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Sunday, October 22, 2017

Life Magazine



February 28, 1949 


Several weeks ago, I wrote about a Saturday Evening Post magazine from 1944. Glancing through that magazine, I noticed the overall sense of war time frugality permeating the articles and advertisements.

Looking through this Life magazine from 1949, I can see how much the attitudes had changed in just 5 years. Now, instead of encouraging people to make their cars last longer, advertisements are telling the reader that bigger and newer is better. The Dodge ad states, “When Army physical exams revealed that our wartime generation was far bigger, taller, and more active, Dodge engineers started planning this great new car!” While you’re at it, you may as well get a new Kelvinator refrigerator. “You never saw such room. It’s cold clear to the floor.” You can now shop ahead – buy more – all that excess food will stay fresh!

One article in this magazine really emphasized the new feeling of abundance and wealth. Potato Chippers Have a Convention details the Chicago meeting of leaders in the fast-growing business which had grown to $300 million a year. Home economist Florence La Ganke Harris gave dramatic rebuttals against the slander that potato chips are fattening, while also giving new ideas for adding chips to your diet. Crumble them into meat loves and cookies – all for better health, apparently. From the photos, we can see that the convention was definitely not all work! The convention queen sported a bra made from potato chips, for which she was paid $30 a day. 

From extreme frugality to frivolous excess in five years.  I wonder what people 50 years from now, when looking at a 2017 magazine, will be thinking about the American culture of today. 




Sunday, October 8, 2017

When We Were Very Young


By A. A. Milne
Illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard

Copyright 1924


What book do you give to a brand-new baby? The options are overwhelming due to the vast quantity of excellent children’s books. But when that book is for a grandchild and her name is Emmeline, the choice is easy!

Tucked into this book of poetry by A. A. Milne, is a sweet little poem entitled Before Tea.

                     Emmeline
Has not been seen
For more than a week.  She slipped between
The two tall trees at the end of the green…
We all went after her.  Emmeline!”

“Emmeline,
I didn’t mean—
I only said that your hands weren’t clean.”
We went to the trees at the end of the green..
But Emmeline
Was not to be seen. 

Emmeline
Came slipping between
The two tall trees at the end of the green.
We all ran up to her.  “Emmeline!
Where have you been?
Where have you been?
Why, it’s more than a week!”  And Emmeline
Said, “Sillies, I went and saw the Queen.
She says my hands are purfickly clean.”


Pasted inside the front cover of this particular copy of When We Were Very Young is a book plate with my name on it, put there by me when I was very young. I never could have guessed that many years later, I would be passing it along to Emmeline Adrienne, a beautiful, sweet granddaughter. I give it to her with the hope that she will come to love her books enough to proudly paste her own name inside of them!