Observer, La Grande, Ore., Toes., Oct. 21 1958 -..Page 7 OUT OUR WAV By J. R.lWlillmi OUR ROARniNG HOUSE With Malor HoaoIi V impact Of . Fallowing is fho.stcond of three dispatches by Raymond . Lahr, United Press Interna tional political .writer, concern ing the election year contro versy over state right-to-work laws. The dispatch deals with how such laws have worked in states which have them. ' I "' Right-To-Work Laws Discussed veh the olv AWP At-t PEOPuel ly'.wfe-flF 00 MEAM Trt AT Owl tS CLUB'- cbuv who lives snake (t"EAJ:Ew 't7T' l ay -the DUMP- r 1 OIL ) "TIMES' IN 3NLYA SLIGHT COLLATION FOR ) t'LL 6av, My EABS cd0M SA ' ouabamttee IT- OM' I vo o MAI KE J TOO AUCH POOD PA,"Dcl4STME H YWREErLOC TO MAk& SLIC HE 5EZ. "AIN'T A L t HOT I A HABIT Or I ikItci I crT vo, lymiuJ lun A-V l"" UtLULK -I "BK YCAIIs ( SNAKE A A WATER.') VlT.MA.' V 'SS". I WONPERRn. BACK?") VL" -y- maicT'L Am? SI ICAri EXeRCISt-VOOKSENllUS well, it's that I T ' . ! 'JICS C0A tP A gABLE TO AT LOGISTICS BVMOMlNS v, f& ' ' r--.- ill ' wHVMOTHERETv .o-i PHJ;Sl3 o&1k i v By RAYMOND LAHR United Press International WASHINGTON IUPI - Labor and industry spokesmen ppd.somc state officials have conflicting ap praisals of the impact of right-to-work laws in. the,; 18 states where they are in .force., , Union leaders frequently con demn the laws as a brake on un ion growth and wage increases or as a threat to 'Stable labor-management relations.. . Industry leaders and some state officials credit them with helping attract new industry and with forcing union officials to follow the dictates of rank-and-file mem bers. ' In this connection, supporters of such laws have quoted some un ion leaders as saying that too much union security , can cause union officials to become inatten . tive to the views of their mem bers. . Right-to-work laws, an election issue in 10 slates this year, pro hibit union shop and other labor management agroement8 which require workers to belong to .un ions to hold their jobs.; Voters in these states have, been., bombard ed with arguments pro und con. In Iowa, Ed Storey, director of the State Development Commis sion, says the state's righl-to-wrirk law often figures in negotiations about . the location of new in dustry. "It is brought up more often by owners of small businesses who feel unions tend to make their own operating costs somewhat higher," he said. "They fepl they can't compete with companies who don't have unions. The ques tion of right-to-work isn't too im portant because Iowa doesn't tiK to- sell on the basis of cheap labor. v . "The larger companies lend to want unions in , their plants.- be cause of the stability of opera tion." , ' : ; . . "Most , of our people like it," says Harry Linn, head of the Iqwa Manufacturers' Association. "I have also heard off the record that laborer like it. The law pro tects them because union leaders have to serve them to keep them as union members." - .i , -, But . Iowa AFL-CIO President Hay Mills says, the law -"puts the unions which need protection the inost out of business." He referred specifically to unions'of restaurant workers and retail clerks... He said average weekly wages in Iowa wore $3 below the national average, lh Indiana,' Gov. Harold W. Handley, who let the right-to-work bill become law without his signature last year, and Lt. Gov. Crawford Parker credit the law with being primarily responsible for 10 new companies locating monthly in that state. Dallas Sells, AFL-CIO president in Indiana, says a law governing labor relations should improve such relations but that the right-to-work law "appears to divide rather lhan unify." He says labor will be at. the door of the Indiana legislature in January to press for repeal. Gordon Preble, president of the Nebraska Federation of Labor, Says he believes the Nebraska law "has made strong unions stronger and weak unions weaker, even to the extent t'that some of the weaker ones are going out of business." . Donald E. Devries,: director of the Associated Industries of. Ne braska, says the slate has enjoyed good labor relations under the law and that unions have continued to grow. ' ,; i . i. In one of its' publications last month,' the- AFL-CIO. listed Ne braska, along with Arkansas, Iowa and North . Carolina,,- as a state where it said "economic progress slowed down" after enactment of a right-to-work law,. In .Georgia, State. Labor Com missioner Ben T. Huiet says his offices ..has had no c6mp!ainl,s from labor , of, management and that the Georgia law is "function ing smoothly.". ' . . ' : Harold B. Boyd, Virginia AFLr CIO president, says it can be shown that ' Virginia . wage levels arc lower because .of Us right-to-work' law. He says the. fight, for enactment of the law was led by "non - union shops paying low wages'." j , ..,' i . Chris H. Whiteman, industrial director of the Virginia Chamber of Commerce, f ays. the Virginia law has been "among themajor considerations'.' influencing' com panies which' have built new plants in that state. - ' The AFL-CIO contends the ma jor factors in locating new plants arc not righl-to,work . laws but availability ' of markets, the cost and supply of raw materials and the supply of labor with necessary skills. In Utah, the authors of the law Classified Advertising Can Increase Your Business .. .. TEXAS ,4A SS N JVrw PREVIOUSLY 2 v-i V?4( X.,-f REJECTED IN Wm V ' U J L teiA-V,"LA LEGISLATURES : U RT-W LAWS ON NOV. BALLOT M J&fe W FoFPl R-T.W.LAW?.iM.rrFrcT V:: : i r-i R-T-W PREVIOUSLY V J HH R-T-W LAWS REPEALED iUi . c l R-T-W PREVIOUSLY UJ P.tJCCTED BY REFERENDUM " ft5)NtwiiMAP BIG ISSUE IN SOME STATES An important and ccntrovaisial side issue to the up coming congressional elections is the so-called ''Right-to-Work" question. Nowcnup above spots the six states which will vote on proposed R-T-W legislation Ln November, plus those which now have, or once had, such legislation. Also indicated are numerous states, includ ing the six voting on it this year, which have previously rejected It-T-W, either oy rcl crendums or in their legislatures. In other states R-T-W has not yet become an isiue. enacted in 1!)55 say it has pre vented unions from "organizing from the top by coercion" in .40 cases and that it serves as a con tinuing deterrent against the start of any such action. Backers of right-to-work laws sometimes contend that the laws are a weapon against corrupt un ion leaders because they allow an escape from the union for mem bers disgusted with racketeering officers. To this argument, the AFL-CIO replies: . "The question of eliminating corruption is not a question, of union security but of establishing necessary legislation of a police nature to allow prosecution of wrongdoers." . , Secretary of Labor James P.. Mitchell, an opponent of the laws despite the neutrality of the Ei senhower administration, recent ly cited a Tennessee case devel oped in the Senate investigation of labor racketeering as evidence that a right-lo-work law does not prevent corruption. Supporters of the laws . argue, however, thal.it is significant that, among the many cases whih got attention in the Senate inquiry, the Tennessee case was the only one nvolving unions in a state with .n right-to-work law... CALENDAR OF EVENTS TUESDAY . 6:45 p.m., Kiwanis club, Saca- jawea. 7:30 D.in.. Planning Commis sion meeting, City Hall. 7:30 p.m., souiti 40 club, saca- jawea. 8 p.m.. Veterans of Foreign Wars, VFW hall. Business meet ing. WEDNESDAY 7:30 D.m.. La Grande Citv Commission, City Hall. Grand Tour Answer to Previous Puzzle ACROSS 1 French city . 4 Swiss mountains 8 Heavenly city (var.) - 12 Mountain In Asin Minor 13 Shakespearean -king r ,,, 14 Learning 15 Decimal unit 1G Soaks food 18 Persian rulers 20 Elongated circles 21 Pronoun 22 Goes astray 24Caucla4 appendage 20 Unwelcome" plant . 27 Footlike part 30 Hindei 32 Broadest 34 Slips 35 Card game 30 Article 37 Globule 39 Girl's title 40 Refuse from grapes 4 1 Edge 42 Watches furtively 45 Rubbers 40 Fought 51 Faucet 52 One time 53 Evergreen tree 54 Japanese outcast 55 Afternoon parties - 56 Deeds 57 Hot Hax by exposure DOW.V 1 Small islands in rivers 2 Notion 3 Mrs. Socrates 4 Dancing girls 5 Jump a i riliL .eart SUN, "l KAiIIEAl- N O T E g N 5hI Cg5lR aL Pp o u . t- o A RED4 WSES SOARED 6 Indian religious sect 7 Hindu title 8 South Europeans 9 Jot 10 City in -Soviet Union 11 Cape . . 17 Scandinavian 19 Irritates 23 Marry again 24 Tip 25 Oriental nurse 26 German river 27 Boundary 28 Superlative suffixes 29 Female saints (Ob.)--, 31 Lower 33 British noblewomen' 38 Sharp 40 Allots -. 41 Infernal region . 42 British . ,. Islander 43 Cornbrcad 44 Peruvian Indian 46 Lease 47 Grade 48 Petty quarrel 50 Health resort i-Ufp I K4pp IT5I p p 11Q 1 in . ' fcr!bii MWt.h -nui msE r 1 Iff 1 XXVIII j HE started back to his desk,! when the desk officer called him.! lie walked over and took the slip of paper the man had just writ ten. "The state police just called in. They found Hal Verhey. At least they found what is left of him."! , Morrison turned an inquisitive glance on the desk man and asked, "I didn't know Verhey was gone." . "He tried io get by another car up in Sagun Pass.. I guess it was a blind curve, because he met a tanker and trailer, head on. They're still fighting the fire. One of the state patrolmen knew the car he was driving, so they were able to identify him. The car be lgnged -to an old guy that owns a enrage up there." "What was Verhey doing in a1 car that didn t belong to him and way up there?" "They didn't say. The wreck started a fire and they've been busy with it. They'll call as soon as there s something to tell. "O.K. Keep me informed. I'm going to talk to the captain.' Captain Harris was ready to leave, but when he saw" it ,wasi Morrison, he went back to his desk. . . "You should bo an aiuMiorityl on where to have shoes repaireay'l he said mildly. "Did you find: anything of value?" "I think so. One man is. sure the repair job on the heel was his work, but he doesn't remember who he did it for. Fleck and Grimes are trying to let him get a-look at anyone that could fit Dr. Murdock's description. "That sort of work is time- consuming but valuable. Was there something else?" Morrison looked at the placid man and wondered if anything ever got through his thick veneer. He knew and respected, the man's D L. MATHEWS 195! by 0 L. Mothcws. Oiltribulerf t, Mi Uma. Ik. brilliant mind, but he couldn'tl help wondering if he ever con sidered the people with whom he dealt in any but a clinical way. Verhey is dead, he said shortly, and was pleased to see the captain show some surprise. "How did it happen?" "It was an auto wreck. Therci aren't too many details yet. He hit a gasoline tanker and, it started a fire.- The slate police have been too busy to give us much, yet." . ... State police? what are they doing on it?" The wreck occurred on the east slope of Sagun Pass." "I see. Was he running?" M "I DON'T know. It looks fun ny. He was told not to leave town, but he did. lie had no reason to run, though; his alibi checked out. "You said he seemed frightened when you talked to him," the captain reminded him. , Morrison pulled out another cigarette and lit it. "Maybe it's just a run-of-the-mill accident." "In faagun i'ass.'" , "Yeah, I know," he answered, but was saved from saying any thing further by a knock on the door. - r ,- It was the desk officer with more information on the wreck.i He handed his notes to Morrison and left. ' Morrison read the new infor mation, and felt sick. "He was running, Captain. He told the guy that loaned him the car that something was wrong with his and that he had to mane a service call and fix a freezer that was full of food, in Sultana. There. was nothing wrong with his car and the grocer in bultano where he was supposed to go says there isn't anything wrong with his freezer. Mac got his answer, too. Verhey. took a fall for rob bery four years ago, in Joplin." 'Something to, hide," the cap tain said, softly, "or rather some thing he thought he had to hide," 'Even so," Morrison asked bit terly, "he didn't kill the kid, so why run?" ' "You've forgotten one of your first lessons in police work, Lieu tenant. You can't account , for people's actions. They do things, and that's that. Never try to fig ure out why. Leave that to the psychiatrists." THE dress shop where Helen Verhey worked was only a few blocks from the. station, but he took the car anyway. No matter how carefully he worded the news, it was bound to hit her like a 10-ton truck, and she'd be in no condition to get home alone. He opened the door and stepped into the perfumed interior. The floor was carpeted in a nubby gray and there wore little-groups of low fat chairs, upholstered in a kind of pinkish velvet. ,Thero were large mirrors on all the walls, and they had a pinkish cast to them too. . Once used to the indirect light ing, Morrison examined the room more thoroughly, and there wasn't a single dress to be seen. He was so busy looking, and try ing to overcome his feeling llfat he had blundered Into the ladies' room by mistake, that he didn't hear the woman come up behind him. The woman looked as' a dow ager duchess should look but sel dom does. Silvery hair, waved softly above an unlined fore head, that could only be called nuecniy. She was dressed simply. Hut every line and seam of the dress looked as though it had been placed with calipers. The bright blue eyes gazed at him so steadily, he felt she must be putting price tags on everything ho was .wearing... . , . "I'd tike to sec Mrs. Verhey," he said politely. "Our ladies are not permitted to have personal visits during working hours." , . - He wondered what a kick in the rear would do to her dignity. (To Be Continued) THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE By Wilson Scruggs TSWtS f TRAINEE ASKED Kjf F PO SOMETHING... STOP THEM ... 'V 3KSiSk i MEIFIWAWTEDTDSEET . V , BEFORE IT'S TOO tATE-V.Wpl jSKIt; DON'T HE'LL 1 ' 'tjlsiL" VOO W AKLOIU(X.n ' rWEwja,. ' le'cwl .' FRfcCKLES AND HIS FRIENO . .. . . a o,.,i tt.osser Yes mr.wilsom TwLeo00 SRIEF 1 1 Bur 1 VRM1 I RELAX , SIR. l 1 f NEXT - 'V.'l I " y'-HECK ur CS7I IDEMTS. I LLP THINS". DVnli- ,A SB3tW ypf ec ? W , I 17 (O lPSfl hy NEA Sir-i'c. liT CAPTAIN EASY . : - . " By Leslie Turner IXSt- f yES. THE NWV FOUND VARSER'S .X , I I A GRAVJE? THEN V THEN WHAT I ll OVERHEARD VOU1 I'LL' FltlD OUT, 1 ' r ' X'EWPTy PLANE WA5HEP UPON A TIN V - IT MU5TA BEEM 1 HAPPENED TO I WUST KNOW .WHICH VAKBERt AMD IP - WAS THAT UWINHA8ITED I5LAND! THEy FOUND ) WlLLARD'Sl HE I VARBEK? I THINK ONE IS BURIED ON (THAT 60V I5.ALWE, NEWS ABOUT V NO BODIES.., ONLY A FRESH GRAVE!-. COULDN'T BUKy SOMEONE ELSE THAT LONELY ISLAND! I'LL FIND HIM! I'VE ALLEY OOP ' ' '' '' ' - - ' r-- JTBJUMiffrntM I ;. THEM SOME YAP SEEti BUT WHY SHOULD I I I NEVER I NO... BUT THEN 11, WELL, NO, ..,. -r- 7 Kp 'Vjr IT'S ALWAYS Nl A HUMP8WTKED ( TH' CRITTER GET HEARD OF A NOU'VE NEVER ' I..:MY ' T " Jsf x 'X W SUMPIN, ISNT IT? PTERODACTYL AN' V EVERYBODY S& ONE OF 'EM ) HEARD OF A .' G00'NESSMr-7 -i " ( VAw I HERE YDU WERE, BOOM ...YOUR DAY iy. DISTURBED? HURTIN' HUMPBACKED tna. w0$&k i T;S'' V FEELIN' SO GOOD JS-iji'S RUINED jt0vwvM 1 ANYBODY, V, PTERODACTYL . txMr7( V-S" BOOTNHER BWDtll " - ' ' ' . f-' " " Bydgar Martin I TljSS "1 1 X'OB. 0S V.VOLCij VU, W 1 1 .WEree N. SO WCCVA . I '. 1 1 TOV. I , f J . . . : -iOA TOR. "BOOV PepR.-r COOV-V VCKMCto VP esBOOrt VA,AQU (7) TUV- UWVS. OiVWVS., SWS S f Ori . . . CM .UfcVA-, VW I BEING SHAVED BY) l&K VVT CZiZ-Li I U f A ')', t-VOUR ELECTRIC i (-t)W h'''- ' W "AJ 1 " J (S ' 1 SHAVER, POP? ixTi JJ " ' vl ) bugs bunnv . ' . .,.,,'.:;v ... i SEE I fHE LOOIS PRETTY 11M l DON'T BELIEVE IT.") I I S fflt'fci' I VAGOTA DL.W.B.1 DOES HE tM .KID . , , SHOW ME ! jr THAT'S ;THE "A (yy T?Sn NEW 006 KNOW AKiyTHIN'?Jte! RSn y -v I ONLY THINS W )&lJjCc ' Jff!k in3z&0z-$$ Jaiv (jv--j ive tausht W ytfVy ' 1