by Squire » Sat Jul 18, 2015 5:57 pm
The bottle itself appears a popular design of the era made to standard dimensions. Notice the top has a sort of truncated funnel appearance. Originally made of medal, those were also referred to as "jigger tops" because they were designed to also serve as a measure ( holding 1 1/2 ounces) for mixing drinks. Unscrew the top, fill and pour for a cocktail.
The whisky it held was made by the Hiram Walker distillery of Peroia, Illinois, which was established after Prohibition in 1933. Some famous brands such as Ten High came out of that distillery. The Bourbons were middle shelf and popularly priced, not the best but good enough. Walker's Deluxe was a mainstay and usually bottled at 86 proof in 6-7-or 8 years of age although I have seen it at 5 years and 100 proof.
Can't say much about Mr. Walton. Walker was a large, international business with distilleries all over, Canadian, Bourbon, Scotch, Rum, you name a beverage alcohol product and Walker made one or more of it. He could have been an exec for Walker or some other concern as the inscription sounds like a retirement testimonial.