Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Lorain Journal Front Page – June 24, 1926
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Happy the Clown is Not Happy... Schwebel Bakery is Closing
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| The shelves at Discount Drug Mart in Vermilion has already experienced a run on Schwebel buns |
As noted on the WEWS Channel 5 website, the firm "will begin winding down operations and expects to initiate a liquidation of its business."
"The closure will include bakeries in Youngstown and Hebron, as well as retail stores and distribution centers across Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York."
There was even a Happy costume that could be worn for personal appearances.
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| Courtesy ClevelandHistorical.org |
Monday, June 22, 2026
Homewood Shopping Center 1954 - 1958
Interestingly, Homewood Store's parent company – Union Supply Company – was a subsidiary of U.S. Steel. Perhaps the store's proximity to the steel mill had something to do with the decision to locate it there, on Grove Ave. (what was considered then as 'new' Route 57) at Homewood Drive.
The odd thing is that Homewood Stores wasn't around for very long. Here are the articles and mentions in the Lorain Journal that tell its story.
This November 27, 1952 article observes that the construction of the shopping center was coinciding with the beginning of the latest addition to the Homewood housing development.
This February 25, 1954 photo provided a progress report on the Homewood Shopping Center, as well as the O'Neil - Sheffield Shopping Center.And then – only four years later – on July 5, 1958, it was announced that the Homewood Shopping Center would close. The Union Supply Co. division of U.S Steel decided "to eliminate the retail merchandising function of the Homewood Stores Division."
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| June 18, 1960 |
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| Aug. 17, 1960 |
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| Aug. 17, 1960 |
Sunday, June 21, 2026
Father's Day 1926
Here's wishing all you fathers out there a Happy Father's Day – especially my two brothers.
One hundred years ago, this was the Father's Day edition of the Lorain Journal on June 19, 1926.
It has some special pieces in honor of the holiday: a funny, timeless cartoon, a special tribute by A.M. Hopkins to his father. But other than that, it's chock full of the usual news items – some tragic (several deaths caused by trains) and some unusual (a man about to be drafted by the Czecho-Slovakian army unless he can produce his birth certificate that shows that he was born in Lorain).
If you're wondering who A. M. Hopkins was (like me), it appears that he was manager and editor of the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), a syndicate that provided features (such as his column) to newspaper nationwide.
As as for the young Lorain man who was trying to avoid serving in the Czecho-Slovakian army, the story had a happy ending.
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| June 23, 1926 Lorain Journal |
Friday, June 19, 2026
Homewood Shopping Center Father's Day Ad – June 1956
It's fairly fascinating seeing what you could buy for a buck back then: Interwoven socks, a Regal summer tie. Moving up in price slightly, a dollar fifty could get you a Hickok leather belt, billfold, key case, jewelry box or briefcase; matching Hickok gold or silver plated cuff links and tie bars.
At the high end price-wise was an RCA personal TV set with a 32 sq. in. screen for $125 or an 18" power mower by Penn ACCO for $79.95.
There are a few items that are slightly less but still expensive: Elgin and Bulova watches at $33.75 to $75; a Motorola portable radio for $34.95.
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I'm afraid my father never made out too well on Father's Day. As kids, we probably just signed a card that Mom bought for us to give him. Dad didn't really have any hobbies, so there was nothing special or fun to get him. I only remember boring gifts like handkerchiefs (which he always carried). It wasn't until my siblings and I were grown up that we actually bought him something. In later years, I usually got him a book, since he was a voracious reader. He particularly liked Tom Brokaw's book The Greatest Generation and the follow-up book, The Greatest Generation Speaks.
Thursday, June 18, 2026
First Annual Vermilion Festival of the Fish – June 1967
Vermilion's 60th Annual Festival of the Fish is this weekend, June 19 through 21. So it's a good time to look back at the very first one, which was held June 16, 17 and 18, 1967. That's Perky Perch above – the mascot of this event since the very beginning.
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| Vermilion Photojournal ad from early June 1967 |
What follows are Journal clippings and ads from that first year. This article notes that Ray Full, president of Kishman Fish Co. helped initiate the Festival of the Fish.
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| Jan. 23, 1967 |
The festival hype started early, with an article in the Journal on Feb. 22, 1967.
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| June 15, 1967 |
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| June 15, 1967 |
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| June 17, 1967 |
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| June 19, 1967 |
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| June 19, 1967 |
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| June 19, 1967 |
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
1955 Father's Day Gifts to Finish Off That Facial Fur
These days, I'm not sure. But back in 1955, according to the two ads below that both ran in the Lorain Journal on June 15, 1955, a shaver would have been just the right gift. (That is, assuming the mother bought it and let her kid 'give' it to dear old dad.)
I don't remember Dad ever using an electric razor. If he did, it was only because he received one as a gift, and he felt obligated to use it for a little while. I do remember the packs of razor blades in the medicine cabinet, along with a shaving brush. (I wonder whatever happened to that thing?)





















































