brummie nick
master brummie
Does anyone remember 'Everybodys' as advertised on the tram in post #441 ?
I think Everybodys was a magazine
Nick
Does anyone remember 'Everybodys' as advertised on the tram in post #441 ?
We use to pass that one around the billet in the RAF - such decadence !We had "Titbits" at our house.paul
My mate used to get turned on by the can can lady on the fron of the sheet music for Song From the Moulin Rouge. How well they judged the cheese portions with the cheese wire. When I was at school cheeky girls would lift up the boys blazers and say he's got a cheese wire bum? Loved the sound of the bacon slicer. The butter patts and the Libra style weighing scales with the individual brass weights and the way they packed lookse tea in to a packet made from flat paper and string. My partner is my Satnav she says turn right and I do then she says why did you turn right I said left."Dickie seat"! How could anyone be carried in one of those without a seat belt or head restraint? Come to think about it, how could anyone drive one of those old Roadsters with no servo steering or braking, airbags, head restraints, reversing lights, parking sensors or cameras? And however did anyone get to Southampton without a Sat-nav? :culpability:
Ah yes, the smells of fresh sliced bacon and cheese cut with a piano wire; who can forget George Masons? Strange isn't it how the produce was must cheaper when totted up on the paper it was wrapped in with a freshly licked tip of an indelible pencil? :abnormal:
My parents are probably at my parents fault for allowing me access to the pictures of you ladies showing their stocking tops in the Reveille and Titbit while listening to this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qjjdpFZmEc that made me the warped individual I am today. :crushed:
Had to look up on Google why they were called dickie seats and one of the answers was that they were also called 'mother-in-law seats' !!"Dickie seat"! How could anyone be carried in one of those without a seat belt or head restraint?
No Old Mohawk, that would be the ejector seat!Had to look up on Google why they were called dickie seats and one of the answers was that they were also called 'mother-in-law seats' !!
It looks like a man and two ladies cycling on a Sunday morning to go to St Johns church ....maybe !Re. post 414, photograph put on by Old Mowhawk could he be a Telegram delivery boy ?
Hello AngelaRe. post 414, photograph put on by Old Mowhawk could he be a Telegram delivery boy ?
Hi Nico - I remember them up the Kingstanding Rd as in the pic below, 14 bar poles ! The lady at the bus stop has probably picked up her baby from the nursery which can be seen on the corner of Goodway RdNever seen telegraph poles like that before?
Hi Nico - Looking at the poles you can see 4 crock insulators on each bar which means 56 thin wires between each pole. This was a bit of a problem for flocks of pidgeons speeding through the air, so they often put the little rubber things on the wires so the pidgeons would see them.I never saw any with so many bars as that Mohawk. I remember the actual cables used to have little rubber things at intervals, Nan sad they were for the the birds to perch on.
At that leaning angle he would need something solid to lean on and it might be a Bundy Clock. He's probably waiting for the moment when he can turn the key. The pic below from 1900 shows the earliest leaning man I've seen on the forum.That bus drivers leaning on someone behind that pole Im sure. Was this a role that conductors usually fulfilled ?
At that leaning angle he would need something solid to lean on and it might be a Bundy Clock. He's probably waiting for the moment when he can turn the key. The pic below from 1900 shows the earliest leaning man I've seen on the forum.
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The pic is linked from https://birminghamhistory.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?t=41947&p=490001#post490001