PACE SIXTEEN
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
FRIDAY, MAY 21,
End Of Meat Strike Held
Possible As Workers Vote
Wage Demand Acceptance
By The Associated Press
The pouible end of the prolonged
meat itrlke end removal of a strike
threat at International Harvester
company planta were bright ipota
In the nation's Indtutrial strife to
day. Results of the vote by the strlk
Inr CIO paekinf house worker! on
whether to end their 67-dajr-old
trlke were expected to be an
nounced today at the unlon'a na
tional headquarter! In Chicago.
Herbert March, strike director,
predicted the vote to end the work
stoppage on company terms will
favor return to all plants except
Wilson and company. He predicted
a close vote for returning to work
at plants of three other major
packers Swift, Cudahy and Ar
mour. National Guard
As the votes were being tabulated,
national guardsmen continued to
patrol strikebound plants in Water
loo, la., and in Albert Lea, South
8k Paul and Newport, Minn., scenes
mf recent disorders.
The big Rath packing plant at
Waterloo, la closed for !4 hours
after rioting in which a CIO park
ing house nnion picket was killed,
reopened . for . limited . production
smder protection of nearly 1000 na
tional guardsmen.
The reopening went off calmly.
Last week state troops were sent
Into the violence-ridden packing
plants at South St Paul, Newport
and Albert Lea. The guardsmen
were called out In both Minnesota
' and Iowa after issuance of court
Injunctions banning mass picketing.
The estimated 100.000 striking
parking house workers voted last
night on acceptance of a nine-cent
hourly pay boost, retroactive to the
March 16 strike call: retention ol
all seniority rights and arbitration
with the companies on possible dis
charge of workers accused of un
lawful acts during the strike.
Wage Demand
The union struck in support of
demands for a wage hike of 39 rents
an hour, rejecting company offers
of nine cents. March said the union
recommended strikers to vote
against returning to Wilson plants
because the company proposed to
reserve the right to re-employ all
strikers and said It would not re
hire workers charged with unlawful
acts. About 8000 workers are nor
mally employed at the struck plants
operated by Wilson.
In Washington. Jonn L. Lewis was
asked by the soft coal operators to
resume contract negotiations which
broke down Wednesday. The I'nlled
Mine Workers president did not Im
mediately reply. The operators had
told Lewis it waa a "mistake" for
him to Insist on excluding southern
producers from the contract nego
tiations. The present one-year con
tract expires June 3.
Sim Agreement
Officials of the International Har
vester company and the CIO Farm
equipment union signed an agree
ment in Chicago to extend con
tracts to June 38. The working
agreements cover 40.000 employes
in 13 plants.
The union, under terms of the
Taft-Hartley art, had taken all pro
cedure necessary to call a strike.
In Peoria. HI., the CIO United
Auto Workers, elected bargaining
agent for the Caterpillar Tractor
company at a special runoff NLRB
election yesterday, planned to open
wage negotiations today.
Douglas Fir
Production Up
PORTLAND, Ore.. May 31 iPi
Dnuglas fir production Is running
10 per cent above last year's outptr,
the West Coast Lumbermen's asso
ciation reported today.
The rut In the fust 17 weeks of
'he year totaled 3.870.188.000 board
fret. Las! year It was X HUM, 000
end In 11146 It was 3,610.W,000,
April's weekly average produc
tion dropped from 176.0a.IXHI feet
I hp previous mouth in 148.3:111.000
due in part, I lift association report
ed, to a si l ike of boomriicn and
raflrrs.
Orders climbed sharply III Aprl
to a weekly average of l70.73li.0iH)
Icet compared Willi 167.3:14.000 ill
March, but shipments were down
-averaging IM.0IH.000 board feet
weekly in April ami I'H.ino.ooo In
Maivh. IMilllIrd orders ill Hie end
of the moiilli were HIUWI.OOO feet.
J. L. DEAN
Public Accountant
and Auditor
New Olflt'c lomlion
SOU North Till HI.
I'lioue 0346
RECORD
prtnxr vn Mv ai isn Port
land, with 10 days left In May, has
already issued more Dunning per
mits than In any previous month
evcept one.
A new construction record would
be set if the May total tops the all
time hleh nf 17 314 045 set last
March. So far In May, the total Is
$0,162,930.
It Pays to Use the Want-Ads!
LONG, RNEiy DRAWN, THEy
SHOW GREAT FORESIGHT.
THEY LIGHT UP EXPECTANTLY
WHEN OWNER LOOKS
FORWARD TO A DRINK OF
SMOOTH 'DOUBLE-RICH'
CREAM OF KENTUCKY
WHISKEY! SQ20
4 t or.
Fine Blended Whiskey, 86 Proof,
70 grain neutral spirits. 1948,
Schenley Dist. Corp., N. Y.
"Baby of the Month
9 9
"KATHY"
Sixteen-month-old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Chilcot
4636 Boardman St.
Received 115.00 award for April
The most photogenic child photographed eoch
month is selected os "The Baby of the Month"
' ond receives a $15.00 cash award.
. (Willis Wood)
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