by DDDVIOAUS » Sat Dec 15, 2018 11:03 am
I remember all the old things, being near 60 will do that. Phone booths, and mail boxes on near every street corner. Every restaurant and diner coffee till you burst for 25cents. The bars where the only food in the place was the pickled eggs and sausages behind the bar. Everything was Coca-Cola where I grew up. Remember the glass bottles, the thick green tinted glass. Did you know if you looked at the bottle of the bottle, you could see where that bottle came from? It was either etched in the glass or super imposed. I remember working with some old guys, and at lunch and break we would hit the Coke machine, and whose ever bottle was furthest away, paid for the next round, and it was only 25 cents.
Remember the old lunch boxes, had G.I. Joe, and an older one I got from a cousin Roy Rodgers and Dale Evans. Remember it was dresses for girls, and flair pants for boys. Bell bottoms, in all odd sorts of colors and styles. Mom was an old hippie/country chick, and loved to dress me in stripped pants and paisley shirts, or vice versa. Girls wore dresses or skirts that never went past the knee and often stopped at mid way between the waist and knee. Rotary phones, party lines. The old box record players, played albums and 45's. Was first on my block at age 13 to have one and I became quite popular with the girls in the neighborhood. Down side, I got forced to listen to a lot of Bobby Sherman, David Cassidy type music. We also had my grandmothers old Victrola, which played those really thick, I think they were 78's.
Christmas was always a real tree, put up somewhere between weekend after Thanksgiving and Dec 5th. Was hard back then to find any Christmas music on the radio before like the 1oth. We put on Christmas plays at school, parents would come during the day. All the local fire companies held parties for the kids. Every kid, got a small toy, a stocking, an orange and some candy. We would hit every fire company every year. The local theatre shut down after Thanksgiving weekend was over, and came back with Christmas themed movies and cartoons, free for the kids, with free eats. They asked for a donation from the parents, which was always given to the needy fund. 12-5 every Saturday in December was great for parents who wanted to shop without nosey kids around. Oh and the amount of Christmas cards that came and went. After Christmas my sister and I would be allowed to cut out the cards and make a huge collage, which Mom always kept. Lastly, the radio station who would from 5pm till midnight every year, have detailed sightings and the comings and goings of ole Santa every 15 minutes, and sometime burst into the music with SPECIAL Santa bulletins,,,