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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1960)
Great Idea! Do it with ARM & HAMMER (BAKING SODA) BICARBONATE MEETS ALL REQUIREMENTS OF U.S. PHARMACOPOEIA DARN C AG EX i 'IV V" A -c?S5 II t j WW v J "Iffr'tmrnf' -it. - CLEANSE AND SWEETEN ROTtlOf RATOR Soda is the cleanser recommended by refrigerator manufacturers. It sweetens as it cleans. Just sprinkle Arm & Hammer bicarbonate of soda commonly called baking soda-on damp cloth and wipe all surfaces. Soda cuts film without scouring, without grit, without leaving suds. Wash ice trays, food boxes, etc. with solution of 3 tablespoons soda to quart water. Buy Arm & Hammer soda at food stores. CLEAN AND PUtlFr BABY BOTTLES Soda gives them fresh fragrance and extra-clean sparkle. No sour odor or bottle film. Add Vi teaspoon of soda to each bottle (glass or plastic) and fill with warm water. Then shake, rinse and sterilize. K ,x OUKK WAV TO CLEAN BRUSHES AND COMBS Just let them sUnd several minutes in basin of warm water to which has been added 2 or 3 tea spoons soda. Soda cuts film, leaves them sweet and clean. Keep Arm & Hammer soda in your bathroom. V- ARMiHAMMEBj FREE: hbw i ijm ititaff mmi SfJVt MUaoy. Illustrated booklet describes accepted ways to use soda bicarbonate for good health, baking, cleans ing. Mail coupon below. I crrUin mu, sufk as atWrv polilmH Airw Turk, Ou name hidk quality stim is sU under the nmm COW BXAXD. Church & Dwight Co., Inc., Dept. FW-3 P. O. Box 2266, Grand Central Station, New York 17, N. Y. , - Please send free booklet "How to Live Better and Save Money." ran YOU ft NAME I As if march weren't windy enough already, the flailing limbs of basketball players competing for this month's many state high-school tournaments stir up a pretty stiff breeze. Climaxing a season of America's most popular spectator sport, these contests arouse excitement among players and fans alike. Some teams may win because of superior height, speed, tactics, or stamina. But few hoopsters go through the elaborate practice maneuvers developed by Butler Hennon, coach of -the Wampum, Pa., high-school team. On the theory that a player who does well with handicaps does brilliantly when the obstacles are removed, Coach Hennon has the boys jump with galoshes, run with weighted vests, wear 20-inch mittens, and warm up with a medicine ball. Coach Hennon's theory works almost to perfection. In the past 10 years, the Wampum team has won 148 games, lost only four. Full armor for a practice hoop session at Wampum High School includes 20-inch leather mitts, a weighted vest, galoshes, and kneepods. Family Weekly, March 6. I960