Paul Gustav Fischer - Evening West Rampart Street, Copenhagen (1919)
Coastline of Santa Monica Bay between Malibu and Palisades (1912)
Harley-Davidson School for Motorcycle Mechanics (1917)
Children in England carrying holly and mistletoe (December 1915)
Fritz Gareis, In Anticipation, 1916
OKAY SO THIS PICTURE
"A Royal Field Artillery sergeant-major showing his mascot, a hedgehog, to a French girl in Rallancourt Chateau, 21 August 1917"
I've decided that the hedgehog's name is Sergeant Prickles and they shoot him over to the German lines every week for reconnaisance
And the Germans are like "MEIN GOTT DER IGEL" and the Brits are like "SERGEANT PRICKLES SENDS HIS REGARDS" and all chaos breaks loose because Sergeant Prickles takes no prisoners
I feel like I need to draw this
I'm a tired teacher two days before Spring Break can you tell
BEHOLD
A SERGEANT PRICKLES CONCEPT SKETCH
Edgar Bundy (English, 1862-1922, b. Brighton, England) - Death as general rides a horse on a battlefield, 1911, Paintings: Watercolor
13 Vintage Halloween Songs from the 1910s, 20s, & 30s
01. This House is Haunted, Roy Fox (1934) 02. At The Devil’s Ball, Maurice Burkhart (1913) 03. Bogey Wail, Jack Hylton (1929) 04. The Skeleton Rag, American Quartet (1912) 05. The Boogie Man Is Here, Tom Gerun (1929) 06. Undertaker’s Blues, Helen Gross & The Kansas City Five (1924) 07. With Her Head Tucked Underneath Her Arm, Cyril Smith (1934) 08. That Syncopated Boogie-Boo, The Premier Quartet (1913) 09. Strange Enchantment, Ozzie Nelson & Rose Anne Stevens (1939) 10. The Ghost of the St. Louis Blues, Bob Skyles & His Skyrockets (1930) 11. Spooky Spook, Victor Military Band (1917) 12. Spider Web Blues, Victoria Spivey (1926) 13. The Ghost of the Terrible Blue, The Peerless Quartet (1915)
* Playlist graciously uploaded by Lindsay Koski.
British & Indian Sikh soldiers posing in front of the Sphinx during WWI.
Piggly Wiggly was the first self-service grocery store. It was founded by Clarence Saunders and opened on September 6, 1916, in Memphis, Tennessee. It was also the first to provide checkout stands, price mark every item in the store, use turnstiles in a modern application and, starting in 1937, provide its customers with shopping carts.
Previously, grocery store customers would have to give a list of items they wanted to a clerk, who would then fill their order while the customer waited. Saunders’ innovation allowed customers to shop and pick out items themselves. It also reduced the number of clerks needed, which in turn cut costs and lowered prices.
Customers would enter through a turnstile, pick up a hand-held basket and walk through four aisles selecting what they wanted from the store’s 600+ items, which were packaged and organized into departments. As a result, package design and brand recognition quickly became important to both companies and consumers.
It became such a success that other independent and chain grocery stores began changing to self-service. At its peak in 1932, the company operated 2,660 stores and posted annual sales in excess of $180 million.