
Apparently it isn't just Tangel who has eye's bigger than her pocketbook. Here's Gene Catlow oogling an aircar (or D-grav) belonging to Tangel'.
(The D-grave is rather primative compared to Saara's Kjola technology, but it still floats and that's gotta be cool!)
The car has appeared in a couple of drawings of mine, from rather a long time ago. The stickers in the rear loading area windows are places I've been in the days I did a lot of travelling. (By regular car of course.)
(The D-grave is rather primative compared to Saara's Kjola technology, but it still floats and that's gotta be cool!)
The car has appeared in a couple of drawings of mine, from rather a long time ago. The stickers in the rear loading area windows are places I've been in the days I did a lot of travelling. (By regular car of course.)
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Singing cowboys for a quarter, buffalo burger on the grill 24 hours a day, and free postcards of the miniature Mt. Rushmore!
When I was there I talked briefly with the son of the owner -- it was still a family business with the original pharmacy buried in the bowels of the vast Wall Drug complex. Do you recall *why* it was called Wall Drug? Or rather why the town it was in was called Wall?
When I was there I talked briefly with the son of the owner -- it was still a family business with the original pharmacy buried in the bowels of the vast Wall Drug complex. Do you recall *why* it was called Wall Drug? Or rather why the town it was in was called Wall?
The town of Wall North Dakota was founded on a location near some rim-rock -- a lengthy bit of exposed cliff-face -- that looked like a Wall. Might not have been far from where the Hole-in-the-Wall gang hid out, come to think of it. Hole (another town) was sited not far from where a part of the rim-rock broke down and you could ride up and over. There was a bit of a canyon associated with the hole, I think, where the bandit gang sat it out waiting for the heat to die down.
Maybe you can answer me a question. Remember in the early 1970s when Mattel's "Hot Wheels" decided to get away from the regular looking HO scale car designs and introduced their first four "Futuristic" models? I remember the Torino, the Twinmill, and the "Splittin' Image," but what was the fourth one called? (I like the windows on the back of this design by the way.)
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