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Soapine trade card (Kendall Mfg Co.) |
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Winconsin Michigan Power Company's "Sportsman's Fish and Game Handbook" back cover: Bag your limit, but... PLEASE DON'T SHOOT INSULATORS! |
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Program for the 1987 Foster-Forbes factory tour and celebration as "the oldest continuous operating glass plant in the United States" with a claimed 181 years in glass manufacturing. |
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This 1905 postcard is the cutest kids/insulators image the author has ever seen. More are available in the postcard ring. |
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1935 Bell Telephone ad, Years of Progress HAVE BROUGHT MANY IMPROVEMENTS IN TELEPHONE SERVICE, with great cut "New York City in 1890" showing crossarm/wire madness. |
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1930 Bell Telephone ad, The continent that became a neighborhood, with very nice lineman-on-pole artwork. |
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Victorian era trade card of L. G. Tillotson, manufacturer and dealer in railway and telegraph machinery. |
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Another L. G. Tillotson card; the unfortunate fellow has been cuckolded via telephone, a new twist to an old, old problem. |
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One more L. G. Tillotson trade card: late for the train! it's all your fault! |
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Another L. G. Tillotson trade card: Trunk line - Pay here. Is this supposed to be humorous? |
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Yet another L. G. Tillotson trade card:
Rush this |
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Operating Force of the Central Union Telephone Office, Bowling Green, Ohio, 1902 |
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"The Spirit of Communication" - This 24', 16 ton bronze statue by Evelyn Beatrice Longman, commissioned by AT&T in 1916, stood originally atop their old New York skyscraper. |
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"THE GENIUS OF ELECTRICITY", from the statue by Antonio Rosetta, Rome. One of a pair of statues, the other is of James Watt and called The Genius of Steam. |
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This 1928 photo shows a line of trucks waiting to load at the Whitall-Tatum plant: 215,000 insulators for American Electric Co., bound for Rio de Janeiro, S.A. |