San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1961 Page: 4 of 12
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•AN antonio
8AN ANTONIO REGISTER
[ A fnUimtioa Dedicated to Bifbt, Jtutioe, ud
1 BAN ANTONIO 8, TMXAM
PUBLISHED rilBAT OF EACH WU1 II
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Baptist Convention of Texas
Ends 7ftk JbinualSessimi Here, Friday
KEY. FRED DOL'ULAM SMITH
NBW AIMHUK8--'TV sew ad-
dir o« of Lily of tbe Valley Baptist
church, the Rev. Fred I>nnglaea
Smith, pastor, waa announced this
week an 137 I>ort street.
The public is invited to attend the
nightly unices at 8 o'clock, and
the Pundny aenicee at the time car-
ried ia the weekly eehedule.
(Paid advertisement)
Let the Case of Mobile be a Warning
4 PRESS dispatch from Mobile, Ala., is more than
a little depressing—and it should serve as a warn-
ing.
The news item, about the Mobile city runoff elec-
tion, in which the race question was the most impor-
tant issue, sets forth that, because Negroes failed to
go to the polls and vote, "the most liberal city ad-
ministration since Reconstruction" had been ousted.
The defeat of two liberal commissioners is laid
directly to the Negro's failure to go to the polls in
sufficient numbers, while white racists were being
goaded into believing that they must beat a phantom
Negro "bloc vote domination." The racists voted in j
large numbers.
One of the defeated incumbents lost by just 40
votes. The other liberal was defeated by 1,816 ballots.
Fifty per cent of the Negro electors voted, as com-
pared to 65 per cent of the whites.
Yet, during the defeated candidates' eight-year
administration, Mobile harl enjoyed the best race re-
lations since the turn of the century. The first Negro
police officers were appointed, policewomen were,
employed, bus drivers were hired, more city firemen
were emoloyed, other opportunities were opened, and
segregation in public places diminished.
The racists hammered away at the race issue
during the campaign.
Strangely, on election day, Negro voters did
something else other than go to the polls and vote' tbe occasion win
for the men who had, possibly as much as an u
baman can, been sympathetic to, and pushed, the, «•••"mo of the Tmvi county v®t-
. , "•.} . u:_ ''r league: and director of the state
cause of first-class citizenship.
NIim Iflim Taenia* Hureiujr
tt iso, ante the tkafit Touid
FUthfuL"
Tk« program develapad lirougbout
the weak u outataadiaf gMn die-
cowed Mm tbeew under Hum head-
money in wiueadag
TO 79th inal aaaiw at the Amrioaa BirM
of T«ne ft* n*r way here, tW> week, wttli the
m imalwl. Monday moiof, a Hew Light to
tat tfcardb, liberia* ia % bwr w*k of aMvitimTfie. fl
WffldMWi^ paeter J >ew Llfht, la the eoDTraitloi ywMwt
A upaoity aadtaace heard Monday nifht'i program.
Tkm Mualfai InU) IU
jfciae
"ftithfal to Service'
VUthfnl ia Mwanlabip
aad third, "Talthfel la tka Lerde
Boeiiwae."
PrMduit Dr. WUklaOM called up-
on Um oooT«ati«a to caauad for
equal cwwrtaalbaa, Can lattfrabon,
and loyal rapport tt the program of
miaaiou aad educatian. -
In tha praaMaot'a aaaaal wea-
aag«. he challenged tka cbovmiumi
to UUP a pnrtioB tt tka adaeatloaal
and miwiuoarf
apoa tha coaraation to eoaaidtf un-
derwrltinc a chair tt taHflloa
tHmltaneoaalr with tka paraat
My'a meeting, tka eeoior voan'l
auxiliary contention ha* bees to nee-
don at Friendebip Baptiat etmreh, I
tka Bar. O. a (Menan. paatari and]
tka hi alar woomu at Zka Star Bap-1
tint, tka Bar. Junta Jordan, paator.
Thursday nlnht'e program waa to
mark the observance at 36 Jin',
aarrica to the convention by Dr. Wtl-
to Claaa, Friday
Tka eoarrntion ia aefcednloi to
doaa Friday afternoon, Oct 99, at 1
o'clock. Tka Iter. A. Ll I<«wie tt
I^ana City will ddlrar tka doaina
prautrra | aorninn at 12 noon.
|—Functions of Life Insurance—i
FEATURES Of THE W8TOAKOE 00KTBAC7
By J. E. TAYLOB. JB.,
J. K. Tartar, Jr., Agenc.v, General Agent,
Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company
(Gaatiaucd from la.t week.)
"Obligation?" Wbooo Obligation
AKi'lfl R UK WITTY
(.1 EST SPEAKER-Roae of Sbnr-
on ltaptiet chnrrh. l.r 02 I-Taet Crnck-
ett Ktr Nt, will obaerve Men's day,
.lobby for the NAACP of Texas.
ISan Antomans sJiould "bear the case of Mobile1 to hear un.
in mind. An election will be coming up shortly, in1*"'" "'"Trnui advertisement)
Texas, in which Negroes have an important stake, j ♦
Let them not be fishing when that election day comes.! jyfl^ Pisgflh BdDtlSt
To Observe Men's
Killer
(Continued from I'uge 1.)
friend, Joeeph Goydon. 37, a Negro.
a> was Davie. Guydou nave him a
ride to work on the day the kill-
in*:?'.
The other di-ad are Edward I>onald
%iornn, M' , ilammoud. Ind., track ganic
•epair (uteman; Neal Wolf rath, 4\
Gary, a metallurgist, and Royal Butt,
25. Gary, a plant maaaaement train-
•e aad recent college jrra*^
white.
Critically wounde<! by th* berserk
Paris w*re Louis Msaea, 51. Gary,
an instrwnent repair general fore-
man, and David Mchaefer, 2y, of Grif-
fith, Ind., a secretary.
Less seriously wounded waj< Gt r-
•ld Mv.th, 48, Portage, Ind., an in-
strument repnir fort-man.
Doris had been reprimanded by his
traHc ^Ting r«^«ir b"^. Guydon, f r
luaiirg on the job. When Davi* talk-
ed back, OnydoB orflered him to re-
port to Mawa's o£fi< e at 6 a. m., the
following day. for dincipliuary a<*tion.
.Mrs. Lenora Davjx. the 21-year-old
Widow, alter learning of the tragedy,
laid:
"l didn't even know he had a pun
•ud I didn't know he was having
trouble at the plant, lie never told
toe much, but he wns a giMMi man.
in* board and cellophane Wrapping.
•TL'm, th«' purchaser i* charge*! for the
j not weight of each it'-m -tbe meat
alone.
All of the store* tise the finest
t.^-pea U uralee avnilable. These are
checked periodical!v.
FSirthennor#'. an all supermarket
managers pointed out, their scalcs
and tha pre-packaged meats are aub-
ject to constant checking by tbe
Texas state weights and mea*urea
bureau.
"We're sure that mistake* oeea-
fonafle iri ' mm fiillil""list
witt all at the checks and safety
measureK employed they are no doubt
pretty rare."
Singers Alliance
Holds Meeting
Day, Sun., Oct. 22
i the fireplace; tha _r
I the payment o« that
Men's day will be ohwrved Sunday ' month, and the obligation
afternoon. October 2*2, at 3 o'clock. Ipo*cd by law!) aa long
at Mt. l'isgah Baptist ch«reh, 3Tneii | that car to carry
Lamar street. Giu^t fpvak^t will be
Freddie Miller, graduate of Phillis
Wheat ley high school, a ittl* student
at St. Philip's college. ^
Gaeat soloist win be Miaa Joyce
Nlona, who will be assisted by other
talented musicians.
Chairman of the program is Tom
Miller, and the paetor iVftev. K.
Miller. The public is cor JiaiJ^. invited.
(Paid advertisement)
Spiritual Five
The regular m " tin){ of the Singers | To Celebrate
alliance was held at the headquarters, I f « ii 4 a
HO Burnet str.-et, with K. J. Lem- i lltfl AnillVerSary
on, president, preoidiiie. The Crotrna. The Spiritual Kite will xa-W.rnie
of Ilorj of i allas. were guest* < tho eleventh anniversary as a gospel
I mon Baptist church, und Xew Mt I quartet, at Progressive Baptist
^fonah Baptiat etiijrch, iaat Sondaj. j rhnr< h. Rev. \V. (i. OilleapI r:pa«tnr.
Sunday. October 22, at 2 :' 0 o'clock.
The Xew Salem llarmouizers and
the Israelite Spiritual singers were I |{pv Gillespie will preach a aermou-
h'wts.
Mr
and Mrs. Tt. J. Lemon were
honored at a surprise party by the
group Monday. Oc*tol>er 10, at a
twenty-first anniversary observance,
He went to Sunday school every j in the home of Mrs. I>. Hall,
k. He kissed me and the children | There were 20 guest«. The honor
ette.
before he left for work, juxt li*e he
always did."
Witnesses Raid Davis waa matter-
sf-fact, almost placid, on his mlseion
af killing men. lie paused to tell
Iniployees with whom be bad worked
|t railway traek repairs in the huge
(tat :
"It looks like you're going te get
s new bo*s . . . I've just shot fire
frien."
Markets
(Continued from Page 1.)
Weighting, ax required by the health
department. When they are weighed,
•llowance Is made for each tray, back-' freedom riders.
guet ts received many lovely gifts.
The next meeting of the Singers
alliance will be held Oca f er £i, at
7:1T o'clock in the alliance head-
quarters.
The Perrymsn quintet will Ih* In
charge of the program with the Fel-
lowship organisation U|"I other local
tale-.it appearing.
At 7 the Spiritual Fafc and
Perryman quintet will be heard in a
joint program at Israelite Baptist
church, Ifcev. P. Iloln-rstm, paator.
(Paid advertisement)
Youth Day Set
For Sunday, Oct. 22
At Pilgrim's Rest
Youth day will be observed Sun-
day afternoon, October 22, at J o'-
clock. at IMlgrim'a liest Baptist
church, Elder C. F. M. .Tones, pas-
tor. Kev. II. Ksmey of St. Paul
der aecregati< n ended in ptiblic trans-1 Baptist c. ! I>ackiantl, will deliver
jK rtation facilities here and sought to'the messa*:. 11 • members and both
njoin Jackson police from arresting!choirs will lie present.
Injunction
(Continued from Page 1.)
exercising their right freely to trav-
el in interstate commerce."
The NAACP, acting for three
Jackson Negroes filed n lawsuit June
W in which it asked the eourt to or-
1 AF all the objections which may be, and frequently Are, Voiced
j" b.v the uninformed young man who is unconsciously seeking
justification for hi* reluct an oc to muke a wise ami prudent
'sacrifice, the one to which I am personally most allergic is
; that threadbare, unreasoned, gray-bearded old wheeze—
slent . . . and he cries about "taking
on" an obligation!
But the thing about that "obligat-
ing myself' malarky which rilea the
most ia hia blithe assumption that
he does actually aasnme an obliga-
tion when he and some good life
insurance company get together and
; effect a contract.
Nonsense!
Of course lie doesn't. He cao
change his mind whenever he wishes,
lie can stop whenever ho wants, lie
can stop making deposits whenever
he cboooea ... he will have had his
money's worth at any point along the
liue . . . and if he has by then built
U|l U t<i«U lilSlIti OA MUJ «MSt i (nuittl
in most canes meana pretty quickly)
he can begin to receive instead of dis-
burse.
No, he assumes no obligation. But
in feeling that he does, he is even
■ore wrong than moot of us reslir.e.
He is twice wrong, if jron please, be-
cause (1) he himself aaoumcs no ob-
ligation, and (2) the other party—the
company—does assume an obligntioa
. . . a fact which the buyer of life
insurance almont certainly overlooks
and which the seller of life Insurance
unfortunately overlooks all too fre-
quently.
But it ia much too big a fact <0
overlook. It is a remarkable* tad tre-
laaadously important fact, deserv
lag the thoughtful coaaideratioa of
trcry life anderwriter: the fact that
when • life iaauraace company ac-
cepts a man'a dollars and iasues to
him its policy, it assumes enormous
and many-sided and possibly burden
some obligations from which ?t has
no escape short of maturity" eteept
by decision of the |iolicyowuer .
yet for which It asks of the insured
no balancing obligation whatever, but
merely his continuing deposits so long
as he chooses to kee^ the company
bound by its agreement.
"Why, sir, you nsmnne no obliga
tion when you enter into this con-
tract . . . but you certainly sign the
company into a tight spot."
(Next week wo ahall discuss in
more detsil, these obligations on the
psrt of your insurauci* company.)
'I don't want to
self for tbe future."
iloly IL McMackeral, aa the teen-
agers aay, look who'a talking about
obligations!
"Obligate," he
says . . a when
niuety-uuip times
out of a hundred,
the man who says
that is surrounded
and laden with ob-
ligations you ara
trying to help him
discharge whether
or not he ia given
the time to do ao
nimseii: ine obli-
gation to provide
for a wife as long TAKLOK
as she lives and aot merely us long
ss he lives; tbe obligation'to see a
couple of toddlers tkMah their
schooling and into tlfeir siMupport-
iug years still two decaJas away;
the obligation to malw-glB iaors
monthly pay men ta an (kaAnM be-
fore the mortgsgs can ba qjgpwn in
drives
for the benefit of
wife and children;
buy nine meals a dajr
a bite himaelt . . . .>
So jou come alaoc. to ftnr Wm
how aome tine Inaoraaee at j iotlar
or two dollar, per hundred 'uliL eaar>
antee him cither the tiaaa tf dlMarp
all hill oblifatiaaa, ar KaUa ««atT-
l>ablic Ik I in lied. Siiouaora are Uea-
dainei Kihel .lonea, MiUia Jaocs, aad
Liliie Rwra.
(Paid adn
Thank Yon!
Kev. and Mrs. J. H. Thomas, Del
Kio. Texas, take this method to ex-
tend thanks and appreciation to the
members and other frienda of Great-
er Mt. Olive Baptist chufdt ^ tbe
sjH'cial guest, for the lovt aad hos-
pitality fcbown toward tham ia tbe
anniversary services held fOCiBtly.
(Paid matter)
Five Blind Boys
To Appear
In S. A. Oct. 22
The Five Blind Boya of BUmissippi
will make their first appearance here
at Greater Mt. Olive Baptist church
in a full program of spiritsal songs,
Sunday afternoon, October a; at 2:30
o'clock. Dr. J. N. Byrd ia pastor.
Donations for tickets will be $1,
and tickets may bt ascurfld tfrom
Hieks Beauty school and OanMag-
han;'.s pharmacy.
Further information may ba se-
cured by calling LEhigh 8-0T6C or
CApitol 6*5076.
(Paid advertisement 10-20)
YOU
Can make real money in
ELECTRONICS
Durlimn often the beet and
lioat complete training ia
RADIO-T\'
COMMITXICATIONR—FOO
IXDL'HTHFAT, ELECTBONICS
State anil VA Approved
ENitOLI, NOW
New day nnil liinlit classea form-
ing. Free job placement while
training.
Call or write un for free bulletin
DURHAM
Electronic College
Air-Conditioned Prea Parking
m N. MAIN AT SAN PEDRO
CA 3-1868
pro-iram will be
resented, i he
I
SAN ANTOMO j
Mm Mm Mm . Llcken good!
HANCM-ANM s
Vrtah, fully dressed Imperial
FRYERS
.21'
GRADE A
WHOLE
USDA GRADED CHOICE TENDER AGED BEEE'
ROUND OR
SWISS STEAK
SIRLOIN STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
T-BONE
H>. 89c
>. 89c
ib. 49c
ik 95c
ROEGELEIN'S PINKY PIG
LINK SAUSAGE
OLE PLANTATION SWEET or BUTTERMILK
Biscuits "
it 49c
5C
TSjUf ^edtuAA6 9^7JteWeek
TREND
DKTKBGENT TABLETS Witfc lie M InM
SALVO
PRI8KIE8
DOG FOOD
T and P SOLID PACK
TOMATOES
BAMA
PEACH PRESERVES
2 lg. pkgs. banded 33c
Giant pkg. 69c
26-oz. can 2 f°r 25c
No. 303 can ] 5c
12-ox. jar 25*
jCALA-RIPE ELBERTA
,.^rr
PEACHES 19c
* GERBER BABY FOOD *
Strained Except Meats
lotns 5 'or 39c
Chopped Except Meats1
Limit A 681,8
8
4T39CJ
CALIFORNIA VINE RIPENED
Tomatoes * 10c
FRESH HOME GROWN BELL
FRESH OCEAN SPRAY
CRANBERRIES
•ach
l-lb.
box
4c
sio
BAKED-RITE 8" - 2 LATER
WHITE CAKE
A delicately textured white cake . ..
with three faldea lay ere at pineapfle
GUiac . . . eorered with a aarae-
minnta hailed icing aad uiwiaed
with motet, tender ahredg at Aacet
Hake Coconut ... A deiight/rf
89
WHITE SANDWICH ,
Baked-Rite Bread (1^?' 24c
Why Pay More 1 Try this loaf . . Save 3c J
.f *OH
Top Yalna Stanpr
With Every lUc
pnrchme
HANBMUWy
Z&
■loan luoraa id loot quaxtittm
- « wowaoto rnmcAi.w
ad irmrnvi thwj batttbdat.
■St.
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Andrews, U. J. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1961, newspaper, October 20, 1961; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth399764/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.