Quote and Credit

Quote and Credit

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Gasoline Powered Ice Racer from the 1930s. Frozen Daredevils






Looks like a contraption from a 1930s Popular Mechanics cover.  Check the engine on this contraption.  Most ice vehicles, or skimmers, or ice mobiles, or I have no idea what, are made with sails and operate on wind power.  These hopped up speedster guys made a real ice machine.  Ice Racing or snowmobile prototype?    Summer sport in Michigan! 
Snapshots of an Ice Vehicle  No Date (1930s?)  Collection Jim Linderman

Hot as Coal


Anyone east of Big Muddy will understand this today.  

Salesman Sample for Matchbook cover circa 1940 Collection Jim Linderman

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Amateur Hour Contortionist? Show Business Philadelphia 1950 by Robert Jones

Looks like a television studio with a well balanced performer.  Amateur Hour?

Pair of photographs by Robert L. Jones Philadelphia PA 1950 Collection Jim Linderman

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OH MIN! Hand Painted Folk Art Sign Oh Min ?



The seller and I at an outdoor antique show debated over the meaning of this hand-painted sign. A bad OMEN? A preacher exclaiming AMEN? It cost ten bucks and I bought it just to figure it out, which is usually the case with objects I post here.
 
It turns out OH MIN was the exclamation cartoon character Andy Gump used when complaining to his wife Minerva. The Marriott? I have no idea. Family name for this sign which may have identified a residence? Along the beaches in Michigan, it is not unusual for families to hang goofy signs in the woods to help folks find the place. That's my guess. 

"Oh Min" Hand-painted sign. Circa 1930. Collection Jim Linderman 

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Christian Preacher and Evangelist W. V. Grant Mortal Conduit for God

Christian Preacher and Evangelist W. V. Grant uses a selection of sepia stock photos to help fill his pockets.  According to Wiki, the ex-con has claimed he isn't a faith healer, but IS a "mortal conduit" for same.  One of God's chosen ambassadors, I guess.  Grant's father was in the same game.  His "religious service" is an act aimed at anyone suffering from the worst affliction:  Blind faith.  A nice video of the fraudster follows.

I have assembled a nice little collection of Grant's tracts (thousands of which have sold for $1.00 each) which will be featured in a series of miracles of my OWN on the old time religion site.

 
CLICK HERE to send a Prayer Request directly through electronic conduit to Reverend Grant!  He is waiting for your mail.


My OWN books, which I am afraid cost more than a dollar, are available HERE

Buy the eBooks, they are cheaper.

In Honor of the Roswell Anniversary, My Personal Collection of ACTUAL UFO PHOTOGRAPHS



Every serious photography collection should have a few original snapshots of Unidentified Flying Objects. These are original Kodachrome photos from a set dated 1964. I believe, I believe!




All above DATED and AUTHENTICATED by my own alien contacts.

Five color Kodachrome Print Snapshots 1964 Collection Jim Linderman

Kopeefun Fun!





It's Kopeefun fun!  Early copyright violating "storage systems" for copying your favorite characters.  Here is a group of obsolete cartoon critters I can't identify...Let's ask the blog's oldest follower to contribute the answer.  They look like one of those "If you can draw THIS" ads from the 1950s, but submitting a Kopeefun drawing as your attempt would be cheating.
It is a double delight on Dull Tool Dm Bulb today.  The sister blog shows some risque versions of kopeefun!  Have  fun! 
 Original Kopeefun Magic Sheets (Used) circa 1945  Collection Jim Linderman

BOOKS AND EBOOKS BY JIM LINDERMAN AVAILABLE HERE

July 4th 1939 Lou Gehrig Day The Luckiest... Anonymous Painting of 1939



Yes, it is July 4th, Independence day, but it is also Lou Gehrig Day.  July 4, 1939, one of our greatest baseball players took to the field and Yankee Stadium to acknowledge the crowds.  Movietone was there to record it, and it obviously moved the young artist here.

TheTheThe   
LuckiestLuckiestLuckiest 
ManManMan.  
Lou was sick when he stood before the microphone.  No one had even heard of hockey then, and basketball was still a joke.  We had one sport and Lou was the epitome of it.  Of all his accomplishments, the greatest was that he played 2,130 games in a row.   From 1925 to 1939.  Have YOU ever called in sick?  Lou didn't.  Not once.  And all they had back then was aspirin.

The anonymous painting here, too large for my scanner, was found folded in a "one dollar" basket at the end of a table at a garage sale.  Who would throw this out?
 

Anonymous Child's Painting of Lou Gehrig Day.  Date, possible, 1939  Collection Jim Linderman
 

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Snapshooter Snapshot taken by another Snapshooter

A perfectly centered snapshot of a snapshooter.  What?  Google doesn't recognize the word snapshooter and wants me to check my spelling?  The first use was in 1896 according to Meriam-Webster dictionary. Get with it Google.  Looks like Meriam Webster is kicking your robot's butt. 

Orignal Anonymous Snapshot (Dated on Reverse 1950) Collecton Jim Linderman

ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS BY JIM LINDERMAN ARE HERE

Painting a Little Wooden Folk Art Dog for the Garden


Painting a Wooden Cutout Dog.  At least I think it's a dog.  It has a collar...cat?

Original Snapshot circa 1950?  Collection Jim Linderman

The Day I Spoke to Captain Kangaroo



The Day I Spoke to Captain Kangaroo
 

My first real, paying job in Manhattan was working at CBS News, and at the time the Captain was still around.  Way at the end of the building (a converted Milk Factory on West 57th Street) Captain Kangaroo was still being broadcast, though the year I started they had just shorted him to a half- hour a day…to concentrate on the CBS Morning News rather than educating the kids.  The Captain didn't like it and eventually quit.  Still the props were around and it was pretty cool to see them.

Bob Keeshan was certainly a part of my life, as were the libelous dirty jokes we told about Mr. Green Jeans behind the barn when I was older.   We were being mean, as I don't think "Lumpy"  Brannum, who played the barnyard buddy, would do the things we described.  Other regulars on the show, which you have forgotten, were Dr. Bill Cosby, Dr. Joyce Brothers  and Dr. Cosmo Allegertti as Mr. Bunny Rabbit, Mr. Moose, Miss Frog, Mr. Whispers, Dancing Bear, Grandfather Clock, Uncle Ralph AND the Magic Drawing Board!

Anyway, I was working in the library fielding calls like "How do you spell Hosni Mubarak's first name" and "Did anyone ever cross the Pacific in a balloon" when to my surprise the next call didn't ask a question, didn't say hello…it just said "This is the Captain" in a soothing voice which put me right back on the couch before school in the second grade.  He really called himself the Captain!  I can't remember what he wanted…but I'll never forget hearing his voice.

Bob Keeshaw marketed the "googly eyes" drinking cup here himself.   The eyes are "lenticular" which means they follow you as put the milk carton carefully back into the fridge all by yourself.  "Captain Kangaroo" is a trademark of "The Cashin Comedy Company" which he did. The cup on the base has "Robert Keeshaw Associates" scrolled around the center.


Captain Kangaroo "Sip" Cup.  Collection Jim Linderman


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Butch Austin Black Cartoonist for (and OF) Jive

Butch Austin Forgotten Black Cartoonist for Jive.
 
Still no help a year later on my query for information on the hep jive talking African-American cartoonist Butch Austin, who worked for Jive Magazine in the late 1950s.  Let's try again...

Anyone out there know the story of Butch Austin, Forgotten Black Cartoonist?

BOOKS BY JIM LINDERMAN AVAILABLE HERE

Lingerie Show (with hat) 1959




I don't really know how enthused the fashion editors are, but this is a wonderful pair of snapshots.  I guess one could say a ritual seldom seen?

Anonymous "Lingerie Show" 1959 Collection Jim Linderman

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Harry McGregor Pulls a Wagon

A 1933 postcard from the Ripley's Odditorium at the Century of Progress Fair in 1933.  Harry's wife adds insult to injury by threatening to poke one of his hard-working eyes with her finger. 
Real Photo Postcard 1933 Collection Jim Linderman
Books and $5.99 Ebooks by Jim Linderman available HERE