Mrs. Lulu Caley, aged 38 years, wife of C. A. Caley of Princeton, Minn., passed away Tuesday evening at 7 o’clock, at one of the rooms of Wood & Wood, Chiropractors, above the Orpheum Theatre.
Mrs. Caley had been ailing for several years, it is understood. Several weeks ago she accompanied her husband here to visit at the home of her sister, Mrs. Gus. Anderson, three miles west of Minot. While here she took several treatments from Wood & Wood, and after they left for Minnesota on their vacation, she was left in charge of Miss. Minnie Perry. Just a week before she died, Mrs. Caley was brot in from the country and occupied a bed in a suite of the Wood rooms. Miss Perry states that when she learned the Mrs. Caley was in such a serious condition, she called in a physician, who declared that Mrs. Caley had but a short time to live. Miss Perry states that she was told by Mrs. Caley that she had been treated in Minnesota for tuberculosis of the bowels.
An inquest was held at the Van Fleet undertaking parlors this morning and the jury returned a verdict that the deceased had come to her death from adhesion of the bowels.
The jury consisted of Julius Weinrebe, J. C. Smallwood and J. L. Fahey.
The funeral was held from the undertaking parlors this afternoon, Rev. T. A. Olson delivering the sermon. The remains were interred in Rose Hill cemetery.
Mrs. Caley leaves a husband and a son eleven years of age.
The Ward County Independent, Thursday, September 3, 1914, Page 9.
Mrs. Lulu Caley, aged 38 years, wife of C. A. Caley of Princeton, Minn., passed away Tuesday evening at 7 o’clock, at one of the rooms of Wood & Wood, Chiropractors, above the Orpheum Theatre.
Mrs. Caley had been ailing for several years, it is understood. Several weeks ago she accompanied her husband here to visit at the home of her sister, Mrs. Gus. Anderson, three miles west of Minot. While here she took several treatments from Wood & Wood, and after they left for Minnesota on their vacation, she was left in charge of Miss. Minnie Perry. Just a week before she died, Mrs. Caley was brot in from the country and occupied a bed in a suite of the Wood rooms. Miss Perry states that when she learned the Mrs. Caley was in such a serious condition, she called in a physician, who declared that Mrs. Caley had but a short time to live. Miss Perry states that she was told by Mrs. Caley that she had been treated in Minnesota for tuberculosis of the bowels.
An inquest was held at the Van Fleet undertaking parlors this morning and the jury returned a verdict that the deceased had come to her death from adhesion of the bowels.
The jury consisted of Julius Weinrebe, J. C. Smallwood and J. L. Fahey.
The funeral was held from the undertaking parlors this afternoon, Rev. T. A. Olson delivering the sermon. The remains were interred in Rose Hill cemetery.
Mrs. Caley leaves a husband and a son eleven years of age.
The Ward County Independent, Thursday, September 3, 1914, Page 9.
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