HOW DISEASE CAN BE CURED AND LIFE PRESERVED. 93 



this article, and it should relieve us from further corre- 

 spondence upon the subject. 



When a young child is sick, no matter what the age 

 be, no time should be lost, but the progress of the disease 

 should be checked immediately with microbe-killer. 

 For the medicine may be used with perfect safety to the 

 youngest child, even to one only a few hours old. It 

 cleanses the blood, prevents fermentation, and is bene- 

 ficial in all diseases to which children are subject. I 

 have had considerable experience with children, and 

 have found that when the microbe-killer is used regularly 

 children seldom have trouble of any kind, thus proving 

 that it acts as a preventive as well as a cure. This 

 might be expected, because by the habitual use the sys- 

 tem is kept in good order and microbes are destroyed 

 as fast as they appear. Children are fond of it. The 

 flavor is agreeable, and they take it readily ; and, when 

 they are allowed to do so regularly, their skins become 

 perfectly clear and healthy. The capillary circulation 

 becomes normal, the little ones have rosy cheeks, and 

 not a pimple or spot upon their bodies. 



We can preserve wood and stone from fungi ; it is 

 natural, therefore, that we should preserve the body, as 

 my medicine proves that we can. It only needs to be 

 known to every family as it is to me, and children will 

 no longer be down with measles, scarlet fever, or any of 

 the other troubles of childhood. They will take the mi- 

 crobe-killer freely in time, when the very first symptoms 

 appear, and they will hear no more of such epidemics. 

 In fact, even if the medicine is not used habitually, it 

 should be taken whenever any disease is prevalent, and 

 it will protect the person from an attack. 



It may be thought that by constant use its effects will 

 be lost, but it is not so. Some medicines, especially 

 many aperients and cathartics, do act in that way. 

 They produce an immediate action on the bowels, and a 

 torpidity follows, just as the action of some medicines is 

 cumulative, like arsenic. So no effect may be produced 



