1940s, Books, Cool Stuff, VIntage

The Shadow Knows

“Ladies and Gentlemen, when you hear the Shadow’s blood-curdling laugh, you can be sure that exciting entertainment will follow!”

A few weeks ago I brought home some audiocassettes from Mom and Dad’s. I was telling the Son-in-Law about this Old Time Radio’s Greatest Mysteries cassette set from from the 1930s and ’40s and he expressed interest in hearing them at some point, so I got out my cassette player and some other old radio show cassettes I have, including Fibber McGee and Molly, The Shadow, and Sherlock Holmes!

I found these Agatha Christie audiobook cassettes at Mom and Dad’s as well, they are Miss Marple stories read by one of the actresses who played Miss Marple (the best one, in my opinion).

I got this tape at an estate sale.

I’m looking forward to listening to all of these!

“The weed of crime bears bitter fruit. Crime does NOT pay. The Shadow knows…”

1940s, Change, Cool Stuff, History, Hmm..., Travel

1940s Saturday 2-1-14

This last weekend I bought a few magazines from the 1940s.  I’m kicking myself for not buying the whole pile, but hoping that the man will be at the flea market next month with the rest.  I want the magazines because A)  I love reading old magazines; B) Our house was built in 1946 and I’m interested in the history; and most importantly C) we have been re-doing our bathroom, and I’ve decided (I think) to decorate with travel ads from the 1940s.  This is the cover of one of the magazines, which will be perfect for my travel theme.  Seriously, you should have seen the giant grin on my face when I found it! 

 

 

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While looking through old magazines, I’m always struck by how similar the articles and content are to what we have today.  For instance, I read an article about a lady who was a writer, and tired of trying to do her work in a space where she was constantly trampled by children, puppies, and tradespeople, decided to redo a cellar room into a study. She managed to do it for only $25, ($384.59 by today’s standards, according to The Inflation Calculator).  Today, however,  I saw this in a 1941 Better Homes and Gardens.  The first two paragraphs read:

“There’s one sure way to tell a long-lasting paint. Find out how much white lead it contains. For as good painters and architects will tell you, the greater the white lead content, the more enduring the paint. And you can’t get a more weather-resistant paint than one containing 100% pure white lead.”

 

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<Jaw drops to floor>

Little did they know, a few years later children would be seriously injured from eating bits of the paint that was not, I suppose, as durable as the ads wanted them to believe.  Of course, 15 years ago people still thought margarine was better for you than butter.  We just never know when our prevailing wisdom will turn to foolishness!  Open-mouthed smile