Evening Star Newspaper, January 1, 1923, Page 22

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Coue Effects Cures by Force Of the Optimism He Imparts “Little Wizard of Nancy” Insists He Does Not Heal by Own Efforts, But Merely Points Way to Patients iss Emile C [Editor's Note atihews an American girl, curee Tow on his way to the U This is the second articie by absolutely red ted | States, and who will write a series of articles to be_published e The Star, beginnin NANCY, Fr Those “Little W study sively nest MATTHEW riday. ] BY 1ce afar to for eit first from anc; who come ard of or cure are at in Washiugton in December 15.— the her greatly dismayed and a little disappointed But he is so simple! come so far feel that he v sonality? for only this? ally you has a strong per- And didn’t vou find those I little exercises that he had us do with our aver cured an ory infantile? Has nic disease? hands rather he | Coue has so cleansed Why have T Do | extremely Is he | not, after all, merely a fad with nerv- | ous women These from newcomers, vre totally daily contributi Bnt the parting are the sion of gratitude morphosis which takes place in life of every in wish to touch mony of one who with Prof. Coue tha the living te who goes contact upon man doinz good b formed me that M celved 3£ T wished to might short, rather hall. his hetween tobac he 1 T was ush me by th kitchen maid. who never but t Coue any one in private, do so. At tocky that momen man entered e k browned raustache and 0-stained fing. keen Then and exclaimed: Woman Rid of Pain. s W gave me the look ned observe n jumped u ons ex- is something different and it is this meta- th ¢ comes a0 ti- about nto his comtortable in- hat ttend his public clinic t the A Cigarette out from held it hile of a waliting | word { beauties a difficulty than to walk up with dif- culty. is sincere man has a gospel it gospel of common sense, the ity of which is making itself ay the world over. His dis- very of the potency of the Imag- tion over all the other faculties led to a knowledge of the power the subconscious mind. .~ This can be used as a means of self-mastery by any and all who will open their minds to jt. It is not a sect, a creed or a religion, but rather a means of self-development, a line or re-education from which you may Dbenefit, be. you Catholic ~or P'rotestant, Jew or Gentile, bellever or unbeliever in the potentcy of auto- suggestion. For the foundation upon which M. Coue's method is based is so scientific that it can bear fruit if one will closely follow directions. iturally confidence in the method will bring about quicker results. Cures Englivh Woman. iosuggestion ever effected lis” the leatnol felt delached and impersonal as he_was. But- have not all of life's -gretest truths come to us, innocent of preten- sions and from most impersonal sourc: A man of child-like simplicity, Prof. | nic cure? This is the question himself of ali|asked most frequently. The writer personal interests that he has become | has had the privilege of following an unchoked channel for living ( the e subsequently nientioned ou_but accept it here in rd has talked to the which it is giv themselve: es in vour thou ths ko an Englls mpassion and d suffered fro y for service have become perfected in | brought to M him because of his supreme detach- For ment and self-effacement. Though been. impersonal. I you alyzed fmprint of & o Today lish woman injured Coue in eight one. firs and she, had was chait 4 he had | side entirely pa visit she lcft her walked across th walks all over th of Nanc There is at p in Coue's who spine v bath the s ity. But his is not the personality of the man who has an idea of his own im-{ v ‘ongenita Sl gl L | etinic young man with congenital agent | jo whose legs at birth and has his secretary dismise unin- | 207t s al 4 teresting people. His 1. and who has passed one maid of all- iy i P “ting p 13 4 life in hospitals, work serves him occasionally when | 1, 478 Pl Tusing e is not occupied ministering tof cpugches and in constant pam. In his omore self-centered visito 1| two weeks M. Coue's treatment Joubt if he ever heard of a publicity | he was entirely free from suffering. campaign such as we have merica. | 1y, walks everywhere, priding He never gives a rendezvous because | himself that he is able to go up- he will sbeak to you at any time and | siuirs without even the aid of the ‘lN e where vou approach hin 1d | banisters. He is still lame, but has ‘H( him & question contidene in_ the ability of i rl d!)el‘\mmhl_\ could better he com- s subconscious mind to enable his pared o the sign on the roadway | hip Joint to so adjust itself that his vhich imbs the mountain nip will some time function normally. the hand with the index fing \ amuse the skeptics to know !zg ll; the summit, 4 ecting 1is young man has already at- REDRIEE Ty igh | in" this short time what M roader Ve do not told him a: the beginning that sive thanks 1o th 3 id never hope to achieve. Prof. encounter. We take th admits daily his own consterna- there are unima t the resuits which his patients T ead. and if we follow th ain direction we usually find ti i A w o we 3 d the summit oman To me M, Coue has hoen «f | Coue some Pointing ith infallible ment the summits of life ith part_of his life in b now vista horizon due which we that came to Prof. few weeks ago for treat- gen health, so that able to undergo an ion for tumor. He did not treat e tumor at all, but merely stions for her general other day she returned report that when she the hospital for the oper- of Nan; would b certitude to she Instills Confiden He shares with a)l 1 a all the the ability to project himeelr e the experiences of othere 1 fodivs cliviclo clinic he knows truly | Gardetia ana gonn Ga CATHOLIC VETERANS INTED 10 NEETNG Committees to Be Organized to Arrange for Military Vespers on February 11. All local men are invited to a mass meeting in the Aloysius Club, 47 T street, at 7:45 o'clock Thursday night, fo organize committees for miltary vespers to be held in St. Aloysius Church on the night of February 11, to commemorate the sinking of the Maine and of the troop ship Aquatania. The Aquatania was sunk off the north coast of Ireland on the night of Feb- T 12, 1917, by a submarine, with 2,000 men on board, bound for France, as well as considerable supplies for the French front. W. H. Lowder of 1 Rosedale street northeast will be chairman of the meeting. He will be assisted by D. J. Leahy, Edward Sullivan, Henry Lovel W. J. Harrington, Joseph her. Delegates from the Soldiers’ Home, Walter Reed Hospital, the Naval Hos- pital, Mount Alto Hospital, the Grand the Republic, the United War Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Legion, the Army and Navy unions and the Disabled Veterans’ ociation, as well as the Retired Enlisted Men's Assoclation, the war mothers, ladies’ auxiliaries from various former serv- ice men’s organizations and enlisted men from Army, Navy and Marine camps. Rev. J. Sweeney will preach at the services. Vocal selections will be endered by the St. Aloysius full choir. Wreaths will be placed at the Maine anchor and at the tomb of the unknown soldier in Arlington on February 15, —_— every patient hope and self-knowl- edge until he brings about his own cure. Prof. Coue will live forever in the hearts of the thousands of pa- tients who go from him not only well Catholic former service | 1 ADYOUNGTERS | AT HOLIDAY PARTY Knights of ‘Columbus Dis- tribute Tokens of Christ- mas Cheer. Fourteen hundred white and colored youngsters were presented with tokens of Christmas cheer yesterday when the annual Knights of Colum- bus party for orphans was held at the Knights of Columbus Hall, 918 10th street. The party was the ninth largest that was ever held by the Knights in Washington. To those children who could not attend at the hall presents were sent in care of the institutions which harber them Tree Bearing Gifte. was a tree with trimminge fts. Therc a clown b azz and syncopative crash There was good old St Kk to § that those who are seen last are seen v . There were candies, and and cakes, and horns, and gifts, anical toys, dolls, games and littie ' what-nots for the and the The The o'clock. crowd began arriving at 3 It kept coming for the rest of the afternoon. Mgr. C. F. Thomas of St. Patrick’s gave the children a short talk on the spirit of the sea- son. Deputy Grand Knight in Charge. Benjamin F. Crifasi, deputy knight of Carroll Council, general chairman of the party. ssisted by a committes Darr, D. J. Callahan, James A. Sul- livan, John E. Burns, James T. Ryan, Edward Tucker and Thomas K. Gal laher. A committee of the Daughters of Isabella augmented the personnel of the Knights of Columbus commit- tee. . PARLIAMENT TO MEET. | Dominion Legislators to Be Sum- moned January 31. | The Havenner Baking Co. Announces the Sale of its Horse and Wagon Delivery Equipment at Public Auction Tuesday, Jan. 2nd, 1923, at 10 a.m. At the Bakery, 476 C St. N.W. B. P. Dougherty, Auctioneer The sale is made necessary because of the elec- trifying of the Havenner Delivery Service and will include— 23 Horses 23 Wagons 23 Sets of Single Harness 3 Sets of Double Harness 30 Halters Together with separate pieces of harness, blan- kets, weights and other livery accessories—all in the very best condition. For further information, inquire of Fred Johnson 476 C Street Telephone Main 781 “Ooh. M vou don’t_know how how to offer you have changed my life by ridding ulder which vears! T have under your Cons in body, but marvelously refreshed in spirit. (Coprright, OTTAWA, January 1.—The Dominion pariiament will be summoned vene here January 31, it w: last night by the prime n i discovered that mor. ough mpathy o engthe PAUEnt. but mever cnoush f wral kim. In unsuccesstul patients he ¥s able 10 tell ex fail to practice his order to bring about the sults, Then his face will With that radiantly e str to con _me of that pain in my s 22 by North American 2 have had for eight e Dlaced myself entirely control.” . my dear madame, that is just t vou should not do. T am not a | He is optimistic merely a professor and | person tured = His ; vor to teach my pupils how to | imagination picture It 1 had cured you. | body restored to heait ime vou were ill you | Jeanne d'Arc mignt ha 1 to leave your * | the stake when she said und come to Nancy 1o |Jesus” and feit no longer the limiia want you to develop | tions of the flesh, because her ., he power of healing | agi n had pletured to her the lite; W ch never have to re- | bavond, free from Sufferinm | termine To a woman who is subject to pe= It 4s His {odical illness he will remark reached out into the air and har- light seen | you in pain now. madame? nessed a power which we call ele lives. |~ “No. monsieur. 12 and made it serve us, though with al “It i3 a great pity, madame we are stll ignorant of source healthy coloring: white hair receding | should have the pieasure and composition. the way from a very high forehead. His eyes instant relief.” = | Prof ue h red Rreit ar half “closed in scrutiny or | Then. turning to her neighbor. he | POwer ibeenscious mind Lo pointed white beard |will ask: “And veu. madame r eas into realities and thu seem to follow the |is your rheumatism today? Are f conscious and e eves and somehow help to [in pain now?" i it of body project into your consciousness the 0. not just ot tell words with which he ad-|returns every evening thix discove dresses vou ! Out comes™ the After the first meeting T left feeling [rette. A cloud passos i i ) t that 1 had received no benefit whatso- | forehead. er timi of & true liberator, he ever. but it might be my own fauit. 1| “My dear friends, o) content to heal people would try it again. At the occasion of | eager to tell me that | with him, but has my next meal 1 remembered that T had | going to return a little away every one decided hew my food thorougaly. | will return because vou i ister of himself th d always known that I|We are all vic of our i i ercome all his phys > Irof. Coue had piunted | tions, Eighty per cent of the peo 1 moral imperfections. so firml¥ in my eub-[who limp are lame because they thin S that 1 must chew my | they are” s Taer o Commerchaliien to do it. And I did simpl 1 realized that “ail his sug egarding my sleep, my daily physical life, my state of mind, were all becoming slowly but eurely vealitics. T hecame gay where I had bhecn worried, composed where T had bheen irritable, happy where I had been unhappy. Something came welling up from iy inner self and saying to my conscious mind: “You are going to have confidence in vourself. You are going to do work well because it_is easy and the thing you should do. You Eoin h more and more Str elf you shouid be.” All my thoughts had become positive, checr ful and healthful. Without Personality. But T told myself that it was simply my common sense working this change fn me. Certainly it was not the force |protested M. Coue. “It is less mirac- | of M. Coue's personality, for he|ulous and nearer the normal for a |f had none. I had never seen a man solperson to walk up stairs without' thi Prof. Cou most_ conserva Ve in his comment upon the likeli- {hood of cure in the of cach pa- tient. He states his doubts and hopes ving any false gement. But he pupils that wi healer 1 ende enre th Ives then xt would be obl in Californi be cured within your o that vor turn to me His small. hbrown eves danced wax radiant_ with a only in peonie of consecrated Tt is a youns face ti larging 4| training a new field of endeavor, the none of us as mind is limits of | can vet de- Special Prices on Special Features Some very interesting bargains are awaiting your coming tomorrow. Things vou'll want—at prices w made most attractive. Of course, vou know the privilege of a charge account is always open to you. much the same as when we House & Herrmann th 10! | man_of I with th has while vou ende This man. actuated by the has been content to ird in the hearts of the || 1 patients whom he has helped | | than to paint his name high || =0n 5 heavens for all to r minds are in the possessing little personai ! our bodies as the motor of an - me e has somehow managed 16 || mobile is to the body of th The | giv hims<elf and his time gratu- medical profession preparcs men only | itousis twenty years to all whe with the knowledge of the ter. y called upon him.~ His work has re- | Applied psychology feaches us how | mained « from the slightest taint | [lff to treat the engind he two studies | of « ercialism | should supplement each other. | He who can and will free One time a woman who had had |er fr Lis own prison asthma for twenty vears ran bondage—not by the foree stairs to prove to herself that healer, but by the |was cured. viction in the heart of Miraculous!” wa her that he is his own sav i every one who witnessed it ainly servant of both “But it is not miraculous at all.” ¥ k| | Defines Mind and Bo i Tn speaking of the with purest motives, medical works Coue onee d profes sion, hand, Prof, which he hand-in- Our relation to same his broth- house of | of an out- planting of (Exactly as Illustrated) Four-FPiece Bedroom Suite Combination Mahogany or Walnut Suite, as you prefer ~Dresser, Chifforette, Full Size Vanity = . | Case and Double Bed, with bow { foot. D Of most consistent workmanship Chassis gy ~Price~ Reduced from $275 to. 1185 e 0. Las: . 8. Leasi Piss Federsl Tes she (Exactly as Illustrated) Dining Room Suite Attractive Queen Anne patte Quarter-sawed Oak— Jacobean finish. There are four pieces, as shown—the Table having top 48 inches in diameter, $137 50 . extendable to 6 feet. Kitchen Cabinet $13500 SpecialPriceis..,...........:.. (Exactly as Illustrated) the comment o ma With i the finite love uffe an ouses in nd com morall the 50 il $165 Seven-piece Ivory Bedroom Suite . $275 Four-piece l1vory Bedroom Seber . .- $350 Eight-piece Combination Ma- hogany or Walnut Bedroom Suite with TwinBeds ..o ... ....... $385 Seven-piece Combination Ma- hogany Bedroom Suite $300 Seven-piece Combination Ma- hogany Bedroom Suite........ I - F = ; : $21 7% 1 ':'.” $26.85 ll Of excellent Oak construc- tion—with porcelain sliding top; flour bin, sugar and spice jars; the inclosed cal is White three drawe ‘Speed Wagon dominance in city de- li_very, highway haulage and farm ser- vice isdecisive indication of the survival of the fittest. Mor? than 75,000 have been put to v 7 i = /V. B work in practically every business ‘ ; 1 where hauling is a factor, simply be- SatleaCtory cause the Speed Wagon will out-econ- Heat omize any other motor truck regardless i —— of size or price. R . saving of fuel from Capacity, 500 to 2500 pounds. $15.75 TREW MOTOR COMPANY and $19.75 14th and T R e (Temporary Location) Main 4173 $25.00 and $29.50 “Saves Space and Worry-Converts in a Hurry” You can turn the Englander Couch Bed from an attractive Couch into a_comfortable Dou- ble Bed with onc motion. “quipped with the Englander 00 Link Spring and Cotton Mat- tress. Covered 25' _ in Denim. SPI 322.50 Colonial Bed (Bxactly as Tilustrated) Rockers (Exactly as Illustrated) Golden Oak or Mahog- any finish; designed on g enerous, comfortable lines ; broad back ; shaped arms ; upholstered s Four - poster Beds— combination Walnut or Mahogany, with grace- fully shaped turnings and open foot end. Either in Twin or Double Size. SPECIAL. seat in imitation Spanish leather. CIAL . SCRAIL .o llllllllll% 0 Seventh and Eye Streets seventh and - House and Herrmann Eye Streets “Furniture of Merit” B s ——

Other pages from this issue: