-H if.".!. V 4 THE baFfeON STATESMAN, SALEM. OREGON SUNDAY MORNING. APRIL 15, 1923 ,By, s Upton Sinclair i . An Account of the Revolutionary Discovery of Dr. Albert! Abrams, the Diagnosis of Disease : from the Radio Activity of the Blood j (Reprinted from Pearson's Magazine for June, 1922) , r ; . . . . , ,. . ' 1 . r J -'',:!. 1 : For 1 tome fifteen ?r eighteen years. I i have had the good, for tune to count among my friends on of America's greatest poets and1 most lovable ot men, Georg Sterling. For ten or twelve of ' these velars I have been accus tomed i td read in his letters ex travagant statements ' concerning - a certain San Francisco physician. He" would say. I should never again 'be afra'd of getting any disease. Abrams would cure it in m weekoor two." He would say, "My friend .Abrams continues to work new inlracles, so rapidly that the medical profession have been frightened away from htm." These - statements were so extreme, that I failed to Jake them as seriously as I should? I wish now to profit by that blunder, and tell what I hate to tell as cautiously and con- rervatively. as possible, so as not to frighten the reader away. AC few months ago I received from George Sterling a letter from which i I quote a couple ' of para--!j graphs : j;-; '. '..;; . '" .' j "I am iglad to see you're in 1 terested In Dr. Abrams. and wish 1 could, orally discuss him ..with ! you. He has utterly revolutionised medicine, land henceforth! nine op i erations out of tn willbe unneces sary; especially those where -bac-' 11 If are concerned. I send you one of bis quarterly pamphlets, which ' he publishes for the many physi cians who have taken, "his course. There's always a lot of them In his! laboratory, and. taey fell me that ; his ' diagnosis , are .100 per centi eorjrect.' In this quarterly, read especially' the 'article' by Sir James -Barr, late president of the British Medical Association; real Iziag meanwhile what It means for . a conservative English physician , to j make such '. statements! ; , And ' ,Barr s going jto be convinced even as to cancer. ; t know of many cases that Abrams has cured late ' ly.flour of;them personal friends of mine. And tuberculosa is noth ing to him. To me he seems the greatest man ever born. . '.' ;V; Se I decided to go to San Fran cisco and Investigate. I planned to spend a day. or two, but what I found there held me a couple of 'Weeks, and it might have been months or even years, if urgent ' duties i had not called me home. X Chink the best way for me to . present ! to you the work of Dr. Albert Abrams is to take you Into nis' clinic, iand let yon see-what J saw at my first visit, without any preparation or- explanation. It is a two-story; building en Sacramen to (street, and after I had visited it a' tew times;' X took: to caUing It T5' House of Wonder,", for I saw 'in it such miracles as I had never dreamed of la this world. ; ,Tou; are In a physician's labork ; tory. with rows of raised chairs along one aide of the wall These chairs .are occupied by a score or so of physicians, .who have come I from all over the country to study 'Abrams work. In the center of the, room is a long table eqtitaln lng some electrical apparatus. One (tf the wires from this apparatus ends In an electrode,! and In front tti the ; table, upon j a grounded blate, stands a young man, stripped to- the .waist, and with the" electrode pressed .to his fore head, i Dr. Abrams sits on a chair r before the (young man. and taps with his ringer upon the tatter's abdomen, a method known to phy sicians as "percussion." To save yoa usaecesBary bewilderment. I explain at once that this young man la not the. patient being ex amined; this young man is known as ;the subject,", and his body , Is merely, ooe v ot the Instruments which Abrams uses lnhls exami nation The patient Is In Toronto, or .Boston, or Mexico City, and all ; that Dr.-Abrams has is half a dos- , en ; drops of his blood upon a bit ! of clean white blotting; paper, t j f'Nekt 8pecImen,, ,- eay I)rl Abrams, iand his assistant takes r from aa envelope a blood, speci men which has come In that morn- ' lag's mail, and cuts. It to the right : slfn d i puts it In a little box which is connected by wire with a rheostat, ; in turn connected .with the bod ot the subject. J ''I The . doctor's assistant hands him a letter which has come with the specimen, and, the doctor reads it to his clinic: il send the blood OfjMrs. J.. age 46 years." That H i J all.' "No symptoms!" grum bles Abrams.: f'They want to try me out i ot course, and I can't b(ame them, but it Is a waste of my time, to begin at the beginning in each easev All right, gentle men, we set' the instrument at 49, which Is the vibratory Tate of hu man blood.. . .1 don't; happen to kbow i this doctor; who sends - the specirnen, and - there are people trying to play tricks on me all the time. ; If this - specimen contains haman blood, the vibratory rate will come through oh the body of, the subject, and we shall have a dull area oni this spot, if it is a V male.T UThe doctor indicates : a liae just below the navel, and i about an inch to the left. "If if Is a female, the dull area' will be, on tbfe corresponding " spot fo the rliht-l .Now ll3ten." - .v; iHe presses the 'second finger of : hla left hand against the abdomen ot his subject, and with? the second v fiager of his right hand, used as, a little.. hammer. : he begihs to tap. He starts a couple of Inches off 'v trtm the correct spot., and you harj;a slightly resonant sound. He moves his fing-r,' and when he comes upon the correct; spot you notice a difference in the sound V least you come to notice it af ter you have listened through sev eral sessions of the clinic and your ear : has become practiced. The sound Is duller the same dltfer- ence you would noticef if you were percussing a table, and changed from the middle of the table to a spot over one of the pegs. . "It is human blood, female." : says Abrams, "In order 'to verify It, 1. set the rheostat at 50, and you notice that .the dallness dis appears I set it back lat- 49, and the dullness returns. I call your attention to the fact that the sub ject is I facing west. I turn his body slightly out of the line, so, and you note the dullness is goae, even ail 49. I have to impress upon you again and again. the im portance of these minute details. I do not know why it is necessary to facejwest; it must have some thing to do with the magnetic cur rents of the earth, of course. All I know 'is that if you fate the west' you get these reactions,: and if you tace any other way, you don't get them. All this work pf mine is empirical, you understand. I ex periment and find; what happens. il try one way, and then I try an-rl i other; so little bylittle !I am grop-1 ing , my way to these 3 secrets of nature, j . j "Now we have here a specimen of a woman's blood and. without being given any symptoms we , are asked to find the disease, if there be a disease.. "Wei begn with the most common of all diseases, that Is ' to say, , congenital! syphilis. There are latent syphilitic condi tions in the blood, which can be recognised only by thisi method of electronic analysis. find that aa enormous percentage1 of human beings have a hereditary syphilitic affection, and, , this prepares the body soil for numerous other dis eases, such as tuberculosis and cancer, if We now aet the rheostat at 57, which is the vibratory rate for congenital syphilis, j If this vibratory-rate is j present In the blood. It "will come through and manifest Itself , upon the body of the subject In i what, we call the 'dumbbel area, extending across the upper portion of the abdomen. Now listen." And the doctor be gins to tap. You her?-r he says. "Congenital syphilis. 4 We will how determine; the strain. If it is bovine, there will be an area, of dullness here." He indicates a spot above the navel 'of his sub ject. Yes, bovine strain. Vac cination, as usual! We will next determine the virulence of the dis ease. We will; set this dial of the rheostat at 30 ohms as a gnessJt comes through, you see.' We try 35 ohms. A very severe Case. 37 ohms, 38 ohms. At 38 you notice that the dullness disappears. We set It back fo37 It comes through at 37. I We will now examine the specimen for tuberculosis. We set the rheostat at; 4?,' ' No reaction. We will try cancer, (0; the dull area should be here. lAh! Tou no tice? - Unmistakable! To show you the' difference, I set it at 49. At '4?, you see, ' there" is Ithe reaction for human bloof , at this spot by the navel, but so reaction in the cancer area. We set it back at 60 and the dullness j returns at once. A - Y ' ' ' "We have now to determine the location of the disease. Cerebro spinal? That should confe through here. Nocerebrb-spinal. Digest ive? Yes. Cancer ot ihev digestive tract, Where? ( We try here and here, ' Ah, yes. cancer of the pylor us. We will ; determine the oh mage. Five! ohms?; ; 4lf comes through. ; Ten ohms?r Again! A very severe - case. Twelve ohms, yes. It has passed the stage where It Is operable. In a case of this sort, gentlemen, we arel In posi tion to destroy the malignancy of the disease, but we cannot re move the growth, nor can we cor rect any structural changes 'which may have taken place. This speci men comes from Detroit,; and we are asked to telegraph the diag nosis. We telegraph that we find Congenital syphilis, 37 ohms, bo vine strain ; also cancer ot the pylorus, 12 ohms. . We prescribe treatment with the oscilloclast at the rates ot 2 and 5. Next speci men." Xli-V ' '. V The assistant takes the blood specimen from rl he little box and throws : It into , the trash basket. She touches the top and inside and cover of the box with." a little-horse-shoe magnet' t'o destroy the radio-activity of! the last specimen, and puts in another specimen, this time from a physician in Boston. I This specimen is marked . "male,1 age 62." "Another physician I do not know," says Abrams. "And again no symptoms given. It seems that we have to spend the whole morn ing dorng this a-b-c work; every physician in the countryihas to be separately convinced and. . then they aren't convinced!.., All right, no help for it First', is it human lblood?i We feet the dial at 49. Forehead, please." .. The subject1 places the electrode upon -his ffcrrehead, and Dr.! Abrams begins to tap. "Aha!" he says. A practical joker.'; Not hu man blood! You see, gentlemen,! it is clear and unmistakable. The; area for human blood is precisely here Now listen carefully; there is no difference whatever in the! sound. Neither male nor female!! About once a . week we have some one trying to play this silly Joke upon us. . Jurt for fun, let ns de4 termine what kind of blood it ls.'f And the doctor sets the rheostat at one figure after another. "Cow's, blood? r No. : Dog's blood? No. Chit ken's blood? - No.,.,, Monkey, cat. sheep ah yes, sheep's bipod He has: pressed the paper against his Sunday dinner before it went Into the oven. All right, we wljl waste no. more time upon that The : doctor itajces the , envelopfii and the venemence of his pencil as he . writes the . words "shenr blood" ought surely. If there be anything in his theory of radlt4 activfty, to convey a vigorous shock to the doctor In Boston who has played the trick. 'i "Next specimen." And so we proceed. Another sample is put in, and the tapping begins, and we are told that this person has 25 ohms of tuberculosis, located in the spinal cord ' and left kidney. We are fold that the disease is of 12' years standing, also that there is "strep," that is to say strepto cocci, or pus infectioh fn the teetH on the lower left hand side. 1 W are told that ; the next specimen which comes from a town in Texasi indications whatever, and we are tain precise spot of the brain. The next specimen comes .without any indications whatever, "and we are told that it is a woman 52 years of age, and that she is suffering from acquired syphilis of 14 years standing, and that the lesion will be located on the right forefinger. Some of these findings are made in two or three minutes. None 61 them take more than ten minutes, and after you' have watched the work for an hour, you find your? self with one clear-cut conclusion in your mind i this eager and ex citable - little Jewish doctor is either one of the greatest geniuses in the history of mankind, or else one of the greatest maniacs. You are not quite sure whteh. and you go on day after day, and still you cannot be sure, because the thing unveiled to your view is so amaz-f ing, you cannot make it real to yourself.- ;;. j t . H ! But one thing quickly become! clear, to you. jj The hypothesis ot fraud must be excluded. This man Is passionately, even furiously conj vinced ijf the realfty of his phe- entist, working in' the highest tra ditions of the healing art. He Is a much over-worked man, irritable and nervous. ; Things go wrong with his apparatus'; the wires get In his way, or his assistants make blunders, and he says "Damn it!" and has to apologize to the lady doctors. But present him with a hew idea, some way to verify or perfect his work, and he pounces on iff like a cat'J He is a veritable incarnation of Nietzsche's phrase about the human! soul, which "hungers for knowledge 'as the lion for his food." There is no exj periment he will not try.tyou sug gest an idea to him one morning, and discover next day that he has slept' only two hours he Was working the rest of the time on that idea. There is hardly any subject of human thought about which he has not read and has not something vivid aud vital fo say. Incidentally he Is a warm hearted, lovable! man. whose., work it is a personal pleasure to aid. j He has a marvelous acquain tance with the human .body; -He calls it the most delicate scien tific instrument: in existence, and he has not merely that knowledge of its structure and functions which other physicians and sur geons possess he has gone on to explore the radio-activity it mani fests, and the tnflnife variety of reaction resulting therefrom. Many years ago this man was known in the medical profession as the discoverer ot "the reflexes of Abrams." He studied thener jvous. system of the body, tracing out each minute thread of nerve, and showing exactly where dis turbances In the functions and structure would manifest them selves.: It is this knowledge about nerve reactfons which he has now turned to use. The nerve threads all cafry different vibrations, and If radio-activity is Introduced Into the body, they Instantly sort it out, and manifest It at a certain area, which can be found.'. Vou decide that the man is not a fraud, and then you begin to wonder, can It be, that he is de ceiving himself, and that he only imagines he 13 getting these re actions? You talk with the phy sicians who sit watching, i Why ddyou come here?" you ask, and the answer is. "jl sent Abrams some blood specimens, and found his diagnoses were right every time." You ask another, and get the same response. You ask a third, and he says, "He diagnosed ray cancer while I was in Illindis, and cured it, so I came to learn about it." Half the physicians here have been cured of some thing, you find, and several .are in process of cure. I One came in while 11 was there, and t watched an entertaining lit tle drama. He was an ) elderly gentleman, "retired from practice because of nervous breakdown. His case had been diagnosed ' at a certain famouB sanitarium, so he knew all about himself, and you could see that he was highly sus picious! of these electronic gym nastics. He told me that his mind was open jto any new truth; but my wife, ho is a Judge of charac ter, remjarked to me, "There hasn't, anything .new got into his mind in twenty-five , years." Abrams examined his blood and found tuberculosis, cerebro-spinai. and you could- see that the old gentleman wasj not satisfied.; Evi dently he said so, for next, morn ing he was on hand again, and Abrams said. "I have told Dr. So-and-so. that I will locate for him the precise spot where he suffers intense pain, and he agrees that if & can uo ma ue win lwi rea- aurt-u iuuui my jnciuuu. Dr. So-and-so has! stripped to the waist, and sits facing the west, wlfh his arms stretched out and hts feet on grounded plates. . An assistant takes an electrode and places it on Dr. So-and-so's spine below the waist. Abrams, mean time, remains In his seat before the feubject; for strange as It may seem, he learns more about' the patient from the subject's body than from the patient's body! "Draw down the curtain, please," he; says, and a shade is drawn, separating the patient from the subject' and from Abrams. "I do this." he expla'ns, "In order to ex clude the personal equation. I might be influenced -by watching the patiest, and I want to con vince him that these tests are de pendent upon nothing- but the" radio-activity of his disease. We set the dial at 42, which is the vibratory rate of tuberculosis. My assistant will move the electrode up the spine of the patient, and when it comes to the seat of the disease the dull area will mani fest itself on the body of the sub ject here and here. I want you to listen for the sound. My assistant will move the electrode slowly. Each reaction takes twelve sec onds, and if you move foo quickly I do not get the reactions prop erly, on I confuse one area with another. Now, ready." f The doctor begins to tap upon the abdomen of his subject, and the assistant moves the electrode, covering a new spot each time. Fi nally the dull sound is henrd, and Abram-s cries, "Stop! Mark.j it please." The assistant .takesj, a pencil and makes a mark about the electrode. "That ts where you have the pain. Dr. So-and-so," says Abrams, and Dr. ' So-and-so looks bewtldered and answers, . "Yes, that is the" spot." ; 1 1 "Now," says Abrams. ''we wHl begin at the top and work down the spine and I will tell you when you come to the same spot." This is done. "And now,"; says Abrams, "I am going to show you how -this experiment may be entirely separ ated from the personal equation. I am troing to demonstrate it with the pith ball." He takes from the drawer a rod, having a ball of drred pith about the size of your little finger-nail suspended by a thread. The assistant takes a, flannel cloth and , a rod of hard rubber, and rubs; It vigorously, to electrify it. and touches' the pith ball with it several tlmes- The p'th ball now carries a Blight charge of electricity. "You see that it leaps away, from the rod. Like repels like. But the radio activity of the disease is of the op posite polarity, and ;will attract' this pith ball. I press the end of. the rod upon the body of the pa-l tient. so that the pith ball bangs about one inch away. I put it here, where, there is no disease, and you note that it hangs per fectly motionless; but now I f put it over the spot "which is. marked, andj we wait a few seconds for the reaction, and you see the pith ball move3 in. It is drawn, in unmis takably, sometimes it touches the. skin; 'and we can repeat th's ex periment as often as we wish. We can check it up by putting the electrode at the seat of the . dis ease, and bringing the pith ball over to the body of the subject:; at the dull area we see It move." I assume that the reader Is skeptical concerning these- mira cles. It Is proper that he should be. Some one may -point out that the little drama with Drj. So-and-so might easily have been arranged in advance, after a fashion under stood In the "medium parlors," where you talk with the spirit of your deceased grandmother for the1 sum of two dollars. But I sat in this clinic twice a day for a couple of weeks, and in that time I saw several hundred blood spec imens . examined, ,'and , letters and telegrams i sent to physicians all over the United States. Abrams has examined to date over 12.000 blood specimens for .other phy sicians, and the fact that letters continue to arrive by special de livery can have only one meaning that the physicians find hia di agnosfs correct. Also I saw in this clinic more than a hundred pa tient's who had been treated, or were being treated, by Abrams methods, and he must have been a stage manager of supernatural skill to have taken all this variety of people, men and women from a dozen races-.and of ages varying from eight to' eighty, and taught them to play the strange roles which they played before the crlt ical audience! Again and again I saw Abrams make 'a? diagnosis from the blood, and their bring in the patient', and invite some phy- sicianln the clinic whoi happened to be a specialist, to make an ex amlnation and see if he 'could find slims of the disease. Once it was adenoids, again it was a tumor in the thigh, again tuberculosis of the skin, again epithelioma. Here, for example, is an Irish lady with a vigorous temperament. She has been treated in one of the largest hospitals of San Francisco for cancer of the breast. Six phy sicians diagnosed her ' case, and when she refused to lose her breast, one-; of them threat ened to have a certificate signed by all six oft them declar ing her insane: She defied them and came to Abrams, and had been treated a couple of weeks. "Do you believe in him?" asked my wife; and she answered, "BelieVe In him?. He saved my .breast t" She states that' all the pain is rone, and the enlargement is re duced by one-half. ' ' And here Is a' Creek boy, who has been almost totally blind from acquired syphilis. He is taellig good, and the doctor, who likes to "jolly" his patients, lets him dis play himself. "How well can your see now. Joe?", j ,1 ; "As good as ever I could in my life, doctor. : . i You don't mean It. Joe!" i 1 s f "Sure I mean It. Why shouldn't I I mean It?" I j - . . "Can you see meJoe?" "Sure I can see you." "And what have I in my hand?" . ! , "You-got a silver dollar." "Don't you wish! you had It, Joe?" ;. I i "I reckon I could use It if I had it." j "And you really couldn't see at all two months ago?. You couldn't have seen, this dollar?" "No, sir, I couldn't have seen It It you had held It before my eyes." 1 And here comes an actor, who has had a tumor on the brain, and had lost the power to make con nected sounds, and; was rapidly losing the power to; walk: Now, after .two months' treatment, he can both talk' and walk again, and his stage ambitions have revived. He is a tall, black-coated figure, presenting a weird appearance, be cause a part of his treatment has consisted of shaving his head and painting it a vivid red, some sub stance whose, vibratory Tate cor rexponds to that of sarcoma. j "Now show . us how you can walk," says Abrams. "Can you stand on your toe?"!, f "Yes. sir,"; says the actor, aid he toddles around. ! "You couldn't dd, that a few Weeks ago?" ;-"I fell on my face every time I tried it." v -!"And now on your heels. You couldn't do that?" j '"No; sir. if I got' up on my heels when I got out of bed, I fell back ou the bed helpless.?' , '"And your voice Is coming back all right?" . i'fWell, you can hear it," says the actor proudly. His voice still falters, but he tells us. how in the old days he acted in England, and how some day he is going to act Richard III. He shows us how he will do It, with many expansive gestures: j "Now is the winter of, our dis content ! ' Made glorious summer by this sun of York!" j What is the' principle upon which these marvels are based? Let us bear in mindljo begin wth that' all our explanations in this matter are guesses. iWhat Abrams has done is to find but what hap pens. He has done; this by twen ty years of minute and painstaking experiment. Having found out. he tries to account for the happen ings, to rationalize! them," but if ail hia guesses are wrong, that does not alter his facts. Let! us begin with first" princi ples. Modern physical science has discovered that all matter con sists pf electrical energy. Each molecule of matter is composed of millions of minute electrical charges. This is not: a theory of Abrams, but something which is taught in all school text-books of physics. No eye has ever-beheld these "electrons," they are mil lions of millions of times smaller than anything the. miscroscope can reveal; but it has been found possible by various devices to pho tograph or .otherwise ; record the effects of their 'activity, and if you are curious you may find such photographs reproduced in modern next-books of advanced physics. These electrons constitute uni verses In themselves; the t'ny elecr trical charges revolve about a cen tral nucleus just as our planets re volve about the sun; Some of the electrons are thrown off, and this constitutes what is known, as radio-activity. It Is known that all matter .has radio-activity, and Abrams has proven by many in teresting experiment's that the hu man body Is an Infinitely compli cated electronic machine, with ja vast variety of radio-activities, j. Every, high school boy knows that water consists' of two mole cules of hydrogen and one of oxy gen, and if it" varied from that composition, it would be some thing else than water. In the same way, Abrams has discovered ex perimentally that every disease has a radio-actrvity peculiar to it-; self, and uniform and invariable. He calls this; the "vibratory rate" of the disease: but you must bear in mind that this terms is purely arbitrary, a name which he gives to- certain effects which he has observed and measured, though he does -not know what' they are or how they came to be. Tubercular tissue, and the tubercle bacillus and every drop of! blood from a body which contains the tubercle bacillus all these substances pro duce a reaction when the rheostat i set at 42, and if the reaction does . not come i through at this point, there s no tuberculosis in that body. That this is amazing and new does not in any way alter the fact that it is so. It has been demonstrated by Abrams in many thousands of cases. It is demon strated ever and over again scores of times every day in his clinic. and.it can be demonstrated by any one who will take thg trouble ;fo understand hs method. j It would be impossible to ex aeeerate the revolutionary nature of this 'one discovery. It gives us for the first time - an infallible method for the1 diagnosis of dis ease; it gives us also a means lot exploring disease and understand ing Its real nature. ' By. this meth od we learn that many of the prin ciDal diseases exist in forms hith erto not recognized; also that some diseases, supposed to be en tirely separate and distinct, are in reality-different symptoms of the same disease. For example, the so-called pernicious anemia, or de-' ficiency of red cornuscles In the blood, turns ;out to be a symptom" of congenital svohillis affeetlnsr hia .nltiAn in-liV.' A r. n -v. I thereon. Neurasthenia in all iti .UV oiricil. rT.ll.JI: iailLCI KlflllfU forms turns rout,! to be congenial syphilis, human dr bovine,' of cere- j reaction! appear upon th abdo-hro-spinal activity. Cancer and I men. He then places the electrode tuberculosis turn out to be con-! a little further up on his head, sequences' of syphilis; either con genital or acquired; that is, you never find blood which there is either carcinoma, sarcoma, tu- berculosis. or dementia, that vou do not also find 'the reaction of some form of syph'ilis. This 'dis ease turns out tdr be the basic source of our worst troubles; lurking iu our blood in forms hith erto unrecognized and in places not accessible to other researches. As Abrams phrases It. picturesque ly: "Realized pathology is syph ilized pathology. Our sainted an cestors were tainted ancestors." He has obtained thai reactidu of syphilis, both congenital and ac quired, from the bones of Egyp tian mummies, three thousand years eld '4 I :n I- Human blood contains many vi bratory rates it contains not rmerely the vibratory rates, of dis ease, it contains other rates de pendent upon sge and sex, others upon race, others upon family. All these things Abrams has worked out by elaborate and painstaking experiment, and he provides you with tables so that by examining a drop of blood you can determine whether it contains a Negrostrain. a Japanese," or Inr dian,. or what you will. He has also an lnXallfble, method for de termining: paternity. He finds , a number of different vibratory rates in the blood of the child, and then he tests the blood of the father and finds the same rates. This aspect othis work brings him notoriety, because it has to do with court proceedings, and scan dals, appealing to the newspapers. It is a curious! commentary upon our journalism; that it telegraphs all over the country the news that Abraras has pronounced a certain child to be illegitimate, while it says not a word about the fact that there come to his clinic every day people who have been cured of all three of the dread scourges of our , race, syphilis, tuberculosis and cancer. M :.'. I repeat: disease In all its mani festations, its perms, the poisons produced by these germs, and the body tissues in which these germs have I been active, all yield the same Invariable vibratory rate. Abrams has specimens of all-' the various diseases In test-tubes bear ing the. label of a well-known la boratory. With: his divine patience he will stop his work and show you that if you place a tube near the instrument you get the same reaction that you get" from the blood of a diseased person. He will take in his clinic a patient suffering from cancer, and will bring the electrode near this can eer and show you the reaction. He will j show you that this reaction comes through at the number 50. and does not come through at the number 51. He will bring sam ples! of healthy blood, or will put the electrode upon a patient who has no cancer, and show you that no reaction comes through. He will show you that' certain persons ara immune to cancer; that is to sayv- samples ot their blood, placed between the cancer specimen and the) Instrument, will cancel the cancer rate, and there will be no reaction. ; Abrams himself is one of these immune persons, and he proved it long ago. He was one of six physicians fn a certain hos pital who experimented "with Xbiospitals,- recognized-as the author ravs in the early days. All the mother five died of cancer, and iAbrams shows you tne scars upon us nanus, ; wuiiu wumu umo turned to cancer had he, not pos sessed the natural Immunity. If happen that he has been twice married, and both his wives d'ed of cancer, which accounts for some of the energy ; with "which he has gone at the problem or this ais ease. He , has undoubtedly con quered it. He can produce immu nity in the blood, and will dem onstrate that' Immunity to you. N6w to continue: It is Impos sible as yet; to measure these In finitely minute vibrations, mil lions of millions of times smaller than anything; our senses can per ceive. There ! had . fo be an In strument to sfort them out and man'fest them!, and the most sub tle1 instrument Abrams could find was the human body. That ac counts for his curious practice of using a "subject." iHe explains that the nervous system of the body consists ot millions of min ute! fibers and lines of communi cation, and! these apparently cor respond to different vibratory rates. At any ; rate, he has ob served that if he presses an-electrode to the forehead of a human being, and admits to that body ra-iio-activity: of a certain vibratory rate, that activy will affect cer ain nerve channels and no others; it will travel through the body, and will manifest itself at certain nerve ends.l ' locations which can be) detected by patient; search. Wherever the impulse goes.' there will be a minute Increase' In the vctivity of the cells; a little more blood will flow to that spot, the cells will dilate, and there will be what physicians, know; "as - a "dull area," to be discovered by "percussion. So her is Abrams technic of exploring" the human body; first, the specimen of blood, placed In a;ox connected with an, electrode; second, an instrument which stops 11 electrical manifestations from this blood, except those at one cer tain rate; third, the body of the "subject," which takes the vibra tions coming through, and turns them into cell activity at a cer tain area. In Abrams practice the subject i first places the elec trode upon his forehead, and the and the reactions appear upon the back. He then places the elec trode upon, the top" of his head. just' back of a line between the ears, and the reactions again ap pear upon tVe jtbdomen, but at a different area than when the elec trode was upon the forehead." !The ' method of determining these reactions by-percussion is an unsatisfactory one.; Percussion Is to soma extent a lost-art. and few physicians have1 the necessary skill J fo recognize the dull area. Abrams himself, I think, would . never make a mistake If he were not hurried, If the work piled upon" him were not several "times too much for one .man. ' But; it shduld be understood that if his facts are correct, they are not" In the- least" Invalidated by. errors inj practice; any more than, for example, the method of wireless telegraphy Is Invalidated by sun spots, or a drunken operator. What is wanted la an instrument that' will" record the reactions from the JJdy auto-J matlcally perhaps oy tne miuuio Increase of heat ( at the "dull area,".- or; .the still - more minute Increase of moisture. . If such an instrument can: be contrived, the method will be. "fool-proof," and Abrams can die in peace. He has been robbing his sleep in order to seek thlsl Instrument. He hoped to f'nd it In the pith ball, but this depends too much upon the elec trical conditions of the room and other accidental factors. He hoped to find it in a vibrating wire, but such wires have -their "nodes, their own "dull " areas." not de pendent upon the radio-acflvlty of the blood. I carry in my mind the image of this devoted andf he-' roic man staggering under his too heavy burde". ui I fe3l like, call ing out to all the inventors of the world to come and ;help him solve this problem t'o find some way of recording minute changes of vas cular activity upon a dial! j Meantime, until the Inventor comes, Albert- Abrams must con tinue to spend his precious hours tapping." tapping, "tapping upon the bare skin of a bored young man. and people .In Boston, To-, ronto. and Mexico City, .waiting anxiouslyi to know from what deadly disease they are suffering, are -dependent in part Upon the fact that this young man may have ea'len ! too many waffles for his breakfast: I see Abrams wrink ling lip his forehead with exas peration ! and exclaiming, ," "Oh, your reactions are very poor this morning!" . He takes the Hat cS his hand; and pounds upon the seventh cervical vertebra of. the bored young man. There will be perhaps twenty-five ' blood- speci mens to examine, that morning, and as many patients to be Inter viewed, each one a. desperate case demanding compassion .from a man who Is as tender-hearteid as a child; and if In the -midst of all that pressure he should make "one slip, and miss the reaction at 49, then some, vulgar-rid iculer will call In the newspaper reporters and proclaim the. fact that he sent Abrams , a specimen , of his own blood and got a diagnosis of ani mal blood! ; Up to a few years - ago Albert Abrams was one of the most emi nent' practitioners iin Sa Francis co the -head physician or large of important discover'es. .But now, when you mention his name, the average San Francisco physi cian shakes his head' and- says, "Oh, Abrams! He's crazy!" .And if you ask ' why he is crazy, you will be told, first, he claims to locate diseasel from a drop of blood; second! he claims to fell paternity; from a drop of blood; third, he claims that cattle, have syphilis and 'fhatj you can get it from vaccination. You see what has happened. He has gone ahead a little; too fast, and so they say about him what they said. about Harvey, who discovered the cir culation of the blood, and about Lister, who discovered antisepi He's crazy !"j J Why should not cattle have syphyis? For nearly two centur ies nofw we have, been inoculatisrg them 'With the virus of. human smallpox. We know that cattle can take that disease: we know also that they can . take tubercu losis. Why should they not have taken syphilis, -and .developed a form of this disease which, can be reinoculated f into the ' human body? JWhsether or not this hap pens is piJrelya matter for experi ment. Abrams finds-thaf-he gets a reaction , of bovine syphilis and he has the courage to say so; also he has., the patience to take you in his clinic and . show you the re action. He will show it on your vaccination scar; be will; have someone i move the electrode up your arm. and "tell you when it gets' to that spot. And you can go to a drug store and" buy some vaccination points, and put them in j front ot the electrode, and Abraras will show you, the vibrat ory rate of 57 in five cases out of sixj If you want to have yourself inoculated by one of these points, he i will show you the reactions some hours later j in your ' own blood. If he is mistaken inh all this If for example, It Is some other disease which yields this rate somebody is free to prove It, but! that somebody will ' have to start on the basis of AbramsV find ings. ' ' - j ' George Sterling said to me, "When the, antl-vaccinationists get on to Abrams: work, what a howl they will raise!! But Abrams has j found a 'method of destroying tne syphilitic proclivities ot these vaccination points. All that h necessary to tfurify the virus is to expose 4t for five minutes to the influence of blue light, which de stroys the activity of the spiro chetes; and then to expose it to yellow light, which destroys the tuberculous factor. If you doubt fhis, Abrams has his ever ready answer. He will put a tube of bo vine syphilis to the, electrode acj show you the reaction; and then he will have his assistant throw t blue light on; the tube and be hold the reaction lstgone! ,; 'This brings1 us to the most Im portant aspect of Abrams work the curey It means, of course, a great deal to physicians to be able to "diagnose infallibly, but to the patient it Is cold comfort to "be told that he has some-deadly dis ease, if he' has to go on having It. Abrams claims to cure and here again we have, two things to consider: first, the facts, and sec ond, the theory. The theory may be wrong', but the facts are beyond dispute. . Having ascertained, the vibratory rate of cancer, .if oc- cured . to him In his gropingrs to i I find out what would be. the effect ' upon a cancer specimen of a con tinued exposure to that same vi bratory rate. ! He constructed aa Instrument called " the "oscillo clast," which breaks up an ordin- ary alternating -current of elec tricity Intouvarious vibrations. Ha measured: these by the same ia-, strument that measures the radio activity, of the disease: and whea he had sot a rate which gave tha e 'same reaction as the cancer speci men, he applied this rate to the cancer .specimen, and discovered' that the effect was to destroy the cancer reaction. After such treat ment had been given, yott might put the cancer specimen near the electrode,, but you would get no dull area."- What could this mean? Opuld it mean that the cancer was no longer cancer? - Imagine tha state of mind of a physician who: has seen two . wives and many of his colleagues die of this hideous disease, and I suddenly ., discovers that he can destroy Its vibratory rate! How ; quickly he would hasten to get some, animal that' was suffering from cancer and try the experiment upon it. And then to take some- human subject, ia the last' stages of the disease, and make the . final, all-Important test! - ; ; . What , happens? I have just read a letter, written by Dr. Wffl. O. Doern. of Milwaukee, describ ing a case of cancer of the pylorus,' the opening from the stomach in to the small intestine. ' This was a far advanced Case, and the patient . was treated. ,by the oscilloclast,1; and the malignancy- of the dlaeasa destroyed; but the digestive dis turbances continued, because-c4 , the - mass blocking the stomach, and so an operation. Was i per formed. It was found that th'i j cancer had i degenerated, an4 j around the edges the body had be. ) gun turning It info connective tis sue, or what In everyday language is known as gristle. In a case of -sarcoma of the. leg bone, the siz of two fists.' it was' found that the mass could be scooped out by the handful; and all around the edges the body was turning It in to fibrous tissue. As you may know, cancer and malignant tn mor are the mysterious turning of. human tissue into a lower form ot unorganized-cell life; those. lower forms ot cells begin to eat: up the : body. But here, suddenly, the pro cess was reversed ; the mysterious power of the; evil cells was gone." and the body was eating up the , cancer! . ' . ; j T , t ' ' . What nappeneed In these cases J of cancer happens with every form of germ infection. Ascertain" the vibratory rate of the disease,- ; ascertain what current will cancel that reaction,! and then pour Into- : the body a current of that rate,, and you destroy the activity of- the germs. Youcan not, of cburs$. i always restore tissue; If a lung has been eaten up by tuberculosis, 1 you. cannot: build a new lung. But arrest the-course of the disease, V and - take good care of yourself, j and often you wil be astonished to see how far the healing forces , of; nature can rebuild what has been' ruined, j I have known this from ten years' experience, watch- j ing what the body can do after the 1 bloocLhas been purified by a long fast? Here in Abrams' clinic you seejit jiappening. and you feel as Ifyou were watching the old-time' Bible-miracles. The blind begin to see, the deaf begin to hear, the lame begin to walk! I speak thfe. literal truth when I say that after I had sat for a week In Abrams clinic I had lost all feeling ot the , horror of the three dread diseases. tuberculos's. syphilis and . cancer. Why; does . the same, vibratory ; rate- destroy the disease activity? Abrams makes -a guess, and the guess Is interesting. He tells how he once saw. Caruso, at a dinner party, tap upon a wine glass and determine the musical . note at which it vibrated. , and then sing that, musical note at the glass and shatter it to fragments. You can see how fhis happens. The vibra tion Is reinforced by new-energy. Its violence J Is continually; in creased as a swng U made to ro farther and farther by each addl t tonal shove. f. You know that sol diers marching over a.' bridge al ways have to break step, otherwise they would bring down tho bridge. In my .wjfe's family they tell a well authenticated, fncident of an old gentleman who caused a stam pedeJ In a country church by Tite absent-minded habit ot sitting with his legs crossed and one foot shaking persistently up and dos. -They thought It was the f'rst earthquake in the history of Kis- -x t i