16S MICROBES AND THE MICROBE-KILLER, 



Seven years ago he began the warfare with ideas and 

 principles which electrified the whole world. He could 

 not then argue like his opponents, but he accomplished 

 results which proved what arguments could never prove. 

 For seven years these results have been accumulating, 

 until to-day there are one million people who believe in 

 him, trust in him, and bless him for his discovery. 

 This man is William Kadam, the inventor and discoverer 

 of JRadam's Microbe-Killer. 



It is easy enough to laugh at a new discovery. At 

 first men laughed at the telegraph, the cable, and the tele- 

 phone, and called them pretty toys. They don't laugh 

 any more. It is easy enough to laugh at a man who says 

 he can cure all diseases with a single medicine, but what 

 are you going to do when he proves his assertion ? 



The intelligent man, when confronted with something 

 new, listens carefully to both sides, hears all the argu- 

 ments, and then comes to a decision. The foolish person 

 does not. Any person who will read this article care- 

 fully will learn several things he had never imagined 

 possible, and if he is fair in his judgment he will say 

 that the name of William Radam ought to be in every 

 book of history and upon the lips of every schoolboy. 



There is a pretty romance of facts concerning this 

 wonderful discovery, unequalled in fiction. Twenty-five 

 years ago William Radam, a young man, then twenty- 

 five years old, landed in New York. He was a German 

 and had been in the employ of Emperor William in the 

 Imperial Gardens in Bellevue. There he had learned how 

 to care for flowers and trees. He never expected to 

 enter any other business, because among flowers and 

 trees he was happy — they were his children. From 

 New York Mr. Radam went South, and with his im- 

 perial recommendations secured a position as gardener at 

 the St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans. Here he remained 

 two years. During that time he contracted malarial 

 fever and was compelled to give up his position. 



Texas was then described as a good section for an in- 

 valid. Thither Mr. Radam went, and in Austin, Tex., 



