Log Cabin Series – Old Cabin Bitters

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OLD CABIN BITTERS

Pictured on top: “Old Cabin / Bitters” Figural Bottle, America, 1860-1880. In the form of a rectangular two story log cabin, red amber, applied sloping collared mouth – smooth base, ht. 9 1/8 inches. R/H #O19 Great looking bottle, strongly embossed, beautiful brilliant medium color. Rare. Price Realized: $4,680 – Norman C. Heckler & Company

Log Cabin Series – Old Cabin Bitters 

John H. Garnhart | St. Louis and James B. Kelly | New York

21 February 2013
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KELLY’S OLD CABIN BITTERS

Apple-Touch-IconAA couple of months ago I did a post on Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters (pictured above) which is the slightly younger brother of the Old Cabin Bitters. Virtually identical bottles, with the Old Cabin Bitters missing the word ‘KELLY’S’.

Read More: Log Cabin Series – Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters

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CARNHART & KELLY ST. LOUIS Mo. 9″ Applied top, smooth base. A nice example with some decent overall crudity, this is the first example we’ve seen or sold. Found in a Midwestern fort, we’re told this is a rare St. Louis bottle. An interesting one it is, it has arched panels with embossing on the two ends. For the St. Louis collector, this has most of it’s crudity around the shoulder. About Mint, here’s a rare and pretty bottle. – American Bottle Auctions (December 2003)

The Old Cabin Bitters and Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters are products of John H. Garnhart of St. Louis and James B. Kelly of New York. Look at this great square pictured above with both partners names. Fantastic.

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

O 19  OLD CABIN BITTERS, Circa 1863 – 1875
// s // f / OLD CABIN / BITTERS // PATENTED ( au ) / 1863 // f /
OLD CABIN / BITTERS // PATENTED ( au ) / 1863 //
9 1/4 x 3 1/2 x 2 3/4 (5 1/4)
Rectangular cabin, Amber , LTC, Applied mouth, Rare, Similar to Kelly’s
Design patent No. 3,926, dated March 22, 1870 by John H. Garnhart
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OLD CABIN BITTERS in a red amber color – Meyer Collection

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“OLD CABIN / BITTERS – PATENTED / 1863”, (O-19), American, ca. 1865 – 1875, amber cabin bottle, 9 1/4”h, smooth base, applied mouth. A tiny flake is off the top outer edge of the lip. Also a few areas of outside wear and inside stain. Considerably harder to find than it’s Kelly’s embossed brother! Ex. Judge MacKenzie Collection. – Glass Works Auctions – Auction #96 (Part 2)

READ MORE LOG CABIN SERIES POSTS

Log Cabin Series – Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters

Log Cabin Series – Dr. Lovegood’s Family Bitters

Log Cabin Series – Perrine’s Apple Ginger – Philadelphia

Log Cabin Series – American Life Bitters

Log Cabin Series – Drake’s Plantation Bitters

Log Cabin Series – Holtzermann’s Patent Stomach Bitters (2-Roof)

Log Cabin Series – Holtzermann’s Patent Stomach Bitters Compound (4 Roof)

Log Cabin Series – Old Homestead Wild Cherry Bitters

Posted in Bitters, Figural Bottles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Lightning Rod Exhibit at the Franklin Institute

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F – Thought you’d find interesting. (Some Executive at) AMC Pictures collects LIGHTNING RODS. Dealer Ted Storb in Connecticut sold many of these to him.

JEFF (FROGGY) BURKHARDT

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Visit The Franklin Institute Web Page

Hi All,

Jeanne and I visited family in Philadelphia last weekend and also got to see the lightning rod exhibit at The Franklin Institute. Thought you might like to see some photos we took at the exhibit. Believe it’s a nice well rounded collection of types, sizes and configurations, Ben would probably approve!

Ted & Jeanne

Apple-Touch-IconAThe Franklin Institute (named after the noted American scientist and statesman Benjamin Franklin) is a museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and one of the oldest centers of science education and development in the United States, dating to 1824. The Institute also houses the Benjamin Franklin National Memorial.

Read: The Franklin Institute Press release “New Exhibit of Antique Lightning Rods

Read: Lightning Rod Balls – A Few From Our Collection

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Posted in Advice, Collectors & Collections, Display, Early American Glass, History, Lightning Rod Balls, Museums, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Curtis Cordial Calisaya Stomach Bitters – The Real McCoy

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CURTIS CORDIAL CALISAYA STOMACH BITTERS

19 February 2013

CurtisCordialTrio_ScamQuite a bit of excitement of late with the scam involving a ‘doctored’ emerald green Curtis Cordial Calisaya Stomach Bitters. You see, there is no record of that yellow green color but it was sure tempting. You just never know.

Read: Curtis Cordial Calisaya Stomach Bitters Fraud?

With that said, I though I would develop a post of the real McCoy meaning known examples of the Curtis Cordial Calisaya Stomach Bitters. The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

C 261  CURTIS CORDIAL CALISAYA STOMACH BITTERS, Circa 1866
// s // CURTIS // f // CORDIAL // f // CALISAYA // f // THE GREAT // f // STOMACH // f // BITTERS // f // // s // below 1 // 8 // 6 // 6 // C // C // C // 1 // 9 // 0 // 0 // f //
11 3/4 or 11 1/2 x 2 3/4 ( 4 3/4)
Round, ARM, Applied mouth, Amber – Scarce; Yellow olive – Rare
12 Panels on shoulder, Bridgeport, CT.
Note 1: There can be a 1/4 inch variation in bottle height. Known from newspaper advertisement: L.F. Curtis, 285 Main St. & L. F. Curtis & Co., No. 3 Curtis Bldg, East Washington Avenue., Bridgeport, CT.
Note 2: L.F = Probably Louis Foulk Curtis
Note 3: Same Curtis family name as in Curtis & Perkins Wild Cherry Bitters
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Spectacular olive green CURTIS CORDIAL CALISAYA STOMACH BITTERS. This is the REAL bottle that was doctored in the scam noted above. – Mark Warne Collection

“Mystery solved. Absolutely same bottle. Bought it only 4 months ago. Some low life scallow stole the sellers photo.”

MARK WARNE
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Louis F. Curtis noted in United States 1900 Census, born June 1843, Married Mary Curtis in 1871. Druggist in Connecticut

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Advertisement for L.F. Curtis in Southport Times, CT, 1879

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1886 Graphic Billhead – Curtis Brothers Stoves, Ranges,Furnaces – Bridgeport CT (same address as Curtis Druggists)

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CURTIS CORDIAL CALASAYA THE GREAT STOMACH BITTERS. When we said Bryan had two of the best Curtis bitters, we were serious. While the first one is loaded with whittle (see below) and is an overall superb bottle, the second example is even better. It’s green! We’ve actually never seen a green example before. And when you look at the picture with the two variants together, you can see just how green it is. This also has some pretty good whittle and a perfect top. The whole bottle is nothing less than exceptional. It is definitely one of the best examples around and just another bitters we’re proud to offer from the Bryan Grapentine collection. Ex-Carolyn Ring – American Bottle Auctions Auction 41 (Grapentine Part II) – Lot 495

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CURTIS CORDIAL CALASAYA THE GREAT STOMACH BITTERS. 1866 CCC 1900. Ring-261. Applied band. There are some bitters I never seem to tire of and Bryan (Grapentine) managed to find two of the best examples we’ve ever seen. This first example is a medium to deeper amber, in terrific condition and it is hammered with whittle. These bottles for some reason are often in poor shape and we’re just not sure why they don’t turn up in better condition more often. In this case, Bryan has an beautifully colored, highly whittled and desirable bitters. At worst, there may be a hint of high point wear but we have to call this one a 9. It would be very hard to find a better one. This bottle sold in a Norm Heckler sale in June of 1999. American Bottle Auctions Auction 41 (Grapentine Part II) – Lot 494

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Detail of above – CURTIS CORDIAL CALASAYA THE GREAT STOMACH BITTERS. 1866 CCC 1900. Ring-261. Applied band. There are some bitters I never seem to tire of and Bryan managed to find two of the best examples we’ve ever seen. This first example is a medium to deeper amber, in terrific condition and it is hammered with whittle. These bottles for some reason are often in poor shape and we’re just not sure why they don’t turn up in better condition more often. In this case, Bryan has an beautifully colored, highly whittled and desirable bitters. At worst, there may be a hint of high point wear but we have to call this one a 9. It would be very hard to find a better one. This bottle sold in a Norm Heckler sale in June of 1999. American Bottle Auctions Auction 41 (Grapentine Part II) – Lot 494

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CURTIS CORDIAL CALASAYA THE GREAT STOMACH BITTERS. When we said Bryan had two of the best Curtis bitters, we were serious. While the first one is loaded with whittle and is an overall superb bottle, the second example is even better. It’s green! We’ve actually never seen a green example before. And when you look at the picture with the two variants together, you can see just how green it is. This also has some pretty good whittle and a perfect top. The whole bottle is nothing less than exceptional. It is definitely one of the best examples around and just another bitters we’re proud to offer from the Bryan Grapentine collection. Ex-Carolyn Ring – American Bottle Auctions Auction 41 (Grapentine Part II)

C 261 (Curtis Cordial)

Golden amber CURTIS CORDIAL CALISAYA BITTERS – Meyer Collection

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“CURTIS – CORDIAL – CALISAYA – THE GREAT – STOMACH – BITTERS / 1866 CCC 1900″, (C-261), American, ca. 1866 – 1875, amber, 11 3/4″h, smooth base, applied mouth. A 3/8” in diameter open bubble is located on the panel between Stomach and Bitters, otherwise in perfect condition. – Glass Works Auctions | Auction #97

Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Cordial, Druggist & Drugstore, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Color Purple or Amethyst in Antique Glass

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T H E   C O L O R   P U R P L E

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Purple, Amethyst, Plum, Violet, Lilac, Grape, Bishop’s Purple, Aubergine, Eggplant, Royal Purple

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The Color Purple or Amethyst in Antique Glass

18 February 2013

Apple-Touch-IconANot too long ago I did a post on the color Puce. Probably the most misunderstood color in bottle collecting. Not far behind is the color Purple. Rarely are antique bottles and glass in purple, but when you do see a nice rich piece, it is breathtaking.

Read More: What is Puce or ‘Pooce’ as some call it?

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Wikipedia defines Purple as a range of hues of color occurring between red and blue. The Oxford English Dictionary describes purple as a deep, rich shade between crimson and violet. In the ancient world, purple was the color worn by Roman Emperors and magistrates, and later by Roman Catholic bishops. Since that time, purple has been commonly associated with royalty, piety, magic and mystery.

Purple is the color of good judgment. It is the color of people seeking spiritual fulfillment. It is said that if you surround yourself with purple you will have peace of mind. Purple is a good color to use in meditation. Being the combination of red and blue, the warmest and coolest colors, purple is believed to be the ideal color. Most children love the color purple. Purple is the color most favored by artists. Thursday’s color is purple.

Purple was the color worn by Roman Emperors and magistrates, and later by Roman Catholic Bishops

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imagesPurple or as you will hear often, ‘Amethyst’ glass, was given its color by adding manganese oxide to a molten glass mixture of sand, potash and lime.

Purple or Amethyst glass should not be confused with clear antique glass that has changed color due to sun exposure (see picture to left). This type of glass color has actually been enhanced by sitting in the sun and has a different hue, almost violet in nature, when compared to the rich plum color of glass made with manganese oxide.

Just a FEW altered insulators pictured

Just a FEW altered insulators pictured – Dwayne Anthony

It’s also wise to note that “sun colored amethyst” glass has been artificially produced by some unscrupulous sellers who expose antique clear glass pieces to ultraviolet light in order to change the color. You see this often on ebay with Coke bottles and insulators.

Read More: Color-Altered Glass – Presented by Dwayne Anthony @ FOHBC 2012 Reno Expo

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A true Purple Drakes – Danny Catherino

With Bitters bottles, you almost never see the color purple. The very closest you will come might be this Drakes Plantation Bitters pictured above when held up to a light.

P U R P L E   G L A S S   G A L L E R Y

Eagle Masonic - Sandor Fuss

Purple Masonic Flask – Fuss Collection

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R. & G.A. WRIGHT / PHILADA. from the 2011 Norman C. Heckler – ex Thomas McCandless Collection Auctions 95 & 96 – Jane & Charles Aprill Collection

Umbrella Inkwell in a deep amethyst - GreatAntiqueBottles.com

Umbrella inkwell in a deep amethyst – GreatAntiqueBottles.com

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20 Vertical Rib Patterned Flask in purple

HAYWARD'S / HAND FIRE / GRENADE - PATENTED / AUG / 8 / 1871 - S.F. HAYWARD / 407 / BROADWAY - NEW YORK - photo Great Antique Bottles.com

HAYWARD’S / HAND FIRE / GRENADE – PATENTED / AUG / 8 / 1871 – S.F. HAYWARD / 407 / BROADWAY – NEW YORK in purple – photo GreatAntiqueBottles.com

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“DODGE BROTHERS – MELANINE – HAIR TONIC”, bright purple amethyst, tombstone-shaped rectangle, early smooth base, 7 1/2″H, applied double collar, mint. American, 1865-1875, rare. This pristine hair bottle is not only sparkling attic perfect but also quite crude and best of all, the color is even better than normal. – Jeff and Holly Noordsy

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Purple cone ink reading Brilliant Red Ink Prepared By Thaddeus Davids & Co., New York

Photo courtesy BottleNut.com

Purple Decanter – photo courtesy BottleNut.com

Unlike hanging friendship balls or witch balls that have a loop, gazing balls have a stem so they can securely sit in a stand. Larger sizes can be made, but may be difficult due to the weight of the blown glass.

Puplish Witch Ball

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Dark Amethyst Barber Bottle with Cherubs – Wilbur Collection

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Purple BTC 102 MONTREAL – Meyer Collection

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Purple Hair Bottle

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Amethyst Apothecary Jars

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Purple Glass Fishing Float

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Purple Johnston target ball selling for $12,880 – American Bottle Auctions

National Bitters

The legendary coffin shaped NATIONAL BITTERS in amethyst – Fuss Collection

Posted in Apothecary, Bitters, Color, Early American Glass, Flasks, Historical Flasks, Insulators | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Curtis Cordial Calisaya Stomach Bitters Fraud?

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Will the real Curtis Cordial Calisaya Bitters Please Stand Out!

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Subject Bottle in Question

RedFlagOn 30 January 2013 I opened up one of my many incoming bottle related emails to see a stunning emerald green Curtis Cordial Calisaya Stomach Bitters with the following question:

“do you buy old bottles i found this bottle in my attic don’t know if it has any value or if it worthless i looked on google for it but couldn’t find it thanks it says Curtis Cordial Calisaya The Great Stomach Bitters”

Anicia Benson (Benson Collectibles)

Seems innocent enough. My first reaction was wow, because this is an undocumented color for a Curtis Cordial. I sent back a cautious reply saying that it was genuine and asking for more pics and colors. I even suggested buying it. The thought did cross my mind that it was not real. I remember thinking Photoshop and the recent Henry Harrison Flask scam on ebay (see below). Because of the girls name and Benson Collectibles, I did however give it a chance. Who knows. New stuff shows up all the time.

Quite honestly I forgot about the bottle as I received no response. I suspected it was being shopped and left it alone. Probably will show up at an auction house if it is real.

Well last night I saw a facebook post from fellow Bitters collector Jeff Burkhardt with the same picture and the following comment:

“A couple of weeks ago some of us received in inquiry/ offer of sorts for a CURTIS CORDIAL CALISAYA BITTERS…in this this UNIQUE bright yellow-green. What became of it?

Jeffrey Burkhardt

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Personally I like my cobalt Photoshopped version better – Brian Wolff

Well….so it was shopped. I started reading the comments. A few are noted below:

Burning question! I spoke to them on the phone and paid the seller for the bottle, followed a tracking number for a week to find that it was a decoy. Scammed! Luckily, I just got my money back through Paypal yesterday. I really wish we could rid the hobby of these scumbags!! It is a great bottle, and was a little overexcited about it… may have clouded my senses!

Michael George

If that’s Photo Shop work it’s damn good.

Jeff Noordsy

No way in my opinion. The bottle must exist somewhere… that is the second part of the scam that bothers me!

Michael George

Don’t be fooled, it’s outright fraud and this jerks ship is about to sink……..

This scumbag con artist that’s trying to cheat everyone knows bottles and resides in New Albany, Indiana. The authorities are now involved.

Lou Lambert

[PRG] A quick google of Anicia Benson pulls up the following… Anicia Lynn Benson was born in 1981. Anicia currently lives in New Albany, Indiana. Before that, Anicia lived in New Albany, IN. Anicia Lynn Benson is related to William Benson, who is 47 years old and lives in New Salisbury, IN. Anicia Lynn Benson is also related to Carrie Benson, who is 48 years old and lives in Fort Wayne, IN.

Personally I like my cobalt Photoshopped version better 😉

Brian Wolff

Update from Mark Warne via email: Hi Ferdinand. Hope all is well. Just checked my favorite site and I see my Curtis in a much brighter green than it is. I won mine off ebay and that is positively the bottle. Everything matches perfectly and it has a killer tube in the neck or bubble that sages down 4 inches. Kind of like a 4 inch cocoon with open ends inside the neck. Glass is extremely thin in this area and is very cool. Have never seen anything like it. I see the tail end of it in your photo. Mine happens to be pure green (lucked out for sure 🙂 ) but certainly not like the green in your photo. Someone doctored the colors that you have for sure. I’ll send photos to you soon. Mark

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I also have it in Grape, Teal & Copper. Was fun just playing around with it (in Photoshop) – Brian Wolff

Read More: Curtis Cordial Calisaya Stomach Bitters – The Real McCoy

Read More: “there’s a customer born every minute” – William Henry Harrison Flask Scam

Read More: eBay Scam Exposed!

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Subject Bottle in Question

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Subject Bottle in Question

Posted in Advice, Bitters, Cordial, News, Photography, Questions, Scams & Frauds | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Marihuana Tax Act 1937

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MARIHUANA TAX ACT OF 1937

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RJM1a-3a Federal Marijuana imperf tax stamp set.

ReeferMadnessPosterI suppose it is fitting to see if there are any Cannabis bottles after the recent posts on Peachridge Glass on Cocaine, Heroin and Opium. With my United States postage stamp background, it is exciting for me to look back and be reminded of the 1937 Marihuana Tax Act (note spelling of marijuana with an “h”).

Many of us might remember seeing the movie Reefer Madness which is somewhat of a cult movie. I remember some teachers actually showing this movie to us in high school. Amazing how times change and in some ways they are still the same.

Reefer Madness (originally released as Tell Your Children and sometimes titled as The Burning Question, Dope Addict, Doped Youth and Love Madness) is a 1936 American propaganda exploitation film revolving around the melodramatic events that ensue when high school students are lured by pushers to try marijuana – from a hit and run accident, to manslaughter, suicide, attempted rape, and descent into madness. The film was directed by Louis Gasnier and starred a cast composed of mostly unknown bit actors.

CannibisPhotoOriginally financed by a church group under the title Tell Your Children, the film was intended to be shown to parents as a morality tale attempting to teach them about the dangers of cannabis use. However, soon after the film was shot, it was purchased by producer Dwain Esper, who re-cut the film for distribution on the exploitation film circuit. The film did not gain an audience until it was rediscovered in the 1970s and gained new life as a piece of unintentional comedy among advocates of cannabis policy reform. Today, it is in the public domain in the United States and is considered a cult film. [Wikipedia]

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Hemp has been grown for at least the last 12,000 years for fiber (textiles and paper) and food. For 3,000 Years prior to 1842, marijuana and hashish extracts were the most widely-used medicines in the world. Benjamin Franklin even started one of America’s first paper mills with cannabis, allowing a colonial free press from English control. Marijuana has been effectively prohibited in the United States since the 1950s.

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The use of cannabis or marijuana for recreational use was not evident in the United States until the first decade of this century. It appeared first on the Mexican borders, when marihuana cigarettes were brought in by migrant labourers. Cannabis had been in use in South America and the Caribbean for many years by then. With the onset of alcohol Prohibition, its popularity burgeoned and by the 1930s there were many hundreds of hash bars in New York alone.

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Fairwater Hemp Company, Fairwater, Wisconsin – c1917

Visit: Hash, Marijuana & Hemp Museum – Amsterdam

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Read More: If you wanna hang out you’ve got to take her out – Cocaine

Read More: Heroin – Purest and Best

Read More: To Smoke Opium is to get out of the Train (while it is still moving)

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$1, $5, and $10 Marihuana Tax Act imperforate blocks of ten revenue stamps,
United States, 1937

Cannabis-Tincture-BottleThe Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 was a United States Act that placed a tax on the sale of cannabis. The Act is now commonly referred to using the modern spelling as the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act. The Act levied a tax equaling roughly one dollar on anyone who dealt commercially in cannabis, hemp, or marijuana. The Act did not itself criminalize the possession or usage of hemp, marijuana, or cannabis, but it included penalty and enforcement provisions to which marijuana, cannabis, or hemp handlers were subject. Violation of these procedures could result in a fine of up to $2,000 and up to five years’ imprisonment. Read the Full Text of the Act

G A L L E R Y

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Dunglison’s Medical Dictionary with medicine bottles – The Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum – Amsterdam

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Cannabis Prescription – Easton, Kansas – 1915

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$1 Dollar Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 Overprint Revenue Stamp

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$2 Dollars and $3 Dollars Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 Overprint Revenue Stamps

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$5 Dollars “Marihuana Tax Act of 1937” Overprint from the Smithsonian National Postal Museum deaccession

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$10 Dollars “Marihuana Tax Act of 1937” Overprint, Imperforate Pairs (RJM1a-RJM3a). Without gum as issued, bright colors, large margins, Very Fine and choice, scarce, no other Marihuana Tax issues were issued in imperforate form – Robert A. Siegel

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10 – Ten Dollars  “Marihuana Tax Act of 1937” Overprint from the Smithsonian National Postal Museum deaccession

Posted in Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Tax Stamps | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Blacking Bottles & a little more

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B L A C K I N G

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This past week, a number of primarily eastern US collectors have been posting some really great pictures of Blacking bottles. I thought I would take a moment to nest a few images with support material.

One of my memories from childhood was pulling out a wooden polish box from my fathers clothes closet with instructions to polish my shoes for Sunday School. I remember the little circular cans with different names and colors, the oily rags, the brush and mostly the nice smell. I really didn’t mind the task, though I’m sure I griped as most children do.

In the 19th century, many forms of shoe polish were available in bottles, yet were rarely referred to as shoe polish or boot polish. Instead, they were often called blacking, especially when mixed with lampblack which is the fine soot collected from incompletely burned carbonaceous materials, used as a pigment and in matches, explosives, lubricants, and fertilizers. Blacking is actually “a substance (as a paste or polish) that is applied to an object to make it black”.

RockwoodsBlacking

A heavy amber bottle standing approximately 5 ½” high with that classic applied stopper top and a most eye appealing label for ROCKWOOD’S YANKEE BLACKING. – Tias.com

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H.A. Bartlett & Co., Stove Polish, Philadelphia & Boston Trade Card – Sheaff

Blacking was also used on stoves (see above) and the grates of fireplaces in Victorian times. Mrs. Beetons’ Book of Household Management (Chancellor Press, 1982 Edition) gives the following instructions under “Duties of the Housemaid”:“

The cinders disposed of, she proceeds to black-lead the grate, producing the black-lead, the soft brush for laying it on, her blacking and polishing brushes, from the box which contains her tools. This housemaid’s box should be kept well stocked. Having blackened, brushed and polished every part, and made all clean and bright, she now proceeds to lay the fire.” Mrs Beeton recommends a blacking made of asphalt, linseed oil and turpentine.

Read More: An 1842 day at Martin’s

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“The Ladies Blacking” Trade Card

G A L L E R Y

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Here are six different blacking bottles… not sure where they were produced, but I assume that they are all from the Northeast. As Mark Yates had mentioned, these were likely produced at most (or all) of the bottle glass factories in the Northeast during the first half of the 19th century. – Michael George

BartlettsBlacking

This early 12″ x 15″ chromolithograph was published in Philadelphia in 1863 by H. A. Bartlett. It advertises a boot polish and reads: “Bartlett’s Blacking, Preserves The Leather and Polishes So Easy and Nice.” The central image shows a domestic scene in a gentleman’s study. A young black valet has just finished polishing his shoes. Lifting one leg upon a stool, the master of the house admires the job. Not only can he see his reflection on the shoe, but his dog can see his reflection on the other shoe! – Heritage Auctions’ Political & Americana Auction #6086, May 12, 2012

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Here’s a quick picture of some Mt. Vernon blacking shards. – Brian Wolff

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Great Uncle Sam and American Eagle Original Label. This rare circa 1890 shoe blacking box depicts a resourceful Uncle Sam using his boot as a makeshift shaving mirror. In the lower lefthand corner of the lithograph, Sam’s pet bald eagle fights its reflection in the other boot! – Z & k Antiques

Blacking_Hutchins

One of the very few square blacking bottles that is embossed. All of the known examples were found together in one yard in Keene, NH. It is believed that the bottles were never filled with product. – Michael George

JacquotBlackingLabel

Outstanding original color lithograph label for Jacquot & Co. French Paris Blacking, includes a man, a bird and a grinning monkey. Label made by “CRUMP LABEL CO., N.Y.”

Blacking_Noordsy

OK, it’s not a lily pad, a mini glob or something else fabulous but really, are there many bottles more beautiful than a stout New England blacking? Just got this one and it is a great, great piece of glass. – Jeff Noordsy

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C1880 Boot Blacking Box w/Label Black Americana – ebay

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Early American Blacking Bottle, about 1840-1860 – Corning Museum of Glass

MasonsBlacking

1800s Mason’s Blacking Shoe Polish Box – Black Americana – Ruby Lane

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Four Blacking Bottles – photo courtesy Glass Works Auctions

HealeyBlacking

J. Healey Currier “Blacking Maker To His Majesty” – London

Blacking_Cooleys

A.A. COOLEY HARTFORD CON blacking bottle. 4.5 inches tall. Huge jagged open pontil. Needs felt pads in order to stand up straight. This bottle was sold to me as repaired. I can not find the repair. looks great under a black light. There is a small open bubble in the letter o of HARTFORD. Minor scratches on the back. – BottleNut.com

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Nubian Preparations for Boots & Shoes, Illustrated London News, Sept 1893

Since we are posting a few blackings... here is one that I had tucked away with a group of labeled bottles. This one has a nice colorful and graphical label covering 3 sides. The birthday boy John Panella will appreciate this one!

Since we are posting a few blackings… here is one that I had tucked away with a group of labeled bottles. This one has a nice colorful and graphical label covering 3 sides. The birthday boy John Panella will appreciate this one! – Michael George

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Frank Miller Blacking Trade Card

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COLE Cedarville, Herk. Co., N.Y. Price 18 cts. – James Becker

FrankMillersBlackingTradeCard

Frank Millers Blacking Trade Card

Blacking_Gutta

“Gutta Percha / Oil Blacking / Patent / Forbes & Co / Chatham / Square / New York” Blacking Bottle, a Stoddard glasshouse, Stoddard, New Hampshire, 1840-1860. Rectangular with four embossed indented panels, yellow olive, outward rolled collared mouth – tubular pontil scar, ht. 5 1/8 inches, wdth. 2 1/2 inches, dpth. 1 1/2 inches; (pinpoint sized surface sand grain blemish, a tiny manufacturer’s flaw, tiny bruise with small fissures at the front base corner below the letter “k”). Extremely rare. Kris Kernozicky collection. – Norman C. Heckler Auctions

FrankMillersBlackingTC

Frank Miller’s Improved French Blacking Trade Card

Ceramic-Blacking

Ceramic Blacking bottle, 19th century. – St. Albans Museums

Blacking_black-diamond

Black Diamond Show Dressing advertising envelope

IvoryBlacking

Cobalt Blue Ivory Blacking bottle – 19th Century Bottle Diggers

Day&MartinBlacking

Victorian stoneware bottle with label: Day & Martin Real Japan Blacking
The label showing the company’s address, stylish “97” trademark and Directions For Use

Race&Sheldons_Lot65

Gorgeous and famous RACE & SHELDON BOOT POLISH

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To Smoke Opium is to get out of the Train (while it is still moving)

QueenofChinatown_LOC

The Queen of Chinatown by Joseph Jarrow – Strobridge & Co., Lithographers, NY, c1899. – Library of Congress

Everything one does in life, even love, occurs in an express train racing toward death. To smoke opium is to get out of the train while it is still moving. It is to concern oneself with something other than life or death.

Jean Cocteau

fourclaweddragons

Chinese Snuff Bottle – Glass with double overlays of milky white and transparent sapphire-blue colors on white glass carved with a continuous design of two four-clawed dragons, 1760–1790. Bloch Collection.

O P I U M

Apple-Touch-IconAIt is fitting that I round out the Cocaine and Heroin posts on Peachridge Glass with a post on Opium. I like following thoughts and looking at things that I have long forgotten since growing up or going to college. For instance, I remember buying some old vials at an antique shop in the 1970s in Kansas City, Missouri that I have somewhere at home. I was told they were opium vials. Later I began to collect oriental snuff and opium bottles for their decorative beauty (see example above). This was all, way before I got interested in early American antique bottles.

Anyway here are some great pictures and images from my virtual trip today that really took me around the globe and throughout time with stops in the Neolithic Age, China, 19th century France, New Zealand, Chinatown in New York, Chinatown in San Francisco, Baltimore, the Library of Congress and quite a few Opium Dens.

Read More: If you wanna hang out you’ve got to take her out – Cocaine

Read More: Heroin – Purest and Best

Read More: The Right Snuff: Decoding Chinese Snuff Bottles

ElixirOpium

DR. MUNN’S ELIXIR OF OPIUM

E.W. Wood Genuine Opium Den by Richard K. Fox Show Print, c1899 - Library of Congress

The queen of Chinatown by Joseph Jarrow.

Cultivation of opium poppies for food, anaesthesia, and ritual purposes dates back to at least the Neolithic Age (new stone age). The Sumerian, Assyrian, Egyptian, Indian, Minoan, Greek, Roman, Persian and Arab Empires all made widespread use of opium, which was the most potent form of pain relief then available, allowing ancient surgeons to perform prolonged surgical procedures. Opium is mentioned in the most important medical texts of the ancient world, including the Ebers Papyrus and the writings of Dioscorides, Galen, and Avicenna. Widespread medical use of unprocessed opium continued through the American Civil War before giving way to morphine and its successors, which could be injected at a precisely controlled dosage. [read: Wikipedia]

Read: The Architecture of 13,000,000 Pounds of Opium Production

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This is scary for us Baltimoreans. LAUDANUM – Poison by McCormick & Co., Baltimore, MD

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Massive opium warehouses, 19th century.

Chinatown N Y - Pell Street

Chinatown N Y – Pell Street

ChinaTown San Francisco, California 1880

Chinatown San Francisco, California 1880

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Opium Party – circa 1918

OpiumPermitNZ

Permit to import opium, 1906 – Opium was widely used for medicinal purposes in 19th-century New Zealand, but it came to be seen as a dangerous and addictive drug. Its use was strictly regulated from the early 20th century. This permit was issued under the Opium Prohibition Act 1901, which made it unlawful to import opium for the purposes of smoking it. Chemist George Mee would have kept a register which recorded the amount and form of opium imported, what it was made into and to whom he sold it. – The Encyclopedia of New Zealand

French nude postcard, ca. 19th century - Opium Den

Smoking Opium – French nude postcard, ca. 19th century

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Opium den in New York City, early 20th century:

Opium_cure-alls

In the 19th century, opiate-based preparations were legion. Patent medicines were taken as cure-alls in an age when cures were rare. The use and abuse of opiate-based remedies has been treated scornfully by medical historians. But taken sparingly and judiciously, they offered more effective pain-relief than is readily available over-the-counter today. – GeneralAnethesia.com

Opium-Smoker

An unidentified woman poses with an opium pipe in this amateur portrait, circa 1940.

OpiumVials

19th Century Opium Bottles. A set of three great old bottles. The cork is new. No writing or markings on these. The two larger are 3 7/8″ tall, the smaller one is older judging from the shape, and is 3 1/2″ tall.

Opium_smoking

Opium Smoking – Picture: Charles J.H. Halcombe (PD_

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A 19th Century dose of Opium – STICKNEY AND POORS Pure Paregoric

OpiumBachelorDen

When bachelor dens cast over waking hours a loneliness so deep. – Library of Congress

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Uncle Marb’s O.B. Bitters – A real mystery

UNCLE MARB’S O.B. (not G.B.) BITTERS

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UNCLE MARB’S O.B. BITTERS – Dennis Eastley

Apple-Touch-IconAGot a tip from Dale Mlasko about an extremely rare Uncle Marb’s Bitters coffin flask. Dale was reminded of the flask after reading Two XR Tombstone Flasks containing Bitters (uh Whiskey). The Carlyn Ring and W.C Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is minimal but includes:

U3  UNCLE MARB’S OLD BOURBON BITTERS

UNCLE MARB’S ( au ) / G.B. (should be O.B.) / BITTERS // c //
7 1/8 x 2 3/4 x 1 1/2 (5 1/8)
Flask – coffin, Amber, ARM, Appplied mopith, Extremely rare
From a collection known to have existed in 1928.

This is a rare bird and I expect a unique example but we will see. I can find no information online on Uncle Marb so a little looking and thinking about the “G.B.” is appropriate. G.B. can mean a lot of things including Green Bay (possibly), Game Boy (can’t be that), Great Britain (doubt it), Great Barrington, MA (probably not), Gigabyte (nope), German Baptist (odd) or a persons initials. What do you think?

UPDATE (thanks to Marianne Dow):

UncleMarbsOldBourbonBitters

(Marianne Dow) Uncle Marb’s Old Bourbon Bitters — so it’s not GB but OB — according to this link to the INDEX of a book on the website of the Illinois State Archaeological Survey – title of book may be Bottled in Illinois —http://isas.illinois.edu/bottlebook-index-full.pdf

Illinois3Book

(Marianne Dow) Bottled in Illinois: Embossed Bottles and Bottled Products of Early Illinois Merchants from Chicago. www.isas.illinois.edu
‎”Bottled in Illinois: Embossed Bottles and Bottled Products of Early Illinois Merchants from Chicago to Cairo, 1840-1880″

I am also intriqued by the Ring and Ham statement in Bitters Bottles…

“From a collection known to have existed in 1928.”

A real mystery here. Thanks to Dennis Eastley for providing the nice pictures.

“I got it at the Canyonville show and the history is murky. I was told that it came from a collector in Nevada City but when I contacted him he did not remember the flask.
So the history is in a dead end alley.”

Dennis Eastley

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UNCLE MARB’S O.B. BITTERS – Dennis Eastley

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UNCLE MARB’S O.B. BITTERS – Dennis Eastley

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Heroin – Purest and Best

Mae Murray

H E R O I N

“In the City Market is the Meet Café. Followers of obsolete, unthinkable trades doodling in Etruscan, addicts of drugs not yet synthesized, pushers of souped-up harmine, junk reduced to pure habit offering precarious vegetable serenity, liquids to induce Latah, Tithonian longevity serums, black marketeers of World War III, excusers of telepathic sensitivity, osteopaths of the spirit, investigators of infractions denounced by bland paranoid chess players, servers of fragmentary warrants taken down in hebephrenic shorthand charging unspeakable mutilations of the spirit, bureaucrats of spectral departments, officials of unconstituted police states, a Lesbian dwarf who has perfected operation Bang-utot, the lung erection that strangles a sleeping enemy, sellers of orgone tanks and relaxing machines, brokers of exquisite dreams and memories tested on the sensitized cells of junk sickness and bartered for raw materials of the will, doctors skilled in the treatment of diseases dormant in the black dust of ruined cities, gathering virulence in the white blood of eyeless worms feeling slowly to the surface and the human host, maladies of the ocean floor and the stratosphere, maladies of the laboratory and atomic war… A place where the unknown past and the emergent future meet in a vibrating soundless hum… Larval entities waiting for a Live One…”

 William S. Burroughs, Naked Lunch

PUREST & BEST

Heroin-Pastilles

Three Spices Brand Tropels and Pastilles – Purest & Best with POISON and Heroin Pastilles applied labels

Apple-Touch-IconALast September we did a post on Cocaine (Read: If you wanna hang out you’ve got to take her out – Cocaine) and focused on how it ended up in many of the household medicinal and commercial products from times past.

Today we look at Heroin or Big H, the dragon, white horse, Chiva, smack and on and on…

opium025

Opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, is the species of plant from which opium and poppy seeds are derived.

The opium poppy was cultivated in lower Mesopotamia as long ago as 3400 BC. The chemical analysis of opium in the 19th century revealed that most of its activity could be ascribed to two alkaloids, codeine and morphine.

Friedrich_Wilhelm_Adam_Sertuerner

Friedrich Wilhelm Adam Sertürner (born 19 June 1783 in Neuhaus (near Paderborn), died 20 February 1841 in Hamelin) was a German pharmacist, who discovered morphine in 1806.

In 1806 the German chemist Friedrich Wilhelm Adam Sertürner isolated morphine from opium, a milky substance found in unripe seedpots of the poppy plant. Morphine is one of the strongest naturally occurring painkillers and of great importance where other analgesics fail. Side effects include depressiveness, drowsiness and a slowing down of breathing and circulation.

The attempt to find a non-addictive replacement for Morphine led to the development of heroin, a morphine derivative, by the German chemical company Bayer in 1898. 

Bayer-Heroin-1901

The attempt to find a non-addictive replacement for Morphine led to the development of heroin, a morphine derivative, by the German chemical company Bayer in 1898. The pain-controlling and analgesic properties of heroin are much more effective than those of morphine, and for over two decades the use of heroin was promoted to the general public against headache and other minor pain.

Bayer-Heroin-Bottle-ScrewCap

The name “heroin” is only used when being discussed in its illegal form. When it is used in a medical environment, it is referred to as diamorphine. The white crystalline form considered “pure heroin” is usually the hydrochloride salt, diacetylmorphine hydrochloride. Diacetylmorphine was first synthesized in 1874 by C. R. Alder Wright, an English chemist working at St. Mary’s Hospital Medical School in London. He had been experimenting with combining morphine with various acids. He boiled anhydrous morphine alkaloid with acetic anhydride for several hours and produced a more potent, acetylated form of morphine, now called diacetylmorphine or morphine diacetate.

Instead, the experiment produced an acetylated form of morphine one and a half to two times more potent than morphine itself.

Later diacetylmorphine became popular only after it was independently re-synthesized 23 years later by another chemist, Felix Hoffmann. Hoffmann, working at the Aktiengesellschaft Farbenfabriken (today the Bayer Pharmaceutical Company) in Elberfeld, Germany, was instructed by his supervisor Heinrich Dreser to acetylate morphine with the objective of producing codeine, a constituent of the opium poppy, pharmacologically similar to morphine but less potent and less addictive. Instead, the experiment produced an acetylated form of morphine one and a half to two times more potent than morphine itself.

BayerHeroinAd

An advertisement for Heroin as cough medicine

From 1898 through to 1910, diacetylmorphine was marketed under the trademark name Heroin as a non-addictive morphine substitute and cough suppressant. Bayer marketed the drug as a cure for morphine addiction before it was discovered that it rapidly metabolizes into morphine. As such, diacetylmorphine is in essence a quicker-acting form of morphine. The company was embarrassed by the new finding, which became a historic blunder for Bayer.

bayerheroinAd2

BAYER Pharmaceutical Products HEROIN – HYDROCHLORIDE “The Cheapest Specific for the Relief of Coughs – December 1901 Advertisement

The company was embarrassed by the new finding, which became a historic blunder for Bayer.

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Heroin prescription from Boone & Boone, Durham North Carolina – November 1932

In the United States, the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act was passed in 1914 to control the sale and distribution of diacetylmorphine and other opioids, which allowed the drug to be prescribed and sold for medical purposes. In 1924, the United States Congress banned its sale, importation or manufacture. It is now a Schedule I substance, which makes it illegal for non-medical use in signatory nations of the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs treaty, including the United States.

BayerHeroin2Bottles

Two BAYER Heroin bottles – circa 1900

The Health Committee of the League of Nations banned diacetylmorphine in 1925, although it took more than three years for this to be implemented. In the meantime, the first designer drugs, viz. 3,6 diesters and 6 monoesters of morphine and acetylated analogues of closely related drugs like hydromorphone and dihydromorphine were produced in massive quantities to fill the worldwide demand for diacetylmorphine—this continued until 1930 when the Committee banned diacetylmorphine analogues with no therapeutic advantage over drugs already in use, the first major legislation of this type.
Later, as with Aspirin, Bayer lost some of its trademark rights to heroin under the 1919 Treaty of Versailles following the German defeat in World War I. [source reference Wikipedia]

Glyco-HeroinBoxBottle

Glyco-Heroin Bottle with Label and Box

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GLYCO:HEROIN (Smith) – A mixture of heroin and glycerin. “No other preparation has had its therapeutic value more thoroughly defined or better established.”

HeroinBottleShoulder

As time went on in the early 1900’s, the Pure Food and Drug Administration started to regulate the patent medicine industry against the use of narcotics and cure claims. As a result companies made revisions to their products and even this product changed its name from Glyco Heroin to Glykeron. It still contained the Heroin but evidently Glykeron sounded more medicinally correct. Not a commonly seen bottle, actually rarer than the Glyco Heroin bottle – ebay

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