Showing posts with label 1930s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1930s. Show all posts

Thursday, July 3, 2025

519. KLIM Powdered Whole Milk by Borden, 1935-1967 Print Ads

1965 KLIM AD "Best Milk for Baby"

KLIM Powdered Milk is one of the oldest milk brands available in the Philippines, but the product version sold here was made by Borden Co., a well-known U.S.-based dairy company that had its beginning in the 19th c. Early ads featured the slogan "Spell it backwards”.

EARLY 1935 PHILIPPINE KLIM AD

The brand KLIM had an even earlier history though, that began in 1920, when the Merrell-Soule Company of Syracuse, New York improved the spray-drying method patented by Robert Stauf in 1901, a process that dried milk into  powder. Merrell-Soule replaced regular milk with condensed milk, resulting in a dehydrated whole-milk powder that kept not only its nutrients, but also did not spoil quickly.

WORLD CHAMPION BOXER 'FLASH" ELORDE FOR KLIM,1957

KLIM Powdered Milk was sold in cans, and just a few spoonfuls mixed with water can give babies and kids the pure wholesome goodness and flavor of real cow’s milk. As KLIM can stay fresh without refrigeration, it was perfect for use in humid, tropical places. Hence, KLIM was brought to the Philippines as early as the 1930s, imported and distributed by the Getz Brothers.

KLIM achieved success in the Philippines, and its advertising played up on its completeness, value for money, and the convenience of no refrigeration. In the 1960s, NAMARCO-branded KLIM products were launched in support of the National Marketing Corp. which aimed to help Filipino retailers procure products at reasonable prices and promote economic welfare.

1966-67 KLIM AD
Over the years KLIM used tri-media advertising to push the product, using celebrity endorsers that included world champion boxer Gabriel “Flash” Elorde in the late 50s and a young Lea Salonga in the early 80s who popularized the jingle “I love KLIM…wow-..woww..woww.wow..I Love Klim!”.

1966-1967 KLIM AS
In 1998, Nestle acquired KLIM from Borden, which filed for bankruptcy in 2020. That same year, New Dairy Opco LLC won Borden's assets via an auction, becoming the company's new owner. KLIM Powdered Whole Milk is still being manufactured by Nestlé to this day, assuring us that this iconic brand will endure for more generations to come.

Sunday, October 13, 2024

488. Got Ink? Parker QUINK , Various Ads 1935-1965

An indispensable office and school staple for students and workers in the 1930s is Parker QUINK INK. Back in those days, before the advent of ballpoint pens, fountain pens were used for office and classroom writings.

Unlike disposable ballpens, fountain pens were a sort of a status symbol, not only to be used and refilled with ink, but also to show them off, as fancy ones that had silver and gold fittings, trimmed with mother-of-pearl, and precious gems like diamonds and sapphires! But the ink remained the same favored  Parker QUINK INK.

QUINK INK is a coined term from  'quick' and 'ink' developed by the Parker Pen Company in 1931 and continues to be produced today. Chemist Galen Sayler is credited for its development creation, and  Quink was launched  on 17 March 1931—and its superior qualities—continuous flow, non-cloggging, smooth writing, quick-drying—drove its commercial success worldwide.


A myth grew out of QUINK INK’s origin in that it was a U.P. Filipino chemical engineer  Francisco A. Quisumbing who invented the world-famous ink. After receiving his Ph.D. from Columbia in 1921, he returned to the Philippines to teach Industrial Chemistry at his alma mater, U.P. (1922-1934).In 1923, he founded the Quisumbing Ink Products, that was not connected with Parker, in any way.

Though the popularity of fountain pens gradually dipped during the second half of the 20th century, Parker QUINK INK bottles and refills continue to be available today to a whole market legion traditional fountain pen users worldwide.


SOURCE

Quink Ink, Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quink


Friday, September 2, 2022

388. HORLICK’S MALTED MILK, 1927-1930 Ads

HORLICK'S PHILIPPINE AD, 1930s

HORLICK’S  is a sweet malted milk hot drink powder developed by British-born founders and brother  James and William Horlick way back in 1873. It was first sold as "Horlick's Infant and Invalids Food," soon adding "aged and travellers" to their label. In 1918, World War I  British soldiers brought it to India, where it achieved popularity as a family drink.

In Britain, HORLICK’S  was a favorite bedtime, while in other markets, it was promoted as a breakfast drink. It was in the 1920s that HORLICK’S MALTED MILK reached the Philippines and hailed as “the drink for all ages”.  HORLICK’S contains extracts of malted barley and wheat, mineral salts and milk, ingredients needed for ideal nutrition.

Early  Phil. HORLICK'S AD, 1927

The primary markets of this imported milk brand were undernourished Filipino children and women who are both beauty and health-conscious. It was sold in glass jars by druggists and leading grocers, and had the backing of doctors and nurses.

 The imported product was available through the next decades. There were even HORLICK’S Malted Tablets what were sold as candy, and which were supplied to the U.S. and UK. Troops as energy-boosting treats during the war. These HORLICK’S Tablets also became available in the country.

HORLICK'S GLASS PREMIUM, 1950a

HORLICK’S came under the ownership of  GlaxoSmithKline (Consumer Healthcare) in Australia, Bangladesh, Hong Kong, India, Jamaica, Malaysia, New Zealand, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and the U.K. until it was acquired by Unilever in 2018. The icon brand with a rich history is still in production today.

Sunday, May 15, 2022

372. BALINTAWAK BEER, ca. 1937

People in pre-war Philippines would surely remember BALINTAWAK BEER, a beer brand that came to be, thanks to Japanese investors who pooled in funds to establish a beer factory in Polo, Bulacan. This was the Balintawak Beer Brewery, founded in 1937, which launched its BALINTAWAK Pilsener Beer to the local market, bottled in amber bottles similar to San Miguel’s, with paper labels.

BALINTAWAK BEER was supported with print and radio advertising, and early ads focused on the beer’s relaxing, comforting qualities that’s perfect for social entertaining.  The KZRM airwaves was filled with songs and music from featured performers like Alicia Garong, pianist Rafael Artigas, and even a  BBB Mystery Singer.

In 1938, BALINTAWAK BEER  added its ‘Black Beer’ version, the counterpart of san Miguel’s Cerveza Negra. Like San Miguel, BALINTAWAK BLACK BEER was positioned as the drink ideal for women for its health-giving attributes.

World War II put an end to the operations of Balintawak Beer Brewery, as the plant was taken over by the Japanese forces, along with San Miguel beer plant. BALINTAWAK BEER, however, continued to be available to Filipinos.

In the 1950s, San Miguel Corporation bought the Polo plant and converted BBB into their primary brewery for their world-renowned San Miguel Beer.


 Vintage Bottle collectors are always looking for BALINTAWAK BEER bottles today for their rarity, as many of their identifying paper labels have been worn away by time.

 SOURCES:

Graphic Magazines, 1937-1939 issues

Kasaysayan, Vol. VII.  "Prewar Pesos for Japanese Goods," Yu Jose, Lydia.



Tuesday, September 7, 2021

341. Brand Stories: ELPO RUBBER SHOES of El Porvenir Rubber Products Inc., 1933

EL PORVENIR RUBBER PRODUCTS, INC. 1933

The story of El Porvenir Rubber Products Inc., more popularly known as ELPO (diminutive of El Porvenir St., “the future”, in Spanish, and the company address)  is the story of Don Tomas Geronimo, father of the rubber shoe manufacturing industry n the Philippines, who established the industrial enterprise in 1933.

ELPO FOOTWEAR CHRISTMAS AD, 1933

Don Tomas engaged in the importation and exportation of flour and sugar in the 1920s, and from this humble beginnings in Herran, he grew the business by leaps and bounds,

Upon his death in 1940, his son Carlos took over, until the company suffered great financial losses when the war came and destroyed the factory and machines.

ELPO AD, 1956

In 1946, Carlos Geronimo rebuilt the business, producing 2,000 pairs of rubber shoes a day. By the start of the 1960s, ELPO shoes were being produced at the rate of 4,000 pairs daily.  When it opened its 13,000 sq.m. Caloocan compound, Elpo was regarded as the biggest and most modern rubber shoe factory in the Philippines with over 500 employees.  Its company compound stood on a 14,000 sq. m. lot in Grace Park.

ELPO AD, 1956

ELPO Shoes became very popular nationwide by the 50s and all through the 60s. The company was awarded the “Rubber Show Manufacturer of the Year 1950”.

 SOURCES:

Article previously appeared in short form in FilipiKnow and spot.ph (used with permission)

“Porvenir Rubber Products, Inc.”1961 Philippine Business Progress Report, p. 66

Sunday, July 18, 2021

332. ISUAN SOFT DRINKS, of ISUAN Inc. 1935-1937

ISUAN SOFTDRINKS PRINT AD, 1937

One of the most popular line of softdrinks of the 1930s Philippines is the ISUAN brand (pronounced E-Swan), produced by ISUAN, Inc. The softdrinks were made from the famous ISUAN Mineral Water, sourced and bottled at Deep Hot Springs, Km. 66, Los Baños, Laguna. Aside from the all-purpose mixer , Soda Water, the flavors include Tru-Orange and Ginger Ale. Another sub-brand Dixo-Cola was added to the ISUAN line around 1935.

FORMULA FOR REFRESHMENT, ISUAN, 1935

ISUAN GINGER ALE & TRU-ORANGE, 1935

WHISKY-ISUAN, 1930s

DIXO-COLA, by ISUAN, 1930s


Wednesday, September 9, 2020

295. Pre-War ROYAL SOFT DRINKS Print Ads, San Miguel Brewery, 1925-1930s



San Miguel Brewery, which was founded back in 1889 by businessman Enrique María Barretto de Ycaza y Esteban, was primarily known for its lager beer, San Miguel Beer, and subsequent beer types like Cerveza Negra and Doble Bock.  Earning much success from beer production, San Miguel Brewery diversified its business by venturing into non-alcoholic drinks. 


The result was a line of carbonated flavored beverages known as ROYAL SOFT DRINKS, first produced in 1922 by its Royal Soft Drinks Plant at Gen. Solano, Manila. The ROYAL brand was carried by at least 20 flavor variants—from Strawberry, Lemon, Grape, Lime, Ginger Ale,Cream Soda, Root Beer, Singapore Sling, Mandarin, Soda Water, to Orangeade, Orange Squeeze, and its all-time favorite Tru-Orange. Initially, the first ROYAL beverages were packaged in stoneware bottles that were more appropriate for beer.



ROYAL SOFT DRINKS were first advertised in the leading Philippine dailies and magazines in the mid 1920s, with copy in both Spanish and English.  Consumer taste preference led to the dropping of some flavors from the line. It was clear though, that the very popular ROYAL TRU-ORANGE, led all other flavors and so was advertised separately beginning in the 1930s.




The war interrupted the production of ROYAL SOFT DRINKS, as the Japanese ook over the San Miguel Plant. The company regrouped pots-war and ROYAL TRU-ORANGE returned to the market in the 1950s, in the familiar clear bottle with a blue panel, carrying the brand name in the familiar “Royal” font that the product has used since its introduction. It was the leading orange flavored drink in the market of the 50s decade.




Wednesday, September 2, 2020

294. Brand Stories: Nestlé MILKMAID, “Marca Señorita”, 1856

MILKMAID EVAPORATED MILK, AD, 1929

The milk known in the Philippines for many years as “Marca Señorita” because of its female brand character, was a product of a dairy company founded by two American brothers, George Ham Page and Charles Page, from Dixon, Illinois.

MILKMAID SWEETTENED CONDENSED STRIP AD, 1929

 Their story began in 1865, when Charles, who was the U.S. Vice Consul of Trade was posted in Zurich, where he marveled at the sight of endless green meadows populated by grazing cows. He saw the potential of producing a new kind of processed milk that was clean and pure, and did not spoil easily due to the addition of sugar. 

MILKMAID EVAPORATED MILK AND ITS USES, 1929

Developed by Gail Borden in the 1850s, the canned “condensed milk” was supplied to American Civil War soldiers in the battlefield. Charles’s brother, George, had learned the process of making condensed milk himself,  from the Gail Borden plant in the U.S. The two brother, thus, joined their heads together, to form the Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk Company a year later, in Cham, Switzerland —the first condensed milk company in Europe—and the future international dairy giant was born.

MILKMAID EVAPORATED MILK AT ITS BEST, 1929
The condensed milk product took the world by storm. By  1868, the brothers’ Anglo-Swiss company was selling over  374,000 cartons of condensed milk, driven largely by demands from Great Britain and its colonies. With the death of Charles in 1873, George took over the helm and by 1891, the company had 12 factories in Europe and the US which exported their famed condensed milk worldwide, under the “MILKMAID” brand.

BEAUTIFUL MILKMAID BABIES OF 1929, Philippine Free Press, 1929 

Meanwhile, in another part of Switzerland,  German immigrant Henry Nestlé had started making waves with a new milk product produced by his Vevey plant. Introduced in 1867, Farine Lacteé, an infant feeding formula, became a huge marketing success. It was just a matter of time that Nestlé expanded its product line and emerged as a rival of the Anglos-Swiss Dairy Company. Despite the competition, both companies thrived due to their shared passion for producing milk products of the highest quality and standards.

1937 SEARCH FOR HAPPY, HEALTHY BABIES, conducted by MILKMAID

While talks of a merger were initially opposed by George Page, his death in 1899 paved the way for the two companies to finally join forces, and in 1905, a deal was sealed with the creation of the Nestlé and Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk Company.

As early as 1895, Nestle products like Bear Brand, were being marketed in the Philippines. It was only in 1911 that the sales office of Nestle and Anglo-Swiss Dairy Company was put up here, along Calle Renta in Binondo.

1938 SEARCH FOR HAPPY, HEALTHY MILKMAID BABIES

By the 1920s, there were already 3 milk processing plants in the country led by San Miguel’s Magnolia. To keep up with the growing demand for milk, these plants began importing European milk and reconstituted them locally. It was in this way that Bear Brand and MILKMAID became widely available in the Philippines, becoming household names.

MILKMAID was  highly promoted in the Philippines, and both its evaporated and condensed milk versions were advertised in print ads published in local magazines.

Curiously, because of the bucket-carrying milkmaid trademark illustration that identified the product, Filipinos began referring to MILKMAID as “Marca Señorita” (mark of a Miss), as Spanish was still a major language in the Philippines then. In other countries where it was sold , MILKMAID was translated in the native languages—La Lechera (Spanish), La Laitière (French), Die Milchmädchen (German).

MILKMAID gained more popularity with its ingenious promotions, including launching the search for the happy, healthy babies of the Philippines back in the late 1920s, that was regularly held till the 1930s. It encouraged parents to send photos of their bouncing, beautiful babies, and selected winners had the photos published in the leading magazines of the day.

Another promotion engaged MILKMAID users to save and collect labels to be used to get porcelain tableware marked with the brand logo. The set-building promotion included plates, saucers, cups, milk pitchers that were avidly collected by housewives for their homes.

WINNERS OF THE HAPPY, HEALTH BABIES CONTEST OF 1938

In 1955, Filipro, Inc. acquired the license to produce and market MILKMAID locally, and which later became the local Nestlé company here.  MILKMAID cans had “A Nestlé Product” printed on the label.

1956 MILKMAID 'PEPE AND PILAR' PRINT AD
A WINNER FOR BABY'S HEALTH, 1955

With the surge in prices of goods in 1959, the government stepped in to form the National Marketing Corporation (NAMARCO) to procure, buy, and distribute such commodities in short supply, with a special non-recurring dollar allocation from the Central Bank. MILKMAID was one such product endorsed by NAMARCO.


THE HOUSEHOLD FAVORITE FOR MORE THAN 50 YEARS, 1962

Throughout the 50s and 60s decade, MILKMAID advertising continued, and its position in the market was firmly entrenched,until the rise of new evaporated brands in the country like Liberty and Darigold.  Despite its core loyal users, MILKMAID started looking  more traditional as modern canned milk brands with new formulations gained their foothold. 

'SENYORITA" AND GROWING CHILDREN, 1960
GROWING CHILDREN AND SENYORITA GO TOGETHER, 1960 .

In the 1970s, MILKMAID regained prominence with the “grow Tall, Little Man” campaign, topbilled by then-chils superstar, Nino Muhlach.

THEIR HEALTH IS PRECIOUS!",MILKMAID AD,  1961

In 2007,  Nestlé gave Alaska Milk Corp. the license to manufacture and sell its MILKMAID sweetened condensed milk in the Philippines. Alaska Milk Corp, was acquired by  FrieslandCampina  in 2012, but the plant continues to produce MILKMAID, but no longer carries the Nestlé name. MILKMAID today is promoted as an ingredient for modern confections, sweet treats,  dessserts, and bakery items.


MILKMAID, under Nestle (L) and under FrieslandCampina (R)

SOURCES: