1Popular Science Monthly, September, 1903.2Manaceïne, 62, 69, 70.3Dr. J. Madison Taylor in thePopular Science Monthly, September, 1905.4Thomson’sBrain and Personality, 314.5Psychological Review, September, 1896.6Insomnia and Nerve Strain, 12.7Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Disease, 78, 355, 361, 457, 731.8Popular Science Monthly, September, 1905.9As the proof comes, the patient in question writes me that his insomnia was of the fitful type. He had so much trouble in going to sleep promptly that he formed the habit of sitting up late and inducing the sleep mood by reading. Since his treatment ended, he writes me (Sept. 12th), “This summer I have retired at nine o’clock with few exceptions, gone to sleep immediately, and risen at half past six in the morning thoroughly refreshed.”10See Dubois’sPsychical Treatment of Nervous Disorders, ch. xxiii, for the drugless cure of constipation.11The Heart of Good Health.12Psalm cxxxix., 7-9.13Thomas E. Brown.14Subsequent treatments are usually a logical development of this. See also Henry Wood’sNew Thought Simplified. In the author’s next volume to appear in 1909, he expects to publish a complete series of suggestive treatments for nervous functional disorders.15It is perhaps unnecessary to explain that no charge is ever made for the Emmanuel treatment, though grateful patients sometimes make a thank offering to the church of which the Emmanuel worker is the Rector.
1Popular Science Monthly, September, 1903.
1Popular Science Monthly, September, 1903.
2Manaceïne, 62, 69, 70.
2Manaceïne, 62, 69, 70.
3Dr. J. Madison Taylor in thePopular Science Monthly, September, 1905.
3Dr. J. Madison Taylor in thePopular Science Monthly, September, 1905.
4Thomson’sBrain and Personality, 314.
4Thomson’sBrain and Personality, 314.
5Psychological Review, September, 1896.
5Psychological Review, September, 1896.
6Insomnia and Nerve Strain, 12.
6Insomnia and Nerve Strain, 12.
7Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Disease, 78, 355, 361, 457, 731.
7Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Disease, 78, 355, 361, 457, 731.
8Popular Science Monthly, September, 1905.
8Popular Science Monthly, September, 1905.
9As the proof comes, the patient in question writes me that his insomnia was of the fitful type. He had so much trouble in going to sleep promptly that he formed the habit of sitting up late and inducing the sleep mood by reading. Since his treatment ended, he writes me (Sept. 12th), “This summer I have retired at nine o’clock with few exceptions, gone to sleep immediately, and risen at half past six in the morning thoroughly refreshed.”
9As the proof comes, the patient in question writes me that his insomnia was of the fitful type. He had so much trouble in going to sleep promptly that he formed the habit of sitting up late and inducing the sleep mood by reading. Since his treatment ended, he writes me (Sept. 12th), “This summer I have retired at nine o’clock with few exceptions, gone to sleep immediately, and risen at half past six in the morning thoroughly refreshed.”
10See Dubois’sPsychical Treatment of Nervous Disorders, ch. xxiii, for the drugless cure of constipation.
10See Dubois’sPsychical Treatment of Nervous Disorders, ch. xxiii, for the drugless cure of constipation.
11The Heart of Good Health.
11The Heart of Good Health.
12Psalm cxxxix., 7-9.
12Psalm cxxxix., 7-9.
13Thomas E. Brown.
13Thomas E. Brown.
14Subsequent treatments are usually a logical development of this. See also Henry Wood’sNew Thought Simplified. In the author’s next volume to appear in 1909, he expects to publish a complete series of suggestive treatments for nervous functional disorders.
14Subsequent treatments are usually a logical development of this. See also Henry Wood’sNew Thought Simplified. In the author’s next volume to appear in 1909, he expects to publish a complete series of suggestive treatments for nervous functional disorders.
15It is perhaps unnecessary to explain that no charge is ever made for the Emmanuel treatment, though grateful patients sometimes make a thank offering to the church of which the Emmanuel worker is the Rector.
15It is perhaps unnecessary to explain that no charge is ever made for the Emmanuel treatment, though grateful patients sometimes make a thank offering to the church of which the Emmanuel worker is the Rector.