6 Heppner Gazette Times, January 31, 1946 Lexington Items By MBS. MARY EDWABDS Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jones of Ya kima were week-end visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mc Millan. Mrs. Bertha Hur.t underwent a serious operation in The Dalles hos pital last week. At the latest re port she is reported to be doing nicely. Mr. and Mrs. Truman Messenger entertained at a party Sunday eve ning honoring the birthday of their son Franklin. The evening was spent playing games after which delicious refreshments were served. Clarence Buchanan arrived home Monday. He was recently discharg ed from the army after spending over two years overseas in the Pa cific islands during which time he saw much action. Cletus and Paul Nichols of Port land arrived last week-end in re sponse to word that their father T. H. Nichols was seriously ill. Mr. Nichols has suffered three strokes during the last few weeks and is very low. Word was received here Tuesday of the marriage of Miss Frieda Breeding and William F. Matthews. The ceremony took place Jan. 21 in Walla Walla. The bride is the eld est daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Breeding of Lexington and the groom is veteran of World War II and is a native son of Pendleton. Cpl Herman Wallace arrived home Sunday. He has been overseas for about nine months. At the ter mination of his leave he will be re assigned to some base in the States. CLYDE F. PETTYJOHN AT SEA ON THE USS HOWARD On the USS Douglas L. Howard, at Sea. Clyde F. Pettyjohn, radar man, second class, USSR, Lexing ton, Ore., served on this destroyer escort when she was engaged in post-war naval activities in the Marshall Islands. Earlier in the war the Howard was active in anti-submarine and convoy patrols in the Atlantic. In July, 1945, she was attached to the Pacuc Fleet and was at Pearl Har bor getting ready to enter the bat tle wen the Japs surrendered. m GUESTS FROM CANADA Archdeacon and Mrs. Neville Blunt drove to Umatilla Tuesday evening to meet some friends, Mr. and Mrs. George Patrick, of Strath more, Alberta, Canada, who will be their guests for several days. The Patricks are enroute to Monterey, Calif., to spend several months. A Letter to the President of the United States January 18, 1946 Hon. Harry S. Truman President of the United States The White House Washington, D. C. Dear Mr. President: Your proposal to me in Washington last evening that the wage demand of the United Steelworkers of America-CIO be settled on the basis of a wage increase of 18V2 cents an hour, retroactive to January 1, 1946, can not, I regret to say, be accepted by the United States Steel Corporation for the rea sons set forth below. As you must be aware, your proposal is almost equivalent to granting in full the Union's revised demand of a wage increase of 19 Vk cents an hour, which was advanced by Philip Murray, the President of the Union, at our collective bargaining conference with the Union in New York a week ago today In our opinion, there is no just basis from any point of view for a wage increase to our steel workers of the large size you have pro posed, which, if put into effect, is certain to result in great financial harm not only t( this Corporation but also to users of steel in general. As I have tried to make clear to you and other Government officials during our con ferences in Washington over the past few days, there is a limit in the extent to which the Union wage demands ran be met by us. We reached that limit when we raised our offer to the Union last Friday from a wage increase of 12 cents an hour to one of 15 cents an hour. This would constitute the highest single wage increase ever made by our steel-making subsidiaries. Our offer of 15 cents was equivalent to meeting 60 of the Union's original excessive demand of a $2 a day general wage increase. Our offer met 75 of the Union's final proposal of a wage increase of 19 V- cents an hour. A wage increase of 15 cents an hour, such as we of fered, would increase the direct labor costs of our manufacturing subsidiaries by ap proximately $60,000,000 a year. That is a most substantial sum, and does not take into account the higher costs we shall have to pay for purchased goods and services, when large' wage increases generally become effective throughout American industry, as is inevit able after a substantial increase in steel wages. As you know, ry v -?tive bargs'V"- tiations with the Union broke down at the White House yesterday afternoon, because Mr. Murray then refused to budge from his position that a country-wide steel strike must take place, unless steel workers are granted a general wage increase of 19V2 cents an hour. Our offer of a wage increase of 15 cents an hour was again rejected by the Union. The Union threatened to go ahead wjth its program for a national steel strike at midnight next Sunday, although such a strike will be a clear violation of. the no strike provision contained in our labor con tracts with the Union, which continue by their terms until October 15, 1946. From the outset, we have recognized how injurious a steel strike will -be to reconver sion and to the economy of this whole coun try. Most industries are dependent upon a supply of steel for their continued opera tions. We have done everything reasonably within our power to avert such a strike. If a strike occurs, the responsibility rests with the Union. When the Government at the eleventh hour informed us about a week ago of its willingness to sanction an increase in steel ceiling prices, we at once resumed collective bargaining negotiations with the Union. Such price action by the Government was a rec ognition by it of the right of the steel in dustry to receive price relief because of past heavy increases in costs, something which the steel industry for many months has un successfully sought to establish with OPA. 1 should like again to point out some per tinent facts relative to the wages of our steel workers. , Since January, 1P41, the average straight time hourly pay, without overtime, of our steel workers has increased more than the 33 increase in the cost of living during that period, recently computed by Govern ment authorities. Steel workers' wages have kept pace with increased living costs. Such average straight-tine pay in our steel-producing subsidiaries was $1.14 an hour in each of the months of September, October and November 1945, excluding any overtime premium and any amount for correction of possible wage inequities. An increase of 15 cents, in accordance with our offer, would raise such average straight-time pay to $1.29 an hour, placing such pay among the highest today in all of American industry. Under our offer of a 15 cent increase, the average weekly take-home pay of our steel workers for a forty-hour week would amount to $51.60, assuming that no overtime is in volved. This figure is only $4.54 less than the actual average weekly earnings of these employees, including overtime, in the last full war year of 1944, when the average work week was 46.1 hours. The difference is really less, because we will undoubtedly continue to have overtime in the future, just, as we have at the present time. In Novem ber, 1945, overtime premiums to our steel wor-kers aggregated more than $1,300,000. Such reduction of $4.54 in weekly take-home pay is the natural consequence of a shorter work week of forty hours, and therefore one of lower production. Much as we desire to avoid a steel, strike, we cannot overlook the effect both on this Corporation and on our customers and American business in general, of the I8V2 cent an hour wage increase, which you have proposed. Such a wage increase must result in higher prices for steel than have pre viously been proposed to us by the Govern ment. Great financial harm would soon fol low for all users of steel who would be obliged to pay higher prices for their steel, higher wages to their employees, and still have the prices for their own products subject to OPA control. Such a high and unjustified wage scale might well spell financial disaster for many of the smaller steel companies and for a large number of steel fabricators and processors. The nation needs the output of these companies. Increased wages and in creased prices which force companies out of business can only result in irreparable danv .age to the American people. In our judgment, it is distinctly in the public interest to take into account the in jurious effect upon American industry of an unjustified wage increase in the steel industry. After a full and careful consideration of your proposal, we have reached the conclu sion above stated. Respectfully yours, Benjamin P. Fairless, President, United States Steel Corporation United States Steel Corporation