Showing posts with label 1908. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1908. Show all posts

1/1/14

BIEN THERE, DONE THAT...Happy New Year!


I may or may not have posted this card in the past. I'll chalk it up to senior moments. And frankly, I can think of other things to do than go back through old posts to find it because seriously, it's worth posting again.

It's a lovely card printed by Julius Bien & Company in 1908 in New York. Mr. Bien died a year later in 1909. How nice that this card has survived so many New Year's.




Click on images to see them larger.

The following is from the MetroPostcard site in New York, always a great source of postcard information.
Bien, whose father had been a lithographer, studied graphic arts at the Academy in Kassel, Germany. He left for the United States after the failed revolution of 1848, and opened his own lithography shop in New York. Between 1854 and 1856 he went into a brief partnership with Julius Sterner. He first achieved acclaim for his lithographic transfers of James Audubon’s engravings from Birds in America. Afterwards he concentrated on printing maps, setting new standards for their production. By the 1880’s the firm expanded into printing a wide range of chromolithographic material including advertising, posters, and trade cards. This would latter further expand into sets of comic, holiday, patriotic, religious, and sentimental postcards, typified by a highly graphic style. Bien died in 1909 but the firm continued its printing operations until purchased by the Heywood, Strasser & Voigt Litho Company in 1915. Julius Bien also served as the first president of the National Lithographer’s Association. (SOURCE: MetroPostcard Publishers)

6/3/13

On FARNUM STREET in Omaha, Nebraska in 1908


This was going to be a quickie post; come in, drop the images, then leave. But if anyone knows me after following this site you'll know that an old piece of paper can lead me to a place I hadn't planned on.

Today I give you two businesses that existed across the street from each other in 1908 Omaha, Nebraska. I'll let the images I found in old newspapers at the Library of Congress tell the little stories.




Click on images to see them larger.

On the left side of the street you'll see Dresher Tailors.



April 20,1902, Omaha Bee



June 2, 1905, Omaha Bee



November 12,1905, Omaha Bee



April 8,1906, Omaha Bee



May 26,1907, Omaha Bee



October 13,1907, Omaha Bee



September 4,1910, Omaha Bee



October 2,1910, Omaha Bee



November 24, 1910, Omaha Bee


On the right side of the street you'll see Balduff's Ice Cream Parlor and Restaurant.



November 20,1897, The Courier


November 24,1898, Omaha Bee

April 20,1902, Omaha Bee


November 5,1905, Omaha Bee


July 26,1906, Omaha Bee


June 26,1907, Omaha Bee

Want ad from The Ice Cream Trade Journal in 1908




November 14,1908, Omaha Bee


February 2,1909, Omaha Bee

March 20,1909, Omaha Bee


March 24,1909, Omaha Bee


April 10,1909, Omaha Bee


August 4,1909, Omaha Bee

August 3,1909, Omaha Bee

So the ice cream parlor did not survive and was running an ad the day after the takeover of their premises. I don't know what became of the tailor.

12/31/12

Watch the CATS DANCE ON NEW YEARS!


Oh sure, there are lots of people giving you New Years greetings online with pretty little New Years pictures, but how many people with serious head colds are giving you dancing cats from 1908? Yeah, that's what I thought.

Click on either image to see them larger.


11/24/11

It's THANKSGIVING. Remember...


be cordial. You only have to see these people once a year. Give them the bird and then leave.



Click on either image to see it larger.

Card manufactured by M.W. Taggart, N.Y., 1908.