Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 38]

oe cast. ie li alee ae he a ee ae >. ~~BRON ZE REPORTER, el FE ace SATURDAY. AUG. 30, 1958 The Socia ~Visiting here~ from Boston, Mrs. Martin Best, the sister Mabel Gordon of E. Ninth Street. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Williams of Lapeer Street entertained guests Saturday night honoring Mrs. Williams~s sister and brother-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Thorne of New York City. Those in attendance were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Garrett, Mr. and Mrs. Willie Broady, Mr..and Mrs. Darwin Davis. of Detroit, Mr. and Mrs. Berlin Dobson, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond L. Davis and Mrand Mrs. James Todd. s+ The Shrine and Umbrella Club will present an indoor picnic Saturday, August 30, at 2 p.m. tintil at the Rose of Sharon Hall. s+ Attorney and Mrs. Herman Gibson are the proud parents of a lovely baby girl, Carol Elaine, born August 22 at St. Joseph Hospital. The Gibsons have two other children, Joan, 5 and ~ j. Whirl Massachusetts are Mr. and q and_ brother-in-law. ~ Mrs. e+ % ~ Miss Betty Wilder of Owen} ~ Street ~is. vacationing in Chicago} and Kansas City, Missouri = & relatives and friends. +2 4 Benita Reid, Marshall Burns, oRbert Finkles, Josephine Walk er. and the Royal: Angels are among the vocal stylist appearing in the benefit show at the. Frolic | ~ Show Bar Sunday, August 31, at} 2 8 p.m. | _This event will be prdsented by the tSarlight: Club. Proceeds will go to the TB Sanitarium. * ~ & Misses Rene and. Debra Mitchell of Liberty Street. will be the house guests. of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Harvey, Detroit for two weeks. The young ladies will have a busy schcdule of horse. back riding and swimming. Make Breakfast the Best Meal of the Day For a secverpiireel bronkfast or company branch, Ham * n Eggs Goldenrod isa savory dish. ~ How are your family~s breakfast eating habits? Do they start off each day with a well-balanced morning meal? September, long celebrated as Better Breakfast Month, is the time to take a good look at breakfast habits. For this morning meal, which ~breaks the fast~ since the previous day~s ~dinner, can well be your most important meal of the day. Children, and working adults (including homemakers, too) need the nutrition of a well planned breakfast to start the day. This meal should |. supply from 1/4 to~1/3 of the daily food Ss rd good breakfast includes fruit, a protein dish or cereal, futtered toast or rolls and plenty ef milk to drink. You will probably choose a simple menu on weekdays, when time is at a pre- | mium; but.on weekends, when there are no buses to catch, _~ not take a little extra time to Prepare a special meal? Here~s a breakfast planned for such a leisurely morning or for brunchtime entertaining: Ham~n Eggs Goldenrod combines two breakfast favorites in a smooth cream sauce. Serve it over chow cuits and kine butter.- Broiled grapefruit to start and plenty of milk to drink compléte the menu. Ham ~n Eggs Goldenrod 5 hard-cooked eggs 1 eup finely diced cooked ham move yolks. Press yolks through a fine sieve and set aside. Chop whites coarsely and combine with ham. Melt butter in saucepan over low heat; blend in flour. Add milk stirring constantly. Cook luntil sauce is smooth and thick ~SORORITY F HEADS SERVE WORLD'S LARGEST BUNBURGER~Mrs. Patricia Roberts Harris, left, Washington, D. C., executive director, Delta Sigma Theta, and Mrs. Carey Maddox Preston, right, Chicago, administrative secretary, Alpha Kappa Alpha, took time | their busy convention schedules in Washington last week to assist Youth out fro Work Director Calvin Hughes, above center, 12th Street YMCA, in serving the world~s largest bunburger to Y-day campers. Bélow, ~at extreme left, Miss Rosemary Tyler, consumer|consultant for Carnation~ Company, Washington, lends hand in the treat to more ~than sixty youngsters. Made from Carnation evaporated milk recipe, the bunburger measured 2~ 4~ x 3~ 2~, and was made of choice beef~topped with cheese~and served on a giant Sunbeam bun. Los Angeles milk.products firm made and donated bunber gers. 5 - Ike~ s Only Negro Cabinet Member Asked To Resign some. t ~ aSknNGTON. D. C.~J. Ernest Wilkins, only Negro in the United States Government with Cabinet status, last (1/2 pound, week refused to confirm or deny a report that he was being 1/4 coy pg ousted to make way for George C. Lodge, son of UN Amsa mile bassador Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. he and pepper, to taste | __ When asked to comment on the chee mein noodles or buttered | Of his expected ouster, Wilkins |to hold a ~Little Cabinet~ potoast cups said,-~~Not a word,~ the equiva- | sition sinte the administration of Shell eggs, cut in half and re- lent of no comment,. william ward Taft. In 1911 the ate Willi ~H. Lewis of Boston served as~ an Assistant Attorney General. Mr. Wilkins has been ill. At ~Rumors: have Fcbihsled for inle-: that...Secretary of ames P. Mitchell,. was Lo dump Mr. Wilkins, s first colored person Labor: J planning who- is~ ~th ened. Stir in ham and egg whites; then season to taste with salt and Pep er. Serve over chow mein. les or buttered toast cups; top! with sieved egg yolks. Makes 6 servings. To Make Buttered Toast Cups, cut crusts from slices of soft bread. Spread butter on both sides and press into muffin pans, mein noodles, along with hot bis Bake at 375~ until golden. SEEIN~ In nearby Las Vegas, Louie Pops Armstrong is.making merry with a terrific money~getting idea~opera and jazz mixed~ into one show~Marguerite. Piazza is an opera star~Pops is a jazzman~together they tear the house down~and The _ Sands counts the dough~With them are 12 Texas Copa Girls~and with Pops is Velma Middleton, who sings ~St Louis Blues.~ In its last three weeks~Larry Steele~s ~Smart Affairs of 1959~ at Club Harlem in Atlantic City ~was spiced with Mauri Leighton~s suggestive songs.~she came in from Miami for the occasion~ meanwhile, Arthur Lee Simpkins ~a Latin Quarter (NY fixture)~ is showing off his voice~and if you ever thought spirituals and semi-classical music would not STATE. FAR AUG. 29~SEPT.7 then you~d have to hear the. magic of Arthur Lee Simpkins and how |, his powerful voice stops the cus- | ' lieve~, STARS go over with a bang among a bunch of noisy, happy folk~ tomers cold ~ and leaves their |: hand suspended until his song is ended~Doing such as ~I Be~Just A Wearing For|: You~, ~Granada~ and others~he captivates his audiences such as Paul Robeson~afid surely you~ ve || never heard ~Ave Maria~ in a nightclub at 2 a.m.~Well~Sim- | pkins does it and the audience || won~t let him get off the stage. Della Reese searching for another hit record~meanwhile, is booked at ~Mister Kelley~s in Chicago for a stint this winter~No matter how they make: over ~Imitation of Life~ many movie ~fans feel the plot~ is too~ outdated and the Negro has progressed too far to bring it back ~Jamaica~, now in its 36th week ~has come right back to the top, taking in more than $40,000 after taking 6 weeks vacation. ~ Fine Pointing and Peperhanging INSURED UP TO ~ YEARS TO PAY Wilbur S. Jenkins~ FLINT DECORATING CO. TELEPHONE CE $-5148 ALL- wai SPECIAL PLAIN SKIRT ANY SWEATER ~TRY~OUR~SHIRT~LAUNDRY.. Melson Cleaners 4_HOUR~SERVICE | 1312 Lapeer ~as one of America~s foremost ee * Douglas should know. He remembers the old time stock companies well, for it was afi the Bonstelle Civic Theatre ~ in Melvyn Douglas came home last week. Douglas, who rates stage and screen actors, visited Detroit professionally for the third time in little more than two years. The current visit was occas-| ioned by) his introduction of a ~new. family type comedy cur - and Fork | |sure to professional: theatre in _4in winter. They have no perman Ib Sn pesto rently called ~Sweet and Sour.~ Unlike) many such tryouts ~Douglas |used the Northland) ~Playhouse, one of the Detroit area tent theatres, as his spring-| ' board. When | asked why, over a ~coffee cup in Yeaman~s Knife Club, he said, ~Theatre is like every other commodity. ~You have'to take it to the people. That's where these summer tent theatres, which are very similar ito our old type stock companies, May be the renaissance of the istage.~. Lauds. Summer Theatre % ~Take Michigan as an examiple. Not only does it become lincreasingly difficult to draw an: audience in the downtown theatres jin some cities, but in visiting uch places as Traverse \City and Milan you are reaching audiences which have no expo ent buildings, and have actually inever been explored. Anything which revives theatre. interest ~helps stimulates. There are ~hundreds of thousands of people ~ \ es i | % Q | Eo $ 2 M. Douglas ~ Detroit,. Michigan's Mast stock: company that he first achieved) star billing. ~ sch Met In Detroit =~~ ~ It was here that he and your: writer first met. The writer, an usher, boasts ~of having once: played with Douglas, walking. on as one of three monks in: the last act trial scene of Shaw's. ~St. Joan~. << ~ That the writer never again trod boards dampened not his~ interest in theatre. For Douglas, who has risen to recognition as one of the greats of ~our time, the early days are still important. Important too, is anyone interested in theatre. Douglas Reare e Pome 39% h End Laundry ~ Wa Finish All Shoat, Buttons.and Minor: Repairs Ries. Myurs #- ce is a dedicated professional. Hb the meeting last spring of the International Labor Organization, Mr. Mitchell exercised his prerogative and replaced Mr. Wilkins as the aid of the American Government delegation. As the Assistant Secretary of Labor in charge of international affairs, Mr. Wilkins has headed the elegation.. We The International Labor aie ization is a tripartite organization representing 70 countries. It. is the only international organization in which the governments, the employers and the workers of the 70 countries are members and meet together. The presence of Mr. Wilkins at ILO meetings in Geneva has been regarded as a good antidote to Russian propaganda. Soviet Russia, by virtue of its ~membership in.the United Nations, asked for and obtained a seat in the ILO conferences. Appearing with Mr. Wilkins last Feb. 3 before the House Appropriations Committee, Mr. Mitchell testified that ~if we don~t put our best foot forward, if we don~t approach our meeting in the ILO with the best kind of knowledge we conceivably have, then we will permit the Russians to make greater propaganda of their position in the ILO than they: have.~ CLUB CALENDAR ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA SORORITY Basileus, Mrs. Boyce Buckner Meets, Third Saturday, 3 p.m. CATALINA MOTORCYCLE CLUB President, Danny Williams Meets; Second and Fourth Saturday DELTA: SIGMA THETA SORORITY. President, Mrs. Salters Wadsworth Meets, Second Friday, 7:30 p.m. FAIRWAY GOLF CLUB President, Samuel J. Cox Meets, First and Third Saturday 1 p.m. St. John Center f LINTAASSOCIATION OF COLORED WOMEN'S CLUBS ident, Mrs. Janie Nelson: ts, Third Tuesday, 12 noon FLINT BRANCH N.A.A.C.P. President, Herman Gibson Meets, Third Sunday, 3:30 p.m. At Pioneer Hall FLINT CITIZENS CLUB | President, Rozier Phillips THE FUXES President, Mrs. Dorothy Fergusson Meets Second Sunday ~ FRONTIERS CLUB President, Al Loving | Meets, Second Tuesday, 12:15 p. m. THE GLEANER CIRCLE, KINGS DAUGHTERS President, Mrs. Janie Nelson: Meets, First and Second Sunday, 5 p.m. HELRING HAND ~CIRCLE DAUGHTERS President, Mrs. F. R. Leach Meets, First and Third Thursday, 2 p.m. LAPALOMA SHRINE CLUB OF GENESEE TEMPLE NO. 550~ELKS President; Mrs. Lelia Maddox Meets, First and Third Sunday, 6 p.m. ~ ROSE OF SHARON LODGE President, William Whitson Meets, First and Third Saturday, 7 p.m. At 4212 Maines ROYAL STAR CHAPTER O.E.S. Matron, Mrs. Laurentine Williams. Meets, First and Third Monday, 7:30 p.m. VEHICLE CITY LODGE Exaulted Ruler, James Mackey Meets, Second and Fourth Sunday, 4 p.m. At Lodge Hall VEHICLE CITY GOLF CLUB President, Howard Bannister Meets, Second Sunday, 8 p.m. At Sportsman~ s Club THE ZAGS tx President, Mrs. Marion Williams,,,,. Ste, Meets, Second and Fourth Friday,..8: pm. 4\ Is your club listed? Send information to the BRONZE REPORTER, 1301 Lapeer. Send us your club news. STEWART SKATING CLUB President, Cleodia Myles. Meets,, Thursday, 6:40 p.m. At Stewart School. Urged To Halt Worker's Exploitation NEW YORK~Governor Averell Harriman has been urged ~to enforce with vigor and sensitivity~ New York State laws designed to protect migatory farm laborers from a ~~vicious system of economic exploitation~ by labor agents and growers. Following an extensive investigation of labor camps and work ing sites in six upstate counties, Herebt Hill, labor secreary of the National Association for the Advancement of: Colored People, submitted a report to the Governor, on August 14, calling for enforcement. of ~all the statutes and administrative codes relating to migratory farm labor.~ The report was made public here today. HEY RO e _~ FRE THEATRE TICKET wit YOUR PURCHASE of $2.00 or ~MORE in SCHOOL SUPPLIES E! FREE! é i Bae, > PI Ticket Good as a Paid Admission fo ~ NORTHLAND DRIVE-IN @. DORT DRIVE-IN WEST ~SIDE DRIVE-IN THEATRES and * MICHIGAN or # WORTOWN THEATRES

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Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 38]
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Page 4
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Flint, MI
August 30, 1958
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African Americans -- Michigan -- Flint -- Newspapers
Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers

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"Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 38]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0005.038. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 3, 2025.
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