Brownsville Weekly News

_ subdued ~monotone shades, will be ' as bright as Easter eggs, but, - they are completing a costtsmme in one of the gayer tones, will lean |: he Cou. * AGRE oun. Bey. ~ ae e 8 ~ [x -~S ~ _saTUnDAt eee all fe ane a Wide Variety if Of Colors To Be Selected ' By HAZEL G. REED (Associated Negro Press a. Fashion Editor) You Wak in the Parad.....; nel Your coat..._will be navy, black, beige or brown, if you lean toward conservatism, or one of the bright shades, spring green, fireweed red, yellow. ~or ~violet pastel plaid or vividly. checked, if you~re going all the way with 1941. Whatever. the shade through, the interest will be tricks of tailoring such as _ soft shirring. box pleats and set-in belts. The. shoulders will be rounded and soft, the sleeves neat and. slim or the graceful dolman type. Fitted: coats with minutely gored backs also are good, ahd the perennial reefer style will be many an Easter choice. Your ~suit... -also will step out in the ever-reliable shades ~or follow; the color road to glory. It will have a longer-line jacket with a pelated or gored skirt, the same soft-shoulders seen in coats, dressmaker details for smartness, and classic lines supercharged with interesting~ pockets, nifty buttons or other clever ~tricks of this season~s | tailoring. HAT WILL MATCH Your-hat.,--will match ~ your costume or add a note of contrast. As forecast sometime ago, its avow~d aim and ~intent will be prettiness. It may he all flowers, taffeta or feit, and. it may be extremely small, iarge and geometric in shape of any of the shapes or sizes between. It~s cntirely up to you, the military picture being endlessly varied this season. With navy, rhu-* barb pink swathed in blue veiling is very chic, unusual blues ~ are teaming. up with brown and snappy greens are ~~ with almost any color. Your secessories....1f addirig the finishing touch to one of the more if more toward dependablé ~ brown, beige, white or chamois, PUMPS WILL STEP Shoes...:0f patent, calf, gabardine with faille trime, in colors from black to cameo beige, will Step gaily along in the Easter promenade. Patent bow pumps in high or low heels will be fashion favorites. The flats have a schoolgirl look that is irrestible. Hosé will be any of che new shades which harmonize with the costume. Your boutonniere....may match the poises on yqur hat, if ~ your bonnet is the flower-laden type; it may be. jeweled pin, a fresh or artificial nosegay, but it will be gay and. spring-like...,hyacinths, jonquils; tuplips.:..and will add the final note of rea! Easter glamour. WETNESS RECORD WHIPPING WILMINGTON, Del. ~ (ANP)~ Six prisoners, who pleaded guilty tc 19 robberies and one larceny charge and: have been sentenced to five years imprisonment. in the New Castle~ county workhouse, were lashed ~240 times Saturday befor: 75 spectators. Warden Elwood Wilson, White, applied the lashes with a "bat: onine tails strap on the bare@ backs of the prisoners in eight.:-minutes. ~ HOTEL MACK $0 Teurist & Transit Rooms, $1 Up. 848 Bedford Pl., N. E. VE fas won Atlanta, Ga. Free Parking. ~ everywhere. Friends, Love thre ~our club. All types of oe si Ke, Mr pa or Sterling Sliver, FREE: 4 @ sparkling simulated sacuthinn. tite ti order for # brilKant. oa diamond ting, a perfect reproduction of genuine Beate rings, ~tn eith-., at the back in the form of magic | | tablespons butter, rat Well-dressed Miss \ Parade Is Minutely Described 8 By M FLINT. BROWNSVILLE NEWS, iar MICHIGAN th usual crop~ of June, brides. for. bridal clothes. ~So tn rn Belle~ bridal costume of white silk marquisette; ~ ces right, lace trimmed white silk marquisette bridal dress ~Wedding bells are ringing merrily and. will has pleated ruching edging the off-shoulder yoke, continue to ring~as the season promises to see more marriages than ever before~not including At a recent New: York fashion show many silk sheers were shown ~ Above are some of the models. The garden wedding found the bride and her attendants all gowned in silk marquisette, as shown left and center. In true southern belle style the bride is wearing three petticoats under her white wedding gown, the first being a hoop skirt, the second satin, and the last a matching silk marquisette with self pleated ruffles edging the hem and papliqued with real chantilly lace. The grown cotton and silk line sleeves. costume. and butterfly sleeves. Queen of Scots headdress matching mitts. The bridesmaid jis quisette with: long full sleeves wrist with beads, and worn with yellow horsehair hat trimmed with velvet ribbon. bridal gown of the same material. the full skirt are accented by vertical ruffles of and forms A pompadour bonnet is worn with:th's Silk Sheers Popular With The Brides Marquisette Chosen for Two Bridal Costumes Modeled at Show center, atttodant's dress in yellow; With it is shown a Mary with short veil and in yellow martrimmed ~at ~the |~ Right is another The lines. of lace, which trims the wedge neck~epaulettes over the long fitted By ARDEN H DUANE (For the ANP) To me, Lent is always a pleasant interlude..the first lovely signs of to spring... the wew season are beginning appear. ', ~This week I have been thinking sbout the meals I should give my family and my friends during this betwixt-and-between time of the year. There just can~t be any dull meals during Lént. We can stiil provide balanced meals without meat. Here are some _ meatless dishes and I do hope they will furnish~ ideas for good Lenten meals at your house. SALMON LOAF SUPREME: One pound can of salmon, juice of one lemon, one onion, chopped, two one can of condensed tomato soup, oné half cup milk, one egg, beaten, two cups cooked rice, seasoning, one half cup buttered crumbs. Flake fhe salmon sprinkle the lemon juice over it. Cook the onion in the butter until tender but not brown, mix the tomato soup, milk and beaten egg. Add to the onion and butter. Add the cooked rice to this and combine with the sal bread pan or other loaf-shaped baking dish. Cover with buttered crumbs and bake in g-slow over until the crumbs aré nicely browned. Tt may. be a good idea to set the pan in a-shaliow pan of boiling water. Bake in: a moderate oven about twenty-five minutes. ~ SAVORY MAGARONI: Winter is slowly changing into mon. Season well. Put into greased [| and pepper and pour over maca-~ roni. Bake in moderate oven about fifteén minutes until cheese is melted. O26SEROLE OF SEA FOOD: One cup~ crabmeat, one and one half cups shrimps, one half pint oysters, mils three tablespoons butter, three tablespoons flour, one teaspoon chopped parsley, salt, pepper and mace, butter bread crumbs. Use fresh or canned shrimps and crabmeat. Remove bones som crabmeat. If wet packed shrimps are used, save liquor drained from them. Remove intestinal veins from shrimp. Heat oysters slightly and drain. To the shrimp and oyster liquofs add enough milk to maX& two cups. Melt butter, blend in flour and add milk gradually. Add chopped parsley and seasonings. Mix with the seafood. Turn into. a casserole. Cover with buttered crumbs and bake in a moderate oven until thoroughly hot and MORNAY: Two poundds fillets of haddock, hake of flounder, one small onion, one bay loaf, one sprig of thyme, or one eighth teaspoon dried thyme leaves, two or three spoons flour, one cup grated cheese. Wash the fish. Place in a_ large saucepan and cover with hot water, cnion, D2y leaf, thyme, parsley and Really No Problem To Feed Your Family During Lenten Arden H. Duane Gives F ine List Of Sea-Food Recipes. TUNA FISH PUFF: One cup stale bréad crumbs, one teaspoon salt, one tablespoon prepared mustard, one~-tablespoon minced onion, two cups milk, one cup. tuna fish, flakes, four eggs. Combine thé crumbs salt, mustard onion and milk in~a@ sauce pan and. cook over a low heat for ten minutes. Then add the tuna fish, remove from the stove and pour over the eggs, which have been slightly beaten. Pour into greased custard cups, set in a pan of warm water and bake in a moderate oven for forty-five minutés or until a silver knife inserted in the center comes out clean. CURRIED OYSTERS: One quart oysters, one haf cup butter, two cups oyster liquor and whole milk, three tablespoons flour, pirich of salt, pinch of pepper, one half team spoon curry powder. Sarfte oysters in half the butter until edges curl. Remove from 5 E Te schik is z ~ +3 fo 7 s Hf; i;: E 4 _ | scription of the attitude of the war -+ department and the U. S. Public By HELEN Co: omes now the season when. men, too, for that matter.. The skin is an, excretory organ, as you all know. If the body is active, doing hard. labor, the sweat glands will exude as much as two pints of waste fluids a day. Certain solid substances, like fats and ammonium salts, will be deposited upon the epidermis. As a rule, the daily bath with friction and u heavy brush, fresh undies several times a week, and the free application of a dusting powder will suffice to keep the skin free of cffensive odors. But not always There are cases that persist despite the most fastidious care. These cases usually have a background of physical disturbances, require at the attention and treatment of.a médical man. BLAME NERVOUSNESS ~Nervousness is sometimes resnonsible. It acts as fear, causes.the flesh to be moist and cold. Heavy eaters, though they may not exercise at all, often sweat heavily. Foods that undergo putrefactive. changes in the intestinal tract have an unplessant effect upon. glands, causing: them to pours ~forth their. odorous exudations in. Daily Bath ~ |Not Banish BO ~ (Distributed By King Features Syndicate, Inc.) JAMESON that most difficult of all. beauty subjects must be considered, excessive skin moisture: and the unLeng odors that result from it, in easy.one about which to write, Thowands. op women, aud Sls. carry an aura that otfends the public nose. One waits to keep miles way from them; that they should cut down on proteins of which they.usually eat 169 much, stoke up on vegetables, fruits and green salads. The nost active of all glands ~ct n-the armpits. If these can be made. to ease up their work, many times thetrouble is finished. At all cosmetic counters can be found deordorants or deterrents. These coMe in many forms~pastes, powe ders, liquids~and chemists have made them hetter and more effective every year. FOLLOW DIRECTIONS Some of: these preparations dry the skin slightly so the pores are closed. No'-danger in.that; there are thousands. of pores elsewhere on the body to carry. on. All these products shoUld be. applied-exactly according to direetions; oftimes | anly ~a few drops are. necessary~ to. stay the flood of moisture that is constantly present, It- may ~happen that they -have ~to be used ~not oftener than two or three times a summer: Considering that - the woman who carries the baneful body odor. is just about a social outedst, you'd~ think that she would make every: excess, Specialist, who. have ma strveys saw that these individuals should never eat ontons or garlic, porsibie ~effort among~ ~her. Sellow -croahares. NEW YORK-~ (ANP) ~ Two resolutions protesting the army ban against using Negro nurses. in the defense program were passed by separate white organizations meeting here last week, according to Mrs. Mabel Keaton Staupers, secretary, National Association of | Colored Graduate Nurses, Meeting at the -Hotel Penncyl- | vania on Tuesday evening, the New York State Nurses association, District 13, heard Mrs. Staupers~ de health service toward colored nurses, and proceeded to pass 4 resolution ~condemning this discriminatory policy. Invitation to speak a few days later before the Catholic Laymen~s union resulted in such indignation on. the part of that body that a similar resolution was introduced and favorably acted upon..In both instances thé resolutions are being forwarded to the~ war department... Mrs. Staupers said that those Z OMEGAS TO DISCUSS DEFENSE | 1 seteetsoosce 10~ a eeecctenee 10c Can be Beautiful eereeece 15e of energy and appetite, or some other form of periodic, functional | building energy, Siete tins a Solar a able? ~Why not do of | w haearee eee ibe hl = % There are two ways to take it spain Army Bias Against Race Nurses Rapped attending the meeting of nurses ~promised to. convey knowledge of ~this condition ty other organiza-. tions with the hope that they too will take similar steps in helping to abolish this prejudice. Vigorous efforts, Mrs. Staupers actied, are being made to win fér colored nurses, the same opportunities to work for national defense as are being) accorded to white nurses. ae en | New Cigenisa ~i Mrs. _ Mariorie Stectork: Soya, whup ln pick ~ood Wh Hea wee iestin piace n'y 3 > nape BS atta of the National Beauty Culturists and Bénevolerit Association of Mme. C.. J. Walker Agents, Inc. Tides: te redcetetsilice wen, Disa, Abe~ EF, Burnette, first vice-president of the ~Walker Company, will be national organizer. The Association, organized in 1926, provides for. bene-. fits, sick dues and free legal advice, the latter to be furnished by Dott Atpnily Sinan Wane See who isJegal adviser. red vast f PITS Housewives Resent _ Offensive pitboards _ PITTSB Pa. ~ (ANP)~ two billboard ads as ~unbecoming.and insulting to. the Negro race~, members of the Housewives~ guild lodged - vigorous protests with the manufacturers of Kelvinator. refrigerators and the. Fairmont Co. against their tse of Negro ~ subjects. in |. signs. which are displayed all over the city. ~ Bf cic ~manner. ~ feel, that they a the. Neero. bass Th the Kelvinator billboard.sign, |. a little coloréd boy: is pictured -con suming a large - piece of water- | melon, This the guild said ~ does-},, rot meet with the. approval of the. public, it tends to belittle Negroes | ~and tends. to ~reflect a time-worn ~ fee 7 A cps atta P: mont~s better butter.~ ~Mrs, Alma Iilery, president ~of the - guild; flayed ~the the sign as un-. Sradiedicentory. We want. those. sigtis removed~ at ofce~, she said, ~and have sent a formal. rfotest to. both- companies. We.do not. ~| For, no matter-how you shout~ it; OFFER ~GRADUATE COURSE. NASHVILLE ~ (ANP) -- For the fourth consecutive year, Meharry. Medical college: will ~conduct. a post graduate course in medicine, " from June. 2-14, designed to meet the practical needs of the ~_ in general practice.. Your new cotton trocx will lead a~ busy life from dawn to dark, doras - household, work....calling the children at school.... visiting @ friend. A merry-go-round ex Hi i" hil S: | i | i H elf ul i 2 A: Bil i: STYLE FIRSTS she won't really care~about jt. She won~t know the many = tear drops: you..have shed: If you think somé praise-is due her Now-is the. time to: give it to her~ For ~Mrs. Crawfotd~cannot read her~.. tombstone~ when: ~she is dead "(More than. fame and~ more. than money; ~Is ~the comment, kind: and-sunny ede thd caiaon ~warm approval of

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Brownsville Weekly News
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Page 4
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Flint, MI
April 5, 1941
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/35170401.1941.009. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 2, 2025.
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