Sometimes the Great Clean Up project has unexpected results. As the family member best able to judge such things I was charged with dealing with my dad's library of medical books. Yes, you remember books. I'll have more on this in a bit, but basically only a handful were worth preserving. Mostly well illustrated older texts and a few I kept because a small mystery is involved.
And there there are things like this:
This one gave my memory a good old nudge. Because I remember a concoction called "Vademecum". I was a bit fuzzy on details, I just knew it came in a tube and was pink. My brother recalled that it was a European tooth paste. Hey, its still sold today albeit not by the company that started marketing it in Sweden in the late 1890's.
So what's the connection? Vade Mecum is a Latin phrase that translates to "Go with me". It has long been used for portable hand books, often of a medical nature. The sort of thing that would contain tips to diagnoses and lots of make 'em yourself remedies for same. The first such use is said to be from circa 1629. And as modern medicine advanced and this sort of reference became less important, this early 20th century example would have been near the end of the long and distinguished line. I assume the tooth paste was a marketing concept based on the notion that there were all sorts of great formulas to be found in the Vade Mecum.
A bit more on the etymology of Vade-Mecum, including its link to "vamoose" and "wade", with a tarty chambermaid thrown in for good measure.
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