![]() (Other Kiddles shown, not included.) Molded slide and book included. 3-inch vinyl body… bendable and poseable. Rooted hair is caught on either side in ribbons. Set includes Slipsy Sliddle dressed in sporty bell-bottom slacks, blouse and white shoes. Two-story house has room for many Kiddies it’s 12 x 7-1/2 x 10 inches high… molded vinyl. Kiddles love riding in the elevator… just turn the handle to go up or down. Just pull the ring at the back of the house and it will say one of 10 phrases. “This is where the Liddie Kiddies live,” says the Talking Kiddie House. Liddle Kiddle Talking House: Holds crowds of Kiddles (1968) The story doesn’t end when the storybook does.ĪLSO SEE: The fascinating 3D covers with lenticular printing were the best part about these picture books from the 60s That’s another especially nice thing about getting a doll with a storybook. One that may be even more fascinating and original than the original. They give your little girl a chance to make up her own adventure story. And later on, after the story is over, these new Storybook Kiddles work another kind of magic. ![]() Liddle Biddle Peep and her sheep.Īlong with each doll and animal, there’s an illustrated storybook for you to read aloud. Peter Paniddle with Tinker Bell and the crocodile. There’s Liddle Red Riding Hiddle and the wolf. They make it as real as the tiny dolls your little girl can hold in her hands.Įach of these new Storybook Kiddles comes from a favorite story. Mattel’s new Storybook Kiddles bring the story to life. Joe, which wasn’t quite popular yet, was first released in 1964.While you read her the fairy tale, these Storybook Kiddles work a kind of magic. 14-year-old Patrick Maley won the international yo-yo contest held at Disneyland. They even held a 100-lap Grand Prix at Wilkes-Barre, PA in July, with a full-size sports car as first prize.Ĭhildren all over the country were learning how to ride skateboards. The high-fashion doll, typified by Barbie, waned in popularity and as Christmas approached, was being supplanted by Skipper, billed as Barbie’s little sister.Įlectrically powered racing cars continued to cut into the popularity of the electric train. Predictably, the trend brought complaints from parents.ĭolls returned to the more conventional. They were used in games, jigsaw puzzles and even in liquid bath soap dispensers tagged to “Scare You Clean.” Made of plastic, they included old standbys such as Frankenstein’s monster and Dracula and also strange new characters called “Weird-Ohs”, “Rat and Bat Finks”, “Drag Hags” and “Surfink” (a monster on a surfboard). It was the year of the monsters as grotesque, fanstastic and sinister figures showed up on toy counters and became and immediate hit. What board games did families play with in the 1960s? The most popular board games in the 1960s were:
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