I haven't encountered real rag and bone men since I was a child. There are still people who ride around in carts pulled by horses but now they are only interested in scrap metal and they usually regard taking it away as payment enough. You don't even get a "windmill" or a goldfish for a refrigerator, let alone for items of clothing anymore.
I haven't used a suitcase without built-in wheels for many years. Where did we find the strength to carry the ones without wheels? Or did taxi drivers and railway porters (remember them?) do most of the carrying? Or were we all built like gorillas? Or do we just put heavier things in suitcases now that they have wheels?
I don't think that anyone uses spirit duplicators such as Roneo anymore. Remember the alcohol smell of the notes that the teachers rolled off for us? When I lived in rural Natal, I went to a school where ballpoint pens were forbidden. My mother gave me a fountain pen to start with but when that ran empty, I just dipped a nib pen into an inkwell (remember those?) like the other kids. I suspect that the teacher roneoed notes a lot because she didn't believe that we could read the ink-soaked mess that we were writing. It was supposed to develop handwriting skills but it didn't work for me. My next school was a high school and I was caned a lot just for my handwriting. (I have never seen quill pens in use but according to movies such as The Card, Kind Hearts and Coronets and A Place of One's Own, they were still in use for important documents in the early twentieth century. I just read that they are still available for use in sessions of the US Supreme Court.)