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To: Pelham

The pay was tiny by today’s standards but I was in high school in the 1950’s and it was my ticket to what I thought was financial independence. Ice cream cones at Dairy Queen were $.05 and you could buy a Ship ‘n Shore 100 percent cotton shirt for $3.99. We used to ride the street car in town and used either red or green plastic tokens - believe they called them mills but it was too long ago to remember. No credit cards, counter checks at all the stores and people used layaway and paid $1.00 or so a week until their items were paid for. Life was good.


69 posted on 04/07/2016 6:34:44 AM PDT by Grams A (The Sun will rise in the East in the morning and God is still on his throne.)
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To: Grams A

“We used to ride the street car in town and used either red or green plastic tokens - believe they called them mills but it was too long ago to remember. “

What city was that? As a boy I got to ride the streetcar in Washington DC before they pulled up the tracks. Whittaker Chambers had helped build them as a laborer in the early 1900s.

“No credit cards, counter checks at all the stores and people used layaway and paid $1.00 or so a week until their items were paid for. Life was good.”

I remember my folks using layaway to make purchases. And I think they could open a store credit account for larger purchases like appliances. The earliest ‘credit card’ was Diner’s Club and it probably had to be paid off each month. The world of personal finance was designed to encourage thrift and prudence, it didn’t encourage you to get yourself into trouble. Maybe that habit was a result of the Great Depression just 20 years earlier

It wasn’t until I was in high school in the 60s that I remember Bank of America rolling out their BankAmericard which evolved into Visa and Mastercard and the rest of the enticements to personal debt.


89 posted on 04/07/2016 9:37:54 AM PDT by Pelham (A refusal to deport is defacto amnesty)
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