"The main patio of The Lodge On The Desert ... one of the many attractive resort hotels in Tucson, Arizona."
1950s is my guess.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Postcard - Tucson, Arizona
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Phone photo 2698
Labels:
Allegheny Cemetery,
Emil Winter,
Phone photo,
Pittsburgh
Postcard - Tucson, Arizona
"Metropolitan Tucson, Arizona, as it appears from the peak of 'A' Mountain."
1950s?
For awhile, up to 1985 or 1986, this town was home to Dale Luciano and Dada Gumbo Press. Some of my favorite jam titles were published here.
1950s?
For awhile, up to 1985 or 1986, this town was home to Dale Luciano and Dada Gumbo Press. Some of my favorite jam titles were published here.
Labels:
Dada Gumbo,
Dale Luciano,
jams,
postcards,
Tucson Arizona
Phone photo 2697
Labels:
Allegheny Cemetery,
Emil Winter,
Phone photo,
Pittsburgh
Jonah and the Wail
From the White Salmon Enterprise, January 21, 1916. The town of White Salmon, Washington is on the Columbia River, across from Hood River, Oregon.
Phone photo 2696
Somehow I find it a bit disturbing to see a tomb so locked and fortified, but then my hosts told me the film Night of the Living Dead was filmed in nearby Butler County so suddenly this made sense.
Allegheny Cemetery, Pittsburgh
Labels:
Allegheny Cemetery,
Butler County Pennsylvania,
Night of the Living Dead,
Phone photo,
Pittsburgh
Worker Poet Covers Obscuro Bezango
Our old friend Mike Hill has some coverage of the Obscuro Bezango show, including a few unusual photos:
Check it out at this link http://workerpoet.blogspot.com/
Phone photo 2695
Monday, August 12, 2013
Morty Comix # 2618
Morty Comix # 2618 was slipped into a book by B. Kliban in the room where I stayed in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Phone photo 2694
Postcard - Phoenix, Arizona
"Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Phoenix, Arizona. The most modern, fully-equipped and luxurious coliseum and convention center in the entire Southwest is focal point of the 80-acre Arizona State Fairgrounds. Beautifully equipped and decorated, it seats over 14,000 and hosts conventions, sporting events, exhibits, trade shows, theatrical productions and concerts."
Late 1960s?
Late 1960s?
Morty Comix # 2617
Morty Comix # 2617 (which has already been discovered, I'm informed) was hidden in a hat in a cabin in Butler County, Pennsylvania. Somehow I lost a couple of the shots documenting this event.
Postcard - Phoenix, Arizona
"North Central Highrise Complex, Phoenix, Arizona. Viewing from the left: Executive Towers Apartments, Del Webb's Towne House, Del Webb Office Building, Guarantee Bank, and the Financial Center. The two circular satellites adjacent to the Financial Center are the Pioneer and Home Savings Banks. Picturesque Squaw Peak looms on the horizon."
I'm guessing 2nd half of the 1960s. Squaw Peak was renamed Piestewa Peak in 2003.
I'm guessing 2nd half of the 1960s. Squaw Peak was renamed Piestewa Peak in 2003.
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Favorite Movie Quotes: Killing Zoe
"If you do it, it will make you feel as though the rest of the world is in a bubble of glass and you are rubbing against it like a bad windshield wiper."
Morty Comix # 2616
Oh, the cards that we are dealt by Fate. Hey, I think I drew an entire comic on that premise, Cranium Frenzy # 9 back in 1998.
Anyway, Morty Comix # 2616 was folded up into a little square and squeezed into a box of playing cards at a home in Butler, Pennsylvania. Three other people were in the room as I performed this task but I managed to pull it off as my greatest card trick.
Postcard - Phoenix, Arizona
"Aerial View of Downtown Phoenix, Arizona. The Capitol of Arizona, Phoenix with a population of approx. 350,000 is a desert metropolis in the center of the fertile Salt River Valley. World famous as a winter resort. Phoenix also is prominent in the supply of citrus and produce."
If the population estimate is correct, this postcard dates back to the 1950s.
If the population estimate is correct, this postcard dates back to the 1950s.
Morty Comix # 2615
Phone photo 2687
Postcard - Dateland, Arizona
Morty Comix # 2614
Morty Comix # 2614 was placed inside a tabletop ad at a restaurant in Hampton Township, Pennsylvania.
Eat'n Park is a regional chain and the name brings up some questions. What exactly is the word "Eat'n" contracting? Do they mean "Eat and Park"? And if so, wouldn't "Park and Eat" make more sense as this is not a drive-in? Or "Eat and Drive"? Or is the contraction a way of calling the place an "Eating Park"?
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