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re: Pictures from days gone by....

Posted on 4/26/21 at 3:57 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 3:57 pm to
Sakura beer, Japan c. 1930

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 3:58 pm to
Late '50s

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 4:00 pm to
Let's party

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 4:02 pm to
1955: “My husband has switched from his old brand of violence to you”.

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 4:06 pm to
Alphonse Mucha poster for Sarah Bernhardt as Hamlet

Posted by Hangover Haven
Metry
Member since Oct 2013
33526 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 4:31 pm to
My parents had that same HiFi stereo, next to the TV, in our house back in the day...

This post was edited on 4/26/21 at 4:32 pm
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 4:47 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 4:48 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 4:49 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 4:51 pm to
Posted by kywildcatfanone
Wildcat Country!
Member since Oct 2012
139276 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 6:41 pm to
Posted by mauser
Orange Beach
Member since Nov 2008
26871 posts
Posted on 4/26/21 at 6:56 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/27/21 at 8:19 am to


Where one man’s trash became another man’s treasure: Pawnshops lined Elm Street in Deep Ellum for decades (Dallas Morning News)
quote:

Watch those bear traps when you walk through here,” pawnbroker Rubin Goldstein of Honest Joe’s warned Dallas Morning News staff writer Larry Grove in 1964, while he threaded his way through “the clutter of a million valuable items that bear a striking resemblance to junk.” This scene was common along Elm Street in Deep Ellum from the 1920s through the 1980s.

Pawnshops played an important role in Deep Ellum, lending money and selling inexpensive goods — and they were omnipresent. As pawnbroker Eddie Goldstein said in an April 1992 interview with writer Jay F. Brakefield: “Deep Ellum in its heyday was pawnshop, pawnshop, pawnshop, dry goods store; pawnshop, pawnshop, pawnshop, grocery store; pawnshop, pawnshop, pawnshop, shoe store.”
1964



1971

quote:

In 1924, Dave Goldstein married Dora Abramson, and in 1930 they bought a dry goods store in Deep Ellum. Many people pawned items during the Great Depression, so the Goldsteins added a pawnshop and phased out the dry goods. “Among their customers in the 1930s were Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, who hadn’t yet achieved notoriety,” The Dallas Morning News reported.
quote:

Isaac “Rocky” Goldstein, a younger brother of Dave’s, moved to Dallas to work at his brother’s pawnshop when the stock market crashed and he had to leave his studies as a law student in New York. He went on to work at Klar and Winterman, a “relatively upscale pawnshop” at 2308 Elm St. He eventually opened his own business in Deep Ellum — Rocky’s pawnshop.

In the early 1980s, John Hinckley Jr. bought the gun he shot President Ronald Reagan with from Rocky’s.

The shop was known for the sign that hung over the door: Guns Don’t Cause Crime Anymore Than Flies Cause Garbage.
Rubin Goldstein in 1969

quote:

Rubin Goldstein, another brother of Dave’s, grew up on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. In 1964, he told staff writer Larry Grove, “I always wanted to be a pawnshop man … I remember lookin’ in the shops on Delancey Street.” Once he landed in Dallas, his dream came true.

In 1931, Goldstein, then 23, moved to Dallas and opened a pawnshop at 2524 Elm St. He gained “a reputation for being the most honest pawnbroker on the pawnshop-lined section of Elm.”

Outside, his store was covered with business signs and mottos. Inside, it was cluttered with pawned items. He told Grove, “I’ve always taken a liking to junk. A lot of this stuff won’t ever sell, but it’s good to have around. It gives the place a junky atmosphere, don’t you think?”

His shop was packed to the rafters with random items: bear traps, artificial limbs, fake teeth and lots of guns. His most-pawned items included watches, rings and other jewelry. He told many a tale about items and their owners.

One such story: “And now you won’t believe this, but this is true. This other guy, name is White, has a cork arm and he brings it in all the time and gets a sawbuck. Redeems the arm when he gets work. Wired me money from Houston yesterday and said ‘Put my arm on a bus. I got a job.’”

Honest Joe’s influence went beyond his pawnshop. After the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, FBI agent Nat Pinkston came to Goldstein for assistance tracing Lee Harvey Oswald’s gun. The pawnbroker provided replicas of the gun used in the shooting and Pinkston traced the rifle to Klein’s Sporting Goods in Chicago.

According to Goldstein’s obituary, he was even among the people riding in the motorcade on that fateful November day. His name was included in the Warren Commission’s report and in William Manchester’s The Death of a President. He was also one of the appraisers of Jack Ruby’s estate.

Honest Joe died in September 1972. His wife, Bess, continued operating the pawnshop for a few years until it closed permanently.
Sep. 8, 1972 - A funeral wreath hung on the door of Honest Joe's Pawn Shop at 2524 Elm St. in Deep Ellum after the death of owner Rubin Goldstein.



1984

Posted by mauser
Orange Beach
Member since Nov 2008
26871 posts
Posted on 4/27/21 at 9:55 am to
I tried to find out exactly what is a Scotchogram.

I found this, "A Scotchogram is to reduce the number of words in a telegram or other message by using as many euphonisms as possible and so send a longer message for less money. A great book of word puzzles."

There's a 1928 book for sale on Amazon by Jack Shuttleworth, "Say It With Scotchograms." It's classed as a book of word puzzles and as humor.

Be nice to see a couple of examples.
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/27/21 at 10:07 am to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/27/21 at 10:20 am to
quote:

A Scotchogram is to reduce the number of words in a telegram or other message by using as many euphonisms as possible and so send a longer message for less money. A great book of word puzzles."

There's a 1928 book for sale on Amazon by Jack Shuttleworth, "Say It With Scotchograms." It's classed as a book of word puzzles and as humor.

Be nice to see a couple of examples.
LINK
quote:

In the days before e-mail, faxes, etc. when the quickest way to communicate was via telegram, Western Union charged by the word. People would try to shorten the message by omitting words, or phonetic codes, etc. These became known as "scotch-o-grams"

Here are some examples:

MUSCATEL OUT OF THERE

OHIO LOVE YOU

A summer camp counselor sent to the parents of a little girl named Ann, who sat on an ant hill and had to be taken to the infirmary for treatment:

ANACIN HOSPITAL ADAMANT BITTER ASININE PLACES [This one has got to be the champ - K]
Not sure the following is really a scotchogram, but it's definitely the best known of these, so I'll include it anyway:
quote:

A gossip columnist needed some personal information on actor Cary Grant for a column. She wired the following query to
Grant's agent:

HOW OLD CARY GRANT

Grant's agent wired back:

OLD CARY GRANT FINE. HOW YOU?
Sometimes the story is told w/Grant himself sending the message. After the story became famous Grant was asked if he'd actually sent the message. Grant smiled and replied, "No -- but I wish I had."
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/27/21 at 11:37 am to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/27/21 at 11:45 am to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/27/21 at 2:01 pm to
There's gonna be a showdown

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157185 posts
Posted on 4/27/21 at 2:18 pm to
quote:


I've posted this pic on here a few times

Curiously, Alfalfa and Darla are buried in the same cemetery





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