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Comments on Puzzle #8493: Fill me up!
By Tom O'Connell (sensei69)

peek at solution       solve puzzle
  quality:   difficulty:   solvability: line logic only  

Puzzle Description:

is Ethel around?

#1: Amanda French (Amandarose_20) on Apr 21, 2010

Cute Tom!
#2: Ga Hendrick (GaHendrick) on Apr 21, 2010
Good use of non-centered images.
#3: Diana W (aeris) on Apr 21, 2010 [SPOILER]
I like how you have the 'G' part of 'Gas' showing.
#4: Alison Deem (Indigo) on May 7, 2010
Who's Ethel?
#5: Tom O'Connell (sensei69) on May 8, 2010
Alison ... in the old days, they use to ask us "do you want regular or ethel gasoline?"
#6: Alison Deem (Indigo) on May 8, 2010
Ohhh...ethel. I do remember full-service stations but only regular or unleaded options.
#7: Tom O'Connell (sensei69) on May 8, 2010
was before that era, Alison
#8: Teresa K (fasstar) on May 8, 2010
A little gasoline history trivial:

On Feb. 2, 1923, the first Ethyl gasoline went on sale at a roadside station in Dayton.

In those days, gasoline caused car engines to knock or ping. It was not only annoying, but potentially harmful to the engine.

Thomas Midgely and Charles Kettering, researchers for General Motors in Dayton, discovered that adding tetraethyl lead to the gas eliminated the problem. Kettering coined the resulting mixture "ethyl gasoline," which was dyed red to distinguish it from regular gas.

It was first made available to motorists at a Dayton gas station owned by Willard Talbott, a friend of Kettering. Of course, leaded gasoline was toxic to the environment and to people.

By the mid-1930s a collaboration among General Motors, DuPont and Standard Oil produced Ethyl gas. They managed to suppress government reports about the danger of the product and tetraethyl lead was added to 90 percent of the gasoline used in the United States. Leaded gas was phased out in the 1970s.

Source: http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2003/02/02/loc_ohiodate0202.html
#9: Tom O'Connell (sensei69) on May 8, 2010
thx Teresa, but i didn't buy gas in the 30's or 40's or 50's lol
#10: Teresa K (fasstar) on May 8, 2010
LOL - me neither! That's why I called it a history lesson. :-)
#11: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on May 23, 2010 [SPOILER]
Tom, for me, in the old days, they'd ask "regular or unleaded?" For my daughter, she'll probably tell her grandkids, "in the old days, they'd ask, 'gas or electric?'"
#12: Tom O'Connell (sensei69) on May 24, 2010
sooo true, Joe
#13: Sarah Andrews (sarah) on Oct 18, 2010
cute

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