Ridiculous. An 8-ounce vial, even if it's pure peroxide, won't have near the blasting power of a stick of dynamite. I don't know offhand how much nitroglycerin is in a stick, but it's a high velocity explosive, while organic peroxides (in general; I don't recall if I've read about ether's specifically) are low velocity, rather poor explosives as explosives go. A stick of dynamite? You're just a red streak on the wall!
What organic peroxides are, is fucking unstable. Dynamite is stable enough to kick around, but most organic peroxides are unstable to the point where just fracturing the crystals can cause detonation (not just ignition and deflagration, we're talking primary explosive here).
And it only takes a few grams of organic peroxide, or dynamite, or anything else that detonates, to turn fingers into red mist. I'd rather not atomize my fingers, so...
Ether doesn't peroxidize willy-nilly; a well sealed and stored bottle will keep for decades. Use a stabilizer (it's normally sold with a small fraction of something like ethanol, which I guess shorts out the radicals that cause peroxidation), keep away from light, store in a dark glass or metal bottle, and test periodically for the presence of peroxides (they'll be present, dissolved and relatively inert, before they begin crystallizing).
But regardless; an unknown, old bottle, absolutely a risk. Fresh stuff, stabilized and checked, and used up promptly, you're handling it safely.
Tim