No, they did not.
Elmers glue and water. Get the water boiling in a medium size pot. Remove from heat. Add 1 medium bottle of glue to the water and stir till totally disolved. Allow to cool. If too transluscent, gently warm the water and add more glue slowly till it satisfies your preference. This is how they film milk for TV and print, as natural milk appears slightly blue-ish on film. If making a baby bottle -- seal the ring cap with elmers glue after pouring the fake milk in, don't forget to seal the cap also. I use E 6000 glue. If you wish to see the milk travel to the nipple then buy a silicone blind nipple(no hole). Be sure to seal the cap.
The Borden Dairy company introduced Elmer's Glue All in 1947. It had been marketing a line of glue called 'Cascorez', made from milk products. -The new glue was entirely synthetic, but sales were slow until they introduced 'Elmer the Bull' , husband of their long time mascot, 'Elsie the Cow'. Since then Elmer has represented all of Borden Chemical's glues.
No, you can't make glue out of milk.
Proper glue from milk is impossible.
Milk does NOT make any glue stronger.
You buy some milk empty the milk put glue in the empty milk bottle and voila you have glue! Sugar Honey Ice Tea C U Next Tuesday
The shake's main ingredient is milk.
The main ingredient in yoghurt is milk.
No, add sugar however,and you can.ANS 2 - Glue can NOT be made with milk, no matter what you add to it.
-There is no record of who specifically 'invented' Elmer's Glue All, -I suspect, that like many new innovations, it was developed by a scientific team. There is no actual person called 'Elmer' connected with this. The Borden Dairy company introduced Elmer's Glue All in 1947. It had been marketing a line of glue called 'Cascorez', made from milk products. -The new glue was entirely synthetic, but sales were slow until they introduced 'Elmer the Bull' , husband of their long time mascot, 'Elsie the Cow'. Since then Elmer has represented all of Borden Chemical's glues.
-There is no record of who specifically 'made' Elmer's Glue, -I suspect, that like many new innovations, it was developed by a scientific team. There is no actual person called 'Elmer' connected with this. The Borden Dairy company introduced Elmer's Glue in 1947. It had been marketing a line of glue called 'Cascorez', made from milk products. -The new glue was entirely synthetic, but sales were slow until they introduced 'Elmer the Bull' , husband of their long time mascot, 'Elsie the Cow'. Since then Elmer has represented all of Borden Chemical's glues.
any type of milk will do fine :)