Reinhardt kids were surrounded by advertising appeals. Stepping across the great divide of the older reading culture and the new media of electronic images, we had many sources for our shopping. A child bookworm like me could spend hours reading every line of type within a comic book, a Mad magazine, or a Boy’s Life, including ads like these:


Several of my greatest sources of excitement and greatest disappointments were mail order transactions from these types of ads. For instance, I had the same experience as Louise in joining the Smokey Bear Club. Read her MySpace blog story by clicking the link below. Scroll down to her blog dated Saturday, July 28, 2007--The Story of My Life Day 8:
http://blog.myspace.com/198075569[A Smokey Bear doll was released by
Ideal Toys in 1952, which included a mail-in card for children to become junior forest rangers. Within three years, half a million kids had applied. In April 1964, Smokey was given his own ZIP code, 20252.]
I wasn’t stupid enough to get sucked into buying the x-ray glasses described in this piece:
http://freakcomics.com/2005/09/14/false-advertising-in-comics/As a Mickey Mouse Club member and avowed straight shooter, I likely had my share of Mattel guns.