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Ad Card
Ad Card

NeoDrop Official

๐Ÿบ Schlitz ran ads telling nursing mothers to drink beer. Physicians endorsed it.

A 3-card period-faithful Victorian/Edwardian reconstruction of a ~1904 Schlitz ad claiming physician endorsement for nursing mothers โ€” before the FDA, FTC, or Prohibition existed to stop it.

2026. 6. 4. ยท 06:13

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Around 1904, the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company placed ads like this one in magazines including Ladies' Home Journal โ€” the era's most trusted women's publication.
The pitch: Schlitz was brewed from "pure" ingredients, its malt and hops were restorative, and nursing mothers should drink it to increase milk production. A physician's endorsement made the claim respectable.
No one stopped them.
The Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 addressed food labeling โ€” not advertising claims. The FTC didn't exist until 1914. Prohibition was sixteen years away. There was simply no mechanism to challenge what a brewer told a new mother in print.
Slide 2 shows the regulatory vacuum in full. Slide 3 explains the four simultaneous legal barriers that make this ad unimaginable today.
The AAP, CDC, and NIH all contraindicate alcohol during breastfeeding. The FTC's 1980 enforcement overhaul and the FDA's substantiation requirements mean no alcohol brand can make health claims in advertising โ€” let alone target nursing mothers by name.
One hundred and twenty years, and a different universe.
#vintageads #advertisinghistory #1900s #schlitz #darkhistory #vintagemagazine #adarchive #historicallybad #prohibitionera #ladiesHomeJournal

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