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Picture/Clip Post Magazine

Lil Abner and Daisy Mae Before they got hitched....Mammy Yokum was opposed to Daisy Mae's Family who were the Scraggs. I never thought Ol' Pansy had a leg to stand on since She was a 'Hunks' and only barely more Respectable....but that was a Dogpatch Matriarch for you. She relented when Abner came back from a tour in The US Navy( still trying to find thar reference).
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Interesting ad, for sure!
 
Historical document? I have to say, no, I don't know why.
Miz K, this isnt aimed at you in any sense....just an old cowboy rambling along.....
.....The outfit willy is rocking is blue denim, which was the then-current fatigue duty uniform....I have photos of my Dad, my Uncles and the rest of the 21 Brooklyn kids who all enlisted on the same day, to stay together.The little boonie hat and all. This was what was known later as "The Brown Shoe Army". Not such a much, is it? BUT in January of 1942, Our First Response, task force 6184, left the Brooklyn Navy Yard for Australia. Still not much, eh?
Then for your delectation, understand this. Those blue uniforms were dyed green for what they knew would be jungle work. The problems began with that dye. It reacted to salty sweat and caused VICIOUS rashes which wouldnt heal in the presence of the damned colorant. Heat and humidity caused a lot of problems with rations in cans, especially those stored since WWI
( YES...The USArmy NEVER throws anything away). So Willy's blue jean fatigues actually caused more early casualties than the Japanese did. Add in the food problems, and it was a 3 ring circle jerk. Daddio always said their best days out there were when they'd overrun a jap ration Dump...the Japanese had ten years of learning curve on us....and so their rations were dry rice, dried fish and sometimes pork or beef, dried veg....The jungle troops on that side in New Guinea ate far better than we did....and were uniformed for the heat and wet. We outlasted them early on...But as a kid, 20 years later, I remember being told not to bite off a green thread, if I had to stitch a seam, because the green was toxic


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Huh, I had no idea it had been in a can!
Up til the Advent of WWII, i think...metals were at a premium throughout those years.....They even put silver in five-cent pieces to conserve Nickel for gun barrels. Glass is easy and cheap, so bottles were pushing into the marketplace for anything they could be used for.
In looking around it appears that cans were available until fifty-six....which accounts for why I remember them. The product was slso packed in bottles. Originally made by the Towle Family, it went to General Foods, to Kraft, to Aurora Foods. It was even sold in a glass bottle shaped like a Cabin, briefly.
 
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