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- Officer Jaggers in Hospital
Patrolman G.H. Jaggers has been removed to the Angelus hospital to Los Angeles Suffering from tuberculosis, he having been ill for some time and now in a serious condition.
News-Pilot, San Pedro, California. Saturday, 19 May 1917.
[5]
- G.H. Jaggers, policeman at Wilmington, who was reported in a critical condition last week is now getting along nicely at the Angelus hospital in Los Angeles and expects to leave the hospital the end of this week. He is suffering from ulceration of the bowels and will have to use a wheel chair for some time until he regains his health again. His plans are to go to the mountains to recuperate.
News-Pilot, San Pedro, California. Monday, 28 May 1917.
[5]
- Police Officer Jaggers Died in Los Angeles
The date of the funeral of Police Officer G.H. Jaggers of Wilmington who died at the Angelus hospital in Los Angeles at 1 o’clock Friday afternoon has not been set, it not having been decided whether the interment will be in Wilmington or in the east.
The decedent was in the hospital for about a month before his death expiring from a complicated ailments.
He leaves a wife and two children who reside in Wilmington. His death was a shock to his many friends who had been informed he was on the road to recovery.
The parents of the decedent will arrive here tomorrow for the funeral. Interment may be held in the Wilmington cemetery Thursday.
News-Pilot, San Pedro, California. Monday, 11 June 1917.
[3, 5]
- Funeral of G.H.Jaggers Held This Afternoon
The funeral of the late Guerney H. Jaggers, the Wilmington police officer who passed away in a Los Angeles hospital last Friday, was held in Wilmington at 2 o’clock this afternoon. Many police officers attended the services, a part of the fellow officers of the decedent acting as pall-bearers.
After the services at the undertaking parlors of D.J. Woods, the interment was held in the Inglewood cemetery, a number of autos filled with friends of the decedent accompanying the remains. Mr. Jaggers left to mourn his loss a wife and four children in Wilmington, and other relatives who live in the east.
News-Pilot, San Pedro, California. Thursday, 14 June 1917.
[3, 5]
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