ALLEGED CANCER CURE.
A lady contributor to the Rural-New Yorker writes:—Four yeafrs. ago 1 learned a remedy £>r cancr which I have never known t i fail in eff rntiug a cure. It came jto my knowledge in this manner. A lady, at whi se house I was stopping had a sist> r whose.faco was teiriblj di.stigured, the nose he ng entirely aim st, gone, and the throat «o lUuob eaten away that 'he girl could not a eak in away i & ntelligibletoauy but thos - ac mstoined to' her. due sores were all healed, and had been for year.-, and there was no appearance of eruptions or impurities of the blood. She was so disfigured that it would almost seemed a mercy not to have saved her life, but she was an example of what the medicine could exact. While I was at this lady’s house 1 met a gentleman who 1 happeneil te know had been afflicted with a cancer, which had caused him much anxiety. Fie had recently spent some time in New York under the treatment of a ce'ebrated cancer doctor, but without obtaining relief. 1 informed the lady of th se £ vets and she gave him this receipt This was four yeais ago I saw the geutleman a few months since, and- inquired about the cancer. The reply was—“ Oh, 1 it gives me no trouble, if I have any fear of it, I take a little of Mrs S.’s medicine, and it is all right.” I have an aunt between 50 and 60 years old, who has had an internal cancerous tu;i our, causing her much suffering, and rendering het for much of the time unable to work. She has been treated by eminent p iys oians, and has spent hundreds of dols., hut all to little purpose. For the last few months she hai Been taking this medicine, and says;she has not been so well fqr years I might mention other cases, but perhaps these will be sufficient. I have never known it to fail in a single instance to cure impurities of the blood, whether cancerous or otherwise. I wish I could inspire in others the same confidence which 1 feel, for I am certain it would mitigate a vast amount of suffering. Cancer cure; 2oz. of sulphur. Jnz. quicksilver, loz of cream of tartar, 4oz saltpetre. Put into a pint of molasses, stir, take a teaspoouful before going to bed. For outside application ! One bottle of Br tish oil, loz of red precipitate. The sulphur and quicksilver must be thoroughly mixed for a long time in a druggist’s mortar and then the other ingredients added. I wish this could be | u lisbed in every paper in the land, and that in after years I could have the satisfaction of knowing that many have been saved from horrible suffering and death by its use. and that it may be regarded as a reliable specific.
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Bibliographic details
Dunstan Times, Issue 1121, 26 October 1883, Page 3
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491ALLEGED CANCER CURE. Dunstan Times, Issue 1121, 26 October 1883, Page 3
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