Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 28, 1919, Page 2

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= . PAGE TWO CLEANUP STAGED kT THEAMOPOLS Thirty Law Violators Fall into Net of Officers and Special Deputy THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., June 2b. —During the first day of the “Treat ‘Em, Rough nipede here Thursday rested on charges 1g, mbling and »rosti- he arrests were made thru of Fred L. Crabbe city ahd county co-operation Y enne and y is overflowing with vis- d with people arriving fron- n by train and automobile imated this morning that records would be doubled oon. > BERLIN SUFFERS LACK OF MILK BERLIN, (By Mail.) "¢ 0.5, FOR HARVESTER RECEIVED BY FEDERAL LABOR OFFICE HERE, ee Hurty calls are being received by the U. S. Emplerment Satvice from) various points in Kansas asking that, | hundreds 6f meti be notifitd that un-| less hafvest hands imnjediately fe-) lieve the situation that great amatints | of wheat will be Ic3i. The loeal service this morning received a tele- gram from the Phoenix Gommercia] | 'Clib at Dodge City, Kansas, stating ‘that 500 méh wete tieeded there im, mediately at wages ranging from 50 to 60 cents an hour with boatd and room provided. No provisions have been made for the shipment of men to the harvest fields as it would éntail an almvay| imposible original expense to the farmers. With 500 men wanted in this vicinity and the failfdad fare ‘over $20 it would eftajl an original expense of over $10;000. There are scores of idle men i: this vicinity, however, who are! awaiting definite information of the! harvest néeds} préparatory to em. Authorities barking to telieve thé situation. The of Greater Berlin entrusted with the “lockl government office can supply distribution of f. and milk declare, all needed information. in i n to the Imperial ee ter, t Berlin is now re- y 200,000 quarts of milk } quarts less than eur ago. This, it is cient only for children The minimum required ds of those entitled to o collapse, the o accuse the Food f failing t6 take proper » relieve the situation. daily, which is the city ha say CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Christian Science services aré hela every Sunday mofnirig at 11 o'clock in I. O. O. F. hall, and on Wednesday | evenifigs at 7 o cioex The tes8on | séfmon tomorrow is “Christian Sei- ) ence.” The- public is cordially invited to, nite hese services, Cold Ch From the Only Iced Refrigerator Candy ; Case In C. WEST eff AND BUY THEM Schulte Bros. Co. “The Little Store with the Big Business” ocolates Casper. & ee vc Before procee i be Cagper_ “MUST KEBP our FRAUDULENT CHECK LAN PATH OF TRUCK, FIREMEN STATE Meftibéis of the local fire depart- fhelit caélléd atténtion t6 the latge numbér of imOtbr tars whith hive been fblléwifik the fire apparatus to fires recently. There is a city ordi. naheé which forbids any vehicle riviig nearét than 300 feet to any ir8 apparatus whe it is Fesponding to an alarm. There-is @ fine of $5 to $50 awaiting the driver who vio- jatés this ordinance. Firémen said t6day that either thefe would be fewer motor tar drivers trying to beat the apparatus to the fire or there would be some fines. There is rea] danger both to the speed fiend racing to the fire afid to the firéhien who are respond- ing to an alitm ahd atteinpiing to get there in the legs? possible time. W:_H. Leavitt, superintendent of the Midwest refinery, and V. E. Han- sén, chief engineer, are leaving te morrow for Denver on buSiness con- fected with their toripany. YOUR EYES NEED CARE The eye is a very deli- cate organ which needs care and attention, if the sight is to be retained. Many cases of partial and total blindness might have beet prevented by timely aid. The eyés NEED care and if more attention were paid to them, defective eyesight. Would become a less Serious mattér. For your owh sake do not be éareless; do not take ehances with your sight. Pay us a visit; aiid be cdre- fully tested, so that you may. know, if glasses would improve your sight. Prevention is better AND BASIBR than eure. ovens YOUR EYES BY THE BEST METHOD BURNETT-HYNES Optical Co. Ground Floor, Sifweat Hotei s ' 1 7 or Y | shall mike; irae, utter of deliver any} draft or order as afofegaid shall be) ; | cheek, + or order for the payment) pritna facie evidence of intent to de- FP ag mits of mon The new law of- 2919: providing a) pesson, fifhi SF COFPOFALiON khoWing penalty for issuing checks when the|at the time of such making, drawing, maker has no money or insufficient funds with which to meet sanie is! very sevére and fio jdke 4s some of the guilty parties will soon find. The} law is: “That Whoevér with intent to de- fraud by obtaining money, merchan- dise, property, credit, or thing of 1 value, altho #6 express réptesenta-| tiary for not moré thah five years at! |tion is mad@ if referent thereto, or! both, The making, drawing, beer. | who ih pa it of any obligation, ing or deliveFing of such thé fraud. The word “credit” as used! ted herein shal! be constried td inean at | sree arrangement or understanding with LESS. We cater to quality as wel) the bank, depository, fifth er Gerpor- 95 Price. Grocerits M@ats and Harg. fr the payment of suel theck, depart) ati hi t of such che, ky ASPB ation for the payment of such cheéc RCIAL &, or order in full upon its presentation, a * 10. a draft or order.” |shall be guilty of aa and upon) } pl edfiviction thereof shall be fité@ not), q ry es § more than five thousand dollars ($5,-,, 4 Eittle wantad will cell’ it. 000) or imprisoned \in the peniten- ey upon any bank, depository, uttering or delivering that the maker or drawer has not sufficient funds Read the Tfibune ads. sete eur ppeph ities ante. SS UT hae REGUS PAT OFF Tho alt- year-round sort dtink The first man’s drink was air. and grain. Bevo is the highest refinement of the natural drink of primitive man the accepted drink of modern America a beverage with real food valtie, A healthy and substantial drink at the soda fountain, or with lunch at the restaurant, a comfort waiting for you in the ice«box at home. ‘Sold overywhore - Families suppliod by Srocor, druggist and dealer. Visitors abo invited (6 inspect otip plant , DPS Sa ari ia rr tea ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST.LOUIS BG Mueeny, Gilet Co., Casper, Wyo, TTT Vertebral adjustment is an art anda ther apéutic procedure founded upon the theory that pressure upon a spinal nerve by a dis| laced, ot more technically speaking, a sublux- ated vertebra, is the physical and perpetuating cause of 95 per cent of all cases of disease; the remaining 5 per cent being due to subluxations of other skeletal segments. To laymen who have no settled convictions about the natute and cause of disease, this theory seems both plausible and logical and they eagerly seek the relief its proper appli- cation affords. To the average physician, however, when first presented it appears unwarranted, preposterous and unworthy of belief, But really, itis no move so than was the an- nouncement of Hahnentann that the potentized sintilimum possesses a high degree of remedial power and efficiency or the prophecy, a hundred years later, that the time was near at hand when the human voice would be transmitted across the continent without arty loss of its individual qualities or characteristics. This reluctance of the majority of the medical profession to accept the subluxation theory. of disease at its true value, exists, | am persuaded, for two reasons: First, because of an erroneous opinion concerning the limitations of vertebral movements, and second, to confused ideas about the nature and cause of discase. ; With regard to the first reason, all medical teaching, until the present time, has been to the effect that the vertebrae are so interlaced with ligaments and so surrounded with lay- ers of muscles that, except to a very limited degree in certain normal directions, they cannot be removed without suffering a fracture. With regard to the second, all medical authon- ties are of the opinion that disease may result froma variety of calises, somne originating from within and some from without the body. ; Under these circurnstances it is little wonder that, to the medical mind, a theory which claims there is only one physical cause of disease, and that this cause is the pressure of a subluxated bone upon an adjacent nerve, should eeem not only too tidiculous for serious consideration but apparently even discredited by the findings of anatomy, WHAT IS A VERTEBRAL SUBLUXATION? ling further it may somewhat lessen this incredulous and antagonistic attituide towards the subluxation theory and put it in a mote favorable light, by. explaining what is meant by a veterbral subluxation, ya A subluxated vertebra is not one that has been forced into an abnormal, fixed dition would be a complete luxatjon and could hardly occur without a fracture. A vertebra that has suffered a subluxation is still movable but is subluxated because, mechanically speaking, it is “off its center.” motion has been shifted, to a greater or lesa degree, go that it no longer corresjonds with that of one or both of its neighbors. According to this view the only difference in. position between a vertebra when it has reached the extreme normal limit of motion in any given direction and when it occupies the came position as the result of a subluxation is, that in the latter case it cannot return to its normal center, while in the former case it can, fins Dr. J. H. Jeffrey — Lyric Theater Bldg. Telephone 706 nn CC ni nT | Clinical Experience With Vertebral Adjustments — First Installment of a Series of Lectures By G. H. PATCHEN, M. D., D.C., New York, New York (Paper Read at The American Institute of Hotieopathy, Baltimore, June, 1916) CHIROPRACTORS Graduates of the Palmer School of Chiropractic TTT 1M i TTT TTT Tin mTnTTTTn position with a complete separation of its articular surfaces from those of ils fellows, Such a con- In other words, the center of its field of Dr. Annie Graham Jeffrey CASPER, WYOMING esidence Phone 93 = = = a = = = = 4 = = = : B= = = = = = = = = = = = = 2 = = 2 = = 2 = = : = 2 = | i |

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