We got Green Stamps, Top Value, and those blue ones. Anyone remember Gunn Brothers Stamps?
We got Green Stamps, Top Value, and those blue ones. Anyone remember Gunn Brothers Stamps?
I think you mean 44th and I-35 where the bingo hall is now. My parents always went to that one after we visited the grandparents who lived off 36th and High. We would usually hit the Dairy Queen (closed and later burned down) or the A&W (Now Pizza 44) before the Green Stamp store. My siblings and I and would hang out in the car listen to the radio and eat are lunch/ice cream while Mom and Dad shopped. These days doing that would earn a one way trip to the county hotel.
I remember the S&H Green Stamp redemption center in the Redding
Shopping Center on the N.W. corner of S.W. 44th and S. Western.
We didn't do a lot of business there because Mom was more interested in
saving money at the moment instead of getting gifts in the future. Kids
didn't understand that. I learned a lot about economics from Mom.
Curious...
Does anyone remember Gunn Brother's Stamps? Gold Bond?
Lord, if I had a nickle for each Green Stamp I moistened and placed in those friggin S & H Books!!!
Dennis,
Ah but the treasures! Somewhere in the past, probably early 50's, our mother told us that we could redeem any stamp book(s) that we filled. Almost made the glue taste good in anticipation. We did S&H Green stamps, TV stamps which I believe were from Humpty Dumpty grocery stores, and Gold Bond, not sure where we got those, probably at the service (gas) station. It was almost like the "Tetris" game, tearing off the correct stamps to fit the open space.
C. T.
The things we learn! I was looking up Gold Bond stamps because I remember those as well. It turns out the Carlson Hotel chain started as Gold Bond Stamps!
"Carlson was founded in 1938 as the Gold Bond Stamp Company by Curt Carlson, who used a $55 loan to start his venture. Founded during the Great Depression, Mr. Carlson used "Gold Bond Stamps", a consumer loyalty program based on trading stamps, to provide consumer incentive for grocery stores."
Carlson Companies - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From the Article:
By the early 1980s, Curt Carlson had acquired over 50 diverse businesses, most of them small and some not running profitably. Under the administration of president Edwin C. "Skip" Gage, husband of Curt's younger daughter, the majority of those small enterprises were sold. The company then purchased the MacDonald Plaid Stamp business (a public company listed on the New York Stock Exchange) and merged it with the Gold Bond Stamp business to become the largest trading stamp company in the world.
As all of this took place from the center of the web--in Minnesota--doesn't this sound like a great theme for the next Coen Bros. Movie?
Instead of Fargo II or Son of Fargo, they could call it, simply, "Minnetonka".
(heck . . . maybe they could persuade The Artists Formerly Known as Prince--and then known as Prince again--to come out of retirement to compose the soundtrack.)
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