If you can find any of the fonts used in this hundred-year-old Cincinnati butcher supply catalog I would be extremely grateful
The logos in the first two images are hand-drawn.
"Catalog No. 31" in the first image, and "Boss Back Fat Skinner" in the second-last image, are in Lining Gothic No. 5 (1885) [Daylight Fonts · Fonts In Use]:
"Manufacturers and Outfitters" is in Standard Gothic (circa 1905) [Fonts In Use]:
"Refrigerators and Fixtures" and "Machines and Applainces" are in Gothic Condensed No. 129 (1897 or earlier) [Fonts In Use]:
Gothic Condensed No. 129 was apparently later renamed "Gothic Condensed No. 529" (which is the name Fonts In Use calls it). Similarly, Lining Gothic No. 5 was later renamed "Lining Gothic No. 45" and then "Lining Gothic No. 545".
"For All Purposes, Small or Large" is in Lafayette (1885) [Fonts In Use]:
"Boss Hog Scraper with Belt Polishers" is in Bradley (1895) [Daylight Fonts · Fonts In Use · Identifont]:
"Patent Applied For" on the Boss Hog Scraper page, and most of the small text on the Lard Machinery page, are in Ronaldson (1884) [Daylight Fonts · Fonts In Use · Identifont]:
The paragraph describing the Boss Hog Scraper is in Fashion (1876) [Daylight Fonts · Fonts In Use]:
"The Cincinnati Butcher's Supply Co." on the Boss Hog Scraper page is in Skeleton Antique (circa 1858) [Fonts In Use]:
Also note how in the above specimen they were transitioning from the old system of size names (pica, English, great primer, etc.) to the modern point system.
"Lard Machinery" is in Tudor Black (1878) [Daylight Fonts · Fonts In Use]:
Note the art nouveau-y M, a shape not found in more traditional blackletter fonts.
"Patent BOSS Automatic Back Fat Skinner" is in Post Condensed (1902) [Fonts In Use]:
There's also some Post Condensed in the back of the last image.
"Directions for the successful operation of the" is in De Vinne (circa 1892) [Daylight Fonts · Fonts In Use]:
There's also one sentence where De Vinne is used for emphasis inside a paragraph of Ronaldson.



















