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The Arabian Art of Taming and Training Wild and Vicious Horses by John J. Stutzman;P. R. Kincaid
page 59 of 60 (98%)
in every part, refreshing every man's and woman's soul that reads
it with a most grateful sense of its truth and importance. I know
of no work in the world like it, or comparable with it."

"I have read 'ESOTERIC ANTHROPOLOGY' with all the deep earnestness
and absorbing interest with which I have ever perused the most
brilliant romance. It has inspired nobler emotions, and deeper
pleasure. 'Truth' is more attractive than 'fiction.' The work, I
believe to be eminently true to nature--to her unerring laws; I
hesitate not, therefore, to pronounce it a noble work. It will be
a great blessing to humanity."--PROF. ALLEN, of Antioch College.


The enthusiastic letters respecting it, received, would fill a volume,
larger than book itself. Sacrificing every personal consideration, and
changing his first intention, which was to keep it as strictly private and
professional work, a physiological mystery, as its title indicates--the
author offers ESOTERIC ANTHROPOLOGY to the whole public of
readers; satisfied that no permanent evil can result to any human being,
from the knowledge of the deepest truths, and most sacred mysteries of the
science of life.

MARK THIS.--Nearly every other work on this subject directs the reader
to apply to its author for a prescription in case of sickness, accompanied
by a fee; while this, although its author is a practising physician,
contains not a line of this kind; its whole tendency being to place every
reader, whether male or female, entirely above the need of a physician.

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