Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 91, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 April 1912 — WINAMAC ATTORNEY DIED FROM HODGKIN’S DISEASE. [ARTICLE]
WINAMAC ATTORNEY DIED FROM HODGKIN’S DISEASE.
M. M. Hathaway, Who Was Associated With Clinton Bader, Succumbed to Disease Wednesday, Medary M. Hathaway, a Winamac attorney well known in Rensselaer, and who was associated with Clinton L. Bader in the bridge manufacturing business and one of his attorneys when Bader was tried in this county, died in an Indianapolis hospital Wednesday afternoon from what is known as Hodgkin’s disease, described as being an enlargement of the lympathic glands and progressive anaemia. It usually means death, but the hope was maintained up to within a few days before he died that it would prove to be a goiter and would submit to treatment. The Pulaski County Democrat says: On Friday the good report of the cay before was offset by the news that the patient’s stomach had gone back on him and that he was very restless —both Hodgkin symptoms—and fear was intensified. These conditions never improved. The victim steadily grew worse. Unconsciousness followed earjy Tuesday morning and was present until his death some 33 hours lat.er at 3:50 Wednesday afternoon, the last 20 hours of life being attended by a temperature of 105. “Hodgkin” had done its'work. The, inflamed an ll , constantly enlarging glands of the neck and breast had forced the heart downward and enlarged at also, and this condition at last stopped its action forever.
