Dayton Review
Thursday, September 26, 1895
Charles T. Curtis, the second son of W. A. Curtis, died in Dayton, Iowa, Sept. 22, 1895. For the past three or four weeks he had been quite low with malarial fever but it was thought a week ago that he was on the road to recovery when he took a relapse and was soon beyond the reach of human skill. He was born in Dayton, June 29, 1868, and has always lived here. "Joe," as his friends called him, was the soul of good humor and was generally the life of the young company with whom he associated. His genial smile and his kindly accommodating ways made him popular with all. Rev. Chapler preached his funeral sermon to a crowded house on Sept. 24 from Gen. 2-7.
Dayton Review
Thursday, September 26, 1895
Charles T. Curtis, the second son of W. A. Curtis, died in Dayton, Iowa, Sept. 22, 1895. For the past three or four weeks he had been quite low with malarial fever but it was thought a week ago that he was on the road to recovery when he took a relapse and was soon beyond the reach of human skill. He was born in Dayton, June 29, 1868, and has always lived here. "Joe," as his friends called him, was the soul of good humor and was generally the life of the young company with whom he associated. His genial smile and his kindly accommodating ways made him popular with all. Rev. Chapler preached his funeral sermon to a crowded house on Sept. 24 from Gen. 2-7.
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