Not a whole lot went on at the truck stop during the middle of the night, but sometime earlier in the week, someone had dropped off three bundles of the old Grit weekly newspaper, from 1961, 1962, and 1963 for me, my penchant for trying to keep up with the news being well-known here in the Sandhills of Nebraska.
So I pretty much spent the night reading Grit.
I dunno if Grit is published any more; it came out of central Pennsylvania, and had a nation-wide distribution of boys, and perhaps some girls, running around their town selling the weekly issue. Apparently it wasn't via mail subscription; one had to get a copy from someone hawking them.
There was competition for Grit about this same time, Capper's Weekly, published somewhere in Kansas, which was sold the same way. But for some really odd reason, even though Nebraska is right there on top of Kansas, this second weekly was never "big" up here like the Pennsylvania publication.
I don't think I've seen a copy of Capper's Weekly in my life, but it was in fact pretty popular in its time.
My older brothers sold Grit, but that was before my time. Apparently about 60 copies of that publication were sent to them every week, for which they were to charge 15 cents, remitting 10 cents to the newspaper for each copy sold, and keeping 5 cents for each newspaper as their profit.
That was about the time the warped primitive (now circa 60 years old) was a little lass, and stubbornly refusing to drink milk at the supper-table, demanding soda instead.
This phenomenon of selling newspapers door-to-door is probably extinct now.
All of the brothers and all of the sisters delivered the regular daily, semi-weekly, and weekly newspapers in their own time; one of the most enduring memories of this childhood is the picture of all these white canvas bags, hanging in the vestibule.
One or two of them were still doing it as late as their last year in high school, but nearly all of them stopped at about 15 years of age, going on to other sorts of employment (physician's office, movie house, furniture store, grocery store, soda counter, town library, and somesuch).
I alone of all the children in the family never had a newspaper-route, either a regular one or this door-to-door selling thing. I am not sure why; I was also never an altar boy or Cub Scout or Boy Scout or played competitive sports. I suspect the parents thought it was something I couldn't handle, and perhaps probably the parents were right.