The middle picture looks like Bubble pipes?
It was much the same for that other common killer, tuberculosis. Unfortunately, Gerhard Domagk's research, which led to the discovery of sulfonamides in the 1930's, eventuated in the discovery of the anti‐TB activity isonicotinic acid hydrazide (INH) in 1952. Adding INH to PAS and SM (“triple therapy”) resulted in predictable cures for 90–95% of patients, the Holy Grail, but not for my mother. She died from TB in 1956, just short of my tenth birthday. She left a bereft husband to raise four children alone. He did it too, and held down a job. He was cook, cleaner and just about he most amazing father you could wish for. My dear Dad raised my siblings and I to adulthood, he went on to live until he was 92. I love him still.Back in my day, we didn’t have shots for many diseases such as polio, mumps, measles, chicken pox and a few more. I had all the above except polio. A classmate wasn’t as fortunate. He was put in an iron lung.
Yes, I remember people hitchhiking all the time! I guess it was pretty safe back then. I remember always being barefooted in the summer and it was no big deal. We'd be running across hot asphalt even! No one even thought about phones. If you needed one you could maybe find a payphone and spend a dime when in town. This digital age has made things way too easy and we're all way too lazy!Back in my day, it was easy (in the late teens, early-mid 20s) to hitchhike on the highways. Many young Canadians got across this enormous country that way, or gtracvelled down into the States. Up here in Canada, a young person could spend the night in any of the "youth hostels" that were established in all the major cites. Or other young people might offer you a place to roll out your mat & sleeping bag. Adverse experiences were so extremely rare that you probably never heard of one... okay, you might get stuck someplace "between pins" and have to spend one night inside your tent someplace. Basic, carry-along food was inexpensive.
You felt no need for a cell phone. You got a feel for the countryside, and for the subtle differences in lifestyles, customs & culture in various regions... didn't spend your time enmeshed in digital gaming. You learned some self-reliance, as well as some things about relating with people.
We never wore shoes in the summer except to church or to a store.Yes, I remember people hitchhiking all the time! I guess it was pretty safe back then. I remember always being barefooted in the summer and it was no big deal. We'd be running across hot asphalt even! No one even thought about phones. If you needed one you could maybe find a payphone and spend a dime when in town. This digital age has made things way too easy and we're all way too lazy!
There's no place to move to that a kid starting out can afford any longer. Between all the corporates buying up all the housing and all the illegals moving in there isn't the abundance of housing there was in the '50s and '60s. There's a solution to this somewhere, but when and where is a mystery.to move out of the house when we graduated high school.