More vintage advertising

OK, I post this because of the fine print at the bottom "Serving all legalized beverages" What exactly is a legalized beverage? What if I wanted an illegal beverage?
I don't know for sure, but if that ad was from the 1930s, FDR had signed a law that legalizef the sale of beer or wine-- this was prior to the repeal of the Volstead act later in 1933. So perhaps the phrase "legalized beverages" is referring to beer and wine.
 

Imagine a versatile product that can be used to line hosiery drawers, store displays, instrument cases, display cases, glove compartments or for 1001 other uses! You could have become a distributor. Imagine how wealthy you might have become if—when you were 10, 15, or 20—you had invested and become a distributor for this astounding product Micro-Fluff.
MicroFulff.jpg
Micro-Fluff guy.jpg
 
I don't know for sure, but if that ad was from the 1930s, FDR had signed a law that legalizef the sale of beer or wine-- this was prior to the repeal of the Volstead act later in 1933. So perhaps the phrase "legalized beverages" is referring to beer and wine.
Absinthe was banned in France in 1915. Perhaps that was considered banned here too?
 
Absinthe was banned in France in 1915. Perhaps that was considered banned here too?
Yes, according to Wikipedia, it had been banned in the U.S. by 1915.
I think it had gotten a bad rap, mostly from exaggerated stories from Europe. The major problem with absinthe was that it had a very high alcohol content of up to 74% (148 proof). So unless it was cut heavily with a mixer, a person could get drunk pretty quickly.

I think that the absinthe sold today, at least in the U.S., is a thick liqueur, which probably no longer contains wormwood. Not sure about that.
 
Why not?

7578fd522336c12590ed675394b477e6.jpg

I love Cream of Wheat!
 

Back
Top