Advertisement

Donald Clifford Farley

Advertisement

Donald Clifford Farley

Birth
Monroeville, Huron County, Ohio, USA
Death
1 Mar 1937 (aged 3 months)
Monroeville, Huron County, Ohio, USA
Burial
Monroeville, Huron County, Ohio, USA Add to Map
Plot
No Marker
Memorial ID
View Source
MONOXIDE GAS CAUSES DEATH OF FARLEY CHILD
Monoxide gas generated by a soft coal heating stove, caused the death, early Monday morning of Donald Clifford Farley, three-month-old son of Mr and Mrs Maurice Farley, who live near the New York Central station.
Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon in the Drake Funeral Home, with Rev. Owen T Williams, pastor of Congregational Community Church, officiating. Burial was made in Riverside Cemetery.
Besides the parents, the infant is survived by three sisters, Luena May, Bertha and Verna, and three brothers, John, Lawrence and Maurice Jr.
According to Coroner J. D. Bradish the monoxide gas was discharged into the room because the stove pipe was too small to carry off the fumes, and because a larger pipe from the kitchen cook stove entered the chimney directly opposite the pipe from the coal heater.
Other members of the family were mildly affected by the discharge of monoxide, according to the coroner's report. Mr. Farley is employed at the Herman-McLean Co.
MONOXIDE GAS CAUSES DEATH OF FARLEY CHILD
Monoxide gas generated by a soft coal heating stove, caused the death, early Monday morning of Donald Clifford Farley, three-month-old son of Mr and Mrs Maurice Farley, who live near the New York Central station.
Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon in the Drake Funeral Home, with Rev. Owen T Williams, pastor of Congregational Community Church, officiating. Burial was made in Riverside Cemetery.
Besides the parents, the infant is survived by three sisters, Luena May, Bertha and Verna, and three brothers, John, Lawrence and Maurice Jr.
According to Coroner J. D. Bradish the monoxide gas was discharged into the room because the stove pipe was too small to carry off the fumes, and because a larger pipe from the kitchen cook stove entered the chimney directly opposite the pipe from the coal heater.
Other members of the family were mildly affected by the discharge of monoxide, according to the coroner's report. Mr. Farley is employed at the Herman-McLean Co.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement