Welcome Guest! YouRememberThat.com is 100% FREE & fast to join! Upload, comment, create your own profile and more!
Search
Search:
 
            Tipalet Cigars  Ad  60s Someone must have thought this was romantic, yeah right.
Tags: cigars  tobacco  advertisement 
Added: 17th August 2007
Views: 876
Rating:
Posted By: Naomi
Honus Wagner baseball card The most valuable sports card in the world features Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Honus Wagner. Printed by the American Tobacco Company in 1910, the card is quite rare. Only about 60 are known to exist. Their scarcity can be attributed to Wagner himself. A non-smoker, Wagner objected to his likeness being used to promote tobacco. The company acquiesced to Wagner's wishes and withdrew the card from production--but not before a number had entered the market. The most splendid example of the Wagner Card sold at auction in February 2007 for $2.35 million.
Tags: Honus  Wagner  baseball  card 
Added: 22nd November 2007
Views: 274
Rating:
Posted By: Lava1964
Pleasant Smoking do u have Prince Albert in a can?
Tags: vintage  ad  Camels  Prince  Albert  cigarette  tobacco 
Added: 2nd December 2007
Views: 314
Rating:
Posted By: Teresa
Silk Cut Cinema Ad Now that tobacco ads are banned this is one I can remember from the 70's. Then it made me laugh but to look at it again after all these years it just shows that it is so un-pc. Still though!!!
Tags: Cinema  Ad  Cigarettes 
Added: 30th May 2008
Views: 112
Rating:
Posted By: donmac101
The Danny Thomas Show - American Tobacco Crispy Critters spots Taken from the Danny Thomas Show, here are commercials for the American Tobacco Company and Post Crispy Critters cereal!
Tags: Amerian  Tobacco  Company  Post  Crispy  Critters  Danny  Thomas  Ray  Glasser 
Added: 1st June 2008
Views: 136
Rating:
Posted By: videoholic
Cardiff Giant Hoax 1869 The first great hoax in American history was the Cardiff Giant. In 1868, a wealthy American tobacconist and atheist named George Hull got into an argument with a minister about a passage in the book of Genesis that claimed that giant men once walked the earth. Inspired, Hull decided to create a fake petrified giant and foist it on the gullible public. He hired men in Fort Dodge, Iowa to carve him a 10-foot long block of gypsum. (Hull told them it was for a monument to Abraham Lincoln.) Hull sent the gypsum block to a stonecutter in Chicago to have it secretly carved into the likeness of a man. Once the work was completed, Hull had the carving sent to his cousin's farm in Cardiff, New York. There Hull artificially aged his giant with acid and buried it in the ground for 11 months. On October 16, 1869, two men hired to dig a well 'found' the giant. (This photo shows it being 'exhumed' from Hull's hiding place.) The story of the giant's discovery spread like wildfire. Hull initially charged the curious public 25 cents apiece to view the giant. He later upped the price to 50 cents. Despite scientists universally claiming the Cardiff Giant to be a hoax, Hull sold it for $37,500 to a five-man syndicate headed by David Hannon and laughed all the way to the bank. (The hoax had cost Hull about $2,600, so the sale netted him more than 14 times what he had spent!) P.T. Barnum tried to buy or rent the giant from Hannon for $60,000, but his offer was refused. Not to be outdone, Barnum had his own giant made, displayed it at his museum, and declared Hannon's giant was a fake! On December 10, Hull publicly confessed to his hoax. Meanwhile Hannon and Barnum were busily suing and countersuing each other over who possessed the real Cardiff Giant. Only in America...
Tags: Cardiff  Giant  hoax 
Added: 10th July 2008
Views: 383
Rating:
Posted By: Lava1964
Tobacco Road Nashville Teens
Tags: Nashville  Teens  Tobacco  Road 
Added: 31st August 2008
Views: 155
Rating:
Posted By: donmac101

Pages: [1] of 1 | Random