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half billions, ~ =the --sure to list all the big oil stocks on =» -the proposed = ying_braneh_will branch will probably “PAGE SIX NEW EXCHANGE FOR OIL STOCK Jrganization of Great Petroleum Exchange in New York Is Held Possible. is goo There authority for the tatement that a Petroleum Exchange s being organized in New York will enable the oils from the vil fields in the world to enjoy stand- ns and will also make a K fo from ull the products retroleum fi pant the Curb z -esponsible market for oil stock: will be graded and dealt in, ‘otton on the New Orlez oi York cotton exchanges, or like grain n Chicago and New York. Oil stocks will be handled as industrials on the > Yo exch 2. A searching i tion Il precede listing and guaran- teed statements of earnings and de- velopments will be regularly pub- lished “Inside information” will be superceded by a square deal publi- ration of news for all The public as it now Stoc ] have facts as early s the crop reports and no one will heve any advance knowledge. The spring lambs who speculate will have all possible protection. - Altho the combined value of the Standard Oil Cos. is now two and a xt they are all listed on Curb and not in the Sto«k Ex- ange. This is because the Stock xchange regulations excluded them *on account of withheld information. This old fight is over and the pres- chenge is very strong. It ure that is giving birth to Petroleum Exchange. “When it gets into operati be estab- : KEELEY INSTITUTE * Cor. Eighteenth and Curtis i! DENVER, COLO. = LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS Secured by a scientific course of medi_ “cation. The only place in Colorado Sts. ..« where the Genuine Keeley Remedie* “are used. ey lpereerns to common-sense. any perfectly. Two y wows and will stz tion, by rai: household. ethics army of quacks, verdict of others: are me, Soese-efoefoatecte-stostocte-elocte-ctooteo’ “QUICKSAND' CONTAINS STRONG APPEAL, THEME (5 RIGHLY DRAMATIC That human quality of determina- tion awhich seems to be an nerican pre-eminent the h was recently shown nirit of w shed at Denver, the center of the Trans-Mississippi which even now, produces about half of the entire world oil supply and will soon produce two-thirds. Next to wheat and cotton, oil is the most important staple commodity in the word. Tv should have an exchange of its own. when were distributed about the building “It can’t be done—go do i is one of the strong features of “Quic a Paramount picture from the Thomas H. Ince studio in which Dorothy Dalton red and which will be shown at the Iris theater tomorrow. In this photoplay seen as a young ¥ F ahs is wrongf a Government office signs readings: is Miss Dalton is e whose hus- cused of fory Determined innocen the et singer and lures the man who crime into a the husband in this capacit really committed the confession This frees and all ends happi 1. nArFOW z e from the qu ef life, ch abound on every ancl and trap us if we are not © PDL LL LE EE ELE ELE LE EE. wees We are managers The Penn. Mutual Life: Is 72 years young and issues all the modern forms of life insurance with the LOWEST participating premium LARGEST cash, loan, paid up and extend- edi msurance values. ming, are placing agents throughout the state and have some valuable territory still open for live, business producing agents. WRITE US King-Probst Agency Co. WYOMING STATE MANAGERS N 305 O.S. Bldg. Phone 564R Casper, Wyo. N yates and the for the State of Wyo- TA MADAL AAA LA A hhh hdd, hidhdeuke MS NEEL LOL LP LOLS EL LES ELS LS BS SSS. 2 So ae ful one. plays band Philo McC ullsch who is astrel, Henry PB Jack said was who — suffers t of Joh: hall, @ photo: a little peat.”—Answers, | Special Thursday and Friday Richelieu Asparagus Tips, No. Richelieu Succotash, No. Richelieu Small Onions, Casper Storage Company Car Lots Canned Goods, Meats, Fruits, Vegetables Handled, stored, re-shipped and Checked in Che Casper Dai; fiss Dalton is said to have been given a particularly nowerful emo- tional role in this Production | which was directed by Victor L. zinger and written by John ‘Lynch. R. Cecil Smith did the scenario. The supporting cast js a power- It includes Ed Coxen who the role of Jim Bowen the hus- aperintee phy by Jchn Stumar is said to be ex-ellent in every respect. a = -“Did you tell her. what you strict confidence? o; I didn’t want her to think it was important enough to re- | The Casper Storage Grocery THE RICHELIEU STORE Eribune Electric Construction THIRD AND LAST RECITAL of the Season qq By the Junior and Senior Pupils of MISS LULU SAMS at the Methodist Church Saturday, May 24 3:00 p. m. qq The Public is Invited to Attend This Program Svhert- “We Do Anything Electrical” A. W. THIELE, Manager imprisonment, Temporary Location: Residence Phone 31J rer of a Frankie Lee. COMPUTATIONS TIME SHERTS Estimates on Job Work Comptometer Operators Furnished by the CASPER BUSINESS COLLEGE, Inc. INVOICES Phone 142-W Medicine You Take? Surgical Dressings. Your wants in this line will CASPER PHARMACY Drugs and Jewelry “Promptness and Efficiency” “The Home of the Picture Shop” 110 E. Second Street 1 can ..... 3 can No. SMC AN ieertterecs L. F. KELLY, GEO. W. FERGUSON, J. H. ADRIANCE, D. M. LOBDELL, Committee. General Storage a Business Like Manner Medical Opinions---Anent Quackery The best doctor is not always the most erudite. Learning is not invariably superior When a man knows how to do even one thing and do it well, he may be better equipped than some others who strive to do many things and the most of like kind of y ther this ng acry against the irregulars outside Standard dictionaries partly define a “Quack” : of regular medicine a quack is defined as prescribed standard or one whose practices v both within and without the “Medical practice is quackery to a large “Occasionally a patient comes to me after preventative ry ranks of regular me it is this large body of men and women to which the noise their doctors. sin the medical ranks. tactics will in time do, gone to the quack- o long as medicine itself continues its present policies of reform: ranks to the neglect of their own a pretender to medical skill. without knowing how to do s ago the federation of state medical boards went into session at Chicago and adopted a nation-wide program to prevent an on-coming wave of qua ure quacking louder than ever, tive quacking has, Today they Preventa- In the a person whose training may be less than a conventions of ine, from the medicine. is a large one, and whether The Mr. Mencken re But let us hear the extent.”—Herald of Health. having gone through the hands of other phy- or Richard C. system (as indi- investigate the de- unworthy of the D., Phila- sicians some of whom have been of the highest standing men who would know ° not a patient is really diseased. In many such ¢: i been obvious to me that the pa- oJ tient is sound and well and u at these other physi have known. this.””— -& Cabot, M. D., Chief, Med. T, Mass. Gen. Ho: < “A pretender is a Bunce: His unwilling ness to investigate any other 3 cated by orthodox medical men) other than that which he is familiar, or $3 fects of his own methods, stamps him as prejudical in mind and, therefore, = SP respect and confidence of thoughtful and fair-minded men.’—Alfred Walton, M. ig delphia. La Rofodtest +4, “Ninety to Bismarck per RD oes Paris, France. “Medical doctors are “Doctors know that all physicians are more or practitioner: cent of my fellow mere empirics when they —St. Paul Dail —Dr. less quacks are quacks. are not charlatans.’ v ‘—Prof. Dr. News. Schweninger, Physician Magendie, Se “The medical profession has given resp ectibility to quackery by the outrageous quack- B04 ery of the pro ion itself.”"=Alex. M. Ross, F. R.S. L. (England.) =| “The ival of a clown in town is worth m< than the arrival of twenty medical quacks “ye with drugs.’’—Prof. Sydenham, Noted English Phy an. y “The chief cause of quackery outside of the profession is the real quackery in the pro- ee fession.”-—Adams Smith, M. D. singing nei’ pr Ss, ne ‘reguls ave not neglected ¢ enouncing as quacks members a “Singi their th gul h t 1 1d I ‘bi & of other schools to prejudice the public against them.’’—Helen S. Gray, in The Forum, May, oy 1915. =tner “If recent cults had absolutely no merit the;) would cease to exist.”—Richard Cabot, - BS Chief, Medical Staff, Massachusetts General Hospital. 2% “] am of learned quackery in the medical ranks.’-—Benj. Waterhouse, M. D., Har- - & vard Unive t “& “It is the best physician who gives the least medicine. Drug physicians are quacks.””— te Benj. Franklin, Philosopher. bs “Competition has driven medical doctors in large numbers into quackery and crime.”’— Robt. 1% rt oleh i, . o¢ ‘e “If medicine ae | Pn tot so ho-e$ June 18, ican, 4, Me ore, ‘e 0, oO y aXe . o, oO Colo po-aSe-eho-ale-es KD 3 K jte A. Schauffler, M. D. “Sometimes profes: the surgeon to operate. onal zeal, —Helen were an exé Gray, in t science Lyric Theater Bldg. Telephone 706 1915. impossible. May, —Richard sometimes ignorance or the prospect of a big fee, leads The Forum, the quack would be Chief, Medical Staff, Massachusetts General Hospital, quoted from the Boston Sunday Amer- 1916. Dr. J. H. Jeffrey Cabot, “If we arrive at a correct diagnosis in only 50% are we not quacks to the extent of the other 50% in diagnosing and giving treatment?”—Richard Cabot, Chief Medical Staff, Mass- achusetts General Hospital. “The distinction between the quack doctor and the qualified one is merely that the latter at allowed to sign death certificates, for which both sorts have equal occasion.’’—Bernard Shaw. “As often practiced by men of undoubted respectability, medicine is so nearly allied, if not identical with quackery, that it would puzzle many a rational looker-on to tell which is the one and which the other.’-—Andrew Combe, M. D. “A medical doctor treated a patient for liver trouble, and through examination of another medical doctor that the patient had not liver trouble. first medical doctor a medical fakir?”—C. R. Lipman. “If Webster’s definition of the Quack in any way fits any drugless doctor, you will have to ‘show me’, for they distinctly make the fact known that they do not use drugs, nor do they practice medicine.’”—W. A. Turner, M. D., Portland, Ore. “I believe that every practitioner whether he passes a Board or not has some good in him; that however obscure is his origin, he may know and be able to do some things valuable ‘in medicine that the biggest man in the city does not know and cannot do.” —Richard Cabot, Chief, Medical Staff, Massachusetts General Hospital. “Medicine as a means of livelihood has arrived at the most critical period of its history. Competition is becoming sharp and this cuts down the remuneration of the medical man. Many new leading cults and sects have made great inroads in the sum total of patients orig- inally divided among a few schools.’’—Chas. J. Whalen, Illinois Medical Journal. “The fact that probably ninety per cent of diseases will recover in spite of improper medical treatment or no medical treatment at all, makes the quack a possibility. How much of this applies to the legalized physician?’’—Richard Cabot, Chief Medical Staff, Massachu- setts General Hospital, quoted from the Boston Sunday American, June 18, 1916. “If 90% of our patients would recover anyhow without any medication or in spite of our improper treatment, are we not quacks to the extent of 90% ?”—Richard Cabot, Chief Medical Staff, Massachusetts General Hospital. “If a patient is treated by a cultist, of course, according to charges laid against the practitioner by the ‘regulars,’ the patient yas killed by the methods of the cultist, and any regular medical doctor will try to prove it so in court by the concurrent testimony of any number of his colleagues.’-—The Journal, Logan City, Utah, May 27, 1916. “A patient of mine could eat but little, he failed to improve on diet and usual remedies; he adopted one of the recent cults. In a very short time he was able to eat anything, appar- ently is perfectly well and is at work. He had been treated by other physicians for the same condition during the past/four years with no better results than I obtained.”—Richard Cabot, Chief Medical Staff, Massachusetts General H ospital. “I am a magazine writer with whose name in the current magazines you may or may not be familiar. I have recently taken up Chiropractic work. I was reluctant at first to take up the work for my conception of Chiropractic and its practice, at that time was the Popular American Medical Association’s misconception—‘quacks’, ‘Fakes’ and ‘ignoramus’ ; I had happened on a remarkable science so I matriculated and have taken the work with a fair degree of efficiency.””—H. G. Creel, Springdale, Ark. “The editor of the American Medical Association is one Geo. H. Simmons, and he should know all about quacking, as he was in that kind of business long enough. In Lincoln, Nebr., he was a Homeopath. Not succeeding as such, he became a specialist in dis-eases of women. Then he started the Lincoln Institute and ‘Water Cure.’ Not receiving the desired returns, he added specialties of the eye, ear, nose, lungs and skin, vapor, Turkish, electric and medicated baths, and included massage and movement cures. Now as the editor of the Journal of the A. M. A., that is the kind of a quack who has called Chiropractic quackery.’—The Peril, commenting on an article in the Journal of The A. M. A. by Geo. H. Simmons, editor, con- demning Chiropractic. it turned out afterwards Was the Dr. Anna Graham Jeffrey CHIROPRACTORS Graduates of the Palmer School of Chiropractic Residence Phone 93 ore ao- aie do aie ste siodte die see ate-ste ste sie aio-sie sie se-ste- seo ste she 40-ao-ate sin-se ake sho ste she ao. 40e 0-40 40e- 46 Se-ete-ete- ate atoeteeteate ate te eo ete-diodee dee dee oho ode Crp Roeee Coate dio-ate ate ooo ote-ase ate ate sfe-ate eho ofan ote ote-ate de ete steal Electric Repairing Electric Supply & Construction Co. ATTENTION, SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR VETERANS! I realized . e WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1919 240 South Grant Street Casper, Wyoming INVENTORIES Office Smith Tarter Bldg. pnd and Durbitt @We handle a complete line of Drugs, Chemicals and receive prompt and careful attention by nine Registered Pharmacists. A meeting is called at the courthouse Wednesday eve- ning, 8:00 o'clock, for the purpose of organizing a camp and arranging for Decoration Day exercises. RO M% Soederhecoctectectoctoctecterdecectecdectectecte eateateads sfoctecgectectectoctectecder toto atocgoade conte to ate ogeates So dodocgecgeateatoatoateatpetoctectecdecteatoates oatestoateate coegeate teatectesteteatoeteefeetee Lodoegeete SOD AI NIN IOI LOLOL LOL LLLP RII INL SLES L SII SLE DIEL OILS LEILA LEELA CASPER, WYOMING = - Are You Sick? Or Are You in Doubt of the Read the A Advertisements in The Daily Tribune and Save Mone’ aM a oo, KO so-ago-e$ e Coa eas e e rodoetoctoctect iM e Reto ee Coat Coste Roese-efeeoateateetoetoe’ we o