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  • Texas | Columns | "It's All Trew"

    No end to uses for paper, twine

    by Delbert Trew
    Delbert Trew

    If you are old enough to remember a “twine or string ball,” usually kept on a pantry shelf, you are probably moving around a bit slow. A recent Alanreed Coffee Shop conversation brought out several stories about string balls.

    First, in the older days before sticky tape, brown paper, paper and plastic sacks, most all purchases at general stores were wrapped in a sheet of white paper then tied in quarters like a cross with white string located on the store counter.

    Perishable foods were wrapped in waxed butcher paper, then in the white paper and tied with string. This kept the food clean, fresh and secure on the way home, as the purchaser usually rode in a wagon, buggy or maybe a Model T.

    My mother and my grandmother each kept a large ball of twine and a neat stack of white paper on a pantry shelf ready for instant recycling.

    Each purchase was untied, the string wrapped around the string ball, the paper smoothed and stacked then a square of cardboard placed on top and something heavy set on the cardboard to keep the papers straight and unwrinkled.

    One coffee shop slurper, an old cowboy who had spent his entire life on the area ranches said one of his former bosses had once lost a valuable cow who died from a huge ball of twine collected in her belly. She kept eating the cake sack strings, removed from sacks of cow feed. The man insisted the cowboys pick up every string and roll it on a string ball in the cake house. When he finally quit the job, the string ball was the size of a washtub.

    Another man said his family’s first baseballs were balls of string wrapped in canvas.

    One of our early barbed wire collectors started a ball of hay baler twine. Seems he leased out his grass, suddenly found abandoned bale twine everywhere and started a big ball. He eventually sold it to Ripley’s Believe It Or Not and a crane had to be brought in to remove it from his farm, load it on a truck and deliver it to the museum. The ball was more than 12 feet tall.

    See Devil's Rope Museum

    © Delbert Trew -
    May 8, 2012 column
    More "It's All Trew"
    Delbert Trew is a freelance writer and retired rancher. He can be reached at 806-779-3164, by mail at Box A, Alanreed, TX 79002, or by email at trewblue @centramedia.net.
    Related Topics:
    Texas | Texas Ranching | Columns | Texas Panhandle |

    Mclean Tx - Devils Rope Museum
    Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, July 2009
    Devil's Rope Museum
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