Saturday, February 20, 2021
have you ever seen the early BMW posters with the incredible detailed parts in cutaway view by the artist Herbert Schlenzig?
strange way to hide something, but it reminds me of a joke
the joke is about how an inmate wants to help his old mom get the wood moved, split, piled, etc... so, he says where the guards overhear him how he hid the evidence in the woodpile, and that causes the cops to go to his moms place and move the wood pile piece by piece to find the evidence. After several fake stories told where the cops could overhear, and go do work at his moms place, all the chores get done.
http://teamthruxton.blogspot.com/2012/01/sortie-de-grange-difficile.html
compliment of the day, thanks Billy O!
Thanks for your efforts, they are worthwhile if they can at least save these places in our memories, thanks to people like you.
I discover something new almost every day on your site, and I'm extremely grateful for all your leg-work that saves me from doing it.
Alex Oxley was an animator, cartoonist, and illustrator from 1920-1950. With a huge passion for motorcycles, he worked for Triumph to design advertising posters for the British brand.
hmmmm, heavy railcars, steep hills, what could possibly go wrong? Were there no redundant safety precautions for the brakes? Hmmm, let me see, gravity plus wear and tear, yeah, who woulda ever thought? Especially after the 1st time in 1915? Or the 2nd in 1926? Well, there was a repeat in 1947
Seriously, who could ever predict that the rained on greasy cables would be less than perfect for applying brakes to?
https://opensfhistory.org/news/2018/07/23/tillmanys-ride-a-closer-look/
built to last, the old San Francisco 1926 Mohawk gas station at 16th Avenue and Irving Street, is gone. Opened in 1926 by Charles Kleinclaus, his grandson took over after his 2 years in the Army during WW2
above, 1968
After that, it went through many owners and more problems caused by the city, that caused it to shut down, again:
Frank and Jim’s Mohawk Service (1960),
La Prath Mohawk Service Gas Station (1963)
and Louis (later Lou’s) Mohawk Service (1964).
One of the last people to run the station (from 1964 to 1980) was Ludwig “Lou” Glowacki.
In an odd situation, the design of the old gas pumps could only show gas selling for less than 59.9 cents a gallon. But gas prices had reached $1 a gallon.
For a few years, many stations had been “half-pricing” their gas—doubling the price shown on the pumps. By this time, the Mohawk station on Irving was engaged in quadruple-pricing.
The signs in the window stated that “the price per gallon and the amount of sale is one-quarter of the amount it should be.”
But a new city law required that all old pumps be replaced by new ones before July 1, 1980. Glowacki could not afford the estimated $6,000 required for the upgrade.
https://www.outsidelands.org/goldsworthy-gas.php
video at https://www.outsidelands.org/historyminute/1297115615/MohawkGasolineStation
https://www.outsidelands.org/publications/outsidelands14.3.pdf
Even a post this small took an hour and a half to make, fyi.