"Dreaming is one of the few remaining delicious
pastimes open to the public that's absolutely free. There is no better way to remain passionate than to dream
big."
R.
Brooks, B.L. Richardson, "You Should Really Write a Book"
Coming out of the first part of the 20th Century, and World
War II, families began to create the American Dream - to have more than their
parents had, to finally live a life of luxury - a house for all with white
picket fences.
In the 1950's and 60's we, like everyone else, had a
magazine rack in the living room.
If you don't know what that is, it's fine.
It was a bad idea, a place where you could keep your
magazines close, but without clutter, so you could reach in and read them at any time.
Of course, they usually filled up in
about a week and sat there, next to a growing pile of magazines on the
floor.
We had a magazine rack, and
it seemed to collect what I call Dream Books - books that we would look at and
think about what we might want.
Books
that let us dream the American Dream.
Of course, catalogs like the Sears Catalog and the Penny's
Catalog and the S&H Stamps Catalog were there; these let you look at clothes and
appliances and all sorts of things and think about what you may choose to purchase
some day "when your ship comes in". The Sears Catalog had been a Dream Book for many decades. The
first Sears catalog was published in 1888. By 1894 it was already more than 300 pages long! In 1993, Sears stopped publishing its
general merchandise catalog, but all through the 50's and 60's we had them.
A reproduction of the "1909 Sears, Roebuck and Co.,
Inc. Consumers Guide", (
Cheapest
Supply House on Earth) must have been a great dream book, with not only clothes
and tools in it but jewelry, musical instruments, furniture, guns, cameras,
everything you could imagine.
I
used to pretend that it was 1909 and I had $5 to spend.
I would make lists for myself, choosing
things like the 64 cent
American
pocket watch over the Swiss Calendar watch ($5.88); or the Remington Derringer
for $4.25.
If I had given myself
more, I would still have favored the cheaper Beckwith Home Favorite Piano for
$89 over the $138 Beckwith Artist's Grand Piano.
(All of their
grand
pianos look like uprights to me.)
You could get a perfectly fine shotgun from Sears for $11-17.
In addition to the Sears Catalog, cookbooks were an
interesting kind of Dream Book. In
the 50's and 60's we were flooded with them, as booklets somehow associated with
a product. They took you away to
thoughts of dinner parties and entertaining - to thoughts of having the money
to throw dinner parties and entertaining.
In the 1950's, as new appliances were becoming available, many
manufacturers provided cookbooks to accompany their product.
Every product seemed to come with a booklet that gave
you something to look forward to.
I have a brochure from perhaps 1954 advertising "Low Cost Room
Cooling". It was portable! Reversible! It was Automatic! If it was hot, it turned itself on; cool, it turned itself
off! There was even a picture of a
happy eskimo in front of his igloo on the cover. All this fuss was over a 20-inch Window Fan! But to read about it, this was true
luxury.
In 1961, my parents bought a Kenmore washing machine from
Sears for $209.00, possibly the first one for them that didn't have a
wringer.
"NOW - make washday
a JOY instead of a JOB!"
It
tells about the
pleasure of using
this Automatic Washer.
This was a
woman's user manual.
Accompanied
by drawings of well-dressed women, there are tips to make washing better - by
defining the
tasks of sorting
clothes, preparing clothes before washing, pretreating, prewashing, and of
course, using Kenmore Detergent.
We all take detergents for granted but it wasn't too long ago that families
would periodically make small batches of their own soaps, none of which worked
very well for cleaning clothes.
We had a 1962 booklet that accompanied freezers and those
newfangled refrigerators with freezer compartments, again from Sears. It was titled "How to Prepare foods
for Freezing". It was filled
with color pictures of the great food you will have if you freeze fresh
strawberries, meats, etc. The 35
page booklet contained lots of recipes too. Apparently when freezers came out, you needed help to use
them.
Even my parents' Sunbeam Automatic
Percolator came with a booklet, containing lots of pictures of coffee being
poured. "The best automatic
percolator made!" (also described as the "Finest Automatic Percolator
Made".) Several references
are made to the perfect coffee that
you will enjoy, now that you have it.
An electric iron from Westinghouse came with a booklet - "The
Secret of Easier Ironing With Steam!" It was the easiest iron you've ever use! The last page contains technical
details (weight, cord construction, heating elements, steam generating
principle, etc.); the page is labeled "for men only".
My mother's Sunbeam Mixmaster came with a 45 page cookbook
called "How to get the Most out of your Sunbeam Mixmaster". It also
contained full-page ads for their other products such as the Sunbeam Ironmaster,
the Coffeemaster, the Waffle Baker, the Automatic Egg Cooker, and the
Shavemaster.
It was quite an
impressive line of products.
We
would dream about having a house full of Sunbeam xxxmasters!
Dream books related to products made it seem like just about
everything was brand new, and needed explanation. They filled your head with exciting new ideas, often for
dinner parties and barbecues (all things you didn't do before, but now would do
because of these products). One
particularly exciting booklet from the Reynolds Metals Company, Compliments of
the Penn Fruit Co. Cookout Center, was called "Outdoor Cooking with
Reynolds Wrap." The
opportunity to make corn on the grill by wrapping it in the latest "tin
foil" was exciting, and well photo-documented. The promise was clear - life was going to be good!
The American Dairy Association put out a booklet called
"Let's Eat Outdoors" (
A Cook
Book of Recipes and Ideas for Picnics, Barbecues, Patio Parties and Camping).
I'm sure we never would have even
thought of having a patio party, or even a patio, before reading this full
color booklet.
Of course, page one
was dedicated to "Milk Coolers for Outdoor Fun".
You remember Milk Coolers, Right?
One very exciting one was called the
Calypso Cooler.
("Bartender,
One Calypso Cooler for my friend here!")
The recipe was as follows:
" To one quart of thoroughly chilled milk, add 8 tsp. of
Nestle's Quick.
Stir briskly and
serve."
Another, the Raspberry
Flip, was made by adding Stokely's Red Raspberry perserves to milk.
Yum (I think).
Where have Milk Coolers gone?
I'll spare you the details, but we had a booklet (1961) from
Knox Gelatine, called "Do you really want to lose weight?
then here's the KNOX EAT and REDUCE PLAN".
I used to know what Knox Gelatine was,
but not any more.
There was a 1965 booklet in the magazine rack called "quick
recipe favorites". There are
drawings of some desert-y looking things, a salad mold, and even a ham on the
cover. Can you guess who it's
from? The subtitle is
"distinctively different with 7 Up"!
Sealtest published a free booklet entitled "Serve
Cottage Cheese" (selected favorite
recipes from the Sealtest kitchen) that made you just want to have a Cottage Cheese patio party! We also had a "Royal Baking Powder
ROYAL Cookbook", a "Bisquick party Book" (from Betty Crocker), a
"Calumet Baking Powder Company book of Reliable Recipes", and a
picture book of recipes called "Flavor and Spice and All Things Nice"
from McCormick. They all did an
impressive job of convincing you that your life would be better, more elegant,
if you made some of their recipes.
A distinctive red, white and blue booklet from Betty
Crocker, "How to prepare appetizing, healthful meals, with foods available
today" is dated 1943, and Betty's Forward begins with "Hail to the Women
of America!".
It really is an
interesting read, with sections such as "Stretching Meat".
It talks about what to do when meat is
rationed, and how you should consider asking for bones and trimmings to make
soup with.
It must have been very
complicated because the war made heavy demands on the meat supply, so
"homemakers" were well-versed in meat grades, correct methods for
storage and preparation, how to make plans for left-overs, and even techniques
such as "salvaging drippings".
It was a different time. Even in the 40's during the war, this cookbook
booklet discussed Hospitality in Wartime, and making food for activities such
as a victory garden supper, a basket social, a community sing, or perhaps a
barbeque or hobo party.
We still
had to party!
Magazines peaked in the 1960's. They were big and glossy, filled with photojournalism and
news and lots of exciting color ads for alcohol, cars and cigarettes. Life
magazine (1936-1972) led the pack.
Its mirror image Look magazine,
had a similar rise and fall (1937-1971).
The ads in these things certainly raise them to Dream Book Status.
One of my favorites in the Dream Book rack was "The
Sherwin-Williams 1959 Home Decorator (
and
how to paint book)".
It
was given to us compliments of John Wanamaker (Philadelphia) who apparently
used to sell house paints on the 5th Floor.
The color pictures of beautiful homes and rooms painted with
Sherwin-Williams paints really did make you believe that their paint could convert
your row house into a sprawling ranch.
"This is your book of Wonderful Ideas" is how the book
begins.
All of the rooms they
showed looked so nice, and we could
have
them, because "everything in a room can look new with a change of color on
the walls".
That's quite a
promise.
Filled with words like
perfect,
exciting and
beautiful ,
it really did make you want to go out and improve the quality of your life by
painting!
|
Get some paint, paint the walls, paint the doors, paint the piano!, you can even paint the kids! |
We only had a few issues of a publication called
"Popular Home" (
your
how-to-do-it magazine), but that was more enough.
We looked at them over and over.
They came to us complements of the Scholtz
Lumber Company, 85th and Tinicum Ave, Philadelphia.
(SA 9-5500; "we're as near as your phone").
They had so many ideas on how to fix up
an attic or a bedroom or family room, you wanted to go to Wanamaker's and get
some Sherwin-Williams paint, then stop off at the lumber yard, so you could
turn the attic into that extra space that every family needs.
Pulling these ideas together was a "magazine"
called "Hospitality Home" (
A
digest for Modern Homemakers),
circa
1956.
I'm not sure what a digest
is, but it says it was.
We got a few issues from
B& W TV, Furniture & Appliance, 402 MacDade Blvd. Collingdale PA (Phone
Sharon Hill 1187).
There were
articles on things to sew, things to do in the summer, something to build like
a bookcase, some new recipes, often something on flowers (
The Magic of Annuals) and lots of ads - from Hotpoint.
The month that they printed a full page
ad on Hotpoint air conditioners they also published an article on air
conditioners called "Styled from a Woman's Point of View").
Hotpoint washing machines and dryers
got a double-page ad, with a photo of a family - wife, husband, two girls, a
boy and a baby - with what now seems like a confusing title - "Everything
this family is wearing (yes everything!) can be perfectly washed in a Hotpoint.
. .".
Articles such as
"Don"t be a Snob about Modern!" seemed to fit well with another
one, "Fit TV into Your Home" (
Have
you puzzled over the best way to fit television into your life and living
space?).
Surprisingly,
Hotpoint also sold TV's, even portable ones, called Hi-Vi TV, because of the VIvid
picture, VIvid sound and VIvid styling!
|
wanted this room then, still want it now! |
Of course, we don't get free booklets or anything any more -
although similar things may be on the internet for you.
I think these Dream Books represented
dreams for those who created them as well.
They spent the money to give loyal customers something good,
and by making this investment, they would get more customers.
They had their dream too!
This was a time of dreaming, a time of so many changes, a
time of new technology, making the lives of our womenfolk easier, and brighter,
a time when, even if you couldn't have all of the latest colors and alcohol and
cars and appliances, you could dream.
Someday it would happen, some day you would be there. You would have a Patio Party and become
part of the high society in your town.
Life had the potential to be good.
All we had to do was dream, and dream we did.
© 2013 John Allison