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1889 WHO SAID HOOD\'S SARSAPARILLA?*WEAK WOMEN*AGED PEOPLE*BABIES*BLOOD PURIFIER For Sale


1889 WHO SAID HOOD\'S SARSAPARILLA?*WEAK WOMEN*AGED PEOPLE*BABIES*BLOOD PURIFIER
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1889 WHO SAID HOOD\'S SARSAPARILLA?*WEAK WOMEN*AGED PEOPLE*BABIES*BLOOD PURIFIER:
$17.95

Vintage 1870\'s - 1890\'s era Victorian trade card, as shown.Please view scans carefully for condition. 1889 WHO SAID HOOD\'S SARSAPARILLA?*WEAK WOMEN*AGED PEOPLE*BABIES*BLOOD PURIFIER 1889 WHO SAID HOOD\'S SARSAPARILLA?*WEAK WOMEN*AGED PEOPLE*BABIES*BLOOD PURIFIER

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Description

APPLEBY\'S ATTIC TREASURES

Specializing in Original Vintage Ephemera - Advertising - Postcards - Victorian Trade Cards - And More!

Vintage 1870\'s - 1890\'s era Victorian trade card, as shown.
Please view scans carefully for condition.

A short history of trade cards (from Collectors Weekly):
Victorian trade cards are an early form of collectible advertising. Popularized after the Civil War by businesses, they offer a colorful and diverse look at popular culture and society in the late 1800s. Trade cards originated in England in the 1700s with tradesmen advertising their wares. But the advent of lithography in the 1870s made it possible to mass-produce them in color, leading to a golden age from 1876 to the early 1900s when halftone printed newspaper and magazine ads became more economical. Trade cards typically had a picture on one side and an ad on the other. There were custom cards printed for specific products, and stock cards which could be used for any product. Trade cards were popular for medicines, sewing, and farm equipment, and a range of other products. Some rare Victorian trade cards are now worth thousands of dollars, for example cards advertising Clipper Ships traveling from the East Coast to California in the 1860s.
 

 

 

 

 

Payment Payment is expected within 5 days of end of sale - please contact us if you need to make other arrangements. Shipping All items will be shipped within 1 business day after payment is received. Pictures sell!
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Images © photo12.com-Pierre-Jean Chalençon
A Traveling Exhibition from Russell Etling Company (c) 2011