Tokyo Radiation Hotspot Linked To Old Bottles

TOKYO — Japanese officials investigating a small radiation hotspot in Tokyo say it was caused by old bottles stored in the basement of an empty house, not the country’s leaking nuclear power plant. (Read the rest at Huffpost)

[PRG] Maybe we can get the NRC to find out who is nuking all that doo-pah-pah on eBay.

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Stuarts – C&I S.H.M. | Dialog & Research

I have been following some interesting Stuarts whiskey bottle conversation via email that is now documented over at Western Glob Top Whiskies

[From western collector Bill Curtis]

Hello Bruce: I got a Stuart’s last week after looking at it I don’t believe it is made from the Cassin’s mold you can see the slugged out area on the Stuart’s fits the SHM but not the Cassin’s also the Cassin’s has a different bottom and the shoulders are different and if the Stuarts was made from the SHM that would explain the circle on the front of the Stuart’s let me know what you think maybe you can put this on your site.

[Bruce Silva]

Thanks for the great commentary on the C&I fifths and the relationship of the S.H.M. and the Stuarts moulds. I went back and reviewed a posting we had two years ago about the Wilmerding bottles …What a tangled web we weave. Many of the questions or theories that were raised have been answered/debunked. Good on you guys! That is one of the original goals of the site, to form ideas or theories, and to put them out for comment. Sometimes the comments or push back are meaningful and constructive, sometimes not so much. I’ve discovered that no matter how obscure of a little detail that I have noticed about a particular bottle, when it is finally spoken of… other collectors had noticed it as well. Some have even formed a theory as to why. When a few people start commenting on it, someone will try to find the answer. It’s human nature… answer the question, solve the problem, dig deeper and prove the prevailing consensus wrong.

Read the rest at: Western Glob Top Whiskies

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Oriental Herb Bitters – A Real Oddity

Oriental Herb Bitters (center) – Rick DeMarsh

Oriental Herb Bitters – A Real Oddity

28 November 2011

Apple-Touch-IconARick DeMarsh over at Rick’s Bottle Room (visit RicksBottleRoom.com) asked the following question on the PRG Facebook page. “Need some help on this one please, Oriental Herb Bitters

At first I didn’t think the bottle was listed in Bitters Bottles or Bitters Bottle Supplement by Carlyn Ring & W.C. (Bill) Ham, though I believe I have seen it before. This looks to be un-embossed and once labeled. The trick is, how do you know name? Looks like something you might hang on your porch. Very foreign looking.

Note: Rick follows-up with an illustration from Ghost Town Bottles. See below.

Oriental Herb Bitters – from Ghost Town Bottles

[PRG] Rick…there is an O 80L (labeled only) Oriental Herb Bitters that does exist as a Square. L.S Loeb & Co. Deluth, Minnesota, 8 x 2 1/2, Amber. The sheared lip note matches. What you picture and illustrate is obviously far from being a ‘square”. Note the 8″ hgt syncs.

I suspect the listing in Ring & Ham is correct but the shape “Square” description is not. This oddity looks like it has been soldered together or is contructed like stained glass.

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Old Paper Art – Mr Cachet

Marianne Dow over at the Findlay Bottle Club blog has been promoting this fellow making art with our bottles and bill-heads. I finally checked this guy out. His work is really good.

Visit Old Paper Art

MrCachet

Helena, Montana, United States

I’m a sixty-three year old artist with a taste for history and the printed word. I’ve been putting my art on envelopes for well over fifty years, and still continue to do that either on a whim or of necessity. I consider Thank You cards a necessity.


Posted in Advertising, Advice, Art & Architecture, Cologne, Ephemera, Fruit Jars, Perfume, Spirits, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

A Variety of Burdock Blood Bitters Trade Cards

A Variety of Burdock Blood Bitters Trade Cards

26 November 2011

Apple-Touch-IconAI probably have a couple of dozen Burdock Blood Bitters Trade cards that I have picked up over the years. It seems like someone once told me that there were over a hundred different cards printed and distributed for marketing purposes. Far more than any other bitters trade card. I have posted a few of my examples. Look at all of the different logo and type style treatments for the copy Burdock Blood Bitters and BBB. For more information on Burdock Blood Bitters:

Read: Burdock Blood Bitters – Part I – 1883 Letter to Customer

Read: Burdock Blood Bitters – Part II – 1889 Almanac

Read: Burdock Blood Bitters – Part III – Labeled Bottle and More

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Thanksgiving 2011

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Burdock Blood Bitters – Part III – Labeled Bottle and More

Part III from my friend and noted Civil War author Jim Schmidt…Make sure you visit his blog site and sign up to receive his posts.

[from Jim Schmidt]  In this third and final post in a 3-part series on Burdock Blood Bitters I include a photo of a beautiful labeled Burdock bottle from the collection of friend and bitters collector extraordinaire, Ferdinand Meyer at Peachridge Glass.

Read Part III

Read: Burdock Blood Bitters – Part I – 1883 Letter to Customer

Read: Burdock Blood Bitters – Part II – 1889 Almanac 

Posted in Advertising, Advice, Article Publications, Bitters, Civil War, Collectors & Collections, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, History, Peachridge Glass | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Thanksgiving Bottles

Thanksgiving Bottles – Digger Odell Publications 2008. This post is dedicated to

John A. “Digger” Odell

(October 30, 1948 – October 27, 2011)

“On December 4, 1619, 38 English settlers arrived at Berkeley Hundred, which comprised about 8,000 acres (32 km≤) on the north bank of the James River, near Herring Creek, in an area then known as Charles Cittie, about 20 miles (32 km) upstream from Jamestown, where the first permanent settlement of the Colony of Virginia had been established on May 14, 1607.

The group’s charter required that the day of arrival be observed yearly as a “day of thanksgiving” to God. On that first day, Captain John Woodleaf held the service of thanksgiving. As quoted from the section of the Charter of Berkeley Hundred specifying the thanksgiving service: “We ordaine that the day of our ships arrival at the place assigned for plantacon in the land of Virginia shall be yearly and perpetually keept holy as a day of thanksgiving to Almighty God.”[3] (Wikipedia).

That was the traditional Thanksgiving as the story was handed down to us. We know what they supposed ate and shared. We know how they dressed and what they believed. We know from archaeological evidence of the Fort they built and even the glasshouse. It has been said, that glass-making was America’s first industry. Jamestown became the first permanent settlement some twelve years earlier in 1607.

“On October 1, 1608, a company of settlers arrived aboard the English vessel Mary and Margaret with the Second Supply. The journey took roughly three months. The company recruited these as skilled craftsmen and industry specialists: soap-ash, glass, lumber milling (wainscot, clapboard, and ëdealí ó planks, especially soft wood planks) and naval stores (pitch, turpentine, and tar). Among these additional settlers were eight “Dutch-men” (consisting of unnamed craftsmen and three who were probably the wood-mill-men ó Adam, Franz and Samuel) “Dutch-men” probably meaning German or German-speakers)[7], and Polish craftsmen, who had been hired by the Virginia Company of London’s leaders to help develop manufacture profitable export products. There has been debate about the nationality of the specific craftsmen, and both the Germans and Poles claim the glassmaker for one of their own, but the evidence is insufficient.[8] Ethnicity is further complicated by the fact that the German minority in Royal Prussia lived under Polish control during this period. Wikipedia

Glass was actually manufactured in Jamestown only for a short time since the factory failed sometime after 1610. A second attempt to re-establish a glasshouse in Jamestown was in 1622 with Italian glassmen also failed. But we know from written records such as those in 1632, when Captain John Smith said, “…We sent home ample proof of pitch, tar and glass…” that they did make and export products. The actual Jamestown furnaces were re-discovered and excavated in 1948.

What kind of bottles and other glassware were produced is not certain.  It is likely that the typical black glass bottles that were popular in England and other parts of Europe at the time would be likely candidates. Given the limited information of how much and what was made in Jamestown it is possible that a black glass bottle sat on the first Thanksgiving table, at least I would like to think so.

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Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters – Colorado

Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters – Colorado

23 November 2011 (R•082414)

In from Mike Holzwarth – Fort Collins, Colorado

Thanks for adding me as a friend (Peachridge Glass Facebook Page)… Been digging bottles here in Colorado for over 25 years. Love your wall sites, beautiful bottles. Here’s a couple of pictures of a very rare bitters bottle, Colorado’s only bitters. It came into my collection just this last Sunday. Bought it at a little Antique store in eastern Colorado for $8.99. I was a little ashamed to pick it up at such a low price, but I’m getting over it the more I fondle the bottle. 🙂 That’s just as fun as digging it. Looking foward to looking at more of your pics.

[PRG] Love these stories Mike. Thanks for sharing. I have a major Bitters square collection and do not have this bottle. Very exciting to see and research. I added the Carlyn Ring & W. C. Ham Bitters Bottles information below:

J29  JEPSON’S // f // DYSPEPSIA / BITTERS // f // c // C & Co. //
9 5/8 x 2 1/2 (7 1/2) 3/8
Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, Very rare
The Jepson Brothers & Company had an office at 412 Larimer Street, and a bottling plant at the corner of Colfax and Broadway in Denver. Made in 1880 only. The Jepson brothers were Eugene O. Jepson and Edwin C. Jepson. Their partner was W.W. Montelelius.
Note: A similar bottle, J 29.5, reads JEPSON’S TONIC BITTERS and is extremely rare. Same company and same date.

Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters – Holzwarth Collection

Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters – Holzwarth Collection

Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters – Holzwarth Collection

Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters – Holzwarth Collection

From Impressed in Time - Colorado Beverage Bottles, Jugs 1859 to 1900.

From Impressed in Time – Colorado Beverage Bottles, Jugs 1859 to 1900.

From Impressed in Time – Colorado Beverage Bottles, Jugs 1859 to 1900. – Edwin C. and Eugene O. Jepson formed a partnership with W.W. Montelius and opened a business at the corner of Colfax and Broadway in 1880. They had an office at Larimer Street in addition to the bottling plant. They called the product Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters. The business venture proved to be unsuccessful as they were only listed in business one year.

1880: Jepson Brothers & Company (Eugene O. and Edwin C. Jepson and William W. Montelius), dyspepsia bitters, Colfax av. cor. Broadway, office 412 Larimer) – 1880 City of Denver Directory

The below pictures represent a second Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters tha closed on eBay on Sunday, 24 August 2014. The seller reported that he dug the bottle in an old gold camp near Silver Cliff, Colorado. It was nestled near the bottom of an 8 1/2 ft. privy.

JepsonsEbay2

Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters – eBay

JepsonsEbay

Jepson’s Dyspepsia Bitters – Holzwarth Collection

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Burdock Blood Bitters – Part II – 1889 Almanac

Burdock Blood Bitters – Part II – 1889 Almanac

23 November 2011

Apple-Touch-IconAPart II from my friend and noted Civil War author Jim Schmidt…Make sure you visit his blog site and sign up to receive his posts.

[from Jim Schmidt] In Part II of my 3-part series on Burdock Blood Bitters, I’m pleased to offer scans of pages from an 1889 BBB almanac (my collection).

Read: Burdock Blood Bitters – Part I – 1883 Letter to Customer

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