I started reading back over the ‘Where are they
now?’ lists and adjudged they all deserve to be elevated to Main Pages status
before their forthcoming removal from Discussions Threads (.. 'Nothing lasts for Long' as Joni Mitchell sings on her supurb 'Travelogue' album.)
I have retained most pseudonyms here
also. I know some real identities and
like to guess at others! Maybe you will
enjoy that aspect too! Finally apologies
to our regulars (especially those who didn’t use pseudonyms) whose names are
not here included. They’re still there
on the Discussion Threads!

Horst
Jankowski
In the course of our walk in the Black Forest the other day, Franz Beckenbauer and I
overheard some nostalgic members of the Newry diaspora asking 'Where are they now?'
We were quick to jot down the following list:
1. The Joy
Bells (Sunday evenings)
2. The Chinese Burn (Put out your hand!)
3. The lead drinking cup on a chain in the Abbey School
yard (Join the queue!)
4. The Maypole & Shepherds
5. Griskins ( Anderson's of Sugar
Island)
6. Curley's Chip Shop ( Jim Reeves on the jukebox)
7. 12 aniseed balls for a penny (18 if you're over 60)
8. Goosegams
9. The Chapel Entry
10. Going Round The Hill (St Clare's Convent)
11. Herrings Alive! ( Bring out your plates)
12. When your lunch was called your 'piece'
13. Sleeping suits ( What a superfluous crease in the trousers!)
14. Fly papers (The last public hanging in Newry)
15. The Holy Family Confraternity ( 'Happy We Who Thus United join in cheerful
melody')
16. The men's aisle and the women's aisle in churches
17. The Rag Store (Monaghan Street)
18. The Mascot Annual Christmas Dance ( Even money you win the draw!)
19. The Back of The Dam
20. The Frontier, The Savoy
and The Imperial
21. Pledge Pins & Fainnes ( What a laugh a minute they were!)
22. Bread poultices (Put out your leg!)
23. The two shilling selection box for Christmas (Join Our Christmas Club)
24. Sunday Nights at the Parochial Hall
("Do
you fancy a mineral?"- "Would that
be an occasion of sin?")
25. Eye patches on spectacles ( "You have a lazy eye!")
26. Ear muffs ("You have a lazy ear!")
Meanwhile
back in the Black Forest, the Newry exiles
were reminiscing at such a speed that Beckenbauer and I had to resort to
shorthand to keep up with them:
27. People who poured their tea from cup to saucer 'to cool it'
28. Martin, Nesbitt and Irwin (Newry
Town's half-back line?)
29. Mystery tours (Three times round the Big Clock with the blinds down)
30. Black diamond patches on sleeves when a close relative died
31. 'Offerings' at funerals
32. Awnings outside shops ("We'll stand in here outta the rain")
33. Fried Christmas pudding (Close your eyes and you're a child again)
34. "Dear Santa, please bring me a gun and 'pooch' and a packet of
caps."
35. Magnifiers strapped to 12 inch televisions (What next? Lucozade wrappers
for colour?)
36. Ronson Variflame lighters (A dragon blast of eyebrow-singeing flame)
37. Dobbin for football foots and 'tube-and-covers'
38. Black-shawled grandmothers
39. Fathers giving children a 'spin on the pedal' of their Raleigh three-speed bicycles
40. The white National Dried Milk tin with the navy blue writing
41.
A spoonful of malt in the mornings / cod liver oil / concentrated orange juice
42. A spin on the Monaghan street
railway gates
43. Radio Luxembourg
("208 - Your station of the stars")
44. The pig market in Needham
Street (Where I first heard an auctioneer in full
verbal flow)
45. People with mottled legs ("Sit well back from the fire!")
46. Sukie Sunkap Orange ("What was IT made from?")
47. Navy and fawn duffel coats (Some people are still wearing the originals!)
48. 'Fawn' - Now there's a word you seldom hear these days ....
49. People who wore plastic bags on their heads when it rained
50. A peerless pint of Bass in Tommy Casey's (Well worth waiting for)
51. Seven O'Clock blades
52. Paris Buns, life-size Wagon Wheels, Snowballs and 'Slim'
53. Marbles: waterloos, taws, glassies and wee dingers. ("Where did they
all go?")
54. Marble talk 1 ("Knuckle your trig and shoot like a pig!")
55. Marble talk 2 ("Back slappins doesn't count. There's no back in a
marley!")
56. The breadcrumbed skating rink outside McCann's Bakery when it rained
57. 'Upstairs model' bicycles ("Mister, your back wheel's catching up on
your front one!")
And finally, exam results ....
What a change from today's 10 A stars, 2 A's and a B.
Back then, a gardener needed one 'hoe level', a farmer ... one 'hay level',
and a joiner ... 'one spirit level'.

Nyuckraker
The smell of Mansion polish.. Blue bag in
the washing.. The Newry Telegraph.. The Frontier Sentinel.. the Sun and The
Comet comics.. Radio Fun.. Film Fun.. mothballs in the wardrobe.. Crookes
Halibut Oil capsules.. scones made on the griddle on the range.. Guinness XXX..
Monk Ale.. Radio Eireann before school (Whelahan's of Finglas, Gael Linn, The
Walton programme ("The Songs our fathers loved')..Jimmy O'Dea ('Hands
across the border').. (O)Callaghans hardware shop with the earth floor..
Timoney's ice-cream in Canal
Street.
Getting paid (peanuts) for gathering
raspberries out past Savilbeg on the Rathfriland
Road...the first day in LONG TROUSERS (how
embarrassing) at about 12 years old.. dark blue jeans with a GIGANTIC turn-up,
all light blue around the ankles.. the old round-pin electric plugs.. and
before that.. GASLIGHT in the house with delicate mantles and a constant
hissing noise.. the aunt outside Newry whose light was a Tilley Lamp with
methylated spirit... Friar's Balsam in boiling water with a towel over your
head when you were chesty (and Vick rub on your chest)... Minnie Kennedy's ring
blessed by the Pope for curing a stye (nobody seems to get them now, but I can
guarantee that it worked!)... impaling a snail on a thorn and burying it to
cure warts (ditto - don't ask!).. Lion ointment for whitlows... squeezing boils
('biles') with a Yale Key (hole over the head of the boil) - YUK!)... nettle
soup when times were especially hard... ironing stains out of clothes with a
sheet of brown wrapping paper... sheets from flour-bags.. a fine comb for nits
(and apparently the latest research shows that that's more effective than
chemicals!)... little sachets of shampoos like 'Vosene'.. using a bit of bread
as a rubber for pencil writing ..Cardinal Red tile polish...Cherry Blossom shoe
polish (can you still get it?).. NHS orange juice... singlets!.... scrubbing
half-moons on the footpad outside the Big Door...
Aaah! It all comes back... down the Big
Slide on a flattened cardboard box.. burning the 'banks' (accidentally, of
course).. and don't forget the other big water-hole the GREEN Motion.. and up
the Bullet Road
to the Nutwood.. and didn't Valerie Hooks father have a High Street shop up by
the corner with Church Street?..
and The Rock and Jones's fields (with the tempting orchard :)
Cloaky
Trays of day-old chicks twittering loudly
as they were loaded on the green UTA bus to Belfast at the depot beside Woolworths.
A penny worth of Brandy Balls served in a
newspaper cone in Jimmy O'Callaghan's grocery/confectionery in Market Street. The
brown shopcoats and the smell of tea and onions blended, the Cardboard Parrot coated with DDT that
killed flies in the same shop, girls with their hair in curlers, women with
"turban" headscarves. The elegant pews in the "Florentine"
cafe where one young debutante thoughtlessly genuflected to loud cheers from
the assembled young bloods…. the tailor
in Gallagher's shop window, North
Street
a)"Flingers", primitive frisbies
made from lollipop sticks.
Normally there were five lollipop sticks held together by their own tension,
but you could make "six-stickers" or even "4-stickers."
Some referred to them as "boomerangs" but they seldom came back of
their own volition.
(b) "flying saucers", the silver caps of milk bottles which could be
carefully removed from the bottle and washed free of cream. By holding the rim
firmly between first and second fingers and briskly "ficking" them ,
they could be made to describe graceful trajectories.
(c) "Pixies" , knitted helmets for girls with a phallic projection at
the back of the head.
(d) Corduroy "jerkins" with zip fasteners for boys.
(e) Advertisements for "Aer Lingus" on Michael Coyle's coal delivery
cart.
And various
And what about "Knifey-knifey" at
great risk to your feet?
Anybody remember playing "Jacks"
with 5 wee stones?
Does anyone remember playing with a Hoop.
This was a single bicycle wheel propelled and steered along the street using a
piece of stick.
Yes. Still got a scar on my right cheek
just on the cheekbone where I tripped and hit the wheel rim. Wish I'd used a
hula-hoop.
what about this one - getting a wash at the
jar tub (sink)
Wasn't that a 'jaw box', Sandra?
Cloaky: You didn't mention paper planes. What an art! Some with a tail and
wings, made with new A4 page: some of the jet type. The former, if thrown with
index finger along the top, thumb and second finger beneath, would describe
several most graceful loops before making a perfect descent and landing!! I
still make them for the grandchildren, who crush them immediately. Another lost
art??
Marble Talk 3. 'Fuggy Annie Dowdle in the Wee Town Hall'.
I haven’t a clue what it means but we used it a lot along with 'Knuckle your
trig and shoot like a pig'.
Here are a few more:
The Bucket (fancy a dance)
The Flo (see you in there for a coke)
The Satellite (where we ate the greasiest chips in the world)
Spricks (how many did you catch)
Guest Teas (whose table are you sitting at)
1 p Dainty (chewing for ages)
C& C Drinks (which flavour was best)
1/- worth of cream from The Shelbourne
Black Jacks.. sherbet powder with liquorice
'straws'.. liquorice 'laces'.. gob stoppers.. Five Boys chocolate.. Cadbury's
Chocolate Splendid.. Lemmon's sweets.. Sloane's liniment..toffee apples..
Inglis (?)penny biscuits.. the watering trough in Trevor Hill.. the Big
Clock!.. the 'Golden Teapot' teapot!
Ball bearing carts - looking for spare timber at Fisher's to make them.
Parochial Hall and Town Hall dances on Friday nights.
Marbles and conkers.
The ghost at the Abbey
School!
Bag of broken biscuits from Woolies.
Liquorice pipes.
Brandyball sweets.
Clove Rock sweets.
Treacle Apples.
The watering trough at River
Street.
Door to door collection of refuse to feed farm animals.
Rope around the trees for swings.
Round pink bubble-gum.
1. The Milkman coming to your Street selling
Buttermilk by the jugs. (I hated the stuff)
2. Tommy Byrne with his Tricycle operated 'Ice Cream
Buggy'.
3. The Mineral Man selling various flavours of Pop,
usually six were purchased much cheaper than from the
shops.
4. The Breadmens Vans daily deliveries. (Arthur Mc Cann,
Bernard Hughes and Sam Warwick.
5. 'Big Chief' white sliced pan bread.
Sliding down High St rocks on piece of cardboard.
Pocket money from selling sticks round doors for firelighters.
The rent man calling every Friday night.
Tin bath in front of fire on Sat evenings.
1.collecting blackberries and bringing them to Gavigans.Benny Connor once
took out his uncles seven cutthroat razors and we used them to cut the berries
off the bush
2. School ceilis in the Parochial Hall with John Murphy and a young Susan Mc
Cann
3. The bus to the Adelphi in Dundalk on Sunday
nights.
4. Carnival tents in Camlough, Mayobridge, and other places.
5. Dances in the Osbourne in the Point
6. Rockview Rangers and Barney Fitzpatrick
7. Hot orange in the Florintine
Whitening for gutties (powder storm as you
walked)
Creamola Foam (add to water for a flavoured drink)
Standing on Dublin Bridge as the train went past (black faces and coke in your
eyes)
Swinging on the structure of Dublin Bridge.(great fun)
Hanging onto the back of the milk lorry for a spin (let go at the right moment)
Throwing duckies into the tide to retrieve the ball (the game must go on)
Walking on the glar in the tide if the duckies didn’t do the job (the game had
to go on)
White dog turds on the street?
When an 'impertinent brat' got a 'cuff on
the lugs'.
Or a "box on the jaw"
. or got the face ate off him (especially
if he had a bad eye in his head)...
Or... You'll laugh the other side of yer face;
Or... I'll draw the back of ma hand across yer face;
Or... When one of your mates was eating an apple and you wanted him to share it
with with you;
"Leave us yer root".
.. or got the face ate off him (especially
if he had a bad eye in his head)...
____________
I’ll bet you know more…………………
