This vintage shipping tag from M. Cohen & Sons, Wholesale Grocers of Pulaski, Giles County, Tennessee, represents a classic piece of 1930s commercial ephemera. The tag is printed in red and blue ink on sturdy beige cardstock, featuring a reinforced eyelet for secure attachment to shipments. The typography is characteristic of the era, with a bold, serif font announcing the company name and its wholesale grocery trade. The presence of the production code 25M-5-33 is a significant detail, with the M likely denoting thousand in printer's parlance, indicating a substantial print run of 25,000 tags produced in May of 1933. This dating places the artifact squarely within the Great Depression, a period where the logistical operations of regional wholesale distributors were vital to local economies. The tag's design, with its pre-printed TO field and blank lines, was intended for handwritten addressing, documenting the logistical chain of dry goods and provisions from a central wholesaler to retail establishments throughout the region. As a piece of Southern commercial history, it offers a tangible connection to the business practices of a family-owned enterprise in Middle Tennessee. The survival of this unused tag, with its clean fields and intact eyelet, provides a pristine example of the functional printed matter that facilitated trade and commerce, making it a valuable artifact for collections focused on mercantile history, Depression-era business operations, or the material culture of the American grocery trade.