The Sutton Museum is the home of the Sutton Historical Society and is dedicated to the collection and preservation of historic artifacts and information about the Sutton, Nebraska community.
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Tuesday, April 30, 2019
1919 Advertisements
This product on the market in 1919 claimed to take the place of chains for car tires. Anyone know what this was all about?
This Harvard business was clearly working its way out of the horse business into the mechanized world.
This early 1919 vacuum cleaner looks amazingly like a product you might find today.
Museum Blog Statistics
Our website host Blogger, a service of Google provides an accounting of our exposure and audience. We are a passive site engaging in no advertising with a target audience of people interested in the small Nebraska town of Sutton and its history.
As of April 30, 2019 we have had a total of 175,975 pageviews over our lifetime of about 10 years. We currently have about 2,500 pageviews a month.
We also receive an insight into where our pageviews come from. During the last month, our stats are:
United States 1211 Pageviews
Canada 176
Belgium 161
Russia 120
Japan 85
Brazil 59
Ecuador 23
Indonesia 21
France 20
Our all-time audience is led by the United States, of course, followed by Russia, France, Germany, Ukraine, South Korea, China, Poland, UK and Canada
The Techie stats are: leading OS is Windows with 65% followed by Linus at 11 - Mac is 8%. The leading browser is Chrome with 36%, Explorer has 27% followed by Firefox, Safari and BingPreview....
New Drive-In by the Park - 1969 - to become the Sweet Treat
The new business in town in April 1969 was this Drive-In across the street from the park and the swimming pool.
Later to become The Sweet Treat.
Prince Albert Tobacco AD
Tobacco advertising used to be a bid part of radio and TV advertising as well as print media.
A link below goes to a site of vintage Prince Albert ads.
A silly and overused practical joke was to call a retailer and ask, "Do you have Prince Albert in a can?" If the retailer replied in the affirmative, the jokester came back with, "Well, you better let him out."
Yeah dumb...