The Spokesman Review - February 4, 1901
PULLMAN, Wash., Jan. 30.--Mrs. Brown, wife of Samuel Brown, a farmer living on a farm eight miles south of Pullman, died here yesterday after a long illness of Bright's disease. Mrs. Brown had been in the hospital at Colfax for several weeks. Her death occurred at the residence of Mrs. Swall of Pullman. The remains were taken to the family home, where the funeral occurred this afternoon. Interment was in the Ewartsville cemetery. Mrs Brown leaves a husband and five children, ranging in age from 4 to 18 years.
(Note: According to records she and Samuel had 7 children. It is possible that Ernest Leonard Brown b. 1883 was not living at the time of her death but the remaining six children would have been living.)
The Spokesman Review - February 4, 1901
PULLMAN, Wash., Jan. 30.--Mrs. Brown, wife of Samuel Brown, a farmer living on a farm eight miles south of Pullman, died here yesterday after a long illness of Bright's disease. Mrs. Brown had been in the hospital at Colfax for several weeks. Her death occurred at the residence of Mrs. Swall of Pullman. The remains were taken to the family home, where the funeral occurred this afternoon. Interment was in the Ewartsville cemetery. Mrs Brown leaves a husband and five children, ranging in age from 4 to 18 years.
(Note: According to records she and Samuel had 7 children. It is possible that Ernest Leonard Brown b. 1883 was not living at the time of her death but the remaining six children would have been living.)
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