Title

Alka-Seltzer Brand Antacid & Analgesic Tablets – Multiple Vintage Packages

Author

Miles Laboratories, Inc. – Elkhart, Indiana

Image

Side-by-side vintage boxes with Miles Laboratories branding

Description

These vintage Alka-Seltzer packages showcase multiple design eras of the iconic effervescent remedy known for its fizzy relief of headaches, indigestion, and body aches. Manufactured by Miles Laboratories of Elkhart, Indiana, the kits include glass bottles and cardboard packaging that span from the early postwar period through at least 1971. Early “Original” versions prominently feature buffered aspirin, while later boxes highlight analgesic and alkalizing effects. One version even includes a now-defunct promotional offer for a free roll of color film—a marketing tactic that speaks to its mid-20th-century popularity.

Condition

Varied. Some boxes show moderate edge wear, surface grime, and crushed flaps. The glass bottles are intact and still contain tablets. Print remains legible. One box has torn interior flaps and some debris; another features a clean example of a 1971 film coupon intact.

Gallery

Historical context

Introduced in 1931, Alka-Seltzer became one of the most iconic over-the-counter medicines in American history. Marketed for “acid indigestion, headache, and excess stomach acid,” it was a staple in mid-century home cabinets and famously advertised with the slogan, “Plop plop, fizz fizz, oh what a relief it is!” The packaging here predates the modern plastic tube format, using glass bottles and heavily branded boxes.

Curious Facts, Ephemera, and Trivia

  • The back of one box includes a mail-in coupon for a free roll of Kodak-compatible color film—a $1.25 value, for just 25 cents shipping, with expiration in March 1971.

  • The active ingredients list includes aspirin, sodium bicarbonate, mono-calcium phosphate, and citric acid—creating the signature fizz when dissolved.

  • Miles Laboratories was later acquired by Bayer, which still produces Alka-Seltzer today.

  • The design evolution of the boxes—from “gold box” to blue-and-white—mirrors broader design shifts in mid-century consumer packaging.

Excerpt

“With specially buffered aspirin for speedy relief of upset stomach, headache, body aches and pains.”

Why it is in the Cabinet

These boxes represent more than a remedy—they’re artifacts of American pharmaceutical marketing, mid-century medicine, and consumer culture. From the fizzy chemistry to the free film gimmick, they perfectly embody the era when over-the-counter medicine became household identity.

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