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Subject: The Collectors Newsletter No. 1134 September 21 2018 Date: Fri Sep 21 2018 03:54 pm
From: Janis Kracht To: All

7. Share your story about collecting and be eligible for a free gift!

Do you have an interesting story to tell? Send your story to
newsletter@tias.com and we may publish it here.  If we use your story, we'll
send you a handy-dandy TIAS pocket tape measure & magnifier.
https://www.facebook.com/pg/TIASAntiques/videos/?ref=page_internal

Please be sure to include your name and postal mailing address when sending in
your story.  (Valid for US addresses only)

Here is a reprint from a previous edition of The Collectors Newsletter:

When I was a little girl my grandparents lived in an oil camp. The camp had a
dump where the residents would throw out things they now longer wanted or
needed.  Mostly is was broken furniture, old appliances, etc.  Although we
children had been told not to play at the dump, occasionally we would disobey.  
We had a playhouse in the woods we called the Kennedy Mansion (he was president 
at the time) and we were always looking for things to "furnish" it with.  I
came across a clear glass sugar bowl with no chips or cracks, just no lid.  We
took it home and my grandmother fell in love with it so I gave it to her.
Years passed and I no longer saw the sugar bowl in her cabinet so I assumed it
had been broken or thrown away.  When she died a few years ago, my aunts and
uncles went through the house and took the things they wanted.  Then we
grandchildren were allowed to look for any leftovers we might want.  You
guessed it, my sugar bowl was still there hidden behind some old tea glasses.
It means nothing to anyone but me and only because my wonderful grandmother
loved it so.  On a side note, when I was in the second grade my teacher gave me 
a planter that looked like a miniature spinning wheel.  I gave it to my
grandmother and over the years it disappeared.  When looking through the
"worthless" things the aunts and uncles didn't want, I found it, too.  My
sisters and I found many things that day that have no monetary value, but
precious memories attached to Grandmother.  Including enough feather pillows
for each of us five girls to have two each, she had written the date on the
ticking when she made each one.  I feel like we got the most valuable things of 
all. Carolyn R
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--- BBBS/Li6 v4.10 Toy-3
 * Origin: Prism bbs (1:261/38)

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