The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, June 25, 1908, Image 4

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    Professional Cards |
A. P. CULLEY,
Attorney & Gonnselor-at-Law
(Office: First National Bank)
Loup City, Nebr.
ROBT. P. STARR
Attorney-at-Law.
LOUP CITY. NEBRESKE.
R. J. NIGHTINGALE
LOUP GITY. NEB
AARON WALL
Lawyer
Practices in all Courts
Loup City, Neb.
R. H. MATHEW,
Attorney-at-Law,
And Bonded Abstractor,
Loup City, Nebraska
O. E. LONG AC RE
PHYSICIAN anfl SURGEON
Office, Over New Bank.
TELEPHONE CALL, NO. 39
S. A. ALLEN.
DEJYTIST,
LOUP CITY, - • NEB.
Office up stairs in the new State
Bank building'.
W, L. MARCY.
DIINTiST,
LOUP GITY, NEE
OFFICE: East Side Public Sauaie
Phone, 10 on 36
ROBERT P. STARR
(Successor to M. H. Mead)
Bonded Abstracter
Loup City, - Nebraska.
)u 1 v set of Abstract booksin conntj
Try the
F- F- F- Dray
F. F. Foster, Prop.
Office; Fester's Barber Shop
Low Rate
Summer Tours
To The Pacific Coast:
Daily low round trip rates to Port
land’ Seattle. Tacoma, San Fran
cisco. Los A ngeles and San Diego.
Slightly higher to include both
California and Puget Sound.
One whole business day saved by
our new schedule to the Pacific
northwest.
to Chicago
Cud Eastern Resorts:
Republican convention tickets on
sale Jund 12 to li>.
Daily low excursion rates to
Canada. Michigan, Wisconsin,
Minnesota, Massachussetts and
New York tourist resorts: also
low excursion rates to tourist
resorts in Maine. New Hampshire,
Vermont. _
4n American Tour
cor Nebraska Teachers
And their friends" Excursion will
leave Lincoln. 4:.'50 p. in. .) une'27.Will
spend three or four days at N. E. A.
Convention in Cleveland: thence
Buffalo, Niagara B’alls, Toronto, St.
Lawrence river hv steamer through
Thousand Islands and over the Ilapids
Montreal, Boston. Albany, down the
Hudson to New York, thence Phila
delphia, Washington and Pittsburg.
Ask the agent for an itinerary and full
information or write undersigned.
First and third Tuesdays to the
West, including the famous Big
Horn Basin and Yellowstone Valley
where large tracts of rich irrigated
lands are being opened for settle
ment by the government and by
private companies. Write D. Clem
Leaver. Burlington Landseekers’
Information Bureau, Omaha, ex
cellent business opening in new
growing towns.
J. A. DANIELSON,
Ticket Agent, Loup City, Neb.
L. W. Wakeley. G. P. A.
Omaha, Nebraska.
1 Cure Nerve-Vital Debility, Weak
ness. Drains. Rupture, Stricture,
/aricocele. Blood Poison, Private
5kin and Chronic Diseases of Men
I do not ask you to
tome to me first if you
believe others can cure
you. Should they fail,
don't give up. It is
better to come late
than not at all. Re
member. that curing
diseases after all oth
ers have failed has
been my specialty for
years. If you cannot
I visit me personally.
a-rite symptoms that trouble you most. A
•ast majority of cases can be cured by my
stem of home treatment, which is the most
v eessful system ever devised. 1 make no
barge for private counsel and give to each
Hu nt a legal contract in writing, backed
oy abundant capital, to hold for the promise
Physicians having stubborn cases to treat
ire cordially inviu-dXUf~|||BE]V cured of all
to consult with me. ’’ Vnig.IX womb and
bladder diseaser ulcerations, menstrual
irouhle. etc. Confidential. Private home in
the suburbs, before and during confinement.
Motherly care and best attention guaran
teed. (iood hemes found for babies.
CPTFI POSITIVELY FREE!
I Ivtt! No charge whatever to
man woman or child living in LOUP OITW
or vicinity, suffering from any CHRONIC
iHSEASE, a *10.00 X-RAY EXAMINA
TION. Come and let me look inside of you
absolutely free of charge.
VN. Diels SPECIALIST. GRAND
Dr. Iticn, ISLAND. NEB. Office op
posite Citv Hall, 103 W. Second Street.
THE NORTHWESTERN
TERMS:—11.00 PER TEAR, IF PAID IN ADVANCl
Entered at the Loup City Postofflce (or traut
mission through the malls as second
class matter.
Office ’Phone, - - - 6 on 108
Residence ’Phone, - 2 on 108
J. W. BURLEIGH. E«l. and Pill).
Republican National Ticket
For President,
WILLIAM H. TAFT,
of Ohio.
For Vice-President,
JAMES S. SHERMAN,
of New York.
Luke E. Wright of Tennessee suc
ceed Taft as secretary of war.
Grover Cleveland Dead.
Ex-President Grover Cleveland died
suddenly at Princeton, N. J., yester
day (Wednesday) morning at 8:40.
While he had been in failing health
for some time from stomach troubles,
his death was unexpeted.
A late report from Cleveland is to
the effect that Jas. S. Sherman, re
publican candidate for vice president,
is dangerously ill at a hospital in that
city, and may have to undergo an
operation for gall stones.
On the first page will be found a
report of the National Republican
convention, together with the good
looking faces of the next president
and vice president of the United
States. Further comment will not
be made this week—not at all neces
sary.
Secretary Mellor says that more
horses were named for the State Fair
Stake Races to begin August 31st,
than ever wasentered at any previous
race meet at Lincoln. This year the
races will consist of fifteen harness
and eight running races, with total
purses amounting to more than
#12,000. The closing of the class
races is on August 10th.
There will be an eclipse of the sun
on June 28, visible in nearly all parts
of the United States. In this part of
the country it will begin at about 7:45
a. m. and will last for nearly three
hours. About three-fourths of the
sun's surface will be hidden by the
eclipse leaving only about as much of
the sun visible as may be seen of the
moon in its tirst quarter. It is re
ported that in a strip of country
ninety miles long and forty-five miles
'wide in the vicinity of Tampa, Fla.,
the eclipse will be as near total as is
possible for the moon to hide the sun
for a short period, something like
three minutes.
Fifty years ago there was some ex
cuse for bad roads, for our country
was poor. Now it is such that there
is no excuse. A good road is always
to be desired and it is a source of
comfort and convenience to every
traveler. Good roads attract popula
tion as well as good schools and
churches. Good roads improve the
value of property, so that it said that
a farm lying five miles from .market
connected by a bad road is of less
value than an equally good farm con
certed by a good road. A larger load
can be drawn by one horse on a good
A>ad than by two over a bad one.
Good roads encourage the greater ex
change of produce and commodities
between one section and another.
Good roads are of great value to rail
roads as feeders.—Ex.
Air ship navigation on a large scale
has received a check by the accident
to a monster machine of this kind out
on the Pacific coast recently. It was
designed to run between San Fran
cisco and New York and was to be
one of a line of vessels which were to
make daily trips. This ship was only
a model, the regular ships of the line
were to be twelve hundred feet long—
nearly a quarter of a mile-to be
equipped witli parlors, sitting rooms,
bed rooms and special airship furni
ture including seventeen-ounce up
holstered chairs, air mattresses and
silk bed covers. It was expected that
one of this magnitude would be able
to carry oOG passengers and forty tons
of mail at a speed of 150 miles an
hour shooting over the continent in a
day. The fate of the model has
delayed indefinitely the plan to in
augurate airship service for the pur
pose of competing with great rail
road systems and furnishing the pub
lic with a very novel method of trans
portation. '
The News hears the name of Mr.
C. A. Clark of Ravenna mentioned in
connection with the republican nomi
nation for state senator, this fall.
Prof. Thomson declares that he is
out of it—that under no considera
tions would he accept a renoini nation
and this determination on his part
has led the leaders of the republican
party to cast about for a man who is
available, and Mr. Clark seems to be
very favorably considered and unusual
strength is expected to develop in
favor of his candidacy from the fact
that he is well known throughout
both counties of the district—Buffalo
and Sherman, and has about equal
financial interests in both counties.
Mr. Clark is a man who is universally
admired, and is known as a man of
the highest integrity. He lias always
taken advanced grounds politically,
and is in thorough harmony with the
best element of bis party, and his
abilities are such that he would give
good account of himself as a senator,
or in any other public office within
the gift of the people.—Ravenna
News.
The Country Candidate.
The expecCed lias happened, and a
large number of the republicans of
Iowa are demanding the repeal of the
direct primary law. A dispatch from
Council Bluffs says the republicans
of Pottawattamie county will urge
either the repeal of the entire law or
such changes as shall remodel it al
together on the delegate plan.
It is asserted, not only in Potta
wattamie county but in other coun
ties of Iow a, that the recent primaries
proved a handicap to the country
candidates and that they gave the
candidates from the cities a great ad
vantage. It is alleged, also, that a
man in first place in the list of candi
dates has an advantage, and this is
urged against the Iowa law.
Iowa has made a thorough test of
the primary law and knows what it
will do. Nebraska has not yet had a
fair chance at the workings of the
new statute, but it will be surprising
if the same complaints do not follow
the application of the law in this
state that are now heard in Iowa.
It is easier for the voters in the
cities to get to the polls than for the
country voters to get there. Bad roads,
busy harvest times or any one of sev
eral other things are liable to work
against the farmer on primary day,
and if it happens that conditions are
not right then the town vote is sure
to outnumber the country vote and
the candidates from the “rural'’ dis
tricts are left in the rear.
Under the convention plan the coun
try members of the party were sure
to be well represented by delegates,
and when the tickets were made up
the country was given its share of
the prizes because the city leaders,
looking ahead to election day, did not
dare do otherwise.
Possibly Nebraska's experience will
be like that of Iowa. The first general
trial of the new law will tell.—Lin
coln Daily Star.
Having Fun With Brewers.
The declarations of the brewers'
convention in Milwaukee have given
rise to a great deal of criticism and
not a little fun has been poked at
some of their utterances. When they
declare that the temperate use of beer
promotes happiness, the humorous
critic responds that if beer contains
only 5 per cent of alcohol, to become
real happy the drinker wants to take
more than might be denominated a
temperate use. Again, when the
brewers declare, “We earnestly desire
such improvement in the drinking
habits of the people as will further
advance temperance,” the humorous
critic suggests that the temperance
people and the brewers are at last
one if that is true. The brewers are
certainly breaking into literature
nowadays and some of their number
propose that they go still deeper into
it and inaugurate a regular campaign
of education. But by far the wisest
thing proposed among them is to
clean up morally the drinking places
and to keep out of politics. Much of
the intense feeling just now pre
valent against the saloon is founded j
on the feeling that drinking places'
are generally the headquarters of a
low and criminal class of people and
that the saloonkeeper too often is a J
low order of politician.—Lincoln Star, j
A New Departure.
After considerable agitation upon
the part of those interested in the
settlement of Government lands in
the west, the Government has now
designated an engineer to show pros
pective settlers lands within the
Shoshone Project in Wyoming. This
is an innovation that will be apprec
iated by prospective liomeseekers for
the reason that in the past, persons
seeking Government lands have as a
rule had to depend upon strangers to
show them the land and point out
the corners, but this is all cliangnd
now. Settlers now going to Powell,
Wyoming, where the Government
Engineers have their headquarters
for the Shoshone Project, have one of
the engineers at their service, who
goes with them personally and points
out the corners and gives them any
information desired. These lands are
all platted into farm units and the
engineer who did the surveying is the
one designated to show the lands.
This is certainly a step in the right
direction.
The Tochnfque of Home Making
“Cook, sweep, dust and sew, these
four words will never make a happy
home,” writes the editor in Woman’s
Home'Companion for July. “They
do not make sympathy, and love, and
ambition, and faith; but they go a
long way toward making room for
these things. The average bride has
a trunkful of ideals, and maybe two
trunkfuls of clothes. Her cookbook
—if she has one and the leaves are
cut at all—opens easily to “fudge.”
Hut unless she has mastered enough
pages of this book to get three meals
a day. without exhausting her own
body and soul, and her husband’s,
too, she will have little time for
clothes and none at all for ideals.
She finds herself involved in the
mastery of the merest technical
details. In spite of her best en
deavors, her husband loses his en
thusiasm for badly cooked food poorly
served. Perhaps she tells him that
lie couldn’t do it so well himself, and
then he tells her about what he can
do—perhaps it’s soldering a joint or
adding up a column of figures or
drawing a straight line between two
given points—but anyhow lie can do
it, because it is his business and he
has perfected himself in it. and if
she— And then Cook and Sweep and
Dust and Sew fling wide the doors of
that house, and Sympathy and Love
and Ambition and Faith make their
escape.”
%
Y. M. A. A.
For a pleasant hour come to the
reading room and look over our supply
of magazines and books. Among the i
magazines we have: Scrap Book (two
sections), Argosy, Everybodys, Mc
Clures, Am. Lumber Magazine, Sat-,
urday Evening Post, Collier's, Youth's
Companion, Epwortli Herald and
many others.
Ladies and girls are invited to use
the gymnasium between the hours of
nine and six on Thursdays of each
week. During that time no one else
will be admitted whether members
or not. All are requested to wear
rubber-soled shoes in the gymnasium,
as exercising without them is danger
ous.
Boys from twelve years upward can
join the Asociation. Later in the
year a basket ball team will be or
ganized among the young members
and also the older ones. You can
not atford to miss the chance for good
exercise when the membership fee is
so small.
Members of the Association are
allpwed the privilege of taking out-of
town people into the gymnasium. If
you have a friend here visiting let
him enjoy himself in this way, when
you are too busy to entertain.
Mr. Jones has painted two glass
signs for the Association which will
be used outside in a box furnished
with a gas light. In appreciation of
the gift we announce that this work
is a contribution of Mr. Jones’. Any
order left with him will receive the
best of attention and we know from
experience that he can do the work.
It is the intention of the Assoc
iation to open the gvmnasium to the
public on holidays, charging a small
admission fee. This will add to the
attraction for the outsiders and give
everyone a chance to use the room at
some time.
Additional Locals.
JohnCzaplewski returned from Den
ver Tuesday.
Mrs. John Synak and children left
for Gibbon Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Thompson re
turned home Monday evening from
their visit at Ord.
Mrs. Ditto, Mrs. Wes Pedler, and
their guest, Mrs. Cushman, visited
Arcadia intheOdendahlautoTuesday
Everyone is most cordially invited
to attend the Episcopal services to be
held in the Baptist church next
Friday evening.
Uncle Peter Jacoby returned Tues
day from a visit with the family of
his son, Dwight, near Loup City. He
tells us that the weather man is dish
ing up about the same brand of
weather that is being served in
Hamilton county. Dwight seems to
be well pleaded with his Sherman
county investment.—Aurora Republi
can. 7.
The storm of Monday night was
one of the heaviest of the season, the
gauge at llayhurst's measuring an
inch and a quarter rainfall. The
hail accompanying cut the growing
corn in bad shape, and at Arcadia
there was about a mile or more of
wheat and other crops cut to pieces.
The downpour there was reported
the proportions Of a cloudburst, with
three inches of rain.
Quite a few business changes and
matters along business lines are made
this week. Elsewhere we spoke of
Frank Robbins selling his barber
shop to Mr. Dan DeWitt. Now
comes the word that Mr. DeWitt has
formed a partnership with Frank
Foster and they will occupy the
Foster shop. Stewart and Ashley
Conger have formed a partnership
and w ill start a chop house in the
Robbins building and hope to get
started sometime the first of July.
Chris Johansen will be the new ice
man and handle the congealed aqua
instead of Conger. Foster will have
some changes made in his barber
shop, enlarging the accomodations,
and hopes to have everything in shape
by the first of the week.
Items Worthy of Note.
A sensible girl says: “Why do
young men do so much loafing? Go
to work. Push ahead! I am but a
young girl, but I clothe myself and
have money in the bank. 1 lay up
more money in a year than any young
man within three miles of my home.
When they get a dollar they go to a
dance and go home a dollar out. I
advise all girls to cut clear of all loaf
ing boys. Stand by the boy who
works, and never put your arm
through the handle of a jug.”
“Some of these newspapers are
frights,” angrily exclaimed &n old
comrade of ours, “why, they are too
cowardly to print the truth when it
is furnished them. Just the other
day 1 worked up a column roast on a
fellow who deserved it, and the papers
wouldn’t publish it.” “Did you sign
your name to it?” we asked. “Sign
my name to it? Why should I sign
my name to it and lhave everybody
jumping on to me about it?—
Thoughtful Thinks in the Kearney
Democrat.
From stastistics of booze consump
tion in this country the Philadelphia
Ledger estimates the annual drink
bill of the nation at 1*1,466,584,J27. It
is nearly double the sum paid for
education. It is a third more than
the entire national debt: and those
who pay this monstrous contribution
to Bacchus receive nothing but
physical and mental mischief for the
investment. The legalized traffic in
alcoholic poison is upheld on the
specious and clearly indefensible plea
of personal liberty, but the plea will
never hold good in the court of
popular opinion when the people are
once fully aroused to the real evil
that threatens the life of free govern
ment.—Bixby in State Journal.
FEW MINUTES HE HAD 8PBNT.
Statistician’s Passion for Figures Get
Him Into Trouble.
He is one of those persons with a
mad passion for figuring out "How
much,” “How long,” etc., and was wait
ing for his wife, who was adjusting
her hat before the mirror. They
were going to the theater, and had ten
minutes to catch their train. Present
ly a sparkle came into his eye, and
he fished a pencil and paper from his
pocket. That kind of man always has
a pencil and paper, even in his even
ing clothes.
“Do you know," he said presently,
looking up at his wife, who had fin
ished adjusting her hat, “that I figure,
basing my figures on observation, that
a girl from six to ten spends an aver
age of seven minutes a day before her
mirror; from 10 to 15, a quarter of an
hour; from 15 to 20, 22 minutes. A
woman of 70 will have spent 5,862
hours, or eight solid months, counting
day and night. Now, a woman of your
age has spent—”
“Never mind what I've spent,” she
said coldly, removing her hat. "You
have spent 15 minutes figuring it out,
and we have missed that train.”—Sun
day Magazine.
HEROISM OF TRAINED NURSES.
Fight Grimmest of Battles with N*
Trumpet Sound to Encourage.
The trained nurse goes into battl*
encouraged by none of the blood-stir
ring incidents of the soldier. She la
often entirely alone; her struggle must
be quiet; and her antagonist is grim
and terrible and ever watchful, be
cause it is death itself. Suppose it la
you yourself who are suddenly smitten
In the midst of your life and work,
says Anne O'Hagan in the Delineator.
With the coining of the trained nursa
you feel infinite relief from thanks
giving. You are no longer obliged to
struggle alone, to watch the door
alone lest that other one enter. Tha
nurse, calmest of warriors, least grim
of sentinels, sits beside your bed and
will keep the vigil for you. You trans
fer the battle to her. For yourself, you
will lie still and think—not of the
combat before you, not of the turmoil
behind you—that whirling, dusty con
flict of the world which was so impor
tant a little while ago—but of the
great, important things—earth and its
greenness, the wide, white, country
skies on moonlight nights, the flash of
blue birds’ wings in the September
sunshine, all the daily miracles you
had forgotten to watch when you were
hurrying to those manifold appoint
ments of yours. Now you are in the
region where only "the mightier move
ment sounds and passes, only winds
and rivers, only life and death.”
SLIM PASSENGER A SKEPTIC.
Story of Wonderful Surgical Operation
Received with Doubt.
It happened on a Pullman car be
tween New York and Chicago. Dinner
having been finished, the gentlemen
assembled in the smoking-room to en
joy their cigars. "During the time
I was in the war," said the quiet man,
“I saw a wonderful thing in the line
of surgical operations. A friend of
mine was shot through the right
breast, the bullet passing clear
through him. The presence of mind
of his companion undoubtedly saved
his life. He wrapped his handkerchief
around the ramrod of his gun, and,
pushing it through the path made by
the bullet, cleared the wound
of all piosonous lead. I know
it is hard to believe, but, gen
tlemen, the man still lives to tell the
tale.” "Which man?” inquired the
slim passenger on the other seat,
quietly. “The wounded one, of
course,”'-exclaimed the old soldier,
scornfully. “Oh, I beg your pardon;
I thought it might be the other.”
$150 For Best Article.
The Republican Congressional Com
mittee offers $1.10 for the best article
not exceeding 1.000 words on the sub
ject:
WHY THE REPUBLICAN PARTY
SHOULD BE SUCCESSFUL
NEXT NOVEMBER.
Tqe competition is open to all.
In judging the merits of contribu
tions consideration will be given not
only to styie, arguments and facts pre
sented, but to the convincing power,
and it should be borne in mind that
Members of Congress are to be elected
as well as President and Vice-Presi
dent.
No manuscripts will be returned,
but will be the property of the Com
mittee.
The best article will be widely used
both in the newspapers of the country
and in pamphlet form.
The award will be made and check
sent to successful contestant about
August 15th. Manuscripts must be
mailed not later than July 15th to
Literary Bureau,
Republican Congressional Committee,
Metropolitan Bank Building,
Washington, D. C.
Tie 11F
Is ttie best. See or write
T. Irfl. "Reed.
LOUP CITY, NEBR.
IT MUST BE i
“MO
IF THE BEST IS WANTED
The days for driving are draw
ing near, so you'd better begin
looking for the new b; guy you in
tend to buy.
This year’s purchase of the fa
mous Moon Brothers* buggy in
cludes some of the very nicest
medium priced rigs that rave ever
been brought to Loup City.
The screwless and plugless body
of the ‘ Moon” insures against spot
ted sides-cracked paint-a buggy
not to be ashamed of--for many
years.
Come in and see some high-class
buggies that sell at a medium price.
Hayhurst-Gallaway Hardware
Company,
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New and Scenic Line
TO
YELLOWSTONE PARK
One of the most beautiful spots in
America. No matter where you have
traveled, or what you have seen, here
is a trip that will please you as well,
if not better
VERY LOW ROUND
TIPATES
in effect this summer
For Yellowstone Park lealfet and
information regarding the new
direct line to Yellowstone
VIA THE
UNION PACIFIC
inquire of
(3h W. Collipriest
, She Has Cured Thousands
Given up to die.
DR. CALDWELL
OF CHICAGO
Practicing AieopatJi.v, l(omcn]i*
ath.v, Electric and (Jotieral
Medicine.
Will by request, visit professionally
LOUPC1TY, NEB.
At St. Elmo hotel
FRIDAY, m 26
Hours: 2 p. m. to 9 p. m.
returning every four weeks. Consult
her while-the opportunity is at
hand.
DR. CALDWELL limits her practice to the
to the special treatment of diseases of the
E.ve. Ear. Nose, Throat. Lungs, Female Dis
eases, Diseases of Children and all Chronic,
Nervous and Surgical Diseases of a curable
nature. Early Consumption. Bronchitis. Bron
chial Catarrh, Chronic Catarrh, Head Ache,
Constipation, Stomach and Bowel Trouble••
Rheumatism. Neuralgia. Sciatica, Bright's
Disease. Kidney Diseases. Diseases of the
Liver and Bladder, Dizziness, Nervousness,
Indigestion. Obesity, interrupted Nutrition,
Slow Growth in Children, and all wasting
Diseases in adults. Deformities, Club-feet.
Curvature of the Spine. Diseases of the Brain,
Paralysis. Epilepsy. Heart Disease. Dropsy,
Swelling of the Limbs Stricture. Open Sores,
Pain in the Bones. Granular Enlargements
and all longstanding diseases properly treated.
Blood and Skin Diseases.
Pimples. Blotches. Eruptions. Liver Spots,
Falling of the Hair, Bad Complexion. Eczema,
Threat ulcers, Bone Pains. Bladder Troubles,
Weak Back. Burning Urine. Passing Urine
too often. The effects of constitutional sick
ness or the taking of too much injurious
medicine receives searching treatment,
prompt relief and a cure for life.
Diseases of Women. Irregular Menstruation.
Falling of the Womb. Bearing Down Pains,
Female Displacements. Lack of Sexual Tone.
Leuchorrbesi sterility or Barrenness, consult
Dr. Caldwell and she. will show them the
cause of their trouble and the way to become
cured.
Cancers, Goiter, Fistula, Piles
and enlarged (.’lands rested with the sub
cutaneous injection method, absolutely with
out pain anc without the loss of a drop of
blood, is one of her own discoveries and 1*
really the most scientific and certainly sure
cure method of this advanced age. Dr.
Caldwell has practiced her profession in some
of the largest hospitals throughout the coun
try. She has no superior in the treating and
diagnosing of diseases, deformities, etc. She
has lately opened an office in Omaha. Nebras
ka. where she will spend a portion of each
week treating her many patients. No in
curable cases accepted for treatment. Con
sultation. examination and advice, one dollar
to those interested.
DR. ORA CALDWELL & CO..
Omaha. Neb. Chicago, III.
Address all mall, 104 Bee Bldg. Omaha, Neb