Quote and Credit

Quote and Credit

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Mr. Daniel, "Singin and Dansing Comeden" Minstrel Card


He might have gotten more jobs if he wrote more clearly and spelled better, but it is a beautiful little handmade piece of early showbiz. Maybe his incorrect spelling was part of the act. On reverse, "Plantation Show" is penciled in. Click to Enlarge

Hand Drawn Minstrel calling card, c. 1870 Collection Jim Linderman

At the End of the Road you Meet God


REPENT and BELIEVE the GOSPEL



Ralph and Martha Palmer and their Bus Post Card Newport News, VA c. 1950 Collection Jim Linderman

Lost Weekend in Wax (Horrors in Wax #10)


Wax Ray Milland (real name Reginald Alfred John Truscott-Jones) stars as wax Don Birnham, who goes on a legendary bender and emerges with a new friend...OSCAR! In the depicted scene, wax Birnham is thwarted in his attempt to cash in his typewriter for a stiff snort...the pawn is closed for a Jewish holiday. In the book, Don was secretly gay, but 1945 audiences weren't quite ready for that...a hopeless drunk was startling enough. Ray plays two roles for his kudo...Don the writer and Don the ravaged whiskey guzzling bat seeing rummy. The scenes of "Hangover Plaza" were filmed at Bellevue. In real life, Milland blamed a bad perm given to him for his performance in Reap the Wild Wind for his premature baldness, thus reducing him to second banana roles. Milland is also known for the shortest Academy Award acceptance speech in history, and it is a record which will stand. He said not a word, just bowed and left. For earlier entries of Horrors in Wax, click the subject heading below.

Dexter "SceniKrome" postcard, c. 1950. Collection Jim Linderman

Wise Kid, A Bad Fall, Praying Boy & HI-HO Thermosetting phenol formaldehyde resin polyoxybenzylmethylenglycolanhydride






Also Known as Bakelite.


Newspaper Specialties, Inc. Puzzle Toy Box, Bakelite Pieces 1933
Collection Jim Linderman

"Whittlin" C. A. Hughes Champion Whittler of Arkansas (Meet the Press)


There is a stereotype of whittlers being lonely old men. This photo does absolutely nothing to dispel that notion.

Original Photo, Mena Studio, Mena Arkansas 1927 Collection Jim Linderman

The Glamour and Glory of Gambling (In Natural Color)



Someone needs an new publicist. I guess back when this card was taken, the mob still ran the table and quality control was less important then where Frankie was playing that night...At any rate, note the slogan of the post card company who produced this card. If the boss saw this, someone would be pushing up cactus.

Reno Gambling Post Card Circa 1950 Collection Jim Linderman