Going near a stylus with anything remotely solid is asking for it. Many people have broken off cantilevers. All you need to keep a stylus clean is and fine artist's brush and stylus cleaning fluid which is easy to make. First take the brush and with a very sharp scissors cut across the bristles at the 1/2 way point. To make the fluid measure out one cup of distilled water and add two drops of J+J's baby shampoo. Shake it up and put it in whatever container is available. Dip the tip of the brush in the fluid and with the soft artist brush you can wipe the stylus in any direction without hurting it, but do not get the fluid to far up the cantilever.
As stated above, clean records make stylus cleaning a monthly occurrence if even that. There is nothing on a new record that can contaminate a stylus other than dust. All additives are incorporated into the PVC in very small amounts and can only be removed as fast as the PVC is removed. If your stylus is catching anything but rare dust your records are contaminated with something like cooking fumes, smoke or bad record cleaning fluids that leave a residue.
Conductive sweep arms like the Hudson HiFi arm are not used to clean a record. They are used to keep a record from getting dirty by discharging static electricity and collecting any incidental dust, keeping it out of the path of the stylus. @cleeds mentions this because he has a vendetta against me and a very poor grasp of the situation. Ultrasonic cleaners work but by themselves make poor record cleaning devices. By using a suction record cleaner after ultrasonic cleaning you can improve the situation greatly. Air drying or fan drying the record is a mistake because you evaporate only the water and leave any contaminants on the record. Suction drying removes everything. The other problem is using contaminated water over and over again. Filtering the water will remove dust but not anything that is dissolved in the water. If you can only afford one machine you are far better off with a suction cleaning machine.