The oddly shaped Vigor Bitter & Invigorating Tonic & the Heublein & Brother Bottle

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The oddly shaped Vigor Bitter & Invigorating Tonic & the Heublein & Brother bottle

05 September 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAFrank Wicker sent the pictures (which I have cropped in Photoshop) of a Vigor Bitter & Invigorating Tonic saying, “Hi Ferdinand, have you ever seen one of these? This one is a concave square bottle. The Vigor Bitter & Tonic Co. Hope all has been good, Frank”.

I recognized the bottle from the recent Rachel Davis Fine Art Auction. When mentioned to Frank, he replied, “Yes , it has been added to the collection. Ring & Ham says it’s extremly rare. But this one is a variant. It’s 10 1/4 inches tall in height instead of 11 inches. From what I hear, it was one of the few bottles at this auction with no damage.”

Read: Wicker Visit – Austin Healey’s and Elephants

I posted the image on Daily Dose and the Peachridge Glass Facebook page and got an almost immediate response from Gerard Dauphinais, Great piece. I have a bottle the same shape in green from Hartford, Ct. Heublein Co.” (see pics, again cropped in PhotoShop) 

VigorBitter_HeubleinFull

The Vigor Bitter & Tonic Co. (left) and Heublein & Bro. (right)

I wondered about the Vigor Bitter & Invigorating Tonic and searched online for information, focusing in the Midwest and Illinois area. I just felt the bottle looked like some of the triangular bitters from that region. The Heublein & Brother bottle from Hartford, Connecticut led me to the northeast as it looks like an identical form. In both areas I could not find any support information though I did find an abundance of information on Heublein Inc. (also known as Heublein Spirits). They were an American producer and distributor of alcoholic beverages and food throughout the 20th century.

Heublein was originally a restaurant in Hartford, Connecticut founded in 1862 by Andrew Heublein, a German American entrepreneur. He was soon joined in business by his two sons Gilbert F. and Louis Heublein. In 1875 they took an order to prepare a quantity of pre-mixed martini and Manhattan cocktails for the annual picnic of the Governor’s Foot Guard. The event had to be cancelled due to rain. A few days later, a restaurant employee was instructed to dispose of the stored cocktails. But his curiosity led to the discovery and declaration that the alcoholic drinks were “still good”. It had been duly noted by the two brothers, who started selling pre-mixed cocktails in the restaurant. These ready-made cocktails were so popular that a distillery was built just to satisfy the increasing demand. The business became Gilbert F. Heublein and Bro. upon its transfer to Andrew’s sons Gilbert and Louis Heublein in 1890, when the focus was turning towards their lucrative line of “ready-made” alcoholic cocktail drinks. [Wikipedia]

Read: Afternoon Cocktails in the Tower with Gilbert by Jack Sullivan

Now, let’s go back to the Vigor Bitter and Tonic. First of all, the Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

V 21.8  THE VIGOR BITTER & TONIC CO
// b // THE VIGOR BITTER – / & TONIC CO
11 x 4 (measured diagonally) (8 1/4)
Square, Amber, LTC, 4 concave sides, Extremely rare

When I check my own archives. which are close to 100,000 images, I see a lone folder labeled Vigor Bitters right under my nose. Apparently Glass Works Auctions sold one before! And it is really a Provost Vigor Bitters from Cleveland, Ohio. So my original instincts were correct.

ProvostVigorBitters

A labeled Provost Vigor Bitters, Cleveland, Ohio with the same embossed base – Glass Works Auction

I now check Bitters Bottles again and find:

P 149  L… Provost Vigor Bitters
// b // THE VIGOR BITTER / & TONIC CO. /
Prepared and bottled by the Provost Vigor Bitter and Tonic Co., Cleveland, U.S.A.
10 x 3 (7)
Square convex sides, Amber and Clear, LTC, Tooled lip, Extremely rare

ProvostBittersShot

Here is a shot glass found on pre-pro.com. It reads, Provost Vigor (arched, old English) / (line of 12 dots) / BITTERS (ital, with design at either end) / FOR THAT (up-swoosh design at either end) /TIRED FEELING.

Posted in Auction News, Bitters, Medicines & Cures, Questions, Shot Glasses, Tonics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Professor Virchow’s Iron Bitters – Chicago

VirchowsClipped

Professor Virchow’s Iron Bitters – Chicago

04 September 2015 (R•120615)

Apple-Touch-IconAJeff Burkhardt (Cedarburg, Wisconsin) sent the following e-mail and two pictures of a Professor Virchow’s Iron Bitters. I have not seen one of these bottles before so I thought this was pretty cool. Nice to see that Jeff took the time to find out a little bit about the bottle.

Hello Ferdinand,

Just picked up a PROF. VIRCHOW’S IRON BITTERS, a bitters that I’d never seen before. A quick search reveals that HERMAN KAESTNER was a pioneer tobacco merchant and possible saloon owner(609 Wells St.) in CHICAGO in late 1890s.

The bottle, V-23 in the Ham/Ring listing, is rated extremely rare and came from an old Wisconsin collection. Carlyn listed in her FOR BITTERS ONLY so she may have had one. This is what makes bitters collecting so exciting…always a new, extremely rare find around the corner!

Froggy

ProfVirchows1_Frog

ProfVirchows2_Frog

V 23Drawing

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

V 23  PROFESSOR VIRCHOW’S IRON BITTERS
PROF. VIRCHOW’S /IRON BITTERS / MAN’FRD BY THE / CHICAGO BITTERS CO. / HERMAN KAESTNER / SOLE AGENT // f // f // f //
6 3/4 x 3 (5 1/4)
Square, Amber, CM, Extremely rare
Lettering reads base to shoulder
Virchows_GWA

“PROF. VIRCHOWS / IRON BITTERS / MAN’FRD BY THE / CHICAGO BITTERS CO. / HERMAN KAESTNER / SOLE AGENT”, (Ring/Ham, V-23), Illinois, ca. 1880 – 1890, medium amber, 6 3/4″h, smooth base, applied mouth. Cleaned to its original luster but retains some minor imperfections mostly along the edge of the base. Rated as extremely rare, which it must be as none have been sold at auction in the last 25-years! – Glass Works Auctions | Auction 109

Read about another iron bitters: Baltimore’s Iron Bitters – Brown Chemical Company

Herman Kaestner

Herman Kaestner was born in Saxony, Germany around 1822 from parents also from Saxonia. He received his United States citizenship on 03 September 1855 in New York City, N.Y. and moved to Chicago, Illinois to become a pioneer tobacco merchant. Listings for his cigar business can be found in Chicago as early as 1861. He next would lose his property and stock of tobacco in the Great Chicago Fire in 1871. Rebuilding, he again went into the cigar and tobacco business until he moved into the saloon business in 1886 at 609 Wells Street in Chicago. He jumped on the bitters bandwagon around 1890 with his Chicago Bitters Company enterprise and is listed in the bitters business in an 1891 Chicago City Directory. This is why the bottle is extremely rare. He died in 1895.

He named his bitters after Rudolf Ludwig Carl Virchow who was a German doctor, anthropologist, pathologist, prehistorian, biologist, writer, editor, and politician, known for his advancement of public health. He is known as “the father of modern pathology“. I doubt they ever met though they could have met the professor in Germany before he came to United States.

If you look at the bottle mouth, it looks like it has an applied lip. This is odd if it is dated around 1890. Maybe Jeff can confirm this?

Mrs. Kaestner, nee Gebhardt, came over from Germany in a sail boat in the 1850s, and the time consumed in making the trip was seventy-seven days. The trip was accompanied by many perils. (Chicago: Its History and Its Builders, a Century of Marvelous Growth, 1912)

Professor Virchow

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Rudolf Ludwig Carl Virchow (13 October 1821 – 5 September 1902) was a German doctor, anthropologist, pathologist, prehistorian, biologist, writer, editor, and politician, known for his advancement of public health. He is known as “the father of modern pathology” because his work helped to discredit humourism, bringing more science to medicine. He is also known as the founder of social medicine and veterinary pathology, and to his colleagues, the “Pope of medicine“.

Born and bred in Schievelbein (Świdwin) as an only child of a working-class family, he proved to be a brilliant student. Dissuaded by his weak voice, he abandoned his initial interest in theology and turned to medicine. With special military scholarship, he earned his medical degree from Friedrich-Wilhelms Institute (Humboldt University of Berlin) under the tutelage of Johannes Peter Müller. He worked at the Charité hospital under Robert Froriep, whom he eventually succeeded as the prosector.

Although he failed to contain the 1847–1848 typhus epidemic in Upper Silesia, his report laid the foundation for public health in Germany, as well as his political and social activities. From it, he coined a well known aphorism: “Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing else but medicine on a large scale”. He participated in the Revolution of 1848, which led to his expulsion from Charité the next year. He published a newspaper Die medicinische Reform (Medical Reform) during this period to disseminate his social and political ideas. He took the first Chair of Pathological Anatomy at the University of Würzburg in 1849. After five years, Charité invited him back to direct its newly built Institute for Pathology, and simultaneously becoming the first Chair of Pathological Anatomy and Physiology at Berlin University. The campus of Charité is now named Campus Virchow Klinikum. He cofounded the political party Deutsche Fortschrittspartei, by which he was elected to the Prussian House of Representatives, and won a seat in the Reichstag. His opposition to Otto von Bismarck’s financial policy resulted in an anecdotal “Sausage Duel” between the two. But he ardently supported Bismarck in his anti-Catholic campaigns, the social revolution he himself named as Kulturkampf (“culture struggle”).

A prolific writer, his scientific writings alone crossed 2,000 in number. Among his books, Cellular Pathology published in 1858 is regarded as the root of modern pathology. This work also popularised the third dictum in cell theory: Omnis cellula e cellula (“All cells come from cells”); although his idea originated in 1855. He founded journals such as Archiv für pathologische Anatomie und Physiologie und für klinische Medizin (now Virchows Archiv), and Zeitschrift für Ethnologie (Journal of Ethnology). The latter is published by German Anthropological Association and the Berlin Society for Anthropology, Ethnology and Prehistory, the societies of which he also founded.

Virchow was the first to precisely describe and give names of diseases such as leukemia, chordoma, ochronosis, embolism, and thrombosis. He coined scientific terms, chromatin, agenesis, parenchyma, osteoid, amyloid degeneration, and spina bifida. His description of the transmission cycle of a roundworm Trichinella spiralis established the importance of meat inspection, which was started in Berlin. He developed the first systematic method of autopsy involving surgery of all body parts and microscopic examination. A number of medical terms are named after him, including Virchow’s node, Virchow–Robin spaces, Virchow–Seckel syndrome, and Virchow’s triad. He was the first to use hair analysis in criminal investigation, and recognised its limitations. His laborious analyses of the hair, skin, and eye colour of school children made him criticise the Aryan race concept as a myth.

He was an ardent anti-evolutionist. He referred to Charles Darwin as “ignoramus” and his own student Ernst Haeckel, the leading advocate of Darwinism in Germany, as a “fool”. He discredited the original specimen of Neanderthal as nothing but that of a deformed human, and not an ancestral species. He was an agnostic.

In 1861, he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. In 1892, he was awarded the Copley Medalof the British Royal Society. He was elected to the Prussian Academy of Sciences in 1873, and entitled an ennoblement “von Virchow”, but which he declined. [Wikipedia]

Select Listings:

1822: Herman Kaestner born 1822 in Saxony, Germany.
1855: Herman Kaestner Naturalization, 03 Sep 1855, New York
1860: Onychomycosis. – Professor Virchow exhibited to the Berlin Medical Society a specimen of a nail affected with what he terms onychomycosis. It consists of a vegetable parasite, first described as affecting the finger-nail by Meissner, and very frequently observed by Virchow in the nail of the great toe at Wurzburg. It occurs far less frequently in Berlin. The preparation exhibits the characteristic white appearance of the surface of the nail, due to the presence of a fungus situated deeply at the bottom of the nail. It resembles porrigo favosa, but is not identical with it, porrigo of the nail being less deeply placed than onychomycosis..— Deutsche Klinik, No. 38., Medical Times and Gazette, 1860
1861-1870:  Herman Kaestner, 88 Wells, Cigars, Tobacco, Retail – John C.W. Bailey’s Business Directory of Chicago
1868: Herman Kaestner, 88 Wells, Cigar Manufacturers and Dealers – Commercial Directory of the Western States
1870: Herman Kaestner, Cigar Dealer, Age in 1870: 48 Estimated Birth Year: 1821 Birthplace: Germany, Home in 1870: Chicago Ward 19, Cook, Illinois Race: White Gender: Male – United States Federal Census
1874: The yellow pigment is now designated bilirubin. On standing, it becomes greenish from oxydation, and is converted into biliverdin, which accounts for the dark colour usually presented by the bile in the gall-bladder after death and in the faeces. Biliverdin is also the principal colouring matter of the bile of the herbivora. Bilirubin is now known to be formed from blood-pigment or haemoglobin by the hepatic cells, in the passage of the blood through the liver. That this was the source of the bile-pigment, was suggested at the end of last century by a distinguished Fellow of this College, Dr. W. Saunders, who observed: “Green and bitter bile, being in common to all animals with red blood, and found only in such, makes it probable that there is some relative connection between this fluid and the colouring matter of the blood, by the red particles contributing more especially to its formation. This view, revived in our own day by Virchow, is supported by the apparent identity of bile-pigment with the pigmenthcematoidin found in old extravasations of blood, and by the fact that what appears to be bile-pigment can be produced from blood-pigment by the action of chemical reagents; by the discovery of Zenker and F’rcrichs of crystals of haemotoidin in inspissated bile and in the bile of jaundiced urine; by the observation of Gubler that bilirubin and hajmatin give the same play of colours with nitric acid, except that the green colour is most persistent in the former, and the violet in the latter;  by the discovery of Frerichs, Kuhne, and others, that when any. – Virchow’s Cellular Pathology, English Translation, p. 144; Kuhne, Lehrbuck dcr Physiol, Chcmie. Leipzig, 1866, p. 89.
1876: Herman Kaestner, cigar manufacturer, 23 Lake, r 692 N. Franklin – The Lakeside Annual Directory of the City of Chicago
1880: Herman Kaestner, Cigar Manufacturer, Age in 1870: 58 Estimated Birth Year: 1821 Birthplace: Germany – United States Federal Census
1882: Herman Kaestner & Company, 18 North Clark, Cigars – Chicago Illinois City Directory
1886-1889: Herman Kaestner, saloon, 609 Wells –A. N. Marquis & Co.’s Handy Business Directory of Chicago, Volume 1
1889: The advisability of appointing school doctors in Germany, we are told, was suggested by Professor Virchow in 1889, and in 1900 medical inspection of schools was actually in operation in Wiesbaden, Konigsberg, Niirnberg, Darmstadt, Frankfort, Dresden and Leipzig. In 1899 the Board of Health of New York City had 250 medical inspectors for schools at a salary of $360, with a chief at a salary of $2,500. In Chicago, in January, 1900, a daily inspection was begun with fifty-six inspectors receiving fifty dollars a month, to work from 9A.M. till 12 noon. The city of Boston is divided into fifty districts, with a medical inspector to each. Germany and America, the great progressive countries of the world, are alive to the necessity of making the health of the children a matter of first importance. We occasionally appoint a medical officer often quite unfitted for the work by training or special experience to act under the School Board and make the best arrangements he can with the Medical Officer of Health, but at best our methods are blundering, cumbersome, and to a great extent useless. – Med. Press and Circular
1890: Herman Kaestner Voter Registration – Living in Cook County Illinois 31 living in precinct 6 years. Current address 7 Hammond Court
1891: Herman Kaestner, Bitters, 79 Hammond – Chicago Illinois City Directory
1895: Herman Kaestner died o7 August 1895 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois.
Posted in Bitters, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures, Tobacco | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Daily Dose | September 2015

September  |  2 0 1 5

Wednesday, 23 September 2015

NovDec15_HoustonScrapBookCover_R2

In the pretty city of Greenville S.C. the next few days. Cover design for the next issue of BOTTLES and EXTRAS went to the editor last week.

Tuesday, 22 September 2015

OldHouseGary2

Ferd, this is near my home town of Lancaster, Ohio. Could there be a “Henry Weavers” in the privy? If only the old house could tell its story.  Gary (Beatty)

OldHouseGary1

Read: Mexican Bitters – Henry C. Weaver – Lancaster, O

Tuesday, 15 September 2015

Updated the Bininger Gallery with this fine example of a Bininger Golden Apple.

BiningerGoldenApple2

Monday, 14 September 2015

Chillin’ in Downieville. Steaks tonight. Rain coming in.

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17 year old Bianca Passarge of Hamburg dresses up as a cat, complete with furry tail and dances on wine bottles. Her performance was based on a dream and she practiced for eight hours every day in order to perfect her dance. (1958)

Bee cool if these were IXL’s

Dr Henley IXL Color Run

Dr. Henley’s Wild Grape Root Bitters Color Run

Tuesday, 08 September 2015

Downieville

Hope everyone had a great Labor Day Weekend. Leaving for Sacramento Thursday morning. Full FOHBC 2016 Sacramento National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo team meeting Friday morning at the Lions Gate Hotel. Then Coco and I will head off to Downieville for the great bottle show event.

RohrersStoreFrame

Really incredible auction online with some fantastic, rarely seen material. Check this out. Conestoga Auctions

Friday, 04 September 2015

ProfVirchows1_Frog

In from Jeff Burkhardt, aka Froggy…

Hello Ferdinand,

Just picked up a PROF. VIRCHOW’S IRON BITTERS, a bitters that I’d never seen before. A quick search reveals that HERMAN KAESTNER was a pioneer tobacco merchant and possible saloon owner(609 Wells St.) in CHICAGO in late 1890’s.

The bottle, V-23 in the Ham/Ring listing is rated extremely rare and came from an old Wisconsin collection. Carlyn listed in her FOR BITTERS ONLY so she may have had one. This is what makes Bitters collecting so exciting- always a new/ex.-rare find around the corner!

Froggy

ProfVirchows2_Frog

Thursday, 03 September 2015

Up in Washington DC today for business. Looking forward to Sacramento and Downieville next week. Interesting color here on this Angostura Bitters…

Blue Bitters

Ferdinand, How’s that for a subject line? Should grab most people’s attention. Anyhow, I dug this little beauty a couple months ago but haven’t really been able to find anything out about it?  Do you have any idea what would be worth?  I’ve seen hundreds of greenish ones but never a deep Prussian blue one. Any ideas would be helpful.

Thanks, Brandon (Smith)

Read: The Wizard of Oz and Angostura Bitters

Viridian_Ang1

Tuesday, 01 September 2015

Christian Raezer posts this later, labeled Canteen Bitters over on the FaceBook Antique Bitters Bottles page.

I wonder if it is related to the more well-known John Hart & Co. Canteen Bitters from Lancaster, Penn?

Read: Canteen Bitters – John Hart & Co. – Lancaster PA

CanteenBittersSquare

 

 

Posted in Bitters, Daily Dose, News | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Telliers Herb Bitters – Established 1834

TelliersBitters_Gary3

Telliers Herb Bitters – Established 1834

30 August 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAHere is a cool bitters square that I have heard about and seen on eBay before though I do not have an example in my collection. This looks like a pretty decent example. This brand is not to be confused with the Theller’s Stomach Bitters which I do have on my shelf. Read: Labeled Theller’s Bitters Lady’s Leg – New York. There is also a Theller’s Stomach Bitters (R&H T 17) square. See picture below.

ThellersSquareHere is an e-mail from Florida bitters collector, Gary Beatty that inspired this post.

Ferd, here is a bitters I spoke briefly with you about at Chattanooga. It is listed as T-11.5 ,n Ring & Ham’s Bitters Bottles Supplement. Bill Ham has it as rated as extremely rare. It was found at a Pennsylvania flea market. Jim Hagenbach told me he has seen only two over the years. It could be a Pennsylvania bitters? Also in the Ring & Ham listing it says Est. 1884 but you can see it is embossed 1834. I wonder if you or Froggy has seen this one? Best Regards, Gary Beatty

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

T11_5_DrawingR

T 11.5  TELLIERS HERB BITTERS
ESTD 1884 (should be 1834) TELLIERS // f // HERB BITTERS // f //
9 7/8 x 2 3/4 (7) 3/8
Square, Amber, Applied mouth, 2 sp, Extremely rare

TelliersBitters_Gary2

TelliersBitters_Gary1

Here is a Telliers Herb Bitters example below that sold on eBay this past July with this wonderfully brief description: “Fine old bottle, needs cleaning. Thanks for looking”. See listing. I would suspect Gary’s example is the same and that Gary won the bottle and cleaned it upon receipt.

Telliers_eBay

I also found reference to a Telliers Herb Bitters that was dug in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

We went to the right about a foot and found a side, and the other two sides were found just as quick. So we had an opening 4′ x 3′ with three sides found. We had probed the sides after we broke through and could only hope for a little length in the other direction, the depth with the top off was about five feet. But the biggest question was, as it always is, are we lucky today? The second shovel of ash brought the sweetest sound a digger can hear, that beautiful screech of a bottle being disturbed from a sound sleep. Let’s at least have a corktop so we can have some age, I thought. Bob brushed away the dirt to get a look at what he had scraped against. “It’s a bitters”, he yelled. Sure enough, as I looked over where the second shovel of dirt came out, the square bottom of a brown bottle stood straight up! Two scrapes around and out came a “Tellier’s Herb Bitters”.

Except for a slight amount of stain, the bottle was in the most unbelievable condition. No ground wear, no scratches, no chips, nothing. In fact, every bottle to come out of this hole was in the same condition. I’ve never seen a good bottle that was so close to the top. This hole was to be full of surprises.

Read: A Bitters Tale: Bottle digging in Coal Mining Country

Peter & Frank P. Tellier

We are probably talking about Frank P. Tellier who in 1880, on a United States Federal Census, was listed in Patent Medicines in Easton, Northampton, Pennsylvania. Tellier was born in 1843 and his father was Peter Tellier from France. At 17 years old he was a clerk in Bushkill, Pennsylvania and later worked with his father at P. Tellier and Son at 37 Northampton in Easton, Pennsylvania. You can see him listed as confectioner in an 1868 and 1873 directory in Easton. His wife was Huldah L. Teel. He died on 20 February 1905 in Philadelphia, Penn. His obituary said he was an Insurance salesman. Funny how a lot of bitters guys went off later into the insurance business.

If this is the guy, the bitters may have first been concocted by his feather Peter with the “Established 1834” date.

Posted in Bitters, Digging and Finding, eBay, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Top Saratoga “Wanted” List Update

Saratoga_Neil@table

Top Saratoga “Wanted” List Update

27 August 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAA couple of weeks before the FOHBC 2015 Chattanooga National, I received a simple e-mail from Neil Moore from Milford, Delaware that is represented below.

Good morning,

I read your comments regarding the “Union Spring” that recently sold at auction for 6K and your thoughts about the original Saratoga “Wanted” List. Attached find Bernie Puckhaber’s Saratoga “Wanted” list dated 1973, and my “preferred” list for 2015. Enjoy and see you in Chattanooga.

Neil A. Moore

Read: The Union Spring Bottle

Neil brought these great bottles to Chattanooga and I carved out a space on my table for him to display. Quite an impressive group of mineral water bottles.

Saratoga_SansSouci

Top 3 Saratoga Bottles, Sans Souci Spring (aqua), Saratoga Seltzer Spring (olive-green) and Aetna Spring (aqua).


Ten Most Wanted Saratogas

Bernie Puckhaber – 1973

All pints

1. Aetna Spring (aqua)
2. Glacier Spring (emerald green)
3. Hyperion Spring (aqua)
4. Paradise Spring (olive-green)
5. Round Lake Spring (amber)
6. Sans Souci Spring (aqua)
7. Saratoga Seltzer Spring (olive green)
8. Triton Spring (aqua)
9. Union Spring (emerald-green)
10.Washington Spring (Bust of Washington) (emerald-green)


Ten Most Wanted Saratogas

Neil A. Moore – 2015

All pints

1. Sans Souci Spring (aqua)
2. Saratoga Seltzer Spring (emerald-green)
3. Aetna Spring (aqua)
4. Paradise Spring (olive-green)
5. Hyperion Spring (aqua)
6. Round Lake Spring (amber)
7. Glacier Spring (aqua)
8. Union Spring (emerald-green)
9. Triton Spring (aqua)
10. Washington Spring (Bust of Washington) (aqua)


Saratoga_Neil@table2

Neil A. Moore proudly sitting with his Top 10 Saratoga mineral water bottles.

Saratoga_PriceList

Ten Most Wanted Saratogas, Neil A. Moore – 2015 Price List

Saratoga_3withPrice

Detail of Aetna Spring, Paradise Spring and Hyperion Spring Saratogas.

Saratoga_AetnaSpring

#3: Aetna Springs mineral water, Saratoga, N.Y.

Saratoga_GlacierSpring

#7: Glacier Spring mineral water (front), Saratoga, N.Y.

Saratoga_GlacierSpringReverse

#7: Glacier Spring mineral water (reverse), Saratoga, N.Y.

Saratoga_ParadiseSpring

#4: Paradise Spring mineral water, Saratoga, N.Y.

Saratoga_Hyperion Spring

#5: Hyperion Spring mineral water, Saratoga, N.Y.

Saratoga_RoundLakejpg

#6: Round Lake mineral water, Saratoga, N.Y.

Saratoga_SansSouci2

#1: Sans Souci Spring mineral water in aqua, Balston Spa, N.Y.

Saratoga_SeltzerSpring2

#2: Saratoga Seltzer Spring mineral water, Saratoga, N.Y.

Caligraphy

#2: Saratoga Seltzer Spring mineral water (back side with S S S calligraphy), Saratoga, N.Y.

Saratoga_UnionSpring

#8: Union Spring mineral water in emerald green.

Saratoga_Washington

#10: Washington Spring (Bust of Washington) mineral water in aqua. Triton Springs (#9) beyond.

Posted in Advice, Bottle Shows, Collectors & Collections, FOHBC News, Mineral Water, News, Water | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Gilbert’s Sarsaparilla Bitters – Enosburgh Falls, Vermont

G42_Gilberts_MeyerGilbert’s Sarsaparilla Bitters Enosburgh Falls, Vermont

21 August 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAIf you read my most recent post about Dr. Gilbert’s Rock and Rye Stomach Bitters (Read: Dr. Gilbert’s Rock and Rye Stomach Bitters), you saw that I was going to investigate to see if there was a relationship to Gilbert’s Sarsaparilla Bitters from Enosburg Falls, Vermont. Actually, if you read historical and current information, Enosburgh is also spelled ‘Enosburg’. Kind of like Pittsburgh and Pittsburg.

Unfortunately, I can not find the “Gilbert’s” link that I mentioned above, but I was able to find out a little about the proprietor of Gilbert’s Sarsaparilla Bitters who also put out Wild Indian Lung Balsam and Scotch Oil, a family and horse liniment. The horse illustrated below really looks like he needs some Scotch Oil!

Gilberts_B GilbertsA

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

G 42drawingR
G 42  GILBERT’S SARSAPARILLA BITTERS
GILBERT’S SARSAPARILLA // BITTERS // N. A. GILBERT & CO. //
ENOSBURGH FALLS, VT. // f // f // f //
8 3/4 x 2 1/2 (7 5/8)
Octagonal, Amber, NSC, Applied mouth and Tooled lip, Rare
Label panel curved sunken area crossing 3 bevels
Label: A specific for loss of appetite, indigestion, constipation, dyspepsia, biliousness, general debility, and all diseases arising from the impure state of the blood such as scrofula, syphilitic affections, cancerous tumors, ring worms, salt rheum, boils, pimples, headache, dizziness, and all diseases of the kidneys, liver and urinary organs, etc., giving tone and strength to the stomach and the whole system, assisting nature to expel from the system, all humors, impure and effete matter, trough its natural channels. Pleasant to take and effective in action.

Enosburgh Falls, Vermont

Village of Enosburgh Falls. – The village of Enosburgh Falls is by far the most important trading and manufacturing center in the town, but practically within the last quarter of a century has this prominence been attained. Indeed, so rapid and healthful has been the growth of this locality that on the 19th of November, 1886, the state legislature passed an act incorporating the old Seventh School District into a village, and otherwise provided for the election of trustees, clerk, treasurer, collector, one chief engineer, two assistants, three fire wardens, and conferred upon the village the power to govern its district in the same manner that other corporate villages are ordered and governed.

But Enosburgh Falls as a hamlet had an existence almost if not quite as early as any other settled locality of the town, yet it was not until the construction of the Missisquoi Valley Railroad through the town that the rapid strides in the direction of municipality were made. The hamlet was first started and built up in the vicinity of the falls, where nature designed one of the best of the many fine water privileges of the valley, but which required the arts of man to develop and put into practical use and operation. That this power has been utilized by past generations, as well as by the present, there can be no doubt, for the old buildings still standing are sufficient evidence of the fact in the absence of other proof, but just when manufacturing commenced here, and what was its peculiar character, none of the present villagers will venture to state. During the early years of the present century Samuel Kendall was numbered among the most prominent men of this locality. In 1824 he built and put into operation a woolen-mill, or, as it was then known, a carding and fulling-mill, and manufactured cloth for the few settlers of the locality. Also, that he might profitably turn into cash an accumulated stock of corn, he started a distillery, but the latter industry he gave up, not liking the whiskey business. After Samuel Kendall, the pioneer, came his sons Marshall and Samuel, jr., as proprietors of the mill, and about 1860, or perhaps earlier, the “red mill” was built by Samuel, jr. The property afterward passed through other hands, and finally came to its present occupancy. – History of Franklin and Grand Isle counties, VermontWith illustrations and biographical sketches of some of the prominent men and pioneers, 1891

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Enosburg Falls, Vermont, birds eye view map – 1892

Nathan A. Gilbert

Captain Nathan Allen Gilbert, the son of Nathan and Cynthia (Smith) Gilbert, was born in Fairfield, Vermont on February 4, 1847. He was the youngest of five children and was brought up in mill work and became actively interested in that business in his native town, being half owner with his father of a mill from about 1866 until 1877. In 1877, he came to Enosburg, Vermont and with D. B. Stetson, built a large flouring-mill at the Falls, but later sold his interests to Mr. Stetson.

The Missisquoi Flouring Mill was built in 1877, by Daniel B. Stetson and Nathan A. Gilbert. The mill stands near the dam, on the east side of the river; a substantial building, well adapted for its use, having four “runs of stone,” and equal in capacity to any industry of its kind in the region, excepting only those at Swanton. In 1883, Mr Gilbert retired from the business, and was succeeded by General C. L. Marsh, the firm becoming Stetson Marsh, a relation that has ever since been maintained. In connection with the milling business here done the firm has an extensive grain, flour, and feed store on Main street, near the railroad. – History of Franklin and Grand Isle counties, Vermont, 1889

Gilbert attended college at the Franklin (Vermont) Academy and entered Norwich University in September, 1864, remaining until September, 1866. He married on November 23, 1868, to Hattie N. Ward, native of Castleton, Vermont who died in Enosburg Falls on May 10, 1896. Five children were born to them: Emma Lucy, born March 13, 1870, married Mr. Hibbard C. Kendall, died November 4, 1897; Allena Cynthia, born August 20, 1872, married Mr. R. J. Isham, resided in Burlington, Vt.; William Nathan, born August 5, 1875, resided in St. Johnsbury, Vt.; Lottie Elizabeth, born September 29, 1878, married Mr. Walter B. Taylor, resided in Bennington, Vt. and Armida Julia, born February 1, 1884, married Mr. Percy Howard, resided in Whitefield, N.H.

Gilbert also served as captain in the Vermont State Militia from 1870 to 1875. was member of the A £ II Fraternity; served with the corps of cadets at Newport, Vermont, in October, 1864 which was during the St. Albans Raid excitement.

In 1885, Gilbert began drug and patent medicine business in Enosburg Falls. In 1886, N.A. Gilbert and Company was established as an outgrowth of a drug and medicine business run by Benjamin J. Kendall and Henry D. Kendall in 1876. He ran this business until 1892, being associated in the business with H. L. Kendall, 1885-87, and J. W. Beatty, 1889-92. They were the producers of Kendall’s Spavin Cure. In 1891, Gilbert and Co. was manufacturing Gilbert’s Sarsaparilla Bitters, Wild Indian Lung Balsam, and Scotch Oil, a family and horse liniment to compete with Kendall’s Spavin Cure.

J. W. BEATTY, Medicines – Church Street. – Mr. J. W. Beatty is a manufacturer of Scotch oil, condition powders, pills, bitters, tooth powders, etc. His business was established by H. D. Kendall in 1881; succeeded by Kendall & Gilbert in 1883; by N. A. Gilbert in 1883; by Gilbert & Co. in 1883; and by Mr. Beatty in September month. 1890. He travels through the states of Vermont and New York, selling his excellent medicines, which give satisfaction, their quality being pure and good. Mr. Beatty is a thorough and practically skilled compounder of drugs, and has come into his profession with a complete understanding of its important branches. His oils are manufactured from ingredients that make them all-powerful in the killing and utter routing of pains. Horsemen and stock raisers, breeders and dealers have heartily endorsed his condition powders, as have eminent patients spoken highly of his pills and bitters, while his powders for the teeth are free from any factor that disturbs the enamel, their functions being to purify the gums and breath. – Industries and Wealth of the Principal Points in Vermont, 1891

Later Nathan A. Gilbert engaged in the stove and furniture business in Enosburg Falls from 1893 to 1897. In 1898, he located in St. Johnsbury, Vermont, where he made his home and was in the employment of the Fairbanks Scale Company from 1898 to 1900. Next he was traveling salesman for W. B. Saunder’s Co., of Philadelphia, from 1900 to 1907. In 1908, he retired from active work. Nathan A. Gilbert died in 1923. His grave marker is below. Pretty simple.

Gilbert_Marker

TrampsBook_Gilberts

N. A. Gilbert & Co. advertisement – “Tramp’s” Note Book, Or, Some Things a “Tramp” Has Seen, Heard, and Said, 1889

ADVERTISING TRADE CARDS

The following advertising trade cards are from the Joe Gourd Collection in Chicago, Illinois. These are stock cards with surprints for the brand and product on back. You could send in .50 cents or $1.00 for a bottle or two. With a 2 cent stamp, they would send you eight “beautiful Picture Cards”.

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Stock advertising Trade Card for Sarsaparilla Bitters (Reverse) – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Gilberts TC 1B

Stock advertising Trade Card for Sarsaparilla Bitters (Reverse) – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Gilberts TC 2

Stock advertising Trade Card for Sarsaparilla Bitters – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Gilberts TC 3

Stock advertising Trade Card for Sarsaparilla Bitters – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Gilberts TC 1A

tock advertising Trade Card for Sarsaparilla Bitters – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Gilberts TC A_A

Stock advertising Trade Card for Sarsaparilla Bitters – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Gilberts TC B

Stock advertising Trade Card for Sarsaparilla Bitters – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Gilberts TC C

Stock advertising Trade Card for Sarsaparilla Bitters – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Gilberts TC A_B

Stock advertising Trade Card for Gilbert’s Sarsaparilla Bitters and Wild Indian Ling Balsam (Reverse) – N.A. Gilbert & Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vermont – Joe Gourd Collection

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Sarsaparilla, Trade Cards, Veterinary | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Gilbert’s Rock and Rye Stomach Bitters

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Dr. Gilbert’s Rock and Rye Stomach Bitters

20 August 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAFinally coming out from under the work load associated with the FOHBC 2015 Chattanooga National and I am doing what I like best, that is passionately collecting and writing about antique bitters bottles. I even gave a talk with the master, Jack Sullivan, in Chattanooga, the seminar titled, “Every Bottle has a Story”. You can also see some of the bitters bottles in Chattanooga here: Chattanooga National Bitters Spotting

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“DR. GILBERT’S / ROCK AND RYE / STOMACH BITTERS.”, (G-40), American, ca. 1875 – 1885, medium teal blue green Ex. Howard Crowe Collection.

Gary Beatty (FOHBC Treasurer), pulled me aside during the show and took me to his table where he pulled out a box from beneath. I knew it had to be something great as Gary has a keen eye for bitters. He pulls out a killer, probably the best I have ever seen, Russ’ St. Domingo Bitters (Read: Russ’s St. Domingo Bitters – New York) in a spectacular green that was whittled to death. Next he pulls out the taller variant of a Dr. Gilbert’s Rock and Rye Bitters in blue-green. These two bottles commanded a quick picture or two as the Rock and Rye example recently moved from the Howard Crowe collection to the Beatty Collection.

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

G 40Drawing

G 40  DR. GILBERT’S ROCK AND RYE STOMACH BITTERS
DR. GILBERT’S / ROCK AND RYE / STOMACH BITTERS. // sp // sp // sp //
9 1/4 x 2 7/8 (6 3/4) 1/2
Square, Green, LTC, 4 sp, Extremely Rare (also blue green)
G 41  DR. GILBERT’S ROCK AND RYE STOMACH BITTERS
DR. GILBERT’S / ROCK AND RYE / STOMACH BITTERS. // sp // sp // sp //
7 1/2 x 2 1/4 (5 1/8) 3/8
Square, Blue green, LTC, 4 sp, Tooled lip, Very Rare

Here is the smaller variant below in a blue-green or teal color.

DrGilbertsRock&Rye

“DR. GILBERT’S / ROCK AND RYE / STOMACH BITTERS.”, (G-41), American, ca. 1875 – 1885, medium teal blue with a hint of green, 7 5/8”h, smooth base, tooled lip, about perfect (a pinhead size flake is off a panel edge). Very rare, probably less than five known examples and the first to be offered in 15 years! Ex. Stuart Elman Collection. – Glass Works Auctions

Rock and Rye was a liqueur made of whiskey blended with powdered rock candy and sometimes fruit and was something almost any bar carried and in the 1800s. It was reputed to aid in digestion. I suppose they made the bottles a ‘pretty’ color to mask the sludge with. Most liquor establishments most made their own, often as a way to make some rather rustic whiskey more approachable. The classic recipe is rye sweetened with rock candy, sometimes also ginger and/or citrus peels, essentially an Old Fashioned cocktail-in-a-bottle. Theoretically, all it needs is a couple of dashes of bitters and a twist to complete it. Since rye had a hard time coming back after Prohibition, if a bar carried it at all after that, it was likely a manufactured bottled bastardization of the stuff (for nostalgic purposes?), neither “rye” nor “rock.” Excerpt: The Return of Rock & Rye, An old bar standard makes a comeback to replace what’s been here for years. Amanda Schuster

rock-and-ryeTradeCard

So who is Dr. Gilbert? I really do not know. The path we will look at first is to see if it is related to Gilbert’s Sarsaparilla Bitters (see below) from Enosburgh Falls, Vermont. This will be a follow-up post.

G42_Gilberts_Meyer

Gilbert’s Sarsaparilla Bitters – Meyer Collection

Posted in Bitters, Bottle Shows, Liqueurs, Medicines & Cures, Questions, Spirits, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Chattanooga National Bitters Spotting

ChatBitters_MaconGa

Chattanooga National Bitters Spotting

19 August 2015 (R•082015)

Apple-Touch-IconAAs busy as I was at the FOHBC 2015 Chattanooga National Antique Bottle Show, I certainly had the opportunity to see some nice bitters on the floor, under the tables, in the displays, in the auction and in some hotel rooms. I thought I would lasso a few for your enjoyment. Many of these were southern bitters as this was our Southern Region show.

*All photographs by Mallory Boyle unless otherwise noted.

ROLLING THUNDER AUCTION

Chat_70 Loveridge

Rolling Thunder Auction. Lot #70: E. DEXTER LOVERIDGE/WAHOO BITTERS (on 2 panels), embossed eagle with arrow and label, full label on 4th panel, embossed on roof DWD/PATD/XXX/1863, (Ring/Ham L-126), 10” tall x 3” square, applied collared mouth, nice medium amber, original foil and cork, both labels are 95%, mint condition—as good as they come. Estimate: $1,000-$2,000. Purchased by Brad Francis for $4,300 not including auction house premium. Photograph Daniel Auctions

Chat_81 OOSB

Rolling Thunder Auction. Lot #81: SOUTHERN/BITTERS/C.H. EBBERT & CO./DEPOT/MEMPHIS, TENN., (Ring/Ham, O-94.5), applied sloping collared top, square, 9.5” tall x 3”, nice medium amber, a rare southern bitters, near mint condition (couple of high point wear spots on label panel). Estimate: $2,000-$4,000. Sold for $6,400 not including auction house premium. Photograph Daniel Auctions

Chat_Kimballs

Rolling Thunder Auction. Lot #41: KIMBALL’S/JAUNDICE/BITTERS/TROY, N.H., (Ring/Ham, K-2), 7” tall x 3” wide x 1.75” deep, applied sloping top, medium Stoddard amber, improved pontil, mint condition — super example. Estimate: $1,000-$2,000. Sold for $800 not including auction house premium to FM5. Photograph Daniel Auctions

Chat_74 LoveridgeMem2

Rolling Thunder Auction. Lot #74: Loveridge Business Ephemera – Carte de Visite photo of Loveridge building, letterhead, envelopes, other early photos, ink blotters, etc. Lot. Estimate: $500-$1,000. Sold for $1,300 not including auction house premium. Photograph Daniel Auctions

ChatAuction_73 Hat&Cane

Rolling Thunder Auction. Lot #73: E. Dexter Loveridge Items – beaver skin top hat, 1864 tin type photo of him wearing top hat, his walking cane (engraved coin silver handle cap) with concealed knife, 13 x 17”, near mint condition. Lot of 3 Estimate: $500-$1,000. Sold for $3,500 not including auction house premium. Photograph Daniel Auctions

Chat_WahooFramed

Rolling Thunder Auction. Lot #71: Wahoo Bitters by E. Dexter Loveridge Great Indian Remedy, Paper Sign, litho by Gies & Co. Buffalo, NY, framed In Victorian-era frame, absolutely beautiful, a great addition to any bitters or early advertising collection, 13 x 17”, near mint condition. Estimate: $500-$1,000. Sold for $6,800 plus auction house premium. Photograph Daniel Auctions

THE DISPLAYS

Chat_Leremondies

Great Southern Bottles Group Display organized by Tom Lines. Dr. Leriemondie’s Southern Bitters (Ring/Ham, L-77), pontiled, known to be from Brookhaven, Mississippi but not marked. Collection of Dr. Charles Aprill (New Orleans, La.). Also First Place Winner (tie) in the Battle of Chattanooga “Best Bottle South of the Mason Dixon Line” category.

Chat_Solomons

Great Southern Bottles Group Display. Left to right standing three great Savannah, Georgia bitters. Lippman’s Great German Bitters (Ring/Ham L-99), Solomon’s Strengthening & Invigorating Bitters (Ring/Ham S-139) and Arabian Bitters (Ring/Ham A-80).

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Tennessee Bottles Group Display. Organizer Ed Provine. Highland Bitters and Scotch Tonic (Ring/Ham H-117) figural barrel and Victory Tonic Bitters (Ring/Ham V-20).

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Tennessee Bottles Group Display. Fine Apple Bitters from Nashville, Tennessee. Our Own Southern Bitters represented on left.

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Tennessee Bottles Group Display. Left to right (full image bottles) Cumberland Bitters (Nashville) (Ring/Ham C-256), Highland Bitters and Scotch Tonic figural barrel (Ring/Ham H-117), Wiggs Bros, Memphis, Tenn. figural cabin and a Genl Frank Cheatam’s Bitters (Nashville) (Ring/Ham C-136).

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Great Southern Bottles Group Display. Two Tutt’s Golden Eagle Bitters (Augusta, Georgia), (Ring/Ham T-71). Photograph Ferdinand Meyer

SHOWROOM FLOOR

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Miscellaneous bitters grouping – Lou Holis table

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Dr. J. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters – Peter & Jon Zimbelman table

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Miscellaneous bitters grouping – Lou Holis table

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Argyle Bitters (New Orleans, La.) (Ring/Ham A-83) and a J T Wiggin’s Gentian Bitters (Ring/Ham W-108.3) (1 of 3 known, 2 in Meyer collection) – Meyer Table

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Some excellent bitters that were on sale and will probably be headed to an auction house. Three tables full! Peter & Jon Zimbelman table. Photo by Ferdinand Meyer.

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More figural bitters from the same table as noted above. Peter & Jon Zimbelman table

ChatBitters_Fish

A couple of Fish figural bitters and bottles. Connie & Dennis Hill table.

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Extremely rare Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters (Louisville, Ky.) (Ring/Ham R-69) Photograph Ferdinand Meyer

ChatBitters_LoveridgeGreen

E. Dexter Loveridge’s Wahoo Bitters in yellow green (Ring/Ham L-126). Saw this baby last year. Believe is was consigned to an auction house at the show. Photograph Ferdinand Meyer

TonecoBittersPurple

Toneco Bitters (Ring/Ham T-37) in a blue purple, prob been nuked. Usually clear. For $50 why not? Photograph Ferdinand Meyer

ChatBitters_Gray

Kathy Gray watching over some nice bitters.

UNDER THE TABLE

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Left, extremely rare blue green Dr. Gilbert’s Rock and Rye Stomach Bitters (Ring/Ham G0-40) and an extraordinary green Russ’ St. Domingo Bitters (Ring/Ham R-125). Both Gary Beatty collection recently from the collection of Howard Crowe. Photograph Ferdinand Meyer

Chat_PontiledOldSachem

Large size, open pontil, Old Sachems Bitters and Wigwam Tonic (Ring/Ham O-46). Meyer table. Ex: Elmer Smith Collection

ChatBitters_WinfreesAmber

Extremely rare Winfrees Bitters (Petersburg, Va.) (Ring/Ham W-137). Photograph Ferdinand Meyer

ChatBitters_WinfreesAqua

Extremely rare H. N. Winfrees Aromatic Stomach Bitters (Chester, Va.) (Ring/Ham W-136). Photograph Ferdinand Meyer

ChatBitters_IXL

Extremely rare Missouri IXL Bitters (Ring/Ham M 104.5) – Shultis Collection. Photograph Ferdinand Meyer

Hotel Rooms

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Upper floor of the Marriott Downtown Hotel. Left to right: Dr. Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters, Baker’s Orange Grove Bitters, Moulton’s Oloroso Bitters. green ladies leg, OK Plantation Bitters, London Jockey Gin and an American Life Bitters (Tiffin, Ohio variant) – Jerry Forbes Collection

Posted in Auction News, Bitters, Bottle Shows, Club News, Display, Ephemera, Figural Bottles, FOHBC News, Medicines & Cures, News, Tonics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Daily Dose | August 2015

August  |  2 0 1 5

Monday, 31 August 2015

VigorBitter_FrankCompile

Frank Wicker sent the above pictures (which I have cropped in Photoshop) of a Vigor Bitter & Invogorating Tonic saying, “Hi Ferdinand, Have you ever seen one of these? This one is a concave square bottle. The Vigor Bitter & Tonic Co. Hope all has been good, Frank”. I recognized the bottle from the recent Rachel Davis Fine Art Auction. When mentioned to Frank, he replied, “Yes , it has been added to the collection. Ring & Ham says it’s extremly rare. But this one is a variant. It’s 10 1/4 inches tall in height instead of 11 inches. From what I hear, it was one of the few bottles at this auction with no damage.”

Read: Wicker Visit – Austin Healey’s and Elephants

Great piece. I have a bottle the same shape in green from Hartford, Ct. Heublein Co. (see pic below) – Gerard Dauphinais

HeubblinPaired_Gerald

Saturday, 29 August 2015

Blahniks1_Gary

Ferd, here is an unlisted bitters I found on a table mixed in with lesser bottles at the FOHBC Chattanooga National Show. “BLAHNIK’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS”. Sheldon has never heard of it. It has a blister on the rough ding on the front and a crack near the base on two panels. Never the less, it is unlisted and I will forward pictures to Bill Ham. Don’t know what state it is from but possibly, Kentucky, Ohio or Tennessee. Best Regards, Gary…. Ferd, disregard the un-known, I stand corrected the BLAHNAK’S is listed as B-118 however it is extremely rare. Gary (Beatty)

Rosenheims1_Gary

Ferd, Sheldon Baugh and I visited the table where I got the “BLAHNIK’S STOMACH BITTERS” three times and each time I got a bitters. You saw this one at my table. It is black glass and you can’t see through it. “ROSENHEIM’S BITTERS THE GREAT WESTERN REMEDY”. It has a repaired corner but I am so glad to get it. Sheldon says it is from West Virginia and extremely rare. Gary (Beatty) Note: The brand is from Baltimore, Maryland.

Thursday, 27 August 2015

FerdSandsBottle

Hello Ferd, I figure not often do you see your name on a bottle. This was found by a guy tearing old houses down. I would stop and see him here in town and he would show me paper stuff, old cards, a knife, coins, etc. he would find in the walls. One day he showed me this larger extract looking bottle but the label had come off and was curled up. I soaked it, cleaned it and it cracked but glued it back on and its a rare treasure. Says Cure too so pre 1906 and cost was $1.00.

Thanks,
James Campiglia

FM5: Thanks James. Pretty cool. I usually see Meyer bottles but less with “Ferdinand”. Read: So who is A. C. Meyer?

Wednesday, 26 August 2015

TexCant1

I just picked up this unique whiskey canteen.  Nobody has record of ever seeing another.  Such a cool piece of history. – Brad Seigler

Read: Historical Canteens – Canteen Figural Bottles

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Sunday, 23 August 2015

Some of my Clarke’s Vegetable Sherry Wine Bitters bottles. Taken earlier today. There are all different.

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Saturday, 22 August 2015

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Yesterday, I had the pleasure of getting a personal tour of the Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens. Look for a post. Some great Early American glass and historical flasks.

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Thursday, 20 August 2015

Completing the Chattanooga National series in the next week. Still have the auction report, show bottles, kids grab bags etc. In the meantime, look at these two nice bottle grouping pictures from the upper floors of our host hotel Marriott Chattanooga Downtown. The top picture is from Jerry Forbes (Big Sur, California) and shows some extraordinary bottles that he picked up during the show. Downtown Chattanooga in the background. The bottom picture is from Bob Koren (Macedonia, Ohio) and shows some exquisite early American cruet’s that he collects. Lookout Mountain in the background.

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Monday, 17 August 2015

ChatBitters_Garys

Got in to Miami around 2:00 am due to delayed flight. Don’t really like flying on Sunday. Hopefully you have noticed a series of Chattanooga National posts. Had to get the September October issue of BOTTLES and EXTRAS out first. Look for some ramped up activity on PRG as we go into deep bottle season. A special post will be titled, “Bitters spotting at the Chattanooga National”.

Saturday, 08 August 2015

Jack&JohnCuttingSmall

Working on major web posts for the 2015 Chattanooga National. Need to get BOTTLES and EXTRAS to the printer by Tuesday. The SEP OCT issue will contain a feature article on the show. Show chairs Jack Hewitt & John Joiner cut the ceremonial show ribbon to start the show last Saturday.

ColumbiaEaglePint

Look for a cool story called Gardner Love Token in the SEP OCT issue of BOTTLES and EXTRAS.

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Tyler’s Standard American Bitters – New Haven, CT

This gallery contains 6 photos.

Tyler’s Standard American Bitters – New Haven, CT 22 July 2015 (R•072615) (R•040816) I have pretty much been overwhelmed with business, the upcoming 2015 Chattanooga National and the 2016 Sacramento National. Traveling every day of the week, so thinking about … Continue reading

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