Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 July 1960 — Page 3

Barrington Sets Open House; Sensational Rent Plan Offered

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Barrington, the modem. 700unit apartment project located in South-east Indianapolis, will have an open house Sunday, July 24, James C. Cummings Jr., the new manager announced this week. The public is invited to visit model apartments in the Barrington Manor section where 1900 furniture groupings will be displayed and information presented on a sensational new rental plan. Door prizes will be awarded, gifts will be given children and merchants of Twin-Aire Shopping

Out of

The Woods

By RON WOODS

been alerted to a most blistering and depressing piece of news. When Naptown’s favorite daughters, the CALYPSOS, stage their Third Annual “Miss Charm”-“Mr.

Center, located near Barrington |Esquire” dance Saturday, July 23, will give special coupon folders j at the IBEW Hall, partygoers may to everyone attending. The ton-1 witness the linal efforts of the pons will be good for special pur- j spontaneous group After convul-

chases in Tfin-Aire stores.

FLASH!: This writer has just.he’s as good a musician as anyone

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LAUNCHES NEW — MODERN TAILORING AND CLEANING SHOP

Mr. Archie Smith and Mr. David Kemn, Jr. announce the opening of their new and modern NU-LOOK TAILORING AND CLEANING SHOP located at 2749 Northwestern Avenue. The shop, with the very latest in modern equipment, was cnened to viewers on Saturday, July 9th. Mr. Smith is a well known person in Inlianapolis. having worked at St. Vincent's Hospital for over 30 rears. He lives with his family at 2615 Boulevard Place. Mr. Kemp, formerly of Louisville, Kr.. has made Indianapo is his home since his marriare to the former Mbs Carrie Smith. Mr. Kemp wil* graduate July 29 from West Kentucky Vocational School, Paducah. Kv., where he will at that time have completed a 22-month course in Tailoinsr and Drafting. He is the son of while-you-woif service. The telephone number is WA. 4-0962. The NU-LOOK TAILORING AND CLEANING SHOP will specialize in major and minor alterations anj a press wh Je-you-woit service. The telephone nuber is WA. -0962.

around, will provide the musical heat . . . We predict that this extravagant affair, which has held N apt own audiences spell-bound through the years, will again entrance the dignified ball-goers. ' LETTER OF THE WEEK: “Dear IVI.\ Woods: I regret to inform you that your column in the Recorder is not considered a necessary part of this otherwise outstanding newspaper by the majority of individuals who have been questioned on ihe matter. Your unfortunate habit of inquiring of your still more unfortunate subject^ (if they object to what you intend to print about them and printing it whether they object or not) is not your most endearing quality — there is an-

other.

What I refer to i$ the distinct modesty with which you refuse to prn*i anything Which praises your writing ability. (This is understandable as it would be in direct contrast to the accompanying evidence). However, there must have been a mixun a few weeks ago, for I cqme upon a letter in your column v/hicJi came dangerously

,on. Patricia Hansom and Billie j ^,11 ‘.."S. .I.ncc Short, tor “Miss Charm,” “".Viol of^rse and William Barnett, Michael I ,

Lllis, John Lewis, Ronald Taylor | ,f 1 ma >’ be Permitted to submit 1 i nd Hon Woods, for “Mr. Esquire.” i Uns m,,d complaint and add to it

a gentle suggestion in the form of

'sing us’ins during the years with such first night thrills as “The Orchid Fantasy,” “Pick-Of-Six,” and “Bohemian Mood” dances (while making its debut on the social scene), members appear to have confirmed rumors that the club will fold A tipster alleges the reason to he “No Leadership.”

ON THE BRIGHTER SIDE: The

One bill will pay for everything . . . including the purchase of four rooms of fif*niture—under the new Manor plan. A payment of $88 will pay all expenses including the purchase of four rooms of brand new, high quality furniture, which will belong to the tenants. Full detaiis of the open house

will be presented in the July 23 ! highlight of the Calypsos affair,, of issue of The Recorder,Plaui now to iconise, will he the crowning of attend this gala affair, (his year’s “Miss Charm” and “Mr.

Esquire” by last gear’s winners, NORMA C HEATHAM and ELROY EDWARDS . . . And, except for the expectation of the club folding. the event promises to encompass all the g amour and charm of its two previous years. High-ranking competitors in Ihe contest include Charlotte Bailey, Anna Cowherd. Marsh Emer-

Gallagher Elected Head of Indiana Insurance Inst.

DAVE HARDIMAN, who has proven time acid time again that

BARGAINS!

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constructive criticism, I would like to request that you scrap your column and fill the resulting space with something more rewarding, for instance, obituaries. Respectfully Yours, Kathie Gesner” “P. S. I DARE YOU TO PRINT

THIS!”

(WRITER’S NOTE): You make it news Kathie! We on the news-

papers, will make it public.

WE WERE WRONG-tipped when v\e reported SHEILA JAMES’ “secret pals” . . . Sheila has suddenly decided she isn’t the least hit interested in Jewell Pearson or Luther Jack, as we all thawt. But Naptcwn scuttlebutt still insists she’s stuck on JERRY HUB-

‘T, IrintlnR , ° r<!er and her entourage of five ail , lt\. 4-lo45. Open Until • 0 ti ier professional entertainers will “ ~— I b<' seen in a complete show open

to the public at the Madam C. J ! Walker Diamond Anniversary Convention . Scheduled for (he ! Walker Building August 21-24, (he j observance will also feature the I appearance of glamorous VERA

| GUNN and her models.

E. P. GALLAGHER Edward P. Gallagher, nationally known insurance executive and executive vice president and. general counsel of American States Insurance Company, this week was re-elected to a third term as president of the Insurance Institute of

Indiana.

Also elected to serve third consecutive terms were: Horace H. Tudor, vice president and general counsel of Indiana Lumbermen’s, as vice president; William P. Cooling 1 , president of Indiana & Consolidated Insurance Companies, as treasurer, and Jack J. Rosebrough, general counsieJ of Farm Bureau, as secretary, of the non-profit educational corporation. Serving with these four men are O. O. Allen, secretary of State Auto,, and Carl M. Russell, president of Meridian Mutual, on the Executive Committee, policy-mak-

ing body of the Institute.

The board of directors, made up of the presidents or board chairmen of the 18 major fire and casualty companies domiciled in Indiana, also re-elected Allen Dale,

executive vice president.

The Institute has spoken to more than 350 club meetings in Indiana during the two years of its operation and discussed with business leaders of the state the problems confronting both the

Lt. Thos. E. Carter Jr., Army Reservist On Active Duty FIRST LT. Thomas E. Carter Jr., son of Mrs. M, L. Carter, 2860 Highland, is presently serving with the Headquarters VI U. S. Army Co:ips, Fort Benjamin Harrison. The assignment of the 31-year-oud Marion County reservist as assistant to the Corps Engineer while on annual active duty training was announced last week. The Corps, commanded by Major-General George E. Bush, ;s respoinsible for the supply, administration, and training of ail Army Reserve forces and ROTC activities throughout Indiana and Michigan. J A 1946 graduate of Attucks high school, Carter enlisted in the Army in late 1951, receiving a commission as a second lieutenant after attending Engineer Officers Candidate School at Fort Belvoir, Virginia early in 1953. From April, 1953 until January, 1954 he was executive officer of Company A, 50th Armored Infantry Battalion, 6th Armored Division, Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. Lt. Carter is currently attending Indiana University, where he is majoring in economics. His military career still continues as he prepares himself for his civilian occupation. Appointed company commander of Company A, 972nd Engineer Battalion, Army Reserve, headquartered at the Robert M. Moore Reserve Center in West Indianapolis, July, 1959, he also served as platoon leader and executive officer in the same reserve unit.

The Indianapolis Recorder,. July 16,1960—3

Ind. Bell Placing 67,000 Miles of Telephone Lines Indiana Bell construction crews are placing 67,000 miles of new telephone lines in the Indianapolis metropolitan area in projects started recently, George K. Kennelly announced this week. Kennelly, Bell’s Indianapolis division manager, said the cable projects will cost $1,198,000. Exj cept for the Mooresville area, the work is scheduled to he completed late this year. The Mooresville project, the largest oi 12 now under way, is a $495,800 job, preparing for the introduction of dial service in the Mooresville-Brooklyn area about m id-1961, Aerial and underground cables will be placed in Indianapolis to serve new customers and to make one-party telephone service available to present customers now on multi-party lines,‘Kennelly added.

U. S. Judge Refuses Ala's 3rd Plea For Delay of NAACP Case MONTGOMERY, Ala. (ANP)— U.S. District Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr. last week refused to put off a hearing in which the Alabama NAACP seeks to get back into business in the state. It was the federal judge’s third refusal of state requests to postpone hearings on racial disputes. Trial date was set for July 13. State Atty. Gen. MacDonald Gallion had asked for the delay until after the Democratic national convention in Los Angeles.

( In California he said he planned public and the insurance industry I to remain there until after the including such topics as who convention closes, but would keep

actually sets automobile rates, what can be done about traffic safety and where will the pres

in daily touch with his office here. His assistants said here that they were not familiar with all

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Jury Returns 'No Verdict' Decision in Hulan Jack's Trial

Lis 26th arrest. Or so he told thts- 1 writer during our. 14-hour stay

there.

WOODS OF WISDOM: CONFESSION: We confess our liiUe faults only to persuade others that we have no great ones . . .

Like, BOOM!

Wherever you **;k me merc haul to liave Keeorilers on sale for the convenience of his eustome: s. Get veer eo.vy of 'Oie Record-

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THIS WEEKEND ONLY

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NEW YORK (ANP)—No one, Alleged rapist GKORGE riPES | suspended of the

Headquarters or. Alabama Street)!? 01 ' 011 ^ , of

becoming a convert after suffering J U LV ° n , l,u ‘ mLM aIul 1 .

en eouldti t decide on his innocence

or guilt.

The jury reported to Judge Joseph A. Sarafite in the court of general sessions late last week that it was unable to reach a decision after 20 hours ot deliberation. The jury had listened to evidence on both sides for 20 days. Charles M. Giddeiis, jury foreman and manager of a Harlem liquor store, said he felt that a hung jury was a vindication for Jack who is accused of having accepted a bribe* from a wealthy lawyer and real estate operator,

Sidney In gar.

i THE OPINION of Giddens, j only Negro on the jury, was not i shared by Stephen H. Kessler, a ! young Harvard educated real estate man, who favored conviction: “It was chaos in the jury room,” he said. “There was not enough care in choosing the jurors,” he

complained.

The jury was eight to four for

conviction.

When Jack was asked if he would reinstate, himself in his $25,()()() per year job, he referred to his attorney Carson De Witt Baker who said the matter had not been decided. District Attorney Frank S. Hogan was asked what would happen if Jack lifted his selfimposed suspension from office. “That’s a problem for the Governor,' not this office,” he replied. Only the Governor has power to remove a borough president, and then only on charges after

a hearing.

Immediately after Jack’s indictment last Jan., Governor Rockefeller asked Hogan to send him a copy of the grand jury minutes. However, Judge Thomas Dickens of the Court of General Sessions refused to let the Governor have the minutes at that time, on the ground that to do so would interfere with orderly judicial pro-

cedure.

Jack suspended himself from office the day after his indictment. He resumed office in March after Judge Gerald P. Calkin of the Court of General Sessions dismissed the indictment as faulty. The Appellate Division reinstated the indictment in April, whereupon Governor Rockefeller said he assumed Mr. Jack would suspend himself again and the Borough President did so. Asked about a new trial, Hogan

replied:

“No decision has been made as yet, but we’ll weigh all the factors involved and come to a correct decision. We have plenty of time to consider the matter because there is no possibility of holding another trial until fall in any event. That doesn’t mean that we would not make a decision before that time.” Ironically, Jack and Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, once political enemies, but now co-leaders of a

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beat the powerful Tammany, machine in the last elections, are in somewhat the same spot. Powell, indicted and tried for income tax evasion, is now awaiting a decision by the government on what to do in his case, which ended as Jack’s did with a hung jury. One of the highlights of Jack’s trial was the public appearance of his shy wife, Almira, who fraternized freely with the press during court recesses. Giddens said the racial question was not raised by either side despite long hours of heated arguments. Other jurors confirmed that. Mrs. Theresa Klein, a housewife member of the jury, said the four who voted for acquittal seemed to be guided by their emotions. “They seemed to think it wouldn’t be fair to convict Jack,” she said. “They never admitted it in so many words, but I could see they felt that by convicting him they would break him down to nothing and ruin his career, and they didn’t want to do that.” IF JACK had been convicted he would have lost his $25,000-a year city position and would have been subject to a maximum penal ty of one year's imprisonment and $500 fine on each of the four charges in the indictment.

Gambling Stamps Issued Here to Sixteen Persons Four Ncg:o persons are among the 16 Marion County resident, who have purchased the $50 gambling tax stamp from the Interna. Revenue Service on the beginning of the new fiscal year. Vigo County ('lerre Haute) L uot tar behind with a total of 14 applications processed so :'ar ivio e than 600 such stamps were issued throughout the state last 3 ear, according to the IRS, whici said that approximately 300 applications have been received this year with the fiscal year beginning

July 1.

bo far 124 applications have been processed. Besides stamp-, at Indianapolis’and Tet re Haute, 10 went to Anderson, 12 to Gary, and 6 each to Evansville, East Chicago and Kokomo. Neg.o stamp holders are Charles T. Edwards, P. P. Club, 438Vfc Indiana, Van Wert Mullin, 242 Indiana; Martin Wilford, 3346 N. Capitol, and Esther Hicks, 715 W. 27tlv

successful political combine thatvives.

Mary Jane Murphy Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Jane Murphy, 64, 2715 Winthrop, were held July 7 at New Baptist Church, with burial in Floral Park Cemetery. She died July ? m General Hospital. Born at Union City, Tenn., Mrs. Murphy had lived in Indianapolis 50 years. Before her retirement seven years ago, she was an agent <J or the Mammoth Life Insurance

Company.

A sister, Fannie Fisher, sur-

Undertaker's Plea‘Please Don't Die For Six Months' BRISBANE, Australia (ANP) — The only undertaker in Mt. Isa, central Queensland state, will not be permitted to drive his hearse. for six momths. A court susperilfta the license of Desmond Jennings, 33, and fined him $126 for drunk driving. Jas. (Racket’) Williams Services for James “Racket” Williams, 60, who died July 7 at home, 413 W. Michigan, were held July 11 at King and King Funeral Home, with burial in New Crown Cemetery. A native of Nashville, Mr. Williams had lived in Indianapolis 39 years, and formerly managed the old Douglass Theater. Survivors include a son, Robert Lee Williams.

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