
DRINK SQUIRT SODA, SELF-FRAMED TIN SIGN, “CALL ME SQUIRT”, Circa 1940’s
Featured here is a very colorful Squirt brand soda self-framed tin sign with the iconic squirt young boy character, which was used in many of their advertising pieces.
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Featured here is a very colorful Squirt brand soda self-framed tin sign with the iconic squirt young boy character, which was used in many of their advertising pieces.
This is an incredibly beautiful and rare self-framed tin sign from the Reno Nevada Brewing Company, advertising their Sierra Beer, circa 1900. Self-framed brewery signs were a popular promotional piece prior to prohibition.
Here is an awesome and colorful brewery tip tray from the Magnus Beck Brewing Company which was in Buffalo, New York, circa 1905. The colors on this tip tray are amazing and the eagle was a very popular emblem for breweries in the early 1900’s.
This is a beautiful brewery tray featuring a bottle of beer from the Port Angeles, WA Brewing and Malting Co. The tray commemorates their award at the Seattle Worlds Fair exposition in 1909.
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.
Here is a beautiful celluloid over cardboard similar to a tin over cardboard sign from the Feigenspan brewery out of Newark, New Jersey for their PON brand of Beer and Ale products. Circa 1930’s.
Here is a awesome cardboard sign with a clock inside for the Continental Brand of Tobacco, made by the Cotterill, Fenner and Company out of Dayton, Ohio. This sign is circa 1910 and shows a continental solider from the Civil War era.
This tray features a beautiful eagle from the Peter Doelger Brewery which was the largest brewery in NYC before Prohibition. The tray advertises the beer was “Brewed Expressly for the Home”.
The Louis Obert Brewery produced several earlier reverse on glass advertising signs, many of which were transom signs like the one photographed here. These transom signs were hung outside saloon or tavern entrances all around the St. Louis MO area in the early 1900’s. This one is the only one known to exist at this time unfortunately today.
The Daniel Aberle and Sons whiskey distilling company produced this beautiful tin charger tray sign around 1905 for their Golden Link Whiskey brand. The Daniel Aberle & Sons Whiskey Distilling Company was based in Minneapolis, MN before Prohibition.