e762/1241749474-jjad-bicycle1.jpg โ€œNo โ€” heโ€™ll never ride a bicycle again.โ€

So begins another installment in a series of terrifying, guilt-inducing advertisements that the Johnson & Johnson company ran in national magazines in the 1940s. And boy, did they lay it on.

Just look at the image: A young boy โ€” on crutches! โ€” stares wistfully at a dusty bicycle in a garage. The caption reads: โ€œAND NOW THERE IS A BICYCLE FOR SALE.โ€ My goodness, what has happened here? Why wonโ€™t he ever ride it again, you wonder?

Very simple. Because his parents foolishly, stupidly, and carelessly forgot to use Johnson & Johnson bandages. Read on:

โ€œFor the rest of his life, he must pay the penalty for something that neednโ€™t have happened. He merely cut his foot โ€” just as thousands of active boys do. And his mother bandaged it, lovingly, as has been the way of mothers since the world began.

โ€œThe bandage looked clean, too. But it wasnโ€™t. And infection set in and spread . . . infection that crippled.