Harold Shoe Store was in the shopping center at 23rd and Meridian...that was the only place I got my shoes as a kid.
From an old news item archived online:
Originally home to Northside Church of Christ, the building was constructed by church members in 1948 and valued at $50,000.
So what was the name of the music store when your friend Lee Burns and his wife owned it?
(I used to love browsing in there and occasionally buying something . . . =)
. . . it seemed to be the only place in town where you could buy cards along these lines
. . . or '80's versions of music like this (like, on cassette =):
(what WAS the name of that place? . . . dang.)
Thank You, Sir!
(that question really would have bugged me for at least a couple of days =)
(dang. all this just reminded me of that long-gone, dearly departed store upstairs in Penn Square with the NewAgeTraceMusic and fountains and greenery and stuff . . . =)
(i think it was across "the mall ravine" from Successories and fairly close to The Frankiln Quest location . . . =)
Without a doubt:
1. Shakes pizza
2. El Felix Mexican
3. Any working and decent cafeteria
After that:
4. The 14 flags drive in theater
5. The Riveria drive in theater
6. Team electronics
7. Sound warehouse.
Last edited by whorton; 08-05-2024 at 03:51 AM. Reason: Add business
1. Casa Bonita.
2. Heritage Park Mall / Crossroads Mall / Shepherd Mall.
3. Crystal's.
4. Split T.
5. Russell's.
I miss all the classic men's stores: Harold's, Orbach's, The Squire Shoppe, McCall's.
To be fair, we still have several good ones: Mr. Ooleys, Steven Giles, Alton's, Rye 51.
I second that, Pete.
Harold's, Orbach's, McCall's were where we bought all our "better" stuff growing up. Squire Shoppe I am less familiar with.
At the risk of sounding older than my years, people today are so casual about everything. Jeans at the symphony, t-shirts even at nicer restaurants. Grrrr! Glad there are still some nice outlets though.
I would probably go back and add:
1. Harry bears restaurant on Mosteller drive.
And in this era of mega motion picture theaters where they have EVERY CURRENT PICTURE IS AVAILABLE. I kinda miss the charm of places like the Apollo twin, the Shepherd and Quail twin, the Southpark 4, Reading 4, and even the Almonte 6. Granted, I am a bit biased as I was a projectionist at each of those theaters, but goodness, the charm of a sitdown movie is now lost to history.
Kind of makes you appreciate those days of youth and listening to parents an grandparents bemoaning how things had changed since their youth. . karma is a . . .well you know!
Last edited by whorton; 08-30-2024 at 03:17 PM. Reason: Addition
Not a full blown men's shop, but I'd add William & Lauren to the mix. For fully custom it's pretty affordable for what you get, and they're great to work with.
https://williamandlauren.com/
Radio Shack. The old original Radio Shack when they had drawers and drawers of electronic components. And a tube testing machine. The reason I wanted to be an electrical engineer came from repairing the radios and TVs around our house when I was a kid.
Rat shack was pretty cool to a young man growing up in the late 60's and 70's. Sadly so many of their products did NOT stand the test of time.
Mach I speakers
D X-120 or D X-160 short wave radios
Their whole police scanner line. .
T R S 80 COMPUTERS.
63-968 Radio controlled clock
23 channel CB radios
Their stores in general!!
Jensen 6x9 triaxial speakers. Those were the speakers to have in the 80s. I remember when CBs came out. My parents had one in each car and my grandpa was a trucker and had one. We used to get on there and talk to people for hours when we were kids. Breaker 1-9 what's the 10-19 is what we always asked after school when my grandpa would pick us up.
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