90 MICROBES AND THE MICROBE-KILLER. 



cially should the first symptoms of seasickness appear. 

 The result was that neither was sick, and they were the 

 only ones who never missed a meal. A lady who had 

 used the microbe-killer in New York wrote to me from 

 Europe that she had never passed so pleasant a trip 

 across the ocean as the last time when she used the mi- 

 crobe-killer. Previous voyages had been so disagreeable 

 that she was compelled to keep her berth from the be- 

 ginning to the end. It is the purification of the blood 

 and the removal of fermentation from the stomach sev- 

 eral weeks before making a voyage that prevents sea- 

 sickness. It is the sick who suffer most from seasick- 

 ness. Healthy persons are rarely affected with it. 



What the microbe-killer cannot cure, if taken in time, 

 I am unable to say. I cannot see the end. It can only 

 be reached by experience. I claimed at first that I had 

 discovered the cause and cure of all diseases in man . This 

 I have already proven by the cures. But as we have 

 cured horses, cows, chickens, canary birds, and other 

 animals by the same microbe-killer applied in the same 

 manner, I am entitled to claim more. Discoverers gene- 

 rally claim more than they can prove. My discovery is 

 different. Whoever has read this book carefully will 

 readily understand that whatever cures man must natu- 

 rally cure animals, for their diseases are caused by the 

 same process— microbes, which produce fermentation. 

 To reach satisfactory results in curing both, we must 

 use a certain quantity of the microbe-killer, according to 

 the bulk to be preserved. When a tumblerful of the 

 microbe-killer is required to saturate the system of a 

 man, a quart will be required to saturate the body of a 

 horse. A quart of microbe-killer will cure any form of 

 colic in a horse within from fifteen to thirty minutes, 

 whereas if the horse suffer from a disea(Se of long stand- 

 ing many gallons will be required to cure him. 



A rule which applies to the cure of man and animal is 

 that if a disease develops and kills quickly, the microbe- 

 killer must be used without delay. It must also be ad- 

 ministered in large doses and at short intervals, so that 



