Weird Universe Archive

September 2024

September 15, 2024

Heraldry of Fish

All that you'd ever want to know about fish, as they pertain to heraldry.

Available to read via archive.org.





Posted By: Alex - Sun Sep 15, 2024 - Comments (1)
Category: Signage, Fish, Books, Nineteenth Century

Follies of the Madmen #605



Posted By: Paul - Sun Sep 15, 2024 - Comments (1)
Category: Advertising, Cereal, Infantilism, 1960s

September 14, 2024

The Spider That Waged A Battle Against A Clock

I wrote this article about eight years ago for a site that has now gone dark. So I'm reposting it here.

The Internet has made many animals famous, such as Grumpy Cat, Darwin the Ikea Monkey, and Sockington the Twitter Cat. But as this brief list suggests, Internet-famous animals tend to be either pets or species that biologists describe as "charismatic" — meaning ones that people can easily identify with. Insects don't get much love.

This hasn't always been the case. If we look back to 1932, we find an example of a spider that achieved overnight celebrity status, with the media producing daily reports of its adventures. It's the curious case of the "spider in a clock."

The Spider First Noticed
The spider's rise to fame began on the morning of November 20, 1932 at 552 Parker Ave in Barberton, Ohio (a suburb of Akron). Louise Thompson rolled over in bed, turned off her alarm clock, and then noticed a "tiny black dot" moving across the face of the timepiece.

Closer examination by her husband, Cyril, revealed that the dot was a small spider. It had somehow gotten into the space between the face of the clock and the glass, and it was attempting to spin a web between the minute and hour hands. It succeeded in briefly attaching a fine thread of gossamer between the two hands, but as the minute hand slowly advanced the thread broke. No matter. The spider climbed up the face of the clock and began its effort all over again, only to have the thread broken for a second time. The couple watched as the spider continued to repeat this cycle over and over.

The next morning the spider was still there, still trying to build its ill-fated web. And it remained there the day after, and the day after that.

The Thompsons shared the story of the clock-battling spider with their neighbors, and soon people started dropping by to see it. Eventually, someone contacted the media.

Media Fame
By the time a reporter first saw the spider — around December 7, 1932 — the insect had grown to the size of an ordinary house spider, and the hands of the clock were covered with fine threads.

How had the spider managed to grow without any obvious source of food? And how had it gotten into the clock in the first place? These were the mysteries that the spider presented.

The reporter interviewed the Thompson's two children. Young tommy thought the spider was boring, but his sister, Mary Louise, was fascinated by it, admiring the way it kept at its task despite constant defeat. She said, "He must be awfully brave."

Wilkes Barre Times Leader - Dec 10, 1932



Evidently much of the American public agreed with Mary Louise, because after the first story about the spider (distributed by the Associated Press) appeared in papers, interest in the arachnid swelled. The media responded by providing daily details of its adventures.


More in extended >>

Posted By: Alex - Sat Sep 14, 2024 - Comments (1)
Category: Insects and Spiders, 1930s

Rowland Emett’s “Lunar Cycle”

Watch the video below the screenshot.

His Wikipedia page.







Posted By: Paul - Sat Sep 14, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Humor, Inventions, Rube Goldberg Devices, Cartoons, Space Travel, 1970s

September 13, 2024

First Alaskan Pipeline Oil

I wonder if anyone still has one of these sitting on their desk. I didn't find any for sale on eBay.

Los Angeles Times - June 1, 1978



About a year later it was selling for less than half its original price. Mustn't have been a lot of demand for it.

Salem Capital Journal - Oct 16, 1979

Posted By: Alex - Fri Sep 13, 2024 - Comments (4)
Category: Kitsch and Collectibles, 1970s

The Swamp in June



Posted By: Paul - Fri Sep 13, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Boredom, Nature, Vinyl Albums and Other Media Recordings, 1960s

September 12, 2024

Opal Dixon, the mouthwash bank robber

Mrs. Opal Dixon decided to start robbing banks because she was "tired of living without having money."

Her method was unusual. She would fill a syringe with mouthwash, enter a bank, and then brandish the syringe over her head while shouting that it was full of nitroglycerine and she would blow the place up if the teller didn't give her money.

She got away with this once and would have succeeded a second time if the police hadn't identified her later while she was walking down the street.

Decatur Herald and Review - Jan 23, 1947





Des Moines Register - Jan 23, 1947



Mansfield News Journal - Jan 23, 1947

Posted By: Alex - Thu Sep 12, 2024 - Comments (2)
Category: Crime, 1940s, Women

The Fantasy Circus League

We've all heard of Fantasy Football, where the amateur player gets to run a team. But how can that compare to the activities of the Circus Model Builders, where you get to run a circus?

Here's their homepage. In short, you pick an extinct circus and recreate it as a model.




Here's a great article about one young lad who earned a lifetime circus pass by doing so. You can go to the source if you want to increase the typesize for readability.



Posted By: Paul - Thu Sep 12, 2024 - Comments (1)
Category: Hobbies and DIY, 1940s, Circuses, Carnivals, and Other Traveling Shows

September 11, 2024

The Devon Octopus Invasion

Summer of 1950: A strange Cold War conspiracy theory circulated among fishermen in Devon. They attributed a large number of octopuses in the coastal waters to the presence of Russian trawlers "fitted with tanks containing octopuses," releasing the creatures near the coast.

Plymouth Western Morning News - Sep 28, 1950

Posted By: Alex - Wed Sep 11, 2024 - Comments (1)
Category: Fish, Conspiracy Theories and Theorists, 1950s, United Kingdom

Jailbait!

This text seems to be missing coverage of fully half of all possible juvenile delinquents. But why not see for yourself at the Internet Archive.



Posted By: Paul - Wed Sep 11, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Excess, Overkill, Hyperbole and Too Much Is Not Enough, Teenagers, Books, 1940s

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