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Old pay phones sold as novelty items

Collectors have made an online rush to buy BellSouth's boxy old pay phones that have been refurbished for home use, after the Atlanta based telephone company decided to pull   of the coin-operated phone business that had withered in the wireless . "It's a novelty. You just don't usually see pay phones in people's homes,” said Hugh Bowen, a retired Atlanta police officer who bought one of the 30 pound phones. "I thought it was so neat and I had always wanted one. When I saw this opportunity I jumped on it.” About 500    for the $135 phones were filled in the two months they've been for sale, and now there's a waiting list of about 300 more people.

Cell phones have increasingly pushed aside the once-ubiquitous pay phones. More than six out of 10 Americans now own cell phones, said Patrick Comack, an analyst with Guzman & Co. in Miami. "Pay phones have lost so much   share to wireless, it's no longer a moneymaking business," he said. So the big phones are going the way of rotary phones, crank phones and early model brick-sized cell phones. When BellSouth became the first major phone company to close its languishing pay phone business two years ago, volunteers with the phone company decided to refurbish the phones for home use and resell them to raise  for charity. The phones were rewired so they can   a wall outlet and to work without coins.

About $18,000 has been raised from the $35 in profit from each phone,   will go toward groups like Habitat for Humanity and the American Red Cross, which are charity organizations. Other companies will continue to operate some pay phones, but their numbers will continue to decrease. The total number of pay phones nationwide has   29.5 percent in the last five years, including a 32.9 percent drop in the pay phones operated by local phone companies, according to the Federal Communications Commission. "My grandchildren and   -grandchildren won't know what it is,” said Bill Ray, who bought one of the pay phones and keeps it atop a filing cabinet in his Memphis, Tennessee, BellSouth office. "I thought I'd get it for the nostalgia, and it will be a conversation piece for years  .”