Friday, April 19, 2024
Let's Talk Rusty Iron

Let's Talk Rusty Iron

The two Whinery brothers sold Deering farm equipment and other farm supplies, as well as builder's supplies and, in 1915, made the decision to incorporate the business as a stockholder-owned company, probably to raise money to expand the business.

Even though women have, since the beginning of time, labored mightily to help feed, clothe and house their families, as well as bearing the...

When I was a kid I’d hear some of the older farmers in the neighborhood talk of planting something by the dark of the...

How many of you remember the Salona Supply Company? I do, of course. My father, also Sam Moore, was general manager of the firm...

I hope you don’t get tired of the old stories I resurrect — I find them fascinating and hope you do too, plus I...

In a 1917 issue of Gas Review magazine is the following story by a proud papa: “Our boy wanted a gasoline engine, talked about it...

I've been reading about how people traveled long distances during the early decades of the 19th century before the development of the railroads.

Back in the early part of the 20th century gasoline and oil tractors were few and far between. The big heavy monsters that existed...

Several generations of Salem High School students bought school supplies at the Harris Printing Co. store across North Lincoln and up a few doors...

Sometime around 1941, the Moore & Townsend partnership (my father and my uncle) bought a used Farmall F-30 tractor to replace an old McCormick-Deering...