensive research that the Phoenicians beat Colum bus to Middle America by about 2,500 years. It's accepted, the said, that the Vikings also discovered America Maurine raps right wingers PORTLAND (UPD- Sen. Mau rine Neuberger, D Ore., Sunday warned the Pacific Northwest re gional conference of the AFL CIO's Committee on Political Ed ucation (COPE) of "tax exempt right wing groups." Mrs. Neuberger told the labor group that "dozens of tax-exempt right wing groups masquerading as education or religious organisa tions are today flooding the coun try with extremist partisan politi cal propaganda." The Oregon Democrat said such organizations were financed by tax-free contributions from busi nessmen, She listed several organ izations she said took in more STANDIFER'S BIG ANNIVERSARY SALE SPORT SHIRTS T-SHIRTS and Val. to $3.95 .1-98 rl MEN'S BRIEFS frV.Lt.HM .2-98 C-v p Q v.i. i. km 3.98 mtaSr l,"sulm 4Jo '' v.,. ,. $79s 4.98 U&afo " 4Zb y WORK PANTS BOYS' SPORT ; 2.98 JS&jM 1298 BERMUDA SHORTS 3.9 u SUMMER SLAX DRISS JL AIL SHIRTS W BOYS' short sleeved tAft jJ. SHIRTS lM(W 0NSAl l98 I " PHONE 382-2391 II BEND, OREGON W BUY NOW AND H f SAVE FOR $5 value GRADUATION! Columbus was ahead of Columbus, finding the North American continent about l.OM AD. Mrs. Irwin's research on who was first is compiled into a fas cinating chronicle of pre-Columbian culture in the Western Hemi sphere. Called "Fair Gods and Stone Faces" (St. Martin's Press) the book was eight years in re search and writing, she said. It is her first work about a field which she said always bsd in trigued her archaeology. than $5 5 million of tax exempt contributions annually. Mrs. Neuberger said the tax free Incomes and the shield of respectability "cloak their right wing propaganda." OFFICERS NAMED PORTLAND (UPD Mrs. John Schreiber Jr. of Portland was elected president of the Oregon Association for Retarded Children Saturday. Leonard Pugh of Corvallis was elected first vice president and Mrs. G. Buren of Salem was chosen second vice president. ATU YOUR SAVE FATHER'S DAY and GRADUATION 'lafe-comer' Until now, her writings mostly have been sports books for young people. Mrs. Irwin isn't belittling Chris topher Columbus. "His timing was right," she said in an interview during a visit to New York. "The Phoenicians and the Vik ings were too early," she said. "Columbus arrived at a time when the whole world was ready to expand and to colonize. "The achievement (of Colum bus) are many and our debt to him can never be lightly dis missed. "From 1492 on. the line of de velopment is essentially unbroken." IF YOUR INSURANCE PROBLEM IS LARGE or SMALL HALES 731 Franklin Ave. N ID AY LAST CHANCE ON FINE GIFTS fo New World But the Phoenicians, "the great.: seafarers of their time," landed in Middla America somewhere around 1.000 B.C.,' she has eon eluded. She stressed that this U' her personal conclusion from her research much has to be proved.'. But she suggested they were the" ones who gave origin to the legend of Quetzalcoatl, the fair-bearded' god, among the dark-skinned May as, Incas and Aztec. - 5 Mrs. Irwin speculates that th Phoenicians, busy trading up an4 down the African West Coast,' might have blown off course ant. riding Atlantic currents, found Middle America probably tha., West Indies. SEE INSURANCE AGENCY Ph. 382-5W1 TO FOR PS 1 -