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Coffee Shop
speaking of old pharts, a question...
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<blockquote data-quote="Lammie" data-source="post: 763855" data-attributes="member: 3306"><p>My aunt, back in the late sixties, started making flowers with them. I don't know how and none exist now. </p><p></p><p>If you had a hen that would not stop brooding in the summer, just sitting and not eating or drinking, you put them in a tow sack, hung it on the clothes line and doused her with water in the sack. That's my dad's contribution. I was supposed to make the hen snap out of it, I guess. I tried it once. Just pizzed off the hen. </p><p></p><p>Sack races. </p><p></p><p>But Jogee, what material were they made of???</p><p></p><p>And for those of you that are really really young, a clothes line was something you used to dry clothing by hanging it up there with wooden objects called "clothes pins". Like a dryer, only slower. </p><p></p><p>Jeez, you never see a clothes line anymore in homes that are less than thirty years old.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lammie, post: 763855, member: 3306"] My aunt, back in the late sixties, started making flowers with them. I don't know how and none exist now. If you had a hen that would not stop brooding in the summer, just sitting and not eating or drinking, you put them in a tow sack, hung it on the clothes line and doused her with water in the sack. That's my dad's contribution. I was supposed to make the hen snap out of it, I guess. I tried it once. Just pizzed off the hen. Sack races. But Jogee, what material were they made of??? And for those of you that are really really young, a clothes line was something you used to dry clothing by hanging it up there with wooden objects called "clothes pins". Like a dryer, only slower. Jeez, you never see a clothes line anymore in homes that are less than thirty years old. [/QUOTE]
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speaking of old pharts, a question...
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