Tuesday, April 14, 2026

More Stuff From the Box

I've grabbed a new box full of fun for the next few "Stuff From the Box" installments. It's a pretty nice old lithographed tobacco tin, with the stern countenance of Daniel Webster, oozing solemnity. He was an American lawyer and statesman who represented New Hampshire and Massachusetts in the U.S. Congress and served as the 14th and 19th U.S. secretary of state under presidents William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, and Millard Fillmore. Inside the box, there's the usual selection of random objects, along with a few "gems".


I used to have fun bowling with various family members when I was younger, even though I was not particularly good. I could never throw the ball any way other than "dead straight and fast", which led to a lot of splits. But it was a good excuse to eat hot french fries with lots of ketchup, and there's nothing wrong with that. For whatever reason, bowling's popularity seems to be waning year by year. The pin below is a nice example from 20th Century Lanes (wherever that was) in celebration of somebody scoring 225 - not too shabby. I love the rocket theme.


I've mentioned my fondness for old employee pins and badges (in fact all of the rest of today's items fall into that category). This next object is an ID badge that belonged to a fellow who worked at General Electric's facility in Schenectady, New York. I guess he was hired in 1949? (GE's) company's roots in Schenectady go back to Thomas Edison, who moved his Edison Machine Works there in 1887. GE's Schenectady facility is known for its manufacturing and service center capabilities, particularly in areas like steam and generator rotor services, and advanced generator manufacturing.


Here's a cheerful orange name tag (sans name) from a Rexall drug store. I assumed that Rexall was still a thing, but Wikipedia says Rexall was a chain of American drugstores, and the name of their store-branded products. The stores, having roots in the federation of United Drug Stores starting in 1903, licensed the Rexall brand name to as many as 12,000 drug stores across the United States from 1920 to 1977. They've been gone since 1977?


Here's an attractive employee badge from Pabst Breweries (in Milwaukee, Wisconsin), date unknown. The Pabst Brewing Company is an American company that dates its origins to a brewing company founded in 1844 by Jacob Best and was, by 1889, named after Frederick Pabst. The brewery's best-seller was a lager, Best Select, which began public sales in 1875. By 1893, Pabst became the first brewer in the United States to sell more than one million U.S. barrels (120 million liters) of beer in a year. The beer was also the favorite of Frank Booth from "Blue Velvet"!


I really like the design on this tiny pin (small enough that it was hard to photograph) given to a Convair employee in honor of that person's fifth year with the company. Convair, previously Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation, was an American aircraft-manufacturing company that later expanded into rockets and spacecraft. The company was formed in 1943 by the merger of Consolidated Aircraft and Vultee Aircraft. In 1953, it was purchased by General Dynamics, and operated as their Convair Division for most of its corporate history. It also manufactured the first Atlas rockets, including the rockets that were used for the crewed orbital flights of Project Mercury. The company's subsequent Atlas-Centaur design continued this success and derivatives of the design remain in use as of 2025.


Stay tuned for more STUFF FROM THE BOX!

10 comments:

  1. Major-
    I can see why the design of the Convair pin is a favorite of yours. It's pretty swell.

    Thanks, Major.

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  2. OK, so why is there a 10 cent postage stamp stuck to the tobacco tin? Whoever is on the stamp has an even sterner countenance than Mr. Webster.

    Mr. Friebel reminds me a bit of a young Bill Nye, the Science Guy. At least in the thumbnail image.

    After a quick (very quick) search, I found out that Rexall is still a thing!

    The Pabst pin looks like a very used bus token. Are bus tokens still used somewhere?

    I also like the Convair pin, but my favorite today is the 20th Century Lanes pin. A combination of the colors, the gold outlining, the rocket, and just the simplicity of the design, all together, appeals to me.

    Good stuff, Maynard... I mean Major. :-p

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  3. My favorite today is also the 20th Century Lanes pin. There used to be three bowling alleys fairly close to me. They are all gone today......sort of like the disappearing drive-in theaters. Sad!

    Thanks for sharing, Major!

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  4. Another vote for 20th Century Lanes, because they have a rocket on it! Yay rockets! We used to go bowling at the lanes near Disneyland on my school trips. That place is gone now, it’s now a parking lot by the Pixar Hotel, I bet Tokyo remembers it.

    Mr. Friebel looks like a no-nonsense guy, but probably loosened up after a couple of Pabst beers. I’ve got some PBR in the fridge right now.

    I remember Rexall Drugs, I’m surprised they are still around after all the turmoil in that business in recent years. Orange logos are back in style.

    That Convair pin is pretty cool. I had a little toy jet plane, well over 60 years ago, that was labeled Convair. I wonder if Artemis 2 used any of their tech?

    Fun pins, Major, and a neat box too.

    JG

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  5. Nanook, I love a good little graphic design!

    JB, I think stamps like those are some sort of tobacco tax, but I’m not really sure. Mr. Friebel reminded me a bit of Buddy Ebsen! Huh, I guess I should use Google and not “Hank’s Internet Thingy”, no wonder I got the Rexall info wrong. Bus tokens… I think they are extinct. Just use your phone app! Yeah, that 20th Century Lanes pin is pretty nice, the rocket theme makes me think it is from the Apollo era. (Maynard?)

    TokyoMagic!, I don’t understand why bowling has fallen out of favor... I think it’s a fun thing to do with friends. Though it can be frustrating when all the lanes are full and you have to wait a long time!

    JG, I used to like to take my niece and nephew bowling up in San Luis Obispo, there was (is?) an alley in Pismo Beach, and another on the campus of Cal Poly. The kids loved it, and of course we always got french fries with plenty of ketchup to dip in, maybe that’s what they REALLY liked. My relatives in Minnesota liked Pabst beer, though I seem to recall Schlitz was also popular. You’d think that people would still need drugstores, in fact maybe more than ever with an aging population. Shrug. Good question about whether Convair contributed to the Artemis mission, no idea!

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  6. Let's not forget that Daniel Webster literally kicked the Devil's butt in the Jabez Stone case.

    The "APR 49" date on the Genera O Electric badge is more likely the expiration date, which security people would need to see more than a hiring date. Whatever the purpose of the date, that badge suits Mr. Friebel to a "T."

    Tough decision for me. I love Convair's delta-winged beauties - the F-102, F-106, F-111 (OK, technically a swing-wing but still effectively a delta in fully-swept position), and the B-58 - and the Atlas and Centaur rocket lines, but that 20th Century Lanes rocket desig is so cool looking. I'll abstain from voting today.

    JG, the Superman II script didn't spend any time exploring who built Artemis 2, but SISE should have gotten its money back. That thing crumpled like an aluminum can when Non pushed on the top of the cabin. Granted, the guy was Kryptonian, but still...

    Or...were you talking about NASA's Artemis II spacecraft? In that case, Convair's successors were involved. General Dynamics sold its Space Systems Division, which developed out of Convair's rocket business, to Martin Marietta in 1994, which merged with Lockheed in 1995 to form Lockheed Martin. Lockheed Martin is the prime contractor for the Orion capsule, and also partnered with Boeing to create the United Launch Alliance, which is the prime contractor for the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS), the upper stage of the Space Launch System (SLS).

    Thanks, Major!

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  7. @ JB-
    "OK, so why is there a 10 cent postage stamp stuck to the tobacco tin? Whoever is on the stamp has an even sterner countenance than Mr. Webster".

    As The Major has indicated, that is a cigar tax stamp. The gentleman of 'sterner countenance' is none other than statesman Henry Clay - who was both a senator and representative for Kentucky, among other achievements of note - including three, unsuccessful runs for president.

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  8. "Hello? Do you have Webster in the can?"

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  9. Lou and Sue1:22 PM

    ^ :oD

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  10. Major, "Good stuff, Maynard" was a catch phrase from a TV commercial some tome back... 30 years, maybe? I'm not sure what the commercial was advertising, some sort of cereal maybe?

    Wait a sec while I check Hank’s Internet Thingy......
    OK, it was from a Malt-O-Meal commercial in 1983(!)

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