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Show subjects, In that they yield readily to the hypnollc Influence, and accept unconditionally the suggestions communicated by the operator. Morphine Habit Cured, All the great suggestionlsts huve successfully treated morphlnomanU by Inducing hypnosis and Implanting a fixed Idea agnlnst the use of the drug In question either by hypodermic syringe or month. Morphine cannot be suddenly cut off front the patient, as there Is danger of collapse In such herocl treatment; It muHt be gradual!) withdrawn. Hypnotic suggestion ren ders such reduction absolutely painless to the subject. "The method pursued with con returned and the young lady Is firmed cigarette smokers has been to perfectly well, filling an Impoitant deprive them gradually of the dele- position lu the musical world." "Numbers of men and women with HOW TO CURE YOURSELF OF musical gifts have applied to me," said Dr. Quackenbos, "for the translaDRUNKENNESS. tion of latent into actual talent. In Dr. John D. Quackenbos. By such cases an appeal U made to the An alcoholic addict, actuated by along the lines of fearless a sincere desire to break the utterance, without thought of extraneshackles of the despotism and go ous criticism, with force and feeling forth with capacity for the higher and dramatic power. . joys of life, is urged to think per"Of all the good work possible to a sistently as he is falling asleep In suggestionist, that which Is Inspiralines like these: tional In Its nature is by far the most "Whisky is unnecessary to my thrilling the evocation, of genius physical wellbeing; it is creating from the subconscious to the conscious structural changes in vital organs; life In response to the dynamogenic it is destroying my mentality and voice of him who is en rapport." blunting my moral sensibility. I "Leaders of thought are becoming do not need it, and shall no longer conscious of superphysical world, use It either In mere bravado or said Dr. Quackenbos, which men have to hide from my vision conditions sought to apprehend since man began that are insufferable. I shall deto think. Every human being is now pend absolutely on the units of conceived, of by students of mind as energy legitimately manufactured existing simultaneously In two worlds, out of nutritious food, good air, described as the objective, supraliexercise, and sleep. I am done Dr. John D. Quackenbos. minal, or world of waking life in with alcohol once and forever. shlch he communicates through his The appetite for It is destroyed in YORK. Dr. Jekyll drank a senses with the phenomenal universe my being, and I no longer admit iLAI chemical reagent and. became and the subjective or transllmlnal, for temptation. From capacity the bad Mr. Hyde. He changed the world of sleep, of an this hour It shall be Impossible himself back to the- - good Dr. or outside for me either to desire or to take Is but of which the earth-lifJekyll by the same means. a drink for any conceivable reay are Eminent scientists experi- a fractional expression. son. I do not Want it. I do not menting with a reagent for whlchthey The Process Explained. need it. I shall not miss it. Iclalm the power to perform the In a state of sleep, natural or Inmiracle of converting Mr. Hyde into duced, the objective' consciousness is Dr. Jekyll. By this mysterious power In Suggestions are first shadow, and the Individual Is prac- terlous gas. they ace making bad men good, weak tically excarnate by reason of sus- given to smoke fewer cigarettes each men powerful, mediocre men talented. Hence he Is day; secondly, to detest tobacco and pended sense-activitAnd the beautiful thing about this transllmlnally focussed in all the drop the practice. habitual falsehood, reagent, they say. Is that every one phases of his personality and all the "Kleptomania, has It in bis own possession, to com Is of his powers. It then that mand at wilL Only when he lacks the infinity the dynamogenic touch that may work slim will to use it, after, learning the a miracle of heating or reform or inpie processes of Its application, need spiration to the quick development of he employ others, skilled In the art hidden genius may be Imparted of handling It, to administer It to him. L a fellow who, owing This Is the claim now made for to 'theByexistence ofbeing mutual sympathy hypnotic suggestion, that it is the one and confidence, Is en rapport with the reagent by which a man can transform sleeping subject This Is Suggestion. himself Into the Ideal of what In hts "II. By the man objective to bis own best moments he aspires to b . self. This Is Auto or Self subjective For 25 years Dr. John D. Quacken Suggestion. bos, former professor of psychology In "Various methods are In vogue of Columbia university, has been studyinducihg the suggestible state. The ing and practicing the art of curing technic adopted by myself Involves arand reforming persons by this process. rest of the visual attention by a brilHe has treated 7,000 cases by sugges- liant jewel or some object In the tion given during hypnotic sleep. room, the concurrent establishment What he has accomplished, often of the patients confidence In his deseeming to approach the miraculous, sire and ability to extend aid (rapport and the exact processes by which he must be consensual), and monotonous And other skilled suggestionlsts opersleeping suggestions as an ate, Dr. Quackenboa Is how to make ment of Impression by his accompanipersonality public. In a book to be Issued from the several steps being relaxed ' & the press of Harper Bros. vacant stare, Indolent audl pr. Quackenbos gives to the New ence, passive brain, blank objective , York Sunday World, in anticipation of reverie. Bleep. his forthcoming exposition, the revel mind, ' "Inspiration communicated In this ation of hl.s discoveries and remark negative state of animal being calls able experiences. ' forth adequacy dormant In the ego, to few Instances As a of the power of regulate physical function, enhance hypnotic suggestion, as he has proved faculty, or modify character. Dr. it. Quackenbos cites the following: "The directions Imparted by emA leading lady In a Broadway theatdeclaration may not be objecphatic rical company owes her rise to fame heard by the sleeper; but In tively to Inspiration given during hypnotic some mysterious way they, pass the At the time of her visit to me sleep. sentinels of his she was adjudged to possess but a to rivet the attention unchallenged, slender mediocrity of talent, says Dr. and launch the spiritual energies of Two treatments evoked Quackenbos. the transllmlnal man. the realistic touch of 'Bernhardt. It "Two Treatments Evoked the was In her. She was only Inspired to Employed by Physicians. "Reputable physicians In this counexpress It on the Instant, qnd the peomania for dishonesty, hopeless ple of New York have for months try and abroad are employing the appeal extensively In the re- swindling and gambling all yield to given singular evidence of their wonlief or cure of functional disorders of suggestlonal treatment. der and delight. A woman artist who has jecently digestion, absorption, and circulation; "Every mother In the land can make of conditions nervous children what she wishes them to her & represented by painted portrait from life .of King be, provided she Is a woman of high Edward VII., and previously had hysteria, hystero-epllepsy- , petit mal, chorea, habit moral principle, gentle and patient, trayed many other royal personages, neuroses owes the Inspiration to do the work spasms, occupation (like apprehensive of the power of transthat has made her famous to sugges- telegrapher's arm, writers, violinist's llmlnal appeal, possessed of courage tion given to her during a few sessions and ballet dancer's cramp), psycho-genl- s to apply it with Intelligent persistence, cardiac arrhythmia, pseudo-aglna- , and having ardent faith In Its effectiveof hypnotic sleep. A private ambassador representing speech defeats. Intractable In- ness. Asked to state the care of President MeKInley on an Important somnia and neurasthenia or nervous and the process by which a perto exhaustion; even of diseases characdiplomatic mission was enabled utilize talents Jie had never before terized by severe pain, like sciatica son applies' It to himself. Dr. Quackshown that he possessed because of and other forms of neuritis, locomotor enbos said: "The transllmlnal self of an Individan idea of power Implanted In his ataxia, tuberculosis and carcinoma. mind during one hour of hpynotlc Indeed, there is no rational sufTerer ual Is as amenable to suggestion by who may not be benefited In some his own objective mind as by the obsleep. jective mind of an outside person. Other cases are cited to show that degree by such treatment. of this, kind, or autoa dying person one who has even "In treatment of moral diseases Is to all who would conopen suggestion, of the realms results of translpassed beyond truly ennoble their lives by cultivating a sciousness back to life, and In In- lmlnal domination are manifested. closer relationship between the supra stances to health, by such words as "A moral defective may be comwere spoken to the apparently mori- pelled to take upon himself a changed Umlnal and the transllmlnal nature. "The state of mental abstructlon bund Adcle: "Adelo, where are, you nature In response to appropriate suggoing? You cannot die! Come back, gestions. The bad may be made good called '.reverie,' Immediately preced you have work to do on earth. Come even In the face of their deliberate de- Ing natural, sleep, Is most appropi late As one is about back at once. termination to continue In the clutches for yielding to slumber for the night, let Came Back to Life. of sin. hint say to himself, for Instance, that Of the girl Adele, Dr. Quackenbos "As a rule, however, the success of he will no longer be a slave of the says: "In answer to the summons the suggestlonal methods depends largely Imperative conception or the evil habit upturned eyes resumed their nntural on the desire of the subject to be that Is crippling his best expression angle and became riveted on mine. cured and his faith In the power of that he will develop talent along speci. . Gradually , the mental mist the suggestion selected. fied lines that he will draw spontanecleared away, the physical strength "Dtpsomanlucs are generally easy ously upon the resources treasured In his higher being for creative work in the normal sphere. DR. JOHN D. QUACKENBOS, FORMER COLUMBIA PROFESSOR. Prerequisite of 8uccess. SAYS . "Lapse Into sleep with the transllmlnal thus Invoked, to employ Itself THAT HE HAS Hypnotized an Ambassador and Enabled Him to Sucas Instructed, Is all but equivalent to ceed in an Important Diplomatic Mission. suggestion given by another. The preTHAT He Hypnotized a Mediocre Actress and Made Her a Broadway requisite of success Is earnest, IntelliStar. gent, persistent application of the selfTHAT You Can Cure Yourself of Drunkenness by given suggestions. "It Is In accordance with psychologTHAT Hypnotism Can Cure Seaslcknese, Locomotor Ataxia and Other ical law, now well tested .and proved, Maladies of Mind and Body and Call Back the Dying from the that If the active Intervention of one's own richly endowed spirit be honestly Edge of the Grave. and earnestly Invoked, adequate now- - LAYING rrsTT OF HYPNOTISM to-da- y er will always be forthcoming to re slst temptation, to destroy unworth? motives and Impulses,' to flood tM earth-lifwith curients of prompting e to sublime action. The unprincipled man Is he who never defers to bir transllmlnal self. "Inspiration comes from the inne: self, the spiritual personality, In rt sponso to spoken commands uttered In the approaches of sleep, and the faculty propulsion of supernormal grows easier with practice. before sleep, "By Robert Louis Stevenson obtained material, through Immediate dream representation, for his most Impressive romances. "For centuries," said Dr. Quackenbos, In conclusion, science has been seeking to fathom the real connection between mind and matter. It has but just reached an explanation In the philosophy of a transllmlnal control of the material by the Immaterial man, for the good pf the human complex." n self-regna- nEW :1 extra-planetar- y e to-da- EUROPE IS GROWING COLDER. auto-sug-tlo- n t Downing Street, Known as Hub of British Empire, and Has Long Figured In History Founded by an American. " ( - London. "The most famous street In the world," as It ls(called In London, la about to be closed to the public. This is. Downing street, which former Ambassador Joseph H.. Choate once described as "the connecting link between England and America, ' and which certainly Is one of the most interesting streets In the world, If It be not the most famous. Downing street Is the hub of the great British empire, yet as a street It is Insignificant, In fact, It Is worse It is the dreariest, dingiest imaginable, and Is dignified by being called a street at all. Excepting the-bigovernment buildings which cor-- 1 ner It, there are but two houses, Nos. 10 and 11. One Is the official residence of the prime minister of England, the other of the chancellor of the exchequer. The first of these, "No. 10, Is Indisputably one of the most historic buildings in existence. It Is in Downing street that the British cabinet meets. It Is here that the most important matters affecting the empire are discussed, ministries are made and broken and peace and war declared. There Is, of course, a sufficient reason for such a surprising step as the closing of Downing street to the public. Xhere have been whispers that the suffragettes Intended besieging the official residences of the prime minister and the chancellor of the exchequer. At any rate, the street Is to be closed, and It the suffragettes desire to do any rioting they must do it elsewhere. Downing street was started by an American. His name was George Downing, but he was not ah American on whom the United States can pride Itself. A historian of his own nationality, in fact, declares that "It became c Temperature of the Continent stantly Becoming Lower. Con- Some months ago there appeared in these columns some tables worked up to show by Camille Flammarion changes of a meteorological character which seem to have taken place In Europe, says the Philadelphia Record. Writing again, he states that from actual figures obtained within the past six years he has become certain that the temperature of Europe has been falling. France has been suffering for a long time from an excess of cold weather, the thermometrlcal readings at Paris having been one degree below the normal height. Other readings show even less favorable results. The fall is more noticeable during the spring than during Similar other periods of the year. prenomena are recorded In Great Britain, Belgium, Spain, Italy, Austria and Germany. In the days of Philip Augusta, in the thirteenth century, the wines of Etampes and Beauvais were the favorite beverages at court. Henry IV., a pronounced bon vlvant, frequently expressed his fondness for the product of the Suresnes grape. At the present day there is not a vineyard SOUTH-DOUN- For Parson, Santaquin and Lo Angelr ... No. Si For Pavaon, fcantaqulu and" Nephl No. M For Puyson, Nephl and" Mantl 61 No, NORTH-BOUN- " D No. 62 For Provo, PI Grove. No. 66 For Provo. Salt Lake ani",4l Amer. lean Fork, Leht, Meiour. (Salt Lake Intermediate point ,f For Provo, Salt Lake anf''li- intermediate point , I Palatial tralna are now running ),ii I tween Salt Lake and the Pnclllo Coait UTAH COUNTY la In direct touch, great cities Heat local train sorvlc i J. H. Burtnbr. District Paannrer'f N. PSTSRHES, Depot No. - 64 ij Tli-ko- t i 2J iDNRB fMBANDEWESlH Arrival and departure of tralna troa I ' 7 For Snrlnffvtlle. Provo, Suit Lake and afl point eatand writ... iv No.29 ForSnrlngvIUe Provo. Salt Uk, Y and all points eat and wrt i,f No. 8 For Eureka, Mammoth and Sll. t verCIty ( No. 28 For Eureka, Mammoth and - 1 . ver City Connections made In Ogden Union dtp J all trains of Southern Pacino umlOretoto "I Line. I OFFERS CHOICE OP No. SU- n. FAST THROUGH TRAINS f DULY AND THREE DISTINCT SCENIC BOH Pulman Palace and ordinary EleeploiaJ Denver, Omaha, Hannas City, St, Lm, 1 Chicago without change. Free Reclining Chair Cara; Peraontllj J ducted Excursions; a perfect vloe. For rate, j folder, eta , Inquire of P. K. Hxdrino, Ticket w G.A. P. D., Salt tt,; LA. or writ Dining cii I BENTON. &OBER.TSON g Lake STEBBEt CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Flattering and Cement Work a Specially. Mantle and Fir Flace Burnished tad k Spanish Fork, Vlab. DR. N. C. SPALDINC VETERINARY PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office at Palace DruJ Store, Both Prove, L Phr-nse- Makes regular call to Spanih Fork ever Thursday.. Office at World Drug btoit HORSE INFIRMAR Downing Street, London. a proverbial expression with New Englanders to say of a false maq who betrayed his trust that he was an arrant George Downing." This Downing was the son of Emanuel Downing of Salem, Mass. His mother was Lucy, sister of Gov. John WInthrop. He was educated at Harvard and was the second graduate of the university. For a time he was a professor there, teaching the younger students. Then he went off to the West Indies, wa chaplain of the ship and did a deal of preaching. He The eventually reached England. time were troublous, the civil war war, raging and Downing sided with Cram-wel- l. i pseudo-meningitis- THOROUGFARE LONDON TO BE CLOSED TO PUBLIC. SHORT Realistic Touch of Bernhardt! of Importance north of Paris, and as for the petit .vln now made at Suresnes, It has become the drink only of the poorer classes. In the middle of the sixteenth century Macon was celebrated for Its muscated wines, whereas the muscatel grape at this moment can scarcely be made to thrive there. Ancient chronicles mention the cultivation of the vine in northern Brittany, where now even apples are not plentiful. Again, it Is to be remarked that trees which once flourished In the north of France are at present found In the extreme south, and a considerable number have disappeared altogether. Languedoc no longer grows the lemon; there Is not an orange left' In Rouslllon. The Lombardy poplar, so familiar and picturesque In old French line engravings, Is now nowhere to b found on French soil. These are facti which, putting statistics out of the question, serve to Illustrate tbl changes wrought by temperature In the great country ol France. Life In Kentucky. When the king once more came ln.o hla own, Downings peace was made with Charles II. by Thomas Howard, brother of the earl of Suffolk and ancestor of the man who has made Daisy Lelter of Chicago and Washington an English countess. Soon after Downing was restored to favor the king made him the chief treasurer. Downing gave the profligate king all the money he wanted and In several pamphlets defended his royal master. He also saw that the king's three chief favorites, the duchess of Portsmouth, Lady Castlemalne and Nell Gwynn, had their share of dips Into the English treasury. He was such a great sycopant that he obtained a grant of 1100,000 from the king. He served In all the parliaments and was known as "the house bell to call all the courtiers to vote. The founder of Downing street built some houses on It which he sold as well as leased. Nos. 9, 10 and 11 were Bold to Lee Lord Litchfield, master of the horse to King James II. When the king fled from England Lord Litchfield had to do the same, and his property wns forfeited to the crown. In this sny these three houses came Into the possession of the government. King George I. knocked Nos. 9 and 10 Into one residence and presented It to Baron Bothmar, the Hanoverian minister, for life. On Bothmar's death George II. offered the houso as a gift to Sir Robert Walpolt, then prime minister. Walpole refused It for him-selbut accepted It as the office of the first lord of the treasury and perpetual official residence of the prime minis-ter- . Drummer (at Moonshlnevllle, Ky.) Good morning, Mr, Crossroads; how's business? Storekeeper (disconsolately) Mighty poor, mighty poor. You see, a new store started up In Opposition to me, and of course I couldn't stand thut, so I Jest gave my frlen's th wink, und they commenced killin' off his customeis; but he hud more trade than I knlkerlated on, an' w'en his And thus lt,came about that Downcustomers began to shoot back It street Is "the most famous street ing made a party even fight,-an- ' both In the world." Although all the sides killed each other off so fast that proclamations and official papers of now there ain't either of us got any England are dated from "Our Ialnce customers, X. Y. Weekly, of St. James'," they r.ally emanate from Downing street. For two centuries the British empire has been run Tbs Trouble with 8om Peopls, from the dingy house In this narrow One trouble with some people Is that a very small effort enables them to dull and probubly will continue for centuries of the future. keep their self respect. 1 At the old Oraa Lewie corner, oft VW ville road, Spaniah Fork, Utah- - X Split? Bon Spavins end Pipee of Fcetala Ninon or no pay. Crippled and lame hone! Alleiimel examined irip specialty. charge. Look well to your home' feci from them come many diseases. "Lite Ut live it my motto. J A. BROT X X What's the matter!) I IDAHO IQ) Thousands of acres of laadh been reclaimed to cultivate irrigation in that State dr the put 10 years. Thorn. more will be reclaimed the next 10 years. This n an openiug for many thoum of homes. Have You Investigated It has been truthfully IDAHO! termed i Land of Opportunity A Land of Homes The Oregon Short Line Railroad will be pleased to eendaeseriptiwf ter regarding Idaho's resources. to 1). E. Burley, G P. A., or D. S.Sf eer. A, G. P. A., Salt Lake City. C' B. H. BROWN, Livery AFD Stable. Hack Meets all Train? 'phone No. 12. e Rpealsk Pork, " t Spanish Fork Hive Co-Op- or Institution, Dealers In f, General Merchandise, Flour, O Grain Produce and tfsaufacturers of Harness, Boots ud Shoes. JOHN JONES, SupL tpanish Fork - - 0 j |