
HOFFMANN HOUSE CIGAR TIN SIGN, THE HILSON COMPANY, NEW YORK, N.Y., Circa 1900
This is a beautiful tin sign from The Hilson Company in NYC, for their Hoffmann House brand of cigars. The image features a debonair man with a top hat.
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This is a beautiful tin sign from The Hilson Company in NYC, for their Hoffmann House brand of cigars. The image features a debonair man with a top hat.
Early lithographic poster from the Honest Cut Plug Tobacco Brand. This poster shows the Presidential Possibilities in the year 1892
Tin sign featuring the famous dog and cat in an Honest Scrap. Chewing Tobacco Cut Plug Product. Circa 1920.
Pictured is a beautiful 1904 Hood’s Sarsaparilla Lithographic calendar for their famous drink. Hood’s was based in Lowell, MA and the company produced calendars on a yearly basis.
Featured here is a beautiful self framed tin sign from the Hoster Brewery in Columbus, Ohio. This pre-prohibition era sign features a couple of the beer bottle brands from this large brewery. The Hoster Columbus Associated Breweries Brewery was started in 1836 by Louis Hoster, however, it died with the advent of prohibition in 1920. …
Featured is a nice cardboard sign from the Howdy Orange Drink Soda brand, which says “Don’t say Orange, Say Howdy” as their slogan. Circa 1930’s.
Pictured is a beautiful 1900 era Vitrolite corner beer sign from the Hudepohl Brewery in Cincinnati, Ohio. This sign was reproduced at one time, but the frame is not an original style of corner sign composition
Pictured is a beautiful pre-prohibition serving tray from the Hudson County Consumers Brewing Company in West Hoboken, New Jersey. The tray shows a lot of color and a great factory scene image.
1930s Tin over Cardboard Soda Sign from the Fred Husemann Soda Bottling Company in Red Bud, Illinois. Mr. Husemann was in business from approximately 1920 to 1960 in this town in Randolph County, IL.
This is a collection of various soda bottles from the towns of Waterloo, Millstadt and Valmeyer, Illinois. The Charles Boeke bottle from Waterloo, IL is a Hutchinson or “hutch” style soda bottle which would have required a porcelain stopper in the top held in place by the wire bail