Actually, to all who are wondering about the story of this dryer here it is:
This machine was purchased by the son of the guy I bought it from at an estate sale in Apple Valley, MN. It was in the home of a little old lady. The son then moved half way across the country and lost interest in trying to move the dryer with him. Dad decided it was too nice to scrap and thought he'd try to get out of it what had been paid for it.
As to the aforementioned little old lady, I'm guessing her husband bought her this dryer new in 1957 or 1958. She probably line dried 99% of her clothes so that this machine was only used for "fluffing" line-dried towels and perhaps drying a few loads in the deepest cold of winter. I bet this machine only actually dried a few dozen loads of laundry a year. And, as is often the case with "old lady" dryers, it likely saw no use at all during the last years of her life since laundry was likely done by family members at their homes.
I know this situation from personal experience. My grandmother (now 99) has a late 1960s Kenmore "Match-all" dryer that looks almost as if it came off the catalog store floor! As a child, I helped her wash in the Maytag E2L and then everything was hung outside or in the basement. If it was a particularly still summer day or in the winter, towels and jeans would get a 10 minute air tumble in the dryer before folding so that they were not "stiff as a board" as my grandmother would say! [this post was last edited: 2/4/2013-17:56]