San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1961 Page: 1 of 12
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.. V
. fa Froffnai WiUwwt atrncgto
"If there is no *truggle, there-*
Nm progrett. ThoM who pro few to
lOwor freedom, and. yet depreeitto
i^eitetibn, are men who want «ropa
ff^itkont ploughing up the ground.
,. Power concede* nothing withont
demand. It never did and never
4 «UL"
^-Frederick Doaglut
RIGHT •
air Edition lie
With BapplenHnt. o«t of CUy. He
NAACP OFFICIALS AT WHITE HOl'SE—Official* of the National A«<mclntion for the Advancement
of Cidored People were warmly greeted by Pre.idcnt Kennedy when they called at the White II nunc, Wednes-
day. July 12. I'lctnred above, left to right. are Wallop Stephen Oill Hpntt*wood, chairman of the NAAC1* hoard
of directora: l'reaident Kennedy ( Joel 8plt*arn, NAACP preaident, and Hoy Wilkin«, exeeutive aecretary of
the association. ... , .
The NAACP member* pictured above, nlong with 57 stnte directors, executive board member* and other
NAACP oflieiala, were greeted by the President in the Oval room of the eiecutive manaion. President Kennedy
reaffirmed hia atrong position on civil rlghta. Following a diacuaaion, tha Prcaident escorted the group to Lin-
eoln'a bedroom, and pointed out art idea of hiatoric interest.
•No Incidents as
•Negroes Swim
: At Gulf port, Miss.
No Violence, No Arrests
As Group Swims
At "All-White" Beach
| ^ By the Aesocliited Nenro Press
OULTPORT, Mia*.—Highway pa-
4 trol and Harrison rounty law officials
a were reluctant to call laat week's
w i hour and a half swimming episode l>y
a Negroes at (lulfport an organised
r effort to break dowa Miaaissippi'a
• gegregation barriers.
There waa no violence and no
i arreats aa waa the cnae laat aummer
in an integration attempt on the
. beach sear Biloil, but the group of
. nearly 2S Negroes were kept under
tlaae aarveiltanca by authorities.
*AU «• did waa patrol the road,"
r Sario. Fnlka aaid. Ha eairthat about
• 14 at the swimmers appeared to be 10
. «r 11 year* old and the others la their
Color Bar
Down at
Tex. Tech
By the Axaoctatcd Negro Preaa
L' BBOCK. Teiss—The Texaa
Tech eallegc heard chairman
laat week, said tha college
would accept Negro students pro-
vided the appliraate are «aalMM.
W. J. Durham, attorney, said
la Dallas that the NAACP waa
plaaaiag a suit aniens Negroes
are adailtted.
C. 1. (Htooy) WaH Teeh'a
board chairman. aaU that "If
they (Negraea) apply aad auet
the faMoltas they will be ac-
cepted ah* aayaae rtae."
i
I
I
ilarriaoa couaty Sheriff Curtis De-
deaai aaid tha swiwmers were "Jaat
I bunch ot colored kid*.
They Bwam In a portion of the 28-
mlle beach previously used only by
white adulis. Home areaa of the
beach, especially around Waveland
and Paas Christian near the Missis-
alppl-Louisiana state line, are uaed
•uly by Negroes.
Sheriff Dedeaux aaid he could not
call the swimming an organised ef-
fort to integrate the beach yet "uii-
leaa another big group cornea along.'
A suit baa been filed by the federal
government aaking for an injunction
ending aegregation and permitting
Negroes use of ail portiona «rf the
beaeh.
The governments claima ara cen-
s tered around the federal funda epeut
to build aeawalis and renovate the
• beach after a aevere 1M7 hurricane.
The auit ia still ia the courta,
■ leading a deciaion on whether the
. county or private parties own the
< beach aectlone fronting their prop-
arty. '
Con Man with
"Tear in Voice,
Bilks Ministers
By the Associated Negro I'reae
CLEVELAND, Ohio —A smooth-
talking confidence man with a quiet,
aad voice has been bilking ministers
in the lost week by taking advantage
of their gympnthy for relativea of the
dead.
After firat enlisting a minister to
afflciuM at the "funeral" of hia
.mother, the mnn solemnly aaka for a
email sum to bring a relative here
•from Chicago for the aervicea. The
touch ia made and he leaves.
"In ti*u or three cases, tha minia-
ter didn't find out there wasn't any
fnacrnl until he. arrived for the aerv-
Ice" aaid Alvin C. whose fu-
neral honrt is named by the awindler
aa handling arrangements.
"lleeides those who came in, I've re-
ceived half a down calls from minis-
tera checking on funerals. I've had
to give them the bad newa that they-
've been fleeced."
A typical caae went like this: A
well-dressed man of medium height
called on the Rev. B. Robert Law-
eon, .pastor of Emmanuel Baptist
church. He aaid that he waa Jamea
Benaou and that hia mother, lira.
Janet Bejjaon, had just died.
He seemed to be forcing back the
tears aa he told Rev. Lawaon that the
atevicea would, be at Oibba' on Wed-
nfoday. The "bereaved" eon asked
awQier favor after Lawaon agreed to
*^5*1 Ike good mlniater please ad-
vance |10 aa b* could bring hia aunt
' ("my mother'a only living relative
1 baaMea myaeir') here from Chicago
nr^'bamled over the l«|
i ■ Benaoa left. Later that day, at1
weekly meeting of the Baptist
conference at hia church,
lea COM. rut id
I la thla Weat Tex
aa city, haa net
atadaati previsaely.
appliratlana are ea file aaw. Tha
Labhotfc Avalaadie Joarwal aaid
fear Negroes applied laat year
bat were tamed dowa.
a —
Lightning Bolt
Kills Eight
North Carolinians
By the Associated Negro Press
CLINTON. N. O—Five Negroes
and three whitea were electrocuted
last week when a bolt of lightning
struck n tobacco-curing barn into
which they hnd taken shelter from a
rainstorm. One other Xegro suffered
shock.
According to police, the eight vic-
tims were sitting on metal tobacco
carers when the lightning struck
the barn. The electric charge
ripped off ft small hatch-like door,
traveled around two,metal curera and
acroiw the damp ground. The high
conductivity of the metal, plus the
fact that they were not grounded, en-
abled the charge to flow unopposed
through the bodies of the sitting vic-
tims.
Kugene Daughtry, 16-year-old.Negro
youth, was sitting on the ground with
his head resting against a curer. He
felt ft jarring impact against his
head.
"That'a all' I remember.* he said
later. "I guess I was knocked out."
Treated at the hospital for shock.,
he waa reported to be in gooa condi-
tion. .«•.
Home of the victims bad been har-
vesting tobacco in the fields, while
the others were engaged in tying to-
bacco under the shelter adjoining the
barn.
Fake Lawyer
Returaed to D. C.
For Arraignment
By the Associated Negro Press
WASH INGTON — Daniel Jackson
Oliver Wendel Homes Morgan waa
returned here last week.
Court obserrera jammed tin United
States commimioner'a office for the
hearing in which Morgan stood ac-
cused of posing aa a criminal lawyer
whom many recall as barking oat ob-
jectiona and wearing dowa trial judg-
es.
Dressed in aporta elothea and chew-
ing gun, Morgan appeared without a
lawyer and whlepered four words,
"No atatemeat to make," when aaked
if he objected to a-bond of M0.000.
Morgan, 60-year-old ex-convict, wag
ordered returned here by a federal
judge in San Franciaco to face trial
on four charges of falaely atating be
(Sea FAKE, Page U
Mixed Marriages
Win Approval
Of Church Bodies
Interracial Marriages
Have Gradually Won
Religious Approval
By the A mo" In ted Negro Picss
DENVER — Interracial marriages,
once frowned on if not banned by the
church, have gradually won religious
flfriroval.
According to a purvey of various
religious denominations just released
by Editorial Research Reports, sev-
eral outstanding churches have ex-
pressed in writing their a| proval of
marriage between whites and blacks.
**A foot cause of opposition by white
aouthernera to integration in the
•cboola and elsewhere is their fear
that It will promote such marriages,
Helen B. Shaffer re| orts.
"But religious bodies ara frankly
acknowledging that Christian brother-
hooft implies acceptance of interracial
ariimla," ahe said.
Church attitudes Include:
Episcopal
Hie 'Efriacopal Society for Cultural
hnd Racial Unity petitioned the
House of Bishops on July 10 to study
the question of Interracial marriage
and to state in its next pastoral let-
ter the position of the church. It was
the view of the society that laws for-
bidding racial intermarriage were
"contrary to Christian teaching, nat-
ural laws and the Constitution," Miss
Shaffer reports.
Reformed Church
Its "Credo on Race Relations'* in
1967 included the statement: "We
believe that the churdt misconceives
its function when it actively hinders,
forestalls, or decries the marriage of
any two people who, loving Christ,
love each other . . ."
Congregational Christian
A "Statement on Interracial Mar-
riage" issued by the Congregational
Christian church in 1948 upheld the
virtue of such marriages by saying
that "fellowship based on res(>ect and
good-will for people is the divine pur-
pose" and that physical differences
between the races were "superficial."
Presbyterian
The growing willingness of church
leaders to assert the acceptability of
interracial marriage was evident in
the responses of Presbyterian clergy-
men and lay leaders to a question
posed not long ago by a church publi-
cation : "Would you want your daugh-
ter to marry a Negro?"
Although nearly all the respondents
recognized the acute difficulties in-
terracial couples would face, nearly
all said they would wholeheartedly
accept a son-in-law or daughter-in-
law of the other race.
CatJiollc v
Differences of race or color are no
obstacle to marriage in the Roui&iV
Catholic church.
Jewish
Jewish law makes no reference to
differences of race or color between
marital partners, but the small num-
ber of Negro Jews makes the ques
PROGRESS
City Edition 126
SAN ANTONIO,
>AV. Jl l.Y SK, IMI
wan
< CUy, Ui
fALC"
the SAN ANTONIO anil f
SOUTH TEXAS Newi .
While It is NEWS. Com-
plete National and World
Wide News Coverage. J
its toilTxEwsMF^
S. A. Burglar Hits Seven Counties
NAACP
Of Mississippi Products
(Special to 8an AntOnlo HN Vr>r)
Pim.AnKt.PinA _ •• Operation Matissippi," the NAACP
project deiigned to bring full ottiMuhiu to citizens of the
state of Mississippi, has been amplified to include a nation-
wide campaign to halt consumer purchase of Mississippi prod-
ucts.
A resolution, adopted by the association's board of direc-
tors at a meeting held during the ttnd annual NAACP con-
vent ion which cIomhI here on July
1U. culls for the launching of a cam-
paign to tease buying all products of
.Mississippi. A list of these products
will be compiled for distribution
throughout the country.
"All Americans" are urged "aa a
matter of simple justice to give sup-
port to the NAACP program 'Oper-
ation Mississippi' which includes a
stepped-up registration and voting
enmpaign and an affirmative attack
uimui the segregation statutes and
ordinances" of the state ahd cities of
Mississippi, a convention resolution
asserts.
Another resolution passed by the
in national in.'iters, or by responsible
NAACP officers in local situations
involving efforts to jjet jobs or service
on a non lixriminatory basis."
Tha John Hircli society, which was
denouftetd l>> Itixhop Stephen (3.
Npotfswo*! in liia keynote address,
was brand*<1 in one convention reso-
lution aa a'i organisation wliit h "seeks
to foster tin* belief that America's
greatnea* a nation can he preserv-
ed only through Mind glorification of
the past as exemplified in the Me-
Kinley trn. forced conformity snd
repression ..f <li*M nt."
A total of some SO resolutions
was
Loot, Worth Thousands,
Taken Since Con's May 29
Release from Jail
A 33 year-old San Antonio ex-convict who, in less than eight
weeks after his release from jail, burglarized more than a
score of homes in seven counties—including Bexar—obtaining
loot valued at thousands of dollars, had his stealing binge
brought to a halt, last week.
The man, Leroy Ellis, 111 Alabama, is being held in jail
in New Braunfels for a daylight burglary committed there,
July 1&
CLARENCE S. THOMPSON
Fender Benders
Back on Target
With a Slam-Bang!
After a abort, ahort "holiday,"
tha "w *«k pffiod" before, San An-
tonio'a Irodrr-brnilinf, rear-end crum-
pling legion* got back on target, the
laat wreck period, with a redounding
ban?, to aend dainagea to the $10,000
mark—a«nin.
S#Vent.T-two Telilclea were involved
la M accident*1 matting in damagea
of at leaat $10,063JO. Eight vehiciea
either were aot damaged, or the dam-
ag+« ware aot Itamediateiy liated.
Seven driver* had as operator'* 11-
cenae. One driver waa reported dmok,
or driving under the Influence ot al-
cohol ordrun. One person waa hurt.
Tea women and four teen-age driven
• Wedneaaay, July 19, police report*
indicate Barba M n\cu, Jr., 19. 4100
Weat Martin, and i'adron Alfonao,
SB, 8308 We*t Salinas, were follow
ilg too oloaaly, and failed to uae prop-
er laatau 'Whew, at Weat Martin
aad Noaib San Jacinto, Monica col-
lided MKUnt driven by O. B.
Lewis, 9fi, 103 Oklahoma, and wa*.
In turn, hit by Alfonso. Damagea of
970, fiUO, and |3K were auatained.
respectively, by IJonica, Alfonao, and
Lewie. Monica had no operutor'a II
eenae.
Respective damagea of $200 and
$130 were auatained by Mra. Madie
V. McGowan, 28, 234 Maryland, and
Thomaa 0. Ixdlar, Jr.. 38. 1302 No-
lan, Wedneaday, In a collision at Eaat
Houston and North Waltera. Mra.
McGowan, police report, failed to
yield the right of way or uae proper
lookout.
According to police report*, Har-
old O. Sorenson, 53, Stockdole, oper-
ating a truck, failed to yield the right
of way, and l|(Kh he and Leroy John-
son, 28, 1543 Montana, failed to uae
proper lookout, when they were in
eolliajon. Wedneaday, at South Cherry
and Nebraska. The impact caused
Sorenson to hit, and knock down, a
fence owned by Ralph Hilton, 130
Xebraaka. Damage to Johnson's ve-
hicle waa $2J50; to Hie fence, $15,
and to the truck, $200.
Both motorists failed to use proper
lookout, police report* indicate, in a
collialon involving a city transit bus
operated by J. 0. Kldridge. 20, 223
Burke, and a 1000 *edan driven by
Rev. Douglas Hall, ft!, 838 Canton,
Wednesday, in the 1400 block of West
Commerce. The bu* sustained $3 dam-
agea; the aedan, $30.
Juan Beltran Crux, S3, 228 Wick-
e*. was booked for- driving while in-
toxicated, negligent collision, and
fleeing the neene of an accident, Wed-
neaday, the rwult of hi* collision
with the rear of a 1060 sedan driven,
hy A. J. Miller, 28. 115 Kansas, at
Nqgalitn* and Cumberland. Crux ' «*-
His arrest resulted when tlie license
number of the car seen driving away
from the burglarized residence was
obtained. The automobile wns foil in!
1 to be registered in Ellis's name. A
! number of guns were stolen in the
HATS IN RING _ Clarence R. July 13 burglary.
Thompson, 24. 1202 Wyoming street,! Kllis was arrested in Seguin. I-ri-
who, in the 1068 Democratic primary,! dn.v. July 14. imii brought to Sim
placed second in a four-man race; Antonio the following Wednesday,
against former state representative. He directed offi'-ers to a 3100 block
F. S. Seeligson. has announced hi*| Nebraska street address, where he
items from the New
•overed by the res-, in the Texas bouse of representatives | Braunfels robbery, including a $315
television set; ■ JI'JS rifle, and two
other rifles.
Antonio for the (Hist 15 years, has i Interrogation. Ellis admit-
been consistently aligned with the lib- I f b,,r 1"r"'" .i.","1"1'
cral wing of the Democratic party,
and i* a long-time supporter ot Unit-1 K™lnl1' (oml BehXMr
ed States Senator Italph Yarborough I fr"m ar''nH
and Stnte Senator Henry B. Gonxalex. 'Ifamtng into San Antonio to
He i* a member of the Bexar county establish identification of recovered
Democrat* and Young Democratic I '"** th,lt inolud'<l ,<'1*v, >n
club, and has served on the utate
executive committee of the latter or-
ganisation.
Thompson has Ions been identified
with the fight against bigotry and
racial oppression in .Teia< and was
one of the three San Antonio youth*
who firftt launched the attark on
l *d by the convention.! candidacy for the vacancy
delegatea anks that "the policy of se-. Among fliibjeeta covered by the res-1 jn the Texas bouse of rcpres
lective buying, boycotts nnd picket-1 olutiona whi'h set NAAOP policy are by the death of Marshall O. Bell,
ing be used again whenever it aeern* . houjplgg.Joreiga affairs, education Tt w(lo has lived in Sa
likely to be successful in pursuit of • public •sinfanre, labor and soc-inl |
policies adopted by tbe association' security, mni>tri-l shown, health, seg-
and called for by the executive sec- regatcd Mbools, jMilitical action, and 4
retary and (or) the national board many •fthei
First Negro
Sworn in as
D. CL Commissioner
By the Associated Negro Press
IHINGTON—After * mis-
| lire, the District of Colum.
Mttgat its first Negro roonni*.
d«Mr lait week.
Vk Mnate, without oppoeMlon.
M 'trctk confirmed Fresideni
IMMy's nomination of John
B. •whiii to the llt.oon per
4nmil was by voire vote,
the- mitine method of eonfirm-
taglMsit prtaiiaallal appointee*
(•giDbtrict aad federal paata.
Stand-ins Staged
At Two San
Antonio Theatres
Majestic Visited Again,
Aztec Demonstration
First at That Show
San Antonio Negro and white col-
lege students, stepping uj demount ra«
tions against theatre Jim
staged stand-ins, Sunday, at the Ma-
jestic and Artec tbeatref. both down-
town. They were unsuccessful ia
their eff< rt to lower the color bar.
The Mujestic has a "colored" bal-
cony. No provisions are made at all
for Negro |>atronaa" at t!ie Axtec.
The theatre demonstrations hava
been stage<l, intermittently, sinc<
February, the fir-*t having been
dios. khiik. pistols, watches, fans,
sewing machines, electric power saws.
automobile tires, and record players.
Cash money was also stolen.
Most of the property was recov-1 Ltacoiu'a birthday
ered from individuals who had pur-1 Sunday marked' ibe Cir^t time that
chase<l it from Ellis. j the Astec has been visited by tht
He\ar county chief sheriff inves- , protesters. The Majentic has been uu-
... . . . • v a tigator, Tony Morin* said that Bllis; ,jPr fjre for slx m<,„ths.
pm ic wwooi segregation 111 . an ah-| jina penitentiary nentences in j This week has be
tonio. In 1951, Thompson, Millie
Jean McNeely and Donley Ross l*hil-
lipH made the first attempt to enter
then all-white school, here.
He is a former vice president of I
the TVxas conference of NAACl' |
Xoutb councils.
Thompson ^attended local public
schools, 8t. Peter Claver academy,
inatituU it Virginia, and
1'a university, here.
Oklahoma, and had been released, on
probation, from Guadalupe county
jail on May 21).
designate
tion .largely academic, the author ■ talned -$290- damages; Miller, $100.
(See MARRIAGES, Page S.)
i
(See TAROKT, Page •.)
far Hie po*t altar aa fenaliy «a-
a|aaad that he had beta aeglect-
lil k paying Us tana.
Daaean M preaeatlr serving
aa tteeorder at Deed*, waa awora
hi* nev office Monday at
tha District building. He suc-
eea* ('oauaiaaioaer Robert K.
HHtbaghlin who I* returning t.
piliali' life after aervlag for
alfr+ear* aa a commiaaloner and
■ a member of tha
Public rtilitie* com-
Bhacan'i nomination wa* ap-
HWH earlier by the Senate Dla-
trM committee.
Jesse Owens
Endorses Hoffa
Aide, Loses Job
By the Associated Negro Press
CHHjiGO—.Tesse Omens lost a $7,-
400 per ^resr job here last week. He
waa diadargeil from his post with the
llllnoia Tonth commission. He attrib-
uted hl dismissal to a cut in the
budget df the commission.
However, his discbarge came one
day after a crucial labor election in
which 60(10 < hicngo taxicab drivers
voted t# wist Joseph Glimco who had
headed the teamster taxicab local
since 1961.
Owena, <>ne of the world's greatest
athletea,^ had been severely criticised
for urtipg members to vote for Glim-
co, an %1-convict who was accused
of muscling the union from Dominic
Abata.
In the election, supervised by tbe j Jng to end" slavery.
1W1 Convention
Second'Largest
In NAAOP History
(fecial to San Antonio Kegister)
PHILADBLPHIA, Pa—The Na-
tional-Association for the Advance-
ment of Colored People last week
closed the second largest annual con-
tention in the &2-year history of the j wound in the left arm. Hill said that
San Antonio Has
No Letnp in
Violence, Thievery 1^
There was no letup during the past
week, in violence and thievery, po-
lice reports reveal.
Delilah Jarmon. 4ft. 283 Doric,
complained to police. Thursday. July
at), that a 04-year-old man had .truck ^ acmoDs
jwm_ theao«rt', >vera| "me*, with whju,s (u [h|v til.kKS
Patrons not takiui; part in the dent-
"theatre integration week." by tha
Studeuts for Civil Liberties, which
I group oriuiually projected and is con-
I tinning the stand-ius.
William Doualrue, a sjH>ke*ninn for
the students, saiil that St'L represent-
atives were to nvet, Tliursday, with
officials of the Cinema Arts chain,
and, following the meeting, the stu-
dents would decide whether or not tm
demonstrate at ihia chaiuls four the-
atres.
The Majestic and Aatec are mens*
ml tbe inters eats ekmim, fcsi
quarters for whitii are in Dallas.
In Sunday'# demonstration, at tha
Majestic, two white students carried
signs saying "'Hiis is a demonstra-
tion protesting the segregation policy
(if Interstate theatres." while ten
other demonstrators, Negroes and
his fists, laceratiug her lip. and knock
ing out a tooth. The man was not
immediately appreheuded.
In an altercation with two wom-
en—one 1!). the other 44—Friday, Vir-
die Hill, 28, lOli Ira Aldridge. suf-
fered a severe eight-inch long knife
association.
Attending the Philadelphia con-
vention were 1,760 delegates, alter-
nates and registered observers from
38 states, the District of Columbia
and three foreign countties. This to-
tal has been topped only by the at-
tendance at the association's golden
anniversary convention in New York
City in 11*50 at which nearly 2,000
were registered.
The delegates to the 52nd annual
convention represented 37.'t local
branches. JO stnte or area units, and
82 youth councils nnd college chap-
ters—a total of 485 NAAOl' units.
The convention opened on July
and continued through July 10.
The trek to Washington aboard the
Freedom Train, while noteworthy aud
dramatic, did not represent the first
time an NAACP convention has mov-
ed en masse to another site for a par-
ticular program. At least three times
previously this has been done.
In the midst of the 1019 conference
in Cleveland, the delegates took one
day off to go to Oberlin college where
a session was held paying tribute to
the role of the college and town iu
the anti-slavery movement and com-
memorating the .sons of Oberlin who
died in the southern rebej^on fight-
onstratiou were directed to a ticket
booth inside the theatre lobby. When
demonstrators sought to enter the
lobby, their way was blocked by ush-
ers.
Lynn Krueger. manager of the Ma
, . t ijestic, told Negroes he could not sefl
he became involved in an argument , ^ ti<;k(,ls 0U(, wllite dwnipnittl.at0M
with the two women in front of the | thu he , no[ til.k(.t(
Ira Aldridge address. One of the worn-
to be used by Negroes.
en stabbed him with a knife, the blmle j Kru0>!<,r war"ned „ demonxtruto*
cutting through the mnacle of the left wJ|0 , w movr jm„ Ih(. ,oM)
arm. Hill also said that the women
i that *'You are on
Move an/'
>-
private pr« pertj«
pulled a pistol on him.
Julia Stafford. 30, 1116 Dakota, suf-
fered head injuries. Friday nigiit. In
an altercation with another woman.
Miss Stafford told police that she be-
came involved in an argnmeut with
the other woman, who struck her on
the back of the head with a blunt
instrument.
John Lawson. 2J5, 1S17 Burnet
101 arrested. Saturday, and booked for
! aggravated assault, on complaint
his wife. Mrs. Mitxi Lawson, 211. She
alleged that l.awson beat her because | The schedule of August si lea and
she wns not at home when he ar-i dates for the mobile X-ray unit pro-
rived. Her nose was bloodied, and she J vided by the Dexar I ounty Tubercu-
suffered possible internal injuries, i losis association, has been announced.
She was treated at the Robert U. The mobile X-ray unit, stationed ia
Green hospital. key spots and community cent era
A seven-shot .22-cnlibre revolver throughout the city, during the
appeared to be the prize in some-1 month, makes it easy and convenient
thing of a tug-of-war.
Chest X-Raying
Schedule Set
For August
a complaint made Wednesday. July
10. by Mrs. Mamie Lee Wilson, 02.
027 South Mesqulte street.
some-1
according to! for all persons to have chest X-rays.
This is a feature of the TB associa-
tion'a year-around program for tho
arly detection and subsisjuent early
She said that a 40-year-old man treatment of tuberculosis.
National Labor Relations board, Aba-
ta waifr£qntrol of the drivers' union
who recently stayed at her house dur-
ling her absence, UHoTYSe'gun from a
Loaa of lis state job is not expected
to affeef Owens' job as a disc jockey
and part owner of a public relations
(See OWENS, Page S.)
During the 14th annual conference purse hidden between pillows on
in Kansas City, Kan., in 10211, the j bed. Her son, she declared, found the!
entire convention took a day off to : man. took the gun away from him, ]
journey to Leavenworth to visit the , and returned it to the house. The man J
54 imprisoned former members of the | then came hack to the house and t<s k
24th U. S. Infantry regiment. The J the gun again. He could not be im-
mediately apprehended
(See SECOND. Page 9.)
Now Come MtneistSpotlight Seekers
By the Associated Negro Press
JACKSON, Miaa.—Human «a-
tare, beta, what. It b, haa
brought a hart of aprtlllht teth-
er* la high aad low place* lata
the Kreedaai Rider*' battle far
i at travel ata-
Ffeedoja )UW vlolatlea af
atate law* "utirtfie* at deep fua-
daanatala la ear American way
of life."
According ta Gov. Anderaoa,
Ihrdtw da wraag ar
ra^are proper way* ta
«e It. At da thae, eaa wa
dalihenrtx breaklaf af
ihealaaCttia
aaljr hr entaai hat aha hr law.
Oaa aaefe ladWdaal af "Ugh
1 waa tba |aia aae 4 Ma-
, Bhaar Aadaraas, whsaa
' pwtfllir waa la Mm farai
at a letter ta Hada^a Oar.
J5 .t r
luvernnr* ■ u
Kentucky aad Ui
rewatativea ta the
Khtx Klaa,
huodad
aaraad ta a jatat i
haaf a, tMr atataa i
early ha# at the
enter
plrtnre
n In ever, wajr
m* of Chicago.
V
•hia andentandahl). among | The wire waa aeot by Walter
th,' Ktrnora present aad eaa- I A. Bailey, Biloxi. Mi**., aa-
y,, thi, action waa Ar- ' -*
(Irval Faabu*. Other*
Harnelt of
itterson of A
llclllnga of Soath Car-
vice pceiident of the
KKK, wha noted that "we feel
tha attorney general haa turned
hia hath upon the white people
af the nation. Therefore, It la
the daty af the white people ot
the aatiea who ara oppaaed ta
tateffBMan to form a aolld waH
of raaMaaae."
In little Koch. City Maaa<er
ly radio braadeaat receatlj ta
i- • 1 I why the paHee had
ataad af a araard at IN which
"MtV'aa
mm HOW, Ttm fJ
The August whedule follows.
August 1—iMC^tnalional buiWfj^ ,
518 West Houston, 0 in the morninf
to 3 in the afterntMUi.
August 2, 3—Gene's Super mar-
ket, 102 Barrett place, 11 in tha
morning to 0 in the evening.
August 4—County jail, 120 Cam-
eron, D ia the morniug to 2 In tht
(See SCHEDILE. Page a.) j
Woman Driver,
In May Accident,
Prowlers hit St. 1'hilip'a college
again. Thursday night or Friday
morning. A thief, who gained en-
trance by ripping the screen and
smashing a second story window. tin>k j
an undetermined amount of money
from cigarette and soft drink vend-
ing machines, aud an undetermined ;
amount of cigarettes. Damage to the
screen and window wns set at $80. | _
Cleveland Lemmon, 70. 22$2 Ne- j lVI^a. |f|f-nviPflfPIl
braska. complained, Friday, that 11UI illlvf ^*vCf a VIA
prowler* had gained entrance to the
residence through a window, and ran-
sacked a bedroom ind living room. It
waa not immediately ascertained
what. If anything, had been taken.
Patrolman Oscar Trevino, cruis-
ing on routine patrol, saw two men
fifhting, Sunday, at Albert and North
Zartamora, with one mnn beating
tha ather with a billiard cue. Tre-
vino, stopping the affray arrested
Frank Lore, 61, 1307 North San
Jacinto, and booked him for agcra-
?ata3'auAult. The benten man, Ed
Moore, 62, 2307 West Poplar, wns
Mention, on Page 7, of the May
issue of Register, of a traffic accti
dent involving Mrs. Velma J. Don*
ovan, 24, 211 Harney, and Robert ]&.
Forester, 48, 710 Drexel, erroneoua*
ly stated that Mrs. I>onovan waa,
booked for driving while intoxicated*
The report listed Forester, not Mrft
Donovan, with driving while intox^
cated. An error was made when A
reporter eopietl tha traffic report.
Mra* Donovan was not intoxicate^
nnd no such booking waa iiattp.
carried to Baptist Memorial hospital
hn Mioaion ambulance. « Kcgislv
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Andrews, U. J. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1961, newspaper, July 28, 1961; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth399000/m1/1/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.