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Zets Vintage Store

Vintage Medicine Spirit Turpentine Glass Bottle Southwestern Drug 7000 W. Fort St. Detroit Michigan NIB

Vintage Medicine Spirit Turpentine Glass Bottle Southwestern Drug 7000 W. Fort St. Detroit Michigan NIB

Regular price $76.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $76.99 USD
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Vintage Medicine Spirit Turpentine Glass Bottle Southwestern Drug 7000 W. Fort St. Detroit Michigan NIB

My father was a physician many years ago. He collected vintage and antique medical equipment and medicines. We will be listing many of these collectable items in our Etsy Shop.

Great piece for the Detroit, Michigan collector of all things vintage.

The base of the bottle is embossed: 2 U. S. A.

Embossed on the back of the bottle is 3 oz in an oval.

This bottle is being sold strictly as a collectors item and NOT for consumption.

The label indicates the instructions.

The Long, Strange History of Medicinal Turpentine
Drinking it was thought to cure nearly everything. (But you shouldn’t try it.)
BY ANNE EWBANK
MARCH 26, 2018
TURPENTINE IS A COMMON SIGHT in hardware stores and art cabinets. Made from pine resin distilled until clear, the oily liquid been used for hundreds of years as a water repellant, paint thinner, solvent, and lamp oil. (It is very flammable.) But for thousands of years, it’s also been used as a medicine, even though most modern doctors would strongly advise against ingesting it at all.
Turpentine has deep roots in medical history. In Looking for Longleaf: The Fall and Rise of an American Forest, author Lawrence S. Earley explains that the Romans used it to treat depression, naval surgeons during the Age of Sail injected it (hot) into wounds, and medics used it to try and stop heavy bleeding. Doctors found it appealing, even though they knew about its less-desirable effects.
“The rectified oil of Turpentine is a medicine much less used than it deserves to be. The reason probably is, the fear of its producing violent effects on the alimentary canal and urinary organs,” one doctor wrote in 1821. He also wrote that turpentine could greatly be put to use killing internal worms, since insects instantly died if exposed to the liquid. He ordered one patient afflicted with tapeworms to drink turpentine every few hours. During the Civil War, doctors administered turpentine internally and externally to halt infection, often with dubious results.

This is a remarkable opportunity to own a true piece of medical history.

This bottle is sold as is.

Please see the photos to complete the description.

Thanks so much for checking out our Shop.

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