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Monday, August 27, 2012

Perfection and Superfection

The missing piece here is probably STILL under somebody's couch or bed somewhere.......


Perfection and Superfection were games made by Lakeside in the '70s

Perfection was a game where you put the shaped game pieces into their matching slots on the game board before a one minute timer expires and the board ejects everything. If you can complete it, you can stop the timer. If you couldn't, you were left picking up game pieces everywhere for 10 minutes.

Superfection had a two minute timer and puzzle piece blocks..

Somehow, I could never complete either of them before timer blew everything up.

 

Sunday, August 26, 2012

"Mister Hot Rod" The Scramblers (1964)


"Mister Hot Rod" The Scramblers (1964)

Like most of the budget record labels of the '60s, Wyncote produced a lot of cheesy low budget knockoff material. They were the budget subsidiary of the Cameo-Parkway label, one of the larger independents of the '60s.

This album is mostly your average Beach Boys/Jan & Dean knockoff - except for this strange offering. This track, which also appears on the Incredibly Strange Music, Vol. 1 CD compilation is by The Scramblers, another anonymous group of session musicians that recorded for a budget label.

(I just can't imagine the crowd going wild over this one. Maybe staring.......)

Stretch Armstrong


When these were introduced, my 7 year old mind thought he was based on a cousin of Louis Armstrong. I remember watching a TV show and how big Louis Armstrong puffed out his cheeks when playing the trumpet. They HAD to be related somehow......

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stretch_Armstrong 

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Montgomery Ward


A ghost from the past arrived in my mailbox the other day.

A Montgomery Ward catalog.

Needless to say, I was puzzled.

Montgomery Ward (or simply "Ward's") went out of business in 2001.

Interesting....

From it's beginnings in 1872 as a mail-order catalog.....

At the Sno-Isle Library in Lynnwood, this reproduction of the 1922 Montgomery Ward catalog was actually one of my all time favourite books there when I was growing up......
......to it's early-mid 20th century heyday as one of the big three chain department stores (along with Sears and JCPenney) Ward's was iconic. As both a catalog and a department store retailer.

Fall/Winter 1968. These bi-annual catalogs were HUGE and weighed nearly six pounds EACH!

LONG defunct former mall anchor store
But beginning in the '70s, it became a victim of a succession of several bad executive decisions and changing tastes (Ward's was an old school department store in the age of the box store. They had a very minimal online presence at the end of their life and were considered an anachronism in the new millennium.)

Timewarp to today.

After a little investigating, I finally found the reason why after 10 years defunct, Ward's was back - The intellectual property of Montgomery Ward had been sold. The original company itself was dead for at least 10 years. This was an entirely new operation using the still valuable name of Montgomery Ward.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montgomery_Ward 

This new catalog, is ummm.....a heck of a lot THINNER than the bi-annual behemoth books that used to be a staple of Ward's until 1985 that I remember (well over 2,000 pages thick!) Even stranger, I also received catalogs from Seventh Avenue and Ginny's and the products in these catalogs as well as the new Montgomery Ward catalog are exactly the same. Right down to the corporate colour scheme and type fonts of the catalogs. So I'm guessing it's all just one company under several different names.

http://www.wards.com/ 

RIP Neil Armstrong