"PAINE-- At Oregon City, Feb. 5, Caroline L. Paine, aged 57 years, wife of Dr. Harry W.; mother of Phillip. Funeral services will be held at 3:30 P.M. Monday at the Chapel of Holman & Pace, Oregon City.,"
Enterprise, February 6, 1933
MRS. PAINE PASSES; RITES HELD MONDAY
Funeral services for Mrs. Harry W. Paine were held Monday afternoon from the Holman & Pace chapel. Dr. E. P. Borden, pastor of the First Congregational Church, officiating. Mrs. John W. Lind sang. Pallbearers were members of chapter P.P.E.O. Sisterhood, and included Mrs. Robert Bradshaw, Mrs. John J. Tobin, Jr., Mrs. Arthur G. Beattie, Mrs. J.C.M. Dodds, Mrs. John Oatfield and Miss Glyde Schuebel. Internment was in Mountain View Cemetery.
Mrs. Paine, who had been ill since last March, passed away early Sunday morning at the family home at Ninth and Taylor streets.
Caroline (Caddie) Lusk was born in southern Indiana, in the picturesque hill and valley country near Salem. She was of Scotch-Irish descent and her forebearers established the first outposts of civilization in that territory. During the Civil War some of them maintained a station of the historic "underground railroad."
Her paternal grandfather, Rev. Robert H.
Rusk, a convellanter minister, was a circuit rider, traveling in early years over the states of Ohio and Indiana.
In early girlhood, she was removed to Kansas, with her parents, four brothers and one sister, all of whom survive excepting the father and one brother. Her mother, Mrs. Mary C. Rusk, still maintains her own home in Hutchinsion, Kansas. Her sister, Mrs. R.L. Sanders of Wichita, Kans. returned home a few weeks ago after spending the fall and winter here.
Caroline Luck was graduated from the State Teachers College in Euporia, Kansas, and later taught school in Hutchinson, Kans. where she was married to Harry W. Paine, now a practicing physican here. She leaves besides her husband, one son, Phillip L. Paine of Baker, Ore., and a three year old grandson, David.
Mrs. Paine was a member of the First Congregational church of this city and up until her last millness was active in the P.E.O. work.
"PAINE-- At Oregon City, Feb. 5, Caroline L. Paine, aged 57 years, wife of Dr. Harry W.; mother of Phillip. Funeral services will be held at 3:30 P.M. Monday at the Chapel of Holman & Pace, Oregon City.,"
Enterprise, February 6, 1933
MRS. PAINE PASSES; RITES HELD MONDAY
Funeral services for Mrs. Harry W. Paine were held Monday afternoon from the Holman & Pace chapel. Dr. E. P. Borden, pastor of the First Congregational Church, officiating. Mrs. John W. Lind sang. Pallbearers were members of chapter P.P.E.O. Sisterhood, and included Mrs. Robert Bradshaw, Mrs. John J. Tobin, Jr., Mrs. Arthur G. Beattie, Mrs. J.C.M. Dodds, Mrs. John Oatfield and Miss Glyde Schuebel. Internment was in Mountain View Cemetery.
Mrs. Paine, who had been ill since last March, passed away early Sunday morning at the family home at Ninth and Taylor streets.
Caroline (Caddie) Lusk was born in southern Indiana, in the picturesque hill and valley country near Salem. She was of Scotch-Irish descent and her forebearers established the first outposts of civilization in that territory. During the Civil War some of them maintained a station of the historic "underground railroad."
Her paternal grandfather, Rev. Robert H.
Rusk, a convellanter minister, was a circuit rider, traveling in early years over the states of Ohio and Indiana.
In early girlhood, she was removed to Kansas, with her parents, four brothers and one sister, all of whom survive excepting the father and one brother. Her mother, Mrs. Mary C. Rusk, still maintains her own home in Hutchinsion, Kansas. Her sister, Mrs. R.L. Sanders of Wichita, Kans. returned home a few weeks ago after spending the fall and winter here.
Caroline Luck was graduated from the State Teachers College in Euporia, Kansas, and later taught school in Hutchinson, Kans. where she was married to Harry W. Paine, now a practicing physican here. She leaves besides her husband, one son, Phillip L. Paine of Baker, Ore., and a three year old grandson, David.
Mrs. Paine was a member of the First Congregational church of this city and up until her last millness was active in the P.E.O. work.
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