There were signs all along 287 for Little America, outside of Cheyenne, showing a penguin dwarfed by a stratospheric custard cone emblazoned with “5 CENTS.” We wanted those, and five cents seemed like nothing, but Mom and Dad never took us there, so we were never disappointed by them. Maybe their reasoning was that there were six in the family, so thirty coppers down the drain, or maybe they knew it was a “tourist trap” and thus beneath our dignity. By the time I saw the place for myself, I was in high school, and they weren’t advertising five-cent anything.
Auntie Clockwise over 4 years ago
Nancy toughs-it-out with another big wish-fulfillment-dream that becomes a little nightmare.
Lyons Group, Inc. over 4 years ago
These days, it’s free.
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member over 4 years ago
Imagine wanting to charge 10c for an ice cream cone!
Sir Marcie over 4 years ago
Nancy’s learning about capitalism the hard way.
Calvinist1966 over 4 years ago
Presumably the ten cent cones were much more than twice the size of the five cent cone.
jagedlo over 4 years ago
Caveat emptor, Nancy!
Zebrastripes over 4 years ago
Get what you pay for…
The Orange Mailman over 4 years ago
Not much has changed in 70 years.
Flatlander, purveyor of fine covfefe over 4 years ago
I remember going to the corner store with a nickle to get the Montreal paper and using the two penny change to get a big bag of candy.
gooddavid over 4 years ago
Used to be a drug store in town where they sold ice cream cones for a nickle up through the 70’s.
Another Take over 4 years ago
I used to buy my clothes half off until they arrested me for public indecency
j.l.farmer over 4 years ago
you get what you pay for.
Bobtul07110 over 4 years ago
I remember ten cent ice cream cones and double dips for fifteen cents.
brklnbern over 4 years ago
Get what you pay for.
billyk75 over 4 years ago
You get what you pay for.
Auntie Clockwise over 4 years ago
There’s an echo in here…
Bob. over 4 years ago
When I was a kid in Chicago the streetcar fare was 3 cents. When I was in Japan in 1952 the train ride from camp to town was about 3 cents.
Kip W over 4 years ago
There were signs all along 287 for Little America, outside of Cheyenne, showing a penguin dwarfed by a stratospheric custard cone emblazoned with “5 CENTS.” We wanted those, and five cents seemed like nothing, but Mom and Dad never took us there, so we were never disappointed by them. Maybe their reasoning was that there were six in the family, so thirty coppers down the drain, or maybe they knew it was a “tourist trap” and thus beneath our dignity. By the time I saw the place for myself, I was in high school, and they weren’t advertising five-cent anything.
Kip W over 4 years ago
I would also have accepted an empty cone.
WCraft Premium Member over 4 years ago
Next thing you know, they’ll be shrinking bags of coffee, sugar, flour; cans of tuna, boxes of tuna, etc….