The deceased was a native of New York, but had been in the west for some years. For the past few years she had made her home with her daughter, Mrs. Caleb S. Cox, of Hubbard. Her disease a peculiar one. A tumor fastened itself in the abdomen in such a way that no nourishment could reach the organs of assimilation, and the affect upon the patient was similar to starvation. She leaves a husband and three children besides other relatives and friends to mourn her. The funeral occurred Monday from the M. E. Church of Hubbard of which she was a member, Rev. Mr. Neelands conducting the services, and the remains were laid to rest in the Hubbard Cemetery.
Enterprise, March 31, 1893
The deceased was a native of New York, but had been in the west for some years. For the past few years she had made her home with her daughter, Mrs. Caleb S. Cox, of Hubbard. Her disease a peculiar one. A tumor fastened itself in the abdomen in such a way that no nourishment could reach the organs of assimilation, and the affect upon the patient was similar to starvation. She leaves a husband and three children besides other relatives and friends to mourn her. The funeral occurred Monday from the M. E. Church of Hubbard of which she was a member, Rev. Mr. Neelands conducting the services, and the remains were laid to rest in the Hubbard Cemetery.
Enterprise, March 31, 1893
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Wife of Seymour Francis
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