New York Amsterdam News — 1963-00-00439
1963
1 pages
✓ Indexed
28 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., June 15, 19«3
Week I y News
*
i>> i tij I h i '/> u ay (y?<7p?i
m 3-8200
1406 PITKIN AVE B KLYN.N.V.
Ephraim A. Roe
Epbnir A. Roe. a retired pastor of Paradis* Baptist
j r
merchant seaman, died recently Church.
Mr. Roe. who was a veteran
"V •
in Kings County Hospital at the
u>
____ (-f World War I. served after
ale «f I® IllS remains were w a r j s as a radio operator
bitfwd in Long island National aboard the S. S. Kxeeteior of
the United States Maritime Serv
Cemetery. Farmingdale, after
ice. He is survived by his widow,
advices at the Unity Parkway
Gertrude; two children, Walter
Roe and IXirothy Mason, and
four graadchddnen.
Cfcapel. 1406 Pitkin Ave.. Bklya.,
kd by the Rev. Ernest Cook,
Guy Newell
Guy Newell, 45, of 382 Sterl-by Rev. E. W. Cook, Paradise
ing Place, Bklyn., died recently BopUst Church.
In Pilgrim State Hospital, Brent- ®®r- -'’eweL, a bachelor from
wood NY and u as buried in New London Co™-. is survived
waod. N, Y., and *as buried in by
Jnother> Mrs Marian
Evergreen Cemetery, Bklyn., af- Williams, two brothers, Donald
ter rites at Unity Parkway Chap and Harold Newell, and a sisl
el,* 1406 Pitkin Aw., conducted Mrs. LuciUe Barnes.
>, *» e
Interracial |Newark Mayor
Council Officers
Assures Negro
Demonstrators
At an executive board meeting
of the Brooklyn Catholic Interrac-
NEWARK — Jjtayor Hugh J
ia, Council, June 5. the following
officers were unanimously elect
Addon nio assured Negro decn
onstrators this week that he will
ed do lead the Council during the
coming year: President, Miss call a meeting with heads of the
LopUe Glover: first vice presi- building trades in Essex County
dent, Mr. Donald Joyce; second!to seek the hiring of more Negro
workers on city construction
vice president, Mr. John Breglia;
projects.
Recording secretary'. Mrs. Gil
bert Tjurphy; corresponding sec
He made the assurances after
retary’ Mr. Charles Sherwood;
some 75 persons, mostly Ne
treasurer, Miss Frances Herlehy.
groes, picketed City Hall Mon
bujtftrles concerning Council
day under the banner of the
membership may be mailed to
Newark Coordinating Council
191 Jorglemon St, Brooklyn 1;
and gave the mayor a 30-day
any other inquiries may be made
deadline to take action on their
by telephone to the Council chap- demand to end discrimination
lain, Monsignor Archibald by firms and unions engaged
Me Lees, at HY 3-4798. ‘
I in construction of city buildings
To Teach
In Africa
Miss Janet Juanita Linton,
daughter of the Kev. William
Liaton, pastor of Brooklyn’s Em
anuel Christian Mission, was
commissioned Sunday as a mis
sionary teacher to the Lutheran
Church of Northern Tanganyika.
East Africa.
The commission service was
conducted at the St. Paul Luth
eran Church, 392 MacDonough
St., by the Rev. Rudolph Burke,
secretary for Africa of the Board
of World Missions, Lutheran
Church in America.
Miss Linton, whose first term
of foreign missionary work will
last four years, graduated from
Upsala College, a Lutheran
school in East Orange. N.J., in
1962 and attended the Lutheran
School of Missions in Maywood,
111. She has worked in the Luth
eran Home for the Aged in Jer
sey City, N.J., ans as a telephone
operator.
Honored
In D.C. —
Reverend John H. Nichols,
Di).. pastor and founder of the
First Calvary Baptist Church,
953 Putaan' Avenue, Brooklyn,
New York, was the twenty sec
ond Annual Commencement
speaker at the North Western
College, Washington, D.C., Sun
day, May », 1883, at 5:00 p m.
Dr. Nichols was tbs second
speaker from toe state of New
York. The first speaker from
New York was the Honorable
Hvlan Jack, former president of
the Borough of Manhattan.
Dr. D. W. Board, Chancellor
of title college conferred upon
Dr. Nichols a degree of Master
of Arts, in the field of Humanity
and Social Religious Service. Dr.
Nichols is the Moderator of the
New York Baptist Association,
and President of toe Modera
tor's Council of the Progressive
National Baptist Convention.
ROYAL CLUB CONTEST — The Building Fund, at a baby con-
Royal Progressive Club raised test held recently. Winners are
ever $1,200 for Cornerstone’s left to right: Pauline Thompson
and baby Stephens, 1st prize;
Lourenia Bullock and baby Hol
mes, 2nd prize; Eunice Solo
mon and baby McGlone. 3rd.
Looking on is Dorothy K. Ro
beson, rear, club president.
By MALCOLM NASH
“The passing of Popei
John XXIII is A distinct
. and)
loss to his church .
to all mankind.”
The Rev. Dr. Joseph H. Jack-
son. leader of 5 million Negro
Baptists of the nation, spoke
largely for himself when he ex
pressed the above sentiment, but
to some degree that sentimen;
is now shader by the majority
of Negroes of all faiths, tongues,
station and allegiance at the
death of the Pope of Peace.
"He was indeed a great leader
of ihis church," declared Dr
Jackson.
The 261st Pontiff of the world's
500 million Roman Catholics won
the hearts and respect of Ne
groes — non-Catlholic a« well
as Cathulic — when he shattered
tradition in 1960 by creating the
first Negro prince of the church
in modern tunes, Laurean Cardi
nal Rugambwa, bishop of Ruta-
bo, Tanganyika, Africa.
In Brooklyn
News Of Churches
Baptist
We are in the valley of de
cision about race relations and
the future of the Republic," said
Rev. Gardner Taylor, and "the
moral imperative must take prec
edence over any question of ex
pediency” if the nation is to
avoid an unparalleled" blood
bath."
. Concord’s pastor, addressing
the annual meeting of the Urban
League of Greater New York,
said "the time is now” and call-
?d on liberals to "Insist that the
New York City government maxe
-quality of opportunity its prim
ary consideration, first in its!
□wn departments and then by
conciliation or force, in housing,
education, employment and com
munity attitude."
The comparatively comofrtable
Negro leaders who have had the
ear of white leaders are now
having to run to catch up with
The hopeless, intensely angry,
accusing masses" moving under
the goad of their own frustra
tion, said Dr. Taylor who also
warned “This is a life and death
struggle for democracy and ‘soft
methods’ will not work.”
Holy Rosary R C
The Rev. John H. Stonebridge
celebrated his 25th anniversary
as a priest with the singing of a
Solemn High Mass assisted by
Rev. Edward A. Fus, J.C D.,
deacon, and Rev. Robert R. Mc
Court, sub-deacon. Parishioners
honored him with an afternoon
reception. Father Stonebridge
came to Holy Rosary 19 years
age after seven years at St.
Peter Claver.
On Monday a Solemn High
Mass was sung for the repose of
the soul of the late Pope John
XXIII as the draped Church ini-
Itiated the prescribed nine days
of mourning his death.
Bethel Baptist
White Pastor In
Negro Area Works
by SIMON ANEKYVE
In 1960 there were about 12
Negro members of Bushwick
Avenue Methodist Church at 1139
Bushwick Avenue, Brooklyn. And
the history of the church showed
a marked resistance to reach
ing out into the community with
its large influx of Negroes.
A year ago the church began
to place special emphasis on the
Spanish speaking citizens and the
Rev. Dr. Edmundo G. Morgado,
fresh from a Cuban prison, Joined
as Spanish minister of the Bush
wick Avenue church.
Thus building a healthy Christ
ian church in an interracial com
munity seems to be the special
But the board of trustees want
role Rev. Lee is fulfilling in his
ed a white minister who would
make Negro community members Brooklyn ministry. "Most of us
part of the church and who could are ^1. of heart-break because
veork with a Negro associate ^he discrimination and resi-
(Stance to change" now manifest
tninister.
I in both the South and North, Rev.
„
So the Rev. Charles Wesley
Lee was called from New Hyde T, . ..
Park, L.I. to take charge of the, But w* llke to „
Bushwick church in June 1960.
T™11 way and
He got a Negro associate mini-,partJ>f the
,
ster, the Rev. Elemit A. Brooks,
in October.
that in
feel
in a
small
„
a ^5
ts being made." he continued.
The congregation has 678 mem
bers with about 280 in church
every Sunday. About half of that
membership is Negro or Puerto
Rican.
Rev. Lee showed some photo
graphs on his table. The choir
] was mixed; the confirmation
class had as many black boys and
M J girls as there were white. The
W picture of the Women’s Society
showed the elderly ladies were
■ 'white, the middle aged, Negro
and the younger ones Puerto
Rican. It thus reflected the length
of time each group has been in
the area.
Besides a concern for the spiri
tual interests of members and
activity within the church, the
Bushwick Avenue church mini
stry also has a deep social con
cern for the welfare of the com
munity. Rev. Lee spoke of the
|problem of over-crowding that
his packed some 42.000 persons
Into the area.
The best habit to form is to
read the Amsterdam News every
week. Out every Thursday.
PENTECOST AT ST. MAR
TINS — Clergymen and acolyt
es of St. Martin’s Episcopal
Church, 122nd St. near Lenox
Ave., are shown leading wor
shippers during recent proces
sion, witnessing the commem
oration of the Day of Pentecost,
celebrating the descent of the
Holy Spirit upon the Apostles of
Jesus. (McAdams Photo).
Headache
Drag?
Work . . . work! Run . . . Runt
Pressure . . . pressure! Tentioa
builds! And before you know it,
you’ve got • headache! When
headache, rheumatic-like pains or
headaches due to tension drag you
down , . . throwing a PAIN BAR
RIER between you and your work
er play, BREAK THRU THAT
-PAIN BARRIER” FAST WITH
-BC" TABLETS OR POWDERS.
Baptists To Birmingham
By MALCOLM NASH
No change in plans has been
made.
The National Sunday School
and Baptist Training Union Con
gress opens Monday in Birming
ham •— as scheduled — for its
weeklong session.
More than 5,000 Negroes from
the South, the North and other
sections of the nation will con
verge, by car, bus, plane and
train, on the tension - sieged
city, cramming the white as well
as the Negro quarters of Birm
ingham.
Among the several places they
will meet is the Municipal Aud
itorium.
Mrs. O. Clay Maxwell, wife of
the president of the National
SS-BTU, told the Amsterdam
News this week that the con
vention will be held according
to plan, in spite of the racial
strife resulting from the civil
rights struggle of Birmingham’s
Negroes.
"We expect no incident to de
velop,” she declared. “And Dr.
Maxwell and I are going there.
We haven’t called off going."
that it will not attend the ses
sions, held annually in different
cities.
This is the first time in many
years that the sessions will be
(
held in Birmingham.
Some officials of the National
SS-BTU, an auxiliary of the Na
tional Baptist Convention of the
U.S.A. Inc., earlier calle for a
cancellation erf the sessions be
cause of the racial clashes there,
but were rebuffed.
Mayor May Speak
It was learned that Mayor -
elect Albert Boutwell has invited
the organization to come to Birm
ingham, and he may address
delegates at Municipal Auditor
ium.
It is the custom of the National
SS-BTU to invite the mayor of
the host city to address the open
ing session, and it is believed
that Mayor Boutwell has been
invited to the upcoming one.
weekend, by train, to go to Birm
ingham.
They will stay at the home of
friends, as many of the delegates
will, and will attend all sessions,
Mrs. Maxwell said.
No Fear
Dr. Maxwell earlier had said
that there was no reason for fear
and that convention delegates
will be attending in a "Christ-
like spirit.”
Mrs. Maxwell added to that
when she predicted ‘‘much good”
would come as a result of the
visit to the Southern city and
the meeting in Birmingham pos
sibly would result in a “clearing
of the situation.”
Whether delegates to the ses
sions will take part in any dem
onstrations or projected demon
strations is not known.
Dr. Maxwell had said earlier
that "that also will be determin
ed by leaders (of the sessions and
of the demonstrators) who will
Mrs. Maxwell said she and theibe called
president plan to leave on theition.”
to discuss the situa
Bible Quiz
By Rev. V. SIMPSON TURNER
True or false.
1. Moses became prime minister of Egypt.
2. Cain fought with a giant.
3. Noah became the high priest.
4. Methuselah took the longest boat ride.
5. Joshua commanded the sun to stand still.
(See Answers Below)
The Largest Funeral Parlor In tho City
SELECTION ROOM ON PREMISES
HY 34473-MY S4673
1904-06 FULTON ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Dignified Service
H. R. HURD, JR. FUNERAL HOME, INC.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Mario Hurd Owens
Paul B. Hemsley
Emilio E. Owens
SLocum 6-5777
10 Trey Ave. nr. Felton St.
Brooklyn 13, N. Y.
No Withdrawals
(Mrs. Maxwell, whose husband
is the pastor of Harlem's Mt.
Olivet Baptist Church, said Dr.
MaxweH has not received any re
port from any delegation saying
ONE POLICY INSURES
Father...
-Jr Mother...
Sons...
Daughters t
Rfct&RENCE — Little Roaa-
lifl^^Xeacock kisses the ring of
SuJBqpgan Bishop of Long Is-
lawif Jonathan Sherman, at
■r
«■—.........
the P.E. Church of the Resuf-
rection in East Elmhurst fol
lowing confirmation service,
Sunday, May 26. Looking on at
left is Rev. Harold L. Wright,
rector of the church and at
right is Calvin Johnson, also
confirmed. —(Cooper photo)
BROOKLYN'S
MOST
MODERN
FUNERAL
HOME
In time of need, come to Unity Parkway
Chapel, where you can get expert funeral
direction and every modern facility at a
budget to suit every purse.
Unity Parkway Chapel,
Inc.
HYacinth 3-8200
1406 PITKIN AVENUE
at Eastern Parkway & Ralph Avenue
BROOKLYN, N.Y.
"Your Loved Ones Deserve The Best"
June will be a month of in
teresting activity beginning Sun
day, the 16th, with the annual
I Fathers and Sons breakfast at
6:30 a.m. A banquet for the com
bined choirs will be sponsored on
June 21 by the Sea Cadets under
Mr. E. Gregg and on June 28
the Deacon Board will present
the movies "Golgotha” and
"Bible Lands."
Bushwick Ave. Methodist
The Rev. Elemit A. Brooks,
associate pastor, preached a ser
mon entitled "A Man Started to
Build.” The New York East Con
ference, June 12-16 will be attend-!
ed by Rev. Brooks and Rev.
Charles W. Lee. In their absence
next Sunday's service will be led
by Mr. Rufus Lawrence and Mr.
Roy Geiger will deliver the ser
mon.
Bethlehem Baptist
Lewis Austin, editor of the
Carolina Times, of Durham, N.C.,
discussed the freedom fight which
has led to hundreds of arrests
and fatal rioting in North Caro
lina. He appeared as part of
Bethlehem’s continuing Emanci
pation Centennial celebration
Guests included the Rev. Robert
Kenlock, Mississippi Registrars
Comm., Johnny Paraam, Urban
League, Mrs. Maude B. Richard
son, Brooklyn NAACP, Risley
Dent, Brooklyn rent control di
rector, and Joseph Davis, presi
dent. Carver Savings and Loan
Assoc.
Our Lady of Victory R. C.
The Holy Name Society of Our
Lady of Victory Parish sponsors
its annual spring dance on Fri
day evening, June 21, at the Par
ish Auditorium, 272 Macon St.,
Bklyn. Proceeds to help defray
church repair costs.
84. John’s Baptist
The Wide Awake Club raffled
off a new sofa-bed, bicycle and
table lamp and the Floral Club
marked its third anniversary.
Choral and service elements of
St. John's attended the Annua
Fellowship at the Holy Route of
Prayer and an anniversary cele
bration at Bethany Baptist dur
ing the week. On Sunday, June
16, the congregation will celeb-
brate the 39th birthday of their
pastor. The Rev. F. Arthur Reed
and hold the annual baby con
test.
Hollywood Baptist
The Laymen’s League will hon
or Dr. Martin Luther King as
Its 1968 Achievement Award Din
ner at Mike’a Lounge, 248 John
St., West Isttp, on Friday, June
14, 8 p.m.
Conversation
With Baldwin
On Wednesday. Juno 19, et
7:30 p.m.. WBAI will present a
vrrtgram featuring James Bald
win, prominent figure in the
urrent integration crises, and
author of "The Fire Next Time"
end "Nobody Knows My Name."
Brooklyn-L. L Church Services
YOUR GUIDE TO
BAPTIST
BAPTIST
BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH
265 Borgon Street, Brooklyn 17, N. T.
“Com, la to Worahlp and (o oat to Sarva”
Rev. W. J. HALL Foster
THIS SUNDAY
7:00 A M -Father’. Day Rraakfart
100 AM.—Morning Worship, Rev. P.T. Prudon
9:18 A.M.-Church School
11 00 A M -Morning Worship, Rav W J. HaU
7:00 P M -Holy Communion, Candlelight Service
MA to 51433
UUtor S-8881
HOLT TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Ralph Av*, at Quincy St. Bklyn, N. Y.
Rev. Thomas 9. Harten. Paator
Sr. Vlro-Prea. of National Haptlit
(on-«ntloa, 0, s. A. lac.
THIS SUNDAY
0:## A M. - - Sunday School
10:45 A.M. — Morning Worship
0:0* P.M. — B.T.U Community Canter.
*01 Franklin Ave.
ST. JOHNS BAPTIST CHURCH
tao Bainbridge at. 'Near Saratoga Ave.)
Rvooklyn. N. Y.
Rev. P. Arthu* Reed. Pastor and Founder
THIS SUNDAY
;
9 J0 A M -8UNDA) SCHOOL
| 11:00 A M —SUNDAV WORSHIP
* WEDNESDAY. 0:10 P.M,-
,
PRAYER MEETING RBUt CLAM
7 PM-BOLY COMMUNION. IW SUNDAY
MT. CARMEL BAPTIST CHURCH
7H Quincy St.
u - „
Brooklyn, N.f.
REV. J. N. CARRINGTON. Potor
ORDER OP SERVICE
o es A M Sunday School
tt:Oe A.M.-Moraias Servlet
sm p.m.-
ST. JOHN'S PENTICOSTAL
HOLY CHURCH
,177 BedfpeU Ave. Beanklyn, N. ▼.
Sunday Juna ,1
Special Oathar'a Doy Service
Starting 11 00 a.m.
Regular services:
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Night Service 8:00 p.m.
REV. BENNIE SMIPFHARD
CORNERSTONE BAPTIST CHURCH
Law la Avenue and Madlaoa Street, Brooklyn
The Reverend Sandy F. Ray
THIS SUNDAY
• 00 A.M.—8UNDAY SCHOOL
11 00 A M.—MORNING WORSHIP
3 30 P M-PASTOR'8 AID. PRESENTING THE COMBINED CHOIR
0 00 P.M - BAPTIST TRAINING UNION
0 00 P.M -EVENING WORSHIP
Ml GATES AVENUE
MT. SINAI BAPTIST C-HURCH
PROOELTN,
MB* TOBE
PASTOR REV. DR. W.
LYMON LOWE
Ord.r of Sarvlto
9 30 A M — K.'ntlum Service
9:30 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A M —Morning Service
7:30 P.M.—Evening Worship
Holy Communion following evening service on every jrd
METHODIST
FIRST A.M.E. ZION CHURCH
rompUna and McDonough St
Brooklyn, NX
REV. W. 0. fARRINGTON, Poitor
THIS SUNDAY
t oo A M -Sunday Mmol
10:30 A.M —Junior Church.
11 00 A M.-Morning Worship
1:90 P.M.—Extended Sunday School.
I 00 P M. -Evening Worship
NEWMAN MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH
BeuoMye. N. I,
Ml Maeee Street (Near Throop)
BBV. MBNRT M. DBAS. PAJTOB
10 43 A M —SERMON, TATHER S DAY
9-90 P M -VESPERS
. REV. BENRY M. B«AA
THIS SUNDAY
PRESBYTERIAN
SILOAM PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Jefferson 6 Mercy Avos.
Brooklyn, W. T.
MV. Dt. MILTON A.
THIS SUNDAY
9:«« A M -MORNING WORSHIP
11:00 A M -MORNING WORSHIP
t-.jo a m.—young adult church school
12:90 P M CHURCH SCHOOL
Attend the Church
of Your Choice
Honor Graduates
The more than 150 graduates
of Harlem’s Junior High Schools
136 and 139 will be honored in a
"Salute to Graduates’’ Friday
evening at St. Andrew’s Episco
pal Church, Fifth Ave. and 127th
St.
The Rev. Irving Anthony, St.
Andrew's rector, will preside at
the tribute which will be attend
ed jtlso by the principals, teach
ers, parents, relatives and friends
of the graduates.
Trinity Baptist
Soloist Evelyn Burr of New
Rochelle’s Zion Baptist Church
and Florence Mont of Abyssinian
Baptist Church will sing on June
23 at Trinity Baptist Chireh, 808
E. 224th St., the Bronx.
Progressive BTV
While the National Sunday
School andBaptist TrainingUnion
Dr. King
Sunday At
F riend ship
Dr. Martin Luther King
Congress of the National Baptist
Convention of the U.S.A. convenes
Monday in Birmingham, the Na
tional Sunday School and Baptist
Training Union Congress of the
Progressive National Baptist Con
vention will also convene (Mon
day in Washington, D C.
In Birmingham
Speaking of the SS-BTU con
vention in Birmingham next week
not all Baptist clergymen going
there are sincere sympathizers
with Freedom Fighter Martin Lu
ther King's apprqach to the in
tegration question.
Consequently, it will be inter
esting to watch developments
there, since more than 5.000 Ne
groes, particularly from the
North, will be going to that still
smoldering city.
Revival
The Rev. G. C. Williams of
Atlanta will be in charge of the
weeklong revival services at Mt.
Zion Baptist Church in PortcheS
ter, begining Sunday.
Anniversary
The Rev. Elias Miner's third
anniversary rites as pastor of
United Christian Baptist Church
at 719 E, 223rd St., the Bronx,
will closes out Sunday when the Rev-
speak at Friendship Baptist Jasper Reeves will be the last
Church. 131st St. near Seventh of five ministers to conduct the
Ave., on Sunday evening.
observance services.
Dr. King, president of the --------------
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, will apeak to an an-
ticipated 1.000-plus persons at the C|
height of the church's men’s week
‘
1TldrK 8
Gloster B. Current, the NAACP
director of branches, speaks at
11 a.m. Men’s Day services Sun
day at St. Mark's Methodist
Church, St. Nicholas Ave. and
137th St.
observances
He was invited by the Rev.
Dr. Thomas Kilgore, the outgo
ing pastor of the church and a
Northern official of the RCLC.
‘Rama Report
The civa rights exponent Is
expected to give a progreee re-
port on developments in B4rming.|
I: ham when he appears at the
church at 7:30 p.m.
Men’s week rites began Wed
nesday evening when the Rev.
Monroe WaU of Mt. Calvary
Baptist Church, his choir and his
members took charge at evangel
istic services
He will be followed Friday eve
ning by Robert D. Bell, who
will take charge at charter pree
mption rites. Bell Is the pant
president of Metropolitan Baptist
Men.
Tfifa b the Life insurance policy you have been hearing]
40 much about.
With this one policy—and for a surprisingly modes!
premium—you insure every eligible member of the family
—yourself, your wife and all children from age 14 days tq
age 18 years. The children continue to be insured to age
25. Any additional children born into the family are in
cluded automatically beginning at age 14 days.
To really round out your program, this is a policy you
should have. The privilege of telling you about it witt be.
welcomed. Write, wire, telephone or just ask!
LEO SAPERSTEIN
Metropolitan Insurance Cansaltant
Estate Planning t Business Insurance
*- ,
401 BROADWAY, N.Y.C.
Off: WO 6-3555
*•«- UL 9-4281
Far Further Information Write:
r
i
i
I
I
I
t
Snperttein
t. Life tos. Co.
, N.Y.C
401
Address
l
I
--------- . ,
________ ________ A«e ---------- •
Metrepolfhir. Life tmurancu Cempony, New York 10, N. T.
MANHATTAN
BAPTIST
MOUNT OLIVET
201 Lenox Avn. (Cor. 120th St.)
Dr. O. Clay Maxwell 6; Lovelle A. Maxwell, B.D
SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 1963
SUNDAY SERVICES Sunday School f :90 A M.
Worahlp II 00 A.M. and 7:39 P M
Baptist Training Union — 9:30 P.M.
CONVENT AVE. BAPTIST CHURCH
420 W. 145th ST
(Corner of Convent Ave.)
THE REVERENT) M. L. WIT-SON
PASTOR
SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 1963
ATlttWOe'fi
7WUBWC8 B
4. False.
I. True.
9 on A-M.—REV. WILSON
9 30 A M.—CHUBCH SCHOOL WORSHIP
11 00 A M -REV. JOHN E. GREGORY
« 00 P M -BAPTUrr TRAINING UNION
7:30 PM-REV. WILSON
1. False.
2. False.
3. False.
CATHOLIC
Card OT Thanks
The family of the late GEORGE
AUGUSTUS LYNCH, who depart
wiahes
ed this life June 1st. 1963
to extend their sincere thanks
to the kind and thoughtful friends weekday masses a m
and neighbors who did go much
to lighten their burden of grief
12:4t r.al.
OUR LADY OF LOURDES CATHOLIC CHURCH
tss W. M2 St. (Brt. Amaterdam A Convent Avar)
RT. REV. M8GR. HENRY J. I.ENARAN, Paator
SUNDAY MASSES: A M —0:30. 9 00, 9 00, 10 00 (High). 11» (Spaaiah Sermon),
ADULT BIBLE-CATECR1SM CLASSES-TTJES. A THUM. at I P.M. _____________
7, a». r.M.-i2:ia.
MANHATTAN
METHODIST
a»
MOTHER A.M.E. ZION
140-0 W. 137th St. Dr B C Roheaon, Paator — Rev. P
A. Price,
Rov. J. D. Maxwell. Aaaoc.
SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 1963
9 30 A,M.—CHURCH SCHOOL
11:00 A M -REV. D. J. GARLAND
11:13 A M —JR. CHURCH SERVICE
1:30 PM— ADULT SCHOOL
COMMUNITY CHURCH
40 EAST 95th STREET
SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 1963
11:00 A M -MXXVIN C. VAN DE
"MORALITT BY
it
J
WASHINGTON HEIGHTS CHURCH of CHRIST
109 W. 190th ST . ie Y. — HOWARD V. JOHNSON. MMater
SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 1963
10:00 A M.-LORDY BAY SCHOOL—11:00 A.M. and 0:00 P.M.-
WORSHIP
WEDNESDAY, S:M P.M. — BIHLE CLASH.
N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., June 15^19«3 • *9
At Rites
For Pope
Prayer Of The W
ATLANTA - Dr. Benjamin
E. Mays, president of Mere-
house College and a leading
Baptist clergyman, was nam
ed by President Kennedy as
one of the four Americans to
represent him last Friday at
the 9-day otncial funeral of
Pope John XXIII In Rome.
The delegation was headed
by Vice President Johnson and
will also include James A.
Farley of New York, former
chairman of the Democratic
National Committee, and
George M. Shuster of New
York, former president of Hunt
er College.
Of the four, only Farley and
Shuster are Catholics.
God, ia this mo-
quietness, hushiog all
ant noises, that we may
we would ponder
the pattern our lives are weav>
ing, as we bow in Thy searching
presence, O God, unto whom all
hearts are open, and from whom
no desires or secrets are hid. -
When in the light of Thy right
eousness and truth we examine
ourselves, our hearts are filled
with regret and discontent, for
wc confess with sorrow that we
have so often missed the shining
marks of our high calling which
beckon us even from the valley
of defeat.
To Install
New Pastor
In Newark
NEWARK - The Rev. James
A. Scott will be installed pu June
30 as pastor of Bethany Baptist
Church, succeeding the Rev. Dr.
William P. Hayes who died sev
eral weeks ago after a 29-year
pastorate.
The Rev. Dr. William Sloane
Cvrifl n Jr., chaplain of Yale Uni
versity, will install the 32-year
graduate of Lincoln University
an<t Yale Uni verity School of
Religion.
Installation rites will be held
at 4 p.m. under the Rev. Dr.
Homer Tucker, pastor of this
city’s Mt. Zion Baptist Church.
Bishop Warns
ATLANTA—The Lovett School,
an Epicopal Church - support
ed Institution, was warned last
week by this city’s Epsicopal
Bishop,* the Rt. Rev. Randolph
R. Claiborne, that it must with
draw its refusal and accept the
son of Freedom Fighter Martin
Luther King Jr., or face disas
sociation from the church.
Christian Science
Alan’s Preserver
A Bible Lesson entitled "God
the Preserver of Man” will be
presented at this Sunday’s serv
ice in 12th Church of Christ Sci
entist.
The Responsive Reading includ
es this verse: "The Lord shall
preserve thy going out and they
coming in from this time forth,
and even for evermore.” (Ps.
121:8).
the second council held in the
Vatican and the 21st held in
the church’6 history.
To some degree, the reforma
tion was achieved, notably in
the area of the use of native
music and local languages in
tra church’s ritual and liturgy
This was also accomplished
through the African Secretariat
a Vatican agency in whose for
mation Cardinal Rugambwa
played a leading role and through
which African Catholics will play
a more substantial role in the
church’s affairs.
“We have lost a great cham
pion for peace ...”
Significantly, the Pope’s most
stirring document oi the year
was his encyclical, "Peace on
Earth,” published in April, In
which, among other things, he
called for an end to discrimi
nation of all kinds.
Man’s Rights
“One of the fundamental du
ties of civil authorities,” said
the Pontiff in the historic docu
ment, "is to coordinate social
relations in such fashion that
the exercise of one man’s rights
does not threaten others in the
exercise of their own rights nor
hinder them in the fulfillment
of their duties.
"The righto of all should be
effectively safeguarded and, if
they have been violated, com-1
pletely restored.”
Recalling his impression of the
Pontiff, Dr. Jackson said:
"There has never been a Pope
like him in recent times. He
was a man with a big heart. It
is my hope that the work begun
by him in the Ecumenical Coun
cil shall continue."
Rise of Africa
The elevation of the descend
ant of African tribal chiefs,
which came with the Pape’s cre
ation of 22 other cardinals to
increase the size of the College
of Cardinals, promoted the as
cent of Africa in the affairs of
the church as well as in die
affairs of mankind.
His recognition went to other
members of the family of man,
for he also created, for the first
time, a Filipino cardinal and a
Japanese cardinal, bringing
Asia’s 38 million Catholics closer
in heart to Rome.
“He sought to win the world
by the medicine of mercy . . .’’
Pope John showed that when
he canonized the Man of Mercy,
Blessed St. Martin de Porres,
the 16th century Negro of South
America, and made him the
Western Hemisphere’s first man
of color to became a saint.
“He lived, breathed and be
lieved in peace . .
Made Saint
Pope John’s canonization of
St. Martin de Porres almost co
incided with the desegregation
of New Orleans’ parochial schools
by the then Archbishop Joseph
Francis Rummei.
He reaffirr ed his desire for
peace, even -tween the races
in the Unitec Staes, when he
upheld ArchbMQop Hummel’s ex-
communication of th'ee New Or
leans Roman Catholks who de
fied the prelate’s desegregation
decree.
"We will never forget the dt-cp
concern shown by him to the
non-Catholic observers (whom he
invited to attend the Second Vati
can Council). He sat with us,
as brother to brother.”
Only Baptist
Dr. Jackson was the only Ne
gro Baptist — the only Baptist,
for that matter — who was per-
sonaUy -invited by Pope John
to sit among the 60 Protestant
observers at St. Peter’s Basilica
at the fall session of the Council
of Fathers.
Dr. Jackson’s meeting with
Pope John was the second since
December of 1960 when he first
had audience with the Pontiff
at Vatican Palace, the president
of the National Baptist Conven
tion of the U.S.A. Inc. recalled.
The Negro Baptist leader al
so recalled that the Pope had
told him then of his great desire
for unity of the world’s Chris
tians.
"He was - oncerned for the
religions of the world and sought
to bridge the gap between Cath
olic and non-Catholic In a spirit
of fellowship,” continued Dr.
Jackson.
Called Council
As concerned as he was with
Christian unity, the ailing Pope
also showed equal concern for
closer unity among Catholics
through reformation of the
church, one of the two principal
reasons for the calling of the
Council of Fathers last year.
Yet even in all our failure
to attain, we are lured by the
haunting creed that Life is capa
city for the excellent. Help us
to make it a pursuit of the best,
and, casting aside all counsels
of despair, to press on with buoy
ant feet, firm in the faith that
for ourselves, our Nation, and
our world, the best is yet to be
in a golden tomorrow for all
mankind. «
In the Redeemer’s name we
ask M. Amen.
Elect Former
New Yorker To
Conference
DETROIT — A former New
Yorker whose mother is a trus
tee of a leading Methodist church
in that city was elected to full
membership in the Detroit Conf
erence of the Methodist Church.
He is the Rev. Woodle W. White
whose election took place at the
122nd annual session of the conf
erence at Adrian College in near
by Adrian.
The Rev. White, who was also
ordained an elder by Bishop Mar
shall R. Reed at the closing of
the session, is the son of Mrs.
Mazie*Waller, a trustee of New
York’s Greater Bethel Methodist
Church.
The young minister is a grad
uate of New York’s DelWitt Clin
ton High School, Paine College in
Augusta, Ga., and Boston Univer
sity’s School of Theology.
Moravians
Meeting In
Bethlehem
BETHLEHEM, PA. — The Rev-
erends Rudolph Boone and Rob
ert Cuthbert of New Yortt and 248
o$ier leaders of the eastero TflSr*
trict of the Moravian Church in^
America have arrived hea».fo*Z
the opening of the 4 • day bien
nial conference Friday at the Mo
ravian College’s Union Building. ,
The Moravian clergymen and
laymen from six states are con
vening to push emphasis Pfl.
church work, urban church strat
egy, women’s work In the chhrch,
church extension and new wortt
and seven other topics.
J. Irwin Miller, president
the National OeuncQ of Churches
and a principal In the National..
Conference on Race and RadJ^pq
of last January, will addresu the
convention after the Rev. Dr. Ed-...
win A. Sawyer opens It. Dr. Saw
yer is the district president .“ . ‘. ’2
The Rev. Dr. Dan M. Potter, (
executive director of the Protes
tant Council of New York City„.
also wili speak on "The Protes
tant Witness in America Today.”
Sunday morning worship rites
at Central Church will be presid
ed oveT by the Rev. Dr. John Ol
iver Ne’.jon, professor of Chris
tian vocation at Yale University
Divinity School.
Estub.
1884
HORACE JOHNSON
2283 Lacomba Ave.
Aiken. SX
May 39, 1M
JOHN WILLIAM CVRREV, N.Y..
675 Eagle Ava.
May 2*.
-EDWARD CARTER
50 We« 119 St.
ANNIE NELSON
113 Wert U3 St.
FRANCES FELDER,
USS Burka Ave.
rncrjjLin c.
PRUELLA
1970 Daveatk
1970 Oavaatb Ava.
MARGARET
123 Wart 111
112
JAMISON
SAMUEL JA
US Wart 14* SL
BEAMAN
N.Y..
May 2(.
N.Y.,
May «.
Orangeburg,
May 30.
Cbarleaton,
May 3L
Cbarleaton. !
June 2.
S.
May 10.
The Caroline
Chapel, toe.
228 UENOX AVE., N.Y.C. • Ubifb
May We Help When You Need Help Most'
Tel. AUdubon 3-3637
Paris Funeral Home
LILLIAN PARIS
WILLIAM J. GREENE, JR.
Liconead Undertaker
151 WEST 131st STREET, NEW YORK 27, N. Y.
MODERN & MODERATE SERVICE
WITHIN YOUR MEANS
- (Established By Grcmviila O. Paris)
WAINWRIGHT & SON FUNERAL HOME, Inc.
UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS
ECONOMY with Dignity
Rev. Edw. W. Vv'ainrrripht
Founder
Rev. Leslie S. Wainwright
General Manager and President
LICENSED UNDERTAKERS
AU 6-4290
LICENSED UNDERTAKERS
Ida E. Wainwright
Treasurer
» 6
a ^^Mg
Grace W. Wainwrighr
Notary
162 WEST 136th STREET
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