Columbus OH Bottle Show Saturday February 15 2014 @ State Fairgrounds


Columbus OH Bottle & Insulator Show Saturday Feb. 15, 2014 @ State Fairgrounds

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The highly anticipated Columbus Bottle & Insulator Show is on Saturday, February 15, 2014 -- the first Ohio bottle show of the year! It's BIG -- it's FUN -- you don't want to miss it! Over 130 dealers/150+ tables, with 1,000's of bottles and advertising treasures!

You can read some show reports from previous year's shows --  with lots of pix!

COLUMBUS, OHIO ANTIQUE BOTTLE SHOW DETAILS




  • Show Date -- Saturday February 15, 2014
  • Show Time -- 9 AM - 2:00 PM
  • Public Admission -- $3 -- Fairgrounds Parking is $5 -- plenty of parking available.

    • Early Bird Adm. -- 7 AM - 9AM -- $25 -- You get in there while the dealers are setting up!
    • The show is in the RHODES CENTER building at the Ohio State Fairgrounds complex.
    • The Ohio State Fairgrounds is located at 717 E. 17th Av -- go west off I-71 at Exit 111
    • For driving directions and fairgrounds maps, click here
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  • The showroom is huge, well lighted, and has wide aisles for shoppers, with plenty of space between the tables for the dealers.
  • Restrooms in the heated building.
  • Food concession provided by the fairgrounds ($$).
  • Link to the weather forecast for Columbus Ohio.

    • Shoppers Bonus! The famous Scott Antique Show  is also the same day, also in the Ohio State Fairgrounds Complex, so you can spend the day and hit both great shows, and finds tons of treasures.
    • Just walk across the street, do not move your car, or you will have to pay for parking again.

    • Extra-early Bird Bonus! There will be a fun Hospitality Party on Friday night from 7pm to 10pm (or later -- it's a lot of fun!).
    • At the Baymont Inn Hotel (now a Motel 6) -- complimentary food and drinks, and lots of good visiting with your fellow collector/dealers.
    • Ask for the discounted show rate for your room, call and book your room NOW!
    • Hotel website link  and phone: 614-848-9696
    Call for your tables NOW!

    Co-Show Chairmen:



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    19th Century San Jose ~ In a Bottle ~ New Bottle Collecting and History Book by Tobin Gilman


    19th Century San Jose ~ In a Bottle ~ by Tobin Gilman

    I wanted to share this new book for a couple of reasons. One, of course it's about bottle collecting. But I am really impressed with how nice it looks, and the fact that it is self-published. Very inspiring! All you historians, researchers, and writers should check it out. And of course you San Jose bottle collectors will enjoy it. Even non-San-Jose bottle collectors will like it, too -- lots of great photos.

    Here's author Tobin Gilman's description:

     "19th Century San Jose In A Bottle," a historical view of daily life and commerce in San Jose, California in the 1800s, told through the prism of antique bottles from the area.

    Available now, this book is packed with colorful stories and amazing photographs that take you back to the earliest days of San Jose. You will learn about the downtown druggists, the local breweries, the soda and mineral waters, and much more.

    The glass bottles that San Jose's nineteenth century businesses used to package their products are spilling over with fascinating historical insights about the city's past that you won't learn anywhere else.

    Follow us on Facebook to keep up with the books progress while learning some fun facts about a simpler time in San Jose."
    Here's the Facebook page link -- https://www.facebook.com/19thCenturySanJoseInABottle

    Here's the link to preview and buy the book. Gilman has used BLURB.com to self publish. Blurb is great, they have a program where you upload your book using their software, then you set your price, and post your book for sale on their site and they handle the payment and printing, and you get your commission.

    Blurbs preview widget is very cool. You can flip through and see all the pages. Nice! Like I said, I'm feeling very inspired.

    Here are a few screen shots -- go check it the rest of the book -- link.


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    Prince Rupert's Drop ~ Glass Blower's Magic Trick Captured in Slow Motion Video



    This glass blobby-string thing will blow your mind when you see it explode in slow motion.

    Todd Knisely shared this awesome video about a glass blowing phenomena called a Prince Rupert's Drop.

    Here's the video (newsletter readers will have to click here to watch it on youtube).


    There's another video on the Corning Museum of Glass website, too. -- http://www.cmog.org/video/prince-ruperts-drop

    Here's the description, but please - watch the videos. It is so cool. The words below can't even come close!

    Smarter Every Day heads to a glassblowing workshop in Alabama to reveal the unique mechanical properties of the Prince Rupert's drop – a tadpole-shaped glass structure created by dropping molten glass in cold water.
    As Destin demonstrates, the very high residual stress  within the bulbous end of the drop allows it to withstand a blow from a hammer. However, a slight touch on the drop’s tail will cause the whole structure to explode.
    Filming in high-speed with a Phantom v1610  the team capture the explosion at100,000 frames per second to reveal, for the first time, exactly how the Prince Rupert drop explodes.
    But why does this happen? With thermal imaging (and some mini-Destins!) we are shown how the cooling process sets up extremely high levels of compressive stress in the outside layers of the drop and extremely high levels of tensile stress on the inside..
    As Destin explains:
    "If one link in this tension chain is ever cut, it breaks on down the line feeding off of its own stored up energy just like a chemical explosion."
    Mechanical strain energy is released in a phenomenon known as a "mechanical failure front". Shooting at 130,000 fps allows the team to measure the velocity of drop’s failure front at over a mile per second! 
    Watch the video -- it'll explain it better, and be visually awesome.
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    Dairy Photos For Ohio Milk Bottle Collectors ~ Bordens, Driggs, Willow Creek, Kelly's






    Joe Clevenger sent in these neat dairy photos and info, with this note:
    "I found some Ohio dairy pictures on the net. I paired the photos up with what information that I had and thought I would send it to you.
    Lou and I were always mailing stuff like this back and forth. Now that he is gone I will try to send it to you for the newsletter." -- Joe
    We're all still sad about losing Lou McFadden, author (with wife Sue) of OHIO'S DAIRIES.


    Since the dairy photos above are screen shots, the text is part of the image. Top to bottom, they are:

    1. Willow Creek Dairy
    2. Driggs Dairy in Toledo
    3. Borden's in Akron and Newark
    4. Kelly's Dairy in Newark

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    Rare SoCal Fruit Jar / Southern California Packing Co., Los Angeles / Important California Canning Industry History


    Here's another very scarce southern California jar, embossed SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PACKING CO.LOS ANGELES,CAL. This photo was posted on the Antique-Bottles.net Forum by fruit jar collector Tammy Johnson (of FruitJarRings.com).

    Besides this jar, the only other mention of a SCPCo jar that I found was one that sold on ebay in 2008. It was 48oz., and had a paper label, but sadly, there is no photo on the Worthpoint-archived listing.
    "JAR: 48 OZ. Clear with a few bubbles,ground lip,strong embossing and label. EMBOSSING: SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PACKING CO.LOS ANGELES,CAL. around palm tree and building and the word "OURS" on both jar and lid. LID: Embossed glass lid with zinc screw band with handle. LABEL: Gold,brown, and green. Very decorative. -- SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PACKING COMPANY / BLACKBERRY JAM / LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA"
    Here are some photos of wonderful fruits and jellies and jars displays at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair, where the Los Angeles Herald reported that: "The Southern California Packing Company will make an immense display of orange marmalade in the California building." 



    Bonus fact: That elephant is made from walnuts, a wonderfully successful advertising ploy to get more growers to import and grow walnuts in Southern California. Read more: http://looking-for-mabel.webs.com/walnutelephant.htm

    Photo of the employees of the Southern California Packing Co., Los Angeles, 1895. - Huntington Library Collection [Source]

    Note: The Huntington Library has a collection of old photos including Cromwell & Westervelt photos of the Southern California Packing Company in Los Angeles in 1887. Listed here, but no images are shown.

    Women were a huge part of the fruit packing and canning industry's workforce. 
    Del Monte plant, above 1890. [Source
    Below, 1920s. [Source]



    The Southern Califonia Packing Company incorporated in 1881, with J.M. Elliott as one of the founders. Listed above as Secretary and a Director, John Mackay Elliott was a noted Los Angeles banker. He was on the Board of Water Commissioners, and prominent in the Owens River project.

    Bonus Fact: Water supply being a serious issue for California, you may remember the Owens River project was a huge part of the Chinatown (movie) plot.




    There are many mentions and advertisements in newspapers and journals circa 1880s and 1890s, but by 1902 the company was listed, along with so many others, as now being part of the California Fruit Canners' Association, as was Del Monte (see label below).

    The SCPCo. had tried to stay independent. In 1899, The San Francisco Call newspaper reported them as one of 3 companies holding out [source].

    "A New Combination of Fruit-Packers. TO MAKE A STEADY MARKET THREE LARGE CONCERNS ARE STILL HOLDING OUT. The Corporation Will Endeavor to Minimiza the Cost of Production by Effecting Sweeping i Changes.
    Articles of incorporation were filed yesterday for the California Packers' Asso-
    elation, with a capital of two and a half million dollars.
    The new concern is composed of some of the largest fruit-packing establishments In the State and Its object will be to control and regulate the prices of canned fruits. It will also ship goods to all parts of the world. It is organised on practically the same lines as the Alaska Packers' Association, and the members hep-: to be able to minimize the cost of preparing fruit for shipment and thus dictate prices.
    Under the plan agreed upon it is probable that some factories will be closed altogether and others which now can fruits of all kinds will limit their output to a single variety. For instance, factories In cherry-growing districts are now canning net only cherries but peaches, pears and apricots. The fruits not raised In that particular district must be shipped to the country* often at great expense. After having been canned they must be reshipped to the point of distribution, which may be in the neighborhood where they were grown. It is the plan of the corporation i" save this. double shipping bill by treating each variety of fruit in the. portion of the State where it grows in largest quantities. The new concern held a meeting yesterday afternoon and organized with the election of the following directors: A. D. Cutler of the Cutting Fruit Packing Company; M. .1. Fontana of Fontana & Co.; E. 11. Nielson, California Preserving Company; I". Tillmann Jr., Oakland Preserving Company; J. H. Hunt. Hunt Bros. & Co.; R. R. Bentley, Sacramento Packing Company; I. H. Morse of Kins. Morse & Co.; W. H. Wright, San Jose Packing Company; W. J. Hotvhkiss, Russian River Packing Company; James Madison, A. F. Tenny Company; J. Streining, Rose City Canning Company. The concerns which have not entered Into the combination are the Southern California Packing Company, the Pacific Cannery Company and the California Canneries Company."

    They gave in and joined in 1900:
    "In 1900, the company took over nine more companies, including Rose City Packing Company of Santa Rosa, A. F. Tenney Canning Company in Fresno, Courtland Canning Company, the Whitter CanneryChico Canning CompanyLincoln Fruit Packing CompanySutter Canning & Packing Company, and Southern California Packing Company. "Thus, at the end of the second season, the California Fruit Canners' Association controlled twenty-seven plants in twenty-two cities." About half of the initial plants were in California; the rest were in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Hawaii. A list of the 1901 canneries appears in a California board of horticulture biennial report from 1901.
    "The California Fruit Canners' Association, which has for years been the dominant factor in the canning business on the Pacific Coast,..." [Source]

    The CFC Ass'n. was just one of the many California fruit producers and packers groups that merged individual growers businesses in the late 1800's to early 1900's. And those groups all eventually folded into the giant packer's conglomerate, The California Packing Corporation

    Formed in 1899, nicknamed CalPak, it grew into what is today's Del Monte mega-brand.

    More California Packing company history, which mentions the Del Monte brand name's having originated with the Oakland Preserving Companyhere.

    Another article on Del Monte's history here.





    Del Monte the brand is named after the famous Del Monte Hotel that was built in Monterey in 1881.








    You can buy CalPak labels from The Label Man



    More Bonus Facts:



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    Bottle Digger Finds Rare 1890s Pasadena Fruit & Crystallizing Jelly Jar


    Pasadena Fruit & Crystallizing Co. / Pasadena Cal. jar











    A Happy New Year over to you all as well !!! Great pictures and bottles with the articles, thanks !! I have something I want to share here as well, and would be of great interest for the western jar and jelly jammers alike. 

    I have dug this little product fig jelly jar many years ago back in the late 80's up in the "Bunker Hill" neighborhood area near downtown Los Angeles, in a privy. This is when they were tearing down this entire section that unfortunately got rundown over the years. But back in the late 1880's to about 1910 it was quite the upscale neighborhood, with nice Victorian houses overlooking the city up on the bluff. But very good for us diggers then. 

    This example is the size of a typical jelly jar and looks to date from the late 1890's to about 1905. It has the ground top, and is near perfect, except for a small chip and a hole on the back side on the base corner. There are no cracks.

              This was socked away in an unassuming box for over 20 years, and finally now it sits proudly on my shelf. The embossing is bold and it has a wonderful picture of a fig in wonderful detail. It reads within a circle "Pasadena Fruit & Crystallizing CO / Cal." On the fig it reads "Trade Mark". 

    I have not seen another one of these in my many years of digging and collecting in the southern California area. This little jar measures just 3 1/2" tall and 2 3/4" across the threaded ground top. The old glass has turned a sun colored amethyst.

    Good thing it was not tossed back in the hole years ago, as that is what we used to do then. It caught my fancy for sure, and it still does. Have never hear or seen another, even broken, and showed the old timers in the LA club and they have not seen or heard of it either. 

    If you have any info on this jar it would be greatly appreciated. Have you ever seen or hard of one of these jars before? It sure looks attractive and kinda reminds me of the Southern California Packing Co. jar from Los Angeles with the mission scene on it, but far rarer. Check out the attached pics that I took of this cool little jar !!! 

    Regards, Ed. 


    Definitely a neat little jar. I couldn't find another example, and only found a smattering of info about the company. 
    • In 1886, the Fruit Crystallizing Works was formed in Pasadena. They canned fruit, and marketed jellies, etc. They had a store for a short while.
    • Over about 10 years, the company changed owners a few times; added more products like baked beans and catsup.
    • In 1905, their corporation charter was forfeited.
    • The plant finally went into the hands of the Pasadena Canning Company, formed by a group of fruit producers. 
    • All the California fruit growers and packers eventually wound up in the big conglomerate of the California Packing Co., formed in 1899, which grew into the famous canned food brand, Del Monte.
    _______________________________

    That's it, so as ''filler'', I have mixed in a few fruit crate labels for fun, color and interest. I am working on my article about the other jar Ed mentioned, and the So. Cal. Packing Co. -- Stay tuned.




    P.S. -- Don't you just love these fancy jars from George and Shirley ________'s collection? [The photo is posted here on the antiquebottles.net forum] 

    You see these ornate jars, with glass screw-on lids and wire bails, at antique shows, malls, and ebay
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    Historic Ball Fruit Jar Collection on Display at the Minnetrista Museum in Muncie IN







    Dick Cole, President of the Muncie Fruit Jar Club [fruitjar.org] writes to tell us of the great new

    Fruit Far Display at the Minnetrista Museum in Muncie

    "Minnetrista has moved the Gift Ship from the Lobby of the main building.  They combined it with the Orchard Shop.

    The resulting empty space was filled with fruit jars.  What better choice?  

    Since it is on the first floor, it is open to the public and free. 

    How long will the display be there? Probably until next May [2014].  

    Those of you who can’t make the monthly meetings can see it when you come to Muncie for the Annual Show in January."

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