5015 - always said as "fifty-fifteen" - never forgotten - and wasn't the Co Dividend a time of joy in most households, along with the rebate from the gas/electric meters - I can see the column of single shillings on the mantelpiece to this day!
What was it they put in that machine in the Co-Op too. Did they write a wee chitty with the amount of your purchases at send it whizzing with a clunk to the administration offices up the stairs so your dividend could be calculated at the end of the "quarter"?
"Appro" is another word that comes to mind from the Co-Op. Did you get things out the clothes and shoe shops on "appro" ("approval" I guess) (giving you the opportunity to take them back if they didn't suit the person for whom they were intended? Your dads, in these days, were never available to go to the shops themselves.
Co-Numbers
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Re: Co-Numbers
Nothing is ever really lost to us as long as we remember it.
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Re: Co-Numbers
Ours was easy:
"A pound of mince, a pound of stew,
9122"
Say it aloud!
Jim McCreadie
"A pound of mince, a pound of stew,
9122"
Say it aloud!
Jim McCreadie
- down south
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Re: Co-Numbers
Here's that receipt I mentioned; the membership number is quite high, in the 9000s, because for some reason my mother didn't join until 1957.
Susan
Susan
Last edited by down south on Mon Jun 27, 2022 3:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Co-Numbers
When I was a young boy my uncle Tam often used the expression "it was the biggest tragedy since the Co Quarter", but I was never sure what that meant.