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Main Area => Odds n Ends => Topic started by: The Buddha on May 27, 2010, 11:06:22 AM

Title: Who invented the electric tooth brush.
Post by: The Buddha on May 27, 2010, 11:06:22 AM
That fool obviously never saw a nice pair of b00bies jiggle when girls are brushing their teeth.
Awful invention I tell ya ... awful.

Cool.
Buddha.
Title: Re: Who invented the electric tooth brush.
Post by: Jabilli on May 27, 2010, 12:44:51 PM
It's the small things in life that make it worth living.

How you thought of that is beyond me, but I won't disagree either.    :dunno_black:
Title: Re: Who invented the electric tooth brush.
Post by: Homer on May 27, 2010, 11:13:21 PM
(http://i160.photobucket.com/albums/t196/84CrapJ7/1270335928056.jpg)

Rotten teef are pricey. 
Strippers are only a dollar. 
Title: Re: Who invented the electric tooth brush.
Post by: Cal Price on May 29, 2010, 01:58:55 AM
Lazlo Electric-Toothbrush, it's obvious ennit?
Title: Re: Who invented the electric tooth brush.
Post by: The Buddha on May 31, 2010, 02:43:32 PM
Lazlo ... hungarian ?
Cool.
Buddha.
Title: Re: Who invented the electric tooth brush.
Post by: Elijafir on May 31, 2010, 08:46:44 PM
An early electric toothbrush was produced in Switzerland in 1939, but it did not sell well and was quickly taken off the market.

Innovator Philippe-G. Woog invented the electric toothbrush in 1954 for E.R. Squibb and Sons. Squibb introduced the motorized contraption as the Broxodent brush in 1959 at the American Dental Association's centennial celebration and began marketing it to the public in 1960.

The first toothbrush to be advertised as an electric brush went on the market in 1880. There was no electricity involved, however. This was Dr. Scott's Electric Toothbrush, which had slightly magnetized iron rods in their handles. Dr. Scott claimed the brushes were permanently charged with electromagnetic current, a claim he also made for his electric hair brushes, electric flesh brushes and electric corsets. Ads for his electric toothbrushes appeared in Harper's Weekly in 1884.

( http://www.ehow.com/about_4598206_who-invented-electric-toothbrush.html )

Clearly these men had no concern for the disruption of bouncing boobies that this would create.