1951 - american air mail society

35
Vol. XXll . . Ffcd v r l:. t.. " N I .«i ·. Oo .. o 18! l.1"0o11 ...-" No. 4 D11.ign Commoa. to a S&rlee of Shctee11 Aiz Letter Sheet• Jlec•nJlr Illl!Ued For J:jgbJ Portuge5o ColorUes... - See This 11su• FQr P•tails . January , 1951

Upload: others

Post on 09-Dec-2021

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Vol. XXll

. .

Ffcd v r l:. t.. " N I .«i·. Oo -~ .. o ~J~ 18!

l.1"0o11 ...-" ~~'.~~9il1

No. 4

• D11.ign Commoa. to a S&rlee of Shctee11 Aiz Letter Sheet• Jlec•nJlr Illl!Ued For J:jgbJ Portuge5o ColorUes... - See This 11su•

FQr P•tails

.January, 1951

''R. F.11

On March 13, 1943, the U. 5. Naval Department

issued o directive to several fleet and area com­

manders. It provided tho t where no French postage

wos available and cancellation was to be made by

French Post Offices, U. S. stamps could be used

with the letters "R. F." (Republique Francaise)

overprinted.

Listed exclusively in ...

SANABRIA 1950 The Complete Air Post Catalogue

$4.75 post free

NIC:OLAS SAN ARlll.<\. C:o., Inc .

521 Fifth Avenue New York 17, N. Y.

Dr. Robert Paganini,- Airpo_st Pioneer~ DieS In Switzerland

• by DR. MAX KRONSTEIN

. ' - .. '' T ord h~s just · been . r~ceived in \~V the United . States · that Dr.

Robert Paganini, Dean of airpost collec­tors the world over, died in St. Gallen, Switzerland on December 6, 1950. Through the courtesy of Mr. E. Rickli, Director of the Airpost Archives section of the library of the Swiss Telegraph and Telephone Administration in Berne, we 1earn that Dr. Paganini died quietly af­ter apparently having suffered a stroke during his sleep at the Home for the Aged in St. Gallen where he had lived since the death of his wife Martha several years ago. Dr. Paganini. was a member of the original Aero Mail Club of · 1912 and a honorary member of the American Air Mail Society and of practically every other air mail organization in every cor­ner of the globe.

Our honorary member commenced his studies in the field of air mail and air mail collecting during the period of pio­neer flights, at which time he was a chemist in the Ciba Corporation, one of the world's largest chemical companies.

During these early days he gave an enormous impetus to the collection of aero-philatelic flown covers and later to air mail stamps. At that time almost single handedly he combatted the lack of interest which was then displayed in the philatelic press and 1Jy philatelic socie­ties in these items, recognizing the essen­tial historical character of them. He cor­responded with kindred souls located all over the world and ga~ered together perhaps the world's finest documenta­tion of the history of the air mail and the postal flights ·connected with it, includ­ing stamps, covers, posters, autographs of

' famous fliers and · correspondence . with

• Dr. Robert Paganini

the pioneers of aviation. This magnificent collection was dcmated some yea'ts ago to the Swiss people and was housed per­manently at the Library of the General Direction of the Postal Telegraph and Telephone Administration in J:seme.

Dr. Paganini, although well advanced in age, continued to contribute to the philatelic press until the very eve of his death, one of his last writings being an announcement of the publication of Vol­ume II of the American Air Mail Cata­logue, which was made in the December issue of the Swiss Stamp J oumal "SBZ". In September of this year Dr. Paganini, along with Col. Hans Lagerlof, was des­ignated Honorary Patron of the Inter-

(Continued on page 109)

T~E AIRPOST JOURNAL ~rfifil~·trTJi1C~Ns%~ Entered as second-class matter, February 10, 1932, at the post office at Albion, Pa..

under the Act of March 3, 1879. Published monthly. JANUARY, 1951 - VOL. XXII. NO. 4 - ISSUE NO. 249 - 25c PER COPY

JIJndividuals, some obscure, and Ill some prominent. are honored in

the majority of instances in the issued and forthcoming airs we note this month. Ecuador is trying hard to achieve first place with the number of sets issued. And we have news of new issue sets that are still 18 months away!

CHILE Panama and Argentina have been

joined by Chile in honoring ·the hero of South . America, San Martin. A decree calling for a 5 pesos violet air mail stamp has recently been issued. The stamp is to be 40 x 30 mm in size and will be printed in a quantity of one million. The central design will show the Villa Prades, a pass in the Andes. The central figure will be San Martin. The inscription will read "Chile Air Mail General Jose de San Martin 1st Centenary of his death 1950" in Spanish. The Casa de Moneda y Especies Valoradas is entrusted with the printing job.

CUBA

The portrait of Jose Paul Capablanca ( 1882-1942), the man who brought the world's chess championship to Cuba in 1922 will appear on a 1952 series that will honor him. Plans call for a 5c Be and 25c air mail set. ' '

CZECHOSLOVAKIA

Outside of confirming the fact that the set will appear in January there are no further details on the Tourist Attraction series featuring outstanding spas, which was noted here about a year ago.

ECUADOR

Mariana de Jesus Parades y Flores was raised to Sainthood this past Holy Year.

M~ ALTON J. BLANK

1089 WINSTON ROAD, SOUTH EUCLID 21.0HIO

Otherwise known as the "Lily of Quito" this woman will be the subject of an issue of four values. The 60c, 90c, IS and 2S values will show her portrait, religious scenes, and the monasteries of Quito· and Cuenca.

The Sebastian de Benalcazar and Earthquake series mentioned last year are now to appear soon according to re­cent reports. More details . when the stamps do appear - in 1952 if need he!

IFNI Lope Sancho de Venezuela, a medieval

warrior of Spain is pictured on a 5 pese­tas black stamp issued for the Day of the Stamp. This man led <Jxpeditions into the Uad Nun country which is now the Spanish possession of Ifni. The stamp is illustrated elsewhere.

NEPAL We note a report that this land north

of India is planning to join the U. P. U. When and if this is accomplished plans call for postal paper, one series of which will e for air mail use. Let us hope that the stamps are issued y the Nepalese and not some New Yorkese.

SPANISH GUINEA Manuel Iradier Bulfy' s portrait adorns

a 5 pesetas brown stamp, which we illus­trate this month. This item is another "Day of the Stamp" issue. Native art appears at the base of the stamp. This bearded and helmeted explorer was ac­tive in the 1874-84 period of African Exploration.

SPANISH SAHARA Diego Garcia de Herrera, first Spanish

governor of this area is presented as an armored figure holding a flag with the map background of the part of Africa

JANUARY, 1951 · 97

-stamps for mustratton, courtesy, F. W. &;ESSLER

• Airposl Slamp Issues of Recent Vintage

where he made his explorations. The value is 5 pesetas and the color is ma­genta. Another "Day of the Stamp" issue also illustrated elsewhere.

TANGIER - Sp. Of. in Morocco

Two values have been added to the 1949 set of four. This time they are a 20c gray violet and 1 pes~ta purple. B~th feature a "Constellation" high over the Tangier coastline.

TRIESTE

Bearing the straight-line block type "AMG-FTT" overprint we add the 300 L. magenta and 500 L. blue in the Bell Tower type alongside the 100 L. green which appeared last year.

TURKEY

We now illustrate the stamps for the Aviation Congress which were forecast in our September chronicle.

VENEZUELA

The Barquisimeto set mentioned last month as being due for release in the "near future" will not make its ~ppear­ance until 1952. Juan de Villegas found­ed the city in 1552 and called it "Nueva Segovia". Despite earthquakes and burn­ings it today remains one of the most important cities of Venezuela, although it bears a new ~ame.

• POSTMAN'S KNOCK

The world's largest dealer with the . world's largest stock of air mail

stationery.

Correspondence invited - Want Lists solicited (we must buy too - so

that we can selD.

. Cincinnati 7. Ohio

OUR BOOK REVIEW Zeppelinpost Kata.log by Hermann E. Sieger, 14th Edition, October, 1950, 2.30 pp.; .published by Sieger-Ver­lag, Lorch, Wuerttemberg, U. s. Zone of Germany; - Price $2.50.

• Reviewed by

DB.« MAX KBONSTEIN

. JOr many years prior to World War. Ill, the Sieger Catalogue of Zeppe­

lin flights was the standard authority for these interesting items. During the War, of course, and during the immediate post war years it was not possible to bring out this catalogue. Collectors will, therefore, welcome the 14th edition of this standard work which has just been published in Germany. While printed in German, the collector · rapidly become.5 familiar with the various terms and is able to use it as a reference work without too much diffi­culty.

The new work follows the arrange­ment and format of former editions but it has been necessary to provide all· new cuts of the hundreds of cachets and stamps included therein since the origin­al cuts were destroyed during the war. One innovation is the arrangement of the so-called "contract posts" by country groupings. These listings include the mail officially dispatched from countries other than Germany by contract ar­rangement with the German government, such mail generally being sent by regu­lar means to Friedrichshafen and from there transported officially by Zeppelin. Those collectors interested in only a sing­le country can find all of the dispatches listed under that country.

Another new section lists all the mili­tary Zeppelins by name with their his­tory, the various markings employed on covers carried by them and the places where mail was dropped. Of particular interest to collectors will be the list ·of Zeppelin mail flights made during World War II by the Zeppelin LZ-130. Because of lack of information these flights could not be included in the Zeppelin section

of the ne~ American Air Mail Catalogue, 1950 edition, and it will be of interest to users of this catalogue that between items Z-441 and Z-442 mail carrying flights were made to Leipzig, Goerlitz, Biele­feld, Kassel and Wuerzburg, and that special cachets were provided for all of those flights. Several other flights were made and are listed, as well as several cachets which were prepared for use on special flights which subsequently had to be cancelled.

The prices in the new catalogue are based on the new German mark with I DM., equivalent to 1 Swiss franc which is presently worth slightly less than 25c U. S. currency. This catalogue, as is common with most European catalogues, is priced on a "discount basis," i. e. sales are generally made at net prices some­what less than those shown in the cata­logue. A careful job seems to have been done on the pricing, ·especially for those covers which bear special Zeppelin stamps.

We note one major difference in data between the American Air Mail Catalog­ue and the new Sieger work. The former states that the number of covers saved from the Hindenburg catastrophe at Lakehurst was 357 pieces; the Sieger catalogue states that the number recover­ed was but 133 pieces. As it is our un­derstanding that the data used in the Ame1-ican Air Mail Catalogue came from the United States Post Office Depart­ment, it would seem that the sources of the data used in both books might prop­erly be checked.

This is a very excellent work and all collectors of Zeppelin material will wish the new Sieger edition.

SPECIAL NOTE

The American Air Mail Society is endeavoring to complete arrange­ments to permit its members to purchase the above catalogue di• rectly from the Society. This ar­rangement recognizes the great collector interest in this new work and it is hoped that an announce­ment can be made in respect to same in the next issue of The Air· post Journal.

JANUARY, 1951

'

Edgar. M~hrmann· /.-y'

~ - . 4,;Europe's io'i-emost Pb.ilatelic dealer"

• f. ·. • ' • " .. t

P R E·S ENT S •. • - · An "iii.vitati~n ··to pre-wa~ friends . ~d to di~cerztlng new· cllenh. to

avail themselves of an unsurpassed stock of classic and modern stamps and covers offered with superior, friendly service •••

Regular auction sales of at least 3,000 lots at every session, accurately described in a comprehensive, illustrated catalogue which is air· mailed to the United States without extra cost • • • ·

"Atlantic Post," a "between auction sales" offering of special items of unusual interest, and fully described in a large illustrated cata­logue aho-mailed to clients •••

-:--· For Catalogues Write ---·

EDGAR- MOHRMANN HAMBURG 1 SPEERSORT 6

GERMANY

Have you purchased your • • •

Volume II . . .

American Air

Mail Catalogue? ' I' 0

$4. 00 plus postage (ORDER FROM YOUR FAVORITE ·DEALER)

99

....... ------------------------------------------------~~

1022 W. Ross Street. Lancaster, Pa .

Now that the Holidays are over, we shall try to gather up the loose ends and start out the New Year with an account­ing of all recent inaugural flights. Trans­World Airlines has completed its ser­vices to Frankfort and London from New York, Boston and Philadelphia. These were the new ports of call as designated by the Civil Aeronautics Board. Similar stops assigned to Pan American Airways have not yet received the approval of the countries concerned. However, the first flight to Paris via Pan American took place on December 17, 1950 while ser­vice to Rome is slated for January 2, 1951. And, over this newly acquired ter­ritory, Pan American recently inaugur­ated service to Bremen, Germany.

There was considerable delay in the return of inaugural flight covers address­ed to the Station Managers of T. W. A. at London and Frankfort due to the in­ability of the airlines to handle such cov­ers for collectors. Remarks pertinent thereto will be found elsewhere in this issue of The Airpost ]ot1rnal. The delay, however was worthwhile as T. W. A. very kindlv applied a cachet to all covers which had been in their care. None of these covers were backstamped but those sent otherwise received a backstamp of October 7, 1950, at Frankfort.

Service from Philadelphia from the aforementioned cities commenced on November 1, 1950. The Department pro­vided a cachet for covers destined for Frankfort but no special marging for those to London because the British postal authorities consistently refuse to accord philatelic treatment to first flight covers. Covers from the G. P. 0. and

• Airfield are postmarked 11 :30 A. M. and backstamped Frankfort, December 2, 1950. Covers to London. of course, are not backstamped. It may be well to men­tion that about two-thirds of all col­lectors' items sent to Frankfort and Lon­don (November issue The Airpost Jour­nal) were serviced by the airlines them­selves and later distributed by them. Be­for leaving T. W. A. we might add that the service to Frankfort and London is on a separate spur of F. A. M. 27 and has no connection with any other Trans­W orld Airlines services.

" " 0

Pan American's service to ·Paris and Rome when completed will be a new routing through Europe with a hop-off from Shannon to Paris and a direct flight from Par:s to Rome, by-passing the port of Nice, France. From Rome the route will be extended to Beruit, Syria, where it will meet the main route of F. A. M. 18 extending from Istanbul via Beruit­Basra-Karachi, etc.

Service as far as Paris was inaugurated on December 17, 1950 and covers are so postmarked at New York and Boston. Some covers received · a backstamp of December 19th and apparently were re­turned by the inaugural flight for they too are backstamped New York, Decem­ber 22 or 23, 1950. Paris-New York cov­ers depict a plane in flight between the Eiffel Tower and the Statue of Liberty and "First Flight, PARIS-NEW YORK, Pan American World Airways." The cach€t was obviously provided and pos­sibly applied by the airlines and seems to have been generally poorly handled. Covers we have seen are not backstamp­ed, possibly due to the Xmas mails,

.JANUARY, 1951

e The American Eagle Carries :the Mail on Official F AM-27 Cachet

however we can assume that all covers from these services were carried correctly because they had to be addressed to the port of destination.

The Captain on the first flight to Paris was H .. Smith; co-pilots Emerson and Jacobs. There were but 112 pieces from the New York G. P. 0. and 200 from the Airfield.

This is the initial service to Paris by Pan American World Airways although this airline was the first to operate sched­uled service across the Atlantic to Mar­seilles, France on May 22, 1939. Because of the use of flying boats the Marseilles port was the nearest practical port for Paris. To the collector, Paris, is, of course, a new stop on F. A. M. 18, and as such a first flight.

Pan American Airways also made a flight to Bremen, Germany, over old F. A. M. 24 from New York on Decem­ber 1, 1950. The Statue of Liberty is again depicted with a plane in flight and the usual wording on the official cachet. The G. P. 0. applied the cachet in green and dispatched 344 covers while the Air­field used purple and sent but 360 pieces. This service was pedonned on rather short notice and the small number of pieces carried indicate the scarcity of these ~overs.

On the original schedule, the notation relative to the flight reads, "Flight 197 designated 1 flight (December 2nd) only, Berlin-Haniburg...,Bremen:, As stat­ed before the flight took place on Dec-

101

ember 1,. 1950, and covers are back- , stamped, Bremen, Germany, December 2, 1950.

Covers which we believe to have been carried on the first return flight bear a circular-type cachet reading, "Bremen­N eur - Fugdiens - Bremen - Berlin, Dec­ember 2, 1950". These covers are not backstamped but it is quite possible some were later backstamped through favor. The return flight pilot was F. Wal­lace along with co-pilot R. Nordt.

Our old young friend George Lindman of Stockholm, Sweden, has shown us complete coverage on the Pan American inaugurals over old· F. A. M. 24 when various Scandinavian cities became Pan American ports-of-call. While these are not listable as first flgihts they are very interesting to the specialist, especially for those who try to secure full P. A. A. coverage. It was no small task to com­plete such coverage for no philatelic ser­vice was provided in any way and all covers had to be addressed to the port of destination.

British Overseas Airways was to have inaugurated service from Nassau, Bahamas on about November 1, 1950. Covers so dispatched bear a typed cachet reading "First Direct Flight Nassau-New York, Speedbird Stratocriuser." We un­derstand however that these covers were not carried as indicated.

For some reason unknown to the writ­er, a first flight was to have been made to Baghdad, Iraq over F. A. M. 18 on December 1, 1950. This city is not shown on any P. A. A. schedules or maps so we have to wonder as to the reason for such a flight. In any event, the covers at hand were postmarked at the New York Air­field on December 1, 1950 but were later returned to the senders with this notation, "As the scheduled stop at Bagh~ dad is cancelled indefinately, the attach­ed covers are returned to you." Covers, of course, had to be addressed to Bagh­dad.

Some few collectors appear to be con­fused as to the catalog\ling of covers

(Continued on next page)

102 THE AIRPOST. JOURNAL

F. A. M. NOTES-· (Continued from preceding pai;e)

• which involve more than orie route or better still, are mailed from a point on one route to a point on another. This is particularly true of covers posted from F. A. M. 5 (old) to F. A. M. 6 or vice versa. We must remember that when our E. A. M. System was in its infancy, there were only a few ports of call on each route and it was then the vogue to add­ress covers from each inaugural city to cities on connecting routes. But, when 6-10 expanded to cover the entire length of South America this type of dispatch and listing became a major problem be­cause of the many cities involved. One or two earlier catalogues attempted to list such cross dispatching but it all ended in mass confusion. We today therefore consider any covers carried past the ter­minal points to be the' equivalent· of those addressed to· the terminal of the route on which they were originally mailed.

There is one instance where this rule does not apply and it would be well for all collectors to check the following: On the completion of the Lindbergh Circle, F. A. M. 6-10 dispatched to F. A. M. 5 and vice versa, and it would be well for all collectors to study the text and listing of F. A. M. 6 on page 666 of the new catalogue as well as pages 646 and 647 under F. A. M. 5. A somewhat similar condition applies in the addition of Cien­fuegos, Cuba and Kingston, Jamaica to F. A. M. 6-10 on August 7-8, 1932. {Page 672 of catalogue.) These same cities were originally added to F. A. M. 5 (Pages 644 and 649). Here again it would be well to study the text and the maps.

May I take this opportunity to wish our readers a belated Holiday Greeting. My wife Dorothy joins me in thanking so many of our good friends for their remembrance at Christmas time. May the New Year bring you nothing but Good Luck and Happiness ..

·~ Richard L. Singley.

COMPLETE 128-PAGE U.S. CATALOG!

Pictures More than 1000

Stamps!

Lists and prices all ma­jor varieties of United States, U. S. Possessions and British ·North Amerc ica. Most dependable

l:,~a~~~bfeidf or in c~f1~L tors. Sent for only 25c to cover handling and postage. Write today!

UNITED STATES STAMPS

H. E. HARRIS & CO. W oild' s Largest Stamp Firm

30 Transit Bldg., Boston 17, Mass.

ATTENTION PLEASE In order fo verify certain facts

in connection with issue and use dates of early U. S. Air Mail stamps, I ask each reader who has in his or her collection, a New York - Philadelphia - Washington 1918 cover to inform me if the cov­er has: A- Cancellation on 24c air mail stamp,

New York, May 13 or May 14. B- Cancellation on 24c air mail sta.mp,

Philadelphia, May 13 or May 14. C- Cancellation on 16c air mail stamp,

New York, July 11 or July· 12. D- Cancellation on 16c air mall stamp,

Philadelphia, July 11 to July 12. E- Use of "AIR MAIL SERVICE -

. PHILADELPHIA" cancellation, December 10, 1918.

Just write a one cent pos:l:card and refer to A, B, C. D. or E. Your co-operation will be very much appreciated.

KARL B. WEBER Historian-Recorder, A. A, M. S.

114 MONTANA STREET Pri,:-TsBUR<,rn, PA .. N. s. 14

• Booth of the American Air Mail Society. Left to right. Bernard Davis. Director, National Philatelic Museum. G. F. Lancaster. Miss Barbara

Kaiser. Past President M. O. Warns. President Grace Conrath. F . W. ' Kessler and Past President George D. Kingdom

• Left to right. Herbert S. Beuhe~ President A. S. D. A.. Osborne A.

Pearson. Assistant Postmaster GeneraL Peter G. Keller, Exec. Officer

A. S. D. A •• Anne Jeffreys. Star of "Kiss Me Kate" and Mrs. Osborne A.

Peuson. The Peusons' Daughter is in the Foreground.

:;; • A~Ei!!!R!!P0 : :- =-=I> 11111

POSTAL STATIONERY NOTES

BY·IAN C.MORGAN 14SS Union Avenue. Montreal 2, P. 0.

• CANADA

Official notice received from Ottawa advises us that a new 15c air letter sheet in the design of the recently issued lOc sheet is now available from the Philatelic Agency, Ottawa. The new sheet has the stamp imprinted in red but all other printing is in blue as is the printing on the lOc sheet.

NIGERIA Although frequently reported, Fred W.

Kessler is the first to show us the air letter sheet from this Colony for official use. The entire fonn is printed in red with pink overlay on gray paper. It has the words "Official Paid" in two lines in the upper right-hand corner and the let­ters "O.H.M.S." at top center. The in­scription at top left is the same as that found on all Empire type air letter sheets. In one line at the bottom of the form are the words "For Use within Nigeria only." The reverse of the form is printed in black and includes the word "Airgram" and printed sections and lines for refer­ence number, date and "From" and "To". It is doubtful whether postal statoinery of this type will be catalogued in the American Air Mail Catalogue of Air Let­ter Sheets but these items are interesting and of particular interest to the specialist.

PAKISTAN Harold Fisher has let us have a look

at the new Pakistan 4 annas red air mail card sent him by the. Regal Stamp Comp­any of Lahore on August 9, 1950. This is believed to be the first day of issue.

PORTUGESE COLONIES Sam ·Hant~n sends us the informa­

,tion, and Fred W. Kessler kindly loans

us the specmien sheet which we illustrate on the front cover this month, in respect to an entirely new series of air letter sheets recently released for the eight Portugese Colonies. Each of the sheets bears an embossed stamp of the Holy Year commemorative design inscribed at the top "Ano Santo MCML", with the name of the individual Colony at the bottom. All inscriptions on the sheet are in every case in the color of the stamp. All of the sheets are light pink in color and there is a total of six values for the eight Colonies; however, these are not divided on the basis of two to each Colony. The sheets for each Colony has a design in the lower left corner consist­ing of letter with two wings attached and the tri-lingual inscription "Aerea-Par Avion-By Air Mail"; however strangely enough this design and inscription is omitted on the sheets furnished for Moz­ambique. It is not known at this time whether the omission was intentional or through inadvertence.

We list below the values and colors of each of the sheets seen to date, together with the reputed first day of issue in every case and we also list the reported values for those items not yet seen:

Angola -

1.50 ACS., gray green 2.50 ACS., brown 4.50 ACS., red First day of issue,..-October 25, 1950

Cape Verde Islands

2.50 ESC., not yet seen 3.50 ESC., not ye tseen

jANUARY, 1951

Macao -60 A vos, not yet seen

Mozambique -1.20 ESC., not yet seen 2.50 ESC., red 3.50 ESC., gray green First day of issue for items seen -

November 3, 1950

Portugese Guinea -2.50 ESC., gray green First day of issue-October 17, 1950

Porl:ugese India :--9 Tangas, gray green

10 Tangas, not yet seen First day of issue for item seen

October 21, 1950

St. Thomas &: Principe -1.50 ESC., not yet seen 2.50 ESC., blue First .day of issue for item seen

November 11, 1950

Timor -50 A vos, not yet seen 70 Avos, not yet seen

When You Think Of ...

BUYING OR SELLING AIR MAILS

Think of H. R. Harmer, pio­neers in· selling of Air Mail Collections by aucl:ion.

Vendors: Request booklet "Concerning your stamps."

Collectors: Request free illustrated auc· lion catalogues.

H. R. HARMER, Inc:. The World's Leading Stamp

Auctioneers 32 East 57th Street New York 22, N. Y.

FAMOUS PLANES ON VIEW IN ARGENTINA

• by ERNEST A. KEHR

Assistant Editor

105

]JLujan, in Argentina, chiefly . is known as a Catholic pilgrimage shrine, but one of its more important attractions is a museum devoted to the display of vehicles associated with the history of transportation in the Argentine. In its vast halls are dog, horse and ox-carts, diligencias, carriages, railroad cars and even airplanes, all of which were used at one period or another in the swifter delivery of mail.

Of particular interest to airpost collec~ tors is the monstrous looking amphibian whose fabric is inscribed. "Plus Ultra, M-MWAL," and in which Spanish pilot · D. Ramon Franco, accompanied by co­pilot and navigator Ruiz de Alda y Duran and mechanic · Rattla flew from Madrid to Buenos Aires in 1926, covering some 10,120 kilometers in sixty-one hours and 44 minutes to establish a then-new long­distance flying record.

Accustomed only to four-engine lux­ury liners of today, the younger genera­tion of Argentines who streamed through the museum the Sunday I was there just couldn't believe that this awkward con­trivance even could have taken off the ground, or rather from a watery runway. "But how could the pilots keep dry and warm without a cabfo?" one ten-ye~r old inquired of his father, as he skepti9al-

. Iy looked at the open cockpits. Argentina has no other place where the public can actually see pioneer aircraft

··JOIN THE A. A. M. S. OQQR~~~~020ROOQQQQJR2JOQR~

~~ ~ Official Publication of 'the

·~~~1111m1w,~: ~lli'ht1t{llslp1~1 l!: American Air Mail Socleey. Pub­'! u .. · ~ ~ l! y!h~.!! ~ ~\J ~t lished monthly at Albion, (Erie

-~==wo=R=L=o=·s=L~EAJ~~kNJT~~~~f,1,~~~H;)J~~Hcii,;,L~!J!~~~~;1djc=M=A=GA=z=1N=E==IP="" Co.), Pennsylvania, U. S. A.

Entered as second-class matter at the Post Gfftce at Albion, Pa .• February 10, 1932, under the Act of March 3, 1879 .

• The AIRPOST JOURNAL is not conducted for profit. The Editor, Business Manager, and all other editors, feature writers and contributors serve gratis and without compensation of any kind. All receipts from advertising, subscriptions and contributions are applied directly to the betterment of the magazine and the

promotion of aero-philately.

EDITOR L.B. GATCHELL - 6 The Fairway, Upper Montclair, N. J.

BUSINESS MANAGER GEORGE D. KINGDOM, Tyler Building, Conneaut, Ohio

ASSISTANT EDITORS ALTON J. BLANK 1089 Winston Rd., So. Euclid 21, Ohio

GRACE CONRATH, P. O. Box 519, Albion, Penn'a ERNEST A. KEHR - 230 West 41 Street, New York 18, N. Y.

ART EDITOR EDWIN L. HASTRY

DEPARTMENT EDITORS R. LEE BLACK - Interrupted Flight Cover News

FLORENCE L. KLEINERT - A. A. M. S. Chapter News IAN c. MORGAN - Aero Postal Stationery

RICHARD L. SINGLEY - F. A. M. Air Mail Routes WILLIAM R. WARE - Contract Air Mail Routes

WILLIAM T. WYNN - Dedication Covers Assistant Editor ALTON J. BLANK also conducts "Airs of the Month" Department

ASSOCIATE EDITORS FRANCIS J. FJELD F. W. KESSLER DR. MAX KRONSTEIN

JAMES WOTBERSPOON

SUBSCRIPTION RATES Anywhere ............................ $3.00 per year.

Second (duplicate) copy sent to Subscriber's same address, $1.50 per year. Back Numbers, 25c each; Bound Volumes, if in stock, $4.75 per volume.

ADVERTISING RATES One Inch, per issue ............................ $ 3.00 Front Inside or Back Cover ............ $17.50

Quarter Page, per issue ...... ; ............ .$ 4·5° Composition charge for solid, tabular Half Page, per issue ............................ $ 8.00 or special typographic layouts: lOc to Full Page, per issue ...... _ ................ $15.00 25c per mch additional. Interested advertisers may apply for contract rate for space used every Issue for a period of 12 months. Advertising and editorial copy MUST BE RECEIVED BY THE 20TH OF THE MONTH preceding publication date.

The right is reserved to ,refuse any advertising.

THE AIRPOST JOURNAL has been published under the auspices of THE AMERICAN AIR MAIL SOCIETY since October, 1931. It has reached its hiirh place of usefulness to the hobby primarily through the genius, industry and devotion of the lat.e

WALTER J. CONRATH successively Business Manager and Editor. To his memory are the future

issues of the JOURNAL gratefully dedicated.

WHERE. TO WRITE Correspondence concernine advertis- Department Editors may be written

ing, new and renewal subscripUons,direct at the addresses printed at the back numbers and bound volumes,top of their columns. All general edi­addresa changes and other matters oftorial copy and communications on all circulation, business matters of another matters should be sent to the kinds and all remittances should bepenonal attention of the Editor at sent direct to the PubllcaUon Office at 11 The Fairway

ALBION, PENN'A UPPJ:R MONTCLA.IB, N. 1.

RANDOM NOTES FROM THE

EDITORS D~SK

We have just received word from Har­ry L. Lindquist, the American Commis­sioner for the International Philatelic Ex­hibition, which was scheduled to be held in Cairo, Egypt late in March this year, that cabled advices indicate that this great show has been indefinitely post­poned, if not actually cancelled for this year. Mr. Lindquist who planned to at­tend the show promises to send us addi­tional information just as soon as it is re­ceived. It is believed that the present in­ternational situation has made this action necessary.

The death of Dr. Robert Paganini in Switzerland on December 6 will come as a shock to those airpost collectors who have been with the hobby over a period of years. From the earliest days Dr. Paganini has stood for everything that was fine in aerophilately and really earned the title of "The Grand Old Man of Airposts." It is gratifying to know that he has left a living monument to his in­terest in and efforts for air mail collecting in the form of the Airpost Archives which he donated to the Swiss Postal Museum some years ago ... We also learn with regret of the passing of Jack Smith, for­mer Superintendent of the Stamp Print­ing Division of the U. S. Bureau of En­graving and Printing. Mr. Smith died in Florida following a long illness. Those who have made pilgrimages through the Bureau of Engraving and Printing under the auspices of the American Air Mail Society on the several occasions on which the Society held its gatherings in Wash­ington, will recall with pleasure the gen­ial personality of this grand person who was never too busy to take time out to explain the intricate workings of the var­ious machines - some of which he him-

GEORGE ANGERS RECOVERING

• Friends of George W. Angers, Past

President and Co-Founder of the American Air Mail Society, will be happy to learn that he is presently recovering from a recent serious op­eration, but that it will be several months before he is in a position to personally communicate with the lar­ge number of people who have writ­ten to him.

George asks us to convey his grati­tude for the many expressions of goodwill and prayers for his recovery. He would like to use the columns of the Journal too, for this purpose as it would be a physical impossibility for him to personally answer all of the letters which he has received.

self perfected. Mr. Smith will also be remembered as the official in charge of the stamp printing equipment which was. on display at both the 1936 and 1947 International Exhibitions held in New York. Although not a collector himself, he has a host of friends among collectors and will be sorely mourned by them. .. .. ..

Does anyone want to add a very scarce Dedication cover to his collection and at the same time assist the Publication Fund of the American Air Mail Society? Some years ago, through the courtesy of Albert N. Brown of San Francisco, Cal­ifornia, the Society was presented with the only known copies of the Airport Dedication Covers from the Dedication of the Naval Auxiliary Air Station at Fal­lon, Nevada. These covers will be found catalogued in the supplementary listings to the American Air Mail Catalogue, the

108

entire quantity being less than ten pieces. We know that there is a vacant space in most Dedication collections where this item should be. We will send a copy of this cover tG· the first four collectors who send us $5.00 in any negotiable form -cash, check, or money order. Prompt ac­tion is necessary as there are only four covers available. Address the Editor.

Collectors of FAM flight covers were recently thrown into a dither by informa­tion to the effect that Trans-World Air­lines had announced its refusal to return covers addressed in its care on the in­augural service to London and Frank­fort. While the information in respect to these particular covers was incorrect and these covers have actually been returned to the senders by the Airlines, discus­sions with TWA bring out the fact that in the future Trans~World will have to re­fuse to accord philatelic treatment to any covers sent in its care except in those cases where the United States Post Office Department has made advance arrangements and announcement to the effect that covers may be sent in care of its Station Agents. This action is made necessary by the many collector abuses of airline "hospitality" and, while it may seem a bit drastic, a careful investigation of the facts indicates that the Airline is fully justified in discontinuing the ser­vice which it has previously rendered. Collectors of F. A. M. covers and domes­tic covers as well are aware of the un­failing courtesy previously rendered by officials of T. W. A. and of the fact that they have actually returned thousands of such letters to collectors at their own ex­pense in many cases flying them back to the United States from distant points. Naturally, as this service was set up to provide facilities to individual collectors who otherwise might not be able to secure souvenir flight covers to far away places, a restriction was made that only a limited number of covers could be handled for each collector. But perhaps it would be better to let Mr. W. H. Plu­chel, Director of Mail and Express for TWA, take it from here and explain the situation in his own words. We quote and in this case Mr. Pluchel is referring

THE AIRPOST JOURNAL

ADDRESSES WANTED

• The Catalogue Committee will be grateful to anyone who can supply the present addresses of the following persons:

Chesley B. Pickle Col. Robert T. Stevens, U. S. A.

If you can furnish the present postal addresses of the above parties, kindly communicate with Editor L. B. Gatchell, 6 The Fairway, Upper Montclair, N. J.

to the 1946 inaugural flights to the Mid­dle East:

"Wanting to cater to the individual amateur philatelist,· and not to the commercial collectors, we set a limit of 10 covers for each individual to each individual city. Within two weeks after the planes departed we were de­luged with inquiries concerning the return of these covers .. An investiga­tion developed that the loudest com­plaints were from the commercial philatelists, who had already put out a price list on these covers at a price far in excess of the postage.

We did tl1e best we could; however, in further analyzing these we found as many as a thousand covers to the same address, with only a change in the name. Needless to say this was a commercial philatelist's way of getting around our instructions.

To prepare these covers . for ulti­mate shipment to the sender required two girls working five days a week approximately three months, and the final dispatch amounted to in excess of 4000 individual packages, some containing as few as one envelope and others as high as a thousand.

Since that time we have been asked at various times by collectors to do all sorts of unauthorized ways of handling covers, and other requests, each of them with the idea in mind that their cover might be a distinct rarity and, hence, of high intrinsic value. I think you can well appreciate

(Continued on page 126)

JANUARY, 1951

' I

·~~.' ,~.~. Airport 4-. -- ·'-:

Dedication Covers ... • By WILLIAM T. WYNN

8544 Cloverlawn. Detroit 4. Mich.

• Rapid City, S. D. is reported to have

held dedication of its field on Aug. 27. The posbnaster says one or two cov~rs were mailed. - Orrin Russell Fox Helio­port was dedicated at. Pasadena, Ca~if., on Oct. 27; a silver sticker .was applied to 1250 covers by the C. of C. The mail was flown by helicopter to Los An­geles and backstamped at the Air Mail Field. A few covers have been reported with embossed cachet in the same de­sign as the sticker. - Challis, Idaho's air­port was dedicated Oct. 22; 188 covers were mailed. Two cachets were used -one a map type cachet and the other reading "Sportsmans Paradise" - Doug­las, Wyo. held dedication of its Airport on Oct. 22; 123 covers without any markings, were mailed. - Dress Memor­ial Airport at Evanst>ille, Ind. was dedi­cated on Oct. 29; cachet was sponsored by Evansville Squadron. - Borger, Tex. is reported as dedicating its field. Post­master's inscription is found on a very few covers. - Pacific Airmotion Airport was dedicated on Nov. 3. Ontario, Up­land and Chino, Calif. all entered into the dedication exercises, but so far no covers are reported from any of these towns. - Monrovia, Calif. held dedica­tion of Model Airport on Jan. 1, 1950. Can anyone help your editor with cov­ers? - Garberville, Calif. held dedication of its Airport on Sept. 30 and Oct. 1. To date covers are reported for Sept. 30 only. - Covers have been seen from the Sutter County airport dedication held on Oct. 1, mailed from Meridian, Calif., marked with a sticker cachet. Most of the covers for this event were mailed at Yuba City, Cal. - A new CAP field will

109

be dedicated at Live Oak, Fla. on Jan. 21; send your covers to Chamber of Commerce. All of those who had cards with the writer for such short notice news have been notified. Again we offer this service to anyone interested. There is no cost for this service, just send a supply of self-addressed cards to your Editor at 8544 Cloverlawn, Detroit 4, Mich. - The Hutchinson County airport was dedicat­ed at Borger, Texas on Oct. 18; a very few covers were mailed with posbnaster's

-inscription. - A MODEL plane port is reported to have been dedicated and cov­ers mailed with cachet from Monrovia, Calif. on Jan. 8, 1950, but so far we have been unable to obtain proof of dedica­tion. Who will help with such news? -Reports have been received on dedica­tion at Shannon, La., Oct. 1 and Many, La. on Oct. 18, but we have no details or covers from such a dedication. Your help is solicited in respect to news of past or future events or any other news pertaining to airport dedications. We

. hope in the next few weeks to get the listing of the 1950 events into shape sa that a new Supplement can be carried in The Airpost Journal early in the new year.

• DR. PAGANINI DIES -

(continued f.rom page 95)

• national Airpost Exhibition held at the National Philatelic Museum in Philadel­phia under the auspices of the American Air Mail Society.

Dr. Paganini had an extensive library of aero-philatelic literature and this was also donated to the Airpost Archives.

It was this writer's privilege to· know Dr. Paganini personally and to number him among his friends. He was one of the most friendly and warmest persons we have been privileged to know in these stormy times. He was a real friend to all of those who came to know him well and his friends and the hobby will mourn his loss.

ENJOY YOUR HOBBY! l'VE FE: I. T TAl'S WAV EVE.IE- gNCE l'YE LST LONG­A&i..P ME WITA

M.VAO&&V/

There are a lot of ways yon can let Long help you with your hobby. On the next page are a few specific "offers" ... which may or may not meet with your approval.

If they do, send us your order. If not, let me know what does interest you!

l•'or instance, tens of thousands of fine covers are always in stock here (we've been gathering covers since 1926) available for your inspection "on approval". If you'd like to look over a small lot, let me know your interests, specialties, likes or dislikes.

If you'd rather buy from lists, they can be had "for the ask­ing". Oceanics, Historicals, First Flights, First Days, etc., etc.

If you like to buy at Auction, you'll find our Monthly Mail Sales a great source of supply. Nearly every sale has a large rep­resentation of cover material. Singly, as well as in bulk lOts, you can thus buy fine covers at YOUR OWN PRICE.

The "Collector's Handbook" is another item you'd better have! Carry it with you at all times; you'll find it a handy pock­et-sized check-list and price-list combined. No cost, just ask for your copy ... it's Free (send a postal car for yours).

There are many ways Long can help YOU enjoy YOUR hobby~

Deal with a fellow member (Life Member, incidently) of the A.A.M.S. Mention your A.A.M.S. No. when you write. Glad to hear from you!

., -~:

t'I

IELMIER Ro LO~G

CANADIAN AIRMAIL COVERS

I These colorful, historical First Flight Airm. ail Covers from the I land of the Maple Leaf will add greaty to your air collection!

. All covers listed are very fine, neat and clean. They're also of standard size, properly cancelled, cacheted, etc. Some have Semi­Official Air stamps used in addition to the government air or postage stamps. (San: Sanabria Catalog which lists Semi's.)

C·l

C-2

C-3

C-4

C-S

C-6

C-10

C-11

C-12

C-13

C-14

C-16

C-18

C-19

C-21

A superb unaddressed cover with San. #542 used on Fort McMurray-Athabasca Feb. 23, 1931 First Flight #133 ..... $ .SO

Another, as above, using San. #542, Athabasca. #133a. .... .SO

Another, as above, using San. #542, Athabasca, #133c. .... .so Another, as above, using San. #542, Edmonton, #l33b. .... .SO

Aklavik to Miami, March 14, 1931, with San. #542. ............ .SO

Compleie se:t of two superb #150, 150a, using San. #551. .. I.SO

Peace River Fligh:t, Feb. 12, 1931 using San. #542. ............ .7S

Edmonton Peace River 1931 Flighi #132 with San. #542. .. .7S

Aklavik lo Buenos Aires, First through flight with 60c postage, crowded with postal markings; March, 1931. .... IO.DO

Fod McMurray, July 26, 1930, Lists #239 at $2.00. ............ .SO

Four complete, #245, a, b, c, Leihbridge 1931 set. ... .. ... 1.00

Augus:t 17, 1931, listed page 978 AAMS as #250, gem ........ 3.00

Round Trip Cover, Fort Chipewyan lo Fond du lac 1933 ... 1.00

Complete 6 different Feb. 15, 1933 Wadhope #542 to e. . . .. 1.00

Two beautirJl July 193S Flights, #577a, 577d ($5>. ............ 2.40

GET THIS ENTIRE COLLECTION of 25 different Historical I Canadian First Flight C. overs at this special group price of

. only $19.00

You may order by Number (C-1 to C-21) for your convenience if you do not need all of these covers. Bear in mind that in many cases only a very few of these covers were flown!

11112 ~A\RK.JET ST o 9

lHIA\RRllSIRIJRG, IPA\o

Life Member: A. A. M. S ..

P. O. Box 595, Malden, Mo •

• AM #93 ,..... SEGMENT #3, WINS-

LOW TO DOUGLAS. This was the in­itial segment of Route #93 to get under way and was operated in connection with the extension of Route #73 from Gallup to Winslow. This segment flies via Flag­staff, Prescott, Phoenix, Tucson, and Nogales, all in Arizona. The initial flights were made on June l, 1950. Ser­vice over this segment is actually pro­vided in two parts with planes operat­ing from Winslow via Flagstaff, Pres­cott to Phoenix and return with another flight originating at Phoenix and operat­ing via Tucson, Nogales to Douglas and return to Phoenix.

The inaugural flight from Winslow to Phoenix was made by Captain Geo. L. Sims and First Officer Earl R. Wells as Flight #161 and was a continuation of the flight from Gallup via Route #73. At Phoenix this same crew returned to Winslow as Flight #162 and thence to Gallup, N. Mex., via Route #73 as re­ferred to in our chronicle of Route #73 above.

The initial flights between Phoenix and Douglas were made by Captain Dallas W. Taylor and First Officer Wm. Lyon operating as Flight # 171 from Phoenix to Douglas and Flight #172 from Doug­las to Phoenix.

A new type of cachet was furnished for the service on Route #93 being in the form of a rectangle with route of Segment # 3 on the right side and with a picture of a desert flower on the left side of the cachet, with city name at the bottom in large letters. These cachets were very attractive, with different color used for each city involved. It might be mention­ed that on the Tucson to Phoenix dis-

patch there were but 256 covers for col­lectors.

AM #93 - SEGMENT #2, PHOEN­IX TO EL PASO. Service on this new Feeder route was further extended with the inauguration of Segment #2 on July 15th. This segment operates from Phoen­ix to El Paso via Stafford, Ariz., Lords­burg, Deming and Las Cruces, N. Mex.

The initial flight from Phoenix to El Paso was made via Flight #182 flown by Capt. W. M. Omeara and First Of­ficer Milton Lamoureaux. Captain Om­eara will be remembered as one of the inaugural pilots on the first flights of Route #72 several years ago.

The initial flight from El Paso to Phoenix was made via Flight #181, flown by Capt. Everett L. Aden, another veteran with Frontier Air Lines and First Officer A. F. Clark.

A map type cachet showing the addi­tional segment involved drawn in with more pretty flowers and applied in a dif­ferent color for each city, makes these a nice set of covers. We note the added notation: "Segment #2" in the cachet which collectors will appreciate as it identifies the segment from which the cover originated. A nominal dispatch was made from each each city on this segment with the Eastbound dispatch from Las Cruces consisting of 272 phila­telic covers being the scarcest item of this set. Inasmuch as service on this route is not complete, we can expect more activity from this route later.

AM ROUTE #90 - ADDITION OF COLUMBUS, NEBR. Getting back to

J.ANUARY, 1951

ROUTE . ~::=:-_. AM

u.n I~ &? ?\..'M1ss.l &e. Hu 11 'Y . .........LAU~ ALA. ~J~~L NA~~~1keuRJ, \ FIRST -·-·~'. e?tt

FLIGHT LA. M.OBll.£

BATON= ·~ ROUGE Ytl{

113

• Aliraclive Designs of Official Cachets for Current Route Inaugurals

Route #90, Columbus, Nebraska was added to this route on October 3rd, 1950. This city is served on Segment #2 of Route #90 which operates between Huron, S. D. and Omaha, Nebr. The in­

augural flight from Columbus to Huron was made via Flight #2f37 flown by Pilot G. E. Richardson while the inaug­ural flight from Columbus to Omaha was made via Flight # 236 flown by Pilot Harry W. Brewer. No co-pilots were employed. The usual Route #90 cachet was applied in green to all covers showing route of Segment #2. 1980 pieces of philatelic mail were dispatched via Flight #236 while Flight #2f37 handled f313 pieces of philatelic mail. Carrier: Mid-West Airlines.

LIFE MEMBERSHIP

A.A.M.S. - $50~00

Join This Select

Group NOW.

:-: == :-: == :-: ~ :-: == :·:-:·: ===-= 5

PHILATELIC LITERATURE GROUP ELECTS NEW OFFICERS

• Members of the Philatelic Library As­

sociation have adopted a Constitution, By­Laws, and elected four officers and four­teen additional directors

Those elected were: Daniel W. Vooys, President, P. 0. Box 300, Canajoharie, New York; George T. Turner, First Vice Presi­dent, 34-52 73rd Street, Jackson Heights, N. Y.; David Lid.man, 2nd Vice President, 64 Pascack Road, Park Ridge, N. J.; and Frederick L. Scholl, Secretary-Treasurer, Nedrow, New York.

Directors, in addition to the officers are: C. N. Allen, Hanover,' N. H.; Jere Hess Barr, Reading, Pa.; Fritz Billig, Jamaica, N. Y.; Winthrop S. Boggs, East Orange, N. J.; Miss Phebe Booth, Waukegan, Illinois; Sylvester Colby, New York City; Euge~e Costales, New York City; Mrs. Edith M. Fisher, Montvale, N. J.; Manne! Hahn, Winnetka, Illinois; Herman Herst, Jr., Shrub Oak, N. Y.; George W. Linn, Sidney, Ohio; Van Dyk MacBride, Newark, N. J.; Lowell J. Ragatz, Worthington, Ohio; and Wililam W. Wyle, of Albany, Oregon.

The purpose of the Philatelic Library Association is to promote and encourage the collection, study, and general use of stamp collecting reference publications, to circulate information on such material among the members, to compile and pub­lish bibliographies and other works re­lating to philately, and to provide a med­ium for the purchase, sale, and exchange of such reference literature.

Official publication of the Association . is the "Philatelic Literature Review," ed­ited by Daniel W. Vooys since the first issue of September 1942.

Annual members dues, including subscription for the view costs $1.00 and applications may be sent to President Vooys, P. 0. Box 300, Canajoharie, New York, or Secretary Scholl, Nedrow, New York.

FOURT81 AUCTION MAIL SALE February 17, 1951

I. S. GOODMAN

offered by

Box 133

• Bloomfield, N. J.

TERMS OF SALE are the same as that of our 3rd Auction Sale as appear­ed in the September "Airpost Journal", and conform to usual auction practice. Feel free to send your maximum bids with the knowledge that 60 % of the lots in our last sale were sold at 5% to 50% below the maximum available bid. Every single lot unconditionally guaranteed. A complete list of prices realized will be published in the next available issue of the "Airpost Journal" follow­ing the date of sale.

• FIRST DAY COVERS

The following First Day Cover lots are all clean and fine as described. The larger lots may consist of mixed cacheted and uncacheted covers, but this lack of matching has been considered in computing the retail value.

1 .)'t629, 682, 689, 690, 702 (2 eities), 703; Blocks of 4 ............................. Retail Value $ 5.50 2 27 diff. 2c First Days 1926-1931, inc. scarce 2c Hawaii. ............................................ 10.50 3 4q diff. 3c Comm. First Days, #772-803 complete in Block of 4. ............................ 30.00 4 1938 Presidentials, 'hc-20c complete, mostly cacheted, (23 covers). ................ 12.50 5 1938 Presidentials, combined 16c, 17c, 18c, 19c, 20c on 1 fine cover .................... 5.00 6 combined 24c, 25c on one cacheted cover. ............................ 4.00 7 12c-20c complete on matched cacheted cover, all in

pairs or strips, face $3.09. . ...................................................... .,........ 10.00 8 #803-812, 'hc-7c complete in Blocks of 4 ................................ 11.00 9 #817-820, 12c-15c in Blocks of 4 (4 covers). ........................ 8.50

10 $5 Coolidge, scarce cover. ................................................................ 15.00 11 coils #839-851 complete .................................................................... 3.00 lZ coils #839-847 complete in pairs. ................................................ 4.00 13 Booklet Panes (3 covers). ................................................................ 2.00 14 Defense set, #899-901, pairs on one cover ........................................................................ 2.00 15 Occupied Nations, 13 values complete (13 covers). .................................................... 6.00 16 Famous Americans, lc-5c values complete, all sets (28). ........................................ 10.00 17 Trans-Mississippi le sheet. Omaha & Wash., complete panes on 2 covers .... 3.00 18 CEl, CE2 (2 covers). .. .................................................................................................. ,.......... 1.50 19 National Parks complete inc. Blocks 7c, lOc ................................................................ 7.00 20 Army-Navy complete, mostly pairs. . ........... ,................................................................... 3.00 21 Army-Navy complete blocks of 4. .................................................................................. 8.00

22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36

C. A. M., "f'. A. M., MISC. U. S. FLIGHTS

C. A. M. #2-9; 26 diff. stages, inc. 9"'36. .. ................ .< ............ AAMS Cat. value C. A. M. #10-13; 15 diff. stages, inc. 11E7f, 13N3 ................................................... ..

~: ~: :: :i~t~~~ ~ ~l~~: ~\~~~~. r:;fc~ cc°o~":is :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::: F5-2, 41, 44, 66c, 78d, 115a, 6 good stages FAM #5, good franking ................... . F6-4a, 6, 15a, 75, 79, 120e, 123, 7 good stages FAM #6, good franking ............ . F9-18, 41, 2 v. f. stages r'AM 9 ............................................................................................ . Fl4-la, lb, 23, 3 good covers. .. ......................................................................................... . Fl4-10 to 14-16 complete, :ill stages, 17 v. f. covers Guam-Macao ext ............... .. FJS-1 to 6, complete (exc-:;pt la & lb), 10 v. f. Southern route large cov ....... .. F18-10a, b, c, lla, 12, 15a, b, 16a, b, 12 fine covers Northern Route ................... . Wl-6, 7, 8, Sa; N. Y.-17, 5 very nice covers ................................................................ . U. S. Gov't. Flights #147 '?< 147a, Kansas City-Omaha, both ways .................... . Interrupted Flight 36.6, Dec 15, Salt Lake City .................... ~ .................................. .. Canal Zone Cl3, 14, 17, 18 on 3 cacheted 1st Day covers, fine, scarce ..... Est.

I. S. GOODMAN - MAIL AUCTION - FEB. 17

24.10 23.80

9.00 14.50 13.75 13.25 7.50 5.75

45.00 24.50 13.50 8.50

17.50 3.50

20.00

37 38 39 40 41

J. S. GOODMAN - MAIL AUCTION - FEB. 17 ---­TRANS-OCEANIC

#l068b, Lindberg Caribbean Flight. . .............................................................................. . #1138, First Official Flight, Australia-England, (Darwin-Athens) stage ........ . .:t;l230, 1935 P. A. A. Survey Flight, California-Hawaii Round Trip .................... . #1255, Inaugural Regular Service, France-South America. . .............................. . #1328, Montreal-New York. . ................................................................................................ .

FO:aEIGN FIRST FLIGHTS

17.00 25.00 15.00 5.00 3.00

42 Canada, #291-29li, all stages complete, 10 covers ..................................................... $ 4.70 43 Canada, 40 diff. Gov't. Flights. . ...... .,................................................................................... 13.65 44 Greece #2, (?), Athens-Brindisi, Sept. 29, 1926. ........................................................ 8.00 45 Greece #3, Athens-Alexandria, April 2, 1929. ............................................................ 8.00 46 Peru #6, Lima-Paita (large cover). ................................................................................ 5.00 47 Philippines #101, 102; Manila-Labuan & Singapore, 2 good covers. .................... 4.00 48 Philippines #117, Manila-Batavia via KNILM, folded but good. ........................ 3.00 49 Syria #5, Damascus-Baghdad. ................................................................................................ 3.00

50

51 52 53 54 55 56

57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 61 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 f11

ROCKET FLIGHTS

Germany; 4 Proofs of the 1933 Rocket Issue (yellow only missing), rare (Kessler Rocket Catalogue)

Germany: 3 mk. on 1 mk. with star surcharge. (Kessler Ula). .. ......................... . Italy; Dec. 1934 Flown Card with 5 Lire Rocket stamp ..................................... Est. Italy; As above but autographed cover with 7.7 Lire stamp ......................... Est. Jugoslavia; J'ug II Rocket Stamp mint (Kessler illb) .............. ; ............................. . Netherlands. Mar. 6, 1935 Flown autographed covers with rocket stamps. Est. Netherlands; April 23, 1935; Flown Cover with 2 rocket stamps, signed

Roberti. .............................................................................................................. Est.

ZEPP FLIGHTS GERMAN & U.S. DISPATCHES

40.00 30.00

5.00 15.00 9.00

10.00

15.00

215 - Schwa.ben Flight, Darmstadt post card with San. #2 ......... AAMS Cat. $ 3.00 Z41 - Oct. 1924, First Trans-Atlantic flight (ZR-3), v. f. card with C23. ........ 3.00 Z41 - Oct. 1924, First Trans-Atlantic flight, v. f. cover with C24. .................... 3.00 Z55 - First Ocean Crossing LZ127, Oct. 1928, v. f. card with C36. .................... 4.00 Z55 - First Ocean Crossing LZ127, v. f. cover with C25. ........................................ 4.00

~~~ = ii:~~~ ~Yf:1fi1t. 1Jfii~ c:~~er". .. ·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: !:~ Z56a - Return Flight, fine cover, Lakehurst postmark. ........................................ 6.00 Z63 - · good card with C32. . .............................................. -....................... 3.50 Z63 - good cover with C36. • •••..•..•. -....................................................... 3.50 Z63? - v. f. Tel Aviv drop card .................................................... Est. 10.00 Z65 - Mediterra,nean Flight, card, regular cancellation. . ...................... :................ 3.00 Z65a - Mediterranean Flight, card. ................................................................................ 3.00 Z65a - Mediterranean Flight, v. f. Board Cover with C36. .................................... 3.50 Z64 - 1929, Southwest Gnmany flight - Mannheim drop card, v. f. ............ 6.00 Z67 - 1929 Interrupted American Flight, v. f. card with C36. ............................ 4.00 Z67 - 1929 Interrupted American flight, v. f. cover with C37. ................................ 4.00 Z72d - Round the World Flight, Lakehurst-Tokyo, cover, scarce. .................... 12.50 Z73 - Round the World Flight, Germany-Tokyo, good cover. ............................ 3.50 Z75 - Round the World Flight, Los Angeles-Lakehurst, fine card. .................... 2.00 Z75 - Round the World Flight, Los Angeles-Lakehurst, fine cover. ................ 2.00 Z76 - Round the World Flight, last leg, Sept. 1, '29, nice cover. .................... 3.00 ZBl - Oct. 13, l Holland flight, fine Amsterdam card. ................................ 3.00 Z82 - 1929 Balkan t, Bucharest drop card, v. f. ................................................ 6.00 Z82g - 1929 Balka reslau drop card, v. f. ................................................ 3.00 Z84 - Nov. 2, 1929, flight, v. f. card. ............................................................ 2.50 Z84 - Nov. 2, 1929, 6th Swiss flight, Zurich cover, fine. ........................................ 2.50 ZlOl - Spanish Flight, April 15, 1930, v. f. cover ............... ;..................................... 2.50 Z107b, 1930, Amez:ican Round Trip, Seville (cover)-Lkhst. ........ 7.50 Z107c, 1930, Amer~can R. T., cover, Seville-Seville, 343, 344 (2). 10.00 Z107d, 1930 American, v. f. Seville-Fried, Round Trip cover. .... 12.50 Zl75 - 3rd S. A. 1931, v. f. card. ............................................................................ 3.50 Z404 - 1st N. A. t, Hindenburg, v. f. card. ........................................................ 2.50 Z404 - 1st N. A t, Hindenburg, v. f. cover. .................................................... 2.50 Z442 - Sudeten Flight I..2-130, v. f. pictorial card. .................................................... 3.00 Z417 - 7th N. A. Flight, good but worn cover. ............................................................ 2.00 Z504 - Lakehu~-Bermuda, nice cover. .. .............................................. -................... 3,00 Z505 - 2nd Flight Lakehurst-Bermuda. ...................................................... . 2 00 Z506a - Return Flight of above, cover with 3 line cachet ................... :::··:······ .. ··· 3"00 Z507 - Lakehurst-Puerto Rico, nice cover ................ ~ .................................... ::.:::::::::::: 2'00 Z510 & Z511 - both Akron covers. .................................................................................... 1:50

I. S. GOODMAN - MAIL AUCTION - FEB. 17 ----

I. S. GOODMAN - MAIL AUCTION - FEB. 17 ----·

ZEPP FLlGHTS - FOREIGN DISPATCH Some o:f the :foreign dispatch covers below are among the rarest 'z'epp; covers. Not only are they scarce, but most o:f them are still abroad and seldom available in the United States. Values are estimated net prices.

98 Z109c - Europe-Pan American Flight, Rio Dispatch, v. f. cover with San. Cll (2) stamps ($6.00 each) ......................................................................................... $25.00

99 ZllOn - Europe-Pan American Flight, Uruiuay dispatch, v. f. cover with Cl4, C18. .......................................................................................................................... .... 10.00

100 Z180 1st S. A. Flight, 1932, Greece dispatch, v. f. card. .................................... 4.50 101 Z200 1st. S. A. Flight, 1933, Tangier dispatch, v. f. cover; rare, 501-504 (3ea) 12.50 102 Z200 - 1st S. A. Flight, 1933, Eritrea dispatch, v. f. cover with fine frank. 7.50 103 Z200 - 1st S. A. Flight, 1933, San Marino disp. with #137, Cll, C12 ($8.00). 15.00 104 Z200 - 1st S. A. Flight, 1933, Albania dispatch, v. f. cover. ................................ 8.00 105 Z201 - 2nc S. A. Flight, Rhodes dispatch, v. f. rare cover with #7-22. ............ 12.50 106 Z202 - 3rd S. A. Flight, Eritrea dispatch, v. f. cover. ............................................ 8.00 107 Z202 - 3rd S. A. Flight, 1933, Malta dispatch, v. f. cover, with 169, 172, 180. 12.50 108 Z203 - 4th S. A. Flight, Cyrenaica dispatch, v. f. cover with CB-11 ........ """'" 10.00 109 Z213 - Italy Flight, Eritrea mail, v. £. card. ................................................................ 7.50 110 Z213 - Italy Flight, Gibraltar dispatch, v. f. card. ................................................ 5.00

BID SHEET

I. S. GOODMAN Box 133 Bloomfield, New Jersey

BID SHEET BID SHEET

In accordance with your Terms of Sale, I am listing below the highest prices I agree to pay for each of the lots listed at your mail sale auction to be held or.

February 1'1, 1951

it being understood that these lots will be sold to me below these limits if the sale permits, for wl-Jich I will make payment not later than ten days after re­ceipt of lots.

SIGNED ............................................................................................... .

ADDRESS ........................................................................................... .

CITY ........................................ ZONE ........ STATE ................... .

SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP · ...................................... '" .................. ""

Lot# ......... . Lot# ......... . Lot#

Lot# .. Lot # .,, .. ,,,,, ..... Lot #

Lot# Lot # ,,,, .. ,. .......... Lot #

Lot# Lot # .... .,. ............ Lot #

Lot# .. Lot # ................... Lot #

Lot# Lot # •>•••••u••••••••• Lot #

J ... ot # Lot# ........ .. Lot#

Lot# ......... . Lot# ......... .

I. S. GOODMAN - MAIL AUCTION - FEB. 17 ----·

. , .

The National Philatelic Museum ~HILADELPHIAi PA. ', ..

In conjunction with the

International Airposl Exhibition and the

American Air Mail Society Convention Ha!J i.ssued a special edition of its

MUSEUM BULLETIN This large 190 page book is a veritable handbook of Airpost Collecting

-a proud and useful addition to every collector's Library.

Price: $1.00 Post Free, if a Member of the

American Air Mail Society $2.00 Post Free, to Non-Members

. Address: ·

National Philatelic Museum BROAD &: DI.AMOND STS. P:EULA_DELPHIA 22, PA.

Supplements To The American Air Mail Catalogue 194 7-1950· Edition

• Supplements to this Catalogue will appear regularly in THE AIRPOST fOURNAL. Users possessing additional information for listings or correc-­tions are asked to communicate with the appropriate Section Chairman. A list of such Chairmen will be found at page 600 of Volume One and at page 624 of Volume Two.

The Catalogue is aavilable from most Philatelic dealers or from THE AMERICAN AIR MAIL CATALOGUE, Albion, Penn'a at $4 per volume, plus 27 c postage East of Chicago, 38c West of Chicago, 50c foreign for each volume.

- Twenty-Ninth Supplement -•

UNITED STATES CONTRACT AIR MAIL ROUTES

• AIR MAIL ROUTE NO. 20

• REVISED ROUTE NO. '1

• WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. ADDED

November 1, 1949

IV-V

American Airlines added White Plains, N. Y. to Revised Route No. 7 on the above date. An attractive official cachet, showing a sketch of the portico of the Federal Post Office Building, was provided.

WHITE PIAINS, 'N. Y.

Cachet-Type 20t Pilot-C. R. J'ohnson

20W66 White Plalna-(blue)-Johnson 1l>JC66 White Plains-(blue)-Jobnson

Type 20t

(3855 pieces) ( 565 piece.a)

.. AO

JANUARY. 1951 · H9

AMERICAN.AIR MAIL C.ATALOCUE .. S.UPP.LEMENT~Cont.

AIR MAIL ROUTE NO. 81

• AMARILLO- WICHITA

September 15-16. 1949

Carrier: Central Airlines, Inc .

• AMARILLO - WICHITA

Although Central Airlines, Inc. was authorized to operate feeder service in the states of Texas and Oklahoma on November 27, 1946, it was not until September 15, 1949 that service was inaugurated. The initial service was on Segment #4 from Ft. Worth, Texas to Oklahoma City, Okla., serving six intermediate points. By a special Board rul­ing, Holdenville, Okla. was substituted for Wewoka on Segment #2 and #4; and, on short notice, the southern terminal of Segment #4 was changed from Dallas to Ft. Worth.

The southbound flight of September 15th was interrupted at Gainesville, on account of darkness, and operated on south, from Gainesville to Ft. Worrt;h, on September 16th. The Dallas Post Office inadvertently dispatched some first flight· covers on an earlier flight to Ft. Worth which received a Ft. Worth backstamp of Sept. 15 - 7 P. M.,. proper­ly dic;;patched covers should have a Ft. Worth backstamp of Sept. 16 - 6 P. M. Official map type cach~ts, with small pictorial insets, were applied at all points. ·

Cachet - Type 81

Pilots - Gordon Bourland, S. D. Turner.

Segment No. 4, Fort Worth - Oklahoma City

81Nl Ft. Worth-(green)-Bourland ( 1669 pieces) .25

81N2 Dallas-(black)-Bourland ( 796 pieces) .25

f. Airfield-( blue) ( 1023 pieces) .25

8182 Dallas-(black)-Turner ( 282 pieces) .25

f. Airfield-(blue) ( 120 pieces) 1.30

81N3 Gainesville-(magenta)-Bourland (1366 pieces) .25

81S3 Gainesville..,-magenta )-Turner ( 319 pieces) .50

b;l.N4 Ardmore-(black)-Bourland (1553 pieces) .25

8184 Ardmore-(black)-Bourland ( 472 pieces) .50

81N5 Ada-(purple)-Bourland (1209 pieces) . .25

i31S5 Ada-(purple)-Bourland ( 909 pieces) _ .50

(Continued on next page)

120 THE AIRPOST JOURNAL

AMERICAN AIR MAIL CATALOGUE SUPPLEMENT ~ont.

81N6 81$6 81N7 81S7 81$8

Boi.denville-(green)-Bourland Boldenville--(green)-Bourland Shawnee--(magenta)-Bourland Shawnee-(magenta)-Bourland Oklahoma City-(blU.:'!)-Bourland

SEGMENT NO. 2 - TULSA - DALLAS October lll, 1949

( 3402 pieces) ( 356 pieces) (3831 pieces) ( 385 pieces) (1152 pieces)

.25 .55 .25 .50 .25

On this date, service was inaugurated on Segment #2 from Tulsa, Okla., via Okmul­gee, Holdenville, and Durant, to Dallas, Texts. An unofficial cachet sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce at Okmulgee was applied to 329 southbound covers and 21 north­bound covers. Official map type cachets, with enlarged city names replacing the pictor­~al insets, were provided for all cities.

8189 81$10 81N10 81Sll

81Nll 81812 81Nl2 81Nl3

Cachet-Type 81 Pilots-Floyd Kinyon, W. A. Whitlock. Tulsa-(black)-Kinyon Okmutgee-(green)-Kmyon Okmu!gee-(green)-Whitlock Holdenville-( purple )-Kinyon Boldenville-(purple)-Whitlock Dura.nt-(blue )-Kinyon Durant-(blue)-Whitlock Dallas-(magenta)-Whitlock

f. Airfield-(purple)

(1823 pieces) ( 2056 pieces) ( 37 4 pieces) (3691 pieces) ( 299 pieces) ( 248 pieces) (2229 pieces) ( 1663 pieces) ( 1868 pieces)

SEGMENT NO. 3 - DALLAS-TEXARKANA October 15, 1949

.25

.25

.50

.25

.so

.55

.25

.25 .25

CC"ntral Airlines, on the above date, inaugurated service on Segment #3 from Dallas, via Greenville and Paris, to Texarkana. Official map type cachets, with pictorial insets as used on the initial service, were applied at all points.

Cachet-Type 81 Pilot-Ed Armstrong

81E13 Dallas-(green)-Armstrong . £. Airfield-(black)

S1W14 Greenville-( purple )-Armstrong 81El4 Greenville-(purple)-Armstrong

Paris-(magenta)-Armstrong Paris-(magenta)-Armstrong Texarkana-(blue)-Armstrong

81W15 81El5 81W16

( 14-02 pieces) (1699 pieces) ( 517 pieces) (1268 pieces) ( 225 pieces) (1580 pieces) ( 2038 pieces)

SEGMENT NO. 5 - OKLAHOMA CITY-WICHITA November lll, 1949

.25

.25

.30

.25

.65

.25

.25

Service over Segment #5 was inaugurated on November 10, 1949, serving four inter­mediate cities between Oklahoma City and Wichita. Arkansas City and Winfield, jointly used the Strother Air Field. Official map type cachets, revised to show Segment #5 and with different pictorial inserts for each city, were provided at all points.

1'1Nl'? 81N18 81S18 81Nl9 81$19 81N20 81$20 81N21 81$21 81S22

Cachet-Type 81 Pilot-Charles M. Smith Oklahoma City-(black)-Smith Enid-( purple )-Smith Enid-(purple)-Smith Ponca Clty-(blue)-Smith Ponca CitY-(blue)-Smith Arkansas City-(green)-Smith Arkansas City-(green)-Smith Winfield-( black )-Smith Wlnfield-(black)-Smith Wichlta-(magenta)-Smith

(2167 pieces) ( 5217 pieces) ( 630 pieces) (1549 pieces) ( 347 pieces) ( 1817 pieces) ( 1900 pieces) ( 1823 pieces) (1777 pieces) ( 1694 pieces)

.25

.25

.40

.25

.45

.25

.25

.25

.25

.25

JANUARY. 1951 121

AMERICAN AIR MAIL CATALOGUE SUPPLEMENTS-Cont.

SEGMENT NO. 1 - AMARILLO-TULSA November 15, 1949

Service over Segment #1 of this route was inaugurated by Central Airlines on :November 15, 1949. This service operated from Amarillo to Tulsa via Pampa, Woodward, Enid, Ponca City, and Bartlesville. Official map type cachets, with small inserts depict­ing some outstanding feature of each city, were applied at all points.

81E23 81W24 81E24 81W25 81E25 UW26 81E26 81W27 81E27 '-i1W28 81E28 81W29

Cachet-Type 81 Pilots-F1oyd Kinyon, Sam D. Turner Amarillo-( green)-Turner Pampa.-(black)-Kinyon ( 467 pieces) Pampa-(black)-Turner (1754 pieces) Woodward-(blue)-Kinyon ( 350 pieces) Woodward-(blue)-Turner (1480 pieces) Enid-(purple)-Kinyon (2650 pieces) Enid-(purple)-Turner ( 302 pieces) Ponca City-(magenta)-Kinyon (1239 pieces) Ponca City-(magenta)......:Turner ( 314 pieces) Ba.rtlesville-(green)-Kinyon (1489 pieces) Bartlesvllle-(green)-Turner ( 304 pieces) Tulsa-(blue)-Kinyon (1753 pieces)

ADDITiON OF SHERMAN (DENISON), TEXAS January 16, 195-0

.25

.50 ;25 .40 .25 .25 .50 .25. .50 .25 .55 .25

On .January 16th Sherman and Denison, Texas were added to Segment #2 of AM-81 between Durant and Dallas. Denison received service through the Sherman Municipal Airport. Official map type cachets, similar to those previously used for Segment #3, with enlarged· city names instead of pictorial inserts, were provided for both cities.

81N30 81S30 81N31 111831

Cachet-Type 81 Pilots-James L. Smith, Sam D. Turner Sherman-(green)-Turner Sherman-(green)-Smith Denison-(black)-Turner Denison-(black)-Smith

u. S. FOREIGN AIR MAIL

• CONTRACT

ROUTES

(2235 pieces) (1006 pieces) ( 1277 pieces) ( 458 pieces)

XII-B FOREIGN AIR MAIL ROUTE NO. 24

• FIRST SERVICE - NEW YORK TO HAMBURG, GERMANY

AND RETURN

March 5-7, 1950

.25 .25 .25 .35

Effective on the above date, New York first dispatched to Hamburg, Ger­many. No cachet was used but some covers were returned bearing a typed cachet appropriate to the flight.

Cachet-None Pilot-0. B. Whitmore

F24-56 F24-56F F24-57

New York-Hamburg, Mar. 5-6, (no cachet) New· York Airfield-Hamburg, Mar. 5-6, (no cachet) Hamburg-New York, Mar. 7-9, (no cachet)

(Continued on next page)

3.50 3.50 5.00

122 THE AIRPOST JOURNAL

AMERICAN AIR MAIL CATALOGUE SUPPLEMENTS-:.Cont.

FIRST SERVICE BOSTON TO HAMBURG AND RETURN April 30 and May 6, 1950

On April 30, 1950, Boston and Airfield made first dispatches to Hamburg, Germany. No cachet was used on mail carried in either direction but the A. 0. A. Station Agent at Hamburg applied a typed cachet on return flight covers which read, "First Air Mail Flight via Route FAM 24 - American Overseas Air~ines, Hamburg, Germany to Boston, Massachusetts. Flight 145, May 6, 1950."

Cachets-None Pilot-R. B. Keeton

F24-58 Boston-Hamburg, Apr. 30 - May 1, (no cachet) 3.50 F24-58F Boston Airfield-Hamburg, Apr. 30 - May 1, (no cachet) 3.50 F24-59 Hamburg-Boston, May 6-7, (no cachet) 5.00

ADDITION OF DUSSELDORF-COLOGNE, GERMANY September 2, 1950 .

On the above date, New York and Boston and respective Airfields made inaugural dispatches to Dus&eldorf, Germany. A cachet was also provided for mail intended for Cologne, Germany as this city also received service through the port of Dusseldorf at the time of the inaugural flight.

Type . F24f · Type. F24g

Cachets--New York and Boston and Airfields: Type F24f and F24g, with appropriate change in wording; Dusseldorf, box type cachet_ inscriped "FIRST FLIGHT :.....; AMERICAN OVERSEAS AIRLINES - DUSSELDORF - NEW YORK - September 1, 1950." · ,· · ,

Pilot-William H. Fish. F24-60 New York-Dusseldorf, Sept. 2-3, (red). (1226 pieces) .75 F24-60F New York Airfield-Dusseldorf~ Sept. 2-3, (blue). (1056 pieces) .75 F24-61 Boston-Dusseldorf, Sept. 2-3, (green), (1019 pieces) .75 F24-61F Boston Airfield-Dusseldorf, Sept. 2-3, (purple). (1007 pieces) .75 F24-62 New York-Cologne, Sept. 2-3, (purple), (1358 pieces) .75 P24-62F New York Airfield-Cologne, Sept. 2-3, (green*) (1094 pieces) .75 F24-63 Boston-Cologne, Sept. 2-3, (blue) (1095 pieces) .75 F24-63F Boston Airfield-Cologne, Sept. 2-3, (red) { 941. pieces) ,.75 F24-64 Dusseldorf-New York, Sept. 1-3. (red) 2.50 ·( *) The New York Airfield-Cologne cachet is also found applied in blue; green was the

officialy designated color.

JANUARY, 1951 123

AMERICAN AIR MAIL CATALOGUE SUPPLEMENTS-Cont.

WITH THIS FLIGHT THE SERVICES OF FAM-24 WERE TERMINATEJ:?. ON SEPTEMBER 25, 1950, AMERICAN OVERSEAS AIRLINES WAS. PUR­CHASED BY PAN AMERICAN WORLD AIRWAYS AND SERVICES FOR­MERLY CERTIFICATED UNDER F. A. M. 24 AUTOMATICALLY BECAME F. A. M. 18 SERVICES.

• FOREIGN Al R MAIL ROUTE NO. 34

• EXTENSION TO ASUNCION, PARAGUAY

March 6, 1950

Add following listing, inadvertently omitted: F34-19 Asuncion-Houston, Mar. 8-10, (no cachet). (**)

ROUTE COMPLETED TO BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINE May 29, 1950

2.00

On this date Braniff inaugurated the final link in its route to Buenos Aires, Argentine with stops at Colon, C. Z. and Lima, Peru. The majority of covers from Buenos Aires Sr{; on Company prepared envelopes but some bear an unofficial cachet similar to the one used on F. A. M. Route 5-A express service covers as illustrated en page 653 of the Catalogue. In order to drama­tize Braniff's through servke between Buenos Aires and Chicago these covers were carried through to and backstamped at Chicago, j:ine 1, 1950.

Cachets-Houston and Airfield, Type F34a, inscribed as to destination and containing the national flag cf the Argentine.

Pilot-T. 0. George. F34-25 Houston-Buenos Aires, May 29-31, (magenta) ( 1704 pieces) .50

li'34-25F .Roust.on Airfield-Bu.,nor Aires, May 29-31, (blue) . ( 863 pieces) (*)

.50 F34-26 Balboa-Buenos Aires, May 29-31. (no cachet) 1.50

2.00 F34-27 Lima-Buenos Aires, May 29-31, (no cachet)

F34-28 Asuncion-Buenos Aires. May 30-31, (no cachet). 1.00

LOO F34-29 BuenC's Aires-Houston (Chicago), May 31-June 1, (no cachet).

(*) Some covers were postmarked from Balboa Airfield.

U. S. Airpost Stamps Bring High Prices

• A. group of United States air mail

stamps in complete sheets sold at high prices in the Dec .. 5-6 auction of Hanner, Rooke & Co.

On the first day of sale, when the auctioneers were offering 171 complete U. S. Sheets, comprising the collection

of Ralph H. Blum o.f Beverly Hills, a set of Zeppelin sheets,. Nos. Cl3:-15, was bought for $3,100 by a collector who bid from the floor. This entire collection of sheets brought $12,854.

Sheets of 100 of the 24c airmail stamps of 1918 ar,d 1923 realized $310 and $420. Three sheets of the 50c Zeppelin stamp of 1933 brought $270, $310 and $250.

A bid of $1,000 took the horizontally imperforate sheet of the 6c blue and car­mine airmail stamp (No. C23a).

~Mrnl~~~ ~rn M~ll ~~~IH~ A Non-Profit Corporation

Under the Laws or Ohlo Or,Ja.nlzed 1923

Incorporated 19H

SECRETARY CLAUDE w. DEGLER

2114 North 49th Street Milwaukee 8, Wisc.

TREASURER

JOHN J. SMITH Ferndale & Emerson Sts.,

Philadelphia 11, Pa.

SALES MANAGER

ALTON J. BLANK

1089 Winston Bd., South Euclid 21, Ohio

PRESIDENT GM.CB Colm.A.TK

P.O. Boxlll8 Albton. Pa.

ADVISORY BOAB.D

(Farmer Presidents) HARRY A. TRUBY WILLIAM R. Al..Lgy

GroRCE W. A.NcERS

HERBERT H. GluFFIN

L. B. GATCHELL

RICHARD L. SINCLEY

GEORCE D. KINcooM

M. 0. WABNS

VICE-PRESIDENTS

ALTON J. BLANX ADM. JESSE G. JOHNSON

SoL GLAss RAFAEL ORIOL

DIRECTORS ATTORNEY ALBERT N. BROWN GEORCE D. KINGDOM

California

. LoUISE DAVIS HOFFMAN CHAPTER CHAIRMAN New York FLORENCE Kl.EJNERT

J. P. V. HEINMULLER New York

HISTORIAN-RECORDER

ERNEST A. KEim :KARL B. WEBER

New York DIRECTOR OF

THEODORE LIGHT FOREIGN RELATIONS

Illinois DR. MAX KRONSTEIN

PERHAM c. NAHL AUCTION MANAGER

IU!nois

JAMES WOTBEBSPOON ADM. JESSE G. JOHNSON

Cardinal Point Great Britain Norfolk 8, Va.

ADVANCE BULLETIN SUP'I. EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT GRACE CONRATH

The Airpost Journal, Albion, Penn'a.

The Advance Bulletin is sent reg­ularly by the manager only to those members who are in good standing and provide a supply of self-addressed regulation GQvernment Postal Cards.

Each ·member is entitled to two 25-word Exchange Notices per year in the Official Publication, without charge. Address direct to the publication office at Albion, Penn'a.

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION THE AmPOST JoURNAL

Published monthly and sent to all members in good standing.

SECRETARY'S REPORT •

NEW MEMBERS 3683 Dethier, F. M., cl o Service des A. I. M. 0., Coquilhatville, Congo Belge, Africa

3684 Ropp, J. A., 600 E Crosby St., El Paso, Texas.

3685 Edler, F. Herbert, 1750 Walworth Ave., Pasadena 6, Calif.

3686 Chandler, II, George M. 6185 Evanston Ave., Indianapolis 20, Ind.

JANUARY, 1951 125

NEW MEMBERS-(contJ 3687 Cross, J. C., 212 Buckhannon Ave., Clarksburg, W. Va.

3688 Pickering, J. K., 1423 Hamilton Ave., Palo Alto, Calif.

3689 Plohr, William F., 219 East 4th St., Brooklyn 18, N. Y.

3690 Lagerman, Francis G, 224 East 26th St., New York 10, N. Y.

NEW APPLICATIONS Richardson, Ed., 217 Columbia St., Ithaca, N. Y. Age 41. Personnel.Mgr. AM

AS SC PC HC FF GF CC CF Aero Postal Stationery of Canada. By Grace Conrath.

Manesiotis, Michael G., 60 Semicir St., Pittsburgh 14, Pa. Age 24. Contractor. AM­Comm. of Latin Amer. UC HC FF GF CAM FAM CF ID. By Grace Conrath.

Goris, 37 Rue de Berey, Paris i2, France. Age 62. Lyric Artist. AM AS. PC PB EL FF CAM FAM RP CC OF Z PIX By Earl H .. Wellman.

Fordham, Mrs. James D., 474 Lake Road, R. R. No. 3, Webster, N. Y.. Age 50. Housewife. AM AU UC U20 HC FF CAM FAM CC CF lD EX

. By Wm. T. Wynn,. Jr. Akerly, Dr. Guy W., Millord, Ill. Age 55. Dentist. AM AU FF CAM FAM CC

DC CF lD EX By Grace Conrath. Hooker, A. H., 419 Pecan St., P. 0. Box 511, Center, Texas. Age 42. Radio Sales .and

Service. AM AU UC CAM FAM lD CMC EX By Grace Conrath. Fatout, Oscar H., 314 Elm Ave., Long Beach, Calif. Age 59. Sign Writer. PC HC

PA PB FF GF CAM FAM RP CC OF Z PIX By Grace Conrath. Geer, L. Sherwood, 40 Forest Road, Tenafly, N. J. Age 57. Vice-President.

By Grace Conrath. Moyes, William E., P. 0. Box 16, Eatontown, N'. J. Age 30. TouriSt Camp Mgr. AM

U20 UC HC FF GF CAM FAM RP OF DC CF 1D EX. By Wm. T. Wynn, Jr. Coombs, George Woodrow, 289 Coverly Road, Lansdowne, Pa. Age 32. Accountant.

By Grace Conrath. Baadles, Dr. Ehner L., Ashland, Ill. Age 37. Dentist. CAM FAM lD EX

By Grace Conrath. Livingston, Fred W., 237 So. Caynga St., Ithaca, N. Y. Age-Legal. Salesman.

By John H. Harley. Clark, John C., 7410 S. W. Miles Place, Portland 1, Ore. Age 35. Shipping & Receiv­

ing Clerk. PC HC GF Canal Zone "RF" Overprints EX By Grace Conrath. Kraemer, Henry, 105 Delafield Ave., Staten Island l, N. Y. Age 55. Stamp Consultant.

AM PC HC FF PIX EX By F. W. Kessler.

NEW LIFE MEMBERSHIP L. M. 67 205 Charles G. Riess, P. 0. Box 11, Albany, N. Y.

CHANGES IN ADDRESS Alvev Correa, Alvaro, Caixa Postal 1577, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Austin, John E., Box 38, Vergennes, Vt.

126 THE AIRPOST JOURNAL

CHANGES IN ADDRESS---(Cont.)

Fitts, Frederick B., 47 Nelson St., Framingham, Mass.

Frame, Robert W., 21 Santillane Ave., Coral Gables 34, Fla.

Johnson, Hamilton M., 623 So. Lahoma St., Norman, Okla.

Kent, Lt. Thaddeus F., QMTTS Library, Fort Lee, Va.

Lefkowitz, Herman, 1435 Lenox Ave., Miami Beach 39, Fla.

Maier, Alfred D., 521 ~5th Ave., New York 17, N. Y.

Pag, Aage, 71 Jullandsgade, Fredericia, Denmark.

Peck, Frank W., 4811 Circle Drive, San Diego 16, Calif.

Sutton, James K., 341 MacLaren, Ottawa, Canada.

Walker, Douglas A., 21 MacMillan Ave., Cashmere Hills, Christchurch S. 2, New Zealand.

Welling, Jr., Lindsay H., c/o YMCA, No. Ervay St., Dallas, Texas.

Wight, Royce A., 708 - 14th St., Alexandria, Va.

RANDOM NOTES -(Continued from page 108)

• that it is impossible to take care of this type of request, so we have to be guided by some sort of a policy."

Surely, this Airline has done all that could be expected of it and more, too, and we now find that their courtesy ar­rangement which had been set up for the benefit of the individual collector must now be eliminated because of the actions of a few. We cannot say that we blame them at all, but all collectors should see in the forced action of TWA a salutary lesson for the future and for their rela­tions with other Airlines. We feel cer­tain that TWA does not intend to destroy any covers which may in the future be sent in their care, but will have to resort to the perfectly legal procedure of in­structing their Station Agents to refuse to accept such mail when sent in their care.

"' "' "'

glad to report that following a success­ful operation Mrs. Truby is on .the road to recovery ... We have just received the 1951 edition of the Annual Price and Check List of Used Airmail Stamps pub­lished by George Herzog, Inc., 68 Nassau Street, New York City 7, N. Y. The price of this list is 50c which amount may be deducted from the first order of $5.00 or more . . . Our friends the Flying Boes­mans of the Hague have been at it again and we are now in receipt of two addi­tional flown balloon cards, one carried in Germany on the 50th Anniversa;y of the first flight of the Zeppelin LZl on Octo­ber 29, and another carried in the first balloon flight from Algeria, which was performed on November 26 of last year ... We also thank Mr. F. Jacobi of Cara­cas, Venezuela for a first day cover of the new Lake Maracaibo air mail set . . .

And so to bed!

• VOLUME II NOW READY

NOTES BY THE WAY: We learn ORDER FROM YOUR FAVORITE with regret of the serious illness of the wife of Harry A. Truby; however, we are DEALER TODAY - $4 plus postage

APJ ADS RATES:

. THR~E. CENTS PER WORD per inser­tion. Minimum charge 50 cents. Remittance must accompany order and copy. The :::::~.ST JOURNAL, APJ Ads, Albion,

6:J& AIRMAIL KN V .t:LOPES, l:IARBEH Pole design. 24 lb. Parchment Stock, 100 per cent rag content. $11.00 per thousand postpaid. Samples Ten Cents. Milton Ehrlich, 76-29A 167th Street, Flushing, New York. Member AAMS. , 244-6t•

199 WHOLESALE ADS IN EVERY ISSUE of "Stamp Wholesaler" - World's Largest Stamp-Trade Journal! 21 issues $2. to stamp dealers only. Address: Stamp Wholesaler, Box 284, Burlin&ton 10, Ver­mont. 241-12t•

AAMS EXCHANGE ADS

WILL EXCHANGE FIRST FLIGHTS OR dedications for mint US or airs. Frank Herget, 92 Arden, Buffalo 15, N. Y. Ex-lt

WILL TRADE THE ALL AMERICAN, Singer Canary, for stamps, air mail pre­fered. Want a Graf Zep ($2.60) canceled. Mrs. E. L. Servoss, 1004 North St., Peoria 5, Illinois. Ex-lt

HAYTI-NYBRA COVERS 1930; PORT AU l'RINCE to various; also other Hayti -Trade for U. S. stamps. Rubin, 6509 Del­mar, University City, Me. Ex-lt

I WISH TO EXCHANGE COMMEMORA­TIVES and air mail stamps used. Basis Yvert. Magazines. Bartolomeu de Oliveria, Caixa Postal 47, , Joao Pessoa, Paraiba Brasil. Ex- lt

AIRPOST STATIONERY. AIR LETTERS, Air Cards, all types wanted in exchange against your needs, merchandise, etc., ar­ranged also. J. Barchino. Brantford, Ont., Canada. Ex248-2t

SPECIALIST DESIRES PHILIPPINE AND Israel First Day and First Flight Covers, stamps, sketches, and proofs. On approval only. Ben Zimmerman, 615 Darien Way, San Francisco, Calif. Ex- lt

AGAINST USED AIR 11.1AILS I GIVE Used Air Mails of Paraguay. 'Basis Scott 50. No want lists. Dorothy de Gates Cruz Chica CBA, Argentina. 'Ex-lt

WANTED EARLY FIRST DAY COVERS 1919-1930 U. S. only. Contact me if you h!'ve some. Charles A. Koehler, 2916 Mac­kinaw Street, Saginaw, Michigan. Ex248-2t

WANTED - ODD, UNUSUAL, ESPEC­IALLY cachet color variety CAM covers. Buy or exchange for CAM or other cov­ers. Chas. G. Riess, P. 0. Box 11. Albany 1, N. Y. Ex248-2t

EXCHANGE COMPLETE MATCHED plate block commemorative collection fr<;>m . 1944 for what have you? Lloyd H. Fhckmger, Riverdale, North Dakota.

Ex-lt

AAMS EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT

BUY SELL WANT LISTS

WILL EXCHANGE 7x50 POWER BINOC­ULARS for U. S. Historical and first flight covers. Irving Pistiner, 27 Chatfield St., Springdale, Conn. Ex-lt

WANTED - CAM AND FAM COVERS -will exchange HPO, flights, airport dedi­cations, first day covers, etc. Even ex­change, catalogue basis. Jerry Jarnick, Almond, Wisconsin. , Ex-lt

WILL SW AP "EVEN STEVEN" YOUR mint U. S. against your want list. Harvey Dolin & Co., 31 Park Row, New York 7, N. Y . Ex-lt

WANTED - PIONEER COVERS, AVIA­TION Photos, 1910-1920. Also ship covers, 1800-1920. Will swap air mail and ship cov­ers. Comdr. Murch, 1307 Poplar, Annapo­lis, Maryland. Ex248-2t

STILL NEED CRASH COVERS FOR MY collection. Will trade or purchase. Need other covers, too. Joseph Eisendrath, 2394 No. Deere Park Drive, Highland Park, Ill.

248-Ex-2t

NOW IS THE TIME TO SECURE F. A. M., C. A. M., H. P. 0. and F. D. covers. Will exchange for U. S. mint blocks, or what have you? E .. L. Hastry, Halethorpe 27, Maryland. Ex249-2t

WILL EXCHANGE WORLDWIDE USED Air Mails singles and mint in complete sets for what used I need. Harry Reichen­thal, P. 0. Box 73, New York 60, N. Y.

Ex249-2t

HAVE 150 DIFFERENT FOREIGN V­Mails (airgraphs), thousands Foreign air­mail and Zeppelin covers, exchange for o .. g. U. S. commemoratives. Davis, 18 Lmgdale Rd., West Kirby, Cheshire, Eng­land. Ex248-6t

EARLY AND MODERN U.S. AND FOR­EIGN air labels and ail souvenir sheets of France. Ask for my list. Joseph J. Lohr, 1447 Minford, New York 60, N. Y. Ex249-1t

SEND M~ YOUR MINT A,IR MAIL SETS, and. I will s'O'nd you others in exchange. Basis Sanabria, Scott, Yvert. Francisco J. StraJ:<y, Huelfein 112, Cordoba, Rep. Ar­gentma. Ex249-2t

STAM?LESS COVERS, 1756-1856 WANTED for Air Stamps. H. M. Konwiser, 181 Claremont Ave., N. Y. 27, N. Y. Ex249-2t

EXCHANGE USED AIR MAIL STAMPS of World - 1 to 5 of each kind. Frank J. Zeltman, 719 Bay Ridge Ave., Brooklyn 20, N. Y. Ex249-2t

WANTED: U. S. A. CIGARETTE CARDS FDC's. cac~eted . blocks only, before 1947: ~ceamc First. ~hghts. Will give mint. used air letter British Colonies. R. Kahn, 1330, 45th Street, Brooklyn 19, N. Y. ,Ex-lt

A_ FINE LOT OF (THE ALL AMERICAN Smgers) Canaries for trade in stamps What i:iave .YOU. I am in need of the $2.sO used ai~mail Graf Zeppelin. Also the $5.00 Columbia (use~). Mrs. E. L . Servoss 1004 North St., Peoria 5, Illinois. 'Ex-lt

The Airmail Auction • • • of the year

Each year we accumulate the finest collections and offer them in one Outstanding Auction Sale. This year we offer various col­lections, the most outstanding of which are:

The World-Famous Gold Medal Collection of

MR. J. J. KLEMANN, JR. containing the finest collections of

U. S. Pioneers - Trans-Oceanic Flights - Hil'torical Flights Governmental Flights . - Zeppelin Flights

---·---A highly specialized and very extensive collection of

COLOMBIAN REPUBLIC Property of Mr. C. L. Nichols of Bogota.

19th and 20th Century, Scadta Issues, etc.

---· - --A COLLECTION OF CATALOG NO. I AIRMAIL STAMPS

USED ON FLOWN COVERS.

Property of Mrs. Mary E. Lane of Ocean Grove, N. ].

Also various other collections containing:

Mint Airmail Stamps - · Used Airmail Stamps

Roosevelt Collection, including full sheets

Foreign Pioneer Stamps on Cover Trans-Oceanic Flights

and other material

Property of Messrs. H. BARTLING, ROBERT G. FISHER,

CARL MANGOLD and others.

AUCTIONS WILL TAKE PLACE IN FEBRUARY Write now for free illustrated Catalog.

F. W. KESSLER 500 FIFTH A VENUE NEW YORK 18, N. Y.

I I I