JimWagner
Practically Family
- Messages
- 946
- Location
- Durham, NC
I know, but I'll disqualify myself for age
In western Pennsylvania, it was Dad's Root Beer, when I was a boy. I think this one goes back far enough to be "golden age". Also, in the snack cracker world, we had Lance crackers. As a teenager, I had an after-school and weekend job driving a vending machine operator's truck (the owner or one of his kids rode shot gun as navigator). We went from tavern to factory lunch room, all over south western PA, restocking candy machines, pop machines (that's "soda", for those of you east of the Alleghenies), and cigarette machines (another extinct species). Lance crackers went into every candy machine.
Remind me sometime to tell you the story of unloading a tractor-trailer load of book matches at his warehouse.
Speaking of Six Pack, does any one these days know what that refers to in the automotive world? Or a Pair Of Deuces, and Three Deuces or Tripower?
Not a chance. The whole concept of a carburetor is foreign.
I had a 1970 Barracuda with a six-pack. What a great car...totaled it on the Maine Turnpike!
No,
And a variation on the theme, who remembers what a "deuce and a quarter" referred to in car land?
Only when they're watching Cinemax late at night....And does anyone still use the term "Boob Tube" when referring to a TV?
Remember the phrase "cock-and-bull" as in a cock-and-bull story, meaning, at least as I used to hear it being used by some of my Dad's friends as, a made-up, fake, BS story?
Don't know if it's been mentioned in the previous 122 pages, but the other day I used the word "cattywampus" in a casual conversation at work, as in I told a woman she couldn't see something on the other side of the room because she was "sittin' all cattywampus". For those of you not from the South, the term basically means "out of alignment" or "at the wrong angle". The picture on the wall is "cattywampus", or the bolt holes don't line up because the top piece is "cattywampus". Well, I said it the other day in the presence of other coworkers, most of whom nearly hit the floor laughing, except one guy from Scotland. Apparently, they use a similar term.