From the Dallas Herald, Saturday, March 19, 1881, p. 6:
Mr. C. Nabors, a brother of Mrs. Louis Reichenstein, died suddenly yesterday. He was employed in the Texas Central yard, and was on duty, when about 12 o'clock he was seized with sickness. At the time he was standing by the switch engine, and exclaiming, "Oh, I feel so dizzy, and just like I was paralized," fell to the ground. He was taken to the residence of his brother-in-law, Mr. Louis Reichenstein, on East Jackson street, where he expired in a few hours. Doctors Pace and Sutton attended him and used every exertion to save him. They pronounced his sickness to be fulminant cerebro-spinal meningitis.
From the Dallas Herald, Saturday, March 19, 1881, p. 6:
Mr. C. Nabors, a brother of Mrs. Louis Reichenstein, died suddenly yesterday. He was employed in the Texas Central yard, and was on duty, when about 12 o'clock he was seized with sickness. At the time he was standing by the switch engine, and exclaiming, "Oh, I feel so dizzy, and just like I was paralized," fell to the ground. He was taken to the residence of his brother-in-law, Mr. Louis Reichenstein, on East Jackson street, where he expired in a few hours. Doctors Pace and Sutton attended him and used every exertion to save him. They pronounced his sickness to be fulminant cerebro-spinal meningitis.
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