Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, July 10, 1976, Image 70

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    —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 10, 1976
70
PARK RIDGE, 111. - A
federal order restraining
maritime unions from in
terfering with the free flow
of foreign trade was praised
here this week by Allan
Grant, president of the
American Farm Bureau
Federation, as “reassuring
evidence that ours is still a
government of laws.”
Grant cited an order from
the National Labor Relations
Board directing the In
ternational Longshoremen’s
Association (AFL-CIO) to
cease and desist from im
peding the loading of grain
4-H poster winners named
Berks County had two 4-H Those winning from Pennsylvania will be
uerKs county naa iwo wi ™ r ° represented m Chicago by
Club members named in the u>. were Kacnei . created hv Slip
honorable mention group of HoUoway, 12 of West Chester g ch id 15 f y y ,
4-H noster art at the state and Janet Latshaw, 16 of *cnreiaer, 10, ot YorK
, poster an at me state „ . Cj . County; Carol Carville, 13, of
level conducted by officials City. Allegheny County; and Ruth
of the Pennsylvania Guzel, 18, of Washington
Cooperative Extension This is the fourth year of 4- County
Service. Chester County had H poster art competition and Three selected topics for
tw Jt , 10 .. . top exhibits from the the 1976 posters were «4_ H
This top group of 18 artistic state will be hung in Chicago Freedom to Be-” “4 H
4-H youths were named out during the National 4-H Club Brings out the „ and
of 109 total contestants. Congress in November. “4-H is Action ”
Winners from Berks Co. Foliowing the Chicago event, E Suloff , Berks
were Oemse Beamesderfer, the coUection from aU states associate county agent
102 Community Dr., will be scheduled for display state s that each January the
Shillmgton, and Lisa Spatz - at events across the nation acc eptable 4-H poster art
Rl, Hamburg. throughout the year. topics will be announced for
the coming year.
Judge for this year’s
contest were Harry A.
Carey, Extension exhibits
specialist at the Penn
sylvania State University;
Dr. David B. Van Dom
melen, Penn State associate
professor of art education;
and Mrs. Louise Mook, art
teacher in the State College
Area School System.
Rabies detected
HARRISBURG - Seven
teen rabies cases were
reported in Pennsylvania
during the fiscal year of July
1,1975 through June 30, 1976,
according to the Penn
sylvania Department of
Agriculture’s Bureau of
Animal Industry.
This compares to 20 cases
in the 1974-75 fiscal year.
Of the 17 reported cases,
fifteen were bats. One rabid
skunk and a rabid raccoon
were also reported.
Bucks County had the
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fungus diseases.
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You’ll like its convenient flowable form Ask us for
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HELENA CHEMICAL CO. USS AGRI-CHEMICALS
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OR SEE YOUR LOCAL AG CHEMICAL SUPPLIER
Grant praises maritime union restraint
destined for delivery to the
Soviet Union. The NLRB
order came some five weeks
after the unions agreed to a
settlement stipulation that
they would discontinue the
practice.
Grant said the NLRB
order ending union in
terference in Soviet gram
dealings does not repair the
damage of the 1975 union
boycott, but agriculture is
hopeful that it will stand as a
landmark precedent to head
off any future violations of
free trade by intervening
special interests.
Berks and Chester Counties
highest incidence of rabies
with three cases being
reported, all of which were
bats.
No rabies cases were
detected in the first three
months of 1976. In April of
this year one rabid bat was
reported from York County.
Three rabid bats, one from
Northumberland County and
two from Allegheny County
were detected in May. One
bat from Bucks County was
diagnosed rabies positive in
June.
The NLRB order marks
the Completion of action
started August 25, 1975, by
the AFBF, Texas and
Kansas Farm Bureaus when
they filed a complaint in the
Houston regional office of
the NLRB charging the
International Longshore
men’s Association with
engaging in unfair labor
practices.
V he Farm Bureaus based
their complaint on the fact
that the ILA in August, 1975,
engaged in and encouraged a
work stoppage of ships being
STOLTZFUS MEAT MARKET
i ATTENTION FARMERS I l\
I CUSTOM BUTCHERING I i\)
I OUR SPECIALITY | ,
—FRESH BEEF AND PORK— f ( J \
OUR OWN HOME MADE ¥ Jjk
SCRAPPLE & FRESH SAUSAGE
Bacon and Country Cured Hams
Orders taken for freezer Meats
PH. 768*3941
Directions; 1 block east of Intercourse
on Rt. 772 - Newport Road
STORE HOURS ™ RS ' S *J'
loaded for the Soviet Union
at the Houston and
Beaumont, Texas ports.
On September 19, 1975, the
acting general counsel of the
NLR board authorized the
issuance of a formal com
plaint, after investigating
the charges filed by the
Farm Bureaus that the ILA
and two local ILA unions had
conducted an illegal
secondary boycott in
refusing to load the ship
Bosanka with Soviet
purchased grain. The NLRB
found that the ILA violated
provisions of ,the National
Labor Relations Act
prohibiting secondary
boycotts.
On April 24, 1976, the
NLRB submitted a cease and
desist order agreement to
the ILA and the Farm
Bureaus which was signed
by all parties. Approval of
the agreement by the NLR
board came June 22, 1976.
Grant said that the refusal
in August, 1975, of the ILA to
load Soviet-bound grain
ships, “was a patent
deception by the union to
pressure the Administration
to order a substantial portion
of the grain to be shipped in
American vessels.” He
added, “Union wage scales
on the American ships raised
maritime costs well above
the world rates and are paid
in great part by American
taxpayers under the terms of
a general maritime subsidy.
Government estimates are
that American grain going to
the Soviet Union this year
will cost U.S. taxpayers
about $BO million in subsidies
for ship operators and
workers.”
Grant recalled that the
Ford Administration
capitulated to the union
demands by halting sales of
U.S grains to the Soviet
Union from August 11, 1975,
until late October, 1975, when
the United States signed a
five-year grain sales
agreement with the Soviet
Union. A companion
agreement provided a $16.00
a ton minimum rate for
shipping grain to Russia,
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VACUUM PUMPS
BUCKET MILKERS
DUMP STATIONS
SPUTNICKS
NEW AND USED COMPRESSORS ALL SIZES
J. M. HORST
SERVICE CO.
Box 231, Quentin, PA Phone (717) 274-1242
Sales Rep. in Lane. Co.
Bill Guhl Phone (717) 529-2569
ZVU>‘~ PIONEER OF FARM BULK MILK COOLERS!
with one-third of the ship
ments to be made in
American vessels.
“The government action in
negotiating sales and
shipping agreements with
the Soviet Union that set
price terms and locked in a
maritime subsidy on behalf
of organized labor only
compounded the damage
done to U.S. export
markets,” Grant said.