Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 196, Decatur, Adams County, 20 August 1959 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Agency Shop May Renew Union Shop INDIANAPOLIS (.UPD — Procedures for inserting the agency shop clause into labor-manage-ment contracts as a means of bypassing the Indiana "right to work’’ law were outlined Monday to a state labor organization by Bernard Mamet, Chicago attorney. Mamet, who was the legal counsel for a successful union fight which gained Indiana Appellate Court approval of the clause, told | the Indiana Workers’ Protective Committee that such clauses will I have to be worked in at the end i of present contracts unless they: have reopener clauses. The agency snop proviso requires all non-union employes of a company to pay a "service charge” to- the union representing their fellow workers and 1 usually: provides that the company must I fire the non-union employe who fails to pay the charge. Mamet warned, however, that 1

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.union leaders should be acquaint:ed with NLRB rulings and laws before attempting to. use the agency shop clause. He also predicted that the 1961 General Assembly wil felature an attempt to amend the “right to work’’ aw, • in an effort to flatly prohibit the agency shop clause. _ The, committee re-elected Earl ■ Whitehurst, Fort Wayne, as presi- ’\ dent. | Treasurer Leo Baumann, Indi- ! anapolis, reported the committee received $65,249 in contributions J during the past three years. Ernest Redden, Fort Wayne was > elected as new treasurer; Donald Marks. Jaspev, vice president, and Hobart Aut ter son, Terre Haute, secretary. Sixth Tractor Death In Monroe County ELLETTSVILLE, Ind. (UPD— Carl Crum, 64, was crushed to death on his farm Wednesday night when his tractor overturned I and he was pinned beneath it. Crum's death was Monroe ! County’s sixth tractor fatality of the year.

r -pJ Ia • i r * l ■ i ELECTRICITY PHHHTI—Nurse Angela Bates uses a hand pump I to power the iron lung for Phillip Konigsberg, 8, at Mount I Sinai hospital in New York, one of the many such emer- i ’ gency measures taken when some 500 blocks of upper Manhattan suddenly had no electricity. The heat, too many electric fans in use. etc., did in the circ”’*-

U.S. Agency Sells Ideas for $.25 WASHINGTON (UPD — F-r 25 cento the government will Scd you an Mea that could make you rich. There’s a gimmick, though. You have to supply the brains and imagination and toil it may take to transmute the idea into gold. The government traffic in ideas, a fairly thriving one, is channeled through the Office of Technical Services of the Commerce Department. Subjects range from accelerometers to zirconium production. OTS has just published a new series of abstracts of governmentowned patents which may be exploited without charge for private gain. You have to pay for the abstracts, but they don’t cost much. Say you’re interested in “food products and processes.” The booklet of patent abstracts in that field costs 50 cents. “Instrumentation” comes higher — $1.25. There are seven booklets in the new series. Once you've spotted in the abstracts an idea you think you can turn into profit <how about “Production of Maple Sugar Products Having Enhanced Flavor” or “Magnetic Fluid Clutch Shaft Seals’’?) Drop a line to the commissioner of patents. He will send a copy of the complete specifications for 25 cents. If you decide to go into business, be sure to write the agency administering the patent — the Atomic Energy Commission, say, or perhaps the Army or Navy—and ask for a free non-exclusive license. If you just go ahead on your -own, and invent something based on the two-bit idea, there isn’t anything anybody can do to you.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA — • — \ *

Crucial Test On' Labor Conference WASHINGTON (UPD — Con-1 ferees neared the crucial phase today in efforts to fashion a labor reform bill acceptable both to Congress and the President. On the sidelines, it was re-' vealed that a union president has . written House members who j voted for the House version of the bill, warning of retaliation at the ' polls. James B. Carey, head of the International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, told the congressmen that members of his organization will “do all in our power” to defeat them in the next election. Conferees have agreed quickly and quietly on most non - controversial phases of the Senate and House labor bills, but things promised to be different when they enter the area where the measures diffcre widly. Other congressional news: Hogs: The House Agriculture Committee approved a bill which would provide subsidy payments to farmers who market hogs at light weight. Contracts: A House armed forces subcommittee accused the Convair division of Veneral Dynamics Corp, of withholding information on big missile and bomber contracts. The General Accounting Office reiorted that unless Air Force - Convair contracs are renegotiated the government will be overcharged by more than three million dollars. Foreign Aid: An exective department study- co.mittee told Congress that President Eise - hower may ask for special allocations to nake up fund shortages in the foreign aid progran. The Independent Citizens Foreign Air Committee meanwhile urged Congress to do away with the paid program entirely.

Government Accuses Defense Contractor WASHINGTON <UPI) — House investigators accused a big defense contractor today of refusing to provide the government with information on contracts for 858 bombers and Atlas guided missiles. Rep. F. Edward Hebert (D-La.), chairman of the House armed forces investigating subcommittee, immediately sent a wire to the Convair division of General Dynamics Corp., demanding full access to files. ' The action came after officials of the General Accounting Office informed the House group that Convair had once again balked on giving the data to government auditors looking into defense contracts. The GAO also reported that i Uncle Sam will be overcharged for fighters unless contracts are ; adjusted. The GAO is Congress' j watchdog on government spending. I Hebert sent the telegram to 'Frank Pace Jr., board chairman |of General Dynamics, in New • York. Pace served as secretary jof the Army under President HarIry S. Truman. j Rep. Porter Hardy Jr. (D-Va.) ' said that if Pace doesn’t open up the files, the GAO should direct the Air Force to halt all payments • under the contracts. GAO officials 1 said the Justice Department might be asked to seek a court order forcing Convair tc release the in--1 formation. The GAO complained that the government will be overcharged by a total of $3,402,000 unless the Air Force re-ngotiats a contract with Convair for tsuprsonic ■fighter planes. | The GAO said its audit of the 490-million-dollar fighter contract showed the aircraft firm had estimated its costs several million dollars too high. Carroll Gartin RUNOFF VOTI — Here are the two candidates in Mississippi’s runoff primary for governor Aug. 25. They were the leaders in the regular Democratic primary Aug. 5. Barnett is a Jackson lawyer. Gartin is the lieutenant governor.

Democrat Says Farm Speech All Political WASHINGTON <UPD— Chairman Allen J. Ellender (D-La.) of the Senate Agriculture Committee says President Eisenhower’s forthcoming nationwide radio-TV speech on farm problems is a “purely political” idea. “The President wants what he demands or nothing, and he’s going to get nothing,” Ellender said Wednesday. He challenged the President to “explain away” his opposition to wheat legislation which Ellender claimed “would have saved the taxpayer a quarter of a billion dollars.” Ellender said this opposition was shown by Eisenhower's veto of one wheat bill and administration pressure which killed another measure in the House. The senator said he doubted Congress could write a better bill next year. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Agriculture Department appealed to the public today to be on the alert for unexplained damage to crops, lawns, gardens, trees, and shrubs which could mean the presence of a new plant pest. Persons who discover any unusual damage should report it to their county agricultural agent, the department said. Department scientists pointed out that alertness on the part of those working daily with plants and crops could speed detection of any foreign pests that might make their way past quarantine barriers into the United States, or of pests already in this country that have spread into new areas. WASHINGTON (UP!) - The Agriculture Department has amended its regulations to include calves among the animals for which the carbon dioxide method of slaughter is designated as humane. .. Previously, the carbon dioxide method was designed only for sheep and swine. The addition to calves to the list was recommended to the Agricultural Research Service by the Humane Slaughter Advisory Committee. In addition to the carbon dioxide method, two other methods of slaughter have been designed as humane: The use of captive bolt stunners or gunshot on sheep, swine, goats, calves, cattle, horses and mules, and electric shock for swine, sheep, calves, and cattle. WASHINGTON (UPD — The Agriculture Department received so many requests for information on how to kill wasps that it issued a leaflet entitled "Wasps, how to control them.’’ The safest, most effective way to kill wasps, the booklet says, is y ■* ' - 11 ‘ "***’’ 1 ' ' ' \ >

SP / v\i ■Il ■* we i I H" ■ i ■IB ? ’ SAVED FROM COBRA BlTE—William White rests in bed at- . ■ tended by his wife in St. Joseph, Mo., after serum rushed by Jet plane from Miami, Fla., saved him from the bite of a cobra (right). When he put the snake in a sack, preparatory to cleaning its cage, it bit his thumb. The Miami Serpentorium is the only source of anti-cobra serum in the U. S. The serum is made in Bombay. India,

by thoroughly dusting or spraying the nest. This should be done at least an hour after full darkness when the wasps are inside for the night. Comblike nests may be treated by recovering the open cells with an insecticide dust containing 5 per cent chlordane or 5 to 10 per cent DDT. The paper-like globular nests or hornets or yellow jackets, often found in trees or shrubbery, have only one opening into which spray should be sprayed. Because oil in a spray may damage plants or trees, a water emulsion containing 2 per cent chlordane or 5 per cent DDT is suggested. WASHINGTON <UPI) — The Agriculture Department said today dealers’ stock of 45 kinds of vegetable seeds on June 30 totaled 95,300,000 pounds, down 40 per cent from last year’s large holdings but close to the 1953-57 average. The 84,200,000 pounds of the large seeds — beans, peas, and corn was 43 per cent under last year. The 11,100,000 million pounds of small seeds such as beets, carrots, radish, spinach, and others was the smallest in 16 years. Grand Champion Steer Brings 62 cents a Pound The grand champion Hereford steer at the Whitley county 4-H fair, Columbia City, brought 62 cents per pound for a total $703.70, and the grand champion black Angus brought 48 cents per pound. The reserve champion shorthorn was sold for 35 cents, and the reserve champion hereford for 39 cents. The grand champion barrow, a Duroc, was sold for $1 a pound for a total $195, while the reserve champion barrow went, for 37% cents per pound.

THURSDAY. AUGUST 20, 1959

vC FIELDS $ - _ “Lefty hits to all fields, all right!” Sports Wire I. U.’s Boyer Wins. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPD— Hoosier swinger Ron Rtafyer of Crawfordsville won his opening round match without any trouble at the Trans-Mississippi Golf championship Wednesday. Royer fired one-under-par golf to oust Pat Shannesy of Minneapolis, 7 and 6, in the most one-sided , match of the day. Major League Leaders United Press International National League G AB R H Pct. Aaron, Mil. 117 478 94 178 .372 Cnghm, St. L. 113 355 47 122 .344 Pinson, Cin. 121 510 107 170 .333 Temple, Cin. 116 464 84 149 .321 Cepeda, S. F. 117 468 76 148 .316 American League G AB R H Pct. Kuenn, Det. 105 416 73 146 .351 Woodling, Bal. 110 350 51 114 .326 Kaline, Det. 102 390 68 126 .323 Fox, Chi. 118 484 67 156 .322 Runnels, Bos. 115 442 74 140 .317 Runs Batted In National League — Banks, Cubs 115, Robinson, Reds 106; Aaron. Braves 97; Bell, Reds 96; Cepeda, Giants 81; Mathews, Braves 81. American League — Killebrew, Senators 94; Colavito, Indians 89; Jensen, Red Sox 88; Maxwell, Tigers 77; Malzone, Red Sox 76. Home Runs National League — Banks, Cubs 37; Mathews, Braves 34; Aaron, Braves 33; Robinson, Reds 28; Cepeda, Giants 25; Boyer, Cards 23. American League — Killebrew. Senators 37; Colavito, Indians 35; Allison. Senators 28; Lemon. Senators 26; Maxwell, Tigers 26. Pitching National League — Face. Pirates 15-0; Antonelli, Giants 16-7; Drysdale, Dodgers 15-7; Law, Pirates 14-7; Newcombe, Reds 11-8. American League — Shaw, White Sox 12-4; Pappas, Orioles 13-5; McClish, Indians 15-6; Wynn. White Sox 16-7; Ford, Yankees 43-6. RE-TURNCOAT7— Word from the Tibet border has it that the Panchen Lama (above), who - waa installed as "ruler" of Tibet when the Chinese Communists chased out the Dalal Lama, has turned against Peiping. There’s a new uprising, it is reported, and the Panchen Lama is under house arraafr