[or-roots] Do you remember punch boards?
Jerry & Carolyn Ott
jc.ott at verizon.net
Wed Sep 28 23:39:04 PDT 2005
I remember Punch boards.... There was a cafe that had a punch board in the town where I grew up. We ate there quite a bit..... I was young enough to believe in Santa Claus. I had seen the punch board and the prizes that could be won. On Christmas morning one of my gifts was a great big plastic piggy bank ( I had seen it in the cafe among the punch board prizes). My comment was Santa must have won this on the punch board.............actually 50 some plus years later I think I still have it some where around here.
Anyone remember the Saturday afternoon cowboy matinees at the theater......Roy Rogers, Gene Autrey, Whip Wilson, Lash Larue, Rex Allen, Gabby Hayes, etc. etc. I saw a lot of the matinees just about every Saturday
Carol
From: Jacqueline
To: or-roots at sosinet.sos.state.or.us
Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2005 9:10 PM
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Do you remember punch boards?
The little Jiffy Way in Barlow had the punch boards.......so it wasn't just Taverns that had them
Jacqueline
----- Original Message -----
From: E V Barnes
To: or-roots at sosinet.sos.state.or.us
Sent: Tuesday, September 27, 2005 9:48 AM
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Do you remember punch boards?
It seemed every beer tavern in Oregon had one of the Punch Boards. I do not
recall the cost of the use of the punch
tool. Seems it may have been around
$1.00.
----- Original Message -----
From: Dorothy Wogh
To: or-roots at sosinet.sos.state.or.us
Sent: Monday, September 26, 2005 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Do you remember punch boards?
Yes I remember the punch boards, also the slot machines, and how each time they came out to collect the money the settings was changed.
Dorothy Wogh
----- Original Message -----
From: Cecil Houk
To: or-roots
Sent: Monday, September 26, 2005 6:40 PM
Subject: [or-roots] Do you remember punch boards?
Do you remember punch bords? I do. They were a a form of gambling I remember in the Sweet Home, OR area in the 1940's. They were a bit less than a foot square, with a zillion holes drilled through them. The bottom side was covered by a plain piece of paper. The holes were filled with rolled up slips of paper with a win/no win message. The top of the board was covered by a printed sheet that named the board, and indicated where the holes were. You pay your money; you "punch" out a hole. Mostly you won nothing, BUT...
One night we stopped at a cafe in Foster (I think the building is still there, but was vacant the last times I saw it 1998 & 2000), located on the NE corner of HWY 20 and Wiley Creek Road. My dad won a stuffed animal on their punch board. It was a white horse about a foot long, and not quite as high. This is one of the few things my dad ever won.
Now why do I remember this? My mother named the horse Dobbin; why I do not know, but I do know that she would not allow Doug or me to play with it - Dobbin became a part of our Christmas decorations. He spent 11 months a year carefully packed away.
Long story short: my mother gave Dobbin to Doug's kids, and I kidnapped him from them in 1973. I still have Dobbin, but he's far from white today. :-(
The trigger for this memory came from a WW II map of Germany that I saw on the History Channel today (9-26-05), showing the town of Dobbin!
Yes. My Houks/Haucks came from Germany.
Cecil
Cecil Houk, ET1 USN Ret.
PO Box 530833
San Diego CA 92153
FAX 619-428-6434
mailto:cchouk at cox.net
ANDERSON - BLAKELY - FORD - HOUK - KIMSEY - MOE - RULAFORD - SIMPSON
Searchable GEDCOM: http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~cchouk
My web page MENU: http://members.cox.net/~cchouk/
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