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Growing up, I remember...

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by 3wLarry, May 27, 2010.

  1. Deuce3wCpe
    Joined: Aug 21, 2004
    Posts: 848

    Deuce3wCpe
    Member
    from New Jersey

    Late 60's early 70's ....saved my snow shoveling/lawn mowing money up for about 6 months..went downtown to Kolker's Toy Store and bought a COX Shrike , a streamliner powered by a gas engined rear prop. First run out I let it off the tether and it smashed head on into a curb shearing off the engine at the fuel tank.
    I washed the fuel off it, put it back in the box and nervously brought it back to Kolker's to try and tell them it "came that way".
    The man behind the hobby counter took one look at it and said "c'mon son, tell me the truth...you broke it didn't you" ...with a shameful nod of my head I stared down at my shoes....the guy went into the back room and brought out a brand new one in the box and said "take better care of it this time." I couldn't believe it- told him I was sorry for lying and thanked him about a million times.
    It was one of those life's lessons that you never forget.





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    Last edited: Jun 1, 2010
  2. Jalopy Jim
    Joined: Aug 3, 2005
    Posts: 1,867

    Jalopy Jim
    Member

    I'm going to add a couple more to my list:

    Horse drawn hay rides, the sounds of the horses hooves as they pull the wagon and the smell of the hay.
    Small mom and pop stores where customer service and a hello and thank you come with every purchase.

    jim h
     
  3. Going to where AE Nugent Chevrolet stored the new Chevy models before they were officially released. This was in the Gilmore complex in the Fairfax district of L.A. that included the Pan Pacific Auditorium, Farmers Market, Pan Pacific Drive-in, Pan Pacific Theater, a bowling alley, Gilmore gas station and CBS Television City (on the former site of Gilmore Stadium).
     
  4. ol'chevy
    Joined: Nov 1, 2005
    Posts: 1,283

    ol'chevy
    Member

    Hey, Kool Aid! Oh, Yeah!

    Wacky Packages, elvis cards, Kiss(the band) cards, Godzilla cards.

    Watching Batman after school.

    Skyjackers with the little lights on the rear end.

    Plastic bannanna board skateboards to bust your ass on.

    Muraled vans.

    I was a kid in the 70s.

    Cheap muscle cars in the 80s....that my dad wouldn't let me buy.

    Riding in the '79 olds Cutlass looking out the T tops. My step mom traded her '72 Cuda for it??????????

    Listening to the Cuda warming up in the carport before school.

    Riding all the way from SC to Fla in the sleeper above the driver in my uncle's rv.

    Sliding back and forth across the vinyl seat riding through the mountains.

    Making faces at the cars behind my grandmother's station wagon while sitting in the reverse seat.

    Those annoying Strawberry Shortcake commercials that you would sing all day after hearing. We would sing it to each other just to get someone else singing it.

    Watching CHIPs.
     
  5. Harms Way
    Joined: Nov 27, 2005
    Posts: 6,914

    Harms Way
    Member

    Re: Growing up, I remember... ANN-MARIE JACKAWHTZ !!!!!!! "YEEE_HAWWW" :D
     
  6. D.R.Smith
    Joined: Jan 12, 2009
    Posts: 294

    D.R.Smith
    Member

    when i was 14,my parents had a good friend that was a salesman at the local Ford dealer.He took me with him when he did a dealer transfer about 50 miles away.The car we brought back was a 66 shelby Gt 350.That was the first time I thought I had died and gone to heaven.1964 seing the nascar greats running Fonda speedway a 1/2 mile dirt track in upstate NY,Fireball roberts sideways all the way down the back striaght.Getting my draft notice in 1970,and failling the medical twice.Can't remember why.Didn't think much about it until 20 years later,Then I came to feel guilty about not going when so many of my generation went and didn't come home.Still can't watch films or read about Nam.
     
  7. Harms Way
    Joined: Nov 27, 2005
    Posts: 6,914

    Harms Way
    Member

    Your NEVER to old to have a Happy Childhood ! :D
     
  8. Weldemup
    Joined: Dec 12, 2003
    Posts: 181

    Weldemup
    Member
    from Central,NY

    $99 dollar used car lots...Every car in the lot $99 or less...We had one right down the street.
     
  9. Mazooma1
    Joined: Jun 5, 2007
    Posts: 13,545

    Mazooma1
    Member

    getting "booked" at 3 1/2 years old

    [​IMG]

    dad was a cop....:)
     
  10. wvenfield
    Joined: Nov 23, 2006
    Posts: 5,613

    wvenfield
    Member

    Wow, I saw that pic in the local post office today!
     
  11. HealeyRick
    Joined: May 5, 2009
    Posts: 573

    HealeyRick
    Member
    from Mass.

    I meant this to be a quiz. Who can identify the firearms with the guys who carried them?

    Who carried these:

    [​IMG]

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    [​IMG]
     
  12. HealeyRick
    Joined: May 5, 2009
    Posts: 573

    HealeyRick
    Member
    from Mass.

    Name the dogs and series:

    [​IMG]

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    [​IMG]
    <embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://tinypic.com/i/input.swf" style="" id="flash-html-code" bgcolor="transparent" quality="high" name="flash-html-code" wmode="transparent" allowfullscreen="true" swliveconnect="true" allowscriptaccess="always" flashvars="ipt=%5BIMG%5Dhttp%3A%2F%2Fi49.tinypic.com%2F2vt2w3l.jpg%5B%2FIMG%5D&trk=copy_details_img" width="262" height="19">
     
    Last edited: Jun 1, 2010
  13. DavidL
    Joined: Oct 6, 2006
    Posts: 82

    DavidL
    Member

    Alternators with external voltage regulators.

    That the ignition key could be pulled out of the ignition of a Corvair with it running (might be true for other makes/models as well...just vividly remember that this could be done with a Corvair)

    Banana seats and monkey hanging handle bars where normal.
     
  14. My first time behind the wheel--at 3 years old! Fishtailing the VW got me grounded from driving until 5 yrs old.
     
  15. whitedawg
    Joined: Jun 4, 2009
    Posts: 24

    whitedawg
    Member

    Greenie Stickum Caps..and firing those plastic bullets at your sister
    Reflectors on Christmas tree lights
    Snakes those little black capsules you would light and would explode into black wriggly things
    Chasing fireflies until street light rule went into to effect
    Lionel train ads...knowing full well I would never see one
    Bactine and Mecurichrome would heal anything
    Civil Defense symbol on your car radio
    Woolworth always had a promtion for banana splits..with amounts from .01 to .49 in ballons..picke the ballon get the price. Never did hit the .01
    Trying to be slick and listen to World Series in school with transistor radio..back when they were afternoon games
    Going to World Fair in NY
    Buying war stamps in school
    Resposiblity...when I torn up my dads car being stupid I had to make good, cost me a favorite 16ga shoutgun
     
  16. Harms Way
    Joined: Nov 27, 2005
    Posts: 6,914

    Harms Way
    Member

    How did I do ?
     
  17. Searcher
    Joined: Jul 8, 2007
    Posts: 620

    Searcher
    Member

    1. ?
    2. Lone Ranger
    3. Steve McQueen
    4. Rifleman
    5. I remember the Derby but can't think of ?
    6. Paliden ?
     
  18. Harms Way
    Joined: Nov 27, 2005
    Posts: 6,914

    Harms Way
    Member

    Rin-Tin-Tin
    Lassie
    Rin-Tin-Tin

    #4 I am guessing "Flub-a-Dub",..... Kuzz datz what it say !
     
  19. Searcher
    Joined: Jul 8, 2007
    Posts: 620

    Searcher
    Member

    The dogs are, Rin tin tin
    And Lasie

    Edit: the only other dog I remember was White Fang on Soopy Sales.
    Oh, and Peetee on Our Gang
     
    Last edited: Jun 1, 2010
  20. InDaShop
    Joined: Aug 15, 2004
    Posts: 2,796

    InDaShop
    Member
    from Houston

    I'm 33 and I remember

    -Party Line Phones
    ----Dialing four digits for the local and on a rare occasion dialing 7 for the neighboring town
     
  21. apound
    Joined: Jul 13, 2008
    Posts: 542

    apound
    Member

    party lines, had to recognize "your ring" to know they were calling you and not the neighbor
     
  22. Mazooma1
    Joined: Jun 5, 2007
    Posts: 13,545

    Mazooma1
    Member

    Bubble-Up, we can still buy it

    Wink-that tangy grapefruity soda...I kinda liked it

    old Pepsi Cola logo, before the swirled bottles

    Nesbitts Orange, can still buy it here, but it's about a 10 mile drive, but worth it...real cane sugar...yum

    On the far right is the Coca-Cola Co. soda called Simba, very short-lived, kind of a Sprite like soda...

    [​IMG]
     
  23. HealeyRick
    Joined: May 5, 2009
    Posts: 573

    HealeyRick
    Member
    from Mass.

    The guns:

    Wyatt Earp - Buntline Special

    Lone Ranger - silver bullets

    Steve McQueen - "Wanted Dead or Alive" - mare's leg

    Chuck Connors - "The Rifleman" - Believe it or not, Chuck also played for the Boston Celtics and the Brooklyn Dodgers.

    Bat Masterson - the cane was the giveway

    No one's got the double-barrelled sawed-off yet, keep guessing.
     
  24. carcrazyjohn
    Joined: Apr 16, 2008
    Posts: 4,841

    carcrazyjohn
    Member
    from trevose pa

    Growng up I remember not growing up . I still play with cars....
     
  25. Mazooma1
    Joined: Jun 5, 2007
    Posts: 13,545

    Mazooma1
    Member

    Mountain Bars...we could get 'em here when I was a kid, but now are only available in the Northwest...and by mail. I get a case of 24 every year or so.
    The nice folks at Brown-Haley Candy Co. knew of my nostalgic love for the candy bars, so they found and sent me this old advertising poster from the 60's....very nice of them....:)

    [​IMG]

    You have to be a geezer or geezette to remember the push bars for the screen doors at the local stores, so you didn't stick your hand through the screen....cool old advertising piece...

    [​IMG]

    best ever bath tub toy....Ideal Seaplane...wind 'er up and hope it doesn't smack you in your crank...

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    50 Cal. dummys from a B-17 ride I went on

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    big chunk of shrapnel that would constantly bounce off my Dad's Sherman Tank in WWII....my paperweight to remember him by

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    the chimes from my grandfather's Seth-Thomas clock still sounds like pure gold...

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    all that's left from my car show poster from my Model A days...the rest rotted away over the past 43 years...

    [​IMG]

    the old Rochester Co. Coca-Cola thermometer that was in Dad's garage over 50 years ago...

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    this guy greets me everyday....nothing says "fun" like taking a jet dragster and torching an old truck!!!!!!!! Look at that smile!!!!

    [​IMG]

    crazy memories of this place...Oct., 1967 when I was 17...
    the stories of the guys of the "Early Times Car Club" and George "Bushmaster" Schrieber and Roth's "Yellow Fang"....(for some other thread)

    [​IMG]

    Dad and I built this together (I watched) in 1957...

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    [​IMG]

    Sometimes when walking around your garage and taking photos, it dawns on you how cool all your old stuff is....
     
  26. Slim Pickens
    Joined: Dec 15, 2008
    Posts: 3,343

    Slim Pickens
    Member

    Doug, You sir are a national treasure. Wow, it is just NUTS the things you have. LOL. Slim
     
  27. Mazooma1
    Joined: Jun 5, 2007
    Posts: 13,545

    Mazooma1
    Member

    Many of us had paper routes...around here, kids don't throw the newspaper anymore.
    In the mid 60's I threw the daily "Pasadena Star News" which was, then, an afternoon paper, except for the Sunday edition, which was early morning...real early. I'd have to be on the road by at least 5:30 AM or poeple would lose their minds.
    This guy named "Bob" would dump my 80-90 papers off every day and I'd fold them and put rubber bands around them, divide them up so one side of my handle bars wouldn't be too much different than the other regarding weight on my Schwinn Sting Ray and off I'd go.
    I didn't have the route in my neighborhood, so I had to ride about a mile or so before I'd throw my first paper. All the apartments had to have their stairs climbed, some people demanded that their papers be "porched", etc., etc.
    Lots of doubling back with the dead ends.
    So, that was 7 days a week, rain or shine, of course and about 8 miles round trip.
    The crappy part was good old "Bob" would "sell" me the 80-90 daily papers and the stinking rubber bands and then I'd have to collect the money from all my "customers" each month the $2.25 owed to me. If some old coot refused to answer the door, or had a big-assed dog that wouldn't let me in, the I'd have to "eat" their subscription. I was in business for myself at 13 or so years old. If I collected all the payments that I could, I'd make about 40-50 cents a day for my efforts. If I could't collect from someone, that was "tough shit" as "Bob" would say. One lady gave me a dime as a "tip"...she held it out to me over my head for a moment like I was supposed to do a trick, roll-over and bark or something.
    I really couldn't stand it, but I'm glad that I did it for about two years. I learned a lot about how good most folks were and how crappy a handful of the others were.
    Too bad kids around here don't get to do it anymore....it was more important to me than the money when I look back on it now.
    I guess everything looks better now...you remember the good stuff and brushoff the crappy part....
    You have to learn responsibility somewhere and that was a good time for me...
    Many of you guys have exactly the same stories...I'm sure....:)
     
    Last edited: Jun 1, 2010
  28. billsill45
    Joined: Jul 15, 2009
    Posts: 784

    billsill45
    Member
    from SoCal

    Once upon a time, you could go to your dealer and order a car exactly as you wanted it. I recall reading some years ago that in the early 60's someone calculated the number of possible combinations offered by Chevrolet on the full size line (body style variations, driveline combinations, trim levels, all of the equipment options, interior and exterior color choices, etc., etc.) and the total number was in the thousands. Now your choice with a particular model is: Do you want the silver, white, black or red one? Oh, and can we upgrade the wheels and tires for you?

    The manufacturers realized that they could separate the customer from more of his money by only offering option "packages". If you want a particular feature on your car, you'll also have to buy a bunch of other options that you couldn't care less about. The dealers (at least for the less expensive lines) don't want to screw with special orders ... they just want to move the iron out of their floor plan.
     
    Last edited: Jun 2, 2010
  29. philo426
    Joined: Sep 20, 2007
    Posts: 2,097

    philo426
    Member

    Shotgun Slade!
     
  30. Johnny Gee
    Joined: Dec 3, 2009
    Posts: 13,124

    Johnny Gee
    Member
    from Downey, Ca

     

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