"Dead Doctors Don't Lie" by Dr. Joel Wallach Time is running out on your health. Doctor Wallach has the answers - minerals and common sense! INDEX: 1. Ulcers 2. Cancer 3. Arthritis 4. Alzheimer's Disease 5. Kidney Stones 6. Aortic Aneurysms 7. Varicose veins 8. Stroke 9. Cardio Myopathy 10. Cravings 11. Liver or Age Spots 12. Hyperactive children/Low blood sugar/Diabetes 13. Baldness and 14. Deafness 15. Osteoporosis (partial) 16. Hormones 17. Smell/Taste loss 18. Longevity 19. Osteoporosis 20. Gingivitis/Receding Gums 21. Arthritis 22. Hypertension/high blood pressure 23. Insomnia 24. Kidney stones/bone spurs/heel spurs/calcium deposits 25. Muscle Cramps/twitches 26. PMS 27. Low Back Pain 28. Diabetes "Dead Doctors Don't Lie"
by Dr. Joel Wallach I'm Barbara Nicholson, a little over a year ago, my husband dropped dead of cardiac myopathy. And it just nearly killed me. A good friend of mine, Dr. Henry Curtiss, from Denver, Colorado, called me. He said, "I just want you to listen to this tape." I didn't do it. But when I eventually did, I heard Dr. Joe Wallach say that cardiac myopathy is 100% preventable. This really hit me very hard, therefore I want to tell you the reason that I am here is that I don't want to see anyone else go through what I went through... that I've been through this last year. Dr. Wallach is going to explain to you tonight not only about cardiac myopathy, but many other things. I pray that you listen closely and carefully, because what you are going to hear may save your life or the life of your loved one. Dr. Wallach, in 1991, was nominated for the Nobel Prize. He's had many many fabulous things in his life. There's no way to tell you how pleased I am to have him here in Kansas City tonight. And I want to turn the time over now to Dr. Wallach. Well, I would like to add my welcome to Barbara's. I'm certainly glad you are here. How many of you grew up on a farm, or still work on a farm, or have anything to do with livestock? I'll tell you what, you are my kind of people, because I grew up on a farm in W. St. Louis County, back in the '50's. We started out with beef cows, and if you raise livestock, the only way to make money is if you raise your own feed (for those of you who don't have that experience). And so we raised our own corn, and our own soy beans, and our own hay, and we had a truck come out from the mill. This truck would come out from the mill, they would grind up the corn, and the soy beans, and the hay, and then we would add sacks of vitamins, minerals, trace minerals, and we would make pellets out of it, and this is what we would feed to the calves.
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