![]() About the author: Elaine was raised until the age of three in a small town in Pennsylvania, before her family moved to LaSalle, Michigan, just north of the Ohio border. She attended Monroe High School where she studied business. She later took courses in business in college. Her marriage at a young age sadly ended in divorce, yet gave her four beautiful children. She worked in a factory until her children were grown, then left the factory to begin her own business. She was again married, this time happily. Her husband joined her in her business until his death in 2005. Elaine owned and operated Woodland Embroidery in Marion, Michigan. Today Elaine lives in Kentucky and owns and operates American Designs. Elaine also spends much of her time listening to, and giving encouragement to, others who are going through the same kind of ordeal that she went through. Purchase Amazon.com You may also find helpful information from the following sources. BelieveinHishealing.com If you are looking to purchase Protocel®, I recommend: Testimonies On the following pages are the stories of friends and fighters who won their battle, and bring hope and faith to you when you need it the most. Their testimonies are brought to you in their own words, along with some of their recommendations, and are grouped as follows: cancer patients, non-cancer patients, and pets. No claims are made by Elaine Hulliberger as to their accuracy or expectations. Kathie, who gathers medical records from Protocel users, was of paramount importance in the accumulation of these testimonies. Without her diligence and hard work I don't believe I could have offered so many accounts for you to read. Each of these testimonies are found in the Second Edition of Winning the Battle Against Cancer. Cancer Patients Elaine's Miracle ♦ Colon Cancer Earlene's Report ♦ Lung Cancer Joe Nevitt ♦ Lung Cancer Charlie Meese ♦ Prostate Cancer Alan D. Johns ♦ Prostate Cancer Carol Skalba ♦ Lung Cancer Roberta Andre ♦ Breast Cancer Roland V. Raham ♦ Prostate Cancer Walter Grover ♦ Colon Cancer Aileen Grover ♦ Poss. Breast Cancer Sara Swearngan ♦ Lung Cancer Georgeanna Rassie ♦ Brain Tumor Thomas Schwahm ♦ Kidney Cancer Ruth Keller ♦ Lung Cancer Elonna McKibben ♦ Glioblastoma Cindy Neal ♦ Lung Cancer Ken Browne ♦ Pancreatic Cancer Lisa & Jerry Guajardo ♦ Medulloblastoma Marge Sheridan Dubuque ♦ Breast Cancer Laurie M. Patterson ♦ Skin Cancer Gail Voyda ♦ Breast Cancer Donna Marvin ♦ Chron. Lymph. Lukemia Joyce Richards ♦ Breast Cancer Kathleen McVean Schulz ♦ Breast Cancer Albert J.Dubuque ♦ Prostate Cancer Angela Ellis ♦ Breast Cancer Dennis Rogers ♦ Metas. Malig. Melanoma Brad Matznick ♦ Kidney Cancer Barbara Bryd ♦ Breast Cancer Non-Cancer Patients Kathleen Metherell ♦ Fibromyalgia Brian & Leanne Breiholz ♦ Poss. Endometriosis Carl Cazessus ♦ Trigger Finger Micky Moore ♦ Hepatitis C Kathy Keating ♦ Hepatitis C Samantha Dubuque ♦ Mononucleosis Audrey Teeling ♦ Epstein Barr Syndrome Ed C.♦ HPV Animals Baxter ♦ Transitional Cell Carcinoma Schera ♦ Tumor on Vulva Bingo ♦ Abdominal Mass Luke ♦ Fibrous Sarcoma |
My name is Alan Johns, a retired naval aviator, 75, who should be a prime candidate for prostate cancer. In my diagnosis in 2005, an invasive (through the colon wall) biopsy was used. I was alarmed, but had put my care (and life) into the hands of a local urologist, who performed this procedure himself on an outpatient basis at the rural (but magnificently business-like) hospital. He gave me a few antibiotics, but I came down with septicemia, for which I was rushed to the ER and was admitted with “pneumonia” in midsummer by my alarmed wife. If I exhibit some disdain for the medical profession, it is because of that botched biopsy. That urologist diagnosed me with prostate cancer with a cancer- marking blood test (PSA) at 11.7. My sister had been introduced to a website, “outsmartyourcancer.com” I already had read articles skeptical of cancer treatment as a moneymaking endeavor of doctors. I was interested, not in continual treatment, but a cure. My sister also told my lifelong smoking brother about “Protocel® 50.” He took this, extending his life a year until he died of emphysema at age 64. I believe he was cured of lung cancer. In my prostate cancer case, I changed physicians because I wanted relief from the urinary symptoms of an enlarged prostate. He recommended the Tran urethral resection, commonly called the “rotor-rooter.” I underwent that in a three-day stay at an urban hospital. Tissue reamed from my prostate exhibited cancerous cells at a Gleason scale “9.” This urologist left the “natural means” treatment up to me; so, I resumed five daily doses of Protocel® 23. I see this urologist every six months because the last PSA was 2.73. The previous bout with prostate cancer brought my PSA down from 11.7 to 2.5. The previous urologist was impressed, saying, “A man of your age should be about 6.” I continue on a maintenance dose of Protocel®, which costs about $150 for a two-month supply. The routine-change in my life now entails carrying a “kit” with a glass and a plastic bottle with a pre-measured dose and a bottle of distilled water. I wake at 3:00 A.M. to use that kit in the bathroom where I have ceased to need to go. I feel grateful to be on a maintenance schedule till my next six-monthly blood test. I recommend Protocel® to all my friends. One friend that I was not prompted to tell just died of pancreatic cancer, of which he died in the same month he was diagnosed. People who have a history of cancer in their families should use it as a precaution. Protocel® 23 is this world’s best antioxidant. My schedule is 1/4 tsp. in 8 oz. of distilled water at 8:00 AM, 1:00 P.M, 5:00 PM, 10:00 P.M., and finally (after setting an alarm) at 3:00 A.M. [From the author: you can choose any 6-hour increment for dosage that works best for you]. Alan D. Johns, August 2007 | |
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