Adolphus Hohensee
Appearance
Adolphus Hohensee | |
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Born | 1901 |
Died | October 5, 1967 |
Occupation(s) | Naturopath, writer |
Adolphus Hohensee (1901 – October 5, 1967)[1] was a naturopath, fraudulent nutritionist and quack from the twentieth century.
Career
Hohensee described himself as a doctor but held no valid qualifications. It was discovered that his "Doctor of Naturopathy" degree was obtained from two schools he never attended.[2]
He campaigned against processed foods and advertised his mineral and
peppermint tea as a cure for "gall stones, colic, flatulence, headache, rheumatism, high blood pressure, arthritis, prostate trouble, lumbago, fits, convulsions, colitis, tuberculosis, asthma, pin worms and tape worms."[5]
Hohensee had repeatedly violated the
Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.[5] In 1955, Hohensee and his companies were charged on seven counts of a Federal Grand Jury indictment for misbranding their food products. The companies were fined and Hohensee was sentenced to a year in prison in 1957.[4] Susan Gilbert in Medical Fakes and Frauds noted that "Hohensee was convicted of fraud in 1957, but even before then he was exposed as a hypocrite. A photographer for the Houston Press caught Hohensee in a restaurant gorging himself on processed bread and fried fish and quenching his thirst with beer."[3] In 1962, he was given an eighteen-month prison term for selling honey under false pretences.[2]
Hohensee was influenced by the Bates method and authored the book, Better Eyes Without Glasses (1944).
Publications
- Better Eyes Without Glasses (1944)
- Nature's Key to Youthfulness and Longevity (1948)
- The Adolphus Cook Book of Balanced Meals (1951)
- Constipation: Its Causes, Effects, and Corrections : Appendicitis, Tonsillitis, Arthritis and Longevity (1952)
- How to Think and Attain Success (1952)
- Love, Romance, Sex and Success (1959)
References
- ^ "Adolphus Hohensee dies Oct 5, 1967". Retrieved 8 Feb. 2019.
- ^ ISBN 0-87975-855-4
- ^ ISBN 0-7910-0090-7
- ^ a b Smith, Ralph Lee. (1960). The Health Hucksters. Crowell. p. 156
- ^ a b c Hoeber, Ralph Carl Louis. (1986). Contemporary Business Law: Principles and Cases. McGraw-Hill. p. 135