774 
G. LEO HAGENBURGER. 
sympathetic and sensory nerves, while conduction is carried on 
by the nerve fibres and nerves themselves. The heart, a very 
important organ (but very little understood by physiologists in 
the past), is the central galvanic battery for the vascular system 
in which a coarser grade of forces are brought into action, having 
electrical troughs in shape of veins and cells in the form of such 
centers of blood as the brain, lungs, liver, stomach, spleen, kid¬ 
neys, etc. Wires in shape of capillaries, etc. It is exceedingly 
important the blood should be well supplied with vitalizing and 
active principles so that the electrical life ethers (the essence of 
all life) maybe attracted briskly through all its channels. 
3. Chemical Composition Govern and Ride all Parts of the 
Body .—We know and can prove that one important arrange¬ 
ment of chemical forces is caused by the union of the thermal 
color (red) with the electrical color (blue), and is exemplified in 
almost every function in the body. 
Thus, the blue blood (venous) and the red arterial work to¬ 
gether in the right and left side of the heart; the bluish white 
interior nbrous matter of the cerebrum lies right up against and 
interblends as I may call it, with the cellular reddish gray 
exterior matter of the same, and consequently this junction must 
be the point of the greatest and finest chemical activities from 
the part that the sensory nerves and from all parts of brain and 
body convey their forces there, hence it is deemed a true sen- 
sonum. When I say this, I, of course, don’t wish to infer that 
thought, sensation, consciousness, etc., result merely from chemi¬ 
cal action, but from a spirit as a quickening principle. 
(See Barter’s Chemistry and Phisic’s Spirit, Matter, Force, 
as the Three Factors in the Universe), in connection with chemi¬ 
cal action. 
I. The Bluish White Corpuscles .—Collossum lies against the 
reddish gray superior ganglion F, which in turn lies against the 
great inferior ganglion E. The cerebellum L, like the cere¬ 
brum M, M, has reddish gray cellular matter on the outside and 
with bluish on the inside, although this white interior is inter¬ 
spersed with reddish gray in a way as to resemble a tree, and 
