The Mattador's Comments

Reading through these comments has left me to feel nauseous at peoples' apparent lack of historical knowledge. Allow me to inform the masses.

During the great depression, families had to line up to recieve government provided meat and cheese from a regional government-opperated butcher shop. Those were tough times back then, tough times. So tough, in fact, that famlies had to wait in long lines. This device was a government project designed to increase efficincy in these markets. it worked like this:

1.) A representative from each family in line would take a number. (Similar to the deli at your local grocery store? That's right! This is where it all started.)

2.) The clerk would take the order and send it back to the boys in the butchering room.

3.) The butchers would cut the meat and cheese for the order.

4.) This is where the device-in-question comes in. They would use the device to stamp the meat and cheese with the corresponding number held by the customer. The shop worker could swing the device like a hammer to stamp the food and the device was capable of rapidly advancing in numerical sequence simply by actuating the lever on the side.

5.) The meat and cheese were then wheel-barrowed to the front counter along with other peoples orders, and because they were all stamped, the clerks could differentiate between them.

6.) Ta da! The food is united with the hungry American family.

Now there you have it! Riddle solved! By the way, to develop this tool the government spent 42 million dollars, and if you think that sounds like a lot, just think how much it was in 1935! But as you can see, it was worth every penny as it helped us, as a nation, through some tough times.

P.S. My t-shirt size is small. I like a tight fit to show off my muscles.
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  • Member Since 2012/08/13


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