Thanks to you garagefriends, including for the information on the crate: my town is next to french border so the opposite of WWI front (Austria and Jugoslavia) so it concernes probably supplies sold locally when the war ended as suggested by bib. I found the box perfectly suited to hold the LPs and is what I believe will do with it in our music-corner in the living room!
Today I take opportunity to document some object hanging on the walls of the house and workshop to give even more Citro-charme to the place..
Many of us use to hangin their home, garage or in their bedroom pictures, posters, sculptures, models, drawings, carvings, jewelry or various artifacts related to the automobile world, I've my little citro-pinacotèque.
In this ground-floor kitchen corner, almost involuntarily I collected few objects that recall epochal moments in the history of Citroen..
This is undoubtedly the most precious piece (gift of a great friend and
citro-extimateur Corrado) it's a newspaper page of the April 9, 1919 that advertises the
first model of Citroen car, the Type A.
Great emphasis is given to the fact that this is the first car built in Europe with the Fordist system of the assembly, promising (the first time of many times...) to make the "car for everyone":
The text refers directly to the first day of sales will be
April 25, 1919, almost a century ago..
At the bottom, on the kitchen scale, is positioned a 1:18 scale model of the 2CV unveiled at the Paris
Oct. 7, 1948: another "A" model for Citroen for another post-war reconstruction time..
The French half-liter bottles with candle has nothing to do with the Citroen.. but refer a little to the dinners in the taverns of the famous French ace of World War I during his brief pauses in the hunt for Red Baron and his flying circus!
Right next, a reproduction of the historic
Michelin advertising poster (1898) first entroducing the
Michelin obese (yet durable..) testimonial in act of raising a glass full of nails and broken glass...
Nunc est bibendum!
The tire michelin
"drink the obstacle!", with great envy of it's deflated and patched competitors...