/pine
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2009
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- 15,763
If interested...Google"
"Aida lanterns" or "Petromax Lanterns"
"Aida lanterns" or "Petromax Lanterns"
That is why I mentioned it. Not a safe practice.Never realized Tig tips are radio active...
It was standard practice to use the vertical belt sander in the shop.to shape.
$10.00 a ounce and $90.00 for a pound for meI remember weed in high school was $40 an ounce for Acapulco Gold or Maui Wowie. I couldn’t afford it so I didn’t partake.
$10.00 a ounce and $90.00 for a pound for me
The fabric was treated with Thorium and Cesium salts when being made. Most of them were washed out in the process, but some would still remain in very small amounts able to be detected with a Geiger counter.We used both Aida and Petromax fuel lamps for fishing (they are like high end Coleman lanterns)...they're all stainless and use a variety of fuels...kerosene, mineral spirits etc. etc...we always knew about the "mantels" being radioactive...
The manufacture of these rare earths, and the processing and disposal of the waste and tailings over the years produced an environmental nightmare. I was aware of this facility back in the 1970's, and at that time, rumors were that the environmental clean up costs would run several times what the profit for the life of the facility had been.The fabric was treated with Thorium and Cesium salts when being made. Most of them were washed out in the process, but some would still remain in very small amounts able to be detected with a Geiger counter.
en.wikipedia.org
Found it!!! ( Mrs. found it ) I’ve had this for over 50 years. I remember having at least 3. They used to attack my toy soldiers. The green paint has worn off in some areas revealing what appears to be brass. It weighs nearly a pound.Fifty years ago, if you got a gas station fill-up, you would get a gift. I remember the little dinosaur figures that Sinclair would give out. As an adult, I find this rather funny, as oil never came from dinosaurs.![]()
Check it with a geiger counterFound it!!! ( Mrs. found it ) I’ve had this for over 50 years. I remember having at least 3. They used to attack my toy soldiers. The green paint has worn off in some areas revealing what appears to be brass. It weighs nearly a pound.
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It's not quite as restrictive as all that.50 years ago, you could just jump on your motorcycle and go. Not helmet or any thing. 50 years ago you didn't have to pay for an annual infection species tax on your boat. Didn't have to wear seat belts in the car, You could drive to any Oregon Beach and it was free. Didn't even need an ORV permit to run the dunes or in the common Forest Woods. All changed now, as everyone wants a cut, and they want a beach access fee money and ORV money. You can't smoke a cigarette on an Oregon beach or have your dog off leash. Can't have a campfire, or stay over night in all the interesting areas that use to be free to over night with a camp fire. And Oregon State says, F-you, to the locals that depended on this, for tourists to enjoy a little freedom from their urban lives. I am so glad I got to see and experience this State, 20 years ago, before the bean counters got involved. It is a pale place to explore, now, then it use to be, with so many restrictions and fees for anything that use to be free. Driving on the beach now is just a tiny fraction of the areas one use to be able to drive on.
It is actually even worse than you say.I always found the internet and online shopping destroying Sears, and JC Penny as semi humorous in a slightly twisted way.
You had a store chain, which built itself as a mail order catalog enterprise, which then branched out to brick and mortar where they stocked the more popular items from the catalog, but which still had their catalog.
The the internet move started, and they still had their catalogs, and brick and mortar stores. The internet ate into their mail order sales so the got rid of the catalog division, and moved to just brick and mortar.
If they had only had a modicum of foresight, and actual intelligence: They could have moved their catalog, (it was already in HTML, and it would have been pretty straight forward), to an online presence they would still be world class enterprises.
That brings back the memories. That McDonald's looks like the one near my granny's house. I would visit it her at least twice a year when I was a kid and we would go to McDonald's to get a hamburger, fries and a soda. There were no Big Mac's or Quarter Pounders. I don't think there was a Fish sandwich either. Just the hamburgers and fries.
And those vent windows worked really well too! Had some problems with the AC in the truck and I was wishing for a vent window.......Ac was optional anyway. You had '55 air'. Flip the vent window around and all was good....![]()
A police officer would come to our elementary school at least once a year and show a stranger danger film. Course they did not call it that back then but that is what the film was about. There was one scene that was a bloody tile floor. Always assumed it was the bathroom but it was just a bloody tile floor. Simple but got the point across.Now, you've got me thinking about a traffic safety film they showed our PE class called Mechanized Death. It gave the gore flick Blood Feast, on at the drive in that year, a run for the money.
I remember when the first girl in our class got pregnant, must have been the summer before 9th grade. I never saw her again.A police officer would come to our elementary school at least once a year and show a stranger danger film. Course they did not call it that back then but that is what the film was about. There was one scene that was a bloody tile floor. Always assumed it was the bathroom but it was just a bloody tile floor. Simple but got the point across.
Can't imagine them doing what the doctors did in Jigs_N_Fixtures school system in any of the schools I went too!But they should have shown those films. We had too many teen pregnancies. A 13 year old got pregnant but I think it was more of a rape than consensual. She was Catholic and went to visit her grandmother. Not sure I ever saw her again. That was very unusual in that school system but then we moved back to Florida and I was shocked at the number of girls in school walking around pregnant.
Later,
Dan