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| Bad Dog Cafe Hershey's Bad Dog Cafe is our Off Topic forum -- but NO POLITICS and NO FIGHTING. NOTE: Discussion of guitars other than Tele & Strat belongs in the "Other Guitars" forum and discussion of Music belongs in the "Music to Your Ears" forum. |
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#21 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Texas
Age: 47
Posts: 1,433
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I never ate at a Woolworth's, though my hometown did have a few drug stores with lunch counters where I used to go as a kid. The main things I remember are the five-cent sodas and huge, thick milkshakes.
Now I'm in the mood for a BLT. . . |
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#22 (permalink) |
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Telefied
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Bakersfield Ca.
Age: 62
Posts: 31,272
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Glad this brought back some old memories.
Fish tanks and little turtles with painted shells 45's of Elvis songs the 50's were cool.
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I'm so blind my seeing eye dog needs glasses. |
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#25 (permalink) |
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Doctor of Teleocity
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: White Mountains
Posts: 10,343
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You're makin' me cry Mark
Seems like if I just turned my head just right I'd be there again. And don't forget all the cool Diners and Sangwich Shops. In Lawrence where I grew up it was Bea's Sandwich Shop on Broadway for a Veal Cutlet and an Orange Tonic, or Lawton's "By The Sea" (next to the canal - the only joint I ever knew that expanded to include a fire hydrant in the building) for a Hot Dog. Cars with tailfins and Dalton's and Ford's Coffee Shop. Meville's for coffee and pie and The Cedarcrest for a serious lunch. Panheads and Flatheads everywhere along with "The DA's". The comb in the pocket and Ronnie & The Daytonas for a nickel. The Drive-In and the chicks on roller skates at A&W RootBeer. I'd chuck everything these times have to offer to journey back 40-45 years. Hey - "The Secret Weapon!"
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Somebody Loan Me A Dime |
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#26 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: andoverandoverandover,ct
Age: 50
Posts: 1,901
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i remember my dad taking me to the soda counter at the Franklin Pahrmacy in Glastonbury, Ct after sunday school a couple times. it was cool. definately cooler than when he took me to the VFW!
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toadman the plank spanker www.slugnickel.com www.zydecohogs.com "The ultimate result of protecting man from folly is to fill the world with fools" Herbert Spencer
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#28 (permalink) |
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Poster Extraordinaire
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Back in the '40s my Family(grandparents and their 10 kids) owned a beer joint/cafe called "THE ROCK CAFE"(the building was made out of rocks and fossils), just outside of Lone Grove, Oklahoma.
They had a menu like the one above just a little cheaper. ![]() The Cafe had the first TV in the county and the only jukebox. My dad would always say how he was a bartender when he was just 12 years old. He also rigged the jukebox so it would just play Bill Monroe's "Rocky Road Blues" no matter what song someone wanted to play. My Grandparents in front of "THE ROCK CAFE".
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Alvin http://www.oldbluesound.com/cms/ http://www.facebook.com/cowboytwang _________________________ Originality is just undetected Plagiarism! |
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#29 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Framingham, MA
Age: 61
Posts: 1,459
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Great memories - I wasted a lot of time in Woolworths when I was a kid. The town I grew up in had many soda fountains and lunch counters downtown, as well as 2 movie theatres. I spent a lot of time in all of them, and every one of them is gone now. I'd like to go back for a week or so, just to re-live those times and feelings.
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#30 (permalink) | |
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Doctor of Teleocity
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: White Mountains
Posts: 10,343
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Quote:
I'm starting to think we really ought to change Our name to - The United States Of High Fructose Corn Syrup. Back then an obese person was a "sight". And I don't remember anyone on Prescription Meds. And Old Folks weren't as feeble like middle aged people are today. And Heartburn - never even heard of it. There were no artificial sweeteners. And nobody was on a "low salt diet". I'm believin' that we are in an age of really bad science. And what's with all these FAT kids?????!!! I weighed 96 lbs. when I was 11 and was considered "big".
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Somebody Loan Me A Dime |
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#31 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Pittsburgh, Pa
Age: 53
Posts: 1,229
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One of my favorite memories at Woolworth's was ordering a chocolate milk shake. The waitress would take a tall steel container and add the fresh ingredients and put it onto the mixer. I think six milkshakes could go on the mixer at once.
The best part was when you were just about done with your milkshake, she would come over and pour what was left in the big steel container into your glass, Now that was heaven and I loved those waitresses!
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“You don't find a style, ... a style finds you.” Keith Richards |
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#32 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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Oh yeah, but the Woolworth's price is pretty exorbitant on that. Back in High School I used to wander over to the deli for lunch and get a get Pressed Ham on a roll for 25 cents. Soda was a nickel as was a candy bar. Pretty good eating for 35 cents.
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"I don't play a lot of fancy guitar. I don't want to play it. The kind of guitar I want to play is mean, mean licks." John Lee Hooker |
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#33 (permalink) | |
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Friend of Leo's
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Quote:
Thanks for the stroll down Memory Lane, Dr. Mark! mud
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MudBean Music Nekkid Bart: "This is the worst day of my life." Laffing Homer: "Worst day SO FAR!!" |
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#34 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
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Big fan
of the Woolworths here too! I used to eat at them with my dad often.
But did you guys notice the Fender fonts all over this menu?!!? Great stuff! Johnny Isaacs
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I've never trusted a guitar player who hasn't licked a few 9volts... Famous last words...... after this one, no new Tele's! |
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#35 (permalink) |
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Telefied
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Bakersfield Ca.
Age: 62
Posts: 31,272
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I remember those old malts and milkshakes that mixer was built like a tank and when they poured the extra in it was a sugar blast good enough to send a man to the moon.
My biggest Woolworths memory was the Monday at noon after the Sunday night when The Beatles first appeared on Ed Sullivan. They had Beatle cards Beatle scarfs Beatle Wigs Beatle albums mass marketing at its best there was so much Beatle stuff we were blown away. My sister has my Beatle cards and she has a scarf she kept all these years.
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I'm so blind my seeing eye dog needs glasses. |
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#36 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Toronto, Canada
Age: 54
Posts: 462
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I worked at Woolworth's in the 70's. The technical term for "lunch counter" was "340 Unit".
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"If you make a mistake, play it twice, so the audience thinks it's intentional" Visit the Deacons on the web at http://djcdeacon.wordpress.com |
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#37 (permalink) | |
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Poster Extraordinaire
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: California
Age: 54
Posts: 5,308
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Quote:
I remember the Woolworth's store, though. If you were up for a looooonnnggg bike ride, you could go to our little shopping center, which had Woolworth's, the Rexall Drugs, and another five-and-dime called W.T. Grant's. You'd buy your comic books at the Rexall, and you'd look at the plastic models (Revell, Aurora, etc.) at the two drug stores. Can't remember if all 3 places had the Matchbox cars -- I know the Rexall did (they were behind the counter). (BTW the K-mart food was surprisingly good...)
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"It looked like a giant green gum drop to me." |
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#38 (permalink) |
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Doctor of Teleocity
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Indeed. When pigs are cut into chops and steaks and bacon, etc. there is a great amount of meat left over in the joints and major bones. These pieces are sold to processing plants that steam the remaining meat away and press it into pressed loaf. Hence; pressed ham. I work in packaging engineering and I've been through a large factory near Milwaukee that does this every day. Factory workers at a pressed ham factory will remind you that the best meat often comes from near the bone (like when you eat a T-Bone steak). It's really not as odd as it sounds. The meat-on-bone product is sold by the rail car full (packed in corrugated pallet gaylords). It's huge business. The same cold cut is often called "chopped ham". I remember getting plates of french fries at Woolworths. I also remember the photo booths.
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John "The rock and roll business is pretty absurd, but the world of serious music is much worse." - Frank Zappa |
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#39 (permalink) |
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Poster Extraordinaire
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But where is my favorite, The Hamburger Sandwich and French Fried Potatoes?
We had TWO Woolworths in my town. One downtown and one at the new Mall they built out by the freeway. When I was little we ate quite a few meals at that lunch counter. When I was in high school the one at the mall was where you'd go when you ran into a girl you knew and wanted to take her to lunch. Either there or Sears that had a snack bar kind of place in the basement. When the local Woolworths closed here in Fort Collins, we bought eight of the big heavy serving platters from the lunch counter (I wonder how many meals were served on those plates?) and the fainting counch out of the womans rest room.
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"Can y'all play some Skynnard? Y'know, like 'Stairway to Heaven?'" -Drunk cowboy at Trail Dust Days, Pine Bluffs, WY |
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#40 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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I was always amazed at how emplty the lunch counters were at all the places that I knew. The drug stores, Woolworth and even the K-marts just never seemed to attract the people during the 1970s and 1980s. The fast food franchises stole away all their business with the specialty food themes (tacos, pizza, hamburgers, fish-n-chips, etc.). Time sure did change. I miss the lunch counter era. The latest end of cycle now is the Cafateria dinning. There is only a few left and they have become very expensive.
That menu is in great condition. I am reminded of a map that my wife had kept since 1963. That was the opening year of original Six Flags Over Texas. Nearly all the rides look very dated and most are gone now (like the Little Mexico Train Ride). |
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