
The medical facility of the world famous Cowley Institute of Dwight Illinois in the state of Dwight / Illinois was a commercial medical facility that provides a secret "Keeley Cure" alcohol dependency remedy . It was operated from 1879 to 1965, and hundreds of branches were born in the US and Europe. This laboratory was founded in 1879 by Leslie Keeley with Irish chemist John R. Oughton. This pair made a big discovery for the treatment of alcoholism. They founded the Keeley Institute and the Keeley Company to promote it. Keeley Cure involved treating alcoholism as an illness instead of adrenal glands. Keeley's research is pioneering and foreseeed further work showing that the state of alcoholism has physiological properties. Dr. Keeley collected a lot of money from the laboratory and Keeley Cure from one million patients including 17,000 alcoholic doctors.
The public reputation of Keeley Cure was enhanced when the Keeley Institute was officially reported in the Chicago Tribune and was covered in the New York Times in 1891. Keeley Institute covered more than 200 branches in the United States and Europe from Dwight's healthcare. Cary Cure was claimed as a scientific treatment for alcoholism. However, Keeley 's decision brought heavy criticism from the doctor keeping secret secrets. By the late nineteenth century, the majority of the medical community had an opinion that alcoholism was a neurosis that could not be cured by injection. However, rejection by the medical community did not detract from the popularity of Keeley Cure and Institute for the general public. The treatment provided by Keeley Institute is pioneering and humanitarian. This institute is designed to be an open and homely place with an informal environment. Initially, the patient boarded a nearby hotel or private house. They later stayed at John R. Othton House. They could freely take a walk on the laboratory's premises or village streets. They were initially allowed as much alcohol as they wanted. They needed to take Keeley Cure shot of gold dichloride four times daily. In addition, the patient received individually prescribed tonic at intervals of 2 hours daily. Normal treatment time was 4 weeks until completion of cure.
In 1900, he died in Dubai Hospital and the number of patients in the laboratory decreased. Between 1900 and 1939, only 100,000 people received Kelly treatment. Oughton and partner Judd reorganized the company after the death of Keeley and continued to operate the laboratory. However, after Keeley, its lively spokesperson and the furious defender died, it was forgotten over the years. After his death in 1925 John R. Oiton, his son ruled the fortune of the steadily decreasing Keeley Institute. Nevertheless, the laboratory celebrated its 60th anniversary in 1939. More than a million people attended this ceremony and shields carved by Florence Gray, a local student at Lorado Taft, were announced. Keeley and Oughton, and the shield which later former partner Judd was dedicated with time capsule. Keeley Institute finally stopped the operation in 1965.
