Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1963 — Page 2
b
♦ *• •> - . V* •* 0 -f • "*
The Indianapolis Recorder, July 20, 1963
UMio/h Beard
Vfnion Beard, 59, a Pullman pordjed July 12 at Chicauo. Fiiperai services were held in Chivmo, wiere ne resided, with buriajTliw ip floral Park Cemetery. IHr, Bepfd, was a native of Jacksdq, h|4ss. Survivors include his wife. Mrs. Mable Beard; a daughter, Mrs. Ora Lou Spencer; two grandchildr en, all. of Chicago: a sister, Mrs. Lillie Williams and an aunt, Mrs. Mattie Jones, both of Indianapolis.
UNCLAIMED •SUIT* •SALE* FROM SIZES 46 DOWN Volue $89.95 to 225.00 NOW 49.95-59.95 FRI. AND SAT. Alterations Extra HARRY OLIVER TAILORS 28 N. PENN. ST. Call Quincy Ayles WA. 6-8846
Effie May Brewer Mrs. Effie May Brewer, 39, died July 12 at her home, 407 W. 16th. Her remains were shipped to EugLesville, Tenn., where services were held July 16. Born at Eagiesville, Mrs. Brewer had lived in Indianapolis 15 years. She was a member of Puritan Baptist Church. Survivors include her husband, Earl Brewer; a son, Robert Earl Brewer, at home; her mother, Mrs. Lillie Patton, Eaglesville; six siste* 5, Mrs. Leona Sheffield and Mrs. Jo Clara Labner, Indianapolis; Mrs. Maudie Russell, Nashville, Tenn., Miss Evelyn Patton, Atlanta, Ga., Mrs. Estella Goods, Knoxville, Tenn., and Mrs. wildred Webbs, Arrington, Tenn., and two brothers, Jimmie D. Patton, Eaglesville, and Face Patton, Indianapolis. Want Ad Deadline Wednesday IT A.M.
John A. Henderson • Public Accountant • Tax Consultant • Accounting SjlA£ms • 4240 CORNELIUS AVE. AT. 3-4464 • SPECIALIZING IN DIFFICULT INCOME TAX CASES
INDIANAPOLIS NATIVE NAMED TRUSTEE: Endicott Peabody (center), Governor of Massachusetts, recently named Paul Parks (left), an Indianapolis native, a trustee of Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston. The 40-year-old Parks, presently living at Roxbury, Mass., is the first Negro to be named to such a position. He
is a graduate of Purdue University. Shown with the new trustee are (left to right) his mother, Mrs. Hazel Parks of Indianapolis; Gov. Peabody, his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Alexander Parks; his daughter, Pamela Dee Parks, and his son, Paul Parks Jr.
— UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT — NU-WAY MKT. 239 W. 21st St. - WA. 4-0966
GRAND OPENING SPECIALS FRI., SAT. & SUN.
CLlp AND SAVE these specials are available only with THIS COUPON and A 85 or more order
Colonial Or Wonder BREAD 20 OZ. Loaf
Meadow Gold MILK One Gal. Jug
3c 49c
OLEO lb. 9c
PLUS MANY OTHER BARGAINS
Work Camp for Unemployed Youth to Start in Fall
"A Fuller's Friondly Hotel" PLAZA HOTEL 231 N. CAPITOL AVE. 140 Modem, Comfortable, Well Appointed, Rooms, 65 Rooms With Private Bath. . Our Policy Cleanliness, Courtesy, Comfort Convenient Parking Transit Rooms Permanent Wkly Rates Single — $2.00 up Ajoining Bath $12 wk. Double — $4.00 up Private Bath $16.00 wk. Located in the Heart of Indiana’s Capitol City. One block north of State Capitol, near Theaters, Business and Shopping District.
DIAL ME. 4-2481 m
R. HAYES Your Host
AID TO MISSISSIPPI NEGROES: The local Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ), in co-operation with the Church of the Brethren, has been busy this week collecting food, clothing and other items to be sent July 20 to Mississippi, where they will be distributed among Negroes who have lost their jobs as the result of attempting to register to vote. In photo, Mrs. Ella Williams (left), Co-ordinator of Relief and Rehabilitation for the Disciples of Christ, checks a portion of the items collected Monday with Mrs. Ruth M. Allen, who is in charge of the store room where material is kept for the Church World Service and special projects. (Recorder photo by Houston Dickie)
Aimed at establishing jobs for unemployed youth, a work camp will be set up this fall at Harrison State Park, Gov. Matthew E. \V€l £ h announcer! late last week. The camp, designed to get out-of-work youths off the street ^nd give them jobs, will be modeled after the Civilian Conservation Corps of depression days. It is believed that the camp, scheduled to begin operation Sept. £\ is the first of its kind in the nation. The Governor said the camp will be opened on an experimental basis and will help jobless young men “find work and become responsible citizens.” WELSH STRESSED that the camp is not aimed to deal with juvenile offenders, but "it is our , feeling that state government has 1 a responsibility to provide assistance to the young citizen in makj ing the transition from non-em-ployment to gainful employment in 1 our private economy.” | Present plans call for 100 young men between the ages of 17 and j 22. They must be single and have been unable to get work for 90
l days.
Those selected to attend the camp will be paid $5a mthno7 d camp will be paid $75 a month plus food and maintenance. The campers will work 40 hours a week in the field and spend a minimum of eight hours of education and vocational training. Among the projects zre re- . pairing the CCC camp grounds and facilities, construction of family camping areas, fire lane construction and development of hiking trails.
Indianapolis Post Office Clerks Negotiate Pact James W'. Burnett Jr., 1124 N. Illino s, and Harrison E. Doughitt, Crown Ppint Road, were among the representatives of Local 130, United Federation of Postal C(erks, AFL-CIO, present when Postmaster Charles Boswell and President James P. Williams of Local ICO, signed th>2 first contract pver negotiated for the clerks of the Indianapolis Post Office. Barnett and Doughitt, who is also a vice-president of the Indiana Federation of Postal Clerks, were members of the union comittee which negotiated the agreement. The contract which covers working conditions and personnel practices for more than 1700 clerks was signed on July 11, and became effective July 15. Prior to this year, unions representing Federal employees were not permitted to negotiate. Such negotiations were made possible by an executive order issued by President Kennedy. Local 130, UFFC, won the right to bargain lor Indianapolis clerks in an election held under the terms of the order. Other members of the negotiating team present at the signing were Charles W. Sellers, Vernon Hayes, Robert H. Fougnies, Jack McClain, James E. Jones and Wilbur Wagner.
Mi l
FUTURE ASTRONAUT HONORED: Air Force Copt Edward J. Dwight Jr. (center) of Kansas City, Kan., receives the Los Angeles Urban League 1963 Preparedness Award from D. R. Zook (left) and Wesley Brazier, league officials. The captain, the first Negro to enter astronaut training, also received and accepted an invitation to be an honored guest at a banquet to be held during the five-day Annual National Conference of the Urban League, beginning July 28.
Rev. W. F. Moses New Pastor at Caldwell Chapel
MRS. FANNIE THARP Missionary Baptist Women’s President
The young men chosen for the camp, most of which will be school dropouts, will be recruited
RfeV. W. FELIX MOSES . Named to Caldwell Chapel
Baptist Meet
Continued from Page 1
Rev. W. Felix Moses, prominent fV eties sho, ;> d d ° is t0 work lo , v-hnroh hel P evangelize the community
where we live, Uit3 city, the state
and then into all the world to
help spread the gospel.
“The time nas come when
in the African Methodist Church, was recently appointed as pastor of Caldwell Chapel AME Church, 11th and Sheffield. He replaces
after screening by the Indiana Em- R ev g g. Bell,
ployment Security Division. No ap- Bishop S. G. Spottswood trans- th,?re should not be a missionary j plication will he accepted after ferred the minister to the Indiana meeting where we meet and eat, j Aug. 2. 1 Annual Conference at the close of but a missionary meeting where It successful, the camp may be- a meeting of the Ohio Annual Con- ; we can make reports, not how ! come permanent the year around, ference last month much money we raise, but how' j The present assignment became many souls we have won for
Rev. Moses* eighth appointment in Christ and His church.
Lucy Hardy
600 Memorialize
Continued from Page 1
Mrs. Lucy Hardy, 37, 2934 Northwestern, local active church worker for more than 45 years,
WHO PUTS THE £ 2S SL Si B-R-R-R # "Be aS fw IN B-R-R-BON? W^
will not bq soon forgotten.'*
“A SOLDIER OF THE CROSS
■ who gave his life in service to his j j u j y al an Indianapolis country, w as the descriptive n OS pU. a i. Rites were scheduled for phrase used by Rev. Birt IIa [* ns - Saturday (July 20) at New Era Bap-
l past °{; °* Good She P herd Luther - list Church, with burial in Crowm
i Memorial Fund. Donations will be an Church. (Hill Cemetery.
segregation
Rev. Clair D. Sipie, pastor of St. Mrs. Hardy, wiaow of the late | Church, Rev. Moses comes to this ‘mission work.
more than 30 years of pastorship Mrs. Tharp pointed out that | with the AME Zion Church. j evangelism is the most important He is a graduate of Wilberforce I part of the churc'n program, and University, Wilberforce, O.. and ' that with the changing flow of studied at Payne Theological Sem- people in communities it should inary and the Roosevelt-McKinley | aw'aken missionaries to be alert. Institute, Chicago, 111. watch and call on the family incoming here irom Coraopolis, ; viting them to church. Mrs.
Pa., where he served the past three She urged tne convention to cmi- Indiana University Extension
years as pastor of St. Paul AME , tinue support of foreign and home i Fort Wayne.
REV. F. W. COLEMAN Convention President Tharp is a student at the
at
j Mississippi — particularly in the Paul’s Memorial Methodist William K. Hardy who was killed area where most of Evers’ work j Church and president of the St. in an au tomobile accident in 1920, was concentrated. Joseph County Ministerial Assn., j a igo did extensive missionary "There are Negroes with Ph D sa * d Evers’ murder was a “shock- wor i t j n Greenwood as well as In-
degrees who can’t vote in Mississ- inevitability” caused by a so- di anapolis.
ippi,” Rev. Gordon asserted. cial and moral cancer which, as Formerly a member of Ebenezer Proclaiming "we want freedom, Christians and Americans, we can jj a pti s t Church, she later became and we want it now,” Rev. O. L. no lon g er tolerate. an ac tj V e member of the First Powell, president of the Interde- City Councilman J. Chester Al- ; Baptist Church of North Indian-
t -_x. —, aiis 1— ...1— apoijs gh e was thg mo ther of 11
I Mrs. Ruth Shobe is housing
community with a wealth of ex-i Mrs. Walter M. Edwards is sec- c0,Ti mittee rhciainjl*
perience, having purchased land, end vice-president, and Mrs. L. C.
nominational Ministerial Alliance, ; len, who represented Mayor said the services were conducted Frank J. Bruggner, said human de"so the death of this great man eency was the viltimate goal for
I which Evers was fighting. He said
*— * that the fight will go on as "an the Indianapolis recorder historic challenge to our country*’ Published Weekly by the The march was a quiet one — T'Kivrrxr lacking singing, shouting and jeers Main Office, 518 Indiana *A\e. by htecklers and there was only a Indianapolis, Indiana j handful of spectators. The few Entered at the Post Office, Indian- s jg ns carried by the 600 marchter under the Act of March 7, 1870. ers listed only the chuichcs pal-
You can... with a FITZ MIST, Nothing chillier. Nothing easier. Nothing more memorable than the frosty flavor of the One and Only Oub Rtzbehau Kentucky’s One and Only Premium* Bourbon | Exclusively BoWed-in-Bond * •At its price or higher ftor» f s Howl Pack snifter or old-fashion glass with crushed t-** Ice. add Jigger of Old Fitz and twist of lemon. STITZEL-WELLER Distillery, Estab. Louisville, Ky. 1849 fteOow 100 Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Six Yean Old
National Advertising Representative Interstate United Newspapers, Inc., 545 Fifth Avenue. New York, X. Y. Member: Audit Bureau of Circulation, National Newspaper Publishers Association, Hoosier State Press As-
sociation.
Unsolicited Manuscripts, pictures and cuts will not be returned unless accompanied by postage to cover same. „ 6 Mos. 1 Yr. Oi'y $3.00 4.00 Indiana . 5 3.25 4.50 Elsewhere 3.50 5.00
ticipating in the services.
Place A Mighty Midget Want Ad Call ME. 4-1545
children.
Survivors include three sons. Rev. Albert Hardy and William Hardy, both of Indianapolis, and Timothy Hardy, Chicago; four daughters, Mrs. Adline Hawkins, Miss Renett Hardy and Miss Ruth Hardy, all of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Marie Anderson, Los Angeles; 13 grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren.
built and relocated churches. » While at Coraopolis, he was active in many civic and community movements. He was affiliated with the Inter-denominational Alliance and served as vice-president as well as on several of the religious committees. Although Rev. Moses has served here only three weeks, church members said that this will be a banner year for the church under the administration of the new min-
ister.
Parish pulpit associates are the Rev. George Tate' and Mrs. Mazy Marlin. A welcome program, to which the public is invited, is being planned.
Comer is first vice-president of the
woman’s group.
Mrs. Birdie Whiteside of 25th Street Baptist Church, home mission chairman and director of the Guiding Light by Tape recording, said she visited 60 nursing homes and brought cheer to 4,000 patients during the year. Rev. C. R. Rowlette of South Bend spoke at the women’s eve-
ning meeting.
Mrs. Tharp is a member of Shiloh Baptist Church. Richmond, where her father. Rev. William Caldwell, is pastor. She is BTU and chorus director, a missionary teacher, nurse and program chairman for the missionary society.
committee chairman. Members in- - elude Mrs. Whiteside, Mrs. Fan- ^ nie Odom and Mrs. Cora Powell. " Dining room chairman is Mrs. Vir-
ginia Ricketts.
SEE
Mighty Midget CLASSIFIED AD
I
.•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiii
I SAM'S LOAN CO. = YOUR PAWN-BROKER FOR 25 YEARS
= SAME COURTESY RUT A NEW LOCATION
= CASH — LOANS — 0N
CAMERAS MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
SHOTGUNS
TYPEWRITERS RECORD PLAYERS MISC. MDSE.
=
■ =
DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY RADIOS LUGGAGE
TV*
Out-of-Pawn Values
Save-At-Sam # s
Easy Credit Terms
SAM'S LOAN CO
24 W. OHIO ST.
ME- 4-4369
niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
HALL-NEAL FURNACE CO OVER 70 YEARS OF QUALITY AND SERVICE James and Pierre
PIERRE PETERSON Asst. Division Director WA. 6-9814 or CL. 3-0552 • WATER HEATERS •
SAY — Planning A New Furnace Or Air Conditioning? NO MONEY DOWN 60 MONTHS TO PAY First Payment In 6 Months Contact these assistant soles engineers — Frank Gaddie at WA. 5-0594 . . James Oglesby at AT. 36169 and William White at AT. 3-4314 or CL. 30552. Vacuum Cleaning — Servicing CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING
GAS FURNACES • OIL FURNACES • COAL FURNACES •
ELEC. FURNACES STOKERS CONVERSIONS
JAMES L. RICHARDSON Division Director WA. 3-9032 or CL. 3-0552 • INCINERATORS 4
HALL-NEAL FURNACE CO., 1336 N. Capitol Ave.-ME. 5-7441
