Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1965 — Page 12

fog* 12

THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER

JULY 17, 1965

Tuning in on ANDERSON By Modelyn Irrin — D hone 644-5179

ANDERSON—The Woman’s tor of Bethesda Baptist Church, Home and Foreign Mission and will conduct the 11:30 a.m. SunSociety of Wallace Temple AM- day morning service. The senEZ Church will meet Sunday, ior and junior choir will sing. July 18, at the home of Rev. Mrs. Yvonne Rhodes and Mrs. Mrs. Madelyne Irvin, 1934 Lin- Anna Lloyd are ministers of coin, at 5 p.m. music. Sunday School is at

The theme is “Mercy.” Rev. Mrs. Irvin will deliver the meditation on the theme. The theme song is “Lift Him Up.” It will be sung by Mrs. Janie

Stean.

The guest speaker, Mrs. Bruetta Gholston, will speak on “The Negro in A Changing

World.”

All members should bring a guest. Mrs. Ovenia Shacklett

is president.

. .. Sunday School is at 9:30 a.m. The missionary mass meeting jyj rg Qrpha Ford is superintenofthe lnd^pohs and Ev^s. dent . At 6:30 p.m. vesper servTik* di £l nCt l ° f ice wil1 be led by John Mills AMEZ Churches will ™eet Wed- and 0 th er young people. Midnesday, August 18, at Wallace week prayer service is Wednes-

day at 7:30 p.m.

Reader recites achievement

of Negro on American scene

music. Sunday School is 9:30 a.m. David Braxton is superintendent. Sunday evening services and Bible class are at 6:30 p.m. Midweek prayer service is Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.

* * *

At Allen Chapel AME Church Rev. H. A. Perry, pastor, will conduct the 10:45 a.m. Sunday morning service. The senior choir will sing. Mrs. Pauline Sanders is minister of

music.

Temple AMEZ Church. Mrs. Mattie Anderson is supervisor. Dr. I. Benjamin Pierce is presiding elder. Rev. W. A. Rose-

brough s host pastor.

* * *

Mr. and Mrs. John Bostic of 1225 Hendrick had for their house guests the Fourth of July weekend Mrs. Bessie Williams of New York City, Mrs. Fannie Perkins of Montgomery, Ala., and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cantrell and family of Covington,

Ky.

* * *

Rev. Mrs. Irvin has received a letter from her granddaughter, Andrea, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dungy of Gary, who spent the Fourth of July weekend in Denver, Colo. Miss Dungy is taking a fiveweek summer course at Ball State University. In September she will attend Grinnell College, Iowa.

* * *

Mr. and Mrs. Leon Collier and family of New York City were the house guests of his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Collier, 2202 Martindale, over the Fourth of July weekend. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. Ray

Taylor.

James Meredith, the first Negro to attend and be graduated from the University of Mississippi, delivered the vocation address Friday,

Rev. W. A. Rosebrough, pastor of Wallace Temple AMEZ Church, and Rev. Mrs. Irvin, will be in charge of 11 a.m. Sunday morning services. The senior and junior choirs will sing. Mrs. Ovenia Shacklett is minister of music. The usher board chorus and the Buds of Promise Children’s Chorus will assist in the singing. Mrs. Claudie Carter and Mrs. Janie Lee Stean are respective pian-

ists.

Sunday School is at 9:30 a.m. Mrs. George Carter is superintendent. Evening worship is at 7:30 p.m. Midweek service is Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. * * * Those ill in the community include Bill Myers, Ronald Smith, Gus Shacklett, Bob LaMar, Miss Bertha Carter, Rev. James Menifee, Mrs. Mary Wooten, Mrs. Helen Sanderson, Mrs. Elizabeth Miles, Mrs. Dorothy Patterson, Mrs. A. Fields, Mrs. Pauline Rolling, Mrs. Emma White, Mrs. Esther Yourie, Finn Yourie, James Maxwell Jr., and Mrs. Beatrice Parker.

To The Editor The Recorder Dear Sir: For the past several months I have been thinking a great deal about the past. After God completed His work. He said everything was good. If there was but one person on earth, there would be no system, no society and sociology. There would be no enslavement, no ethics, no etiquette, no statutes, no styles, no standards, no laws. But with many persons on the earth laws are bound to be made. We are watching one another. Every woman is watched, every man is marked, every child is checked. Our crimes are catalogued, our patriotism is almost forgotten. Our mistakes are broadcast long and loud. But Negroes are only human beings, subject to all the winds and waves of laws, love and life. They are not immune to the mental boll-weevils that cut and crawl into the brain of all races of men, royal or ragged. The Negro has a long way to go. Before he achieves his goal he will have to stop dressing like a prince on a poor man’s pay. He will have to stop buying fine cars to decorate the streets. You will not find these things in school books. But if you want to know things go to the library. I have proved that white men have never hated more than half the Negro group. We have been taught to hate. Many people do not know that Thomas Jefferson, father of the Declaration of Independence and once President of the United States was said to have been the father of many, many mulatto offsprings. Many people do not know

that it is said in Houston, Tex., in 1917 a white policeman ran a Negro boy into a

Scene in Fort Wayne

Mrs. Corrine M. Brooks, 2017 ily motored to Cleveland over

Councilmen

block youth aid, tied to U.S. grant GARY — Four members of the Gary city council faced charges last week of blocking a federal grant of more than $1 million to be used in pro-

Negro home. A woman in the Weisser Park Ave., has received the holiday week. While in , - home was bathing and pro- a citation in the 1964 Lane Cleveland they were the guest motln 8 a local youth program,

tested the invasion. The po- Bryant Annual Awards, nation- of Mr. and Mrs. Algernon

liceman arrested her and took al competition for community Lyons, both former residents of

her through the streets with- welfare volunteers. Mrs. Brooks Fort Wayne,

out a stitch of clothing on her was one of three Indiana Worn- * * * body to the police station. en to receive a citation and is Mrs. George Thomas, 1214 Cpl. Charles W. Baltimore, now eligible for one of two Eliza Street and Mrs. Rush 24th Infantry, and fellow $1,000 awards to be announced Holmes, 3709 Chestnut Street, troopers set out to rescue the at a December 2 luncheon in recently flew to California for woman and were brutally New York. The awards have a month long vocation. They beaten. These incidents start- been given annually since 1948 plan to visit the southern and ed the “Houston Riot”, rec- to encourage volunteer work northern part of the state. They ords convey that 19 policemen designed to benefit the Ameri- plan to be on hand for the wedwere killed, and 19 Negro sol- can community. ding of Mrs. Holmes’ daughter

M rs - Brooks’ activities have Tish. to be held in Los Angeles,

Some soldiers of the outfit include( i volunteer work with * nd ,f _? to / k cooperates to to Leavens- the following agencies and or- be on hand for the birth of

The blocking move or opposition to the program is led by councilman Theodore L. Nabban who is supported to councilmen Paul Dudak, E. Hugh McLaughlin and Eugene P.

Carribine.

Recently Nabban blasted Mayor A. Martin Katz’s pro-

posed Human Relations Commission and called for a FBI security check on commission

appointees.

Mayor Katz says the federal grant of $1.5 million to the city stands in jeopardy following the stand of Nabban and his supporters. They blocked recently a council appropriation of $8,500 required to launch the Neighborhood Youth Corps. Further he and his supporters would not approve the $39,200 salary request of the mayor for the staff of the Human Relations Commission. A group of Negro citizens are planning a huge demonstration in protest against the stand of the city council or Nabban and his supporters.

ganizations:

were sent

worth Prison for life They sacrificed themselves to

hrppH Ct Rnf their R ecr eation Center, Girl Scouts, ^ , j r ocik S SKP&’S ttffiSr&S -I ‘. W „ h Jh”^i. br S. n . 3 ary Guild, Fort Wayne Human ^ » lth

The Fort Wayne Mrs ’ Thomas’ grandchild in San Urban League, Inc., McCullock ^ ranc j 9 ®-

Mr.

Relations Council, Catholic Interracial Council and The Fort

Federation.

mother and other relatives.

* * *

and not get lynched. But oth er white men make big hauls

0f nKi» ey „^l. t l. 0f Ho U no. d ! al3 ’ Wayne^Vair* 1 Housing Tas^a- , Mr - an ? Mrs Robert E. WilMany people do not know Mr _ R-ooi,,, a dm inU- kerson Jr. and family are that it is said that Augustus i rat j ve assistant of the Fort s P endin K th eir vacation visitJackson, a Negro of Philadel- ^vnp assistant oi tne rort . . . , '

pia, invented ice cream. Many vva y ne

people do not know that it is said an Indianapolis Negro invented a process for vulcanizing leather to be used in making automobile tires. Louis Stewart, a Negro of Los Angeles invented a refill-

able electric fuse plug. Four Negro people have

ing friends and sightseeing in Toledo. The Wlkersons reside

at 2525 Darlene Court.

Jewish

* * * «.

The Turner Chapel AME

Church will be host to the pas- j n* u n

tors and congregations of the o/>^ r 'rf n f ^® nry / P'^ n - 3 ’

Allen Temple A.M.E. Church f 02 k P“ rle „ , V e Court and . and the Bethel A.M.E. Church, Sh,jrry

both of Marion, Indiana, at a

special service Sunday, July nessee -

18, at 3:30 P.M. Music will be

friends and

are

relatives

visiting in Ten-

been Registers of the United £uest Sh conir b reei 1 t?ons hOI The 0f R t ev e spencMng^°theh°"vacation* on*™ Bruce 3 , J Ye c 8U Napier an W A - J oli ™ r is PastJ oAhe ™ 0t0 o,. tr , ip t _ 0 .. th .! f 3 !. 1 : .?„ e fT

Lyons and W. T. Vernon.

colored woman of Ohio

L. A

was

pastor

Allen Temple A.M.E. Church and the Rev. T. E. Cooper is

. . .. . pastor of the Bethel A.M.E. S .h^ „™5 r * Ute Church. The Rev. S. D. Hard- , ,, , F ea mon* j g pastor of the local con-

ument to Abraham Lincoln. gregation

the Blacks return they plan to

visit Ontario, Canada.

William E. Lilly, lawyer of Chicago,

a

was

Negro

the

Mr. and Mrs. William H.

Rev. Mrs. Madelyne Irvin, who has been ill the past 10

con- days, is able to be up and about

July at this writing.

9, at Indiana University. * * *

Mr. Meredith, 33, recently re- William Cox, 83, 1425 Sherturned from Nigeria, Africa, man, died June 29. He had where he did graduate work in lived here 69 years and was a political science. retired steel and wire company The monthly fellowship meet- employee. Mr. Cox was born

ing of the Triumph Church, in Columbus, Kv

Faith Tabernacje, and the Survivors include four daughChurch of God in ^Christ, vras ters, Mr. Nellie Page and Mrs.

Mary Canty, Anderson; Mrs. Ella Mae Stonestreet and Mrs. Martha Wise, Detroit; five sons, Frederick, Johnnie Wil-

held at Triumph Church, 20th and Cedar, Sunday, July 11. Words of appreciation were given to the 1965 high school

Jacobs blasts

U.S. road chief on inner loop WASHINGTON, D.C. — Congressman Andrew Jacobs (Dem. Ind.) late last week was refusing to accept the dictum of the federal highway chief that the Indianapolis inner

loop must be elevated.

In a letter sent to Rex M. Whitton, Federal Highway Administrator Congressman Jacobs sought an explanation “tenth of mile by tenth of a mile” of a $5 million discrepancy between 1962 estimates of

tribute.s°to“mt.°Lincol^

(Lilly',) book, "Lot My Poo- 1“™! ^tint wifh "the Peace pie Go. Corps in the Carribean Isle of

**000.+ o* St. Lucia. Mr. Watson was for-

Fol owing the sport of j th Dean 0 f Boys at CenS !r.! r . a i 0 i- tbC . 5[ e . at . e .^ t tral High School. W,? join oth;

ers in welcoming the Watsons back to the Fort Wayne com-

★ ★ ★ Terre Haute news

jockeys ever to mount a horse's back were Negroes. They were

Isaac Murphy Alonzo Clay- ^ WatsonJare tem n_J,. ! -“ 0n !L,,9 Ve c“" r ' porarily residing at 821% Mad

Perkins, Felix

Colston, Andy Hamilton Winkfield and Willie Simms. Men of my race lift your heads up.

(to be continued)

Rev. George N. Tate ★ ★ ★

Mad-

ison Street.

Evansville, Ind.

BY CLEONA HARDEN

EVANSVILLE—Miss Marie Williams of 904

Janet

graduates by Mrs. liam’and Robert, all of Ander-

Irvin, a minister in the brothers, Lee Cox, Indianapolis, pJ between 1962 estimates of pendence was married SaturConference and n^spaper col- John A C 0 x , Andepon, fc^To engin^rfngTirm and day, July 10, to James L. umnist for the Anderson y and Noble Cox, Troy, a h _ _ of t i. e state Highway De- Hamm, of Stantonsburg, N.S.,

Herald and Bulletin Newspa- Ala . 30 Kran d c hildren, 18 State “j^way pers, Inc., and The Indianapolis great-grandchildren, and sever- b • Recorder weekly newspaper, In- al nieces and nephews. Mr. Jacobs noted that three dianapolis. * * * ori/ , „ years ago, the Lochner En-

She is a member of the An- Homer LaRue, 79, 326 W. -* derson Mayor’s Human Rela- 17th, died recently at St. John

. > • • i nr_ TT •. i

Hospital

TERRE HAUTE — Chester H. Roberts died Monday, July 5, in Rockville. He was active in local Democratic circles. The Bell and Bracken Funeral Home was in charge of funeral arrangements. * * * Rev. C. W. Holliday, pastor of Spruce Street AME Church, has been transferred to St. John AME Church, Indianap-

olis.

* * *

The Gospel Train Radio Program, hosted by Rev. J. W. Parks, concluded its last pro-

Eldridge and Miss Denise Wal- gram Sunday. It will resume ters. The girls were accompa- i n the fall. The Russell Funied by Miss Cynthia Bell, neral Home sponsored the pro-

Girls’ Work Secretary at the gram.

Kiwannis Branch YMCA. * * * * * * Elder C. P. Kirkland, pastor Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Blanks of the church of God and

Funeral Directors

CRAIG

Funeral Home 1002 S. SENATE AVE.

ME. 4-4843

Jacobs Bros. Funeral Home 1239 N. WEST ST.

ME. 5-3361

2401 Martindale Ave.

WA. 3-1991

King & King Funeral Home 1503 Columbia Ave. ME. 8-2324 Nettie Scott King, Sec’y-Treas. Paul R. Scott, Mgr.

WILLIS MORTUARY 632 N. WEST ST. ME. 4-5100 Paul H. Haizlip, Owner

DAN MOORE Funeral Home 873 W. 9TH ST.

ME. 4-5880

PEOPLES Funeral Home 526 N. WEST ST. ME. 4-8097 Mrs. Lula D. Hinton, Pres. B. J Jackson, Mgr.

BOATRIGHT Funeral Home 2163 N. Illinois WA. 4-3013

STUART MORTUARY 812 N. WEST ST. ME. 4-4448

George M. Miller Mortuary 1139 N. WEST ST. — ME. 4-6780

The Entertainers Club of the Kiwannis Branch YMCA recently spent the day in Chicago touring the Museum of Science and Industry. The girls also visited Riverview and reported having lots of fun. Among those taking the trip were the Misses Joanna Renee Patterson, Wendy Woods, Diane Brewer, Joan

Hoosier Monument Co., Inc. MARKERS — MONUMENTS 2058 N. MERIDIAN ST. OFFICE WA. 3-4583 EASY PAYMENTS CALL ELIZABETH STEWART 239 BUCKINGHAM DRIVE WA. 5-2266

Inde- Sr., 1408 Hugh Street and fam- Saints of Christ, will host the

after a month’s ill-

ness.

Mr. LaRue was bom February 5, 1886, at Edinburg and had lived in Anderson since

1914.

tions Commission, and Wallace Temple AMEZ Church. _ Mrs. Irvin was appointed missionary travelling minister of the AMEZ Churches of the Indiana Conference recently by Bishop

£) C TTuckdr

She has two children. Her He was a member of Second daughter is a teacher in the Methodist Church and was a Gary Public School System, and retired Citizen Bank Building her son is a Richmond business- employe. His wife, Sarah May man. Mrs. Irvin is a retired La Rue, died in 1958. school teacher and an alumnus Surviving are three daugh-

gineering Co., Chicago supplied a $16.3 figure as the cost of elevating the north leg of the inner loop. He quoted a June 30, 1965 figure of the highway department at $21 million. The Lochner firm earlier had recommended an excavated, or "depressed’’ design for the northern sector of the loop. Congressman Jacobs told Mr. Whitton, “We do not understand, nor to date have we been given any reason to under-

in the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Odd Williams. Miss Williams was employed by Shane Manufacturing Company before her marriage. Mr. Hamm is employed by the Veterans Hospital, New-

ark, N.J.

President names D.C. native to post of Army aide

state convocation Sunday Monday at Terre Haute.

and

Mrs. Ada McCollough was Lawrence Godwin, and Miss general chairman. Rev. G. R. Rowena LaRue, Anderson; a Redding was host pastor. son, Charles, Anderson; + * * sisters, Mrs. Lucy Suggs, IndiRev. Zack Turner, assistant anapolis, and Mrs. Arella Purspastor of Zion Baptist Church, ley, Lexington, Ky.; eight will conduct the 11 a.m. and grandchildren and two-great-

7:30 p.m. services Sunday. The senior choir and chorus will sing. Mrs. S. Gully is pianist. Sunday School is at 9:30 a.m. and midweek prayer service at 7:30 p.m. every Wednesday.

* * *

Rev. Charles Middleton, pas-

grandchildren.

Waltz and Hiday Funeral Home was in charge of services held Sunday, July 4, at Second Methodist Church. Rev. Martin L. Bellinger officiated. Burial was in 'East Maplewood Cemetery Monday, July 5.

★ ★ ★

of Tennessee State University, ters, Mrs. James K. Bailey, Mrs.

the inner system.”

He cited to Mr. Lochner that in 1960 his firm told a public hearing that the excavated roadway was the best. “Few people attended the public hearings when the press, in 1960 indicated there would be few dirt enbankments across these residential neighborhoods,” Mr. Jacobs noted. "But after it was learned that plans were being revised, 900 people attended a recent public hearing before the Indianapolis city council, with hardly any exception, to protest,” he further cited in his letter.

★ ★ ★

This week in Negro History July 11, 1905—A meeting of Negro leaders results in Niagara Movement for Justice. July 11, 1804 — Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of Treasury, and believed to be a descendant of Negro ancestors, was fatally wounded in a duel

with Aaron Burr.

July 13, 1863—Anti-slavery riots in New York City. July 14, 1793—Richard Allen, founder of the AME church, organized city-wide nursing service during yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia. July 14, 1881—Tuskegee Institute (Alabama) enrolls first

students.

July 15, 1873—Quinn Chapel AME church, one of the oldest churches in Chicago, was destroyed by fire for the second

time.

WASHINGTON—Maj. Hugh Robinson, a native of this city, a West Point graduate (1954)

> * and the holder of a M.S. degree

A Fourth of July party mo- from Massachusetts Institute tored to Princeton the past of Technology, went to work week and were guests of Mrs. early tbis week as a military Lizzie White on Emerson. Mrs. aide to President Johnson. White served a delicious three- The announcement of Maj. course dinner in her beautiful Robinson s appointment to the h om e. Presidents staff was made Guests were Rev. and Mrs. from the LBJ ranch near JohnHerschell Maddox and daugh- son City, Tex. He and his wife

ter, Princeton, and Mrs. Pau- were flown

line Broshears, Mrs. Anna M

"Riot," sequel to slaying by cop in Fort Wayne FORT WAYNE—The fatal

on the front porch. They said he was swinging a baseball bat and exclaiming, “Nobody’s going to send me to the hospital.” Hatcher reported, he attempted to calm Suttle who advanced upon him with the bat. He said he backed down the street about

, . , _. , _ 100 feet and then fired two shooting of Lincoln Suttle, age warn j nff s h 0 ts between Suttle’s 28. by Motorcycle Patrolman feet s u ttle continued to adRobert Hatcher here on Tues- vance h e said, and he fired three day touched off a near riot in more shots at the advancing

the vicinity of Suttle’s home. mnri

The shooting and following incidents precipitated another disturbance at Parkview Me-

morial Hospital.

According to police reports the slaying followed threats made by Suttle against Patrol-

man Hatcher with a baseball Rites for AU en J. Woodfor , bat. Hatcher had been sent to 79, 2415 N New Jersey, were Suttle’s home along with an- conducted July 13 *t Antioch other officer to quell a disturb- Baptist Church, with burial ance . New Crown Cemetery. He died Following the fatal shooting July 10 at General Hospital, city and state police were Mr. Woodford, a native of rushed to the scene to requiet Cochran, Ga., had lived here 42 a highly disgruntled group of years. He was retired seven neighbors. years ago from the New York After they heard Suttle was Central Railroad Beech Grove dead, police report several of shops- He had worked there

★ ★ ★

Allen J. Woodford

Suttle’s relatives were arrested. Later they were released on their own recognizance. Police reports indicate the trouble followed a report by

Suttle’s sister that her brother Mich., was “out of his head.” She was Wade,

37 years.

He was a former deason of the Antioch Baptist Church. Survivors include six sons, Emmett Woodford, Marian,

William H., Jasper, John and Nathaniel

July 16, 1862—Ida B. WellsBaraett, initiator of anti-lynch campaign of 1890s, was born in Holly Springs, Miss. Before coming to Chicago where she

told to call a doctor and ad- Woodford, all of Indianapolis; vised at the doctor’s office to a daughter, Mrs. Hazel Wil-

call police for assistance. Hams, Indianapolis; two sisters, was an opponent of segregation When the police arrived, Mrs. Idell Howard, Detroit, and a political worker, she edit(Hatcher and others) they re- Mich., and Mrs. Rochester ed her own paper. The Memphis port they found Suttle sitting Kurts, Washington, D.C. Free Speech, in Memphis, Tenn.

Reed and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hawkins, Evansville. They report a joyous and safe holi-

day.

* * * McFarland Baptist Church closed an interesting two-week Bible school the past week. Mrs. Wanda Washington was supervisor. The children rendered a lovely program Friday evening. * + + St. John Methodist Church closed its Bible school with a picnic for the youngsters in Mesker Park Saturday. The children were chaperoned by adults. Mrs. Christine Bowling was director. * * * Mrs. Mary Ridley of Milwaukee is visiting her sister, Mrs. Wilma Bethel, on S. Denby. She was also the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bowling on Prosperity. Mrs. Ridely is the widow of John E. Ridley, former director of Carver Community Center.

to the ranch for an

informal ceremony and intro-

duction to the press.

Maj. Robinson will be the President’s Army aide serving under Air Force Maj. Cross scheduled to be promoted to lieutant colonel this week. Col. Cross (designate) will be Armed forces aide, a new title replacing military aide. Maj. Robinson, a Negro is the first of his race ever to hold such

a post.

IT IS OUR PLEDGE And our policy to provide a smooth and dignified funeral service for the family that is in accord with their every wish, and at a price they can afford to pay. PATTON Funeral Home 2357 NORTHWESTERN WA. 6-4511 MARK D. BATTIKS FUNERAL DIRECTOR

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