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The Detroit tribune. (Detroit, Mich.) 1935-1966, August 03, 1957, Image 1

Image and text provided by Central Michigan University, Clark Historical Library

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn92063852/1957-08-03/ed-1/seq-1/

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Detroit Mother Hurt In Chicago Race Riot
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VOLUME 35—NUMBER 24
3 YOUTHS CONFESS CRIME
Devil Robs Ex-Detective of 20 Years
By ANDREW F. FRUEHAUF, C.S.++4-
"MASON HIRST DIES AT 49" (Nows, 7/5)
A THINKING SUFFOCATION !
GOD TO HIS DETROIT TRIBUNE:
The lot# Edsel Ford could not make his "Declaration of
Independence" from the devilish illusions and delusions of
the Christ Scientist Messiah void religions, "satan bound*
therapeutics, education, culture, politics, art, human law,
and the multi-billion $ devil's Democratic - CIO S-T-E-A-L !
(See DEVIL ROBS EX-DETECTIVE, Page 2)
"Wife Tells Os Union Battle"
(New York Times Service—Free Press)
WASHINGTON—A woman accused the president of the
Bakers' Union Tuesday of knocking her down, kicking her
and attacking her husband in a row over control of the
union.
Mrs. Nathan Ehrlich, of New York, pointed at James G.
Cross, president of the Bakery and Confectionery Workers
International Union.
Cross denied even being present when the fight occurred.
"It's so simple," said Senator McClellan (D., Ark.), chair
man of the probing labor-management committee. "One
of you is net telling the truth. One of you is committing
perjury."
Fruehauf Gets Safety Award
(From Industry Notes Free Press)
Fruehauf Trailer Co.'s plant at Westfield Mass., has been
given the top award for 1956 in a plant-safety contest spon
sored by the Truck-Trailer Manufacturers Association. The
plant recorded nearly a million working hours last year
with only three lost-time accidents.
Chicago "Precinct Aid [Democrat]
Is Accused of Extortion"
VICTIM—COLORED; ACCUSED—HEBREW NAME.
By George Bliss (Chicago Tribune)
A trap set by state's attorney's police resulted last night
in the arrest of a Democratic precinct captain, who also
is a Municipal court deputy bailiff, on charges of extorting
SSO to $75 every other week from a Puerto Rican immigrant
by threatening to have him fired from his job as a city street
sweeper.
The precinct captain, Louis Winetroub, 62, of 7 W.
Walton st., was accused by Saturino Pena, 39, of 8 W.
Chicago eve., of keeping him off the civil service rolls so
he could be coerced into paying.
* * *
Try To Save Each Other; All 6 Drown"
"Leesville, La., July s—Six persons drowned in a Fourth
of July outing when, one after the other, they jumped into
the water in futile attempts to save each other . . . included
were five children 8 to 14 . . . oldest victim was 20. . . ."
(Detroit News)
Devil's Judaism Loses 'Son'—
David A. Gimbel, 28—N. Y.—
THE DEVIL TAKING THE BIBLICAL 40 YEARS ! VIA
'CANCER'—SO THE DEVIL SAYS I
GOD TO HIS DETROIT TRIBUNE*.
A THINKING SUFFOCATION I
CAUSE AND EFFECT ARE EXCLUSIVELY MENTAL !
THE UNIVERSE IS 100% THE MANIFESTATION
OF THOUGHT !
"AS A MAN THINKETH IN HIS HEART (desires, espi
rations], SO IS HE" l—O. T.
THE HUMAN BODY IS A 3-DIMENSIONAL
m-o-r.t-a-l t-h-o-u-o-h-t image and resides
IN—HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS.
SO DOES THE EARTH, SUN, MOON, AND STARS—
THEY RESIDE IN COLLECTIVE HUMAN CON
SCIOUSNESS I
(See DEVIL'S JUDAISM, P»(P 4)
970 GRATIOT, DETROIT 7, MICHIGAN
Selfridge Employees Heeeire Awards
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SELFRIDGE AIR FORCE
BASE. M. Clement. Mich..
Efficiency it more ihan
its own reward for two De
troiters among eight Tenth.
Air Force employees at head
quarters here.' Mrs. Jerome
Thwedtt 3787 W. Euclid, and
Mrs. George Davenport, 2941
Field (fourth and third from
Wilkins Says—
Defeat Os Part 111 Os Rights
Bill ‘Handcuffs* Ally. General
WASHINGTON—The Senate
by voting to eliminate the ef
fective provisions of Part 111
of the pending civil rights bill,
has, in effect, “voted to hand
cuff the national law enforce
ment agency in enforcing equal
protection of the laws” Roy
Wilkins, NAACP executive sec
retary, charged here today.
Mr. Wilkins' statement follow
ed a 52 to 38 vota in the Senate
on July 24 to strip the civil
rights bill of provisions which
would have empowered the At
torney General to initiata ac
tions to secura school desegre
gation and protect other civil
rights guaranteed by the Consti
tution.
“By this action,” Mr. Wilkins
asserted, “the Senate has acted
to prohibit the use of preven
tive legal methods by the At
torney General in securing the
equal protection of the laws. . .
The adoption of this motion
says plainly to Negro Americans
that, so far as the Senate is con
cerned, they can expect little,
if any assistance from the fed
eral government in attempts to
win enjoyment pf their consti
Name National Park After
Booker T. Washington
Today Secretary of the In
terior Seaton announced estab
lishment of the Booker T.
Washington National Monu
ment as a public memorial to
the man who achieved fame as
a loader, educator, speaker and
writer.
The monument includes
184 U acre* on Virginia Route
122 in Franklin County where
Washington wan born and
livad with hia mother until
emancipated in April. 1865. At
hia death .in 1915 ha wan one
of Bia baat known Negro load
ers in the world.
The monument contains a
aeplica of the log cabin in
which he was born. Congress
authorised the monument April
2. 1938. It became effective last
June ! 18 when the Booker T.
Washington National Mon u •
ment Foundation, in co-opera
tion 'with the Commonwealth
ol Virginia, denaued the prop
right), both secretaries, await
S2OO or 8100 checks being pre
sented by CoL Paul E. Todd.
Tenths* deputy comtnander, to
ell ol JA % Civil
Servian annual "outstanding”
or ''sustained superior per
formance" awards. The others
(left to right) are Miss Lucy
Federico, court reporter. New
tutional rights.”
Following the southern vic
tory in eliminating Part 111,
attention in aWshington was
again focused on Part IV and
efforts of southern Democrats to
weaken it by providing for jury
trials in contempt cases growing
out of violations of federal court
orders against interfering with
the right to vote.
The defeat of Part 111 fol
lowed failure of the President
to support it forthrightly when
questioned about it in his press
conference of July 17. South
erners, encouraged by the Pre
sident's uncertainty, renewed
their efforts to eliminate the
section of the bill which would
have provided protection of a
wide range of civil rights.
Efforts to get the President
to come out with a strong state
ment in support of Part IV and
against the crippling jury trial
amendment were being initiated
in aWshington in the hope of
holding Republican senators
firmly in line on his crucial
issue. Hope was expressed that
he would make his position
clear.
erty to the federal government.
“This monument is a valu
able addition to the national
park system,” Seaton said. “It
commemorates a great man
whose ideals have left an indel
ible imprint and whose life es
tablished for his race a pattern
of advancement founded on the
basic virtues of honesty, indus
try, thrift and interracial har
mony."
When Washington l was 16 he
walked and begged, rides 500
miles to Hampton Normal and
AgriciUtural Institute There
he worked as a janitor to pay
for his education.
At 25 he was appointed or
ganizer of a Negro normal
school at Tuskegee, Ala. Under
his leadership, the achool flour
ished. In less than 20 years it
had 40 buildings 36 of them
built by student labor, and its
holdings covered several thou
•tad acre.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1957
Baltimore; Mrs. Ward Hostet
ler, bookkeeper; Miss Muriel
Malone, records clerk; Mrs.
Jack Moore, clerical super
visor. Mrs. William T. Ellis,
secretary, all Mt. Clemens; and
Mrs. William R. Hampton, sec
retary, Selfridge.—Air Force
Photo
I I// IVolm'.v
Uvutinfj Os
Furmvr
LITTLE ROCK—FBI agents
have investigated the brutal
beating of Eddie Mayberry, 28-
year-old Arkansas farmhand,
Mrs. L. C. Bates, president of
the Arkansas State Conference
of NAACP branches, reported
here today. As yet, Mrs. Bates
said, no action has been taken
to present the findings to a
grand jury.
In a sworn statement, Mr.
Mayberry alleges that early in
June he was beaten unmercifully
over the head with a plow
handle and later with a rope
by a white planter for whom
he worked. Pictures taken of
the victims bare back reveal
fiendish lacerations.
Defying an order of bis em
ployer. Mayberry fled from the
plantation with his wife, six
children and two grandchildren.
In Little Rock he sought the
aid of the NAACP. Association
officials secured medical treat
ment for him, found a home for
the family, reported the case
to the FBI. and got a job for
the beaten man when he was
well enough to return to work.
Sweet Daddy
'Sour' About
Guilty Verdict
Sweet Daddy Grace and two
ministers of his church, the
United House of Prayer for All
People were found guilty in
Traffic Court Friday of creating
and maintaining a nuisance.
Judge John D. Watts placed
78-year-old Daddy Grace. Elder
Claude Wllkereon and Oder
H. Price on probation for a year.
Judge Watts also ordered the
three ministers to hold all serv
ices inside their church—with
the doors closed.
Elder Wilkerson was the only
one of the three in court. He
told Judge Watts that sweet‘
Daddy Grace gad Eider Price
PRICE: SINGLE COPY 10 CENTS; PER YEAR, $4.50
Will Seek To Try
Them As Adults
Two teen-age boys confessed this week to the senseless
robbery-shooting of a Woodward avenue tobacco store
owner last Wednesday.
Being held after confessing the shooting is Alvin Shew,
16, of 621 E. Euclid, and Curtis Curley, 16, off 62 E.
Philadelphia.
Curley stated to police that
he stole the weapon used in the
hold-up from a roomer at the
Philadelphia address.
Eugene W. Jones. 35, a con
struction worker. reported to
police that his six-shot Span
ish typo pistol had been fired.
Jones discovered the usage
Sunday night.
GIRL FIGURES
A 15-year-old girl, Nadine
Allen, of 655 Melbourne, is also
being held after police found
out that she knew of the robbery
3,000
In Racial
/ A .
Flare-Up
CHICAGO. Police are
still mobilized to prevent any
further violence which has
reached alarming proportions
in the Chicago area. As tem
peratures rose so did tempers
and incidents.
There have been autos
stoned end overturned,
name celling and individual
injuries es crowds as high
as 3,000 milled about cer
tain areas of the city.
Police riot squads comprised
of white and Negro officers have
been put on emergency call, all
leaves and off days for officers
have been canceled as tension
sparked by a park picnic goes
into its fifth day.
NEGROES STONED
A Negro club, the Bodine So
cial and Civic Club, were hold
ing their annual summer outing
at Calumet Park last Sunday.
There were approximately 100
in attendance. Police report that
a group of 50 to 60 whites began
throwing stones at the group.
Polios arriving on the scans
found the groups baffling with
sticks, stones, bottles and
planks. Over 100 officers an
swered the first call.
DETROIT MOTHER HURT
Mrs. Dorothy Fike. 35. and
her two daughters, 12 and 13.
| of 3425 Beatrice street, were in
jured as their auto was stoned
while driving through the city.
They were returning to Detroit
atter a visit.
Police took them to a hospital
i for treatment and later escorted
them to the city limits.
WHITE GIRL SHOT
A white girl was accidentally
shot by a Negro policeman as
persons in a large crowd jostled
and mauled him, causing his
gun to fire. —.
Negro policemen reported
being stoned in -and out of their
scout cars.
Negro bus drivers ware pro
vided with police escorts as
shay drove their busses
throughout the city, Motorists
were provided with police pro
tection while driving.
City officials stated that this
is the worst outbreak of racial
tensions in the last 15 years.
are in New Jersey on church
business.
Tha complaint was filed by
reaidents In tha vicinity of tha
church at MSO Linwood. They
said Sweet Daddy's form of wor
ship disrupted tie celm neigh
borhood.
Neighbors also complained
that Sweet Daddy's baptismal
ceremony snarled traffic and
doused their homes. Converts
to the Church were baptized on
the street with tin hoeea»
shooting but remained silent
until her arrest.
PART OF GANG
The three juveniles admitted
that they were part of a teen
age gang which had been con
ducting robberies throughout the
Woodward - Philadelphia area.
Five youth were supposed to
participate in the Fox robbery,
but three boys backed out at
the last minute.
Shaw and Curley decided to
go it alone on Wednesday. Ac
cording to police, Shaw told the
youths. ‘‘lf Fox resisted. I’ll
have to shoot him.”
Charles W. Fox, 52, store
owner, was found lying in a
pool of blood after being struck
by several shots. The youth did
not obtain apy money in the
establishment.
They robbed • market of
5335 the day following the
shooting.
WANTED FOR NOTHING
Parents of the girl, Nadine
Allen expressed shock and be
wilderment at her implication.
They were not aware of her as
sociation with the teen hood
lums.
Her father, Henry J. Allen, a
railroad repairman, said:
"She wanted for nothing;
she just got info the wrong
bunch. We don't understand
it."
According to her parents she
had been keeping company with
Curley. She had encouraged him
to go to summer school with her
to improve his marks. Curley
had dropped out of Northern
High last year.
The gang has admitted to sev
eral other break-ins in their
neighborhood.
John Hui fvs
Wins Trib.
S. S. ion tost
The Detroit Tribune 1957 Sun
day School Superintendent Con
test has closed. John Hayes of
Third Baptist is in the lead
by off,-setting his closest com
petitor, John Ferman of Mt.
Pleasant Baptist by 2,000 votes.
Mr. Hayii, won by nctlving
10.000 votes. Mr. Ferman is
second having received 0.000
The awards, a 050.00 U. S.
Savings Bond for the First
Place, and a 025.00 U. S. Sav
ings Bond for the Second.
The awards will be presented
at the Sunday Schools, at a later
date.
The votes are as follows:
MR. JOHN HAYES
Third Baptist Church .... 10,000
MR. JOHN FERMAN
Mt. Pleasant Baptist .... 8,000
MR. ROOSEVELT PRICE
Warren Ave. Baptist 240
REV. E. S. JONES
Chapel Hill Baptist 150
MR. WILLIAM KING
Hopewell Baptist 150
McCLUSTER BILLUPS
Jordan Grove 150
HONDON B. HARGROVE
Oak Park A. M. E. 150
Bond Sales Up
Sales of Series E and H Sav
ings bonds in Michigan during
the first six months of 1957
totaled 1144,741.000, equivalent
to 46 per cent of this year'a
Treasury assigned quota of 1315
million it was reported today
by Delmar V. Cote’, state direc
tor for the U. S. Savings
Division*

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