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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1947)
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1947 PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CKNTKAL OKEC.ON I'KKSS Th. Rd Full.lln (wkl,l IWU 1MI Th. ftnri BulWIn trwlrl l Fulimlie.1 Kv.r Aiu-rnooti fcwwl SiuiMy nd Crtin lloluw. hi Vh. Bnd Enund u Second Clui lUtter. JnurT . 1IT. ro.toHlc M Band, Ow. Ln.l.r Aot f March S. 1:. ROBERT W. SAWYBR-KJitor-M.iuun- HKNRV N. KOWLSK-Aoci. Editor rttAMk U. lAMitlAN AdrrUtn tun An Indpndcnt Ntllr Sunuim lor th. Sguara Il. Clou BoloM, Clrn rolltio And Uw Ht Jnirou of Bond and Control Ortv-tn MKMUKit Al I'll Bl'RKAU Of l lKCliLAIIO.NS SCllSCKli riOS KAlbd n.. Kv Oorrior One Yow , -5 Ono W JJ-M bix Month . - S' Mootlu H.SJ Thrco Months H-o Ono MonUl JW Flout notify ua ol uy cnutf o( oodrou or ioUur to recount Ui. papor roaularly UNUSUAL CLOUDS A friend called our attention to some unusual clouds in the western sky this past week-end. He said they looked like a mountain mirage. We thought the clouds, Vavy- streamers that curved before ascending warm air, were the vapor trail of a passing airplane. The observer in charge of the local weather station was called in for advice. "Cloud formations in Central Oregon," said the observer, "are always unusual." And, he added, they are probably the most interesting found in any part of America. f actors entering into the unique cloud formations observed in this part of the state, so we learned, are varied. The dom inant factor is the clash of Great Basin and coastal weather, with the Cascades as the breastworks separating the conflict ing air currents. High over the Cascades, so it seems, the arid air masses from the interior region meet the damp air from the ocean, carried in by storms whirling in counter-clockwise from the Aleutians and north Pacific. The warmer, moist airs from the ocean go aloft as they sweep inland from the Pacific, and thousands of feet over the Cascades the first sign of an approaching storm are marked by delicate cirrus clouds. At sunset on Sunday, these ice clouds painted in the western sky dainty mother of pearl colors irisations, the weatherman called them. Below these high clouds, massive banks of middle clouds were fringed with another series of colors, traced in ice crystals. The observer said that these clouds are of the lenticular type, and frequently hang in the Cascade sky for hours, apparently without chang ing. However, he said, the clouds do change: Their eastern edges evaporate in the dry midstate atmosphere while their western fringes build up before the coastal air. From the observer we also learned that there are some 30 types of clouds charted at the local weather station. Within the types, there are numerous variations, and frequently there are combinations of the variations. Seasonal changes result in changes of combinations. Delicate rainbow colors characterize the high ice clouds of winter, the weather observer said, but summer yields the most gaudy colors, as thunderheads break up in the sunset skies. These thunderheads, so it appears, are literally "cloud factories," and out of the remnants of the massive cumulonim bus develop clouds that range from cirrus, probably 25.000 feet high, to the stratus that creeps along the sides of moun tains. We agree. Central Oregon clouds are unusual. Washington Column Bv ryir KdKon (NKA Woahinston Corroopondont) Washington, P. C. Some thliiR now was aiUU'd to the Wash ington labor picture with the is suance ot an ll polnt labor iv form program by the department of commerce. Heretofore in government ad ministrative circles, department of labor has boon labor and de partment of commerce has been management. Each minded its own business before Henry Wal lace became secretary of com merce. His successor. W. Averell Harriman. is apuaivntly carrying on the Wallace tradition, but will). reverse English. And when the department of eominerce starts telling how labor laws should be changed, that's news. Though given in general terms, the commerce statement goes far beyond the president's labor re form recommendations to con gress. It is also just as broad as anything proposed by the republi cans in congress. Briefly, it in cludes such principles as these: The public interest must be paramount in any labor-management relations. Labor practices which retard production should be eliminated. Employes must have complete freedom to bargain individually. Violence must be eliminated individual merit must be recognized. There must In equality before the law for both employe and employer. .Laws for j the preservation of order must be i strengthened and enforced. This program was drawn up by the department of commerce small business advisory commit tee. That's an organization of IS private businessmen. Its function is to advise the department on how it can aid small business. Such a group is, of course, free to make any recommendations it chooses on any subject, without committing the government. But the fact that this labor reform program was issued as a depart ment of commerce statement gives it at least a semi-official status. Secretary Harriman is to be deeply The Bigger It Gets the Less Chance It Has 1 MMMflBBMmW.j MIIUIUP V iif I H PIPUI. .Ill in in ! 47 aZW lo.: 'l)K 'Voice Of America' Programs j Will Be Beamed To Russians i ii'.o. oir w President By Donald ,1. Gonzales (Umtod tmo Surf Corroapundrnt) Washington. Jan. 21 'tr The known state department's plan to skip Interested in labor soviet censorship wiih dally Ktis- THE WAY TO DO IT ! If Bend's city charter is in need of an overhaul, not an im possibility after all the years it has been in service, the method endorsed by the, chamber .of commerce directors is the one to use. The directors' recommendations recognize that any change should be preceded by careful study of the charter itself and of ways by which weaknesses, if they eist, may be remedied. Also recognized is the desirability of delegating this analysis to a group so selected and so operating that its find-, ings will present a cross section of community opinion. Fin-, ally, on the basis of these findings, the suggested changes ' should be referred by the commission to the people for their approval. j It is an orderly way of handling the situation and one which, ' we would say, should promise most in constructive results, We hope that the commission will see fit to follow the direc tors, recommendations. recruited and Is working on the broadcasts. The Munich trans mitter began beaming programs Doc. 15 to Balkan countries. 1 Allhough the United Slates has not officially informed Moscow of its forthcoming broadcasts to the KuK.siMii people, stale department I officials have been in close touch with the American embassy there i to find out the number of possible 1 listuners and the best program time. i Atmnromlv Ihero nrr onlv 7n . ' Secretary Harriman has set up, rr i,i ,n fr 00 lo (-W radio sots in Husslil relations. He docs not believe sian-language broadcasts is sche- tnat tne department of commerce duled to begin about teb. la, it has any business trying to admin-1 was learned yesterday, ister the labor laws or administra-1 The "Voice of America" pro tion labor policy. But he does be- f grams will originate in New York, lieve that anyone interested in They will be relayed to Kussian business production must be in- listeners during early evening terested in maintaining labor hours from a ooworlul transmu- Pe5ce- . i ter In Munich. Germany. 1 '! Program planning calls for an will be "carefully screened from fair and factual" basis so they 111 not he objectionable to the soviet government. Henorted plans to start the ser- llh a rocoiueu talK ny Truman have been shelved. Olio official said that the first broadcast protxibly would begin "inausplclotisly with a little footnote that this is the rd for eign language broadcast to be started by the Untied Slates." Bend's Yesterdays (From Th Bulletin FiUi) I ll'l KKN VKAItS AtiO Uiiniiaiy VI, I'.mt A proposal him lieen made that the city of Mend make n hid lor the 1'ii si Nallonal bank building for use as a city hall. (.). U. I'ollver, posiiniistoriit fill ver for the past ,'IA yearn. In leav ing noon to make Ills home III Pol l laud. TWKNTVI'IVIC VKAItS AtiO tJanuary ill. iWJt) Many Bond residents are in terested In the location of it good ski area near the city mid most of I hem believe that sueh an area Stalin Admits Deterioration Of Friendship Now York, Jan. VI lUn Premier Josef Stalin helloven thai rein lions Ih'Iwooii Hie Hulled Sliilox and ItiiKHlaii govoriiiiienlH liiivn di'lerloniloil, lull that lolallons between Iho iieole of llm two milium are boiler uud "Iho dan ger of a now war Is not real," Kl- Hull ltooxcvolt Haiti in a copy. : rlghlod Htory In Look Magiilne. i l,....u..,...tl 1(1 111 H,-l-t,lllll ,tf III, can he found. 1-orinaili.n .f a win-. , , ,,,,. ,,, ,.. lor sports club Is also being dls-, (Vm,K.,. a , Slu,n-. ,,,,. . ly cussed. I Kiomlln In Moscow, mild Hint Iho W B. Smith has heel lot ted , , upmared to Ik- In president of the Arnold Irrlga-, U,MU uhwutsU ,., lion company. I .,, w,n Koo.evell hud ee tv imam iwiei- is in ui-ihi loony , , , ....uaiy from .Shevlln camp. allii- eo.nmei.U on re Dr. U. C. Coo, an early day re Itleut of Bend, was a visitor hero today. REA Finances May Be Slashed lutloltM bolwis'll Iho Iwo powers woio made when UoonovcIi asked: Ktnllii Itcpllcn "To what do you iioiIIm IIio lessoning In friendly relations nml I understanding between our two I countries sluei Iho death of ' Franklin IttKiiM'velt?" Stalin answt'iotl: "1 fool thai If this qticulon re. Iiitin lo relations and understand ing between the American and itUKSlnn m'oIom, no tleterloratlon Washington, Jan. 21 ill11 move gol under way In congress' Monday to curtail or halt govern ment loans to rural electric co-oix'rativea. It was touched off by circular ) ,a,,n vUxn-, hut on Iho con lotiors from a co-op official mty- ,lal.y tvliulons have Improvrtl. Ing the ropubllcnn-coinroll.'d con-1 A, , relallons Ih-iwih-ii iho gn-ss might "sabotage" the rural ,wo governiuonls. there' have olecirlflcalion iirogiain. : H,. mlsiindersiaiidliigs. t'orialn- Chairman I'lare K. Hoffman, doterlorallon has lakon platv and It.. Mich., of the house cxet uiive ,(, K,vl ,,,,, , ,ale( that cxpondlluroa commllloe. denounc ln,.lr i-eimion, would oven de ed the letters as "propaganda i,ioraio null further, lint I k,-,. and demanded to know If they wore paid for with government (anils. "If the coops are using gov ernment money for I'm proa ganda, it Is Illegal." Hoffman said, "and If Ihev've mil iiiiueh of their own money to Use for . '""''I ruM' ' in iikiii ioiiiiiii'I this purpose, they don't need liny i,,,I,y from the governinont." , x'wer, a nothing frightful about this In Iho sense ot n violation of jkmci? ur a military conflict. Tlretl Of War "Not a single great power, oven If Its government uero anxious lo large allied as an adjunct of his own head-' h '""k ro'7, " " a "h nil t o lble of reviving the programs. ; " quarters an office of program ;AZric"n S lom r l lh'' """' ls ""l'tod to In-1 bHI planning. It is headed by Phil JSomd rau i CrPaSO as Hllssliin factories turn Hauser, who was one of Henrv ; d' ArnHcnn of fields ncluding re- OU'. mnre SP,S' In" Wallace's bright young men in '.A0 wir 7 i? 1 Admitting that the American-! In anj DKKIMilN'ii LAW SOt'OHT Salem, Ore., Jan. VI dli Min ing dredge operators would be re quired to romir defacement of stream banks and level dump piles within six months after com pleting oiwratlons untlor a bill drafted today by Hop. E. W. Killi ng, 1'nurle City. Hendryx Named To State Board Salem. Ore.. Jan. VI Hit - Ciov. l-jirl Sncl! today announced a potntmont of II. E. Hendryx. link er, as a member of the Stale board of CtHilogy and Mineral In duslrlos, suereodlng S. II. Willis Ion, who reslgntsl. consultant, formerly wns publish er of the tinker lleruld and edited a war II. nolher great H,wer, Iw. use now out cannot lxuodhly fight wllhoul one's H-ople and the iH'opio lire unwilling to fight. They mo llrcd of war. And ! sides, there are no understandable objectives to Justify n now war." The lalo president's son was accompanied during Iho Interview by his wife. Actress Kayo Kmei son. (Jili-nUmm rrowuted Itnosevelt put IV questions to l;illtl nn.l l,lo ir.. I, Hendryx. a mining engineer and OMl, UI' ,, ,H,. ' Asked if It were pos-dhlo for the rl.i,ru-ru,l.. It.,l,.u Ci.,.. ....I mining journal prior to World uyrwiiunlrt KuhsIii lo ll've side by- Hide III ik-bw, Stalin replied that Wllllston ri'slgmil because businiws reasons. Knoll said. BALLOT FOR CITIZENS OF BEND I am in favor of having 5 Commissioners 7 Commissioners Elected at large for the City of Bend. (Indicate choice by cross in box.) I am in favor of having the City Munici pal Judge elected by the people. (If not in favor, write in the word "not.") Please mail above at once to The Property . Owners Association. P.O. Box 828, Bend, Ore. Prior to January 27. PAID ADVERTISEMENT rfr. n ht young men in tirinK secretary of state James tJ7i ii j j j . Byrnes, long have neon per horvHjVa72"an addCda ""-bed over the meager facts f rSL I , '.?rmAly irectr i available to the Russian people. Z ' Tl'fu CI- Hifob The impetus for the Russian mt?rS y 1 he.lmPac,,Pf 'aoor; ianRUage programs came from h.J n im n b.uslDeSS .POliLy' Hci Byrnes last spring during the had nothing to do with the pre-lgrmy sessions of the council of Efi f,h.f,smal1 business ad-1 foreign, ministers in Paris. He 5S?r ? recommenda- ,oid intimates that the best way tions on labor reform. The whole to knife the lack of Russian thing came as a surprise to him. understanding would be through It was also a surprise to the de- direct broadcasts to the people, partment of labor, which, for thel Initiation of the Russian pro present has no comment. It may ! grams -was delayed until an adc mite ine iruman aaministration ;QUate Russian sDeaklnB force -I..- ....Inl.. I Admitting that the American- in any season and weather if suf- sponsored programs pose a "dell-: llciont ventilation exists to pro- cato" diplomallc problem, nffi- j vent discomfort to occupants of cials here state the broadcasts the building. o it was "not only jHissililo- It is l wise and entirely withlii the I bounds of reallallon." look a bit red in the face. Holly wood is used in scientific instruments, toys, furniture in lays, athletic goods and musical instruments. Use Bulletin Want Ads for Best Results tee m. She's Now! Smarter After months of squinting, and frowning ... be cause she would n't wear eye glasses . . . this little-lady now enjoys good vision and free dom from headaches with eye glasses accurately prescribed, made and fitted. Dr.M.B.McKenney Optometrist 908 Wall St. Phone S42-M could be hired. Technical difficul ties also held up the idea. State department sources said that a tentative staff of five full time and about 10 part-time Russian-speaking persons has been !.r. Nationally Known Silverplate . . . Just Received! HOLMES and EDWARDS Two popular patterns . . . "Danish Princess" and "youth." 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