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Growing Old

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All except home delivered milk.
 
I actually owned a Hudson at one time and I barely remember block ice being delivered for our ICE box.
 
I missed the icebox, but I remember the story. My Dad thought we should get a "fridge". My Mom said no, she wanted the whole refrigerator.

Boone's Farm was relatively recent. Thunderbird was another "budget" wine. "What's the bird? Thunderbird! What's the price? 25 twice."

We still have a drive-in movie theater (I think).
 
Visited our relatives out on the Island who were a block away from the Long Island Railroad tracks.
We enjoyed seeing the steam locomotives and put pennies on the tracks.
Engineers blew their whistles if we pulled our arms up and down.
The desiels were a novelty for a short time, but eventually we saw they had no soul.
 
I'm too young for milk delivery. We did have a Charles Chips truck that brought us a big tin of chips though. I wonder how widespread that was.
 
All except two: Never heard of Black Jack gum and not sure about Boone’s farm (booze?)
All over Jacksonville NC while I was in the Marines in 69-71. Bud from Michigan made it his staple weekend drink, reminded him of home. Alson, had the Coffee Man in a red truck brought all sorts of stuff to the house.
 
We had a milk man along with a bread man delivery not only with bread but lots of other goodies every day. The milk bottles had cardboard caps that we would save, don't ask me why, I think we played some sort of a game with them.

Oh yea, Basil, Black Jack gum and others! šŸ˜
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Dugans used to deliver milk and bread in the NY area.
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Boone's Farm was a sweet wine used primarily in hookah pipes. Couldn't drink it after. But you couldn't drink it before either. Blackjack was a licorice gum. Charles chips were in my neighborhood in Miami, Fl. There were only routes where a franchisee wanted to operate.
Bob
 
At my grandparents, we had a visiting huxter produce truck that made weekly stops...Chevrolet called the vehicle a "canopy express".


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Since we are off the list, when I was 3 1/2 or so, I remember being in West Aliquippa Pa at my Grandma's house. There was an old guy in an old truck with caged chickens. He would sell you a live chicken and dressed it for you. Weird that I remember that from that stage of my life
Bob
 
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