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Home & Colonial stores with broken biscuits in a glass-topped tin, rice in sacks, and cheese on a marble pedestal under glass, the assistant cut the cheese with a wooden handled wire!
Steve
Steve
Odd, foil with a paper wrapper around it is still the norm here.Chocolate wrapped in foil rather than plastic….I’m sure it tasted better.
I never knew that was a thing until I saw it mentioned in an episode of Life on Mars, when the main character remarks on it.White dog poo
In the Netherlands, bus services were privatised in the 1990s due to liberal¹ economic theories of the kind best known to British readers from the Thatcher years. Until then, they were provided by public companies that was usually owned by the province (equivalent to a county in UK terms) or, in major cities, by the city council. However, in recent years rural provinces — such as the one I live in — have been getting ever more shortchanged by the bus companies they’ve contracted, with stops and lines being scrapped for not being an efficient use of resources. It’s come to the point where the provincial government here hasn’t been able find a contractor to perform bus services when the current company’s contract runs out in a few years’ time. There has been talk of the province setting up its own bus service once more.Almost going back to the days of rural communities having their own independent bus and council owned and run corporation bus services isn’t it. Not sure why it should really be a council responsibility really though
My cousin had one Tim and we were the same - couldnt work out how it knew the answers! When I saw one at a car boot a few years ago I had to get it , cost -50p . I’ll get it out of the loft and have a go .Was Magic brain an update of Magic robot Dave? I had the robot one and simply couldn’t work out how it knew the answers. Magnets were involved, but I didn’t (still don’t to be honest) know how it worked.
Forgotten about broken biscuits. Our local Cadena (deli and cafe) used to also do broken chocolate. Basically the bits out of the bottom of the pan after they’d made the hand made chocolates.Home & Colonial stores with broken biscuits in a glass-topped tin, rice in sacks, and cheese on a marble pedestal under glass, the assistant cut the cheese with a wooden handled wire!
Steve
Love the smell of Redex!GPs who made house calls
Cassettes and their players
Redex dispensers next to petrol pumps
..Murray Walker.. oh mate yes. I miss him so so much.Elastic garters for cubs socks with little green tabs on them.
Philips cassette recorder and microphone.
Church fetes
Coconut shies
point to point races
Murray Walker
John Peel and The Old Grey Whistle Test.
Crystal set radios
The Beano
John
I preferred Raymond Baxter..Murray Walker.. oh mate yes. I miss him so so much.
Footballers?You left out blokes with permed hair……
No sparrow shortage around here Mark. We get up to a hundred a time on our feeders, and I’m not exaggerating. The hedges front and back are simply alive with the little buggers. No Green or Goldfinches these days though. I think the sparrows have eaten them all….Ash trays in cinemas
Sparrows
My fashion sense
Paraffin heaters
Yellow pages
I remember waiting about six weeks just to get the catalogues, which you got by sending off a stamped addressed envelope. Spent a fortune on stamps so I could spend a fortune on toys……seems a bit weird these days.Here's another one and it may sound a bit dumb...Remember, way back when, where you made an order with a mail order hobby shop and paid with a money order. You didn't know for sure if they got it or not. You waited, and waited, with high anticipation, and went to the post office everyday to see if your order came. After a couple of weeks, you had a yellow card in you post box, took it to the window, and got your package. A very exciting thing and you couldn't wait to get back home to open it and see the goods inside.......
Today, you can see your payment, track your package and have it in a few days.......All with the tap of a few keys on the computer...
Back in the old days when I was a kid, ordering hobby stuff was a lot more exciting............until your Mom found out where your allowance went!...
Prost
Allen
'Allow 28 days for delivery'I remember waiting about six weeks just to get the catalogues, which you got by sending off a stamped addressed envelope. Spent a fortune on stamps so I could spend a fortune on toys……seems a bit weird these days.
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