where do you find the old fashioned wooden paper towel holders?
It is the classification that goes under the cabinet, and it has big round sides and the hop-pole goes through both of the wooden round sides. The whole fetich is wood.Please help.

It is the classification that goes under the cabinet, and it has big round sides and the hop-pole goes through both of the wooden round sides. The whole fetich is wood.Please help.
Like these:
http://www.organizeit-online.com/images/ 4946-Bamboo%20Paper%20Towel%20Holder-1.j pg
I don't over recall I'm using it right. Like how are you required to rip the towel off?
omg i positive every time i use one of those i get like the whole roll hhahaaha i sense ur pain lol.
This is a native-made paper towel dispenser which allows you to take one lamina at at perpetually using only one like mad easily. Upstanding about every moment you have need of a ...
Soap dispensers are broken or unfilled. Paper towel holders are regularly either broken or empty. Waste bins contain overflowing garbage that spills out onto the floor. Cockroaches prowl the halls; it gets worse at night.
Apparently, this does not stop students from using the bathrooms — far from it.
Most days the floor of the men’s and women’s bathrooms are slick with urine and covered with dirty toilet paper. Sometimes even clothing and food are thrown around. It is enough to make truck stops look sanitary.
The filthiness is not confined to the UC-Satellite. It is in the Science and Engineering Classroom Building, Agnes Arnold Hall and most of the restrooms in the M.D. Anderson Memorial Library as well. That’s only the beginning of a long list.
This is not meant to disgust or offend anyone; it is merely a truthful representation of the state of campus facilities. We are not trying to say the maintenance staff is responsible, either. After the current budget went into effect, 11 maintenance positions were eliminated.
Ah, the juice box. Made with paper, aluminum foil and wax, it’s too complicated to be recycled in most areas, and cannot be reused. (Unless you want to make yours into a DIY iPod holder, as someone else did. Google it and marvel at the kind of crap that gives DIY a bad name.)
But kids love juice boxes.
They also spill, which means lots of paper towels. And some parents seem to live in fear of leaving the house without a snack, which means lots of cheese sticks or one-serving pretzel bags or the like, most of which uses packaging that also cannot be recycled.
The result is that each American kid is a one-person environmental disaster, even before mom and dad drive him or her to Rockville because that’s how far you apparently need to go these days to find eight other kids to kick a ball around.
So, let’s fix all this.
First to go is the juice box, cheese stick and one-serving snack pack.
Each parent should think to themselves -- are there times that we can leave the snack behind? As the kids get older, they should snack less but by then the habit is so engrained that we just keep feeding them hourly. Ask regularly, can we cut it back? Another upside for fewer snacks: less crap for us to schlep.
You can surely frame this jotting. Tellingly depot/Lowes sells precut pieces of wood for the station and dowels for the vertical stem. Adhere the pieces together with wood seal and you are done. Should charge no more than a combine dollars. Also I fancy if you bill out your city place stockpile like Object or BB&B they would have something equivalent.