Well, we can see why Mark picked this one, seeing he's an ad fan. Some great toys that I'd have loved to have recieved on Christmas morning. But here it was an orange, a selection box, a junior smokers kit, an annual - usually The Broons or Oor Wullie depending what year it was, or one of the piles of others that came out every year - and, if you were really lucky, a 10 bob note from your granny.
As for the story, that never happened in The Snowman, or Rupert. While there were talking animals in Rupert, it was much more fairytale, and all the better for that. I felt that having warships and jets in the story was a real letdown and I'm sure children would have dreamt up some fantastic allies, other than the military. Still, it's a nice, not bad wee story.
It's the ads that make this for me as an adult and I fondly remember the Woolworths in the town where I grew up. It was like an Aladdin's cave. Anyone remember those awful cover versions of hits on those never heard of before or since record labels? Our Woolies also sold comics, British comics. Not mainstream Beano or Dandy or the like, but the American look-a-like versions
Thanks for a look at this curiosity.