Posted 7 years ago
roddyq
(122 items)
I'm sure many of us remember eating those Nabisco Shredded Wheat biscuits for breakfast. It was a change from porridge and tasted good with sugar or jam on top while it was floating around in the milk in your cereal bowl. The Straight Arrow cards in the above photos replaced the plain cardboard inserts that separated the 12 biscuits into 4 layers of 3 biscuits in the boxes of shredded wheat starting in 1949. The cards measure 4" wide by around 7 1/4" tall. One thing I found while checking information online is that Book #1 and Book #2 were done with the blue ink and Books #3 and #4 done in green ink. The set I have above is Book #1 and contains 28 cards. From what I have been reading it is stated that each set contained cards numbered to #36. I haven't been able to find any info. on why the set I have says a complete set consists of 28. I'm thinking maybe the Canadian set was smaller then the American set. The cards were inserted into the cereal boxes from 1949 to 1952.
HISTORY: Compiled from randerson web.
Straight Arrow first made his first appearances almost simultaneously on a radio program and on "Injun-uity cards". These two projects were tightly coordinated projects backed by the National Biscuit Company and its advertising agency, McCann-Erickson. After a six month test-run on a local radio station in California, the radio series and the publication of the Injun-uity cards ran parallel with each other from 1949 to 1952. Nabisco was the sole advertiser on all the radio programs.
Shredded Wheat was an American breakfast cereal made by the National Biscuit Company (Nabisco). Each portion of Shredded Wheat was a loosely-woven, pillow-shaped biscuit about 10x6x3 cm in size. A package of Shredded Wheat contained 12 such biscuits, packed in four layers with 3 biscuits in each layer. Separating these layers were three gray cardboard dividers. Starting in 1949, "Straight Arrow's secrets of indian lore and know-how" were printed on these cardboard dividers in an effort to increase the popularity of Shredded Wheat among children. Fred L. Meagher of Magazine Enterprises was the illustrator of all these cards.
I still think its my favourite cereal ever. Wish they still put sets like this in the box, just love this book.
LOL I think it tastes like the cardboard! Sorry for the spoil alert! ;) Now, add some honey, raisins, nuts...oh, that's granola isn't it??? haha Great pic!
It was great Phil getting so many different premiums in boxes of cereal like the Straight Arrow cards don't see this nowadays.
It was a change from porridge all the time sharurpassion . No granola back then just rolled oats/porridge:)
Thanking you fortapache, MyCountry, buckethead, vintagelamp, shareurpassion, Jlmam, Roy, iggy, Thomas, vetraio50, bobby725 always much appreciated.
How perfectly wonderful--and the text too. I love this post. Thanks roddyq
Thank you for dropping by Lois your comments are always appreciated:)
Lois, fortapache, MyCountry, buckethead, vintagelamp, shareurpassion, Jlmam, Roy, iggy, Thomas, vetraio50, bobby 725, always great when you stop by and share the loves.
Hello this is an item we have been looking for. We are the rights holders of Straight Arrow. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straight_Arrow. We are a non profit charity in Canada. Are these cards the same as the american versions? Thanks Michael