If I only had wood and paper.. I could have a fleet of <somethings> to run!(Seriously, I'm quite lacking in the "rollingstock" department...)
Maybe put them in a display case, right above/below a set of "modern" equivalents.
-Dan
Builder of Bowser steam! Railimages Site
What ever you decide please don't pitch them. Some of those are few and far between. If nothing else email me with some photos and go from there
Mike
http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/showgallery.php/cat/500/ppuser/4309
See if the Howell Day Museum is interested. http://www.nmra.org/howellday/
I agree they shouldn't be dumped.
Enjoy
Paul
they are important because of the time, the WW2 period when certain materials like metals were sacrificed for the war so other hobby materials were used. A good modeler could pull good tricks on them and make them great models.
I have a few of them laying about here needing TLC or what to do with them.
I have an IC paper reefer that is just crude printing on flat cardboard and it is hardly worth keeping
However I also have some Santa Fe paper reefers where the paper was embossed for the wood sides and whoever assembled them really did careful work. The printing jobs were excellent. They show no warp damage at all. The detail parts are all metal. With new trucks and couplers on them I have no reason not to run them on my layout together with good plastic cars. They look fine.
Dave Nelson
Dave,
It's worth keeping too, as said before, it's most likely from WW2 era and are wourth preserving. As I also said before, if nothing else. Email me and we'll go from there, before you trash it.
Re: reklein's post...
Wow! A regular Viking funeral! Now there's an idea!
- B.
As it happens, Keith Wills' "Collectors Consist" column in RMC has been talking about wood/paperside cars in the last couple of issues, you might want to check it out.