Coca Cola in Bottles - Elling Brings Back Another Load from Minnesota

 
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Winona Coca-Cola Bottling Company
 
[From our Inbox]

All Bottlers;  In what has almost become a routine, Mike Elling brought back another load of traditional Coca-Cola products in reusable glass bottles 750 miles away in Winona, Minnesota.  That is, you carry up a load of empty bottles and exchange them for full ones.  I used a Chrysler van designed to run on the new VEGETABLE OIL  (E-85) fuel and got 25 miles to the gallon at turnpike speeds.  The local Enterprise car rental facility was pleased that I did so prior to the traffic crush of the Memorial Day weekend.
 
Traffic was light, and the route was mainly through the farmland of central Illinois and Wisconsin.  The only major city I drove around was Madison, Wisconsin.  I got there at rush hour, but they have a splendid 6-lane interstate that was clear and fast.
 
Beverages in reusable bottles is not dead.  There are also dairy companies who continue to market product in glass, especially in the Missouri, Illinois, and west Tennessee regions.  When you consider the size of the individual plastic bottles children are drinking from today, and compare them to the traditional 6- and 10-ounce soda bottles of a half-century ago, it is no wonder childhood obesity has become a problem!  Fortunately, there is still an independent bottler in Minnesota who understands that.  And for that I say, YOU BETCHA BY GOLLY !
 
Photo Caption:  Leroy Telstad at new display of Coke bottles from throughout the nation featuring bottom-up embossed city names.  Leroy designed and built this display at the Winona Coca-Cola Museum.
 
--Michael Elling Photo
 
 
Photo Caption:  Rented Chrysler Town and Country Van easily hauled 44 cases of glass bottled Coke products at turnpike speeds.
 
--Michael Elling Photo

Butte Montana Bottle Show June 1 and 2, 2012





From our inbox:

Subject: Butte Bottle Show June 1 & 2, 2012 

Hello, Collector,

The Bottle and Antique show is coming June 1 and 2 at the Butte Civic Center. 
We have done a ton of promoting. Many new dealers. Hope you can make it.

Regards,
James Campiglia
Show Chairman and Vice President

jameschips@bresnan.net
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Check out James Campiglia and Reggie Shoeman's bottle-digging website, Outhouse Patrol http://www.outhousepatrol.com/



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Findlay Antique Bottle Club -- Website - Facebook - Twitter

Hesperidina Barrel Bitters Bottle History


Hesperidina, then and now.



For everything you've always wanted to know about Hesperidina Barrel Bitters Bottle History, read Cecil Munsey's pdf article, illustrated with lots of ephemera.
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Findlay Antique Bottle Club -- Website - Facebook - Twitter

Sad News - RIP Jeff Harper - Friend and Ball Fruit Jar Collector - You Are Missed

Jeffrey F. Harper



The Findlay Bottle Club sends its heartfelt condolences to Mary Harper, and to Jeff and Mary's family and friends. Jeff will long be missed, and fondly remembered by all his fellow fruit jar collecting friends.


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Jeffrey Harper 

  |   Visit Guest Book

Jeffrey (Jeff) Frederick Harper passed peacefully in the early morning of May 18, 2012 from complications of kidney cancer. He was 60 years old. 

Services will be held at First Congregational Church, 10840 Beinhorn, Houston, TX on Sunday, May 27 at 4:00 p.m. A reception will follow in the Assembly Room.

Jeff was born and raised in Muncie, IN, graduating from Burris High School in 1969. Jeff attended The Culver Academies Summer School from 1960 to 1968, first as a Woodcraft camper and then as a member of the Naval Academy. He was also a Culver Summer Camps counselor for the summers of 1969-1970. During his years at Burris he met his wife of 38 years, Mary Pieroni Harper. They married in 1973 after Jeff graduated from Brown University with Honors in Molecular Biology.

They moved to Charlottesville, where Jeff earned his Ph.D. in Pharmacology at the University of Virginia in 1978. He completed a post-doctoral fellowship in Endocrinology at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill in 1980.
Jeff was employed as Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine (Endocrinology) and Pharmacology at the University of Texas Medical School - Houston from 1980 through 1987. 

After leaving the medical school, he became the owner of an industrial ceramic inspection and testing company that grew into International Refractory Service, Inc. (IRSI). At its height, IRSI had offices in Houston and Venezuela. Switching careers in 1998, he began working for Askesis Development Group, Inc. (ADG) , a subsidiary of the University of Pittsburgh Medical School. He served ADG in computer data management and held several positions including VP for Development and Manager, Client Services Division.

Since 2002, he served in several volunteer capacities at First Congregational Church. He was on the Board of Deacons from 2006-2012, serving as the Head Deacon over the past three years. He also served on the Church Council, and rang bass handbells in the Decibells Handbell Choir. 

Jeff has been an active volunteer with the Fibromyalgia Association of Houston (FMAH), video-recording and producing a DVD of each presentation. He supported the organization in countless ways, and FMAH will deeply miss him. He was a very giving person, who always took the time to help others.

Jeff was one of the leading collectors of fruit jars and other memorabilia made by the Ball Corporation, a company founded by Jeff's great grandfather and great uncles. At his passing, Jeff possessed over 2400 different Ball fruit jars, 100 different Ball soda bottles, and numerous other items related to the company.

Jeff is survived by his beloved wife Mary, two wonderful adult children (Katherine Anne and Andrew Mario), and two loving siblings (brother Charles, his wife Kathy and children, and sister Ellen, her husband Jim and children). He is preceded in death by his parents Marjorie and Henry Harper and his in-laws Jane and Mario Pieroni.

Remembrances may be made to: 
  • FCC Endowment Fund (Harper Fund), First Congregational Church, 10840 Beinhorn, Houston, Texas 77024;
  • Fibromyalgia Association of Houston, Inc., POB 541742, Houston, TX,77254-1742;
  • Or to The Jeffrey F. Harper Memorial Fund for Science Education, C/O Askesis Development Group, 112 Washington Place, One Chatham Center, Suite 300, Pittsburgh, PA, 15219
Published in Houston Chronicle from May 23 to May 26, 2012

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  Jeff Harper was featured as a LEGENDS OF THE JAR      

A digger's story about his first find that started him collecting ink bottles.


Three bottles that were found while digging: an unembossed pontiled 12-sided ink bottle in medium green, attributed to the Keene, N.H., Glass Works, circa 1840 (value $150): an aqua pontiled eight-sided Harrison’s Columbian Ink bottle (value $150); and a rare sapphire blue eight-sided pontiled Harrison’s Columbian Ink bottle with lip repair (value $1,000 as is).

A digger's story about his first find that started him collecting ink bottles.

Many advanced collectors of early American glass bottles will tell you the category they first started collecting was ink bottles. Their diminutive size and alluring colors and shapes catch the eye of anyone with an appreciation for detail and a fascination with the early glass-blowing trade as it d...

From: Digging on Antique Bottles: Start a Collection with Glass Ink Pots by Bram Hepburn
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Decorating with Antique Bottles - A Trend Worth Pursuing



Decorating with Antique Bottles


Philadelphia Antiques Show report includes this tidbit about some antique bottles that sold as a grouping.

" A mid-Nineteenth Century worsted wool New England appliquéd table mat hung on the back wall in the booth of Jeff and Holly Noordsy Art & Antiques, Cornwall, Vt. Below it, a long shelf held an assembled collection of 18 New England chestnut bottles blown between 1790 and 1820. "We put two collections together to make this group, paying strict attention to the shape of the bottle and the length of the neck," Jeff said. When all was said and done, the bottles were perfectly graduated and "we still had about another 18 to begin another graduated set." He added, "The bottles, including the shelf, sold to a collector who did not have any glass in his collection." " --Antiques and the Arts
My advice for bottle dealers who also set up at non-bottle antiques shows: Follow the Noordsy's example and take ready-to-install displays, groupings, and collections. You can sell to someone decorating their home, and to interior designers who are looking for something unique for their clients.

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Findlay Antique Bottle Club -- Website - Facebook - Twitter

Mansfield Bottle show 2012 - A Few More Pix

Just a few more pix: people, and a couple views of the other show building. I was too busy selling and visiting to get more pix. 

The 2012 Mansfield Bottle Show was great -- lots of dealers, shoppers, and fun. Congrats to the Ohio Bottle Club and Show Chairman Bill Koster on another success!

Lou and Sue McFadden 
The McFadden collection holds over 3,600 Ohio milk bottles. They wrote the book Ohio's Dairies which lists the dairies, and includes pix of the buildings then and now, and other info. An invaluable resource for collectors. To purchase one of the few remaining copies, just email Sue for info


Terry Jones and Santa Claus.

Jim Houdeshell

Keith Leeders




My earlier Mansfield posts:


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Mansfield Bottle Show 2012 - An Inside Sneak Peak




There are 2 buildings full of bottles and more. I'm set up in the Arts and Crafts bldg. - here's an overview. No chance to go shop the other bldg. yet.
Sent from phone.

Mansfield Bottle Show 2012 - The Sharks Are Circling









More early bird outside activity. Each new dealer that starts setting up finds themselves quickly surrounded. Sales happen lightning fast. Don't worry, there's plenty of treasures left. Hope to see you on Saturday.
Sent from phone.

Mansfield Bottle Show Pre-set-up Crowd Hungry for Deals







This afternoon at the Mansfield fairgrounds. Everyone milling about, shopping at the few outdoor dealers, while waiting for the doors to open. Good crowd, beautiful weather. Come see us tomorrow!
Sent from phone.

Collecting #Vintage Watkins Cure Bottles, Spices, Tins, Advertising, and More - Museum Info


"Joseph Ray Watkins founded Watkins Incorporated in 1868 from the kitchen of his home in Plainview, Minn. Made from camphor (extracted from evergreen trees) and capsicum (from red peppers), Original Liniment offered relief for tired, aching muscles. J.R. Watkins was so confident of his home-manufactured natural product that he introduced the now famous Watkins "Trial Mark" bottle, along with the first-ever money back guarantee." -- from JRWatkins.com -- read more there, and see the history timeline.

Still in business today, JR Watkins started by selling door-to-door, and his company became a huge success. - wikipedia



Interested in collecting vintage Watkins bottles and ephemera? Visit the JR Watkins Home museum in Plainview, MN.


Ron Manzow, volunteer curator at the J.R. Watkins home, says:
“I started collecting (Watkins memorabilia) in the spring of 2008, knowing absolutely nothing about them, but with the help of John Goplen, archivist at J.R. Watkins Naturals and the Watkins museum in Winona, and discovering the Watkins Collectors Club … I jumped into the arena of the 'Watkins collector.'"On display in the Watkins home are various bottles and tins that have been collected and donated, mostly by Manzow. When he is looking for items, he says he looks for “the oldest items that contain the markings 'The J.R. Watkins Medical Company.'"Those markings date the items prior to 1918, before the name was shortened to the J.R. Watkins Co. These items are more rare and command a higher price, but they are well worth the effort to uncover." 
More info about the Watkins House museum:

Click the collage-photo to enlarge.


Wow -- there are sure lots and lots of Watkins items to collect!

Some more Watkins links:

  1. http://www.glassbottlemarks.com/j-r-watkins-co-bottles/
  2. http://www.atticshoppe.com/watkins/vintage-watkins.htm
  3. http://www.winonadailynews.com/stories/news/article_c0cf9da8-a928-5086-8bf5-b168ebe01a44.html
  4. http://www.antiquetrader.com/antiques-news/fake-watkins-tooth-powder-bottles-discovered-during-collecting-clubs-annual-convention

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Findlay Antique Bottle Club -- Website - Facebook - Twitter

Special Fruit Jar Posts Round Up Edition




Hey there, Fruit Jar collectors -- did you see these blog posts?








  • "I Had a BALL at Mason's" - Jeff Klingler's article about Mason Bright's collection.









That's just a few fruit jar themed posts from our past. Nice thing about the internet, it's all archived here and we can re-package the posts that were published separately into a little mini-magazine. Enjoy!
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Findlay Antique Bottle Club -- Website - Facebook - Twitter

New Jersey Antique Bottle Club 2012 South River Show Photo Album


Check out this great photo album of the 2012 South River Bottle Show

Above is a website screenshot, and below is just one pic:
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Findlay Antique Bottle Club -- Website - Facebook - Twitter
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