4, 1900, she was married to Arthur Edwin Bruce. 12, in Reedsburg Memorial Hospital at the age of 87 years, 2 months and 26 days as the result of a fall which fractured her hip last July 5. Įva Nora Shreve, daughter of John and Sarah Shreve, was born June 17, 1991, in Greenwood Township, Vernon County. Brown, once postmaster at Viroqua, died there on the 4th inst. A peculiar circumstance is that the widow has recovered almost as suddenly as she was stricken and is now believed to be entirely rational again. The same doctors who made the examination of the woman examined the body of the man and found he had died of rupture of the brain. – Solfest Bringe, age 42, dropped dead here when his wife, to whom he was devoted and who had been acting strangely for several days, was pronounced insane by physicians. After eating dinner he became sick and fainted, expiring within a short time. Bjornson, an old citizen of Viroqua, died suddenly. Berg was formerly connected with the government improvement work on the Mississippi. It was met by his brother and sister from Chaseburg, Vernon county, and taken there for burial. – The body of Herman Berg, who died in Denver, Col., suddenly, and about whom there was some uncertainty as to his identity, arrived here this morning. Aschim had a wide circle of friends in Duluth, who will be grieved to hear of his death. Aschim was pastor before coming to Duluth. The remains will be taken to Viroqua, Wis., where Rev. Aschim, who for eight years was pastor of the Bethesda Norwegian Lutheran church in Duluth, died at his home in Berthold yesterday afternoon. Hanson, auditor for the Fitger Brewing company, received a telegram from Berthold, N.D., last night, that Rev. Thus has another of the industrious and indomitable band of pioneers from New York state, who have done so much for Wisconsin gone to the dust with honor and respect on his grey hairs. His body was brought to this county for burial and interred here on Friday, the 13th inst. Y., to this state in 1850, and during his active and useful life was a sound and constant supporter of Democratic principles. He was aged 73 years on the 20, of last December and was born in Washington county, New York, in 1789. The deceased was greatly respected by numerous friends in this county, and at the place of his last residence. At his house in Beardstown, Vernon County, Wis., on the 16th March, at 8 o'clock in the evening, Capt. A wife and four children are left toĭIED. Biddison conducting the religious exercises.įranklin, Badax Co., Wis., February 26th, 1858, Mr. Her funeral occurred on the 21st inst., and was For more than thirty years she had been a consistent and faithful Ady, with whom she passed the remainder of herĭays. The 25th day of July 1806, in the State of Maryland and on the 13th of Augustġ828, was married to Wm. Most respected and esteemed residents of this village. Grandmother Ady had been for nearly twenty-five years one of the In Viroqua, Tuesday, August 20th, 1878, of Viroqua, Wisconsin ] transcribed by Angie Lietzau The Wausau Daily Herald was a 1985 finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Journalism for "a special section on Wausau's growing Indochinese refugee population, the Hmong" by Pam Sprague and Rob Orcutt.Obituaries and Death Notices in Vernon County, Wisconsin In August 2021 the sale of the Daily Herald's Scott Street offices in Wausau was announced by Gannett. In 2018 the Appleton facility was also closed with printing moved to a facility in West Milwaukee. In 2017 Gannett announced the closure of the newspaper's printing plant in Wassau, with production moved to Appleton. In 1958 it moved into offices on Scott Street in Wausau. After a series of mergers and renamings, it eventually became known as the Wausau Daily Record-Herald in 1907, with the first edition being printed on 2 December of that year. The paper traces its roots to a paper established as the Torch of Liberty in 1875. The Daily Herald is owned by the Gannett Company, which owns ten other newspapers in Wisconsin. It is the primary newspaper in Wausau and is distributed throughout Marathon and Lincoln counties. The Wausau Daily Herald is a daily morning broadsheet printed in Wausau, Wisconsin. The Wausau Daily Herald's former offices on Scott Street, Wausau
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