Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1966 — Page 2
i
THE IND»ANAK>US RECORDER
McGuire letter shop Mlmeoffraphiiif - Typing - Fllinf Papers - Affldavlts - Letter Wrlttnr, Tax Service 1U Work Strictly Confidential Notary Public 504 North Dorman St. At E. Michifan St. Representative Indianapolis Recorder 34 years
Poverty
Continned from
UNCF to share in U.S. Steel College grant
eduled for Saturday, June 11, at 2 p.m., at 1804 N. Martindale. On hand for the ceremonies will be many political figures and local dignitaries, it was reported.
Nation-Wide Shoe Stores 2030 W. Washington St. Corner Belmont- & Wash. Sts.
EVERY DAY 9 TO 9 SUNDAYS. 12 TO 6
FAMOUS BRANDS SHOES At Big Discount Prices
FAMOUS BRAND — REG. $25 MEN'S SHOES CONNOLLY
CREATORS OF MAN FASHIONED FOOTWEAR
*12?5 12 Prs. $25
• 15 Different Styles • Sizes 6 to 16 • All Widths
Men's Summer Shoes $3.95 to $8.95
FAMOUS BRAND — REG. $19 VALUE FOR MEN JOHNNY WALKERS DRESS SHOES
• Many Styles • Sizes 5 to 14 • Black • Brown
*13?. 2prs*27
MEN'S WORK SHOES $6-$8-$10
For men — Famous Brands — Reg. $20 to $35 Values • FLORSHEIM • FREEMAN • JARMAN • STETSON # STACY ADAMS • NUNN BUSH Sizes 6 to 15 _ A to EEE $12.95 • $14.95 • $16.95 • $24.95
ON LEAVE: Roger Young, son of Mrs. Margaret Young of 1051 Roache St., is home on leave after serving with the U.S. Air Force in Viet Nam since February. Airman Young, a radar technician, will return to Hill AFB in Utah after completing his 30-day leave.
MIDLAND THRIFT — SHOP — * Trouser and Shirt Sale SUMMER MERCHANDISE 2021 E. 46th St. CL. 3-6746
Women's, Children's, Leather Sandals $1.69 pr.
FAMOUS BRANDS — REG. $5 TO $20 VAL. WOMEN'S BETTER SHOES
$3-$4-$5 $6- $8
Sizes 4 to 11 Widths A-B-C-D-E & EEE
POWER CLEANING CAR WASH 10 MINUTES FAST SERVICE Guaranteed Service Steam Cleaning WAXING • UPHOLSTERY CLEANING L. H. Smith Car Wash 1802 Northwestern Ave. FOR PICK-UP SERVICE Monday thru Thursday Call 924-3221
^ITALIAN LOAFERS • PENNY LOAFERS • HIGH HEELS • MEDIUM HEELS • FLATTIES
MEN’S _ WOMEN’S BOY’S — GIRL’S
Tennis Shoes $ l-$1.50-$2
CALL ME!
JAMES L. RICHARDSON Division Director CL. 3-6706 or CL. 3-0552 YOUR HALL-NEAL SALESMAN
lOZMAN'S
11082 UdeH St.
HOURS
CORNER
UDELL & CLIFTON
MONDAY - SATURDAY
9 AM. TO 10 P.M.
- REGAL — MARKET WA. 3-0677 SUN. 9 - 8
I ISTcho* lb. 59c Neck Bones $1
1 ss;“ CHUCK ROAST Ib, 49c = * C
!jwL , $4.45 | FRANKS l bS ' 1 s pan ML 1 SAUSAGE #
IN THE PIECE IKROCIU 1 L. $1.051
i • Fresh Produce Daily • ! K Greens 2 fc. 25c !
! LEMONS doz. 39c
MANY MORE FOOD BARGAINS i • E WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO S LIMIT QUANTITIES 5 ■
§ FLORIDA JUICE [ORANGES doz. J7C
WE ACCEPT | SURPLUS FOOD STAMPS
Some 33 member colleges of the United Negro College Ftind Steel’s $2,600,000 program of will share in United States Steel’s $2,600,000 program of aid-to-education, according to an announcement made recently by Roger M. Blough, chairman of the board of trustees of United States Steel Foundation, Inc. The program comprehends grants to 700 liberal arts colleges, universities and institutes and to 21 organizations dedicating to raising the quality of teaching and learn-
ing in America.
“In this,’’ said Mr. Blough, “the 13th consecutive program in aid-to-education, the trustees have again directed the major part of the program to the multiple needs of the institutions of higher education which so significantly serve the needs of our free society. Grants made are primarily concerned with institutional efforts to secure and retain quality facilities, expand facilities, enhance teaching resources, improve educational research and advance scholarship, as well as to stimulate ever-broadening support to higher education.” Located in 11 Southern states, the 33 predominantly Negro colleges and universities affiliated with the United Negro •College Fund are reconstructing their educational programs in a concerted effort to train thousands of students for many areas of professional employment formerly closed to Negroes. UNCF member Stillman College, was recipient of another Steel Foundation grant
earlier this year.
WE SELL HIGH GRADES COALS Pr. Poca. Jewell Lump $21.95 Pr. Poco. Jewell Egg .. 21.95 Poca. Briquets 23.45 Pr. Poca. Olga Stoker 19.90 Leatherwood Ky Lump 18.90 Pr. Console Cavalier Ky. Stoker 19.90 Pr. Eastern Ky. Stoker 17.90 Pioneer Island Creek W. Va. Lump 17.90 W. Va. Lump 17.90 W. Va. Egg 16.90 W. Va. Lump Sc W. Va. Nut & Slack 13.25 W. Va. Lump — Poca. Nut & Slack 14.25 Indiana Egg 13.95 W. Va. Nut 8c Slack 9.00 Indiana Lump 15.55 Wheel In 50 Cents Per Ton Ziegler Fuel, Inc. 2112 Northwestern Ave. 926-3368 PEARL K. DUNCAN
Negro Demo Continued from Page 1 included Gov. George Wallace’s home county of Barbour. Gary’s opponent in the primary was another attorney. William V. NeviUe Jr., of Eufaula. Complete returns in Macon County gave the nomination for sheriff to Lucius D. Amerson, 32, who defeated incumbent Harvey Sadler despite a split in Negro ranks which had given Sadler the indorsement of at least one Negro leader. Amerson quit his job in the post office at Montgomery in February to devote full time to the race for sheriff-chief law enforcement officer in the county. He is married and the father of two children. A Negro funeral home operator, L.A. Locklair, won the nomination for collector in Macon County, defeating Arthur L. Cooper and Harold W. Webb, another Negro, beat incumbent, John Henderson for a seat on the county board of revenue. Another Negro leader, the Rev. Peter Kirkley, won the party nomination for a place on the Green County School Board. He defeated Seyborne Colson. Negro candidates trailed for sheriff in two other counties, Bullock and Perry, and for tax collector, tax assessor, county school board, and county governing body in the other races. In Hale County, a Negro civil rights leader, the Rev. Henry McCaskill was defeated by former state trooper Ben Kizziah for sheriff. There was evidence of divided loyalty among Negro voters elsewhere besides Macon County. Paul Stone, a white candidate who was out in front of Negro Obie Leonard Scott in
the race for tax collector in Perry County, commented, “I had heard some folks say some Negroes were voting for white candidates, and it’s beginning to look like they did. In one of the three statewide races also at stake in the election, Secretary of State Agnes Gaggett apparently won the nomination for state treasurer with the reported help of Gov. Wallace. Her opponent, State Auditor Betty Frink, had received the support of thousands of Negro voters in the first primary. A beautiful Montgomery housewife, Melba Till Allen, was nominated for state auditor in her first state-wide race. Among the defeated Negro candidates for the legislature were all four who ran in Jefferson County, (Birmingham). Three of them had the indorsement of the Birmingham News. Patronize Recorder Advertisers
More Negroes Continned from Page 1 per cent of its combat zone personnel is Negro. They said one Negro Navy man had been killed in action in the crisis. Negro losses in the Army and Marines are more pronounced when officers are excluded from the deaths. Negro enlisted men accounted for 22.1 per cent of the Army casualties and 1 per cent of the Marine deaths.
JUNE 4, 1966 The survey showed 16,531 Negroes in the Army, 3,580 in the Marines and 500 in the Navy in Viet Nam. The Air Force total showed 908 Negroes in the area as of last September. The report showed Negro deaths were 197 out of 1,078 total army deaths in Viet Nam. Six of the deaths were Negro officers. Of the Marine 346 deaths, 39 were Negroes, including two officers. Total figures for all service show Negroes making up 8.27 per cent while accounting for 14.6 per cent of the combined deaths.
BAIRD CLEANERS 628 N. WEST ST. (Cleaning Plant)
* SAVE • BUNDLE CLEANING
Other Locations 315 BLAKE STREET 631 BLAKE STREET CALL • ME. 4-8197 For Prompt Pick-up And Delivery Service
BOOK MATCHES ALL KINDS OF ADVERTISING SPECIALTIES. Evening — 926-5528
DR. JOSEPH E. KERNEL OPTOMETRIST Traction Terminal Building 104 NORTH ILLINOIS STREET ME. 5-356$
$ $ BE THRIFTY SAVE $ $ CLOTHING & FURNITURE BARGAINS FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY STOP — AND — SHOP CATHOLIC SALVACE BUREAU 449 E. WASH. ST.
9th and Fayette
%
1547 Roosevelt
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SAM'S LOAN CO. Your Pawn-Broker For 25 Years Same Courtesy But A New Location CASH — LOANS — ON
Diamonds Watches
TVs
Radios Jewelry Luggage
■"’••o' * ; . -
\
! i a
1 1 1 1
$
PAY
1
TOP PRICES
1 •»
1
FOR OLD FURNITURE
1
GUNS — BOOKS
*9
1
DISHES — LAMPS
I
4* 1
COINS — VASES IRON TOYS JEWELRY
•m 1
V9-
CHAIRS — ANY
1
OLD ANTIQUES
1
|
926-0736
1
V*
12 NOON-1:30 P.M. WEEKDAYS
1
$—$—$—$—$
GEORGE P. STEWART PRINTING COMPANY, INC. Main Office, 518 Indiana Ave. Indianapolis, Indiana Published WeVkly by the INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER MARCUS C. STEWART Editor and Publisher Entered at the Post Office, Indl tnapolls, Indiana, as second-class matter under the Act of March 7, 1870, National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc., 310 Madison Avenue, New fork, N.Y. Member: Audit Bureau of Circulation, National Newspaper Publishers Association, Hoosler State Press Association. Unsolicited Manuscripts, pictures and cuts will not be returned unless accompanied by postage to cover same. 6 Mos. 1 Yr. City 13.00 4.00 Indiana 2 2E. V60 ^.Isewhera 2.50 A.flP
MAN WITH CAR Interested In Newspaper Circulation Work — Full or Part Time. Age No Barrier. CALL 634-1545 FOR MR. THOMPSON OR MR. ERVIN
Rev. Johnsoir
REV. JOHNSON SAYS: My Work Is Often - IMITATED - But Never -DUPLICATEDNotice New Hours Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. — 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
DON ! TELL HIM!! LET HIM TELL YOU!! CONDITIONS
-OF ALL KINDSLOVE • MARRIAGE SEPARATIONS No Case Too Large or Too Small
Rev. F. L. Johnson 517 INDIANA AVE. • 638-8597
SHEETS and TABLE LINENS OUR SPECIALTY
"SHIRTS" 0HLY 20c When Included With Flatwork Bundle
THIS COUPON WORTH
50c
ON A Flat Work Bundle • One Per Person Expires June 11
m
LAUNDERERS & CLEANERS
ILLINOIS AT 22nd ST. — WA. 3-1596
Cameras Musical
Instruments
Shotguns
Typewriters
Record Players
Miso. Mdse.
Out-of-Pawn Values
Save-At-Sam's
SHOTGUNS, RIFLES, REVOLVERS
$12.95 TO $59.95
Easy Credit Terms
Out of Pawn Values on TV’s, Binoculars,
Pistols, and Sporting Goods.
SAM'S LOAN CO. 24 W. OHIO STREET ME. 4-4369 > iHHUiiiiiiHiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiinhHHnniiiiiiHimiiiiiiniuua
2 LOCATIONS
22nd & College 29th & Central
STEAK SALE
Round - Sirloin Cube or Club Rib Steaks
lb. 89c lb. 99c lb. 79c
IN THE PIECE JOWL
ib. 39c
SLICED BEEF LIVER
ib. 49c
FANCY CHOICE: VEAL • LAMB
FRESH DRESSED FRESH » POULTRY • FISH]
SEALTEST MILK
Glass or Paper Ctn.
69c
GRADE “A’’ LARGE A EGGS doz. 39c
BI-RITE — ALL PURPOSE CLEANER f«u With Ammonia
29c
• FRESH PROPUCE DAILY #
FRESH MIXED
GREENS V 49c
1 * SUNKIST
SS LEMONS
doz. 49c
: r POTATOES
3 ■
33c
ALWAYS SHOP WHERE YOUR PATRONAGE IS APPRECIATED
• WE RESERVE THE KlUnT IU LIMIl tJUANIIIIk, ffcDFNl Monday - Thursday • Fri. & Sat. 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. •wl fclw 8:30 o.m. to 8 p.m..a Sunday 8 o.m. to 6 p.m.
