Saleeby, Caleb Williams. Worry, the disease of the age. **$1.35. Stokes.
7–16990.
“Dr. Saleeby apparently conceives worry as a sort of an entity, and he seems to hold to the old distinction of body and mind. Worry, for him, can be a cause, and one may gather is rather a cause than a mere result. And so he gives us instances of how worry can ruin one’s digestion, with it one’s temper as well, and make one thoroughly and really ill. This seems to the writer a curious reversal of the familiar relations of the cart and the horse.”—N. Y. Times.
“A new volume of double usefulness: from the practical side offering serviceable hints for what he considers the disease of the age, and from the theoretical setting in their proper, light the current notions as to the healthful relations of mind and body.” I. Woodbridge Riley.
| + + | Bookm. 26: 410. D. ’07. 1950w. | |
| + | Lit. D. 35: 26. Jl. 6, ’07. 230w. |
“A profoundly serious medical consideration with much that is philosophical in the most practical and helpful way.”
| + | N. Y. Times. 12: 268. Ap. 27, ’07. 100w. |
“He has read widely, he has studied deeply, he has thought out things for himself, and these are the fruits. Dr. Saleeby is a true philosopher.” Carl Snyder.
| + + | N. Y. Times. 12: 313. My. 18, ’07. 2110w. |