The palmetto leader. (Columbia, S.C.) 1925-196?, June 25, 1955, Page Page Eight, Image 8
f\ .
Fag* Eight J
JAMAICA AGOG OVER
KNIGHTING OF BUSTAMANTE
J
Continued from page 1
tfchr. a Uptopian night mare.
stepped down from government
control to become leader of t h e
minority party of Jamaica, after
nis JLP was w.hipped at the J-ini;ary,
1955, polls, received the
nigh Buckingham Palace award
calmly at his 24 Tucker Avenue
House.
Just before the announcement
and after, he was deluged with
congratulatory messages.
It was ?t this Vi,?nu<> that CP.
proach came to -him after he lost
the election, and night-maskel
hecklers this year, threatened t o
shoot him at night hy shouting a
cross the hedge. .And ..it w.is .at
this' same house that he received
information of the Queen's gift.
~~ Month* Ircforc the knigh(.hoo?l
ed down on his'public appearances,
and showed extreme tolerance t o
the mass indictments and blames
thrown upon him by the Manloy
party foi: hiost of the country's
present illy.
? r 'Day after -he received the award
however, be attended .the Queen's
birthday 'Military Review at t h c
polo grounds of up park Camp.
1 ^ There he exemplified himself as
being extremely .... humble._ when a
little blacjk boytjiU-elad and barefooted,
forced his way through the
" . . crowd to^him.
and barefooted, forc<^ his way
through the crowd to him.
' "Please, Sir, may I.shake your
hand?" - ? 4
From among the elite, Busta replied:
"Sure my son. 6e a good
boy, .hear!."-He patted the youth's
"head" as he shock his hand.
[5 That night Bus teamante attend
ed a King's House garden party
. f -given in honor ?of those rewarded
3s well as to fete the democratic
governor of -Puerto Rico, Senor L.
Munoz Marin. The latter was o n
his way to the United States and
Europe and pafQ a state visit t o
Jamaica on the occasion of t h e
tereentary celebrations.
Sir Alexander's knighthood has
now made him a stouter opponent
for his cousin, Norman Manoly.
The latter who now leads the Jamaica
government through his so
cialist People's National party.
hopes to run for the Federal Assembly.
In this house, Jamaica
will have -17 seats.
Bustamante's JLP which* is patS
E E US FOR
FRESH FISH & SEA
- FOOPS
o
> ; Dressed Free
Cannarella .
FISII MARKET
2109 Read Street
A \Johnson Paint Store
distributors
Fabrics
Stap: Painty Wallpapei
Five Pom+8? ? Columbia, S. C,
711 harden st. nmno 3-617:
r> ~ -
Let IJ s
re-roof or give
your house the
NEEDED REPAIRS
Small Monthly Terms
No Down Payment
Central Roofing and
Supply Co.
Sealioard Park Phone 2-199."
JACK EVANS
QUALITY FOOD
and MEATS
r*
"The Ekj?h we sell To-morrow arc
on the Farm Today."
827 MAIN STREET
TELEPHONE 4-11*48??
[ * Phone 2-7239 s
I ^
> ? /
... y '
terned off the Conservative's o
England, will -also be contestin)
this election. Any party that win
. the majority in the Federal As
sembly, is the party w.hose leade
is likely to be appointed prim
J minister by the governor general
i _London appoints the governa
> general, and he in turn appoint
, fche prime minister.
Bustanrante has always bee;
confident he could beat his cou
j sin Manley to the draw. Now h
| in a better position to do so. Ii
i the Caribean, Bustamante is stil
the man to watch.
HIGHLANDER WORKS FOR
BETTER SCHOOLS
Montcaglc, Tennessee?"The er
j emies of the Supreme Court _ Dc
cision concerning segregation ai
i the enemies of labor in Clarer
1 ilon rv>ti.?*w t >
y-'M?vj * II ? ll V U1U.IIN
where Judge J._ Waites Warlo
.handed down the decision tha
Negroes rafnnot legally he harro
from voting in democratic pvi
i niaries in South Carolina, "
| wlvite furniture wwkw f-roi
j f.'iluramlnn County told other I!
I nited Furniture Worker stiideni
enrolled at Highlander Fo'
| School; ? -
1 Morris* Fixer, International
i t .of th" United * Furni
ture Workers, CIO, addressing th
fifty-five UFWA representative
from eight southern states, sau
, "This one-week school is- a goo
investment for the union. It wil
bring "dividends to the organtzat
ion antl we hope to have man
I more schools like it. Thoro ohoul
be places like Highlander all ove
( the country."
Myles Horton, director o.f Higl
lander, stressed the important
of participation in community a
fairs by- union members. "It i
vitally important," he told th
j Negro?and white- students, "t
work in our own communities fo
a prompt and orderly , transitio
from segregated to desegregate
public schools."
Courses taught at the school
. were! I.ahor Historv and Sho
J Steward Training, by Aleine An
tin Mufson; Trade Union Prol
lems, by Miyles Horton; Parlir
mentary Law, Public SpOakin
and Political Action, by Ilenr
Shipherd; Economics of the Fin
niture Workers Industry, by Da^
* THE RHYMI1
r
I AT LAST MV DAUC
MARRIED \ HE'S A C
HO CLUCK I j
'j^r. ^ '
n ' mmmta
tTHE^R
- 'SHATTER POF
VJON'T THE CAC
|
THE i R[
Na/OULO BE SWEU
, ITHH NtfOfcLD UVED
' +fc[0^ DA?!
/
' Virginia Can Start
; Once, NAACP Offi
e '
I. Jiy Tarter Jewel
r 11
9 PETERSBURG," Vu.?fANP)- -1~i
There is not a school division i n '
n Virginia that cannot begin ilese- j
- gration in September, Oliver Hill, |
e Richmond member of the legal
n staff of the NAACP last week ;
[1 told 1,000 people at Zion Baptist
church, here.
Hill, who was the main speaker
at a day-long emergency confer- i
once held by leaders of the state |
conference and local' NAACP
branches throughout Virginia,
i- took issue with (low Thomas 15.
!- Stahley arid his Commission o n
o! Education * on the undersirability ;
i-1 of d.csegration in the public :
i.-j schools.
gi The Richmond lawyer said the
i ti school boards who are opposing
d | immediate implementatioif of the!
i- J IT.. S. Supreme court's decree of
a ' May SI "are influenced by somen
f4hwir?-moM?="<'than-? administrative-.
I 1*1 "hh III .ii" ?
s I Ik- spoaKer <ioscnoq<i wane pok
liticians who arc opposing im- j
?nicdlittc rtoseg ration as '^tlve same ;
old erowd; of diehards." He said,
i* some, regard the court decree "as
| as vi-tory for the old, South," hut \
s he said. "it is victory for the real j
1, [-South."
d There are some, people who still
II claim "the time is Wt ripe for
' integration^" Hill'said. but he add
V ' ed that Negroes should petition
d?their school?frrr integration tst
r -j soon as possible. .
| The Richmond lawyer challen-!
] ged the views of the State Com- I
e missions on Educational headed :
' j by Sen. 'Gordon Gray of Waverly j
si\Vith regard to the possibility o r i
practicability of desegration with 1
^""tho beginning of the 1955-5(1
' school year, lie also took issue .
n , with those \Vho contend that
^ States Rights were violated by the ;
court's decision. .
r' Hill explained the 1.3th AmendP
' :
>- Ramsey and Charles Taibi: I'pliti
ical Action for ITWA. by Mar-|
g. tin Raphael and Fred Fulford;
y and History of the Furniture
Workers Organization, by Morri?
>'0 I'izor and Floyd Huekner. I
ROMEOS
^
aHTER $ | NABBING A DC
DOCTOR f 1 \S V/hAAT I CA
^GREAT LUCK \
HYMING" R
>? U*V_ ( ANOTHER L
HYMING o R(
l IF] rLE6S QUPlRREEII
INJ FRIENDSHIP...:V/<
/? ?"'^ - G h" v N>v/ 1 K r
M>
THE PALMETTO LI
Integration At
icial Says
ment to the U. S. Constitution as
Applied to the abolition of slavery
and the 10th Ainendmentr which
explains the powers reserved for
the states and the -over-all higher
power of the federal constitution.
"The state lacks the power to
make arbitrary jrroupinjjs of its
people for serrated schools," the
speaker said. *
"Twelve years of negotiations
finrl ulllte nneiill n>l i ?? ..
(tlllt H..1UHVU III VMH.V
improvements of tin1 schools," Hill
told the audience. It was because
of the. slow response >of southern
states to the program of t h e
NAACP. for equal public schools
within, the frame work of "separate
hut cqustl doctrine." that the
NAACP changed its objective t o
seeking, the end of all segregated
schools, the speaker said.
Tie pointed tt> the case for integrated
schools in Prince Edward
County, ami said Jthis suit was
basically responsible for the
county building the Sl.OUO.UOO R.
R. Moton high school.
I}rri was introduced by Dr. J,
X Tinsley, president of the Virginia
State Conference of NAAC11
Branches a 11 d the Richmond
branch, who presided at tiie public
meetir.g? in the afternoon.
. _ . . _
?Altty.DN \ SOI.ON SI" I'MITS
DILI. FOR AID TO SCHOOL
AREAS PLANNING INTEGRATION,
? - - ' j_
By Alice A. Dunnigan
A V A S If IX C. TO X?(A X P P- Hop.
Stewart- L. I'dall (P. Ariz.) last
week introduced a bill v/hich
11 1 TA 1 1 _? I?A? ?>
huuw iiiuvhu. rcui'iai aid i-o ail
school districts which are carrying
out, or arc ready to;carry out,
schol integration programs.
"Under its terms ' the ..federal
government would construct outright
the new facilities needed hy
such districts as to reorganize and
and unify their school systems.
In introducing: the hill, Cong:.
Udell stated that this "legislation
incorporates and puts to use the
well-tested federal impact?principle
which* is already imbedded in
the policies of this country and
die Congress."
XTOR VIELL ...HE
% tfclkff
OMEOS
' Li r WHAT BE
r-WGE/Jl| - ^CAR TOO
"Mv ^ cr\c v'
^IVILVJ 2__
more\| \Cl\AE PEN T<
DULD HEipj |TH&N THE
>ry
? tr 1
EADER^
Your Social Security Benefits
' i' ' *
Many retire*! workers now receiving okt-a*.ro and survivors insurI
anco checks may be entitled to an increase in their benefits in July
?if?they establish that thcy?fonvc-n?totni- disability which' began six
months or longer before reaching (15, according to \\\ H. N'ixon, Dis- I
1 M ? - r it-- ? ! 1 ' ? 1
?iTitxunRcr m me nuciai wrtiriij' .'\tiministnitiiin in t^nnTrrrtiia. I
T.argcr payments will lie received more promptly by those who are
j eligible if application is filled by June .'10.
I> Those under 05 may also ij-ain l?y establishing a disability freeze, j.
j if eligible. By tiling at this time, for example, it is possible to es;
talilisa. a disability that 1 etran as far back as October 1SM1. It is em-I
i phasi/.ed that the law proteets the Social .Security lights of a worker!
| who is sntrertng from prolonged total disability but does not pay j ^
| cash 1 ciefits to him before he is <i.j. . L
j The disability freeze ran protect the survivors, of a disabled person 1 1
I who dims after June ' () from possible InsS- or reduetidti of benefits,"]'
I but if only an application was filed before, death.
j As :i service to readers of the Palmetto I.eader, there is' reproduced
, the following disability impiiry form which may be used* as Hie first'
: step toward an applieation. - . * .
Disability Freeze Inquiry
S(i( I A !. SIKTIMTY I)\TF. f)K
. . ( '
V(ViUX'- M'Ml'i:U - - I
r , (Mo.) (day) (Yr.) l
! 1 > \V< rt- yon omployml at Ions! f'vo yoara on a
jol. oovon'il |.y fvivJnl Set-mily j . ... y,.s ^ -Xo '
'? I"'"' "I" i' ' I 1.:, ii
six month.;? . ___ y(>s '
I"*TT .we \?h iinaMo to iiT snf. t inlial ''
|f vjorii? "... -iL*..-.'..r...... C. .... V,, . .=_x? ]
1 s;<n '" / ,1"'?,v N"""' |.
? " ' ami AtMross
.1 ' -* Use Ink i
' aivwt ami Xumhot' .?n?;? :? ?: p
i City, 1'. O. aiul Spite
m-in yi ur name as. usually written ; T
(do not print i
If your answer to each of the- ahnve. questions is ""Yes," fill in this
| -form, cut out ano mail to the Social Security Administration, t'olnim ?
i 1 ia. S.' C. If disabled pVrson is unable to fill out the above form, .
1'j a friend or relative may do so for him. Insert here date your dis- 1
1 ability began -?r"-? ?-? .
I l e y.'arkod o.ut hy the communities
Briefly discussing "the pi;ovisi-:| and individuals affected; He does ?
ons of this hill and explaining hi> J not think it can be solved over-' I .
reasons for introducing it, l.he Ari j night by ruling .of courts of b y
I none representative recognized laws enacted in legislative bodies, j
that the main impediment to into- But. continued the congressman. ,
uration is the' _detic:ite and com- "Men of good will in these com- '
ilex human relations questions munities must wrestle 'with this
which are. implicit in the- court's | problem and solve it as best they
decision. jean, for admittedly any outside .
Thbrfs a paVimouTit problem, he Pressure or intrusion would only (
said, a local matter which must "ggiavate the situation."
: -r-?
^ By HORACE ELMO isn't
exactly! K but he sure d\d
4
. By HORACE ELMO
.COMES OF A^n1 'SOMEONE SELLS IT TO ?
7"
/ k *. IVI Vf
3 MIGHTIER V-Z?(TMAT5 BECAUSE WITH A\::j
: 5V/0RD, r fij JSV/ORO YOU CAN'T SIGN?
t*
f
Subscribe For
The Palmetto
LEADER ~ j
m ? II r^4 A w -m "% A
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nooxn;
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710x15 * $7.05. cxcli.l
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TIKE MART
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A & T AUTO SALES!
Good I'soil Cars
?. ..JS17 Sumlcr St. i
ph. 2-isix; |
WE HUY. SELL & TRADE.i
ED BROCK MOTORS
A Oood Place To Bu>^
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9^1 a M \ TXT CT
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eplacement parts equipment, suirilies
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JENKINS AUTOMOTIVE
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Springs 'N' Thinjjs
2959 Main St. Columbia, ft.-C.
NEW & LSEI) CARS
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1 l'oid K. it li. ___- 29.")
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10 through . 50 Models At A Real
T Ilarjjain T
Queen Motors '
fi'iH Harden St. CdlNi., S.
PlIOXK r?-3i."?l
3 Huriier ?Cabinet
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was $39.75 ' |
N () W $23.75 J
HENDRIX
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eoia mm a, s. e.
mamammw
???
EVANSBROS_
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A Full lino of Quality Fowls audi
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2330 1 .iiurel St. Ph. 3-2120
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4
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KING P
, 1925 M
Saturday, J tine 25, 195$
WASHINGTON
Carver Village
Columbia's most economical
_ Iwjjl. bedroom apartments for
colored. $.'19.00 and $43.33 per
month, or $9 and $10 per
week. Call S-1534 for details.
?
* .
Carolina Par's Co.
sriot 'I a ij. ?
1951 l-'I.V. (iood second car $L!t>
. litmus (1-0.V2S?2!?
Canulin IIwy. Columbia, 73, S.C.
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USED CARS , '
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1051 Olilsnvobile'SS . 99.V ...
Kancock-Buick
Company
LA I'KEL at 11AR\ W ELL
PHONE 3-7545 1
Senate Street
Grocery Store
: GROCEKIES : r
A Full Line of Groceries <
OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY
.Mrs. James LeDeaux, Manager .
'.' 'iflO Seuatu St.? Columbia, S. G> 1
_ Phone 4-9457 _ I
0
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