Advertisement

Advertisement

Hortense Soward Ellsaesser

Birth
Georgetown, Scott County, Kentucky, USA
Death
22 Mar 1915 (aged 58)
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Plot
Block 16, Row 15, Grave 49
Memorial ID
View Source
58 years, 10 months and 2 days.

Married.

Daughter of Reason and Alice Barnett Soward.

Informant - John Ellsaesser.
___

Gilbert J. Cone, 48 years of age, and Hortense Cummings, 39 years of age, were married December 22, 1897.

John Ellsaesser and Hortense Cone were married July 1, 1913, in Jackson County, Missouri.
___

THE KANSAS CITY TIMES
Tuesday, May 16, 1911

PAIN DROVE HIM TO SUICIDE.

A Huckster Suffered Thirty Years With
Rheumatism.

Despondency brought on by suffering from inflammatory rheumatism for more than thirty years resulted in Gilber J. Cone, 62 years old, a huskster, 810 Elmwood, committing suicide about 9 o'clock last night. His wife was visiting at a neighbor's when she heard a revolver shot. She ran to the alley and found her husband dead.

Mr. Cone had lived in this city thirty-two years. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Hortense Cone, and a son, D.C. Cone, this city, and a brother, Chester Cone, South Whitney, Ind. Dr. Harry Czarlinsky, deputy coroner, sent the body to Fairweather & Smith's undertaking rooms.
58 years, 10 months and 2 days.

Married.

Daughter of Reason and Alice Barnett Soward.

Informant - John Ellsaesser.
___

Gilbert J. Cone, 48 years of age, and Hortense Cummings, 39 years of age, were married December 22, 1897.

John Ellsaesser and Hortense Cone were married July 1, 1913, in Jackson County, Missouri.
___

THE KANSAS CITY TIMES
Tuesday, May 16, 1911

PAIN DROVE HIM TO SUICIDE.

A Huckster Suffered Thirty Years With
Rheumatism.

Despondency brought on by suffering from inflammatory rheumatism for more than thirty years resulted in Gilber J. Cone, 62 years old, a huskster, 810 Elmwood, committing suicide about 9 o'clock last night. His wife was visiting at a neighbor's when she heard a revolver shot. She ran to the alley and found her husband dead.

Mr. Cone had lived in this city thirty-two years. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Hortense Cone, and a son, D.C. Cone, this city, and a brother, Chester Cone, South Whitney, Ind. Dr. Harry Czarlinsky, deputy coroner, sent the body to Fairweather & Smith's undertaking rooms.

Gravesite Details

NO MARKER EXISTS



Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement