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Thread: Burma Shave
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	01-28-2014 03:59 AM #1Burma Shave
 
 I think some here will like this..
 
 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 then the traditional 5th sign advertising Burma Shave, a popular shaving cream.
 
 Here are some of the actual signs:
 
 DON'T LOSE YOUR HEAD
 TO GAIN A MINUTE
 YOU NEED YOUR HEAD
 YOUR BRAINS ARE IN IT
 Burma Shave
 
 DROVE TOO LONG
 DRIVER SNOOZING
 WHAT HAPPENED NEXT
 IS NOT AMUSING
 Burma Shave
 
 BROTHER SPEEDER
 LET'S REHEARSE
 ALL TOGETHER
 GOOD MORNING, NURSE
 Burma Shave
 
 SHE KISSED THE HAIRBRUSH
 BY MISTAKE
 SHE THOUGHT IT WAS
 HER HUSBAND JAKE
 Burma Shave
 
 THE MIDNIGHT RIDE
 OF PAUL FOR BEER
 LED TO A WARMER
 HEMISPHERE
 Burma Shave
 
 AROUND THE CURVE
 LICKETY-SPLIT
 BEAUTIFUL CAR
 WASN'T IT?
 Burma Shave
 
 SPEED WAS HIGH
 WEATHER WAS HOT
 TIRES WERE THIN
 X MARKS THE SPOT
 Burma Shave
 
 A GUY WHO DRIVES
 A CAR WIDE OPEN
 IS NOT THINKIN'
 HE'S JUST HOPIN'
 Burma Shave
 
 THE ONE WHO DRIVES
 WHEN HE'S BEEN DRINKING
 DEPENDS ON YOU
 TO DO HIS THINKING
 Burma Shave
 
 And my all time favorite:
 
 PASSING SCHOOL ZONE
 TAKE IT SLOW
 LET OUR LITTLE
 SHAVERS GROW
 Burma Shave
 
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 Advertising
   - Google Adsense
- REGISTERED USERS DO NOT SEE THIS AD
 
 
 
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	01-28-2014 05:18 AM #2
 Yeah, Mike, I remember the Burma Shave signs well from the very early 50's. My parents had moved from Texas to Missouri, and we'd make regular trips "back home" to visit family, catching Route 66 a bit into Oklahoma and running it down almost to Amarillo before peeling off on Farm/Market roads. The Burma Shave signs provided a break in the monotony, and as a kid just learning to read were a learning tool, too. Good memories of simpler times....Roger 
 Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
 
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	01-28-2014 05:35 AM #3
 I don't remember them as a youngster here in New England. But we loved seeing them when we would go to Indiana to visit family. The whole family would read each one in unison, sign by sign.. good fun!
 
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	01-28-2014 05:41 AM #4
 We'd make our semi-annual trek down to Grandpa's place in Kansas during the '50s and all the usual happenings for a kid in the back seat; identifying makes of cars, noting license plates from around the country, and Burma Shave signs often at the edge of corn fields. Roger and I may have read some of the same signs!?!  Your Uncle Bob, Senior Geezer Curmudgeon 
 
 It's much easier to promise someone a "free" ride on the wagon than to urge them to pull it.
 
 Luck occurs when preparation and opportunity converge.
 
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	01-28-2014 05:56 AM #5
  Likely true, Bob, likely true. Likely true, Bob, likely true.
 
 Mike, an interesting point in their history, the signs were put up in most of the lower 48, but there were a few states down in the SW (NM, AZ, NV) that did not get them because the traffic volume was deemed too low; and Massachusetts -Lawyers recommended that they be removed from the roadside in the '60's because of the potential for liability, fearing that drivers might claim they were "distracted" by the signs....eliminated due to that state's high land rentals and roadside foliage.  Roger 
 Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
 
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	01-28-2014 06:05 AM #6
 That's interesting Roger.. high rentals and foliage.. and liabilities & lawyers had a presence back then!
 
 I also remember a whole movement to eliminate / control advertising and billboards along our highways.. I remember a photo in Life or Post showing a section of highway and all you could see was advertising on both sides and 15 / 20 feet high.
 
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	01-28-2014 06:10 AM #7
 Oh yeah, that "movement" was driven by Lady Bird Johnson's "Beautify America" Bill, which put limits on billboards, required "junkyards" to be fenced to block them from view, and on, and on. Lot's of good done, but some heavy handed rules, too, as I recall.Roger 
 Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
 
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	01-28-2014 08:28 AM #8
 When I was a kid, once or twice a year my cousin Dennis and I would get to ride along on a cattle buying trip "out West" with Grandpa and Uncle Jake. Watching for Burma Shave signs was part of the entertainment on the trip!!! Whoever spotted the most signs first got to choose what the dessert was for dinner that night at the restaurant. I'll never forget those trips and all the good road games. BTW, when I won dessert was always hot apple pie with cinnamon ice cream!!!! Going to the Indy 500 with Dad was the same game, same rules, same prize. By about '63 or so most of the signs had disappeared.Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today! 
 Carroll Shelby
 
 Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!! 
 
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	01-28-2014 09:23 AM #9
 Brings back memories of going on summer vacations with my Grandparents. Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming and Utah, especially in the Rockies- - - I owe them so much and tried to pass it on to my children !
 
 Here's a couple that I remember and why I remember these two, I don't know.
 
 Clancey's whiskers tickled Nancy
 Nancy lowered the boom on Clancey
 Burma Shave !
 
 "my favorite"
 He lit a match to check gas tank
 That's why they call him skinless Frank
 Burma Shave !. 
 " I'm drinking from my saucer, 'cause my cup is overflowed ! "
 
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	01-28-2014 01:22 PM #10
 Seems a few of us remember these most in the context of a trip or vacation. And we all have fond memories of those times!
 
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	01-28-2014 06:51 PM #11
 From the time I was about 6 years old until I was about 18 I remember taking the Greyhound bus from Philadelphia to Toronto for many summers since we spent a lot of summers with my cousins up there. Maybe because they had stops in several towns along the way, the bus didn't take the interstate so one of the entertaining things we did was read the Burma Shave signs along the roads of northern Pennsylvania and New York.Nick 
 Brookville '32 hi-boy roadster
 TriStar Pro Star 427 CID
 
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	01-28-2014 08:15 PM #12
 We didn't have the signs here in Canada and the first I remember hearing about them was Roger Miller's song. Here is a youtube of it:
 
 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRgwhDQ8AJU
 
 
 
 
 .Remember, Freedom isn't Free, thousands have paid the price so you can enjoy what you have today. 
 
 Duct tape is like 'The Force.' It has a light side and a dark side, and it holds the universe together.
 
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	02-02-2014 11:21 AM #13Nick 
 Brookville '32 hi-boy roadster
 TriStar Pro Star 427 CID
 




 
				
 
		
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 Originally Posted by Bob Parmenter
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