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Do you remember?
Add some things that happened back then that you remember that your grandkids haven't any idea about.
A time before Pizza? I had my first taste in high school. Our Miss Brooks? The Land of Let's Pretend. A time before TV...meaning TELEVISION? Well water. Victory Gardens. Wacs and Waves were my heroines and solders and sailors my heros...the second world war when I was very little. Cowgirl outfits and Dale Evans. Writing for and receiving movie star pictures in the mail. Don't leave me dangling here showing my age...join in please. What do you remember that your grandkids wouldn't know about??? |
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Howdy Doody Winky Dink Nickel Cokes Peanuts in those Cokes Having 2 pair of shoes, one for school and one for church! |
Spending the summer at grandma's at the lake in Indiana and not wearing shoes.
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What do you remember that your grandkids wouldn't know about???[/QUOTE]
Movie magazines, True Love/Confessions magazines, fountain Cokes, ration books (WW II), 25-cent gas and cigarettes, radio shows (Green Hornet, The Creaking Door, Amos & Andy, The First-Nighters), typewriters, mimeo machines |
Drive-in movies
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"I know nothing!" per Sgt. Shultz.
Burma Shave signs. "A little dab'l do ya" - Brylcreme (sp?) (Been so long I don't even remember how to spell it) "See the USA in your Chevrolet" per Dinah Shore. I guess I watched too much Television. |
Rembering...
...rotary phones, 3-digit phone numbers, nickel draft beers, SERVICE gas stations, 25 cents a gallon gas...
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Squirt Soda with real pieces of grapefruit in each bottle
Drug Store soda fountains S&H Green Stamps 5 cent parking meters Horse drawn milk & garbage wagons Crystal set radios Lunch counters in department stores Hand cranked cash registers The blizzard of 1947 (if you lived in Wisconsin) Toys without batteries "Scrubs" baseball games |
Remember when
Remember when.....
Couldn't even say anything related to sex on tv and now you can say the "f" word and have love scenes in bed? You had to get up turn the channel on the tv? Only AM radio Had to actually wait to get home to answer the phone that was plugged into the wall and had an answering machine? When kids were respectful? When kids wore their pants on their hips instead of down to their knees? When your mom bought you 3 outfits for school and you were thrilled? When the whole family sat down to dinner together? When mom stayed home to raise the kids? When dad had a job? When families were able to make ends meet on one paycheck? When owning a home was the "American Dream"? When a pair of sneakers costs 12.99 not 120.99? When you didn't have to lock your house doors and windows and car doors? When you felt safe walking anywhere? When what was yours was yours and not everyone elses? I could go on and on. |
- New car designs changed every year or two (and every manufacturer's cars looked unique)
- There was no interstate freeway system - Local transit buses were actually trolleys, with the overhead electric lines and tracks laid in the streets - Mailing in cereal box tops to get prizes sent to you - Top Value savings stamps - Getting coffee mugs, etc. with a fill-up at the gas station - There were no 'self-serve' gas stations - and the attendants who filled your car up always checked the oil and washed the windshield - Getting each successive volume of Funk & Wagnalls encyclopedia at the grocery store - Only 'expensive' cars had air conditioning, power windows, and door locks Bill :) |
Brooklyn Dodgers and the Washington Senators.
Nash Rambler No stores open on Sunday or Christmas Day. |
45 & 33 rpm records
8 track tapes cassette tapes |
Mom or Dad calling (yelling )you home from the front porch because it was getting dark!
Pickup games of stickball,baseball,basketball after school in the neighborhood! |
Roller skates that fit onto your shoes and were tightened with a skate key!
Flavor-straws. Dots candy on a strip of paper. Lunchmeat and cheese sliced on a hand-turned slicing machine. Cars without automatic turn signals. Hand pushed lawn mowers. Lawn trimmers that looked like big scissors(no weed whackers) |
I remember
towels or glasses in clothes detergent boxes blue starch to soak our nurses caps in (stuck them to the mirror until dry) sitting in long rows at school (desks attached to the floor) waiting for a turn to use the phone (many sisters) paying a penny for a seltser at the luncheon counter in Woloworths parades with lots of marching bands and service men church on Sunday and the bakery afterward good times and occasionally bad times. I have learned from all of them; I hope. |
Remembering
These are so much fun to read and bring back memories....some of them I don't remember because I was too young. Yipee for me!
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I remember:
Tax stamps given for some purchases and collected at school for credits for something :).
A visiting nurse at school checking for your vaccination scar. (Girls who had one on their thighs had to be checked in the cloakroom). Speaking of cloakrooms, every classroom had one. They were great for soggy rain wear, mittens, and kids who misbehaved. One day one kid ate several other children's lunches while he was incarcerated there! Remember Tom and Betty, Dick and Jane, and their dog named Flip? Elementary schools without carpool lanes. Lik-Em-Aid that turned your hands green and red. Air raid drills. Trying to decide how I was going to deal with being the outcast of the sophomore class because my mother thought that $16.99 for a pair of Weejuns sounded outrageous! She did relent and you actually couldn't wear those shoes out! |
Andy's Gang
S&H Green Stamps Lime Rickeys Egg Creams stickball Bikes with baseball cards stuck in the spokes with clothespins Having to change out of your "school clothes" when you got home milk delivery johnnie on the pony mumblypeg ebbetts field the polo grounds girls wearing girdles (frustrating) girls wearing stockings (much better) 25 cent hot dogs and 35 cent burgers 10 cent soft pretzels (three for a quarter) stoopball boxball chinese handball Murray the K Cousin Brucie Bob Sheppard, the voice of the Yankees |
In my family's house we had one rotary dial phone in the kitchen. If you wanted privacy, you had to drag the phone into my parents' bedroom and close the door.
"Brick" or "bag" car phones -- couldn't put those in a purse. Using a manual typewriter to type papers in high school and college We had one black and white TV shared by 5 people until I was 10. And if you missed your TV show, there were no DVR's or watching the show a few days/weeks later on the internet or a cable's "on demand" service. At my Catholic elementary school, we had lunch tickets that we bought every week, and the lunch ladies would punch the lunch ticket every day that a student bought a hot lunch. Blackboards and chalk -- do they still exist in elementary or high schools? Pay phones...not obsolete yet, but will there be any left in 5 years? It's pretty hard to find one now. |
"Trying to decide how I was going to deal with being the outcast of the sophomore class because my mother thought that $16.99 for a pair of Weejuns sounded outrageous!"
Weejuns!!!!!! If they looked worn out; a friend told me, that just meant you've been cool for a long time. |
[QUOTE=Jim 9922;446261]
The blizzard of 1047 (if you lived in Wisconsin) Now even I don't remember that one. 1947 maybe, but not 1047. |
So true...
Weejuns!!!!!! If they looked worn out; a friend told me, that just meant you've been cool for a long time.[/QUOTE]
:bigbow: And remember when everything came in madras? And how about those green canvasy coats with the hood? At my high school slacks (let alone jeans) were a no-no. |
Jim 9922,
The blizzard of 1047? Boy, you are old. |
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And remember when everything came in madras? And how about those green canvasy coats with the hood? At my high school slacks (let alone jeans) were a no-no.[/QUOTE] The madras would bleed :o .... loved the ties, sport coats and shorts. |
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50's decorating
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And, for years there were really only three channels. The evening news was 15 minutes long. Any Cincinnati area people remember Peter Grant? Paul Dixon? Ruth Lyons? Uncle Al? Ding Dong School? |
Memories of years gone by...
Lux Radio Theatre
Amos 'n Andy roller skates with a key 4 party phone lines trolly cars (in Boston) food stamps during WW2 mixing the color in oleo pin curls (to curl hair) rag curls (to curl hair) Sears & Roebuck Catalog |
"See Rock City" painted on the roof of every barn in the country.
Dial "0" for operator and actually getting one personally that will put your call through. Directory Assistance that actually looked up the number for you at no charge. All phones owned by the phone company. "Henry J" automobile. |
One Ringy-dINGY
"Dial "0" for operator and actually getting one personally that will put your call through."
Between high school and college I worked for Directory Assistance at Cincinnati Bell. I worked in long distance (555-1212); we actually sat in cubbies surrounded by about 20 phone books and actually did look up the number for you. In my dept we covered two area codes and had a rotary dial on the wall to call small towns which we had no directory for. The caller stayed on the line while we spoke to the other operator. "Oh, Jim Brown on Main Street. I know his brother. His number is...." |
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Not saying it was okay
but in the old days kids made prank calls. (Other kids, of course :icon_wink:).
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"Do you have Prince Albert in a can" Answer: YES. "Well, you better let him out". :) |
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And the Circus Today signs on the highways. |
Asking a parent if you could use the phone; picking up the phone and hearing the operator saying "Number please." The operator would often be, btw, my Aunt Frances. And our home number was 672. My aunt's home number was 504W.
A house had one radio, when I wanted my own I built a crystal set (which actually got one station). Rationing and ration stamps. Buying a 10 cent war bond stamp at school each week. Milk at school, mornings and afternoon, 5 cents per week. All kids having chest x-rays at school once a year...they were looking for tuberculosis and yes, once in a while they'd find a child that had it. Two days after a snow storm, the snow would be black from all the coal that was used for heating and power in the mills. A river that was so vile, even us kids would never go near it. Chemicals, industrial waste, sewage. Just about every house had a flag in the window with a blue star for every family member in the service. As the years went by, some blue stars were replaced with gold stars. |
We always had a bottle of mucilage in the house (like glue) with a rubber stopper/applicator. 'Tape' hadn't come along yet.
Dad made his own glue (for fly tying) from animal parts, like hooves and sinew. Mom 'thumped' us with a hankie filled with cornstarch at bed time on on hot summer nights because there was no air conditioning, except for the occasional breeze through an open window. There were oscillating fans, but they were heavy, noisy and the motors got so hot they gave off more heat than anything. Remember how cool it was when someone gave you an old cigar box to put treasures in? Remember sledding with whatever was available? Cardboard boxes were the best, better than a garbage can lid. (No plastics yet!) How about washboards? Ringer washing machines? Ever get your arm caught in the ringer? 'Splain THAT to the grandkids! :faint: I told my daughter some of my more exciting childhood stories and she cried! Silly girl... being a kid back then was great! |
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Current PA announcer is not even close to Mr. Sheppard. Remember when fans in the lower deck could exit by the field, exiting through the bullpen ? The broadcast team of Mel Allen, Red Barber, and Phil Rizzuto ? |
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Are you really eligible for the Villages ? :) |
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