C
Casablanca
Guest
The brothers who founded Friendly [ the 's was added later by a different owner] hated each other. So, why do you think they would treat their employees well. Did you get a lot of business in '64 from "Archies"? HoJo's was still around on the Expressway. It had better ice cream but in the closest hang-out for us after school was Fasano's Diner on Washington Street.
TSBench said:Neggy said:Just to rattle TSB's mind a bit, but all in fun....
remember any of this.....
FIVE PLEASE
TEN PLEASE
we sell Friendly Cola, is that OK?
red scoops, green scoops, black scoops
setups
GRILLE PLEASE
Jubilee rolls......
the list goes on... and you thought you forgot your teen years. You of the white ice cream suit days or the blue checkered shirt/blue polyester pants era?
I'm afraid that young ladies had all the glamour 'wait on customer' jobs. I was employed as what I would call a "Dish, Glass, and Flatwear Cleanliness Technician." I don't recall them actually giving me anything special to wear, just whatever I wore in. This was back around 1964. I think the waitresses and counter people did wear distinguishing shirts, though.
It was a new store (Quincy Ave, in Quincy) and I was part of the original crew. I do remember that at the end of every evening shift, the manager told us to make ourselves whatever we wanted. We all made ice cream sundaes the size of bowling balls. When we got our first paychecks, we found out that they had charged us for the ice cream, although at a lower, 'Friendly' price. Sonuvabitch!!
One Washington's B'Day weekend, my father had told me we were going to go to a cottage we were building in NH, and he needed me to help with the wiring. I told my manager at Friendly's, and he told me I had to work that weekend. I went to NH. and when I returned discovered that I was a former employee.
My wife thinks it's funny to tell people that I was fired from a place named Friendly's.
Regards,
TSB
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