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Ralstonism

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25: 308:, where he founded Ralston Heights in 1905. A house he designed was built to contain a community of Ralstonites he meant to be a core of a future City of Ralston. The contours of the estate followed Edgerly's conviction that sudden stops and walking in straight lines would cause leakage of vital force. Edgerly planned to expand to hundreds of lots, sixteen small farms, seven palaces and a Temple of Ralston. This community did not materialize, at least not in the form Edgerly intended. Much of the estate still exists, albeit in ruined condition. 95: 263: 274:, which would give them control over the thoughts of others. Much of the physical regime demanded moving in graceful curves and arcs and walking exclusively on the balls of one's feet. Because sudden starts and stops and sharp angular movements caused a "leakage of vital force", Ralstonites were to even pick marbles in continuous circles. There was a proper way to bathe (dry bath), gesture, sit, stand, sleep, talk, and have sex. 377: 206:
ideas of personal and racial hygiene. It began as the Ralston Health Club, which published Edgerly's writings. It was a hierarchical organization where members were ranked according to the number of "degrees" they had, which ranged from 0 to 100. Members gained in the hierarchy by purchasing and
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In addition to advice like toothbrushing, the books make various recommendations: for example, every young man should engage in a form of probationary marriage with a woman old enough to be his grandmother. Edgerly also
241:. Although Edgerly publicly claimed that the Ralston Company had no goods for sale, he did sell his books through mail order. Many of these books are still available through old-books dealers. 270:
Ralstonites were to follow strict dietary guidelines. For example, watermelons were supposed to be poisonous to Caucasians. Correct diet and proper physical exercise would help readers attain
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In 1900, Edgerly joined forces with the founder of Purina Food Company, which took the name Ralston Purina Company (which would later become
315:. Albeit supernatural horror, Betz' story was influenced by Webster Edgerly's Hopewell Valley residence along with the Ralstonism movement. 159: 131: 178: 76: 47: 138: 422: 222:, and free from "impurities". He advocated the castration of all "anti-racial" (non-Caucasian) males at birth. 116: 207:
studying Ralston's books, each of which taught five degrees. Edgerly at first published his ideas under the
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cereal that Ralstonites were to consume. The food company Edgerly founded evolved into what is now called
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In 2020, a fiction novel entitled, "Ralston Heights," was published by James Betz, an author from nearby
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Between 1894 and 1895, Edgerly bought large areas of farmland along the northern slope of
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Everett Ralston, but later used his own name and explained "Ralston" as an
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Edgerly saw his followers as the founding members of a new race, based on
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for "Regime, Activity, Light, Strength, Temperation, Oxygen, Nature"
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Life building method of the Ralston Health Club; "All nature" course
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which was the original manufacturer of cereal brands including
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Book of general membership of the Ralston Health Club
237:, artistic deep breathing, facial expressions, and 119:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 370:Magnetism Manual of the Magnetism Club of America 384: 46:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks 225:Edgerly wrote 82 of what would today be called 428:White supremacist groups in the United States 179:Learn how and when to remove this message 77:Learn how and when to remove this message 16:American pseudoscientific social movement 261: 385: 403:Social movements in the United States 266:Shredded Ralston advertisement, 1942 117:adding citations to reliable sources 88: 18: 327:"Hidden History of Ralston Heights" 324: 13: 14: 439: 374:(formerly at neurolinguistic.com) 340: 93: 23: 104:needs additional citations for 1: 318: 253:The Magnetism Club of America 325:Six, Janet (May–June 2004). 7: 347:Writings of Webster Edgerly 10: 444: 229:books under the pseudonym 247:created his own language 32:This article includes a 61:more precise citations. 423:Eugenics organizations 313:Pennington, New Jersey 267: 279:Nestlé Purina PetCare 265: 113:improve this article 272:personal magnetism 268: 231:Edmund Shaftesbury 202:that promoted his 34:list of references 408:Social philosophy 189: 188: 181: 163: 87: 86: 79: 435: 393:Health movements 336: 235:sexual magnetism 204:pseudoscientific 184: 177: 173: 170: 164: 162: 121: 97: 89: 82: 75: 71: 68: 62: 57:this article by 48:inline citations 27: 26: 19: 443: 442: 438: 437: 436: 434: 433: 432: 383: 382: 349:at oddbooks.com 343: 321: 302:Hopewell Valley 200:Webster Edgerly 196:social movement 185: 174: 168: 165: 122: 120: 110: 98: 83: 72: 66: 63: 52: 38:related reading 28: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 441: 431: 430: 425: 420: 418:Ralston Purina 415: 410: 405: 400: 395: 381: 380: 375: 366: 365:at archive.org 358: 357:at archive.org 350: 342: 341:External links 339: 338: 337: 320: 317: 187: 186: 101: 99: 92: 85: 84: 42:external links 31: 29: 22: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 440: 429: 426: 424: 421: 419: 416: 414: 413:Pseudoscience 411: 409: 406: 404: 401: 399: 396: 394: 391: 390: 388: 379:at google.com 378: 376: 373: 371: 367: 364: 363: 359: 356: 355: 351: 348: 345: 344: 334: 333: 328: 323: 322: 316: 314: 309: 307: 303: 298: 296: 292: 288: 284: 280: 275: 273: 264: 260: 258: 254: 250: 248: 242: 240: 239:ventriloquism 236: 232: 228: 223: 221: 216: 214: 210: 205: 201: 197: 193: 183: 180: 172: 169:December 2019 161: 158: 154: 151: 147: 144: 140: 137: 133: 130: –  129: 125: 124:Find sources: 118: 114: 108: 107: 102:This article 100: 96: 91: 90: 81: 78: 70: 67:December 2019 60: 56: 50: 49: 43: 39: 35: 30: 21: 20: 369: 361: 353: 330: 310: 299: 295:Cookie Crisp 276: 269: 257:mind control 251: 243: 230: 224: 217: 191: 190: 175: 166: 156: 149: 142: 135: 128:"Ralstonism" 123: 111:Please help 106:verification 103: 73: 64: 53:Please help 45: 332:Archaeology 283:whole wheat 281:). It made 198:founded by 59:introducing 387:Categories 372:(archived) 319:References 306:New Jersey 220:Caucasians 192:Ralstonism 139:newspapers 227:self-help 209:pseudonym 287:Ralcorp 213:acronym 153:scholar 55:improve 194:was a 155:  148:  141:  134:  126:  398:Diets 160:JSTOR 146:books 40:, or 293:and 291:Chex 132:news 115:by 389:: 329:. 304:, 297:. 259:. 44:, 36:, 335:. 182:) 176:( 171:) 167:( 157:· 150:· 143:· 136:· 109:. 80:) 74:( 69:) 65:( 51:.

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list of references
related reading
external links
inline citations
improve
introducing
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verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Ralstonism"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
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social movement
Webster Edgerly
pseudoscientific
pseudonym
acronym
Caucasians
self-help
sexual magnetism
ventriloquism
created his own language
The Magnetism Club of America
mind control

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