Dubious offerings from Sears

Filed under: Errata, Finds — olivander September 23, 2008 @ 6:10 pm

My research on Conley cameras takes me through a lot of early 20th-Century Sears catalogs. Tens of thousands of mail-order items could be had from their sprawling Chicago warehouses. A person could literally buy a pre-fabricated house, furnish it, stock the pantry, fill the medicine cabinet, line the library shelves, clothe the family, and put a car in the garage–all from one catalog. In the days before the Internet, the Sears catalog was the Internet; you didn’t need anything more. Their series of international stereoviews–65¢ per 100–was the armchair traveler’s Wikipedia.

Looking at them today, some of the products on the market at the time range from the quaintly amusing to the downright bizarre. In sprite of their respectable reputation, Sears, Roebuck, & Co were not above peddling snake oil. For your entertainment, here are a few products from the 1906 Sears catalog that are dubious at best:

Magnetic teething necklace
This is a mix of weird and sad. One can’t help but wonder how many of these things were sold before people figured out that they were bogus. One also has to wonder at what point the device began to strangle the poor little kids.

Edit: holy shit, you can still buy them.


I can actually see the practical purpose of this. Hot water tanks were a luxury, and didn’t hold much water. At the same time, you can’t imagine yourself actually using one of these, can you?


Hope your feet aren’t sweaty. Bzzzt!


“Legs half-off for legs half-off!” Man, what I wouldn’t give to come across a Sears Artificial Leg Pamplet on eBay.

Tomorrow, we’ll explore some of the medicinal products you could ingest for your, um, health.

4 Comments »

  1. I am horrified that the teething necklaces are still sold! I mean, they routinely issue recalls for kid’s sweatshirts with strings in them, for gawd’s sake.

    Comment by Strikethru — September 24, 2008 @ 1:28 am

  2. Plus, is that kid wearing a monocle?

    I’d think an artificial leg is one of those purchases you might not want an off-the-rack size for. I say spend the extra $40 and have it custom made and fitted. But that’s just me.

    I think the woman in that showering yoke is surprised by the appearance of a naked child there in the room with her. He’s probably taunting her because she’s wearing a showering yoke. She can’t do anything about the taunting, however, because she’s wearing a showering yoke.

    Comment by duffymoon — September 24, 2008 @ 7:09 am

  3. Magnetism! The Snake Oil that Keeps on Giving! I’d laugh, but a quick search on “magnetic shoe insert” shoes a lot of products for the low-low price of $9.99 a pair. I think the foot model would have been wise to save their eighteen cents and spend it on some wider, non-magnetized shoes.

    Comment by mpclemens — September 24, 2008 @ 3:15 pm

  4. That kid can’t help but bring to mind the liqueur decanter you used to see that had the nekkid boy on top that dispensed your drink..ahem…naughtily. Perhaps that’s what he’s doing in her tub. Only it ain’t scotch.

    Comment by olivander — September 25, 2008 @ 4:26 pm

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