THE EVIDENCE OF THE INVISIBLE FORCES EMANATING FROM HOMOEOPATHIC REMEDIES AND THEIR RELATION TO SIMILAR ANIMAL AND VEGETABLE ENERGY



Finally, electric phenomena are always present in living matter.

The living transformer of energy obeys the same laws of the conservation of energy as do non-living energy transformers.

In accordance with the bipolar theory, these processes which distinguish the living from the non-living are due to electrical forces within the protoplasm, which endow the protoplasm with the essential qualities of irritation, assimilation and reproduction.

Moreover, not only do electric forces construct the component structures of the cell but they arrange the atoms and molecules of the structures outside the cell which play their part also in rendering effective the electric charges created within the cell itself.

Thus, the invisible forces emanating from homoeopathic remedies are evidence of their relation to similar animal and vegetable energy, which explains Hahnemanns Laws of vegetable energy, which explains Hahnemanns Laws of Similia Similibus Curentur and Simplex Simile Minimum. SEATTLE, WASH.

Mrs. L.O., age about 45, married. Dementia praecox.

History of ten miscarriages.

Mental symptoms: ugly; cant sleep nights; wanders all over neighborhood and city if she can get out of the house unseen. Imagines all sorts of things. Religious mania.

Was considered hopeless and incurable. Cicuta virosa 10M. and she is about 80 per cent cured.

Miss A.C., age about 24. Dementia praecox.

Case diagnosed by three leading mental experts, who decided she was utterly hopeless.

History of being overheated while standing in the sun for over an hour waiting for a street car during one of the hottest days.

Every cat or dog she saw was as a green-eyed monster to her. Hadnt had over two hours sleep for three months, not eaten a regular meal during this time. Baryta phos. 10M.

She has returned to work this last winter; she is a duster in the stock room of a dry goods store. -VIRGINIA M. JOHNSON, M.D.

C.P.Bryant
C. P. BRYANT, M. D.
Seattle.
Chairman, Bureau of Surgery