Bronze Reporter [Volume: 2, Issue: 4]
ae THE BRONZE REPORTER ~~e ae a oes Saturday, October 8, 1955 MODERN _ SHOE REPAIR NEW FALL SHOE | STYLES - -~ Complete Service For Th e Shoe. 4617 S. SAGINAW STREET ||Hearing Aid Use Grows DINING ROOM. x bs Home Cooking iz Phone SU 9-9975 4008 Industrial Ave. ' SUNHEAT FURNACE OIL SMinimizes Burner Failures), 7 New ingredient keeps burner; Umezzles and oil filters clean... | minimizes rust and scale in fuel ~storage tanks. (Higher Heating Value More btu's per gallon~more (per dollar. *S A Promivm Ferucice Ui: ~ oo etegeler Pele => _ CORPORATION * ~ITY PRODUCTS - PHONE CE 2-3151 - 2061 S. Saginaw heat J wana ~lof the hearing aid~s dark ages. j cently begun to wear hearing aids. on glasses. ~ij them~ willy-niliy. Whereas ~| getting a hearing aid unti) his imust do something or miss much Several friends of mine, men in their vigorous 40s, have re For some reason, they seem.a little-more apologetic about them than does 'the:man who first puts Perhaps that~ ecause a man who newis glass lertainly must, in time, get M~and accept a man who is slightly hard of hearing may, out: of vanity, put off hearing is so impaired that he of wlat goes o1 around him, which: is a footish procedure. ',| Modern hearing aids are so inconspicuous and so efficient that no one who needs one sh duld be deterred from getting one. A leading manufacturer tells me that one and a half million people in the United States wear hearing aids. But another five million shouldwear them, but do not, mainly out-of false pride and vanity..;. Here'are some rules in hearingaid etiquette: 1~Be natural when talking with a hearing-aid user. 2~Never shout, but always rememb~~ your voice~ is competing for recognition with the every surrounding nose. Even the finest modern hearing aid is not se the voice of the speaker to the exclusion: of ~surrounding~ noise, 3~Never change your normal enunciatior~ pattern. Don~t try to it just confuses~ the listener. 4~Never tap anyone using a modern hearing aid on the arm or shoulder to attract attention. Anyone whose hearing has been rehabilitated with a good hearing aid will strongly resent this relic Good-breeding is the art of showihg men, by external signs, the internal regard we have for hem. It arises from good sense, improved by conversing ~ with good company. ~ Cato |Role Of Parents lective and cannot concentrate on}. oversimplify your pronunciation |. | | 4 In Delinquency Hit SPOKANE, Wash., Oct. 6 ~ Sunday school teachers should try to reach aduits as well as children in an effort to combat ~parental delinquency,~ the president of the National Sunday School Association said yesterday. _ By contacting adults, said Dr. can be strengthened, thus helping to combat parental, as well as juvenile; delinquency.~ Dr. Er\:kson spoke at the opening session of the 10th National Sunday School Convention, which attracted a record first-day registration of 1,265 delegates. Ministers and laymen from. the United States, Canada and Hawali are attending the 3-day. meeti ng} The delegates were told there is a trend toward return to the. attitude that the Bible is the in fallible word of.God. Steals From Mail | CHICAGO, Oct. 6 ~ A _federal court jury convicted Frank Boyd, 36, a sybstitute postal clerk, of stealing 50 cents from a letter and Judge John P. Barnes sentenced him to a year and a day, in prison. Are you wondering what folks are buying, selling, renting? Who offers some special service that you. need? Check the ~ Ads in this Newspaper Lid Compliments of... HAMANN~S!: _ PH. CE 3-9053 ns _BEER and WINE 401 East 8th St. GROCERIES _ ~BEVERAGES rs OPEN ~;:30 ~a.m. - 11:30 P.-m fe | fe |}loaves, of bread per wk., amounts to $5,980.00 per wk. or Do You Kn Onexef the-yurpases pPaThe | Flint ~ivie<Organization. is to create an aWareness among the Negro population of those businesses that have _quie put democracy intO practicewithaut giving lip service to it: Are we interested in getting the full benefit of our spending power? The impact of our collective spending power...might be an amazing thing to watch. - Do. you. know? That, the approximate 4000 Negro families in the city of Flint constime 26000 or "1,452,600 loaves per ~year. This $311,560.00 per year, at the average price of.23 per loaf. This information. is based on the study, made: in 1953 by Mr. Frank J. -LCorbett and Mr. Arthur J. Ed munds of The Urban League, and # ~WE DO IT OR UDO IT~ |, _ FLUFF-DRY - LAUNDRY |, {Reasonable Rates):. "2801 S. Saginaw St. PHONE CE 8-6011 a on - i ei ho eee ree ee: 4 } v y M | a 4 * ~ 4 b: og | F lint's Oldest Used Cas |~ WE BUY, SELL, & TRADE ~. WHY NOT GIVE.US A TRY? ~$818 N. SAGINAW ST. + Re eee OTOR SALES F otitgs Dealers tes ea 9-6031 T | v | | OW... additional spot surveys made by The | Flint Civic Organization. These facts might be interpreted to mean that Negroés are ~bread-eaters~, but-I would like to point out that which -is most pertinent, namely, that there are 23 wholesale baking companies in the city of Flint. DO YOU KNOW THAT of the 23 only one, The | Hardy Baking Company a Negro Salesman. ~. ~.. ~ This Negro salesman, Mr. Corley Page,:has been one of the 19 salesman with Hardy. Baking Company for 4% years and has been! a. steady and diligent sales-.m | Have. we as NEGRO CIT?%Zz béen~ aware ~of: his. position?) Do--we buy Holsum Bread? If not, why not? Bee es -I_ hereby urge every NEGRO CITIZEN to buy HOLSUM BREAD to show our appreciation to Mr. Hardy for his fair employment} practice- in- hiring a Negro without the benefit of F. E. P. press} re. Live for something! Do good jand leave behind you a monu ment] of virtue that the storm of time |can never destroy., Write your ~name in kindness, love and |mercy on the hearts of the thou- |}. |sands you come ~in contact*~with, year by year, and you will~never ~be forgotten. Your name, your deeds, will be as legible on the stars|on the brow of evening. Good |deeds will shine as the stars of. heaven. ~ Chalmers Attention FEINT CIVIC ORGANIZATION _ MEMBERS Meeting Friday Night 8:30 p. m. which makés Holsum Bread, has. hearts you leave behind, as the~ WASHINGTON ~ (ANP) The United States~ recent decision. to vlace more Negroes in forcign service positions in India has had no effect on the betierment of race relations between the two countries, according K. B. Tandan, page relations officer at the Indian Embassy, e Speaking at the season~s first meeting of the Central Press Club last week, the Indian official pointed out that the United States is rather naive to assume that it can win the confidence of the Indian people just by sending a few Negroes to that country in high official: positions. Indians feel that such action is merely ~window dressing~ there is no real sincerity of purpose. eG He further implied that the To* issue~in..this country. ~That is a here in the United States. Man cannot. degrade woman without ~himself falling into degradation; he cannot elevate her without at the same time elevat | and 4 people of India are not particu-|' larly concerned about the racial} problem which should be settlea| Tandan pointed out also that | |Negro Diplomats ~Window Dressing,~ Indian Says the American propaganda agen-~ | Information cies like the U. S.; F 3 4 ohh at, service and the Voice of America have lost their effectiveness in ie India because they -tend to per suade the country from its neu- | tral position toward China. The public affairs officer was | rather critical of the book written about ~An American In India~ by J. S. Redding, and about articles released by Carl ~ Rowan. > AT Flint Branch - NAACP LEO A. GREENE, Chairman Canaan Baptist.Church. TILL PROTEST MEETING Sunday, October 16 (3:30PM. _ fing himself. ~ Alexander Walker oe < > 767 E. Stewart Ave. TOWNSEND REALTY ~YOUR KEY TO A BETTER DEAL IN HOMES, FARMS, OR BUSINESS~ COMPLIMENTS ~ EE ROGER B. TOWNSEND, Broker. Ph. SU 9-4942 WE HAVE APPRECIATED YOUR FRIENDSHIP AND WE WISH THE BRONZE REPORTER MUCH SUCCESS '.*-| GRAPHIC PRESS. => | 1517 N. Dort Hwy., Flint, Mich, PHONE. CE 2-3603 & ~ "HAS MORE POWER-: ee 124 E. 8th Street ae gt wnat ae ie peeenrerer wre J
About this Item
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- Bronze Reporter [Volume: 2, Issue: 4]
- Canvas
- Page 6
- Publication
- Flint, MI
- October 8, 1955
- Subject terms
- African Americans -- Michigan -- Flint -- Newspapers
- Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
- Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers
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- Black Community Newspapers of Flint
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https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0002.004
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https://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/blackcommunitynews/35177303.0002.004/7
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"Bronze Reporter [Volume: 2, Issue: 4]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0002.004. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 5, 2025.