Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 03, 1959, Image 2

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    J MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford. Oregon, Tuesday, March 3, 1959
Test Kitchens
Cloak -Dagger
Br JEANNE LESEM
United Press International
New York - (LTD - The test
kitchen of a major food man
ufacturer takes on aspects of
a cloak-and-dagger mystery
when a new product is in the
works.
This impression is height
ened at the Borden company's
new test kitchens here by a
small but fully equipped
kitchen shut off from the reg
ular four-section unit and the
"quantity recipe kitchen."
"We call this our 'puttering
kitchen," said Mrs. Evelyn
Costick, kitchens manager, in
an interview. "Men in our
products group use it for con
fidential experiments without
interruptions when visitors
are coming through."
It also keeps them out of
the way of the four home
economists who run the regu
lar test kitchens, developing
recipes, testing products and
Member Speaks
At Altrusa Club
Of Recent Trip
Mrs. Edna Mole, a member
of the Altrusa club of Med
ford, spoke to the group
Thursday following a busi
ness meeting at the home of
Mrs. Martin C. Wood, near
Talent.
Mrs. Mole, who has recent
ly returned from a six-weeks'
trio to the Philippine islands
and the Orient, told of her im
pressions of the places she vis
ited. After short stops in San
Francisco and Honolulu, she
flew to Manila, where she
stayed three weeks with her
son-in-law and daughter, First
Lt. and Mrs. Richard Van Al
len of Clark Air Force base.
Mrs. Mole said there are
still many evidences of
World War II damage, with
families living in the corners
of ruined buildngs, and chil
dren greeting American visi
tors with a V for Victory sign
and a shout of "Hi, Joe:'
Accompanied by her daugh
ter, Mrs. Mole arrived in
Hong Kong on Chinese New
Year's day. From there they
toured the countryside, seeing
the rice paddies, the walled ci
ties, and looking down on the
, fenced and guarded border of
Red China. They were advised
that refugees are pouring into
Hong Kong from Red China
at the rate of 7000 a month.
Mrs. Mole and her daugh
ter flew to Tokyo via Hong
Kong Airways, and added
that what Impressed her most
in Japan was the number of
people ready to serve you
wherever you go there.
Club members wore old
fashioned clothes, in honor of
the Oregon Centennial. Re
freshments were served by
the hostesses, Mrs. Howard
Stoll and Mrs. Valton Finley.
Mrs. Dorothy Donnely of
Renton, Wash., governor of
Altrusa Internationa l's
Twelfth district, will be the
honored guest at a special
Founder's day dinner Aprils,
it was announced by Miss
Myrta Otterdale, club presi
dent. The Altrusa club was
organized in Nashville, Tenn.,
in 1917.
Medford Jaycettes
Announce Meeting
. Mrs. Charles Henry, 349
Lindero avenue, will be host
ess for a meeting of Medford
Jaycettes Wednesday, March
4 at 8 p.m. An informal eve
ning of games will follow the
regular business meeting and
casual dress is in order.
Co-hostesses are Mrs. Clyde
Wheaton and Mrs. Warren
Hayse.
Meeting Announced
By Sewing Club
The Sewing club of Dis
a b 1 e d American Veterans'
auxiliary will meet Thursday,.
March 6, at 10 a.m. in the
home of Mrs. Linn Elliott. 513
Oregon Terrace. A potluck
luncheon will be served at
noon.
tcKojftoiflisravSI opens the door to
Portable
Model 907
$12995
Take On
Atmosphere
directions for new products,
and preparing food for taste
tests.
Most new products are de
veloped at the company's
main laboratory in Syracuse,
N.Y., Mrs. Costick said, but
many new food ideas origi
nate here. Once in hands of
the new products committee,
an idea starts on a long, labor
ious route that doesn't always
lead to grocery shelves.
A product may be okayed
by the research director and
meet all taste and quality
tests, only to founder in the
market research department.
Some Filed
If the demand for a product
is expected to be too small for
mass production, or if the
competition is too great to ab
sorb another brand in the,
field, the product is filed
away.
A company official, Milton
Fairman, could not say how
many new products meet this
fate, but he did recall one
mass production item that
was developed with an im
proved flavor, but had to be
shelved because it cost too
much to manufacture.
There is no average time
lapse between origin of a new
food idea and mass distribu
tion of the finished product.
However, the company's in
stant coffee took nearly a cen
tury to perfect.
Early reports of a coffee
concentrate were traced to a
Texan who visited the Borden
company founder, Gail Bor
den in New York in 1853. The
Texan subsequently wrote
home about tasting a coffee
made from a Borden inven
tion, a liquid coffee-milk mix
ture. This product was made un
til '.he late 1920s. Then, in
1941, the company-at govern
ment request developed a
concentrated coffee for the
armed forces during World
War II. It was released for
civilian consumption shortly
after V-E day.
Many Tests
Testing new products and
revising old ones go on con
stantly. The firm also devel
ops recipes for packages, leaf
lets, labels, cookbooks and
advertisements.
Consumers write in to have
recipes checked. Such a re
quest touches off a chain re
action, Fairman said. It starts
with the company's legal de
partment, to protect both the
consumer and the company.
Many a formula that the writ
er considers an old family
recipe turns out to be a Bor
den's original or an adapta
tion of a company recipe de
veloped many years earlier.
The four home economists,
working in family-size kitch
ens with equipment from
many major manufacturers,
check recipes and create an
average of 200 to 350 new
ones annually, enough to fill
a full-size cookbook, Mrs. Cos
tick said.
They use the kind of equip
ment a housewife uses in her
home kitchen, and test most
recipes on both gas and elec
tric stoves for variations in
cooking directions.
In spite of the meticulous
groundwork, a carefully test
ed recipe sometimes back
fires. A cherry whipped
cream pie once brought doz
ens of consumer complaints.
The blame was traced to a
proofreader-male and, obvi
ously, no cook-who didn't no
tice that one line had been
dropped from the recipe copy.
Unfortunately, that line con
tained directions for an essen
tial ingredient.
One recipe the company has
never published and probably
never will, was dreamed up
by the test kitchen staff in a
joking attempt to use as many
of the firm's products as pos
sible. The result was a cake
containing mincemeat, chees,
mElted milk, chocolate, con
densed milk, regular milk
and coffee-with a whipped
cream topping.
"It had an open, coarse tex
ture and a brownish color,"
Mrs. Costick admitted.
How did it taste?
"Passable," she said.
Nothing to add. 4 controls
include individual channel
control. 12-foot connecting
tead between speaker units.
Dual amplifiers. 8 watts.
50 to 18,000 cycles.
Operates on either
monaural or stereo. Has
Columbia CD cartridge
with sapphire needle. Plays '
cU records, better than
ver. Completely automatic.
Case covered in Dew
pyroxylin cloth whab!e.
Comes in 2-tone dark
brown and eggshelL
Exclusive Aeousti -grille.
RECORD SHOP
217 E. Main, Medford
STeREO
All-American
Chrysanthemums
Chosen for Year
Chrysanthemum growers of
the United States recently an
nounced three new varieties
as the All-American chrysan
themums of the year. The
new mums are Flair, a large
Cowered cushion type chry
santhemum, Crimson Lady,
another cushion mum, and
Girl Friend, a large decora
tive type.
Girl Friend is described a
dawn pink in color, with long
cutting stems for indoors or
outside beauty. It grows 24 to
28 inches in height with 12 to
18-inch spread. Flair is said
to be a "lively lavender" and
fully double with flowers in a
blanket of bloom. It grows
about 18 inches in height.
Crimson Lady is said to flow
er heavily, with blossoms of
a brilliant red. This variety
grows 15 to 20 inches in a uni
form, rounded plant.
Chrysanthemums are frost
tolerant, and give good color
to the garden in the late fall.
Plants live through the win
ter, and clumps may be sepa
rated for a number of plants
the following spring, or left
alone.
The 1958 winners were
Ruby King, Burning Bronze,
Showpiece and Yellow Em
peror. Former Resident
Honored at Party
On Anniversary
Mrs. John R. Widmer, for
merly of Medford and now of
Portland, was honored at a
family party in San Carlos,
Calif., February 22 which ob
served her 80th birthday an
niversary. Mrs. Widmer, re
membered here as Mrs. Eliza
beth Fluhrer, came to .Med
ford by plane and was joined
for the trip south by her
daughter, Mrs. Warren Olson,
1430 Euclid avenue.
In San Carlos they were
guests of another daughter,
Mrs. Bruce Bauer, also former
ly of Medford. Present for the
party were Mrs. Widmer's
three granddaughters, Miss
Marilyn Olson, student at
Stanford university; Miss Bar
bara Bauer, student at the
University of California, Mrs.
Donald Thorn, the former Jo
celyn Bauer, and the Thorn's
three young sons.
Mrs. Widmer spent a few
days in Medford on the re
turn trip, leaving last Wednes
day for her home in Portland.
4
It Isn't The Wheat ...
East Lansing, Mich. (UPD
Homemakers' quiz: What is
the cost of wheat in a loaf of
bread?
Slightly under three cents,
or 2.5 cents to be exact, says
John Moore, extension speci
alist at Michigan State Univer
sity. Biggest expenses in get
ting bread to market are costs
of baking, wholesaling and re
tailing. In spite of recent increases
in the price, a factory worker
can buy about 11 one-pound
loaves of white bread com
pared to 9.7 loaves in 1948.
Calendar
Calendar notices and news for
the society section of The Mail
Tribune must be submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition ts 1 p.m. Friday. Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 9
a.m. of the day for publication and
for week day news is 5 p.m. the
day before publication.
7:30 p.m. Chapter BE of
PEO Sisterhood, with Mrs. C.
Kennedy, 1 White Oak dr.
7:30 p.m. Medford Par
ents Home Extension unit,
home of Mrs. W. J. Thomp
son, 1210 Smith st.
7:30 p.m. Wilson Park
Home Extension unit, home
of Mrs. John Haven, 1200 Le
land ave.
8 p.m. Howard PTA,
multi-purpose room at school.
8 p.m. VFW auxiliary,
VFW hall, 42 North Front
St.
Wednesday:
10 a.m. , Agate Home Ex
tension unit, home of Mrs.
John Morgan.
10:30 a.m. Eagle Point
Garden club, home of Mrs.
Clarence Davies.
10:30 a.m. Lake Creek
Home Extension unit, home
of Mrs. Henry Meyer, Browns
boro. 10:30 a.m. Upper Apple
gate Home Extension unit,
home of Mrs. Rolland Smith.
11 a.m. Townsend Har
mony auxiliary. Carpenters
hall, 123V2 West Main st.
12:30 p.m. Chapter CP
of PEO Sisterhood, home of
Mrs. A.R. Schoenberg, Camp
White.
12:30 p.m. Contempor
ary Book club, with M r s.
Ralph Barnes, Old Stage rd.
12:30 p.m. Ladies auxil
iary. Fraternal Order of
Eagles, Eagles hall, 217 West
Main st.
1:30 p.m. Central Point
Garden club, home of Mrs.
Arnold Bohnert, Grant road.
1 p.m. Chapter CG of
PEO Sisterhood, home of Mrs.
Wayne Wejty, 2940 Hillcrest
rd.
2 p.m. Wednesday study
club, home of Mrs. O. A.
Welsh, 1300 East Main st.
' yJHr $m r$k KP"
1959 All-America Mum Elections. Crimson Lady of deepest
red, above, and Flair of lively lavender, on left, newest and
best hardy garden "Cushion" Chrysanthemums. Girl Friend
of dawn pink, on right, Is the new large garden "decorative"
winner. Available from plantsmen this season.
TV Cameras Kibitzers
At Bridge -Tournament
New York -(UPD- The kibit
zer - that much maligned in
dividual who always knows
the card you should have
played - is about to get a new
lease on life.
"He's about to change his
status from gazing pest to
paying guest," said John B.
Powers, executive secretary
of the Association of Amer
ican Playing Card Manufac
turers. "And it's all due to the mo
dern magic of the television
camera, which has just proved
that bridge and other card
games can be exciting spec
tator sports."
The proof, according to
Powers, came recently when
a New York television
station poked its kibitzing
cameras over the shoulders of
U.S. and Italian bridge ex
perts playing in the final
rounds of the International
Bridge tournament.
Could View Hands
The players were enclosed
in a glassed - in, soundproof
booth where they could also
be seen by the nearly 500
spectators who crowded the
room in a New York hotel.
The hands they were play
ing were shown on a nine-foot-square
electronic board called
a "bridgearama." The players,
of course, had to sweat it out
without the help of electron
'Retarded Child at Home'
Subject of New Bulletin
Washington To help par
ents of mentally retarded chil
dren give them the best pos
sible foundation for later liv
ing, the Children's Bureau has
issued a manual, "The Men
tally Retarded Child at
Home."
Mrs. Katherine B. Oettin
ger, Bureau Chief, in an
nouncing the new publication,
pointed out that it is one of
only a few which are devoted
to the development of men
tally retarded children in
their early years. It empha
sizs practical suggestions for
day-to-day living in the family
and community.
"The first few years of life
are so tremendously import
ant for the child; they can be
also the hardest for the par
ents. During these early years
the child is gaining the foun
dation for living with people
and learning to cope with life.
Attitudes and feelings have
tremendous importance i n
how well each of us uses the
abilities we have. This is no
less true of the retarded child.
"Teachers know that the
child who is happy at home
does much better in school.
When the family of a retarded
child has taught him good
self-help habits early, the
school or institution can spend
its time training him for other
useful tasks."
"The Mentally Retarded
Child at Home" was prepared
in response to requests not
only from parents of retarded
children but also private phy
sicians, who felt that many
parents needed a concrete
guide in helping their chil
dren grow and develop. The
publication approaches the
problem of retarded children
from the standpoint of normal
childhood growth processes,
and stresses the ways in
which these children are like
other children '
styling self -
velopment.
VISIT,
PHONE,
WRITE FOR
FREE SELF
EVALUATION ANALYSIS
ics. They couldn't see the
board.
But as each card was played
in the booth, a light blinked
behind the appropriate card
on the electronic board, then
went dark as the trick was
completed.
"Just like spectators at any
other sports event, the kibit
zers were free to cheer, boo,
and shout when they felt like
it," Powers said.
Behind Glass
"But this was one time
when the kibitzers could not
bother the players with their
free advice. The players were
safely quarantined behind
soundproof glass walls like so
many people-sized goldfish."
Kibitzers are named after a
German bird, the kiebitz. The
bird is noted for both its curi
osity and' the way it protects
its eggs.
The Kiebitz flaps its wings
in the face of an egg-hunter,
annoying him greatly. Powers
said the Germans coined the
word "kibitzer" years ago
when it became apparent that
the buttinsky sort of card
player or spectator and the
kiebitz were act-alikes.
It takes a lot of people to
keep the kibitzers at bay the
electronic way. Not counting
television crews, 14 special
ists pitched in at the interna
tional championship tourney.
It was written by Mrs.
Laura L. Dittman, specialist
in home training programs
for mentally retarded children
in the Bureau's Division of
Health Services.
Mrs. Dittman consulted per
sons in the fields of medicine,
child psychology and psychi
atry, education, social work,
nursing, speech, physical and
occupational therapy in its
preparation. A number of
parents of retarded children
were among its reviewers.
The publication gives par
ents suggestions on toilet
training, dressing, cleanliness
and manners, discipline,
speech, play, group experi
ences for the young retarded
child and discusses the im
portance of psychological
tests. It also discusses the re
tarded child's school days and
his adjustment in adolescence,
and suggests toys and equip
ment for home play.
Copies of "The Mentally Re
tarded Child at Home" may
be obtained from the Superin
tendent of Documents, U. S.
Government Printing Office,
Washington 25, D. C, for 35
cents each.
Beefing It Up
New York-OJPT-For an easy
luncheon dish, add Hi cups
shredded dried beef to easy
corn bread mix. Place beef in
plastic bag of cornbread in
gredients, mix and bake ac
cording to package directions.
Slice hot cornbread squares
horizontally and serve with
creamed peas between slices
and over top of each serving.
Prediction
New York (UPD The prices
of things consumers buy will
average from 1 to 2 per cent
higher in 1959 than they did
in 1958, according to agricul
tural economists at Michigan
State university.
WHETHER YOU ARE HOMEMAKER
STUDENT OR CAREER GIRL
Picture a charming, glorious, more successful
YOU! Sound too good to be' true? It isn't! Nancy
Taylor's Success Course helps you quickly learn
the secrets of cosmetic application figure
control fashion grooming modeling
etiquette speech and conversation hair
improvement personality de
nancy taylor
ROBERTSON SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
40 North Riverside, Medford, Ore.
Phone SP 3-4264 - SP 3-6408
Women Golfers
To Open Season
Women's Golf association of
Rogue Valley Country club
will open the 1959 season
with a breakfast at the club
house .Thursday, March 5.
The morning's program will
open at 9 a.m. with a "get
acquainted" hour followed by
open discussion and breakfast,
the latter to be served at 10
a.m.
Mrs. Fred Conrad, chair
man of the association for
this season, states that women
of the valley interested in
playing golf and becoming
members of the club are in
vited to attend. Reservations
are to be made by calling
Mrs. Reese Alexander, SP
ring 3-1969.
4
Ashland Student
Named to Office
McMinnville-Miss Vivienne
Murray, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Lee S. . Murray, Star
Route, Box 72, Ashland, is
among new spring semester
officers of fraternities and
sororities elected this month
at Linfield college, McMinn
ville, Ore.
Miss Murray is the new cor
responding secretary of Lamb
da Lambda Sigma, local so
rority. Ten Greek letter social or
ganizations are active on the
Linfield campus-five frater
nities and five sororities.
Three of the fraternities are
chapters of national fraternal
orders.
4
Mrs. Richard Singler
To Be Club Hostess
Wenonah club will meet
Thursday, March 5, at 10:30
a.m. at the home of Mrs. Rich
ard Singler, 27 Rose avenue.
A covered dish luncheon will
be served at noon, with a
business meeting following.
Mrs. Henry Dooms will pre
side. Members are reminded to
take their table service.
Square Dancers
Plan 'Hoedown'
An open "hoedown" square
ranee will be held at Ker
shaw Square starting at 8
p.m. tonight, Kenneth Hood,
Medford, has announced.
Potluck refreshments will
be served, and all square dan
cers are invited. Mr. Hood
and guest callers will call
squares.
Baked Applesauce
New York (UPD Baked
applesauce with cider topping
is a good dessert. Place (two
1-pound cans) applesauce in
IVi-quart casserole. Combine
Va cup each sifted flour and
sugar, cut in V cup butter,
sprinkle over applesauce and
bake in 450-degree oven 20
minutes, or until lightly
browned.
Serve warm or chilled, top
ped with cider-whipped non
fat dry milk. Combine Vz cup
each instant non-fat dry milk
crystals and well-chilled apple
cider. Whip 3 to 4 minutes, or
until soft peaks form. Add 2
tablespoons lemon juice and
continue beating about 3 to 4
minutes or until stiff peaks
form.
Lady Bosses
Denver-(UPD-Women will be
bossing men outside the home,
too, say business executives.
A panel of businessmen be
lieves there will be such a
shortage of men that lady
bosses will be commonplace.
The men based their predic
tion on projected statistics
from the labor department.
To handle the shortage,
women must be accepted as
management trainees now,
they added.
$11.95
Black Patent and
Bone Calf
Sizes: 5 to 9
AAA - AA - B Widths
WE GIVE
GREEN
STAMPS
Bring Italv to your home with a package of noodles, a can of tomatoes
and delicate Parmesan cheese. Blend compatibly with favorite American
ingredients and form an Italian-American treat . . . Tuna Neopolitan.
Hospital Solves
With hlew Nurses' Nursery
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
United Press International
New York-(UPD-"A "nurses'
nursery" is helping a Bronx
hospital solve the critical
shortage of trained personnel.
During the five years it
has been in operation, the
nursery has made it possible
for 150 mothers to return to
their chores tending to the
needs of the sick.
Unique in its field, Monte
fiore hospital's nursery first
aimed to woo back nurses by
guaranteeing them that their
youngsters would be well
taken care of at the hospital
while they worked.
At present, it also is car
ing for children of a social
worker," a doctor, a dietitian,
and two administrative execu
tives. Lunch Visit Permitted
The working mothers de
posit their children, ranging
in age from three to six, at
the nursery around 7:45 each
morning. They are permitted
to stop by for lunch, work
schedules permitting.
Once a month, the mothers
are required to attend a parent-teacher
meeting, accord
ing to Mrs. Lisa Hirsch, di
rector of the school.
"The school is wonderful,"
said Mrs. Vita Brabschrift, a
social worker who drops her
daughter off there five days
a week.
"It allows you to maintain
a relationship with your child
even though you have to
work. You never feel separ
ated or wonder about what's
happening to your child."
Mrs. Hirsch directs a staff
of three accredited nursery
school teachers, a secretary
and a cook.
Two-Hour Nap
The children get a mid-
When Waiting Helps
NewYor k (UPD Chilled
curry soup improves with
waiting. The day before you
plan to serve it, combine 2
tablespoons q u i c k-cooking
tapioca with IV2 to 2 tea
spoons curry powder, 1 tea
spoon lemon juice and 2 cups
chicken broth. Cook and stir
over medium heat until mix
ture boils. Remove from heat,
add IV2 cups light cream
gradually, stirring constant
ly. Cool about 15 minutes.
Stir, Chil! thoroughly, at least
2 or 3 hours, but preferably
overnight. Makes about 3Vi
cups.
4
Good Ending
New York (UPD Delicate
herbs such as parsley and sa
vory are always added at the
end of cooking, so the delicate
flavor isn't lost. Strong herbs
such as sage, basil, marjoram
and oregano are added during
cooking.
as seen in Harper's
Blue,
Sizes
AAAA -
II 1 Eeiae. Black Patent. Red M
II V Sizes 5 to 9
IV AAA - AA - B Widths
Use Your Pick's Apparel Charge Account
Problem
morning snack, a big lunch,
a mid-afternoon snack, and a
two-hour nap every day.
The mothers, according to
Mrs. Hirsch, pay $52 per child
each month. But, she said, the
cost of running the school
comes to more than that per
child.
The difference is made up
by the associated Y.M. and
Y.W.C.A. of greater "New
York.
It's smooth sailing until the
end of the day, according to
Mrs. Hirsch. Then, "some of
the youngsters want to stay
on when their mothers stop
by after work to pick them
up for the trip home."
Yes, we hava been
business for 27 years . .
and Northern California
our ability.
KfrS IH MEDFORD!
We sell only 1st class merchandisa and stand
behind the manufacturer's guarantee 100.
' Dollar for dollar, we'll give you more for your
money, in quality and service, than any other sew
ing machine store in Southern Oregon.
Yes, Sewing Machines, new and used, rentals,
parts and repairs, is our business and we're proud
of it.
Let Us Demonstrate the New
Husqvarna VIKING Sewing Machine
Husqvarna Viking, Made in Sweden
Jam Proof and Simple to Operate
New VIKINGS start at SI 19.00 and up
The Husqvarna Viking Sewing Machine is only
available through authorized franchised dealers,
and cannot be purchased through discount outlets.
When you think of Sewing Machines . . . think of us.
Art and Melba Klatt
Come In and visit us ALL THIS MONTH "
Register Now for the . . .
To Be Given Away ...
Seming Machma 408 Eajt
and
Bazaar
$9.95
$12.95
Beige, Red
5 to 9'2
AA - B Widths
m m
Jack Benny Plays
Violin af Benefit
San Francisco (UPD Jack
Benny appeared as guest vio
linist with the San Francisco
Symphony Orchestra in a
benefit concert Monday night
before a sell-out audience at
the Opera House.
It was the veteran come
dian's 10th symphony appear
ance in behalf of worthy
causes in this case, the San
Francisco Symphony's pension
fund.
Benny ended the night's
performance with a crowd
pleasing series of imitation
of famous violinists after serv
ing as soloist in Sarasate'i
"Gypsy Airs"; Mendelssohn's
"Concerto for Violin and Or
chestra in E Minor," and
llimsky - Korsakoff s "Capric
cio Espagnol."
Benny was presented with
honorary memberships in the
American Federation of Musi
cians and Local 6 of the AFM
at the conclusion of the concert.
CONVENIENT
FREE
PARKING
Ask Us When Making
an Appointment
CRATERIAN
and
MODERN
Beauty Salons
IT'S OUR 27TH
in Medford in the SAME
serving Southern Oregon
customers to the best of
OPEN
ARM AUTOMATIC
VIKING
Nothing to Buy to Qualifyl
4
1
k
SEWING MACHINE
CENTER
We Carry Our Own Cont,9,ii
Ma;n phone $p 2.2388
Just in . . . our new
high and little
heels state ever so
smartly fashion's new
credo shortened skirts
need shoes that flirt . . .
to put you in
pretty-legged standing!
HOES
112 EAST MAIN STREET
7
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