Paw, your comment sent me back for another reading of the "small space" ads, as we used to call 'em when I was a paste-up artist for Learning magazine.
Yeah, phlogiston...I remember it well. Supposedly phlogiston existed in flammable materials and was released when an item burned. I looked it up on Wikipedia and found this wonderfully loopy theory, which introduces a new catchword: dephlogisticate!
Phlogiston theory states that phlogisticated substances are substances that contain phlogiston and dephlogisticate when burned. Dephlogisticating is when the substance releases the phlogiston inside it and that phlogiston is absorbed by the air. Growing plants then absorb this phlogiston, which is why air does not spontaneously combust and also why plant matter burns as well as it does.
So maybe Antiphlogistine dephlogisticates the boils. Speaking of boils, they were a big deal when I was a kid and they were mentioned frequently. I once had a mean one on my knee that hurt like hell and was gross to boot. However I haven't even heard the word in decades. Did Antiphlogistine make boils extinct?
In the "everything old is new again" department, Canada Dry have just started an ad campaign with a message quite similar to the one here: wholesome, pure, finest genuine ginger etc. There's also been a spate of TV ads for a children's laxative. I swear I never heard of a constipated toddler until I started reading these old magazines. But here they are back again.
A nod now to the new miracle fabrics in Blue Swan undies: Laton, Celatone, Swantone, Doubletone (also the name of an art paper used by newspaper cartoonists), Suedetone, Tricotone, Twinkletone (!), and best of all, SPUN-LO! A couple of these sound like the names of Golden Age science-fiction villains. Note the Blue Swan office is in the Empire State Building. Maybe they supplied Ann Darrow's underwear.