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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1958)
CORINNE Griffith Vumimn mutton picture ttar. Her cotikiiook, "I'luti I llav.c Known,1 ij widely read. IOI ...!.. IWi ft Is 0 ti nt rnccfope I SPAGHETTm SATiri vttXx I. lim.ui iriiMM. Y"C NMMkwpiaf Reduces hours of preparation to minutes. Economical, easy to prepare. GIANT WALL-SIZE UNITED STATES MAP . ifi hi $2.00 retail value. Big, beautiful, clear! 50 33 inchai, printed on heavy map paper in eight (8) gorgeous colors! Eiquisite detail helps you put your finger on unfamiliar, hard-to-locate placet in the news. Valuable for schools and colleges in business offices and broadcasting stations as a decoration for home office or rumpus room. And a Complete Map Library International World Map Superior Map of Europe Superior Map of Asia Superior Map of Canada Superior Map of Africa Superior Map of South America Superior Map of North America Superior Map of Australia Pacific Ocean These big Hammond Standard Maps are each almost 12 square feet, epensively printed in full color, and very specially priced. $2.00 value, only $1.00 each. 3 maps for $2.75 . . . si (4) for $5.00 ... all nine, a complete map series for only $7.50 . . . postage prepaid. No C.O.D. Please en close payment with your name end address. Satisfaction guaranteed. BASIC BOOKS. INC. 151 No. Michigan Ave., Chicago 1, III. Round and Round Ruth Dixon Draw a big wheel on a big sheet of paper. Have lots of spokes. Between them write numbers from one to six or eight or ten. Each player in turn shuts his eyes, twirls a pencil in the air, and says, "Round and round without a sound, See the number that I've found!" The other players turn the wheel to a new position while the player has his eyes closed. Then he pushes the pencil down on the wheel. The number it falls on is what he scores. If the pencil lands outside the wheel or on a spoke, no points are counted Don't peek, Jimmie! Vs iv 7T Two Boats ' Margaret O. Hyde & Frances W. Keene hat you need: A waxed box such as a butter or milk carton, freezer tape, and a pece of soap or camphor or vegetable oil. 1. What to do: Cut one side from the butter box and mark the center at one end. Score lines from the opposite corners to this point and fold along these lines. Tape the point together. Cut a little circle in the stern as shown. It should be smaller than the piece of soap so that the soap rests on it. Place the boat in quiet water and the soap will drive the boat along, because it weakens the surface tension of the water behind the boat. The stronger surface tension at the bow pulls the boat forward. 2. What to do: Make another boat as in 1, but instead of cutting the circle in the stern, cut a slit up the center with a little hole as shown. Place the boat on the water and put one or two drops of vegetable oil in this hole. The oil will run along the slit, and the boat will move slowly across the water because the oil changes the surface tension of the water. I 7; V $ I V s 2.CUT A SLIT w If TAPE VEGETABLE 4c UIL SOAP I WEDGE ' 1. CUT HOLE 1 An Anatomical Tale Bess A. Lee eventeen parts of the body can be found in the words of this story. The first two are in italics. Chester and Earl raise chinchillas on their farm. These are handsome little animals. Some are greyer than others. They eat heartily but never meat and potatoes as we do. Uncle Oliver built them a cage with a wheel inside. Sometimes when they climb on it, they slip and plunge into space, looking very comical. They are never seen basking in the sunshine. They like shade. The children shipped one to the state fair and won a ribbon.' uoqaiH 'padjiHS '3NIHS"ns '3NDISBq 'aONflT1 'dlis 'aiMITP '133H 'H3An 'S30X;od 'lUHVaH '-i3Aa-iS 'auiosQNVH 'IMHVJ 'seiUipNIHD 'IHV3 '-XSaHO :sj3msuv Touch Tail! . Nat Bradford n this lively game the players . line up, each with his hands on the shoulders of the one in front of him. The front one is the head, the last one is the (oil. All the others try to keep the head from touching the tail. The line can never be broken. When the head finally tags the tail, the second in line becomes the head, and the first head becomes the tail. Try it. It's fun! u-:x. - ni .. I N Jane McHenrv he answers to these clues will rhyme with the word tin. This has a sharp point Part of a fish. If you beat the other team, you A receptacle for storage. ' 5. To whirl or revolve. 6. To look pleased and happy. 7. Noise, uproar 8.. Each of two people alike or nearly alike 9. Part of your face 10. Relative of your family. 11. Front part of the leg below the knee. . 12. The outermost layer or surface of anything 24 Family Weekly. April 13, IfiS