O. Halsted's Anti-Dyspeptic Pills, 1858

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Artifact Overview

Nineteenth-century entrepreneurs promised cures with patent medicines. Some of these concoctions, however, contained harmful ingredients or ingredients used in unsafe quantities -- the industry was unregulated and manufacturers were secretive about their recipes. Beginning with the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, national legislation increasingly prohibited misleading health claims and required manufacturers to list their product's contents.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Patent medicine

Date Made

1858

Creator Notes

Invented by Dr. O. Halsted and sold by William Burnet in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

33.504.8

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Paper (Fiber product)
Cardboard

Color

Black (Color)
Gold (Color)

Dimensions

Height: 1 in
Diameter: 1.5 in

Inscriptions

O. HALSTED'S ANTI-DYSPEPTIC PILLS/O. HALSTED/PILLS/Principal Depot at BURNET'S No.14 East 4th Street, CINCINNATI, OHIO.
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