i loved the victory V rosie....prob mentioned already but dont forget the love hearts which are still going strong
lyn
I seem to start a lot of sentences with 'I can't remember' but in this case it's right - in my mind I can see multi-coloured Rice Krispie type things. They came in a small bag but I'm not sure if they were in my time or my daughter's (1970's). They were very sweet and harder than rice krispies. Any idea what they were called?
I seem to start a lot of sentences with 'I can't remember' but in this case it's right - in my mind I can see multi-coloured Rice Krispie type things. They came in a small bag but I'm not sure if they were in my time or my daughter's (1970's). They were very sweet and harder than rice krispies. Any idea what they were called?
My memories of the sweets of yesterdays are from mr whetton,s the sweet shop on lichfield road
and i could get two black jacks for the farthng and a penny bottle of so called ice cream soda pop with a stone type bottle stopper a penny gob stopper and secondly from the sweet shop in upper thomas street oppersite the upper thomas street school every day after lunch befor back to school she used to sell chocolate potatoes they was on a tray they was 1d each i would buy two and i was taken in by that they had a little note inside which says you have won a prize you either won nother free spud or a pick off another trayworth slightly more i was a sucker for them
more often than not it was a dammed sherbutt with a sticky lolly in the tube best wishes Alan, Astonian;;;
mbenne, Just happened on the US ebay site and it had loads of Fillery's toffee tins. Must be very collectible over there.
Were Fillery's toffees like a little roll of toffee rather than a cube does anyone know?
It wasBlue Bird did them too. For some reason I remember the blue wrapped one very well. Think it was liquorice. Viv.
l remember when we were evacuated in the warAs kids we would often use substitutes if sweets weren't available i.e. no money and no pop or beer bottles could be found to return for the deposits.
Condensed milk sandwiches - there was always an opened tin on Nan's table - two puncture holes in the top and yellowy threads of crystallized dried milk running down the side.
Syrup sandwiches - though we always wrongly referred to this as 'treacle'
A substitute for Nesquick, which my Mom always refused to buy as it was a non essential, was a table spoon of Birds custard powder in milk with a couple of spoons of sugar.
A substitute for pop - another non essential - was a couple of spoonfuls of Dad's Andrews liver salts in a glass of water with the inevitable consequences. Really fizzy and refreshing though we never realised it was a laxative!
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