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    Legacy Member ArtPahl's Avatar
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    The "Good Old Days"

    While waiting out a commercial break on college football yesterday, I was thumbing through one of my old American Rifleman magazines; August 1960. Flaig's of Millvale, PA (remember them?), was selling Eddystones for $30, case of 10 @ $225.

    Of course, in August of 1960 I was 22 years old with a wife and two very small kids, I was driving a 10 year old car, and if I had $30, it would have been ear-marked for something far more important than an old GI rifle. And I could only dream about having $225 all at one time.
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    Legacy Member champ0608's Avatar
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    And better than the price was the fact that they would have delivered it straight to your door.

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    Legacy Member RC20's Avatar
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    Well the hoot of hoots to me is I ordered a bayonet about 1960 (maybe a bit before, I would have to do some math and not sure I want the answer!). I was around 7 at the time.

    You could get amazing stuff for 50 cents. My mission was to cut down all the Devils Clubs (may be unique to AK, kind of a broomstick with branches and lots of stickers)

    I failed (much to my regret, I ran into them latter on surveying, nasty things, hard to cut with a machete (put your foot on it first) or a chainsaw (whipping around).

    Anyway, the Bayo was a random pick out of a bin by someone- lo many years latter my younger brother is cleaning up his garage and wants me to take my bayonet. I tell him to sell it, worth a pretty good chunk now. Nope, its yours, come get it, no idea why I got it.

    Turns out to be a WT and the rarest of WWII. Saw a WT with the wrong grips go for $450. A couple in the $900 range. Amazing.

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    Legacy Member ArizonaBeagle's Avatar
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    The "Good Old Days"

    A Couple of ads from that time 1960, look at the prices.
    To put it in proper context I was making $1.25 an hour as a journeyman printer
    with thousands of hours of experience.

    Attachment 113037


    AZB

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    Legacy Member Salt Flat's Avatar
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    Yea, I was 16 in 1966. I went into a pawn shop in Phoenix. They had display case full of Norwegianicon 1911's. They let me pick out the best one.--- 50 bucks. No forms, no hassle. In the early 80s I was supporting my family and needed cash and sold it for $400. --- I wake up in the middle of the night sometimes in a cold sweat and think "WHY OH WHY". Salt Flat

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    Legacy Member Daan Kemp's Avatar
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    Unfortunately for gun sickness, family has priority. We can always re-gun but re-family is never that easy. Family is forever, guns nearly so. Oh well.

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    Legacy Member Salt Flat's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Daan Kemp View Post
    Unfortunately for gun sickness, family has priority. We can always re-gun but re-family is never that easy. Family is forever, guns nearly so. Oh well.
    Daan, So true--

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    Legacy Member old tanker's Avatar
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    The passage of the Gun Control Act of 1968 was a sea change. They have spent the last fifty years trying to achieve the total elimination of private gun ownership. Growing up, getting a box of .22s from Mr. Pirtle at the General store did not involve governmental interference.

    A boy could take pride in knowing he helped put food on the table.

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    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by old tanker View Post
    A boy could take pride in knowing he helped put food on the table.
    I used to hear from the older folk around that spoke of carrying a firearm to school across the fields so they could pot a couple of pheasant or rabbits on the way home. Anything to help mother feed the crew. Imagine now...?
    Regards, Jim

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    Contributing Member ssgross's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by browningautorifleicon View Post
    older folk
    One doesn't have to be that old to remember. Even in the 80's and 90's many a rural school district across the US had a a marksmanship club, and the student parking lots were full of old beat up pickups with a rifle hanging in the back, and a few tractors parked in the back of the lot. Many schools even closed for the first week of hunting season, so as not have to list the majority of the school truant.

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