Turpentine oil is applied to the skin for joint pain, muscle pain, nerve pain, and toothaches. People sometimes breathe in (inhale) the vapors of turpentine oil to reduce the chest congestion that goes along with some lung diseases. In foods and beverages, distilled turpentine oil is used as a flavoring.If anyone knows what this was used for, please weigh-in.
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Thanks, Paps!Turpentine oil is applied to the skin for joint pain, muscle pain, nerve pain, and toothaches. People sometimes breathe in (inhale) the vapors of turpentine oil to reduce the chest congestion that goes along with some lung diseases. In foods and beverages, distilled turpentine oil is used as a flavoring.
I can remember it being in the house when I was a kid, but didn’t know what they used it for.Thanks, Paps!
Boy, I can only imagine the smell. Clothes, bedding, furnishings... all smelling of turpentine.
Neighbours had one of these and for once a commercial actually got it right, no false advertising on it!
Your post brought back a lot of great old memories for me, Ruth!I remember Glass Wax. It was some type of liquid glass cleaner. You smeared it on the windows, let it dry and wiped it off. The problem was you ended up with all the white dust that got all over everything.
They really hit the jack pot when they offered Christmas stencils. I think you had to send for them. You put the stencil on the window and dabbed it with the Glass Wax which would make a white design on the window.
The beauty of it all was that all you had to do after the holidays was wipe it off and you ended up with sparkling clean windows, so they said.
I pestered my mom to let me have the stencils.
I remember stenciling snowflakes on every window of our house. Mom must have spent hours cleaning up the mess.
We also did it on our school windows as well. The poor janitor had to clean the windows..
We had a couple in our home (childhood home), and we could get them to slink down a good portion of the stairs, but somehow they never kept going. I don't recall one ever making it from the top of the stairs to the bottom without help.
Oh yes, Marie, I remember them well! One of my faves back in the day!
Baby brother had an Erector set, nothing junk about it. Solid brass and steel pieces, nuts, bolts, fasteners, a little wrench and screwdriver... he used to tinker with his for hours at a time.
Drinking! Yikes!!
That was my thought exactly, Dob! LOL!Drinking! Yikes!!
Lovely tidbit of history, Kadee!Info about the above Cooker
Adelect cooker. No1. Manufactured for Adelect by Simpsons
The Adelaide Electric Supply Company increased the use of electricity with a the campaign which included demonstrating electrical appliances. In 1934 the charges for electricity used by domestic applicances was decreased. Another incentive was the Adelect stove which was manufactured in Adelaide and was not purchased but hired by the customers.
If anyone knows what this was used for, please weigh-in.
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My dad always kept a bottle of Bromo in the cupboard