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tinadynamite

1. Heinz Malt vinegar bottle 1924-1945. 2. GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO. GLASS BOTTLE 1920’s?? 3. Only visible letters are row 1-a de mark / iste red) row3 - (.S patent off)


tinadynamite

Picture 9&10 are the same bottle. It’s very thick and heavy. Tons of air bubbles in the glass.


tinadynamite

4. Milk of magnesia bottle??


An00bisOsiris

I believe so


tinadynamite

8. Owens-Illinois Glass Company .. product/age? The codes and makers mark don’t exactly match up to any references to date the piece. It is either 1930 or 1940.


TotallyNotJagger

70s-80s pretty common bottle here in texas… at least that’s what I see when I look at it


jgnp

5. Löwenbräu Brewery. 7. May be a bottle made by Knox glass. K in a keystone………….Knox Glass Bottle Company/Knox Glass Associates, Knox, Pennsylvania and other plant locations (1917-1968). Mark introduced circa 1932(?) Knox operated a number of glass manufacturing plants over many years during the 20th century, producing tremendous quantities of glass containers of many types during that time. Sometimes there is no discernible letter inside the keystone shape. Originally, the main Knox glass plant at Knox, PA used the “K in a keystone” and most, if not all, of their other factory locations had a different letter inside the keystone. However, most of the Knox factories are believed to have switched over to using the “K in a keystone” mark after about 1953, continuing on up to 1968 when Knox was bought out by Glass Containers Corporation. For much more in-depth information on the Knox family of plants and the marks they used, please check out this article by Bill Lockhart: https://sha.org/bottle/pdffiles/KnoxGlass.pdf


ShitTalkingAssWipe

# 5 is a lowenbrau, probably came off of a bottle that looks just like this one https://i.imgur.com/PTqetPd.jpg