Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: beverages
Milkman, Horse, and Wagon for Borden's Condensed M…
26 Jul 2016 |
|
|
|
"Borden's Condensed Milk, Bottled Milk & Cream. Gail Borden, Eagle Brand. Office, No. 227 East 34th St."
A real photo postcard of a milkman with his horse and delivery wagon in New York City.
Merry Xmas and a Happy New Year from Your Dairyman
15 Dec 2014 |
|
|
A cardboard milk bottle cap with Santa Claus and greetings of the season.
Holiday Greetings and a Toast to Good Cheer from Y…
05 Dec 2014 |
|
|
"Clover Leaf Dairy sends holiday greetings and a toast to good cheer. Your Milkman."
A die-cut paper wreath that a milkman could place over a milk bottle as a holiday greeting for his customers. Clover Leaf Dairy was located in Pottstown, Pennsylvania.
Conestoga Coffee, Lancaster, Pa.
29 Aug 2014 |
|
|
"Conestoga Coffee Blend, one pound net, Lancaster Wholesale Grocery Co., distributors, Lancaster, Penna."
Although the landscape surrounding the Conestoga wagon in this illustration from the front of a paper coffee bag depicts the rugged terrain of the American West, early settlers actually used a different type of covered wagon (often just a simple farm wagon enclosed in canvas) to travel westward.
The Conestoga wagon originated in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania , and its name may have come from the county's Conestoga Township or Conestoga River ("Conestoga" originally referred to a Native American group now more commonly known as the Susquehannocks ). It was a sturdy vehicle capable of handling large loads over the undeveloped dirt roads in Pennsylvania and surrounding states during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Given the local origin of the Conestoga wagon, it's not surprising that the Lancaster Wholesale Grocery Company chose the name for its coffee. And it's certainly more dramatic--through not accurate--to see the wagon traveling through a mountainous Western landscape rather than slogging through the muddy roads in the eastern United States.
See also Howard C. Frey, Refurbisher of Conestoga Wagons .
Lunch Menu, Hotel Ponce de Leon, St. Augustine, Fl…
28 May 2015 |
|
|
The Ponce de Leon Hotel in St. Augustine, Florida, was built by Henry Morrison Flagler , "a Gilded Age industrialist, railroad pioneer, and partner with John D. Rockefeller in Standard Oil" (as described on Flagler College's Legacy of Innovation page). The luxury hotel opened on January 10, 1888, and this menu dates to February 26 of that year. Today, the hotel building is part of Flagler College .
Gil Wilson 's History of the City of St. Augustine Web site contains additional information regarding the Ponce de Leon Hotel and Osborn Dunlap Seavey , the hotel's manager in 1888.
Not to be confused with the Ponce de Leon Hotel in Roanoke, Virginia :
Hotel Ponce de Leon, St. Augustine, Florida
O. D. Seavey, manager
Lunch, Saturday, February 25, 1888.
Consommé. Julienne with rice,
Pickled oysters. Fried shad roe, á la tartare. Radishes. Bermuda potatoes.
Roast leg of mutton. Smoked beef tongue with spinach.
Currie of chicken, á l' Indienne. Kidneys, sautés, with mushrooms. Baked sweet potatoes. New beets.
Boston baked beans. Pressed corned beef. Game pie. Ribs of beef. Ham. Tongue. Mutton. Pickled tripe. Pickled lamb tongue.
Asparagus salad. Chicken salad. Sliced tomatoes. Lettuce.
Stewed prunes. Apple pie. Pumpkin pie. Ginger snaps. Lady cake. Croquettes Parisiennes. Assorted cake. Pistache ice cream. Fruit. American and foreign cheese. Tea. Coffee.
Wier's Lemon Seltzer Cures Headaches
16 Aug 2014 |
|
|
|
Front and back of a small folded advertisement for Wier's Lemon Seltzer that also includes a chronology of the Spanish-American War, which took place in 1898 (the year "1899" above the "Historical Events in the Spanish-American War" heading is apparently either a typo or is intended to show when the ad was published).
--------
Wier's Lemon Seltzer Cures Headaches &c.
Before, after. 10c.
--------
1899. Historical Events in the Spanish-American War.
Jan. 25.--Capt. Sigabee arrived at Havana with Battleship Maine.
Feb. 7.--DeLome letter made public.
Feb. 15.--Battleship Maine blown up, 206 officers and men lost their lives.
Mar. 5.--Spain asked the recall of Gen. Lee.
Mar. 16.--Congress voted $50,000,000 for National Defense.
Apr. 4.--Navy Dept. ordered purchase of 10 crusiers.
Apr. 9.--Gen. Lee returned from American consuls.
Apr. 12.--Ultimatum to Spain to withdraw land and naval forces from Cuba.
Apr. 21.--Spain declares war by notifying U.S. diplomatic relations were at an end.
Apr. 24.--President calls for 125,000 volunteers.
May 1.--Ad. Dewey destroyed Montejo's fleet. Americans, none killed and 6 wounded; Spanish, between 5 and 6 hundred killed and wounded. Ensign Bagley, of torpedo-boat Windslow, 1st officer killed in the war.
May 25.--President calls for 75,000 more volunteers.
June 3.--Hobson sank Merrimac in Santiago harbor.
June 24.--First action between land forces and Spanish took place.
July 3.--Cervera's fleet destroyed by Sampson's fleet.
July 17.--Santiago surrendered. Stars and stripes hoisted.
Aug. 9.--Protocol drafted and signed.
Aug. 18.--Manilla surrendered to U.S.
Sept. 17.--Peace Commission sailed for Paris.
Oct. 18.--American flag raised over San Juan.
Nov. 1.--Spanish cruiser Infanta Maria Teresa abandoned at sea after being raised.
Nov. 25.--First American troops landed in Havana.
Nov. 28.--Spain assents to U.S. demand for the entire Phillippines for $20,000,000.
Dec. 10.--Spanish American treaty signed at Paris.
Ask your druggist for Wier's Lemon Seltzer. It is a positive cure for headache, nervousness, indigestion, etc. Pleasant to take. 10c.
Milk Bottle Collar: Reminder and Order Form
22 Apr 2014 |
|
|
A milk bottle collar (for wrapping around the top of a bottle) that served both as a humorous reminder to return empty bottles and as an order form to ask the milkman to deliver specific items (back when dairies used to make regular home deliveries).
"Help keep down the cost of your milk by returning your empty bottles. Every unreturned bottle adds to the cost of delivering milk to your door. If you have any empties around your kitchen or basement, please return them."
"Lady, please send me home. Empty."
"Handy Order Blank. Place over return bottle. Please leave: ________. Name: ________. Address: ________."
For an enlargement of the middle panel with the cartoonish milk bottle, see Lady, Please Send Me Home!
Lady, Please Send Me Home!
22 Apr 2014 |
|
|
|
The center panel from a milk bottle collar that wrapped around the top of a bottle in order to remind customers who received home delivery of milk to return their empty bottles.
For more information, see Milk Bottle Collar: Reminder and Order Form .
"Not Onto It," Charlie Ferguson, Pitcher, Philadel…
03 Mar 2014 |
|
|
|
One in a series of baseball-themed advertising trade cards published in 1887 by Tobin, this card featured a caricature of Charlie Ferguson, who was a well-regarded pitcher for the Philadelphia Quakers team. Sadly, it turned out that 1887 was the final season that Ferguson played--he died from typhoid fever in April 1888.
--------
"Philadelphia. 'Not Onto It.' (Ferguson.) Tobin N.Y."
"A. W. Schrader, manufacturer of all kinds of mineral waters, also bottler of lager and porter. Private families supplied at short notice. 726 and 728 Adams Ave., Scranton, Pa. Telephone connection."
Steel Pier Jail, Atlantic City, N.J., 1954
06 Nov 2013 |
|
|
|
Unrepentant milk drinkers arrested for disudderly conduct and nearly causing a cowtastrophe.
Season's Greetings from Your Rutter's Milkman
16 Dec 2013 |
|
|
"Season's Greetings, Elmer Myers, Your Rutter's Driver. Rutter Bros., Inc., Dairy Products, N. Geo. St., Ext'd. Golden Guernsey, America's Table Milk."
Mouse over the image for a close-up of the milkman and his milk truck .
Season's Greetings from Your Rutter's Milkman (Det…
16 Dec 2013 |
|
|
For the full greeting card, see Season's Greetings from Your Rutter's Milkman (below).
Lion Coffee Hook and Ladder Fire Engine
21 May 2013 |
|
|
|
Touch Not, Taste Not, Handle Not
10 Jun 2013 |
|
Compare this pledge card with a Lincoln-Lee Legion Pledge Card, 1903 , and an Anti-Cigarette Pledge, 1916 .
"Touch not. Taste not. Handle not. Pledge. I hereby promise, by the help of God, to abstain from the use of all intoxicating liquors, including wine, beer, and cider, as a beverage; from the use of tobacco in any form, and from all profanity. National Temperance Society, 58 Reade Street, New York."
Jump to top
RSS feed- Alan Mays' latest photos with "beverages" - Photos
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter