Many years ago a sharp-witted
scamp appeared in one of the
European countries, and offered
for sale a pill, which he
declared to be a sure protection
against earthquakes. Absurd as
was the assertion, he sold large
quantities of his nostrum, and
grew rich on the proceeds. The
credulity which enriched this
man, is still a marked
characteristic of the human
race, and often strikingly
exhibits itself in this country.
The quack doctors, or
medical impostors, live upon it
and do all in their power to
encourage it.
There are quite a number of such
men in New York, and they offer
to cure all manner of diseases.
Some offer their wares for a
small sum, others charge
enormous prices. Frequently one
of these men will personate half
a dozen different characters.
The newspapers are full of their
advertisements, some of which
are really unfit for the columns
of a respectable journal.
Besides these, they send
thousands of circulars, through
the mails, to persons in various
parts of the country, setting
forth the horrors of certain
diseases, and offering to cure
them for a fixed sum. The
circular contains an elaborate
description of the symptoms or
premonitory signs of these
diseases. A very large number of
persons, reading these
descriptions, really come to the
conclusion that they are
affected in the manner stated by
the quack.
So great is the power of the
imagination in these cases, that
sound healthy men are,
sometimes, absolutely led to
fancy themselves in need of
medical attention. A short
conversation with their regular
physicians, would soon undeceive
them, but they foolishly send
their money to the author of the
circular in question, and
request a quantity of his
medicine for the purpose of
trying it. The nostrum is
received in due time, and is
accompanied by a second
circular, in which the patient
is coolly informed that he must
not expect to be cured by one
bottle, box, or package, as the
case may be, but that five or
six, or sometimes a dozen will
be necessary to complete the
cure, especially if the case is
as desperate and stubborn as the
letter applying for the medicine
seems to indicate. Many are
foolish enough to take the whole
half dozen bottles or packages,
and in the end are no better in
health than they were at first.
Indeed they are fortunate if
they are not seriously injured
by the doses they have taken.
They are disheartened in nine
cases out of ten, and are, at
length, really in need of good
medical advice. They have paid
the quack more money than a good
practitioner would demand for
his services, and have only been
injured by their folly.
It may be safely said that no
honest and competent physician
will undertake to treat cases by
letter. No one worthy of
patronage will guarantee a cure
in any case, for an educated
practitioner understands that
cases are many and frequent
where the best human skill may
be exerted in vain. Further than
this, a physician of merit will
not advertise himself in the
newspapers, except to announce
the location of his office or
residence. Such physicians are
jealous of their personal and
professional reputations, and
are proud of their calling,
which is justly esteemed one of
the noblest on earth. They are
men of humanity and learning,
and they take, perhaps, more
pleasure in relieving suffering
than in making money. If a
patient cannot pay for their
services, they give them free in
the name of the Great Healer of
all ills. They have no such
things as private remedies. They
use their knowledge for the good
of mankind, and are prompt to
make known their discoveries, so
that all the world may enjoy the
benefit, they themselves being
rewarded with the fame of their
inventions.
Not so with the quacks. A few
have some medical knowledge, and
are even graduates of regular
colleges, but the majority have
neither medical knowledge nor
skill. They know their remedies
are worthless, and they offer
them only to make money. They
know in many cases that their
nostrums will inflict positive
injury upon their victims; but
they are careless of the harm
they do. They live upon human
misery.
We may safely assure the reader
that not one single physician,
so called, who conducts his
business by means of
advertisements or circulars, is
really competent to treat the
cases he professes to cure, and
that no one knows this better
than himself. Do not answer any
advertisement you may see in the
newspapers. They are worthless.
Above all do not take the
medicines sent you by the
advertisers. Some of them are
poisonous substances. If you
doubt this assertion, take the
compound to any druggist of your
acquaintance, and ask him to
analyze it, and tell you what it
is worth as a healing agent. If
you need medical advice, go to
some physician that you know and
have confidence in. Don't put
yourself in the hands of a man
you know nothing of, who would
just as soon poison you as heal
you, and who pursues his
calling, in most cases, in
violation of the laws of the
land. Let quack doctors, or, in
other words, advertising
doctors, alone.
Patent Medicines
As a general rule, the various
medicines advertised as
"specifics," or
"panaceas," for
various ills, are humbugs. They
are worthless. Many of them are
made up of harmless drugs, which
can do no harm, if, as is very
certain, they do no good; but
others are composed of very
dangerous substances. The
remedies advertised for
"private diseases"
rarely fail to make the patient
worse, either by aggravating the
disease itself, or by
permanently injuring the
constitution. The "Elixirs
of Life," "Life
Rejuvenators," "Vital
Fluids," etc., are either
dangerous poisons, or worthless
draughts. They contain mercury
to a very large extent; and
anyone acquainted with the
properties of this substance can
easily understand how great is
the danger of using them. The
certificates accompanying them,
as testimonials of their merits,
are simply forgeries. Some
rascally proprietors have not
hesitated to use the names of
prominent public men, without
either their knowledge or
consent, in this way. Some of
these forgeries have been
discovered and exposed, but the
majority pass unnoticed. Rest
assured, dear reader, that men
of character are very chary of
such use of their names.
The various bitters which flood
the country are only cheap
whiskey, or rum and water, made
nauseous with drugs. They have
no virtue whatever, as medicinal
agents, and merely injure the
tone of the stomach. Their chief
result is to establish the habit
of intemperance. They are more
fiery than ordinary liquors, and
more destructive in their
effects. The various medicinal
wines which are offered for
sale, are decoctions of
elderberry juice and kindred
substances, and are more hurtful
than beneficial.
The "washes,"
"lotions,"
"toilet fluids," etc.,
are generally apt to produce
skin diseases. They contain, in
almost every instance,
substances which are either
directly or indirectly poisonous
to the skin. The
"tooth washes,"
"powders," and "dentifrices,"
are hurtful. They crack or wear
away the enamel of the teeth,
leave the nerve exposed, and
cause the teeth to decay. If you
are wise, dear reader, you will
never use a dentifrice, unless
you know what it is made of. The
principal constituent of these dentifrices
is a powerful acid, and there
are some which contain large
quantities of sulphuric acid,
one single application of which
will destroy
the best teeth in the world.
The "hair dyes,"
advertised under so many
different names, contain such
poisons as nitrate of silver,
oxide of lead, acetate of lead,
and sulphate of copper. These
are fatal to the hair, and
generally injure the scalp. The
"ointments" and "unguents,"
for promoting the growth of
whiskers and moustaches, are
either perfumed and colored
lard, or poisonous compounds,
which contain quick lime, or
corrosive sublimate, or some
kindred substance. If you have
any acquaintance who has ever
used this means of covering his
face with a manly down, ask him
which came first, the beard, or
a troublesome eruption on the
face.
Retired Physicians
One of the popular
"dodges" of the rogues
who sell such compounds as we
have been describing, is to
insert such an advertisement as
the following in the newspapers
of the country.
"A RETIRED PHYSICIAN, of
forty years' practice,
discovered, while in India, a
sure remedy for consumption,
bronchitis, colds, etc. Having
relinquished his practice, he
has no further use for the
remedy, and will send it free on
receipt of a three cent stamp to
pay return postage."
Sometimes the advertisement is
that of a "retired
clergyman," and sometimes
it is in the following form:
"A lady who has been cured
of great nervous debility, after
many years of misery, desires to
make known to all fellow
sufferers, the sure means of
relief. Address, enclosing a
stamp, Mrs.----, P. O. box--,
New York, and the prescription
will be sent free by return
mail."
A single moment's reflection
ought to convince any sensible
person that the parties thus
advertising are humbugs. It
costs a great deal to advertise,
and as the announcements we
refer to can be seen in every
paper in the land, it is safe to
say that the "retired
physician" and
"clergyman," or the
"nervous lady," expend
each from five to ten thousand
dollars per annum in
advertising. The reader will see
at a glance, that, however
benevolent such parties may be,
they cannot afford to give away
so much money every year.
The manner in which the
business is managed is as
follows: The "retired
physician" and
"clergyman," and the
"nervous lady," are
one and the same individual. The
man personating them is an
ignorant knave. He scatters his
advertisements broadcast over
the land. Letters come, asking
for his valuable recipe. He
sends the prescription, and
notifies the party asking for
it, that if the articles named
in it cannot be procured by him
at any drug store convenient to
him, he, the "retired
physician,"
"clergyman," or
"nervous lady," will
furnish them, upon application,
at a certain sum, (generally
averaging five dollars,) which
he assures him is very cheap, as
the drugs are rare and
expensive.
The articles named in the
prescription are utterly unknown
to any druggist in the world,
and the names are the production
of the quack's own brains, and,
as a matter of course, the
patient is unable to procure
them at home, and sends an order
for them with the price, to the
"retired physician,"
"clergyman," or
"nervous lady," and in
return receives a nostrum
compounded of drugs, which any
apothecary could have furnished
at one half the expense. In this
way the "benevolence"
of the quack is very profitable.
Men have grown rich in this
business, and it is carried on
to an amazing extent in this
city. It is done in violation of
the law, and the benevolent
individual not infrequently
falls into the hands of the
police, but, as soon as
released, he opens his business
under a new name. As long as
there are fools and dupes in the
world, so long will the
"retired physician"
find an extensive practice.
Any one who chooses to do so,
can verify our statement by a
simple application at the police
headquarters of this city. The
accomplished and energetic
Superintendent of the
Metropolitan force is a stern
foe to swindlers of all kinds,
and he can furnish any one who
desires it with more interesting
details on this subject than we
can possibly give. One proof of
our assertions is the fact that
these quack doctors and patent
medicine proprietors rarely use
their own names in their
business. They operate under
a variety of aliases.