A divisional symbol and another tactical symbol are visible on the fender of the parked car.
This is not the comfort zone of my knowledge, but I would dare to say that they are these:
The 2nd SS Panzer Division symbol...
And the Towed anti tank company symbol
Happy Mother's Day - Schönen Muttertag..... Enjoy them or remember the love they gave you ...
Russian friends: Hurray! Happy Victory Day in your Great Patriotic War!!
Greetings
Santi
Bavaria St. Pauli Bier
Founded in 1922 from the merger of two older breweries, Bavaria - St. Pauli bought a dozen breweries from northern Germany until Brau und Brunnen bought the brewery in 1994, merging it with Elbschloss-Brauerei GmbH.
In January 1998, the city of Hamburg bought the brewery as it was under threat of closure. In December 1998, Hamburg sold the brewery to Holsten, the city's other major brewery, which closed the brewery in 2003.
In 2004, Carlsberg in turn bought Holsten. The old Bavaria-St. The Pauli Brewery building has since been demolished....
Cheers!
Santi
Austria, around 1953. His parents and older brothers did wear the uniform ...
Piast Brewery is a defunct brewery, located in Wrocław, Poland. It was founded in 1872, when the city of Wrocław, known as Breslau, belonged to the German Empire.
In 1945, when Breslau was annexed by Poland, the brewery took on the name Piast Brewery, honoring the Piast dynasty, the legendary first Polish historical Royal dynasty that ruled the country from its beginnings until 1370.
Right after World War II, the production process was run by Polish brewmasters from the brewery of Lwów, who had been ordered to leave their native city and move to the Recovered Territories. In 1951, Piast Brewery produced 350 000 hectolitres of beer and 9 000 tons of malt annually.
In 1991, the brewery became part of Wrocław's company Zakłady Piwowarskie S.A., and on January 23, 1996, it was purchased for $9 500 000 by Ryszard Varisella. In November 2001, it was bought by Carlsberg Polska, and in 2004, brewing of beer was terminated.
Regards
Santi
Hey Santi Mate, funny thing - my ad blocker blocks the pictures on this thread!?! turn it off and they appear again!?!
Great thread by the way.
Oh, René. Well, I don't know how to solve that problem.
Of course, the best of this thread are, without a doubt, the images that I seek and seek to illustrate it ...
Let's see if any administrator knows the solution to this problem.
Regards my friend.
Santi
Since the late twenties and until today there are preparations made from pectin for home-made jams and jellies.
Probably the most popular brand was the German Opekta
Opekta was a company managed from 1933 to 1953 by Anne Frank's father , Otto Frank , which distributed a preparation made from pectin used in the production of jam .
The Opekta company was based in Cologne when Otto Frank, then living in Germany , was appointed to assist in its expansion into the Netherlands. Frank had considered moving there with his family after the election of Adolf Hitler in the rise of Nazism, so he accepted the position and moved alone to Amsterdam to find a house for his family and facilities for the company. He had briefly worked for the rival company, Pomosin, which sold pectin to factories from the Dutch town of Utrecht but he decided that selling to the public would be more lucrative on the Dutch market than the wholesale. Its franchise for the Amsterdam branch of Opekta was established in September 1933.
It operated from the building in which they were hiding from persecution during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.
Employees of Otto Frank's company in Amsterdam
It operated from the building in which they were hiding from persecution during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.
Advertising campaign through the streets of Amsterdam
Victor Kugler, a former colleague, also came to work almost immediately to help him run the company. The workforce was small; In addition to an administrative employee, it only had a secretary whose duties were merely secretarial and included public relations and advertising. In 1938 he appeared in a promotional film to promote the Opekta product, which was used to show consumers how easy it was to use in the kitchen. That year they were joined by two other employees, Hermann van Pels as a herbal specialist and Johannes Kleiman as an accountant. Bep Voskuijl As a typist she had been employed the year before, 1937.
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