OCR Text |
Show 12 DECEMBER 22, T1IK JOURNAL 4 II FROZEN FOODS WINNERS -- scon's By R. J. SCOTT SCRAP BOOK ; 11)51 Santa To Visit Indian Reservations Candy, toys, clothing, dolls and other gifts are being shipped by the Save the Children Federation to the Navajo and Iapago Indian New Reservations in Arizona, in preparation Mexico, and Utah for the annual Christmas party which will bring presents to more than 10,000 Navaio youngsters and 1,500 Papago children. Miss Irene Taake, state director for the Federation in Arizona and New Mexico, will supervise the dis-- ! tribution of the gifts. BILLBOARD, A PRO.JFC'flCH CR. LEDGE FIAEP '(V.t BOW oF A YESEfcL FoB.'fKL KGHOR'fo REST OK. OM BILLBOARD, e A. FLAf SURFACE, AS or FAHEL WALL, oft FFNCE.CHYiHICH fxoLiD. burs m Frozen Foods program, of which National winners in the 1951 International Harvester Company is the donor of awards, show samples merchanof their work a frozen cake to F. W. Jenks, dising services, International Harvester, during the 30th annual National Club Congress in Chicago. Winners, left to right, are Beverly Norris, 20, Burtrum, Minn.; Grace McCall, 10, Fulton Md.; Bettie Lou Bunn, 17, Pikeville, N. C., and Janice Richins, 16, Draper, Utah. These girls were selected from 1,000 county winners and 45 state winners to receive national awards of $300 International Harvester scholarships, good at any accredited agricultural college. Miss McCall has frozen 503 quarts of vegetables, 303 quarts of fruits, 2,863 pounds of meat, 58 pies and cakes, and 66 pounds of dairy foods in five years of Frozen Foods participation. Miss Norris has frozen 6,532 pounds of meats and other foods in seven years and has given 20 Frozen Foods demonstrations. Miss Bunn, in her project, has frozen 1,704 pounds of meat, 414 quarts of vegetables, and 130 quarts of fruits, as well as butter, cakes and breads. Miss Richins has frozen 2.931 pounds of meat, 55 packages of fruits and vegetables, as well as many baked products. 4-- II vice-presiden- flow Pip rf ROSS t, With the exception of the dolls, the Christmas presents will be generally distributed. The dolls all of which were hand created by teen-aggirls in Seventeen Magazines Christmas Doll party in behalf of Save the Children Federation-will go to Navajo and Pago classrooms up to and including the fourth grade. The extras will be given to dormitories and Navajo and Pagago girls under twelve. LoMG dAKE-CoLUMB- do dill Ah-AHli- 7 Vo DAYS BROOM AMD A. BOARD IK -- q BRITAIN'S NEW S lw-- liu lb WARD u U out-ofscho- Yre YrtRXSUlH; FIELD OFF w Whits i.iIuy UNDERGOING TESTS SUPER-CARRIE- R De Luxe : a specially elegant . , . uncommon, WEBSTER GREAT BRITAIN'S NEW 36,800-TOduring a test run. The Admiralty CARRIER, H.M.S. Eagle, steams through Bangor Bay, near Belfast, Ireland, revealed that the warship has a new, secret method to control damage caused by enemy guns or bombs, Including atomic weapons, and is virtually unsinkable. The Eaglet payload" will be 100 jet fighters and her flight deck Is long enough to launch atomic bombers. (International) N In Edison's Home straight bourbon whiskey, elegant in taste, uncommonly good ...a Hiram Walker Whiskey. and In Today's Home is a Hiram Walker & Sons Inc., Peoria, 111. SbourbonW 86 proof. mas "Pm really In business for myself! You see, in Utah's mining industry, there's a $30,000 investment for each employee. So the company I work for has actually laid out all that money to put me in business. I'm glad they did it, because I couldn't have swung the deal on all-electr- my own." UMi THE OLD This ungainly giant of a washing machine is the seed from which sprung todays streamlined, automatic wonders. The worlds first went washer, the on the market in 1907 (this particular machine went into Thomas Alva Edison's home to do the washing for 13 years). While the model shows exasperation at the labors involved in putting the capacity load of 30 shirts or 12 sheets wringer, introduction of the through a three-rol- l machine marked a momentous step in emancipating the homemaker from the scrubboard. j ic Thor-Electri- c, TIIE NEW Forty-fiv- e years of engineering have produced the modern time and labor saver, which has reduced the job of doing the family laundry to that, relatively, of an incidental household task. Improvements give the homemaker of today a cleaner wash than her grandmother produced. No longer need she go through the backbreaking routine of lifting heavy wet, clothes from wash and rinse waters to put them' repeatedly through the wringer. Todays ma- -' chine does all the washing, rinsing and water extracting at the flick of the handy switch. ol |