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Vohllme 29, Number Jl2
Septemb~r, 1195§
I •
' :
I 'i
1918
EDGAR MOHRMANN
40 Years
Serving the
In tern a tiona I
Philately
1958
lOOth JUBILEE AUCTION Hamburg October, 1958
For this auction we are open :to receive rari:ties from :the whole world, specialized and gener al collections, etc.
Our Commission Is Only 15%
Our catalogues are well known :throughout the world and have the most widespread circula:tion. We can therefore guarantee best results.
The limit prices are affixed under mutual agreement. We are also buyers of rari:ties of :the whole world, special collections,
but only in first-c:ass condition.
Free payment :to ·all countries of the 1vorld.
EDGAR MOHRMANN Licensed Auctioneer
HAMBURG L SPEERSORT 6 Telephones: 32 64 28 and 33 67 28 Cable Address: E•DMORO
A Leadin g Au ction House on the Eu ropean Cont inent w ith World Reputation
'l1HE AIRP OST JOUR!N:AL
Sta10ps for Sale???
WE CAN BE OF SERVICE
TO YOU ! ! IRWIN HEIMAN
For more than a quarter of a Century, COLLECTORS, DEALERS, TRUST COMPANIES and EXECUTORS OF ESTATES have consulted us regarding the conversion of Philatelic Properties into cash.
IF YOU WANT TO SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION we can offer early dates and attractive terms. Expert supervis· ion of all material by an experienced Philatelic Auctioneer. Liberal advances pending sale. Comprehensive insurance and Holmes Electric Protection safeguards your property while in our possession. Our Catalog distribution is world-wide.
OUR PRIVATE SALES SERVICE ... successfully places Collections, Stocks and Rarities where this method is preferred.
IMMEDIATE CASH IS WAITING ... for the outright purchase of suitable material regardless of amount.
Our Advice, Backed by over 30 Years Experience in the Stamp Trade, is at Your Disposal
Information Cheerfully Given
IRWIN HEIMAN~ Inc. Serving American Philately Since 1926
2 WEST 46th STREET
ROOM 708
NEW YORK 36, N. Y.
TEL.: JU 2-2393
REMEMBER, REMEMBER,
the
15th NOVEMBER We have now begun preparing our
LARGEST STAMP AUCTION which will he held on the 15th of November, 1958.
So far we already have some of the world's most outstanding Collections of
AUSTRIA BALKAN COUNTRIES BRITISH COLONIES FRANCE GERMAN STATES GREECE ITALIAN STATES JAPAN SPAIN U.S.A. INCL. CONFEDERATES LATIN AMERICAS, Etc., Etc.
and many other properties are under negotiations. There will he thousands of lots with a huge proportion in the 3 and 4 figure range, hundreds of pages of Illustrations.
The total value will certainly he not less than half a million dollars and might easily rea~h a million Dollars.
Since in view of its anticipated size and cost we can only print a limited number of Catalogues, write us for YOUR copy early. It is free and post free!
This Auction will make philatelic history. You simply cannot miss it.
Yours sincerely,
SHANAHAN/S STAMP AUCTIONS/ LTD. 39, Upper Gt. Georges Street.,
Dun Laoghaire, Dublin
P. S. This, of course, is only one of our regular fortnightly Stamp Auctions.
PAGE 338 THE AIRPOST JOURNAL
THE AMERICAN AIR MAIL SOCIETY
A Nfg;~i~~~~t~grp~~ation 11
Organized 1923 Under the Laws of Ohio
PRESIDENT John J. Smith
Ferndale & Emerson Sts. Philadelphia 11, Pa.
SECRETARY-TREASURER Ruth T. Smith
Ferndale & Emerson Sts. Philadelphia 11, Pa. VICE-PRESIDENTS
Bernard Davis Joseph L. Eisendrath, Jr.
Florence L. Kleinert Robert W. Murch
EDITOR - Other Publications L. B. Gatchell
ATTORNEY George D. Kingdom
DIRECTOR OF FOREIGN RELATIONS
Dr. Max Kronstein AUCTION MANAGER
Samuel S. Goldsticker, Jr.
DIRECTORS Alton J. Blank
Samuel S. Goldsticker, Jr. Louise S. Hoffman
Ernest A. Kehr Dr. Southgate Leigh
Lester S. Manning Dr. Tomas Terry Earl H. Wellman
ADVANCE BULLETIN SERVICE Herbert Brandner 4038 Forest Ave. Brool<:field. Ill.
SALES MANAGER Herman Kleinert 213 Virginia Ave.
Fullerton, Pa.
MEMBERSHIP DUES $4.00 PER YEAR
Dues include subscription to THE AIRPOST JOURNAL. Applicants must furnish two references, philatelic preferred. At least one must reside in Applicant's home town. Applicants under 21 years must be guaranteed by Parent or Guardian. Membership may be terminated by the Society in accordance with its By-Laws.
Correspondence·~concerning advertising, subscriptions, back numbers and bound volumes, address changes and other matters and all remittances should be sent to the Treasurer. All general communications should
be sent to the Editor.
SEPTEMBER, 1958
-tk~IBPOST t;.LJA;toVBNAL
Official Publlcation of the AMERICAN AIR MAIL SOCIETY
Volume 29 No. 12 Issue No. 341
CONTENTS .. For September, 1958 Articles The Aerial Steam Carriage . 340 Around i'he Perimeter of U.S.A. in -2
Hours .... .......... 342
A.A.M.S. 35th Convention .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. .. . 343
A Legend In His Own Time 348
Convention Notes .. .. .... ............. .. ... 356
U.S. Airmail Sheets Good Property ....... 358
Award Winners 1958 Exhibition 363
El AI .................. 364
Regular Features C.A.M. News ................................... .
Airport Dedication News
F.A.M. Notes
Official Section
EDITOR Joseph L. Eisendrath, Jr.
. .... 346
366
366
367
350 No. Deere Park Drive, Highland Park, Ill.
ASSISTANT EDITORS Robert W. Murch
Ernest A. Kehr L. B. Gatchell DEPARTMENT AND ASSOCIATE EDITORS
R. Lee Black, N. Pelletier, Florence L. Kleinert, Dr. Max Kronstein, Thomas J. O'Sullivan, Richard L. Singley, William R. Ware, Sol Whitman, Julius Weiss. James Wotherspoon, John Watson, William T. Wynn, Frank Blumenthal Samuel S. Goldsticker, Jr., J. S. Langabeer.
Pubiished monthly at Albion, Erie Co., Pa.,U.S.A. Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office
at Albion, Pa., February 10, 1932, under the Act of March 3, 1879.
The AIRPOST JOURNAL is not conducted for profit. The Editor, and all others, serve without compensation. Receipts from advertising, subscriptions and contributions are applied to the betterment of the magazine and the promotion of aero-philately. The Editor and Officers of The American Air Mail Society assume no responsibility for the accuracy of statements made by contributors. Every effort is made to insure correctness of
all articles. Subscription Rates: $4.00 per year, 35c per copy,
Advertising Rate Card available from the Treasurer.
PAGE. 339
The ~~erial Stea1n Carriage (from the "Royal Albun1~~ early 1800s)
(Cour:tesy of Alexander D. Gage)
Far more interesting to the patrons of The Hoyal Album than any picture of love, or portrait of ladye faire, will be the representaHon of the stupendous invention of Mr. Henson, the Aerial Steam Carriage, which, in consequence of the proceedings in parliament, to whom arpplication has lbeen made for An Act, and the extreme degree of ·curiosity arising from rthe novelty ·of the discovery, ihas !become the wonder of the day; and we feel that we shall be af·fording a great treat to the public, and well sustaining the ·character of our work, as being the cheapest and best of the illustrated ·periodicals, in g1vmg a faithful and concise description of "The Ariel," the first carriage of The Aerial Transit Company.
·However unsuited a dry discourse on mechanism would lbe to our page, we hope, ·by stripping it of the usual scientific technicalities, to render our description of "The Ariel" as interesting as it is extraordinary.
Let our readers, ·then, first imagine a floor, or plartform a hundred and fifty feet long lby thirty feet wide. We are somewhat puzzled for a word which will accurately designate this main part of the machine. We have called it a floor or platform, merely because of its large area; and yet those terms are improper, except we divest them of peculiar meaning of weight or stability, for this expanded surface floating through the air really performs the office of wings, though it has none of their virbratory motion - it has no joints; it is remarkably strong and sUff from end to end, yet of extraordinary lightness. It advances through and urpon the air with one of its long sides foremost, that side being also a little raised. A tail of d'ifty feet long and of similar ·construction, is jointed to the mMdle of its hinder edge; and
PA:GE 340
• under the tail is a rudder. Across its middle is a vertical web which answers the same purpose as the keel of a vessel, or more nearly of the fin on the back of some fishes -viz., it checks oscillation. All these different parts of the machine are constructed with an especial view te the •combination of strength with lightness, and are covered with silk or linen.
To the main expanse or wings which we have described, and immediately beneath it, are suspended the car and a small, light and very ingenious and powerful steam-engine; the latter ·actuates two sets of vanes or propellers like windmill sails, and of twenty feet diameter, situated at the 'back edge of the wings.
'The principal feature of the invention, as far as the description has yet proceeded, is the very great expanse of its sustaining planes, which are Larger in propor.tion to the weight to 'be carried than those.of many birds; but if they had been still greater, they would not have sUJfficed of themselves to sustain their own weight, to say nothing of their rnachinery and car.go - surely, though slowly, they would have come to the ground. We have remarked, however, that the maohine advances with its front edge a little rai!sed; the effect of w'hioh is to present its under surface to the air over which it is passing, the resistance of which, acting on it like a strong wind on the sails od' a windmill, prevents the descent of the maohine and its !burden. The sustaining of the whole, therefore, depends on the speed at which it is travelling through the air, and the angle at which its under surface impinges on the 1air in its fpont; and this is ex;actly the principle by which birds are uphe1d in their flight with but slight motion of their wings, and
THE AIRPOST JOU~NA'L
often with none. But, then, this result, after the
start, depends ent irely on keeping up .the speed, and there remains beyond that the still more formidable difficulty of first obtaining that speed. All former attempts of this kind have !failed •because no engine existed which was at once light enough and powerful enough to lift even its own wei·ght ·through the 1air with the ne-cessary rapidity. ·Mr. Henson has removed this difficu•lty, partly by inventing a steam engine of extreme lig1htness and efficiency, and partly by another and very singular device Which requires particular notice. It is perhaps necessary to add, tha.t any .degree .by which the requisite velocity oon be obtained may be used in· stead o.f the iTIIClined plane, as for instance, a stationary steam-engine with .a level road.
All former inventors had supposed it necessary to carry in the machine itself all the power necessary to commence and susiain its flight. Hence some failed in their attempts, and others were deterred ifrom making any attempt at all. Nor does mechaRical art, even in its present advanced state, afford the means of over.coming the difficulty, so long as this view of the subject is adhered to. Na<ture and art, hawever combine to shO'W us that this difficulty may be surmounted: Mr. Henson, following their indications, empl•oys thi·s expedient. His machine fully prepared for flight, is started from the top of an inclined plane, in descending which it attains fue velocity necessary to susiain it in its further progress. That velocity rwould be gradually destroyed by the resistance of the air to the [orward •flight; it is, thei'efore, the office of the ·steam-engine and the vanes it actuates simply ;to repair the loss of velocity; it is made, therefore, only of the power and weight necessary for that small effect. Here, we apprehend, is the chief, but not the only merit and originality of !Mr. Henson's invention; and to this h appy thought we shall probrubly lbe indebted for
SEPTEMBER, 195·8
the first successful attempt to traverse at will another domain of nature.
It would ·be easy to show that this principle, though disgluised in appearance, really dbtains in all mechanical action, and that the power which puts a machine in motion must be considered distinct from that rwhkh keeps up that m·otion, we shall however, only refer .to the familiar instance af the clock, whi'ch is set going by drawing its pendulum to one side; it is kept going by the weight or spring preventing the decay of its motion. So •Mr. Henson sets his machine in
PAGE 341
motion by its descent down the inclined plane, and keeps it so by his steam -engine.
Just so does a large bird often start from a high tree or rock. First, he makes a swoop downwards to acquire velocity; that .gained, it requires little effort to rise again and increase his speed. The violent efforts made by slow and heavy birds rwhen rising from the ground and the easy flight of the same birds after they have obtained sufficient velocity, show the operatioll and importance of the same pr'lliciple. Indeed, the whole is but a necessary consequence of the established mechanical axiom, that a body once in motion will ever continue to move if hindering forces be taken out of the way.
HELP WANTED! The ·following questions all pertain
to Canadian Pioneer flights as listed in the AA!MS Catalogue, Vol. II, 1950 edition.
Can anyone give us any definite information as to the existence and wherea!bouts of any of the following Canadian Pioneer fligfuts?
1. #9 and 9B if franked with the burning dirigible stamp .with the numerals "25" in the corners.
2. #13 - February 17, 1919, Vancouver - Seattle.
3. # 14 - May 31, 1919, V~ctoria -Vancouver.
4. #18a - Sept. 29, 1919, Charlottetown - Truro.
5. #23 - May 28, 1920, Toronto -Hamilton franked with the Grand Army of Canada stamp.
6. #26 - March, 1921, Vancouver -Seattle.
7. #26 - March 24-30, 1921, Peace River, Ft. Vermilion, Hay River, Ft. Providence, Ft. Simpson.
8. Any covers flown by the Laurentide Air Service Sept. 11, 1924, either with .the special stamp with side roulette, or without it, but flown Sept. H.
The Canadian airmail study group will greatly appreciate any information. Replies should be directed to John C. Cornelius, 2309 Irving Ave. So., Minneapolis, Minnesota.
PAGE 342
AROUND THE PERIMETER OF THE U.S.A. IN 18 HOURS
BY JET STAR
Twenty years ago this story would have made front page news with full headlines and extras. Now it must seem just one of the many aviation achievements of this age to which we have become accustomed.
The new Lockheed executive jet transport began a flight to fly around the borders of the U.S.A. in less than one day last June 17th. Through the cooperation of Pilot Ray J. Goudy, we now have the full set of covers postmarked June 17th. These include:
1 - Pmk., Tacoma, Wash. 11 a. m. Flown from Edwards AFB, Cal. to McChord AFB, Wash. "1st leg of first flight around bhe peria:neter of the U.S.A. in less than one day," the pilot has written on the cover.
2 - Pmk. Westover Air Force Base, Mass. 1 p. m. Flown from IJ.VIcChord AFB, Wash. at 0126 PDT to Westover AFB 0714 overhead, 172-8 land. "2nd leg of flight around the perimeter of U.S.A. in less than a day."
3 - Pmk. OrLando,, Fl:a. 6 p. m. Flown from Westover AFB, Mass. 0828 PDT to McCoy AFB, Florida 1055 over, 1104 PDT l:and. "3rd leg of first flight around the perimeter of the U.S.A. in less than one day."
4 - Pmk. Edwards, Cal. ·5:30 p. m. McCoy AFB, Fla. 1204 PDT to Edwards A'FIB, Cal. 173H PDT. "Last leg of a very smooth flight above the weather."
5th cover. Same at Edwards, for full fli·ght. Flown from Edwards A!FB, McCoy to Edwards on June 17th, 1958. ''Around the U.S.A. in 18:00 hrs. with 14:50 hrs. in the air. Top speed 686 m.p.h."
With this jet transport's glorious one·-day flight and so many more jet planes coming oJf the lines- now for commercial use, rwe may expect many fine covers from here on.
- Harry A. Gordon
THE AIRPOST JOURNAL
r
A. A. l\1. S. 35th Convention By Joseph L. Eisendrath, Jr .
• Despite all forebodings that the ily the best in the show, and the change in dates would affect attend- award to him was well deserved. We ance at the Philadelphia convention liked Robert Murch's pioneers - the in July, the three days' affair was ex- covers and the original photos. Our tremely well attended. Many told us own exhibit was based on a new that if the dates had not been chang- idea. We showed crash covers -one ed, they could not have come. eaoh year since the air servke start-
The first day was at the Philatelic ed in 1918. We had a hard time to Museum, where we spent a lot of complete it - the 1953 cover was a time studying the exhibits. Major real toughie. Herbert Rosen thad an Scherer, the curator of the Museum, un:'sual showing of the history of had a particularly rugged time, ·as he aviation - most enlightening. The had to set up our exhtb1ts, then sud- wonderful stamps of Brazil owned by denly replace them with a showing Her.bert Feist .caught our :!laney, as did of Ghana Cas the prime minister of early German air material of Dr. Max that country visited the museum on Kronstein. Perham Nathl had an unextremely short noUce), take the usual display on '1How to Collect Air Ghana down, put our approximately Covers" - with many •good ideas 250 frames back, and then the day we suggested. 'l1here were nine aeroleft. tak~ .ours down and set up a11.- gr~mme ~xhi'bi~s, ~ith E~ett Petother exhibit d'or a show the next day. er s showmg wmmng a th~gh award.
The •Muse11;m is scrubbed and pol- The story of C~inese aviation as. tol_d ished, and looks !better than we have by Ellery Demson had some beautlever seen it. We were particularly ful, colorful covers. We like Reg. impressed with the variety and qual~ A:ckland ,s propaganda leaflets -ity of materral sh&wn. The Post Of- o e d,oesn t see t~em very often. John fiee Department had several frames Myer_s Colombian ;ov:rs left us to show the evolution of the new 7•c droolmg - how we d hke . to own air mail stamp. Tom Matthews' Filpex sam; o~, 1Jhose,,920 cov:ers! Bill KaufGold Medal collection was exhibited ~an s . Byrd ·co.llechon had many in the Court of Honor- not for com- mte:estmg polar Items- tough ones petition. We noted here particularly to fmd today.. The exhibits over-the Prof. Wise ,balloon cover of Aug. flowed to the ~asement. . . 17, 185·9 from La•fayette, Indiana; the T~e ·Post O~fiCe branch did a bnsk Buffaloo balloon cover, and one of the bu~n:;tess as time passed .- pleasant, very few Vin Fiz cards known He efficient men - the best m the Philahad a display of the 5·c Beaco~ air delp~ia Post Office were assigned to mail, imperf. between, the & red and the JOb. bluE', also imperf. between, as well as The ·first and only business session the 1·5c map stamp impevf. between. took place that afternoon and was His 24c invert displayed is position fairly well attended. Various reports 84 of the original sheet. Then a 6c showed that the Society ·functions grange air mail envelope stamp was well. Membership up, witfrl a 10% super-imposed over the regular 3c increase in ·a year, more funds on purple envelope postage stamp. The hand, .financially in good shape. The 5c envelope air in black instead of sales mana•ger has done a lot better, blue caught our eye. Ori.gina1 die and the Society benefits. The Airpost proofs of tJhe Cl-2-3 st·amps were dis- Journal still spends most of the played, too. And this was only a funds (almost $5,000 this last fiscal small •part of what he owns. ' year) and still wants to grow. The
Robert Scherer's Iceland pioneer catalog~e committee reported and stamps, covers, and photos were eas- showed us 400 pages of the supple-
SEPTEMBER, 1958 PAGE 343
ment, printed and -gathered. With only 100 or so pages to go, a November first publication date seems reasonable. The secretary reported several deaths, and the elevaHon to life members'hip of ~12 members who have belonged ot the A.A.M.S. for 35 years. Tlhese include WHliam E. Beam, William T. Prinzing, Malcolm H. Ganser, A. M. rHard, Carl M. Becken, Francis J. Field, Walter B. Hausler, E. Marion Wood, Elmer L. Beadles, W. W. Pound, Martin M. Shallenberger, and Sam Rodvien. We now number 1,079 members. The Jack Knight Air Mail Society, Chicago Area branch of the A.A.M.S., invited 1Jhe 1959 convention to come to Ohkago or Highland Park, one of its northern suburbs. Action will come later. Open !floor discussion followed on how to improve membership and services. 'Many ideas were advanced. The meeting broke up about 4 o'dock.
The Jamboree and benefit auction in the air-cooled Sheraton Hotel attracted many people. An open bar was the main attraction. The auction was called by George Kingdom, who did an outstanding job. There were 115 lots and whe1Jher the mood of those attending 'Or the quality of the material was the reason, the bidding really was spirited. Only 15 lots went to mail bidders. Over $450.00 was realized d'or the Society. Bidding was interspersed with drawings for door prizes, and many valuable gifts went to delighted members. Look at this impressive list of donors: Air France, American, Capital, Delta, Swissair, Braniff, Avianca, BOAC, !Pan American, Nor.thrwest, TWA, Joe Martin, Frieda Bulger, Gerald Bookhop, and Emilio Quiros. At the banquet the next night, everyone had a bag of loot, ·and at the lun~heon the next day, it continued.
Wednesday, more 1bull sessions and more people at the Museum. A large attendance at the banquet made for a pleasant evening. 'Bernard Davi•s emceed the affair, and introduced celebrities and lesser lights. J•ohn Smith and Florence Kleinert presented charters to the Metropolitan Air Mail
!PAGE 344
Cover Clu!b, through its president, Sam Goldsticker. A charter for the Rocket Mail Society was exhibited and will be sent to GeoDge Ritter in Tampa, Fla. George Kingdom !had a few remarks to make, and presented an honorary life membership to Franklin Bruns, and in turn, was surprised to receive the same recognition himself a short time later. :Bart Gatchell presented the report of the Exhibit Jury, and much satisfaction at the results seemed apparent. A complete list is shown elsewhere in this issue. Frank Bruns made an informal speech on his jdb, and told what t!he Post Office Department is doing for philately. His friendly and warm talk did much in the line of .pulblic relations. How they prepare for a first
. day of issue service, and the problems of handling 10 on July 31, and one on August 1st came in for attention.
The next morning PoStmaster Thomas of Philadelphia sold the !first sheet of stamps to \President John Smith, amid popping flash bulbs, and the public sale began. At the airpol't on the wazy- home. At the airport on the way home, this writer bought all the papers and there was our photogenic president I>aying out seven dollars.
Long lines of buyers kept the stamp -clerks busy. One of the men assigned to hand cancel covers was not there, so this writer and others stepped in the breach to help. If your covers were neatly canceled, praise us. It's a tough job. We bought $68.00 worth of the 7-c stamps d'or the society, affixing some on luncheon pDograms, covers and what have you. The so-: ciety enjoyed a brisk sale of its 3 covers with eaCih day's convention cancel and the first day on the luncheon pl'ogram. Treasurer Ruth Smith reports a complete sell-out- !but says she still has some luncheon programs left at 50c each. We know- we helped stamp and cancel over 1500 of them.
The luncheon at the Slheraton was the best attended function. Airlines represented were Pan American, TW 4, >Delta, Flying Tiger Line, Aaix-
'illiE AIRIPOST JOURNAL
co, Eastern, Riddle, Northeast, National, American, At1ant1c Aviation Corp., and Air France. 'Dhese representatives wore the red, white and blue vests of the "Or.der of the Vest", a limited organization of people concerned with the movement of air mail.
George Kingdom presided; John Smith welcomed the conventioneers, Raymond A. 'I1homas •greeted us for the Philadelphia Post Office, and distinguished guests were recognized. Howard Brooks .gave a short <talk on behalf of the airlines, and inducted L. Rohe Walter in the "Order of the Vest" - a rare event - and the vest fitted perfectly. IMr. Walter then gave a talk on the functi-ons of his department, and told of the propaganda value of a postage stamp. He deviated from 1his prepared ta1k to dwell on airmail activities and told how his department welcomes the cooperation of societies such as ours. At the end of his talk he made presentation of souvenir albums of full sheets, autographed by ~ostmaster General Arthur Summerfield, to the following:
Dwight D. Eisenhower, President United States.
John J. Smith, President A.A.M.S. Ruth T. Smith, Sec'y and Treasurer Joseph L. Eisendrath, Jr., Editor
Ail'post Journal. Geor.ge ·W. Angers, Past President Geovge D. Kingdom, Past President L. B. Gatchell, iPast lPrestdent Bernard Davis, Vice President Ray<mond A. Thomas, Postmaster,
PhUadelphia. William H. Buckley, designer of the
7c stamp. Samuel Marsh, artist who did let
tering on the stamp. Also he announced that .ten such
a]bums were prepared for all pilots who have received the Air !Mail Flyers' Medal of Honor. Many are deceased, and the atbums will go to their next of kin.
After lunch some went back to the museum, !but this writer flew home to Highland Park, Ill.
It was one swell convention! We will show Convention photos
next month.
MEXICO Part III o£ the Sr. Robert Larranga
GOLD MEDAL COLLECTION WILL BE SOLD IN OUR AUCTIONS
SEPTEMBER 26, 27, 29, 1958 3000 Lots Including
1500 Lots of the EAGLE Issue By Districts and Printings
Fifty Photo Plates Catalogue Free on Request
BILLIG & RICH, Inc. 55 West 42nd Streei New York 36, N. Y. New 1958 Price List of PHILATELlC LITERA',I'URE 64pp available
50c Deductible from First Order
SElPTEMBER, 1958 PAGE 345
P. 0. Box 595, Malden, Mo .
• There has 'been very little to chron- with a spur from Sidney to Omaha icle in the way of First FUghts thus via Imperial, Q.\IIcCook, Kearney, !Hastfar in 1958. However, collectors can ings ar"d Lincoln. take satisf·action from the recent de- 5-Central Nebraska will be served cisions of the CAB which will cause by another segment out of Denver explenty of activity as soon as the vari- tending to Omaha via Cheyenne, ous changes and additions authorized Scottsbluff, Alliance, North Blatte, in these decisions become a reality. Grand Island and Lincoln.
In addition to the Great Lakes - 6-Northern Nebraska is to be served Southeast Service Case and the St. through an extension from Casper to Louis - Southeast Service Case, the Omaha via Dougl-as, Lusk, Ohadron, Civil Aeronautics Board has announc- Valentine, Ainsworth, iNord'olk, Coed its vote in the Seven States Case. lumbus and Lincoln. This involves local service by Fron- The above actually represents an tier Airlines, North Central Airlines extension of Frontier's service eastand Ozark Air Lines in the area em- ward as far as Omaha and Kansas bracing G.\llinesota, Iowa, Illinois, Wy- City. oming, Colorado, Wisconsin and Mis- Ozark Airlines -souri, with several new cities and ex- l..Extended from Des iMoines to !Mil-tensive route changes and extensions waukee via Cedar Rapids, Dubuque involved. The announcement does not and Madison by a new segment. represent the Board's final decision 2~New segment from Moline - Davenwhich will come within the next few port-Rock Island to Minneapolis-St. months. However, tentative agree- Paul via Cedar Rapids, Waterloo and ment has been reached on the !follow- Rochester. ing awards: 3-New segment from Des Moines
Frontier Airlines - to Minneapolis - St. ·Paul via Fort 1-New segment from Denver to Dodge, Ma·son City, Austin - Albert
Rapid City via Cheyenne, Scottsbluff, Lea and Rochester. Alliance, Chadron, Hot Springs. 4-New segment from Sioux City to 2~New segment extending service Chicago via Des •Moines, Ottumwa,
from Casper to Bismar.ck via Newcas- Burlington and Peoria, largely covertie, Rapid City, Lemmon and Dickin- ing cities previously served by this son. route except the service between
3-New segment from Williston to Sioux City and Des Moines and repBismarck via •Minot. The present seg- resents rearrangement of method of ment flown by Frontier between Wil- service to the cities involved. liston and Dickinson is to •be elimin- 5-This proposed new segment will inated. cover service from Chicago to Sioux
4-Southern Nebraska will be served City and Omaiha, operating from Chiby a ·segment operating from Denver cago via Rockford, Duibuque, Waterto Sterling, •Sidney and North Platte loo, Fort Dodge, thence to Sioux City
PAGE 346 THE AIRPOST JOURNAL
and Omaha, diverging at Fort Dodge to the latter two cities.
5-New segment from Kansas City to Moline - Davenport - Rock Island via St. Josep'h, Kirksville and Burlington.
7-New segment from St. Louis to Quincy - Hanntbal.
8-0maha to Sioux Falls segment via Norfolk, Sioux City and Yankton.
9-Sioux .F·alls to Waterloo segment via Spencer, Estherville and Mason City.
In additon, Moberly, Mo. will be added to present Segment #6 of this route as an intermediate point between Columbia and Quincy. There are several cities new to air mail service involved in this award. We presume that the ·Post Office Department will furnish official cachets for the first flights from these cities.
North Central Airlines -
1-This carrier has !been awarded a new segment from Minot to Sioux Falls via Bismarck, Aberdeen, Huron and Mitchell.
2-Bxtension of present segment #8 from Grand Forks via Devils Lake to Minot.
3-New segment .from 'Rapid City to Minneapolis - St. Paul v1a Spearfish, Pierre, !Mobridge, Aberdeen and Watertown, S. D.
4-New segment from Sioux Falls to Minneapolis - St. Paul via Worthington, Fairmont and Mankato, Minn.
·5-New segment from Sioux Falls to Minneapolis - St. Paul via Mitchell, Huron and Watertown, S. D.
6-New segment from Grand Forks via Fal'lgo, Watertown and Brookings to Sioux Falls, S. D. 7~New segment from Minneapolis -
St. Paul to Milwaukee via Eau Claire, Ma-rshfield ·and .A!ppleton, Wise. In addition, Ashland is to be added as an intermediate point on presently existing service between Ironwood, Mich. and Duluth, ll.V.J:inn.
NEWS-AIM #59 has been extended from
Charlotte Amalie and St. Thomas,
SEPTEMBER, 1958
Virgin Islands to St. Maarten, N. W. I. Inaugural :fHgihts with mai'l were made on March 3, 1958, without any advance information. The inaugural flights were flown lby Capt. Luis Cintron. We do not know if any collector mail was handled. However, we are checking on this angle as it is possible that collectors in Puerto Rioo or the Virgin Islands might have caught it.
ABOUT OUR COVER
We reproduce a print exhibited at our recent convention by Herbert Rosen, of New York. It is said to be the oldest drawing of an airship, of which only a few copies survive, and was recently obtained at an auction in Europe by Mr. Rosen, a collector of postal history and aeronautical items.
TJ:lis drawing is contained in a book, "Directorium statuum seu verius tri·bulatio seculi", dedicated to Peter Attendorn, and was published by university students in Strassburg in 1482, only twenty-six years after Gutenberg printed his Bible. The woodcut depicts a gondola type vessel in full sail in which several individuals are crowded. The original size is 3lh" x 5" and is entitled "IMonopolium et societas vulgo Des liech tschiffs".
Linn's Weekly recently said, "This old German work antedates ,by eigiht years the 1490 "Codex Atlanticus" of Leonardo da Vinci with his famous diagrams of proposed schemes and machines to permit human fHght. It bears a remarkable resemlb1ance to the modern German "luftsohif.f" (airship)."
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GEORGE HERZOG, INC. A 68 Nassau St. N. Y. C. 38, N. Y.~
PAGE 347
A Legend In His Own Time . ALBERTO SANTOS-DUMAS, A BRAZILIAN IN PARIS, CAPTURED EAJRLY AVIATION PRIZES AND WAS FIRST INTERNATIONAL AVIATION HERO
By Matthew J. Bruccoli
• <Reproduced with permission of his interest in human fHght. W. R. Grace & Company, from the A game played lby Bmzilian child-Grace Log). ren when Santos-Dumont rwas a child
The world's first international av1- on his father's •coffee plantation in ation hero was a dapper, supremely Sao P.aulo was called "Pigeons Fly." self-confident young -Brazilian named One child would shout "Pigeons fly!" A!Lbert Santos-Dumont. Such was his or "Eagles fly!" and so on, and if the fame that rwhen the news of the ibird or animal were one that did fly Wright brothers' success at Kitty the other ·children would raise their Hawk, North Carolina, was first re- hand"'. Alberto liked to recall that he leased on December 18, 1903, the paid often for raising his hand to headline in the Dayton· (Ohio) Daily "!Men fly!" News read: Six months before the Wright
Dayton Boys Emulate Great brothers made their successful pow-Santos-Dumont ered, heavier-than-air flight, Santos-
That this phraseology indicated Dumont had conditioned civilization scant comprehension of the Wrights' to the plaus~bility of the air as a accomplishment in no way minimizes proper thomughfare for practical .the esteem in which the fantastic transportation.
_ ~razilian was held 'by all people, in- He did th~s by so ma·stering his . ·eluding the Wrights' own co~citizenry. elongated, gasoline~powered balloons
It ·comes to so few men to be leg- that on June 23, 1903, he- could fly ends in their own time. One of these, from 'his base in Neuilly, cross the certainly, wa·s Santos-Dumont. Seine, go down the Champs Elysees,
'Slight of figure - he weighed no turn in to Rue Washington and stop more than 96 pounds - and with his for coffee at his apartment, anchorcharacteristic Panama hat, as 'befitted ing the balloon at his door! a brasileiro resident in Paris, his pro- He confessed to small patience with digiously high collar and his trouser the theortsts who fearlessly predict cuffs rolled well up aibove the ankles, great scientific achievements but :he was as much a part of Paris as the keep their own feet safely dry. His Ave de Triomphe. own method was to enter physically
With pride and affection, Paris en- into the region he had determined to couraged 'his meanderings lite11ally up conquer; but in doing so he did not and down her streets and boulevards forego his demitasse. On 'his first asin his dirigtble balloons, for.giving'him, cension in a spherical 'balloon in 1897, it would seem, an occasional toppled among the accouterments that he took chimney pot. -::. pains to •have with him in the wicker
He led the spirit' of the time. His gondola was a lunch of hard-boiled acts of incredible daring, debonairly eggs, roast beef, chicken, cheese, ice and naturally executed, induced cream, fruits and cakes, champagne, countless others to follow who, in coffee and Chartreuse. their turn, 1became the immortal rpio- The modern, bustling airport on the neers of aviation: Bleriot, Farman, edge of the Esplanada do Castelo in Voisin, even the Brothers Wright. Rio de Janeiro !bears proudly the From the time that he •saw his first name of the man who built the balloon ascension at a fair in Sao world's very first aivport at SaintPaulo in 1888, he pursued tirelessly Cloud near Paris more than a half-
PAGE 348 THE AIRPOST JOURNAL
,_,;:.:.r--1'
Sanios-Dumont Monument at :the Rio de Janeiro · Airport
century ago. The day would come, Santos-Dumont often said, when special fields and platforms would be needed for the. accommodation of f•lyirng machines. And so, ibeing one not to wait for the !future, he erected an aerodrome 100 feet long and 36 feet high, to house his famous steerable balloons and avoid the inconvenience of operating from the oBotani.cal Gardens.
Only iby recalling the Charles Lindbergh reception in Paris in 1927 can we appreciate something of the tremendous readion, the frenzied c::ele,brations that followed the news of Santos-IDumont's ·gammg of the Deutsch Prize on October 19, 1901. We say only 'something' of the reaction, because Lindbergh had been unknown.. Santos-Dumont was already the darling of Paris and had, in 1900,
SEPTEMBE'R, 1958
been awarded the "Encouragement Prize'' -the -annual interest on 100,-000 francs - d'or promoting aeronautics. He gave this money to the Aero Club of France, to be given to the first aviator to Hy around the Eiffel Tower from a take-off in SaintCloud. Such a prize already existed,. offered by IM. Deutsch de la Meurthe;-: but its ·too severe conditioons included: a preposterous 30-minute time-limit for the flight.
A!bout a year later, in 1901, the unconditional prize was yet to be won, much less the impossilble Deutsch award. So Santos-Dumont mounted the flimsy cat-walk of his dirigilble balloon No. 6 at Saint-Cloud and steered a course .for the EiJffeol Tower. It was not to win -ihis own prize, but to fulfill the stringent conditions of Monsieur Deutsch.
PAGE 349
On October 23. 1906, Santos-Dumont flew his No. "14 bis'' plane on Europe's first heavie-r-than-air flight
All started well - for who could Santos-Dumont was the first to use do this thing more conf idently than a gasoline engine successfully in aviMonsieur Santos? Yet when he came ation. He was the first to equip a broadside of the Tower, the petro- plane with :ailerons as we know them. leum motor sputtered and the lbal- He designed the "Demoiselle," one of loon drifted perilously close. Now the most successful planes of its day, Santos-Dumont -had a virtuosity with and freely relinquished the patents. motors, gained from an intense •boy- He was the first aviator to be lionized hood interest in the workings of the in both hemispheres. Sut he was despolpador and descascador and the something more. A young man of other machines on the coffee planta- wealth, he disproved tne cynical thetion at home. ory that a•chievement requires abso-
While the throngs on the boule- lute indigence. vards craned their necks and gasped, He showed how a man of good will the agile aeronaut nursed the motor, may be a credH to his country wher
::-running alternately up and down the ever he may be. He will alway•s have l ength of the catwalk to maintain his the special notice of Americans as one -balloon's level •course. H e rounded who developed a unique potentia ·the Tower, returned to Saint-Cloud weapon and offered it openly to the and became the first flyer to go some French who had 1been his cordial ·place and return under his own posi- !hosts, except that it was never to be ·.tive control. used in any war with :the United
He divided the award among his States of America or the United workmen and the Prefect of Police States of Brazil; he said these were ~ 'for the deserving poor." He also re - kindred. -ceived the prize that gratified ihim most, 100 Contos voted htm by the Brazilian Government and a gold medal inscribed "Por ceos nunca d'antes navegados" (a paraphra·se of a iine by Camoens, the epic poet of the Portuguese-speaking world)_ Truly he had "s-ailed seas never previously navigated."
PAGE 350
He retired in 1908, h aving set the stage for a new era. I n .1928, having always longed for BrazE's multi-colored loveliness, he returned there to live out his days. He died in 1932. It may properly ;be said of AlJberto San tos-Dumont that his celebrity had the special quality of being well deserved .
THE AIR'POST JOURNAL
Dirigible No. 6 on i:ts first flight around :the Eiffel Tower, which earned :the Deutsch Prize
GRACE CONRATH RELIEVED OF BUSiNESS MANAGER
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Former President Grace P. Conroth has asked to be relieved of her t·ask as business mana•ger for the Airpost Journal, and we reluctantly make t'his announcement. All ad copy and communications about the Journal should be sent to 350 No. Deere Park Drive, H ighland Park, Ill. All remittances, address changes and other matters should be addressed to A.P.J. business
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office at Ferndale & Emerson, Plhiladelphia 11, .Pa.
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PAGE 3'51
Get Your Philatelie Needs From Long MAYBE YOU DO!
Maybe you do have to be a sleuth to discover that Long offers stamps for collectors. After seeing ads offering Christmas Seals, Covers, Auctions, Albums and just about anything and everything, it may occur to you that you seldom see any of our ads mention STAMPS! Actually, we do deal in stamps ... we handle them by the millions, really! We sell hundreds of thousands of them at auction every year ... we send out countless approval selections, designed for the particular customer ... and we sell from our various price lists.
IF YOU COLLECT STAMPS: Let me hear from you if you collect stamps~ Ask for a selection of the kind you wish, on approval. Besides sending stamps ... we send covers .. seals ... all kinds of philatelic sidelines and novelties .. to collectors all over the globe. Your A.A.M.S. number is your reference. Let me know how I may serve you. · At present our ONLY Price Lists which include stamps are The 41st edition COLLECTOR'S HANDBOOK (Which lists mostly USA stamps) and a SPECIAL PACKET PRICE LIST. Either or both may be yours for the asking!
I
WE HAVE THE CATALOGUES YOU NEED!
In addition to a fine line of stamps, seals and covers, we do carry the major philatelic lines of albums, catalogs, philatelic books and supplies. Included, of course, are the 1958 SCOTT CATALOGUES which are needed by all collectors. We can supply them:
Vol. 1 - Lists US, BC, CA & SA Stamps $5.00
Vol. II - Lists the Balance of the world $6.00
Combined -The above 2 vol. in ONE $10.00
U.S.S. - The Specialized U.S. Catalog $4.00
We also handle a complete Scott line of albums and sup
plements; we furnish all of these items ($2.00 or more post
free anywhere in U.S.A.)· at publisher's prices.
Your needs in other lines (Minkus, White Ace, Beardcraft·,
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how we may help YOU.
Your Complete Satisfaction Always Assured When you Deal with Long!
IEILMER Ro ILO~G
PAGE 352 THE AIRPOST JOURNAL
11112 MARKIET ST o' IHIARRISimlURG, JID Ao
SEPTEMBER, 1958
Life Member: AAMS APS SPA
PAGE 35>3
'MAIL SALVAGE IS SUCCESSFUL AFTER CRASH
Of interest to crash cover collectors is this Associated Press dispatch which appeared in newspapers on June 1st. Do you h ave any of this mail?
When a Capital Airlines plane collided wit'h a military jet near Brunswick, Md., it was carrying 6'5 pounds of air mail.
The two planes disintegrated in the air, killing 12 persons. But postal inspectors who were on the scene within two hours salvaged about 63 pounds, or 97 per cent of the air mail load.
An .air mail operations report on this air mishap rwas made available.
There is a standard Post OHice procedure when a mail-carrying plane encounters trouble. At the first confirmed word of mishap, postal inspectors from the nearest field office start for the scene and set up a "mail rescue" operation.
It is their responstbility to salvage every possible piece of mail and get it moving again by the fastest available means. .
In the case of the May 20 collision near Brunswick, the mail load was mostly ejected in midair.
Three of the mail pouches, loaded at Chicago, were iound intact near the crash scene. A .fourth 9-pound pouch, taken on at ,P ittslbur·gh, also w as found, •but it had ibeen r ipped open and letters had to •be gathered from the ground where they scattered.
,Machine p a r t s, in a ·parcel post p a c k a g e consigned to a Baltimore plant, were recovered undamaged from under the airliner's fusel·age.
When the hunt was finally abandoned, only 2 pounds of mail remained unaccounted for. On the following day, a farmer living 4 miles from the scene, and on the other side of a mountain found five air mail letters postmarked at Pittsburgh. He turned them in.
PAGE 354
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THE AIRIPOST JOURNAL
Pioneer Aviator Henri Farn1an Passes Awav • In Paris, France, last July 18th, the first World War Farman held the
Henri Farman, one of the great International Pilot License No. 5 French aviator pioneers, died at the (compared with the No. 15 and No. 16 age of 84 years. He began his flights of the Wright brothers), and he paras early as 1907, four years after the ticipated in most of the •great aviation Kitty Hawk flights of the Wright metings of these early years. Special brothers, and as ear-ly as July 31, postal cancellations at these events 1908, had made his first flight demon- are v.:en kn~ to the collectors of · strations in the New York Area. His the PIOneer P~nod. . . . . . After the •First World War - m
first fhght was made In a biplane of 1919 H · F ·1 t f . . - enn arman ·was pi o o his own construch?~· ·~owever, he the inaugural flight of his first pasalso used early VOism bipl<>nes. senger service between Paris and
Quite recently France commemorated the SOth anniversary of Farman's first flight of an aivplane over a one kilometre distance in a closed circuit. This was observed on January 13, 195·8 with the post office using a special ·concellation at the old Issy les Moulneaux Aivport, which is now used as ·an International Heliport.
In the aviation of the period before
London.
He was one of the last surviving pioneers of early aviation, a r-arity in these days on the eve of Jetliner services all over the world.
-Dr. Max } .. ronstein
(Editor's note: His aeronautical biography will be .found in the February, 1958 issue of 1!he Airpost Journal, on page 15·6. See also the April, 1958 issue at page 202.)
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SEPTEMBER, 1958 PAGE 35·5
1958 Convention Notes
Every time you go to a convention, you become better acquainted with people who have only been names bef.ore. It was your editor's good d'ortune to meet people whose warm and friendly greetings were more than adequate compensation for the rough times an editor goes through.
There was Tom . Matthews of Springfield, Ohiu, whose collections are fantastic. We had a common interest in Civil War affairs, as !his grandparents were com1batants. Then Harold 'Frankel of New York turned out to a dynamic young man who is scheduled for big things in aerophilately. His energetic personality is a great he1p in his recruiting activities for the hobby. Frank and Priscilla Bruns certainly added a sparkle to the gaiety that pervaded at the banquet. There is a friendliness we've always found at earlier A.A.M.S. conventions and this one was no exception.
Then Fred Kessler, who flew up from Colombia to be with us, gave the writer a learned tour and lecture on some of the exhibits. His knowledge is encyclopedic. Joe Clark, of Natrona, Pa., got up at the banquet, and remarked on how 'he was made to feel at home. His ideas on developing interest for younger collectors will bear fruit. A long talk with John Myer of New York will result in some most interestiil!g stamp studies fm the A,P.J. He told us that Colombians had -come to him for information on the early Colombian airs. That's real recognition! Ral.ph Cole of Washington is a crash cover collector we knew of but hadn't met. And as the ·writer collects these items, the bull session was tops, as you .can imagine. And again it was our pleasure to see the gracious ilVIrs. Gradys Jennings, from Shaker Heights, Ohio. Slhe was most active in the auction ibidding. Herbert Rosen of New York left his wife home this year, but did enjoy the activities. !His old balloon print features the cover od' this issue.
PAGE 356
• Major Bob Scherer and his wife of the Philatelic ilVIuseum were flaJbbergasted with his grand award in the exhi'oit. This is a real hard-!Working guy - and his activities at the Museum added so much to our pleasure. _ Barney Davis was certainly on the ball there, too, as we have never seen the museum so spruced up. Barney's dry remarks as master of ceremonies really did him proud at the banquet; George Kingdom, indefatigable ihost as ever, contributed so much to this event. Year after year, he's in there pitching. And Bart Gatchell, a veteran of years, also continues 'his devotion to the society. As a judge 'he spent seven hours at the exhibit on Tuesday and four more on Wednesday.
As a sidelight we made a note on which exhi'bits we thought would win awards, and showed it to a couple of people before the awards were ·announced. Believe it or not, we guessed all but one of the major awards, and had a good batting average. No thanks, no judging for us next time!
And then there were the insepara<ble three - Gerald • Bookhop of Schenectady, N. Y., Her.b Brandner of Brookfield, Ill., and Sam Goldsticker, of ·Bloomfield, N. J. These men did yeoman service and helped the convention move along. Sam's picturetaking was timely. :And then, of course, Doc Sneller, the phi}atelic photog, was everywhere. Charles has sent us dozens of pictures; you'll find some of them elsewhere in this issue. Grand guy, that noc! We saw Connie Gatchell snapping pictures with her new film that needs no flash lighting. How did they come out, Connie?
Herman Kleinert of Fullerton, Pa., was the busiest man at the convention. He did a land-office ibusiness on his Sales Department material. We know, because we brought 'home much material from his deep suitcase. And Florence Kleinert, who keeps Herman in line, had much to say on recruiting activities. She's a
THE AIRPOST JOURNAiL
stem-winder. It was our pleasure to meet Bill Pluchel, Dale Bauer, and Howard Brooks, our :friends with the airlines, who have been so helpful to the society on occasion. They sported those fancy vests of the "Order of the Vest'' - an exclusive society, indeed. And John and Ruth Smith were everywhere all the time, planning, worrying and working 'hard. To these two and George Kingdom, and to Barney Davis, we owe a debt of gratitude. They planned the convention. Tlhe Smiths are as devoted to the society as anyone we've ever observed, and they certainly deserve recognition for a tough jdb well done.
Harry Gordon, our jet cover specialist, put in a short appearance, and we really didn't get a chance to talk to him. And the same applies to Lou Fishbach, Gus Lancaster and Harry Levine, who were there and gone before we knew it. Smiling iBolb Fellers, Who maintains ihis nevermissing-a-cop.vention record intact, came from Washington, ,and was enjoying the convention. It's always nice to see Bob. Jesse Johnson, of Norfolk, Va., was his usual genial self and did many people a service by distri'buting Air Force stamp first day covers. We enjoyed talking to Postmaster Raymond Thomas of Philadelphia and enjoyed hearing him tell of 'being at the field on the arrival of the :first mail plane on May 15, 1918.
Philip Sondheim and iMr. and Mrs. Fred Bauer, of New York, spent a great deal of time looking at rare pioneer material Mr. Bauer brougJht .along. We suspect some of it ~hanged hands. Everyone crowded up to get the autograph of the designer of the new 7c air mail stamp, and his wid'e must have wondered aibout how crazy people can get. L. Rohe Walter, whom we met for the first time, is a charming gentleman, and we predict will do great things for the hobby. He departed from his prepared speech to give us interesting information on the future activities philatelically. We are grateful to him for the Post Office Department presentation sta~p SEPTEMBER, 1958
a1bum that he gave to us along with others. It was a complete surprise!
Ernest Schuster of Kenmore, N. Y., was a very 'active bidder at the benefit auction. He's the man who bought the Allahabad, India cover of 1911, catalogued at $15.00, for $31.00. It was a superib item and well wortJh more than double catalogue value. The natty Paul Bugg, from Baltimore, was an old acquaintance we were glad to see, as were Walter Feeney, of Irvington, N. J., and Bill Kaufmann, from Bergenfield, same state. Frank Blumenthal, our F.A.M. column expert, came up from Washington. We had been witJh him in April, but it's always nice to see him. The map on his exhfbit must have taken many hours to draw. Wish we could use it. F.A.M. collectors need somethin,g like that.
Husband and wife combinations included the Norman Haacs from Huntingdon Valley, Pa., the Zwislers from Holyoke, :Mass., and the Lud Raubenheimers from Cranford, N. J. Our genial friend, Doc Southgate Leig>h, from Norfolk, Va., had some new jokes we had never heard before. iHe adds a sparkle wherever he is. We were glad to see our o1d friend, Trixie Zaun and her daughter, Teresa, who journed over from Haddon Heig'hts, N. J. John Henry Ogden, fmm over the river at St. Matthews, Ky., seemed to enjoy the convention, too, and Bernard Dattner, we think attended his first one. He's from !Philadelphia. Another Philadelphian we saw was Bill Mead, and Dr. Paul Cutright traveled in from neal'by Jenkintown. He tea,ches at Beaver College, the alma mater of the editor's wife, so we had something in common. Henry Buten ,commuted from neanby Merion, too.
A word for the PhiladeLphia Postoffice employees. Mr. Smith (no relative of John) had charge of the branch postoffl.ce at the Museum, and his hand-picked men did a yeoman job of serving collectors on the first. A vote of special thanks to Messrs. McFadden, Schwartz, and Barone.
(Continued on page 35'8)
PAGE 357
U. S. AIR MAIL SHEETS ARE GOOD PROPERTY
By Jesse G. Johnson
There is a lot of talk in the Philatelic Press about how much more you will earn if you 'buy United States Government Saving Bonds than if you buy U.S. mint stamps. We agree that the purchase of U. S. Saving Bonds is ·one of the finest ways of saving and we recommend that all who oan should do it. But we would also like to say that air mail stamps in sheets are mighty fine property as are all air mail stamps and air mail covers for a collector's own personal delight and satisfaction.
Just to prove that U. S. Mint Air Mail Stamps in sheets are valuable property, here is a complete quotation sheet used with special permission of the Mint Sheet Brokerage Company) which explains why :air mail sheets are very worth while. This includes "bid" and "asked" quotations which Messrs. Scholl and Chadwick of the Mint Sheet Brokerage Company have received and have quoted monthly in their 'bulletins.
You will notice that the total rfor the 1944 'bids or the stamps listed as $404.95 and the total for one sfrleet of each of the listed stamps in 195'8 was $649.80. In view of the d'aet that if you purchased these stamps when they were current in the post offices of this country, it makes it even better because their fa,ce value is just $190.05.
On the "Asked'' quotations, you will see that on most of those listed no sheets of air mail stamps were offered most of the time. This is not a very good group summary for comparison 1but that is the way the quotation sheets read and the reader should remember that one could not always have these air mail sheets available from the M i n t S h e e t Brokerage Firm.
In these summaries only stamps current for the whole fourteen years of this study are listed. We are equally sure that United States air mail stamps issued prior to those listed
PAGE 358
have risen proportionally in price during the time of this report.
Your dealer will help you collect air mail stamps, and probably would quote you on all sheets listed here. A few collectors holding stocks of air mail stamps in sheets is a good thing, as there would not be too much tendency to corner the market such has been done with foreign stamps when only a few are issued and only a few people can obtain them, except at a very high price later.
The United States Post Office Department has issued large numbers of air mail stamps and there is no reason why anyone can not get them at the time of issue.
Salting away sheets of air mail stamps is only one facet of air mail collecting and while there seems to have 'been a slump in the past few years, now is the time to get back to collecting air mail stamps and covers again. You will ibe rewarded with genuine satisfaction over and over again.
CONVENTION NOTES -(Continued from page 357)
And then we met experienced Stanley HoZidewitz (ibet wf! spelled it incorrectly) from the ·Washington Post Office, ,who just returned from a cross-country trip, setting up d'irst day arrangements for July 31st.
There were other visitors, too -Margaret Kearney, Mrs. Pat Conroy, Tal Tyler, Elsie Jane !Murphy, Barbara Jorgensen, the William Beers, Edith ,Faulstich, Miss Helen Moore ,and Norman Hauck, head of the Philatelic Museum; Dave Lidman, editor of the American Philatelist; William Carter, and Bernard <Ring. We saw Stanley Rice only for a minute. Harry Lindquist we missed entirely. These men, with \Bart Gatchell, judged the exh1bits. A tough job, that.
We wrote names down fast and furiously, but we're sure we didn't get them ·all. Ruth Smith sent us a list of registrants, but we had most of them. 'So to those we missed, we soy we're sorry.
THE AIRPOST JOURNAL
Mint Sheet Brokerage Company -"Bid" & "Asked" Quotations - Per Sheet =================~1944 1944 1947 1947 1951 1951 1955 1955 1958 Year Face Stamp . Bid Asked Bid Asked Bid Asked Bid Asked Bid
1958 Asked
·=================================================== 1.926 $5.00 10c Map 6.00 7.00 9.00 5.00 None 6.50 None 6.50 None
1926 7.50 15c Map Agency 10.00 13.50 7.50 10.00 9.00 None 9.00 None
1927 10.00 20c Map Agency 13.00 15.50 11.00 None 13.00 None 13.00 19.00
1927 5.00 Lindbergh 10c 6.25 7.00 15.00 None 12.00 None 14.50 None 14.50 None
1928 2.50 5c Beacon 6.00 8.00 12.00 12.50 9.50 None 9.50 None 9.50 14.75 ------------------------------------ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1931 2.50 Winged Globe 5c (rot.) 3.75 5.00 5.25 None 6.00 None 9.50 None 9.50 12.00
1931 2.50 Winged Globe 5c (flat) 6.00 None 6.25 None 12.00 None 12.00
1931 4.00 8c Winged Globe 4.10 4.50 6.50 None 5.75 7.00 5.75 None 5.75
1933 25.00 50c Graf Zeppelin 150.00 None 490.00 540.00 210.00 None 250.00 None 280.00
1934 3.00 6c Winged Globe 4.00 7.00 6.90 9.00 6.90 8.00 6.80
1935 12.50 25c Clipper 8.75 15.00 13.00 14.25 12.00 14.00 13.00 14.00 12.50
1937 10.00 20c Clipper 15.00 12.75 16.50 13.50 17.00 14.25 None 14.25
1937 25.00 50c Clipper 27.50 26.50 None 24.00 25.50 25.00 None 25.00
1938 3.00 6c Red & Blue 4.50 7.50 None 7.00 8.00 7.50 8.25 7.50
1939 15.00 30c Winged Globe 25.50 40.00 None 22.00 None 50.00 52.00 45.00
1934 8.00 16c Sp. Del. Blue 9.50 12.50 9.00 9.50 7.50 None
1936 8.00 16c Sp. Del. Red & Blue Agency Agency None 7.00
1935 32.00 16c Sp. Del. Farley 66.00 70.00 110.00 146.00 85.00
1948 5.00 5c N. Y. Jubilee 6.00
1930 4.55 Graf Zepps. (set of 3) 51.00 55.00 85.00 99.00 62.00
NOTE: All are sheets of 50, except N.Y. Jubilee in lOOs, and 16c Farleys in 200s. Agency indicates
stamps on sale at Philatelic agency in washington at face.
THE AiiRPOST JOURNAL
9.00
10Q.OO
7.00
75.00
110.00 None 90.00
6.00 6.50 6.50
75.00 85.00 83.00
None
None
330.00
9.00
14.00
None
None
8.25
None
None
7.25
None
PAGE 359
* FOR Air Post New Issues
SANABRIA Of Course.
(PAMPHLET ON REQUEST)
Want Lists. also
and naturally
SANABRIA'S
AIR POST CATALOG
*
You Can't Collect Air Stamps
without Sanabria
Nicolas Sanabria Uo. Inc.
A. Medawar. Pres. 521 FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORK 17, N.Y.
PAGE 360
BILLIG &: RICH TO AUCTION BRAZIL COLLECTION
Elsewhere in the Journal will be found the advertisement of Billig &
Ricch., Inc., of 5,5 West 42nd St., New Y~ork 36, N. Y., who will offer for sale in their October Auction the Grand Prix Brazil Collection of the late Senor Octavia de Carvalho. The collecUon will be broken into 2,000 lots and is one of the finest in existence. It includes 25'0 1Bull's Eyes among other items, as well as one of the best collections of Brazilian airmails, with many unique blocks and rare proofs.
Preceding this auction, during Septerber, Part III of the well known Mexico collection of Senor !Roberto Gavcia Larranaga wiH be sold. This collection includes 3,000 lots, no less than 1500 of whi0h consist of the Eagle issues, listed iby dicstricts and periods. Almost every stamp in these two sales will,be photographed. These sales may ~well be the largest in these specialized fields.
AEROGRAMMES
Check List of All
Air Letter Sheets
Issued During 1957
Free For Postage
WALTER R. GUTHRIE
SEA CLIFF NEW YORK
THE AIRPOST JOUR!N.&L
MEMBERS OF THE ADVANCE BULLETIN SERVICE:
Your Help Is Urgenily Needed Due to the change in ilhe rate of
postal cards and the fact that all cards now in our possession are franked with only 2 cents, an additional 1 cent per card is needed lby this department. Please make an estimate of how many cards you have and remit the 1 cent per card to the Department Manager. If sending the new post card, kindly advise disposition of cards already on file. Remit by whichever way is most convenient. Stamps will be affixed to the cards.
To members reading this who do NOT use the Bulletin Service, why not send a supply of self-addressed post cards to keep informed of future flights? It costs nothing - just the post cards. Send yours soon to Herbert Brandner, 4038 Forest Ave., Brookfield, Ill.
AIR POST ISSUES
Are Frequently Offered
In Our Auction Sales
For example, one complete ses-
sion m our September 17-19
Sale another already sched
uled for January 1959, Cata-
logues gratis
H. R. HARMER, Inc. The Caspary Auctioneers
6 West 48th Street New York 36, N. Y.
BRAZIL Another
GRAND P R I X Collection Of the late Sr. Octavia de Carvalho
Will Be Sold at Our Auction
1850 Lots Including
250 BULL'S EYES Also All Later Issues
Specialized with one of the best BRAZIL AIRMAIL collections Including V ARIG, SCADT A. etc. Proofs. Essays, Unique Multiples DeLuxe Catalogue will be ready in September. Auction will be held
OCTOBER 24. 25, 1958
BILLIG & Rich, Inc. 55 West 42nd Street New York 36, N.Y.
:SIIDPTEMiBER, 1958 PAGE 361
GREATEST 57-VARIETY OFFER EVER!
SUPER STOCK REDUCING & INTRODUCTORY SALE!
AIR LETTERS Collection of 57 all Different, Mostly Mint, including many
scarce, such as
KUWAIT, RYUKYUS, ANGOLA complete set, GREAT BRIT
AIN Coronation, MOZAMBIQUE set of 9 varieties, AUSTRIA
Universal Postal Union, SOUTHERN RHODESIA Rhodes Cen
tennial, BAHRAIN, LIBERIA 2 different, SAN MARINO com
plete set of 7 varieties, PORT. GUINEA complete set, JAPAN
Universal Postal Union, MUSCAT Coronation, ST. THOMAS
and PRINCE ISLAND 4 varieties.
Retail Val•1e $36.00
ONLY $6.00 to new subscribers to my New Issue Service for airmail postal
stationery. You will receive this collection after you have sub
scribed and have bought for the minimum of $2.00 .from the
first selection. Non-subscribers may obtain the collection at
$10.00.
Air letter price lists against 8c stamped and addressed envelope,
large airmail postal stationery lists 50c, deductible from your
first order of $2.00 or over. Special pages for mounting $4.50
per 50, postpaid. Minimum 50 pages. Pages fit any 3-ring
hinder. Sample 25c. Catalogues supplied.
This Is a Specially Low Priced Offer to Attract Beginners.
Take Advantage of It While It Lasts.
LAVA 854 INTERVALE NEW YORK 59
PAGE 362 'DHE AIRPOST JOURNAL
Award Winners -1958 Airpost Exhibition At Philadelphia
• Best in the Show: Robert W. Scher- J. Smith, Philadelphia; Donald J. er, Philadelphia. "Vikings of the Bayler, Peoria, Ill.; Perham C. Nahl, Air," history of aviation in Iceland. Evanston, Ill., and George Ritter,
Tampa, Fla. rBest First Time Exh~bitor: James
S. Langabeer, Auckland, New Zealand. Newfoundland Air IJ.VI•ail Stamps.
Gold Medal, Division A: Herbert A. Feist, Glenside, Pa. IBrazil Air Mail Stamps, Errors, Proofs.
Silver Medal, Division A: Emmett B; Peter, Jr., Leesburg, Fla. Aerogrammes.
Gold Medal, Division \B: Robert W. Murch, Kirkwood, Mo. Early Classics Showing Flown Mail and .Photos.
Silver Medal, Division B: Joseph L. Eisendrath, Jr., Highland Park, Ill. Crash Covers. Ea<ch Year Since 1918.
Gold !Medal, •Division C: Max Kronstein, New York, N.Y. Research Collector Pioneer Airmail.
Silver Medal, Division C: Ellery Denison, Takoma Park, Mary1and. Chinese Pioneer and Subsequent Flights.
•First awards went to Herbert Rosen, New York; W. J .Chamberlain, Corvallis, Oregon; James S. Langabeer, Auckland, N. Z.; Clayton Goodpastor, Auburn, Calif.; 'IIhomas J. O'Sullivan, Orange, Conn.; Ray Sinn, Bloomington, Ind.; 'Frank H. Blumenthal, Washington, D. C.; ALbert Philip Cohen, New York City; G. Kaufman, Bergenfield, N. J.; J'dhn J. Smith, Philadelphia; Roland F. Kohl, New York, N. Y., and J'Ohn iN. IMyer, New York City.
Second award winners included: Aleksandre Veveris, Detroit, Mich.; Yand L. Chung, Wilmington, Del.; William N. Mead, Philadelphia; Richard L. Singley, Lancaster, Pa.; Herbert F. Brandner, Br-ookfield, Ill.; Gerald Boolcl:top, Schenectady, N. Y.; Ralph Cole, Washington, D. C.; John
SEPTEMBER, 1958
Third awards were received by: Fred Bauer, New York City; William M. Wilson, Philadelphia; He11bert E. Goodpastor, Auburn, Calif.; Ernest E. Schuster, Jr., Kenmore, N. Y.; Sol Whitman, New York City; Helen Kingsbury Zirkle, Secane, .Pa.; R. Lee Black, Des Moines, Ia.; Robert E. Haring, Wilmington, N. C.; Florence Kleinert, Fullerton, iPa.; Jesse G. Johnson, Norfolk, Va.; !Max Kronstein, New York City; Nellie B. Sergent, New Y'ork City; James Wotherspoon, Broxburn, England; Samuel S. Goldsti:cker, Jr., Bloamfiel!d, N.J.; Ar mand ·E. Carroll, San Bernardino, Calif.; Edw,ard Benson, Wilmette, Ill.; Reginald George Auckland, Sandridge, England; WoUgang Fritzsche,
- Geneva, N. Y., and Laura La Vesque, Newton Center, Mass.
Honorable mention to: John C. Mc
Adams, _West Memphis, Ark.; Fred Bauer, New York City; Herman Kleinert, Fullerton, Pa.; Jack Schaber, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Bill Schneider,
Metuchen, N.Y.; Bob ~aufman, Bergenfield, N. J., and Clayton J. Goodpastor, Auburn, Calif.
A special bronze A.AJM.S. plaque was given to Thomas A. Matthews, Springfield, Ohio, for his magnificent rarities from his Fipex Grand award collection. This was entered in the Court of Honor, and was not in competition. Other entries not for competition were those of Geol'ge D. Kingdom, Conneaut, Ohio; L. B. Gatchell, Upper Montdair, N. J., and Pan American World Airways, New York City.
PAGE 363
The El AI Story By Julius Weiss • •
The philatelic world is well aware of the ·M·ogan David emblem of El Al Airline through the many interesting phHatelic items carried via El Al first and special fligilits. It is only fitting that on the Tenth Anniversary Year of the State of Israel that we tell "The El Al Story."
Gazing through our flioght covers we see such materi-al as Lydda to New York (June 26, 1950), Lod to Amsterdam (Mar.ch 8, 19•516), plus many special Holiday (.Passover) flights. Also there i-s a special :Blight Wihiah carried the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra in 1955. These .philateHc items are part of history wh:kh is re-
. markable for any airline w.hich has not reached its tenth year of existen:ce. Et Al is an infant in the world of air travel; yet it is a •giant in its potential energy.
The airline was born of necessity in a period whi-Cih saw large groups of refugees desiring quick air transportation to Israel. El Al, the nationa•! airline, was incorporated in November, 194'8. The government of Israel took over controlling interest, with the Histadrut Labor organiza tion, Jewish Agency and Zim, the na<tional shipping line, also acquiring shares. The line started operating in August, 1949, with four-engined Skymasters (DC4) ,flying to Rome and Paris. For shorter routes the twin-engined C46 Commando was used. By the end of 195·0, the DC4s •and several C46s were in operation with flights to London, Paris, Rome, Zuri-ch, Athens, Vienna, Istanbul and Nicosia. Progress came in 19M rw hen El Al sold the DC4s and !began using Constellations with regular schedules to New York and Johannesburg.
However, before all these flights could carry on, the airfield at Lydda ih1ad to be restored. This field was a great ·British air 1base which finally had been captured by Israeli armored units. The scars of w·ar were all a:b-
PAGE 364
out the field, !but the ha:ngars and the runways were intad. Today nine air companies are operating services to Israel. Our covers show that Swis·sair, Air France, TWA, Sabena, KLM and others land in Isr·ael. FHghts are cov-. ered by air agreements 1between Israel and countries of th-eir ongm, who -grant El Al recipr·ocal rig.hts. The Israeli government has a Department of Civil Aviation whicih is a full member of The International Civil Aviation GCAO).
El Al has one of the most modern schools with the most up-to-date training equipment to teach carefully selected youth the many aspects· of modern-day aviatiQn. ,T:he tmining is for technical Qpemtors (captains, navigators, flight engineers·, radio operators) as well as non-technical empolyes (air-hostesses, pursers). El AI recently won world recognition when El Al 'hostess, IHa Har-El, IWOn the title "Queen of Intern1ational Air Hostesses. The •contest took p1ace in Miami Beach with 36 hostesses representing 26. countries taking part. Many readers may have seen this:
THE AIRJPOST JOURNAL
hostess on TV .as later she appeared on a national (USA) hook-up quiz show. The hostesses and pursers of El Al are linguists, nurses, and effi-
. cient waitresses, for the line !feels that for many persons the flight on El Al is the first (and last) impression of Israel.
As this is the jet age, we enter the new era o.f ·El Al. The Constellations ihave been switched to European routes only and the magic Jet-.Prop (Whispering G1ant) known as the Br1ttannia (Bristol), 310 has taken to the air !for El Al. These £Ugh ts cover trans-Atlantic - London - New York - Paris -Athens -Lod. Most collectors know the fine BOAC fligJhts via this type of aircraft. For a line less than 10 years old to "scoop" many 'Other of the rworld major airlines is truly a miracle in aviation history. Dec. 22, 1957 saw the fir-st El Al commercial :£light (;Bristol Britannia) service to New York '.from Tel Aviv via London. El Al holds both the east and westJbound trans-Atlantk records, having flown from London to New York in 9 hrs 52 rnins. on January 24, 1.958 and from New York to London in 7 hrs. 44 mins. on January 8. El AI also cUpped a few minutes off the previous New York - Paris
SEPTEM:BER, 1958
record early in February. We cannot complete the El AI
story without mentioning the man who has much to do with the new era for El Al. 'Leadership of the airline is in the hands of Brigadier General Ephraim Ben Arzi, a man who follows the slogan of •El Al, "Outwards and Onwards." The range of approximately ·6,200 miles, depending on the payload plus the aibility to carry 13·3 passengers (nearly 3 tons of mail or freight) is truly a marvel!
We -cannot tell the El AI story without saying that in eight years of :flying to many points on the globe not a single ;passenger has lost his or her liofe-ex·cept for the shooting down ru one of its Constellations by Bulgarian .fi·ghter aircraft in 1955. This is· safety at its greatest.
The hobbyist should obtain all El AI philatelic mail, for this is history on the march. The December 2.2, 1957 jet fli:ghts had philatelic treatment wiuh firsts to New York, Paris and London. Remember each El Al first flight cover is a fragment of this historical decade ·for the little nation of Israel with its Whispering Jet Giants . El Al in Hebrew means "To the Skies"; to 'our readers rwe say, eyes up to El AI.
PAGE 365
Airport Dedications By WILLIAM T. WYNN
13537 Rockdale, Detroit 23, Mich.
Airport Dedications have been few and far ·between thus far in 1958.
Greybull, Wyo. and Newton, Kans. will ·hold dedications on Sept. 7. The Postmaster or Chamber of Commerce will no doubt be glad to hold your covers.
The following is 1958 as of now: Feb. 2•8, Miami, Fla.: Municipal
Heliport. No cachet and about 100 covers.
April 13, Torrington, Wyo.: Munidpal. A postmark type cachet used; 700 covers.
April 14, Geneva Ala.: Municipal. No cachet, dedication on Apr. 13, which was Sunday and post office was closed. Covers mailed and postmarked 8 a. m. Monday, April 14. Very few known.
April 26-27, New Orleans, La.: Callender Airfield. Covers mailed both days; cachet by local collector.
April 28, Matamoras, Mexico: Typed inscription by postmaster. Very :few covers known.
June 21, 'Montauk, L. I., N.Y.: Municipal. 5-line cachet by PM on 1000 covers.
July 4, Cleveland, Ga., White County: inscription by airport commission. Only 10 covers mailed.
These are the only dedications we can prove for 1958. Your editor missed out on 4 of these 7, which is surely bad hitting.
Athens, Tex. :held dedication on June 15, no covers known. Rockwood, Tenn. he1d dedication of municipal airport June 21, no covers known. The same is true of Oakley, Idaho on May 21.
At the time of the postage rate <!hange we had over 1500 cards and hold-covers on hand and wish to thank the many collectors for sending the extra postage to help out. We do and must ihave dedication news if ''Airport Dedications" are to succeed. Let's have your help.
PAGE 3•66
F. A. M. Notes By Frank H. Blumenthal
1665 34th St. N.W .. Washington 7, D.C.
Seaboard and Western Airlines, for some years a cargo carrier between New York and many European cities, has joined the list of airlines authorized to fly airmail abroad and ihas been doing so since May 27. This service, to be known as F.A.IJ.VI. route 37, is on a temporary, non-·certificated basis, as the Civil Aeronautics Board has not yet formally granted Seaboard a certHioate. No collectors' mail was carried on the first flight. Tihe Post Of•fice Department states that when the airline is certificated, it will provide the usual phHatelic treatment - probably sometime this autumn. Carrying mail before the certificate is awarded is highly unusual, but has precedent.
Seaboard serves the following cities: Shannon, Eire; London, Glasgow, Hamburg, Dusseldorf, Cologne, Frankfurt, Nurenburg, Stuttgart, Paris, Amsterdam, Munich, Geneva, Basle, and Zuric:h. It seeks to add Milan, Italy, to its routes. It makes some 12 flights a week, terminating six at Stuttgart, three at Amsterdam, and three at Zurich. It has been flying mail from these points to the U.S. since early this year.
* * * Pan American pulled a surprise in
auguration on June 16 when Nurenburg was added to its FA'M 18 route. This city is now part of the airline's extensive local services within Germany, being served as a stop on flights between Berlin and Munich. Covers were :handled in both directions. On hand so far are those flown from Berlin to Nurenbul'g, postmarked on June 16 at 10 a.m. and backstamped eight hours later with a magenta cachet, apparently furnished by the airline.
* * There has just come to light a cov
er seemingly carried on the d'irst return flight over ·Pan American's Los Angeles - San Salvador segment in
THE AIRPOST JOURNAL
1952. The southward covers were flown without advance notice on July 6 that year and are chronicled in the F AM catalogue supplement (5E-30), but until recently there .was no indication of return mail. The cover submitted was one of a few "lost'' in the Los Angeles post office for more than five years. It was mailed in San Salvador on July 8, 1952, with a iblue postmark, backstamped at Los Angeles on the lOth.
• • • It now appears that envelopes re
ceived in the U.S. purporting to be first flight •Bangkok - New York cov-
ers via Trans World Airlines may not have been on TW.A's first flight at all. 'Dhese were mailed at Bangkok (Thailand) last January 5 and have a boxtype cachet indicating they were intended for the first flight, but tlhey were not •backstamped at New York. To one of several collectors .who asked the New Y·ork postal off:iJcials to backstamp the covers, the Post Office wrote a letter stating that no mail was received from Bangkok on the first flight (which ihad odginated in Manila). Further inquiries are being made in the hope of stra:iJglhtening out this matter.
OFFICIAL S~CTION AMERICAN AIR MAIL SOCIETY
MONTHLY REPORT . From the Secretary Ruth T. Smith, Ferndale &: Emerson, Philadelphia 11, Pa.
September I. 1958 NEW MEMBERS
4507 Van Praag. Sol, Sr., 201 W. Prairie, Decatur, Illinois 4508 Stephens, George H., AF-28223202-6002d A.I.S. Grp., APO 953, San Francisco, Calif. 4509 Fecteau, David A., 161 Slocum Ave., Englewood, N. J.
NEW CHAPTER #31 Metropolitan Air Mail Cover Club, Harry Levine, Sec'y, 9910 Seaview Ave.,
Brooklyn 36, N. Y.
NEW APPLICATIONS Utberg, Neil S., Rt. 2, Box 431, Edinburg, Texas. Age: 37. Pilot. AU By Ed Richardson Schwartz, Richard S., 640 Stelle Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Age: 22. Sales Clerk.
U19-20 UC Z 1D X By: Ruth T. Smith Rieger, Nicholas, 5323 Baccich St., New Orleans 22, La. Age; 71. Retired.
AM AU AS SC U20 UC PC HC PA PB EL FF GF CAM FAM RP CC OF DC Z CF 1D APS PIX HF X - Specialty Plate # Bl. of 4 By: R. T. Smith
Bernhardt, Noah S., 23 Irish Lane, East Islip, N. Y. Age: 17. Student. By: Ruth T. Smith
Barlow, Allan E., 26 Central Rd., Withinton, Manchester 20, England. Age: 30. Ass't Mgr. AU PC HC FF Z PIX X By: Anthony Banner
Weber, Donald J., 11322 Headley Ave., Cleveland 11, Ohio. Age: 27. Credit Reporter. FF CAM FAM CF 1D X By: Geo. D. Kingdom
Varney, Linwood I., Jr., 1614 Hampton Rd., Huntsville, Ala. Age: 38. Elect. Engr; AM AU PC HC FF GF CAM FAM CC DC Z 1D By: Ruth T. Smith
Smith, Willis B., 4204 Del Monte, Las Vegas, Nevada. Age: 37. AM AU PC HC CAM 1D
. CHANGE OF ADDRESS Bennett, Matthew, 5401 Lynview Ave., Baltimore 15, Md. Fravel, Ira F., 4126 E. Campbell, Phoenix, Arizona. Culverwell, Samuel A., P. 0. Box 1030, New Orleans 8, La. Borkstrom, Eric I., 1974 Arena Dr., Trenton 10, N. J.
Horn, Henry M., Brooklyn, N. Y. Brenner, Ray, Crum Lynne, Pa.
SEPTEMBER, 1958
DECEASED
Dealer. By: Ruth T. Smith
PAGE 367
APJ ADS RATES:
FOUR CENTS PER WORD per insertion. Minimum charge one dollar. Remittance must accompany order and copy. The AIRPOST JOURNAL. 350 No. Deere Park Drive, Highland Park, Ill.
6%, AIRMAIL ENVELOPES. Barber Pole design. 24 lb. Parchment stock. 100% Rag content. Prices and samples Ten Cents. Milton Ehrlich, 34-15A 31st Avenue, Long Island City 6, N. Y. Member AAM~36_6t•
ROCKET POST. Netherlands, 5 stamps and 2 used miniature sheets $5.75. 3 flown covers $6.70 COLOMBIA SCADTA airs, Mint or used. Cl2-C95. Free price list USA - IX-'35, 2 Miniature Rocket sheets* $1.90. Capt. Wm. H. Peters. Interlachen, Florida. 338-6t*
WANT Zeppelin Covers from San Marino, Cyrenaica, and Tripolitania, buy or exchange. Sebastiao Amaral, Caixa postal 367, Bela Horizonte, Brazil. Ex 339-6t
JET COVERS, all plane types, US and foreign Pilot signed. Military, commercial, RAF Comet 2, Caravelle, etc., jets on hand. What do you lack? Harry A. Gordon, 795 Garden Street, N.Y.C. 60, N. Y.
WANT Antarctic, Arctic Covers, F.D.C.'s, Special Events, other related material of same. No approvals. Please state material available. F.D.C. per 100. Wanted U.S. and Foreign. Emilio Velez, Jr., Grand Concourse, N. Y.
WANTED -Anything pertaining to 20th Century U.S. Local Posts - mint, used, and particularly First Day Covers (unaddressed if possible). Arthur E. Lloyd, Apt. 21-A, Sayre Ct., Madison, N. J. FOR SALE - Rare Arcti-c-, _A_n_t-ar_c_t-ic-E-xpedition Flight covers. Send lOc for 9 pp. list Also available finest selection of Rockets; Pioneers, Zepps, Balloons, SemiOfficial Airs, and others. Belham Exchange, Box 119, Ridgewood 27, N. 1
41_6t*
AAMS EXCHANGE ADS
NEED Airport Deds. - HPO. Have thousands of covers to trade for what I need. I answer all mail. John E. Slavin, 23 Orford St., Lowell, Mass.
WANTED - Picture postcards, coins, currency, Exposition material. Have all types of airmail material- to offer. John Yannunzio, Summit, N.J.
WANT to Exchange, Have all types of material, covers, and stamps. What do you have? What do you want? Herman Kleinert, 213 Virginia, Fullerton, Pa.
EAGERLY Wanted Exchange 1st and spec. flights, spec. postmarks of the world. R. Tocila, Archimedesplantsoen 9he, Amsterdam-a, Holland. Ex 341-2t
PAGE 368
AAMS EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT BUY SELL - WANT LISTS
WHAT DO YOU have to trade for Air Letter sheets, CAMs, FAMs, First Days, Old U.S. envelopes? Orlan E. Green, 555 West Drayton, Ferndale 20, Michigan.
\YILL SWAP Israel mint 7-9, for mint set of US C13-5 cpl. or 20 UN #38 sheets, Dolin, 31 Park Row, NYC 38.
BRITISH and Commonwealth Aerogrammes, used and unused, offered in exchange for similar material from rest of the world (no United States). J_ M. Weinstein, P. o_ Box 419, Pretoria, South Africa. (Member No. 4480)
BREAKING UP of General Collection, will trade for high value air mail singles, mint or used. R. Doull, 1945 Dumfries, Mount Royal, Que.
AERIAL PROPAGANDA Leaflets always wanted or exchanged. Have many duplicates of great historical interest. Correspondence invited. Peter Robbs, 8 Ridgway Road, Kettering, Northants,E~~~~~gt
AIRMAIL POSTAL Stationery wanted,, letter-sheets, envelopes, postal cards, mint, used, any country. Give stamps in exchange. A. Lewandowski, 854 Intervale, New York 59. Ex 340-2t
WILL EXCHANGE Used Airs of the World for British Empire on Scott basis. Write for details. Capt. P. K. Wilkinson, 8th A. F. NCO Academy, Westover AFB, Mass.
OLD MINING Stocks on hickory and Columbia bond paper, 2 Golden Bell, 3 Columbia 1 Chiapas Henequen, exchange for Foreign FDC. Fred :f!:echt,,1306 W. 11th St., Los Angeles 15, Calif.
EXCHANGE - cover 1931 Wilkins - Elsworth trans-Arctic submarine expedition, also Belgium first night flight rocket cover. Need U.N. material. Make offer. R. T. Baeuerle, 2603 Liberty Parkway, Dundalk 22, Md.
SEND 100 to 1,000 well-mixed Airmails. Receive equal quantity and quality. NO junk, no catalog basis. Satisfaction guaranteed! Address: Super-Exchange, Cranford, New Jersey.
EXCHANGE--Graf Zepp cover, Austria .to North Pole flight with scarce Germany #C-42 airmail stamp for rocket cover, July 2, 1936 flight Reynosa to McAllen, Texas, or U.N. material. What do you offer? R. T. Baeuerle, 2603 Liberty Parkway, Dundalk 22, Md.
THE AIRPOST JOURNAL
SHANAHAN'S STAMP AUCTIONS
ARE DIFFERENT!
THE LARGEST STAMP AUCTIONS IN THE WORLD
Every fortnight, offering the most famous collections of every country and other lots to please everybody: large lots and small lots, rare stamps and covers. Country Collections and General Collections, Wholesale, etc. About a 1,000 lots valued appr. $150,000 offered in every Sale, sometimes more. 600-700 Stamps are illustrated in every Catalogue.
ABSOLUTE SECURITY TO THE PURCHASER
(1) "After Sale Approval"-if you like the lot - you keep it. if you don't -you don't.
(2) Absolute guarantee of authenticity - without time limit of Illustrated Stamps.
and
(3) "STOP LOSS INSURANCE" guaranteeing re-sale and loan value. "The greatest Philatelic advance since the penny black."
THE FOLLOWING UNIQUE SCHEMES
(1) "PROFIT FROM STAMPS-With
out Risk."
(2) "DOUBLE BARREL PLAN'' which
enables you to get your Stamps
for less and under certain circumstances even for nothing."
(3) "COLLECTION PICKING PLAN," etc.
GET ON OUR CATALOGUE
MAILING LIST FREE
39 Upper Great George's Street
Dun . Laoghaire, Dublin, Ireland
SEPTEMBER, 1958
fMPORT ANT DISCOVERY! RARE U. N . - A IR POST VA RIETIES. PANAMA A IR POST ISSUE, COMMEMORATING UNITED NATIONS lOth
ANNIVERSAR Y 1948-1958. • NO A IR POST OR .UNITED NATIONS COLLECTION COMPLETE WITH-
OUT THESE STRIKING ITEMS. # I • F L A G S
1 Balboa·S{;oti # 202-May Journal error, g·ray & ultramarine, also imperforate-only 100 exist
Single Copy .. .......... 00.00 ... ............... 00. ....... ....... $ 27.50 Pair ..... .... ..... ... ...... ....... ... ....... ..... oooo o oo ...... oooooo $ 52.50 Block of 4 oo .. oooooooooooooooo oo oooooooo ... oooo oooooo .. oooooo .. oo. $105.00
1~~11 items #l~·l~n Paper WMKD, Scott #3 11 Star & R .P. multiple I
Information as to qu an tities exi sting from inform e d • sou rces I Over 50% of a ll -1 items already p laced in p rivate h a nds.
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JOHN W. NICKLIN PIONEER OF AEROPHILAT'EL Y
MINIATURE SHEET VARIETI·ES Scott # 202a-May :Iournal
# 2 l Oc, 2lc SOc IB
Normal ae li sted. hut imperforate pair or sheets
$450.00 Only 4 Imperf. Pair s Exist
# 3 2lc ultra. I Balboa gray. ultramarine & carmine !
lOc & SOc omiU'ed $250.00
#4 2lc ultra. I Balboa. gray & ultra. lOc. SOc & red
inscription omitted $250.00
only 8 ea. of # 3 and # 4 EXIST
Prices su b ject to advance-order by wire or phone su ggested.
llO WEST 42nd ST •• NEW YORK 36. N. Y .
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