Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 264, Decatur, Adams County, 9 November 1959 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Steelworkers Back To Jobs

PITTSBURGH (UPD — The first post-strike steel trickled from the nation's mills today as workers returned to their jobs after almost four months of idleness. US. Steel and Jones and Laughlin, the major producers in this steel center, said the bulk of their * workers would be called back within a week. Workers, grumbling about the Taft-Hartley injunction which ended lherr ’TI6-driy w’atkout; tapped a few furnaces while maintenance crews toiled to repair damage to other facilities caused by long idleness. Although smoke belched from furnaces from coast to coast, less than half of the 500.000 strik-

INSURANCE g? . PROTECTION _ That provides of Mind. Consult This Agency Today! COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS . JIM COWENS 209 Court St. Phone 3-3601 Docatur, Ind.

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ers were called back to work and full production appeared as much as six weeks away, half of the 80-day duration of the Supreme Court directed injunction period. In addition to millhands, recall orders went to rail workers, Great Lakes ore ship crews, anJ coal and iron miners. Auto Layoffs Continue But as steel men returned gradually to their jobs, the steel-short automobile industry prepared to lay off even more workers as supplies dwindled and no appreciable supply quantity from reopened mills was in sight soon. Some 250,000 auto workers, mostly General Motors employes, are

idle and management warned it would be some time before they could be ordered back. mill workers in the Chicago-Gary area already were back. Some 46,000 workers will be recalled by Tuesday at Bethlehem Steel Corp.’s sprawling Sparrow’s Point, Md.. works. Other major producers across the nation also reported rapid recalls. But a strike of 200 railroad workers against the U.S Steel’s Tennessee Coal and Iron Division in Alabama threatened to keep 25,000 steel workers from resuming work. United Steelworkers officials said their members would not cross picket lines of the Brotherhood of locomotive Firemen and Enginemen. Express Disgust, Resentment But as workers donned mill togs and their wives packed lunch buckets for the.. first .times_.since the strike started July 15, union mehibers nationally expressed disgust and resentment at being ordered back to work under the injunction against their will. They vowed to resume the strike in 80 days if agreement was not reached. But workers admitted they were looking forward to their first pay checks. Workers echoed the “slave labor” charge by USW President David J. McDonald. “They freed the salves under the first Republican President and have slavery again under this Republican President, grumbled John Bajuzick, a carpenter for 33 years at U.S. Steel’s Homestead, Pa., plant. • No Negotiations Scheduled A worker at a steel plant in Cleveland hollered at another who was burning a picket placard,

TRI? DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

- -^fl v si if * I /fl 1 I ■ fl ' I' flfl i |i| ,| 1 I 9 I 1 J || | i| fl£*te±± Illi ' r I '>4 1 I 'iL > vi .41 9L . %■—-I HEN PARTY — Some 4,400 hens jam a coop at Tonganoxie, Kan. Owner J. M. Jack eventually hopes to have 10,000 hens under one roof, producing 7,000 eggs a day. The tenants, Dekalb hens, are automatically fed and watered and their house automatically cleaned. When the arrangement is completed, the eggs will roll out of the nest into a trough for collection.

“Don't do that. We’ll need it again in 80 days.’” “I don’t like the injunction. I don’t think it’s any good- The companies have us by the neck,” said James Dedes, 27, who works at the Allegheny-Ludlum Steel Corp, plant in Watervliet, N.Y. No negotiations between the Steelworkers Union and management have been scheduled. Chief management negotiator R. Conrad Cooper said the companies would continue to strive for a non-inflationary agreement. The union has not lessened its wage demands and its resistence to management-sought changes in work rules.

Ike Is Thrifty About Magazines By MERRIMAN SMITH UPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON <UPD — Backstairs at the White House: President Eisenhower does not have to go out and buy his own ; magazines, but nevertheless, hejj. thrifty about them. Before leavnig Walter Reed Army Medical Center last week after his annual checkup, the President carefully packed two current Weeklies he • had bean ' reading in his overnight ' bag along with his pajamas and shading gear. The bag was sent down to the President’s limousine a few minutes before Eisenhower departed. At the last minute, the PresidCht sent a hospital orderly and Secret Service agent to the car to open the bag and retrieve the magazines. The President then took them to the hospital room of Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson and said, "Here’s something for you to read.” » Benson was in the hospital for treatment of an inflamed gall bladder. The White House ran out of stamps the other morning. Had to send for some in a hurryMembers of Congress can send out tons of mail with no stamps, just the congressional frank. But ' every piece of mail leaving the White House requires regular I stamps. This is the season when Wash ington newspaperwomen are unusually vocal about being excluded from certai stag press dinners, particularly those the President attends. Eisenhower has been to one htis year—the White House Correspondents Assn, annual affair which is strictly stag. Press Secretary James C. Hagerty brought on the latest burst of female complaints by viewing the situation with mock alarm at at a luncheon given for Mrs. Eisenhower by the Women’s National Press Club. The ladies have been somewhat wary of kicking up any public storm about getting into two other types of stag dinners for the press, There has been no known demand for female admission to the Gridiron Dinners (most of the girls’ bosses are members or guests). And Eisenhower seems to be under no pressure to include women reporters at private dinnes he has given for the press.

Quality Photo Finishings AD Work Left Before 8:00 p. m. Monday Ready Wednesday at 10 a. m. Holthouse Drag Co.

Al Least 13 Traffic Deaths In Indiana United Press International Three persons were killed Sunday night in the second multiplefatality accident in a 30-mile stretch of Ind. 37 in a week, raising Indiana’s weekend traffic death toll to at least 13. The accident near Mitchell occurred when a car swerved into a sewer culvert on a curve, climbed a bank, hit a utility pole, -overturned and burst into flames. Roy Wininger, 48, Mitchell, was 'trapped in the burning wreckage and burned to death. Ralph Ponders, 22, Fort Knox, Ky., was killed. Everett Wilson, 44, Mitchell, died in a Bedford hospital a few hours after the accident. Two other persons were injured. They were identified as Ira Leatherman, 37, Fort Knox, owner of the car, and Donald Willard. 25, French Lick. Just a week earlier, four persons w r ere killed in a five-car accident on the same highway just north of Bloomington, contributing to a weekend death toll of at least 11. One other fatality Sunday, eight Saturday and one Friday night hiked the toll. Truck Crushes Man Lorenzo Turner, 32, Indianapolis, was killed Sunday night when he swerved his truck to keep from hitting a stalled car on an Indianapolis street. The door came open and Turner was thrown out under the wheels of the vehicle. Martha Wright, 40, Angola, was killed Saturday when a car driven by James Crain, 42, Angola, crashed head-on into another auto on U S 27 north of Angola. State Police said Crain’s auto was being

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pursued by a trooper at speeds of over 100 miles an hour when it veered into the path of the other car. Miss Wright and a young married couple were passengers in the Crain auto. Gary Copas, 10, Rome City, was killed Saturday when his auto went out of control on Ind. 120 near Orland, plunged over an embankment and rolled over three times. Another one-car accident Saturday killed Everett Hill, 34, Windfall. He died when his car failed to make a curve on Ind. 19 north of Noblesville and hit a tree. Wreck at Crossroads Mrs. Mattie Scott, 40, Greenfield, was killed Saturday in a car-truck accident at a Hancock County road intersection near New Palestine. She was riding in a car driven by her husband. Julian Smith. 24. Hope, died Saturday when his car missed a curve on Ind. 7 near Columbus and struck a utility pole. James C. Brown, 41, Advance, died Saturday when his car struck a bridge railing on a Boone

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County road near Advance. Charles L. Timm, 47, Chicago, was killed Saturday when his auto skidded on an Erie Railroad crossing on U.S 421 south of LaCross in , LaPorte County and overturned. An accident Friday night killed Paul Hunefeld, 46. Batesville, when his auto smashed into two others on Ind. 46 at MorrisWilliam H. Scallon, 84, Fort Wayne, died today in Lutheran Hospital at Fort Wayne from injuries suffered Saturday night when he was hit by a car driven by Mrs. Loretta Coulardot, 60, Fort Wayne, in a residential area of that city. Decatur High School Students Visit I. U. Two carloads of students from Decatur high school attended student day at Indiana University’s Bloomington campus Saturday. John A. Baumann took Sandra Baumann, Penny Longerbone, Jim Gay, and Jerry Mclntosh. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dailey took Alice Allwein, Carol Norquest, Jack Dailey, and Michael Kaehr. The trip included a tour of the university.

AUCTION SALE 1,000 CATTLE Choice Feeder Calves — 300 tbs. to 500 tbs. Yearlings—6oo tbs. to 700 tbs. 100 Fancy Show Calves Suitable for 4-H and FFA Projects These calves are very carefully selected from ranches from the West and South. HEREFORDS - SHORTHORNS - ANGUS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1959 7:00 r. M. LUGBILL BROS., Inc. ARCHBOLD, OHIO

- 1959

Budget Loan Buys Syracuse Branch Jack H. Payne, general manager of Budget Loan Corp, has announced purchase of the Syracuse branch office of Service Finance Co. Budget Loan also operates offices in Decatur, Rushville, Greensburg, Osgood, New Castle, Hartford City and North Manchester. William L. Snyder is manager of the Decatur office. District Christian Youth Plan Meetings Dates for three future district meetings of the youth of the Christian church were set Sunday in a meeting at Van Buren, in Frant I county, the Rev. Edward Pacha, fifth district youth commissioner, reported today. Dates are: afternoon district youth meeting at Marion, Feb. 7; I and a weekend retreat, place to be announced, April 3. Adams, Wells, Huntington, Grant, and Wabash counties are included in the ’ fifth district of the Christian | church-