saloon 1728, Anglicized form of salon (q.v.), and originally used interchangeable with it. Meaning large hall in a public place (esp. a passenger boat) is from c.1835, also used of railway cars furnished like drawing rooms. Sense of “public bar” developed by 1841, Amer.Eng.
SusanSunshine Premium Member over 11 years ago
How the West was shorn.
pcolli over 11 years ago
Even cowboys like to look well groomed at times.
eddie6192 over 11 years ago
Must have been terrible back in those days, without spell-check.
FUNG1 over 11 years ago
Very good ‘toon this morning Dave. Who’da thought they would know the difference back then?
pcolli over 11 years ago
But a lot more posing.
rockngolfer over 11 years ago
I heard that it was the other way around, the sign was supposed to read salon but the painter added an o.
Packratjohn Premium Member over 11 years ago
If you can’t FIND a business model, CREATE one. Salon is a boring name, how about “Manes on Main”? Their slogan, “Shave and a haircut, $22.50.”
davanden over 11 years ago
At the time, a salon was a place where people met to discuss literature and current events. It had nothing to do with fixing up your hair.
TheWildSow over 11 years ago
Saloon is a variant of Salon!
saloon 1728, Anglicized form of salon (q.v.), and originally used interchangeable with it. Meaning large hall in a public place (esp. a passenger boat) is from c.1835, also used of railway cars furnished like drawing rooms. Sense of “public bar” developed by 1841, Amer.Eng.