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\ ROW LET EVER/ PYREX DISH ) I SERVE you ML THESE HWS/ I |. YUMMY HOT IIUMI Fresh corn bread, biscuits and lots of mouth watering, energy-building dishes can be cooked with crispier browner crusts in this utility dish. You can watch cooking progress through the clear glass sides for perfect baking! 2. iwrowvwmau ptsms» See how this Pyres dish dresses up vegetables and makes them more appetising. Tomatoes stuf fed with corn and peaa; candied sweet potatoes; individual Hub bard squashes; a doren others! J. TASTY MIATS AND FISH I Your Pyrex utility dish cooks roasts, Ad chops, all kinds of main courses. Cook, serve, store left-overs in sameAl |T -. dfsh with no extra dishwashing) UTILITY DISH, 10H* site, only V V 4. CRISP SALADS I Ever think of using your utility dish as a unique i oblong salad bowl, or for serving chopped-up fruits and things like that? It adds sparkle and charm to any table, and washes clean as a whistle with no effort at all! ____ IN times like these you can keep every modem Pyrex dish busy! For exam ple, just check all the ways you can use this one! Each smart Pyrex dish can be used for a dozen appetizing recipes. And you can serve and store each food in the ^ same sparkling clear utensil it was cooked in. Pyrex ware cooks better, and faster— saving fuel. It washes easier, too! Choose Pyrex ware to help you serve better meals for less money! S. .DILICIOUS DISSIRTSI Ginger bread, cakes, puddings, custards are just a few of the many good things you can prepare and serve in this glistening Pyre* ware util ity dish! Ama*inopVrm^.„ . - EVERY GLEAMING DISH HAS A DOZEN DIFFERENT USES! PTREX MIXING IOWLS PERFECT for your mixing, baking, serving and storing! New Pyrex mixing bowls nest together to save space. Designed to fit your f||*£ hand. Set of 3 bowls — 1, 1^4 gQ » and 2}4Quart sizes.only "FLAVOR SAVER" PIE PLATE LOOK ... HANDLES ! For the first time on a Pyrex pie plate! The fluted edge of this new deep Pyrex “Flavor Saver” keeps juice and flavor in your pies. Many Ijt extra uses. 10" sire.only /re/ ;_l> ■ ) **®Mr ovib klin_ p. ** WW Ha Mm I *wta out »!**, •**•*■- f SttSysSS? / .—■'^JK ■ W OVINWA E iKH ^E§ W __ — TRADE MARK ..LOOK FOR IT, 4r 1h Bm HE FLAME WARE for your own protection IIAMO Sprucing for inspection — Major Meyer is the valet Little Corporal RATIONS. Corporal Snafu fueled up for a busy day at the field FLIGHT ORDEHS. He gives Lieut. Douglas last-minute low-down WORRY DOTY. Waiting for safe return — and more rations Only a non-com, but he's the big noise of the whole airfield Someday, some Army brass hat is going to get a surprise when he runs through the official Service Record file of our 63rd Pursuit Squadron. For under . the S’s he is going to find a certain Corporal M. Snafu, and he’ll prob ably raise a brass eyebrow — not only at the Corporal’s singular name, but also at the fact that he’s 11 inches high. Cnoi ic thp unnnffKt rwristprpd corporal in the U.S. Army (being six months old) and the hairiest (being a cocker spaniel). If you plan to visit him out at his base, Mitchel Field. L. I., we advise you to take along 9ome soda pop. He likes that better than bones. Pilot Next to soda pop he likes flying. Whenever he’s allowed to, he sticks his nose out of the cockpit and snaps at the rushing wind. He already has over a dozen flying hours to his credit; technically, that entitles him to a solo flight. Who’ll be the first passenger? Snafu was given to the 63rd Pursuit when he was six weeks old. Qhnrtlv after his induction, he was advanced to Private First Class — but was demoted again because of indiscretions in the Orderly Room (his Service Record tells the whole story, in impressive Army terms). He improved with age, however and soon won his corporal’s stripes. They’re regulation, too. He also wears his regulation “dog tag,” just the same as every other U.S. soldier, giving his name, age, etc. Corporal Snafu is on duty all day long in the Orderly Room, and no pilot in the Squadron would think of taking off without a fare well cuff. He bites them all im partially, but especially he bites Major Gilbert Meyer, with whom he bunks every night. “He won't get away with it when he gets his second teeth,” says Major Meyer. Meantime, he keeps ’em flying. - CHARLES D. RICE, JR.