surfaceone
Posts: 7133
Joined: 12/9/2008 Status: offline
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Hello Gary, Welcome to the Blue Pages, and thanks for bringing this little shimmery bottle. I'm not going to be much help either, but believe that the bottle was made at the Obear-Nestor Glass plant: "N in an oblong (or vertical rectangle)............Obear-Nestor Glass Company, East St. Louis, IL (1894-c.1980). This mark was presumably used concurrently with "N in a circle" and "N in an oval", on handblown ware up to about 1915. After 1915, on machine-made ware, the "N in a square" was instituted as their standard mark. N in a square..........Obear-Nester Glass Company, East St. Louis, IL (1894-c.1980). Mark reportedly was used from approximately 1915 to l980." From: http://www.myinsulators.com/glass-factories/bottlemarks3.html I'm going to disagree with carobran, and say not a poison. Perhaps a cologne or some sort of scent though. Age wise I'd guess post WWII. The shimmery embossing was, I believe, designed to catch the eye, and cause the perspective buyer to say, "O-o-o-o, shimmer me timbers! I'll have that, please."
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