Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Tales From the Schmatta Trade (1)

As told on thrift shop sale day...
Marcus & Wiesen, Inc      Made in U.S.A.

(from pinterest: a product of somewhat newer vintage)

The Vanity Fair brand still exists—as VF, which includes more recently purchased brands (Lee, Timberland). As company history would suggest, the organization went from specializing in ladies' unmentionables to encompassing what might be the other end of spectrum—products meant to convey an image of the rugged outdoors. By now, however, all the stuff likely comes from the same set of Chinese factories.

Marcus & Wiesen, Inc., is not mentioned in that history page, and was probably a sub-contractor for Vanity Fair.

The name does appear in Chain Store Age, Volume 17 (1941). In the section, Directory of Manufacturers (page 42, under "Garters, Ladies' & Children's"), Marcus & Wiesen is listed at 26th E. 14th St., New York.
Emilio Guerra
An extensive and interesting history of 22-26 East 14th Street is found in the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission's 2008 report (pdf). The building began as Baumann Brothers Furniture and Carpet Store, built 1880-1881.
One of the more prominent, prolific, and versatile New York firms in the late-nineteenth century, D. & J. Jardine executed designs for a wide variety of building types, including a number of notable cast-iron fronts, in contemporary styles. The wide cast-iron front facade of the Baumann Brothers store, manufactured by the West Side Architectural Iron Works, is one of the Jardines' and one of the city's most inventive, unusual, and ornamental. Built toward the end of the heyday of cast-iron fronts in New York and the flourishing creativity in that material, the Baumann Brothers store is also a signal achievement of Aesthetic Movement design.
In 1884 Baumann Brothers occupied the entire building and advertised as, "the largest and most complete furnishing establishment in America." During the twentieth century—
For eight decades, the ground story contained 5-10-and-25-cent stores, beginning with the fourth Woolworth store in Manhattan (1900-28), acclaimed at its opening as "the largest ten-cent store in the world" and in 1910 the location of the chain's first lunchroom. This space was later a store for F. & W. Grand, H.L. Green, and McCrory. The upper stories were leased for over eight decades for show rooms and manufacturing by various firms related to the textile and sporting goods industries. This was the location of Rubens & Meyer, hosiery (1901-14); [Lewis Mark] Hornthal, [Joseph J.] Benjamin & [Simon R.] Riem, wholesale clothing manufacturers (c. 1902-23); Sohn, Oppenheimer & Co., fine trousers (1913-29); [Alex] Marcus & [Alex] Wiesner (later Wiesen), elastic specialties, garters, and girdles (1930-85)...
Following ownership changes over the years, the lot was transferred
... in 1967 to the Marcus & Wiesen Realty Corp., whose principals were the long-term garter-making tenants in the building. The southern portion of the lot and the building were conveyed in 1902 to the James McCreery Realty Corp., which retained ownership until 1965, when they were acquired by the Marcus & Wiesen Realty Corp. The entire property was sold to Irving and Elliott Sutton in 1979. The building became a condominium in 1999. The upper stories (Lot 1101), acquired at that time by the New School University, are currently in use as an annex to the Parsons School of Design, while the ground story contains a drugstore and several small shops.
Along the way, the "garter-making tenants" were involved in some legal drama, according to the 1940 Federal Supplement: Cases Argued and Determined in the District Courts of the United States and the Court of Claims, with Key Number Annotations, Volume 30 (Page xxix). The case in District Court of NY.: Marcus & Wiesen v. Universal Brassiere & Just-Rite Corset Co.

At some point the company relocated from such valuable real estate as its original home, but continued in its industry for an undetermined period of time. The last reference I find is from 1995, per a note in this book, Unions and Workplace Reorganization (edited by Bruce Nissen).


A note that's sadly quaint in itself; just imagine, companies deigning to talk with unions. And, it turns out, 1995 was when the storied ILGWU last existed under that name.

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Speaking In Code

Now that we're told it's best we shut up about pre-election hacking communicate by courier, this will come in handy...
How to Write Codes and Send Secret Messages, Scholastic, 1966
Author John Peterson apparently had a background in illustration, but pictures here are done by the great Bernice Myers.


Lucky readers can learn the secrets, just by following the how-to's: of Space Codes, Hidden Words Code, Invisible Ink, and more...
Can you read it? The message is...






Where there's a will...

... But, on the other hand: "If you can't train your dog, maybe your friend can train his dog."



Sunday, January 1, 2017

The Year in Korean Nostalgia: January

J found something...

Old-fashioned pastimes are rendered in paper mache dolls. Those are finished with a sheen so extraordinarily oily-looking as to seem at odds with the theme of childhood innocence.

Each month's figures are placed against a traditional backdrop. Photo alteration includes adding bubbles, which apparently summon up the memory for the month.

In January Grandpa is busy tailoring. Presumably, he also tells stories to the kids who sit so raptly. To complete the cozy picture, Grandma stokes the brazier while memory bubbles float through the room.

Le Urla Silenziose del Popolo

Found in library sale castoffs: thirteen years old, yet so timely...
MicroMega, February 2004
Essays published bimonthly; this volume's theme:

Antipolitics, indeed... A little less of that mentality, and the orange-tinged antipolitica to end all antipolitca would have been stopped.

Somehow, Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso took a snapshot of the future. This definitely matches the current mood, for the sentient part of the American public.

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Merry Merchandising To All...

2003; from "The WALK THE TALK Company"...
Number 7 is a good one: "Santa" profits from those helpful elves, so industriously reporting on the co-workers...
Sign "Your Committment Letter (To Santa Claus)" with a Ho, Ho, Ho!

And to all, a merry Buy More Product!

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Red Meat

The Republican Woman's Cookbook: Meats
National Federation of Republican Women, Montgomery, Alabama, 1969.
I don't imagine Maine was voting Democratic, so I'll assume it was on principle that the GOP  promoted apartheid South Africa's lobster industry.

Another sponsor: the Florida Citrus Commission. Though it wasn't until the late '70s that anti-gay rights agitation by a newly political religious right would become associated with Florida orange juice—or that a boycott would then target the product.

Interesting that the group was based in Montgomery, even before the full-blown Southern Strategy. At the time, racists could still run as Democrats and be elected to offices across the South. During most of the 1960s, for instance, George (and later, Lurleen) Wallace held the Alabama governorship as Democrats. Wallace was re-elected in 1972, then ran in Democratic presidential primaries.

If Nixon's plan for the South was not yet in evidence, the little woman puts in an appearance (cloth coat not in evidence, either)...
Also (from the Introduction): "No matter how involved Republican women become in the local and national scene, we are primarily interested in our homes and families." So it was then as it is now— at least for purposes of public consumption and culture war branding.

Some recipes set out to maintain the brand—
There are proletarian meals, and it's even possible to believe some of these people weren't faking ("Governor Romney's Favorite Bean Soup").

The senator wasted no time or fuss in the kitchen.
Hers was one of only a handful of attributions under a woman's own name. Some are names they just don't make anymore...
Fern R. Uglick, Corr. Sec.
16th and 17th Wards WRC 7
Toldedo, Ohio

Florence P. Toothaker, Sec.-Treasurer
Platte Valley RWC
Encampment, Wyoming

Shirley B. Hassdenteufel, Prof. Chm.
New Windsor WRC
New Windsor, New York
Male officeholders and cabinet officers offered recipes under their own names, but submissions from the womenfolk all stress their being wives of ("Black Walnut Stew," courtesy, "Mrs. Barry Goldwater, Wife of Senator From Arizona").

Now there's a name inspiring genuine terror that anti-Commie belligerence would get us all blown up.

... Yet Goldwater's later criticism of fundamentalist crazies—and the fact that his wife helped found Planned Parenthood—would get him drummed out of their party today.

Srom Thurmond shows up here, but so do Edward Brooke (Mrs.) and two Rockefellers (Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Winthrop). Once upon a time, there were actual moderates in their party. And compared to the ones about to take over DC, the racist wingnuts of yesteryear's GOP may come to seem like pikers.

To be fair, the oddest recipes are no odder than what's found in other fund-raising cookbooks of the period. So, we see here "exotic" jello molds, fried chicken coated in crushed Ritz crackers, and "chow mein" made with tomato soup.

We also have—
Those two are "Meat Combination Recipes," not part of this section—
GOP housewives of the past: veritable cosmopolitans.

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Sweet Potato Certification

Spotted by J, in a box at produce aisle of Aldi...
Certified: Grown, stored, packed, and shipped from a nonregulated area...