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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1925)
COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL. MONDAY APRIL 27, 192~; Mr. and Mrs. Bert Burrows, Claude Sherman, Miss Elsie Chestnut, Les lie Hull and Miss Veta Plaster at tended the Lane County Christian Endeavor convention in Spring field yesterday. SUMMER SCHOOL ASK ABOUT IT Ray Nelson, auto electrician. The Business College will be in session throughout the Summer Months. All clas$<s will be conducted the same as during the regular school year. EUGENE BUSINESS COLLEGE A. E. Roberts, President. 992 Willamette’ St. Phone 666 Eugene, Oregon. □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Linehaugh and their son, Glenn Linebaugh, and the latter’s wife and son visited during the week in Astoria a the-home of Mrs. R. G. Land- wehr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I Linebaugh. Mrs. Landwehr is con valescing from a recent operation. Schwartz, the tailor, does nothing else but first class work. a20-27p E. Kelly, of Myrtle Creek, visited during the week at the homo of his son, Frank Kelly. Charles McGee, of Winlock, Wash., arrived Thursday for a week’s visit at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Oscar Vaughn. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Veatch, of Eugene, were guests yesterday of Mr. Veatch's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Veatch. Jess Lansing, recently owner of the Motor Inn service station, 1 has bought a half interest with J. A. Rhoads in the City transfer | I business. f Galloway writes insurance. Eugene they found Roscoe Hemes way, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hem enway, and Miss Helen Darling, a niece of the Heinen ways, Miss Martha Johnson and the latter’s grandmother, all of Portland, who were spending the week end there. Fred Frost was painfully injured Saturday wheu struck by a line at the Bohemia Lumber company’s camp, where he is employed. A. W. Shortridge sustained a mashed finger. on the right hand Saturday when the finger became entangled with a gear at the Woodard mill, where he is em- ployed. Mr. and Mrs. Mallie Miller mo- □ DELIGHT VALLEY. tored to Oakland Saturday and vis- ited J. J. Woodruff, former oil □ " □ (Special to The Sentinel.) well driller here. They continued □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ April 27.—Mrs. M. A. Horn, who on to Medford for the week end. spent several days in Eugene at Mrs. R_B. Hanna is seriously ill. Mrs. C. H. Embree arrived from the home of her sister, returned Knox visited during Mrs. J. F. Portland today to visit at the Mal home last Wednesday. • the wek at Lafayette with Mr. lie Miller home. Miss Lois Compton of the Grove Knox. Mrs. Knox and children M5. and Mrs. Claud George, of I was an overnight guest Friday of will join him there at the close of Newport, motored over today and Miss Eleanor Nixon. the school year. The senior class play of the brought home Mrs. Charles Wright, Mrs. Emma Remington, of Drain, who had visited them two months. 1 Walker union high school was giv- and Clarence Sloan, of this city, Mrs. .Horace Cochran and daugh i en Friday night and a large num- were married in Portland today. ters, Mildred, Marjorie and Patsy, I ber from here were present. Gilfillan, Splitdorff and De A ball game here Friday after- spent yesterday at the home of Forest radio sets all have re Mrs. Cochran’s mother, Mrs. Josiah . noon between Pleasant Hill and markable selectivity and true- ’ the Walker union high school re Porter. tone quality. For sale by% The Gilfillan Neutrodyne sulted in the visitors losing* George N. Swinehart returned Long & Cruson. Miss Lucile Cornutt who spent GN-3 is a low cost radio in today from Portland, where ho Mrs. Clara Burkholder and son vestment of permanence, good last week at home ill with in flu had taken for cremation the body Charles and Miss Kathryn I’euner for years of service. For sale her work in of his Wife, who was killed here enza has returned spent Sunday in Corvallis with by Long & Cruson. Monday last, in an automobile ac- the Grove. Mrs. Burkholder’s mother and Mrs. A. W. Cornutt and Miss Mrs. Frank Wallace and daughter cident. «laughter, Mrs. Lydia Stouffer and Betty .Tane, of Portland, arrived Mary, ere both down with tho Mrs. Froil Smith and sons Rob- flu this week. Miss Belle Burkholder. Thursday to visit at the home of ert and Janies, of Harris, Minn., The W. S. Blakely family spent Mrs. H. A. Hagen is in Portland Mr. Wallace’s parents, Mr. and expect to arrive here in time for I Sunday at tho K<»hi home. Mrs. John Wallace. Mr. Wallace this week on business. Memorial day for an extended visit The E J, Sears family and Miss Have on hand 6-foot sidewalk will follow in two weeks for a at tho homes of Mrs. Smith’s sis Fern Hays were (bnnor guests Sun lumber, $10 the thousand. Walter short visit. ters, Mrs. G. W. McQueen, Mrs. day at the J. A. Joll home. Mrs. S. E. Crabb visited during A. Woodard, phone 4F2. a2O-27c(2) Sunday guests at the T. D. in Portland with rela- Janies Potts anil Mrs. Annie Pe last week C. A. Cross anil son John, of trie, and with Kir. Smith’s sister, Hodges home were the Oscar Jack- fives. Soattl«\ en route to Klamath Mrs. Elbert Bede. Mrs. Smith and Hugh Nixon families. Sewer pipe, sewer connec- has not visited here since her mar- son The Falls, were guests Thursday at the John Walden family, of Eu- W. L. riage nine years ago. home of Mr. Cross’ cousin, G. W. tions am id cement. were Sunday guests at the tf The Presbyterian church will hold gene, McQueen. Mr. McQueen accom Hubbell. M. A. Horn home. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Grube a congregational meeting nt 7:30 panied them to Klamath Falls, re Social neighbors club will be en returned Wednesday from Portland, Wednesday evening. The resigna turning Saturday. tertained Wednesday afternoon at where Mrs. Grube received medical tion of Pastor A. Ralph Spearow the home of Mrs. Melvin Jackson. if treatment. will be acted on and a pipit com Ralph Sears’ mol her, Mrs. Ann Master Robert Mills returned mittee appointed. A. H. Saunders, Sears, aged 82, of Croswell, jvas Saturaday from Eugene, where he pastor of tho Eugene Presbyterian hurt Sunday evening when struck visited his grandmother, Mrs. S. church, will be present. by a ear. Mrs. Sears is a pioneer, E. Howe. Mrs. Dwight M. King was ad having crossed the plains in an Beautiful new rings at the Men mitted at a Eugene hospital Sat early day. denhall jewelry store. urday for treatment. She expects Just give us enough ad More than 30 young folks, ac- to return this evening or tomorrow. 1 Mrs. Ann Sears Is Injured. vance notice and we’ll bake a Wedding Cake for you companied by Pastor nnd Mrs. Mrs. Tom Parkinson, of Portland,, Mrs. Ann Sears, aged 82 years, that’ll be a wonder in artis A. J. Adams, attended the I.anc and Mrs. Walter Hauser, of Eu- I well known resident of Creswell, tic frosting and most deli county Christian Endeavor con- gene, visited during the week with was seriously injured yesterday cious in wholesome and tasty vention held in Springfield Friday, their mother, Mrs. Allie Hawkins. when, upon hearing tho fire whistle qualities. Yes, one that’ll Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Adams Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Skinner, of blow, she rushed onto Pacific please your guests and really returned to conduct his church ser Eugene, spent Sunday at the home highway nnd was struck by a do justice to the happy vices, but the others remained of Mrs. Skinner’s son, J. J. I’reo, passing car. The skin of the back until last evening. of her right hand was badly torn occasion. tho day being his sixty eighth For Radiolas and parts see birthday anniversary. Charles Skin and it was thought that several rigs were torn loose. Mrs. D. H. Ray Nelson. * ner Jr. and family, of Eugene, were Hemenway, her niece, went to Cro«- Misses Marjorie anil Muriel Sliay, also present. well today to bo with her. teaehers in the Roseburg schools, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wilson and spent the week eml here with their sons Myrt and Karl, of PoriSml, G. A. Sanders. Prop. * A returned traveler tells a good parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Shay. were week-end guests of Mr. Wil it C. C. Shuy and grandson, Robert son’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George story about an experience he had Hastings, of PoMland, were week in England with an enthusiastic Mrs. R. B. Powell, who was ad end guests at the home of Mr. Wilson. Mr. Wilson returned yes terday but, the others will remain Britisher. As the car threaded its mitted Friday at a Eugene hospi Shay’s brother, E. C. Shay. until Sunday. way through the natural benuties tal, underwent a -major operation Choice building lots in popular H. B. Yancey observed his seven today. residence section. Get in ahead of ty-sixth anniversary Sunday. He of the place, park, meadows, woods. the boom that is sure .to come. is tho oldest member, in point of At last, the car arriving at a Ray Nelson for Radiolas. a27m7p(2) years, of the local Masonic lodge clear space where there were Tho Springfieiu nigh «rhool base A. L. Woodard. Mr. and Mrs. Norton Pengra anil and possibly nlso in number of neither trees nor gardens, my gnido ball team will meet the Cottage pointed heavenward. Waving his Grove high school team here at three children, of Eugene, spent years of membership. arm, he concluded, “And there’s 3:30 Friday afternoon. yesterday at the home of Mrs. Pen Dr. Hickman, of Kimball college.. a sun for you. Can you beat it!” Mrs. J. E. Tate received word gra’s sister, Mrs. O. W. Hays. Salem, on his way home from at Dr. C. B. King is very low today, tending an Epworth League con Sunday of the- death of her mother in Parsons, Kans. having been in a state of uncon vention in Ashland, visited Fn MICKIE SAYS— You will always got the best at sciousness since Friday. His son day with S. L. Mackin. The two CM YW’ UEWSPADER AAAMS USY ^ Schwartz the tailor. a20-27p ; Carl and family, of Toledo, are were classmates in Hamline college, here. Minnesota. Among those from here who at-1 OF FR1EUOS ARE TUOS6 WHO , See the De Forest radio at Cottage Grove bowlers were de I FURUVSH rrEMS, ' tuose who tended the Baptist church conven-1 tion held last week in Springfield Long & Cruson’s—meets all feated in a contest Thursday night | PftOAPTLM REwEVJ THEIR, were Pastor J. C. Orr, Mrs. E. G. O. re tirements of clear radio re at Springfield, the score being! Groat, Mrs. George Newell, Ray cention with super - sensitive 23A3 to 2285. Those participating I SüSseRipnons, the © teach selectivity—and unlimited from here were Walker, Stonebnrg, Huff and Mrs. Finley Huff. ADMERttSERS, THOSE WHO Dr. Hagen can cure heart trouble. range in this country and Snltsman, Jones nnd Hall. br » uû iu their eoPM for . abroad. Rich full tone and The First National bank of Cot Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Stevens and 000WORK H' M>9 EARXM, many exclusive technical fea- tnge Grove has begun suit in cir- daughter Margaret, of Portland, AHO THOSE V4W0 SAM tures combined. cult court against Stanley Hickey were week end guests at the home “Uncle Bob” Veatch, who is seeking judgment in the sum KIUD WORDS Ftp. TH' PAPER. of Mr. Stevens’ brother, C. A. "suffering with a severe attack of $250 on two notes. Stevens. influenza, is resting easier today. Dont-1ÙH(. The property of the outate Mrs. Helen Hinckley arrived Fri His children, John C. Veatch, of U<re, day from Provo, Utah, nnd is a Portland, and H. H. Veatch and Fred Ernst, deceased, is valued house guest at the C. A. Stevens Mrs. J. E. Young, of this city, $2500, according to the inventory Loaferr! of the appraisers, Worth Harvey, home. are all with him. T. C. Wheeler and John Sams. Fine new silverware of all kinds Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe F. For- Mr. and Mrs. Dean Duvall were it the Mendenhall jewelry store. ward, Mr. nnd Mrs. .Tamas Town, up from Eugene Sunday and, with n City Briefs ° Wedding Cakes to Order! The Cottage Grove Electric Bakery G= I GROCERY SPECIALS THIS WEEK 30e Baker's eocoanut. . 25c. 2 pounds 45c 2 pounds Braxil nuts for ........ ..* 29c 50 pounds Crown flour $2.95 2 cans l.illv of the Valley corn. . . 39c 2 cans Lilly of the Valley Golden Bantam corn. 49c 2 cans Lilly of the Valley tomatoes.. 39c 2 packages seedless raisins. 25c 40c camly.. * 2 Bounds 45r ♦1.25 soap, special basket for ............... $1 oo 2 cans Lima beans... 25c 2 cans S. W. tomato soup................ - - ‘.... 25c l1^ ounces lemon extract............ 23c Smith-Short Grocery The Store That Appreciates Your Trade Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hambrick, whose guests they were, motored to Myrtle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pindtner and family, of Eugene, were guests I Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Wright. Gordon Wright, student j at the university and son of Mr. and Mrs. Wright, made the with them. Ceeil Caldwell and Miss Ruth 1 Stewart motored to Portland terday to visit friends. They expected home this evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Caldwell sn«l Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reese spent i tho w/w'k end in Elmira at the home of Elmer Caldwell, son of Mr. , and Mrs. Caldwell. Clean-Up Week! April 27-Mäy 2 The week of April 27 to Tho Mascot pool room bowlers, of Eugene, will meet the local first May 2 is hereby designated as string team here tonight nnd th» Clean-Up Week and during Springfield bowlers jrill be here that time residents of the city Friday evening. will remove debris front their Twenty members of the Univer -, property and clean-up unsight- sity of Oregon chapter of the Delta iy and unsanitary retime. Ref Gamma sorority motored np from use or debris put into sacks, Eugene yesterday for a 10 o’clock boxes or barrels and placed at break fast at the Gray Goose t*a aceessablc points on paved room. streets or paved alleys will Mr and Mrs. D. H. Hempflwtv, be picked up at the expense Mrs. J. Q. Willits and Mr. and Mrs. -if tne city. Dale F. Hawkins visited in Cres C. E. FROST, well and Eugene yesterday. At a 16-23-27 City Health Officer. PAGE TTTREl Here’s Occasion When It Really Waa Cold TF IT’S QUALITY A Connecticut correspondent writes us: Reading In the Compan ion recently of a Vermonter who In vented a Hying machine with which he flew from the top of a high moun tain and landed on a rock with such force that he drove bls feet Into the ledge clear up to bls hips and again a little later of a Westerner who sawed a sleeping gray squirrel In two one winter's day without wak ing him reminds me of a elory told by my grandfather. He lived In a very bleak corner of Connecticut In the early days when fireplaces were the only means of heating. Il seemed Impossible for him to warm the house. At last he became des perate, and, going into the cellar where there was a large fireplace, he packed It full with several cords of good hard wood, set It all afire 1 and then went upstairs to bed. The next morning he got up early, hoping to find the house warm, but the rooms were as cold as ever; so I he went out of doors to see If smoke were coming out of the chimney. To his amazement he saw the flames standing up our of the chimney four or five feet high, frozen solid 1 Youth’s Companion. 8 sinootll tasting, delightful cup of Coffee you want—try Chase A Sanborn’s, or one or the other of the high grades which we handle. We specialize in teas and coffees. McQueen’s Grocery PHONE 65 n well as a preacher. His fame throughout Oregon arises from the somewhat unusual combination of talents which he has possessed and ! manifested. But his fame through- Emulating the old man who, in | out the world, and it is consid order to make it easier for others, erable, comes from his prowess as bridged the chasm over ¿which an athlete. He represented the he had himself passed, E. J. < Kent University of Oregon in the last writes from Agenda, Kans., to give world Olympic meet. He made a information to others who may new world’s pole vault record in plan upon making the same trip. Japan later, where he was on an He says: exhibition tour. Throughout tho “We left Portland April 1 over period of his student «lays at the Columbia highway and had no Oregon he gave a good account of (rouble in Oregon except for a 25- himself on field nnd track. While milo detour near Pendleton where taking his student course he also Twain Had Weakness were experimenting with oiled preached at Cottage Grove and for Southern Cooking they roads. At Pendleton we camped in : prior thereto at St. Helens. After Mark Twain, in his Autobiog the only equipped camp grounds lie hail become famous as an ath raphy, pays tribute to Southern which we found on the trip. Leav jefe he found opportunity to write dishes, such a§, for instance, corn ing Pendleton tho following day we for various publications. By his bread and fried chicken. “These things," he says, “have found some snow’ in the Blue various activities he supported him never been properly cooked In the Mountains but not enough to self and his wife and paid his North—In fuct, no one there Is able bother. We spent the second night way through college. Ami finally to learn the art, so far as my ex and next day with old neighbors h«> settled down to regular work perience goes The North thinks It at Fruitland, Ida. At Boise we in tho pastorate at Cottage Grove. knows how to make corn bread, again stopped with friends and In all that ho has done he has but this Is mere superstition. Per haps no bread In the world is quite drove out to see the Arrow Rock proved himself a worth while young wonderful engineering man. Says the Cottage Grove Sen so good ns Southern corn bread dam, a and perhaps no breud In the world achievement and said to be the tinel: “Mr. Spearow has boon an Is quite so bad as Northern Imita highest dam in the world. The important factor in creating church tion of It. The North seldom tries foundation is 100 feet below the interest in this city. Ho has been to fry chicken, and this Is well; the river and the headworks rise 300 particularly effective in his work art cannot be learned north of the feet above the river. with men and bovs nnd his church line of Mason and Dixon, nor any On Monday night we camped at has largo classes of both. ’ ’ where in Europe. Tills Is not hear They have no regular Notwithstanding “the inadequacy say; it Is experience that Is speak Burley. ing. In Europe It Is Imagined that camp ground but allow tourists to of a pastor’s salary” in Pastor the custom of serving various kinds camp on the court house grounds Spearow’’a case, ho has been re of bread bluzing hot Is ‘American,’ near the city jail. A light rain ceiving a larger salary than other but that Is too broad a spread; It fell that night and the next morn pastors of similar experience in is custom In the South, but is much ing we found our tent frozen. his church in this territory, accord less than that In the North." From there we found - some poor ing to Tho Sentinel. To retain roads and got stark in the mud even the salary which he had fournl Wet Shoes once on account of a snowdrift. inadequate, Pastor Hpearow would If you are caught In a rain and get your .shoes wet do something to Our opinion of the roads this day have hail to pursue his ministerial counteract the possible effects if and the next would not look well studios over a further period of you cannot’ get home to change in print. Financial conditions in years. Facing this condition, ho your footwear. Business people Idaho are bail and that may ac was forced, on«' may well conclude, who are caught this way know how count for the condition of the to decide upon another kind of uncomfortable It Is to go around roads. We learned at Montpelier career. His travels, his writing In damp shoes and many of them that two banks there had failed experience and his broad contacts, know something about the evil ef and that the city, with 3,0(H) or it is easy to surmise, hail taught fects that often result. It ls a simple matter to lay a 4,000 population, was without bank* him that the world is loss liberal in material ways to ministers of few blotters on top of each other ing facilities. and stand on them a few minutes, “We ha<l heard about tho camp the gospel than to mon of abilities You will be surprised how much ground at Green river, but when equal to a competent minister’s, in dampness the blotters will absorb. wo got there tho only acconinioda- other lines of work. So Ralph Even If you are on a shopping tour tions we found were some largo Spearow, minister, is to become you can purchase blotters and take sign boards. We had better roads Ralph Spearow, life insurance this precaution. If the shoes have become very through Wyoming anil on Thursday agent. Tho timeworn theory that a wet or thoroughly soaked, place a night we camped at Medicine Bow. blotter between the stocking and The next morning was frosty and preacher ought to bo willing to shoe for a few minutes. This Is a we were soon to cross Sherman get along on a pittanco, accept safety-first suggestion that may pass at tho highest altitude of our donation parties, see his wife go avert a cold or more serious ill- trip, but the roads were good and forth in last year’s hat and a ness. we had no bother. Some Oregon made-over gown of the season be folks who took the. trip last year fore last, and let his children do “Association Test" said it was so cold at the pass that without the advantages that other It was resolved In the Contlnen- water froze in their washdish, so children enjoy, in long overdue for ta! congress, March 4, 177Ö, anil wo mot the emergency by leaving being cast into the nshenn. Tho the resolve approved by the com- rnlttee of safety at Exeter, April ours at home, nnd we looked it church ought to pay it preachers 12, that all males above twenty-one when we arrived nt the homo of fairly. Tf it does not do so it will continue to lose Ralph Rpearows years of age (lunatics, Idiots and relatives in Colorado. negroes excepted) stiouJd be asked “We bail aplondid roads through among them, who have tho strength to sign the Association test, whose Colorado and saw’ the first green or the good fortuno to bo able to text was as follows: "We, the w’heat fields that we had seen since rise above its limitations. subscribers, do solemnly engage leaving Oregon. The wheat of and promise that we will, to the I A Recipe. utmost of our power, at the risk of western Kansas is spotted and in our lives and fortunes, with arms, central Kansas all of it winter This home brow is guaranteed We had rough roads harmless: oppose the hostile proceedings of killed. the British fleets and armies through Kansas but nrrived at our Chase a bullfrog three miles and against the United States cok'nles.’’ < j 3«J home at 9 p. m. on April 14. gather the bops; add malted milk J*i)ur tire trouble consisted of and corn plasters; simmer, and turn The Eye Appeal two |)uncturoH nnd wo had very toward the east; strain through an One of the chletf differences bs- little jnotor trouble. Our entire I. W. W.’s sock to keep it from rween such an art as Horner’s and expense, exclusive of wear nnd working; pour into brown bottles, such an art as Dante’s or Milton's tear, but including cats, repairs, dropping a livo grasshopper in each Is that Homer never thinks <rf any appeal but through the ear; where gas, oil, etc., was approximately to furnish the kick.—Exchange. as Dante and Milton both know $50. Through Idaho and western their verses will meet with eyes Wyoming all expenses run nearly Rubber stamps. The Sentim 1. us well as ears. Their art Is cer n third higher than at home. The tainly not greater Chan Horner’s, highest price we paid for gasoline but It has finer modulations of sig was 32 cents nnd the lowest wns nificance. The thing Is, that Dante 20 rents. and Milton, like every other printed “We expect to arrive home or written poet, take advantage of the eye-appeal without losing ths about July 1. ” ear-aypeal.—La sea Iles Abercrombie. Every woman knows that her , THE PREACHER S SALARY. house has to be cleaned thoroughly Ute for Old Neipepapert every spring, During winter, dust, (Eugene Guard.) Merchants In the countries of “He has been a popular pastor dirt and germs accuiuinulate iu the the Far Fast depend wholly on the supply of discarded American news and the only reason given for his corners, under tho rugs, in the papers ss wrappers for purchases resignation is the inadequacy of a curtains “an” every place. Just in their shops. Hundreds of tons of pastor’s salary.” Thus closes a so with ; your system—it should be whole and clenn n«*ws[M<pers are be .news item which records the resig given a thorough I cleansing, purify- ing shipped monthly to the Far nation of A’. Itajph Hpearow, of ing this i spring. HOLLISTER'S East from Atlantic coast ports. Thia business formirrly fell almost Cottage Grove, /roin the pulpit of R(X!KY MOUNTAIN TEA will do Tho statement tho job slick and quick. It will exclusively to Pacific coast dealers, a church there. but with the outbreak of the World raises again tho question as to clean your system, freshen and war the Eastern firms began pur why a pastor's salary shouhl be purify you all over -you ’ll onjoy chasing the newspapers from junk inadequate. living, eat bettor, sleep better— men for foreign shipment. Ralph Spenrow is an athlete as feel better.—Kem’s for Drngs. apr Kents Describe Trip to Old Kansas Home I Tone Up, Purify In the Spring Strength of Beetles Hrienllfi«’ ohservntlona of the bow tie »how It Ims tremendous power So far thia power has been net at 112 time» Its o«n weight A cap tive beetle wim placed under a large milk bottle made from heavy glass In a short time the beetle was pushing the bottle ahead of It at a steady and good pace. An other beetle was made to climb an Incline of 5 degrees dragging a weight equal to 125 grains. The weight was attached to its leg by a silk thread. Long Term of Service Miss Harriet It Edgar, who has been 50 years In the employ of the United States government In the Post Office department, bas been re tired on pay. At the time of re tirement she was a clerk in the bureau of the first assistant post master gsosral K nowles & G raber HARDWARE Cottage Grove : Oregon