The March 1965 issue of Woman's Day was likely laying on the coffee table in my childhood home fifty years ago. It's no wonder I love the advertising artwork and feel comfortable with the trends. There was a great article on new hair styles with diagrams for cutting and rollers.
We wore 'falls' to achieve this 'new' hairstyle:
It reminds me of Meghan in Mad Men. I sure remember wearing a scarf or headband with this look.Oh, those rollers! I had slept in large ones and I don't know how I did it.
No one can forget those iconic Breck Girls.
Basements were being tricked out for youth parties. That bright pink wall color is unbelievable.
'Early American decorating' was undergoing a 'tweak'. The painted furniture reminds me of today's trends.
And patterns for spring suites in spring colors.
I never heard of "Frank Fritters." I guess they didn't catch on in my part of the country.
Nor did Mom ever make me a Jelly Stack.
I will spare you the Brains Barbizon recipe.
Bermuda Casserole
- 4 Bermuda onions cut in 1/4" slices
- 6 slices day old bread
- 1 cu finely crimbled blue cheese
- 1 cup undiluted evaporated milk or light cream
- 3 beaten eggs
- salt
- hot pepper sauce
- butter
- paprika
Parboil onion slices for 10 minutes. Trim crusts from bread and cut bread into small squares. Butter a shallow 1 1.2 quart baking dish. Put onion in dish and cover with bread squares. Sprinkle with the cheese. Mix milk and eggs and season with salt and hot pepper sauce. Pour over ingredients in baking dish. Dot with butter and sprinkle with paprika. Bake at 375 degrees for about 40 minutes. Serves 6.
And these illustrated a page on Potato dishes from Finland.
Pyttipannu
- Cold cooked potatos
- onions
- fat
- mean leftovers
- sliced cooked sausages
- cucumber pickles
- apples
- grated Cheddar cheese
Chop all the ingredients, but cheese, into 1" cubes. Saute the onion in a small amount of fat until golden. Add the other ingredients and sate until golden. Before serving sprinkle the dish with grated cheese. Serve with fried eggs and ketchup.
A shared advise column called Neighbors has this lovely tea illustration. Mary Weberg of Paulina, OR suggested keeping a blank recipe file card in one's purse. When you want a friend's recipe you hand it to them.
"When you use a recipe, of course you think of the person who gave it to you and the occasion of the giving."
An advertisement for Bell Telephone.
This is a sweet illustration for a three column article on March gardening.
Note the pill box hat on the beauty counselor. I never heard of this business.
Yowser! There were theater reviews in this woman's magazine! The Subject was Roses on Broadway starred Irene Dailey, Martin Sheen and Jack Albertson. The review by Hollis Alpert went on a whole page after this page: