Troy,
If you saw the apparatus used to grind the skillets and many other pieces you would understand easily. Maybe you can visualize what the process looked like by reading what Favorite had to say (and illustrate-but I can't send a photo) in a c.1920's catalog on their hollow ware:
"The ware next goes to the grinding department where special machines, designed and made by us exclusively, grind and polish the interior of the ware.
The ware is revolved at a high speed in one direction, and the grinding and polishing wheels set at angles revolve in the opposite direction as shown in the illustration on the following page (can you see it?). The speed of the two surfaces revolving in opposite directions is so great that only the toughest castings would withstand the strain. Several manufacturers do not attempt this grinding process, because the ware will break in the attempt. It is necessary, however, as it removes the scale from the inside, exposing the pores of the iron making it possible to season in the ware in a way that could not be done otherwise. This accounts for its wonderful efficiency in cooking.
After being polished all pieces of ware are given a coat of lacquer to guard against anything that would mar or interfere with the brilliancy of the ware during the packing and shipping."
I am not sure that cast iron is really porous and the mention of it being so might be a marketing ploy. I really don't know and have not studied the properties of cast iron. And what does the "scale" look like that the grinding removes? Is the scale left on the unground parts of the piece or is it removed during the tumbling process (also explained) with thousands of "stars" in which the ware is rotated with in a drum?
The grinding machine reminds me of a brake drum grinding machine. The operator holds a large diameter wheel which he turns to make the stone go across the piece's surface. At least that is what it looks like to me.
Steve