Rapidity of Action. 



The method of taking the tincture is extremely simple. 

 Two or three drops are added to a glass of cold water and drunk 

 before meals. The effect is most striking. After the first 

 few doses, the characteristic irritation caused by the parasites 

 ceases, and the worms which appear in the stools are mostly 

 dead. To make assurance doubly sure, the doses of the 

 tincture are repeated until no more worms are passed, and 

 the sufferer is entirely freed from the trouble. The rapidity 

 with which the drug does its work is not the least of its merits. 

 Indeed, if it is a child which has been attacked by worms, it 

 often becomes rosy, bright-eyed and cheerful again within 

 two or three days. 



Reliability. 



The usefulness of this tincture is not a matter of speculation. 

 It has undergone practical test with a large number of sufferers. 

 It has been taken with complete success by men, women, 

 and children of all ages ; it has been quite effective in many 

 obstinate and long-standing cases of the complaint, where 

 orthodox treatments have previously proved unsatisfactory 

 or useless ; indeed, it has never, to my knowledge, failed in a 

 single instance to dislodge and destroy the parasite. I have, 

 therefore, no hesitation in declaring it to be thoroughly 

 reliable. 



Harmlessness. 



The medicine is tasteless and odourless, and is taken readily 

 even by young children. Its administration calls for no 

 preliminary, or accessory, measures, such as fasting, purgation 

 or injections. It is not poisonous, even in an over-dose. It 

 causes neither pain nor diarrhoea. Unlike most drugs given 

 as " cures " for worms, it does not irritate the mucous lining 

 of the alimentary canal, however sensitive the subject. It is, 

 therefore, in no way unpleasant, and is perfectly harmless 

 even to the youngest infant 1 ; while the medical man who 



1 The danger to infants of so- in their operation. How many 



called worm-remedies was recog- lives have fallen a sacrifice to 



nised as early as the 18th century : anthelmintick cakes, worm-killing 



"What adds to the misfortune of powders, and drastic purges ! " 



infants is that most of the remedies (HuLME, N., A safe and easy 



which are recommended for the remedy for the destruction of worms 



destruction of worms, are either in the human body, London, 1778, 



harsh in their nature, or violent pp. 21,22.) 



