Are you OLD.

Still had a Rotary Phone in my kitchen 'til 2007 when it stopped working.....My grandfather bought it at Montgomery Wards in 1962.

Another thing I never see anymore, Wall mounted Can Openers that seemed to be in every kitchen growing up (Still have one mounted but it's worn out)
Those can openers are still available. We had a Swing-A-Way when I was growing up. It was installed in 1947 and used regularly until the house was sold about 40 years later. The Swing-A-Way was a very popular model.

I think most people find the hand-held openers more convenient and perhaps easier to use.

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We had rotary phones up until the late 70s, and then my parents had them replaced with these SW Bell touch tone pushbutton phones called Trimline, that were compact with a backlit keypad. Each one matched the color of the walls in whatever room they were in. They had a phone in every room.
 
We always had these "drills" in grade school (mid 70s), where the alarms would go off, and we all congregated in the hallways, sat on the floor, and covered our heads with our hands.
 
We had rotary phones up until the late 70s, and then my parents had them replaced with these SW Bell touch tone pushbutton phones called Trimline, that were compact with a backlit keypad. Each one matched the color of the walls in whatever room they were in. They had a phone in every room.


Those were the fancy models. We had the plain black rotary dial that was heavy and had a loud bell ringer.

My brother still used that phone in his workshop up until a few years ago. That bell could be heard above any power tools operating.

Now it’s a collection piece since the landlines were discontinued.
 
Those were the fancy models. We had the plain black rotary dial that was heavy and had a loud bell ringer.

My brother still used that phone in his workshop up until a few years ago. That bell could be heard above any power tools operating.

Now it’s a collection piece since the landlines were discontinued.
And the home phone number would be in the middle of the rotary dial that was made out of those label makers.
 
Haha we would get our older friends to buy us Andre's Pink Champagne (1986):D
We would get bums/wino's to buy us Budweiser, We were never into Wine or Champagne, Wino's drank cheap Wine (Night Train & MD 20/20).....Like it was beneath us, Looking back we were juvenile delinquents looking to get drunk & had no right to judge anyone.
 
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We would get bums/wino's to buy us Budweiser, We were never into Wine or Champagne, Wino's drank cheap Wine (Night Train & MD 20/20).....Like it was beneath us something, Looking back we were juvenile delinquents looking to get drunk & had no right to judge anyone.
Haha we were basically at the mercy of whoever would go buy us our stash. It would either be the pink champagne or Coors Light. I guess our mindset was beggars can't be choosers haha!:ROFLMAO:
 
Not quite 100%, but the vast majority of them are familiar, which might be an oddity for folks my age (30s). I grew up with many of my great-grandparents and lived with my grandparents for a while, which is probably the explanation for it. I can still remember watching baseball with my great-grandmother on her box television.
 
I hate to admit it but my Kids would recognize most of those. How old do you have to be to remmeber TV test patterns at midnight and no programing on TV until 8 am, cigs at 14 cents/pk and portable radios with tubes and 80v batteries.
 
I used to WORK on cigarette machines, up until 1994-the dollar bill acceptor boxes were just starting to be rolled out then. We used to put switches behind the bar (or counter) to shut down the machine so underage people couldn’t buy cigs. They’re all gone now, and the vending company (I worked for back then) sent them all to the scrapyard.
Even though I don't smoke just having one for nostalgia would be neat.
 
I attribute my current adult auto addition to the Fisher Price "Parking Ramp Service Center".
There was one at the doctors office and I used to love going there just to play with it!
:love:
 
4WD,

Thanks for posting the Curtis Mathis wiki. Neat wiki, not to long but interesting and kind of sad in some ways.

From the wiki:
During the next few years Curtis Mathes worked to design a modular TV and modular TV parts and chassis, so that warranty service would involve quickly switching a part, tube, tuner or picture tube. These all had snap-in connectors and were held in place by brackets instead of solder or screws. He envisioned a TV that would never require costly repairs, and early on started offering a 4-year warranty on picture tube, parts and labor.

By the mid-1970s and the advent of solid-state electronics, Mathes had achieved results. The TV consisted of 11 parts: 7 circuit boards, a tuner, a picture tube and a transformer, plus the cabinet. A repair person carried all ten electronic parts in their truck and a repair call seldom lasted more than 20 minutes. In home the fee was $20, and free in the shop.

Curtis Mathes, Sr., died in 1977. Curtis Mathes, Jr., became the Chairman of the Board and the company's public face, appearing in its television commercials until his 1983 death in the Air Canada Flight 797 fire at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport.[2]

The company began to decline, going from a peak of 5,000 employees and seven manufacturing facilities to about 50 employees in 1988 when it was sold to Enhanced Electronics. At the time of this sale, it was the last remaining fully U.S.-owned electronics company.

I think a thread on Curtis Mathis would be a great read.
 
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