Thursday, March 31, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Maps of Antiquity


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm pleased to report that Maps of Antiquity is still in business. There website is: http://www.mapsofantiquity.com/ (I wonder if its a coincidence that it seems like all the 2000 businesses that had websites are still in business, and those that didn't have websites are out of business [or at the very least, unable to be easily found!]

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Custom House


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I was unable to find out if Custom House was still in business. The only business directory they are listed on is www.manta.com.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Courtney's Jewelry


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm not sure if Courtney's Jewelry still has a physical store address, but here's her website: http://www.etsy.com/shop/CJBCapeCod

Monday, March 28, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Ross Coppelman


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm delighted to report that Ross Coppelman is still in business. Here is his website: http://www.rosscoppelman.com/showroom/

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: New England Things


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm not sure if New England Things is still open - I was unable to find a website or a business listing for them.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Mermaid by the Sea


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm not sure if Mermaid By the Sea is still in business. I could find no business directory listing or website for them.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Marjorie's By the Sea


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

Marjorie's by the Sea is still in business. Here's their website: http://www.marjories.com/
Home Decor, Dinnerware, Linens, and Beach Gifts featured at Marjories.com

We are embracing the the groundhogs predictions and are reaching for Spring! We have decided to celebrate this with giving you 10% off the store for the entire month. 10% off ANYTHING in here!

We want you to come see the new colors, the new merchandise and get away from the winter dreariness we are all feeling! We want you to embrace the pastel hues that are so popular right now with our new arrival of silk plants, a beautiful new candle line, and lot’s of other goodies! Think positive… eventually we will be done with all this snow!

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Journey on a Small Planet


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm not sure if Journey on a Small Planet is still in business - I could find no business directory listing for them, let alone a website.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Caoe Cod Businesss: Greenbriar of Harwich


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I don't know if The Greenbriar of Harwich is still open. They have no website. They're in a business directory, however, with the following info:

The Greenbriar of Harwich
554 Main St Harwichport, MA 508-430-0645

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Epiphany Interiors


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm not sure if Epiphany Interiors is still in business in Cape Cod. There is an Epiphany Interiors in Pennsyvania.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Cottonseeds Mercantile


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm not sure if Cottonseeds Mercantile is still in business. They didn't have a website in 2000, and they don't have a website today.

They are in a business directory called hotfrog, which gives their address thusly:

160B Route 6A, Sandwich, MA 02563-2047

p: 5088889820

British Radio Mysteries: Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery Part 4

Jonathan Mystery Episode 4: The Encounter

Cast
Paul Temple
Margo Temple
Sir Graham Forbes
Inspector Gerrard
Mavis Russell
Mrs. Gulliver
Cockney vacuumer

I.
The first few lines of the previous episode are repeated. “We arrived about 8 o’clock,” says Mrs. Ferguson. She tells them that Richard’s landlady, Mrs. Gulliver, had received a letter from Jonathan, and was in quite a flap about it. She’d telephoned them that morning, asking them to come up to Oxford.

Before she can hand the letter to Paul, her husband Robert knocks on the door, and enters. He is inclined to scoff at the importance of the letter.

The letter:
Dear Richard,
This is just to wish you a happy birthday. Hope to see you at the end of the week.
Regards, Jonathan

Robert suggests that Jonathan is just a friend of Richard’s who is on holiday and hasn’t taken the trouble to read the papers, so he hasn’t heard about the murder.

Helen Ferguson also wanted to come down to Oxford because she believes that Richard is being blackmailed. Robert disagrees with her.

Paul asks what would Richard have done if he’d suddenly needed two thousand pounds. Robert says he’d hesitate about giving him the money…but Mrs. Ferguson declares that if Robert hadn’t given him the money, she would.

Mrs. Ferguson then says they’ve discovered the identity of Europa, a woman named Mrs. Mavis Russell. Her husband suggests that Paul already knows this. He also suggests that Richard may be afraid of being murdered, which is why he’s not coming out in the open.

II.
Paul and Steve are eating breakfast in the hotel dining room. They are joined by Sir Graham Forbes. He had just been talking with Inspector Gerrard. The cryptographic people had examined the first post card Richard Ferguson had received – and a list of letters and numbers was found. Steve suggests that they are car license plates. Paul then recognizes one of the numbers – it had been the registration of the car, the Lombard, which Red Harris had been driving.

Sir Graham then says it’s a curious coincidence - he tells Paul and Steve that a French criminal, head of a car racket, had been arrested the night before.

Paul then tells Sir Graham what had happened the night before. He explains that they’d met Mrs. Russell who’d given him a signet ring belonging to Richard Ferguson. They then go to the Encounter restaurant, where he loses the ring – stolen either by Mark Elliot, Reggie Macintosh or Diana Nelson. Then, when they’d got back to the hotel, he’d received the phone call from Richard Ferguson asking him to give the ring to Mrs. Gulliver, and that if he did he would meet Paul that night at the Encounter to explain what it was all about.

Paul tells Sir Graham that on the signet ring had been scratched A4 and D4.

Rudolph Charles joins them. He tells them that Max Wyman actually hasn’t been in Scotland, and hasn’t been seen for over a week.

Paul asks for a description of Wyman…and wonders if Wyman was killed instead of Richard Ferguson.

III.
Paul says farewell to Sir Graham.

Steve and Paul have hired a car and driver, but before they can leave, Mark Elliot drives up on the opposite side of the street, and gives Paul the signet ring, saying that one of his waiters had found it the night before at the restaurant.

They then drive to Mrs. Gulliver’s house, using a rental car. Once there, they meet a young man using a vacuum cleaner, which he doesn’t turn off because he says he’ll never get it going again. He ushers Paul and Steve into a room, then says he’ll go up and get Mrs. Gulliver. The phone rings – it’s Diana Nelson. She wants to talk to Mrs. Gulliver. Paul turns off the vacuum cleaner, and they can hear Mrs. Gulliver’s moans. She’s been badly beaten. She keeps repeating, “Don’t hurt me. I haven’t got the ring.”

IV.
Sir Graham and Paul are discussing the case. Inspector Gerrard enters the room in the hospital where Sir Graham and Paul is, and gives the condition of Mrs. Gulliver. They discuss the ring. Paul says he’s going to be taking Steve to the Encounter later that night. A police officer delivers a message – the letter Paul had gotten from Mrs. Ferguson had no cipher. The note also confirms that it was Max Wyman who was murdered.

V.
Paul and Steve arrive and are seated at the Encounter. Paul goes into the cocktail bar (Steve always goes to powder her nose.) Mrs. Mavis Russell is at the bar, drunk. Paul asks her if she’d heard about Mrs. Gulliver, and tells her its because “they” thought she had the signet ring. Mrs. Russell denies knowing anything about it.

The barman tells Paul that he’s wanted on the telephone. On the other end is Richard Ferguson. Richard asks Paul to bring the ring to him – take it to the first AA box on the Oxford Road. (AA = Automotive Association – an organization that had telephone boxes on strategic roads, so that anyone who had a breakdown could call for assistance.)

Old style AA phone box

They drive to the box, and approach the car parked there. Mark Elliot gets out of the car, waving a revolver.

“You’ve asked for this, my friend, and now you’re going to get it!”

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Chatham Sign Shop


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm pleased to report that Chatham Sign Shop is still in business. Here's their website: http://www.chathamsignshop.com/

Cape Cod Businesses: Carriage House Designs



The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

I'm pleased to report that Carriage House Designs is still in business. Here's their website: http://www.carriagehousedesigns.com/carriage_house/Welcome.html
Welcome to our website! Carriage House is Your Cool Neighborhood Store where you can find great gifts, glittery jewelry and wonderful service. We are also a specialty florist specializing in wedding floral designs.

Our site contains examples of our work and images from our events. You will also be able to keep up on upcoming events and sales. We hope that you enjoy our new web site and visit often.

Our humble beginnings began in 1994 working out of our small carriage house. Since then we have grown into our current location in historic down town Howell.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

British Radio Mystery: Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery, Part 3

Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery
Part #3: The Ring

Paul Temple
Steve Temple
Sir Graham Forbes
Diana Nelson
Reggie Macintosh
Mrs. Mavis Russell
Mark Elliot
Richard Ferguson
Mrs. Ferguson

I.
First is the recap. Paul Temple has called his wife who is in the lobby of the hotel, and told her that the man she is accompanying isn’t Max Wyman. Paul gives her instructions to dump Wyman, while she pretends that she’s talking to an old friend so as not to make him suspicious. She successfully escapes, but the false Wyman also drives off – but they get his license plate number.

Temple explains how he knew Wyman was an imposter. Sir Graham had told him that Wyman was the author of a book on Justinian, but when Wyman spoke to them he misidentified a name that he should have known. But Temple hadn’t remembered it until he and Steve had already left.

In the lobby, Paul asks the reception to put through a call for him to London, to Sir Graham Forbes. Reception also hands him an evening paper. The front page says, “Is Richard Ferguson still alive.”

“Someone must have talked,” deduces Paul. “It’s either one of the Fergusons or Reggie Macintosh.”

They return to their room, where they speculate that the attempted kidnapping was because “they” must think that Paul is on to something. Then the call to Sir Graham is connected, and Paul asks him if he’d gotten in touch with Max Wyman. Wyman was away, says Sir Graham, and that he had spoken to Rudolph Charles, Wyman’s roommate.

Paul gives the car number to Sir Graham, they discuss the incident a bit more, then Paul hangs up.

Steve and Paul discuss the case to date, then there’s a knock on the door and Rudolph Charles is there. He had seen the paper that said that Richard Ferguson was still alive, and wants to know if Richard Ferguson is still alive.

Charles tells them that a friend of his, a woman, thought she saw Richard go into the Encounter restaurant. No one believed her, but now he, Charles, believes that she was probably right.

They invite Charles to go down to the lobby for a drink, but he turns them down. He has a date.

II.
In the lobby they part. Steve goes into the lounge, Paul goes to get some cigarettes from the front desk. The desk clerk says they he doesn’t have any, but he can get some in the bar. Mrs. Mavis Russell approaches and asks the desk clerk if there’s a Paul Temple staying there. The desk clerk introduces them.

Mrs. Russell explains that she was a friend of Richard Ferguson’s, and that people are talking of her like she had led Ferguson astray.

She scoffs at the news in the paper about Richard being alive.

“I know Richard’s dead,” says Mrs. Russell. “I had a letter this afternoon from the man who murdered him.”

III.
They are in the Temple’s bedroom, and Mrs. Russell explains her relationship to Richard Ferguson, and then shows them the letter.

It’s a type written letter.

“Dear Mrs. Russell,
I feel quite sure that you more than anyone else would like to have the enclosed. It belonged to Richard Ferguson.”

She then shows the enclosure – the signet ring.

Paul asks Mrs. Russell if she’d ever met someone named Jonathan.

Inside the ring are some initials – A4 and D 4. Mrs. Russell has no idea what they mean.

Paul asks her if she knew a man named Mark Elliot. Mrs. Russell says yes, he owns a restaurant called The Encounter.

Paul then asks her about her writing as Europa and the New Feature. “If you want to know who murdered your son, ask Europa.”

Mrs. Russell says that’s a beastly thing to do, but doesn’t understand why anyone would do it.

IV.
Paul and Steve are having dinner at the Encounter. Steve goes into the ladies’ cloakroom, which is on the first floor. Dinah Nelson and Reggie Macintosh (her brother in law) come up to him. Macintosh explains that he’d let the cat out of the bag because he’d had too much to drink when he’d been talking with a friend who was a reporter.

Diana sounds happy, she believes Richard is alive and there’s a perfectly simple explanation to the whole mystery. Paul points out that if the victim wasn’t Richard, then Richard was probably the murderer.

Macintosh usually pops up to Oxford two or three times a week. He’s in the textile business.

Paul shows the signet ring to Diana, who immediately gets a bit hysterical, and tries to get Paul to give her the ring. Paul refuses.

Mark Elliott comes up to them. He greets Macintosh and Diana, and they have what seems to be a rather pointed exchange. Reggie and Diana leave, and Elliot asks Temple if he’d like to have a drink.

They go into the cocktail bar. Elliot said he’d never liked Ferguson. “I prefer my intellectuals to be over 40.” He says that he had a motive to kill Ferguson – he was being blackmailed by him.

V.
Steve and Paul are back in their hotel room. Steve is yawning and very tired. They discuss Mark Elliot and that Elliot had paid Ferguson over two thousand pounds in the last six weeks.

Steve says she took a favorable view of Mrs. Russell.

It’s 11.45 pm. The phone rings. It’s Richard Ferguson. He begs Paul to bring the signet ring to his landlady Mrs. Gulliver first thing the next morning. If he does so, he’ll meet Paul at the Encounter the next night to explain what it’s all about.

Paul searches for the ring, he thought he’d put it in his inside pocket, but it’s gone.

Paul wonders if Reggie Macintosh took it, but Steve says Elliot took it.

There’s a knock on the door, and Mrs. Ferguson comes into the room. She and her husband are staying in the hotel also. They’d come down to see Mrs. Gulliver. A letter had arrived for Richard that morning, and Mrs. Gulliver had opened it by mistake.

“It’s from that friend of Richard’s. The one no one seems to know anything about. Jonathan.”

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Culinary History Books: Chop Suey by Andrew Coe


Chop Suey: A Cultural History of Chinese Food in the United States, by Andrew Coe
Oxford University Press,2009
251 pages, plus Notes, Bibliography and Index. Several b&w photos scattered throughout the text.

Description
In 1784, passengers on the ship Empress of China became the first Americans to land in China, and the first to eat Chinese food. Today there are over 40,000 Chinese restaurants across the United States-by far the most plentiful among all our ethnic eateries. Now, in Chop Suey Andrew Coe provides the authoritative history of the American infatuation with Chinese food, telling its fascinating story for the first time.

It's a tale moves from curiosity to disgust and then desire. From China, Coe's story travels to the American West, where Chinese immigrants drawn by the 1848 Gold Rush struggled against racism and culinary prejudice but still established restaurants and farms and imported an array of Asian ingredients. He traces the Chinese migration to the East Coast, highlighting that crucial movement when New York "Bohemians" discovered Chinese cuisine-and, for better or worse, chop suey.

Along the way, Coe shows how the peasant food of an obscure part of China came to dominate Chinese-American restaurants; unravels the truth of chop suey's origins; reveals why Jewish Americans fell in love with egg rolls and chow mein; shows how President Nixon's 1972 trip to China opened our palates to a new range of cuisine; and explains why we still can't get dishes like those served in Beijing or Shanghai.

The book also explores how American tastes have been shaped by our relationship with the outside world, and how we've relentlessly changed foreign foods to adapt them to our own deeply rooted culinary preferences.

Andrw Coe's Chop Suey is a fascinating tour of America's centuries-long appetite for Chinese food. Always illuminating, often exploding long-held culinary myths, this book opens a new window into defining what constitutes American cuisine.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
List of illustrations
1. Stags' Pizzles and Birds' Nests
2. Putrified Garlic on a Much-used Blanket
3. Coarse Rice and Water
4. Chinese Gardens on Gold Mountain
5. A Toothsome Stew
6. American Chop Suey
7. Devouring the Duck
Photo Credits
Notes
Bibliography
Index

____
Museum of Everything
Exhibit: Culinary History Books
Chinese Food

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

British Radio Mystery: Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery Part 2

Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery part 2 of 8

Episode 2: “That Good Old Intuition”

Cast
Paul Temple – Peter Coke
Steve Temple – Marjorie Westbury
Charlie (their manservant)
Robert Ferguson
Helen Ferguson
Inspector Gerrard
Sir Graham Forbes
Max Wyman

I.
In a recap, Mrs. Ferguson tells Paul Temple that she saw her son Robert outside the hotel that morning. Before she could run across to him, he had disappeared (walking away down the Strand).

Paul asks her to explain it from the beginning. He also points out that if Robert wasn’t the victim of the crime…he was probably the killer.

Her husband tells Temple that he had seen Richard’s body that morning. Paul presses him – if he hadn’t been told that Richard was dead, would he have believed that it was Richard. [There was fingerprint evidence that it was Richard, but that will be dismissed with shortly.]

Paul tells the Fergusons to go back to their hotel and just carry on as normal for the next few days.

Charlie comes in and says that Sir Graham Forbes has arrived.

Paul comments on Red Harris’ statement about “they forgot the ring.” He also points out that the fingerprints they took that confirmed his identity were only taken from other items in his apartment – cigarette case, wallet, hair brush, and so on.

Sir Graham refuses to believe it, feeling that Mrs. Ferguson’s evidence is just that of a hysterical woman, and he, Paul and Steve argue about it for a few minutes.

Charlie comes in again. Reggie Macintosh has arrived and insists on speaking with Paul, Macintosh then comes in without waiting to be invited. He tells the assembled gathering that he’d taken Diana Nelson to the train – she had to return to Oxford, and when he went down to the Underground, he saw Richard Ferguson getting onto a train!

II.
It’s the next night, and Steve gives Paul some coffee and asks him what had happened that afternoon.

Paul tells Steve that he and Sir Graham went to Scotland Yard with Macintosh, and took a sample of Macintosh’s handwriting to compare against the magazine, the New Feature, that had been sent to the Fergusons.

“Paul, what do you think really happened?”

Paul says he was talking to Gerrard about those postcards, the ones from Jonathan. But the handwritings on those was different too, from the New Feature writer.

Steve says she doesn’t think that Macintosh actually saw Ferguson. She doesn’t know why she thinks that, only that she does.

Steve then tells him that she read Mavis Russell, aka Europa’s book, The Purple Moon. She says Paul should make a point of meeting Mrs. Russell, as she now believes that Russell might have had an evil influence on a young man.

They decide to go to Oxford for two or three days.

Paul receives a phone call from Robert Ferguson. He’s heard from Richard. He’s asked for money. Robert asks Paul to pick him to help him deliver the money.

III.
Paul and Steve drive up to where Ferguson is waiting outside the hotel. He is in distress, he has a bad heart and its acting up on him.

He’s to take the money to a flat in Lewisham, where he is registered as a Mr. Griffith. Paul tells Ferguson to go back into the hotel, because of his heart trouble, and he and Steve will go out to Lewisham and collect Robert.

IV.
Steve and Paul arrive at the Lewisham flat. It’s pouring with rain. They ask for Mr. Griffith. The landlady is stroppy, it’s almost half past 11. “You’re not one of the regulars.”

She lets them into the house, and says she’ll go up to let Mr. Griffith know they’ve arrived. But when she opens the door, she finds him dead.

Steve and Paul rush up. Paul goes into the room, then comes out again. “It’s not Richard Ferguson. It’s Red Harris.”

V.
The telephone rings and rings.

Paul answers it, breathless. He and Steve had been halfway down the stairs.

On the other end is Sir Graham.

Paul tells him he and Steve are going to Oxford .

Sir Graham tells Paul that he’ll have Max Wyman look him up. He wrote a book about Marcus Aurelius. Sir Graham will phone Wyman and have him look Paul up.

Sir Graham fills him in about Red Harris. He’d been using the name Griffiths for some time – he had a driving license in that name.

VI.
Paul and Steve are unpacking in their hotel room. Steve has brought dozens of dresses for their 2 day journey.

There is a phone call. The hall porter tells him that a Mr. Wyman is there to see him.

Wyman enters, and says that he has been invited to a cocktail party being given by Mavis Russell. He suggests that he and Steve go to the party, and then introduce Paul to her later.

They talk about Wyman’s writing for a minute, then Steve and Wyman go downstairs.

Wyman goes to get his car, and Steve is told that she has a phone call in the lobby. It’s Paul, He tells her that Max Wyman is an imposter!

End Part 2

British Radio Mystery: Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery part 1

Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery part 1 of 8

Episode 1: “The Fergusons”

Cast
Paul Temple
Steve Temple
Robert Ferguson
Helen Ferguson
Inspector Gerrard
Sir Graham Forbes
Red Harris
Unidenitified barman


I.
Paul Temple and his wife Steve are in the first class section of an airplane, heading from New York to London. They decide to go to the “little lounge” to get a drink.

In the lounge, Steve is sitting on Mr. Ferguson’s magazine. They are Robert Ferguson and his wife, Helen. Mrs. Ferguson recognizes him as the author Paul Temple. Mrs. Ferguson says she never forgets a face.

The Fergusons have a boy, Richard, at Oxford, at Maudlin College, and they are flying to England to visit him. Richard has been at school in England since he was 12.

Robert Ferguson is a furniture dealer, but his son, Richard, has told his parents he wants to be a writer.

The plane lands, and the Temples are met by Charlie, their manservant, and also by Inspector Gerrard, “one of Sir Graham’s bright boys.” Gerrard asks them to point out the Fergusons to him – their son has been found murdered.

II.
Sir Graham is in his office, discussing something with Inspector Gerrard. Paul Temple comes in. He’s interested in the Ferguson case, and he wants to hear all about it. “Let me have the facts. Assume I know nothing whatever about the case.”

The Inspector tells the story. Ferguson lived in a self-contained flat on the top floor of Mortimer Close, which is owned by Mrs. Gulliver. Mrs. Gulliver left for the pictures, seeing Richard as she left. He told her he had a dinner date with a Diana Nelson.

Richard didn’t keep the date. The next morning, Mrs. Gulliver goes to the bedroom door with a pot of tea, to find Richard’s body there – most of his face blown away by a close-up shot.

The police haven’t found a motive. “Was anything missing?” asks Temple. “A gold ring. A signet ring.”

And a post card from Harrogate which reads: Having a wonderful time. Jonathan.

But none of Richard’s friends had ever heard of Jonathan.

Temple then tells his story of the night before. He and Steve had been called by the Fergusons, who asked them to come by their hotel room. They had received an envelope in which was a magazine called The New Feature, a high-brow periodical. On page 14 was an article on the international situation by a writer called Europa. There was a note: “If you want to know who murdered your son, ask Europa.”

The Fergusons then ask them to investigate the case.

When they return to their car, there’s someone sitting in it – Diana Nelson. “I was a friend of Richard Ferguson’s.” She lives and works in Oxford, and has come up to London to see the Temples.

Diana tells them that she and Richard had been unofficially engaged for about a year, then his attitude changed toward her. “He suddenly got awfully cynical and bitter about things.” He started comparing her to a writer, Mavis Russell, who writes under the name of Europa. Diana thinks she had an evil influence over Richard, and was responsible for his death.

Diana had been talked to by Inspector Gerrard the day before, and he’d asked her questions about Jonathan, whom she’d never heard of.

Diana denies sending the magazine to the Fergusons. So she’s not the only person who dislikes Mavis Russell, concludes Steve.

Inspector Gerrard says that he’s interviewed Mavis Russell, and liked her.

Then Inspector Gerrard asks if Temple remembers a man named Red Harris. Temple does remember him – he (Temple) had provided the evidence that had cleared Harris from a criminal charge. Harris had spent three days in Oxford, including the night that Ferguson had been murdered.

Gerrard asks Temple who he thinks sent the magazine, and Temple suggests Mavis Russell. She might try to throw suspicion on herself, as a blind, he says.

III.
When Temple returns to his home, he finds that Reggie Macintosh, who is the brother-in-law of Diana Nelson, (Diana Nelson is staying with him and his wife, her sister, in London) has come to visit them. Macintosh tells them that they have received a postcard from Harrogate. “Having a wonderful time. Regards, Jonathan.”

Macintosh doesn’t show the postcard to Diana, instead he takes it to the Temples.

Macintosh leaves, and Temple calls up Red Harris. Red refuses to speak to him about why he’d been in Oxford. He just warns Paul to keep out of the Ferguson business.

Temple decides to go to the public house and speak to Harris in person. They go out of the public house and sit in Harris’ car, a 2-and-a-half liter Lombard, for which he wants 1750. Harris refuses to tell Temple anything. He sees a car driving past them, and a shot is fired. Harris tells Temple he’ll give him one tip, and after that they’re square. “They forgot the ring.”

IV.
Paul returns home, to find that Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson have arrived. Mrs. Ferguson is almost in hysterics. She claims that she saw Richard – her son – that morning.

End Part 1

_____
Museum of Everything
Exhibit: British Radio Mysteries
Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

British Radio Drama: Paul Temple

In the United States, national radio drama ended in 1962, with the last aired episodes of the anthology series Suspense and the insurance investigator-detective, Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar.

In the UK, radio drama is alive and well.

For many years, the digital channel BBC 7 has played old and new radio drama, comedy, variety, etc. Unfortunately the dim bulbs in charge of the BBC are shortly going to destroy the character and identity of this digital channel by renaming it BBC Radio 4 Extra. So of course it's going to get lost in the identity of Radio 4, and I predict will shortly disappear.

In any event, Paul Temple is a detective book writer who assists the police in various cases. It was never a radio series per se, but rather a series of 6 part or 8 part serials, and about 1 a year was produced for 10 years. They are frequently re-broadcast on BBC Radio 7 (but whether they'll be rebroadcast on Radio 4 Extra remains to be seen.

It's hard to explain their fascination for me. The stories are repetitive and formulaic. They always involve someone using a code name, whether it be Margo, or Jonathan, and this pseudonym is always revealed to be used by someone whom the Temples (Paul Temple and his wife Steve (actually Louise, but she is an ex-journalist and is called by her pen-name, which was Steve Trent)meets throughout their adventures.

There's also the annoying radio convention of alwats having to call each other by name when they speak, to make sure the audience knowswhose talking and who they are talking to. Gets on your nerves after a while.

But, I listen to them anyway, just because of the actors. Although a variety of radio actors played the couple, the most well-known, and the ones that BBC 7 airs, are those of Peter Coke (pronounced Cook) and Marjorie Westbury.

In my new exhibit, British Radio Drama: Paul Temple, I'll be synopsizing all the episodes of each serial.

First: more detail from Wikipedia:
Paul Temple is a fictional character created by British writer Francis Durbridge (1912-1998) for the BBC radio serial Send for Paul Temple in 1938. Temple is an amateur private detective and author of crime fiction. Together with his journalist wife (Louise Temple, nee Harvey, affectionately known as "Steve" after her pen name "Steve Trent"), he solves "whodunnit" crimes with subtle, humorous dialogue and rare "action". Always the gentleman, his use of the phrase "by Timothy" was the nearest he ever got to swearing. Between 1938 and 2010, the Temples featured in over 30 BBC radio dramas, 12 serials for German radio, a BBC television series, a German animated series, four British feature films and several novels. In the Netherlands several of the radio plays were recorded with Dutch actors and with the main character's name translated to 'Paul Vlaanderen'. In addition, a Paul Temple comic strip featured in the London Evening News from the mid-1950s to the early 1960s.

British Paul Temple radio serials
Paul Temple was "born" as a radio detective. In Britain, several Paul Temple radio series were broadcast from the 1930s to the 1960s. While several actors and actresses portrayed the Temples over the years, including the Send for Paul Temple Again series which starred Barry Morse and aired in 1945, probably the best known portrayal of the couple was by Peter Coke and Marjorie Westbury. The introductory and closing music for the majority of the long-running BBC radio series was Coronation Scot (a musical depiction of a train journey) written by Vivian Ellis. Many of the serials starring Coke and Westbury have been repeated since 2003 by digital radio station BBC 7. In 2006 the station tracked down the then 93-year-old Coke for a half-hour interview programme, Peter Coke and the Paul Temple Affair.

In August 2006 BBC Radio 4 broadcast a new 8-part re-creation of one of the lost early radio serials, Paul Temple and the Sullivan Mystery, which had originally been broadcast in 1947. Crawford Logan starred as Paul Temple with Gerda Stevenson as Steve (originally portrayed by Kim Peacock and Marjorie Westbury respectively) in a mono production employing vintage microphones and sound effects. A new production of The Madison Mystery followed in May to July 2008, and a remake of the 1947 serial Paul Temple and Steve was aired in June and July 2010.

01: `Send for Paul Temple'. 8th April 1938.
"Paul" - Hugh Morton, "Steve Trent" - Bernadette Hodgson

02: `Paul Temple and the Front Page Men'. 2nd Nov 1938.
"Paul" - Hugh Morton, "Steve" - Bernadette Hodgson

03: `News Of Paul Temple'. 13th Nov 1939. (6 parts)
"Paul" - Hugh Morton, "Steve" - Bernadette Hodgson

04: `Send for Paul Temple'. 13th October 1941.(60 minute abridged Play)
"Paul" - Carl Bernard, "Steve" - Thea Holme

05: `Paul Temple Intervenes'. 30th Oct 1942.
"Paul" - Carl Bernard, "Steve" - Bernadette Hodgson

06: `News Of Paul Temple'. 5 July 1944. (60 minute abridged Play)
"Paul" - Richard Williams, "Steve" - Lucille Lisle

07: `Send For Paul Temple Again'. 13th Sep 1945.
"Paul" - Barry Morse

08: `A Case For Paul Temple'. 7th Feb 1946.
"Paul" - Howard Marion Crawford

09: `Paul Temple And The Gregory Affair'. 17th Oct 1946. (10 parts)
"Paul" - Kim Peacock

10: `Paul Temple And Steve'. 30th March 1947.
"Paul" - Kim Peacock

11: `Mr And Mrs Paul Temple'. 23rd Nov 1947. (45 minute Play)
"Paul" - Kim Peacock

12: `Paul Temple And The Sullivan Mystery'. 1st Dec 1947.
"Paul" - Kim Peacock

13: `Paul Temple And The Curzon Case'. 7th Dec 1948.
"Paul" - Kim Peacock

14: `Paul Temple And The Madison Mystery'. 12th Oct 1949.
"Paul" - Kim Peacock

15: `Paul Temple And The Vandyke Affair'. 31st Oct 1950.
"Paul" - Kim Peacock (NOTE: Peter Coke played Terry Palmer in this production)

16: `Paul Temple And The Jonathan Mystery'. 10th May 1951.
"Paul" - Kim Peacock

17: `Paul Temple And Steve Again'. 18th April 1953. (60 minute Play)
"Paul" - Kim Peacock

The Peter Coke era. Marjorie Westbury was always his wife Steve.

18: `Paul Temple And The Gilbert Case'. 29th March 1954.
"Paul" - Peter Coke

19: `Paul Temple And The Madison Mystery'. 20th June 1955.
"Paul" - Peter Coke (remake of 14)

20: `Paul Temple And The Lawrence Affair'. 11th Apr 1956.
"Paul" - Peter Coke

21: `Paul Temple And The Spencer Affair'. 13th Nov 1957.
"Paul" - Peter Coke

22: `Paul Temple And The Vandyke Affair'. 1st Jan 1959.
"Paul" - Peter Coke (remake of 15)

23: `Paul Temple And The Conrad Case'. 2nd March 1959.
"Paul" - Peter Coke

24: `Paul Temple And The Gilbert Case'. 22nd Nov 1959.
"Paul" - Peter Coke (remake of 18)

25: `Paul Temple And The Margo Mystery'. 1st Jan 1961.
"Paul" - Peter Coke

26: `Paul Temple And The Jonathan Mystery'. 14th Oct 1963.
"Paul" - Peter Coke (remake of 16)

27: `Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery'. 11th April 1965. (6 parts)
"Paul" - Peter Coke

28: `Paul Temple And The Alex Affair'. 26th Feb 1968.
"Paul" - Peter Coke (remake of 7: Villain changed from Rex to Alex.)



__________________
Exhibit: British Radio Drama
Detectives: Paul Temple

Monday, March 14, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: S. Wilder and Co


Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

S. Wilder and Co./Cape Cod Lanterns is still in business, and and their webiste is:
http://www.capecodlanterns.com/

A bit of the text from their website. I don't reproduct the links - to see those it's best to go to this website via your computer, as there's video to watch, etc.
Welcome to our online showroom!

See Craig at Work

Here you will find a wide variety of handcrafted lighting including wall lanterns, post lanterns, hanging lights, sconces, landscape lights, and chandeliers, as well as solid western red cedar lampposts.

Our lighting is handcrafted in solid brass or solid copper with a choice of finishes – raw brass, antique brass, dark antique brass, dark brass, raw copper, antique copper, dark copper, and verdigris. We also have many glass options which include clear glass, optic glass, clear seedy glass, and seedy marine glass.

Cape Cod Lanterns™, also known as S. Wilder & Co., is located in North Chatham, Massachusetts on Cape Cod, and is one of the oldest continuously operating businesses in the Commonwealth. S. Wilder & Co. has been in business since 1836, and reproduces authentic lantern designs. Our lanterns are made by hand just as the original lighting was, and may be customized to suit individual tastes or needs. See what people are saying about Cape Cod Lanterns™!

Science Books: The Oxford Guide to the History of Physics and Astronomy


The Oxford Guide to the History of Physics and Astronomy, edited by John L. Heilbron
Oxford University Press, 2005
348 pages plus index
Library: 530.03 OXF

Biographies, and explanations of historical events under the following categories:
Historiography of Science
-General Concepts and Approaches
-Major periods in time
-Major Divisions

Organization and Diffusion of Science
-The Scientific Profession
-Generalized Institutions
-Individual Institutions
-Diffusion (beyond science)
Communication (within science)
Patronage

The Body of Scientific Knowledge
-Epistemology and Methodology
-Cross-cutting concepts
-Major Subject Divisions
-Minor Subject Divisions
-Theoretical Constructs

Apparatus and Instruments
-In general
-In particular
-In use
-Intellectual
-Social
Geographical

Uses
-Applied Sciences

Biographies

_______________
The Museum of Everything
Exhibit: Science Books

Science Books: Amir D. Aczel


Uranium Wars: The Scientific Rivalry that Created the Nuclear Age, by Amir D. Aczel
Palgrave Macmillan, 2009
223 pages plus notes, references, index and 8 pages of b&w photos
Library: 539.7 ACZ

Description
Ueanium, a nondescript element when found in nature, in the past century has become more sought after than gold. Its nucleus is so heavy that it is highly unstable and radioactive. If broken apart, it unleashes the tremendous power within the atom-the most controversial type of energy ever discovered.

Set against the darkening shadow of World War II, Amir D. Aczel's suspenseful account tells the story of the feirce competition among the day's top scientists to harness nuclear power.

The intensely driven Marie Curie discovered radioactivity. The University of Berlin team of Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner - he an upright, politically conservative German chemist and she a soft-spoken Austrian Jewish theoretical physicist-achieved the most spectacular discoveries in fission.

Curie's daugghter, Irene Joliet-Curie, raced against Meitner and Hahn to break the secret of the splitting of the atom.

As the war raged, Niels Bohr, a founder of modern physics, had a dramatic meeting with Wrner Heisenberg, the German physicist in charge of the Nazi project to beat the Allies to the bomb.

And finally, in 1942, Enrico Fermi, a prodigy from Rome who had fled the war to the United States, unleashed the first nuclear chain reaction in a raquetball court at the University of Chicago.

At a time when the world is again confronted with the perils of nuclear armament, Amir D. Aczel's absorbing story of a rivalry that changed the course off history is as thrilling and suspenseful as it is scientifically revelatory and newsworthy.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Cast of Characters
A Note on Nomenclature
Glossary of Atomic Terms
Introduction: The Blinding Light
1. Physics and Uranium
2. On the trail of the nucleus
3. Lise Meitner
4. The Meitner-Hahn Discovery
5. Enrico Fermi
6. The Rome Experiments
7. The Events of 1938
8. Christmas 1938
9. The Heisenberg Menace
10. Chain Reaction
11. The Nazi Nuclear Machine
12. Copenhagen
13. The Moments of Truth
14. Building the Bomb
15. The Decision to use the Bomb
16. Evidence from a Spying Operation
17. The Cold War
18. Uranium's Future
Notes
References
Index

_________________________
Museum of Everything
Exhibit: Books

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Fast Food Restaurants: Carl's Jr.


View 1 of Carl's Jr. in Cheyenne, WY

View 2 of Carl's Jr. in Cheyenne, WY

Located on the corner of Warren Avenue and Lincolnway. (As you come across the bridge on Highway 85, it changes in to a one way road, Warren, and goes through the town (changing in to Yellowstone a little further along), before you hook up with Highway 85 again on the other side.

I stopped in a couple of days ago and had 3 hand-battered chicken tenders. I had wanted their Asian Sweet and Sour sauce, but they were out of it...though it was only about 5 pm. Indeed, they were out of most of their sauces. I assume that they hand-make all their sauces - I got honey mustard in little plastic cups, rather than in the pre-packaged sauce tiny bucket type things that McDonalds offerse, for example.

I took a photo of their poster for the Chicken Tenders - it's a tie in with the recently released Green Hornet movie.







Carl's From Wikipedia
Carl's Jr. is an American fast-food restaurant chain located in the Southern, Western, and Southwestern United States. It is also in the process of expanding into Canada, Mexico, Malaysia, Singapore, Russia, Vietnam, and China.

It was founded in 1941 by Carl N. Karcher, and is owned by CKE Restaurants, Inc. Carl Karcher's business was jumpstarted with the opening of his first restaurant, Carl’s Drive-In Barbeque. As this grew wildly successful, he decided to open up smaller chains of Carl's. In 1954, he changed the name to Carl's Jr. and the fast-food chain took off. Combined with its sibling restaurant chain Hardee's, Carl's Jr. is the #4 US fast food burger chain in size after McDonald's (31,000+ locations), Burger King (11,500+ locations) and Wendy's (6,700+ locations).

HistoryCarl Karcher got his start in the food industry in 1941 by owning several food stands in Los Angeles, California, most notably on the corner of Florence and Central in South L.A. By 1945, Karcher owned a stand-alone restaurant in Anaheim, California called Carl's Drive-In Barbecue. In 1956, Karcher opened the first two Carl's Jr. restaurants in Anaheim, California and Brea, California; so named because they were a smaller version of his drive-in restaurant. The restaurant chain was characterized by its fast service and its logo, the bright yellow five-pointed Happy Star. CKE's other chain, Hardee's, now shares this logo, after a post-merge rebranding.

A Carl's Jr. in Rancho Cordova, CaliforniaIn 1981, with 300 restaurants in operation, Carl Karcher Enterprises became a publicly held company. In 1988, Carl and his family were accused of insider trading by the Securities and Exchange Commission. They had sold large quantities of stock before the price dropped. Carl agreed to a settlement with the SEC and paid more than half a million dollars in fines.

The late 1980s and 1990s brought trouble early-on and success later. Carl's Jr. chains had struggled to gain success in Arizona and Texas, perhaps diminishing hopes of expansion to other states, though later states like Nevada, Oregon and Washington proved successful. During the 1990s Karcher and the Board of Directors began clashing over marketing and business practices, including the chain's attempt at dual branding with such chains as The Green Burrito, which led to Karcher's ousting as Chief Executive Officer in 1993. Soon after, the Board of Directors took a new approach by cutting the menu, lowering prices, and introducing a new marketing campaign which targeted younger urban and suburban males. During this time, commercials for Carl's Jr. featured an animated caricature of Carl Karcher and the chain's mascot, Happy Star.

During the mid-1990s, Carl's Jr. unveiled its "If it doesn't get all over the place, it doesn't belong in your face" campaign which featured younger people eating Carl's Jr.'s burgers with ketchup and juice dripping from the burger and onto clothes and other areas. Among its famous figures, NBA great Dennis Rodman was also featured in a famous ad in which one of his tattoos is seen eating a burger. Karcher admitted he was heartbroken by the new campaign which contrasted starkly with his conservative views.

Carl's Jr. quickly expanded, and currently has more than 1,000 locations in 13 U.S. states, as well as in Mexico, Singapore and Russia. In 2007, five new branches were opened in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, located at 1-Utama Shopping Complex, Midvalley Megamall, Sunway Pyramid, Mines Shopping Fair and the new Pavilion KL Shopping Complex is the first branch they opened for their comeback. In total, there have been seven branches in Malaysia. The Masjid Jamek branch, Ampang Park branch and the Lake Gardens branch were closed in 1998.

Featured food items include the Double Western Bacon Cheeseburger and the Six Dollar Burger, so called because it is claimed to be of the same quality of a burger one would pay six dollars for in a sit-down restaurant. In May 2005, Carl's Jr. introduced "The Spicy BBQ Six Dollar Burger" in a controversial advertising campaign.

In 1997, CKE Restaurants acquired Hardee's, a restaurant chain with 2,500 locations in the Midwest, South and East Coast regions. Hardee's restaurants are gradually being converted to be more like Carl's Jr. with some of the same menu items and even adopting the same star logo. The chain has also opened at least one restaurant in a former Rally's location in Hollywood with a drive-thru lane, walk-up window and no interior seating. This location carries the branding Carl's Jr. Jr.

In 2002, CKE Restaurants, Inc. acquired Santa Barbara Restaurant Group (the parent company of the Green Burrito brand). Some Carl's Jr. stores are now co-branded as Green Burrito locations. Three Carl's Jr. locations in downtown Los Angeles serve beer: Macy's Plaza on 7th & Flower, California Mart at Main & Olympic, and Citigroup Plaza at 5th & Flower.

In 2004, Carl's Jr. was portrayed in the film Idiocracy as the dominant fast food franchise in a dystopian future.

In October 2006, Carl's Jr. and sister-company Hardee's introduced a promotion with The Palms Casino Hotel to sell a $6,000 Combo Meal exclusively at The Palms. This meal includes the signature Six Dollar Burger, fries, and a $6,000 bottle of French Bordeaux. This meal is available on the Palms room service menu.

In 2008, Carl's Jr. eventually expanded into American Samoa, alongside fellow competitors McDonald's, KFC, Pizza Hut and Checkers.

On January 11, 2008, Carl Karcher, the founder of hamburger chain Carl's Jr., died at the age of 90. A spokeswoman for CKE Restaurants said Mr. Karcher suffered from Parkinson's disease and was being treated for Parkinson's-related pneumonia when he died at St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, California. Many Carl's Jr. restaurants flew their flags at half staff in memory of Karcher.

In February 2009, CKE Restaurants announced that Texas would be their top growth market for the next five years. Franchisee deals were made with two companies to open Carl's Jr. locations in the Dallas/Fort Worth and Houston markets. The franchisees plan to open 193 new restaurants in Texas over the next 10 years. Carl's Jr. had initially expanded into Texas in 1984, but due to the poor state economy most locations never met sales expectations. By 1987, Carl's Jr. had temporarily pulled out of Texas entirely closing approximately 36 locations. Another attempt to bring the chain to Texas was attempted in the 1990s.

Co-branding
Carl's Jr and Green Burrito restaurant in Bell, CaliforniaIn several Western U.S. locations, Carl's Jr. parent CKE has begun operating co-branded restaurants with its Green Burrito group. This is a similar strategy used by Yum! Brands with its KFC, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, A&W Restaurants, and Long John Silvers concepts to help expand brands without the additional expense of new buildings and land.

Taco de Carlos was a fast-food Mexican restaurant chain that spun off from Carl's Jr. In 1972 Carl Karcher Enterprises decided to get in on the Mexican fast-food business because it was a new phenomenon that was proving successful with Taco Bell going public just a few years earlier. Taco de Carlos offered menu items not found on Taco Bell, like the California Burrito, with the green chili, and the Machaca Burrito.

It also served up the standard Carl's Jr. burgers. Some of the Taco de Carlos locations opened next door to a Carl's Jr. By the end of the 1970s Taco de Carlos had 17 locations. Carl Karcher Enterprises could never muster up enough business attention for Taco de Carlos, and the taco chain found itself in financial distress. Meanwhile, the bigger names like Taco Bell, Del Taco, Naugles, and Pup-n-Taco were enjoying success.

In the early 1980s Carl Karcher Enterprises sold off most of its Taco de Carlos locations to Del Taco, and the rest to other buyers. In 1988, after strengthening the Carl's Jr. brand, they decided to try their luck again with fast-food Mexican fare, and struck up a co-branding deal with Green Burrito.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Kristi Klein Orginals

The advertisement below is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.


Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

Not sure if Kristi Klein Originals is still in business or not.

The only website I coud find was:
http://www.capecodislands.com/Index.cfm?Method=Browse.Details&Listing_ID=935

The link on their to the website, www.kristikleinorginals.com, brings you to a Japanese website - in Japanese. Perhaps its been hacked.

Mailing Address
P.O. Box 1585
North Eastham, MA 02651

Physical Address
29 Main Street Mercantile
North Eastham, MA 02651

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Cape Cod Businesses: Blue Heron Galleries


The advertisement above is from the back pages of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

And Blue Heron Gallery is still in business.
http://www.blueheronfineart.com/ (Although having said that, their exhibit schedule hasn't been updated since July 2010, and their home page sine 2007!)
We are situated on Cape Cod in the charming village of Wellfleet, MA. Celebrating its 30th anniversary, the Blue Heron Gallery remains the hallmark of excellence and diversity in contemporary fine art. We invite you to experience our 2007 collection of outstanding recent work in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Cape Cod Businesses: O1' Salty's Quarterboards

The advertisement below is from the back of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.



Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

So is 01' (that's a 1, not an l) Salty's Quarterboards still in business? I haven't been able to find out. They have no website. They are mentioned at this website, but it might be an old entry:

http://www.merchantcircle.com/business/01.Saltys.Quarterboards.800-215-314301' Saltys Quarterboards
28 J H Sears Rd
East Dennis, MA 02641
800-215-3143

Cape Cod Businesses: Wellfleet Flea Market

The advertisement below is from the back of the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue.

Sharing it here at the Museum of Everything (and you see we do mean everything) accomplishes many purposes.

1) An exhibit of a 2000 ad from the Cape Cod Travel Guide Spring/Summer 2000 issue
2) An exhibit of a business that is on, or used to be on, Cape Cod.

So let's see if the Wellfleet Flea Market is still there:

And it seems like it is: http://www.wellfleetcinemas.com/flea-market
The Wellfleet Flea Market is truly Cape Cod’s Biggest and Best! Up to 200 vendors sell it all! Shop for new items, Cape Cod memorabilia, antiques, collectables, jewelry, t-shirts and clothing, household goods, and much more. The entire family will surely find bargains galore. There is a snack bar, beer garden and restrooms for your convenience. A playground too!
Please note that most vendors do not take credit cards, so come prepared!

(It's closed for the winter season, according to the website, with only a few vendors setting up on Saturday and Sunday. Here's the 2010 schedule, which will give you some idea of when it should open for the 2011 season. In May.

Flea Market Schedule – 2010
May 9th through June 27th:
Saturdays and Sundays 8am to approx 3pm

June 30 through September 6th:
Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays, Sundays, &
Holiday Mondays (7/5 & 9/6): 8am to approx 3pm

September 11th through October 10th, plus Monday, October 11th:
Saturdays & Sundays: 8am to approx 3pm

Directions
The Wellfleet Drive-in and Cinemas Complex is located on Route 6 at the town line of Eastham and Wellfleet, Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

If using a GPS device, enter “51 State Hwy., Rte. 6, Wellfleet, MA 02667.”