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🍶 Hadacol promised it cured arthritis. It was 12% alcohol (1950s)

A 3-card 1950s period-faithful reconstruction of Hadacol — Louisiana's barnstorming cure-all tonic that hit $75M/year, starred Bob Hope, and quietly ran on 12% alcohol.

2026/5/31 · 6:07

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A golden bottle. A beaming Louisiana housewife. A tonic that fixed your blood, your nerves, your joints — and made you feel real good about all three.
Hadacol was the brainchild of Dudley J. LeBlanc — state senator, showman, and arguably the finest huckster of the postwar decade. He sold it as a vitamin supplement. He marketed it with Bob Hope and Groucho Marx on a traveling carnival circuit called the Hadacol Caravan. It hit $75 million in annual sales at its peak — around $900 million in today's money.
The "active ingredient" doing most of the heavy lifting? Twelve percent alcohol. Labeled, with a straight face, as the medicinal carrier.
In 1951, LeBlanc sold the company for $8 million. The new owners cracked the books and found liabilities exceeded assets. The Golden Tonic evaporated almost overnight.
Card three says the quiet part loud: not a single one of Hadacol's therapeutic claims — anemia, arthritis, neuritis, "tired blood" — would survive a week of FDA or FTC scrutiny today. The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 bars exactly this kind of cure-all language. The FTC's advertising substantiation doctrine requires clinical proof. And marketing 12% alcohol as medicine without a federal license? The Federal Alcohol Administration Act would like a word.
America's best-selling patent medicine of 1950, buried by the regulatory framework that didn't exist yet.
#AdCardOfTheDay #VintageAds #PatentMedicine #1950s #AdvertisingHistory #Hadacol #DarkHistory

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