It is a metal spindle nearly three feet long. It extends from an antique metal base, no
longer able to support the weight of its contents. Strung along the spindle is the story of several
years worth of La Farge’s history from over a century ago.
R. P.
Dalton was elected village president of La Farge at the April 1909
elections. Later that year, on November
20 and 22, he had two prescriptions filled at Ed Coyle’s drug store in La Farge. Dr. Joseph Esch, who had his office over the
village post office on South State Street, had written both of the
prescriptions for Dalton on slips provided by Ed Coyle’s drug store. One of the prescriptions was for sodium succanate (sic), which is an eye
drop ointment. Perhaps La Farge’s
village president didn’t like what he was seeing around town.
The metal
spindle contains thousands of prescriptions dispensed by that La Farge drug
store from the years of 1908-09. The
length of time that the prescriptions cover is from July 1908 through December
1909. I carefully peeled off a couple
hundred of the RX’s from the last three months of 1909 to try to get an idea
what they were all about. They can help
to tell some fascinating stories, especially when you tie in other information
on La Farge’s history from that time.
Dr. J.E.
Bingham came to La Farge in 1909 and set up his practice upstairs in the
Donaldson Brothers hardware store building on Main Street (the present site of
Bergum’s Food Mart). Dr. Bingham came
from Whitewater and used his own personalized slips for prescriptions instead
of those provided by Coyle’s Drug Store.
Bingham was known as La Farge’s “town doctor” because he made house
calls with a horse and buggy and going too far from town caused delays in
service. On December 4, 1909, Dr.
Bingham wrote an RX for “Baby Wallis” (probably misspelled Wallace) and the
directions read “one every hour till bowels move well”.
We have
Patsy Johnson to thank for saving this unique historical collection of
prescriptions. She bought the spindle
containing the RX’s at an auction held in Bean Park four or five years
ago. She neither knew where the spindle
came from nor exactly what to do with it once she had it in her
possession. When the new VMH Clinic opened
in La Farge last summer, Patsy admired the displays of medical history in the
waiting room. Thinking her spindle of
prescriptions would fit into the display, she showed it to Dr. Deline. He passed it on to this history guy to look at.
Dr. H. N.
Cohen had a medical practice in La Farge during 1908-09. His professional ad posted in the La Farge Enterprise from that era read –
Dr. H.N. Cohen, Diseases of Women. In my
research, I found that Dr. Cohen kept rather irregular business hours while
practicing in La Farge. He had a
practice in La Farge for a short time then moved to Wonewoc in 1910. Dr. Cohen moved around a lot as later in
1919, he was practicing in Wilton, but then moved his practice to Tomah that
same year. On December 1, 1909, Dr.
Cohen prescribed a laxative for Mrs. George Wilson with directions “Take after
meals”.
An
interesting aspect of the sample of studied prescriptions on the spindle is
that children’s names are rarely used.
Usually the RX will be for “James Riddel boy” (that’s probably a
misspelling of Riddle) or “Bert Cowee (boy)”.
There were other prescriptions for the “Blakeley Boy”, the “Gudgeon
Girl”, “Mrs. Brown’s boy”, the “Emerson Heisel Girl”, “Chas Brown’s boy”, the
“Hughy Major baby”, “Joe Waddle girl” (probably Waddell), “Ald. Oldenberg’s
(boy)”, the “Grant Coleman girl”, “Ernie Heisel Boy” and “Aug. Trappe
boy”. This last RX listed was probably
for young Henry Trappe, who would have been three years old at the time. Henry went on to live to be one hundred years
old, so the prescription must have made him well back then.
Brothers Ed
and John Coyle had purchased the drug store business in La Farge from Cyrus
Yeomans in March of 1904. Yeomans had
opened La Farge’s first drug store in 1897 and for the next decade the village
had at least two and usually three or more doctors practicing, which meant for
a healthy pharmacy business. The
business operations of the Coyle Drug Store had undergone a major change in
January of 1909 when John Coyle sold his share of the La Farge business to his
brother and moved to Mondovi to open up a drug store there.
When
looking at that spindle of proscriptions that Ed Coyle filled back in 1909, one
can get a pretty good idea of how busy the doctors were in La Farge during that
era. Since Dr. Esch wrote most of the
RX’s on the spindle, you can get a closer look at his practice in particular.
Joseph Esch
was the “country doctor” in La Farge.
“Doc” Esch, as he was affectionately known, had purchased the first car
to be driven in the community in 1904.
With the new automobile, Dr. Esch could expand his
practice into the rural areas around La Farge. The good doctor liked his new
auto so much that he bought another and then another. He was soon selling autos
out of the Hotel Ward garage, a lucrative addition to his medical business. In
1909, he purchased a White steam-driven automobile. The White Steamer greatly
enhanced the doctor’s country practice as the vehicle could climb the area’s
steep hill roads without faltering. When Dr. Esch went into the country to make
house calls, he would have someone drive the White Steamer for him, so he could
rest or sleep between calls.
Dr. Esch had a busy, thriving
medical practice in 1908-09. On November
20, 1909, he wrote prescriptions for seventeen different patients. Amazingly, that day was a Saturday so Dr.
Esch was keeping office hours on the weekend during that season of
illness. From my research, I also found
where Dr. Esch wrote two prescriptions on Sunday, November 21, both for Mrs. Em
Rittenhouse. I’m assuming there was some
type of emergency, but I don’t know if Ed Coyle filled the two RX’s on the day
it was written.
The next busiest day for Dr. Esch
was on November 29, a Monday, when eleven prescriptions were written. Oscar
Marshall and his wife both had prescriptions written that day by Doc Esch. The directions for Oscar’s RX read, “Put 15
drops in water, take every four hours”, while Mrs. Oscar Marshall had a
prescription that covered nearly two pages of slips and contained nine
different ingredients!
Some of the directions for taking the prescribed medicines show how
times have changed since 1909. In one RX
for the “Bert Rittenhouse boy”, the directions read, “Take one or two drops on
sugar every 15 minutes for up to 3 hours”.
Remember the old saying about being tough and taking your medicine? Well, obviously, that boy of 1909 would take
the doses more easily if they were sweetened up for him.
There was also a prescription for a Mrs. Hicks that read, ”Heaping
teaspoonful dissolved in water ½ hour before meals and one hour after”. The drug on this RX slip can actually be
deciphered (which generally doesn’t happen on most of the slips) and the
prescription is for something called sodoxylin. With a little research in a pharmaceutical
book from that era I found that sodoxylin
was used for acidemia (upset stomach, etc.).
According to Abbott Laboratories (yes, the big drug company was going
back then), which manufactured the drug, “it neutralizes acidity; checks
fermentation; promotes elimination”. You
can fill in the blanks from there to imagine the end results for Mrs. Hicks.
There you have it; a bit of La Farge’s history from over a century past
told through a spindle of prescription slips.
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