Hulda R. Clark - The Cure For All Diseases (1995)

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THE CURE FOR ALL DISEASES

Tin: scrape a tin bucket at a farm supply. Tin solder. Ask a
dentist for a piece of pure tin (used to make braces).
Titanium: purchase a titanium drill bit from a hardware store.
Toluene: a tube of glue that lists toluene as an ingredient.
Tungsten: the filament in a burned out light bulb.
Vanadium: hold a piece of dampened paper towel over a gas
stove burner as it is turned on. Cut a bit of this paper into
your specimen bottle and add 2 tsp. filtered water.
Xylene: paint store or pharmacy.
Zearalenone: combine leftover crumbs of three kinds of corn
chips and three kinds of popcorn.

This list gets you off to a good start. Since few of these
specimens are pure, there is a degree of logic that you must apply
in most cases. If you are testing for barium in your breast, a
positive result would mean that a barium-containing lipstick tests
positive and a barium-free lipstick is negative.
A chemistry set for hobbyists is a wonderful addition to your
collection of test specimens. Remember, however, the as-
sumptions and errors in such a system. A test for silver using
silver chloride might be negative. This does not mean there is no
silver present in your body; it only means there is no silver
chloride present in the tissue you tested.
You are bound to miss some toxins; don't let this discourage
you. There is more than enough that you can find.
The most fruitful kind of testing is, probably, the use of
household products themselves as test substances. The soaps,
colognes, mouthwash, toothpaste, shampoo, cosmetics, breads,
dairy products, juices and cereals can all be made into test
specimens. Put about 1/8 tsp. of the product in a small glass
bottle, add 2 tsp. filtered water and ¼ tsp. grain alcohol to pre-
serve it. For temporary purposes use a plastic baggy and water
only. If you test positive to your household products in your

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