San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, October 7, 1966 Page: 3 of 10
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7. IHI
SAW AWT0W10 MGI8TKR
PAGE THREE
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
]
ROOMS, APARTMENTS
HOUSES FOR RENT
FOR RENT 3-room apartment,
couple or tingle peraon, fur-
niahed. CApitol 2-1648.
THREE-ROOM APARTMENT,
private bath, no children, or peta.
For working people only. 2407
Wyoming atreet after 4 p.m.
ROOM FOR rent reaaonable,
couple or tingle peraon, CApitol
7-6658.
FURNISHED APARTMENT for
rent.no children, LEhigh 4-0615.
FURNISHED HOUSE for rent
1651 Arbor, 155 per month. Mil-
itary peraonnel. GEneral 2-7431.
FURNISHED APARTMENT,three
rooma and bath, no children, 155
per moath. Billi paid, CApitol
2-9096.
FURNISHED BEDROOM.kitchen,
bath for aingle, or working per-
too. LEhigh 4-2342.
UNFURNISHED 4-ROOM apart-
ment lot retired couple. Call
after 5 p.m. LEhigh 3-0689.
109 FREDONIA atreet, houae
for rent, two bedrooms, near
achool and churchea. Call CA-
pitol J-3753 or CApitol 4-0500,
Vera Jefferson or David Jeffer-
a on.
UNFURNISHED 3-ROOM apart-
ment. Share bath, utilitiea paid.
618 Piedmont, LEhigh 2-9413.
NICELY FURNISHED or un-
furnished 3-bedroom houtee;
apartments, rooma, 1614 Eaat
Houston, CApitol 7-0457.
FURNISHED APARTMENTS for
rent, 1541 North Taltera, no
children, CApitol 7-2760.(10-14).
NICE, CLEAN front bedroom for
rent, working couple of aingle
working woman; or working man.
CApitol 6-5507.
ROOM FOR rent, kitchen priv-
ilegea, Mrs. Lillian Vhite, 226
Omaha atreet, CApitol 6-0956.
930 CANTON atreet room for
rent. Call CApitol 4-9013 after
6 p.m.
FURNISHED APARTMENT for
rent, three rooma and bath, 519
Lamar atreet. Apply at Apatt-
awnt No. 3, CApitol 6-9065.
FURNISHED 3-ROOM apartment
tor nat, working couple; or lady.
no children, CApitol 7-9617.
NEATLY FURNISHED 2-room
apartment, with Frigidaire, mod-
ern, utilities paid, 402 North
Pine atreet, CApitol 3-5465.
PARTIALLY FURNISHED 2-
bedroom houae for rent. CApitol
2-9046.
NICE FRONT room for working
man only, 129 North Meaquite,
CApitol 2-8252.
FURNISHED ROOM for rent,
Frigidaire, for man only. Sep-
arate kitchen and bath. LEhigh
2-3401. (10-14)
UNFURNISHED UPSTAIRS
apartment for working couple, on
weat aide. Vater paid. LEhigh
3-7724.
FURNISHED APARTMENTS,430
Lamar atreet, f 10 weekly. (10-28)
MODERN
apartment
4-8618.
3-ROOM furnished
for rent. LEhigh
FURNISHED 4-ROOM apartment,
pay part of utility bill, 1410
Gibba atreet, CApitol 3-9977.
(10-14)
FURNISHED APARTMENT cou-
ple only, no children, no ptta,
three rooma, bath, 1451 Aranaaa
avenue, LEhigh 3-1308.
NICE FRONT room for rent, weat
aide, PErahing 5-0022.
FURNISHED ROOM
man, LEhigh 3-7724.
tor aingle
REAL ESTATE
902 INDIANA, 5-room home,
19,000, VA approved loan; large
lot on Fredonia, near Piedmont;
716 South Olive, 3-roon houae
with ahower. Reduced to 14,000
aelling price, 1300 down. L.A.
VOODS, LEhigh 3-9703.
FOR SALE lot 50 x 150, located
at 633 "H" atreet, PETTUS
REALTY, CApitol 5-7539.
large
like
FOR SALE 10-room houae, ideal
location, four bedrooms, larg
lot, $1,000 down. Balance
rent, 123 Harding.
REAL ESTATE loana to pay
taxes or refinance. Call anytime,
no obligation, CITY-VIDE
REALTY, Rodriguei, CApitol
7-7855 or CApitol 2-0890.
(TF 10-28)
WAITRESS WANTED
WAITRESS WANTED at Tippin
Inn cafe, 1806 Montana, Apply
in peraon.
BUILDING MATERIALS
NEW WINDOW special 24 i 24
window and frame, $7.25; 2-2
fir, 8 to 20 feet, five centa a
foot, 2x6 fir, 8 to 20 feet,
aeven and a half centa a foot.
T.E. BARNES, JR. LUMBER
COMPANY, 907 Victoria, LEhigh
3-5115. (Ind.)
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
FOR RENT equipped barber
ahop; beauty shop; and liquor
atore. 525 Clark atreet, LEhigh
3-9933.
Loss..
(Continued from Pt«* 1)
sometime during the night,
Thursday.
Mrs. J.L. Robinson, 42, 122
Dumoulln street, whose house
was burglarized two weeks ago,
was victimized again, Friday.
In the latest occurence, which
took place sometime between 8:30
Friday morning and noon, Items
totaling $287 wore taken. Included
were $12 cash, a radio and Jewel-
ry. A suspect, who had been loit-
ering around the premises, was
named.
A 43-year-old Burnet street
man, who told policy he had suf-
fered a laceration on the left
side of his head--for which he
refused hospital treatment - -
claimed that he had been attacked
by two unknown "bearded" men
who had approached him at Burnet
and New Braunfels avenue and
asked him for money. When he
told the pair he had no money,
he dec aired one of the men struck
him with some unknown object and
knocked him to the ground.
A 231 DUllon walk woman suf-
fered a small cut on her right
upper arm, early Wednesday
morning, sastalned, she told
police, when someone hurled a
stick through a window at her
home, as she lay In bed.
In an early morning fracas at
a Del Rio street address, Satur-
day, a 54-year-old woman suf-
fered a facial Injury for which
she was treated at Santa Rosa
Medical center. The injured wo-
man told police her "boyfriend"
had struck her with a bottle during
a "disagreement."
In an alleged suicide attempt,
early Saturday morning, a 20-
year - old Micklejohn street
woman took an overdose nf sleep-
was a police clampdown on the
city. Even racial demonstrators
were In for trouble u Edward
I. Dowd, president, St. Louis
board of police commissioners,
charged that police had been
"too diplomatic" with the demon-
strators.
Upshot of the West Coast out-
break was expected to be damage
to the campaign for re-election
of Gov. Edmund G. Brown. In-
flamed racial animosities were
likely to aid the elctlon chances
of Republican gubernatorial can-
didate Ronald Reagan, who has
much "white blacklash" support,
and has never disavowed the
backing of the John Birch society.
AH over the country, racial
tension was resulting In a "white
backlash" of resistance to fur-
ther Integration efforts.
According to a recently taken
Gallup poll, 52 per cent of all
adults In the nationwide survey
think the Johnson administra-
tion Is pushing Integration "too
fast." This Is the highest per-
centage since the Elsenhower
administration.
Among Negroes, only five per
cent thought the President was
promoting Integration too fast.
Among whites, the percentage
was 58 per cent.
Aggravating racial tensions
among Negroes was a typical
Dixie trial in Haynevllle, Ala.,
where eight Negroes and four
whites found a Ku Klux Klans-
man Innocent In the murder of
civil rights worker Mrs. Viola
Gregg Liuzzo.
Acquitted was Eugene Thomas,
42, of Bessemer, Ala., In the
slaying of the Detroit mother of
five, after the Selma-to-Mont-
gomery civil rights march.
The Jury deliberated only 90
minutes before returning Its ver-
dict.
Alabama's Atty, Gen. Rich-
mond Flowers charged that many
of the Negro Jurors were "Uncle
Toms" and controlled by whites.
If so, they weren't the only
Haynevllle residents controlled
by whites. The Ku Klux Klan Is
said to rule the sleepy Dixie town
similar to the way Hitler ruled
Germany.
Earlier, a state court Judge had
ruled In Haynevllle that Thomas
L. Coleman cannot be Indicted
again and tried In the shotgun
attack on the Rev. Richard
Morrlsroe, white Roman Catholic
priest from Chicago.
Circuit Judge T. Worth Tha-
gard threw out an assault charge
against Coleman, a former deputy
aherlff accused of wounding Fr.
Morrlsroe during an outbreak of
racial
log pills following an argument
with her husband. She was taken ' minary »
to WlUord Hall hospital by Bexar was killed during the attack,
county ambulance.
Sutton..
Bishops..
(Continued from Page 1)
(Continued from Page 1) offered a brief prayer.
lalatlve seats In the county In the Among the 17 bishops present
last two elections. Thus, King was were Bishop O. L. Sherman,
expected to win the November Waco, Texas, and Bishop George
election, barring an upset. Napoleon Collins of New Orleans,
At the same time, R.A. Dent In-
decisively won over a white op-
ponent in the race for nomination
to one of two seats in the house
of representatives from the Au-
gusta, (GaO area.
Dent, a brother of Augusta's
first Negro city councilman,
could thus become the city's
first Negro state legislator If he
wins in the November election.
Jobs . .
(Continued from Pace 1)
and child day care teachers.
Certification In elementary or
early childhood education Is a
pre-requisite.
With notices of openings
coming In from ureas outside
the coimty, and all available
positions not filled for 1966-67,
the committee emphasizes the In-
creased opportunity for Negro
teachers with experience and
training. The committee also
points out that requests for re-
placements come In regularly
during the school year, and that
they are now being notified of
some openings for 1987-1968.
The teachcr recruitment com-
mittee maintains a roster of
qualified teachers Interested in
working In Westchester and noti-
fies them of positions available.
Any teacher Interested should
write to:
Teacher Recruitment com-
mittee, Urban legue of West-
chester, 6 Depot plaza, White
Plains, New York 10608.
Violence..
(Continued from Pace 1)
power" shouting Negroes near
city hall.
The mob circled the car occup-
ied by Dr. Edward Pepper, $6,
of Richmond Heights, and Miss
Kathleen McKernan, $3, of St.
Louie, and banged on It with their
fists add with a street sign.
A Negro man who tried to go
to the couple's aid was pulled
away and beaten by the mob,
police said.
Result of the St. Louis rioting
(Continued from Page 1)
world. . . .remains unchanged."
In an exclusive Interview, Ko
zongulzl vehemently denied hav-
ing any plans to create yet another
black liberation movement in
South West Africa.
He confided that his resigna-
tion had been the consequence of
a long series of clashes with
SWANU's mainly Swedish-based
six-member external council, of
which Kozongulzi - - although
national president--was not a
member.
He claimed that, under the
pressure of the Swedish Social
Democratic party and other mod-
erate elements which had offered
them material and political
assistance, four external council
members had often taken excep-
tion to Kozonculzl's militant antl-
imperallst stand.
While representing SWANU at
the Trlcontinental conference in
Havana last January, Kozongulzi
had stroncly condemned United
States policy in Viet Nam and
charged that there was an ln-
creasinc collusion of Sovlst
leaders wtth the U.S. underfills*
of "peaceful coexistence."
He also said that the armed
strucgle would be the sole path
for the world's oppressed
peoples. "The Independence of
Africa today," he added, "Is not
complete simply because the
armed struggle In that continent
of my birth Is not complete.
"Asia will never see peace
unless the imperialists are
driven out by force. Latin Amer-
ica, except Cuba, will always re-
main in U.S. hands without an
armed struggle. The Afro-Amer-
icans In the U.S. will always be
In chains unless they take to
guns."
External council members
complained that such talk em-
barrassed them In their relations
with the United States and other
western governments, as well as
with the USSR and the Moscow-
Somlnated Communist parties In
Europe and America.
Kozongulzi said the conflict
within the organization would
have led inevitably to a split In
SWANU's ranks, If he had not
decided to resign.
However, he maintained that
his militant position--described
as pro-Peking--was fully sup-
ported by South West Africans In
their struggle against rule by the
white - minority government of
South Africa, and that regard-
less of the external council,
SWANU could not abandon that
position without losing vital sup-
port at home and abroad.
Moses Katjlouongua, SWANU
representative in Cairo and an
external committee member,
and Bamba Ulrab in Sweden, an-
other member, Immediately urg-
ed Kozongulzi to reconsider his
resignation. Katjlouongua charg-
ed the four-member antl-Kozon-
qulzl majority with undemocrat-
ic behavior and failure to con-
sult with the president on major
policy questions.
Last Aug. 17, SWANU's nation-
al executive committee followed
up a cable rejecting the pres-
ident's resignation with a letter,
calling ig>on him to present his
grievances against ths four
members of the external coun-
cil, and to withdraw his resigna-
tion.
So far, Kczongulzl has refused
to withdraw the resignation, but
instead has urged that an emer-
gency SWANU national congress
be called as rapidly as possible
to examine the situation.
If that meeting, when it Is held,
should reconfirm him as pres-
ident, Kozongulzi would remain
at the helm of the organization--
with a new mandate to press
ahead with his militant rev-
olutionary policies.
Tests-
(Continued from Pace 1)
Ucatlon forms can be obtained
from high school guidance coun-
selors or by writing to the Direc-
tor of Admissions, U.S. Coast
Guard academy, New London,
Connecticut, 06320.
DIVORCE MILL
DIVORCES GRANTED
September 21
Betty C. Miller vs. Odell
Miller,
September 28
James Lee Phillips vs. Mary
Susan Phillips.
(Defendant on cross action)
Waltsr Wilson and Dora
Wilson.
September 30
Elena Lott vs. Leo Lott.
Mary L. Hill vs. Elroy Hill.
October 3
Jessie Mae Mullin vs. Ed. H.
Mullln.
Vera M. Pollard vs. Henry T.
Pollard.
DIVORCES FILED
September 29
William B. Boyd vs. Mary A.
Boyd.
September 30
Dannie Roberts vs. Etfca Mae
Roberts.
William F. George vs. EUda
George.
October 3
Merle Lewis vs. Charlea B.
Lewis.
Diane C. Scott vs. John D. Scott.
Julius E. Wright vs. Sylvia A.
Wrt«ht* October 4
Jesse E. Taylor vs. Mary Tay-
lor.
Isa Josephine Mitchell vs.
Frank Heeton Mitchell,
CUERO NEWS
Guests In the home of Mrs.
Eliza Traylor and Mrs. Nsnnle
Mooney have been Franklin
Bruce, and Franklin Bruce, Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Darrel,
Pamela, Valrye, and Elizabeth
Darrel, all of Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma. The senior Bruce and
Darrel are attorneys. Also guests
here were Mr. and Mrs. 0*Nell
Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Burton
Smith, and grandson, Bobby of
San Antonio. Mrs. Traylor and
Mrs. Mooney served a de-
licious turkey dinner to their
guests.
NEED MONEY?
Jobs Available
FULL OR PART TIME
BE A
HAV-A-MAID
JOB INTERVIEWS:
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, OCTOBER 8 & 9
1639 HAYS 1:00'TILL 5:00 P.M.
Left make
this dear...
Ifs Real
Draft Beer
ftm the Peine# OeMsn Tey
•ernes dreft beer In quart
Milk M lyaL|^i
IvTilM WTTTi V •
Ifi reel rfreft beer, end
Wt new tren NlMeff,
where new Meet ere e jert
tfnfTiIvWHVT/ p
Baa^i
For your convenience we collect utility
Mils, cash checks, issae money orders and
have a nub-poet office located in Our store
at 410 North New Brannfels plus an in*
store
| TEXAS GOLD GIFT CENTER
Gift Center Telephone CApitol 1-1171
RINSO LIMIT 1 WITH PURCHASE OF $2.50
DETERGENT
mm MM* c»», »■ u* at
PRICES GOOD IN SAN ANTONIO H.E.B.
STORES ONLY. PRICES GOOD THURSDAY,
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 7
AND 8.
CHUNK STY LE
STAR KIST TUNA
LIMIT 2
C0CK-0-WALK
PEARS
2'2 CAN
3 $1.00
MANCHESTER
CRACKERS
POUND
BOX
19C
MILK
FOREMOST 2%
>4 GAL. CTN.
490
CAMPBELL SOUP SALE
YOUR CHOICE 6 for $1.00
CHICKEN W/RICE
CHICKEN GUMBO
CHICKEN W/RICE
CHICKEN GUMBO
CREAM OF MUSHROOM
CHICKEN VEGETABLE
CHICKEN NOODLE
CREAM OF CHICKEN
CHICKEN NOODLE
CREAM OF CHICKEN
VEGETABLE BEEF
TURKEY NOODLE
VEGETARIAN OR
VEGETABLE SOUP
7 for $1.00
TOMATO
SOUP
NO.1 CAN
tut
UUNUS UUY
SILVER VALLEY
MAMjAftlKE
LIMIT 2 LBS. WITH
PURCHASE OF $5.00
OR MORE
LB.
10$
R.C. COLA
PLUS DEPOSIT
16 0Z. CTN. 6
49(
PECKER QUALITY
PICNIC HAMS
CUDAHY BAR-S
SLICEO UACUN
WHOLE
LB.
LB.
m.
ROEGELEINS "OLD FASHIONED FLAVOR'
TENNESSEE
LB.
j.S.D.A. GOOD BLfcK
SIRLOIN
OR ROUND
STEAK
LB.
69J.
6?t
FRESHLEY PACKED
UEEF TUNGUES
LB.
390
FRESH PRODUCE
TEXAS CRISP GREEN
LETTUCE
2 for 290
BELL PEPPERS
OR CUCUMBERS
HOME GROWN
3 for 100
U.S. NO. 1 COLORADO
PUTATUES
10-LB. BAG
590
YOUR CHOICE
MUSTARD s
or \
COLLARD 4
BUNCH
50
FRESH FROM OUR OAKERY
PIES
LEMON
CHESS
490
I
....... .lib
- - 'frail* **
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Andrews, U. J. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, October 7, 1966, newspaper, October 7, 1966; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth403759/m1/3/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.