Older Than Dirt Quiz:
1. Blackjack chewing gum
2. Wax Coke-shaped bottles with colored sugar water
3. Candy cigarettes
4. Soda pop machines that dispensed bottles
5. Coffee shops with table side jukeboxes
6. Home milk delivery in glass bottles with cardboard stoppers
7. Party lines
8. Newsreels before the movie
9. P. F. Flyers
10. Butch wax
11. Telephone numbers with a word prefix (Olive-6933)
12. Peashooters
13. Howdy Doody
14. 45 RPM records
15. S&H Green Stamps
16. Hi-fi's
17. Metal ice trays with levers
18. Mimeograph paper
19. Blue flashbulb
20. Packards
21. Roller skate keys
22. Cork popguns
23. Drive-ins
24. Studebakers
25. Wash tub wringers
If you remembered 0-5 -You're still young.
If you remembered 6-10 -You are getting older
If you remembered 11-15 - Don't tell your age.
If you remembered! 16-25 - You're older than dirt!
I might be older than d irt but those memories are the best part of my life.
Don't forget to pass this along, Especially to all your really OLD friends....
"God grant me the senility to forget the people I never liked, the good fortune to run into the ones that I do, and the eyesight to tell the difference."
For a trip way way back to
when you were a little kid this is an enjoyable piece, or if you want to know
what it was like when your parents were kids this is an eye opener. Enjoy!
Those of us entering geezerdom will appreciate this. For those who are not, look
at what you missed and aren't you glad.
"Hey Mom," one of my kids asked the other day, "What was your
favorite fast food when you were growing up?" "We didn't have fast
food when I was growing up," I informed him. "All the food was
slow."
"C'mon, seriously. Where did you eat?"
"It was a place called 'at home,'" I explained. "Grandma cooked
every day and when Grandpa got home from work, we sat down together at the
dining room table, and if I didn't like what she put on my plate I was allowed
to sit there until I did like it."
By this time, the kid was laughing so
hard I was afraid he was going to suffer serious internal damage, so I didn't
tell him the part about how I had to have permission to leave the table.
Here are some other things I would have
told him about my childhood if I figured his system could have handled it:
Some parents NEVER owned their own house,
wore Levis, set foot on a golf course, traveled out of the country or had a
credit card. In their later years they had something called a revolving charge
card. The card was good only at Sears Roebuck. Or maybe it was Sears AND
Roebuck. Either way, there is no Roebuck anymore. Maybe he died.
My parents never drove me to soccer
practice. This was mostly because we never had heard of soccer. I had a bicycle
that weighed probably 50 pounds, and only had one speed, (slow).
We didn't have a television in our house
until I was 11, but my grandparents had one before that. It was, of course,
black and white, but they bought a piece of colored plastic to cover the screen.
The top third was blue, like the sky, and the bottom third was green, like
grass. The middle third was red. It was perfect for programs that had scenes of
fire trucks riding across someone's lawn on a sunny day. Some people had a lens
taped to the front of the TV to make the picture look larger.
I was 13 before I tasted my first pizza;
it was called "pizza pie." When I bit into it, I burned the roof of my
mouth and the cheese slid off, swung down, plastered itself against my chin and
burned that, too. It's still the best pizza I ever had.
We didn't have a car until I was 15.
Before that, the only car in our family was my grandfather's Ford. He called it
a "machine."
I never had a telephone in my room. The
only phone in the house was in the living room and it was on a party line.
Before you could dial, you had to listen and make sure some people you didn't
know weren't already using the line.
Pizzas were not delivered to our home.
But milk was. All newspapers were delivered by boys , and all boys delivered
newspapers. I delivered newspaper, six days a week. It cost 7 cents a paper, of
which I got to keep 2 cents. I had to get up at 4 AM every morning. On Saturday,
had to collect the 42 cents from my customers. My favorite customers were the
ones who gave me 50 cents and told me to keep the change. My least favorite
customers were the ones who seemed to never be home on collection day.
Movie stars kissed with their mouths
shut. At least, they did in the movies. Touching someone else's tongue with
yours was called French kissing and they didn't do that in movies. I don't know
what they did in French movies. French movies were dirty and we weren't allowed
to see them.
If you grew up in a generation before
there was fast food, you may want to share some of these memories with your
children or grandchildren. Just don't blame me if they bust a gut laughing.
Growing up isn't what it used to be, is it?
MEMORIES from a
friend:
My Dad is
cleaning out my grandmother's house (she died in December) and he brought me an
old Royal Crown Cola bottle. In the bottle top was a stopper with a bunch of
holes in it. I knew immediately what it was, but my daughter had no idea. She
thought they had tried to make it a salt shaker or something I knew it as the
bottle that sat on the end of the ironing board to "sprinkle" clothes
with because we didn't have steam irons. Man, I am old.
How many do you
remember?
Head lights dimmer switches on the floor.
Ignition switches on the dashboard. Heaters mounted on the inside of the fire
wall. Real ice-boxes. Pant leg clips for bicycles without chain guards.
Soldering irons you heat on a gas burner. Using hand signals for cars without
turn signals.