Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 14, 1959, Image 2

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    MAIL TRIBUNE, M.dford, Orfn, 7mm4rr, April 14, lWt
Bag Material Suggested
For Trial-Error Sewing
Learning to sew?
If you are, it's more fun if
you can begin making some
thing for yourself or your
home right away. And if
you're fortunate enough to
have colorful cotton bags on
hand, why not use them for
your trial-and-error sewing
The fabrics used in print feed
and flour sacks are pretty,
practical, and economical
enough to use with nary a
qualm about mishap or fail
ure.
With careful planning and
preparation, you can achieve
KITCHEN' AIDS A cheerful
cotton sack apron can help
make cooking fun. Both the
apron and mammy doll, who's
hiding a cookie jar under her
hig skirt, were made from a
100-Ib. floor bagr. Yon'H find
cotton print bags useful for all
types of home sewing.
amazingly attractive results
from bag materials. Here are
some suggestions that may
help you:
1. Choose a simple pattern.
It's best for beginners to start
with uncomplicated blouse,
skirt, or dress patterns hav
ing easy-to-follow directions.
This won't be difficult, for
most pattern companies pre
pare some design especially
for novice seamstresses. Or,
if you'd like to try making
household accessories instead
of apparel, why not sew an
informal luncheon set, prac
tical apron, or bright kitchen
curtains? '
.2. Select the correct size.
Proper fit is one of the basic
requirements for successful
sewing. Look at the charts in
the pattern catalogues, then
- "4
PACKA BLE Floral print cot
ton shirt and shorts pack neat
ly for vacation-bound miss. En
semble by Century also in
cludes a slim skirt in the same
colorful print.
select the size that most "near
ly corresponds with your
bust measurement, as bust
and shoulder lines are most
difficult to alter. Pattern
sizes differ from those of
ready-to-wear garments, so do
not assume that the dress size
you ordinarily wear is the
correct one.
' 3. Choose an appropriate
fabric. Medium -weight solid
colors or small prints are
good choices for initial sew
ing efforts. Durable, washable
cotton bag fabrics are easy to
handle, come in hundreds of
stripes, checks, novelty prints,
florals, and other patterns de
signed by leading textile ar
tists. NEW
Priced
from
s
If f ; V- 1 1 J
p- T$V$
i"n ii ii
11 1 15
Typewriters New & Used
Adders Calculators
Portables-All Makes
VOIGHT'S
MEDFORD OFFICE EQUIPMENT GO.
FRIDEN AGENCY
8th I Grape, Medford Phone SP 2-4100
If you have print sacks on
hand, you'll find that they
can be prepared for sewing
with little effort. Just rip the
chain - stitched seams, wash
the bags in warm, soapy
water to remove brand names,
then dry and press. An or
dinary 100-lb. sack contains
about one and , a third yards
of sewing fabric, and three or
four provide enough for a
full-skirted frock or a pair
of curtains.
4. Buy the proper notions
and sewing tools. You'll save
time if you have zippers,
thread, buttons, and other no
tions on hand before you
start. Good sewing tools -
sharp scissors, plenty of pins,
tape measure, tailor's chalk,
hem marker, and machine at
tachmente will speed up
your sewing, eliminate that
"home-made" look.
5. Sew with care and imagi
nation. Follow directions
carefully, and you'll be less
apt to make mistakes. If you
do slip us; don't hesitate 'to
take out stitches ' and begin
again. Neatness, combined
with tasteful use of color,
design, and fabric, will bring
results you'll be proud of.
Even after you have be
come an accomplished seam
stress, you'll find cotton bags
handy f for making innumer
able additions to home or
wardrobe. And for skillful
needlewomen, they may have
a fancy future as well as a
practical past.
Prizes for women who sew
with cotton sacks will be
awarded in a $17,000 contest
being held at 49 state and
regional fairs this year. Win
ners will receive cash gifts,
Necchi portable sewing ma
chines, and may become eli
gible for two top prizes -
expense - paid vacations in
glamorous Hollywood. Infor
mation is available from the
National Cotton Council, P.
O. Box 9906, Dept. F, Mem
phis 12, Tennessee.
Reunion Slated
By 1939 Class;
Need Addresses
A committee planning the
20-year reunion of the 1939
graduating class of Medford
High school . announces that
the addresses of several class
members-are still needed. The
reunion will be held at Rogue
Valley Country club June 27.
Needed are the addresses
of Rhea Anderson, Herbert
Botts, Emma Clement, Jean
Bowen, Walter Brunner,
Jeanne Chapman, Donna Roe
Connery, Ben Dodge, Wilma
Fleming, Jack Drager, Bonna
Delle Hankins, Norma Hed-
berg, James Hembree, Fran
ces Ingram, George B. Logan,
Joe McKee, Elizabeth Parks,
Regina Queen, Lauren Skow,
Ellen Walker, Robert Wilson.
Catherine Campbell, Lorraine
Jones, Lorraine Wilson and
George Giffin.
Anyone have the address
of any of these persons is
asked to call Mrs. Alan Jew
ett, SPring 2-6353; Mrs. Ed
ward Conner, SPring 2-4470,
or E. Carl Bennet Jr., SPring
3-4968.
Cadet Espey
Valley Visitor
Cadet David L. Espey of the
United States Merchant Ma
rine Academy, Long Island,
N. Y., was a week end visitor
in the valley t the home of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.
V. Espey, 619 Park street.
A graduate of St. Mary's
High school, Cadet Espey re
cently arrived from ' New
York via Panama Canal and
left Sunday aboard the SS
Monterey for New Zealand,
Australia and Hawaii.
4
Visitors Here
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Latson,
Sacramento, Calif., are in
Medford as guests of their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Chipman,
1808 Roxy Ann place. Tonight
the Latsons will attend a
meeting of Bethel 55, Interna
tional Order of Jobs' Daugh
ters, during which their
granddaughter, Miss Sharon
Chipman, will be initiated
into the order. . . .
ADDING MACHINES
We Rnt
Adders
Typewriters
Calculator
PTA Plans
Meeting -
Thursday
Parents of all McLoughlin
Junior High school students
will have an opportunity to
meet their child's Home Room
teacher and councelors in the
various classrooms on Thurs
day, April 16 at 7:30 p.m,
during a meeting of the Mc
Loughlin Junior High school
Parent - Teacher association
The meeting will be held in
the girl's gymnasium, the en
trance is off Holly street.
Glenn Linn, principal of
the school, extends a special
invitation to all parents of
sixth grade students who will
be entering McLoughlin Jun
ior High school in the fall
to be present at this meeting.
They, will meet Home Room
teachers and counselors and
hear a brief preview of the
school program, grade re
quirements and any changes
that will be made in the cur
riculum. Counselors. will also
be present, from Medford Sen
ior High school for interviews
with parents who have stu
dents , entering that school in
the fall.
Mrs. Bill Rambo will con
duct a business meeting. Elec
tion of officers is planned. A
slate of candidates will be
presented by the nominating
committee and other nomin
ations may be made from the
floor, provided the consent of
the nominee has been given,
All parents and guests are
invited to have refreshments
in the cafeteria with other
parents and teachers after the
meeting. Mothers of students
in the seventh grade will be
hostesses.
Labels Changed
For Sweeteners
Washington, D.C. - Persons
on sugar-restricted diets will
find it much easier to distin
guish artificially sweetened
canned fruits from those
packed in sugar syrup under
special standards developed
by the Food and Drug admin
istration.
Under the new standards,
the words "artificially sweet
ened" will , appear on the la
bel as part of and ahead of
the name of the fruit, FDA of
ficials said.
The standards will become
effective in about 3 months
unless stayed by objections of
persons adversely affected
and will apply to artificially
sweetened peaches, apricots,
pears; cher;ies, fruit cocktail,
and figs. .
The new standards permit
use of a water solution of a
safe nonnutritive artificial
sweetener in place of the us
ual syrup to meet the needs
of persons on sugar-restricted
diets.
In addition to the "promi
nent identification of such
fruits as "artificially sweet
ened," the labels will include
the common name of artificial
sweetener, its percentage by
weight, and the number of
calories in an average serving
of the canned product.
.
Book Club
Contemporary Book club
will meet Wednesday, April
15, at 1:30 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Glenn Jackson, Green
way circle.
Calendar
Calendar notices and news for
the society section of Tbe Mall
Tribune mast be submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition Is 1 p.m. Friday. Dead
line for the. weekly calendar is 9
a.m of tbe day for publication and
for week day news is 5 p.m. tbe
day before publication.
Tuesday:
8 p.m. - American Legion
auxiliary. Legion hall.
8 p.m. - District meeting,
Nevita Chapter, at the Ma
sonic Temple, Central Point.
8 pan. - Pythian club, home
of Miss Patricia Hawks, Shady
Cove.
Wednesday!
9:30 a jn. - Woman's So
ciety of Christian Service,
circle 2, with Mrs. John Bra
dish, 520 Hamilton st.
10-12 noon - K i w a n i a n
Dames Coffee, home of Mrs.
William T. Clark, 545 Pierce
rd.'
10 a.m. - Woman's Mission
ary Union of First Southern
Baptist church, at church.
10:30 aon. - Central Point
Home Extension unit, home of
Mrs. Paul Snook, Ferry rd.,
Shady Cove.
11 ajn. - Townsend Har
mony auxiliary, Carpenters
hall, 12314 West Main st.
12 noon - Reames Social
club, Medford Masonic hall.
12:30 p.m. - Chapter CP of
PCO Sisterhood, home of Mrs.
T. P. Barss, 323 Windsor ave.
1-7 p.m. - Oregon Nurses
Association. District 4, work
shop. Red Cross auditorium.
1 pjn. - Past Chiefs club,
home of Mrs. Emilie Conrad,
632 Palm st.
1 pjn. Phoenix Grange
HEC, home of Mrs. Marvin
Hixon, Colver road.
1 pan Chapter CG, PEO,
home of Mrs. R. E. Mencke,
2141 East Jackson boulevard.
2 p.m. - Wednesday Study
club, Girls Community club.
New Jersey Woman Works
With Eight Thousand Mice
By GAY PAULEY
XJPI Women's Editor
New York-dlPt-Af ter hours.
Peggie Coufos of Teaneck,
N.J., is the first to jump at
the sight of a mouse. But on
the job, she works with 8,000
mice without flinching.
Mrs. Coufos is a "mouse
doctor." Her laboratory in a
pharmaceutical firm in May
wood, N.J., tests mice in an
anti-cancer campaign. Mrs.
Coufos gives each mouse a
thorough physical examina
tion and tests for salmonellae,
an epidemic infection which
can hamper research. If she
pronounces a tmouse healthy,
it goes on to the breeding labs.
The firm - Charles Pfizer -is
raising what it believes is
the first pure strain of mice
in the United States. When
the pedigrees are established,
malignant tumors are trans
planted, to the mice for study.
Mouse Pediatrician
About 20,000 mice are test
ed in her lab every year. And
Awards
Announced
Two Hedrick Junior High
school students, Diana Hiatt
and Eleanore Alfonso, have
each been award $75 scholar
ships to the annual Midwest
ern Music and Art summer
camp to be held this summer
from June 14 to July 26 at the
University of Kansas at Lawr
ence.
Diana Hiatt is a daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D.
Hiatt Jr., 1016 East Jackson
street, and Eleanore Alfonso
is a daughter of Mrs. Mary A.
Alfonso, 14 South Bartlett
street.
These scholarships were
given in honor of the recogni
tion these two students re
ceived in the annual Scholas
tic Art Exhibition.
The summer camp is held
for especially talented or gift
ed students in the fields of art,
music, theater, ballet, and sci
ence. It is open to students
from all over the United
States from Junior High
through Senior High School
age.
Diana Hiatt, ninth grade,
received two gold keys, one
blue ribbon award, and one
placed award in the regional
Scholastic Art Contest held at
J. K. Gill company at Port
land in February.
Eleanore" Alfonso,, eighth
grade, received one gold key,
one blue ribbon award, and
one placed award in the same
contest.
These girls are students of
Miss Kathy Fonken who is the
art art instructor at Hedrick
school.
Concert
Scheduled
Central Point The . an
nual spring concert of Crater
High school, featuring t,h e
concert band, choir and glee
club, will be presented Fri
day, April 17, at 8 p.m. in the
school gymnasium. The pub
lic is invited.
The 73-piece concert band
will play Mozart's "Marriage
of Figaro;" "Italian Festival"
by Osser and "Seouoia" by
Lagassey. The band will also
play "Night Piece' by Klein,
with' Charla Jo Meyer as
piano soloist.
Choir numbers will b e
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes"
by Kern; "All in the April
Evening" by Robertson;
Gary Indiana" by Wilason;
Every Time I Feel the Spir
it" by Murray; "The Lord's
Prayer" and other sacred
numbers.
Among the glee club num
bers will be "I believe," "He";
"Blue Moon" and "If You
Know the Lord.'
Applegate Club
To Hear Speaker
Applegate Valley Mrs.
A. C. Lewis of Phoenix will
speak on flower arrangement
at a meeting of Applegate
Valley Garden, club Wednes
day at the home of Mrs. Rob
ert Sorber. The club is co
operating with the local
Grange in giving a scholar
ship to 4-H summer school
at Corvallis, and a plant sale
for benefit of the scholarship
fund also will be held.
The meeting will begin at
1:30 p.m. and everyone in
terested is welcome.
Elk-Trail PTA
To Present Play
Elk - Trail Parent - Teacher
association will present a
one-act play, "The Dummy"
Friday, April 17, at 7:30 p.m.
in the gymnasium of Elk-
Trail school.
The program, set for 7:30
p.m., will also include a par
ent talent show.
The cast of the play in
cludes Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sanderson, Mrs. Myrna Wag
ler and Wayne Ash,
she acts as pediatrician to the
baby mice. No small task, be
cause each mother mouse has
an average of 6.5 to 7.2 off-
spring per litter in 21 days
A graduate of Barnard col
lege, the pretty 22-year-old
bacteriologist had planned to
i go into medicine until she de-
cided in favor of marriage
during her junior year. This is
her first job, which she began
last June.
"Am I afraid of mice? Oh,
and how!" she said. "I was
squeamish at first, because
I'd never handled mice be
fore. But I got used to them.
I got the purple heart the first
week I got bitten so many
times.
But soon she learned how
to handle the animals "gent
ly! and now has a pet white
mouse which she named
"Dumbo" because it has big
ears.
He has lots of personality,
she .said, "but still, I don't
give him an opportunity to
bite me, and I'd never take
him home. I'd be scared of a
mouse at home."
Has she ever lost a mouse?
"Luckily, no." she said.
"I've heard how they've got
ten loose in other labs, but
not in mine. We keep them
in large glass jars so there's
not much danger of their run
ning around."
rler nusband, Thomas, a
real estate salesman, thinks
her job is "humorous."
"We're so completely op
posite in jobs that he can't
help being interested. But of
course, he teases me, and my
friends call up and say, "come
quick, Dr. Coufos, my mouse
is sick."
4
Congregational
Church Women
To Meet Here
Congressional women of this
areaw ill hear Mrs. W.T.M.
Cook, Santa Ana, Calif., presi
dent of the 800,000-member
National Fellowship of Con
gregational Women, at the an
nual meeting of the Southern
Oregon' Congressional Wom
en's Fellowship at the Mea
ford Congregational Church
Friday, April 24.
Women from Klamath Falls,
Roseburg, Ashland and Med
ford will attend-
Mrs. Cook will tell about
thp church's work in Mexico,
and its project to aid share
croppers at Delmo, Mo. .
Other speakers will include
Dr. A. J. Buttrey, Portland,
minister and superintendent
of the Congregational Confer
ence of Oregon; and Mrs. Paul
W. Harvey Jr., Salem, presi
dent of the Oergon Fellow
ship of Congregational
Women. .
Dr. Buttrey will talk about
the church's mission in Ore
gon, including the need for
starting new churches and aid
for the denomination's col
leges. Mrs. .Harvey will out
line women's projects for next
year
Mrs. C. D. Elhart, Medford,
president of the Southern Ore
gon Fellowship, and other of
ficers will give progress re
ports. This will be the first such
meeting for the women of the
newly organized Congrega
tional church at Roseburg.
Families Visit
Relatives Here
Valley visitors this week
are Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Buckingham Jr., Manhattan
Beach, Calif., and their two
children, Sherry and Timmy,
and Mrs. David Grebb, and
son, Steven, of Roseburg.
They are visiting Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Buckingham, 27
Lincoln street, who are par
ents of Mr. Buckingham and
Mrs. Grebb.
r I ) Silvertone 4x6
::p Portraits
Teacher Group
Plans Meeting
On Arithmetic
Jackson County Classroom
Teachers' association will
have its final meeting of the
school year, Monday, April
20, at the Phoenix Elementary
School cafeteria. Mrs. Ruth
Sawyer, of Elk-Trail school,
president of the association,
will turn over her duties to
Roland Griffith of Griffin
Creek school.
The topic for discussion is
arithmetic. Miss Gladys Dur
rand, supervisor for the Med
ford Public schools, has ar
ranged for group leaders from
among the Medford teaching
staff. Leading, the primary
grades discussion will be Mrs.
Gladys Lawrence, Hoover
school, and Miss Durrand. The
intermediate group will be
under the guidance of Mrs.
Esther Fliegel, Hoover school,
assisted by Kenneth Hulburt,
principal of Jefferson school.
The upper , grade and high
school group will be led by
Mrs. Eula Foley and Gordon
Morris, both of McLoughlin
Junior High school.
Current arithmetic practices
will be highlighted, includ
ing ; individual differences,
grouping, guides and courses
of study, testing, enrichment
and instructional materials.
Dinner reservations may be
made by contacting the county
superintendent's , office b y
Thursday, April. 16. Dinner
will be served at 6 p.m. and
will be followed immediately
by sectional discussion
groups.
This rlati riress rlesisned bv
John Derro of David Hart has
the new dome-shaped silhou
ette. The contrasting vertical
and horizontal stripes give
eye-appeal.
Coins Displayed
At Medford Bank
In observance of National
Coin week, Rogue Valley
Coin club has an exhibit this
week at First National bank.
Included in the display are
ancient Roman and other for
eign coins, early American
coins and modern money, in
cluding currency. The observ
ance closes April 18.
William Thompson is presi
dent of the club, which is one
of the city's newer organiza
tions. '
Returns
Mrs. Bruno Pellegrini has
returned to her home on
South Oakdale avenue after
spending the past month in
Buffalo, N.Y.,with Dr. and
Mrs. Robert Secnst.
Each attractively mounted .
Choice of proofs
Phone
SP 25238
Women Scientists Aid Men
On Problems
By PATRICIA WIGGINS
United Press International
Washington -d'PD- Women
may not be driving man to
the moon, but a lot certainly
are helping in
efforts to put
him there.
Women sci
t i s t s and re
searchers add
a fern i n i n e
touch to pro
grams sending
satellites and
roc kets aloft
to explore the
Patricia Wiggins m y s teries of
space. They are astronomers,
biologists, physicists, mathme
maticians, chemists, drafts
men, physiologists and audi
ologists - to name a few
classifications.
Besides running homes and
raising families, (these women
are charting "road maps" to
the moon; designing electronic
brains for missiles and rock
ets; developing foods for
space-chanber dining; comput
ing orbits for man-made satel
lites; analyzing cosmic rays
and drafting missile parts.
Take Dr. Nancy Roman, a
top-flight astronomer whose
work starts where "space lets
off" at the Naval Research
Laboratory here. She's as
familiar with electromagnetic
spectrums as most women are
with bobby pins.
Nancy includes among her
tasks charting "road maps"
to the moon. Working with
an 84-foot radio telescope, the
largest of its kind in the
world, she supplies, for per
sons tracking rockets through
space, data to help differen
tiate man-made projectiles
from natural phenomena in
the wide open spaces.
Inter-service rivalry takes
a back seat to science where
her work is concerned. One
recent customer for one of
Nancy's road maps was the
Army, before the launching
of Pioneer III.
Nancy also measures tem
peratures on the moon at dif
ferent wave lengths to find
out what the surface of the
moon is like-"fairly important
if we ever get there."
Noise Tests
Or take Women's Air Force
Maj. Elizabeth "Betsy" Guild.
Stationed as an audiologist at
the Wright Air Development
Center's Aeromedical Labora
tory, Dayton, O., she has
flown more than 100 hours
in high-speed jet aircraft,
measuring noise levels at su
personic -speed.
Her concern is not only
psychological-how noise af
fects pilots and crews-but
practical-how to retain effec
tive radio communication in
spite of screaming engine or
wind noises. Her work one
day may help make that trip
to the moon a quieter one for
the traveler,
Another space woman is
Mrs. Helen Hayes, who got
into space work via the ocean.
Formerly an oceanographist
with the Fish and Wildlife
Service studying oyster life
in Chesapeake Bay, , she now
keeps a biologists eye on
Navy research contractors, ex
perimenting with getting oxy
gen to future spacemen by the
same manner that oysters get
it: oxygen-producing algae.
Scientific assistant to the
chief of the Biology. Branch
of the Office of Naval Re
search, Mrs. Hayes saw to it
that yeast experiment samples
went up with the Navy's Van
guard to measure gasseous ex
changes during the flight.
WAF Engineer
Dr. Lillian A. McNally, a
WAF first lieutenant, keeps
busy as a chemical engineer
at the Air Force missile test
site at Edwards Air Force
Base, Calif., developing fuels
and oxidizers for rocket pro
pellants. And mathematician Mrs.
Marion Camille Sims, one of
MOTOGH
120 Eost Mom Si
4l
of Space Age
a bevy of women at the
Army's Ballistic Missile Agen
cy in Huntsville, Ala., cranks
out data from one of the most
advanced electronic brains
concerning the velocity of sat
ellite launching vehicles.
Beatrice Finkelstein, physi
ologist, and food chemist, is
more interested in the men
in space machines than in the
machines themselves. She's
spent the past six years on
pioneer nutrition research
studies which have resulted
in ' 12 frozen aircraft meals
and 10 canned and unfrozen
meals designed to keep space
and jet travelers well fed.
Also at the Wright Devel
opment Center in Dayton, she
works on the premise that
variety in meals is even 'more
essential in the confines of
a space cabin than in an earth
bound dining room.
Even the sundress goes Em
pire in a floral-embroidered
plaid cotton by Brigance of
bportsmaker. Cool and pretty
for blue skies, it has a double
duty scarf for sudden breezes.
Sandra Sanner
On Bethel List
The name of Miss Sandra
Sanner was inadvertently
omitted from the list of grand
bethel appointments listed in
Sunday's issue. Miss Sanner,
Bethel 55, Medford, was ap
pointed grand page.
The appointments were an
nounced during the annual
grand bethel session held last
week end in Eugene.
.
Jaycettes Nominate
At Recent Meeting
Eagle Point - Officers for
the coming year were nomi
nated at the last meeting of
Eagle Point Jaycettes, held at
the home of Mrs. Harry Hans
corn. Election will be held at
the next meeting.
Mrs. Glenn Nelson and Mrs.
Harold Holloway served re
freshments.
YOUR CHILD?
If your youngsters are still
not protected against polio, in
sist that they start and com
plete tbe full series of polio
shots NOW.
Polio isn't licked! In fact,
among children not yet vacci
nated, paralytic polio cases
actually increased in 1 958 over
1957. More ove-ycar-olds were
stricken than any other age
group. i
The 1!59 poli season is fast
approaching. The sooner your
children are polio-protected,
the safer their futures will be.
And since polio strikes all ages
be sure to get your shots too.
See your doctor or health de
partment NOW.
DON'T TAKE
A CHANCE
TAKE YOUR
PGi.iv SnwlS!
Published as a pub'Je service i
cooperation Kith The Advertising
Council and the Newspaper Ad
vertising Executive Association.
' i
It
? ' -I
..' ,, ., .l.i
' 'ii In ill
Si
HI
- 8 . 4 sol m 3
REGAL Miss Malinda Berry,
1959 Maid of Cotton, wears a.
mauve-toned Everfast cotton
satin evening; coat over a ball
gown styled on Empire lines
in floral-printed Supima cotton
crepe. This queenly ensemble
is by Claire SchaffeL
For Small Potatoes
New York (UPD Try ,t h i s
waterless cooking method for
small new potatoes. Wash and
scrape 2 pounds potatoes. Heat
2 tablespoons salad oil in
heavy skillet. Add potatoes,
shake pan to coat all sides,
cover and cook slowly 30 min
utes or until tender. Shake
pan occasionally to cook pota
toes uniformly. Season to taste
with salt, ground black pepper
and fresh parsley or chives.
Serves 6.
From
Holland
a great new hot
chocolate flavor
Borden's
new
Instant
Dutch
Only drink of its kind with
extra vitamins B, Ba, D, IronI
CHOCOLATE
FLAVORED MIX
O MOf COL wm
Wouldn't you like your chil
dren to enjoy a richer, more
nourishing hot drink in win
try weather?
It's Borden's new Instant
Dutch . . . with a great new
hot chocolate flavor direct
from Holland.
55 X i i -me
f ;J s Mi !
We r SB vJ
f
ft
ni iTf
f mixes
INSTANTLY
IN COLD I
, MILK TOO!
Th Borden Co. 4
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