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"The roar of the Twenties was only the faintest of echoes in those vast and empty hills--a mocking echo to Hill Country farmers who read of Coolidge Prosperity and the reduction in the work week to forty-eight hours and the bright new world of mass leisure, while they themselves were still working the seven-day-a-week, dawn-to-dark schedule their fathers and grandfathers had worked; a mocking echo to Hill Country housewives who read of the myriad new labor-saving devices (washing machines, electric irons, vacuum cleaners, refrigerators) that had "freed" the housewife. Even if they had been able to afford such devices, they would not have been able to switch them on since the Hill Country was still without electricity."