Baltimore, Md., March 6 -
Only a moment before apparently in the best of health and having just left the clerk at the desk after having a chat, Mr. George W. Kitzmiller, a coal operator of Blaine, W. Va., and a guest at the Eutawa House, dropped dead in the lobby of the hotel yesterday. Mr. Kitzmiller, who was about fifty years of age, made frequent visits to the city, and nearly always stopped at the Eutaw. Dr. Henry Yokum, of Berkeley, W. Va., and a guest at the hotel, endeavored to render medical aid, but life was extinct.
The Fairmont West Virginian, March 6, 1905, Page 8, Image 8.
Courtesy of Darlina Shaw.
Baltimore, Md., March 6 -
Only a moment before apparently in the best of health and having just left the clerk at the desk after having a chat, Mr. George W. Kitzmiller, a coal operator of Blaine, W. Va., and a guest at the Eutawa House, dropped dead in the lobby of the hotel yesterday. Mr. Kitzmiller, who was about fifty years of age, made frequent visits to the city, and nearly always stopped at the Eutaw. Dr. Henry Yokum, of Berkeley, W. Va., and a guest at the hotel, endeavored to render medical aid, but life was extinct.
The Fairmont West Virginian, March 6, 1905, Page 8, Image 8.
Courtesy of Darlina Shaw.
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