INVERCARGILL MAN’S DEATH.
DUNEDIN, October 2. A married man named William Flint, aged thirty-six, a resident of Invercargill, died somewhat suddenly yesterday. He had been suffering from ptomaine poisoning, as a result of eating pies, and came to Dunedin last Tuesday. He went to a football match yesterday, and while conversing with a friend was taken ill. His friend was taking him home, but as he was getting much worse he was taken to the hospital, where he died shortly afterwards. Death was due to a clot of blood on the brain. Deceased leaves a widow and two children. -NZ Times, 3/10/1910.
FUNERAL NOTICE.
THE Friends of the late William Flint (and family) are respectfully invited to attend his Funeral, which will leave his mother's residence, 679 George street, at 1 o’clock TO-MORROW (Tuesday), October 4, for Anderson’s Bay Cemetery.
COLE AND SPRINGER, Undertakers, 152 George street. -Evening Star, 3/10/1910.
WILLIAM FLINT'S DEATH.
THE INQUEST.
Mr C. C. Graham (coroner) held an inquest at the Hospital yesterday morning into the circumstances surrounding the death of William Flint, who was taken suddenly ill at the Caledonian Ground on Saturday and died almost immediately on removal to the Hospital.
Dr Whettor, assistant resident medical officer at the Dunedin Hospital, said the deceased was brought to the Hospital on Saturday afternoon about 5 o'clock. On examining the man before he had been taken out of the cab which conveyed him to the Hospital, he saw at once that he was dying, and in spite of a stimulant administered without delay death took place a half-minute after admission.
Dr Roberts, who made a post mortem examination of the body, said the cause of death was a large haemmorage from a rupture of an artery in the cavity of the left side of the brain. There was evidence of congestion, and inflammation of the intestines, but compared with the actual cause of death, those conditions were insignificant. The strain of vomiting which the deceased had experienced about a fortnight previously might have weakened an already diseased artery. Still, the rupture of the artery which had brought about death, was quite independent of the above conditions. Excitement such as would have been caused by attendance at a football match might lead to rupture of an artery if it was in a weak and diseased condition.
James Flint, musical instrument repairer, and brother of the deceased, whose body he identified, also gave evidence. His brother was a railway porter at Invercargill. Witness last saw him alive between 2.15 and 2.30 on Saturday afternoon when he was about to leave witness's home for the football match on the Caledonian Ground. He was not in the best of health, thought he appeared to have been gradually improving since coming up from Invercargill, after suffering from the effects of poisoning. Witness was not acquainted with the circumstances of his brother's death on Saturday. The deceased was 36 years of age and a married man with two children.
The Coroner said there was no doubt that was due to natural causes, and he would return a verdict in accordance with the medical evidence. -Otago Daily Times, 4/10/1910.