Saturday, June 15, 2013

In days of yore...




Thank you, Ms. Donna!

13 comments:

  1. I think it is a 21st-century spoof. The typeface looks like something recently designed. The term "alcoholics" wasn't widely used until well after the 19th-century patent medicine era.

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  2. times used to be so much simpler.....and more fun!

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  3. Yep, I think that would be enough to make me never want to drink again.

    Granted, I'd probably also be dead. But, you know. Still works!

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  4. Sure, trade one addiction for another. Genius for the product people, but not so much for the alcoholic.

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  5. The Bishop of NorwichJune 15, 2013 at 5:30 PM

    Would YOU pass that if you were me?

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  6. Amusing. I'm with anonymous at 10:55, though. Copious is misspelled, the use of the word "new" is questionable, and there's an agreement problem with drunkard/they/their instead of drunkard/he/his, among other things (can you gain a new want?). Could be the work of a 21st century artisan, all right.
    --Queen Anne's Lace

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  7. Happy Father's Day, Grumpy! (from a regular reader and infrequent commenter)

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  8. As I recall (but am too lazy to check) the guy who invented Coca-Cola was trying to use cocaine to cure his morphine addiction.

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  9. @ronstew:
    Freud was actually the one that suggested cocaine would cure a morphine addiction, not the guy that invented Coca-Cola (Pemberton)

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  10. The white-on-black printing, exactly matching the typeface of the black-on-white printing, gives it away. That can't be done with letterpress technology. It's digital, or at least photographic. In 19th-century posters, if there is writing on things like the black bottle, it's hand-engraved.

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  11. Pemberton did claim that it was a cure for morphine addiction, (among other things) not necessarily *his* addiction.

    http://cocacolacompany.net/?p=8

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So wadda you think?