Walking In Leeds In the Sixties & Seventies.
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Terrym wrote: "Spelt: K-E-Y-N-S-H-A-M, KEYNSHAM, Bristol.=============================================Next episode Back To School. As well as Horace Bachelor's Infra Draw method, what about :-"NO RINSE NO WIPE WITH DREFT NO RINSE NO WIPE WITH DREFT GREASE AND DIRT ARE QUICKLY GONE DISHES SHINE LIKE THEY NEVER HAVE SHONE NO RINSE NO WIPE MEANS NO WORK LEFT D R E F T SPELLS DREFT"
There's nothing like keeping the past alive - it makes us relieved to reflect that any bad times have gone, and happy to relive all the joyful and fascinating experiences of our own and other folks' earlier days.
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This stuff is brilliant even though, as an outsider (only been here 22 years lol) I neither know, or recall, many of the places etc mentioned.I can still enjoy what you have written and can picture you on your jaunts quite clearly, likening them to my own experiences back in my home town as a kid.Keep it up, eagerly awaiting the next episode LOL
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I could start the walk into Beeston where your School 'Matthew Murray School' was our rivals ie Cockburn High. I would walk down over the Brickie near to Ringtons and reaching the bottom would cross over Dewsbury Road to the Tuck Shop on the right hand side of the road. There was a shop on Dewsbury Road which would sell you a single fag.
xxx
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Terrym wrote: And so with a brand new suit I presented myself to a Mr Brian Todd at Duncan Classic Tailors on Duncan Street in Leeds.This guy was fantastic, easy going, and always good for a laugh.Part of my job was to go to pick up special orders, and this meant a nice walk onto Meadow Lane to our main warehouse named L&D Brown. Great story Terry! In the late 70s I had a Saturday job in a shop on Duncan Street called Untouchable (!), which sold jeans and also jackets and a few suits. I suspect this was the same place, as the owners were the Brown brothers, always known to us as Mr Louis and Mr Dan.