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Ida May Straub

Birth
Montgomery County, Indiana, USA
Death
22 Feb 1914 (aged 6)
Montgomery County, Indiana, USA
Burial
Waynetown, Montgomery County, Indiana, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Crawfordsville Daily Journal,
Thursday, February 26, 1914
BURIED IN ONE GRAVE
TWO CHILDREN OF MRS. WILLIAM STRAUB WERE VICTIMS OF LARYNGITIS
Deaths Occurred a Few Hours Apart
Brother is Employed In This City
Waynetown - On Tuesday afternoon two young children of Mrs. William Straub were buried in the same grave in the Masonic cemetery here following their death Saturday and Sunday respectively, both having suddenly contracted serious cases of laryngitis which with acute heart failure caused their death, Earl, ten years old and Ida, aged six years, were the children. They became ill last week and on Saturday the boy died. Twenty-four hours later the little girl breathed her last. It was first thought that the children had been afflicted with diphtheria, but Dr's. Bounell and Hamilton of Waynetown pronounced the disease laryngitis and an examination of the children's blood by the state board of health failed to reveal any diphtheria germs.
The mother is broken hearted at the sudden taking away of her children and the sympathy of the many friends of the family has been aroused by the sad deaths. Mrs. Straub lives with her family three miles south of Waynetown. Her eldest son, Oscar, is employed in the M.L. Claypool music store at Crawfordsville.
Crawfordsville Daily Journal,
Thursday, February 26, 1914
BURIED IN ONE GRAVE
TWO CHILDREN OF MRS. WILLIAM STRAUB WERE VICTIMS OF LARYNGITIS
Deaths Occurred a Few Hours Apart
Brother is Employed In This City
Waynetown - On Tuesday afternoon two young children of Mrs. William Straub were buried in the same grave in the Masonic cemetery here following their death Saturday and Sunday respectively, both having suddenly contracted serious cases of laryngitis which with acute heart failure caused their death, Earl, ten years old and Ida, aged six years, were the children. They became ill last week and on Saturday the boy died. Twenty-four hours later the little girl breathed her last. It was first thought that the children had been afflicted with diphtheria, but Dr's. Bounell and Hamilton of Waynetown pronounced the disease laryngitis and an examination of the children's blood by the state board of health failed to reveal any diphtheria germs.
The mother is broken hearted at the sudden taking away of her children and the sympathy of the many friends of the family has been aroused by the sad deaths. Mrs. Straub lives with her family three miles south of Waynetown. Her eldest son, Oscar, is employed in the M.L. Claypool music store at Crawfordsville.


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