Flint Spokesman [Volume: 2, Issue: 7]

~ SATURDAY, ~MAY 3 1947) rad ence FIVE ~_~ 7 Redaced."Breathlag~ a oT 1 Arpies Prolongs Storage Life you choke apples and reduce breathing during the winter ~while they are in storage, they will -longér' and: ~much better. Like ~human beings, apples breathe in! ~oxygen and give off ~arbon dioxide. ~Scientific tests have shown that if jthe concentration of the carbon di-) ~oxide is increased and that of th: oxygen ~ decreased,. the breathing) process of the apple is slowed to ai um~ and its storage life is greatly lengthened. | ~This new development in epple ~storage can be adapted to home ~use by using a 50-gallon steel drum ~with-a removable head. A hole is ~dug back in-a bank or down into the ground, if-no bank is available, and a a NA weaw 4 4 At N AUTOMOBILE COMPANY PAID EMPLOYEES $776, 341.00 LAST AR FOR SUBMITTING IDEAS 69 IMPROVING PRODUCTION Za the drum placed in the hole. This is. your refrigerator, as the temperature of the soil rarely rises. above 50 degrees F. Then the apples are placed in the drum and the lid ~replaced. Two %4-inch holes are drilled in the lid and with the drum full of apples and the two %4-inch holes. in the lid, the exact desired concentrations of oxygen and carbon dioxide are maintained. There is no danger of freezing of the apples, 9s | the heat of respiration will keep the ~temperature in'the barrel above the freezing point: By picking the apples while they are still quite firm and storing them at ence with a minimum ~of bruising, the home RAINFALL 1S fruit grower can keep his apples in ~good condition. from one to two mae k~months longer than the particular. ~DER BORE variety ususally keeps under ~ 5 peckiese ~ ' @ a) 0 ee ae ~ Hers Lye einai UB Hale AN ONION OVER YOUR CAR WINDSHIELD, INSIDE AND OUT, TO KEEP /T FROM FOGGING OVER iN WINTER WEGTHER iia, one ~Garden Plot by Spading in Easy Stages If you want your garden plot to be ~well prepared, spade it. Spading is not hard work if done a little at a. time. A space -30x50- feet can be 4 ~spaded in a leisurely way in eight hours. One hour a day for eight days, and the job is done. ~ | Systematic spading makes the job easier, and more complete. Here is one way to do it: Set a definite task for your first day~s work, say a strip six feet wide, running the shortest dimension of the garden. At one end ~It~s Just Like a Woman~ to sue her husband for $50,000, and win the suit.~Louis Jordan, who wrote the famous song, and who also was recently slashed by wife No. 3, was financially slashed by wife No. 2, for $50,000. ~This tidy sum was awarded MRS. LOUIS JORDAN WINS $50,000 SUIT - 1932 after ~he had lied to her,~ ' and unmarried man. The jury Mrs. Ida Fields, Jordan~s second wife, when she testified that: she married Jordan in telling her he was a single evidently believed her story and awarded Jordan~s wife No. 2 $50,000, and ~That~s Just Like a Woman.~ ~dig a ditch, say one foot wide and the depth of the spade, removing all soil from it. Pile this soil near the opposite end of the strip. ~~~ ~~Now begin to spade with the blade not parallel to the trench, but at right angles to it. This enables you to lift the soil more easily and de_ posit it in the trench. The spade should be driven down, not on a slant, but perpendicularly to its full depth. Take a small slice of the: soil, so your back is not strained. Lift it up, turn the spade over, so that the top soil falls underneath the bottom sail on top. In filling the first: trench, you have-*operned a second. Chesterfield of Birds The Chesterfield of birds is the great blue heron. To his middle claw is attached a small comb, with which to preen his feathers. Teacher Outlook In 1920, 22 per cent of all college students in the United States were attending teachers prnue, in 1945 -46 only 7 per cent. Sun Robs Milk Quality Keep milk in a dark place. If left standing in direct sun even in cold weather, milk loses some of its fipvor ~and vitamins, Tenderest Meat Study of meat tenderness shows: that tenderloin is the tenderest. cut. Next in order are the rib, short loin, loin end, and chuck cuts. Following are the round, neck, and foreshank. Eat More Turkey Consumption of turkey,meat averaged about two pounds per person in 1932-34, but jumped to 4% laos: in 1945 and 1946. a Suckers Propagate Plants Century plants are propagated by ~suckers arising fron old plants, ~Qari r ba a aa AUTIFUL HAIR CAN BE YOURS More women have beautiful, ite silky hair now gf than ever before. You, too, can have beautiful, long, ~ df silky hair instantly. ~, Choose the-style you wish, then ak (X) ~in the~ order blank below. These hair-dos are made of fine quality Human Hair. Styled by experts and matched to the sample you send us of yous own hair. 1. Each hair-do is handmade. ~ y 2. We use only fine quality Seine human hair.) 3. Our hair-dos are double-woven and hand-sewn, 4. s t Because we are among the biggest buyers of human hair we are able to give better. quality and finer workthanship at lower prices. Pog BY Remember, we specialize in glorifying the Colored woman. @ | ats cous Fill in the valuable coripon below.~ Check the style. or styles you wish. If you are sot completely satisfied return the hair-do and your money will be cheerfully tefun We ship the same day the order: is ~received,. | BEST YET. @. BEST YET t QUALITY Bed Y BEST YET RELIABILITY~ ~ Soe YET HAIR PRODUCT $ CO. Box 26, Hamilton Grange Sta.~ = ~\ New York 31, N. ~., Dept.~ 225. Please send me the following: Page ey, J 5 Chaser Curls, $5.00 ( _); Chignon,: [2 cial Combination Offer consist )s | i Special Combination Offer consistitig of Cluster unde Curls and Page Boy, $8.00 ( ). If I am not pleased 1 will return the merchandise within 9 days and my money will be refunded. ORDER NOW! 7. Name ~ Screet. 2 eaimesn agp 2 Phy See PoQ RD Ss ~~ = <4 I saeatonntne Seite I = RE GE ne Coe. City 0c: Town: es! mS Waaica Feed Men | In Gala Tahiti Interesting Data on People Of South Sea Islands told by Writer. SAN FRANCISCO.~There~s time for contemplation and a leisurely look at life. Here are some gleanings from Tahiti sent by Alfred Cooper Rowland. ~*A fortnight ago a ship turned up at Papeete,. bearing 900 refugee immigrants, bound for Australia, and some cases of cargo -for Tahiti. ~The cargo was disembarked and the ship departed for Australia. | After the usual customs formalities, the consignees began to open the cases. ~Instead of wines, perfumes and textiles, they found coal clinkers (from the ship~s furnaces) tightly packed with old rubber floor mats.~~ ~The colonial attorney general and his party have returned safely from Rapa. ~Rapa is still a primitive land. A peculiar custom which~ does not exist elsewhere in, Polynesia is practiced here. The men of Rapa do not feed themselves but are = by their women folk. Women Feed Them. ~At meal time the men sit on their haunches with their mouths open. The women folk stand a short distance away and toss bits of fish and balls of taro paste in the open mouths of their men folk. * ~We hear that a movie company may go to Pitcairn island to film Hall and Nordhoff~s last volume of the ~Mutiny on the Bounty~ trilogy which describes the adventures of the mutineers on that tiny island. ~Pitcairn islanders resemble Cape Cod yankees of an earlier period. We hear the island is becoming a sort of Honolulu. ~So far as I can learn, our island | natives are really happy in their isolation from the outside world. One sure indication is that they have begun to sing again after the old manner. ~Some of our intellectual interests, more or less in abeyance during the war, have resumed: ~activity. Our Polynesian society has issued several bulletins containing scholarly research into island antiquities. The circle musical has rescued a noble company of martyrs, who have suffered with varying degrees of apoplectic resignation un-: der the totalitarian tyranny of jazz. Good Musicians, ~There is a surprising number of really good musicians in this colony. Under the leadership of an eminent doctor of music this coterie has given a series of recitals of high merit. ~ ( '"The Tahitian natives, utterly sick of jazz and ersatz Hawaiian a la tin pan alley ditties, are reviving their own polyphonic chorals. The ~old district choirs (before the jazz age) were so perfectly trained that their voices blended like the tone of a cathedral organ. ~Another thing: There is a growing regard for the purity of Tahiti~s beautiful language. The wretchedly ungrammatical colloquial speech which was destroying the euphony and meaning of the tongue is becoming less prevalent. ~The rugged speech of Ao-TeaRoa (New Zealand) represents the common speech of the: Society islands at the time the ancestors of the New Zealand Maori migrated from that ar~hipelago during the 14th century, A.D. ~Now, there is a proposal for island confederation. We are informed that New Zealand and Australia intend to present this ~ to the United Nations.~ Plot to~ Upset Latin Nations Is Told to State Department WASHINGTON.~A diplomatic official said the United States state department has been informed of a plot~involving the governments of two unnamed Latin Amerftan countries~to overthrow the governments of Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras. The official, who cannot be further identified, said the three Central American governments handed a note to the state department denouncing the alleged plot. Ambassadors Julian R. Caceres of Honduras, Guillermo Sevilla Sacasa of Nicaragua, and Francisco de P. Gutierrez of Costa Rica, were reported to have told Dean Acheson, undersecretary of state, that the Méxican government had cap-. tured an arms shipment which was ~to be used in a revolution against the three Central American governments.: Jury Acquits Woman Slayer; | Finds She Had Provocation | NEW ALBANY, IND.~A circuit esurt jury acquitted Mrs. Goldie Sutton, 43, on a first-degree murder charge in the shooting of her husband, Guy, 46, after hearing her Broken her rhone by throwing her over a ~ Stepped on her neck, Poured kerosene on her and tried to set her clothing afire. Tried to slash her thrdat with a razor.: eva ue to. pact hot on on her. ~Singed~ her hafr with a me Ie blast. actor Pinile an Midketie _ The number of frozen food locker plants in the United States increased by 1,561 between July, 1945, and July, 1946. ~ testify he had: Pmt. The Aerojet firm was then building |}: the plane to exhaustive ground ~ restrictions which promise to favor _tioned in the teyt published by the i ~Projet Is Told Test Flight of Man-Piloted Pig: sets? Revealed by _| Anay Kir Forces. ine unknown by a Northrop MX-324, ~in matte reputed to have been the first flight of its kind. The plane was piloted in its flight by. test pilot Harry Crosby. The tiny plane, a fiying. wing of less than 30 feet, was first flown on July 5, #1944. ~ Oe vlna ateuaee aaa | knew of the plane~s -existence and ~fewer than that number witnessed ithe plane~s flight at: Harper dry ilake, near Barstow, Calif. Unless the enemy had flown a i rocket prior to that time, it was the ~first man- controlled flight of a: rocket on record. i; Because of the revolutionary con-!eept behind the ~rocket wing,~ the ~army air forces ordered it: desig-: nated ~secret~ until the present an~nouncement by Northrop Aircraft | company. | Principles Explained. | The principles. of the ~rocket || wing~ were used by Northrop in its aa ~~ ~flying ram, XP-79, a prone-piloted fighter with a heavy armored wing ~designed to shear off the wings of enemy aireraft. The flying ram, ~built*on the rocket plane pattern,~ was the world~s first jet-powered _fiying..wing.: | Northrop reported the rocket ship /was conceived in September, 1942, and ah army contract for its con' struction was let in 1943. ' Racing against time because 'counter-espionage men had learned Germany was working on a similar ~plane; Northrop joined forces with Aerojet. Engineering corporation. its XCAL-200 motor, a true rocket motor as distinguished from jettype engines. et Under the guidance of Don B. Smith, project engineer for Northrop, the 427-pound rocket unit was installed in the plane. The completed aircraft was taken to Harper dry lake for its test. Smith and his men first subjected ~tests, during which the rocket unit ~was fired while the plane remained ~securely fastened to the ground. Speeds Up Quickly. | On-the morning of July 5 Crosby climbed into. thé prone cockpit of the airplane which was linked by a long tow line to a Lockheed twinengined P-38 piloted by Capt. Martin Smith, | Captain Smith inched his throttles forward and the line came taut. The Planes gathered speed and lifted ~into the morning air. The tow plane ~and its glider crossed back over-the, idry lake ~at about 8,000 feét and ~Crosby released the tow line. Bracing his head in the supports | which enabled him to look straight ~ahead, Crosby pressed the rocket ~motor trigger on his control stick. | Smoke shot out in a long white jplume as the delta-shaped plane ipicked up speed under the rocket ~thrust. For five minutes Crosby shot through the air while 31 gallons of ~rocket: propéellent were exhausted. ~Then he brought the two-ton rocket ~down for a landing. ~Mussolini Died a Coward, His Executioner Declares | ROME.~The: reputed executioner of Benito Mussolini declared in an interview that ~~Mussolini died a coward.~: ~~He stood against the wall shaking with terror,~ Said Walter Audisio, 37-year-old bookkeeper, - who ~was identified: by the Italina Communist party as: ~Il Dugé~s killer and Khown to the ~ftalina: underground as ~@olonel~ Valerio.~! ~He kept -yabbling,~ ~But, but, but, but, ~Mr. C@lonel.~ ~T killed cwith five shots from a sugmachin a had né: intention of killing Claretta -Petadei,"~ Audisio continued, adding~ the worhan, Musgolini~s mistress, threw herself in front of hith to ~protest Il Ducé, ~She -said, ~Mussolini must not die,~ " Audisio ~declared. ~I told her, ~Get out of the way, or f'll shoot you, too.~ ~But ghe kept moving in front of him, "*~ fee] no sorrow for having killed her, too. You can't dramatize the pole of this woman; events were erior to her forces.~ ussolini was slain in Dongo on April 28, 1945. United States Protests Swedish Favors to Reds WASHINGTON. ~ The United States has erckentea ~strongly~ to Sweden against new Swedish import Russian over American imports. A note made ic by the state department said the United States ~eannot but~strongly protest~ the implication of the Swedish government~s program to permit certain imports under-a bi-lateral trade agreement while prohibiting or restricting similar imports from the United States. Russia was not specifically men state department, but officials told reporters the agreement was between Sweden and the Soviets. Bhenmatic Fever Rheumatic fever is responsible for - | White And Negro Students Meet Tosilas In Louisiana First Meeting Of ~Its Kind In Recent History BATON See ~ April 29~White and Negro students, in the first meeting of its kind in the recent history of the i er Grip on "World Is Easing tess Scientists Think Full. Diet for All Is Possible i; With Cooperation. WASHINGTON. i should be banished from the earth ~is the opinion of many scientists. ~ Secretary of Agriculture. Ander~son supports this view. The scien ~|; tists, who admit that the job is a - big one, base their studied opinion on present-day knowledge, not at 'erystal-gazing into a superatomic ~age. >:: G. F. Kettering, research vice ~president of General Motors and |former president of the American ' Association for the Advancement of 'Seience, recently estimated more ~than one-fourth of the world~s two billion people normally are hungry. ' At the Hct Springs, Va., United Nations Food and Agritulture con~ference in 1943 it was estimated one billion are undernourished. Plans to increase the world~s food output to give everyone a full diet have stirred controversy for years. Some scientists claim there are so many people in the world that soils will be depleted if the diets of all are increased to American standards. a Anderson For It. 's But Secretary Anderson said in an interview: ~Undoubtedly agricultural and nutritional science now make it possible to banish hunger from the earth. ~If our knowledge is applied, the: job can be done without depleting soils. Of course it will take time to: do it, and it will take close interna-' tional cooperation, but it will elimi-. nate an old, old struggle. ~This means men will have to: work together, in all nations, and: substitute an era of world scientific, agriculture for the present system of national ang individual scientific, agriculture.~~ Kettering and other experts say~ enough food can be raised but be-. cause of world politics and <n | ics it can~t be distributed internationally. | Those who conténd the job can be! done don~t agree on a timetable. 2 Dr. Robert M. Salter, chief of the; bureau of plant industry, soils and, agricultural engineering of the de-: partment: of agriculture, is one who says the goal could be achieved~ with international cooperation. He points out first that-the world food survey of the Food and Agriculture organization (FAO) of the United Nations estimates if all the people of the world have enough to eat by 1960 it means increasing production of cereals 21 per cent, roots and tubers 27 per cent, sugar 12 per cent, fats and oils 34 per cent, pulses and nuts 80 per cent, fruit and végetables 163 per cent, meat 46 per cent and milk 100 per cent..: (These estimates are based on the assumption world population will incréase 25 per cent by 1960.) ~ Two Methods. Dr. Salter says production can be intreased to these levels in two. ways. First, the improved methods that the United States used to boost production during the war could be \Applied to the world land now in '~Wroduction. Second, the amount of: \l@nd under cultivation could be. in-| ' creased. *. He estimates 900 milion acres could be added in South America and Africa; 100 million acres in Sujmatra, Borneo, New Guinea and ' Madagascar; 300 million acres in!: Canada and the ' 1.3 billion |Soviet Russia,; United States. Total:.acres of ~~~new~~ soils. Dr. H. H. Bennett, chief of the. soil conservation service of the agri-' ~culture department, says the task, is to educate farmers into using the latest, scientific methods. This involves such problems as making ~places like China substitute modern: methods for ox yoke and light-ofthe-moon farming.: | Jnterpreting corn research in doljars and cents, Dr. W. V. Lambert,; administrator of agricultural re-; search, says in 30 years it cost the, government and the states 10 mil-' ~mion dollars to develop hybrid corn: ' seed. Log Cabin Yields Signatures | Of Jefferson and Madison ||. PITTSBURGH.~The trouble Har- | ~old J. Kaspary had tearing down a! | disused log cabin on his place 17: ~years ago provided suitable com-} pensation, he now has discovered. ~In the ruins of the 140-year-old structure, Kaspary found a piece of, parchment bearing the signatures of Thomas Jefferson and James ~Madison,. ~ The document, granting a plot of land to Jacob Ferree, an ancestor ~of Kaspary~s mother, was dated in~ "1808. ~ Kaspary says he has had offers 95 per eent of the defective hearts 4 |for. the paper, but won~t sell. ~It~s in childhood, ~\my prize ~~. he explained. ~ That hunger Deep South met together here| recently in a regional conference Jof far reaching significance and implications respecting the future of the South and of the nation. Proposing a new national student organization the conference adopted a resolutien stating the primary purpose of the organization as an effort to per -etuate democracy.. of the over The meeting grew ov: issue which devclovéed School Pace Upsets j Scottish Visitor e ~_~~ ~Exchange Professor Finds the ' Classroom Pace Too Fast. ROYAL OAK, MICH.~The timetable:in American schools is a little too rigorous to please an exchange teacher from Scotland where the classroom tempo is more moderate. Aileen ~. Bailey, recalling her arrival in Royal Oak six months ago, said: ~My first impression was more in the nature of a shock. That, came with the information that I was expected to be at school at 8:15 a.m. at the latest, have hardly an hour for lunch and then continue until 3:15 p. m. ~That, to me, compares avorably with my Edinburgh tinfetable of. 9:20 a. m. to noon, and 1:30 to 3p. mm.~ However, Miss Bailey said her new surroundings softened the blow. Her first impression of the schoo] was of a building ~~with grass and pine trees in front and playing field behind.~ Sunny rooms and equipment in American schools, their ~~~beautifully arranged~ libraries, auditor fiums, motion pictures, school festiryvyals and Parent-Teacher associa tion meetings all appealed to Miss Bailey. The Scottish teacher admitted it took her some time to become atcustomed to hearing her first-graders greet her with ~Hi Ya~ instead of ~Good Morning, Miss Bailey.~ But now, she added, ~I love my little pupils with their friendly greetings and their enthusiasm.~~ She wouldn~t be surprised, either, she said, if she forgets herself upon her return to Scotland amd greets the children of Pennywell school in Edinburgh with ~What's cookin~, | ~~ ~||| London~s War-Scarred Face To Undergo, Face-Lifting | LONDON.~. War-searred. Lon- | don is going to have her face }j lifted.! ~| The town vianniie comogaiites | ~}of the London county council } disclosed a miulti-million-dollar plan for developing the south bank of the Thames river from London bridge to Westminster bridge, an area embracing a heavily - - bombed working class district. National _ government buildings, a cultural center and a national theater will be constructed. It has not been decided when work will start. v oO Army Will Get Better Food, War Secretary Announces ~WASHINGTON.~Better chow for the army has been assured by Secretary of War Patterson. ~High~ morale among troops is oné of the greatest factors neces-. sary in order to win battles,~ Patterson said in an order to all troop commanders, ~It is equally important to maintain high morale in the peacetime army in order to accomplish the Bresent war department mission and: ady for an unforeseen na~ions emefigency that might arise.~ ~ Patterson ordered that food must. be prepared in a palatable and ap-' petizing form and must be nutritious, He said this required close super~vision over food procurement, inspection,.transportation, storage,~ ~handling, distribution and preparation. ~He ordered e@ath commander in the army to select and assign qualifled officer and ~enlisted personnel icons Pb of the amsateny food committee, which made a blistering attack on poor army food in a report to Patterson last year. The order provides for higher grades and ratings for men who handle food, including cooks and mess stewards. Higher qualifications are set down for cooks. Provisions are made for keeping food service personnel in their jobs and not shifting them about to other duties. Predict Large Crops for *AT; Record Wheat Yield Expected WASHINGTON. ~ Another bumper crop production year, topped by what may be the largest wheat crop on record, was forecast by the department of agriculture. It disclosed that farmers plan to plant slightly largér acreages than in the last two years. The country~s wheat supply, decreasing under a heavy export demand, is expected to be replenished by a crop of about 1 billion 212 million busheis. whether or not Negro delepsti should be invited to the conference of southern and southeastern colleges which was held at the same time on the Louisiana State University campus here, and was called by Lloyd Love, president of the L.S.U.. student body. Sixteen delegates from 4 Negro colleges and students from white institutions in Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas attended the conference which was held in the First Presbyterian Church of Baton Rouge, schools represented were Southern Christian Insti-: tute, Edwards, Mississippi; Ark. - ansas AM: and N College, Pine Bluff; Xavier University, New: Orleans and Southern University ~Baton Rouge. - Among FOREIGN JOBS, M2n, Womén gov~t. and private listings, hundreds skilled classifications. 16 -pages accurate information $1.00, postpaid. Satisfaction guaranteed. FOREIGN JOBS, INC., Baltimore 1, Maryland. U. s. Citics Set Record, For Exsansion - 1945 Setting a rew record cf urban expansion, 2~39 Ui S cities extended their boundaries curing 1946 to in-' clude suburbai ~erriiory weeording' to the International City Managers~ association. This. marks a 70 per cent increase over city annexation) in 1945. Among the cities that have, taken this action to control metropolitan ~~fringe~~ growth, 152 were over 10,000 population. Statistics: gathered for the 1947 Municipal: Yearbook show that 42 cities annexed areas of at least one-half of one square mile. Twenty-five of these annexed areas were one square mile or more. In 1945, only 150 cities added new land, 87 of which were over 10,000 population. Increased annexations! reflect city efforts to adjust to rec ord-breaking growth of siatromal itan areas during the war, and in anticipation of a continued subur-. ban building boom.: { Fort Worth scored the greatest area growth last year of any city~ annexing 35 square miles of land by, charter amendment election December 17. This triples the eu topographic size by increasing. its area from 17.1 to 52.1 square miless In the previous year, biggest an nexation was made by nearby Dal las, which annexed a 39 square mile. area. Other cities over 10,009 annex ing at least one square mile of ter ritory in 1946 are Beaumont, Bor ger, Dallas, Lubbock, San Antonio,/ | Tyler, and Waco, Tex.; Wilmington, N. C.; Salem, Ore.; Reno, Nev.; Columbus, Ga.; Denver, -Colo,; Marion, O.; Fresno and Pasadena, Calif.; Kansas City, Mo.; and Faire mont, W.. Va. Inquiry Reveals Butter Vitamin Varies During Year Butter, often considered a splen-' did food source of vitamin A, varies~ considerably in its vitamin and! carotene content during the year, re-| cent studies at the Pennsylvania! State college show. The. vitamin Al content was found to be lowest dur-! ing spring months and highest in! October. In the course of the two-year study, more than 140 samples of five| nationally advertised brands of butter were purchased on the retail; market and one brand purchased at! a local creamery for the study. The average yearly vitamin potency of the six brands of butter was found to be 15,640 international units per pound. With few exceptions, the vitamin A content of butter was found} to exceed the carotene content in terms of both weight of material present and _ international unit equivalent, at all seasons of _the year. y ee Results of the lengthy study, showed that the average vitamin 4 content of the butters January to June inclusive was.526 mg. per 100 mg. of butter while this average dur-| ing July to December was_.857 mg. Buzzard~s Eye The English buzzard (B.buteo) has remarkable eyes. Its eyes are about the sige of human eyes, but with double the visual acuity. ~STOP WORRYING Love, Marriage Health, | Luck, Family Troubles, Happiness, Success, Worries, Troub~es of all kinds ean be corrected by the Science of ~Numerology, Astrology and my Psychic ability ané personal advice. Questions and Answers. A Medium, Private reading Horoscopes. I give facts~You get Results. Write: PROF. LEROY LEE~S PUB. CO. 262 So. 12th St.-Suite 404 Philadelphia 7, Pa, ~

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Flint Spokesman [Volume: 2, Issue: 7]
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Page 5
Publication
Flint, MI
May 3, 1947
Subject terms
African Americans--Michigan--Flint--Newspapers
Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers

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"Flint Spokesman [Volume: 2, Issue: 7]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35183405.0002.007. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 4, 2025.
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