I've rolled thousands of them, but was never very good at hand rolling. I knew people years ago that could roll them about as good as the ready rolls. I have two of the old Bugler rollers. When I was a kid I would roll up a bunch and put in an old Bugler bag to take to the field with me the next day. Back then the Bull Durham that Dr. Walt mentioned was 3 cents a sack and Bugler was a nickel. At the time ready rolls were about 15 or 20 cents seems like. Only time I bought any of them was if I was going out on Saturday night when I got old enough. But that sure took a big chunk out of the 4$ that I had made that day in the field from daylight to dark. Quite a few years ago I bought a fancy machine that you bought the papers with a filter built in and made pretty cigarettes. I have been quit for a while now (fingers crossed) but still have the urge and would like to have one right now. When I got out of the Navy, I gave away almost all my clothes and filled my sea bag up with $1.00 a carton sea store cigarettes (was 90 cents for a long time). Pall Mall red was my choice for years and years. Dr. Walt, I could never roll Bull Durham worth a dern. I tried all kind of things to keep the tobacco in, but never could, so I smoked Bugler back then. The Bull Durham sacks were loved by us kids, and were used for all kinds of things such as marble sacks. We kept every one that we could get our hands on. Brings back a lot of memories.
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Today's Featured Article - Show Coverage: Journey to Ankeny - by Cindy Ladage. We left Illinois on the first day of July and headed north and west for Ankeny, Iowa. Minus two kids, we traveled light with only the youngest in tow. As long as a pool was at the end of our destination she was easy to please unlike the other two who have a multitude of requirements to travel with mom and dad. Amana Colonies served as a respite where we ate a family style lunch that sustained us with more food than could reasonably fit into our ample physiques. The show at Ankeny
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