Article clipped from Kokomo Daily Tribune

Sexton's kinspeople here had made earnest, and repeated efforts to get him to give up the wilderness life and return to this city and live. He was visited by his son-in-law, John Pitzer, who sought to persuade him to come back and make his home on the Pitzer farm. The old man had grown eccentric and obstinate. Ho could not be argued into giving up the life in the woods. He was comfortable in his cabin and his kins-people could lt;lo nothing but let him follow his own bent. They hadfeared for his safety ever since he went there and several of them had predicted that a sinister fate would overtake him. That their fears were only too well founded was es-lablished today when his corpse disclosed that he had come to his death as the result of some man’s violence.
Newspaper Details

Kokomo Daily Tribune

Kokomo, Indiana, US

Mon, Nov 20, 1905

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Sullivan C.

IN, USA 05 Dec 2023

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