Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 22, 25 January 1923 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

Coue's Own

By EMILECOUE '(Translated into English from the original French text) (Copyright. 1922, by Malkan Publishing Company, Inc.)

SIXTEENTH INSTALLMENT How aralysis Melds to Autosuggestion Mr. D., of Jarville, had paralysis of the left upper eyelid. He went to the hospital where he received injections, as a result of which the patient was able to raise his eyelid, but the left rye was deflected outward for more than 45 degrees, and an operation appeared to be necessary. He came to my house and, thanks to autosuggestion, his eye was restored, little by little, to its normal position. Mr. M.. a hatmaker. living at SainteSavine .near Tropes, was paralyzed for two years, following an injury at the junction of the spinal column and the pelvis; the paralysis existed' only in the lower limbs, in which the circulation of the blood had practically ceased, making them swollen, congested and discolored; various treatments, including anti-syphilitic, had been tried without result; preliminary experiments . were successful; suggestions given by me were transformed into autosuggestions by the patient for a week; after that time there was an almost imperceptible, but nevertheappreciable, movement of the lefMeg. Kenewed the suggestions: A week later the improvement was notable; in another two weeks a more and more noticeable improvement took place, together with a slow but progressive lessening of the swelling, and so on; ffeven months afterward, on the 1st ray of November, 1906, the patient went downstairs alone, and walked 1.000 yards; in the inonth of July, 1907. he went back to his factory, where he has since worked continuously, without the least trace of paralysis. Abscess Miss Z., of Geneva, had undergone an operation for an abscess above the knee when she was seventeen years old and had. as a consequence, a drawn-up right leg. She requested Mr. Baudouin to give a treatment by sug gestion, and he had hardly commenced doing so, when the leg began to bend back and forth in a normal manner. (It must be admitted that there was a psychological cause in this case.) Frontal Sinus Mr." B. had suffered for twenty-four vmfc fmm inflammation of the frontal cavity (sinus) which had been operated upon eleven times. But in spite of all that had been done the inflammation (slnusite) persisted, causing intolerable pains. The physical state of the patient was extremely pitiable. He had almost continuously violent pains, no appetite .extreme weakness and could neither walk, read nor sleep. His nprvep were in no better state than his body and notwithstanding the treatment of such men as Bernheim, of Nancy; Dejerine. of Paris; Dubois, of Berne; . of Strasbourg, this pitiable state continued and grew worse everyday. On the advice of one of my former patients he came to me in September, 1915. From that moment his health improved rapidly and at the present time (1921) he is perfectly well. This was a real resurrection. Extracts From Letters to M. Coe I have suffered horribly for eleven vears without . interruption. Every night I had attacks of asthma. I suffered also from insomnia and general weakness which made occupation of any kind impossible. Mentally I was depressed, restless and worried, seeing mountains where there were but niol hills. I had taken any amount of treatments without success and even had undergone, in Switzerland, the removal of the spongy bones of the nose, likewise without effect. In November. 191 S, I became worse in consequence o fa great sorrow. While my husband was at Corfu (as an officer on board a" battleship) 1 lost our only son. in six davs. from influenza, i-ie was a lovely child of ten years, and the sunchino rf our life. Alone - and over whelmed with sorrow.'" I . reproached mvself Ditteriy ior nui. unvius able to protect and save our treasure. I was nearlv insane and wanted to die. When my husband returned (in FebrurrV, he took me to another doctor, v.bo'prescribed various remedies along with the waters of Mont-Dore. 1 spent the month of August at that place, but on ray return the atacks of asthma recurred, as before. I realized, with despair, that 1 was going from bad to worse in every respect. At that critical time I had the pleasure of meeting vou. Although I hardly expected jinv good from it. I attended your confcrncps during the month of October and 1 am very happy to say that by the r, nt Vnvpmber I was cured. In somnia, depression, gloomy thoughts have disappeared as if by magic. I am now well, strong and full of courage. With my physical health restored. I liave also recovered my mental equilibrium and, if it were not for the ineffaceable effect of the loss of my (liild which keeps my mother-heart still bleding. I would say that I am entirely well and, so far as possible, happv. I wish to goodness I had met vou before. My child would then have known a cheerful and courageous mother. - . A thousand thanks. Mr. Coue. Thank yon again and again. ' Most gratefully yours, E. I .. Rue de Lille. After a 30-Year Struggle January. 1920. I can now take up again the strug gle which I maintamea ior ininj vears, until exhausted. I found in you, last August, wonderful and providential help. Returning to our dear Lorraine, I arrived ill and with a heart full of sorrow. I dreaded the shock which I would feel at the sight of all the ruins and distress. I went away comforted and in good health. I Vas almost insane unfortunately I am not religious. I longed for some one to help and comfort me. By a lucky chance I met you at my sister's and

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"Method 99 you gave me the very help and consolation I sought. I now work with new spirit and suggest to my unconscious self to re-establish my physical equilibrium. I have no doubt that I shall regain my former good health. I have already noticed some improvement. You will better understand my gratitude when I tell you that, suffering from diabetes and a renal complication, I have had several atacks of glaucoma; but my eyes are now recovering slowly. My eyesight has in the meantime become almost normal and my general health is much better. ML.L.13. TH-,-., Professor at the Young Ladies' College of Ch s. I read my thesis with success and bave been awarded the highest mark, together with the congratulations of the jury. Of all these honors a large share is due to you, and I do not for get it. My only regret is that you were not present to hear your name referred to with warm and sympathetic interest by so distinguished a jury. You may rest assured that the doors of the uni versity have been thrown wide open to your teaching. Do not thank me, please for I owe far more than you owe me. CHARLES DAUDOUIN, Professor at the Institute J. J. Rousseau, Geneva. Praise From Dr. Bertillon Paris, March, 1920. I admire your undaunted courage and am sure that it will help to give to many minds an intelligent and useful direction. I must confess that I personally have benefit by your teaching, and am applying it to my patients, also. At the clinic we try to apply year method collectively, and have already obtained visible results. DR. BERTILLON. Brussels, March, 1920. I have received your kind letter and also your very interesting lecture; I note particularly the passage in which you say that the will must not inter vene in autosuggestion. That is what a number of teachers and users of autosuggestion, including a great many

The Mistakes of the Kaiser By RENE VIVIANI Premier of France When the War Broke Oat Copyright, 1922, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate.

XXXVIII AUTOCRACY AN ARHCY DEMOCRACY In accumulating upon the head of the Kaiser the tremendous and merited burden of crimes commttted. one must see to it that history is not deflected from its true course; that, amid the huge mass of personal guilt for the war. collective and general guilt be not forgotten. We are not saying this for the purpose of keeping alive hatred at a time when the-concentration of the entire virile strength of the world is necestary for its salvation our task, indeed is to carry out the mission of the future, clear the way. And if as we believe the world is to be regenerated, it is for us to determine the moral and material role which Company now lying prostrate, is to play some day in that regenerated universe. The responsibilities for the war are not. the same nor of the same degree, and, - throughout Germany, there are strong elements which shared the moral and material leadership of the na tion, but which, for a variety of reasj ons, are calling their share of the blame into question. The capitalists, the men who had created a sort of commercial and inj dustnal Pan-Germanism, stood around the Kaiser at the last moment. As they stand today, amid the misery of the German proletariat and the lower middle class, gazing upon their wealth placed in safety in foreign banks, they may say to themselves that they condemned their country to ruin and led it consciously to the downward path of war. To aim at dominating the world by ruining it; to ruin it by distributing at low prices the products of German industrial activity; to recoup the losses occasioned by such sales by the high prices charged at home all this is equivalent to condemning the mass of men not only to forced labor, but to labor bound to bring them to impoverishment and bankruptcy. In fact, the more Germany produced (and how . splendid were the pre-war statistics telling of the magnificent but illusory results achieved by her!) the more she lost in foreign countries whose competition she hoped to crush in order that she might, after this competition had been killed or weakened, be the supreme ruler of a ruined world. From this dream only two awakenings were possible: either Germany must hold firm until her competitors had been exterminated, whereupon she could take their place and raise prices, or else she must perish in her attempt, which she was bound to do if her rivals resisted, managed to survive, defended themselves for instance, by raising, against economic invasions, the barrier of customs duties. In 1913 the second alternative began to loom up as the more probable before the worried and farr-seeing eye of German manufacturers. From that SEVERE OlII AFTER 1XFLLEXZA "After an attack of the 'Flu' which left me with a severe cough nothing seemed to relieve me until I used Foley's Honey and Tar," writes Mrs. K. D. Prake, Childs, Maryland. Coughs resulting from Influenza, Whooping Coush, Asthma, Croup, La Cirippe and Bronchitis are quickly relieved with Foley's Honey and Tar. Contains no opiate? ingredients printed on the wrapper. Largest selling cough medicine in the world. A. (K'Luken Drug Co., 626-628 Main St. Advertisement.

RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

physicians, do not understand. I consider that, likewise, an absolute distinction should be made between autosuggestion and the training of the will. DR. VAN VELSEN. Cesson-Saint Brieuc. Iwonder what you must think of me? Forgotten you? Never! Rest assured that I shall always think of you with deep and grateful affection. I must tell you that your teachings are more and more effective with me; I do not pass a day without using autosuggestion with increased success, and bless you every day; your method is the true one. Thanks to it I control myself better every day I assimilate your directions and feel myself stronger. I am sure that you would have difficulty in recognizing me, so active in spite of my sixty-six years, the poor creature who was so often ailing and who is now beginning to feel well, thanks to you and to your guidance. May the Lord bless you, my dear sir, for it is the swetest thing to do good to others. You are doing much good; I do a little and I thank God for it, MME. M . Lung Lesion ' Disappears Richemont, June, 1920. Am feeling better and better since following your method of autosuggestion. I ask you to please accept my most sincere thanks. The lesion of the lungs has disappeared, the heart is better and there is no more albumen; in short, I am feeling fine. MME. LEMA1TRE. Madrid. Your booklet and your lecture have interested us very much. For the good of humanity it would be desirable to have them printed in several languages so that they might reach every race and country and thus make happy a greater number of unfortunate people, who suffer because they are using wrongly this mighty and almost divine faculty which we call imagination and which is most important to man, as you affirm and prove so clearly and judiciously. I had already read many books on the will and I have also quite an arsenal of formulae, thoughts, aphorisms, etc. Your teaching is conclusive. 1 do not think that any one ever before condensed so intelligently these formulas into "compressed tablets of self-confidence," as I call your .healing phrases. DON ENRIQUE C . Tomorrow Cures of Diseases That Were Not Mentioned to M. Coue. day they set their gaze upon war that is. upon easy and prompt victory, upon economic and colonial conquests, upon the seizure, doubtless, of our Northern Africa, that jewel of the Mediterranean, and a formidable rival. Herr von Bethmann-Hollweg, in his talk with the British Ambassador on July 29th. made himself the spokesman of German industrial interests. Of course, such seizures as those outlined above would have been the minimum. Germany's position in the world was admirable. Commercially, she was colonizing civilized countries by her banks and her business firms, even going so far as to lend a foreign appearance superficially to what was, in reality, something quite German, though hidden inside the offices of these German outposts. At the last moment, capitalism at bay sought to save itself through war. That was the fateful moment. Capitalism, rallying to the support of the idea of waging war, advanced the hour of the militar ists. The latter had been ready fifty years and more. The dream of old Moltke had been to sow the seeds of permanent conflict between France and Germany, by seizing Alsace-Lorraine and making an open wound, and since peaceful France, though forgetting nothing, demanded nothing, and gave proof of her Sound good sense, there was much to be done before war could be brought about. So war plans were hatched; murKidney - and Bladder Trouble Conquered Or Money Back For 40 years, said Dr. Caroy, I have hppn prescribing mv nresorintion N'o. 777 (known far years as Marshroot) for kidney and bladder sickness and now that I have retired from active practice I have made arrangements with leading: druergrists to dispense this wonderful prescription at a moderate price, on tli money back if dissatisfied plan. Beware of kidney disease thousands die of it every year who ouerht to be enjoying the blestiinsfs of life and health. Watch the symptoms. If you have specks floating before the eyes, puffv eyes, clammy feet or moist palms, backache or sidache, you ought to gret a bottle or ur. . arey s famous prescrip tion .N III 1IC,!1L n VV1. . It has wonderfully benefited tens of thousands of cases of kidney and blad der troubles and is the medicine yon can always depend upon. Results are guaranteed. MJiK Dr. uaniei u. carey was a practicing physician for many vears and his great Proscription No. 777 aided thousands or surterers from kidney and bladder troubles. Hereafter you can always get this effective prescription in both liquid and tablet form at A. G. Luken Drug Co., and all reliable pharmacists the country over. Advertisement. MRHiiiuiiMMmmiuitiitiumniinuiiiniiiniiiutiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMiMtiiiiitMiiM 1 Office Desks, Chairs and I Safes Bartel, Rohe & Rosa Co. 921 Main St. iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiimHiiHuiiiiuiiiuiiliiiimiiuiiiiiiinnnimiiiiuiiiuiinHiuii Where You'll Always Find Better Values GEORGE E. KLUTE CO. S25 Main Street There is wisdom in Optometrist Richmond Clara M. Sweltzer, 1002 Main St.

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EXILED BY PRESIDENT. Isalsas De Plerola, one of the wealthiest and most influential citizens of Peru, says he was arbitrarily exiled on a day's notice by President August Leguia because newspapers had hinted he would be the Democratic candidate for the Presidency of Peru two years hence. He arrived in the United States with his wife, former Miss av Victoria Hancock of New York. deius designs plotted; discipline carried to extremes; the army systematically increased from 1905 onward; an entire network, of railways built converging upon the French frontier; Luxemburg subjugated; Belgium con demned to death simply and solely be cause she existed; and an ultimatum launched on July 26, 1914, in cold blood, in the very midst of peace. But why recall what tne world will not forget: that frightful irruption of the Geiman soldiery? , Universities Spur on Militarism. This irruption was backed all through last century, all through this century, ever since 1870, even after 1918, by the authority emanating from the German universities, r If there is ferment iiithe barracks, if soldieis are conscience of having been born for battle, then it is the business of the universities to spur them on. Never before was any nation brought to ruin by such an outburst of savage hatred, of bestial frenzy, of cynical provocation. For the honor of the human mind, indeed, one must refrain from telling or reading the whole story over again. German philosophy set about to jus tify violence and murder, provided i they were committed collectively; it! sought to condone violation of treat- j ies, setting up a special code of morality, which poisoned an entire nation. Such was the terrible crime of that! epoch of German history. Social democracy did not play its role, that splendid role vouchsafed, by their very mission to those, aiming at leading the proletariat toward a. peaceful and invigorating future. German Social Democracy should not be judged either on the day of war nor on the eve of war. It tolerated everything, acquiesced in everything, and, though buttressed with a press of its own, controlling hosts of ballots, sway ing the vote of nearly four millions of Germans, it failed to see that the internal force of autocracy would destroy it or, even though it saw, it was powerless to prevent it. To be sure, now and then the day after the Zabern affair, for .instanceit protested, but it did not take up an impregnable position. Which explains why Kautsky, questioned in 1913 at Dresden by Jaures, told the French socialist, in order to leave him HARMLESS MEANS OF REDUCING FAT! Many fat people fear ordinarv means for reducing their weight. Here is an extraordinary method. Kxtrordinarv because while perfectly harmless no dieting or exercise are necessary. Marmola Prescription Tablets are made exactly in accordance with the famous Marmola Prescription. You reduce steadily and easily, with no ill effects. Procure them from your druprgist at one dollar for a case or send price direct to the Marmola Companv, 4tiI2 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Advertisement

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absolutely without illusions: "Do not count upon my comrades in case of an attack upon France." And I have also heard an older and more ominous saying of old Bebel. uttered in 1904 at Amsterdam.. Jaures asked him what the good was of millions of votes piled up in ballot-boxes, what use the German socialists could make of these against an autocratic government thinking of leading them to war. Bebel replied: "The Kaiser is above classes." One'e country is above classes but the Emperor . . ! Bebel's words show how the Germans deliberately acquiesced in their absorption by one man as something legitimate nor was it absorption by a man risen from among themselves, but by a monarch imposed upon them! How could German Social Democracy reconcile this doctrine of political enslavement with the doctrine which it held, at the same time, of liberation of the economic world? And now? No longer is the, Kaiser above classes. .And it is said that Scheidmann, Under Secretary of State in 1918, announcing the Kaiser's abdication to the people, said in words which I have not as yet been able, to verify: "The German people has won all along the line; the old rottenness has fallen away of itself, the eia of militarism is past, the Hohenzollerns have abdicated!" Which is all very well but what is the result to be? Peace Treaty Accepted The treaty of peace was accepted by Germany, after nearly a year ot debate, and she renewed this acceptance through the Reichstag vote of March 10, 1921. The treaty is severe, she says, and yet it does not impose upon the vanquished the costs of the war. though France had them imposed upon her in 1871, and, owing to this, profound financial and economic disorders still unsettle the allied nations, crushed under the arrears of their debts. What of the French occupation of the Rhineland? Well, for three years 45 of the French departments were occupied, nor did the German troops evacuate them until the war indemnity had been paid. What of the indemnity exacted from Germany? Is it not too heavy? I am not going to immerse myself in calculations, now that time has elapsed and the value of money has diminished, but it seems that, comparing the war of 1870 with the great war in duration, scope, cruelty and cost in men and material things, the five billion francs of 1870 are, proportionately, an enormous sum compared with the sums of today. Moreover, have the Germans thought about the damage caused? Let us set aside the dead, and speak' only of things and of the living: Material Damage Germans Did Ten French departments, representing, because of their industrial, mining, agricultural and commercial wealth, one-half or, at least, one-third of the wealth of France, have been destroyed and pillaged. Even the very tools have been smashed; the very horses and cattle, the very garments of the inhabitants, have been carried away into Germany. When French soldiers, natives of this part of France peasants, laborers, industrial workers, owners returned to this region, what did they find? nothing but a desert, nothing but death! anarchy even among the ruins! Germany ought to pay. She has systematically brought herself to ruin as a nation, organizing her own bankruptcy. During this time France, who had borrowed money for her defense, has borrowed money to rebuild herself. During four years she haspent, for Germany's account, 95 billion francs, on rebuilding her ruins and paying the pensions of her widows and crippled soldiers. And what of the German soldier? DON'T NEGLECT A COLD Mothers .don't let colds get underway; at the first cough or sniffle rub Musterole on the throat and chest. Musterole Is a pure, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It draws out congestion, relieves soreness, does !all the work of the good old-fashioned j mustard plaster in a gentler way, without the blister. Keep a jar handy for all emergcies, it may prevent pneumania in your home, so and b,c in jars ana tubes; hospital size, Better than a Mustard Plaster.

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touched, the factory still standing, the fields unimpaired. It is France who pays though Germany is guilty and vanquished! It is impossible to look on at this spectacle with indifferent eyes. The allies presented humanity with the immense gift of millions of soldiers who overthrew autocracy. The ancient dream of disarmament comes every lay nearer to reality, and we should be closer to its realization if Germany, tortured like a volcano, did not still wrap her plans in mystery, if! she were not still subject, in her con-, dition of uncertainty, to sudden con-J vulsions. j The reparations demanded by history have been paid. Upon the ruins of autocracy, liberty has dawned for; little nations. But security is lacking. France is calling for it; France who, as always, is hostile to conquests, to wars, to adventures. But all this cannot be brought about unless there be in Germany men who think and have the power to make others think. Economically, the situation is still serious. The fall of the mark is a brutal fact. But one must not allow it to be said that this fall is a result of the treaty of peace, and I believe that, even in Germany, there are writers who admit this no more than we French do. The day after the armistice and the day after the signing of the peace treaty the condition of the mark was quite different. What has happened? First, there has been speculation in the mark; it has been purchased below its normal value with the idea of forcing it upward and closing such hazardous ventures by pocketing a profit. German financiers, together with others in other countries, acted thus, and the result was terrible: the mark fell, and, when its fall had defi nitely set in, it was accelerated by the dumping on the world's money markets of depreciated marks which had been held back for profitable speculation. And there is" yet another reason: during the war Germany developed her industrial equipment, fortified her industries, which have lost nothing. Hence she had in hand big reserves, which we lackedas did also the other nations attacked. Counting upon improvement of conditions and hoping to accelerate them by exports, Germany multiplied her exports. Resorting, as she had done in earlier years to excessive dumping. Germany, already weak, has weakened herself more, just as a strong Germany would also have weakened itself. She dumped her products upon the world, leaving in foreign lands the money accruing from these operations. And, during this time, Germany, with no resources, unable to buy raw materials except under diffi culties, suffering like all of us from the rise in the exchange, in the cost of materials, and in salaries has become BEWARE OF DRUGS Medical Authorities Advise Caution in the Use of Preparations Liable to Contain Powerful Drugs. Never drug your system to relieve or prevent colds, grippe or "Flu." Drugs are liable to affect the nervous system or weaken the heart. Hot medicinal tea is now recommended by many physicians, because it is best for the human system, acts quickly on the bowels and intestines by eliminating the excess poisonous wastes that usually tend to lower your physical, resistance. Just pure, refreshing, healthful herbs from nature, that is why millions are now using Bulgarian Herb Tea to relieve and break up bad colds, and also keep the poisons flushed from the system. Many physicians now prescribe Bulgarian Herb Tea. and your druggist can honestly recommend It. Advertisement. Join Our 1923 Xmas Club Second National Bank ntiiHiniuiiiinmimiHitiinHinifitiHiiinHniniiniiiniiNinuiiHitriiiiuii I SAFETY FOR SAVINGS 1 PLUS 3 Interest II DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY "The Home For Savings" f 'HltlllllfllllllllllltlllllliiMIIIIIMIIHUMIUUWIUIIIHMMIIIlWW'OI'UIIUIimiHIimia

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adversely affected by these very business operations of hers. . x These, then, are the general causes of Germany's situation, which is eidently critical. Germany snould take counsel with herself. She should not seek the road to salvation through monarchical Intrigues, which arouse popular anger, or by demagogic excesses, which inexorably lead to reaction. What is the way out open to those Germans capable of action? What can they do. hemmed ,in between two perils? How are they to escape trouble from above and trouble from below? Between the two extremes, I, for my part, believe that German democracy may still be saved, provided German democrats realize that it i3 not enough to have the attributes of a republic, freedom of the press, universal suffrage, immense responsibilities, but that the proper democratic mentality is likewise necessary. Germany wishes to live. We, too, wish her to live; we are helping her, we are seeking to draw closer to her in economic discussions, we are in favor of everything that will revive the useful and conciliating efforts of workers throughout that continent of Europe so often scourged by human pain. But the world also wishes to live, and, in order that it may live, it needs

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