Brownsville Weekly News

eB.. SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1940 FLINT BROWNSVILLE NEWS, FLINT, MICHIGAN ERS > ~VR giz = Boe Some Pointed Tips For _ pe ky Sed Girls On First Big Party STYLE FIRSTS ey St a | | eee = pe } a p | eA) i { j | \ wn ' fs Nee * 973 t ee Contes KIDDIE FROCK FOR. SCHOOL OR PARTY Belle of the classroom or of ice cream 'n~ cake occasions will be the tiny lass who makes her appearance in this butterfly-gay frock Claire Tilden has designed Pattern 973 with such expertness that you'll want to make one dress for your youngster~s kindergarten or romping days and another for partytimes. You'll find the accompanying Sewing Guide a marveloys help, step by step, along the way. The whole frock is vanelled, front and back~an easy style to stitch up speedily, Use your fabric on the bias for the side panels, especially if it~s in checked, plaid or striped design. Another refreshing idea is to make the all-around yoke that goes straight across the front and back in contrast, with.sleeves te match. And do add the little pockets. For the more tailored style, light-colored edging is smart. The dress-up frock Jooks dainty with lace trim. Pattern 973 {s cut in children~s sizes 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 Size 6 dress with contrast, requires 1 3-8 yards 35 inch fabric and~ 3-8 yard contrast; dress. without contrast, 2 yards 35 inch fabric. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins for this pattern. WRITE CLEARLY SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS AND STYLE NUMBER. Send orders to SCOTT NEWS. PAPER SYNDICATE Pattern De Be Natural Ig Best Recipe Says Miss Downing: By MARIE DOWNING In my last column, we planned the dress and make-up for you younger girls who are going to yow first big party. Now we'll go inte the actual preparations for the big event. Be sure to take a brief nap before you dress to make your eyes brighter and ~your: spirits higher. Even if you can~t sleep, lie stiil and rest for a half-hour at least. Take - your bath- before or after your nap, depending gn whether you fing a warm bath ~conducive to sleep or not. DO NOT APPLY MAKE-UP IN. PUBLIC Be sure to cleanse thoroughly before applying your makeup. A light application of foundation. cream will. give your face a smoother appearance and make the make-up go on more evenly and stay on longer, And this last is a great asset since there is nothing that detracts more from a girl~s charm than constant applications of make-up. Get it on well at home and then~ forget about, it until you caa excuse yourself and retouch it in private. Men like to see women carefully made up but watching the process is an unglamorous experience. If you chose cosmetics made for your type of skin, you will have little such an ficulties,: BE NATURAL If you are worrying about the conversational end of the.evening, here is just one suggestion that I wish you would take to ~heart. Obviously ~made~ conversation has 9. stifling effect.on any natural talk It is better to relax in comfortable silence than to prattle ner your face partment, 210 cso ueal Avenue, AtJanta, Ga. At Howard WASHINGTON, D. C. (SNS) Miss Susie A. Elliot, appointed Dean of Women of Howard University at the October meeting of the Board of Trustees, began her duties January 1, after a tour of inspection Of some of the leading schools of the East where she received much information of value in her work at Howard. Miss Elliot comes to Howard University from Tuskegee Institute where she was Head of the Depart+ ment of ~Women~s Industries at Tuskégee School of Home Economics and the Department of Conmercial Dietetics. The new dea of women was born in Maryland and received her elementary education in Baltimore and vicinity. She compieted her high school work in 1910 and her Normal School work in 1912, after which she did special work in th? School of. Household Science and Arts at Pratt Institute where. she received a diploma in 1915. also holds the B. S, Degree in Edu All Gospel Songs Peace It~s Wonderful. When The Last Mile Is Finished 10~ Send All Orders To THOMAS A. DORSEY 155 Oakwood Blvd., Dept, Cc. Chicago, m. 10~ * -~HIAVE YOU A PROBLEM? Don~t let it worry you. Send it to me for a solution, I have helped thousands, J can~help you. Write me at once, Send a self-addressed envelope for Prof. Davis, Box 1233, Cleve She TERE New. Women~s. Dean. Univ. cation and the M. A.. Degree in Health Education from the Teachers College, Columbia University. Miss Elliott taught Domestic Science at the National Trainine School in Durham, North Carolina, and Home Economics at the Witston-Salem Teachers College. She also served. as dean of women at the Winston-Salem Teachers College, and as director of the Emma Ranson House (YWCA) in - New York City. Her splendid preparation and experience eminently fit her for the guidance of young women - an~ vously about nothing in particular. Nervous, jerky conversation is a ~dead give away. Act perfectly at ~ase and the first thing you know you will be. And when other people start going home, don't act as though ~is the first time you have ever been out and you~are afraid it ~may be the last. Remember, your young man may have to get up early the next morning and g0 to work. Show him a: little ebnikderation by leaving at a reasonable hour. The chances of his calling you again will be much better if he isn~t afraid that every time he takes you out, he will be kept up half the night. Bear in mind that naturalness is the keynote of charm~be natural in your actions, your conversation, and your make-up and your evening is boung to be g success, What are your beauty problems? Writt Marie Downing, Larieuse Beauty Foundation, Room 521~319 North Fourth St., St Louis, Mo., and she will be glad to answer them. Be sure helping them to solve their varied problems. to enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope. 101s |,ow ~and -the-merried Dear Miss - Leaf: I married at the I have no children. ard and biggest liar in the world, and I detest both of these traits. I have left him several times but he will follow me and beg me to return to him. Then he will get drunk and say all kind of slanderous things about me. He has never treated me right from the first day we married. He has been untrue to me ever since, we married. I cannot associate. with my friends and can~t speak to a man. He doesn~t allow me to write him and I have no friends. He accuses me of all kind of mean things. When I first married him, I loved him end thought everything he said was right but he has treated me so mean that I have lost all respect and love for him. I work hard but if I did not have the work to do, I would go crazy. Still I do not get any thanks for what I do don~t even have changing clothes. My money goes for household expenses and my reward is a cursing out. Cie tt be I have tried every way I know but death to get out of this and ~ am: tired now. Broken Wife. T read all of your letter and have only printed a portion Of i. Yee deserve a better break than you are getting, as most women do, but you even deserve more than the average. Very few women will take another woman~s children and be the kind of mother you have been to those children. The father should be grateful to you but he, ro doubt, does not have sense enough to be. ~ Don~t stay so long with him that you cannot leave. The children are big enough now, according to your letter, to take care of themselves ig peo era Bo his wife could assume the responsibility. as long as you leave and return Alleged Slayer Of Orchestra Leader Pleads Not Guilty ATLANTIC CITY, N..J.~(ANP) PAgnes Purdie 31, whom police said walked into city hall On the morning of November 3, and announced, ~I just shot. my boy friend,~ entered a plea of not guilty ~through her attorney, Isaac H. Nutter, at Mays Landing Tuesday before Supreme Court Justice Newton H. Porter. _ According to the woman~s story to police following the fatal shoot Snatch Brief Rests During ~ Day ToKeep That Fresh Look ARE YOU A DRIVE-YOURSELF WOMAN? HIGHLY ENERGIZED women, capable and industrious, loving to be: busy, seldom give a thought to health, may forget that good looks depend upon physical well being As long as they can keep on running, they think they are all right. They drive themselves to the limit of endurance, helping others, car If you are the head of a family, as many women are, bringing home the bacon and spinach every pay and loafers have little to offer ip the way of interesting companionship. But rest also:is necessary. Rest, relaxation of ~the nervous e i a 5 i s E gg Peas MT pitty! 2 a iH abEEHEST iy Hy Eg fs al: i | sik have work to do, the drones | Energetic Women Given Warning By Miss Jameson ~: By HELEN JAMESON edge. Some women have trained themselves to doze. -for a few minutes. It is a wonderful pick up treatment. It is possible to rest at one~s desk: Drop your hands at your sides, lower the head, fill the lungs slowly with air, _ breathing way down to your tummy, lift the head slowly, straightening the _ spine from the lower sea stretching neck, throwing the head backward. Do that half a dozen source of refreshment. Let the cold water run over your wrists. If your neck is tired from leaning over a desk, use cold water there, too. Don~t stint yourself on sleep. You need plenty of it, Have a com ~| fortable bed, good springs, and level mattress even if you must economize in other ways. Good food and refreshing sleep are necessary to health. Have a curent of air in the bed room. You're indoors all day, should get your lungs air washed. Captions: Give yourself a half-hour flop before dinner LATEX ~ Hygienic Sanitary Producta far gine 28 tion of Disease, Pie i Hy < story of those ~Grand Old Hymns~ a | rt H z % Fs i t se r Sas Pee rey ee ne iti Age Difference Bars Happiness e of fifteen a. I am now thirty years old and my husband is. forty-five. He had been married before and had four children by his formér wife, who. is déad. I love these children as if they were mine and their father and I would. have been separated long ago. if it had not been for them. He and My husband is the worst drunk- to a man of that calibre, he is go ing to mistreat you. Make up your mind to stay as long as you can peaceably with him ~but when it becomes unbearable, leave him and go a long distance.-No fortune teller told him where you were. Someone else who knew told him. Go far enough away and he can~t find you. Even if he does you do not need to return to him. Just remember all of the things he has done to you and tell him to go South. In the meantime, buy yourself some clothes. Make a habit of go ing. to town ~ everytime you get paid and buy something for yourself, until you have a supply of clothes, The man is old your father and he jealous of your youth. Don~t let him kill your interest in life. You. are much too young to give Up seek-. ing peace and happiness. Send your problems of everyday life to SUE LEAF. Letters will be held confidential and names withheld. NO PERSONAL REPLIES. Ali letters will be~ answered through the columns of. this paper. Address SUE LEAF, SNS., 210. Auburn Avente, N, E., Atlanta, Ga. enough to bée}~ is probably | 30- 5. Year ~ Old q bused Wif To Quit Heavy Drinking University, Scotlandville, La. Attractive Albany Visitor: An attractive visitor in Albay, Ga., recently was Miss Freddie E. Scarborough, an instructor at Webster Paris Training School, Minden, La. She was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Montgomery. She earned her bachelor~s degree in home economics at Southern Many VariedandNovel Ways| To. Save Good Old Sausage By ARDEN DUANE (For the ANP) Just to merition sausage this time mot Se centainly makes, asure | ere is. to encourage sleepy heads to} roll out of bed ge ~scamper downstairs to an early Sunday morning breakfast....the tamtalizing scent of good old-fashioned sausage! The use of sausage in the modern diet is fast. becoming increasingly popwar ~becaus2 housewives know purchased frdm good. reliable sources are fresh, wholesome and of good quality. Sausages are divided into two main classeés....dry and fresh. Dry sausages are spiced, salted and dried under special conditions. This gives them excellent keeping qualities....Tuke these on a long trip for a part of your. food sup-.and you'll find them equally ply.. as healthful for those who stay at | home.; Fresh. sausages include _ pork, frankfurters and bologna. Either fresh pork or beef or a mixture of both js used. Spices, salt, herbs, water and sugar are added to this meat mixture which is then placed ina pure and edjble casing. At one time housewives used sausages as a breakfast food or as a sandwich spread. Today we serve them in a Variety of ways. They are included in -dressings, -soups, canapes, and in casserole dishes with vegetables or rice. And how about an omelet of eggs and chopped sausages? Sausage and Hominy DeLuxe One pound bulk sausage, one No. 2 1-2 can hominy, two cups canned tomatoes (drained), one and one-half teaspoons salt, three | tablespoons green pepper cut fine, one-fourth pepper, buttered bread crumbs. Brown sausage ina skillet. Add the other ingredients and place ir a buttered casserole. Sprinkle with buttered bread crumbs and bake 45 minutes in 400 degrees P. oven. Make an ordinary omelet, addi ta ae Se ing, Flem Daviv, noted cen leader whom she had been friend pan brown tiny bits of sausage, salame, if proferred. When orown, add a little butter to the pan and ee oe in Se aeeans omelet, Gently mix omelet. Cook mennGnt. Sat farther ~omelet puffs up, ~ the top in the broiler. Sausages Southern Pat out sausage meat in baking dish, having the teat about one inch deep. Bake in a hot Oven about twenty minutes. Drain off excess fat. Cover top with a rich biscuit dough,.relled out very thin and score in squares ~onvenient for serving. Bake in a very hot oven about fifteen minutes. or until,the a is a delicate brown. Vienna Sausage Cobbler One can concentrated cream of mushreom soup, @ smali Vienna sausages, one cal peas, one recipe -Tich biscuit dough. Place undiluted soup ina baking dish. Add Vienna sausages cut in half inch lengths and drained peas. Top with biscuit dough and bake thirty minutes in a hot oven. - Would you like other sausage recipes to try? Sausage Fruit Pudding, old-fashioned sausage pies, Sausage and Spaghetti Italian, Sausage Meat Puff....Well, just send along a loose three icént stamp and your request to Arden Duane, 3507 South Parkway, Chi cago, Tl, 3, +|Full Economic ~ Justice For Negroes Urged. ATLANTA.. Ga.~(SNS)~ The Negro question is the ~basis of all the South~s ills,~ ideury) 7 Maverick, mayor of San ~Antonio, Texas, told gn audience of Georgia Tech students Thursday night, adding ~that ~The Negro should have full economic justice.~ =~_~ Said the firebrand mayor: ~The Negro should have ~ full economic justice. By that I mean he should have a chance for a job, a house te live in, the right to good health and- enough money to educate his children.. ~When I say this it is not just from the viewpoint of giving jus- | tice to the Negro. It is giving justice to the whites. For, if the Negro has g low standard of living, a high prevalence of disease, it has direct effect upon white people, By HAZEL L. GRIGGS (For ANP) Fur hats, matching fur coats or fur-trimmed coats, are dominating the winter fashion scene just at present; for, although spring hats of straw ang ribbon are being shown everywhere, women are finding the weather much too cold for straw chapeau, and are going merrily along in bonnets a bit more consistent with Sir Temperature. Fur toppers ~ season: afe no longer mere wW: of fur set pre cariously atop the curls, but rather have graduated ~into real hats, smart and flattering in most cases. Of course, care must be yexercised in choosing a fur hat to avoid that Daniel Boone look. This may easily result from a wrong 7 x too * Final Rites Held For Mrs. C. W. KNOXVILLE, be sqrt N S)~ Cansler Fur Hats Dominate FashionsFor Winter much fur. That care has dominated the selections this year is evident, as the furry styles seen along fashion row are extremely eye-fill picture are Persian lamb, Silver fox, pig sheared beaver and kid ~| ta, Georgia, sends his Te TL ae = To hs. eee oe oe ot te and oy 3 | what a wondé derftl time that must | Es But it seem not my Jot tobe ike~ fe them,: | Bringing wanderers back di With ~its foundation walls all ~56 ~in the plate He went ap ~ ae Furs most seem in the millinery} ire;. me | claeiin nipaiimein mbnigiata, Until I he belches u Then, God: paate > ~Mr. Alrrea PF. Lar ima ta poem: WHEN t TAKE MY. My. VAGA-.. ve TION IN ~HEAVEN~. tiati! iS 5,: the sea, | Where they Test from their: Cares~ be! I must toil through the heat ~ sand OS the cold, Seeking out the Jost sheep on the mountains,. fold. But some day I shall take my Va. cation To the city John~ tells us about, ~ precious. } Where fron: gladness of heart Ye shall, shout! Oh, no sights ever witnessed by. mortals Can~ conipare with the ~glories: up there; - F shall spend.mny. vacation~: with iz + Be There the yeather wil always be Tr aca ee:.S You a ~toe A See ae ze: to Be ag > gossipers -. Couanok stand sich wonderful But the old Gespel Train will be 1 itt ringing With the shout ~ ~of the: ~wloritied throng; - i ge Who are on tile vection with, Jesus~ me q You afte invited to 80. along. q wa when most: ~ptorle take; de y. But when tmp ad cation | a 3 in my mansion of gold in the sky,~ I will. be with my Saviour forever, With: Him sit on His ~ heavenly throne All the days will he, ong, folk vA, When my~ Savior takes me:to His home. sepeisl Sting down on the mniks of <p ye | fore Cis? i bidet eye:

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Brownsville Weekly News
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Page 5
Publication
Flint, MI
January 20, 1940
Subject terms
African Americans -- Michigan -- Flint -- Newspapers
Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers

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"Brownsville Weekly News." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35170401.1940.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 9, 2025.
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