Flint Spokesman [Volume: 1, Issue: 1]

- SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1946 = sm: kas ~BRICKER BOOMS ~ Eseries ath Bricker chuckled and said, Forme " WASHINGTON ~ ~That ~Goy. John W, Bricker, of Ohio,|is something in the laps of the~ ae Seep présidetitial possibil | gods.~ ~ _ ~~ ~ity: for 1948, said Monday h| | thought Rep. ~Clarerice Brown,,6|. BRICKER, who is an unop-; Ohio, would ~make a might | posed Republican~ candidate. for able chairman~ for the Repub|the United States Senate this _ lican Watienal Committee, pe 3 Brown is Ohid~s' choite~ for th ~job, Briéker added. The remark soméwhat. damp éhed the prospects of Rep J ~ Carroll Reeee, Tennessee Repub. liean, who has been leading th Washington selections. ~THE NATIONAL. Committee year in Ohio, came here with |Thomas J, Herbert, former attorney-general, and candidate for Republican nomination for. gov ernor at the * May 7 primary. Bricker, said Herbert - would be nominated. |. Pe | | | will meet hete on. April, to general~ trend in~ the Midwest Shock av aubeelee. vol Jebewmere| V5 Republican. ~Hes predicted, Brownell, of New York, who is Republicans would vin House, ~resigning, -,{seats at Canton, Dayton, and | Akron, this year, from Demo Nobody ie betting that the! crats., Republicans hold 17 of cor mittee will take either} the: 23 Oftio seats now,: wn ot Reece, Reports, per-| sist~ that ~Many committee mem-: Bers - ~would prefer? someone not} Harry Rosental, proprietor, - oe bed the~ lower House} Harry's Market, 1223 E.,Long Po oe. vs pags i n | St., told police that ~about. 3:30: diliibek dtice a dwestern Re. a, m:, March 11, his place was ~ chairmen~ for Ar entered. by breaking.a_ glass thur E: Summerfield, Michigar ~nthe frokt dodo the k it member of the National Com:| a oo oOo~ agers - thittes:. ~However he stilt missing was. $43.in money, $21,-:, still is i | 75 in cigarettes, $|2 in smoked t <9 ~ ~ ~ ere horse~ class, ham, and $14 in see. 7 The ~Brown-Reece tug of wa | in part reflects the Taft-Bricke Load uney/ On every ship theré~s a painted mark which shows how low in the division in Ohio politics. water:she may safely be while car Asked whether he or: Taft would ~seek the ~48 nomination rying a ful! load. But that load varies depending on where and SOCIETY when the ship ts to sail. If she~s N OTEB;; K heading for tropical waters, where HARRY~S MARKET LOOTED 2? the seas areicalm, the mark is high: Similarly, she can. be loaded more: deeply in summer than m winter | their common problems. RepBy the Gadabou r: PONTI ~ C. Mich aoe because less allowance is necessary resentatives from over 25 city, Mich. ~ S - | for storms. There~s also a mark for h ivaeions Wernal! Mr, and Mrs; Charles E. Wil-} fresh water sailing since buoyancy, hae Organizes Sai tie liamg of 16 Esther Stréet wil | of 4 ship is less in fresh water, than Smith,. Neighborhood House; }. in salt. Willie Brown, Veterans; Doro célebrate their. 10th Wedding Anniversary; April 2nd. All of their friends <are wishing them - many such happy years togeth er; { e New Corn Syrup Produced by an. enzyme conversion process, a new corn syrup 50 per cent sweeter than other types has been developed. PASSING PARADE. By, Lee. Roberts sPONTIAC, MICH, ~ APNS~ | T ~have, a very good friend who | resides in Crvstal ~Beach, His name is Mr, Holmes. Mr. Hol- | mes is a very fine chap. He. is also~ a very interesting conversationalist. Mr, Holmes is also a Pvt. Gipson Feted at Party Mrs. Mary S. Gipson. feted her son at a very swanky party over the week end. The affair was a very lovely dinner party given at the American~ Legion Post, the propér atmosphere for one of Pontiac~s returning gallants Pvt, John Robert Gipson was in the. army for four years. He saw four years ~of oversea duty in the. Asiatic Theater of war. The master of ceremonies was the popular Albert Mor-| 4 keen Bible student, It is. en. } tions], edueational) and economgan. The entertainment ~ was | lightening, as ~well~ ag relaxing | tolie Post War News of Yiuth highlighted by the very talent- | git ang converse with him. |. Martha Smith. Ohio Council of ed John Gooseby. Aa enjoyable| His advice is~sound and con- Churches; Neppy Anderson, time was had by. all, structive and nine times out of | Norih High School; and iia ten times he is correct, He reminds me of &@ mathematic teacher I had in Juidior High School. Incidentally they both have the same name. It is a privilege to -know such an individual as _* Holmes, rs ' Twentieth, Century Scene of Annual Party _; A semi-formal party given~ by the ~Chums,~ taken the. spotlight. over the weekend, Over | one hundred guest attendéd this vely sumcenetul affair. Ky ither, Hillel Foundation; Richard Hauser,. East High | Stanly Mason Celebrates 52nd ~ School School: Audty Foley, Birthday ~ Mr, Stanley Mason of 57 Bag- j. ley Street celebrated his 52nd ~birthday ~Samay, March 17th. - Miss Helen Murphy Feted ag + Party i Murphy was feted ab a birthday. dinner patty at her home ims afternoon. Teeth Like Bones a Teeth are like bones in that they ~have several ~mineral ~: elements.. notably lime, in their make-up; they are supplied with Mood vesselé to carry food to the various parts of the tooth structure; and they are well supplied with nerves, as many of us learn from mF sgeperissien Do You Need _ Consult Prof. a E... Prince; - Vittorio Di Savoia, son. of the regent ~of Italy and grandson of the last king of Italy, whose abdication has opened the way to the throne for the boy Prince. Bis father is Prince pide ~MAY RULE ~RRALY:. ed envelope & birthdate, Complete line of psych:c sup. HUNT WILD BOAR... Shown is James Eynn, left; and Benny War~rew, Chicago Cub players who are ~| training on Catalina island, Calif. Titey took time off to look for wild boar in the hills on Catalina island. Bricker said he _ thought the thy Pinkerton, John Bowers, Thelma Thali, Jewish Community Council... Cosmopolitan Club~, USO; Roswell J. Caulk ~will act Chairmen of the panéls. | Allen, St. Phillips |. f~piscopal Church; Elizabeth Ann. Smith, First Community Church; and Robert Laird, West High. School wili present the religious, War Needs of Youth, Alice Pat-- terson, Campus YWCA; Martha | Kirkendall, and Geraldine Burrell, University; will discuss recrea bell Shumaker, will * ' presént Post War. ~Needs of Youth About Health, home end family, sists of three panels with Lee | Mitra, Kualumba, will ~talk on youth vian Hauser: giving a resume of a youth working on plans for a CityWid2 Cecil 0. Walker. Jalus A. Krug, 38, Madison, Wis., whe ret been appointed by President Truman as the new secretary of the KRUG SUCCEEDS ICKES. interior. He was ~formerly chairman of WPB and chief power engineer of TVA. Since leaving government service he has head@ed an engineering cempany. Krug - ~xpressed. his satisfaction in the way the interfor.départment fas been administered in the pot re Secretary Ickes, Youth Coafab: At YWCA This Week COLUMBUS, Ohic~(APNS) | The youth conference, sponsored by the Youth Department of the Columbus Urban ~League in observatice of World Youth Week, will be held at the Griswold YWCA, 65 So, Fourth Street March 22, 23: It has been organized to give youth an op-j{ portunity to discuss solutions, of Girl Scouts; Campus YMCA, Francisco. Young, and ~as Delorez social and cultural Post | South High School Capital Girl ~Reserves, The - afternoon session con Capital University and Joe Williamson discussing. the UNO Shirley Wilcox, Pinedale Coop; Melvin Payne, Shiloh Bap-. tist Church and Rudolph Womack, Central High School,. will present ~Occupation of the Conquered Countries.~ Madhusudan India; Ada Miranda, Puerto Rigo; and Dorothy Ho, 2 in the colonial and gemi-colori ial countries.: ~ The final session features. Visteering committee Youth ~ In 7th Ward Comm. Race COLUMBUS, Ohio~(APNS) Cecil O. Walker, 99 N, Mon- |: roe, announces his~ candidaty | for 7th Ward Committeeman. | He was born on the Eastside; and has attended ~ Columbus} schools, He enlisted im the army | in 1942 and served: im the 10th and 28th Cavalry amd was a warded the purple heart and five other~ citations, He wants his~ friends to support him with that same fighting spirit. So cance Foreign Flags Take Qver At the close of the 19th century only 10 ~per cent of our foreign cotty merce. was. carried American: ships, A century @; our ships: had carried: 90: per cent of our trade: with countries across the seas, iState Bill On College Bias done | Offered By Ives-Quinn Spend | Masic to~ proceed ow ~eomplaints is. ed with it since iits The new bill atterripts to face the. difficulty of ~pre-determined attitude~ Squarely by pertnitting proof of the existencé of a ~gefi. eral policy~ of a ~quota system~ | or other similar Ya to covet prejudice. the -Jegislature last: week, Spon- " ra ~|sors.of the bill } 1 i - i}: = | Walter J. Mahoney,~:3 county), ~and Assemblyman Bar- | exemptions,. | counselled~ to~ ~take.into account determined pattern of. admission of members of the Tesearch staffs. in the ~bill because of: ~difficulty encountered by,SCAD tainirg proot of. discrimination: by Who Got $10 Rewaed bonded:: ~gether with mae ALBANY, N. Y. A. bi-partisan peaked to pare SCAD, set up last year by the Jves-Quinn act, power to pfo-' ceed in questions of bias against colleges, professional schools and other educational institutions practicing racial and religious discrimination in the admission of students, was presented. to are Senator (Rep, Eire ward Austin, Dem, ~Brooklyn, ~both ~of whom were. ~members of the Ives commission: responsible for. last year~s enactment..* (Under the: bill: based ~ largely | on sociology and legal. studies made ~by: the. American Jewish COngtess, racial ~or religious~ ~ discrimination by educdtional institutions. would be declared unlawful ~and violators would ~be Subject ~to various~ pefalties; in. cluding the automatic Toss of tax Before ~deciding ~hacen: or not an institution.was: banning _ Students on. grounds -of race or * religion, ~the. commission,... under! the i the proposed law, - would ~ be all ~general: data, statistical - and other, which shows. the. raee, creed,. color, ancestry or. nat. ional origin of the persons. who have sought or obtained admission as students or empleyment as members of the instruction. or resnarch staff. by the respondent and Which. thus may tend to prove~ thé existenee of ~a pre students or employment of instruction or This provision was included in *. ~ob ~ ~Asks for Another Fry ' KANSAS.CITY, MO. ~: Whtn. his four-months-old. fox. terrier, Corky, ~disappeared recently, Lawren ~E. Later -a fittle bey~ se wei eit Corky arid $10 was. paid ~with~ no questions asked. One. day Maxey: re: | ceived a. post card on whitch ee pencil-scrawléd fi Boyish Handivr. ing: ~Mister, please leave the nd on: your. porch again. v need: sins other ten.~ = Heart Pieeaae Is Main Death Cause. of Doctors. CHICAGO: ~ Heart: disease~ con tinued to lead the causes of death among, physicians during. 1945,,, according. to 4 study published iax the Jourfial of the American Medios association. During the yeu.. death: ~laimed approximately 4,015 physicians, as. compared to 3,415 in 1944. The war toll numbered 116 killed ~im gction and 118 who died in service trom accidents and other causeg,. Military Photography Thirty. thousand: wetial graphs were made for the landing and: 20,000 for~ the Anzio latiding.: The ADied military services used more photographic materials in 1944 than at.any. oeepiqud ae: tiod in oe airy. ae professional~ and. businéss - uses: ES Konly, ~But the users? steal, ~smug ot gle. The ores that - ~séll ~this. to: S ~ Thettiade Poe r hee ate Hof. all ways: ad. i ertilizers and ~powdered. rhi- ce. et Se on ~'Thete*~ ~mut, be, ign n-teee ae be shipped in. rig f coptatses $, can | addicts: atound + ~River! - Rouge, be ddndled without damage | eorse * because. ail~ of ~the doe-| 5 ch beg in. multfavsal, paper eek e Sis escehy home rane kratt,, ore usually bemng~ ced reststar. sheet. of two. A AID ON FOOD ppaoar ig Herbert.C. Hoover, former Président and foremost food expert after World War I, has Geaw inviled by President Truman to aid in postwer world food problens: Me hae vecn active ir foreign reviet work. 2 % i to becavse. prete wsea pleasant - +. | fulness cause become ed,.ineeption ~By g. DRUG: ~ABDICTS - tee ~ Drug addicts are. the: ~same as i ~Dope fiends~; the axubit. ~through gore: way~ ~by | the us? of-dfugs tréquently.. ~This| is. ~git of- the: anes. habivs cne can: forts. Any. one |. repea ~ecly taking a jnarcotic drug} for cver the pér bd. of: thirty | days ic in grave danger: of be-| gomirnz ~ slaveto this drug, A perso: that has become: a slave.durgs have. nitmérous | }reasoss for starziay|these: habits, they ave foreed, have heatd. c.bout, or ~Ae rrremuber's - Of Sag all ase it for the false satis ~action, aad: sensation, and imagination. dg sot: depressed. to: ihe sare extent sel~ control and: the common sans eas ds legsened, these es of | The use of these dopes wears: off and after a time a larger | amount is requited to. maintain the satisfaction: of the victim, the drug is taken> dy. three ways: by~ smoking, by mitt~, by hypodermic injections, needle. The chronie, addict: Ious-| es all idea of honor~ and, truthhe hecomes. weak im; character, laek of. energy, and~ utfetly unfit ~for~ ~work. ~ unless ~he is under. ~iat influence) si ~ ~dope,.:: ~You. can Sere fie: habie most any thing even the ~use of coffer arid tea ~this group. because~ ~gf. the, ong. fein and~ one of the~ ~oldest hab-} ~ittual users: of tobaceo~ because. of the nicotine present: j-Aspitins| ~, ave habit forming: bind alehowwot! s3 ta is considered~., Sogtat Hear~ be. | a2: ~used age mach: ast * pop: The kinds: of drugs > ~ate! + | popular: opitin~ mierphirie, ~db-| ti éaine, arid Mariatuatia: | ~Another | not commonly uséd' around here and, having. a. different upon ome is peyote. Th: ones abuve produce sleep: and. mefri. | mént. and! cunning: wivid imagi-| nation to the extent~ that they great liars,. But this'|. peyote. produces: ibions ~of ia-| fitinite beauty | andi. eoler | and forms, Muscular. weakness and! the depression of- eid respiratory | system, Drug habit is vigit limit: to: etaita of Society, the greatest~ ruriber: among the age: of twenity: five: ~Dr. Frank. E, Adair, president of te forty -five. than women; mor> Negroes, The ~resistance. is I lowered and-* the life. is. shorten-| 2 tubeFoulosis,. ot irritations: of the nose ~and. throat, The handlers of~ dopey~ are sup-| kilied. posed to be it ds. tors rave at. ~one timie or. ~anoth~er ~fad: their: bags: stolltn, Thete is. néver very.mueh: of: this. dope! # arourid:. because. of. the small: a reledsed at a time, ~ t A.. THbo they~ have. formed hazarde:ts | the: | called the Hervous, | ee ~effect | ineluded: in} 5: ox. office records of other bands ig nothing new to Lionel Hampton, ~ but when the dynamic, atomic man of music cracks his own, that~s news, Playing at Hatlem~s famed ~Apollo theatre, Hamp and) his sensational ork did. the best box ~office* business this house has: veyer~: ~witnessed: in-its ten year existerice, ie ~apon, closing Wark Data - oti ere -Regotinions Under: ~Way. For Release of. a ~By War De t m2 iy YORK. =. = Negotiation} to * inf~rmation and matetials ic chemical. warfare | and cme byes résearch available to w eer réséarch workefs, so fat #3 military. séctifity~ permits, are unPig Way with~ the séerstary of: war, Br. Cornelius P. Rhoads, director Of. Memorial hospital,. ~announ ced here. - ig) United ~States spent two bilih déljdts on wartime researel: on io bornb and the cancér soclety hopes the. American * | ~contribute three to five million sin 1946 for research for the & 'No..k enemy,~ Ninety of the nation~s leading lsct-~ntists in flelds related to the ean | Ger problenr tive been recruited by the Rationar. péseareh council to plan fon the eancer.society # nation-wide co-ordinated program for support of peseareh against cancer. | om Committee- Organized.;d@ngouncement also was made of the: ~Organization of. a committee, ~as the committee on growth, and 19. panelé déalifig with spccial | aspects of cancer. research. ~4 fete. the fi -Wag so named. to Kipdeniental verti! on only. of invéstigating cancer, but ~ aud development of fiving tissue, - whieh ie essential to the understanding, of cancer. Be. Rttoada, chairman of the ~omon growth, told the dincrs that-the work of tte ~committee | was ROUND 1H: the frst really cempre| héiasive~ action~ ter provide a coor gloated: ~Gation-wide.. research, on ncer.4 sak age additio: itlgo, te ~basic: problem of te for- | matisa and ae in~ Is @ new's nd erg id + Aiiong many léad-: basic: sciences:as.; ii ues. pf their. work. in: hela fon to cancer..., 6 ~Dr. Lewis: H.. Weed, chairman, ~ol the of of fredicat sctiercds ot the fone research: ebuncil, Nailed. thet, wort: 6f -growth: committee as, establishing. a..few: pattern for effective. attack. of problems = medical ' ~tesearch. Wartime | search, He: declared, tad der strated the~ great! posbibilities. otdinated, action. In applying. t lessons to peacetime seseaettd ti said there are these differerices:: Ph kb veSearch was chiefly con: kh ~with applying kéowledze ~ AONE: male and. surprisingly. ~ diseases, sistered and: for~ 2 ae a Alds Gocking | Feod.specialists today recommiend | sacting ail vegéiables if salted wa- | ter; Salt: irnproves' fie flavor. And | hen: you add salt at the beginning, hélps green vegetables keep their color. -) Keeping Fingers Warm ~ | & good~ way to keep aigers warm while hanging out the family washing ih sold weather i~ to plade the tlotiexpins ih:'a warm oven: and eat thum before taking them out; | doors. i it sat | ~a Pe A loud shout may start an ava-: lamche when: a mase of ice and snow | tie is poiséd'on the mountainside: Swiss | fc ~ guides often~ trisist on absolute si- | -; ence = wher st dangerous | spots. From 1902 to 1940 the capacity of ~ay ' cleetrie: gewerstors. increased ~ry 35. times, electric _Qutput about ~gues: of the: (ee hy times, yong oe sale Bad as had previdusly: been discov. ered; while problems like that of pe require the discovery of) new kriowledge. is the América Cancer~ society, said thst! ~in: fecervertihy: the~ scfentific effort. of the nation:from).the probsof. war to. those of-peace, one é ch if problems we face is that Dt. ites asserted: thet Between Pearl ~Harbor~ and WJ: Day. cancer their. power 1 adershi Bie Johnston, Thete | 1847 tw He. al. i, 8. Oe ~ elie ~ o Cine, nce e, Roscoe B: Fowles. ae. of Bar Harbor, (pro Bea singel peousem.- | em "s staff forced to resigt by ee Pym 4 order for i,. president: of of the | Hedtue~ League of Taun is sd. animals: respond to~ heed She spent 15 4 man kindness: pe 1 egestas off: the of, skunk~with no: after ~. them the most.hectic week they ~standing |. ancer Study | war on cancef, whicft is called ~the |,.} for an additional twelve weeks Maine, thid~ of: tie-Cancer~ society~ ali on. of Setaro. Ishiwata, | irhjehold minister who con~ the.. r s purse. |: Iphiwata; SB, forarerly was finance papell tn have tein, dies i Was.; active | inthe Imperial Rule Assi fas ~ séciation,. He~ was appointed house- | tad sediieter: in: i i} id! was the frst member off the vious~: record, ~months ago, was completely sHattered by his. Yatest stand there: From six o~clock the previous Friday morning when the vibe king's fans began liriing up in front of the two boxoffices there until the following Thursday night at ten when the tick~et Sellers* closed~ up, ending~ for ~ever witnessed, the room only~ sign was permanenily hung: up. While. inside the theatre the dudience rocked to~ the tune of Hay! Ba~Ba~Re~Bop,~ which the: atomic music man has made a jukebox favorite the country wide, the gendarmes had their | fade - full. outside. Ten extra/ |p policériien~ were assigned to the theatre ~by the local pfécinct faring: his engagemeht to keep order: itt the fites: that strétchfed: an entire block at tines, not to mention the private ambul~ance, hired by the management, ~that ~was constantly parked. out~Side;. wh two: @octors at hand for ary emergency. Several ~factors~ are involved ~itt making Hampton~s crew outstanding in the world of miusic, foremost among them the mem~bers themselves such as Milt Buckner, famed pfenist whose ~Locked hands~ style of play. ing has made him unique and Arnett Cobbs, kot tenor saxaPhonizt, ~ho isn~t only a techtician but a creative artist, Another. réason fs the band~s great, enserrble beat with the brasses, ~teedS and rhythm section combirting in a perfect tofral pattern to give fotth with a drive unlike any of the other hot dance. ~Crews, WINS CAPITAL PRESS CLUB AWARD Last week in -Washington, Hampton was give an award by the Capital Press Club for his ~distinguished sefvice toward bettering raee relations, NOW. GN BROADWAY AT ~_ there manager Frank Schiffmar: } announced that Hampton~s pre. |: established ten | COLUMBUS, Ohi: CRPNSY THE: SPORTLIGHT SHINES AGAIN.~Comely Conchita Lo /pez Reeves, 86 N, Monroe, was Lnamed this~ by proprietor~s. Jas, and ~ George Jefferson, Spotlight Record Shop, 1175 Mt. Vernon. Avenue, for the record winner this week, Mrs. Reeves, ~I am glad to win this recognition.~ She.has just returned with her husband, Albert ~Bunky~ Ree ves, from a bifthday. party in | Springfield, Ohio, at the home of her brother, Louis Lopez. Morris Brown Founders Day ATLANTA~(ANP) ~ nes ~thousand persons joined in celebration of the annual Founder~s day of Morris Brown college and Turner Theological semin-~ ary. ~Delivermg the principal ad. dress,Dr. Henry Lewis, of Payne Theological seminary, of Wilberforce, declared: ~Phe world is at the crossroads, the world is dark, The. greatest need of the world -to-. }day is spiritual direction, with. faith in God and in man. World War III is just around the corner.~ He urged Morris Brown to go fofward and become one of the greatest institutions in the ~ land, The Georgia. AME pacer eh AQUARIUM RESTAURANT ad cuvreatly appearing si ee Aqparitnr ~Restaurant on Sréadwav, when@ he opened tc a Técord: breaking ~crowd: of~ fol. towers: the former Benny Good~ian quartet star has added an. other laurel to his swingdom wreath as he was sélected over cent topnotch bands to inaugur~ate the bigbarid policy of th~s popular New York café, Already the management is di~kering to~ get his name ~inked, to a con. tract calling. for Hamp~s service on top df the twelve he~s Playing. now. In response to deveral hone, and requests from fans below ~he border, Hamp~s Swing Book ~Arm y-Has Fi ghier With Power of B-26 Jet Plane Can Go at Rate OF 500 Miles Per Hour. ~SAN DIEGO, ~CALE =.'The XP-61 described as the World's most pow erfoj, high spéed long~ range figtiter. has been completed by Corsolidated Vultee Aircraft corporation and ier undergoing flight tests, the company anmounced.. Tt is. the: first plane to. fly with a gas. aap ed engine désigned for pro: reaer... -Dhe army plane has two complete powet units, a gas turbine in the nose to drive the four-bladed pfopellér and a jéet engine in the fuse: it dart attain spseds in excess of 506 _miles an hour and: the: combined power is virtually the same as that |. produced-4y. all four engines on a B-29~ Superfortress, the anriouncement. sadi. Perfarmance devaits are: secret. _ but the company~ said the plane is, adaptable not enly as a long range: marily designed, bnt also as an interceptor fighter. This presumably | means the figlter when equipped!~ with droppable external: fuel tanks can cruise in excess of 2,000 miles Both of the engines~neither of whic require a warmup~use kerosené. The evttipany said the plapé can take off on both engines or either one. A large~ scoop. tiv eavlr side of the fuselage admits air to the rear ject engine. Air reaches the gas tarbine through a circular duct in the nose _ of the plane. General Electric company, whicn mannfactares both engines; described the turbine engine as being. efficient and econdniical for long flights,~ and Consolidated said it is considering~ us~ df six turbine: ei- |; gines in its 26~ passenger movie? 37.. now in design. ( ' food values we save.~ | long slow cooking it's better to keep ~vegetables at boiling and shorten ad Yate aft of thre pilot: With both units |, ~ bomber escort for which it was pri- | ~fe ~elders~ council and executive. beard met and heard Chanéel lor W. A, Fountain Sr., ama plans for expansion ~oF the col tege. Several hundred AME pastors and presiding elders from over the state attended the exercise along with laymen and Banks Buy Bonds By 1942 more than half of the assets of member banks of the Federal Reserve System were government securities as contrasted with & proportion of less~ than 11 per cent in 1929. Pig Brooders: Electric pig brooders hein to Li save one extra pig per litter and | give an earlier pig crop, especially | iy the colder sections. The brooder provides a warm hover for the pigs ~ when not nursing. Air Conditioning Postwar requirements in air conditioning are sail to exceed $1,600.000}000 in volume. This estimate is based: om the small percentages: of homes and other buildings now air conditioned, some of which are: less than l-per cent of hornes valued at $12,000 or more~ with central heating units; only 3 per.cent of depart-. ment stores; 2 per cént of drug stores; 7 per cent of restaurants; 2 per cent of doctor~s. offices; 30 per. ~~ént of railroad cars, and similarly small figures~ for many other eitablishments. kak Short Cooking Time peller drive: and ' jét engine~ in the~.. ~Today, food specialists tell us the shorter~ the. cooking time, the more Instead of time. Support. Dependents At the end of 1941,.83 million men ~and women in the United. States, including unemployed, employed and housewives, supported 50 million. children, students in high s@hbol and - college, old people, sick people and defectives, paneer ertralinals pera: Fabrics i Brushing with a medium-stiff | Brush is~ better than~ rubbirig those extra-soiled places on delicate fabrics, when washing by hand, say ~extension service specialists. enantio Loses Vitamin. Cooked cabbage held in the refrig~erator two~ or three days and then reheated! does: not lose as much vi-~ tamin C as does that kept standing: on the: stave for an hour or two. will be translated into, Spanish. ~The book is due to hit the newstands in two weeks and will be replete with interesting ~célebs of swing, their. orks and~ intimate bits written by. a - Scofe \ 4 ~ * ~ a ~i: | of fazed leaders. stories. of music, pictures of ei

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Flint Spokesman [Volume: 1, Issue: 1]
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Page 7
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Flint, MI
March 23, 1946
Subject terms
African Americans--Michigan--Flint--Newspapers
Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers

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