Tuesday’s ad is for Blatz, from 1909. The curious tagline, “The Sentiment of the Harvest,” is above a fairy holding up a row of garland. It’s apparently advertising the Valentin Blatz Brewing Co.‘s Private Stock, “the finest beer ever brewed.” And I love that they mention the beer’s “food value.”
Beer In Ads #921: Beer Is The Pure Temperance Drink
Monday’s ad is for the Peter Doelger Brewing Co., from 1916. Peter Doelger was a New York brewery founded in 1859. It returned after prohibition ended, but quickly closed in 1937. The ad is just a couple of years before prohibition and shows how, right up to the end, many breweries were trying to convince people that hard liquor was the problem and, as their tagline says, “BEER is the PURE TEMPERANCE drink.” It didn’t work.
Beer In Ads #920: Once There Were Two Irishmen …
Friday’s ad is for Carling’s Red Cap Ale, from 1959. It’s not the most attractive of ads, but it’s also finny, in an odd way. It starts with the setup of a joke. “Once there were two Irishmen…” and follows that up with this gem of a punchline. And “now there are millions of ’em.” They also refer to the beer below the title with this. “A most unusual ale!”
Beer In Ads #919: Califlorida Here We Come
Thursday’s ad is for Blatz beer, from 1948. Showing an orange tree supposedly with both California and Florida oranges on it, along with the Blatz beer bottles. Based on the ad copy, it looks like they were going after bigger breweries brewing in multiple breweries around the country when they state that they’ve “brewed only in Milwaukee for 97 years.” They also suggest that customers should be patient and wait for the Milwaukee beer to arrive in California … or Florida.
Beer In Ads #918: Over The Fence With Acme Beer
Wednesday’s ad is for Acme beer, from the 1950s or 50s. It’s another one by the famous pinup artist Alberto Vargas, this one depicting a blonde going over a fence, about to rip her short skirt, while carrying a bag of Acme beer cans and bottles.
Beer In Ads #917: Fishing For Beer Cans
Beer In Ads #916: Tally Ho
Monday’s ad is for Budweiser, from 1949. Part of Bud’s long-running “There’s nothing like it” series, but is odd for depicting a more traditionally English fox and hounds hunt, which I suspect was not part of ordinary life for most, if even many, Americans in late forties. More curious still, is in the text at the bottom it reads: “There’s more Budweiser now — and there will be still more as our expansion program continues.” That seems like an odd message to be telling consumers, but maybe this ad was intended for a narrower audience.
Beer In Ads #915: That Man — He’s Done It Again!
Friday’s ad is for Schlitz, from 1950. In the wonderful illustration, it appears that a woman has discovered that her husband has emptied the refrigerator of food and filled it with Schlitz beer. Surveying the scene with a new bag of groceries on the table, not to mention other food scattered about the kitchen, all she can do is exclaim. “That Man — He’s Done It Again!”
Beer In Ads #914: Eberhardt & Ober Brewing Co.
Thursday’s ad is for the Eberhardt & Ober Brewing of Allegheny, Pennsylvania, from around 1890. While the brewery closed in the 1950s, some of the buildings are still in use by the craft brewery Penn Brewery. They even auctioned one of the original lithographs in 2008.
And here’s another version that’s a little brighter.