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<div>At 12:14 PM -0600 1/3/01, Austin J. Gibbons wrote:</div>
<blockquote type="cite" cite><font face="Arial" size="-1">Looking for
the origin of the phrase "Kelesy's nuts". It is the
title of a blues song. I don't know where I first heard
it. Have mostly heard it used as ". . .dead as Kelsey's
nuts" -- ". . . cold as Kelsey's nuts" --
". . . flat as Kelsey's nuts" etc.</font></blockquote>
<blockquote type="cite" cite><font face="Arial" size="-1">Thank
you</font></blockquote>
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<div>There's a substantial entry in the Random House Historical
Dictionary of American Slang, with cites back to 1933 and this
comment on the origin:</div>
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<div>perh. orig. alluding (with pun on slang NUT 'testicle') to the
permanency of welded nuts and bolts on wheels manufactured by the
Kelsey Wheel Co., prominent in the U. S. automotive industry in the
1920's; see P. Tamony, "Like Kelsey's Nuts...", Forum
Anglicum XIV (1985), pp. 120-33.</div>
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<div>larry</div>
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