I have photographed much of my 1933 LL Bean catalog. I have Bean catalogs from the 30's - 60's. My Maine Engineering Shoes are exactly like the picture.
Here they are.
I have photographed much of my 1933 LL Bean catalog. I have Bean catalogs from the 30's - 60's. My Maine Engineering Shoes are exactly like the picture.
Here they are.
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A sense of the fundamental decencies is parcelled out unequally at birth. - Fitzgerald
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I want a cold proof duck hunting coat. For that price.
Thank you for sharing that, Scotrace.![]()
"Revenge is the best way to get even." Archie Bunker
Fascinating! Some of those flannel shirts and mocassins have hardly changed in 73 years.
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Rubber Duck Hunting Shirt? When is rubber duck hunting season, anyway? Just be careful not to shoot holes in your tub!![]()
"Disinterested intellectual curiosity is the life blood of real civilization."
--G. M. Trevelyan
I think you're supposed to use rubber bullets when shooting at rubber ducks, so you avoid that problem.Originally Posted by Mojave Jack
Thanks for sharing. It's great to see how little some things have changed.
See the NRA logo on the cover? Bean must have been an early adopter. I wonder what the "Provisional" designation means?
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A sense of the fundamental decencies is parcelled out unequally at birth. - Fitzgerald
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I dont think that is the same NRA we know today.
I think it is something like "National Relief Association"
It was something from the great depression.
I think.
"Meet me at www.car-noir.com."
The National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) of June 16, 1933, was part of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal. It authorized the President to regulate businesses in the interests of promoting "fair" competition, supporting (that is, raising) prices and wages, creating jobs for unemployed workers, and stimulating the United States economy to recover from the Great Depression. The law created a National Recovery Administration (NRA), an executive agency exercising powers which Congress had delegated to it, to promote compliance on the part of corporations. Firms that voluntarily complied could display the Blue Eagle.
The NIRA was strongly supported by heads of industry, some of whom had helped draft the legislation. Gerald Swope, head of General Electric, was one of the first champions of this legislation which legalized cartels and encouraged government spending on public works. This increased spending was designed to restore prosperity and benefit General Electric and all businesses. Harry Harriman, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and a leading supporter of the legislation, argued that "it constitutes a most important step in our progress towards business rehabilitation." Most large corporations supported it while smaller business generally were quiet.
The NIRA was overturned in May 1935 when the Supreme Court of the United States unanimously ruled in the case Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States (295 U.S. 495), sometimes called the "sick chicken" case, that the Act infringed upon states' authority, unreasonably stretched the Commerce Clause, and gave legislative powers to the executive branch in violation of the Nondelegation doctrine. By then the NRA program had become unpopular and there was no effort to rewrite the legislation.
There is controversy over the effectiveness of this act. Section 7a dealt helped promote the formation of labor unions and in 1935 was incorporated into the Wagner Act.
Taken from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Recovery_Act
Since your catalog is from the Fall, the NRA would only have been in effect scant months before press time, and so I would wager that the Provisional status means they were in compliance, but had not been officially designated yet.
They say ignorance is bliss, but it really just means you failed to learn.
Another welcome addition to the catalogues library. Thank-you for sharing these scotrace. I did indeed notice the leather blouse, also the vacation bag and the long point collars on the Maine outing shirts.
Great stuff.
Politicians, ugly buildings and whores all get respectable if they last long
enough.