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Mar 24, 2020 06:05:22   #
Burtzy Loc: Bronx N.Y. & Simi Valley, CA
 
TriX wrote:
Yep, every one and some radio shows such as Tom Corbett and the Space Patrol on Saturday mornings (sponsored by Wheat Chex/Rice Chex), Amos and Andy in the evenings, and The Friday Night Fights. Did anyone send off to Ralston Purina for the genuine Space Patrol space helmet (clear plastic globe with an inflatable base)? When we got a TV, it was Sky King, Pinky Lee and Howdy Doody Time for us children.


I remember all of those. And when I grew up I entered the film business and one of the people I worked with was a man named Dick Tufeld. He had been the live booth announcer on Space Patrol.

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Mar 24, 2020 06:57:23   #
whfowle Loc: Tampa first, now Albuquerque
 
Remember all of those. #4: How about the chest type soda dispensers where the bottles were in a slot that you had to grab the neck and slide to the cam opening and then put your coins in the slot. In our city, we had only two channels on vhf and one on uhf. Required two different antennas on the roof and a special dial box on top of the tv to tune in the uhf channel because the tv only had a vhf tuner. #11: Last thing at night when the station signed off, they would play the national anthem and then in the morning, the same thing to begin the broadcast day. #7: As of four years ago, my uncle still had a party line with his neighbor. #16: console TV's with a record player under the cover and real furniture grade wooden cabinets. Some even had am/fm radios.

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Mar 24, 2020 07:12:47   #
yssirk123 Loc: New Jersey
 
The only one I didn't know about was butcher wax. Fun list!

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Mar 24, 2020 07:21:28   #
machia Loc: NJ
 
I remember 14 of them. Older than dirt?
Hmmm, suddenly we’re old. Time really does fly.
Yeah, 10 cent Cokes out of the red Coke machine...
A candy bar for a nickel.
Great memories😃

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Mar 24, 2020 07:30:36   #
Stlawrence
 
...and that catchy jingle selling the latest brand of smokes: "a silly milli meter longer...101"

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Mar 24, 2020 07:35:56   #
Kobuk Loc: Roseville, CA
 
Yes those were the days!

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Mar 24, 2020 07:39:11   #
banster Loc: PA, Ontario, N.C.,Key West
 
Dolley’s Diner on Golden Strip still has number 6 and they work.

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Mar 24, 2020 07:42:06   #
twowindsbear
 
robertjerl wrote:
Our local theater, before it closed - Admission 15 cents Monday through Thursday for a "B" grade movie. Friday night, Saturday and Sunday 25 cents for the main feature movie of the week, 10 cents for a bag of popcorn and 5 cents for a Coke.

And I just remembered about the time I was in 5th grade they started allowing boys to wear Levi's (clean and neat ones) and a fad for leather Paratrooper Jump boots came along - I got a pair for Christmas.

And our 4th grade teacher found a group of us playing mumbly peg with our pocket knives, told us we were doing it wrong and then got down on her knees (in a dress no less) and showed us the right way, with her own pocket knife.

First day of hunting season two things happened - kids as young as 8 or 9 were going through town on bikes and in the back of pickups with rifles and shotguns headed down to the woods along the Ohio to hunt and the high school principal put a sign up telling students not to leave their guns in their cars and trucks. No fence and US 60 right next to the parking lot. We were to bring them to the main office and he locked them in the supply room with his gun. Pick it up by 3:15 or wait until the next school day because at 3:15 he locked the supply room and went hunting.

Next is a long story I have told before if you just want to skip it.

One year three idiots from Chicago decided to hold up the town bank at about 3:30 on the first day of hunting season. The clerk at the hardware store across the street saw what was happening. Between that one and the other hardware store around the corner there were about 15 hunters getting their licenses and ammo and on the other corner at the town gas station the Police Chief was gassing up his car. The clerk called the other hardware store and the gas station and told them what was going on. When he saw that instant posse headed for him the getaway driver started his car and took off just as his buddies were running out of the bank. One of the two who went in the bank dove head first through the car window and the third (with the bag of money) found himself surrounded by about 15 armed guys aged 8 to 80 and the Chief. He surrendered and the Chief left the youngest kid and the 80 year old to hold him and everyone else piled in his car and two pickup trucks and took off after the other two robbers. The Chief radioed the next town where their Chief, a Deputy Sheriff and a State Trooper were eating an early dinner in a truck stop. They yelled for some truckers to block the highway at the blind curve just out of town and by the time the robbers made it there it was Railroad embankment to farmers fence on the other side of the road with big rigs and 3 patrol cars. All three cops and several truck drivers who just happened to have guns in their trucks were in cover behind the vehicles and waiting. The robber's tried to do a U-turn, went into a ditch and got stuck, just then our chief and his posse came around the curve and the two guys got smarter fast enough to surrender. A couple of months later when I was visiting my Grandmother on special leave from Vietnam every guy I knew that I met told me the story of the "Great Bank Robbery". It provided something to talk about for a long time in a sleepy little farming town in Western Kentucky. I think most of them were disappointed the robbers gave up.
Our local theater, before it closed - Admission 15... (show quote)


What was the sleepy little town? I grew up i Western KY.

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Mar 24, 2020 07:52:03   #
traderjohn Loc: New York City
 
Architect1776 wrote:
Please NO personal attacks.
If you have to attack or be negative just move on.


OK...I'm looking for the shovel and digging the hole. After the newsreels in the movie house; The Casino on Willis Ave & 138the St in The South Bronx there would also be: serials that had Flash Gordon or Hop a Long Cassidy. Also, matrons on patrol to keep unruly kids in line.
For me, I would add who remembers "the ice-a man" coming down the street with his horse-drawn carriage calling out for those who wanted ice for their icebox. You could get a 5 cent or 10 cent piece of ice and he would use his ice pick and chip it off this huge block of ice.

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Mar 24, 2020 08:16:14   #
joehel2 Loc: Cherry Hill, NJ
 
I remember them all. To throw another one out there, I remember the corner “drug store” had two wooden telephone booths with a glass panel door and a small seat. I remember there was an acceptable distance you were supposed to keep from the booth if you were waiting for someone to finish their call and it was not unusual to see the caller reprimand someone who was standing too close. How times have changed.

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Mar 24, 2020 08:18:43   #
jaymatt Loc: Alexandria, Indiana
 
All of them.

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Mar 24, 2020 08:19:04   #
bobmcculloch Loc: NYC, NY
 
Architect1776 wrote:
Please NO personal attacks.
If you have to attack or be negative just move on.


All except 'Butch Wax'

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Mar 24, 2020 08:19:36   #
bobmcculloch Loc: NYC, NY
 
joehel2 wrote:
I remember them all. To throw another one out there, I remember the corner “drug store” had two wooden telephone booths with a glass panel door and a small seat. I remember there was an acceptable distance you were supposed to keep from the booth if you were waiting for someone to finish their call and it was not unusual to see the caller reprimand someone who was standing too close. How times have changed.


Me too!

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Mar 24, 2020 08:21:33   #
bobmcculloch Loc: NYC, NY
 
traderjohn wrote:
OK...I'm looking for the shovel and digging the hole. After the newsreels in the movie house; The Casino on Willis Ave & 138the St in The South Bronx there would also be: serials that had Flash Gordon or Hop a Long Cassidy. Also, matrons on patrol to keep unruly kids in line.
For me, I would add who remembers "the ice-a man" coming down the street with his horse-drawn carriage calling out for those who wanted ice for their icebox. You could get a 5 cent or 10 cent piece of ice and he would use his ice pick and chip it off this huge block of ice.
OK...I'm looking for the shovel and digging the ho... (show quote)


Ice man, coal man (hand delivered coal to the chute in the side of the house) and junk man (we gave apples to his horse)

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Mar 24, 2020 08:40:02   #
traderjohn Loc: New York City
 
joehel2 wrote:
I remember them all. To throw another one out there, I remember the corner “drug store” had two wooden telephone booths with a glass panel door and a small seat. I remember there was an acceptable distance you were supposed to keep from the booth if you were waiting for someone to finish their call and it was not unusual to see the caller reprimand someone who was standing too close. How times have changed.


You got me thinking. I seem to remember small fans with rubber blades in the upper corner of the phone booth.

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