How Many Do You Know??? From
a CNO Reader
Ok,
here's a little fun trip back in time.
Let's see how much you remember, and how many you can recall. Play
fair, don't
cheat! Oh, you'll need a piece of paper and a pencil to record your
answers.
Let me know how you scored.
1.
In the ’50s, if you had a flat rear tire,
you often had to remove the… ?
a.
Necker knob b.
Curb feeler c.
Fender skirt
2.
What color flash bulbs did Dad use for color
film? a.
Blue b.
Pink c.
Plaid
3.
What was the “parking brake” called when you
were a kid? a.
Emergency brake b.
Pull ‘n’ Stop c.
Breaker. Breaker.
4.
Way before Air Jordan, what was a kid’s shoe
of choice? a.
Buster Brown b.
PF Flyers c.
Old Stinkers
5.
In what year did “Dewey Defeat Truman”
according to the Chicago Tribune? a.
1946 b.
1948 c.
1952
6.
Before the Orkin Man, what technology was
part of most homes’ bug deterrence? a.
Shoe Fly b.
Fly paper c.
50 mm Phlit gun
7.
Dixie cups had what printed on their tops? a.
Secret decoders b.
Movie stars c.
WW II propaganda slogans
8.
What was the prevailing method of birth
control in the ’50s? a.
Heavy lifting and cold showers b.
Fear c.
Girdles and crinoline petticoats
9.
Jimmy Durante said what at the end of every
show? a.
“Aloha, my friends.” b.
“Good night, Mrs. Calabash, wherever you
are.” c.
“Remember, wherever you go, my nose will get
there first.”
10.
“I’m Popeye the sailor man; I’m Popeye the
sailor man. I’m strong to the finish, _ _ _ _ _ , I’m Popeye the sailor
man.” a.
“’cause I eats me spinach” b.
“my dad was big and Finnish c.
“isn’t the music a bit tinnish?
11.
In the quaint greasy spoon jargon of yore,
what did “knock the horns off one, and drag it through the garden” mean? a.
86 the customer, then kick him out the back
door b.
Rare hamburger or steak with tomato and
lettuce c.
Cooties
12.
Lincoln Logs were for what use? a.
A diary of the presidency b.
Keep track of fat cats who sleep in the
Lincoln Bedroom c.
Building toy structures
13.
Ward and June bring what to mind? a.
A popular TV series called “Leave it to
Beaver” b.
A Chicago family of butchers and knife
sharpeners called The Cleavers c.
Inventors of the clicker, Jack Ward and
Ernest June
14.
Cops and Robbers, Cowboys and Indians, and
Zorro are all forms of what? a.
Alcoholic beverages b.
Capitalism c.
Children’s play
15.
What was the cheapest way to turn a bicycle
into a motorcycle? a.
Baseball cards in the spokes b.
Rig an electric motor with a very long cord c.
Turning left into the path of a Harley
16.
Tinkertoys date back to when? a.
1914 b.
1949 c.
1967
17.
In grade school, what was the worst thing
that could happen to you when being picked for a team? a.
Getting picked last b.
Getting your uniform dirty c.
Not having the team tattoo
18.
If we dared to swear and our parents heard
us, we immediately found out what _ _ _ _ tasted like. a.
Meatballs b.
Soap c.
Sasparilla
19.
What was one thing the Lone Ranger and Roy
Rogers would never do? a.
Kill someone b.
Shot a squirrel c.
Eat lima beans
20.
What convertible offered an optional radio
that automatically increased its volume as the car accelerated? a.
1912 Franklin b.
1943 Jeep c.
1957 Ford Thunderbird
Scroll
down for answers.........
ANSWERS
1.
c) Fender
skirts, attached to the rear fenders,
covered fully half the wheel streamlining the car.
2.
a) Blue
3.
a) Emergency
brake. We grew up in much more
dramatic times.
4.
b) PF
Flyers. BF Goodrich patented the Posture
Foundation insole, an innovation in comfort and performance, and began
adding
the new technology to its action shoes. Goodrich shoes with Posture
Foundation
became known simply as “P-F” in 1937. Fashion trends in the Forties and
Fifties
saw PF Flyers escaping gyms and ball fields to become fashionable
active
footwear for everyone. “Everything you do is more fun with PF” read one
1947
magazine ad. In 2001, New Balance acquired the rights to the brand.
5.
b) It
was November 3,1948, when Truman upset
Republican Thomas Dewey in the first postwar presidential election.
Trib
publisher Col. Robt. R. McCormick got the news late.
6.
b) Sticky
fly paper hanging from kitchen ceilings
was common in American homes until insecticides like Flit became
available in
’40s.
7.
b) Most
people over 55 recall with nostalgia the
Dixie Cup ice cream picture lids that appeared all over America from
1930 to
1954. In the final year, the lids were in 3D, full color, and styled in
left
and right action poses. These were used in stereo card viewers for the
3D
effect.
8.
c) This
is a tough one, but the answer is girdles
and crinoline petticoats.
9.
b) “Good
night, Mrs. Calabash, wherever you are.”
10.
a) “cause
I eats me spinach”
11.
b) Rare
hamburger or steak with tomato and
lettuce.
Other
examples: Axle
grease – butter; Blowout
patches – pancakes; Bowwow,
barks, or groundhog – hot dog; Baled
hay – shredded wheat; Bessie
– roast beef; Bessie
in a bowl – stew; Cackleberries
– eggs; Rabbit
food – salad; Sinkers
– donuts; and Sweep
the kitchen – hash.
12.
c) Building
toy structures.
13.
a) A
popular TV series called “Leave it to
Beaver,” perhaps the most unrealistic, misleading and shallow depiction
of
family life ever produced for TV.
14.
c) Children’s
play.
15.
a) Baseball
cards in the spokes. Who among you
never did this?
16.
a) “1914
– Good then, 1935 – Good now, 2000 – Good
always,” read the back cover of a 1935 Toy Tinkers catalog. Charles H.
Pajeau
and Robert Pettit, the founders of The Toy Tinkers of Evanston,
Illinois, and
the creators of the TINKERTOY construction set, knew that the “Thousand
Wonder
Builder” would continue to inspire the imaginations of children because
of its
easy-to-use, yet versatile construction system. They’re still made
today, now
by Hasbro.
17.
a) Getting
picked last. As an expert on this
particular humiliation, I assure you that getting picked last was far
better
than not getting picked at all.
18.
b) Soap.
Was this a regional thing? Where I grew
up, spanking was the generally preferred method for punishing any
childhood misdemeanor.
We wouldn't have known a “time out” to save our lives.
19.
a) Kill
someone. I can’t remember ever seeing the
Lone Ranger, Roy Rogers or other cowboy heroes actually kill someone.
They
would just shoot the gun out of the bad guy’s hand. There was no blood,
no
violence, just folks wondering who that masked man was.
20.
c) 1957
Ford Thunderbird. Hard one but, let’s face
it, easy answer. The option was available only that year.
SCORING
17
— 20 correct: You
are not only older than dirt, but obviously
gifted with mind bloat.
12
— 16 correct: Not
quite dirt yet, but your mind is definitely
muddy, ready to muck up others.
0
– 11 correct: You
are one sad excuse of a geezer
|