Physiology

The Goat-gland Transplantation As Originated and Successfully Performed by J. R. Brinkley, M. D., of Milford, Kansas, U. S. A., in Over 600 Operations Upon Men and Women

We are not privileged to be discursive in a little book which seeks to hit the nail on the head in every paragraph, drive it home in every page, and clinch it in every chapter, and there would be no excuse, therefore, for sketching, even in brief outline, the history of the va...

Chapters

10. CHAPTER X

For many years scientists have believed that a part, or all of the glands of the human body influenced longevity. They believed our glands contained the "life spark." Men for hu...

4. CHAPTER IV

Dr. J. R. Brinkley, head of the Brinkley-Jones Hospital and Training School for Nurses at Milford, Kansas, has now furnished to the scientific world what are termed "ample proof...

6. CHAPTER VI

We must go to the pages of +The Chicago Evening American+ of date August 18, 1920, for the story of Chancellor Tobias, written by Lloyd Lehrbas, of the American staff, with a br...

3. CHAPTER III

At Dr. Brinkley's hospital, a beautifully appointed private residence, it is a comfort to women patients to have the doctor's wife, herself a competent surgeon if necessary, at...

8. CHAPTER VIII

The writer, approaching the age of 54, and finding himself in first-class physical and mental condition, except for a high blood pressure, which was certainly the prelude to a l...

9. CHAPTER IX

Dr. Brinkley's employment of the goat-glands for the past three years of continuous operating, therefore, has proved to his satisfaction and to that of his patients that the tes...

2. CHAPTER II

Dr. Brinkley began his experiments in gland-transplanting upon animals in the year 1911, three years before the European War, using goats, sheep, and guinea-pigs as his subjects...

5. CHAPTER V

The intention in offering for your perusal the preceding newspaper accounts of Dr. Brinkley's work in the opening months of the year 1920 was to show you what his views at that...

7. CHAPTER VII

Writing with vivacity and humor, Mr. Clarence Day, Jr., speculates with so much whimsicality upon the possible effects of surgical rejuvenation of men that one might overlook th...

1. CHAPTER I

We are not privileged to be discursive in a little book which seeks to hit the nail on the head in every paragraph, drive it home in every page, and clinch it in every chapter,...

15. Volume I is to be had only in its bound form, and the number of copies

Cash will be returned immediately to unsuccessful applicants. We shall not reprint this book, after this bound edition is exhausted, in the original and complete form in which y...

12. Volume II of NEW THOUGHT will maintain the high level attained in Volume

I. The same contributors. Dr. Brinkley, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, William Walker Atkinson, Anne Beauford Houseman, Alberta Jean Rowell, Nate Collier, Charles H. Ingersoll, Athene Ron...

14. Volume I of NEW THOUGHT contains: Seven articles written by J. R.

Brinkley, M.D., on his wonderful goat-gland transplantation work; a series of articles on New Thought by such famous writers as Ella Wheeler Wilcox, William Walker Atkinson, Ann...

11. VOLUME II OF NEW THOUGHT

Beginning October, 1921, ending March, 1922, comprising six numbers, each 32 pages, 6x9, edited and published by Sydney B. Flower, will be issued monthly at a markedly REDUCED S...

13. VOLUME I OF NEW THOUGHT

A monthly magazine, 32 pages, 6x9, edited and published by Sydney B. Flower, comprising 196 pages of reading matter in seven issues, viz., Oct., Nov., Dec, 1920, and Jan., Feb.,...