I'UKSDAY, JULY 22, 1052
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Murray Says Steelmen Refected Peace Bids
PITTSBURGH Pr esident chief some guidance on future ; oudtotrd and told a they felt ( Et nhfn a will en lam
Phlllu Murrsy of the C!0 United f strategy, ttitta sens, of humiliation." session.
fiteelworkei charged Monday that 'ioe committee hprd Hiunty MUrry Mid !bBi on June , Mtuny inviltd three stei eam-
tlie iiiuuswy repuainwil s ty mi nrgoinuon, im Vice i pr(NiKiPBt w!t of BeaaMic made i pany execaiivra to tiieixi the
trik U!tim1 which he worked
out with official ol Bethlehem
Bteel Corpocmm lit June )1,
Murray laa.ine usw a iuman
waite-ooilcy committee that Presi
dent Charlea White ol RepubUe
Bteei previeusljF had urged lite
steel comnenlea to accept auggev
llona made by White which Murey
thouiht could have led to a aettfe-ment.
Th potent wite-PoliCT Com
mittee tu called together to hear
Murray' report on the 5-day
walkout which htta Idled more than
1,600,000 and to five the union
BURNS AT SEA Smoke end timet pour from Ik charred hulk of fries Nor
weo,ian freighter Black Gull, 45 mile off fh tip of Long Ulend In fhe Atlantic, i fhe volatile
nepthelene eergo continual to burn. Petting thipt reteued 45 pertont of rhe 4? reported
' aboard the Black Gull in dremetie pre-dawn reicue operation. Tfiit air view. wet made by;
; Attocleted Prett tteff photographer Harry Herrit. , .
Navy A
nnounces Plans
For Ship Construction
WASHINOTON I The New
V announced Hnturtfav the ncrmd
eiant, n,000-Uin can ter ol the Kor
rental clans will be built at the
New York Naval Shipyard in
Brooklyn.
At the aame time. It tald the
hull o( the aecnnd nuclear Dowered
. aubmarlne will be conntructed at
the GroUin. Com.,, plant nl the
eleclne boat dlvlaion, Oeoerol D.V
namtca. Corp.
The emit of the aeeond earner
l eatlntaled at 30.1oo.oijfl, M.Jorv
00 lean than the emulated cott
of the rorretl.
The revy satd that thla lesaer
eoKt wen r05lhle becaue moat of
the drum work and experience
which has none Into the Forrentei
ran be ued. on the aecond ahip.
The aecoe-j carrier 1 vet un
named, eeine. detlenated only a
, the CV.B.-M.
In announelne: the award of the
contract ir the aecond atomic
powered submarine, the Navy aald
It will be of the ame eeneral de
aler) aa the Nautllua, which la being
Douglas Says
He Won't Run
CHICAGO I Supreme Court
Juattce WUUam O. Uouxlae let It
be known Monday that he doean't
want the Democratic vice presi
dential Domination.
H eent thla word to the Oreuon
delegation to the party e national
convention.
Douitlaa was the write-in choice
i tit more than 1 per cent of Oregon
Democrau in primary balloting on
their preaidential preference.
Second to Sen, Estea Kelauver,
DoiiKla waa therefore OreRona
choice for the vice presidential
apol. .
He acnt word to thf Oregon dele
gation, however, that he did nut
want the nomlnntlon and released
the delrgatca (rom any obligation
to auppon him.
Soiiie Oregon delegatca at once
alerted a boom lor Mra. Eleanor
Roosevelt.
The delegation officially Instruct
ed lt chairman to llnd out if she
Is "willing."
In public statements Mra. Roose
velt has Indicated she would never
be a candidate for elective public
office.
Georgia-Pacific
Opens Meeting
OLYMPIA (41 Directors of the
Oeorl Pacific Plywood and Lum
ber Company opened their quar
terly meetiiui here Monday with an
inspection ol the company' new
Ot.vmpla offices.
S. R. Black, local manager for
Oeorgla Pacific, siild the group
would travel to Jtoledo, Ore., Tues
day to look over properties the
company purchased there recently.
Black Indicated the company
would not make another ettemot to
purchase Harbor Plywood Conitia
nv of Aberdeen, He anld his firm
had made an offer to Harbor Ply
wood some time rro and It was
turned down.
built by the aame company.
However the nuclear powered
plant of the second submarine will
be ol a different drums, using a
intermediate neutron energy react
or and a liquid metal coolant. The
Nauillua will be powered by e
thermal reactor.
The Navy made lut announce
ments on the carrier.and subma
rine slmulianeouslv with a sum
mary of Its shipbuilding program
for the coming year, under the re
duced budget approved by Con
gres. The revised program will In
clude construction of 40 new ships.
30 landing craft end conversion
ol four vessels.
One attack submarine la Included
In this program and will be built
at the Mare Island Naval Ship
yard. Vallelo. Calif. Kimball said
that this assignment was made to
take advantage of submgrtfie de
sign capacity available at that
yard, as well as "to achieve a
more equitable distribution of new
submarine construction between
the Kast and West Coasts."
Kimhsll said that two Essex class
carriers will ber converted on the
West Coast, one at the Pugel
Sound. Wesii.. Navy Yard and the
other at the Navy's San Francisco
yard.
Kimball aald that "only one pri
vate shipyard In the country, the
Newport New Shipbuilding and
Drydock Co., has the facilities to
handle these conversions." The
Newport New yard, he said, al
ready has a substantial amount
of work, including construction of
the Forrestal.
"The Pugel Sound Naval Ship
yard has a continuing conversion
class," the Navy statement said.
"The San Francisco vard. which
has not previously handled con
versions of this type, la being as
sumed the aecond carrier in order
to help maintain a satisfactory mo
bilization potential on, the West
Coast."
The Navy said the remainder of
the 1M3 shipbuilding program
would be carried out by contract
awards negotiated on a competitive
basis.. . .
In addition to the carrlera end
submarines already mentioned, thn
pronram will Include:
Three destroyers; two ocean e.
corls, ships of a destroyer type:
ten lSS-Ioot minesweepers: twenty
138-foot auxiliary minesweepers;
two store ships; 390 landing craft.
Kimball said that:
"All the ships win be awarded
to private yards, principally be
cause of the necessity of maintain
ing a heallhy private shipbuilding
industry. The Navv i concerned
with the prospective difficulty of
maintaining an adequate moblllra
tlon base of private shipyards in
operation.
Private shipyards ere not as
close to mobilisation levels as are
the naval shipyards,"
In addition to the carrier con
version as in 1953. two heavy cruis
ers will be converted at Navv ship
yards to equlo them with new
three-Inch, 50-caliber dual purpose
guns.
will do anysiiuss is sd the crijjpS
4 Big etrike, ) , ,
. TUNE-UP
(LASORl
$4.95 r
DUGAN & MEST
Saucer Tales
Up This Year
WASHINGTON Ufl The Air
Force said Monday It is receiving
flying ssucer report this summer
at a rate higher than at sny time
since the initial .flood of sightings
An Air' Forc spokesman said
that while 147 wis the big ' year
for such reports, the current av
erage of 100 sightings a month Is
the largest since then, with the
November - December period of
IHt next. - -
He said there has been no cor
relation of sighting report to sea
sons. The Air Force could not furnish
sn eMimste of the cost of running
down flying saucer rumor be
cause they are handled titrough
normal stall cnanneia.
Since there Is no special project
In this field, no break down, ef
cost is available.
Reports re checked by the Air
Technical intelligence Center,
Wright ' Patterson Air Force Base,
Dayton, Ohio.
The Air FOTCe spokesman aald
that neither the center nor head
quarter here has yet received re
ports on sightings 'aald to have
been made last Friday in the
srea of Burlington, Vt., South
Portland, Me., and Stater Island,
N. Y.
All Quiet
At Prison
LANCASTER. Calif. A
state official returned from the
earuiquane . stricken Tehacmapi
area Monday and reported there
were no Injuries among the 42tt
Inmate t the tte women's
prison.
At first there were renorfs of
terror and panic t the all-woman
institution but the oificial. A. H, i
.wuw, itc w uuormes me
Inmates were orderly d were
conducted out of the damaged
building quietly and auickly.
Todd is business manager of the
Deuel Vocational Institution here.
He aald evacuation of the wo
men from the California insiitu-
won ior women was accomplished
tn about nine minute.
He aald all the prisoners were
in night clothe but most of them
put on some outer clothing. Later
in the compound.
President Jah M, Lscum of
Bethlehem and Bethlehem Counsel
John Morse produced a "memo
randum of understanding" In which
the steel company executives "sub
ktsmlsUy accepted the union
snop."
Murrsy said Lcrkin and Morse
took the memorandum before the
other major producer with the
understanding they would press
ior It acceptance.
Murrsy said that on June 20.
the Bethlehem Steel men returned
and "both expressed considerable
disappointment that the other steel
compjtnies had refused to accept
whst they believed to be a solu
tion of every aspect ef this situa
tion." Murray added:
"They stated they bad been re-
Truman Signs
Final Bills
WASHINGTON W President
Truman Monday sisned the last of
scores of bills passed by the Senate
and House in the final days ol the
SJnd Congress.
The act revises methods of com
puting base earnings oi few
firms for excess profits taxes.
Its purpose Is to give relief to
certain subsidized shipping firms
and those using strategic, and
critical materials.
iWBtHWAf
to ant
ASFtJUM TO
TOUR cmo
several union shoo suggestions closed meeting.
which might have been a basis J They are Stephens. LsrXirs and
for settlement but the indastry re- i Board Chairman Ben Mweei ol
fused to consider them and White ! Jones asid Leuaftiirs Steel Core.
disappeared from following Sego-j The eosunittee gave Murrey
totiaa meetings.
The union shop requires mtjrt'
ber&hip in the union as a condition
of employment. .
A outlined by Moray, White's
praps! would have allowed em
ployes to withdraw from the union
after a stated time.
Turning to toe most recent
White House prodded negotiaiionii
held during the past week-end with
f-srkm and Vice President John
A. Stephen of U. S. Steei, Mur
ray said:
"Again we discovered there was
no hope of any satisfactory settle
ment of the various items."
Turning to the strike of 23,900
Iron ore miner in Minnesota,
Michigan and WiscansiE, Muray
said their walkout was authorized
by hlro and the union t request
of the workers.
Declaring the iron ore miners
had "serious grievances" ' agauss.1
She steel indiutry. Murray said
they wanted to strike because they
feared the steel industry would
wreck their case now pending be
fore the Wage Stabilization Board.
After hearing Murray, the com
mittee recessed until 12:30 p. m.
ST. JSSC9H
SC&lfilU
rousing welcome a he walked into
the hotel meeting room, ?
It vu doubtful the comraiileei
WUHUTZI
A mefsiikent
ptmnt. Men?'
fevcf stylet cad 1
riaisttst f lss I
rent.
LOUIS R, MANN
PIANO CO.
128 No. 7th
People DO TOO
read small space
ads you ere!
j if
i. 1
RARE BUT WELCOME SiOHT ejy tn sn Ml of home-
btked breed. This view jhews grephieeiiy h n cspaeify ef
Keivinsfors newest eiecrrie rsrrge, model eiA 10 inchet wide, '
wHh built-in eafometie slock d oven eontroL The sew rttig
U currently on display Iseelly i Hefrer faemima Co., 9h end ,
KUmeih. Priced t 229.1$.
Former State
Governor Dies
PORTLAND Wi Ben WUson
Olcott, Id. former Republican gov
ernor of Oregon, died at Physicians
and Surgeons Hospital here today.
Olcott, then secretary of state, be
came governor tn 1918 upon the
death of Gov. James Wtthyeombe.
A Portland banker, he was born
In Kietheburg, 111., Oct,- 15. 1872,
He came to Oregon in 1882, and
worked for William Brown and
company, Salem, and then for. the
Lucid nd Bush bank.
The Alaska gold rush drew his
attention tn 1867. but he found
steadier job with the Fairbanks
Banking company. In ISO? he be
came an official In the etate land
office in Salem, and in 1912 waa
appointed secretary of state. He
was elected to the office twice.
He was governor until 1913.
Upon his defeat he returned to
banking, serving for some time
as manager of the Bank of Italy
branch at Long Beach. Caiif. In
1934 he became director of the
Oregon Mutual Savings bank: st
Portland. -
Red Barn
Dorris, Calif.
521 So. 6th
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