Dear brother of David, Jr., Alice, Lily and Gordon Butler.
Charles was a graduate of Columbia Medical School, Class of 1889.
"The funeral of Dr. Charles B. Day of Glencoe, Minn., was held at the residence of Mrs. Katherine Beals yesterday at 2:30 o'clock. Rev. Maurice D. Edwards conducted the services which were private, only the immediate relatives and a few of the deceased's friends from Glencoe being present.
Dr. Charles B. Day was a son of the late Dr. David Day of this city and had resided and practiced his profession in Glencoe for the past six years. He was a physician of unusual skill with a disposition so sweet and heart so gentle as to endear him to all who were fortunate to know him. Nearly every one in the city where he resided, and in all the surrounding country had reason to remember him for some act of kindness, some help he had given them at some period of his short career.
He was still young, just at the age when many professional men begin their careers, yet he had already achieved a prominent place in the medical world, and won a place in the hearts of the people who will cherish forever the memory of his friendship as a priceless thing, never to be forgotten."
Charles' obituary appears courtesy of the Arizona State Archives.
Dear brother of David, Jr., Alice, Lily and Gordon Butler.
Charles was a graduate of Columbia Medical School, Class of 1889.
"The funeral of Dr. Charles B. Day of Glencoe, Minn., was held at the residence of Mrs. Katherine Beals yesterday at 2:30 o'clock. Rev. Maurice D. Edwards conducted the services which were private, only the immediate relatives and a few of the deceased's friends from Glencoe being present.
Dr. Charles B. Day was a son of the late Dr. David Day of this city and had resided and practiced his profession in Glencoe for the past six years. He was a physician of unusual skill with a disposition so sweet and heart so gentle as to endear him to all who were fortunate to know him. Nearly every one in the city where he resided, and in all the surrounding country had reason to remember him for some act of kindness, some help he had given them at some period of his short career.
He was still young, just at the age when many professional men begin their careers, yet he had already achieved a prominent place in the medical world, and won a place in the hearts of the people who will cherish forever the memory of his friendship as a priceless thing, never to be forgotten."
Charles' obituary appears courtesy of the Arizona State Archives.
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