Do you  remember?
               
       
The clothes line....a  dead give away.   Do the kids today even know  what  a clothes line is?
For all of us who are  older, this will bring back the memories.
  
THE  BASIC RULES
1. You had to  wash the clothes line before hanging any clothes.   Walk the length  of each line with a damp cloth around the line.
  
2. You had to hang the clothes in a certain order and always hang whites with whites and hang them first.
  
3. You never hung a shirt by the shoulders, always by the tail.   What would the neighbors think?
  
4.  Wash day  on a Monday...........never hang clothes on the weekend or Sunday  for heaven's sake!
  
5.  Hang the sheets and towels on the outside lines so you could hide your  'unmentionables' in the middle.
  
6.  It didn't matter if it was sub zero weather.....clothes would  'freeze dry.'  
  
7.  Always gather the clothes pins when taking down dry clothes.  Pins left on the line was 'tacky'.
  
8.  If you  were efficient, you would line the clothes up so that each item  did not need two clothes pins, but shared one of the clothes  pins with the next washed item.
  
9.  Clothes off of the line before dinner time, neatly folded in the clothes  basket and ready to be ironed.
  
10. IRONED??????????    Well, that's a whole other subject.
  
   
               A  POEM
   A clothes line was a news forecast
   To neighbors passing by.
   There were no secrets you could keep
   When clothes were hung to dry.
  
    It also was a friendly link
   For neighbors always knew
   If company had stopped on by
   To spend a night or two.
  
    For then you'd see the 'fancy sheets'
  &n bsp;And towels upon the line;
   You'd see the 'company table cloths'
   With intricate design.
  
   The line announced a baby's birth
   To folks who lived inside
   As brand new infant clothes were hung
   So carefully with pride.
  
   The ages of the children could
   So readily be known
   By watching how the sizes changed
   You'd know how much they'd grown.
  
    It also told when illness struck,
   As extra sheets were hung;
   Then nightclothes, and a bathrobe, too,
   Haphazardly were strung.
  
   It said, 'Gone on vacation now'
   When lines hung  limp and bare.
   It told, 'We're &n bsp;back!' when full lines sagged
   With not an inch to spare.
  
   New folks in town were scorned upon
   If wash was dingy gray,
   As neighbors  carefully raised their brows,
   And looked the other way..
  
   But clotheslines now are of the past
   For dryers make work less.
   Now what goes on inside a home
   Is anybody's guess.
  
   I really miss that way of life.
   It was a friendly sign
   When neighbors knew each other best
   By what  hung on the  line!
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