'Oxypathor', oxygen absorption machine, Canada, 1911-1915

Object

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Accession Number
OBJ_0026275
Materials and Techniques
instrument, nickel plated
instrument, cloth
instrument, string
case, aluminium
case, cork
box, paper
box, metal
Place
Ontario, Canada
Description
"Oxypathor", a quack device for increasing the body's absorbtion of oxygen, Canadian, 1910-1920;The Oxypathor was a ‘quack’ device designed by E. L. Moses of Buffalo United States. It allowed the body to absorb extra oxygen via a cord attached to the wrist and ankle. Attached to this cord and placed in a bowl of water was a sealed metal cylinder containing sand or carbon, or sometimes nothing. The all-curing device supposedly helped conditions such as diphtheria, blood disorders, catarrh, kidney trouble, heart trouble, gallstones, blood poisoning, pneumonia, typhoid fever and ‘most forms of paralysis.’ The American Post Office Department won a criminal fraud case against Moses in 1915. He was sentenced to 18 months in jail for promoting quack devices.
Description
"Oxypathor", a quack device for increasing the body's absorbtion of oxygen, Canadian, 1910-1920;The Oxypathor was a ‘quack’ device designed by E. L. Moses of Buffalo United States. It allowed the body to absorb extra oxygen via a cord attached to the wrist and ankle. Attached to this cord and placed in a bowl of water was a sealed metal cylinder containing sand or carbon, or sometimes nothing. The all-curing device supposedly helped conditions such as diphtheria, blood disorders, catarrh, kidney trouble, heart trouble, gallstones, blood poisoning, pneumonia, typhoid fever and ‘most forms of paralysis.’ The American Post Office Department won a criminal fraud case against Moses in 1915. He was sentenced to 18 months in jail for promoting quack devices.
See Elsewhere
MDS record link
Record Rights
Science Museum Group
CC BY
From The Collection Of
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