The second part of this arc will be when Charlie Brown comes around Patty’s house at the end of the month to collect and she pays him by throwing nickels and dimes toward him.
Charlie Brown sold Grit newspapers for the prizes. He always chose a kite, which promptly got eaten by that kite-eating tree. So, Charlie Brown had to sell more Grits to get another kite. It was a never ending cycle.
I delivered the Denver Post in 1942. They were banded. Too big to toss or fold. I had to deliver them to the door. I earned enough money to buy a used bike. Couldn’t use it to carry the papers to steep and even steep stairs. The bike cost $25 and I used until I moved to Calif.
Templo S.U.D. over 8 years ago
No rubber bands or plastic bags back then?
Lil Nachoe over 8 years ago
Well THAT was unexpected XD
bigcatbusiness over 8 years ago
It’s a good thing the wind wasn’t blowing too hard. Paper cuts aren’t a pretty thing.
iggyman over 8 years ago
I was a paper boy in the 1960’s and throwing tucked papers is a skill to master, sometimes I didn’t!
Chad Cheetah over 8 years ago
Throws a paper as good as he pitches
tom over 8 years ago
Na. That only happens when there’s a flooded street between you and the customer and he says, “Go ahead, throw it!”
Neo Stryder over 8 years ago
The same results as in the arcade game.
ahem Premium Member over 8 years ago
That was pretty mean. Couldn’t he at least have helped pick up some of the papers instead of walking away whistling?
Guilty Bystander over 8 years ago
The second part of this arc will be when Charlie Brown comes around Patty’s house at the end of the month to collect and she pays him by throwing nickels and dimes toward him.
Guilty Bystander over 8 years ago
Well, it SHOULD, anyway…
Robert Wilson Premium Member over 8 years ago
Charlie Brown sold Grit newspapers for the prizes. He always chose a kite, which promptly got eaten by that kite-eating tree. So, Charlie Brown had to sell more Grits to get another kite. It was a never ending cycle.
Kip W over 8 years ago
A cartoon character just did something illogical! I must explain to the universe what he should have done right.
wjones over 8 years ago
Looks like his papers were rolled, not folded and tucked
3pibgorn9 over 8 years ago
Not that many pages anymore.
Joan32 over 8 years ago
I delivered the Denver Post in 1942. They were banded. Too big to toss or fold. I had to deliver them to the door. I earned enough money to buy a used bike. Couldn’t use it to carry the papers to steep and even steep stairs. The bike cost $25 and I used until I moved to Calif.
knight1192a over 8 years ago
Still take that over some of the local paper boys. Those kids are thieves.
neverenoughgold over 8 years ago
There are no “paper boys” in most communities anymore. Sadly, it’s a dying art…