Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1961 — Page 2

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■The Indianapolis Recorder, Oct 7, 1961

R«*i the Want Am Pace each ft)tar Want Ad paire of the Recorder.

EVERY DAY

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NO LIMIT

SMO. HAMS

2 LB. AVERAGE

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10-12 LB. AVERAGE

Whole

Or

Half

SMO. JOWL IN PIECE Lb. 26c

LARGE JUICY FRANKS 3 lbs. $1.00

BOLOGNA IN PIECE Lb. 29c

Smo. Sausage 3 lbs. $1.00

AME Confab

Continued from t'agt I Courtney, J. C. Smith, Bernard j Jones, Seth Tate, Erastus HumI phrev BOARD OF CHURCH EXTEN- | SION—0. T. H. Watkins and John E. Hunter, co-chairmen; J. S. Benn III, J. A. Woods, W. K. Robertson, A. L. Jelks, A. J. Oliver I and presiding elders SUNDAY SCHOf, ANNIVER- | SARY—Miss Anna P. Stout, Mrs. E. H. Hunter PENSION—A. B. Moore, T. E. ! Porter, C. E. Roberts, E. Maddex, C. R Manning and C. E. Benson CONFERENCE SUPERINTENI DENTS OF LEAGUES—Mrs. Ar- ! lee F. Watts SOCIAL ACTION—A. L. Jelks, chairman; O. L. Powell, A. J. Olii ver, Ralph Jackson, William S. Nelson EVANGELISM —Lucy Sanford ! Keith and associates MINIMUM SALARY — J. E. j Hunert, J. A. Woods, A. J. Oliver and Elmer Arnold (All candidates scheduled for [ examination or orders must meet ! the Board of Examiners at the seat of the conference Tuesday, I Oct. 17).

I

.

GOP Can

Continued from Page 1

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sides of its mouth in its pronouncement of equality and Attorney General Robert Kennedy’s request that Negroes forego exercising their constitutional rights.

Locally, he said. Mayor Raymond R. Tucker’s recent appointment of Chester E. Stovall as director of welfare war. in recognition of a “fine, qualified public servant”; but again this was in the tradition of Democrats to be forced to execute a Republican pledge. Reynolds’ visit to St. Louis was

in connection with a national survey of preas where there are concentrations of Negro voters. When the survey is completed, he will make a report to Miller of possibilities of organization in congressional districts and campaign techniques to appeal to the Negroes.

“We are going to depend on

changing the image of the Republican party itself to attract

these people”, he stated.

Ig'ffW-

DISCUSS TRAFFIC PROBLEM: James C. Cummings Jr., manager of the sprawling Barrington housing development, has the unswerving attention of Traffic Inspector Audry E. Jacobs of the Indianapolis Police Deportment, as he points to the hazardous

intersection of Renton and Barrington Ave., one of many dangerous intersections in the growing Dairington area on the Southeast side of the city. Looking on (at right) is Arthur G. Woke, assistant traffic engineer.

800 Expected to Attend Leadership School of Religion Approximately 800 church school workers, youth leaders and children are expected to attend the fall leadership School of Religion when it opens Oct. 16 at 7:30 p.m. at the Zion Evangelical and Reformed Church. A variety of courses will be offered. Advance registration fee for this school before Oct. 10 is $1, and afterward, $1.60. Those who plan to attend may send registration fees to the Church Federation office, 1622 North

Meridian.

Another school to be in session is the Observation Practice School which will be held Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9 a.m. till 11:30 a.m. beginning Oct. 24 at the following churches: Tabernacle Presbyterian, north; Downey Avenue Christian Church, east; St. John’s United Church of Christ, south, and Mt. Olive Methodist, west. Only a few can be accommodated at each school and attendance is limited to those who apply in advance. Registration is $3. Miss Catherine Carter is director of the division of the Church

Federation.

Haul Indudes

(Continued from rage 1)

weekend. Police were called to a fruit market at 3736 Northwestern, Sspt. 28 to investigate a burglary. Horace McCutcheon, 948 W. 31st, told police ne closed at 9:30 p.m.. Sept. 27, reopened at 3:30 p.m., the next day and found that someone had broken into the establishment, and taken an undetermined amount of money fBom the cash register and a coke machine. Also a number of cokes were missing from the machine, and some checks from the cash register. Entry was gained by breaking down a rear door. WOODIE’S MARKET, 1206 W. Now York, was the scene of another burglary where thieves took a cash register, $30 worth of meat, and a television set. Woodrow Arnold, 609 W. Ver moot, told police that he closed at 10:30 p.m., Sept. 27, reopened the next day and found that the lock on the front screen door and the inner door had been pried open. ALSO ON SEPT. 28 at 8:40 a.m., police were called to the

Bamngton Residents Thankful N eW Baptist

For Additional Police Patrol

Residents of Barrington, a 700- of the police traffic division, visit-. Z7 m Tj , tr ; " ~ unit apartment development in ed the area and, after a calcula-! P resiuen t Joseph H. Jackson ruled Southeast Indianapolis, were very j tion of the conditions, assigned a|^ en > ire unconstitutional, Rev. pleased with the prompt response special motorcycle officer to the i Booth said. 1 here has been disshown by city officials when they area. He also authorized the em-1 satisfaction^ ever^ since,

were asked to help solve traffic ployment of an adult traffic guard problems in that area, the Re- to be stationed at Minnesota at corder learned this week. Zwingley avenue whenever chilTraffic officia/s ordered addi- die n are soing to or from school, tional traffic patrols, installed Inspector Carl Schmidt, actstop signs, painted cross- ; ing chief of police, in the ab-

Memorial Fund Set Up to Honor Society Founder

, . j money had been taken, lying of An-1 0 f th e building. JOE’S SERVICE STATION,

“A split of our present National Baptist Convention is certainly not desirable in this age of mergers and unity,”

said Rev. Booth.

new stop signs, paintea crosswalks, and hired an adult traffic guard to protect children enroute

to and from School N. 64.

The safety improvements were the result of a combined effort of the traffic engineer’s office and the traffic division of the police

department.

sence of Chief Robert Reilly, sent out a special order requesting all squads patrolling the area to cruise the streets in and around Barrington at regular intervals and to take special note of traffic viola-

tions.

MRS. ESTHER POWERS, prin-

“But the Baptists of our age ; deserve a choice between tyranny 1 and Iveedom. We seek to offer j them freedom. We believe that Baptist blood still runs with a

| desire for freedom.

“We think it is far more righti eous to separate in the interest of 1 peace than to go to a convention j in the fear of returning in a

shroud.

Sealtest Food Co., at 1417 N Harding, to investigate a burglary. Willis Flinn, 820 Westbrook, told police that he opened the establishment at 7:30 a.m., and found that someone had gained entry by breaking a glass on the

eastside of the building.

Flinn also said he found a cigarette machine, from which the

«... , . money hao been taken, lying in

Through the efforts of An- ’ J drew W. Ramsey, member of the

Attucks faculty and editor of the | s Meridian was burK , arizcd ■Voice from the Gallery a week- 0ct j . ind bur|f j arie , took * a box ly column in The Recorder, the of t00 , s valued at j 5(|0 Three Educational Aid Society ^ rans ^® 1 ' venders for cigarettes candv and red its funds of ^,900 to the prin- into

q9 a °f Si sp n u " , *“ u /„ r a me ‘* nd mone >' t*>em.

School as the nucleus for a n Charles Brown, 1138 S. Ranr* Berry C “ | TTl

Mr. Alexander Moore received £*:** ‘"“v f?i^" OT « red ‘ h *‘

the presentation in a recent meet-i ®3' a '’ h n ad t an overhead |n K held in the Railroadmen’s Sav- on th « east s ’ de of the

ings cin^i Loan Association Bldp. j r pup' h' from Mrs. Lanna Wilson, Socety ■ 7 I H | l iu’-' HNSON ,F urr ''t ure

treasurer, in honor of the founder * aS t u sce " e , ot °” e

* .v robbery where the night-watch- ^ ’ , . man was bound ana gagged by a Mrs. Coston was a teacher in knife-carrying bandit,

the public school system for moie Police were called to the store than 40 years and was also a mein- at about 7.30 p . m . ( S ept. 29 where her of the Attucks faculty. Her Ben Mu i Iins> 746 Utica> toId them

from the store. ERNEST J. PUGH, 39, an Indianapolis Transit System bus driver, told police that he was robbed at 12:15 a.m.. Sept. 29, as he picked up a fare at 300 PerkfnS

Court.

The bus driver said a colored man entered the bus, drew a .32 caliber pistol and said, “They put me up t) this and I’ve got to do, it. Don’t fool around with me, boy.” The bandit fled with $55 in change and small bills, plus a money changer. MRS. BETTY LETHAM, an emloyee of the Boyden’s Pastry hop at 52nd and Keystone, told police that a bandit walked into the shop Sept. 30, pulled a revolver and said, “This is a holdup. Give me all your money.” She said the armed bandit took an undetermined amount of money from th^ cash register, put it in a bag which he was carrying, and fled from the store on foot. A 23-YEAR-OLD woman called police Sept. 29 and told them tluxt two man had jumped from a car and robbed her of $180. Mrs. Mary Butts, 23, 1437 1 /£ W. 23rd, said that she was walking near Senate and St. Clair when two men in a 1956 Olds mobile jumped from the car and, after a struggle, took her purse containing the money.

JAMES C. CUMMINGS Jr.,

manager of the sprawling housing | cipa i of school No . ( j 4t expressed area k recently asked officials for ^ school's appreciation in letters aid after a fatal motorcycle acei- wr jtt en to Inspector Jacobs and

RF’VMnins xnnpn tw th dent occurred at the intersection of stanley Siegel, traffic engineer. REYNOLDS ADDED that the, Mmnesota and Minoqua last Cummings and the schooI - 3 p TA

, a , j also wrote letters of gratitude to Cummings contended that the | ^e officials,

absence of regular police patrols, < i—.. together with an inadequate num- Arthur G. Wake, assistant traf-1 leadership.

her of traffic-control signs had, fie engineeix directed the installa- “PERSONS who are concerned created a hazardous traffic con-: tion of additional stop signs on, with adeeming the Baptist initiadition in the area. Barrington Avenue, Renton Ave- tive and storing a democratic

i liictl LIIC i Minnes G.O.P. was out to capture 44 ad-1 mon th. ditional seats next year and give President Kennedy a Republican Congress. This would provide a “sober brake” on the President and his program, and would bring back a balance in government, he

said.

An army captain in World War j II, Reynolds was pastor of Mount Zion Congregational Church in Cleveland for three years; president of Cleveland branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People for three ye^rs and president of the White Plains N.A.A.C.P. for six

“This movement is in no way connected with the past effort of ‘the Taylor team’ ”, Rev. Bootjh said. “No officer of the former movement is either directly or indirectly involved. It is an enitirely new movement under new

son, Ray Coston, and granddaughter, Miss Frances Jean Maloney,

are graduates of Attucks. Mrs.; buildirip;

Wilson is the^only surviving mem- Mullins said that

ber of the

ciety.

a bandit had entered through a window cn the east side of the

Educational Aid So-, carr yj n g a knife, tied his hands

years.

Rent an Apartment or Buy a House -Through the Want Ad Page of the Recorder.

Inspector Audry E. Jacobs, head nue, and Rural Street.

■V

thrusc are invited to join us.” Both men and women are invited. Persons who are interested in attending the meeting Nov. 14-15 are urged to write in for reservations to Rev. L. V. Booth, Zion Baptist Church, 630 Glen-

Governor Commutes Prison Tern^s Of Double Murderer, Woman Slayer Two convicted murderers from 1 time in less than two vears. Wit-

Indianapolis, serving life sentences j nesses told police Miss Goins had , "indicate in prison were granted clemency surprised her lover, Bason, in the ! v Y^ e ^ cr a hotel or home nj de-

last week by Gov. Matthew E. home of another woman. Miss | slred ' Welsn. Irene Proctor, 234 Cora St. The life term of Henry Mack Miss Goins reportedly grabbed Brown, sentenced in 1946 for the i a fork from the kitchen and double slaying of his common-law plunged it into Bason’s heart. Powife, Hattie, and Rev. Gilbert lice later found her fleeing on

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Little, was reduced to 18 years. Police reported that Brown, then 40 years old, fatally shot Mrs. Brown and Rev. Little when he found them together in his home, located at 2054 Columbia. Brown, an auto repairman, had allegedly accused Rev. Little, an' Associate pastor of True Vine Baptist Church, of carrying on an illicit relationship with his wife. On the day of the shooting Brown had come home and found his wife and Rev. Little sitting on the bed, police said. When the two failed to explain satisfactorily, Brown secured a 20-gauge automatic shotgun from the kitchen

and fired at the pair.

MES. BROWN FELL mortally wounded and Rev. Little fled through a back door and fell at the rear of the house. He died

enroute to the hospital.

Taken to police headquarters shortly after the slaying, Brown told officers that he had discovered his wife’s affair with Rev. Little four months previously. She denied the illicit relationship, he said, but the minister readily admitted it and gave a promise to end the affair. However, his suspicions continued, Brown said, and on September 17 he decided to set a trap. Pretending to leave the house for some auto parts he said he doubled back later and waited until he found his wife and the minister together. Mrs. Brown was the mothef of five children. The clemency action by the governor makes Brown eligi-

ble for parole in 1964.

Also granted clemency was Miss Frances Goins, serving a life term in the Indiana Woman’s Prison for the 1945 slaying of her common-law hus-

band, Edward Bason.

Mir.s Goins, 19 years old at the time of the slaying, was facing a murder charge for the second

Shortridger Dies

North Senate Avenue.

Miss Goins, at the age of 18, was acquitted of another murder charge in July, 1943, in connection with the slaying of Charles Ladd, 18, 312 Blackford. Her attorney at the time, Henry R.

Continued from Page 1

nurse at Shortridge, applied mouth-to-mouth respiration in an effort to revive • the stricken stu-

dent but in vain.

- . Seconds after the principal’s

Wilsoh Jr., was able to convince p hone call police and a Fire Dea Criminal Court I jury that she partment rescue squad arrived, had stubbed her then common-law Dr. Daniel Gleich, deputy coroner, husband in self-defense with a pronounced the girl dead.

No Time to Stand on The Sidelines, Yale - Chaplain Tells Group NEW HAVEN (ANP)—Calling | for more action for integration, Yale University’s chaplain recently told a Sunday morning audience of 1.000 worshippers that it is a moral crime for anyone to stand on the sidelines during the ; fight for integration in the South. The Rev. William S. Coffin, who was one of the first 11 Freedom Riders arrested and convicted in 1 Montgomery, Ala., condemned those who avoid taking sides on important moral issues. “Some are scared to die, and some are scared to live,” he said. Rev. Coffin, who has also aided in the training in Puerto Rico of recruits for the Peace Corps, told newsmen he planned to apppeal the $100 fine and 15 days jail sentence given to him in Montgomery, and take it “as far as necessary.”

with wire and carried him to a restroom. After apparently rob-, bing the store, the man left by the. same window through which he had entered. It has not been

POLICE, Sept. 29, followed a man to a parking lot, watched him break into a car, and then arrested him for malicious destruction of property and pre-

burglaiy.

Malon Pullins, 25, 1202 W. New York, was seen leaving his house with a screwdriver sticking out of his hip pocket. Police fo^ lowed him to the Indiana University Medical Center’s parking lot, where they watched him break into a 1955 Dodge. When Pullins got into the car, police rushed in and captured huo, LESLEY SMITH, 45, 1303 Congress, called police Sept. 28 and reported that he had been robbed as he walked in the 1200 block on Congress. He said that two men attacked him, knocked him to the ground, and took his billfold containing no money. He lost consciousness momentarily. A 32-YEAR-OLD_ out-of-town resident was robbed Oct. 3 *at Michigan and California streets by two men who asked him for

a match.

Herman Fields, 32, of Benton Harbor, Mich., said that he was walking in the vicinity of California at about 1:30 a.m. when he met two men who asked hi^n for a match. When he went in his pocket, the men drew knives and took $43 from him.

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The governor’s commutation to ISVi years qualifies the woman for parole next April.

Mr. Shultz said he ordered a

one-minute-silent memorial serv-

ice at the Northside school. Miss Warren was a senior.

THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER Published Weekly by tbs GEORGE P. STEWART PRINTING COMPANY. INC. Main Office 518 Indiana Av*. Indianapolis, Indiana Btitered at the Post Office, Indian'A^oiie, Indiana, as second-class matter under the Act of March 7, 1870 National Advertising Representative Interstate United Newspapers, Inc. 645 Fifth Avenue. New York. N. Y. Member: Audit Bureau of Circulation. National Newspaper Publisher! Association, Hoosier State Press Association. Csaslioited manuscripts, pietorss and cots will net be returned aniens seoosapasted by postage to cover Mane. Subscription Rates' I Mos. 1 Yr. City 8 1.00 4A4 Indiana 1.26 4.10 Elsewhere 1.66 6.66

Ala. Gov. Speaks Out Against ICC 'No Bias' Order NASHVILLE (ANP)—The Interstate Commerce Commission’s recent order to desegregate bus terminals may lead to serious consequences, Alabama Gov. John Patterson told newsmen here last week. Patterson believes ICG’s ruling, which was “politically-inspired and not based on logic or reason,” may force buses to let passengers “out on the highways under the trees” in his state—Alabama. Rural stores, which serve as bus stops in Alabama, would not comnly with such an order, according to Gov. Patterson. Patterson renewed his criticism of Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, and said that resentment in his stat> against Kennedy’s efforts to force integration in Alabama have the people so “sore” at his brother, the President, that he couldn’t possibly carry Alabama if he runs in 1964. He had said earlier the President “couldn’t get enough votes to wad a shotgun.”

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