
Coopers in West Virginia, near Bramwell, is a town accessed by a narrow road under a large double track railroad trestle.


Post card is a Plastichrome by Colourpicture Publishers, Inc. Boston 15, Mass., U.S.A.
This is a DC-3 owned by Mackey Airlines, headquartered at Broward International Airport in Fort Lauderdale FL, flew direct to Nassau from Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach, St. Petersburg, and Tampa. It was acquired by Eastern Airlines in 1967.


1920s postcard. Artwork by E. Weaver (no bio available), but Sherry Arent Cawley, in Berrien County, author of one of the Postcard History Series put out by Arcadia Publishing, describes the artist as “…a very prolific American postcard artist at the turn of the century through the 1930s. His designs, in sets of 8 to 32 are whimsical and humorous with many drawn in a simplified Art Nouveau style.”
The card was mailed from Cloverdale VA on October 25, 1926, to an address in Willis VA.

These things pop up in unlikely places, like at an estate sale. This is a vintage Piedmont child’s souvenir candy travel bag. It was sold at the Piedmont store, filled with candy to keep the little nipper occupied during the flight. It is 7″ wide, 3.5″ deep and about 4″ high (just the bag, not the straps). It has a metal zipper. Manufactured by Airline Textiles Manufacturing Co. of Des Moines IA. The company, apparently, is still in business.

I’ve been collecting “kiddie wings”, the metal or plastic wings given to children on airline flights, for over a decade now. I found this at an estate sale in Johnson City TN. It is nicely done. It’s 2″ wing tip to wing tip and 5/8″ at the circle. The logo of the First Nations person is topped with an acrylic dome. Base metal, made in China.


Top image is the front of this pack of photos from around Tennessee. The lower image is the back or the opening of the card pack. I know that this photo was taken in the mid-sixties and shot by C. H. Ruth (uncredited), who did aerial photo work for Haynes Distributing out of Roanoke. The card pack was published by Dexter Press of West Nyack NY. The interior copy mentions that the Opry was still in the Ryman, so it was certainly published before 1974.

You can find out about Jackie Gleason here. Early in my Radio career, I worked at a station with an Easy Listening format. It was basically background music, but it became soporific if you listened too long. Drove me nuts.