This cabinet file once used for storing medicine
labels is now housed in the attic level of the Follett House Museum. It had been used at the Sloane House Pharmacy, which was on the street level of the Sloane House hotel in
Sandusky, beginning about 1890. Several different pharmacists worked in the
Sloane House over the years, including H.K. Henkelman, Henkelman & Bechberger;
Bechberger & Brown; Bechberger & Kubach, and Kubach and Buderer. Some
of remedies on the labels are for Epsom salts, cod liver oil, boric acid and
liniment. The label below from a container of pine tar capsules was purchased
when Bechberger & Brown were partners in the Sloane House Pharmacy.
This apothecary bottle came from the pharmacy of
Charles A. Lehrer, who had his business at the corner of Central Avenue and
Decatur Street for several years in the first quarter of the twentieth century.
He was the son of former Zion Lutheran Church pastor Rev. J.
George Lehrer.
The compound of licorice powder is from the pharmacy
of J.H. Emrich, an early Sandusky
pharmacist.
This bottle of medicinal oil came from the E. J.
Windisch Quality Pharmacy, which was in business in the 800 block of Hayes
Avenue from about 1908 to 1925.
From 1898 until about 1930 Daniel Schaffer manufactured liniment.
Advertisements claimed it to be the “greatest pain killer on earth.” This
advertisement for Schaffer’s Wonderful Liniment appeared in the Sandusky Star
Journal on November 17, 1920:
Mihalovitch’s Hungarian Blackberry Juice was manufactured by a liquor dealer in Cincinnati, but was
sold locally by nine different pharmacies in Sandusky in 1887. The juice was
said to be a remedy for diarrhea, dysentery, cholera morbus (gastroenteritis),
and all disorders of the bowels.
No comments:
Post a Comment