OCR Text |
Show ‘Sa Among the many pieces of quackery condemned by the courtswas thio Air-Ozone machine that supposedly treated 47 different major diseases. HEN I WAS a youth in Merrill, Mich., some- thing happened to a little kindergarten girl that I'll never forget. She was treated for pains in her had tuberculosis of the spine. Had she been taken to him first, she ‘would have kept the use of her legs Sound vibrations to fight cancer, head harnesses to treat arthritis, a 1,000-watt bulb to cure whateverelse ails you! These are just some of the phonylures to raise your hope—andflatten your wallet By CHARLES L. HUDSON,M. D. Family Weekly, May £8, 1967 stayed with me for almost 40 years. That’s a long time—but not quite ‘as long as the American Medical Association has been waging war on such practitioners of deceit. Despite what you may think, quacks and other medical phonies did not go out with the river boats and medicine shows. They are still thriving in the space age. smock and with a dignified manner, he leaps imaginatively from the fantastic ities of our scientific age to/the distorted world of his own peculiar. pseudoscience. Hebottles garden dirt and claims its minerals and other organic nutrients can drive diseases away. He makes an electric machine with blinking lights and dials and claims it-ean measure certain mysterious “forces” in your body, the lack of which causes disease. The machine can also put those “forces” back College of Electronic Medicine as a superdiagnostic machine. The patient sent in a drop of dried blood |