JF Ptak Science Books Post 1691 Part of the Series on Blank, Empty and Missing Things: Promises.
Quackery in general has survived in spite of itself over many fields, not the least of which is astrology and creation "science", cults, religions, and walking-with-the-dead. In the U.S. in the 1910-1925 period however there was a attempt at investigating the most outrageous frauds in the medical profession by the American Medical Association, and of the many sorts of quacks and frauds-liver cures, neuralgia miracles, electro-vibrator hair restorers and lump removers, anti-droopy happiness pills, cocaine nervous system remedies, and so on--what I'd like to look at right now is concerned with "flesh reduction", or fat cures.
[Photograph of a neon sign, Manhattan, 1941, by Weegee from Naked City.]
According to the AMA (in a 1934 retrospective) the chief stimulant to the obesity industry was the rise of womens' fashions. I think that the reasoning might wind itself around the growth of expendable money in the American rising middle class, where Americans, in general, had more money to spend on the non-essentials than any time in the history of the country. That leads to more consumables, and that leads to more advertising, and that leads to more idealized images of what people should look like, and that leads to wanting to look like that, and that opens the door to scammers who offer a way to get to the not-actual ideal without effort and for little money. And so in the '20's there was a spike in quack remedies for obesity, as there was little or no control over the content of what was being sold nor the claims about what the product did, medically speaking-there was general protection from fraud, of course, but the medical compliment for establishing what that actually was wasn't quite yet in place.
There is a veritable alphabet (soup) of mondo bizarre cures that the AMA attacked and ripped apart during the 1920's, publishing the findings of their labs on the ingredients of the cures and the possibilities of whether any of the hundreds (thousands?) of these things worked at all.
And what the AMA found was really pretty remarkable--lots of water, sugar, tartar,
tinctures of useless this and that, desicated liver, seaweed, salt, lemon, and that
sort of thing, none of which had any value for weight reduction whatsoever. A
major ingredient, for some reason, was focus vesiculosus, also known as
bladderwrack, sea-wrack, kelp-ware and sea-oak--there was no indication of why this
ingredient was so popular, especially since it was used in some farms as a pig feed
to make the animals fat.
So, aside from the pig-fattening ingredient for human "flesh reduction", we'll have a quick alphabetical tour of some of the outrageous (and bizarrely-named) products and their components promising hope and physical happiness to the woman of 1925. (Let's note that the following are just locally-applied or ingested cures-there's an entire universe of external applications and devices that were used to solve the problem of fat. For example, the Violet Ray Machine claimed that in addition to obesity it would cure "Problems with circulation of the blood, the heart's action, bumps of the funny-bone, germ infections, weakness, the waste of the body, congestion, impaired physical development, pains and aches, complexion and skin diseases, facial and body blemishes, hair loss, headaches, inflammation of joints, muscles, nerves, Atrophy, circulatory disorders, constipation, deafness, goitre, high blood pressure, arteriosclerosis, insomnia (sleeplessness-Brain Fag), indigestion, dyspepsia, neuritis, nervousness, hysteria, melancholia, neurasthenia, neuralgia, obesity, pain, paralysis, prostate gland problems, scalp diseases, falling hair, dandruff, asthma, anemia, bronchitis, catarrh, hay fever, rose fever, colds and other inflammations of the upper air passages, and, of course, cancer." This quote with thanks from the Museum of Quack Meidcal Therapy Devices
And so to the consumable and applied quack fat cures:
Absorbit Reducing Paste-one of my favorites. This was a nighttime sleeping paste
which was composed of 44% lard as well as beeswax, oil and milk. After slathering
yourself in this oily, waxy, milky fat cocoon (the sheets!) you were also supposed
to ingest an accompanying night aid pill, which was 24% sulphur and 61% sugar. So
not only would you be oily milky waxy lardy, you'd also be stinky and, at the end of
it all, hyper.
Allmans Anti Fat Anti Pon (?)). According to its label, it was a "powerful and
entirely harmless specific", which the AMA revealed to be composed of citric acid,
water and food coloring. Sounds like Kool Aid.
Arbolone tablets. These guys were made of desiccated thyroid, starch, lime and sugar.
Basy Bread was a "anti growth" bread which turned out to be just a course wheat bread
Clark's Thinning Salts was almost entirely washing soda.
Dalloff's Time Pills were made of lavender and bearberry.
Elfin Fat reducing Gum Drops (continuing its spectacular name by saying it was a
product of the Pep-Giving Product Co., Inc.), was actually one of the only items
that might have contributed to weight loss, if only for the fact that in addition to
consuming its drops made of laxative and sugar you were supposed to adhere to a
pretty regimented, difficult exercise routine. Big sweat and potent laxative does
in fact produce weight loss. Maybe not a good weight loss, but aa weight loss
nevertheless.
Elimiton (!) was a product made of caffeine and rhubarb.
Every Woman's Flesh Reducer promised a new figure with their mixture of Epsom salt
and camphor.
Fatsoff, a soap product that you washed with, was not surprisingly made of soap.
Fayro was another soap and washing flesh reduction "package" that asserted that by
using their secret flesh reducing salve (i.e., "soap"), you would "open your pores
to let the blood cells sweat off fat". I could just about see the AMA guy who was
writing their description of this thing slamming his pen and screaming.
Some other F's included Fells Reducing Tablets (which were milk), Figurroids (salty
baking soda), Floradona (sodium thiosulphate, the photographer's "hypo"), and Folt's
Reducing Soap (which was, again, soap).
Get Slim was a vile purgative of sugar, tartar and baking soda, plus perfumes.
Hall's Tablet Triturates were ginger and a big shake of chalk; Hargreaves Reducing
Wafers (bread and liquorice).
J.Z. Obesity tablets--were the same product as Absorbit which was the same as
Zobeide (minus the ox mucus).
LaMar reducing Soap ("to wash away fat") was soap.
Marmola, "a thyroid-containing obesity cure" was composed of cornstalk, borax, baking
soda and tartaric acid, with a special "constipation agent" (?), as well as a lot of
salt.
Morlene would reduce goitersm neck fat, bust size and tumors, somehow, with the
application of its cleansing elements (soap).
Neutroid seems to have been the most lethal of the hundreds tested, contaning bad
dollops of magnesium carbonate and iodol, and was taken internally (where external
application could prove fatal).
Oil of Korein was pretty nasty stuff, containing sassafrass and about 75% petrolatum
(a semi-solid mixture of hydrocarbons, or petroleum jelly), though it also offered
some really good advice on foods to avoid if you didn't want to actually gain
weight.
Phy-thy-rin was a calcium and sugar coated pill of iodine and dried thyroid, with
plenty of sugar, and liquorice.
Rusell's Anti-Corpulent {reparation was a powdered added to water that would
effectively produce orange Kool-Aid.
Sangra Bath Salts was perhaps the most outrageously simple, being just colored bath
salt. Slendaform ("just gently rub it in, and watch yourself get thin"), was a
half-pound jar of oil of turpentine, white vinegar and milk curd. Slyphine, which
crowded its ads with tremendous claims to be "Absolutely The Best Weight Reducer
Ever Discovered" and other very shouty claims (by somehow "attracting surplus
fat"), was simply borax and talc.
Dr. Vincent's Anti-Stout Pills contained a pretty sounding mixture of aloes, jalap,
cloves and bladderwrack.
Mme. Yale's Fertilizer Tablets-I'm not sure about the real use of "fertilizer"
here.) was actually one of the earliest of these frauds to be attacked by the
government, being charged with fraud by "misbranding" in 1909, as federal chemists
could find no connection between weight loss and its sole ingredients of sugar,
charcoal and cream of tartar.
Lastly, we offer Zobeude, which was just Absorbit Reducing Paste relabled for
British consumption, though it seems to have contained an added ingredient of
"purified ox bile". We are told in Bruce's Materia Medica of 1884 that "Purified ox
bile has the composition of fresh bile, less the mucus ."
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