Christmas is a time for visiting old friends, and on this blog that includes Reddy Kilowatt.
Reddy kept busy back in December 1955, appearing in Ohio Edison ads almost every day, making sure we had lots of gift ideas that were sure to light up the faces of our spouses. Gift suggestions included a Westinghouse Laundromat, a Westinghouse Refrigerator, and a Tappan Electric Range (what, didn't Westinghouse make one?)
Here are a few ads that ran in the Lorain Journal in December 1955.
A detail from a 1955 Kroger ad featuring our pal Toppie the Elephant
It's interesting how Santa Claus has been depicted in ads that ran in the Lorain Journal over the years. The year 1955 seems to have been a year in which the traditional image of the jolly old elf clashed with more modern, stylized renderings.
Perhaps it was due to the popularity of the clip art books produced by such companies as the Harry Volk Corporation, which regularly issued collections of themed, license-free artwork that could be reproduced or actually cut apart (or clipped) for use in ads.
Thus a newspaper like the Lorain Journal had this new artwork being made available along with the older illustrations that the paper already had on file.
Here's an ample sample (what else?) of how Good Saint Nick appeared in ads that ran in the Journal just in time for Christmas 1955.
First are a few traditional renderings.
Then there are the more 'cartoony' illustrations. I really like these.
Then there are the ones where Santa is a little more stylized. Some of these are cool.
Looks like Santa replaced his reindeer with our favorite pachyderm
Lastly are a couple Santas that are out of this world. Check out the crosslegged Santa in the Boston's ad! I wonder if he wears mules (whatever those are)?
But no matter how he's rendered, somehow Santa is always recognizable.
Do you have all your Christmas shopping done? Christmas is only a few days away.
If this was 1958, and you were looking for ideas, this ad for the Downtown Lorain stores was for you. It ran in the Lorain Journal on December 17, 1958.
The ad's A-Z theme is kind of neat, with each letter representing either a gift idea or a store name. The challenge of coming up with a gift suggestion using the letter X, however, apparently was too difficult and it was conveniently left off. This also resulted in a nice, clean layout grid of five rows of five letters.
That's one offbeat looking cartoon Santa in the ad. But that was the style back in the late 1950s, with this style of simple, nebbish-like characters often appearing in TV commercials.
Anyway, did you take a squint at the fine print of the ad block for the letter P?
Yup, the "Christmas Favorites 45 RPM Records" that Kresge's was advertising included "Boofo Goes Where Santa Goes." It's interesting that the record came out at the same time as the beloved "The Chipmunk Song" (also known as "Christmas Don't Be Late) featuring Simon, Theodore and Alvin.
But back to Boofo.
The Boofo Facebook page includes a link to a 2015 WKYC interview with Joseph King, the man who wrote the tune. Apparently the record was a huge hit, selling 30,000 copies in ten days! Forty years later, King added to the Boofo mystique with the book illustrated by Dick Dugan.
Barnaby, flanked by his buddy Woodrow the Woodsman (left) and WEWS personality Captain Penny (right)
Did you know that the beloved Cleveland TV personality Barnaby released a Christmas-themed single back in the late 1950s?
Well, it really wasn't Barnaby per se. It was Linn Sheldon, the man who portrayed the straw-hat-wearing, elf-like character who hosted a children's show on the Cleveland NBC affiliate beginning in the late 1950s. Barnaby lived in the Enchanted Forest with his invisible parrot (Long John), showed Popeye cartoons and engaged in gentle banter directed to his audience of kids. What local Baby Boomer doesn't remember Barnaby's daily heartfelt sign-off, and the haunting theme song (A La Claire Fontaine)? I still get choked up when I hear it.
Anyway, around 1958 Linn Sheldon – who was a talented all-around performer and musician – released a Christmas novelty song: "Boofo Goes Where Santa Goes." Boofo is Santa's little dog, who stays by his side and accompanies him on Christmas Eve.
It's quite catchy and features Sheldon on his ukulele. But I gotta warn you – it might get stuck in your head permanently.
In the late 1990s, Boofo became the subject of a book written by Joseph P. King (the man who wrote the tune) and E. Del Thomas and illustrated by well-known Plain Dealer cartoonist Dick Dugan.
Part of the marketing surrounding the publication of the book apparently included this cute Boofo plush doll.
So what was on the flip side of the Boofo record? A cute, little tune sung by Sheldon entitled, "Rabbits Have a Christmas."
Do you have a favorite Christmas carol or holiday tune?
They've been piped into the stores since Halloween, so you've had plenty of time to enjoy them (or get sick of them, as the case may be). I know for me, I've got to be in the mood to listen to them, otherwise I tune them out.
Sometimes my family used to have them playing in the background while we trimmed the tree. I think Republic Steel used to sponsor a nonstop, commercial-free Christmas music marathon on FM radio back in the 1970s and we might have tuned into that. Either that or we had Herb Alpert's Christmas album (a Brady favorite) playing on the stereo in the living room.
Anyway, my all-time favorite Christmas tune is one that really isn't a Christmas tune at all, but it might as well be because it's only played around the holidays: Leroy Anderson's "Sleigh Ride."
Why? Because it's timeless. It's come to symbolize the holidays for me.
As a little kid, I remember listening to it being performed at various holiday programs by a choir and enjoying the clippity-clop sound resembling a horse. Later, I remember either playing it and/or singing it at Masson in the various bands, orchestras or choirs. And even later, we performed it at Admiral King High School with my brother Ken doing the horse whinny on his trumpet at the end. So it's the one melody that seems to tie together every Christmas over the years for me. I never get tired of it and I always get a little teary-eyed when it comes over the radio, because I feel like a kid again.
As for some of the other Christmas tunes that come over the radio, I must confess that I'm pretty burned out on many of them. "Santa Baby" is one that is played a little too often; same thing with "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch." But who doesn't break into a smile when they hear Burl Ives singing "A Holly Jolly Christmas?"
Be sure to leave a comment about your favorite Christmas melody.
Before I scurry back to the safety of the warm and fuzzy 1950s and 60s, let's sneak at peek at Christmas 1985.
The year 1985 was a big year for me. It was my first full year in my apartment at the Lorain Overlook (after moving out of my parents' home in late 1984). I also started working at the Downtown Cleveland printing company that would be my home for the next 35 years (until Covid hit).
The Journal didn't seem to have very many holiday-oriented ads in the days leading up to Christmas. Here is a not-so-ample sample. I love the Fotomat ad, having forgotten all about those things.
The Journal was still running the Christmas greeting pages (as regular contributor and ex-Journal employee Todd described them). There was only one full page and two half pages of them that ran in the Christmas Eve edition of the paper.
The movie ads were getting a little skimpier. As you can see, Back to the Future was the big movie of the season.
Not bad – Tom & Jerry AND Woody Woodpecker cartoons!
Lastly, the Journal delivered a great editorial on Christmas Eve.
For Christmas 1975, the Journal featured full-page advertising grids with each participating business sponsor occupying a square (or rectangle if you want to be specific) with a small, unique holiday graphic like the one shown above. I guessing these templates were largely ready-made, with only the company name and address to be added.
The December 24, 1975 edition of the paper contained three full pages of these ads, as well as one partial page.
The pages are all fun to look at, and contain businesses from all over Lorain County. I'm sure you'll recognize a few businesses that you may have patronized, but forgotten about due to the passing decades. The cost of appearing in these pages must have been very reasonable to achieve such incredible participation.
A look at the movie pages of that December 24, 1975 Journal really drives home the realization that it was a long time since the 1950s, and that the 1970s were half over.
On one hand, you have some traditional holiday fare. The Walt Disney Company was continuing its practice of re-releasing its cartoon classics every seven years to a new generation of kids with Snow White. (Who could have guessed that the classic would be pointlessly remade in live-action in 2025?)
On the other hand, the era of raunchy movies was well underway, with pictures such as Hooker's Revenge showing at the Lorain Drive-in, and the expected X-rated fare at the VL Cinema.
It was a time when disaster movies were big-big-big. Earthquakewas showing at Amherst Theatre.
On a positive note, there were still movies with such popular Hollywood stars as Charles Bronson, James Coburn, James Caan and Burt Reynolds. And the Monty Python comedy troupe's feature And Now for Something Completely Different was showing at Oakwood Twin Cinemas – along with Three Stooges and Mister Magoo shorts!