(Special to The Tribune)
CASPER, Wyo., Jan. 5.—Daniel L. Clark, aged 66, one of the best known pioneers of Casper, died here the last day of 1919 after an illness of 11 days with typhoid fever. His wife is critically sick at the present time with the same disease while a young man on the Clark ranch has the same disease. The source of the same water or milk supply is believed to have been the cause of the malady.
Mr. Clark is survived by 23 grandchildren and two great grandchildren besides a brother, George V. Clark, and a sister, Mrs. Malissa Heckart, both of Fort Collins, Colo.
Mr. Clark came to Wyoming in 1877 settling in Albany county.
Originally Published in Wyoming State Tribune (Cheyenne, WY), Monday, January 5, 1920; Volume 26, Issue 4, Page 8.
(Special to The Tribune)
CASPER, Wyo., Jan. 5.—Daniel L. Clark, aged 66, one of the best known pioneers of Casper, died here the last day of 1919 after an illness of 11 days with typhoid fever. His wife is critically sick at the present time with the same disease while a young man on the Clark ranch has the same disease. The source of the same water or milk supply is believed to have been the cause of the malady.
Mr. Clark is survived by 23 grandchildren and two great grandchildren besides a brother, George V. Clark, and a sister, Mrs. Malissa Heckart, both of Fort Collins, Colo.
Mr. Clark came to Wyoming in 1877 settling in Albany county.
Originally Published in Wyoming State Tribune (Cheyenne, WY), Monday, January 5, 1920; Volume 26, Issue 4, Page 8.
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