A newspaper's investigation. 1Y7 



cine. His appetite was better and there was less fer- 

 mentation in the lungs. In a few months he was prac- 

 tically well, and is alive and in good health to-day. His. 

 appreciation of the medicine was so great that he came 

 to Mr. Radam and told him of a woman relative of his 

 who was suffering from cancer of the breast. Again 

 Mr. Radam told him he dare not prescribe the medicine, 

 but he was perfectly willing to make up another jug of 

 the gas and place it where it could be stolen. This 

 was done and in a short time the young woman also re- 

 covered. 



By this time the report had gone abroad that Mr. Rad- 

 am had discovered a wonderful medicine which had 

 performed wonderful cures. Sick people visited him by 

 the dozens. Still Mr. Radam did not dare openly advo- 

 cate the medicine. He talked candidly with the people 

 who came to see him. All offers of compensation Mr. 

 Radam refused, because, as he said, he was not in the 

 medicine business, and through gratitude in recovering 

 from his own diseases he could well afford to allow a 

 good many jugs of his remedy to be given away. 



Almost as much to his own surprise as to the surprise 

 of others, the medicine seemed to cure every disease upon 

 which it was tried. It proved then, what Mr. Radam 

 has since proven to the scientific world, that all diseases 

 are caused by microbes, and that the microbes produce 

 fermentation and decay. To cure the disease it was only 

 necessary to kill the microbes, stop fermentation, and 

 the object was accomplished. 



The demands for Mr. Radam 's medicine were so great 

 that he agreed to place it upon the market at a nominal 

 price. He now feared no attacks from the physicians 

 or persecution from the laws, as he had successfully 

 demonstrated that his remedy was harmless as water, 

 and furthermore that it had effected marvellous cures 

 in many cases and had actually benefited every person 

 who had tried it. On account of the manner in which 

 he discovered it and the action of the medicine itself, he 

 gave to it the name '' Microbe-Killer." 



12 



