1.
Small, cream-colored, cardboard box for Lydia E. Pinkham's Pills for Constipation. These laxative pills were created by Lydia E. Pinkham Company to help with constipation [...]
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
2.
Small, red, rectangle cardboard box for Red Cloverine Pills. These laxative pills were created by the Wilson Chemical Company to stimulate the bowels and help conditions [...]
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
3.
Gold and red metal tin for Nature's Cure Blood Purifyer and Liver Regulator. Created by The National Drug Co., these tablets claimed to cure ailments such as rheumatism, [...]
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
4.
Red, rectangle, cardboard box for Schoenfeld Tea. This herbal tea, created by S. Pfeiffer Manufacturing Co., was intended to act as a laxative and diuretic.
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
5.
Small, circular, cardboard container with a yellow and red label for Beecham's Patent Pills. Beecham's Pills were created by English chemist Thomas Beecham in 1842. They [...]
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
6.
Glass bottle containing yellow liquid with a label for Golden Hair Grower. Not much is known about the creator or company behind this hair remedy. It is likely the produc [...]
circa 1899 | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
7.
Glass bottle containing dark brown liquid with a taped label for Mayr's System Regulator and Tonic. George H. Mayr's products quickly caught the attention of federal auth [...]
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
8.
Glass bottle containing dark brown liquid with a stained label for Hadacol Dietary Supplement. This concoction was created by Louisiana State Senator Dudley J. LeBlanc. A [...]
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
9.
Red cardboard box and a glass medicine bottle full of brown liquid labled "Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root." A homeopathic physician, Dr. Sylvester Andral Kilmer founded his labo [...]
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |
10.
Small, light brown, glass bottle with a label for Parke, Davis, & Co. Sublimate Pills. A highly poisonous compound, corrosive sublimate had a number of uses in photog [...]
undated | Still image | Historical Artifacts |