ROBBYBOBBY64
Well-Known Member
This is a perfect example of why people like old bottles. Not only the glass but it's the history. Glad I could help.Awesome. Thank you
ROBBYBOBBY64.
This is a perfect example of why people like old bottles. Not only the glass but it's the history. Glad I could help.Awesome. Thank you
Nice bit of research Robby. There's a nice variety of information on that History Link site. Numerous articles on now non-existent towns, many of which were situated in what later became the Seattle Watershed and are off-limits to the general public today.This is a perfect example of why people like old bottles. Not only the glass but it's the history. Glad I could help.
ROBBYBOBBY64.
I love a good history site. Historylink.org is a great site. Thanks for the compliment. The hardest part was figuring out what the embossing actually said. Once I figured it was a G instead of a C it was easy.Nice bit of research Robby. There's a nice variety of information on that History Link site. Numerous articles on now non-existent towns, many of which were situated in what later became the Seattle Watershed and are off-limits to the general public today.
Thank you. You are very helpful.I find here most druggist bottles are highly collectable and hard to find with the exception of some of the common ones from Toronto ( our largest city ) , you often see them for sale in antique malls for a long time so called stale merchandise
the ones from small towns would be especially hard to find , some I've never even seen in person before and rarely see online
You'd be surprised at how cheap the Eastern Ontario ones are. I've built up a decent collection of them, including from smaller towns, without ever paying more than $10 for one. It's always surprised me how undervalued druggist bottles are apart from select geographical areas, but I'm not complaining because it makes them easier to collect!I find here most druggist bottles are highly collectable and hard to find with the exception of some of the common ones from Toronto ( our largest city ) , you often see them for sale in antique malls for a long time so called stale merchandise
the ones from small towns would be especially hard to find , some I've never even seen in person before and rarely see online
You'd be surprised at how cheap the Eastern Ontario ones are. I've built up a decent collection of them, including from smaller towns, without ever paying more than $10 for one. It's always surprised me how undervalued druggist bottles are apart from select geographical areas, but I'm not complaining because it makes them easier to collect!
This is a perfect example of why people like old bottles. Not only the glass but it's the history. Glad I could help.
ROBBYBOBBY64.