We had a really rough grade school teacher who was built and looked like Gomer Pyle's Sargeant Carter. She had five rulers held together with rubber bands and would bend your fingers back whacking your palm so hard your hand went numb.Much of our grade school punishment for young to teenage boys made you stronger or tougher.
Rulers hit across the knuckles, standing with arms stretched out supporting a book in each hand, carrying supplies up from the basement to the third floor.
She?!?We had a really rough grade school teacher who was built and looked like Gomer Pyle's Sargeant Carter. She had...
Still get my half gallon milk in glass…We still buy our milk in returnable glass jugs, 1/2 gallon. But we have a few local dairy farms that still have farm stores, selling their local milk products.
Haven’t seen milk in glass bottles in decades.Still get my half gallon milk in glass…
HmmHaven’t seen milk in glass bottles in decades.
Come to Pennsylvania! Our number of small family-run dairy farms began to dwindle when the generations born before WW2 were retiring and selling off their farms, but we still have enough that it's very common to see those glass jugs in many of our stores. Many of the farms also have their own farm store, where they sell their own products (milk, produce, poultry, beef), as well as the products of usually a half a dozen other local farms. This increases as you head west from the Philadelphia - New York corridor.Haven’t seen milk in glass bottles in decades.
Recall getting milk in school in glass bottles with the little cardboard top that would pop out/off. Never bought any milk for a great many years used a mini milk can much of the time or reused juice bottles.You might be older if you remember milk bottles like these and standing in line with a full one at the grocery checkout.
Found this one cleaning the shop.
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15-25 years ago, was pretty friendly with the lady who ran one of our local dairy farm stores, her husband ran the farm itself. They did and still use those glass returnable bottles, and I remember her mentioning the state or the CDC were making it increasingly difficult for them to continue operations as they always had, requiring the purchase of new equipment and implementation of new processes that made it almost impossible to remain profitable. I got the sense that if they weren't already well-established and already approaching retirement, that they'd have never been able to afford to be in the business of direct retail.Recall getting milk in school in glass bottles with the little cardboard top that would pop out/off. Never bought any milk for a great many years used a mini milk can much of the time or reused juice bottles.