Ceresota Flour

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Text on Button For Young or Old - The BEST FLOUR sold. "CERESOTA"
Image Description

Color illustration of a young boy wearing red overalls and a brown hat opening sitting on a stool, opening a bag of flour

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BASTIAN BROTHERS  
MANUFACTURERS OF RIBBON AND METAL BADGES 
[union bug] 
BUTTONS AND NOVELTIES 
SEND FOR CATALOGUE GET A COLLECTION OF BUTTONS 
ROCHESTER, NEW YORK

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Catalog ID AD1102

Tilton's Trolley Trip

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Text on Button TILTON'S TROLLEY TRIP
Image Description

Color illustration of the San Gabriel Mission in Los Angeles with red text above and below

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[union bug]
Button made by
The Whitehead & Hoag Co.
Newark, N.J., U.S.A.
Pat. April 14 1896, 
July 21, 1896.

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Tilton’s Trolley Trip gave a tour of “100 Miles for 100 Cents,” around the Los Angeles area, "From Sea to Orange Groves." Stops included San Gabriel Mission, as shown on the button, and also Long Beach, Pasadena, San Pedro, Miramar, and Cawston Ostrich Farm. As per their brochure, “Nuff sed.”

Sources

Tilton’s Trolley Trip brochure. (n.d.). Pacific Electric Railway Historical Society. Retrieved March 7, 2024 from https://www.pacificelectric.org/pacific-electric/pacific-electric-ephem…

Catalog ID AD1101

Stewart's Sparkie Club

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Text on Button STEWART'S JUVE-NILE SHOE STORE SPARKIE CLUB
Image Description

Black and white illustration of the character Sparkie surrounded by black text on a white background

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ST. LOUIS BUTTON CO MFRS., ST. LOUIS, MO

Curl Text © ARTHUR-SAMPSON ENTERPRISES, INC.
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The character on the button is a puppet named Sparkie, from the children's radio show Big Jon and Sparkie.  The radio show ran from 1950-1958 and centered around Sparkie, an "elf from the land of make-believe" who acts just like a real boy.

To be part of the Sparkie Club, a company had to sponsor the show. Many companies were part of a merchandising program where child fans of the show could mail in proof (for example, ten milk bottle caps or milk carton lids) to get a specifically branded Sparkie Club Button.

Stewarts Juvenile Shoe Store was a children’s shoe store located on  historic Broughton Street in Savannah, Georgia. It is considered historic because it lies between Savannah’s city limits before the Civil War. The architecture in the area has remained mostly unchanged since then, with a handful of hotels and businesses from those days still open.

Sources

“Big John and Sparky (Big Jon and Sparkie): No School Today | Old Time Radio.” Www.otrcat.com, www.otrcat.com/p/big-john-and-sparky.

Sponsor Magazine. (1952, August 25). How to get the most out of a kid show. Sponsor, 32-34. https://archive.org/details/sponsormagazine-1952-08/Sponsor-1952-08-2/

Catalog ID CL0691

Lewis & Reilly's Sparkie Club

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Text on Button LEWIS & REILLY'S SPARKIE CLUB
Image Description

Red illustration of the character Sparkie surrounded by red text on a white background

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[back paper incomplete]

Curl Text © ARTHUR-SAMPSON ENTERPRISES, INC.
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Additional Information

The character seen here is a puppet named Sparkie, from the children's radio show Big Jon and Sparkie.  The radio show ran from 1950-1958 and centered around Sparkie, an "elf from the land of make-believe" who acts just like a real boy.

To be part of the Sparkie Club, a company had to sponsor the show. Many companies were part of a merchandising program where child fans of the show could mail in proof (for example, ten milk bottle caps or milk carton lids) to get a specifically branded Sparkie Club Button.

Lewis & Reilly’s is a shoe store that was opened in 1888 by Welsh Immigrant Jennie Lewis along with David Reilly and Mary Davies, who later left the company. In 1952, they opened a new branch in Scranton, Pennsylvania under the slogan “Always Busy”. Jennie was known as the region’s most successful businesswoman for being involved with the company’s daily business operations until she died in 1941. She was a director of the Young Women’s Christian Association (now YWCA), a social justice organization that has fought for women’s rights since 1850, as well as a member of the Quota Club, a faith-based organization that seeks to help struggling communities.

Sources

“Big John and Sparky (Big Jon and Sparkie): No School Today | Old Time Radio.” Www.otrcat.com, www.otrcat.com/p/big-john-and-sparky.

Sponsor Magazine. (1952, August 25). How to get the most out of a kid show. Sponsor, 32-35, 83-85. https://archive.org/details/sponsormagazine-1952-08/Sponsor-1952-08-2/

The Lackwanna Historical Society. (2021, March 15). When you pass the Lewis & Reilly building in the 100 block of Wyoming Avenue, did you ever wonder what [A grainy black and white scan of a photo of Jennie Lewis Evans, an elderly woman with her hair in bun wearing glasses] [Status update]. Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/lackawannahistory/photos/a.431753288810/10158079937248811/?type=3

Catalog ID CL0690

Keep Kool

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Text on Button IN EITHER CASE KEEP KOOL
Image Description

Color illustration of a large penguin smoking a cigarette with its flippers around an an elephant and a donkey surrounded by white text on a green background 

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In 1933 Kool brand cigarettes began using the mascot, “Willie the Penguin.” The popular penguin was used in advertising in newspapers and magazine, as well as goods for the home such as salt and pepper shakers and figurines.

Here Willie is shown between the party mascots of the Democratic and Republican parties. His position and the slogan is a call to people to not take the national election personally. The use of the phrase, “Keep Kool,” instead of the later phrase, “Smoke Kool,” dates the button to either the 1936, 1940, or 1944 elections.

Sources

KOOL Penguin Election Collectibles. (n.d.). dumboozle.com. Retrieved March 7, 2024 from https://www.dumboozle.com/kool/election.html

Catalog ID AD1099

Sparkie Club Hi, Hey, Hello There

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Text on Button HI, HEY, HELLO THERE! I'M SPARKIE
Image Description

Black and white illustration of the character Sparkie on a white background surrounded by black text

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ST. LOUIS BUTTON CO MFRS., ST. LOUIS, MO

Curl Text © ARTHUR-SAMPSON ENTERPRISES, INC.
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Sparkie was one of the titular characters featured on the popular 1950s children’s radio show, Big Jon and Sparkie. Both Big Jon and Sparkie known as, ”the little elf from the land of make-believe, who wants more than anything else in the world to be a real boy”, were both voiced by Jon Arthur. The show first aired in 1950 from WSAI, a Cincinnati radio station. The program aired daily and featured a two-hour special on Saturdays called “No School Today” on WSAI and the ABC network.

While the show never successfully made the transfer to television, it paved the way for children’s television shows such as The Howdy Doody Show and Captain Kangaroo. Big Jon and Sparkie incorporated teaching moments into the shows, which was seen as a radical concept at the time. This concept did not become more common until the airing of PBS programs such as Sesame Street and Mister Rogers Neighborhood. Big Jon and Sparkie moved to The Family Radio Network in 1962 and ran until 1982. Archived episodes can still be heard online.

Buttons featuring Sparkie were commonly produced during the latter half of the show's run. The Sparkie Club was a sponsorship and merchandising program related to the show. It involved companies paying for special promotions relating to the show so fans could mail in proof of purchase (for example, ten milk bottle caps or milk carton lids) to get a specifically branded Sparkie Club Button.

Sources

 Big John and sparky (big Jon and Sparkie): No school today. Old Time Radio. (2024). https://www.otrcat.com/p/big-john-and-sparky 

Big Jon and Sparkie. Jay Johnson’s Monkey Joke. (2024). https://monkeyjoke.com/big-jon-and-sparkie/ 

Tribute to Jon Arthur (1982) big Jon and Sparkie no school today: KGO, Ted Hering: Free download, Borrow, and streaming. Internet Archive. (2020, May 20). https://archive.org/details/tribute-to-jon-arthur-1982

Sponsor Magazine. (1952, August 25). How to get the most out of a kid show. Sponsor, 32-35, 83-85. https://archive.org/details/sponsormagazine-1952-08/Sponsor-1952-08-2/

Catalog ID CL0688

I'm the Guy That Put the Art in Garters

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Text on Button I'M THE GUY THAT PUT THE ART IN GARTERS
Image Description

Black text on an off-white and light blue speckled background. The text is above and below an illustration of a bald man in a green suit with his hand and hands raised, a cigar hanging out of his mouth

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Quality TOKIO Cigarette FACTORY No. 649 1st DIST., NEW YORK THE WHITEHEAD & HOAG CO. PATENTED

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Rube Goldberg (1883-1970) was an American cartoonist and inventor who is best known for his cartoon depictions of impossibly complicated machines to accomplish simple mundane tasks. Goldberg is the only person ever to be listed in the Merriam-Webster dictionary as an adjective.

While working as a cartoonist for the New York Evening Mail in 1912, Goldberg came up with the “I’m the Guy” character. The popularity of the "I'm the guy..." slogans caught the eye of tobacco marketers who marketed the buttons in the 1910s as an incentive to buy some of their cigarettes. The versatile Goldberg even wrote a song with the phrase!

Sources

I’m the Guy. (n.d.) Retrieved March 9, 2024 from http://ronevry.com/imtheguy.html

Mallory, Mary. (2017, July 3). Hollywood Heights: ‘I’m the Guy’ – Rube Goldberg as Comic Performer. The L.A. Daily Mirror. Retrieved March 9, 2024 from https://ladailymirror.com/2017/07/03/mary-mallory-hollywood-heights-im-…

Rube Goldberg Institute (n.d.). About Rube Goldberg. Retrieved February 6, 2024 from https://www.rubegoldberg.org/all-about-rube/a-cultural-icon/

Catalog ID AD1098

Erin Go Bragh Shamrock

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Text on Button ERIN GO BRAGH
Image Description

Black text on a white background above an illustration of an two flags, a shamrock, and a harp atop a glowing yellow background

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[price tag 1.00]

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“Erin Go Bragh” is a phrase often heard on St. Patrick’s Day. In the original Irish, “Éirinn go Brách” is roughly translated to mean “Ireland Forever.” The phrase was coined as a rallying cry during the Irish Rebellion of 1798, a revolt of the Irish against British rule. Although they were unable to obtain their independence at that time, the phrase was picked up by the Irish people as a sign of their allegiance to Ireland. The phrase found its way to the United States through its use by a unit of Irish-American volunteers fighting for Mexico in the Mexican-American War in the 1840s. Today the phrase is used by Irish-Americans to celebrate their heritage.

Sources

Dempsey, Bobbi. (2024, March 13). What Does “Erin Go Bragh” Mean? Reader’s Digest. Retrieved from https://www.rd.com/article/what-does-erin-go-bragh-mean/

Catalog ID IB0853