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Dairy Photos For Ohio Milk Bottle Collectors ~ Bordens, Driggs, Willow Creek, Kelly's

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Joe Clevenger sent in these neat dairy photos and info, with this note:
"I found some Ohio dairy pictures on the net. I paired the photos up with what information that I had and thought I would send it to you.
Lou and I were always mailing stuff like this back and forth. Now that he is gone I will try to send it to you for the newsletter." -- Joe
We're all still sad about losing Lou McFadden, author (with wife Sue) of OHIO'S DAIRIES.


Since the dairy photos above are screen shots, the text is part of the image. Top to bottom, they are:

  1. Willow Creek Dairy
  2. Driggs Dairy in Toledo
  3. Borden's in Akron and Newark
  4. Kelly's Dairy in Newark

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Prince Rupert's Drop ~ Glass Blower's Magic Trick Captured in Slow Motion Video

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This glass blobby-string thing will blow your mind when you see it explode in slow motion.

Todd Knisely shared this awesome video about a glass blowing phenomena called a Prince Rupert's Drop.

Here's the video (newsletter readers will have to click here to watch it on youtube).


There's another video on the Corning Museum of Glass website, too. -- http://www.cmog.org/video/prince-ruperts-drop

Here's the description, but please - watch the videos. It is so cool. The words below can't even come close!

Smarter Every Day heads to a glassblowing workshop in Alabama to reveal the unique mechanical properties of the Prince Rupert's drop – a tadpole-shaped glass structure created by dropping molten glass in cold water.
As Destin demonstrates, the very high residual stress  within the bulbous end of the drop allows it to withstand a blow from a hammer. However, a slight touch on the drop’s tail will cause the whole structure to explode.
Filming in high-speed with a Phantom v1610  the team capture the explosion at100,000 frames per second to reveal, for the first time, exactly how the Prince Rupert drop explodes.
But why does this happen? With thermal imaging (and some mini-Destins!) we are shown how the cooling process sets up extremely high levels of compressive stress in the outside layers of the drop and extremely high levels of tensile stress on the inside..
As Destin explains:
"If one link in this tension chain is ever cut, it breaks on down the line feeding off of its own stored up energy just like a chemical explosion."
Mechanical strain energy is released in a phenomenon known as a "mechanical failure front". Shooting at 130,000 fps allows the team to measure the velocity of drop’s failure front at over a mile per second! 
Watch the video -- it'll explain it better, and be visually awesome.
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19th Century San Jose ~ In a Bottle ~ New Bottle Collecting and History Book by Tobin Gilman

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19th Century San Jose ~ In a Bottle ~ by Tobin Gilman

I wanted to share this new book for a couple of reasons. One, of course it's about bottle collecting. But I am really impressed with how nice it looks, and the fact that it is self-published. Very inspiring! All you historians, researchers, and writers should check it out. And of course you San Jose bottle collectors will enjoy it. Even non-San-Jose bottle collectors will like it, too -- lots of great photos.

Here's author Tobin Gilman's description:

 "19th Century San Jose In A Bottle," a historical view of daily life and commerce in San Jose, California in the 1800s, told through the prism of antique bottles from the area.

Available now, this book is packed with colorful stories and amazing photographs that take you back to the earliest days of San Jose. You will learn about the downtown druggists, the local breweries, the soda and mineral waters, and much more.

The glass bottles that San Jose's nineteenth century businesses used to package their products are spilling over with fascinating historical insights about the city's past that you won't learn anywhere else.

Follow us on Facebook to keep up with the books progress while learning some fun facts about a simpler time in San Jose."
Here's the Facebook page link -- https://www.facebook.com/19thCenturySanJoseInABottle

Here's the link to preview and buy the book. Gilman has used BLURB.com to self publish. Blurb is great, they have a program where you upload your book using their software, then you set your price, and post your book for sale on their site and they handle the payment and printing, and you get your commission.

Blurbs preview widget is very cool. You can flip through and see all the pages. Nice! Like I said, I'm feeling very inspired.

Here are a few screen shots -- go check it the rest of the book -- link.


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Rare Antique Folk Art Sand Paintings in Glass Bottles and Jars by A. Clemens

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The artist who created these beautiful bottles in the late 1800's was Andrew Clemens (1857-1894) of McGregor, Iowa, who was a deaf-mute.




"... It's estimated that of the hundreds of sand art bottles Clemens made during his regrettably short life (he died at age 37 or 42 depending on which account you read) only about 50 bottles remain. They are highly coveted by American folk art collectors for their ingenuity and beauty. Prices range from about $500 for lesser quality examples to as much as $25,000. Four bottles are on display at the Iowa State Historical Museum in Des Moines ..."


  • Sand painting is called Marmotinto.
  • The Victorian-era celebrated crafts, and took Marmotinto to the next level by putting the sand paintings inside bottles and jars.
  • Andrew Clemens was the undisputed master. 
  • The sand is tightly packed, but not glued. 
  • It could take the artist 3 weeks, or 3 months, or sometimes up to a year to complete one bottle.
 These antique glass bottles are filled with tiny grains of colored sand, all placed by hand, with what was basically a long-handled hook (see pic of tools at left). Absolutely amazing, right?!



 This really rare matched pair of sweetheart sand bottles Clemens made for Henry Reinken and his future wife Helen Wimmler, have an estimated value $25,000-35,000, according to Cowan's Auctions.


Find out more about Andrew Clemens, and see many more pix of his beautiful bottles in these informative sites:


You can go see some of Clemens' Sand Bottles on exhibit at the State Historical Society of Iowa Museum.





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Originally published on 'Tique Talk @ msdowantiques.com
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Naughty History of Valentine's Meat Juice in the Little Amber Bottle - Happy St. Valentine's Day, Antique Bottle Collectors

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You don't need teeth to enjoy Valentine's Meat Juice!


Aah, love. 

By Marianne Dow


Valentine's Meat Juice has true love as it's raison d'être. Mann S. Valentine Jr. was desperate to save his dying wife, Maria.

For weeks she had been unable to retain any nourishment, and Mann was distraught while watching his wife starve to death. Physicians could do no more. Valentine became persuaded that she needed juice extracted from meat, with its “strength-giving properties.”

He went down to his basement with a chemistry set, and with sheer determination and rudimentary knowledge from college courses, he worked to concoct a mixture to revive his wife. He worked night after night in the cellar, and on New Year’s Eve 1870, he administered to Maria the first batch of meat juice.

Mann’s elixir worked, and Maria recovered.

[Info from this Richmondmagazine.com article by Harry Kolatz Jr.]

The juice reached its greatest success and acknowledgment in 1881 when President Garfield said, after wounded from a bullet in an assassination attempt, that he breakfasted on Valentine’s Meat Juice along with toast and poached egg to get better.

In Mann's own words:






Read the full text of the advertising booklet pictured above, here. It is mostly testimonials. No photos.

A Valentine's Meat Juice bottle sits on a shelf at Boston's new Massachusetts General Hospital medical history museum (link). [Photo source]



The Valentine Meat Juice Company used 15 to 20 THOUSAND pounds of flesh from beef cattle a day to make the juice. 

Bottle collector Ed Faulkner shared this memory:
"One of the Richmond club members once talked to someone whose father had worked at the plant that produced the meat juice. It appears that there was always plenty of "squeezed" beef after the juice was removed & it was available to employees for free. Although they were dirt poor, the man said, they always had beef on the table!"






LOVE Potion -- It's The Oldest Profession

Valentine's Meat Juice came in this neat little amber bottle. It is pretty common,  and of little interest to bottle collectors, but it has another interesting and rather sordid history, as it turns out. It's connected with "The Oldest Profession", if you know what I mean. No, not butcher.


What bottle collectors will find interesting is that archaelogical digs around brothels found a great many VMJ bottles.
Prostitutes ate better and dressed better than their working class contemporaries. Some of their purchasing power, however, was spent on proprietary medicines such as Valentine's Meat Juice, promoted as a cure for sexually transmitted diseases, aka social diseases. "

But wait, there's more...

There's even more sordidness associated with this little bottle...
Valentine's Meat Juice figured prominently in a famous murder case. ''The Case of Mrs. Maybrick'' was written about in The Elements of Murder By John Emsley.

Apparently the Mrs. killed her husband by poisoning his Valentine's Meat Juice with arsenic!

And I used to think it was such a cute little bottle -- who knew? Well...Happy Valentine's Day, anyway!

ALL BOTTLED UP


It's about 3" tall, and embossed VALENTINE'S MEAT JUICE. Much harder to find with the paper labels:




Some other Valentine's Meat Juice collectibles:

Magazine ad

Dose glass

Chemist's invoice (source)


Mann S. Valentine

The Valentine Museum

According to the Valentine Museum, now known as the Valentine Richmond History Center (Virginia), Mann S. Valentine, Jr. (1824-1893), the museum's founder, made his fortune with the creation and production of Valentine's Meat Juice, a health tonic made from pure beef juice.


Mann shared his love of history with his brother, renowned sculptor Edward V. Valentine. Mann laid the foundation for the museum in 1892; when he died in 1893, he provided the original bequest for the Valentine Museum, leaving his personal collection of art and artifacts and the 1812 Wickham House.

The Valentine Museum, the first private museum in the City of Richmond, opened in 1898; Edward Valentine served as its first president from its opening until his death in 1930. In his own will, he left an incredible collection of his sculpture, papers, furniture and memorabilia to the museum that still bears his family name.

While alive, The Valentine's Meat Juice success provided Mann S. Valentine with more than enough money to do what he wanted. He collected art, and his home was a gathering place for artists.

Here are some photos from the museums collection that show Mann S. Valentine posing as different emotions. I end with these as I think it shows he was an interesting and emotional man, and it's easy to see how his love for his wife would have sent him down into his basement to create the magic potion that would keep her alive.

See more from this series of photos on the Richmond Museum's website here.





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Dr. Kilmer's Indian Cure / Navahoe Mineral Water / Charlie Ross Kidnapped in 1874 / Antique Vintage Bottles ~ Potpourri for February 2014

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Potpourri for February 2014

I Got the The Target Blues


FYI -- New blue jars and demijohn bottle at Target. -- http://www.target.com/p/threshold-blue-bubble-glass-vase-collection/-/A-14942422#?ref=tgt_soc_0000021112

Oh the Things You'll See and Learn... on Facebook!

Interesting tidbits and conversations from assorted Facebook bottle group page posts:

Good Medicine by Dave Dube

Artist Dave Dube shared his latest beautiful bottle-art creation, an Indian Kickapoo SAGWA medicine bottle drawn on an old receipt from the Montana Drug Company. Good luck in the March 2014 Western Heritage Art Show, Dave!

Here's another Indian themed bottle:

NAVAHOE
Kevin Cain posted this beauty, embossed with an Indian Chief's face, and just the word Navahoe (note the spelling). [Link to the FB-post] Speed-googler Jim Lockmiller found this label, so it's ''mystery solved''.


The labels says Navahoe Carbonated Water / Cedar Springs Hotel Co. / New Paris, Ohio.



New Paris is near Dayton, Ohio. The hotel was opened in 1875.




Postcards picturing the hotel:




Staying with the Indian theme...


Mike Holzworth shared his colorful Dr. Kilmer's Indian Cough Cure Consumption Oil tradecard [link to the FB-post], wondering what the bottle looks like. So, I googled some up.

Bottle photo source: Poisonous Addiction

  • AntiqueMedicines.com has a whole page devoted to Dr. Kilmer and his bottles, tradecards, and ads, where they show 2 other Dr. Kilmer's Indian Cure bottle shapes. 

This paper-labeled Dr. K's Indian Cough Remedy bottle sold on ebay in 2006 [Via Worthpoint's archive.]


  • See a collection of 13 different Dr. Kilmer's tradecards, including the above gem, on Tradecards.com/Kilmer.



  • Read some history on Dr. Kilmer from Digger Odell's site: "Dr. Andral S. Kilmer, the inventor of the Swamproot, set up business in Binghamton, New York in the 1870s. There he developed a line of proprietary medicines, pills and ointments."
Read more:

On Point ~ or ~ Diggers Delight

Anthony Savani shared the bottle shard arrowhead he made [link to FB-post]. He says glass knaps like flint. Check out some How To's.  

Another Kind of Nap 
~ or ~ 
Say It Ain't So, Charley! 

Noel Tomas shared this little 4" bottle saying just that it would be on 'Mysteries at the Museum'. So naturally, I had to google that!

Turns out the portrait on the bottle is ''Poor Little Charlie'', Charles Ross, the young boy who was kidnapped in 1874, just 4 years old, never to be seen again. His was the first kidnapping for ransom in America to receive widespread attention from the media.

The admonition to children "Don't take candy from strangers" came as a result of this sad but much publicized affair. The story goes that Charlie and his brother were enticed by two men to go with to them to buy candy. The men drove the boys to a store, gave Charlie's brother money and sent him in to buy the candy. The men then drove off with Charlie.

The kidnappers wanted $20,000 [$400,00+ today], and the ransom notes threatened Charley's life if the police got involved. Charlie's father couldn't afford the ransom, and turned to the police.

The kidnapping soon became national news. In addition to the heavy press coverage, some prominent Philadelphians enlisted the help of the famous Pinkerton detective agency, who had millions of flyers and posters printed with Charley's likeness.




Apparently there were several versions of the Little Charlie Ross souvenir/memorial bottles, too, since there weren't milk cartons yet. Today a missing childrens data base is named after Charlie: http://www.charleyproject.org/ .



A popular song based on the crime was even composed by Dexter Smith and W. H. Brockway, entitled "Bring Back Our Darling".

Several attempts were made to provide the kidnappers with ransom money as dictated in the notes, but in each case the kidnappers failed to appear. Eventually, communication stopped.

There were suspects, trials, some were jailed or died, no one ever knew for sure who did what. The family searched for years, spending 3 times the ransom money following leads, and dealing with 1,000's of boys (then young men) who claimed to be Charlie, but Charlie was never found.


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Troy Lee posted this carnival glass jar lid with an embossed eagle on it, not knowing what jar it went on. [Link to FB-post]Several folks joined the discussion. Lou Holis was first to mention the milk glass owl figural jar takes an eagle insert, but no one had seen the jar in carnival glass. Then Jim Eifler posted a pic of the milk glass insert. Which gave Marianne Dow enough info to be able to hit google and come up with this trio of ornate jars whose lids take fancy inserts. But still no carnival glass examples. Anyone out there have one?

These 3 jars sold as a lot for $480 @ Cowans Auction in 2007 [link]



Troy Lee shared a flask shaped blown bottle that was etched HFV on the base [link to FB-post], and wondered as to by whom and when the bottle was made. The ensuing discussion between the "resident experts" in the group informed us that the initials stand for Hale Farm and Village, which is part of the Western Reserve Historical Society in Clevelaland. They demonstrate the old ways of glass blowing, and sell the results. 




Justin Fox shared this JT SHINN / PHILAD. bottle, wondering what it held [link to FB-post], and a quick google told me it was possibly Chloride of Iron. 

James T. Shinn was a noted Philadelphia pharmacist - see bio below. 


Matthew Knapp pointed out it could have held Shinn's Dentallina.



The Bitter End... Almost 
or
Orange You Bitter Glad There's More?

Looking for more reading material? Peachridge Glass has a whole series of articles about different orange bitters bottles and labels. [Link to list.]
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Rare Cobalt Blue Farmacia Zambeletti Medicine Bottle / Milano Italy / History & Collectibles

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DR.LO. ZAMBELETTI / MILANO cobalt medicine bottle (photo from Mike Urbanski)

This beautiful bottle was posted on the Bottle Collectors Facebook page by Mike Urbanski. He was looking for any info about it. So, a-googlin' I went. [Link to the post.]



Sadly, there's no comma, so it's NOT from Milan, O., birthplace of Thomas Edison. Instead, it is from Farmacia Zambeletti.








Dr. Lodovico Zambeletti
Chemist & Druggist - Volume 40 - 1892

Farmacia Zambeletti was a very successful Italian pharmacy started in 1820 in Milan, Italy (Milano en Italia), by Cavaliere Zambeletti. It stayed in his family, eventually passing to our bottle's namesake, Dr. Lodovico Zambeletti, who continued to build the business into a large chain (which only just recently, in 2001, was bought by/merged with the giant international GlaxoWellcomeSmithKlineBeechamGroup monster corporation).

Merger info excerpt from an article about Zambeletti [in Italian here, and the English translation here]:

Found a fair amount of Zambaletti items online, esp. on ebay.it, but did not find another cobalt bottle, so I think we're safe to say it's not common.




Zambeletti pot crock from OintmentPots.com


Syringe and ampules boxed set from MedicAntica.com


Zamamina ad (from ebay.it) (and box from Delcampe)


1969 Zambaletti laboratory article.
Dropper bottle.

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The Other Rare Coca Cola Prototype Bottle Appears at the 2013 Indianapolis Bottle Show

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Photo Source: Joe Coulson, published in the Midwest Fruit Jar Club's newsletter. 
[Read the newsletter: PDF Link]

The Un-Coca-Cola Proto-type Bottle

Rarest of the rare: this one-of-a-kind Coca Cola Prototype Bottle was on display at the 2013 Circle City Antique Bottle Club's first show, held in September 2013 in Indianapolis, IN. (The Midwest club's newsletter has more show photos, and other interesting articles and bottle hobby news.)

This bottle was designed by Ray A. Graham, of Evansville, Indianawho owned Graham Glass Company. Here's the patent design drawing for the bottle shape, (click to enlarge) [Source] issued on Nov. 21. 1916.


The Coca Cola company's bottle design contest was held in 1916: 
"The firm contacted several glass
houses, offering a contest for the best
design for the Coca-Cola bottle. The
design had to be distinctive both to the
eye and the touch. This would replace
the bottles with straight sides and either
the bottler’s name embossed on the side
of the bottle, a paper label affixed to the
front, or both. Since the main method for
cooling bottles was to immerse them in
ice, the drinks were often not in plain sight
of customer, and the labels frequently
washed off as the ice melted. Coca-Cola
wanted a bottle that the consumer could
identify by touch alone."
This proto-type was made by Graham's bottling works, with the Coca Cola script embossing. 

As we all know, Coke went with the now-famous Earl R. Dean-designed hobble skirt, instead of Graham's design. 

While Graham's design wasn't chosen, his bottle making company did go on to make hobble skirt bottles for Coca Cola. 

That's Krempp on the left.

Thirsty for more info? You should read these:


  • History of the Coca Cola bottle -- The Dating Game: Tracking the Hobble-Skirt Coca-Cola Bottle by Bill Lockhart and Bill Porter -- PDF Link


  • Forum discussion of the prototype bottles with lots of links and info HERE on antiquebottles.net 


  • Forum discussion on the 1916 Coca Cola bottle design contest, where SodaPopBob has written a detailed report with vintage photos, about how this un-chosen bottle got out into the collector world: 

  • "It was also during the 1916 convention in Georgia that a George H. Krempp of Jasper, Indiana, whose family had been in the soda bottling since 1870 and a Coca Cola franchise bottler since 1910, reportedly "acquired" one of the non-winning bottles which apparently had been submitted by the Graham Glass Company. It is believed the Graham bottle is a one of a kind and is currently owned by Gary Salb, who is the great-grandson of George H Krempp." 


  • Book chapter excerpts on Graham Glass Company from The Graham Legacy: Graham-Paige to 1932 by Michael E. Keller


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    Bottle Collectors Digging March! Lions, Lambs, and Leprechauns on Vintage Labels

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    "March comes in like a Lion, and goes out like a Lamb." -- An old saying around since 1624.

    Apparently since glass containers are not allowed in the parades or out on the street, they use “go-cups”. Maybe that's why  I didn't find any Mardi Gras bottle labels. That still seems odd to me, from a marketing perspective. 



    "An extra yawn one morning in the springtime, an extra snooze one night in the autumn is all that we ask in return for dazzling gifts. We borrow an hour one night in April [now it's in March]; we pay it back with golden interest five [eight] months later." - Winston Churchill

    "In the Spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of... digging bottles." - With apologies to Tennyson


    "A narrow neck keeps the bottle from being emptied in one swig." - Old Irish Proverb


    Happy St Patrick's Day and Happy Spring to all you Antique Bottle Lovers!

    • 2014 Dates:
    • March 04 - Mardi Gras
    • March 09 - Daylight Savings Time starts.
    • March 17 - St. Patrick's Day
    • March 20 - Spring springs ~ yay!
    • March 31 - Out like a lamb...?

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    Better Babies Brought to You by Milk ~ How Advertisers Sold Us Bigger Fatter Milk-Fed Babies

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    GOT MILK?
    How did milk-fed babies became the chubby ideal? A  brief look at how the advertising industry sold us on bottle feeding our babies, and changed our image of what healthy looks like.

    The milk industry, and other advertisers sponsored the Better Baby Movement, using chubby blonde blue eyed babies in their advertisements to introducing baby formulas, promoting bottle feeding, changing America's baby nursing habits, according to Nature's Perfect Food: How Milk Became America's Drink by Erna Melanie DuPuis.









    All babies under a year old who are registered will receive a white felt pennant bearing Lima's slogan, "Better Babies, Better Homes, Better Communities".


    Excerpted from The Lima News March 4, 1916
    Better Babies Day Observance Plans Complete
    Program For Baby Week As Planned For Lima 

    BETTER BABIES 
    BETTER HOMES 
    BETTER COMMUNITIES. 

    The above is the official slogan for Baby Week celebration. 
    "Baby Week" was officially in augurated today, when Mayor B. H Simpson issued an official proclamation asking that all Lima citizens interested in making for children a better home and better place in which to live, link their efforts In a great educational campaign to give the baby his just deserts. 

    From now on until next Saturday, the greatest forces for good in the city will pull together to help mothers and fathers know more about their young children and the bringing up of the little ones in a way which will make them healthier boys and girls. 

    President Woodrow Wilson is heartily in favor of the plans put forth for the celebration of Baby Week in the United States. He thinks it is one of the greatest factors for good inaugurated. Governor Frank B. Willis has also taken up the good work and his proclamation regarding the celebration, has been issued. 

    All babies under a year old who are registered will receive a white felt pennant bearing Lima's slogan, "Better Babies, Better Homes, Better Communities". 

    These pennnts will be distributed at Baby Week headquarters at 213 West High street, for those not previously registered. Those babies already registered will receive a pennant through the mails, together with a pamphlet, "Save the Babies". 

    Pamphlets and booklets of scientific information from best authorities on the care of the baby may be had free of charge. Exhibits and charts showing facts concerning infant mortality, proper feeding and clothing, etc, will be shown, and will be on display all week. 

    Special conferences will be held on "Food and Feeding", and on "Milk". 

    The primary school will present a playlet, "Mother Goose Up to Date"; the grammar school will write essays on "The Clean Food Code", "The Milk Code"
    _____________________________


    Prizes for the HEAVY Babies


    Grandmother's Methods Made Prize Babies


    Even Rose O'Neill's Kewpies got on the Better Baby Bandwagon.


    For Better, or Worse?

    More on the Better Baby Movement:



  • Better Baby Contests: The Scientific Quest for Childhood Perfection in the Early Twentieth Century by Annette K. Dorey -- Beginning at state fairs where judging cattle was the norm, a unique campaign of "scientific" baby judging spread to towns and cities of all sizes across the United States in the early years of the 20th century. Infants were poked and prodded, weighed and measured, and then rated on a scale of 1 to 100, 100 being "perfect."


  • Read about the controversial aspects of these contests "creating" better babies as a form of eugenics.
  • Go even deeper into the subject here.

  • Originally published on 'Tique Talk by msdowantiques.com
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    Who is The King of Pain? Ohio's Porter's Pain Cure Story ~ Antique Medicine Bottles

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    W.L. Porter's Pain Cure Story ~ Antique Medicine Bottles ~ Lima Ohio Historyby Marianne Dow



    Porter's Pain Cure / W.L. Porter Lima, O. embossed medicine bottle, circa 1870s.



    Embossed Porter's Cure of Pain, Cleveland O. bottle.


    This Rundle Co.'s Porter's Pain King bottle is in the Smithsonian (but not on display). [Source]

    These later Rundle's Porter's Pain King bottles are pretty common without labels. Even the paper-labeled bottles don't go for much. It appears that most of the earlier Cleveland bottles, unlabeled, are also readily available, and don't go for much either. [Ebay completed listings.] 

    The knowledgeable collectors on the antiquebottles.net forum say "The Bundysburgh early pontil marked ones are the most rare ones." Makes sense.

    As a Lima bottle collector, I know the middle-Porter-era embossed Lima O./Porter's Pain Cure bottles are not common. And I'm still on the lookout for one with a paper label.

    So, there are at least 4 different bottles all with Porter's name and different towns: Bundysburg, Cleveland, Lima, and Piqua. There are probably embossing and label variations. When/if I come across more photos, I'll add them.

    But who is Porter?

    Will The Real Mr. Porter Please Stand Up?!

    In 1871, W.L. Porter sold his secret formula for Porter's Pain Cure to G. H. RUNDLE, who changed the name to Porter's Pain King when he (Rundle) set up production in Piqua, Ohio.

    More about Rundle below, but let's focus on W.L. Porter first:

    "W. L. PORTER, coal and oil merchant, Lima, was bornSeptember 15, 1832, in Washington County, Penn., son of William and Jane (Langan) Porter, of Pennsylvania, and a grandson of John Porter, who came from Ireland to America in 1770. 
    His father, William Porter, who was a miller by trade, came with his family to Ohio in 1836, settling in Parkman Township, Geauga County, where he died in 1852. William Porter's wife died in 1834 in Washington County, Penn. They were parents of three children now living: Elizabeth, John and W. L. [William]

    Our subject was educated in Geauga County, Ohio. He was for several years successfully engaged in the patent medicine business

    He was twice married, on the first occasion in I860, to Emma Harley, by whom he had one child—William Harley. Mrs. Porter dying in 1865, Mr. Porter remarried in 1873, Viella, daughter of B. P. Holmes, one of the early settlers of this county, and by her he has one child—Jane. [Harley lived in Cuba when Viella remarried after W.L.'s death.]

    Our subject came to Lima in 1870 and engaged in the drug business, and in 1872 he sold out his drugs and commenced the coal and oil trade, in which he now does a large business. 

    He is a F. & A. M., a member of the lodge at Lima." [Bio source]

    This may or may not be our W.L. Porter, in 1863: 
    "Lieut. W. L. Porter, Fifty-sixth Ohio Volunteers, and Lieut. James K. Reynolds, Sixth Ohio Volunteers, are announced as acting aides-de-camp to the general commanding, and will be respected accordingly.By command of Major General Rosecrans" -- [Source] THE WAR OF THE REBELLION: A COMPILATION OF THE OFFICIAL RECORD OF THE UNION AND CONFEDERATE ARMIES.
    Porter's Cure of Pain was sold to soldiers during the Civil War, according to CIVIL WAR - The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History: "Drugstores offered bottles of Porter's Cure of Pain to rid soldiers of stomach ailments."


    Also in 1863:
    "Wm. L. Porter, proprietor of Porter's Cure of Pain has removed from Bundysburgh, in this County, to Cleveland, where he has formed a co-partnership with M. D. Norris, under the name of W. L. Porter & Co. The firm appears as "Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Proprietary Medicines, Porter's Cure of Pain and Washing Blue... 128 Detroit St." He resigned from his job as Bundysburgh's postmaster. [Source]

    I don't know why Porter left Cleveland to come to Lima in 1870. Here he engaged in the drug business, and in 1872 he sold out his drugs and commenced the coal and oil trade, amongst many other occupations...


    In 1872, the First National Bank of Lima was founded, with W.L. Porter on the Board of Directors. [Source]

    Porter was also involved in newspaper publishing:

    "The Daily Republican, now in its third volume, was issued August 15, 1882.  It is a twenty-four column folio, well printed and edited.  This office is controlled by the Republican Printing Company, with Charles L. Long, Manager, and J. M. Windsor, Secretary.  W. L. Porter  is a member of this company." -- History of Allen Cty. / The Press


    In 1885, W.L. Porter was part of the management team for theLima Iron Fence Company. [Source]



    In 1886-87, Porter was President of the Allen County Mutual Fire Insurance Company. [Source]

    Porter also sold his Lima oil business interests:

    "A tourist going through the Central Oil Company's plant on Pearl street, will find everybody busily engaged with plenty of work to do. Since buying W. L. Porter's interests in the oil business, the Central has been constantly busy and their own business on the increase." -- The Lima News / Feb. 25, 1888

    In 1890, he was referred to in the Lima newspaper as "Ex-Standard Oil Magnate".



    In 1893, W.L. Porter was in a Masonic Lodge. --

    Proceedings of the Grand Council of Royal and Select Masters ..., Issues 63-65

     By Royal and Select Masters (Masonic order). Grand Council of the State of Ohio [Source]

    On Jan. 16,1894, the Lima Daily Times ran this classified ad, saying: 

    "The Grocery Stock of W. L. Porter and Co. will be retailed at assignee's sale. The public is cordially invited to visit the store and see the line of goods to be retailed. The stock must be sold and prices will be low. Terms cash. Isaac S. Motter, Assignee."

    When did he start a grocery business? No info found. 

    W.L. Porter was killed on October 17, 1896 in a gruesome assault: "Fatally Assaulted on the Street. Lima. Ohio, October 17. W. L. Porter, a prominent citizen, was assaulted, knocked down and his skull crushed on the street last night, presumably by robbers. The assailants are unknown." [Source]


    W.L.Porter's widow remarried in February 1901, and the wedding announcement said Porter had passed a few years earlier. I have not found his obituary yet.

    "At 2 o'clock this afternoon a quiet happy nuptial event which was of unusual interest in Society circles ocurred at the home of the bride, at Market and Cole Streets. The groom the Hon. George P. Waldorf, of Toledo, present Internal Revenue Collector for the northern district of Ohio and his bride was Mrs. Viella H. Porter, widow of the venerable William L. Porter, whose death occurred in this city a number of years ago." [Source]

    About G.H. Rundle:

    "The manufacturer of this valuable article is G. H. Rundle, who was born in Westchester Co., N.Y., in 1847; he led the usual life of a farmer's son, and obtained his education in the common schools of his native State; in 1871, he emigrated West, locating in Lima, Ohio, where he purchased the right of W. L. Porter to manufacture the Pain King; he was soon duly engaged in the chemical compounds, where he remained until five years ago, when he located in Piqua, Ohio, and now is filling large demands for his medicine; he has erected a complete laboratory, where he engages considerable assistance." [Source]


    Rundle's company is now called Porter's Products, and is still in business: "The original name was changed from Porter's Pain King Salve to its current name, due to a request from the FDA. The reference to liniment was made because this salve was formulated from the Porter's original product, liquid Porter's Liniment." [Source]

    Notes:

    1. From 1886 to 1900, the Lima Oil Field was the leading producer of oil in the world. [Source]
    2. At the onset of the 1880s, Standard Oil was known only as a refiner. Thanks to the Lima discovery, Standard would be the leader in crude oil production in the 1890s. [Source
    3. All the independent Lima area and other Ohio oil businesses eventually merged or soldout to become part of Rockefeller'sStandard Oil Company
    4. By 1885, there were, or had been, 17 Lima newspapers: Herald, Porcupine, Argus, Reporter, Western Gazette, Gazette, Daily Gazette, People's Press, Democrat, Sun, Moon, Allen County Republican, Daily Republican, Volkeblatt, Courier, Democratic Times and Daily Times. [Source]
    _______________

    Originally published as part of my Lima, Ohio history ''virtual museum'' on my 'Tique Talk blog @ msdowantiques.com
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    Ohio's Two Royal Crest Dairies ~ History by Joe Clevenger ~ Vintage Milk Bottles

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    THE TWO ROYAL CREST DAIRIES
    by Joe Clevenger

    #1 - Royal Crest All Star Dairy

    Oren G. Hoffman began his career in the dairy business in 1913 at the Molen Dairy Company of Dayton. He worked at the Molen Dairy until 1922 when he went to work at the Dayton Steel Foundry. By 1923 he was back to work at the Molen Dairy and he stayed there until 1927. After leaving the Molen Dairy he went to work for Borden’s of Dayton. Mr. Hoffman continued at Borden’s until 1930.

    The Royal Crest Dairy was founded by Mr. O. G. Hoffman in December of 1930. When the dairy started it was located in Englewood on the farm of Charles Wenger. This partnership lasted three years. As time went by the plant was moved to 3977 Salem Avenue. 

    The dairy made ice cream, cottage cheese and bottled milk. When the dairy began it employed seven people, but by 1966 the company employed one hundred and sixty people. In 1940 the company was incorporated as the Royal Crest Guernsey Farms.


    In 1956 Gene Cox and Pete Davis bought interest in Royal Crest. Gene had been a milk hauler since 1948. Gene continued hauling milk until his retirement in 1998. Also in 1956 Royal Crest began collecting milk by bulk instead of can. 

    Royal Crest was a member of the Golden Guernsey Association. This was because the dairy used mainly Guernsey milk. Guernsey milk is high in fat, but more importantly it is high in milk solids. Other dairy companies had to add powdered milk to increase milk solids. Royal Crest was also a member of the All Star Dairy Program which was a buying association. The association allowed small independent dairies the opportunity to buy supplies at a cheaper price.


    Over the years Royal Crest had various ways to promote their products. In 1956 Gene Cox bought a farm near Greenville on Route 121. Gene remodeled the farm so that it was a modern dairy farm that people could tour. Royal Crest had all of the school contracts for the City of Dayton. This amounted to four or five million dollars a year in business. The Dayton School Board wanted the students to know where milk came from. And so in the fall six to ten thousand Dayton students would be bused into Greenville to tour the farm and have a picnic in the front yard. Royal Crest would supply the milk and ice cream for the picnic. Royal Crest continued to use the farm for tours until 1969.

    In 1957 the next promotion was for Hopalong Cassidy. Hopalong Cassidy was flown in and met with the kids and Royal 
    Crest promoted their products to the children. In 1959 Batman was the next promotion. Gene Cox dressed up as Batman and 
    met with the kids and promoted Royal Crest products. In the early years Royal Crest bottled in glass, but by the late 1950s the company decided to get out of glass, and bottled strictly in paper. 

    In 1961 the P. D. Cosmos Company, of Springfield, and Sunglo Dairy, of Germantown, started a milk war in Dayton because to survive the dairies needed to increase volume. The price dropped from 79 cents a gallon to 19 cents a gallon. To compete in this price war Royal Crest started to bottle in one gallon glass jugs. By 1966 Royal Crest stopped bottling in glass again. It was more cost effective for Royal Crest to bottle in paper because the people of Dayton either would not return the bottle or would return them in a non reusable condition.

    As the years went by it became increasingly difficult for the dairies to survive. Royal Crest bought out several of their 
    competitors. In 1960 Royal Crest bought the Stockdale Dairy, of Mechanicsburg, and used the plant as a distribution center. In 1963 the Sun-Glo Dairy, of Germantown, was bought and was used as a distribution center and an orange juice bottling plant.

    In 1966 Royal Crest merged with Med-O-Pure of Washington Courthouse. Med-O-Pure had bought out two smaller 
    dairies one was in Chillcothe and the other was Sunshade Dairy, of Bethel, located on Route 52. Med-O-Pure used these dairies as distribution centers. After Med-O-Pure merged with Royal Crest the Washington Courthouse plant was used to make Royal Crest cottage cheese. The Bethel and Chillicothe locations were used as Royal Crest distribution centers.​ Royal Crest also bought the Alpha Dairy of Alpha. Alpha Dairy was a small dairy owned by Glen Coy. The dairy made ice cream, cottage cheese and bottled milk. Ringer's Dairy, of Xenia, also sold out to Royal Crest.

    Royal Crest also had several independent distributors. In Coldwater was Jim Forsthoefel, in Eldorado was Winston 
    Dickey, in West Milton was Granville Minnich, and in Ansonia was Jim Riffle. In 1960 Lowell Byrd started the Farm Fresh Dairy Store, on Main Street, in Greenville. The dairy store closed in 1969. Gene Cox purchased an independent distributor in Arcanum. He built up two more routes in the Greenville area.

    In the late 1950s business for many dairies got very rough. Retail routes started to dwindle because it was cheaper to buy milk from a supermarket. To compete against the supermarkets Royal Crest broadened it’s product line for its retail routes. The line included non dairy creamers, dips, fruit juices, eggs, potato chips and goats milk for babies.

    In 1966 Royal Crest sold its retail routes to the Moler’s Belmont Dairy of Dayton. From that point on the dairy had only 
    wholesale routes that sold to stores. Royal Crest increased its private labeling of milk. Some of the companies that Royal Crest bottled for were: Kroger’s, Liberals Market, Foodtown Markets, King Kwik Minit Markets and Stump’s Supermarkets.

    In 1967 Royal Crest began to buy ice cream and cottage cheese from the Hawthorne Melody plant of Bowling Green, Ohio. This was done to make room in the Royal Crest plant so that the bottling capacity could be increased.

    In 1968 business was worse than ever and Mr. Hoffman wanted to retire. He wanted his partners Gene Cox and Pete Davis to buy him out. They did not do it because the return was three percent and the interest rate was six percent. So the owners decided to sell the dairy to the Hawthorne Melody Dairy Company of Chicago, Illinois. Hawthorne Melody closed all of the distribution centers in 1968.

    On April 30, 1984 Hawthorne Melody decided to close Royal Crest. Several of the Royal Crest sales accounts were sold to the Reiter Dairy of Akron. Some of the equipment from the Royal Crest plant was moved to the Reiter plant in Springfield, Ohio. The plant was torn down a few years ago.

    #2 - Royal Crest Dairy Farm


    The Royal Crest Dairy Farm was started by brothers William and Joseph Madak. The dairy farm was located at 23310 Royalton Rd Columbia Station, Ohio (AKA Strongsville) and the dairy served communities all over north east Ohio. As the dairy business changed it became increasingly difficult for the smaller farmers.

    William and Joseph always loved golf and it was at this time that their dream of having their own golf course started to materialize. The two brothers hired golf architect William Burdick and in the spring of 1966 Royal Crest opened its first nine holes to the public. For a couple of years that nine remained the only nine on the course while the other half of the property remained a farm. In 1969 the second nine was completed and the 130 acre course was a full round of 18 holes and has remained the same ever since. Today the barn is used as a club house for the 
    golf course.


    ______________________________________

    Editor's notes:
    Here are pix of Royal Crest items I found online:


    Hopalong Cassidy Clock
    Royal Crest / All Star Dairy Products / Hoppy's Favorite




    Royal Crest Guernsey Farm / Dayton, O. milk bottles.

    Royal Crest Farm Dairy / Strongsville, Ohio
    Bell-shaped milk bottle.

    These bottles are called THRIFT Jars.
    Here's what Joe Clevenger wrote about Ohio's Thrift jars in the 2010 FOHBC Nat'l Bottle Show Program (read the rest of the article, and the entire program here.)









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    Featuring Findlay ~ Vintage Findlay Ohio Collectibles ~ April 2014 Edition

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    Featuring Findlay 
    Vintage Findlay Ohio Bottles and Advertising Items 

    Here's the latest round up of vintage Findlay Ohio items recently seen at bottle shows, on ebay, or that readers have shared. Send us your photos w/a description, and we'll post your goodies, too.


    1912 advertising brochure and scan of a box from the Celery Medical Co., Findlay Ohio. The box says the company was established in 1892.


    This notice in the trade journal, NARD NOTES* tells us that Ed Sargent started the company in Bowling Green, Ohio, and sold it to some Findlay business men in 1912. [Source

    Ed. O. Sargent was a noted Bowling Green druggist who was the proprietor of the Palace Pharmacy.

    *NARD = National Association of Retail Druggists 


    Who were the Findlay men who bought Sargent's Celery Medical Co.? No info found. But in 1935 they seem to have had some legal issues with their labeling. This notice doesn't give names, but does add in some other locations, and so, since I'm focusing on Findlay, as they say on Shark Tank, ''for that reason I'm out''.

    24075. Misbranding of celery powder. U. S. v. 56 Boxes of Celery Powders. Default decree of condemnation and destruction.FDNJ24075 November 20, 1935 Celery Medical Co. celery powder May 29, 1934 Sandy Lake, Pa. Findlay, Ohio, or Fremont, OhioSandy Lake, Pa. Western District of Pennsylvania 24075 F. & D. no. 33296. Sample no. 2714-B. [Source]

    Wondering what Findlay looks like?
    (Click the pix to enlarge)


    Here's Main Street in 1915, looking North.
    And a later view:


    This shows a drug store, but I can't quite make out the name, looks like Findlay _____ Drugs. Patterson's Department Store is on the left, with JC Penney's on the right of the drugstore.

    Patterson's was founded in 1850.

    I didn't find any info on Patterson's online, but someday google will scan this book:



    And here's a later view of Main Street looking south:


    This colorful view above features GALLAHER DRUGS drugstore. I found many newspaper ads for Gallaher's, but no other history online.


    And now an earlier view of South Main Street:



    This one shows The National store, E. C. Miller Dentist with a wonderful molar tooth shaped trade sign. There's also a printer with a sign that says BERGMAN, and the Victory Theatre.

    I'll bet The National store is covered in the above mentioned book on Retailing in Findlay, but no info found online.

    Several generations of the Miller family were dentists, keeping offices on main street for almost 100 yrs, approx. 1866 to 1986, when the last practicing Miller retired (his son broke the chain). The above signed E.C. Miller was the 2nd generation. [Source]

    The Victory Theater survived from 1908-28 at 230 S. Main St., bankruptcy forcing the owners out of business. The finale show there was Charlie Chaplin as "The Fireman." [Source]

    Yet another view of South Main Street, featuring the Phoenix Hotel, at night:



    The Phoenix Hotel existed from the 1830's until 1978. [Source]

    Now for something different, how about we actually look at a Findlay bottle? 


    Southway Beverages ACL soda pop bottle, bottled by the Findlay Coca-Cola Bottling Co.


    Southway was a Coca Cola product, bottled by other Coke bottlers too. 

    The Findlay Coca Cola Bottling plant is still in operation.


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    The Tricky Little Month of April ~ Taxes and Pranks ~ Happy April Fools Day

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    Watch out for those April Fools Day pranks!

    Ole Sir Taxy Waxy will have his due on April 15th!

    April's A Tricky Month!

    "Hold the bottle up to the light; you will see your dreams are always at the bottom." ~ Sir Robert Hutchison

    Cheers to all you Antique Bottle Collectors!

    Don't get fished in... 

    (April Fools Day is April Fish Day in France - see lots more vintage Fishy April Fools Day postcards here. )


    _______________________________________________
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    Jacob Fleck: Findlay's Own Easter Egg Decorator ~ Fleck's Vintage Easter Egg Dye


    First Let's Kill All the Ad Men: Uncle Sam, Shakespeare and the Mad Men ~ Vintage Whiskey and Beer Advertising

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    In honor of William Shakespeare's birthday celebration (April 26), I thought I'd rerun this post about the use of Shakespeare and Uncle Sam in vintage whiskey ads. 


    On Facebook I posted a link to this great blog called  BOTTLES, BOOZE, AND BACK STORIES by Jack Sullivan. 




    "he who... robs me of my bottle... makes me poor indeed."

    I really enjoyed Jack'spost called "Merchandising Shakespeare", showing several antique Victorian advertising tradecards from whiskey and beer companies that used the Bard to peddle and pitch their wares.

    Says Jack:
    I can imagine Shakespeare altering his own famous line about lawyers in Henry VI, Part 2.  It would become:
    “First let’s kill all the ad men.”
    Be sure to explore the BOTTLES, BOOZE, AND BACK STORIES archives for lots of bottles and advertising info and images.


    Or perhaps you'd rather read Shakespeare's lines that mention drinking? Then check out The Boozy Bard (read some pages on Amazon).
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    And All That FIZZ! What put the POP in soda pop? History from Quack Medicine to Big Business

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    Where'd you get that fizz?

    An interesting take on the history of soda pop by The Collectors Weekly's staff.

    It took until 1767 for the real breakthrough to happen when Joseph Priestley, the British chemist who was the first to identify oxygen, figured out a way to put carbon dioxide into water. Priestley’s process used a fermenting yeast mash to infuse water with the gas, resulting in a weakly carbonated drink.

    Read the article, enjoy the photos:

    Medicinal Soft Drinks and Coca-Cola Fiends: The Toxic History of Soda Pop


    http://www.collectorsweekly.com/articles/the-toxic-history-of-soda-pop/

    ________________________

    And All That FIZZ! 


     Here's a 2013 book --



    By Tristan Donovan

    Intro: This social, cultural, and culinary history charts soda's remarkable, world-changing journey from awe-inspiring natural mystery to ubiquity. Off-the-wall and offbeat stories abound. The story of soda is the story of the modern world, a tale of glamorous bubbles, sparkling dreams, big bucks, miracle cures, and spreading waistlines. Fizz: How Soda Shook Up the World charts soda’s remarkable, world-changing journey from awe-inspiring natural mystery to ubiquitous presence in all our lives. 
    Along the way you’ll meet the patent medicine peddlers who spawned some of the world’s biggest brands with their all-healing concoctions, as well as the grandees of science and medicine mesmerized by the magic of bubbling water. You’ll discover how fizzy pop cashed in on Prohibition, helped presidents reach the White House, and became public health enemy number one
    You’ll learn how Pepsi put the fizz in Apple’s marketing, how Coca-Cola joined the space race, and how soda’s sticky sweet allure defined and built nations. And you’ll find out how an alleged soda-loving snail rewrote the law books.
    Fizz tells the extraordinary tale of how a seemingly simple everyday refreshment zinged and pinged over our taste buds and, in doing so, changed the world around us.

    Use the ''look inside'' function to read several pages on Amazon: link


    " Because bottling required a quality of glass not easily found in America, serving by the glass was more popular and soda fountains were born. " 

    *Photo by Catherine Ashmore "All That Jazz"
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    It's Showtime! May 2014: Mansfield Ohio Bottle Show // Columbia City Indiana Insulators Show // Washington PA Bottle Show // Crestline Ohio

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    What time is it?

     It's Bottle Show Time!

    THE MANSFIELD BOTTLE SHOW IS ALMOST HERE!

    Saturday May 10, 2013
    Make your hotel reservations now!
    Early Bird on Friday May 9 is well worth your $$ & time!
    Go to the Ohio Bottle Club's website for details.

    *** Remember, the contracts for the Findlay Bottle Show will be "released" at the Mansfield Bottle Show -- and last year we almost sold out that day! Watch for Show Chairman Fred Curtis hollering: "Contracts! Get your red hot Findlay Bottle Show contracts here!"

    The Ohio Bottle Club’s 36th Mansfield Antique Bottle & Advertising Show & Sale
    • May 9 & 10,  2014 
    • Friday May 9 = Early Bird Adm. $25 // 3pm - 6pm
    • Saturday May 10 = Public Adm. $3 // 9am - 2pm
    • Richland County Fairgrounds, Trimble Road Exit, U.S. Route 30, Mansfield, Ohio
    • Dealer set-up, Friday, May 9, 3:00 pm to 6:00 pm // Dinner @6pm 
    • Contact: Bill Koster @ 330-599-3380
    • www.ohiobottleclub.org
    Mansfield Auction Friday May 9, 2014
     Youth Hall, Richland Co. Fairgrounds
    7:30 P.M. 

    Auction List


    ___________________________________

    Columbia City IN Bottle Show Info:

    PHOTO BY MICHELE K. / ©AMERICAJR.com 
    (More photos from the 2012 show here.)




    Columbia City Indiana 
    Insulators & Collectibles Show

    May 16 & 17  2014
     (Friday & Saturday) 
    Columbia City, Indiana 

    • 581 Squawbuck Road, Columbia City, Indiana 46725
    • Whitley County 4H Center (Fairgrounds) / 1 mile south of US30
    • Show Times: Friday, 3:00 – 5:00 pm, Saturday 8:00 am – 3:00 pm
    • Free Admission
    • Set-up: Friday, noon – 3:00 pm, Saturday 6:00 am – 8:00 am
    • Contact: Gene Hawkins @ 574-377-0171 
    • gene.hawkins@mchsi.com
    Note: the flyer says 581 Squawbuck, but googlemaps doesn't agree. They show the Whitley County 4H Center (Fairgrounds) as being at 680 Squawbuck Rd, Columbia City, Indiana 46725 [map link]


    _______________________________________________


    NEW SHOW
    History in a Bottle
    Saturday, May 17
     9 am-3pm 
    Lowe-Volk Park
    [Map

    Note: their flyer says the 18th, but the show is SATURDAY MAY 17th

    From the show chairman:
    First annual bottle and stoneware show at Lowe-Volk Park Nature Center. Set up to sell, trade or display, tables inside and outside.  Bring your bottle in to find out where it was possibly made and when.  In Crawford County and the surrounding area there were bottling companies in almost every town. Do you have some?  If so bring them to the park and share the history. There is no charge for set up, first come first serve unless reserved.

    Thanks for your interest in helping us promote this event.  I am a naturalist at the Crawford Park district and I decided to have a bottle show as I have a collection of my own that I have dug up with most bottles coming from local businesses.  I also teach historical archaeology with school groups and we often dig up bottle and stoneware fragments at the sites. I am somewhat of an artifact junky. I have also attached our flyer and pictures of the inside and outside of the Nature Center.  The inside picture was taken during our recent Arrowhead Day event.  We have two different rooms that can accommodate a total of about 30 tables.  Set up outside will be available also.

    Chris Rothhaar, Naturalist, 
    Crawford Park District / 2401 SR 598 Crestline, Oh 44827
    419-683-9000
    crothhaar@crawfordparkdistrict.org
    http://www.crawfordparkdistrict.org/ 



     
    _______________________________________________

    Washington PA Bottle Show Info:


    You'll find all kinds of antique bottles and vintage advertising & go-withs at the Washington PA bottle show.








    Washington County Bottle Show

    May 18  2014
     Sunday 9am-2pm
    Washington, Pennsylvania

    • 40th Annual Washington County Antique Bottle & Glass Club Bottle Show & Sale
    • At the Alpine Star Lodge, 735 Jefferson Avenue, Washington, PA 15301
    • Admission: $3
    • Directions: Exit 17 off I-70; approx. 1/2 hour from Pittsburgh (Map link)
    • Contact: Ed Kuskie @ 412-405-9061
    • bottle wizard@comcast.net

    ________________________

    EVENTS AND SHOWS


    We're Happy To HelpThe Findlay Bottle Club does not publish a show calendar. We are happy to help promote any bottle collecting hobby events, club shows, auctions, etc. Just email your info and photos to finbotclub@gmail.com
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    New Location for October 2014 Findlay Bottle Show ~ Sunday Oct. 26, 2014 #antiques

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    Announcing THE 2014 
    FINDLAY BOTTLE SHOW'S 
    NEW LOCATION!
    WE'RE MOVING!
    NEW LOCATION – BIGGER and BETTER – MORE DEALER TABLES


    339 E. Melrose Ave., Findlay Ohio 45840
    (approx. 1mile North of Findlay College then 1/2mi. East off Main St. @ corner of Melrose and Blanchard).

    We're pleased to announce that the 2014 Findlay Bottle Show will be held in a new location, at the beautiful 
    Findlay Senior Center Reception Hall.

    It's a new facility with all kinds of features that make for a great bottle show:

    • Room for many more dealer tables
    • Wide aisles, new tables, padded chairs
    • Excellent lighting, heating and air conditioning
    • Multiple modern restrooms
    • Covered entryway w/automatic doors
    • Huge paved parking lot
    • Handicapped accessability
    • Food concession inside w/ample seating
    • Dining area for our dealer dinner
    Of course, the Findlay Bottle Show will retain its best features:
    • Great dealers selling and wonderful collectors shopping.
    • Dealer-only set-up on Saturday w/our famous FREE buffet supper.
    • Complimentary donuts and coffee during Sunday morning set-up.
    So...
    Come to the Best Little NEW and IMPROVED, BIGGER and BETTER Bottle Show in the MidWest!

    We are excited to have all our bottle friends join us in this wonderful new show venue. Mark your calendars now for​ Sunday October 26, 2014 for a great day of shopping, learning more about our collections, making new friends and visiting with other folks who "speak bottle-ese". 

    Read the details below, and hope to see you there!


    • Sunday October ​26, 2014
    • The show is held at Findlay Senior Center Reception Hall 
      339 E. Melrose Ave., Findlay Ohio 45840

      Approx. 1mile North of Findlay College then 1/2mi. East off Main St. @ corner of Melrose and Blanchard

      See the detailed directions and map below.

    • Show hours: from 9am - 2pm
    • Admission is $2.00
    • Kids under 12 are free (w/adults)​
    • Free appraisals w/paid admission
    • Plenty of FREE parking
    • Show is in a heated building, w/restrooms, and food concession inside.

    • Early Bird Hours: 7-9am– Tickets are only $10 and include complimentary Coffee and Donuts until 9am.
    • Early Bird Session is Sunday only, not Saturday.

    • Early Bird Buyers Admission on Sunday morning,​ from 7-9am​, is​ just $10​. You'll get first pick when the dealers are still setting up​, and free donuts and coffee while they last!​ 

    • There are several SUNDAY ONLY dealers inside who do NOT set up on Saturday, PLUS the outside dealers​ only set up on S​unday morning, so there's plenty of fresh merch to choose from for Sunday's Early Bird buyers!

    • Saturday Oct. ​25 is for dealers only, with our famous pot-luck dinner -- we serve yummy beef brisket and pulled pork BBQ, fried chicken, and enough side dishes and desserts to over-fill every tummy!
    • Sorry, no ​public ​early bird adm​ission on Saturday.​ You must have a ​​dealer contract.

    • There are always plenty of outside spaces available​ (weather permitting​)​.​ Most years the day is nice enough, and we have several outside dealers. Even if it's cold, there are always a few hardy souls who set up out there. Keep your fingers and toes crossed for sunshine this year.
    • Contact Show Chairman, Fred Curtis​ (419-424-0486​) for more info​.​ 


    • There is road construction on I-75, which currently has the State Route 224 exits CLOSED. ODOT says the ramps should be reopened “sometime in October”, but will they be open before our show? Please watch our club website for info and updates. 
    • For alternate routes, see the map above.
    Directions from I-75:

    1. From the North, use the TWP. RD. 99 exit / go East to Main St., then South on Main to Melrose / Head East on Melrose approx. .3 mile to the show
    2. From the South use the St. Rt. 224 exit / go east on 12 to Main St., then North on Main to Melrose / Head East on Melrose approx. .3 mile to the show
    Note: Hotel names and phone numbers may not be current.

    • St Rt 224 is open to traffic, so you can easily get to and from the hotels area and the bottle show. It's about a 5-min. drive. 


    For all reservation and contract questions, contact Show Chairman:
    FRED CURTIS 419-424-0486

    Dealer contracts will be available at the Mansfield Bottle Show, May 10, 2014. You can get your paid contracts back to Fred right then and there, as we always sell out quickly.

    If you can't attend Mansfield, contact Fred AFTER May 10th.

    • 8' Dealer tables are $35.00 each. Limit 4.
    • Full payment must accompany each contract.
    • Checks may be held until the show. Cancellations w/full refund accepted until Oct. 1st. Confirmations will be mailed.
    • Final table assignments will not be made until after October 1st, since this new location will allow us to arrange the show layout as will best accommodate the number of tables needed. BUT...
    • Tables will still be assigned on a first-paid basis, so get your PAID contracts to Fred Curtis right away. 
    ______________________________________________

    Some pix from previous shows: 







      See more photos: 2012 -- 2011 -- 2010


      Rare Labeled Pemberton's French Wine Coca / Earliest Coca Cola Bottle / Up For Auction May 2014

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      Rare Labeled Pemberton's French Wine Coca / Earliest Coca Cola Related Bottle / Up For Auction May 2014

      The history of Coca Cola, from Pemberton's cocaine drug infused concoction of the 1880's on, is well known. Many, many websites and books have covered every detail and angle.

      There are only 3 known examples of the embossed Pemberton's French Wine Coca bottles known, and only one with most of the original paper labels.

      The rare paper labeled version is listed in Heritage Auction's May 2014 Americana Auction. Given how huge the Coca Cola brand became, it is definitely a piece of Americana.

      See the auction listing bottle photos below. I wonder who owns this labeled one? Who will be the new owner?

      _____________________________

      Here is a little bottle history in an image from Blaine Martin's EARLYCOKE.com.

      He owns one of the 3 known bottles (no label), which he had loaned to the famous Schmidt Coca Cola Museum, so we know the Schmidts did not own one.


      Blaine Martin's bottle is pictured in the above history collage. He also posted photos of his rare embossed Pemberton's bottle on Collectors Weekly, where he writes:

      "This bottle was on display in the Schmidt Museum for many years, and it is thought to be the only known one in existence. Certainly the only one in perfect shape. My wife Jeannine collects items associated with Pemberton and bought this bottle many years ago from a home in Alabama."

      Photo by Blaine Martin
      _________________________

      From the Heritage Auction catalog:

      John Pemberton's First Coca Bottle: The Precursor to Coca-Cola.

      • French Wine Coca Bottle with Original Paper Labels. 
      • Embossed at the base of the neck of the bottle it reads "Pemberton's Wine Coca." 
      • Although there is loss on the back label, the front is nearly complete. 
      • Typical of medicinal bottles made during the 1880's, this bottle has an applied lip and shows some residue or "sickness" to the inside. 
      • Size: 11" tall. 
      • We are aware of only three Pemberton "French Wine Coca" bottles in existence. 
      • This example is the only one with the labels largely intact.
      • Estimate: $5,000+
      • Lot # 38223 [link]


      And here it is... 


       




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