Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 December 1963 — Page 2
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The Indianapolis Recorder, Dec. 7,1963
JFK's Casket
Cowltened from Page 1 guard. In addition to f elder and Smith, who bore the President’s casket to and from the horse-drawn caisson preceding the journeys of the funeral procession between the White House, the Capitol Rotunda, St. Matthew Cathedral and the cemetery, several other Negro servicemen also served in the full honor guard. They included James C.| Heard, 22, an Air Force veteran drem Kansas City, Mo. The pallbearers appeared at the special request of the widowed First Lady, Mrs. Jacquelyn Kennedy. Felder was charred with the reeponsfbiMty of securing the flag that draped the Pres-
ident's coffin. He presented the flag to the caretaker, who in tuns presented it to Mrs. Kennedy, during the graveside ceremony. While at Clark College. Felder, a 1960 graduate, was president of the student body, co-captain and quarterback of the football team, a member of the varsity debating team, and the Omega Psi Phi‘fraternity. Heard, who was honorably discharged from the Air Force this past July, after serving a fouryear term, is currently a deputy sheriff in Kansas City. He, too. served several assignments during the long weekend of mourning for the late President.
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THE INIHANAF'OLIS RECORDED Published Weekly by the GKOKGE P. STEWART PRINTING COMi ANY. INC. — Main Office. 5W Indiana Ave. Indianapolis. Indiana Entered at the Post Office. Indianapolis. Indiana, as second-class matter under the Ac*, •n March 7, 18*0 National Advertising Representative Interstate United Newspapers. Inc 545 Fifth Avenue, New York. N. Y Member: Audit Bureau of tfircula tlon. National Newspaper Publishers Association. Hoos.'er State Press Association. Unsolicited Manuscripts, pictures ajid cuts wilt not he returned unless accompanied by postage to cover same. 6 Mos 1 Yr. City $3.00 4.00 Indiana — 3.25 4.60 Elsewhere 8.5U 6-OU
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JESSE E. JARMAN . . . Succumbs In Home Funeral services for Jesse E. Jarman, local photographer and retired employee of the State Highway Department, were held Thursday, Dec. 5, at Simpson Methodist Church, 2960 N. College, with burial in Crown Hill Cemetery. ^Vir. Jarman a native of Murfreesboro. Tenn., died Monday, Dec. 2, at his home 714 W. 43rd. Coming to Indianapolis in 1915 Mr. Jarman worked as a supply clerk and photographer with the highway department. Many of his color photographs were exhibited in the State Highway Department booth at the 1963 Indiana State Fair. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Lucile Jarman; two daughters, Mrs. Cordelia Hines of this city, and Mrs. Lucile Gossett of Los Angeles; a son, Ronald Jarman, also of Los Angeles, and five grandchildren.
Stabbed Fatally Continued from Page 1
Support Rights Continued from Page 1
a ride to the White House Wednesday morning. Many political observers fee) that Johnspn will adopt the Ken nedy administration’s strategy foi the 1964 campaign of concentrating on the populous industria states while Living to hold on tc | only part of -the South. J Observers also feel that Johnson will not soften bus stand on the civil rights isaue, and may far le*s popular in the South election time than he is today. A,U rights leaders who have met with Johnson said they had “great faith’’ in the new President.
MASONIC WIDOWS SCHEDULE PROGRAM: The Masonic Widows of Prince Hall Masonic Temple, 653 N. West, will present their first program of the season Dec. 8 at the temple. The group will present a Chautauqua and Calendar Rally at 3:30 p.m. All Masonic Widows, lodges, Order of Eastern Star chapters, youth organizations and the public are urged to attend the program. The Masonic Widows was formed in 1961 by Bowman Sf Metcalfe Sr., worshipful master of Trinity Lodge No. 18, F & AM., with the purpose of presenting cultural events to th^ community. Pictured in the front row are (left to right) Mesdames Hattie Dinkins, chaplain; Lorraine Stith, secretary; Hat-
tie Whitley, pfesiaeni, and Leota Snorden, vice-president. In back row are Mesdomes Jennie Young, Florence Christian, Elsie Garrett, and Bowman Metcalfe, and Mesdames Dovie Shaw, Mattie Howard and Hattie Williams. Not shown are Mesdames Ella Wells, Mary E. Brown, Cathryn Marshall, Bessie Turner, Georgia Bell, Ellen Merriweather, Susie Simmons, Eleanor Gardner, Rosie Robertson, Ester Blair, Bessie Doscoe, Daisy Gore, Schoenfield Dyer, Blanche Davis Jessie Johnson, Inez Gibson, Nettie Gibson, Areatha Logan, Louise Monger, Mrs. Charles Pittman, Mrs. Andrew J. Harris, Mrs. Edgar Emerson, Mesdames Margaret Wahls, Emma Collier and Beatrice Porter.
established as the time of death. However, the car belonging to Blow, who was married, was later found in an alley near the death scene. Neighbors reportedly told homicide detectives that Blow, v/hose own home was less than a block away, often parked his car in the spot where it was located when he visited Mrs. Reese’s apartment. The man who was allegedly seen leaving the apartment was questioned by police at his home Tuesday night. Id a telephone interview he told The Recorder that he had known Mrs. Reese for a number of years and that he had met Blew through her. r He said hg had stopped by Mrs. Reese’s apartment aoout i&:30 Thanksgiving morning, and that he, Mrs. Reese and Blow had “sit around chewed-the-fat and had a drink. Asked whether or not the couple had been arguing during the course of the morning and afternoon. the man replied, “Definitely not.” i % “I left about 2:30 or 2:45 in the afternoon and she had been jokingly kidding him about ‘two or three boyfriends’ he had run away from her. As I remember, she told him that since he had run thp nien away from her, if she ever saw any women in his car she was going to tell them to get out, and that they had better get out, and that they had better stay out. They both had a good laugh about it,” the man recalled. THE MAN, WHO HAD no connection with the slayings and asked not to be identified, said that he learned while watching television that the detectives wanted to question him and inupediately called the homicide office. Police arriving at the apartment found Mrs. Reese’s body lying in the hallway against a locked door leading to the living room. Called to the scene, the woman’s former husband, David Crayton, 461 Congress, opened the door. On the other side the detectives discovered the body of Blow. In the apartment police found two long-bladed butcher knives they believed were used in the slayings. One was underneath Mrs. Reese’s body and the other was discovered on a table in the blood- \ splattered kitchen. In attempting to reconstruct the events leading up to the killings, Sgt. Urberta said he thought Blow and Mrs. Reese had argued in the kitchen and that Blow grabbed a knife and stabbed the woman. “The way it stand now,” eontinqed, “we think she, though mortally wounded, picked up an-
other knife, followed Blow' into the hallway and stabbed him there before collasping on the floor. “Blow,” he theorized, “probably got through the door and then collasped against it causing the latch to catch.” Funeral services for Mrs. Reese were held Wednesday in the Summers Funeral Home, with interment in Floral Park Cemetery. A native of Bedford County. Tenn., she had lived here 20 years. She was employed as a maid at Butler University. Survivors aside from the son include her mother, Mrs. Curtis Reese, Nashville, and a brother, James Reese, Detroit. RITES FOR BLOW were held Tuesday in the Jacob Brothers Funeral Home. Burial was in FloraJ Park. - < r Born in Jackson, Miss., he hdd lived here 40 years and was employed in the maintenance department at Indiana National Bank. Surviving besides his wife include four brothers, Willis, Howard, Louis, and Walter Blow’, and eight sisters, Mrs. Ruby Moss. Mrs. Carrie A. Bell, Mrs. Lucille Lewis, Mrs. Edna Strabling, Mi's. Pearline Tisdale, Mrs. Bernice Love and Mrs. Katie Tipton, all of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Alice Woodfins, Buffalo, N.Y. Richardson Continued from Page 1
tional Bank; Mrs, Annell Bell, of Witherspoon Presbyterian Church; Dr. Ralph E. Hanley, former chairman. Marion County Health and Hospital Board; J. Hugh Funk, vice-president, Indiana National Bank; Father Bernard Strange, St. Rita’s Catholic Church; Starling W. James, president, Federation of Associated Clubs; James Murphy, president, Indiana Real Estate Commission, and Sea H. Fer-! guson, real estate broker and in-1 vestor. Also. Lionel F. Artis, public’ housing administrator, and Philip j Wilkie, Rusiiviile attorney and banker. INCLUDED ALSU on the program were Bishop John P. Craine, | Bishop of Diocese of Indianapolis; \ Rev. James L. Cummings, city ’coiineilmen elect and pastor of Trinity CME Church, Carlisle J. Hughes, citizens sponsoring committee. and Mrs. Edna Johnson, president of Central City Real Estate Board, Inc., the sponsoring group.
Presentations made to the honoree included a plaque from the Central City Real Estate Board and a huge portrait. After stepping to the rostrum, he expressed his gratitude for being honored on shch an occasion and then stressed the need for members of the community “to work together for unity.” He also cited the need for “prudence” and pointed out the fact that “man does not control his destiny, not one moment,” and only through unity can he achieve the goal in this country of having freedom and liberty ringfr om the rooftops of every home.”
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merely the fulfillment of what I would call the American dream but he is what I would call the utmost fulfillment of the American dream. “WHEN THIS IS REALLY the home of the free and the land of the brave, Henry Richardson will have made an ultimate contribution.” Using a quote of Booker T. Washington’s, Atty. Frank R. Beckwith said: “The success of a man is not measured by the heights to which he rises but by the depths from whence he rises and the obstacles he has to overcome in surmount- j mg.” A “truly active apd loyal memher of the NAACP” and a “loyal, dedicated freedom fighter” is what | Mrs. Virgie Davis, Indianapolis i Chapter NAACP president, termed | Richardson. She pointed out the fact that he is a 36-year member of the NAACP and was perhaps one of the first persons in Indiana to take out a life membership. Prpises just as brilliant came from William P. Flynn, Chairman, board of directors, Indiana Na-
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Correction The Recorder wishes to correct a story appearing in its Nov. 2c issue reporting that copies of photographs, which had been in the hands of authorities, showed ex-policeman Jacque W. Durham engaging in unnaturel sex acts with other persons. Although the prosecution contended during a recent trial that
Tax Trial
Continued from 1
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listed his income tor
year at $29J#4 on whir*
paid $9,353 in taxes.
Mackey’s trial is expected to last >ome six weeks and some 199 government witnesses are expected to
testify.
On Tuesday Mackey, dressed ; neatly in a brown suit, pleaded nnocent to a new indictment. The Rewidictnaent came because of m * ran^portarion of figures in ttic ‘ earlier indictment which was returned by a Federal last year. Government attorneys explain.’ ed there was an accidental shifting of figures in the amounts Maccey had reported as income and .axes paid in the years 1-957 . h rough 1960. one man in the pkotagraphs was the alleged sex otSender, Durham could not he positively identified.
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