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The hobo bag is a style of handbag or purse that is typically large and characterized by a crescent shape, a slouchy posture and a long strap designed to wear over the shoulder. [1] Hobo bags are made out of soft, flexible materials and tend to slump, or slouch, when set down.
[26] Thatcher's bag was almost as newsworthy an item as she was herself and on the day she died, one of her handbag-makers saw a sharp rise in sales of her favorite structured design. The original bag Thatcher asserts on a signed card was the one "used every day in my time at Downing Street" [23] is archived at Churchill College, Cambridge ...
Hobo bag, a style of handbag; Hobo (typeface), a sans serif typeface; Hobo spider, Eratigena agrestis; Hobo (The Littlest Hobo), title character of The Littlest Hobo; Hendy Hobo, a British monoplane built in 1929 by the Hendy Aircraft Company; Hobo Railroad, part of the Plymouth & Lincoln Railroad, in New Hampshire, United States
A bag (also known regionally as a sack) is a common tool in the form of a non-rigid container, typically made of cloth, leather, bamboo, paper, or plastic. The use of bags predates recorded history , with the earliest bags being lengths of animal skin, cotton , or woven plant fibers, folded up at the edges and secured in that shape with strings ...
Michael L. "Mike" Fry (October 25, 1960 – November 4, 2012) was an American serial entrepreneur, entertainer, trainer and marketing expert.He was the original Happy the Hobo on the children's television series Happy's Place, and the creative mind behind and owner of Fancy Fortune Cookies.
Purse may also refer to: Purse (horse racing), the total amount of money paid out to the owners of horses racing at a particular track over a given period; Prize money, "purse", or "purse money", a monetary reward paid out to the crew of a ship for capturing an enemy vessel; Purse bid, in boxing the aggregate prize money; Purse (surname), a surname
Hartmann Luggage is a manufacturer of luggage and leather goods established in 1877 [1] in Milwaukee, Wisconsin by trunkmaker Joseph S. Hartmann, a Bavarian.. In 1956, the company opened a manufacturing operation in Lebanon, Tennessee, and the company's headquarters and plant facilities followed in 1959.
James Eads How (1874–1930 [1] [2]) was an American organizer of the hobo community in the early 20th century. He was heir of a wealthy St. Louis family but chose to live as a hobo and to help the homeless migrant workers. The newspapers often referred to him as the "Millionaire Hobo". [3]