Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1962 — Page 2

FIRST CUT

Park Chops 3 lbs. $1.00 SMO. JOWL WHOLE PIECE lb. 19t LAMB (.EG lb. 49c ROAST lb. 35c Goat Meat Lard 2 Lbs. 25c 50 lb. Con $4.95 OLEO PRINTS 2 lbs. 25c

PRODUCE DEPARTMENT, FRESH, CAREFULLY SELECTED VEGETABLES AWAIT YOUR CHOICE

PUBLIX MARKET—WHERE WOMEN FIND BARGAINS! BE SURE YOU SHOP PUBLIX

Publix Supermarkets Offer Special Easter Bargains The Publix Supermarkets, 28th .'^ason choice poultry or seafoods

md N. Capitol Ave. and at 56tb 3t. and N. Illinois St., under new management are successors to food merchandising organizations op-

erating on me A’orthside of the | without

eity for nearly three decades. William (Bill) Thimbler is manager of the Publix Supermarket at 28th and N. Capitol. He is a veteran of more than 15 years in che food merchandising field. Operating under new management, Morris and Jacob Frankovitz are owners of the Publix Supermarkets. Both men are veterans of nearly 20 years activity in the food

.merchandising field.

The Publix Supermarkets are successors (28th St.) of the Stop and Shop Supermarkets operating m the food mert’.iandising field and on the near Northside almost

thirty years.

Popular prices are the style at Publix Supermarkets and in keep- j ing with expectations of the Easter j

and all selections of beef, veal, pork (hams) etc. are being offered through Wednesday, April 25th at prices to meet all competition.

sacrificing quality, the

available including ice cream, onehalf gallon 49 cents, one-half gallon milk with deposit 49 cents. A regular or full line of fresh vegetables and seafoods in season are available at all times. Canned goods include StokelyVan Camp, Richelieu and other i popular name brand varieties. The store also canies the most popular line of beers, wines and popular

soft drinks.

The meat line includes anything or everything in fresh cuts of

management of the Publix Super-! choice beef, veal, pork and lamb markets states. j or mutton. Seafoods in season inIn keeping with the weekend i elude varieties offered anywhere offering of shopping bargains,; such as are available to select | with each $5.00 purchase a cus- j patrons of the seafood line, tomer may obtain 1 dozen eggs Store hours Sunday through for ten cents. Using a coupon ap- Thursday are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. pearing elsewhere :n this issue of | and Friday and Saturday 8 a.m. The Recorder, a regular six-pack to 12 p.m. The new management of Coca-Cola may be purchased invites your patronage and prefer 19 cents. i poses to offer the best in quality A full line of dairy products is foods and service to all-comers.

FUN . . . FOR VALUE

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© 1961 Walt Disney Productions. Ludwig Von Drake stars in Walt Disney’s “Wonderful World of Color”—Sundays on NBC.

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REV. HOWARD S. DAVIS

[Attend National ; Rally For Rights Mrs. Beulah Wallace, well-known j organized labor and civil rights ; worker, and Oliver Brown repret sented the city as delegates to ' the National Civil Rights Rally held last week in Washington,

D.C.

Mr. Brown and Mrs. Wallace ! both represented the United Auto Workers at the rally, which included visits to Congressmen and I a hearing on civil rights legislaj tion before the Subcommittee on 1 Constitutional Rights of the Senate Judiciary Committee. In addition, Mrs. Wallace represented the NAACP. She is a member of the local NAACP board

of directors.

The Indianapolis woman was honored by election as chairman of the Indiana delegation to the rally, which was sponsored by the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights. About 800 delegates attended

The Rev. Howard Spencer Davis, j

Church, ‘Terr^ Hm.t^ a ind Ba d t ied :the gathering to exert pressure April 14 in Marion County Gen- on for Passage of key

eral Hispital. 1 cml ri ^ hts

rights measures.

Funeral services will be held f^T>ril 20 i'i Bethlehem Baptist Church of Indianapolis, where he had pastored 13 years prior to moving to the Terre Haute church, with burial in Floral Park Cem-

etery.

Born in Proctor, Ark., Rev.

Recorder to report the incident because “1 just couldn’t stand to see any more of that type of brutality

go on.”

“I’ve been at this hospital six years and I’ve seen a lot of it. The way some policemen treat their prisoners is inhuman. It doesn’t matter what a man has done, he doesn’t deserve to be treated like a wild animal. I hope that something will be done about it,” Mr.

Pipkin said.

MATTHEWS V/AS taken to the Marion County Jail, and a charge of resisting arrest had been added to the original drunk charge. He appeared later in the day of April 14 in Judge Charles C. Daugherty’s Municipal Court 4, where he was found guilty on both counts, fined in excess of $100, and sen-

tenced to 30 days in jail.

A Recorder reporter went to the jail to talk with Matthews and learned that he and Calvin Harris, address unknown, were arrested the morning of April 14 on the corner of 19th and Cornell. According to Matthews, he and Harris were standing on the corner talking when a patrol wagon pulled up and two policemen jumped out. He said the police told him that they had gotten a report of two men arguing on the corner. Matthews admitted that he and Harris had been drinking but de-

nied they were arguing.

“We wera only talking,” Matthews said. “I was on my way to j

meet my girlfriend.”

He said the officers told them: “You’re both under arrest,” and took them to the city lock-up above police headquarters. There, Matthews said, a policeman came out from behind a desk and began to bully him. He accused the policemen of using profane and abusive language and charged that one of the officers struck him over the head with a billy club. He said they beat him and kicked him, and then threw him in a cell. When he complained of head pains, he said, and when the blood from his wounds soaked his clothing, police then took him to the

hospital.

CHIEF REILLY reached by phone at headquarters, told this reporter that an investigation of the incident would begin the instant he hung up the phone. Reilly said: “I’m not pre-judging anyone before a complete investigation. But I have a reputation that I am

jealous of. That is, I don’t tolerate or condone the use of unnecessary force by any police officer.” “I assure you the entire matter will be thoroughly Investigated by a high ranking police officer.” DR. POPPLEWELL said he was unaware of what allegedly took

place. He said:

“I don’t understand why this incident wasn’t reported to me first, but I will get as much information as possible to cooperate with the

police investigation.”

MATTHEWS, a 0 ft.. 200 pound unemployed embalmer, has a police record dating back to 1939. He’s been arrested over twenty times since his discharge from the Army in 1945. He has served time in orison on a grand larceny conviction, and he is a convicted narcotics addict, police records show. “We don’t care how bad his record is. That still doesn't give a policeman the right to mete out punishment as if he were a court of law,” an NAACP spokesman

concluded.

BOOKS WANTED INDIANA BOOK STORE 215 N. Illinois St. ME, 4-1986

Kite Contest

Continued from Page 1

ant at Northwestern. finally

Davis, 55, 1704 Sheldon, had re- orbited her kite at an altitude of

sided here 30 years and had owned and operated the Davis Market on

East 16th street 18 years. Survivors include his wife, Mrs.

more than 1,250 feet. Some of the jealous onlookers cut her cord which left her entry tied to the top of a tree and still in orbit as

Mattie May Davis; a son, Howard late as 7 o’clock Tuesday evening .j Davis, Jr. or Indianapolis; a when it was retrieved by a young brother. Ballard Davis of Arkansas; lad. a sister, Mrs. Mary W. Bonner, The following carriers will comWaco, Texas; four stepsons, Joe R., (pete in the final meet Saturday at Winfield, Jamel and A. B. Cole-• Douglass Park at 12 o’clock noon, man; ana a stepdaughter. Mrs., Linda Smith, Alice Kinnard, Mary J. Briscoe. Dwight Lunderman, George

Cheesebourgh, Chester Gill, and Lorenzo Humphries. All Recorder carriers are encouraged to attend the final meet and to encourage their favorite co-worker. Needless to say, the public is invited.

Erbecker

Continued from rage II

PAUL'S DEPARTMENT STORE: Mrs. Mary Gutharie is showing a dress to a customer, Miss Arlene Davidson. Paul's Department Store located at the corner of Clifton and Udell specializes in all types of clothing for the family, at prices to fit all pocketbooks.

Masons Raised

ContUiaeo rrom rage 1

THE INDIANAPOLIS HECORDKPt

Published Weekly by-the QJ30ROE P. STEWART PRINTING COMPANY. INC.

Main Office 518 Indiana Ave.

BrO.ered

Indianapolis, Indiana d at the Post Office,

.toou u 1 uuo kwdv Indian

E Church, grand chancellor; Grady *v>olis. Indiana, as second-claas matB. Hinkle, grand secretary; Alvin funder ^ A,ct^of March ^1870 j commission will

Reno, grand treasurer; Harry K. | consolidated Publishers, Inc., Price, grand engineer and archi-1 Fifth Avenue, New York, n.y. toot* T.nnie C!1arlr. trrnnd hnsnital-^ Member: Audit Bureau of Circula-

tion. National Newspaper Publlshen

tect; Louis Clark, grand hospital les; Thomas H. Van Lear, grand master of ceremonies, Mansfield Finch, grand asst, master of ceremonies; Oscar Roberson, grand captain of the guard; Clarence Webb, grand standard bearer; Robert Lee, grand sentinel, and John H. Motley, recording secretary.

.association, Hoosier State Press Asao

elation. dotted

parts of the county. “I will do everything in my I power to stop these wholesale j muggings strong arm robberies, murders, rapings and burglaries that have plagued Marion County ; and made it virtually unsafe for | any law-abiding citizen to walk the streets after dark,” Erbecker

pledged.

WELL KNOWN TO Westside 1 voters, Erbecker said the plans inS elude formulating a crime commission in Marion County. The

be composed of

545 one citizen from each section of the county to meet with the sherifi on a weekly basis to plan more vigorous law enforcement in those areas where crime seems to be

manuscripts, pteturss | running rampant.

and cuts will not be returned unless aeoonpaaled by postage to cover same

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Erbecker, who was instrumental in the job placement of many Westside Democratics under the administration of the late Mayor A1 Feeney, feels that his record and past performance earns him the privilege of seeking support from those people he has beneaeially aided. Erbecker, who has appealed three criminal eises to the U. S. Supreme Court this year, was one of the youngest attorneys in Indiana to rrgue a case in Washington before the nation’s highest

tribunal.

A NATIVE OF Indianapolis, Erbecker attended St. Catherine’s grade school, is a graduate of

Tax Evasion

Continued from Page 1

rectly to Chacharis with Mitchell’s name on the checks as go-between. The government charges further that Mitchell lied when he testified that he personally worked out his “fee arrangement” with the

two contractors.

“They worked it out,” the indictment quotes Mitchell as _-saying. “I was with them, but they are the ones who told me what it would be.” The government charges that the two contractors did not work out the “fee ar- ’ rangement” with Mitchell and did not tell him about any

such arrangement.

Two months ago Mayor Chacharis was indicted on a charge of failing to pay taxes on $226,686 allegedly received in kickbacks from contractors. At that time, Mitchell and three other councilmen were named as intermediaries who passed along the money to Chacharis. The other councilmen are Terry Gray, George Ferhat and A1 Wozniak. The government described the perjury indictment as a “curtain raiser” into the “machinations” involved in the tax conspiracy

Cathedral High School and attend- charges against the Gary mayor; 3d Butler University and the Uni- L a k e County Sherilf Peter Manversity of Wisconsin, and was dich, other County and city of-gradua-ted from the old Benjamin c j a ] s of G ary and Peter Chacharis, Harrison Law School. brother of the mayor.

Erbecker. 50, and unmarried,

lives with his brother at 703 Lin- victory or defeat is relatively uneolfi. He is affiliated with various important in view of the moral .♦hurch, civic, labor and fraternal principles involved if I have done organizations. nothing but to bring home to the Addressing another such group good, law abiding citizens * of he said, “I will do all in my power Marion County an awareness of the to rid Marion County of crime and drastic breakdown of law enforcevice; I will personnllv defend the ment agencies in Marion County, office of Sheriff of Marion Conn- I shall have been more than amply ty in all Habeas Corpus actions, rewarded, irrespective of my outbrought by criminals to escape come in the race in the Primary, justice; I will never let big busi- My true aim, purpose and concern ness or corporations us" the is to eradicate crime and vice in

of Sheriff to break strikes, and I our community,

will enforce all laws impartially, The “Erbecker for Sheriff” camforcefully and justly.” paign headquarters is located at Erbecker further declared, “My 312 E. Washington, Room 205.

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