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The cabinets were bought from Home depot. We put them in about two years ago. I did all the tile work as well. On the stove that is a greas trap. There is two more under the burners. And that is how the griddle would have looked originally, but just shinier.
 
In the old t.v. series Bewitched, they had a Frigidaire refrigerator in their kitchen with the push button automatic open feature. I think it was a pale yellow. Kind of hard to tell. Anyway, it was tough. I don't remember any vintage appliances of the period in almond. Had a childhood friend who's parents had the same frige, but in chocolate.
 
When we bought the house we had to replace the cabinets in the kitchen. I had wanted to find vintage metal kitchen cabinets, but couldn't find any at the time. Then after we finished our kitchen, thats when I started finding the cabinets. Maybe one day I'll redo the kitchen again. LOL
 
"Monkey Ward"

From the late 70's to the early 80's, my sister was the switchboard operator at the Montgomery Ward store in Kokomo, Indiana. Thanks to her employee discount, just about every appliance in her house was a Montgomery Ward "Signature" brand. My dad always used MW paint. He thought it was the best. I liked using it, too. Good memories! The MW name lives on as an Internet shopping site--nothing like the old store.
 
In the 1960's when I was a little kid, we did not have a mall. We had shopping centers and one was really decent. To go to "the mall" you drove 30 minutes north of my town to The McALister Square Mall in Greenville, SC. It had three big anchor stores: Ivey's, Myers-Arnold and Belk-Simpson. Like your family we would go several times a year. When mom moved to an apartment at an assisted living and we closed out her house, I kept a set of Fieldcrest towles that were purchased at Ivey's in the 1960's. Since they were guest towels they were monogrammed so they were mailed to Atlanta, embroidered and then mailed to her here in Anderson. That was a lot handling, but people thought nothing of it! Montgomery Ward came to Greenville later when the Greenville Mall was built. Now the Greenville Mall and McAlister Square Mall are gone and there a newer mall on the north side of Greenville that is getting a little age on it now. It had been upgraded a couple times and it is still really nice. Do you have any more vintage photos of malls around the nation, etc?
 
I can't find any pix of our 60's Penneys in color.

 

It was a big deal when it opened.  This modern building in a suburban mall surpassed the big downtown store in square footage, and no doubt siphoned off customers, triggering downtown's closing some years later.

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The articles related to the pictures above contain a little bit of fun merchandising information.

 

Penney's is long gone from this location.  Upstairs became Burlington Coat and downstairs Home Express.  Nordstrom Rack came in after HE folded.

 

rp2813++2-21-2011-21-59-7.jpg
 
Cornnut regarding Palm Beach Mall fountain

Unfortunately, I don't personally recall the fountain, it is likely a glycerin type though. They had a fantastic record store, and the Salon Of Music, the Magnavox dealer. I wish I could remember anything more about the place, and I don't remember when we stopped making the trips down there.

[this post was last edited: 2/22/2011-08:02]

 

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