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| June 28, 1937 |
Friday, July 17, 2026
Arrowheads Unearthed on Gashouse Hill – July 1936
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Midway Mall Grand Opening – Sept. 29, 1966
Here are some of the articles and ads surrounding the opening of Midway Mall back on Sept. 29, 1966. Everything was shiny and brand new then, and oozing with mod 1960s charm.
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| September 22, 1966 |
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| September 22, 1966 |
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| September 28, 1966 |
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| September 29, 1966 |
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| September 29, 1966 |
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| September 30, 1966 |
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| Sept. 20, 1967 |
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
Higbee's at Midway Mall Opens – July 1966
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| The view on Tuesday |
In the 1970s, it was the place to shop, to dine, to hang out. It was the perfect place to take a date (especially when you just got your driver's license); you could enjoy a nice dinner, and then walk around the Mall until it was time to get your seat for a movie.
You could get just about everything you needed there – clothes, shoes, jewelry, books, pets. Sears, Penneys, Higbee's – three truly great anchor stores.
Mom went shopping there seemingly every Saturday afternoon in the early 1970s, usually taking my sister along. The whole family went there at Christmas, or to see a movie. I remember all of us going to see The Return of the Pink Panther there on a Sunday afternoon.
There was always something going on at the Mall, especially on weekends: an auto show, a Sportsman Show, art shows, you name it. It really was an integral part in Lorain County when it came to entertainment, dining and shopping. And it became a community, where you were sure to run into someone you knew.
These days, there's not much there. The property keeps changing hands, you hear rumors and read articles about how it is going to be rejuvenated, etc. I'm not sure how many stores are actually still open.
But it was back in July 1965, that the groundbreaking for the Mall took place.
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| July 28, 1966 |
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| July 30, 1966 |
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
Journal Front Page – July 14, 1936
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| Alvin Karpis |
Lorain was just coming off a heat wave similar to what we experienced a few weeks ago. "The heat wave is now in its 12th day," the lead article noted. It has broken all hot weather duration records.
"The death toll in the nation stood at 2,012, the Ohio toll at 183.
"Monday's highest Lorain reading was 92, the temperature between 4 p. m. and 8 p. m.
"This compared with 101 in Norwalk, and temperatures of over 100 in many other Ohio inland cities."
A story about steel mill workers is pretty surprising. It notes, "It's vacation time in South Lorain – vacation time with pay for employes of the National Tube Co. – and the first paid vacation for wage earners in the history of the plant." As a result, many of them were heading out of town to visit relatives in the cities they lived in before moving to Lorain. "Still others are leaving Lorain via automobile, many just 'driving around,' some camping in tents and others staying in tourist cabins," the article observes.
The big national news was Alvin Karpis, the 'dethroned king of gangland,' pleading guilty to conspiracy in the $100,000 ransom kidnapping of William Hamm, Jr., St. Paul brewer. Karpis would eventually serve twenty-six years at Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary.
The Alcatraz History website has a page devoted to Alvin Karpis and his time at "the Rock."
Elsewhere on the front page: an apple gets baked by the sun; a pickpocket strikes in Lorain; a stolen car goes into the drink at Avon Lake; burglars hit a cigar store and a bottling plant in South Lorain; and the City of Lorain was still trying to figure out what to do about replacing the antiquated Erie Avenue swing bridge.
Monday, July 13, 2026
The Passing Scene – July 1966
The July 2, 1966 strip offers a nice panoramic illustration of the upcoming holiday.
The July 9, 1966 comic notes that Lou Kepler (the Journal's Women's Editor) and the Lorain High School Marching Band were both in New York City at that time.![]() |
| July 7, 1966 |
Friday, July 10, 2026
That American Flag Overlooking Route 2 Revisited
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| The view on Thursday evening |
Thursday, July 9, 2026
Jungle Larry Article – July 1970
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| Jungle Larry, his wife Safari Jane, and one of their sons |
But did you know that Larry Teztlaff (his real name) once managed a drug store in Lorain? Or that he was the real thing when it came to going on safaris and collecting animals, once working with Frank "Bring'em Back Alive" Buck? He wasn't just a guy who wore a safari hat.
Read all about him in this informative and entertaining article by Kathy White that ran in the Journal back on July 19, 1970. (Click on it for a readable view.)
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| Courtesy JungleLarry.com |



















































