Friday, September 12, 2025
Snippets from the April 24-30, 1971, edition of TV Guide
Sunday, May 4, 2025
"Inventions Wanted" in November 1968 Popular Electronics
- The Wall Street Invention Brokerage, which claimed "10 years proven performances," offered to develop and help sell ideas and inventions, patented or unpatented. "Our national manufacturer clients are urgently seeking new items for outright cash sale or royalties."
- Pioneer Invention Service, located on Broadway in New York City, offered inventors "free expert analysis" and, whoa, a "free invention certificate," whatever that means. Everything was "strictly confidential."
- Voron Electronics, located on East Mermaid Lane in Philadelphia, was seeking electronic or electrical inventions. The George Voron Company was, among other things, involved with "piped-in music," according to this article on Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia.
- Gilbert Adams, Invention Broker, of New York City urged inventors to "sell your invention for cash or royalties! Our client manufacturers eagerly seek new items. ... Financial assistance if needed. 25 years proven performances."
- Classified ads from 1974 issue of The Monster Times
- "Fate" classifieds, August 1975
- 30 classified ads from the June 1971 issue of "Fate" magazine
- Some 1965 Amazing Stories ads were too amazing to be true
Wednesday, April 30, 2025
Anthropomorphic food in 1948 Children's Activities recipes
- Scalloped Potatoes by Evelyn M. Gavin of Lindsay, Montana
- Bran Muffins by Robert Ann Edgcomb of Ottawa, Illinois
- Tossed Salad by Sally Glensky of Tarentum, Pennsylvania
- Icebox Pudding by Pete Beltemacchi of Chicago, Illinois
- Rice Krispies Cookies by Betsy Pierce of Bismarck, North Dakota
- "It's Time To Renew," according to this anthropomorphic alarm clock
- "The Owl and the Eel and the Warming-Pan" (1890)
- Vintage, punny get-well-soon card
- Freaky illustrations found within "The Story of Soil"
- Five groovy ads from the 1933 Furst-McNess cookbook
- 1960s Russian С Новым годом postcard ("Happy New Year!")
- Slightly creepy vintage Valentine's Day postcard
- Potentially unnecessary bonus image of a blender with a face
- Peachy little corned beef loaves and healthful cheese dishes
- Everything's better with anthropomorphism (1949's Plant Maintenance Manual)
- A fun "Merry Hallowe'en" postcard
- Happy Thanksgiving: Enjoy vintage anthropomorphic vegetables
- The one with the anthropomorphic light poles
- Anthropomorphic Bockwurst would be a terrible band name
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
1975 Christmas issue of Byte
This is the fourth-ever issue of Byte magazine, a home computer magazine that was published from September 1975 until July 1998.
- Powerless IC Test Clip
- LIFE Line 3
- Build a 6800 System with This Kit
- Can Your Computer Tell Time?
- Photographic notes on Prototype Construction
- What This Country Needs Is a Good 8-Bit High Level Language
- The Software Vaccum
- Logic Probes — Hardware Bug Chasers
- What Is a Character?
- Flip Flops Exposed
- Read Only Memory Technology
- The HP-65: World's Smallest Computer
- Assembling an Altair 8800
- "Use Our Hardware Assemblers!"
- "Hi-Speed Static RAM 2602-1 475ns"
- "Inexpensive, Sophisticated Mass Storage"
- "Build Your Own Advanced Terminal"
- "Christmas Time Payment Plan, 1K Altair for Just $68 a Month!"
- "Ten Reasons to Choose CMR Memory Card"
- "16K Memory Kit Less Than 5.5¢/Word"
- "Uses Low Power Schottky TTL"
- "Epoxy Boards with Plated Thru Holes"
- "Jump Program 16K Address Slot"
- "TO-92 Voltage Regulators"
Seasons GreetingsWHAT SINGLE ELECTRONIC MACHINE CAN BE USED TO PERFORM/CONTROL ALL THE FOLLOWING TYPES OF SERVICES?
- Send morse code
- Control repeater stations
- Operate as a calculator
- Receive/send/buffer data between a wide variety of communication devices
- Monitor instruments
- Control machines
- Sort/compile data
- Test other devices
- Play games
the SCELBI-8B MINI-COMPUTER CAN!
- From 1982: Dr. Robert Wesson's program will help you speel better
- Advertisements from a 1982 issue of Creative Computing
- From 1982: William Shatner peddles Commodore's VIC-20
- The "Grand" Stand™ was there to support your joystick
- 1980s computer game: Sonar Search
- Sphere Corporation's "Pleaser" PC from the mid-1970s
- Tackling genealogy on your home PC in the late 1980s
Saturday, November 16, 2024
From the readers: Sock monkeys, film posters, Phillies hex sign & more
Obscure and fabulous movie poster: Betty Bruce writes: "I have this Lake of Tears movie poster. I received it from a Canadian Consulat serving in Cuba from 1966-7 to 1970. I have many original posters from that time period. They are beautiful."
How to make the Red Heel Sock Monkey and Sock Elephant: Anonymous writes: "Edna Clapper published instructions for the Sock Monkey (with permission from Nelson Knitting) in Pack-O-Fun magazine. She subsequently created the Sock Elephant. Nelson Knitting bought instruction sheets for both and included them in every package of red heel socks. She also created the book, 'How to Make Sock Toys,' which Nelson Knitting packaged with a dozen Red Heel socks and sold in the Sears catalog."
I received a related email from author Dee Lindner, who writes: "Hi Chris, I saw on your website that you like history, folklore, etc. I have been interested in sock monkey minutia for decades and have great news! Red Heel Sock Monkeys: Pop Culture Icons is now available in the marketplace. Individuals can purchase this book on Amazon. If you can help spread the word that this book is now available, I would appreciate it."
Scholastic book: "Chilling Ghost Stories": Tom from the Garage Sale Finds blog, which just finished an amazing run of Halloween-themed October posts, writes: "I loved Scholastic, and their ghost story collections in particular. I never had this one, but definitely would pick it up if I came across it. I had 13 Ghostly Tales and Arrow Book of Ghost Stories."
A neat piece of Phillies history: Anonymous writes: "Great to finally see something online about this bizarre little chapter in Phillies history! I attended that doubleheader as a 12-year-old with my father & two of my brothers. This being Philadelphia, many of those hex signs were frisbeed onto the field between games. But not by us — in fact, mine has accompanied me to every place I’ve lived over the past 54 years."1978 Halloween movie marathon at MacArthur Drive-In in Orange, Texas: Wendyvee writes: "I'm not much of a horror fan. I think that is due to the fact that my first exposure to them was when I was probably too young and I had friends with cable TV. The films that stick out to me from that era would be the weird Chuck Connors Tourist Trap (go figure), Harvest Home, Carrie (original), and The Sentinel (Burgess Meredith)."
Advertisements in the final 1960s issue of "Horror Monsters" magazine: Tom quips, "Why do I think you would just receive a pair of those plastic fangs for both the Vampire and Werewolf kits?"
Many great memories of Wintrode's Garage in Littlestown: Mary Wildasin Staub writes: "My dad was the Leroy Wildasin you mentioned in your post! I tagged along with Dad on occasion and he would buy me an ice cream as a treat. Do you have any idea where I could find employee records, as I am researching the time he worked for A.W. Feeder in Silver Run, Maryland, and then the Buick dealership. staubmk@gmail.com would love to hear from you."
It would be great if someone out there could help Mary with some leads!
Triad and Stevie and witches, oh my: Wendyvee writes: "Much like 'Edge of Seventeen,' the origin story [for 'Rhiannon'] does change a little bit over the years; but remains essentially the same."
1967 advertisement for a flying saucer lamp in Saucer News: Tom, who has found some amazing rare pieces at garage sales and estate sales over the decades, writes: "That is one cool lamp. I have never seen anything like it in all my travels."I'd be stunned if an original one even exists in the wild, given how few were produced and how flimsy they probably were. But there's always hope in someone's attic or basement.
Sunday, October 27, 2024
1967 advertisement for a flying saucer lamp in Saucer News
- Some spacey tidbits from the Fall 1966 issue of Saucer News
- 1988 UFO Magazine: John Lennon, Gulf Breeze sightings and more
- Galactitags: The must-have accessory in the event of alien abduction
- Book cover: "The Case of the Ancient Astronauts"
- "Fate" magazine classifieds, August 1975
- Book cover plus some bonuses: "The Oak Island Quest"
- 1976 booklet on UFOs, occult from Southwest Radio Church
- Book cover: "Investigating UFO's"
- Questions, answers & mysteries with Hookland's David Southwell
- RIP Art Bell, of the Kingdom of Nye
- Three sci-fi paperback covers with UFOs (and one with a chimp)
- "Secret of the Old Museum," with tangents, footnotes & Nimoy
- Hoping to see UFOs for 1976 bicentennial Independence Day
- Book cover: "Strangers from the Skies"
Monday, October 21, 2024
Advertisements in the final 1960s issue of "Horror Monsters" magazine
Horror Monsters was published by Charlton Publications for 10 quarterly issues in the mid 1960s. This is a very ragged copy of the 10th and final issue, which is listed as Winter 1964-65.
The magazine was a competitor to Famous Monsters of Filmland and, ultimately, didn't seem to succeed in that endeavor. The monster market wasn't big enough for both of them.
Horror Monsters gave it the good college try, though. This final issue includes an extensive feature story about Vincent Price, photo-filled looks at Mario Bava's Black Sabbath (of my favorites) and Hammer's The Curse of Frankenstein, and a feature article about alleged true-life cases of vampirism throughout history.
It also has cool advertisements aimed at an audience that was composed primarily of teenage boys. There are a decent number of ads, but they are from just a handful of companies — Cult of Horror, Victor Specialties and World Wide Specialties — which was likely another sign of the magazine's flagging viability.
As you'll see, there is both a Do-It-Yourself Vampire Kit and a Do-It-Yourself Werewolf Kit. They cost $1 apiece and, while that's $10 in today's dollars, I can't imagine the package kids got back in the mail were too exciting. But maybe someone has happy memories of getting their kit.
Finally, this small advertisement, nestled among chattering teeth, a shark-tooth necklace and a plastic snake, made me smile. The Worry Bird was a minor phenomenon in the 1960s, though no one seems to know much about the official origins of the big-beaked, sad-eyed creature.Monday, September 30, 2024
RIP, Charlie Hustle & Mount Mutombo
Saturday, May 11, 2024
From the readers: Louie Youngkeit, Sunny Wicka, Paul Crockett & more
Today is, according to the internet, World Migratory Bird Day, Archery Day, Hostess CupCake Day, National Windmill Day and Twilight Zone Day (though no one seems to know why May 11 was picked for that last one).
Here on Papergreat, it's a day to share comments from readers.
Saturday's postcard: Whale at Moon Valley Park in Milford, Pa.: Anonymous writes: "My family vacationed several times at Moon Valley Park in the 1970s and early 1980s. It was a wonderful place for children. I loved the 2 bears and the beagle pups that they sold. The Canouses were a wonderful family. Loved walking up to see the 2 waterfalls. We wereTuesday, June 27, 2023
Everything will be funner in July
Check back for more here soon. Blog Assistant Pete is watching over my shoulder to keep me on track.