boberic
Loc: Quiet Corner, Connecticut. Ex long Islander
Drawn recipricating dingle arm
boberic wrote:
Drawn recipricating dingle arm
I have never seen one! I am familiar with a Turbo Encabulator.
boberic
Loc: Quiet Corner, Connecticut. Ex long Islander
Scruples wrote:
I have never seen one! I am familiar with a Turbo Encabulator.
B y the way the Turbo Encabulator first was published in 1949 in the Journal Of Irreproducable Results
When I heard that it took me about 10 minutes to stop laughing.
Is "thunder mug" just another name for a "chamber pot"?
Neither of which I thought to be correct because the very small foot would be prone to falling over.
A chamber pot was a short round lidded vessel placed under the bedstead for use to do your business at night before indoor plumbing, which the chambermaid collected & emptied into a master chamber pot for disposal each morning.
How tall is it? Are there holes in it?
bertloomis wrote:
A shaving mug.
It is not a shaving mug! I’m sorry!
NewGuy wrote:
How tall is it? Are there holes in it?
While they were usually 9 inches tall or more they had no holes in them. But I mention earlier that it was an Apothecary Jar
That's where we keep Aunt Peggy, R.I.P.
Was she the aunt who cooked the seven layer chocolate cake with cherry and coconut filling?
Container (very old) for shaving soap. Used to employ a wet shaving brush to scrub up some lather to soften the whiskers. Long time ago..
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