Thursday, February 24, 2022

364. Sporty Fashion for Your Feet: SPARTAN FOOTWEAR, Print Ads 1960s

SPARTAN COMMANDER, THE MOST GUWAPO OF THEM ALL! 1963.

 

One of the most iconic athletic footwear brand from the 1960s-70s  is SPARTAN. It was so popular that the brand “Spartan” briefly became a generic name to refer to rubber shoes. SPARTAN was the rubber shoes of choice of many basketball teams and sports leagues, with many styles to choose from.

SPARTAN CHIRSTMAS AD, 1964

For example, there was the ‘Commander’ style, touted as “the most guwapo of them all”, with its colorful ankle patch and blue and red stripes. There was also a SPARTAN Speed Star, made for hardcourt action and agility. It eventually venture dinto other footwear like children and ladies’ shoes and sandals.

SPARTAN was made by KP Rubber Corporation located along Francisco St., in Caloocan City, but not much is known about the company. It folded up I the 1970s. The SPARTAN name is being used today as a brand for rain boots, and also by Reebok, for its line of all-terrain rubber shoes.

SOURCES:
Spartan Speed Star Ad: Pinterest.ph via Eduardo de Leon


Monday, February 21, 2022

363. Brand Stories: ASTRING-O-SOL Mouthwash, Print Ads 1929-1980

ASTRING-O-SOL, "JEANNE YOUNG", 1968 Print Ad

Mouth rinses were not unknown among ancient Chinese, Greeks, Romans and Egyptians. One early mouth was human urine (Romans imported bottled Portuguese urine!), which contains ammonia, believed to disinfect mouth and whiten teeth. Other ptions include the use of tortoise blood, salt-alum-vinegar mis, and pure, cold water to ward of tartar and plaque.


ASTRING O SOL, "MORNING MOUTH", 1929 Print Ads

In 1865 that English surgeon Joseph Lister used an antiseptic to sterilize hs operating room. Inspired by this, Dr. Joseph Lawrence, one of the founders of Johnson & Johnson, developed a mouthwash for cleaning mouths and sterilizing wounds in 18979, naming it Listerine, in honor of Dr. Lister.  Listerine became the first prescription mouthwash in 1914  to be sold over the counter in the United States.

ASTRING O SOL, "MORNING MOUTH", 1929 Print Ad

Not to be outdone, the American pharmaceutical manufacturing giant,  Frederick Stearns & Company (est. 1887, Detroit Michigan) , created ASTRING-O-SOL, the concentrated antiseptic that became part of their dental care line.

ASTRING O SOL COMIC STRIP AD, "ARMANDO" 1956

ASTRING O SOL COMIC STRIP AD, "MYRNA", 1957

ASTRING O SOL COMIC STRIP AD, "LYDIA", 1957

ASTRING-O-SOL contained Myrrh oil (which helps relieve mouth sores and gum inflammation), oil of wintegreesn (which provides germ protection as well as cooling effect), and Zinc chloride (for  pleasant-tasting sensation, hence the “Breath Sweetener” descriptor). Zinc can also limit tartar build up.

ASTRING O SOL "Caressing Sweet", 1960 Strip Ad

The powerful Astringent, Antiseptic and Prophylactic Mouth Wash, which needed t be diluted with water,  was internationally sold by the 1920s, and competed successfully against Listerine. ASTRING-O-SOL’s earliest campaign “Morning Mouth”, gained much popularity among consumers, appearing for the first time on Philippine publications in 1929.

ASTRING O SOL, "Against Bad Breath:, 1969 Color Print Ad

Today, ASTRING-O-SOL  is a registered trademark of the GlaxoSmithKline group of companies, under its GSK Consumer Healthcare Division. With its own manufacturing facility in Cainta, Rizal. GSK continues to bring dental health products and over-the-counter medicines to millions of Filipinos. Other than ASTRING-O-SOL, the company alsmo makes Sensodyne, Aquafresh, Calpol and Dequadin. Advertising is handled locally by Campaigns & Grey. 

ASTRING O SOL, 1980 Print

SOURCES:

Mouthwash, Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouthwash

GSK Product Portfolio: https://www.gsk.com/media/2508/gsk-consumer-healthcare-brands-portfolio.pdf

 Astring-O-Sol | National Museum of American History: https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/search/object/nmah_1218695

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

362. MORE AMUSING BRAND NAMES YOU WON'T BELIEVE WERE USED IN THE PHILIPPINES, Part II

Part II of some of the most amusing, unusual, and sometimes, weird-sounding names ever coined for real products, that were available in the Philippines –from the 1930s to the 1960s.

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BARRY’S TRICOPHEROUS, Brand name for:  Hair Tonic against baldness, thinning hair and dandruff

BARRY’S TRICOPHEROUS was introduced in the late 1840s by "professor" and former New York wig-maker, Alexander C. Barry. The term “tricopherous” alone  conjures many images—either a serious, incurable disease or the name of an extinct dinosaur. But despite its name, the product did surprisingly well.  Barry exhorted his customers: “Stimulate the skin to healthful action with the Tricopherous, and the torpid vessels, recovering their activity, will annihilate the disease.” Apparently, that worked for many satisfied men. The product contains 97% alcohol, 1.5% castor oil, and 1% tincture of cantharides (Spanish fly), which supposedly help stimulate the scalp’s blood supply.  BARRY’S TRICOPHEROUS is still being produced and sold today by Lanman & Kemp-Barclay & Co.

GALISATUMBrand Name for: Skin Ointment

GALISATUM Lunas Galis was a skin ointment developed by Dr. Carlos Jahrling of Botica Sta. Cruz in the 1930s. Dr. Jahrling was a German pharmacist from Offenbach who opened his own business in Manila.“Galis” was an all-encompassing local  term for any skin conditions. “-Atum” was a suffix that was  commonly used in pharmaceutical products  like “mentholatum”and “petrolatum”.  GALISATUM with Lunas Galis sounds more like an incantation or a Latin spell to improve skin condition, especially when you say it thrice.  But it does relieves prickly heat, chafing, pimples, mange, eczema, dandruff and  maladies with mysterious names like Dhobie’s Itch (another term for Jock’s Itch) and Hongkong Foot (a slang for athlete’s foot), as this ad from 1936 claims.

GAYTOP: Brand Name for: Concentrated Hairdressing and Conditioner

Before gay language became more elaborate, it was okay to for Helene Curtis to dub its latest hair conditioner product.  GAYTOP. Nothing wrong with that--in the late 1950s. Today, GAYTOP sounds so suggestive with its homo-erotic undertones;  it seems to reveal  one’s orientation and preferred sexual role—especially when talked about in a beauty parlor! Indeed, if this product were around today, it will be a “brand that dares not speak its name”.

JAGGING JAGGINGBrand Name for:  Face Powder and Pomade

There really is no reason why a  cosmetic product guaranteed to make you “lovely to look at” be named JAGGING JAGGING. It is nonsensical, unfeminine and the sound is far from mellifluous. But  Chun Huat Pomade Factory, the manufacturer, did just that, making it hard to believe that Jagging Jagging  is indeed,  a “girls’ favorite”. Ad from 1934. 

KULSO-ALIS: Brand Name For:  Anti-diarrhea, anti-dysentery

Another product coming from Dr. Jahrling’s Botica St. Cruz is  KULSO-ALIS, a concoction with a brand name that comes from “Kulso” (diarrhea, loose bowel movement) and “Alis” (to be free from, begone). It was a common way to coin brand names for products this way, bewildering the Pilipino name may be to a foreigner. Perhaps this anti-LBM medicine was really meant to target local market only.It is interesting that Kulso-Alis lists  opium as one of its ingredients. Ad from 1937

 (This article originally appeared in the online magazine Esquire Philippines www.esquiremag.ph, on 11 Feb. 2019, under the title "Funniest Filipino Brand names in the 20th Century", commissioned from the author, Alex del Rosario-Castro)