Deucemoi
Member
I posted something similar to this on another forum and the resulting
comments left MUCH to be desired.
I grew up in Missoula. Dad had a floor covering business in an old
store. We kids roamed the neighbor hood at will.
Mostly we played cops and robbers, army or cowboys and indians.
There was a vacant lot we commandeered for our fort. We used
cardboard boxes for tanks, ships and if you were ingenious enough
you could make a plane.
Sometimes we made a little to much noise and mostly we just
got shooed away except for the old guy who took a garden hose
to us.
There was a snack chip company and if you took a paper bag they
would fill it with the bad burnt and otherwise nasty chips.
I learned that if you left that partial bag on the counter you
could gather nearly every variety of ant.
Grandma gave me a pair of strap on roller skates and I made
full use of them, skating down the cement sidewalks, skint
knees and elbows.
A school project was to take a mason jar and cut up a balloon
which you stretched over the mouth of the jar and tied it
with a string. Then glued a piece of paper to the top for
a pointer. This made a barometer and worked pretty good.
One day I was snooping and found this little round tin
inside of which were these little toothpick like things.
You could get a really great surprise if you put those
picks inside a cigarette and waited until someone lit the
cigarette. Needless to say this garnered me a day in my room.
Dad taught me how to make a crystal radio out of an old
oatmeal box, some salvaged copper wire, the earpiece from
and old phone, a piece of galena and a safety pin.
In the same block we lived in was a fruit company and you
could get broken watermelon (in season) cantaloupe, apples
oranges and lots of other stuff.
Several blocks away was a flour mill, my brother and his
pal spent hours there with a box trap trying to trap pigeons.
We raked leaves for a dime. You could get a lot of candy
at the little store down the street, two for a penny.
comments left MUCH to be desired.
I grew up in Missoula. Dad had a floor covering business in an old
store. We kids roamed the neighbor hood at will.
Mostly we played cops and robbers, army or cowboys and indians.
There was a vacant lot we commandeered for our fort. We used
cardboard boxes for tanks, ships and if you were ingenious enough
you could make a plane.
Sometimes we made a little to much noise and mostly we just
got shooed away except for the old guy who took a garden hose
to us.
There was a snack chip company and if you took a paper bag they
would fill it with the bad burnt and otherwise nasty chips.
I learned that if you left that partial bag on the counter you
could gather nearly every variety of ant.
Grandma gave me a pair of strap on roller skates and I made
full use of them, skating down the cement sidewalks, skint
knees and elbows.
A school project was to take a mason jar and cut up a balloon
which you stretched over the mouth of the jar and tied it
with a string. Then glued a piece of paper to the top for
a pointer. This made a barometer and worked pretty good.
One day I was snooping and found this little round tin
inside of which were these little toothpick like things.
You could get a really great surprise if you put those
picks inside a cigarette and waited until someone lit the
cigarette. Needless to say this garnered me a day in my room.
Dad taught me how to make a crystal radio out of an old
oatmeal box, some salvaged copper wire, the earpiece from
and old phone, a piece of galena and a safety pin.
In the same block we lived in was a fruit company and you
could get broken watermelon (in season) cantaloupe, apples
oranges and lots of other stuff.
Several blocks away was a flour mill, my brother and his
pal spent hours there with a box trap trying to trap pigeons.
We raked leaves for a dime. You could get a lot of candy
at the little store down the street, two for a penny.