[SEL] Bill's Selling a toy

Dave Croft dave.croft at ntlworld.com
Sat Apr 9 10:46:05 PDT 2011


Hi Orrin, I was born in 1941 and taught Toilet Paper routine by my dad until 
about 1953.
This meant that the last weeks "English Radio Times" as the best quality 
unglazed publication was
given to me as a duty to cut each page into 4 and then punch a hole in one 
corner and a loop of string
put through the holes to hang the bunch on the hook! See
http://home-and-garden.webshots.com/photo/2623869260028520097gqzXkW
Dave Croft.
Warrington.
http://oldengine.org/members/croft/
http://community.webshots.com/user/crftdv
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Orrin B Iseminger" <obise at moscow.com>
To: "'The SEL email discussion list'" <sel at lists.stationary-engine.com>
Sent: Saturday, April 09, 2011 3:44 PM
Subject: Re: [SEL] Bill's Selling a toy


-----Original Message-----
From: sel-bounces at lists.stationary-engine.com
[mailto:sel-bounces at lists.stationary-engine.com] On Behalf Of Alan
Sent: Friday, April 08, 2011 4:27 PM
To: The SEL email discussion list
Subject: Re: [SEL] Bill's Selling a toy

Snip

AND,,,,, The catalog laying there was always in a different state of use.
In other words it was very obvious that when there was no company all they
used were Sears and Monkey Wards catalogs.

I asked Mom about that and she had grown up that way.
Except in the Summer they would grab a handful of leaves on their way to the
outhouse.
About the catalog pages Mom told me that as you sat down you would tear off
however many pages you figured you would need and start crinkling them up
while you did your job.

Alan in Michigan

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I grew up using a two-holer.  We used old catalogs, too.  When we'd get a
fresh one everybody would use the index pages, first, because they were
unglazed paper and somewhat absorbent, like newspaper stock.

I always hated it when only the glossy pages were left.  They were stiff as
a board and about as absorbent as a piece of cellophane.

I didn't grow up in "the good old days."  They were not all that good.  We
worked like slaves in weather that wasn't fit for man or beast.  The good
old days are right here and now.

Orrin

Orrin Iseminger
Colton, Washington, USA
http://users.moscow.com/oiseming/lc_ant_p/menu.htm
So many projects.  So little time.



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