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To: dustcatcher who wrote (28630)8/12/2000 2:00:04 PM
From: Dealer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35685
 
Thanks Dustcatcher! I can't believe you found that. If ya wanta know just ask......

I think TL thought he was gonna stump us all and I would have thought so too. But Nooooooooooooooo! Dustcatcher comes through.

Is there really a reason for everything? Must be.

That's Great!
dealie



To: dustcatcher who wrote (28630)8/12/2000 2:36:29 PM
From: Clappy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35685
 
Right you are Catcher Of Dust!

Here's what I found...

from: straightdope.com

Dear Straight Dope: (EDIT: Not to be mistaken with Clappy The Sideways Dope)

A Japanese student once asked the meaning of the phrase "sleep tight" (as in "sleep tight, don't let the bed bugs
bite"). I have always been interested in word origins but I have yet to come across this one. I haven't even found
anyone who could make a good guess. Can you help solve this riddle? --Guy Nolan, Washington, DC

SDSTAFF Hawk replies:

Here in Cajun country where I live, before the days of mattresses, beds were square frames elevated from the ground, with
ropes tied across in a sort of weave. It was similar to a hammock in concept. Anyway, in order to sleep well, the "mattress"
couldn't sag, so the bed had to be "tight." (And free of bed bugs, but I thought that went without saying.)

For further insight I spoke to Dr. Jerry Lee Cross, a historian with the state of North Carolina. He confirms that the beds were,
in fact, made of ropes tied across a frame. He adds that the origin of the phrase "sleep tight" is almost common knowledge
among historians, simply because the modern bed is a little over a hundred years old.

But first a little about bedbugs. The 1996 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia, under "bedbug," shows a critter not unlike a flea.
Known to others as _Cimex lectularius_, this beast is a blood-sucker (literally). It is further described as nocturnal and capable
of consuming its body weight in blood in five minutes. This one meal can provide nourishment for the insect for six months! This
flat, oval, wingless bug measures about 0.6 cm long and produces irritating bites but is not known to carry disease. How
comforting.

Dr. Cross's wife, Carolyn, adds that she remembers her mother telling her stories about how she slept on such beds. Mrs.
Cross recalls how her mother said she had to put the bedposts in small cans (like tuna cans) filled with kerosene, in a sort of
moat-like fashion to keep the bedbugs from climbing into the bed (the bugs being wingless and all). Mrs. Cross also says that
there were "rules" for sleeping: you couldn't let the sheets hit the floor or have the bed too close to the walls, lest the bedbugs
could climb into bed that way.

In Charles Panati's _Extraordinary Origins of Everyday Things_ (sorry, Cecil), he writes that mattresses were made of organic
materials such as "straw, leaves, pine needles, and reeds" and tended to rot, mildew, and harbor rats and mice, who were
hunting for bugs! Inorganic materials didn't appear on the scene until about the 1870's or so, when conical springs came into
use. Cylindrical springs, which had been attempted earlier, had problems with no support, too much support, as well as spring
failure from the poor metallurgical methods of the time. (Personally I say if it doesn't have Magic Fingers, it ain't a bed.)

The point is, when people used to say, "sleep tight, don't let the bed bugs bite," they weren't trying to be cute. They meant it.

--SDSTAFF Hawk
Straight Dope Science Advisory Board


-- Cut

I have an even longer answer.

I'll spare you all.

-ClappyTheTightSleepingDope



To: dustcatcher who wrote (28630)8/12/2000 4:49:48 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 35685
 
Jack of all trades.....Thongs are good...<g>..You da man.......
'Seek and ye shall find......."
Thx....
Tim
PS ..doing a little "light " reading on the history of our understanding of the Galaxy......
Was amazed to read that most precious metals here on earth were blown from the cores of dying stars during Supernova events.......
We are all star dust...but the treasures are from cores of the big blow hards........