JAMES DOYLE OF BARING DIES
Death Came Suddenly After Taking Measles—Burial Here Saturday.
James Doyle, a young man 30 years old, a son of Mrs. Hannah Doyle of near Baring, and who had been blind almost three years, died suddenly last Thursday evening. He was just taking the measles and death came after a bad coughing spell, which supposedly caused the bursting of a blood vessel in his head.
Funeral services were held 10 o'clock Saturday at St. Aloysius Church at Baring. Burial was in the new cemetery of St. Joseph's Church at Edina.
The young man was born and raised in Knox County and leaves besides the mother one brother, Thomas, and four sisters, Mrs. J. J. Early and Misses Nell, Alice and Frances, at home.
Those from a distance who attended the funeral were: Ambrose Whelan and Henry Snyder of Chicago, Misses Kate and Alice McGraw and L. X. O'Connor of Kansas City, Mrs. James McGraw and son, Wendell, of Quincy.
Mrs. Doyle and three daughters all had the measles at the time of the death of the son and brother, but are better now.
The Edina Sentinel, Edina, Missouri, March 15, 1917
JAMES DOYLE OF BARING DIES
Death Came Suddenly After Taking Measles—Burial Here Saturday.
James Doyle, a young man 30 years old, a son of Mrs. Hannah Doyle of near Baring, and who had been blind almost three years, died suddenly last Thursday evening. He was just taking the measles and death came after a bad coughing spell, which supposedly caused the bursting of a blood vessel in his head.
Funeral services were held 10 o'clock Saturday at St. Aloysius Church at Baring. Burial was in the new cemetery of St. Joseph's Church at Edina.
The young man was born and raised in Knox County and leaves besides the mother one brother, Thomas, and four sisters, Mrs. J. J. Early and Misses Nell, Alice and Frances, at home.
Those from a distance who attended the funeral were: Ambrose Whelan and Henry Snyder of Chicago, Misses Kate and Alice McGraw and L. X. O'Connor of Kansas City, Mrs. James McGraw and son, Wendell, of Quincy.
Mrs. Doyle and three daughters all had the measles at the time of the death of the son and brother, but are better now.
The Edina Sentinel, Edina, Missouri, March 15, 1917
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