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D. H. Dougan, Dr. P. V. Carlin, Dr. W. C. Weber, Dr. H. G. Wetherill, Dr. J. N. Hall, Dr. G. H. Stover, Dr. S. B. Childs, Dr. L. T. Durbin, Dr. H. G. Harvey, Dr. E. F. Dean, Dr. H. B. Whitney, Dr. Edward Jackson, Dr. George C. Stemen, Dr. C. A. Graham, Dr. A. A. Clough, Dr. A. R. Seebass, Dr. J. W. King.

Dr. Lorenz spoke only briefly, thanking the physicians of Denver for the reception they had given him and referring to the friendships formed on his present tour.

From Denver Prof. Lorenz went to Colorado Springs and then to Pueblo, where he held a clinic at the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company's Hospital. Thence he continued his trip further

west.

His visit to this country has been largely a missionary tour and we may well say a triumphal procession, the effects of which will be felt throughout the medical world and show them selves upon untold members of happy families for many years to come. It is scarcely possible for one to receive a greater reward.

It has been truly said that it is but a step from the sublime to the ridiculous. Professor Lorenz' visit is not without its humorous accompaniment. A pamphlet has been issued and circulated by some of our local friends, the osteopaths, in which the claim is made that Professor Lorenz is but a follower, and not too prominent at that, of their peculiar system of practice, and the bloodless operation is claimed as distinctly their own, originated and completed in

the mind of the founder of their school, Dr. Still. Some years ago the writer had occasion to write an editorial on "The Blatant Osteopath." Our osteopathic friends saw fit to quote the same in full before the senate and house committee to which was referred their bill. The writer takes the present opportunity, the first, to present his acknowledgments. The editorial practically holds as good to-day as it did when it was written. We challenge them to show the slightest advance in knowledge in the fields of anatomy and physiology, which are their great boast, due to their school or any representative of it. While they are making their claims as regards Professor Lorenz, we would also challenge them to produce a patient on whom Professor Lorenz's operation has been successfully performed by one of their sect prior to its development by Professor Lorenz. We might go further and challenge them to produce any published contribution to the development of this operation of which one of their school is the author. But really we are devoting entirely too much time to them; they may become convinced that they are of really some importance in the medical history of to-day.

Some little discussion has been raised on account of the position taken by the Illinois State Board of Health in requiring Professor Lorenz to take out the usual license to practice in that state. There may, perhaps, be some room for difference of opinion as to the appropriateness of this stand. While there is no doubt that Professor

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