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I had steelies. Lots of them. My dad got them free when a bearing would go bad out where he worked. Made good slingshot ammo too.
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I’m thinking I did that once. I was practicing organ at church one day and when I finally decided to quit I found the car keys had died or something. I don’t exactly remember; I just know I had to fish around in the sacristy for a screwdriver and was able to start the car with that.Now I have to see if I can figure out how to start an old car with a screwdriver![]()
My DH once won a Halloween costume contest with a paper bag over his head. He said he was an Arizona football fan...man were they having a bad year
And the windshield wipers were vacuum operated. Fine on level ground or going down hill but start up an incline you start relying on the vacuum canister. Most were useless.Remember when windshield wipers and turn indicators were not standard equipment when you bought a vehicle? They were add ons that you had to pay extra for, (once someone came up with the idea and then invented it).![]()
I remember getting one of the new fangled "wrist rocket" slingshots. They were deadly when using with one of those. Ok I can't guarantee they would of been deadly but idk how they wouldn't of been considering....Made good slingshot ammo too.
Everything is known to the state of California to cause cancer.Warning: This Burger is known to the state of California to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm.
I usually played marbles. Maybe sometimes toss pennies.I can remember when kids learned to gamble in the first grade on the playground in the dirt.
We used to joke (semi-seriously) that the cafeteria always served cooked greens for lunch the day after the custodian mowed the school lawns...Quick before it runs off again. I don't think this has been discussed or cussed but back in my day at lunch time we were fed what the government hat to much of on hand. Peanut butter and American cheese most often. I think there were others and must have been understanding the system now a little better. First it was just peanut butter that was kind of square and 4-5" long like a soft candy bar. I got a lot of those cause some kids just didn't know what they were and if they didn't know they wouldn't take a chance on it. Then the American cheese was served the same way. In a same sized stick. There must have been a lot of surplus canned spinach too. Even Popeye couldn't get kids to eat what we had but I cleaned up on it. Didn't even have to trade anything on my plate for it. We actually got some really good fish sticks back then too. Nothing like the crap sold as fish now. I can still see the bartering and horse trading we did to get more and better on our plates. I'd trade a carton of milk for a meat and a vegetable or even more when I could. Image businessmen by the first grade.
Also the very popular burnt-orange shags!Anyone remember those amazing green shag carpets from the 70s? How the heck did we ever vacuum that anyways?!
And the velvet patterned wallpaper![]()