It's a bird. It's a plane. It's cigars with wings dropped by York-based promoters.

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Barnstormer Karl Ort and sales manager Ray Paris used the novelty of aviation to sell their company's cigars.

In the early days of flying, the York-based pair, tooling around in their DeHavilland plane, tossed cigars attached to parachutes to would-be customers on the ground.

This story with an enlarged photograph of Ort and Paris with their Manchester Cigar Co. DH6 is part of a transportation exhibit at the York County Heritage Trust's Agricultural and Industrial Museum. For additional details on the early years of York County aviation, see http://www.yorktownsquare.com/2006/11/post-1.html.

The exhibit tells the rest of the story... .

To gain attention, the pair sometimes dropped firecracker bombs, designed to explode in mid-air, from their Havana Cadet.

In one drop over Binghamton, N.Y., the firecrackers did not explode until they reached the ground.

Police noticed, and exacted a deal when the York County men landed their craft.

The aviators were ordered to distribute 100 cigars to the police force as payment.

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This page contains a single entry by Jim McClure published on November 26, 2006 4:03 PM.

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