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Tim Wrote in message:

7:17 AMTrue North
When we visited my Cape Breton grandparents all through the '50s and very early '60s we used an outhouse and water was delivered from a well by a hand pump mounted at the kitchen sink.

............


Yessir. I was still a baby when my grandparents got rid of the wood cook stove and got an electric range in the mid-1950s


It is somewhat of a backward Province, isn't it?
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8:53 AMjustan
Tim Wrote in message:
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It is somewhat of a backward Province, isn't it?
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..........


Well in the 50s southern Illinois sure was lol. Come to think of it. Still is!😆
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On Tuesday, April 17, 2018 at 11:38:16 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 20:26:28 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


10:13
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 18:52:20 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:
- show quoted text -
Don't forget how we have been getting to the ISS since the end of the
GW administration. They are not all that backward. Even in WWII they
had one of the best tanks in the war.
I do understand they got their rocket technology from the Germans but
so did we. They were also very good at stealing technology from us ...
and they still are.
............

Oh I agree! The movie was talking (I take it) about the typical “farm boy†soldier that had never seen running water and was marveled at the convenience.

Sure they’re smart. But maybe not “that†smart.


Let's not get too silly here. I bet there were American farm boys in
the 40s who saw their first flush toilet in boot camp.
When my father in law moved from the farm near Paoli Indiana to Kokomo
(1940s), he said it was the first time he had indoor plumbing. They
had it in town but not out at his family farm.


Growing up we would occasionally visit my great aunt and uncle who lived 6-8 miles out of town in the country. They had a hand pump and tin cup on the back porch for drinking water, an outhouse and a wood stove. My wife's dad grew up poor in very rural south Georgia, and said that the chickens would peck their feet through the floorboards of the house. I suspect that's why he lived a frugal life, worked a full-time job and roofed houses on the side. He's very comfortable in his retirement now.

Most kids these days want it all now, and don't have a clue what it's like to make it with what you have, and to work hard and save to do better later..
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On Wednesday, 18 April 2018 10:18:18 UTC-3, Tim wrote:
7:17 AMTrue North
When we visited my Cape Breton grandparents all through the '50s and very early '60s we used an outhouse and water was delivered from a well by a hand pump mounted at the kitchen sink.

............


Yessir. I was still a baby when my grandparents got rid of the wood cook stove and got an electric range in the mid-1950s


I remember the old wood burning kitchen stove. It also heated water. Not sure if it was a Kemac or something similar but the house always had a familiar odor that I instantly recognized on our once a year visits.
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On Wednesday, 18 April 2018 11:17:14 UTC-3, Tim wrote:
8:53 AMjustan
Tim Wrote in message:
- show quoted text -
It is somewhat of a backward Province, isn't it?
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.........


Well in the 50s southern Illinois sure was lol. Come to think of it. Still is!😆


That's amusing...Justine talking "backward"! Imagine rural Floriduh in those days....


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On Wed, 18 Apr 2018 00:44:18 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:

On Tuesday, April 17, 2018 at 10:38:16 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 20:26:28 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


10:13
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 18:52:20 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:
- show quoted text -
Don't forget how we have been getting to the ISS since the end of the
GW administration. They are not all that backward. Even in WWII they
had one of the best tanks in the war.
I do understand they got their rocket technology from the Germans but
so did we. They were also very good at stealing technology from us ...
and they still are.
............

Oh I agree! The movie was talking (I take it) about the typical “farm boy†soldier that had never seen running water and was marveled at the convenience.

Sure they’re smart. But maybe not “that†smart.


Let's not get too silly here. I bet there were American farm boys in
the 40s who saw their first flush toilet in boot camp.


Probably. the big difference is thi is the US and not Russia.


When my father in law moved from the farm near Paoli Indiana to Kokomo
(1940s), he said it was the first time he had indoor plumbing. They
had it in town but not out at his family farm.


My Fraternal grand parents didn't have running water and indoor plumbing on their farm until 1956


That was not really unusual out in the midwest. In fact the "farm"
where we used to hunt in Berlin Md (10 miles from Ocean City) did not
have indoor plumbing in the 70s. I was only there in the winter and
they did have a farm house but it was really just a wooden tent. No
lights, no plumbing, no heat. I think they only used it to get in out
of the rain in the summer but there was furniture in there and it
looked like people might live there. I stayed one night and told the
boys in the morning that we could be staying in a nice motel for about
$30 a night at that time of year, my treat. We stopped camping at the
farm after that. I ended up finding a nice place with a 3 room suite
for $40, half way to the beach. The kitchen saved us more than that
because we could eat in and pack a lunch.
It was not the last time I got the guys up out of the dirt and into
suitable housing. ;-)
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Keyser Soze wrote:
True North wrote:
When we visited my Cape Breton grandparents all through the '50s and very
early '60s we used an outhouse and water was delivered from a well by a
hand pump mounted at the kitchen sink.


The closest I got to “early†plumbing fixtures was at my grandfather’s
store outside Boston. He had one of those pull chain flush toilets like the
one in Louis Restaurant in The Godfather, the one the noisy revolver was
taped behind...


Mom grew up on a farm near the Wyoming border in Nebraska. Closest to
flush toilet is the outhouse was over an irrigation ditch that went to a
swamp.

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True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 18 April 2018 10:18:18 UTC-3, Tim wrote:
7:17 AMTrue North
When we visited my Cape Breton grandparents all through the '50s and
very early '60s we used an outhouse and water was delivered from a well
by a hand pump mounted at the kitchen sink.

............


Yessir. I was still a baby when my grandparents got rid of the wood
cook stove and got an electric range in the mid-1950s


I remember the old wood burning kitchen stove. It also heated water.
Not sure if it was a Kemac or something similar but the house always had
a familiar odor that I instantly recognized on our once a year visits.


Our neighbors growing up had a stove that burned wood on one side and gas
burners on the other. Next to Berkeley. Up to and probably after the
1906 SF earthquake, anniversary today, lots of home in SF had outhouses.
Today they search for those outhouse locations. They did move around the
yard as they filed, and search for bottles, etc that were dumped in the
outhouse.

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On Wed, 18 Apr 2018 08:37:40 -0700 (PDT), Its Me
wrote:

On Tuesday, April 17, 2018 at 11:38:16 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 20:26:28 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


10:13
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 18:52:20 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:
- show quoted text -
Don't forget how we have been getting to the ISS since the end of the
GW administration. They are not all that backward. Even in WWII they
had one of the best tanks in the war.
I do understand they got their rocket technology from the Germans but
so did we. They were also very good at stealing technology from us ...
and they still are.
............

Oh I agree! The movie was talking (I take it) about the typical “farm boy†soldier that had never seen running water and was marveled at the convenience.

Sure they’re smart. But maybe not “that†smart.


Let's not get too silly here. I bet there were American farm boys in
the 40s who saw their first flush toilet in boot camp.
When my father in law moved from the farm near Paoli Indiana to Kokomo
(1940s), he said it was the first time he had indoor plumbing. They
had it in town but not out at his family farm.


Growing up we would occasionally visit my great aunt and uncle who lived 6-8 miles out of town in the country. They had a hand pump and tin cup on the back porch for drinking water, an outhouse and a wood stove. My wife's dad grew up poor in very rural south Georgia, and said that the chickens would peck their feet through the

floorboards of the house. I suspect that's why he lived a frugal life, worked a full-time job and roofed houses on the side. He's very comfortable in his retirement now.

Most kids these days want it all now, and don't have a clue what it's like to make it with what you have, and to work hard and save to do better later.


That is why I think we would never survive another real depression.
Those people did not really lose that much compared to what the post
WWII people have gotten used to. It sucked in the cities but country
folks did not really notice that much difference.
like Alabama says
"Well somebody told us Wall Street fell
But we were so poor that we couldn't tell"
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On Wed, 18 Apr 2018 08:40:15 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote:

On Wednesday, 18 April 2018 11:17:14 UTC-3, Tim wrote:
8:53 AMjustan
Tim Wrote in message:
- show quoted text -
It is somewhat of a backward Province, isn't it?
--
x


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http://usenet.sinaapp.com/


.........


Well in the 50s southern Illinois sure was lol. Come to think of it. Still is!?


That's amusing...Justine talking "backward"! Imagine rural Floriduh in those days....


Not unlike rural Canada except you didn't need a parka and snow shoes
to go take a dump.
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