nondqr, December 3, 1970.
'Senator Sam J. Ervin Reports
WASHMCnm-ffor more
» year now, a bill has
pending in the Senate
; *» it an unfair labor
peacticc for labor unions to
a fine against a person
for refusing to engage in a
concerted activity, such as a
strike.
While Otis bill, which was
introduced by me and Sena
tor Paul Fannin of Arizona,
has been la»g..irf.i« g to the
Committee an labor and
public Welfare, some nninn«
Wave continued to impose
such fines and other eco
nomic sanctions against their
enembers, which is contrary
to principle and individual
freedom in this nation.
ITo my mind, these fines
constitute a direct abridge
ment of the individual right
not to engage in concerted
activities which is guaran
teed by the Taft-Hartiey Act
However, the V. 8. Supreme
Court ruled a few years ago
in a derision involving the
* Allis-Chalmers Company that
labor unions could go into
state courts in order to col
lect these outrageous fines.
That ruling by the highest
court in the land has had the
effect of making legal the
Wont kind Os coercion by
labor unions over their in
dividual members. In a case
involving television perform
ers, such compulsion took the
form of fines amounting to
SIB,OOO per person.
During a recent case de
cided by the National Labor
Relations Board, which has
more or less been on the side
of big unions for the post
decade, a worker was fined
S3OO for crossing a picket
line during a four - week
strike.
The union sued in a Cali
fornia court to collect the
fine and was awarded a judg
ment of $928 including costs
against the worker. During
the time he crossed the
CAKD OF THANKS
The family of Irvin C.
Long, Sr., wishes to express
our sincere appreciation to
everyone who remembered us
with prayers, visits, flowers,
food, cards and all other ex
pressions of sympathy rend
ered during the illness and
death of out loved one. your
thoughtfulness and kindness
! will always be remembered.
Whether its
morning
night
raining
snowing
hailing
sleeting
or just an
ordinary
day,
your
BP
Warm Truck
defivers,
home heat
automatic
ally
So you never need
think about heiting oi.
And for emergency
burner service, just
give us a csN, and wen
you're never leN out in
the cold?
You bet your BP
wewM!
Coasttond Oil
CtolßC.,
Hrnmmmu
Sdmlrnm, N. C.
picket line, the member
earned a net of s3ll.
Under the Thft-Hartley
Act, a union member clearly
is given the right not to en
gage in concerted activities
such as strikes. To my mind,
the Supreme Court should
have read the Taft-Bartlcy
Act exactly as it is written
and outlawed the useaf union
fines.
However, the Supreme
Court ruled in the Allis-
Chalmers case that fines arc
internal union affairs and
are thus not governed fay the
ills i i®
prices in this
AD EFFECTIVE
- ■ 5
PATTIES u nf z 79c SULTANA MEAT DINNERS S C SI.OO N.
VIRGINIA COUNTRY HAMS * 79c Beef Liver * 39c
“SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY HEAVY CORN-FED BEEF VALUES
CHUCK ROAST 39 c 1
FULL CU- rH?irt D !?FA? AST , L ££ C FULL CUT CHUCK ROAST Lb. 43c mJT V T
Lb 49c BONELESS CHUCK ROAST Lb. 59c JL 4
d^?.c. L ?c E c R .^STEAK -BONE-IN Lb. 65c GROUND CHUCK BEEF Lb 65c
rSm L pcanJ A !l d S ™c BEEF Lb - 69c SHORT RIBS 0F BEEF Lb. 39c
OVEN READY RIB ROASTS Lb. 89c DELMONICO STEAKS Lb. $129
W*«®» bfff . I "super-right" quality lean WE CARE
| BONELESS RIB STEAKS u, .091 [FRESHLY GROUND BEEF *gr u, 48c| [
SPREE VALUES ON “SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY FRESH : i
CD VC D C OQc I ™ ilia—i
rnicno Z.i
CAP’N JOHN’S FROZEN CUT-UP PAN READY FRYER □, 33* SEASONING BACON K* 27c I ■ ■
BREADED OCEAN PERCH 2 P L k b B $1.15 FRYER BREAST wWSZe u, 43 c ! ™ R,FTY ALL PURF>OSt 3 I ißm&jjfiffl
FISH STICKS PBKOOKED ifo. 53c 35c FRYER SPLIT WITHOUT GIBLETS u> 39c SLICES 69c j B
S V KRAFT CHEESE j V
- _ # HOP A&P OR APPLES TRY • FOR SALADS AND EATING SHARP 8 ££. 55c j toqrFfih n—Lsmuicit s*Oan
Golden Delicious Apples 4 -39 c Anjou Pears 5 33c 22* “T. l| 2 [ ,
• APPRECIATION VALUE'
Golden Tasty Bananas 10c ~
* ■ “ W j BIGGEST SALE OF THE YEAR ON A&P GOLDEN
• US NUMBER ONE—ALL PURPOSE • CREAM style . . Sk _
Clean White Potatoes 15 & 69c RN ® tLfufc
• SHOP A&P FOR JUICY N \ • PAPER TOWELS Rom” sloo
Hto m iidfaßigb |H l a&p brand instant non-fat
ORANGESX^ * drym|lksouds sl - 25
thin ** " • PEANUT BUnER ' 79c
* HERE’S A REAL BAKERY BUY Del-monte
JANE PARKER VANILLA CREME ICED CAKE _ V
SPANjSH BAR 3 * 1 00 S? 4“ $ 1 frSSe
(Goo BU ttMKBI (teouuw OR SAICWICM SLICED
*-— * IJiM 69' $1.99 ■ *mtEBREAD— 3-79. jS3
HUPP SHOP ASP FOR MEXICO
r--.i-MBibbl butter-me-not biscuits 4~* 49'
pmviaiana of Taft«artley.
Under this interpretation,
labor unions are free to co
erce their aaembers into ai
mort any type of activity
which can be construed as
legitimate to the interests of
the organization.
If an employee chooses to
join a union, apparently he
now abdicates his constitu
tional right to free speech,
his right to peaceably as
semble, his right to work, his
right not to engage in con
certed activities.
The member becomes noth
THE CHOWAN HERALD
ing more than a pawn to be
used as the officials of the
labor union aee fit This is
tyranny to its wont form.
I am hopeful that the Sen
ate will soon see fit to pass
my and Senator Fannin’s bill,
to make these union fines an
unfair labor practice. By SO
doing, it will re-establish the
right of the man who labors
by the sweat of his brow to
make a living and to enjoy
the rights guaranteed him by
the labor laws and by the
United States Constitution.
Freedom demands no less.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
LESSON
its purest sense—an outpour
ing of the spirit, and of the
heart.
Concern for others has no
bounds; it cannot be fenced
in by the tenets of “this jt
done” or “this is not done."
It embraces the whole wide,
wonderful, terrifying world,
and the rewards are equally
boundless.
Zad 'oMrt Hr Belgians
. a«i used by pen
C. A. Parry, 81, b Taken In Death
HHBTFOBD—CIinton Aug
usta Perry. 81, Route 1, Hert
ford, died Thursday at ldO
P. H. in the Winslow Mem
orial Home in Elizabeth City
following a three year ill-
A native of Perquimans
County, he was the son of the
late Charlie a and Mrs. Mol
lie Moore Perry and the hus
band of the tote Mrs. Willie
P. Perry.
He was a retired farmer
and a member of the Great
Hope Baptist Church, where
he was a former deacon »■»!
superintendent of the Sunday
School.
Surviving are a son,
Charles Perry of Durants
Neck; a daughter, Mrs. Cath
erine Perry Layden of Chesa
peake, Va.; two stepdaughters:
Mrs. Catherine Atkins of
Chester, Va., and Mrs. Ruth
White of Edenton; three
brothers: Lawrence Perry of
Hertford, Bristoe Perry of
Edenton, and Claude Perry of
Tyner; four sisters: Mrs. An
nie Proctor of Chesapeake,
Va., Mrs. Cassie Lee Mans
field, (Route 1, Hertford, Mrs.
Isa Mae DaU of Hertford and
Mrs. Ruth Monds of Tyner;
Page 5-B
12 grandchildren and one
great-grandchild.
Funeral services were held
Saturday at 2 P. M. in the
Great Hope Baptist Church
by Rev. M. B. Motts, pa&tor.
Burial was in the church
cemetery.
Pallbearers were Preston
Monds, Earl White, Robert
Hollowell, Samuel ManrfielH
Wilbur Roberson and Jesse
Dail.
POfi QUICK RESULTS
m
IMIB CLASSIFIED ADS