"Hey, Major Pepperidge! What's in the box?". "STUFF!". Here are six more random items of mirth for you.
First up is this odd-looking ring; it is a Straight Arrow Golden Nugget Ring, given out by Nabisco Shredded Wheat in 1950. It's genuine plastic! Not that phony stuff. The Straight Arrow radio program is a western adventure series for juveniles which was broadcast, mostly twice weekly in the United States from 1948 through 1951. A total of 292 episodes were aired.
Initially broadcast on the Don Lee Network, on February 2, 1949, the program debuted nationally on the Mutual Broadcasting Network. All the programs were written by Sheldon Stark.
The protagonist, rancher Steve Adams, became the Comanche Indian, the Straight Arrow, when bad people or other dangers threatened. In fact, Adams was a Comanche orphan who had been adopted by the Adams ranching family and later inherited the ranch.
It was tricky to take a photo of the view as seen through the lens of the ring using my phone, but this ultimately turned out OK. This type of device, with a lens revealing a micro-photograph, is known as a "Stanhope". My mom gave me two of these rings over the years, and both of them lacked the photo - there was just a clear lens, and nothing else.

Here's a vintage ad that I scrounged from the Internet, for your edification.
This next one is something I picked up on a whim at a collector's show in Glendale - I'm not sure I'd buy it now, but I was probably hip-mo-tized by those four genuine Tanzanites, presumably indicating forty years of service with the Kroger organization.
Here's a heavy little copper charm from Knott's Berry Farm. Use it as a keychain, a watch fob, or just throw it at your friends when they aren't looking. I can't tell you anything about it other than what you can glean just by looking at it.
Here's another employee badge that I picked up at a collector's show, for Fisher Body's plant in Hamilton, Ohio. What was Fisher Body? It was an automobile coachbuilder founded as the Fisher Body Company by Frederic and Charles Fisher in 1908 in Detroit, Michigan when they absorbed a fledgling autobody maker. By 1916 the concern had grown into one of the world's largest manufacturing firms, the Fisher Body Corporation, and was producing over 350,000 vehicles a year for nearly 20 different makers. In 1919, under the guidance of its ever-aggressive president, William C. Durant, General Motors purchased a 60% stake in the company.
Before stamped metal bodies and interiors became the norm, the company owned 160,000 acres of timberland and used more wood, carpet, tacks, and thread than any other manufacturer in the world. It had more than 40 plants and employed more than 100,000 people, and pioneered many improvements in tooling and automobile design including closed all-weather bodies. In 1984 GM dissolved its Fisher Body Division as part of its extensive North American restructuring.
These are not hard to find!
Next is this nice, vintage, genuine enamel pin featuring J. Wellington Wimpy, beloved character from the "Popeye" comics and cartoons. He made his debut in 1931, and was a fairly major presence in the comic strip, but became rather one-note when he debuted in animated form in 1933. He loved hamburgers! And his catchphrase was, "Cook me up a hamburger; I'll pay you Tuesday" (the line was altered over the years, I knew it as "I will gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today"). He would have gone perfectly with the
Olive Oyl pin I pictured in an earlier blog post. Yes, I have the Popeye pin too.

And finally, here is an oddball pin that I know nothing about. And, because I can't read Cyrillic, I have no idea what it says at the feet of those sturdy, wheat-lovin' proletariats. The man who sold this to me said it was from a "harvest festival", but he was likely just guessing. It reminds me of a pin from the 1939 New York World's Fair featuring a statue nicknamed "Big Joe" (see two variations
HERE).
Stay tuned for more STUFF FROM THE BOX!
”…or just throw it at your friends when they aren't looking…”
ReplyDeleteLOL
Major-
ReplyDelete"Send any good, small clear snapshot of yourself..." I'd love to be on the receiving end of these mail-ins just to see what 'the kids' sent in. (I'm certain there were some real winners-!
As for that Rooskie pin, it's a Badge of the participant of the Soviet All-Union Agricultural Exhibition - somewhat in agreement with your seller.
Thanks, Major.
Well, I have to admit that the Straight Arrow ring is shiny. BUT IT'S PLASTIC! Also, it reminds me of the head and mandibles of a stag beetle. (They're even worse than kite-eating trees!) I'm not sure what to make of the lens. Seems like they're reaching a little too hard for a nifty gimmick. Other than that... it looks nice. ;-)
ReplyDeleteI did 5 seconds of Googleing (Googling?) and discovered that tanzanite is "roughly 1,000 times rarer than diamonds"! So, if these are real tanzanite gems, then this pin is worth quite a bit!
"Solid Copper". I guess that's kinda neat. Not as good as solid gold but it's something. I like the scene on the front but, "My, what big eyes those oxen have!"
I do remember hearing the phrase "body by Fisher" in connection with the car industry, many years ago.
I have a soft spot in my heart for Wimpy. I don't think I ever saw any of the comics, but I watched a lot of Popeye cartoons with him in it. And his catchphrase that you remember is the one that I remember.
After another 5 seconds of Googling, I found that "BCXB" means "All-Union Agricultural Exhibition", in Russian. [Nanook beat me to it!]"This was a major, permanent exhibition in Moscow, USSR, established to showcase achievements in Soviet agriculture and industry, often featuring distinctive pavilion architecture and pins". If you Google it, it also shows an image of the pin in your post today.
My favorite today is the enamel Wimpy pin. It's a good likeness and it's... Wimpy! Thank you, Major.
My parents 1965 Chevy Malibu Super Sport had the BODY BY FISHER coach seal on the “running board” that was visible whenever you opened the car door. It was a very elaborate oval seal with a metallic blue background. I remember my dad explaining that there was a time former coach builders used to build car bodies for early automobile manufacturers. Automotive companies used to host a model makers competition to build a model of the coach that was used for the Fisher logo. The prizes were model maker apprentice positions within the automotive style shops. The models had to be exact to the specifications and nothing could veer away from the instructions . I believe the last contest was in 1969 - a contest that started in the 1920’s.
ReplyDeleteI do like that Wimpy pin, and I think it's great that you have the Olive Oyl and Popeye pins to go with it (I wonder if there were also Sweet Pea and Poopdeck Pappy pins?). But my favorite for today, of course, is the Knott's charm. My only criticism of it is that Knott's should have included a "speech balloon" coming out of the covered wagon, with the words, "MA, I'M THIRSTY!!!"
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, Major!
More great stuff today! What is it about gadget rings with secret words? Boy Scout organization Order of the Arrow has a secret word, The Sacred Word of Obligation, but I can’t tell you what is. Chuck knows.
ReplyDeleteThat Kroger pin is practically real jewelry. Does tanzanite give you a bloodcurdling yell to swing on vines?
How big is that Knotts charm? It looks very familiar. My mom might have had one similar.
My Body by Fisher story is similar to Mike’s, except our car was a 1965 Oldsmobile station wagon and my Dad told the same story.
For some reason I have no first hand memories of anything Wimpy. I know who he is, and his fascination with hamburgers but that’s it. I feel deprived.
Major, I’m surprised you would own that Commie pin, how subversive. Still, good disguise potential at Moscow Tractor Show. Moose and Squirrel approve.
Thanks Major!
JG
Lou and Sue, that’s how I like to roll!
ReplyDeleteNanook, ha ha, it’s true, I’m sure there were some great submissions from kids (or parents)! Clearly I forgot that you are fluent in Cyrillic, comrade!!
JB, hey, last week the Jet Plane Ring was gold-plated, they can’t all be that great. I’ve actually seen some of the Straight Arrow rings that are sort of a marbled brown plastic, so at least mine sort of looks like metal. I was joking about those little stones being Tanzanites (though they do look like them), I’m sure they are just colored glass. I watch a guy on YouTube who recovers copper from old generators, cables, etc, it’s weirdly fun to watch. He’ll melt up to 25 pounds of the metal sometimes. AND DRINK IT! I never read the Popeye comic, though the old version is supposed to be quite good. Wimpy was so odd, chasing a duck with a meat grinder, I loved him. How do you pronounce “BCXB”? And how do those four letters make “All-Union Agricultural Exhibition”??
Mike Cozart, that’s cool that the old Chevy Malibu had that “Body by Fisher” badge. It was really something when people could hire a coach builder to make a custom body for their automobile, Jay Leno sometimes has people on “Jay Leno’s Garage” with incredible custom beauties. Art Center College of Design in Pasadena has a famous car design program, it’s neat to go up there and view their student gallery, some of those models are so amazing.
TokyoMagic!, I have never seen a Poopdeck Pappy pin or even Sweet Pea, but there is a rare one for Eugene the Jeep that I would love to have. Those are always too expensive though. I admit that I thought about that thirsty little girl for that Knott’s item, since you can see a mother holding her little baby in the wagon!
JG, I know the secret word - it’s “sarsaparilla”! Now everyone knows, and I’ve thrown the world into chaos. The Knott’s charm is about an inch in diameter, but is surprisingly heavy for its size. I don’t think we ever had a Body By Fisher, sadly. I’m shocked that you have no memories of at least seeing WImpy in old black and white Popeye cartoons! You must have wasted your time studying or working instead of watching TV! The Commie pin has a classic Commie design, and I think that’s what drew me to it.
In the comic strip, Wimpy would often talk his way out of some mess and end by inviting the now-pacified party to a duck dinner. As he strolled away he'd add "You bring the duck." Another catchphrase, dating from his earliest appearances as a boxing referee, was "Let's you and him fight!"
ReplyDeleteSegar would do Sunday pages where Popeye would try to outflank one of Wimpy's petty swindles but always failed. Future Popeye comic book and strip artist Bud Sagendorf, who started young as Segar's assistant, recalled Segar mapping out Sunday pages where Popeye finally outfoxed Wimpy. Sagendorf would come in the next day to start inking Segar's pencils and discover Segar rewrote it after he left. "Wimpy is smarter than Popeye," Segar would explain. "He has to win". See Sagendorf's book "Popeye: The First Fifty Years".
DBenson, thank you for the info about those early Popeye comics. I may have to get that Sagendorf book, I’ve always been fascinated by the world that Segar created. I’d also love to find a good overall book about Al Capp and Li’l Abner!
ReplyDeleteThere are plenty of reprints of Li'l Abner strips, but be warned that reading too much about Al Capp the man leaves a bad taste in one's mouth. Can recommend the 1959 movie "Li'l Abner", a very faithful film version of the Broadway musical, which was very faithful to the look and comedy of the strip. Julie Newmar is Stupefyin' Jones, who doesn't talk and doesn't have to.
DeleteAfter reading everyone's comments about the Wimpy pin, I must say it's definitely my favorite today. You jogged my memory of a story that my dad and his [older] brothers told me about their younger years, while living in Chicago....they loved to bring it up and tease my dad about it....
ReplyDeleteThere was a Wimpy's Hamburger restaurant in Chicago that my dad and his older brothers loved to eat at. They hopped in the car one day to pick up some burgers and, since they couldn't find a parking space, they had my dad run in to get the hamburgers and drinks (shakes?) 'to-go' for all of them [while the brothers continued to drive around the busy block, waiting for my dad to come out with the food]. The brothers kept circling and circling, and were getting anxious waiting and waiting -- only to find out that my dad had ordered the food, and then proceeded to eat it ALL, inside the restaurant. My dad later told them that, after ordering the food, the waitress brought all the food out on plates and said the restaurant DID NOT do 'to-go' orders. So my dad decided to just sit there and enjoy, since the food was already paid for. The brothers never forgave him. :o)
Side note: I saw a Wimpy's Hamburger sign in a fast-food restaurant about a year ago, for the first time, and took a picture of it to show my dad. He said that "YES!" that was the Wimpy's he remembered. That Wimpy character (above) was on that sign.
I''ll be back...I wanted to add a link in these comments, but I'm having a problem...
For more info about Wimpy's and photos, click HERE.
ReplyDeleteHa! Thanks for the story, Sue. And for the link.
ReplyDelete