Tuesday, June 7, 2011

NAPA thermometer

Now there is nothing cooler than thermometers, now this on is not that old I know but it is cool and it is metal not plastic. and it's hanging in my shop and still accurate

Developed during the 16th and 17th centuries, a thermometer (from the Greek θερμός (thermo) meaning "warm" and meter, "to measure") is a device that measures temperature or temperature gradient using a variety of different principles. A thermometer has two important elements: the temperature sensor (e.g. the bulb on a mercury thermometer) in which some physical change occurs with temperature, plus some means of converting this physical change into a numerical value (e.g. the scale on a mercury thermometer).

Sunday, June 5, 2011

vintage kids guitar

I have no info on this item only that it was my Aunts back in the depression and it is a real 6 string guitar 

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Happy Motoring!!

When I was a kid(late 60's early 70's) my dad had and ENCO  Service Station and I remember all the cool items they gave away for a full tank of cash ,steak knives,glasses,spice racks, Now these coasters were not from my dad's but from his supplier F&M Oil Co. in Finly IN I have great memories of going down there with my dad for business ,even though it was only 20 miles or so  he bought all of us kids and my mom, it was like a little family outing and  us boy would get are hair cut at the barber shop next door that shared a building with the post office.







F&M Oil Co. Finly IN


Enco was a secondary retail brand name for products of Humble Oil, (now part of ExxonMobil) in certain parts of the United States from 1960 to 1973. It was used on filling stations operated by Humble in states where they were not permitted to use the Esso brand under conditions set by the court-ordered breakup of Standard Oil in 1911.
Because Humble Oil was not the first to register "Enco" in all 50 states, it was forced to drop the name in deference to Earl Nunneley Company (AKA "ENCO") of Texas.
Founder Earl Nunneley's famous quote on the name dispute was "It cost Humble more money to change all of their stationery letterheads than it would have if they'd simply bought my firm."
The Enco brand first appeared on gasoline and motor oil products of Jersey Standard affiliates, including Carter Oil in the Northwestern U.S., as well as Pate Oil and Oklahoma Oil in the Midwest during the summer and fall of 1960, shortly after the parent company reorganized all its domestic marketing and refining operations to former Texas-based subsidiary Humble Oil and Refining Company. In 1961, the Enco brand was introduced at Humble stations in Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arizona - both for the stations and gasoline/oil products, as was the case in California and some other western states where Humble opened stations for the first time. The Enco brand was also rolled out for gasoline/oil products at Humble's Texas stations, which retained Humble as the station brand until that was converted to Enco in 1962. However, one state, Ohio, used "Humble" because Sohio refused to allow use of the Enco name, due to its similarity to "Esso"
Humble's advertisements promoted the Enco brand as short for "ENergy COmpany." From 1961 to 1972, Enco advertising and promotional efforts were the same as Esso's in the eastern U.S. including the use of the Humble name in advertisements along with the "Happy Motoring!" tagline used by Esso for decades, and the "Put A Tiger In Your Tank" ad campaign introduced nationwide in 1964. Logotypes for Enco and Esso were identical ovals with blue outer edge and red lettering with white background.
Despite Humble's attempts to tie Enco and Esso brands together as a nationwide gasoline marketer during the 1960s, the company was not wholly successful at competing with truly national brands such asTexaco (then the only oil company selling its gasoline under the same brand name in all 50 states) and Shell, as Humble's strongest markets remained the Esso territory in the eastern U.S. and the former Humble home territory in Texas. Despite these challenges, Humble was the most successful of several U.S. oil companies to expand marketing and refining operations to California and West Coast states as most other "newcomers" entering that region during the 1950s and 1960s such as Gulf Oil, Phillips 66, Amoco, Conoco and others enjoyed less than stellar results, and each would pull out of California and surrounding states during the 1970s.
In 1967, Humble further expanded its California presence when it purchased a large number of service stations from Signal Oil (a Chevron subsidiary) and converted them to the Enco brand, which joined a large number of stations Humble had already built from scratch or bought from other oil companies. That was followed by the construction and opening of an oil refinery in 1969. Humble also expanded the Enco brand to Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, and Mississippi after the Supreme Court ruled that Humble's use of the Esso trademark in those states violated Standard Oil of Kentucky's use of the name "Standard Oil". Ironically, Kentucky Standard was almost completely dependent upon Esso for its products from 1911 until 1961, when they became a part of Standard Oil of California, now ChevronTexaco.
As early as 1966, Humble realized that it needed a single brand name it could use nationwide but faced a dilemma as Esso obviously could not be used in other Standard Oil territories and Enco had a Japanese translation as "stalled car." In late 1971, Humble rolled out the Exxon brand name at rebranded Enco and Esso in several test markets throughout the U.S. Following successful results of the Exxon brand in those areas, Humble/Jersey Standard officials in May 1972 announced that Exxon would become the company's sold gasoline brand in the U.S. later that year - replacing both Esso and Enco at service stations and on gasoline, motor oil and lubricant products nationwide(Esso was retained outside the U.S. where Standard Oil stipulations by the U.S. Justice Department did not apply). Also, the corporate name Standard Oil of New Jersey would be changed to Exxon Corporation, the U.S. refining/marketing division, Humble Oil and Refining Co., would be renamed Exxon USA, and the Enjay Chemicals division would be renamed Exxon Chemicals.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Nylint "Lil Tow"

This was one of the few  surviving toys of my childhood since I had two older brothers, they always saw fit to run over mine or use the for experiments during the 4th of July!!

The Nylint Corporation was founded in 1937 by Bernard Klint of Rockford, Illinois. His uncle, David Nyberg, supplied much of the initial capital to start the company. The company name of Nylint is a combination of both the Nyberg and Klint names. It was incorporated under the name “Nylint Tool and Manufacturing” and its initial operation was located at 5th Avenue and 13th Street in Rockford. Original founder Bernard (known as Barney) Klint and his wife Grace remained actively involved for nearly 60 years in this privately-held company until their deaths in the mid-1990s. 

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Old Farm Truck!

The Wilkins Toy Company was founded by James Wilkins in 1890 and was purchased by Harry T. Kingsbury in 1894 who continued to produce toys under the KINGSBURY name until WW II. Kingsbury was a world leader of cast iron and sheet metal toys of which are now sought after by avid collectors. Wilkins and Kingsbury produced a large variety of toys, including ships, submarines, trains, trolleys, cars, airplanes, banks, and fire engines.

  A recent exhibit at the Cheshire Historical Society in Keene, NH included over 250 such examples from  1980 to 1942  of much loved and revered array of childhood nostalgia




This was my dad's old truck and they gave it to me when my grandma  died in 1972 .This must have been his only toy, because for being the only boy of 4 kids it was well played with.

Seneca No.3 Camera

Seneca No.3


Seneca Camera Mfg. Co. was a camera maker based in the American photography capital Rochester, New York. The company was founded at the end of the 19th century. Its chiefs were the former superintendent at Kodak Camera Works Frank T. Day, president, William C. Whitlock, vice-president, and Lorin E. Mason. They bought the assets of the Sunart company which was not very successful. Seneca itself managed to get a larger share of the American camera market. It made a series of simpler cameras for everybody, mainly theScout series of box cameras and rollfilm folders. And it made several big view cameras like the Seneca View,Competitorplate box cameras like the Kao Sr., and folding bed plate cameras like the the No. 29 Pocket Seneca, the Black Beauty and the Seneca Chautauqua. Of course Seneca put some products into other popular market segments, for example the Vest Pocket Roll Film Seneca Camera.
The name of the company was derived from the name of the Seneca-Iroqois Red Indians. A county in the state of New York was already named after them. Many ads and advertising brochures of the company showed Indians as eye-catchers.
In 1901 the company had rooms in the fifth floor of the Leary Dye Works, a brick building at the corner of Platt and Mill Street. In spring a fire destroyed the house were 25 Seneca employees were working. Many were rescued, some by workers of Bridgeford's machine shop who managed to find large pieces of canvas on which they could catch people who were jumping out of the windows of the burning house. The damage for Seneca was 40,000 US-Dollars, uninsured. [from New York Times, March 2, 1901]
The company also made tripods, darkroom equipment, and adapters to use film packs on plate cameras.
In 1924 the company was sold to Conley which was wholly owned by Sears & Roebuck at that time. Seneca disappeared in 1926.