How simple? Every boy should have a Jigsaw and every yard should have a wooden bird.
Wooden Yard Folk Art Bird Circa 1940? Collection Jim Linderman
W.C. Williams Advertising Postcard collection Jim Linderman
Real Photo Postcard circa (NOKO, circa 1910?) Collection Jim Linderman
NOTE: ROBERT REEVES WINS A FREE DULL TOOL DIM BULB T-SHIRT for taking the time to point (and gross me) out...with his comment, true, as follows:
"Those guys have been killing the rats in the barn. (see 'em laid out in front? Dozens!) I saw it happen when I was a kid.)
Robert has a better eye than I, always has.
CLICK TO ENLARGE(Copyrighted by the publisher. No rights are given or implied. Presented here for historical significance, magazine fans and Disney collectors)A little treat for you Mouseketeers! A mint illustration from what is likely one of the few remaining issues of Screen and Radio Weekly, an insert to the Detroit Free Press of September 27, 1936. Obviously stored with great care, the newsprint, large format magazine is is wonderful condition considering newspaper pulp and age. Colors as bright as the day they were printed!Back cover of Screen & Radio Weekly September 27, 1936 Detroit Free Press Collection Jim Linderman


With a skeleton on top and a whole family of faces below, this is one wonderful pole. It was built in 1904, created for Matt Larkin on the northwest coast (possibly by the Haida tribe) but then altered upon arrival in Albany, New York. The skeleton on top was added, as were the gentlemen around the middle (friends of the owner, who it is said was "father of the jukebox" ) and mounted on the grounds of his Burden Lake estate.
No actual tribe is identified, but it is certainly what we might call a marriage of cultures. Possibly Northwest origins with touches of Northeast drinking buddies? As you can see in my worn postcard, it is huge, dramatic and preservation worthy regardless.The pole stood until 1958 when a storm brought it down. 20 years later it went to the Marian E. White Anthropology Museum, who received it in 5 pieces. The museum contains one million artifacts with a concentration on Woodland tribes such as the Seneca. Being a composite project at best, and a "genuine Native American fake" at worst, the totem pole seems to be an anomaly. Maybe that is why restoration has been taking decades...a low priority? But then the museum world moves slow...The biggest pieces are displayed in the museum, others are still being worked on.
The laborious process is documented HERE with a really cool picture of the pole you can click on to to check progress.
Anonymous Photograph circa 1935? Collection Jim Linderman
Seems simple enough. On Reverse Elderblossom Wine
Handwritten recipe card, no date
CLICK TO ENLARGEI gave my Frank Wendt photographs to the International Center of Photography in NYC for a forthcoming show, but found a scan I made of an anonymous one man band he photographed. Wendt was an understudy of circus freak photographer Chas. Eisenmann who took over his studio and worked in the Bronx and later New Jersey.
Cabinet Card by Frank Wendt Untitled "One Man Band" circa 1890? collection International Center of Photography
Cooked to Perfection by Convection! A lovely Florida model sits on an induction coil apparatus in order to demonstrate skillet heat waves.Original Press Photograph 1939 Collection Jim Linderman