When I was 7, I wanted an aquarium. Friends found one in the local paper's want ads so Dad and I went over to see about it. Fortunately for me, there was a laundry room located near the garage so while the adults were inside, I checked out the equipment and saw one of these washers. I noticed the similarity between the lid support on this washer and the lid support on our friend's General Electric Electric Sink's dishwasher. I saw two more. One was a trade in for resale at the Economy Auto store in our shopping center in 1958 and the other was in the utility room of a customer on my paper route in the mid 60s.
Everything about the acquisition of the aquarium had an appliance connection. We had gone to the Southeastern Fair in September and had stopped by the booth of an aquarium/pet shop dealer and, while dad talked to the guy about placing an order for an aquarium, I kept walking and found an abandoned booth with GE appliances. There was an operating dishwasher with a bubble top so you could see the water swirling around and a washer-dryer combination that was running so you could see the water splashing through that square window. The dishwasher was the new bow tie impeller design and they had slightly overfilled it so the impeller created two plumes of water that circled inside the dome. That load probably did the motor no good, but it was dramatic to watch. Apparently the timer motors had been disconnected from the circuit so they just washed on and on. There was a little puddle of water in front of the combo under the door. My mother came to find me and asked if I had done that. I truthfully replied that I had not. She said I needed to rejoin them, but didn't say when so I stayed a bit longer. That was the only time we went to the fair, but the appliance memories from 60 years ago still remain. If only my school work had been so easily absorbed.
Frigidaire was smarter than Maytag about the perforated inner tub; they got rid of it faster.