The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 04, 1949, Page 3, Image 3

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    Tuei., Oct. 4, 1949-Tho Newt-Review, Roseburg, Or. 3
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: A, !. Li , J
I K A I L fc R OF 1950 Helm Olsen stands tl (he re
friferator in Die convertible dinette of a 1850 ll'i-foot trailer
displayed at Bourbon, lnd. Seat can be made into a bed.
Mill Race Pollution
Bans Pledge Dunking
EUGENE, Oct. 4. .T Univer
sity of Oregon fraternities have
been warned not to dunk pledges
into the mill race because of
Pollution of the water.
Dr. Fred N. Miller, health ser
vice officer of the school, said
one sinus Infection had been trac
ed to a dunking during the re
cent rushing period.
Chief
Umpqua
Is
the
Symbol . ,
of
UMPQUA
DAIRY
Products
Look for Chief Umpqua tht
next time you buy
Buttermilk Milk and Cream
Butter
Orange Drink
Chocolate Milk
Frozen Foods
t.w
'if
MUST HAVE
PHOSPHORUS
' Uoumu um mere
phosphorue then
many otner crops.
Application of Su
perphosphate in
duces fir etart,
larger yild. greater
nodulation, higher
quality, finer, more
palatable id. and
more fertile Holds
when plowed under.
For Best
Results
Apply
Si'mplot
Red
Diamond
Supcrphosphati
Unions Trying To
Lure Farm Hands,
Senator Charges
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 P
Senator Robertson (D-Val Mon
day said organized labor has
tried to influence farm legisla
tion in order to draw farm work
ers into unions. Admini
tration leaders promptly denied
it.
This issue was Injected Into
debate as the senate took up a
compromise farm bill drafted by
Senator Anderson (DNM), for
mer secretary of agriculture.
The bill would include the cost
of labor as part of the formula
for figuring parity payments. An
derson said labor costs would in
crease subsidy payments to
farmers by about six per cent.
(Parity is the price designed
to give farmers a fair return oi
their crops in terms of what they
must buy.)
Robertson told the Senate the
inclusion of labor costs in the
parity formula "is part of a pro
gram to organize farm workers
in unions."
He said he has been told the
American Federation of Labor
had endorsed this part of the An
derson farm bill.
Anderson said if the AFL had
taken such action "it has been
kept secret from me."
And Senator Pepper (D-Fla)
said there is "no unseen hand of
labor in the bill."
Democratic leader Lucas (111)
said the working man would get
very little benefit from labor
costs being included. "I want to
make it clear" he said, "that
there is nothing in the bill that
goes to the agricultural worker
himself."
The Anderson bill would set up
a flexible system of government
backed price supports, ranging
from 75 lo 90 per cent of parity
for most basic crops. The price
props would come down as crop
supplies went up.
Bandits Caught
After Cape Cod
Home Looting
OSTERVILLE, Mass., Oct. 4.
(.?) Two pistol brandishing rob
bers, listed as from San Fran
cisco and Milwaukee, Monday
roused a sleeping couple, looted
their Cape Cod home of $20,000
in valuables, and fled only to be
trapped at a bridge to the main
land, police reported.
Donald Parsons Jr., 30, a
Woods Hole marine bioligical la
boratory staff member, and his
wife,, Phyllis, 28, were awakened
at 4 p. m., by the two men who
took suitcases and loaded them
with jewelry and antiques.
Without awakening the couple's
three young children asleep in
another part of the house the
robbers bound and gagged the
parents and locked them In a
closet.
Breaking out of the locked cu
bicle, Mr. and Mrs. Parsons noti
fied the Hyannls police. The po
lice swiftly threw road blocks
across the two Cape Cod canal
highway bridges at Sagamore and
Bourne, the robbers' only means
of escape from the cape.
Bourne police, at the mainland
end of the Bourne bridge, short
ly afterward halted a big car
Its back seat loaded with valua
bles identified as from the par
sons home.
They arrested the two men in
the car. who were hooked as
Henry Leo Schnit7.er. 21, of San
Francisco, and Gerald H. Noble,
25, of Milwaukee.
Taken to Hyannis police head
quarters, they were charged with
breaking and entering in the
night time and larceny.
President Truman, Ur.de.
Taft-Hartley Act, Can Stop
Stee Strike 80 Days Longer
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON. Oct. 4. (.4v-You may be wondering: why is
there a steel strike? I thought the Taft-Hartley act was sup
posed to stop big strikes?
First, T-H can't stop any strike but can only delay one. Sec
ond, President Truman hasn't used T-H in the iteel case but
still can if he wishes to.
The strike, which started Oct
1, already was delayed 78 days
hy presidential action. If Mr.
Truman wants to use T-H now.
he can stop it for another 80
days.
This Is an explanation of what
has been done and can be done.
The CIO Steelworkera were
supposed to strike at midnight,
July 15. On that day Mr. Truman
appointed a three-man fact-finding
board to look into the case,
hear both sides, and recommend
a solution.
So until the board could finish
it work, the steelworkera and
the steel owners agreed there'd
be no shutdown or strike. The
board reported back to the pre
sident Sept. 10.
A couple of times between
Sept. 10 and Oct. 1 a strike
upon the president's request.
When It finally started Oct. 1. 78
days had elapsed since Mr. Tru
man appointed "his fact-finding
board July 15.
Thin 7May delay was volun
tary on both sides, the union and
the steel companies. There was
no law compelling them to agree
to the president's request for
delay.
If he had used T-H. Mr. Tru
man could have delayed the
strike by law. This is how T-H
would have worked in this case:
First. Mr. Truman would have
had to decide a steel strike was
a national emergency, endanger
ing the nation's health and safe
ty? Then he'd appoint a board o f
fact-finders to study the dispute.
Then it reports to the president
on the facts.
(There's a difference between
the T-H type of fact-finding board
and the one used in the present
American Ship
Eludes Blockade,
Reaches Shanghai
SHANGHAI, Oct. 4. (PI The
American merchantman Flvlng
Trader docked in Shanghai Mon
day after slipping through the
blockade while nationalist gun
boats escorted two of her sister
ships to the Chusan islands.
The ship was four days over
due from Hong Kong. She spent
most of that time outside of Chi
nese territorial waters near the
mouth of the Yangtze river where
two Chinese warships immohil
ized the outgoing Flvlng Inde
pendent and Flying Clipper, her
sister ships.
The Flying Independent's captain
radioed earlier that the British
armed frigate St. Bridge' St. Bay,
was standing by, within blinker
contact range and ready to give
aid in case of extreeme emer
gency. However, the U. S. and
Britain do not recognize the
blockade. The U. S. navy has re
fused to intercede.
The two ships were halted
Thursday at the mouth of the
Yangtze river. They were out
bound from Shanghai. Aboard are
125 Korean refugees, 15 Ameri
can, British, and other European
passengers, and 10.000 tons of
cargo. The Flying Independent's
skipper reported his situation was
critical due to stormy weather
and food shortage.
(In Seoul, U. S. Economic Co
operation administration officials
said the ships are carrying $1,
659,000 of aid goods for Korea.
The cargo includes three Stinson
planes to inaugurate Korea's first
postwar commercial airline.) .
WOOL SALE FIZZLES ..
CASPER. Wyo.. Oct. 4. (V
A three-day wool sale scheduled
to start here Monday was can
celed because of the lack of in
terest In similar sales at Port
land, Ore., and other western
cities, O. T. Evans, manager of
the woolgrowers warehouse, announced.
Almost three-fourths of pedest
rians killed in traffic accidents
are struck down between 5 p.rr.
and 8 p.m. during the seasons
when these hours are dark.
HEATING OILS
Diesel and Steve Oils
Quality Oils
for Every Purpose
PROMPT METERED
DELIVERIES
E. A. Pearson, Distributor
General Petroleum Products
Phone 321-J
BUY WHERE YOU SHARE
IN THE EARNINGS
Douglas County
FARM BUREAU
COOPERATIVE EXCHANGE
ROSEBURG, OREGON
Phone 98
Located W. Washington St.
and S. P. R. R, Tracks
JOBS AVAILABLE
We hove jobs for trained workers.
If you have the training, we have the job.
If you don't hove the training, come in or call tomorrow
Fall enrollment new u.ider way
GRANT'S BUSINESS COLLEGE
steel case. T-H boards c a n't
make recommendations. The one
in this case, not covered by law,
could and did.)
After receiving the T-H board's
report, the president can tell the
attorney general to get a U. S.
court injunction (order) forbid
ding a strike for 80 days.
The first 60 of the 80 days are
intended to give more time for
the union and a company to
reach a settlement. Meanwhile,
the president calls back his T-H
board and asks for a report on
the latest developments.
This report must be made with
in the first 60 of those 80 days
covered by the no-strike order.
The president makes the report
public. If, at the end of the 60
riays, there's still no settlement,
the national labor relations board
steps Into the picture.
It has 15 days after the elapse
of the first 60 to hold a vote
6
0
" ' ? - 'Of
LOVE IN BLOOM (HIPPO STYLE) After 383 hours of flirting and nose-rubbing through s-p-arating
barriers, "Knautschke" finally gets close enough to his lady-friend, "Grete." to engage in a
little smooching (hippopotamus style). The two light-hearted hippos became acquainted at their
mutual home in the Berlin Zoo after "Grete" was imported from Leipzig in Germany's Soviet Zone.
among the union members to
see whether they even though
their leaders reject the idea
want to accept a company's lat
est offer.
That uses up 75 of the 80 days.
In the next five days the NLRB
must tell the attorney general th?
result of the vote. Then, with the
80 days used up, he must go Into
court and have the no-strike or
der dismissed.
At this point, after 80 days' de
lay, a union is free to strike. At
this point the president sends a
full report to Congress. Then it's
up to Congress to take any spec
ial action it wishes, by passing
some special act, to d e 1 a y a
strike further. This hasn't happ
ened yet.
So, although the steel strike
was delayed 78 days without be
nefit of T-H Mr. Truman can
still use T-H to stop it for anoth
er 80 days by going through the
various steps outlined here.
Grand Jury Chosen Te
Probe Robeson Riots
WHITE PLAINS. N. Y.. Oct.
A. (JPt A grand jury was select
ed ano r-vorn in Monday to in
vestignte the Paul Robeson con
cert riots.
State Supreme Court Justice
James W. Bailey swore in 21 men
mit or promote disturbances of
He asked that they determine
without racial prejudice If there
had been a "consipracy to com
mt or promote dsturbances of
strife."
He also charged the jury to
decide If groups that guarded
the Negro baritone "were an ill
egal private militia."
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey ordered
the special Investigation after
fighting and stone-throwing fol
lowed Robeson's Sept. 4 concert
near Peeksklll and forced can
cellation of an earlier concert.
SHORT WAVES ON BEAM
NEW YORK .P) Unusually
short waves of 4,000 megacycles
are used for radio relay of televi
sion signals largely because they
apply themselves easily to beam
ing from point to point.
INSURANCE"
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