What an ad, playing up to the resurgence in home canning in the early 70s and rustic to the point of horribly ugly cabinets that look like they were made out of a recycled barn or something. Nobody that I know of or knew of used the old zinc caps on jars in modern day canning, but that is what these lids look like, yet I can't see the red rubber ring where the jar meets the lid. I don't know what's in those jars on the lower shelf, but if it's not dried pasta, it sure is ugly food; nothing I would want to put on display. Maybe the first jar is garbanzos. Even the stuff in the jar in the little girl's lap looks unidentifiable as something that is supposed to be edible unless those are very ugly apply slices. Finally, do big feet run in that family or what? If there were ever two women who never should have had side shots of their feet, these are at or near the front of the line.
Why would they put so much ugliness around their dishwasher? The lies in the text are ugly enough; saying that the machine disposes of food particles is a partial truth at best but to say it pre-scrapes is a lie. Of course, as close to the land as this family seems to be living, any scraps not licked off the plates, either by humans or the dog, would probably be fed to the pigs anyway.
Why would they put so much ugliness around their dishwasher? The lies in the text are ugly enough; saying that the machine disposes of food particles is a partial truth at best but to say it pre-scrapes is a lie. Of course, as close to the land as this family seems to be living, any scraps not licked off the plates, either by humans or the dog, would probably be fed to the pigs anyway.