Title

Unmarked Prescription Bottle – Alcohol 2 Percent

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Vintage prescription bottle labeled Alcohol 2 Percent with cork stopper and dosage instructions

Description

This small, cylindrical glass apothecary bottle features a printed label with typed prescription instructions, noting “ALCOHOL 2 PER CENT” and directing the user to take “15 minims just after meals in a tumbler of water” with “EXACT REGULARITY.” A secondary side label reads: “B.B.” and repeats the dosage instructions in slightly different form.

The bottle is sealed with a cork and shows oxidation and residue consistent with its age, possibly due to iron-based tincture residue or herbal sedimentation. It is entirely unbranded, offering no pharmaceutical manufacturer or proprietary name.

Condition

  • Glass: Structurally intact, with no chips or cracks; some interior residue and exterior discoloration present

  • Label: Heavily stained, partially readable; printed in formal block style, typical of the 1920s–1940s

  • Cork: Original, degraded, but in place; shows signs of age shrinkage and possible leakage

Gallery

Historical context

The inclusion of a low alcohol content (2%), precise dosage in minims (an apothecary unit equal to ~0.06 mL), and the phrase “exact regularity” all suggest this was a therapeutic tonic or regulatory remedy, intended for daily or near-daily use.

During the early 1900s through the 1940s, such formulations were commonly compounded by physicians, druggists, or proprietary health systems. They were often used as:

  • Digestive aids

  • Mild sedatives or nerve tonics

  • Menstrual regulators

  • Restoratives for chronic fatigue or “neurasthenia”

The dosage and delivery — diluted in a tumbler of water — also suggests the contents were potent or highly active, even at low alcohol content.

The label space for “Case No. ___” and formula code “B.B.” further suggests it may have been part of a numbered case-based treatment system, such as those employed by mail-order tonics, sanitarium programs, or proprietary compounders.

Curious Facts, Ephemera, and Trivia

  • The bottle’s instructions to “pour out on side opposite the label” were meant to preserve legibility and limit label damage from drips — a small but telling detail in old pharmacy etiquette.

  • B.B.” may have been shorthand for “Blood Builder,” “Bitters Base,” or another coded internal formulation type. In many mail-order or homeopathic catalogs, B.B. formulas were vitalizing mixtures intended for long-term use.

  • 15 minims is equal to 0.93 mL, a very small dose, and was standard in prescribing early alkaloid extracts, fluid extracts, or tincture-based homeopathics.

  • The phrase “EXACT REGULARITY” appears often in historical remedies linked to habit therapy, metabolic treatment, and support for conditions like indigestion, “female irregularities,” or even mild opiate weaning tonics.

  • The cork stopper, ambering of the fluid, and residue suggest a water-alcohol suspension with botanical components now long degraded.


Why it is in the Cabinet

This unlabeled prescription bottle represents the silent backbone of early personalized and proprietary medicine — remedies made for a single case number, often filled with vague or secretive compounds promising gentle regularity and long-term health. Its anonymity invites investigation, and its specificity—down to the minim—demands respect for the quiet precision of historical practice.

It is also a symbolic artifact of America’s transition from apothecary to pharmaceutical industrialization, when handwritten or numbered prescriptions still walked the line between craft and commerce.


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