Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1961 — Page 2
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2—The Indianapolis RecoV&r, Jiily^C
A MESSAGE TO —
THRIFTY MERCHANTS Advertisements Placed In The Indianapolis Recorder Are SURE To Reach The Powerful NEGRO MARKET A Vast Throng In This Locality That Is Loaded With BUYING POWER
• You Can Cut Advertising Costs and Increase Profits By Concentrating On The RECORDER'S Proven Market... The Market Of Customers As Well As Readers. • Today This RECORDER Market Is Bigger And Offers More Profit Than Ever Before. • Merchandise "At Every Price Level" . . . Can Be Moved Thru These Columns.
DO YOU KNOW? 1. The Negro Americen Population It 1 Million Greater Than That Of Canada. 2. Total Income Of Negto Americans Is $1 Billion Larger Than The Entire National Income Of Canada. 1. The Per Capita Income Of Negro Americans Is Just As Large As The Per Capita Income Of All Canadians. OVER 70 THOUSAND READERS FROM MORE THAN 16,000 COPIES DISTRIBUTED Circulation Proven By An Annual Aadit By The AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION iTIII^AfSA III IhTAK THIS BUREAU IS A NATIONAL, CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION OF 3,392 ADVERTISERS AND ADVERTISING AGENCIES
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INSIDE VIEW: This is an inside view of an artist's sketch of the threestory floor plans of the new Elder W. Diggs Memorial of Kappa Alpha F'si fraternity, now under construction at Indiana University. The first floor plan has a patio, dining room, kitchen, living room, powder room,
recreation room, pantry, library, boiler room and mail room. The second floor plan consists of dormitory, luggage room, wash room, stldy room and a balcony. The third floor plan h the same as the -second.
WWe, Attorney Returns to Ala I To Defend Negro Sharecropper
NIGERIA TO GET BREWERY: Western Nigeria recently announced an agreement concluded in New York to establish a $6 million brewery and glass manufacturing enteprise near the region's capital, Ibadan. Partners in the project, which involves the largest investment of private Nigerian capital in an industrial enterprise, are the Western Nigeria Development Corporation, Amkor Corporation of New York and
two Nigerian businessmen, Chief T. M. Odutola and Mobolaji Bank-Anthony. Shown signing agreement are (seated) Ayo Akinsanya, executive director, WNDC; Ernest Schnell, executive vice-president, Amkor Corporation; and Chief T. A. Odutola. Standing are Folarin Coker, secretary of the Western Nigeria Industrial Promotions Commission and Chief M. S. Sowole, chairman of the commission.
NVithout A 9 0n y Brown Resigns
The research was conducted In the privately operated hospital with the assistance of Abbott Laboratories which supplied the DPN. The substance found particularly in the liver, was de-
SEATTLE—Painless relief for dope addiction has been discovered through recent research with the use of disphosphopyridine nucleo-
tide (DPN).
According to reports, this treats _
ment will wipe out one’s craving) scribed as a “wheelbarrow agent” for narcotics without the with- which collects and dumps wastes drawal agonies usually suffered, and poisons in the body. DPN, a natural substance of the Th e physician reported results body, has been successful in ex- 0 f ^jg treatment of dope addicts perimental treatment of addicts j n the Western Journal of Surgery, and has enabled them to stop Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Two examples of the drug’s success were cited: Patient X was 52 years old. He had been hospitalized 28 years for opium addiction acquired after a construction accident and suffered unbearable pain every time he tried to break the
habit.
A shot of DPN wiped out his
With
further treatment he regained his health and is nearly ready to leave
! the hospital.
| Another patient, “Y,” is 46 years old and had been addicted to heroin for five years. He had overwhelming withdrawal symptoms whenever he tried to quit. , A single injection of DPN killed his desire for the drug. He has ! returned to work.
using narcotics immediately and permanently without going through the pains ordinarily occurring in
retraction.
OUT OF 160 PATIENTS receiving DPN, according to Dr. Paul O’Hollaren, chief of staff of Shadel Hospital, no unfavorable effects
were seen. He hesitated though in wipeu o saying that several years will be A snot or mix \vipea o necessary for final evaluation of craving for the naicotic.
the treatment.
Continued from Page 1
sidered necessary to support a paid executive. But as a result of the great Martin Luther King-Ralph Abcfnathy meeting last week, the local rolls have risen to 2,266 memberfs and enthusiasm has been set in motion that may lead to an alltime high by the end of this year. REFERRING TO THE KingAbernathy triumph. Rev. Brown said: “I have carried on until our work is at a peax and there is not too much bad taste left by zy
Atty. William C. Erbecker, a white ‘freedom fighter,’ is scheduled to leave Saturday, July 8, for Troy, Ala., where he will defend Will Arthur Andrews, the illiterate Negro sharecropper charged with the attempted rape of a white woman. A hearing will be held in Troy Monday, July 10, in Judge Erie Paul's Pike County Circuit Court for the purpose of selecting a jury from a number of potential jurors, all white, who have been summoned. BECAUSE HE FEELS there has been a systematic exclusion of Negroes from those already summoned, Atty. Erbecker said j Rape Case Continued from Page 1 ton she drove within a half block of police headquarters apparently and then on to State Road 37 to Franklin and then on to Louisville. Another time during this ride she saw a police patrol car and waved at the officers, according to her
story.
When found by Louisville police, they confirmed the fact that she had not been beaten but did have a mark on her neck where she had claimed a string had been put around her neck by one of the two alleged assailants. Police also indicated that there were cuts on her leg. Police said the woman was only partially clad when they found her. Road blocks set up by state police to the south failed to net either of the alleged rapists.
he would immediately file a motion to quash the entire venire. Andrews, who took refuge in Indianapolis almost two years ago when he fled Alabama, was he'd
in jail.
ATTY. ERBECKER is grateful to those persons am) organizations who contributed to help cover his expenses during las defense of Andrews. Among those who answered the cal 1 issued by Atty. Rufus C. Kuykendall, were: The Indianapolis branch NAACP $100.00 Atty. Rufus C. Kuykendall 25.00 Albir Anderson 20.(K) Atty. Frank Beckwith 10.00 Wilbur Grant 10.00 Yankee Doodle Foundation 10.00 George Sawyer, Richmond r,.00 Cary D. Jacobs 5.00 Elder Murff 5.00
Kappas Dedicate Continued from Page 1
ry T. Asher, Detroit, and Ed-
ward P. Irvin, Chicago. The other four founders
were John M. Lee, Paul Came, George Edmonds and Dr.
Total
$100.00
xt t i Marcus P. Blakemore. , resignation. Now I am compelled c R H W n_ n _ I tr, crivo vmi an « tn makp ar- 1 K 1 0<, S er wuson ol Chicago,
I national president of the frater-1 nity, will make an official inspection of the work in progress on the new house on Saturday, July
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to give you 30 days to make ar rangements for my successor.” The announcement stunned the meeting. Speaker after speaker rose in an effort to persuade Rev. Brown at least to modify his decision. Two members described it as a
“catastrophel.”
But gradually and regretfully, the NAACP workers came to accept their leader’s thoroughly-con-
sidered decision.
On behalf of the St. John congregation, Mrs. Bertha Childress presented Rev. Brown with a gift as a “token of what you have done. We are glad and sorry too at your announcement,” she said REV. ALEXANDER BERNARD, first vice-president of the branch, presumably will take over to serve the remaining year-and-a-half of Rev. Brown’s term. Rev. Gernard is pastor of Grea^r St. Mark Baptist Church, 1906 Yandes. A quiet leader who has not been involved in controversy, at both a faithful attendant at both local and state NAACP meet-
ings.
iNwood Black, United Auto Workers labor leader, is second vice-president while Mrs. Lilia Adams, Riverside Branch librarian, is third vice. Rev. Brown said he would call the board of directors together to consider the succession problem. Some board members said a chairman of the board or executive secretary might be chosen, to lighten the new president’s burden. An ironical footnote is that Rev. Brown was the only member of his slate who won in the election larst December. Rev. Bernard as on the opposing slate, and thus the losers appear to have won after all. However, the old battle-lines have dimzed under Rev. Brown’s leadership. The branch • at the present time seems to be sincerely united without factional disputes. * * * THE MEMBERSHIP DRIVE, which is now rolling in high gear after a slow start, was extended to July 18. Local delegates to the NAACP National Convention, to be held next week at Philadelphia, will be Atty. Rufus C. Kuykendall, Rev. James Jones, Miss Carole Stevenson and Atty. John Preston Ward. Others who had been elected found Jt necessary for various reasons to withdraw. The meeting voted $100 to help defray the expenses of Atty. Wm. C. Erbecker, local white lawyer who is defending Will Arthur Andrews, a Negro, in Alabama. PLANS WERE MADE for a strong campaign to remedy alleg-
15. Kappa Alpha Psi members from Indianapolis, headed by Robert W. Williams, president of the Indianapolis alumni chapter,
will meet Wilson there.
In charge of the fraternity’s memorial housing fund commission is Val J. Washington, I.U. graduate now living in Washing-
ton, D.C.
Slaying Stuped Continued from rage 1 Police Lieut. Spurgeon Davenport said the hat found at the scene fit Goodloe and the paraffin test showed nitrate on his hands. Because there are a number of ways a person might get nitrate on his hands it is impossible to determine whether or not he had fired a gun, Lieut. Davenport said, adding that the results of the lie detector tests were inconclusive. Goodloe’s girlfriend was scheduled to take the polygraph test as police sought to learn whether or not she was covering up for the suspect. ed unfair employment practices by the Indiana Bell Telephone Company. Motions were passed commending Albion Hardin, white president of the union who “went to bat” for the Negro workers as well as Rev. Jones, executive secretary of the Mayor’s Human Rights Commission, who is seeking to izprove the reported situation. READ RECORDER ADS
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