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What has disappeared since you were a kid

leswp1

Well-known member
What was commonplace or part of your life when you were little that has since disappeared? Those of us that are older could probably fill a thread by ourselves :p

For some reason I was remembering trips to the grocery store when I was little. We used to go to shop in a Purity Supreme that now would be considered little but at the time was a "Supermarket". Everyone smoked inside the store (I wonder where they put the cigarette butts, now I think of it). We would go thru the line and the gentleman bagger, wearing a tie, would bag the groceries and put them in a sturdy metal bin. The metal bin was put on a ramp of metal rollers in a que with the others and pushed out of the store thru a flap. Outside there were all the metal bins, filled with groceries waiting. We went out to the car (black VW bug with 3 large neon orange flowers stuck over the back wheel well) and drove up to the front of the store. The gentleman working out in the front, also in a white shirt and tie, would load the car for my mother and she would tip him. He would shove the metal bin on another ramp of rollers and it would roll back into the store.

Later I remember the bag boys, still in ties, pushing the carts out to the car, helping load and her tipping them.

Oh, and my father wore socks that he had garters for just below the knee.
 
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Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

Rock and Roll... but it's still alive on XM Radio, Classic Vinyl, channel 46. :)

Trips to the dump. We'd drive into the dump and a thousand seagulls would run like crazy to get out of the way of the car. My dad, me and my brothers, would all get out of the car and dump the barrels over the cliff (Ok, it was a hill, but to us, it was a cliff :D ). The seagulls would come right up pretty close to see if there were any goodies to eat in our trash. We'd spend some time throwing rocks, breaking bottles, looking for neat stuff (but dad never let us keep any of it, because it was in the dump, where it belonged). The dump was a great place for exploring for 4 young brothers. Today, the dump is a transfer station (I believe the one of first built in MA years ago), but located in the same location as the old dump.
 
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Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

What was commonplace or part of your life when you were little that has since disappeared? Those of us that are older could probably fill a thread by ourselves :p

For some reason I was remembering trips to the grocery store when I was little. We used to go to shop in a Purity Supreme that now would be considered little but at the time was a "Supermarket". Everyone smoked inside the store (I wonder where they put the cigarette butts, now I think of it). We would go thru the line and the gentleman bagger, wearing a tie, would bag the groceries and put them in a sturdy metal bin. The metal bin was put on a ramp of metal rollers in a que with the others and pushed out of the store thru a flap. Outside there were all the metal bins, filled with groceries waiting. We went out to the car (black VW bug with 3 large neon orange flowers stuck over the back wheel well) and drove up to the front of the store. The gentleman working out in the front, also in a white shirt and tie, would load the car for my mother and she would tip him. He would shove the metal bin on another ramp of rollers and it would roll back into the store.

Later I remember the bag boys, still in ties, pushing the carts out to the car, helping load and her tipping them.

Oh, and my father wore socks that he had garters for just below the knee.
I remember those old rollers. :) Forgot about them... thanks for the blast from the past.

How about S&H Green Stamps. Mom would pull out her little book and put her stamps in it, then cash them in at a later date.

Gas station attendants... wore a hat and tie. They'd check the oil, wash the windshield, check the air in the tires, and when the tank was done filling, you'd owe him 5 bucks.
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

Everyone smoked inside the store (I wonder where they put the cigarette butts, now I think of it).

I worked in a Super Duper in Oswego in the late 80s as a teenager. Trust me, those cigarette butts went on the floor. As far as things disappearing since I was a kid: supermarkets in general. There were at least 6-7 in Oswego into the 90s and now there are TWO. Just two.
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

I remember those old rollers. :) Forgot about them... thanks for the blast from the past.

How about S&H Green Stamps. Mom would pull out her little book and put her stamps in it, then cash them in at a later date.

Gas station attendants... wore a hat and tie. They'd check the oil, wash the windshield, check the air in the tires, and when the tank was done filling, you'd owe him 5 bucks.

I forgot the Green Stamps! How could I forget those??
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

-Public telephones

-Common courtesy

-Fuzz on the television when waking at 3 a.m.

-Milkmen

-My ability to dunk
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

Battery operated turntables. Used to have one that was slender, came in a case that you popped the top off. Used to go to my friends with that and the carrying case of 45s.
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

The first thing that popped into my head was studded snow tires.
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

Battery operated turntables. Used to have one that was slender, came in a case that you popped the top off. Used to go to my friends with that and the carrying case of 45s.

Not to mention what went on the turntable, eh?
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

I remember soda machines that had glass bottles in them. You'd put in a quarter or dime, or whatever a soda cost, and then open a small door on the right of the machine and pull out the bottle of soda. When it was done it went back into a rack for the empty bottles next to the machine to be picked up by the bottler I guess for washing and refilling. I recall going to a laundromat in Medfield Massachusetts with my mom (1964-65?) and it being a treat to drink a soda while she washed clothes.
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

Specifically to Detroit and other:

Leisure suits, AMC Motors, Beta-max, Stroh's ice cream, Tiger Stadium, Olympia Stadium, Federal's dept. store, JL Hudson, Winkleman's, Hughes & Hatcher, no deposit-no return, Twin Pines Dairy, Peter Puck, Bob-Lo Island, Edgewater Park, Illinois-Chicago and Kent State hockey, SS Kresge, Cunningham's drug store, Western Auto, Ollie Fretter, Highland Appliance, Joshua Doore Furniture... just to name a few.
 
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Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

FYI Dot matrix are still around in the industrial word. New ones even.

I'm going with decent Saturday morning cartoons. God I miss my saturday cartoons. Also, weekday morning and afternoon cartoons.
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

I remember those old rollers. :) Forgot about them... thanks for the blast from the past.

How about S&H Green Stamps. Mom would pull out her little book and put her stamps in it, then cash them in at a later date.

Gas station attendants... wore a hat and tie. They'd check the oil, wash the windshield, check the air in the tires, and when the tank was done filling, you'd owe him 5 bucks.

I worked at a gas station owned by a neighbor, but didn't have to wear the hat and tie.

What I miss is kids playing all day and all night (at least when we weren't in school). Parents didn't worry because they all looked out for everyone else's kids. Didn't matter what season, we played until the street lights came on, then it was time to go home. Today, it's X Boxes and ipods - just ain't the same.

Common courtesy has been mentioned -- couldn't agree more.
 
Re: What has disappeared since you were a kid

Candy cigarettes, I remember my Grandma giving those out for Halloween. I want to say they had the same or close to the same name as real cigarettes.

My uncles have told me about the 7-Up Candy Bar which was made by Pearsons. It was like seven flavors in one candy bar.

I worked for about three weeks in college as a bag boy at Hornbacher's supermarket in Moorhead, MN. They had the rollers and I think they still do.

Full service gas stations are alive and well in New Jersey and Oregon, that's all they have per state law.
 
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