Remember these Jingles

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The San Francisco Treat

Rice-A-Roni

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Alka Seltzer

Plop-Plop Fizz-Fizz

Oh What A Relief It Is

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You'll wonder where the yellow went

When you brush your teeth with Pepsodent

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And away goes trouble down the drain

Rotor Rooter

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K - E - Double L - O - Double Good

Kelloggs good for you

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Brylcreem

A little dab will do ya

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See the USA

In your Chevrolet

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From the land of sky blue water

Comes the beer refreshing

Hamms the beer refreshing

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Welcome to the "Friday Night Fights" brought to you by

To look sharp, Use Gillette Blue Blades

To Feel sharp, Use Gillette Blue Blades

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Use Ajax the Foaming Cleanser

Washes Dirt right Down The Drain

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L.S.M.F.T.

Lucky strike means fine tobacco

( keep it clean now)

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SEND ME SOME MORE IN AN EMAIL

HERE

???? How many more can we get ????

First let me thank Carmen Nesje for the Idea and the start.

Remember these? For those who never saw the Burma Shave signs, here is a quick lesson in our history of the 1930's and '40's. Before the Interstates, when everyone drove the old 2 lane roads, Burma Shave signs would be posted all over the countryside in farmers' fields. They were small red signs with white letters. Five signs, about 100 feet apart, each containing 1 line of a 4 line couplet......and the obligatory 5th sign advertising Burma Shave, a popular shaving cream.
Here are some of the actual signs:


TRAINS DON'T WANDER
ALL OVER THE MAP
"CAUSE NOBODY SITS
IN THE ENGINEERS LAP
1


SHE KISSED THE HAIRBRUSH
BY MISTAKE
SHE THOUGHT IT WAS
HER HUSBAND JAKE
2


DON'T LOSE YOUR HEAD
TO GAIN A MINUTE
YOU NEED YOUR HEAD
YOUR BRAINS ARE IN IT
3


DROVE TOO LONG
DRIVER SNOOZING
WHAT HAPPENED NEXT
IS NOT AMUSING
4


BROTHER SPEEDER
LET'S REHEARSE
ALL TOGETHER
GOOD MORNING NURSE
5


CAUTIOUS RIDER
TO HER RECKLESS DEAR
LET'S HAVE LESS BULL
AND MORE STEER
6


SPEED WAS HIGH
WEATHER WAS NOT
TIRES WERE THIN
X MARKS THE SPOT
7


THE MIDNIGHT RIDE
OF PAUL FOR BEER
LED TO A WARMER
HEMISPHERE
8


AROUND THE CURVE
LICKETY-SPLIT
ITS A BEAUTIFUL CAR
WASN'T IT?
9


NO MATTER THE PRICE
NO MATTER HOW NEW
THE BEST SAFETY DEVICE
IN THE CAR IS YOU
Burma Shave
10


A GUY WHO DRIVES
A CAR WIDE OPEN
IS NOT THINKIN'
HE'S JUST HOPIN'
11


AT INTERSECTIONS
LOOK EACH WAY
A HARP SOUNDS NICE
BUT ITS HARD TO PLAY
12


BOTH HANDS ON THE WHEEL
EYES ON THE ROAD
THAT'S THE SKILLFUL
DRIVER'S CODE
13


THE ONE WHO DRIVES
WHEN HE'S BEEN DRINKING
DEPENDS ON YOU
TO DO HIS THINKING
14


CAR IN DITCH
DRIVER IN TREE
THE MOON WAS FUL
AND SO WAS HE.
15


PASSING SCHOOL ZONE
TAKE IT SLOW
LET OUR LITTLE
SHAVERS GROW
16

THE CLASS REUNION

Every five years, as summertime nears, An announcement arrives in the mail,
A reunion is planned; it'll be really grand; Make plans to attend without fail.


I'll never forget the first time we met; We tried so hard to impress.
We drove fancy cars, smoked big cigars, And wore our most elegant dress.


It was quite an affair; the whole class was there. It was held at a fancy hotel.
We wined, and we dined, and we acted refined, And everyone thought it was swell.


The men all conversed about who had been first To achieve great fortune and fame.
Meanwhile, their spouses described their fine houses And how beautiful their children became.


The homecoming queen, who once had been lean, Now weighed in at one-ninety-six.
The jocks who were there had all lost their hair, And the cheerleaders could no longer do kicks.


No one had heard about the class nerd Who'd guided a spacecraft to the moon;
Or poor little Jane, who's always been plain; She married a shipping tycoon.


The boy we'd decreed "most apt to succeed" Was serving ten years in the pen,
While the one voted "least" now was a priest; Just shows you can be wrong now and then


They awarded a prize to one of the guys Who seemed to have aged the least.
Another was given to the grad who had driven The farthest to attend the feast.


They took a class picture, a curious mixture Of beehives, crew cuts and wide ties.
Tall, short, or skinny, the style was the mini; You never saw so many thighs.


At our next get-together, no one cared whether They impressed their classmates or not.
The mood was informal, a whole lot more normal; By this time we'd all gone to pot.


It was held out-of-doors, at the lake shores; We ate hamburgers, coleslaw, and beans.
Then most of us lay around in the shade, In our comfortable T-shirts and jeans.


By the fortieth year, it was abundantly clear, We were definitely over the hill.
Those who weren't dead had to crawl out of bed, And be home in time for their pill.


And now I can't wait; they've set the date; Our fiftieth is coming, I'm told.
It should be a ball, they've rented a hall At the Shady Rest Home for the old.


Repairs have been made on my hearing aid; My pacemaker's been turned up on high.
My wheelchair is oiled, and my teeth have been boiled; And I've bought a new wig and glass eye.


I'm feeling quite hearty, and I'm ready to party I'm gonna dance 'til dawn's early light.
It'll be lots of fun; But I just hope that there's one Other person who can make it that night.


Author Unknown


IT WAS GOOD

Were you a kid in the Fifties or earlier? Everybody makes fun of our childhood! Comedians joke. Grandkids snicker. Twenty-something's shudder and say "Eeeew!" But was our childhood really all that bad? Judge for yourself:

In 1953 The US population was less than 150 million... Yet you knew more people then, and knew them better... And that was good.

The average annual salary was under $3,000... Yet our parents could put some of it away for a rainy day and still live a decent life... And that was good

A loaf of bread cost about 15 cents... But it was safe for a five-year-old to skate to the store and buy one... And that was good.

Prime-Time meant I Love Lucy, Ozzie and Harriet, Gunsmoke and Lassie... So nobody ever heard of ratings or filters... And that was good.

We didn't have air-conditioning... So the windows stayed up and half a dozen mothers ran outside when you fell off your bike... And that was good.

Your teacher was either Miss Matthews or Mrs. Logan or Mr. Adkins... But not Ms Becky or Mr. Dan... And that was good.

The only hazardous material you knew about... Was a patch of grassburrs around the light pole at the corner... And that was good.

You loved to climb into a fresh bed... Because sheets were dried on the clothesline... And that was good.

People generally lived in the same hometown with their relatives.. So "child care" meant grandparents or aunts and uncles... And that was good.

Parents were respected and their rules were law.... Children did not talk back..... and that was good.

TV was in black-and-white... But all outdoors was in glorious color....And that was certainly good.

Your Dad knew how to adjust everybody's carburetor... And the Dad next door knew how to adjust all the TV knobs.. And that was very good.

Your grandma grew snap beans in the back yard... And chickens behind the garage... And that was definitely good.

And just when you were about to do something really bad... Chances were you'd run into your Dad's high school coach... Or the nosy old lady from up the street... Or your little sister's piano teacher... Or somebody from Church.... ALL of whom knew your parents' phone number... And YOUR first name... And even THAT was good! ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ REMEMBER...

Didn't that feel good, just to go back and say, Yeah, I remember that! And was it really that long ago?
Author Unknown



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Rock Around the Clock

"Bill Haley & the Comets 1955"

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One, Two, Three O'clock, Four O'clock rock

Five, Six, Seven O'clock, Eight O'clock rock

Nine, Ten, Eleven O'clock, Twelve O'clock rock

We're gonna rock around the clock tonight


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Put your glad rags on and join me hon

We'll have some fun when the clock strikes one

We're gonna rock around the clock tonight

We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'till broad daylight

We're gonna rock we're gonna rock around the clock tonight


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When the clock strikes two, three and four

If the band goes down we're gonna yell for more

We're gonna rock around the clock tonight

We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'till broad daylight

We're gonna rock we're gonna rock around the clock tonight


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Instrumental

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When the chime stikes five--- six and seven

We'll be right in seventh heaven

We're gonna rock around the clock tonight

We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'till broad daylight

We're gonna rock we're gonna rock around the clock tonight


__________________________

When it's eight nine ten-- eleven too

'll be goin' strong and so will you

We're gonna rock around the clock tonight

We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'till broad daylight

We're gonna rock we're gonna rock around the clock tonight


__________________________

Instrumental

__________________________

When the clock stikes twelve we'll cool off then

We'll start rockin round the clock again

We're gonna rock around the clock tonight

We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'till broad daylight

We're gonna rock we're gonna rock around the clock tonight