Robert J. ETZLER, for 40 years a resident of Colorado, died early Tuesday morning at the home of his nephew, Dwight ETZLER, on Elk river, and the funeral was held today from the Steamboat Springs Methodist church, Rev. C. E. Hardesty officiating. Deceased is survived by two brothers, Charles and Henry P. ETZLER of Deep Creek; two sisters, Mrs. Regina WALTON of Butler, Missouri, and Mrs. Clarice O. HARRIS of Lawton, Oklahoma, and four nephews, Henry, Robert, George and Dwight, all of Steamboat Springs and Vicinity.
Mr. ETZLER was born December 14, 1850, in East St. Louis, and he came to this state in 1884, locating at Breckenridge, where he was long prominently engaged in mining. For a number of years he has been crippled with rheumatism, and for three days before he passed away he had been unconscious.
(Published in The Routt County Sentinel (Steamboat Springs, CO), December 26, 1924.)
Robert J. ETZLER, for 40 years a resident of Colorado, died early Tuesday morning at the home of his nephew, Dwight ETZLER, on Elk river, and the funeral was held today from the Steamboat Springs Methodist church, Rev. C. E. Hardesty officiating. Deceased is survived by two brothers, Charles and Henry P. ETZLER of Deep Creek; two sisters, Mrs. Regina WALTON of Butler, Missouri, and Mrs. Clarice O. HARRIS of Lawton, Oklahoma, and four nephews, Henry, Robert, George and Dwight, all of Steamboat Springs and Vicinity.
Mr. ETZLER was born December 14, 1850, in East St. Louis, and he came to this state in 1884, locating at Breckenridge, where he was long prominently engaged in mining. For a number of years he has been crippled with rheumatism, and for three days before he passed away he had been unconscious.
(Published in The Routt County Sentinel (Steamboat Springs, CO), December 26, 1924.)
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