Things you won't find anymore...

Heh, heh. Welk was as corny as they come, which he rode all the way to a fortune.
But at least the guy would make fun of himself, e.g. here on the "Jack Benny Show".
What about Sing Along with Mitch with Mitch Miller chorus and orchestra?. It was on every Saturday afternoon, and we would sing all the songs. We loved it.
 

Cigarette holders.

I'm sure you can still find them somewhere, but there was a time when you could buy them at Rexall Drugs. Woolworth's, too, probly.

I've only seen one person use one. I was a tot, and the user was a lady who came to our house for dinner. She was probably a relative. It was a big family dinner.

Anyway, my Mom smoked for a short while before me and my siblings born. She hadn't been in the US for very long, so we're guessing she was trying to be a classy American lady and started smoking. And apparently, my Dad was okay with it until she paid $1.75 for a long, bejeweled cigarette holder. Then he "blew his top," according to my Aunt, and Mom stopped smoking. But she never really liked it anyway.


I just learned there were certain acceptable cigarette-holder lengths for certain occasions:

Opera length, 16 to 20 inches/40 to 50 cm
Theater length, 10 to 14 inches/25 to 35 cm
Dinner length, 4 to 6 inches/10 to 15 cm
Cocktail length, "stubbies"

Interestingly, men's cigarette holders were traditionally all stubbies all the time for all occasions.
 
Does anyone remember full-service shoe stores where fluoroscopes were present? You'd stick your feet into the device, and it would X-ray them to determine if your toes had enough room inside a shoe you were considering buying. Yes folks, get a free X-ray dosage just for coming in!

What other things once commonplace won't you see today?

View attachment 293431
A boy named Jan.
 
I remember putting my feet into one of those devices to measure if the shoe would fit my feet. I wonder how much radiation
it gave out. ?
Probably very little to the customer. But it was likely treacherous for the shoe salesmen.
That was before they invented the radiation badges-- to detect dangerous radiation exposure.
 
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