I am mainly interested in sodas marked with the name of the bottling works on it in a place of prominence. Here are some of my Florida bottles. The Brookville coke has a slice out of the lip, and, as you can see, the bottle on the right from Quincy was glued back together, but it is quite rare...
Thanks for the welcome! No, you're right, that's a salt cellar. I learned both and am never sure - seems to be the same argument of which has more holes! Where is the pepper cellar? [;)]
It seems totally weird, but it seems that "which gets more holes in the top, salt or pepper?" causes lots of debates (I spent a bit of time poking around the web).
One group states that since pepper was more expensive than salt, it was given fewer holes in the top, but another stated that...
I found this when I was digging behind an old house in Florida. A pretty porcelain Victorian salt cellar with a touch of gold leaf. Didn't find the pepper shaker alas!
I found it in a river dig, so it's hard to say an age exactly, but most of the other things were late 1800s, nothing particularly interesting, except for this bottle.
Hi all. I found this bottle recently. It looks for all the world like a Tiger Whiskey, except that it's in glass. It has Chinese characters on it (I guess I can get them translated!), but I thought I'd ask here too. Any ideas? Thanks!
Hi, I'm new here, so I am just reading this note. I also have one of these bottles; my information is that it is a whisky bottle, originally designed to hang around the neck of the Teddy Bear. I'm not positive on all this, but it seems logical.