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Will Punxsutawney Phil Punk Us Again? Groundhog Day ~ Now with More Vintage Collectibles

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Every February 2nd we wonder, will Punxsutawney Phil see his shadow? Will we have yet more winter? Something tells me we will have many more weeks of cold, no matter what the famous Groundhog does or does not see!

Find out all you ever wanted to know, and more, about Groundhog Day at http://www.groundhog.org/ ... or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groundhog_Day

I love the 1993 Bill Murray / Andie McDowell movie, Groundhog Day (see video clips on Crackle).

Here are a few pix of vintage Groundhog Day items to look for, for your collections.
































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Happy St. Valentine's Day ~ Be My Valentine ~ Collecting Vintage Valentines Day Cards and Postcards

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Vintage Valentines, sweet and oh-so-colorful. They're addicting, but without all the calories of that heart-shaped box of chocolates.

They came in every theme imaginable, for all tastes. Some a little naughty, some for little kids, romantic or ''just friends''. Hearts and Flowers, or downright mean. 


These comical insult cards are called Penny Dreadfuls, or Vinegar Valentines

Here's a great article about them - Happy Valentines Day: I Hate You.

I highly recommend using this website to help find more vintage Valentines for your collection:
  1. http://www.collectorsweekly.com/cards/valentines
  2. http://www.collectorsweekly.com/postcards/valentines-day

Besides articles and reference links, CW's search engine will show you all the Valentines listed on ebay by bid amount or by number of watchers, and they show the COMPLETED.

That's a great help if you're trying to get values on your cards. But remember since there were millions and millions of cards and postcards made, and still being made, this is a hard category to try to decide on definitive values. The good news though is that you can build a collection to suit your tastes and your budget. 

Best to do your homework first. Here's a list of links that will teach you everything you need to know about collecting Valentines cards of the Antique, Vintage, Victorian varieties. http://bit.ly/XtsygE

Here are some more pix of cute Valentines -- Happy St. Valentine's Day, y'all!

--Click the pix to enlarge--











--Click the pix to enlarge--

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Happy President's Day ~ Vintage Patriotic Postcards

On Prosperity Road: From Pangle's to Scot Lad Foods to Rays, Roundys, Chief, & Nash Finch ~ Collecting Lima Ohio

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Scot Lad Canned Pop -- 12 for $1.00






Pangles / Scot Lad / Roundy's / Nash Finch warehouse location on Prosperity Road, at Pangle Street

Evolutionary Links in Lima's Food Chain

This vintage soda pop can came up in my daily Lima Ohio ebay search, and caught me by surprise. As a non-native Liman (?), there are/were many local businesses that I am unaware of.

This Scot Lad soda pop can has Lima, Ohio on it. So of course that meant I had to look into the company.

  • Scot Lad Foods was a large grocery firm out of Lansing, Illinois, formed in 1961 when HS Davies and Meadowmoor Dairy merged. HS Davies supplied grocery products to Lima's Pangles Grocery stores. [Source]
  • Scot Lad bought Lima's Pangles Grocery business in 1963, establishing Scot Lad's Lima distribution center (in the Pangles Lima warehouse), hence this can.
  • Roundy's bought Scot Lad Foods in 1984, changing the name of the Lima distribution center.
  • The Pangles Grocery stores then became Ray's, named after the founder's son. 
  • The Ray's stores were sold to Chief Supermarkets, a Defiance, Ohio company (In 2013). 
  • In 2005 Roundy's sold their Lima location to Nash Finch, which has now merged with Spartan [SpartanNash].

_____________________

Note: These items are part of my ''Collecting Lima Virtual Museum''. They are not for sale.

If/when I find more information on these items, I will add it to the post.

Read the Introduction to my ''Collecting Lima'' Virtual Museum Project, all about my Lima Ohio Bottles, Advertising, Antiques collection.
________________________

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Shoes and Booze ~ 1918 Prohibition Rally in Lima Ohio ~ Newark Shoe Store RPPC

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Let's look closer at this dramatic RPPC, as seen on ebay Feb. 2015 :


What we're seeing is an Anti-Saloon League rally being held in Lima, Ohio in January 1918

The crowd ''of over 500 people'' have gathered on the Public Square, in front of the Newark Shoe Store, which is flanked by The Lima House Hotel's bar on the right, and yet another saloon on the left.

The scene features a sign that reads: ''What BOOZE did for Father'', and a man in prison stripes. The back tells us this ''prisoner'' is actually noted evangelist-lecturer Rev. M.J. Duryea ''giving old booze a kick for the nation-wide Dry Vote.''

One of the testimonials from the above-pictured advertisement for Duryea's Prison Lecture says:

"The Prison Stripes are an awful warning says Rev. J. C. Dorris. 

The temperance lecture, In Prison Stripes given by Rev. M. J. Duryea, formerly of Chicago, was up-to-date in every sense of the word.

The lecture thrilled his audience with his eloquence and interested them with his curiosities, and on the whole showed himself to be a mighty champion of the temperance cause."

Reverend Minor J. Duryea was a prison chaplain for many years, hence his crime prevention themed lecture, and was obviously not a fan of ''Old Booze''.

Bio-bits: 
  • Minor J. Duryea, son of William Henry Duryee (1824-1908) and Catherine Brokaw, was born 19 September 1854, died 1934
  • Married 1876 Anna Miller, daughter of Martin and Margaret Miller, formerly of Ohio, but removing to Hillsdale County, Michigan in 1866. 
  • Minor was a "Temperance Evangelist," ordained in 1885, with pastorates in several Michigan towns, Chicago, Illinois, the Toledo, Ohio area and at the Riverside Church, Elkhart, Indiana. [Source]

His New York Times obituary: 
  • DURYEA, Minor J. / LYNCHBURG, Va., May 9 1934 / The Rev. Minor J. Duryea, former prison evangelist and a native of Michigan, who had made his home here three years, died yesterday at the age of 80. 
  • He was assistant chaplain of the Michigan State penitentiary for a number of years and did much evangelistic work in the West Virginia coal fields, Indian schools of Oklahoma and Federal prisons of Southern States. 
  • During pastorates at Blanchard and Ashley, Mich., he built a Methodist church and a Congregational church at Elkhart, Ind. 




HOW DRY I AM

Ohio was an important state in the Dry Movement. It was the birthplace and home of the Anti-Saloon League, which became the most powerful prohibition lobby in America, pushing aside its older competitors, the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and the Prohibition Party.

Learn more about Ohio's Dry Campaign here.

Anti-Saloon League Museum Collection
The Anti-Saloon League of America, one of the most influential lobbying groups in the early decades of the twentieth century, located their printing center and the headquarters for most of their national leadership in Westerville, Ohio. The former headquarters building, today part of the Westerville Public Library, houses a museum and an archive. LINK

Now, let's get back to Lima, Ohio:


Here is a great old photo that shows the same location as the rally postcard, and now we can really see the businesses, with signs that read: Newark Shoe, Lima House, and Old Dutch. Click on the pic to enlarge it. 

The bar on the left has an ornate sign that says OLD DUTCH -- the name of the establishment, or an advertisement for Old Dutch Beer?  We'll take a closer look at The Lima House Hotel and the Old Dutch later. 

For now, here's a look at the Newark Shoe Stores Company:




Lima's Newark Shoe Store was just one location in a large chain of shoe stores, TheNewark Shoes Store Company, which was founded by the Morton Samuels & Company of Baltimore MD, in 1904, By the time of this 1921 catalog publication, the shoe store company had grown to 442 branches. It appears part of their strategy was taking over existing shoe stores. 


Samuels shows up as early as 1895 as a shoe jobber in Baltimore. As of 1926, the M. Samuels & Co. shoe empire was 1,100 stores strong, including the Newark Shoes Stores, Henry Clay Shoe stores and Dixie Shoes Stores.


Minimal bio info found on Morton Samuels: born 1870, died 1941. Wife named Belle Hess. Active in Jewish groups. In 1922 donated the money to build a wing at the Hebrew Hospital in Baltimore.

"1922 ‎MARYLAND - Hess Dispensary Completed ... The dispensary is a gift to the hospital by Morton Samuels and is known as the Hess Dispensary, in memory of his wife's parents."

I don't know what number Lima's store was, but below is Newark Shoe Store #348, location unknown, but a cool old photo.



In 1920, Samuels' company had an advertising scandal as they had been running ''Fire Sales'' in stores that hadn't had a fire. They had to print apologies in town newspapers. More here.







The same Lima House location was home to earlier shoe stores. 

As early as 1878, John Bowman had the ''Lima House Boot and Shoe Store'', as seen in the above newspaper ad.

The circa 1910's color postcard shows the store is now named the WALKOVER BOOT SHOP. Thishappened in 1896. 



D.L. Sherwood owned it, and WALK OVER was another chain.

Lima's was the Sherwood Walk-Over Boot Shop. Sherwood died in 1915, and his clerk Oliver S. Kitchen bought a half-interest from the heirs. [Source] 

No info as to why they then became a Newark Shoe store, but it must have happened quickly, as the RPPC that started this post was dated 1918.

Also, notice that the Old Dutch sign is not there yet.

We see that the bar/restaurant was called THE OAK.

From some Lima News clips, I have kinda-sorta pieced together a rather disjointed possibly not precise timeline:

  • The Oak Restaurant and Saloon, was opened in February 1890, by Charles S. King. [Source]

  • Charlie King had a little legal trouble for selling liquor at illegal hours. [Source] 
  • Charlie became successful and beloved locally for his restaurant. By 1905 he was in poor health, sold out, and went to Colorado Springs.. 
  • The Oak was soon owned by Henry Lantz who purchased it in 1905, from ''Baker and Guncheon'' who also ran The Elk. 
  • These changes came quickly, as Lantz filed bankruptcy in 1906. 
  • The next owners were: Corwin, Wilson, McCarty. Then Corwin and Steinle. They stayed in business until The Oak closed for good in 1919.
Prohibition must have hurt the business. Guess that Dry Vote Rally achieved it's goal of closing down The Oak.

Corwin and Steinle shuttered The Oak Saloon, and proceeded to reopen as a cigar store and restaurant. Cigars were still legal.




I am sure some of these businesses and men will come up in researching future posts, and I will update this info then. But for now, The End.

_____________________

Note: These items are part of my ''Collecting Lima Virtual Museum''. They are not for sale.

If/when I find more information on these items, I will add it to the post.

Read the Introduction to my ''Collecting Lima'' Virtual Museum Project, all about my Lima Ohio Bottles, Advertising, Antiques collection.
________________________


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Black History Month ~ Vintage Postcards and Photos in Local History Books

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African Americans of Denver, COAfrican Americans of Petersburg, VAAfrican-American Entertainment in Baltimore, MDBlack Artists in Oakland, CA
Charleston, South CarolinaCleveland's Gospel Music, OHLincoln in Black and White: 1910-1925Politics, Civil Rights, & Law in Black Atlanta, GA


February is Black History Month

Check out these selections, and more, from my favorite book publisher, Arcadia Publishing @ http://www.arcadiapublishing.com/theme/African-American

The books are written by local historians, and are illustrated with vintage photos and postcards.

"... Featuring vintage images of African Americans, each book celebrates the culture and communities of African Americans through historical images and descriptive captions. 

From Negro League baseball to the growth of black colleges, from Kinloch, Missouri, to Tallahassee, Florida, and the exploration of cultural, socioeconomic, political, and community events, vintage images give readers an engaging visual tour of African American life that traditional historical textbooks often fail to show. ..."

Febru-Cherry ~ Vintage Cherry Soda Pop Advertising

Burdick: The Father of #Vintage Baseball Card Collecting

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Jefferson R. Burdick is considered the father of baseball card collecting. 

He donated his 30,000 baseball cards to the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Only a small part of Burdick’s collection is put on display. [2015's exhibit link]

"In 1947, Jefferson R. Burdick began to donate his entire collection of approximately thirty thousand baseball cards in large batches, along with another 270,000 trade and postcards, to the Museum. Burdick organized the cards into albums—incorporating the sports cards into other contemporary advertising material—over the course of fifteen years in the Print Study Room at the Museum. In compiling the albums he adhered to a strict cataloging system, which he published as theAmerican Card Catalogue in 1939. Burdick's method has become the standard system used by all collectors of early American printed ephemera.
The Burdick collection of baseball cards is the most comprehensive collection outside of the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, and illustrates the history of the game from the dead-ball era at the turn of the nineteenth century to the golden age and modern era of the sport. The selection of cards on display represents a broad overview of baseball cards produced as advertisements by tobacco, candy, and gum companies between 1889 and 1959"
  1. Mark Lamster's article about Burdick: The Collector
  2. Here's another must-read article by George Vrechek: The Greatest Collection That You Will Never See 
  3. Then you can read George's detailed diary of actually getting into the private research viewing room and seeing/touching some of Burdick's baseball card collection albums. Link: BURDICK REVISITED
  4. Check out  OLDBASEBALL.com
  5. Read the NY Times article about the Burdick collection 
  6. See Breaking the Color Barrier in Major League Baseball -- Met exhibit: January 18–June 17, 2012
  7. Read much more -- More
  8. "Legends of the Dead Ball Era" -- NY Times article - link





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Play Time ~ My Vintage Treasures on Display

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A Peek Into My Cabinet of Curiosities... 
"Stuff is... trophies, evidence of championship hoarding -- finding the perfect rarity that no one else has found. Collecting stuff can be competitive, even if only in the mind. Therefore, showing one's bounty is essential to having stuff. So the vehicle for display is just as essential as the objects themselves." -- 
from The Arrangement of Stuff by STEVEN HELLER
It's Play and Display Time

My stuff is in various states of arrangement, piles, and storage. It all makes me happy. But the most fun does come from getting it out and making a display/vignette. It's my adult form of playing with my toys. Even if they do have to go back into their storage boxes.

I have taken some of my many collections 'on the road' and done displays at our public library, and at antique bottle shows. And of course I get to 'play and display' my stuff when I set up at an antique show, or in my sales-showcases at the antique mall. Even selling on ebay let's me play with my treasures.

This post is just a few photos of some of my treasures, some I have sold, some I still have...








Ms. Dow Antiques Blog 'Tique Talk is published by msdowantiques.com

Friday the 13th - Moonshine and #13 on Ball Jar Base Lore

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Friday the 13th!
 Are fruit jars with a 13 embossed on the base really worth more $$ ?
While fruit jars with the number 13 on the base are sought after, glassbottlemarks.com makes a good point: "many of these jars are now saved by non-collectors or casual glass collectors (and “culled” from large groups of common jars) merely because of the number on the base. This culling out of #13 jars from among the “general population” of jars (and stashing them away) can increase the perception of their scarcity."

Moonshiners and fruit jars ~ a confiscated bootleg still.

When taking down a still, revenue officers destroyed everything a moonshiner might use later, including glass jars.  Franklin County, Virginia, 1965.

When taking down a still, revenue officers destroyed everything a moonshiner might use later, including glass jars.  - Franklin County, Virginia, 1965. - [Source]


More from fruitjar.org --

Q.     Are the Ball jars with the number 13 on bottom worth more money and, if so, why?
A.     The ‘Urban Legend’ is that moonshiners used mason jars for their product, and, being superstitious, would break the 'unlucky' ones with 13 on the base.  This made the jars rare. 
                   In truth, moonshiners did in fact use mason jars as the preferred container for their product.  They were a known capacity, were readily available and buying them did not raise suspicion. 
                   Also, jars with 13 on the base are rarer than single digit numbers.  But all the double-digit numbers are rare. The numbers designated the position that the mold occupied on the glassmaking machine, and there were usually 8 or 10 positions on the machine.  The higher numbers were used when a mold was replaced.  Dealers sell jars with 13 on the base at a higher price, but fruit jar collectors and the published price guides do not consider the number on the base to make any difference in value.
                    My opinion is that while moonshiners may have been superstitious, I can't imagine that the housewife would break jars just because they had 13 on the base, and housewives used more jars than moonshiners.  I think that the urban legend was created by antique dealers who wanted to make more money off an otherwise common jar.









In 2012 we had three Friday the 13ths. 2013 had just two of the superstition-laden days. 2014 saw just one. In 2015 three occurences will cross our paths. [Calendar link]

Friday the 13th 2015

Friday, February 13, 2015
Friday, March 13, 2015
Friday, November 13, 2015

Friday the 13th 2016

Friday, May 13, 2016

Several theories have been proposed about the origin of the Friday the 13th superstition.
One theory states that it is a modern amalgamation of two older superstitions: that thirteen is an unlucky number and that Friday is an unlucky day.
  • In numerology, the number 12 is considered the number of completeness, as reflected in the twelve months of the year, twelve hours of the clock, twelve gods of Olympus, twelve tribes of Israel, twelve Apostles of Jesus, the 12 successors of Muhammad in Shia Islam, twelve signs of the Zodiac, etc., whereas the number 13 was considered irregular, transgressing this completeness. 
  • There is also a superstition, thought by some to derive from the Last Supper or a Norse myth, that having 13 people seated at a table will result in the death of one of the diners.
  • Friday has been considered an unlucky day at least since the 14th century's The Canterbury Tales and many other professions have regarded Friday as an unlucky day to undertake journeys or begin new projects.
  • One author, noting that references are all but nonexistent before 1907 but frequently seen thereafter, has argued that its popularity derives from the publication that year of Thomas W. Lawson's popular novel Friday, the Thirteenth, in which an unscrupulous broker takes advantage of the superstition to create a Wall Street panic on a Friday the 13th.
  • In many Spanish speaking countries, the movie "Friday the 13th" was renamed to Tuesday the 13th ("Martes 13"), because it is believed to be the day of bad luck, not Friday the 13th.

Here are some more "Friday the 13th" info-tidbits from Wikipedia:
  • The fear of Friday the 13th is called paraskavedekatriaphobia [say that 10 times fast -- yikes!]
  • The 13th day of the month is slightly more likely to be a Friday than any other day of the week.
  • On average, there is a Friday the 13th once every 212 days. 
  • It's estimated that 17 to 21 million people in the United States are affected by a fear of this day -- & estimated that $800 million is lost in business on this day. 
I say FEAR NOT !!! Let's get out there and shop!
    ________________________


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    Epic PI Day 3-14-15 ~ An Ode to PI Day ~ now with more vintage pie goodness, and Private Eyes!

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    It's National PI Day

    L'Eau de pi

    Not lurid tabloid rag, nor a mixed bag
    of Private Eyes and Mom's Pies. 
    Not Bogie, Magnum or Drew, 
    not pulp-fiction film-noir gumshoe. 
    Not Dali's liquid pies or Givenchy's bottle full, 
    nor Ms. Honey West, the Private Eyeful.
    Not Moonlighting Angels from Mars, 
    or the rest of the Private Investigator Stars,
    Not pie-eyed Mickey's, or comics Pie-faced,
    but of nerds so straight-laced, 
    and the mathematical constant on which we rely 
    to tell us the size of our pie.

    A Date with Destiny

    Every March 14th, 3/14, is National PI Day, to commemorate the infinitely long number called pi. (It's the Greek letter “π”) 

    3.141592653589793238462643383279502884197169399375105820974944592307816406286...

    Here's your math lesson, for those who don't remember pi from their school days:
    • The number π is a mathematical constant that is the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, and is approximately equal to 3.14159. 
    • It has been represented by the Greek letter "π" since the mid-18th century, though it is also sometimes written as pi. 
    • π is an irrational number, which means that it cannot be expressed exactly as a ratio of two integers (such as 22/7 or other fractions that are commonly used to approximate π); consequently, its decimal representation never ends and never settles into a permanent repeating pattern.
    Image source: Pi Day t-shirt, available here.

    Epic 'Pi Day of the Century'  

    This year's PI Day -- 3/14/15 -- or as one popular Facebook group calls it, "The Only Pi Day of Our Lives."  -- will bring the biggest PI Day partying yet!

    That's because pi to four digits after the decimal is 3.1415, and to ten digits it is 3.141592653, which means on 3-14-15 at 9:26:53 will be the most places of Pi we'll ever have on Pi Day in our lives.

    It is of course irrational to think that we'll be around in 2115 to see the next instance of pi perfection.

    The day is said to have been "invented" lat the San Francisco Exploratorium . Larry Shaw, who worked in the electronics group at the museum, began the tradition in 1988. Read more at piday.org
    1. CNN article about 2014's PI Day Festivities around the country.
    2. More info about pi the number
    3. More info about PI DAY's history

      Check out the very cool Vintage Private Eye Museum

      Since celebrating PI Day started in 1988, it's not exactly antique yet, so it might seem irrational to write about it here on 'Tique Talk. But what the heck, it is an irrational number, so I say: 
      "Here's to being irrational! 
      Happy PI Day, to all!"







      And while we're being festively irrational, Happy Birthday to Albert Einstein.
      "It gives me great pleasure indeed to see the stubbornness of an incorrigible nonconformist warmly acclaimed." -- Albert Einstein
      Einstein's home town of Princeton, New Jersey, celebrates 2015's Pi Day with a full schedule of activities including a walking tour of Einstein's neighborhood and a pie-eating contest.

      Dali Loves Pi -- The Salvador Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida also celebrates PI Day, as "Dali loved the irrational numbers Pi and Phi, often using ... mathematical principles in his art."

      ___________________________________

      P.S. - On a personal note, I love vintage images, and have so much fun collecting them, whether they're digital, or real. Without the images inspiring me, there wouldn't be any blog posts.

      They're a huge part of my process. They talk to me,  and tell me secrets I would never have known if I didn't see them as a grouping. They're in my brain's archive now. A part of me.

      Take the collage and poem above. I made the collage first, and then wrote a couple of rhyming lines, and clicked publish. But then I looked again, and thought a little more, and wrote a longer poem.

      I'm not saying it's a great poem, and I'm sure it doesn't have a correct poetic format, but I still marvel at the combination of concepts that revealed themselves to me.

      I mean, who knew there was pi perfume?

      Or that I would pull the phrase 'Moonlighting Angels from Mars'
      from an image search for "vintage p.i. shows"?

      I love that phrase.

      All because of trying to add vintageness to Pi Day.

      Here's a quote from artist Austin Kleon (via Brain Pickings):

      "We all carry around the weird and wonderful things we’ve come across while doing our work and living our lives. These mental scrapbooks form our tastes, and our tastes influence our work.
      There’s not as big of a difference between collecting and creating as you might think. "
      _______________________________
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      Penwick / Golden Hill / Rye Whiskey / Braun's Rathskeller Saloon Restaurant / Family Liquor House ~ Lima, Ohio

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      Penwick Rye labeled bottle from BRAUN'S / Lima, Ohio



      Rare Trade Token from 
      Braun's Family Liquor House, 
      Lima Ohio

      AKA Braun's Rathskeller

      The public is cordially invited to attend the formal opening of Braun's Rathskeller at the corner of Main and East High streets on [March 6 1913] Thursday evening at 6:30, MAX BRAUN, Proprietor.

      It promises to be one of the events of the season. Many tables have already been engaged for the occasion and a large crowd is anticipated. 

      For the entertainment of the public we have secured the services of Hunter's Orchestra which will discourse sweet music. 

      Aside from this and the elegant meals that will be served it will be a treat to see this magnificent restaurant, and learn that Lima really has in her confines one of the best equipped and most up-to-date eating places for ladies and gentlemen, in the state of Ohio. 

      The furnisnings are of the best in Mission and the service and decorating is all patterned after this style. The services of a French chef and the very best assistance with all first class waiters have been secured, and the public will be royally taken care of at Braun's. 

      As to price after the opening: Business lunch 25c; served from 11 o'clock until 2. At the same hours, dinner 35c. A la Carte service a specialty. On Sundays we will prepare the finest meal possible for only 50c.  [Source]


      Max Braun


      In 1890 Max Braun was a general agent of the Provident Savings Life Assurance Society of New York[Source].




      In 1909, he was manager of the Lima location of the Golden Hill Liquor Company. [Source]

      "N. Trotstein opened a Golden Hill outlet in Lima, Ohio, likely as an adjunct to his saloon. It was located at 34 Public Square, a prime location in downtown Lima, shown here in a period postcard. Trotstein advertised widely in local media. His shotglass advertising Golden Hill Rye is virtually identical to the Columbus-issued versions. The similarity solidifies the notion that the two organizations were closely linked. Also shown here is a Golden Hill flask from Lima."[Source: pre-prowhiskeymen.blogspot.com]


      In 1913 he opened his own saloon / restaurant, the afore mentioned Braun's Rathskeller. [Source]

      In 1916 he lost control of his car and injured a 5 year old boy. [Source] Fortunately the boy recovered. [Source]


      On May 24, 1919, Prohibition closed Braun's Rathskeller down. [Source] -- "Max Braun, former proprietor of the cafe and restaurant at High and Main Street" -- [Source]




      PENWICK RYE BOTTLE INFO:

      In addition to Braun's name on the paper labeled Penwick bottle, we see that Penwick Rye is a brand of the BLOCKDALE ALLEGHENY COMPANY out of Cheswick, PA.

      Cheswick is in Allegheny County and has a Blockdale Street. There isn't a Blockdale, PA. according to google maps.

      According to Cheswick's wikipedia page: "One of the first industries was the Penwick Distillery. In a large brick building, the liquor was stored for years before it was sold. "

      Excerpt from the Pacific Wine and Spirit review, circa 1890's:
      "Bertin [&] Lepori's leading brand, Penwick Pure Rye, is achieving an enviable reputation. Retailers selling it are very pleased with the returns made and look upon this brand as a first-class seller. Penwick Pure Rye is distilled at Blockdale, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, and complies in every respect with the requirements of the Pure Food and Drug act of June 30, 1906. wholesalers, who distribute it to the retailer, who passes it over the bar and to the public who drinks it. Penwick Pure Rye, therefore, is sure to hold its own in the market, and Bertin " located at 661 Devisadero street [S.F., Cal.], but the spirit of unrest imanifest. The management is getting very tired of its present cramped quarters, and the desire to be once again down town and in the commercial district grows stronger every day. An effort is being made to find suitable headquarters among the other wholesalers, and before long it is hoped that its purity and flavor cause it to give general satisfaction to..."
      Bertin & Lepori were liquor wholesalers in San Francisco, so the Penwick brand was sold by many distributors all over the country, including our Mr. Braun.




      [Image from Clarksville Tennessee in Vintage Postcards book available from Arcadia Publishing.]

      _____________________

      Note: These items are part of my ''Collecting Lima Virtual Museum''. They are not for sale.

      If/when I find more information on these items, I will add it to the post.

      Read the Introduction to my ''Collecting Lima'' Virtual Museum Project, all about my Lima Ohio Bottles, Advertising, Antiques collection.
      ________________________


      Ms. Dow Antiques Blog 'Tique Talk is published by msdowantiques.com
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      The King of Pain: W.L. Porter's Pain Cure Story ~ Pain King Antique Medicine Bottles ~ Lima Ohio History

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      Porter's Pain Cure / W.L. Porter Lima, O. embossed medicine bottle, circa 1870s. (Click to enlarge the pic.)



      Porter's Cure of Pain, Cleveland O.

      Above, an aqua embossed bottle; no label.

      Below, two different clear embossed bottles, with rare paper labels:


      PORTERS CURE OF PAIN, an Internal & External REMEDY, Manufactured by G.G. NORRIS, Cleveland, Ohio. 25 CTS


      Porters Cure of Pain / W.L. Porter & Co. / Cleveland Ohio


      Porter's Cure of Pain / Bundysburg, O.

      Above, the rare iron pontil version of Porter's first version of his Cure of Pain / Bundysburg, O., in aqua. Will I ever see a labeled one?


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

      About the bottles:

      The later Rundle's Porter's Pain King bottles are pretty common without labels. Even the paper-labeled bottles don't go for much. It appears that most of the earlier Cleveland bottles, unlabeled, are also readily available, and don't go for much either. [Ebay completed listings.] 
      Note: The one pictured, with the paper label, is on ebay here. We'll see what it brings.

      The knowledgeable collectors on the antiquebottles.net forum say "The Bundysburgh early pontil marked ones are the most rare ones." Makes sense. The one pictured sold for $275 on ebay in 2014.

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

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

      But who is Porter?
      ..

      Porter started in Bundysburg about 1860.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

      Porter's Cure of Pain was sold to soldiers during the Civil War, according to CIVIL WAR - The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History: "Drugstores offered bottles of Porter's Cure of Pain to rid soldiers of stomach ailments."



      ..
      Porter's 25 Cents scrip [image source: Heritage Auctions

      The above scrip, circa 1863, has W.L. Porter & Co. located at 161 Ontain St., Cleveland, Ohio.

      Also in 1863:

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

      As we can see by the paper label on the Cleveland bottle, G.G. NORRIS was listed as the manufacturer. I do find some early mentions of Norris in trade journals, and there was a Norris Drugs in Cleveland for many years. But our boy Porter didn't stay in Cleveland too long.

      Note: the bottom of the label has the name W.J. Morgan, who was the printer/engraver, as listed in Cleveland directories of the time.

      I don't know why Porter left Cleveland to come to Lima in 1870, other than Lima was rapidly growing, and provided many new business opportunities. Once here he again 'engaged in the drug business', only to quickly sell off his Lima drug endeavors in 1872 to enter the coal and oil trade, and many other occupations.


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

      Porter was also involved in newspaper publishing:

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


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



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

      Porter also sold his Lima oil business interests:

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

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



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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

      About G.H. Rundle:

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


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

      Notes:

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

      Note: These items are part of my ''Collecting Lima Virtual Museum''. They are not for sale.

      If/when I find more information on these items, I will add it to the post.

      Read the Introduction to Collecting Lima Virtual Museum Project ~ My Lima Ohio Bottles, Advertising, Antiques


      Ms. Dow Antiques Blog 'Tique Talk is published by msdowantiques.com
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      Naughty but Nice ~ Antique Bisque Mermaid and Bathing Beauty Figurines

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      Naughty but Nice... 
      Antique Bisque Mermaid and Bathing Beauty Figurines


      Here's the book [link] all about these little bisque gems, written by Sharon Hope Weintraub, titled:

      Bawdy Bisques and Naughty Novelties: German Bathing Beauties and Their Risqué Kin

      "... As the Victorian era passed into the Edwardian and Roaring Twenties, a market developed for bisque and china naughty novelties and figurines of women in revealing outfits. These little lovelies include bathing beauties, who came clad in swimsuits of real lace or stylish painted beach wear, as well as mermaids, harem ladies, and nudies, who wear only an engaging smile. Also produced were flippers (innocent appearing figurines who reveal a bawdy secret when flipped over) and water squirters. Most were manufactured in Germany from the late 1800s through the 1930s, often showing remarkable artistry and imagination.  ..."



      Oh My!

      Here's the link to the author's fabulous blog with pix of her amazing collection. Be prepared to drool with desire!

      Here's the Antique Trader's article on Bawdy Bisques and Naughty Novelties -- the darling little figurines of mermaids and bathing beauties.

      These are some pix from the Antique Trader's article.







      This adorable merman on a fish sold on ebay for $155.00.

      Here is the link to see some Bisque Mermaids on ebay now.  

      Vintage Frog Fantasy Postcards ~ April is National Frog Month


      Fishing for April Fools ~ #Vintage April Fools Day Postcards

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      April Fools, April Fish, April Birthdays and Babies -- what a day!

      Enjoy these vintage postcards and illustrations.
























      HAPPY APRIL FOOLS DAY!!
      Watch out for those April Fools Day pranks. 

      Why do we have the April Fools Day tradition? Read this:



      Don't let yourself be "fished in"!

      What's April 1st have to do with fishies, you ask? Well... In France, it's called APRIL FISH DAY, because young naive fish are easily caught. They had some lovely, and odd, postcards in the early 1900's.  Here are a few for your amusement and entertainment.









       

































      Aviation History in Lima Ohio ~ 1913 Airplane Photo Signed Andrew Drew ~ Collecting Lima

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      An interesting chapter of Ohio's aviation history happened right here in Lima, Ohio. Being between Dayton, where the Wright Brothers started, and Chicago's famous Cicero Field, Lima was a great location for early aviators and airplane inventors to gather for test flights and exhibitions. Crowds would gather to watch.



      In early 1913, Jesse Brabazon opened a new "flying field" just outside of Lima, (which eventually became the Lima Airport). 

      The first exhibition flights at this new field were made by pilot Andrew Drew.

      Jesse Brabazon


      Andrew Drew


       

      Above is a real photo postcard (RPPC) that pictures a group of men and boys intently watching a biplane in flight. 

      The pilot was Jesse Brabazon, and the plane is a Wright Model B that had belonged to Calbraith Perry Rodgers:
      "The Wright Model B airplane, in which Calbraith Perry Rodgers had crashed and died on April 3, 1912, flying once again. The plane is flying at a Lima, Ohio, exhibition and it is piloted by Jesse Brabazon of Delavan, Wisconsin. 
      Brabazon had purchased the Rodgers wreckage, and he advertised and exhibited his rebuilt plane as the Vin Fiz, the famous plane in which Calbraith Perry Rodgers made the first transcontinental flight in 1911. It is more likely that Rodgers crashed in his backup plane, and the backup plane was the wreckage sold to Brabazon."[Source: WisconsinHistory.org]
      FIRST FLIGHT OF AN AIRPLANE IN LIMA OHIO:

      "The first flight of an airplane In the Lima area occurred on Friday, July 28, 1911, at the old Allen County Fairgrounds, which is now the site of Lima Memorial Hospital and surrounding homes. The pilot was Calbraith Perry Rodgers, a pupil of Orville Wright, in a Model B Wright Biplane with a 35 horsepower engine. Fifty cents admission was charged. Rodgers made three flights that day. He stayed low so that persons outside the grounds could not get a good look at the event without paying an admission." [Source: AllenCountyAirport.com]
      Calbraith Perry Rogers went on to fly the first trans-continental flight across the U.S in September 1911. Sadly, he crashed and died in Long Beach, California in April, 1912.

      Written on the photo postcard is the inscription:
      "Can you read the vaulting ambition in the expression of the backs of this younger generation? / Over here trying out machine for former pupil."
      The back of the postcard has a message that reads:
      "Thanks for letter - will write you soon - will probably see you in New York before you leave. / Andrew Drew"
      The card is postmarked from Lima, Ohio, May 12, 1913.

      Sadly, Andrew Drew crashed and died while flying a Wright Model B biplane over the grounds of the Lima State Hospital on June 12, 1913.

      Andrew Drew was only 28 at the time of his tragic death. He was born in St. Louis in 1885.

      So many of these early pioneer aviators made a lot of history with their many flights in their sadly too-short careers.

      The card is addressed to Preston Lockwood Esq. / Editorial rooms / "The World" / New York City.


      The addressee was Drew's friend Preston Lockwood (1891-1951) who had just recently become a reporter for "The World". In the 1930s and 1940s, he was an attorney and ran the Brewster Aeronautical Corporation[Source] 


      During his career, Drew, always a forceful and vocal proponent of “safe and sane flying,” made more than 1,700 flights in powered aeroplanes.  [Source]
       
      Andrew Drew was a newspaper reporter turned pilot. He worked with the Wright Brothers, and became a noted aviation pioneer. He was one of the founders and first president of the American Aviators Association, and the director of the Cicero Flying Field in Chicago, which holds an important place in aviation history.




      .


      Umbrella Plane photos.

      More info:



      In 1963 a new airport was built on the other side of Lima, but the old hangar building on the original grounds is currently used by WTLW-44.



      The Lima State Hospital (for the "Criminally Insane") was under construction from 1908-1915, so the grounds were still open and unpopulated when these flights were going on. The hospital didn't get its first patients until 1915. [Source]


      "The facility was originally known as the Lima State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Situated on 628 acres three miles north of downtown Lima, the hospital was constructed between 1908 and 1915. Built at a cost of $2.1 million, it was the largest poured-concrete structure in the country until supplanted by the Pentagon.
      For much of its history, Lima State Hospital functioned largely as a warehouse. Patients sometimes staged dramatic protests against the conditions of their confinement, and frequently escaped (more than 300 escapes by 1978). Conditions improved significantly after 1974 as a result of a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of the patients. In its last years, the state hospital was used for the filming of a made-for-television movie about the Attica Prison riots in New York. Starting in 1982, Lima State Hospital became a medium-security prison, the Lima Correctional Institution. The prison closed in 2004, though a smaller prison on the site, the Allen Correctional Institution, remains." -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lima,_Ohio

      _____________________

      Note: These items are part of my ''Collecting Lima Virtual Museum''. They are not for sale.

      If/when I find more information on these items, I will add it to the post.

      Read the Introduction to my ''Collecting Lima'' Virtual Museum Project, all about my Lima Ohio Bottles, Advertising, Antiques collection.
      ________________________


      Ms. Dow Antiques Blog 'Tique Talk is published by msdowantiques.com
      Sign up for my free newsletter!





      Hop Along to Spring ~ Happy Easter! Collecting Vintage Easter Postcards

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      HAPPY EASTER!

      "The earliest known depiction of the Easter bunny in the United States was acquired by the Winterthur Museum in 2011. The drawing from 1800 is by schoolmaster Johann Conrad Gilbert, who immigrated to Pennsylvania from Germany. In fact, the Pennsylvania Germans brought many Easter traditions to America, which had their origins in the Pagan holiday celebrating the beginning of spring, known as Eostre. The hare is one of the most prolific animals in nature, so is considered a symbol of fertility, and children would prepare baskets of colorful eggs for the hare to sit on." [Source]

      I love Easter, especially the colorful toys and vintage postcards.

      Here's a link to a display of some of my Easter Toys collection that I had up at our local library a couple of years ago.

      Easter always falls on the Sunday after the 1st full moon after the Spring Equinox which is every March 20th. This tradition was based on the lunar calendar to signify Passover. Hence the reason the Easter holiday moves around each year.

      In 2015, it falls on April 5th. And 2016 it will be on March 27th. Learn more about the way Easter's date is calculated.

      If you want to collect vintage Easter postcards, you'll find them in all price ranges, and a variety of subjects: the Easter Bunny, baby chicks, eggs, flowers, religious, comic and dressed animals, anthropomorphic, and so much more.

      A few resource links:








































      Happy Easter!


      Halloween Lovers Dream Auction of Rare Funeral Collection: Real Skeletons, Antique Caskets, Post Mortem Photos

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      Halloween Lovers may have thought they had died and gone to Haunted Heaven when they attended a truly unusual auction that was held in 2008 in Lima, Ohio, when a Collection-Macabre was sold off to the highest bidders!

      We're talking real skeletonsin real caskets, and other Funeral Home and Mortician memorabilia. Plus there were catalogs of caskets, and even garments that the funeral home could order to bury the deceased in, like the two pairs of Slumber Slippers, with lace-up backs to fit multiple sizes.

      There were some small child's caskets, and several adult size caskets with real skeletons inside. The skeletons sold from $250.00 - $800.00 -- each!

      A Victorian “toe-pincher”, also called “heel squeezers” or Dracula coffins because of their narrow tapering foot, sold $675.

      Lots of casket handles and hardware, too.
      I really liked the little folk-arty diorama of a cemetery. Perfect if you are really into decorating for Halloween!

      Antique dealer Don Orwig recognized several of the faux-skeletons sold at the auction and lighted coffins as items from ceremonies hosted years ago by the Odd Fellows fraternity.
      “Two of the coffins I bought were rigged with lights and the skeletons lighted up,” he said. “We’re seeing more of those, now that several of the old lodges are losing their membership and selling out. There’s quite a few collectors for these things, particularly among the Odd Fellows.” [Source]

      The auction generated lots of excitement, and reporters came from all around -- here's the Toledo Blade article, and the Lima News article. Just check this google search to read some of the other newspaper articles.













      I had hoped that there would have been some death-related and post-mortem postcards and photos like the examples below, but there weren't.


      Here's an interesting book on Post Mortem Collectibles - link.

      Here's the link to some post mortem items on ebay now.

      Google's image search for Post Mortem items has some great photos.













      Chop Suey Joints and Vandersall's Grand Cafe ~ Lima Ohio Trade Token

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      Trade tokens for the GRAND CAFE / Lima Ohio / S.B. Vandersall 

      Ad in the Lima News for the Grand Cafe, 1909, reads:

      The Grand Cafe - Attending the Fair is one thing, but knowing where you can eat a nice clean meal and refresh yourself with a cool glass of pure beer is quite another. The Grand Cafe Invites your patronage and will serve you with a promptness, courtesy and cleanliness that will surprise you. Make the Grand Cafe your place to eat and drink while attending the Fair. The Grand Cafe keeps a fine assortment of pure liquors for private and medicinal use, and you should ask our advice in the matter of fine liquors for your household.

      The Grand Cafe (Saloon) was located on the Town Square in Lima, which is at Market and Main. The earliest Lima News mention of the Grand Cafe is 1905, the latest is 1917.

      Other than this token, I cannot connect Vandersall to the Grand Cafe. Two other names show up in the Lima News as the proprietor:

      • Robert Scott -- 1905 -- had money/legal troubles, (arrested for assault and battery) and closed the Grand Cafe. [Source]
      • John Hilly (Jack) (Hilley) -- purchased and reopened in 1905 [source], and in 1908 was arrested for illegal gambling (running a craps game) at the Grand Cafe. [Source]
      While I did not find Vandersall's name mentioned along with the Grand Cafe, I'm guessing he took over after Hilly.



      1906 Lima News ad says that "CHOP SUEY is now open at the Grand Cafe". In 1909 there was a new Chop Suey joint* on Wayne Street [Source]. There is no further mention of Chop Suey connected to the Grand Cafe, so they probably split up when Vandersall took over from Hilly.

      I did find that his full name was Sardis Birchard Vandersall. (Also spelled online as Sardis Burch Vandersall.) 

      Sardis Burch Vandersall - born in Sep 1867 in Jackson Twp, Sandusky, Ohio. He died in 1918 in LIma, Allen, Ohio. Buried - Kansas Cemetery, Liberty Twp., Seneca, Ohio.

      He married Mary Viola Lewman, (born Jan 1865 in Liberty Twp, Seneca, Ohio; died in 1929) on 1 Nov 1893 in Seneca Co., Ohio. They had one child, Marie Vandersall, born in June 1897.

      He was named after Sardis Birchard, who was President Rutherford Birchard Hayes' uncle, and a well known Ohio merchant. [Source]

      No other info found on Scott or Hilly.

      Note: Not to be confused with this S.B. Vandersall, whose first name was Stanley, of Columbus Ohio, who was State Secretary of Christian Endeavor, a religious society, in 1916:





      The concept of Chop Suey Joints, as they were called, came to be as thousands of Chinese laborers came to America for the Gold Rush, then to build the railroads. After that they created ''Chinatowns" within cities all over the country, and of course opened restaurants, which were soon ''discovered'' by the rest of the population, and by the turn of the century there were 100's of 'Chop Suey joints', becoming 1,000's. There are now more Chinese restaurants in the U.S. than any other ethnic cuisine. [SourceEating History: Thirty Turning Points in the Making of American Cuisine By Andrew F. Smith, 2009]

      _____________________

      Note: These items are part of my ''Collecting Lima Virtual Museum''. They are not for sale.

      If/when I find more information on these items, I will add it to the post.

      Read the Introduction to my ''Collecting Lima'' Virtual Museum Project, all about my Lima Ohio Bottles, Advertising, Antiques collection.
      ________________________


      Ms. Dow Antiques Blog 'Tique Talk is published by msdowantiques.com
      Sign up for my free newsletter!





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