a Ford parts salesman in 1937 stopping into a service station, that sold Ford gasoline. I didn't even know Ford was part of a gasoline business


A parts salesman for Parkinson-Neal Motor Co., a Ford dealership in Enid, Okla., makes a sales visit to a gas station and repair facility in that state. The traveling store would visit rural repair shops to restock Ford parts needed for repairs. It is unclear whether the gas station and garage were part of Ford's "Super Service Stations" that serviced vehicles and sold gasoline, parts, accessories and new Ford cars. The Parson's Super Station does appear to sell Ford's Benzol gasoline.

quite an advertising campaign, lined up on the waterfront in Melbourne, Australia. These rolled through Stockholm, Sydney, London and more, turning sidewalks into showrooms.




Axel Wenner-Gren was not an inventor, but he had an inventive mind that could see the possibilities of others’ inventions. Born in 1881 in Sweden to a family made wealthy by exporting lumber, he spent five years working for his uncle’s spice-importing company in Gothenburg. In those hours after school, he picked up English, French, and German and then moved to Germany, where he enrolled in business school, from which he graduated early.

Wenner-Gren continued to work as a salesman and by the end of World War I, he held controlling interest in a company called Svenska Electron that was apparently representing a Swedish lighting company named Lux.

In one version of the story, Wenner-Gren successfully convinced Lux to buy a patent for a home vacuum cleaner, agreeing that in lieu of cash, he would get stock in Lux based on how well the vacuum cleaners sold, eventually owning enough stock that he controlled the company.

in 1919 that a licensing agreement between Elektron and Lux gave Elektron the sole rights to sell Lux vacuum cleaners


by the 1930s Wenner-Gren was one of the wealthiest men in the world. While his name isn’t familiar to us today, his efforts to obtain the vacuum-cleaner contract for the Vatican may have spawned the Hollywood trope of door-to-door salesmen who demonstrated vacuum cleaners.

Supplying the Holy See with vacuums would not only be a valuable contract, it would undoubtedly be a promotional coup for any appliance maker. Five companies each made a pitch, and each were given a piece of soiled carpeting to clean using their respective machines. Wenner-Gren waited until the other four were done with their demonstrations, and then went over their pieces of carpet with an Electrolux vacuum cleaner. When he opened the dustbag, showing how his machine picked up dirt the other cleaners left behind, the contract was his.

Wenner-Gren commissioned a body shaped like an Electrolux vacuum cleaner to be mounted on an automobile chassis. The reaction was so positive that the company commissioned an entire fleet of Citroën-based Electrolux cars and BSA motorcycles with Electrolux-shaped sidecars to promote the brand in Stockholm, Berlin, and London.

Electrolux contracted with coachbuilders Karosseriwerke Drauz in Heilbronn, Germany, and another firm in Denmark to do the fabrication.

Harold Brown owned a Texaco station in New Smyrna Beach and advertised it from there to Alaska.




 built the structure for the back of the truck so they would have a place to sleep on an extended trip to Alaska. 

Harold Browns daughter used the structure as her playhouse after they returned from Alaska.

I bet they wish they'd installed some rail adapters instead of testing the cars suspension for miles. Notice that the left front fender is removed, that must have been done to make it easier to steer on the Florida East Coast Overseas Railroad.





a 41-mile stretch of railroad tracks from Lower Matecumbe en route to the Long Key Fishing Camp in 1927


The celebrated arrival of Henry Flagler and his Key West Extension of the Florida East Coast Railway was Jan. 22, 1912. Though Mr. Flagler’s railcar arrived at the southernmost terminus that day, it did not mark the day construction of the railroad was finished.

Because of his failing health, the job of bringing the train to Key West was rushed. Shortcuts were taken to hasten the project and ensure that Flagler saw his dream come to fruition. The railroad engineers were successful, and when Mr. Flagler’s railcar arrived in Key West, it did mark the beginning of daily railroad service operating between railroad depots at Miami and Key West. One of the lesser-reported stories about the railroad is that it was not officially completed until 1916.

Henry Flagler died on May 20, 1912. He never rode down to Key West aboard his private railcar on the completed Over-Sea Railroad project.

It was decimated by the Great Labor Day Hurricane of 1935 and the railroad was already in a poor state financially so they were unable to rebuild it. The state of Florida bought what was left of it and turned it into the original Overseas Highway.

Here's a strange thing... a heated steering wheel, that's quite poorly designed, or failing catastrophically


A 2024 Tundra owner’s thermal imaging revealed a staggering temperature disparity, with the top of the steering wheel hitting a toasty 114°F while the inner underside sat at a bone-chilling 35°F.

The beloved Rosie’s Diner, once in Little Ferry, New Jersey, and home of the famous Bounty paper-towel commercials with Nancy “Rosie” Walker, is on the move again.





After its time in the Garden State ended in 1990, the diner was moved by an artist to Algoma Township in western Michigan, and is now in new hands and is about to move again, this time in Alabama. It had been sitting shuttered since 2011. What a relief that it now has a future again, with plans to reopen within the year, restored to its 1946 look when it was known as the Silver Dollar Diner. It acquired the Rosie’s name after the smash success of the Bounty commercials, which aired in the 1970s and 1980s.

So... Monday... do not think you can mess with Monday and get away with it. In fact, I recommend staying home in bed instead of going out

 I went out to get a haircut, as my new job starts tomorrow... 630 am

Seemed the sensible thing to do, but then, when I got out of my car at the barber, I smelled antifreeze. I popped the hood on the commuter, and saw some steam... and that's when I suddenly went from poor to broke. 

We are all just a moment away from it, some have homes by rivers, and poof, one hurricane, one flood, and it's all gone. some have trailers, and one tornado rips through and it's gone. Or a house in California, a million dollars worth, but one wildfire. Gone. 

So, I got off lightly compared to so many. All I lost is the remaining space on my credit card. One radiator is 800 bucks, that's what it cost to replace the one in my 69 Dodge, that's what Hyundai charges too... ironically, for one 1/3rd the size. 2 hoses, the upper and lower, and a new radiator, and it's more for the labor at the dealership than the parts. 

It's 2 or 300 just to troubleshoot and determine exactly what is broken or leaking, and since I am guessing that the upper tank cracked from the cooling fins, but regardless I am determined to prevent a colling system problem from happening in the next 5 or 6 years for trouble free use of my commuter. So, I told my old pal, who's been my service adviser through the replacement of the Turbo, under warranty, and the engine, and the trans, all under warranty, that after the testing, and figuring out the problem, I require that the radiator and upper and lower hoses get replaced in addition to another part if that happens to be the case. 

And the estimate, on the parts and labor for just the radiator, and the analysis of what IS the problem, is 2400. That's the start, then they add whatever else has broken, or is highly likely to break in the near future. I suppose I really should insist on a new water pump, as long as everything is going to be torn apart. I bet labor just to replace the water pump is a 1000. If that were to happen at a different time, that is. 

So there it is, my 10 year old, 103000 mile Veloster, blew a hole in the cooling system the day before I start my new job. A month ago, I could have replaced that damn thing myself, saved all the money from labor, but now? What, after work, after the engine and coolant chills down to where it's less than scalding, and as long as nothing goes wrong, have it all back together in time to get some sleep? Not likely. 

a Bugatti mini 2 seater with an aluminum body and 4 cylinder, in 1927/28





This is a photo by Jacques-Henri Lartigue, of a rally check point in 1927


Bugatti Type 37 Coach 2 door « La Cage à Mouche » by Million Guiet, cabriolet 1927 (cn 37125) with 1460-W1 (F), #189 Concours d’Elegance Femina au Bois de Boulogne, Paris (fr), June 1927 with Odette Renou

before the people realized how badly the politicians treated them, the politicians had no reason to fear meeting with people that had pitchforks in hand, and outnumbered the suits


I wonder when the greed and corruption became so well known that the tide turned from respect of politicians to despise. Probably after politicians quit wearing beards. It must have been before Nam. Obviously anyone in New York City and Chicago were familiar with it, I bet that they still teach Tammany Hall in public school.

I would guess the Illinois governor streak of prison sentences isn't over yet, nor California governors facing recall, and the District of Columbia consistently has the highest rate of federal public corruption convictions, followed by Louisiana, Montana, South Dakota, Kentucky, and West Virginia.

There once was a blanket cover up by reporters for the illegal activities of politicians, maybe they were stuck in hero worship mode due to WW1 and WW2, Sgt York, Charles Lindbergh, Chesty Puller, Chuck Yeager,  and Glen Armstrong, etc. But somewhere, things turned to where reporters went out to shine a light on the crimes and shames. 

I suppose it was some time after we stopped electing farmers (Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Lincoln, Carter) and it became only possible to get elected if you were a millionaire without a job.