Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » You could just take the Viagra at some other time...
Wibbs wrote: » yep 10:08:42 because that became an industry standard, because it showed off the hands on an analogue watch well and also worked well for digitals too. IIRC it was Seiko who first made it a thing across their range in advertising literature, with the rest of the industry following suit.
corner of hells wrote: » The HSE allows you only four viagra a month or 48 rides a year. Less if you factor in headaches and the red army.
Duckworth_Luas wrote: » Everyone knows that the best thing since sliced bread is in fact sliced bread. However, before this households made there own bread, with flour that came in cotton sacks. In the USA, during the Great Depression, creative mothers began to make use of this resource to make clothes for their children. The results were adequate, but when the flour suppliers realised what was happening they reinvented they way they supplied their product. They began to pack their flour in cotton bags designed with bright, colourful patterns, which made for much more attractive clothing. The branding and company logos on the bags were made of washable ink that was removed by soaking them in hot water. Sometimes the sacks included designs for children's toys, such as dolls and Teddy bears. They were even made into clothing for adults as well. In fact it, after the Great Depression, up until at least the 1960s, there were competitions as to who could make the most fashionable dress out of flour bags. This one is in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.
Candie wrote: » How interesting! I wonder if the saying 'She'd look good in a sack!" is related to this - I suspect so. That last dress is beautiful.
Duckworth_Luas wrote: » Everyone knows that the best thing since sliced bread is in fact sliced bread. However, before this households made there own bread, with flour that came in cotton sacks. In the USA, during the Great Depression, creative mothers began to make use of this resource to make clothes for their children. The results were adequate, but when the flour suppliers realised what was happening they reinvented they way they supplied their product. They began to pack their flour in cotton bags designed with bright, colourful patterns, which made for much more attractive clothing. The branding and company logos on the bags were made of washable ink that was removed by soaking them in hot water. Sometimes the sacks included designs for children's toys, such as dolls and Teddy bears They were even made into clothing for adults as well. In fact it, after the Great Depression, up until at least the 1960s, there were competitions as to who could make the most fashionable dress out of flour bags. This one is in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.
Greybottle wrote: » 5% of all milk produced in the Republic of Ireland goes to making Baileys. A bottle of Baileys is sold every 0.125 seconds worldwide, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. That's over a quarter of a billion bottles a year. In the time it took you to read this, over 100 bottles of the sickly sweet liquer have been filled and sold.
fred funk }{ wrote: » In 1941 there were only 11 democracies in the world. Ireland was one of them.
Greybottle wrote: » But we weren't technically a fully independent state.
Deleted User wrote: » The second oldest tennis tournament in the world, after Wimbledon, is the Irish Open. It was considered pretty much the biggest tournament after Wimbledon before WWI, and was the first to feature men and women singles and doubles. As recently as 1962 it was big enough to draw the superstars when it was won by Rod Laver in the year he won all 4 grand slam tournaments...a feat no other tennis player has since achieved (although he did it again in 1969).
mzungu wrote: » Not quite, Steffi Graf won all four in 1988.