Masonry Magazine January 1968 Page. 54
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INDEX in MASONRY
AA Wire Products Company 8
Aeroil Products Company 51
Anchor Manufacturing Company Third Cover
Clipper Manufacturing Company 6
Cushion Cut, Inc. 34
Dur-O-wal 4 & 5
Robert C. Evans Company (Target) Back Cover, 50 & 53
Gilson Brothers Company 44
Keystone Steel & Wire Company 14 & 15
Ladevator Div. of Wyco 46
Melroe Manufacturing Company 40
Morgan Manufacturing Company 39
Muller Machinery Co. Inc. 52
National Concrete Masonry Association 37
Ohio Lime Company 30
Omark Industries 12
Pfizer Minerals, Pigments & Metals Division 2
Prime-Mover Company 16
Park Tool Company 47
Pettibone-Mulliken Company 22
Pittsburgh Corning Corporation 43
Rockwell Lime Company 25
Trinity White, General Portland Cement Company 20
Thomsen Equipment Company 27
This index is published as a convenience to the reader. Every core is taken to make it accurate but mesenry assumes no responsibilities for errors or ommissions.
You get stronger walls with QUICKMIX LIME. Creates a strong bond. Makes a monolithic wall. Provides a tough self-healing joint. Lime provides autogenous healing in your Mortar. Has ample strength with flexibility. It gives a little under stress of wind or vibrations to prevent cracking.
QUICKMIX is made by OHIO® LIME COMPANY, WOODVILLE, OHIO 43469
American Arbitration Association
(Continued from page 38)
all" disputes that may arise from the contract. Agreements to arbitrate future disputes are enforced in 21 States in which the nation's commercial activity is concentrated.
AAA's fees are based on the amount of money in dispute. Often the parties agree in advance to share the administrative fee. Sometimes arbitrators apportion the fee between the parties.
Under Section 50 of the Rules, arbitrators serve without compensation for the first two days of hearing. If additional days of hearings are necessary, however, the parties are required to pay the arbitrator a daily rate. This expense is discussed with the parties prior to the appointment of the arbitrator. Most often, the per diem is not necessary, however. Most cases can be heard in one or two days.
Generally, arbitration affords the businessman an alternative to the well-known agonies of litigation. Lawsuits are expensive; arbitration is economical. Delays of as much as 18 months are required in state courts just to bring commercial cases to trial; arbitration is usually completed in about half that time. Since arbitrators can be selected who are knowledgeable about technical matters, attorneys require less time and energy to prepare and present cases, saving both time and money for the disputants. And frequently, awards handed down by arbitrators possessing an intimate understanding of trade customs and practices reflect a greater sense of equity than is found in court. Experience also shows that the privacy and informality of arbitration tend to strengthen business relationships rather than weaken them.
When all this is taken into consideration, most businessmen and attorneys agree that the scales tip favorably in the direction of arbitration in disputes arising over questions of fact or performance as well as in most matters in which the law is clear and reasonable.
Convention Notes
masonry • January, 1968