The ‘Liberace’ of Square Bitters – Steinfeld’s French Cognac Bitters

STEINFELD’S FRENCH COGNAC BITTERS

12 November 2011 (R•052914) (R•060614)

SteinfeldTrademark

Apple-Touch-IconAAs part of the Fancy Gent Series we now visit the Steinfeld’s French Cognac Bitters. Without a doubt the fanciest of squares. The ‘Liberace’ of Bitters squares.

“Bevels decorated with a vine alternating leaves and bunch of grapes. Elaborately shaped sunken panels with 10 shingles at shoulder”

S 186  STEINFELD’S FRENCH COGNAC BITTERS Circa 1867, STEINFELD’S / FRENCH COGNAC / BITTERS // sp // FIRST, PRIZE ( au ) / PARIS / EXHIBITION (au ) / motif profile of a man in draped oval with a crown / 1867 // sp //
9 7/8 x 2 3/4 (6 1/2) 1/2
Square, Amber and Gold, LTCR, Applied mouth, 4 sp, Very Rare,
Bevels decorated with a vine alternating leaves and bunch of grapes. Elaborately shaped sunken panels with 10 shingles at shoulder.
Steinfelds_French_Cognac_Bitters_TheStage_11_1870

Steinfeld”s French Cognac Bitters Advertisement – 1870

Yellow amber Steinfeld’s French Cognac Bitters – Fuss Collection

Amber Steinfeld’s French Cognac Bitters – Meyer Collection

Steinfelds_GW

“STEINFELD’S / FRENCH COGNAC / BITTERS – FIRST PRIZE / PARIS / EXHIBITION / (profile of mans head and two coat-of-arms) / 1867”, (S186), American, ca. 1867 – 1875, deep amber semi-cabin, 9 7/8”h, smooth base, applied mouth. – Glass Works Auctions January 2013

S186_Steinfelds_BBS

Yellow amber Steinfeld’s French Cognac Bitters (see Fuss example above) – Bitters Bottles Supplement photograph

Steinfeld’s French Cognac Bitters Tokens

Steinfelds_GW97

“STEINFELD’S / FRENCH COGNAC / BITTERS – FIRST PRIZE / PARIS / EXHIBITION” / (profile of man in a draped oval with crowns) / 1867″, (S-186), American, ca. 1865 – 1875, bright golden yellow with olive tone, 9 3/4″h, smooth base, applied tapered double collar mouth. Lightly cleaned to its original luster. Two chips, located side by side on two opposite panel edges, have been slightly polished out. A very rare bottle in what is probably a one of a kind color. We auctioned this bottle in 1994 at the Federation of Historical Bottle Collectors National Convention in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. One of the most elaborate embossed of any bitters bottle! – Glass Works Auction 97

SteinfeldsAdNOLA1865

Steinfeld’s French Cognac Bitters Trademark with advertisement – The Times Picayune (New Orleans) September 1865

Read further: A Couple of Fancy Gents

Read further: A ‘Fancy’ Bitters Square for Headaches

Read further: Dr. Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters on eBay!

Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

W. H. Hutchinson & Son Bottling

[In to PRG]

Photo postcard image courtesy of Dennis Smith

Hutchinson Playmates Of The Month!

[HutchBook.com] Here’s another real photo postcard image courtesy of Dennis Smith.  This photograph features two women pouring soda from Hutchinson bottles into drinking glasses.  There are citrus groves behind the women and the postcard came from a California collection.  The best news is this card can be yours if you act quickly: the original photograph is currently listed as GreedyBay 270832734223.  The image posted above has been cropped slightly and the brightness and contrast adjusted to sharpen the details.

Hi, Ferd.

We check your site on a daily basis.

Have you visited www.KocaNola.com (which I built and maintain for Charles David Head)? Charles’ book about Koca Nola is nearing completion. Bill Baab is coordinating publication of this much-anticipated new volume.

[read Koca Nola – The Great Tonic Drink]

Have you visited www.HutchBook.com?  I am working on another round of HutchBook.com updates that will be posted yet this week. HutchBook.com currently contains 300+ (printed) pages of information about the history of the soft drink industry, the Hutchinson Era, closure patents, W. H. Hutchinson & Son, bottling, collecting, bottle books for sale, the Hutchinson Bottle Collectors’ Association (HBCA), and much, much more.  We are continuing to build the Hutchinson Bottle Directory cataloguing almost 17,000 different Hutchinson bottles.

Good collecting,

Ron F.
HutchBook@yahoo.com
www.HutchBook.com
(and)
KocaNolaBook@yahoo.com
www.KocaNola.com

The Hutchinson Era (1879-WWI)

Charles G. Hutchinson, the son of William H. Hutchinson, a long-time Chicago, Illinois soda bottler and equipment manufacturer, patented his “Hutchinson’s Patent Spring Stopper” April 8, 1879. This stopper gained widespread popularity with bottlers and consumers, rendering other closures obsolete, and revolutionizing the soda bottling industry. Several factors (discussed below) combined to prompt bottlers to shift to crown seal bottling equipment by World War I.

Hutchinson Stopper Illustration - HutchBook.com

Charles G. Hutchinson Bottle Stopper

U.S. Patent Number: Reissue 8,755 Patented: June 17, 1879
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE
CHARLES G. HUTCHINSON, OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
IMPROVEMENT IN BOTTLE-STOPPERS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 213,992,
Reissue No. 8,755, dated June 17, 1879; application filed April 28, 1879.

To all whom it may concern:

Be it known that I, CHARLES G. HUTCHINSON, of Chicago, in the county of Cook and State of Illinois, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Bottle-Stoppers, of which the following, in connection with the accompanying drawings, is a specification.
Figure 1 is a vertical central section of the upper part or neck of a bottle provided with my improved stopper, showing the latter in its highest position, or when the bottle is closed; and Fig. 2, a like representation, showing the position of the stopper when the bottle is open.

In the drawings, A represents the neck or upper portion of a bottle. The neck is contracted slightly, as shown at a, between its upper or outer end, a’, and its lower end or portion, a’’, which merges into the body of the bottle. B is the stopper, which may consist, as heretofore, of a disk of rubber. C is a laterally-yielding spring, to which the stopper is attached. This spring extends above the stopper and enters the contracted portion of the neck of the bottle, as shown. In order that the stopper B may be suspended below or away from the neck of the bottle, so that the neck will open, I extend the spring C upward, but make this upper part sufficiently large to prevent it from falling down through the neck accidentally, and not so large as to prevent the lower part of the spring from being pushed through, and far enough below the narrowest part of the neck to fully open the latter, as shown in Fig. 2. To admit of the stopper or plug B being held up to or into the contracted part of the neck by means of the spring, so as to close the neck, I make the lower part of the spring sufficiently yielding to pass through or into the contracted part of the neck, and to press upon the same outwardly, thus holding the stopper in its closed position, as shown in Fig. 1.

It will be perceived that, the spring being laterally yielding, and some of its parts being at all times in contact with the contracted neck, the stopper will be held by it either in such a position as to close the neck or in such a position as to keep it open, as may be desirable or necessary, and that the stopper when open will be held from contact with the bottle. In other words, the friction or pressure of the spring against the interior wall of the neck holds the stopper either in a position to close or open the bottle, according as to whether the spring be drawn up or pushed down.

The chief novel feature of my invention, so far as I am aware, consists of a laterally or outwardly yielding spring applied to the stopper or plug proper, and adapted to extend up through and press against the interior of the neck of the bottle, so that the stopper will thereby be suspended in a position to either close or open the neck as the spring is moved either up or down, and be held in either its closed or open position by the action of the spring. I do not, therefore, here intend to be restricted to the precise form of spring herein shown; neither do I regard a neck made contracted between its upper end and its junction with the body of the bottle absolutely essential, for it is obvious that a laterally-yielding spring properly fitted into a straight neck would suspend the plug or stopper adjustably by the mere lateral pressure of the spring against the interior of the neck.
A simple and inexpensive way of constructing a spring for the purposes set forth, and uniting it in all the advantages now recited, is to make it of flexible wire, bending the wire so that the spring will approximate the figure 8 in form, as shown, leaving one end free, and attaching the other to the stopper. A small hook may be employed to draw the stopper up into the neck, the top of the spring serving as a loop to receive the hook. The stopper, however, may be drawn up by grasping the spring with the fingers; but it is not essential that the spring should intersect or cross itself, or that it should, except when used in a contracted neck, approximate the figure 8 in form.

Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is –

1. The combination, substantially as described, with the neck of a bottle, of a bottle-stopper arranged in the body of the bottle, and provided with a laterally-yielding spring connected thereto and extending upward therefrom and forming a part thereof, when the said spring and stopper are adjustable together vertically in the neck, and the spring is adapted, substantially as described, to hold the stopper alternately in its open and closed positions by pressing outwardly against the interior of the neck, according to the adjustment vertically of the spring in the neck, for the purposes set forth.

2. A bottle-stopper consisting of the plug B, provided on its upper face with the continuous flexible wire C, rigidly attached thereto at one end, and bent to approximate the figure 8 in form, the other end of said wire being bent back to a point near the end attached to the plug, and the end so bent back being left free or loose, in combination with a bottle having a neck somewhat narrower, interiorly, than the said bent part or extension of the stopper, substantially as shown and described, and for the purposes set forth.

CHARLES G. HUTCHINSON.
In presence of – F. F. Warner,
H. C. Ballard.

Hutchinson Run - HutchBook.com

Posted in Collectors & Collections, Ephemera, History, Painted Label, Soda Bottles, Technology | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Koka Nola – The Great Tonic Drink

At one of the FOHBC National shows, four or five years ago, Elizabeth and I sat in on a seminar on the many copy cat brands of Coca-Cola. We were fascinated and really enjoyed the presentation and talk.

[Incoming to PRG]

Hi, Ferd.

We check your site on a daily basis.

Have you visited www.KocaNola.com (which I built and maintain for Charles David Head)? Charles’ book about Koca Nola is nearing completion. Bill Baab is coordinating publication of this much-anticipated new volume.

Have you visited www.HutchBook.com?  I am working on another round of HutchBook.com updates that will be posted yet this week. HutchBook.com currently contains 300+ (printed) pages of information about the history of the soft drink industry, the Hutchinson Era, closure patents, W. H. Hutchinson & Son, bottling, collecting, bottle books for sale, the Hutchinson Bottle Collectors’ Association (HBCA), and much, much more.  We are continuing to build the Hutchinson Bottle Directory cataloguing almost 17,000 different Hutchinson bottles.

[PRG] A separate post will be developed for Hutchinson Bottles

Good collecting,

Ron F.
HutchBook@yahoo.com
www.HutchBook.com
(and)
KocaNolaBook@yahoo.com
www.KocaNola.com

Esposito Koka Nola

Posted in Collectors & Collections, History, Soda Bottles | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

A ‘Fancy’ Bitters Square for Headaches

A ‘Fancy’ Bitters Square for Headaches

09 November 2011 (R•090714)

Apple-Touch-IconANow here is a great bitters square that I would have probably ordered back in the day. The Dr. F. Woodbridge Headache Bitters is a super, extremely rare bottle. Wait to you see the examples below. The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

H 74 DR. F. WOODBRIDGE HEADACHE BITTERS
Circa 1865 – 1875,
HEADACHE // BITTERS // DR. F. WOODBRIDGE // f //
9 1/4 x 2 7/8 (7 1/8) 3/8
Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, 3 sp, Extremely rare
Note: Glass Works (JH): When we auctioned the Carlyn Ring collection back in the
mid-90’s I remembered cataloging this bottle, admiring its beauty and
crudeness. At the time of the Ring sale we believed this bottle to be unique, we
still do today. We were not surprised when it sold for $4,500.00! Ex. Carlyn
Ring Collection.

This gorgeous bottle, with tons of character is obviously a square, but get a load of the radius on the curved shoulders and compound curve indented panels! Certainly a fancy Bitters square!

H 74 Dr. F. Woodbridge Headache Bitters – Meyer Collection

H 74 Dr. F. Woodbridge Headache Bitters – Meyer Collection

WoodbridgeHeadacheHecker

Lot: 53 “Dr. F. Woodbridge / Headache / Bitters” Bottle, America, 1860-1870. Square with beveled corners and indented panels, bright reddish amber in the shoulders and mouth shading to red amber in the base, applied sloping collared mouth – smooth base, ht. 9 inches; (light exterior wear, some washable content residue). R/H #H-74 Beautiful bubbly glass. Outstanding color. Extremely rare. Fine condition. Estimate: $3,000 – $6,000 – Heckler Premier Auction 115

Read: Dr. Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters on eBay!

Read: A Couple of Fancy Gents

Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

H.E. Bucklen & Company of Chicago – Electric Bitters

From RicksBottleRoom.com

Bottle of the week comes from Chris Eib (bottleboys) collection and as you can see he has put together a nice collection on this company. I found some information and added it too, thanks Chris…great stuff.

Electric Bitters Crate and Bottles – Eib Collection

E L E C T R I C   B I T T E R S 

H.E. Bucklen & Company

09 November 2011 (R • 122820 – Patent Trade Mark)

[From RicksBottleRoom]

H.E. Bucklen & Company of Chicago were highly successful sellers of a number of well-known brands. Herbert E. Bucklen had purchased the rights to his medicines from one Dr. Z. L. King of Elkhart, Indiana, about 1878 and moved the business from Elkhart to Chicago about 1878-1879. Bucklen spent lavish sums on advertising in all types of media and created the brand name of “New Discovery”, which had national recognition by 1885. He also had several other top-selling medicines including the Electric Bitters, mentioned above, and The New Life Pills, introduced in 1880 as a cure for stomach ailments. Products which never sold well were Dr. King’s California Golden Compound. Dr. King’s Hop Cordial, and Dr. Scheeler’s Great German Cure for Consumption

Bucklen’s “New Discovery” was a medicine for consumption (tuberculosis) a disease which at the time was killing millions of people. Many companies offered cures and remedies for consumption — all were frauds, including the “New Discovery.”

Bucklen’s “New Discovery” was targeted by Samuel Hopkins Adams in his attack on the patent medicine industry in a series of articles in Colliers Magazine in 1905. Of the ‘New Discovery,” Adams said:

“It is proclaimed to be the ‘only sure cure for consumption.” A further announcement is made that ‘it strikes terror to the doctors.’ As it is a morphine and chloroform mixture, ‘Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption’ is well calculated to strike terror to the doctors or to any other class or profession, except, perhaps, the undertakers. It is a pretty diabolical concoction to give to anyone, and particularly to a consumptive. The chloroform temporarily allays the cough, thereby checking Nature’s effort to throw off the dead matter from the lungs. the opium drugs the patient into a deceived cheerfulness. The combination is admirably designed to shorten the life of any consumptive who takes it steadily.”

By 1893, the business was well enough established to be a major retailer through sites at the World’s Fair in Chicago. This retailing accomplishment was achieved in part by offering for 50 cents a 31-page book, half-filled with color lithographs of the world fair buildings, and the other half descriptive text. The advertising contained therein, of the “New Discovery,” made sure that most people who went to the World’s Fair to see the marvels available to them at the end of the 19th century thought of the “New Discovery” as one of those marvels.

[PRG Supplement]

Electric Bitters…Don’t you just love that name!

United States Patent Office Trade-Mark for Tonic Bitters, Herbert E. Bucklen of Chicago, Illinois, No. 7,938 Registered June 8, 1880

E 30 ELECTRIC / BITTERS // sp // H. E. BUCKLEN & CO / CHICAGO, ILL // sp //
8 7/8 x 2 3/8 (6)
Square, Amber and shades of light Yellow amber, LTC, 4 sp, Tooled lip
and Applied mouth, Common
This bottle was made in many different molds which resulted in minor variations
in lettering height and width. This bottle was used prior to the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act when the name was changed to Electric Brand Bitters (E 31)

E 30 – Very Early Electric Bitters – Meyer Collection

E 31 “ELECTRIC” BRAND / BITTERS // sp // H. E. BUCKLEN & CO / CHICAGO, ILL // sp //
10 x 3 (6 3/4) 5/8
Square, Amber, LTC, 4 sp, Tooled lip and ABM, Common
The change in name from ELECTRIC BITTERS to “ELECTRIC” BRAND BITTERS occurred as a result of The Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906.

E 31 – Later and larger Electric Brand Bitters – Meyer Collection

E 33.5 ELECTRIC BRAND / BITTERS // sp // ELECTRIC BRAND / BITTERS // sp //
9 3/4 x 3 x 3
This is a post 1906 variant that is a larger size and similarly embossed to the E 33
E33.5_ElectricBitters

E 33.5 – Later and larger Electric Brand Bitters “Electric Bitters” panel occurs twice – ebay

H. E. Bucklen & Co. Invoice – Meyer Collection

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, History | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Pictures at an Exhibition – Noordsy Gallery

Jeff and Holly Noordsy

Dealers Specializing in the Sale of Antique Bottles, Antique Glass and Period Decorative Arts

09 November 2011 (R•033119)

Apple-Touch-IconAJeff was kind enough to send Peachridge Glass more Noordsy window shots which are posted below. In my book, glass does not look better than with natural sunlight. Especially when you factor in daily sun movement and seasonal change.

Check the Jeff and Holly Noordsy web site out.



























Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Early American Glass, Flasks, Gin, Hair Tonics, Historical Flasks, Inks, Medicines & Cures, Photography, Pickle Jars, Utility Bottles | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

1915 Coca-Cola Prototype Bottle and Concept Sketch

Dear Ferdinand,

Thanks again for talking to me last week regarding our auction and your interest in posting it on your website. It’s now official. Below is our announcement:

We are pleased to announce to you the auction of our original 1915 Coca-Cola Prototype Contour Bottle and Concept Sketch. These items will be auctioned off individually during Julien’s Auctions “Icons & Idols Rock “N” Roll & Sports” event. Pre-auction bidding has already begun online. The live auction will be Saturday, December 3, 10:00 a.m. PST at Julien’s Auctions in Los Angeles. Interested parties can learn more by following the links below:

1915 Coca-Cola Prototype Bottle (Lot 1009)

A contour Coca-Cola prototype bottle designed by Earl R. Dean. In 1915, when most beverages were packaged in generic, straight-sided bottles, bottlers worried that Coca-Cola was easily confused with imitators. Benjamin Thomas, co-founder of the Coca-Cola Bottling Company, came up with a solution. He stated, “We need a bottle which a person can recognize as a Coca-Cola bottle when he feels it in the dark.” In response, Coca-Cola launched a competition among bottle suppliers to come up with a distinctive design. During the 1916 Bottlers Convention, and among several other design entries, Dean’s contour design would be voted the winner. The prototype never made it to production since its middle diameter was larger than its base, making it unstable on conveyor belts. Dean resolved this issue by making the necessary alterations needed for the design to go into production. The contour bottle was so successful that it became the standard for the Coca-Cola brand. It was also the first bottle design to be granted trademark status by the United States Patent Office. The only other known example of this bottle is owned by the Coca-Cola Company. Bottle reads “Coca-Cola/ Trademark Registered.” Additional embossing of Coca-Cola can be found on the bottom of the bottle. 7 1/2 inches PROVENANCE From the Estate of Earl R. Dean.

<http://www.julienslive.com/view-auctions/catalog/id/37/lot/11931/from/find-lots/>

1915 Coca-Cola Prototype Bottle Concept Sketch (Lot 1008)

A pencil on paper concept sketch of the 1915 contour Coca-Cola prototype bottle by Earl R. Dean. Due to a looming deadline, this is the only concept sketch of the “contour” Coca-Cola bottle ever made; it was sketched just hours before Dean produced the first prototype bottles. Looking for design inspiration, Dean went to the local library to search for images of the coca plant and kola nut, the two key ingredients believed to be in Coca-Cola. While looking up these ingredients in the encyclopedia and finding very little to inspire a design, Dean instead stumbled upon an image of a cacao pod. Intrigued by its vertical grooves, it would become the inspiration for his design. The sketch originally consisted of both a front and back-side view of the bottle. The patent attorney, who needed only one side of the bottle to send to Washington, cut the paper in half, taking with him only the back-side view. It is believed that this other half of the drawing no longer exists. 13 1/2 by 16 inches, framed PROVENANCE From the Estate of Earl R. Dean

<http://www.julienslive.com/view-auctions/catalog/id/37/lot/11930/>

Thanks again Ferdinand!

Best Wishes,

Brad Dean

Julien’s Auctions
9665 Wilshire Boulevard
Suite 150
Beverly Hills, CA  90210
Tel: 310-836-1818
www.juliensauctions.com

04 December 2011 Update: The Bottle sold for $240,000 and the concept sketch for $228,000.

1915 Coca-Cola Bottle Concept Sketch - Julien's Auctions

1915 Coca-Cola Prototype Bottle - Julien's Auctions

1915 Coca-Cola Prototype Bottle Base Embossing - Julien's Auctions

Posted in Auction News, Ephemera, News, Soda Bottles | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Jeff & Holly Noordsy – Nice Window Treatment

Dealers Specializing in the Sale of Antique Bottles, Antique Glass and Period Decorative Arts

May 2011 Bottle & Glass Still Life - Noordsy Collection

On slow bottle days, like some others of you I suspect, I move around the web to see what inspires or moves me. A couple times a year, Jeff and Holly Noordsy change out and photograph select bottles in one of their picture windows. It is usually a spectacular shot with an impressive arrangement of glass. Today was no exception. This last picture was taken in May of this year and graces the home page of their web site. Check the Jeff and Holly Noordsy web site out. The anticipated window picture with snow in the background is usually breathtaking and should be posted soon.

Jeff and Holly Noordsy Web Site

Holly and Jeff Noordsy - Heckler Event 2011

Posted in Collectors & Collections, Photography | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Four Bottle Shows this Weekend!

Looking for a Bottle Show this weekend?

11 & 12 November 2011 (Friday & Saturday) Chehalis, Washington The Washington Bottle Collectors Association presents the Autumn Antique Bottle, Insulator & Collectible Show Friday 11 November, Early Buyers $5.00 1:00 pm – 7:00 pm, Saturday, 12 November 9:00 am – 3:00 pm, Information: Warren 206.329.8412 wlbottleguy@yahoo.com or Pete 253.335.1732

12 November 2011 (Saturday) Belleville, Illinois Eastside Antique Bottle, Jar & Brewery Collectibles 5th Annual Show & Sale, (9:00 am to 3:00 pm, early buyers 7:00 am), at the Belleclair Fairgrounds, 200 South Belt East, Belleville, Illinois (15 minutes from St. Louis), Info: Kevin Kious, 618.346.2634, whoisthealeman@aol.com or Curt Faulkenberry, 636.797.5220

13 November 2011 (Sunday) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania The Pittsburgh Antique Bottle Club’s Annual Show & Sale (9am – 2pm $3, early admission 7am $25) at The Ice Garden, Rostraver Twp, Exit 46B off I70 to Rt 51 North 4.1 miles. Info: Bob DeCroo, 694 Fayette City Rd, Fayette City, PA 15438, 724.326.8741 or Jay Hawkins, 1280 Pleasant Rd, West Newton, PA 15089, 724.872.6013

13 November 2011 (Sunday) Oakland New Jersey New Jersey Antique Bottle Collectors Association 42nd Annual Show and Sale, (9:00 am – 2:00 pm, early buyers 8:00 am), at the Oakland Elks Club, 22 Ramapo Valley Road, Oakland, New Jersey, Info: Ken 973.907.7351 or Jim 516.454.8993.

Posted in Bottle Shows, Club News, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A Couple of Fancy Gents

A Fancy Gent?

At some point, Bitters master Bill Ham decided to call the G 52 | Dr. Goodin’s Compound Gentian Bitters a ‘fancy square’ in Bitters Bottle Supplement. The first volume of the landmark Caryln Ring & W.C. Ham Bitters Bottles simply says “Square” in describing the bottle general shape.

(Read Dr. Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters on eBay!)

” What is a Fancy Square?”

This got me thinking…

While the Dr. Goodin’s is certainly ornate, I see it as more architectural with its strong lines and detail. Like Frank Lloyd Wright designed the bottle. The thinking part was, “what other Fancy bitters might I have?” My first to post will be the Mishler’s Keystone Bitters which certainly is architectural with the keystone motif but obviously more fancy than a typical Mishler’s square which I have also pictured below.

M 103 MISHLER’S KEYSTONE BITTERS
H. L. MISHLER’S / KEYSTONE BITTERS // A SOLVENT REMEDY // ANTI DYSPEPTIC // motif keystone design over flat panel //
9 1/2 x 2 3/4 (7 1/2)
Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, 3 sp, Beveled edges are convex. Extremely Rare
Trade Cards available

M 103 Mishler's Keystone Bitters (fancy square) - Meyer Collection

M 99 MISHLER’S HERB BITTERS, Circa 1866 – 1875
MISHLER’S HERB BITTERS // motif ruled marker  1 OZ.  5 OZ.  10 OZ.  15 OZ. /
TABLE SPOON GRADUATION // DR S. B. HARTMAN & CO // f /  // s // 40 MED. DOSES // b // STOECKELS GRAD PAT. FEB 6 ‘66
L…Mishler’s Herb Bitters, Prepared Exclusively by the Proprietors, S. B.
Hartman & Co., Successors to B. Mishler, Lancaster, PA, Pittsburgh, PA.
9 x 2 3/4 (6 3/4) 3/8
Square, Amber and Yellow, LTC and LTCR, Applied mouth and Tooled lip, 3 sp, Scarce

M 99 Mishler's Herb Bitters (un-fancy square) - Meyer Collection

Note: Henry L. Mishler, 17 west King Street, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Henry L. Mishler was the son of Benjamin Mishler, the originator of Mishler’s Herb Bitters. Henry worked for his father in Lancaster prior to leaving his father’s company and founding his own company to produce these bitters. After selling his company, Benjamin Mishler joined his son and operated a gold
and sodium business.

Mishler's Bitters Shipping Crate - Meyer Collection

Mishler's Bitters Trade Card - Meyer Collection

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