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PAGE TWO TH» CAM PCX CHWOWICLB, i ■ ..* (ftp (Eamiifn 1109 North Bf«o4 M PUBLISHED gVMtY Harold C. Booker - - - - Editor DaCosta Brown - M\ One TPoar Sax Months ..... Payable In Advi $2 1. Ottioo at Mat tor at act of VI*™ All moat bo FRIDA1 i. — lf48 May Become .Far from Democratic fa for Party »ie, the States Rights ly become one of the BtuebaU Wolves Pneldent Manley IJewellyn at the Tri- sute Baseball League hae absolved Man- ager Dave Garcia and two players of the Knoxville, Tenn., baseball club qf blame In an alleged assault on a heckling fan. In a statement of findings after a two^day investigation, he said that the players were “called the most vile names in the vocabu lary of the gutter” and were objects of ac cusations involving their integrity and the integrity of the game of baseball. Manager Garcia said the fan had shout ed at the players that they had “sold out. The heckling fan was a Knoxville rooter- one of those wolves who take! delight in hollering insulting remarks at home play ers whenever they make a bobble. It seems that after the game Garcia and two of his plsyery met the ineuWug fsn and roceeded to pdmmel him quqite a bit with next f< Sta A growing sentiment for is evident all over the nation founders of the new party (handle ly it may succeed where countless thiijd party movements have failed, ere are many people in the . other sec- one of the country who are as fed up with the encroachment of the Federal govern ment upon the rights of the states as are the people of the Booth. Letters from them are pouring into the headquarters of the new party and many of them contain pleas staW. It is a fact that many people have over looked tyat much of the opposition to the adoption of the oomtitution when it was submitted to the thirteen original states was due to the fact that there was no clear cut statement in it that the Federal gov ernment was to have only such powers as were expressly delegated to it by the states under the Constitution. Consequently assurances Were given that the necessary insertion would be made promptly, once the constitution went into effect; and this was later done‘by ihe pro posal and adoption of the Tenth amend ment, which became effective Wherf rati fied by Virginia, the eleventh state to do so, on December 16, 1791. The tenth amendment reads as follows: > “The powers'not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by H to the Statee, are re served to the States respectively, or to . the people.*' - — ^ For years this provision was respected by the Federal government but there has ''grown up in recent years a tendency to ignore it altogether and a New Deal-pack ed Supreme Court has upheld the Federal government in determination to ignore this very important section of the constitution. As we Jiave remarked before the ten dency lately hap been to make the United States a misnomer. The States soon will have no powers. i-x.- To Overthrow White Man w (4) Asserting that the white man is a fascist ?t ;; ; ' f 6) Asserting that the time hae come for the filial overthrow of the white man’s pow- er-economically and politically. . We cannot ate why any newspaper in the South would run the columd written by a native of the South who is always at the section in whkh he was born Such a columnist is Thom** L. ■■■K ^hfieftgue president said in announcing his decision absolving the Knoxville play ers that his investigation had .brought to light an mdstin* condition in the Knoxvi le park “that cannot and will nbt be tole rated.” This condition^ he said, “is the un bridled use of vile and indecent language bv the fans in certain sections of the park. AU parks must be cleared of this inexcus able offense and I am instructing all club owners to have the-gutfty parties or TemoTirfrom the park and re! mission thereafter.* t Baseball is beginning to suffer almost everywhere from the “wolves” that haunt the parks to holler insulting remarks at umpires and players alike, remarks they would not dare make except from the pro tection of a crowd. One eannot blame play ers from resenting such remarks and it might be a wholesome thing for baseball if more of them would hpnf up these wolves after the game as the Knoxville players ^id. rife all right to holler all you please at a baseball game but the game does not of fer excuse for any one becoming a boor. With The Press Thinta Out loud Every one would early toll—for the 1 It M«ns that no Improvements are ever made in political toA chine. A new model always .{pras oat to W just like the old one. A writer says that there are not as many scarecrows seen on toms this yutr aa In former years. It costa too much to drees ’em. . ■ "Xs Full Support The South 'Carolina party should pot only . States Rights party candidates, but should forthwith pledge Its eight electoral votes to the Southern ticket Governor Thurmond and Governor Wright are waging the battle for states’ rights without hope of reward other than that of service to the connWy, It *■ cer' talnly little enough that all South ern states, whkh boast- of their belief in states’ lights, should rally behind the ticket ieve that it Is the right When East meets West they don’t seem to get anywhere. If we believe of every state to govern Its own internal affairs. You can’t vote for states’ righto and vote |pr Truman, Dewey or Wallace. They are un animously in favor of aD of the so- called civil rights program of Presi dent Truman. It 1# a question of whether we shall follow our convictions and vote for the States Rights candi dates or follow the politicians, who more of their own political resentsd ah Idaho dlstykt in Con gress for 14 years, was named again last week. So It seems that at least one Idaho district stands for White supremacy. There, are lota ountiry who think of people hr this country who think that the Rus sians are bluffing and that if we ever can their hand they will back down completely. . Which reminds us of the story about two trucks having met in a country rogd just wide enough for one. Track driver No. 1, a scrawny Mil little man, leaned out of his cab. “Turn out you,” ha shouted, “If ya don’t’, HI IK Two-huadraf pound muscular drtv- No. t, not caring for trouble, pulled out. But so the other track rambled by, he yelled: “What ya do to the guy that wouldn’t pull out for ya?" "I turned out for him/ replied No 1. A California man testified the other- day that he spent several fconsaad dollars on his wife be fore he married her. He most hare married her fer his money. ifhtobfTi >w, he’d now, land. son Crusoe probably hunt ere al that Everybody admires a speaker who, when he says he hasn’t got anything much to say, just says it and sits down. The Fruit Of Freedom , — The Burlington (Vermont) Free Press Senator Mayhank - His v&tory in the first primary over four opponents indicates the high regard that the people^ of South Carolina have for United States Senator Burnet R. Mayhank. It was a rousing endorsement of the stand which he ka* taken in the Senate for States Rights and of the fight which he has made at all times for what he regards as the best interests of this section and of the nation. He will go back to Washington committed to the same principles for which he has fought in t^e past. Mr. Maybank ihas had a rather remark able political record. He has never been defeated for publfcHliffice. He has served as Mayor of Charleston, Governor and as v United States Senator and filled all of ; these positidns with distinction. says: y* , . “The fact that under free institutions the people of the United Statee hav^ achieved the (highest standard of living found anywhere in the word seems to have confused many in this country into the be lief that freedom is a means to reach the goals of ease and comfort. But the fruit of freedom is not primarily a full stomach or more radioe, automobiles, nylon stockings, refrigerators, fur coats, and labor-saving devices. The fruit of freedom is a lifting of the human spirit above the creatui^l com forts of life to a point where they become minor, items in the journey of a through this world.” And that is something we all might pon der over. ' < .>. that at the next Congress we are to be to the spectacle of-W fili buster for the right to filibuster. A witter delfaras that the peo ple of today have advantages that their forefathers never even Cream- -a nr-- —- J w* i# *9 think ot the Interests of the . and vote tor the Trutoan ticket. We may be defeated, and prob ably will, but' It la better to he rirht than to win. Then again, we not bo defeated. If all the Southern states win stick together, We may have enough electoral votes to throw the election Into congress. In the latter event, It to quite possible to gather enough votes from outside the South to dictate who the next president will fto. . , .4- The South to not alone m ito ideas on states’ righto. When the vote was taken on the in the national Demo- itlc der Southern states and states In the north and west voted for statee* righto: Artodna, Colorado, Delaware, Idaho. Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Mtosdurl. Montana, Ne braska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Rhode Island. Utah, West Virginia, Alaska, and the Canal Zone. In addition to these states, which voted either solidly or by s majority with the Southern delegations, several oth er states voted partially with the South. s States’ rights are not merely (Southern principles. There to exfr cellent ground for formation of a new party baaed on these prin ciples. The South now. has the dp- portunlty of making a substantial beginning. If we lose this year, we can go right ahead in 196S. We shall certainly .gain -strength. Ultimately we‘ can win the fight—Bamberg Herald. Truman’s late DoUtteaT session a a saaaamsa m ■wr-i-i# E*■ ■ ■ ■ ■' m 111 ■■ ■ w ■■ Congress did wss to make tfcra realise the number of traitors he has in his administration—-sod wasn’t responsible tor this Information public—the Repub Means were. Truman’s attitude la that It to none of the public’s business how h to spiss he has in high posi tions In Washington. He even re fused to release reports on suspect- whose every’thZL 1 ed and admitted oocnmuntoto to the selfless sad »k *** 1 investigating committee. And we’ve got to pat up him six months!—Fort Mill 1 note! bj./ 1 ?* 11 ’ 1 SS^tor ^2 * People into o*r„ M the national capj^ * Of POWsT^ 1, Granting ^ Wallace kEy with Thurmond For Ail ttatsp Governor Thurmond at Houston stated, not only the case ot the South. He spoke for ail the Ameri can statee. When he said the socalled civil rights program of the . was borrowed from a police he told no more than the and unvarnished truth. Founders of the United I wrote local sett-government and. the individual rights of free men 1 into their constitution to protect ed up today ly Imported from Europe, the meats for return to try tuny have been unmasked. Thurmond and Wright are Ing for national leadership. spired with wlsdrwT, stoat Once would be the 1 will Governor Thur* for the people ♦>» „ Spot'Tl ■i Th£\re I the people of the „„ Ike West not the cities. Perhaps, | f***™ !■ tor fiui, for the solid dw.lHnT 1 ! 7 ^ aei ' r dwelling to cliff of theh : They ] where retatlot more.human basis. 1 speak for all tko states, not tor any Shall retain the with thtir toQ and one section. Governor Thurmond concedes the right of New Tort to ton News and abolish separation of toe races If ■- ‘ — that custom seems proper to its FINAL D people. By .the same token, he 4e- Notice is her* mauds that Georgia, that South Carolian hare the privilege to re quire It Washington could put a federal policemen Into every nook and crany onf the nation. Hie views of other no matter how When he called these Ideas Oom- munistic, Mr. Thurmond used a current term that most persons will grasp Immediately aa unpopu- Nottee Is hereby month from this *0, 1918, Willis D to the Probate Court County his final rsh and tor of the estate of 1 Court tor a fins) Executor. N.a. <Jamden, 8. C., July I fort to force an entrance. Think ing ^quickly the husband said to the burglar, “IT1 open the dooT, if you’ll go in first" • ed of. Tes—we doubt if any of them ever had a basal metabolism test . Ceylon expects to produce 990, 000 jtadir of> rice this year which to be sufficient to lower the Mood pressure of that country very considerably. • ' , No* that a plane has been In vented that will travel faster than sound, the next thing will be in vent a sound that will keep up with h. ' . * * 7- ■v 7 ' •- vj ^ People Never Forget... The thoughtfulness end personal they receive from the memhars of >0: and will At a PHONE 103 One Wonders Every time the House committee on un- American Activities gets hot on the t^«il of some Communists, Drew frearron, m columnist, tries to smear the cfoainhan of the committee. He did it When ,Martin Dies 'was chairman, he did it when John E. Rankin was chairman and now he’s doing it when J. Parnell Thomas is chairman. One cannot but wonder why? The trouble with Glean Taylor, Henry Wallace’s running mate, Is that he apparently can’t think when he’s talking. And he’s talking all of the time. “If a man knows he is right he I ought to have the courage to-stand by his convictions regardless of the cost,” says a writer. You’ve probably heard the one about the lecturer who had reached one of hie most telltfg points: "Ho who flves'Tn when he’s wrong to wise; the man who fives to when right to .’’ “Marrftd^came a utfc* from the audience. '‘;"V , ’A The^Whlknial Coal Association predicts that there will not-be any shortage of coal this wtnter. Nor of pold? An ex WAVE says that this country needs s bigger standing army. Sounds sort of WAC-ky to ua What Is It Doing? ^According to pr. S. D» Norborg,. whu is described as an exceedingly'well-trained. One doesn't hear much from the South Carolina Federated Forces for Temper ance these days as to what progress it is making in the purpose for which it was or ganized and for which most peoplesinade contributions to it and that is it» fight on liquor. , ' * - r Has it abandoned thia fight altogether? The Detroit' Free Press just about suras It up correctly when It says: “Np one brought np In a generation that produced two world war*, totalitarianism, a great de- preeaion. bell-bottom trousers, the Charleston, radio quls programs, and our present state of labor-man- agemenl relations, has s right to tell youngsters anything. We’re too punchy from' the effects of onr own misspent lives. We”re like the lady who snorted at the social worker: Don’t you Ur to tell me how to raise children, me what’s buried six of them/ ” VO stave OURSELF »nd informed mad With worldwide sources of informa^on which have proved extra ordinarily correct, the Soviet propaganda is every wheVe the eftad.' Pr. Norborg says that this propaganda contains Hie following elements: (1) Attack on the white man’s colonial history. V - (2) Ridicule of the white man's stamina in standing up to the Japs. . (8) Bragging about the marvelous un derground resistance of the Communists against the Not A Free People, Eh? A Washington dispatch last week said that the National Democratic party offi cials might go into the courts in an effort to force the electors of Southern states to cas their ballots for Truman. So evidently Mr. Truman et al must really feel that we aye slaves. The Russians will probably claim that that actfool teacher who leap ed from the third story of the Russian consulate in New York was merely observing leap year. -,-i, ,;i - _ Buckingham Landing to hi the news again. We thought that dam project had been abandoned long agA. yr. /1 ' There Bp Right MHBBt The United States, British and French troops are in Berlin by right, not through ang courtesy of the Rusrians. They are re solved not to be forced out by Soviet coer cion. At least we hope they are! * The Greenville county Democrat) ic executive committee wants ah ‘extraordinary*’ seyakm of the General Assembly. An “extraor- ordlnary" senston. we pcqgume, would be one A which something was aocompllahed. m — “Some profile are just lucky in life; everything happens to break just right for them,’’ says a writer. We dom t know so giudi about (hat! You know thw old saying that next to having a great aim to the ability to recognise the psychological moment to pall tie u The refusal of Governor tMaopH 1i» hon or Booth Carolina extradition papers for an escaped convict from the Greenwood coun ty chaingang on the ground that the con- vict had been cmellj treated is juet. an- . unworthy of an •/P'' ” ' robber baa written a article - he had while 111 dtec We couldn’t help think, aa we reed them, of 7-1 —-T ■ s, .* 7 / very Into eomie uaeii authority or '-.Arfs CAROLINA COCAXOLA BOTIUHC