I found a really great Western spice bottle in Kakaako. It came out in water, no sickness and fabulous applied top. Those big chemicals are ammonia bottles from S.F. I also found a fabulous one of those in a neon green at the same place. My first whole peppersauce, and pontiled cologne. I found one of those type toilets "Douglas" and even 1" redwood outhouse seat with shiny galvanised square nails. Honolulu had swamps on the shoreline filled in in later 19th C. Big fires in 1887 and 1900 meant a lot of fill, similar to your 1906 stuff. Dr Grossman's too. Just a note early 1900s whiskey caps & toppers, the red lettering can be rubbed off, fresh out of damp soil. Let them dry & wash them the next day. Lea & Perrins bottles with JDS on the base are post 1868 "John Duncans Sons" whom imported barrels of the stuff to N.Y. & bottled it. "Stephen's Gloucester is a Worcestershire competitor I found here, tooled top and Maltese cross on base. Haz multi ringed design at foot and shoulder.
Wow now that was entertaining Ned, love the age in everything that was dug. Finding the base to that big dish thingy was a bonus. Just awesome stuff, love it.
I find the filed-down dandelion forks to be more precise than rakes, which have too many different sharp points so it's harder to control what you come in contact with!
@@BottleNed well I'd have to agree with that, however I find that a potato rake, is useful for pulling excess material and lose bottles out of a burrowed hole. Then you don't have to reach in. I enjoy your videos they are well put together and presented. And you have some good digging buddies.
I'll bet there might be a glass maker who has the skills to reset that pressed glass bowl and base or you can send it to me and I'll find someone. Let me know. Thanks for the video Ned