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The Daily Notes from Canonsburg, Pennsylvania • Page 4

Publication:
The Daily Notesi
Location:
Canonsburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
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4
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PAfKE FOUR THE DAILY NOTES, CANONSBURG, PA. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1941 THE DAILY NOTES BUNDLES FROM BERLIN" Chttfches THE NOTES PUBLISHING PRINTING COMPANY Robert H. Robinson President John T. Robinson General Manaeei Charles E. Ross Secretary John H.

Clutter Treasurer Chartiers U. P. THE DAILY NOTES Georsre A. Editor Cowden Mission Oscar Goss, superintendent Biblt school, 3 p. m.

the public will turn for guidance. Every service man of the last war should consider it a bounden duty to belong to the American Legion. It is an honor as well as a responsibility and as they met the challenge of 24 years ago, they should meet the challenge today by joining up with the Legion and putting themselves behind the national and the state and the local commander to present a solid front to the nation for whatever duty lies before them in the national crisis. Rev. J.

Reade McCrory, D. minister. Bible school, 10 a. John H. Ross, superintendent Morning worship, 11, theme "The Road to Victory-" Y.

P. C. George Schenkein News Editor R. Neil Morris Business Manager Dally Edition founded April 18, 1894. Weekly Edition founded August 1, 1875.

Published every afternoon except Sunday at The Notes Building, 23 North Central Avenue, Penna. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Single copy 3 cents. By carrier 15 cents per week. By mail (except where there is a Daily Notes carrier.) 1 year 6 months 3 months 1 month 50 cents. By mail (outside states of Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland and Kentucky) $6.00 per year; 6 months months 1 month 50 cents.

A1j subscription accounts payable strictly In advance. v.sv p. m. noneers, p. m.

St Michael's Greek Catholic Rev. John Gaspar, pastor, Mass, week days, 8 a. m. Sundaj 10:00 a. m.

English and Russian sermons. Baptisms after Mass by appointment. Confessions, Saturday from 7 to 9 p. m. Novena, Tues day, 7:30 p.

m. Evening worship, 7:30 theme "How To Meet Disaster." The American Legion must play an important part in keeping the wheels of industry turning. It must lead in keeping an amicable relationship between employers and employes First Christian Rev. Dr. George Walter pastor.

Bible school, 9:45 a. in keeping every job open for every man Private Phone Exchange 706 or 707 Entered at the Postpffice of Canonsburg, as Second-class matter. Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers' Association Midland Nazarene Mission Mr. and Mrs. E.

J. Liggett, co-superintendents. Bible school, 2 p. m. Worship services, 3 p.

if new Midland school building. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock, theme, "The Call to the Colors." Youth Groups, 6:30 p. m) At 7:30 I im i If 'tW 1 p. 50 pictures, ancient and mod ern views of Christ, will be shown on the canvas with William H.

Neill an charge of the machine. Bible ThougM for Today jGOD'S PEOPLE ARE SURE OF VICTORY: We are' troubled on every side, yet not distressed; we are perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not utterly destroyed. 2 Corinthians 4:8, 9. St John's Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Rev. B.

G. Horsky, rector. Morning service, 9 o'clock. Holy Liturgy service, 10 a. m.

Vesper service! 4 p. m. First Baptist Rev. A. B.

Whiting, pastor. Bible Saturday, December 13, 1941 who is willing and competent to fill it. The American Legion must keep its collective eye out for slackers, for profiteers, for the marchant or the individual who seeks to profit, at the expense of the public or the nation and for those who would seek to avoid service in the army or navy or auxiliary military establishments. The American Legion has gone on record in no uncertain terms with reference to the do-feat of Hitler and Hitlerism and by its conduct, its demeanor, its leadership in every community, it must exemplify the ideals of organ-izaeion and be a guiding force in community, state and national morale and conduct. school, 9:45 a.

Wilbur Stiffler, superintendent. Morning worship, 11 o'clock, theme, "The Dream of 'Our Country! In her intercourse with foreign nations, may she always be in the right; but, our country, right or wrong." Alexander Mission First Presbyterian church, Mrs G. Kerr, superintendent. Bibh school, 2:30 p. classes for both children and adults with invitation to public.

Redemption." BYPU, 6:30 p. m. Evening service, 7:30, sermon theme, "The Lord Jesus is King." A NATION WELDED BY WAR THE UNITED STATES IS COMMITTED unemiivneallv to war total war. 'Within i fosr days this nation declared war on three of fthe leading world powers. But in each ease Church of The 'azarene Rev.

Thomas Nicholson, pastor. Services in church in Elm street. Bible school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock.

Young people's meeting, 6:30 p. m. Evening service 7:30. THE ONLY NEGATIVE VOTE First Methodist Rev. Edwin J.

Keifer, pastor. Sunday school, 9:50 a. morning worship service, 11, sermon by the pastor, "A Guide For Uncertain Times." Methodist Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. union evening service witii the Central Presbyterian church in the Central church, 7:30 p. m.

Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. it something thrust upon us. ITII ALL DUE RESPECT FOR THE MIX- W1 ed sentiment and emotions which prompt The first came through treachery, the others came by declaration which was not un ed her choice, the frail, bespectacled represen tative from Montana, Jeannette Rankin, has done herself and the cause she supports great harm. While she may have felt honor-bound to stand by and repeat a vote cast almost.

25 years ago against the United States entry into St. Teter-Paul Pollsn National Catholic Rev. John Zieha, pastor. Sunday Mass, 8 a. and High Mass, 10:30 a.

m. Vesper service, 7 p. m. On holidays, Mass 10 a. m.

Baptismi after High Mass by appointment Confessions, Saturdays from 5 to i p. m. Venice 1 Rev. C. T.

Littell, D. pastor. Bible school, 10 G. M. Quivey, superintendent.

Morning worship and Junior church, 11 o'clock. YPCU, 7 p.m. South Canonsburg Rev. Evelyn H. Kemper and Rev.

Ralph T. Kemper, co-pastors. Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship', 11 a subject, "Guided As a Han or As a Mule?" Junior Battalion, 2:30 p.

m. Evangelistic service, 7:30 p. subject, "Sure Victory For America and How?" Young People's Fellowship, p. Fridya. Congratulations expected.

From this day forward the United States will be completely dominated by war and its demand upon all the people of the nation-. Everything we do, everything we say and think will and must be controlled by war considerations that is, by the consideration of national safety and security and the conquest of every enemy threatening that safety and security. AVe must make no mistake about it. "We are involved in more than a war which can be fought far from our shores by our Navy and our Air Force. We are part of a world at war a war which more completely involves the world than any previous conflict in its history.

It is to be a total, all-out war. It is a war for the survival of the fittest and it will he fought on all fronts with all weapons and wtih 'ew Philadelphia Mission Sunday school, 2:30 pj. m. Gospel Jail service, 7:30 p. Saturday.

war, the logic that motivated her choice would seem to be, to say the least, faulty. A blow struck without just cause will rouse even the gentlest soul to action. Certainly the premeditated attack on United States possessions by the Japanese appears to be justification enough for using the most famous of women's prerogatives, enabling Representative Rankin to take her stand with, rather than against, all her colleagues without the loss of prestige. In times of grave peril, there is no room for reasoning based on emotions. It would seem that, by her unfortunate veto, Miss Ran St Patrick's Roman Catholic Rev.

Father J. Edward Istocin, paster; Rev. Father Thomas Reilly, pastor. Masses: Week days, 7:15 and 8 a. m.

(In case of marriage or funeral at 9, Muse Presbyterian Julia Hendrich, missionary, Bible school, 9:30 a. m. Intermediate and Senior C. 10:45 a. m.

Preaching services, 7:30 p. when Harold W. Eller of the Western Theological Seminary will bring the message. first Mass usually at 8). Sunday, 7:15 Low Mass (English ser Saturday, December 13, 1911 Kenneth Rankin, North Central avenue.

Lois Ann Davidson, Elm street. Marian Franko, Murdock street. Donald Lee Berry, Canonsburg, R. D. 1.

Mrs. Helen Pedeski, Addison street. Mario. L. Dropulich.

Canonsburg. Anthony Watassek, Strahane. Patricia Louise Topka, iSmithfield street. Guy Marks, Houston. John Brennan, Summit avenue.

Samuel Krajick, Strahane. Joseph Krajick, Strahane. Lucy De Vitto, Murdock street. Raymond Atkinson, South' Jefferson avenue. vMichael McArdle, South Jefferson avenue.

Theresa Malena, Euclid avenue. Stanley Guoluis, Park Row. John Samilla. Craighead street. David Solomon, Giffin avenue.

Lucy DiCio, Git'fen avenue. mon). 8:30 a. children's Low Mass (English sermon, but no announcements. Absolutely no adults intent to "get all she can, and can all she bets." Her principal was to possess the German outposts and islands in East Asia within her own region.

By the Treaty she received these as her Mandate. It seems that a mandate was a convenient method of taking over the spoils of victory. Japan was not without experience in this enterprise, so she accepted the "solemn responsibility," for all German possessions within her "zone of Like Oliver Twist, sh "asks for more." Then, there was Italy. She was a member of the "Triple Alliance, "with Germany and Austria, but left them, finally entering the war on the side of the Allies. At the Peace, she got nothing, and thus was dissatisfied.

Her Ethiopian misadventure was a sequel of this mood. Then there was Germany, defeated, torn and bleeding. Shackled, penalized, and sentenced to a living death, she never ceased to keep her yes on th handle of the hatchet. Thus, that which was "written in the stars," is embodied in grim reality; Mars' left his own planet in the skies, and descended to Eareh. War, which is to settle everything, which never settled anything, and will settle nothing, is upon us again.

Again Or is Canonsburg' y. p. Rev. H. Ross Hume, pastor.

Bible school, 9:45 a. m. Morning wor are permitted at this Mass). 9:30 a. High Mass (Slovak and English sermons).

11 a. Low Mass kin has done tiie cause of women in politics immeasureable harm. Miss Rankin will be remembered very pleasantly by many Canonsburgers who had au opportunity to meet and to know her some 1-3 every resource that can ue cast into me balance. This involvement of the United States in war must bring us a genuine and all pervading unity- AVe can have no more labor or industrial disputes. AVe must forget about 40-hour weeks, (English sermon).

Baptisms after ship, 11 o'clock, theme, "Stand last Mass by appointment made during preceding week. Confes sions, Saturdays (and Thursdays before first Fridays), 4 and 7 p. and Take It," Young People's meeting, 6:30 p. m. Evening service, 7:30, theme, "The Star of Bethlehem." The picture bearing this title will form the basis of the thought for this message.

Each one present will be presented with a copy of the picture. m. Catechism for all from 7 to 1C years of age, Sunday, 2 p. m. even 48-hour weeks.

It must go as far as 70 hour weeks, if tliat is necessary to meet pro dirction demands. "Every obstacle of productive capacity Looking Things Over First Presbyterian Rev. E. M. iSchofield, D.

pas or more years ago, when she visited Canonsburg, at the invitation of the late Mr. and Mrs. David 1L Fee of TIIE DAILY NOTES. She inspected the memorial museum of old Jefferson, visited local industrial plants, including the Standard Chemical Company where th'e ounce of radium was extracted for the late Madam Curie. She also inspected with much interest, the Pennsylvania Training School at Morganza.

Through The Files lack of skilled labor and shortage of raw materials must be overcome as rapidly and completely as unstinted effort and unquestioning tor." Bible school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock, sermon by the pastor, using the theme, "The By Rev. Dp. George Buckner, pastor of the First Christian Church of Canonsburg.

The subjects are his choice and the sentiment or convictions therein are his and are not necessarily the editorial policies of this newspaper. (Editor's Note). St. Thomas Episcopal Third Sunday in Advent. Church school, 10 a.

m. Holy Communion and sermon, 11 o'clock with the Rev. Alex Sharpe, Plymouth, England, in charge. loyalty will permit. The annua thankoffer-ing for missions will he received at the close of the service.

Young People's C. 6:30 p. m. Evening i AVe must quit talking and thinking about One Year Ago it just a fresh outbreak of the same old ugly thing? St. Paul's Lutheran worship, 7:30, when the pastor will discuss the subject of the attitude of "The Christian in a World of Friday, December 1.1,1910..

A one day walkout at the Cresent Mine of Pittsburgh Coal company near Daisytown ended yesterday Rev. F. S. Eberle, pastor. Bible Recent events have occurred so precipitously of late that it well nigh impossible to forecast today the likelihoods of tomorrow.

Crisis has crowded upon crisis, and the Babel of disputation so cluttered school, 10 a. m. Worship and Com morning when operations were re munion, 11 a. theme, "Prepare Ye the Way of The Lord." Luther sumed. A course to train First Aid in League, 6:30 p.

m. ALL ONE FIGHT TN THESE FIRST ASSAULTS ON AMERI- can life and property by the Japanese our people have had some comparatively mild samples of what the people in Great Britain have suffered for more than a year- It is not only all one battle but all on method, whether indicted by Destroyer Hitler and his European armies or by Hitler's little Asiatic pupils. And we may as well get used to the fact, for we shall have a great deal more of it. structors will bo sponsored by the Washington County Chapter of the We won the war in 191S, at the signing of the Armistice. We lost the peace June 28, 1919, at eVr-sailles.

The victory was just; the peact was just, in its broad terms of settlement, but severe and impossible in its provisions of enforcement; irrational, in its maladjustments. But the answer is not to be found in Hitler or Hitlerism. The imperative need is out war that will end war but a peace which will prevent war. Read Hitler's Mein aKmpf, then read Thomas Jefferson's Bill of Rights; and you will discern the inevitable and irrepressible conflict. American-Red Cross.

Central Presbyterian Rev. Frank W. Stephens, minister. Church school, 9:45 a. m.

John A. McKee, superintendent. Morning worship, 11 o'clock, with sermon by the minister. Theme, "Xot in The Evening service iu union with the Methodist church at 7:30 in Central Presbyterian church. Christian Endeavor at 6:30 p.

m. The Canonsburg General hospital Payne AME Rev. J. M. Williams, pastor.

Bible school, 9:30 a. Maria Mc-Gant, superintendent. i service, 10:45 a. m. Evening service, 7:30.

announces the birth of a son to Mr. and Mrs. John Brietich of Midway. rates of earnings, amounts of profits or preservations of The war is upon us, and 'we canont evade its stern and compelling demands. It will take time for the United States, with its? allies to close the iron ring around Japan and do equal service on other fronts against our common enemies.

During that period the United States must expect losses. Our navy must expose itself to tlnj constant lurking submarines on the two oetfans and bombing planes from all directions. Sotne of our outlying possessions will doubt-Iesk be captured by the Japanese or Germans, or reduced to ruins. AVe must prepare ourselves for these probabilities. We must keep our eye on the ultimate objective and Avhile doing that, we must bend our backs to make sure beyond all doubt that nothing shall be denied to our armed forces which they can use to good Five Years Ago inese are the modern lluns.

the Annas and Genhis Khans, of our supposedly civilized Sunday, December 13, l'JIiG. No. paper. SAYS AMERICA WAS INHABITED I 2.1,000 B. C.

the waysof life, that outcome finds no opresage in the sequence of events. And "Every one of you hath a psalm, hath a doctrine, hath a tongue, hath a revelation, hath an interpretation." For more than three years the issue has been when, whether, or if, or even what; and in "this freedom" of ours, everyone has his own answer. During the past eight years, there were those really good persons who saw in their new president a "big navy man," and one conflict was written in the stars, who would be "lead us into war." In truth, the present fearful world not with the signing of the armistice, hut in the Treaty of Versailles, signed in that historic city Juno 2S, 1919. "We once had a war with England, the War 0f 1S12. Its objects and aims were so vague, that it had to be named by its date.

Twentieth Century. With their modern iu a highly civilized era and a far un Monuav next. TWfmihfli- is Mt Olive Baptist Rev. W. A.

Mason, pastor. Bible school, 9:45 a. E. A. Jackson, superintendent.

Morning worship, 11 o'clock. BYPU, 6:30 p. Mrs. Alyce Johnson president. Evening service, 7:30.

150th anniversary of the adoption Ten Years Ago greater population, they can do immensely more damage than their famous predecessors Sunday, December 13, 1931. No. paper. did. of the Bll of Rights, i3 Bill of Rights Day, by Congressional enactment, and by Proclamation of President Roosevelt.

Observe it intelligeiftly, and in a spirit of true patriotism and you will know the meaning of this war. WASHINGTON. Oi Dr. Kirk Bryan, professor of geology at Harvard University, in a bulletin issued by the 'Smithsonian Institution, contends that human beings may have been distributed widely, with a variety of cultures, over North America more than 25.000 years aco. Bryan assigned an approximate age of more than 25,000 vears to And will this be the last outbreak of such barbarism? The answer is up to the nation now joined in au all-out effort to save civiliza St Genevieve's Roman Catholic Rev.

Edward Szelong, pastor. Rev. Father Stanislaus Piekarski. assistant pastor. Masses: Week days, 8 a.

m. In case of funeral 9.30 a. m. Sunday 8:30 a. Low Mass, 10 a.

High Mass (Polish sermon), Low Mass (English sermon), 11:30 fc. m. tion, whatever the cost. For few of us wouid care to live in a world dominated by the scien Obituary Twenty Years Ago Tuesday, December 13, 1921. Postmaster W.

A. Leroy and his assistants have tastefully decorated the post office lobby with colors appropriate for the Christmas season. The weather bureau is predicting more snow. James J. Phillips died at the local hospital this afternoon.

He has been a resident since 1S83. tific -savagery represented by Adolf Hitler and his associated destroyers. And if ever a nation went to war with a clear conscience, tills is the instance- It is something that has been forced upon us that every conceivable deed and action was done to prevent, yet it came in a way that gave us no alternative except to fight and to fight to ultimate and complete victory. human products found recently in the Sandia cave in New Mexico. The Harvard geologist does not believe the Sandia man is the direct cultural ancestor of the Fol- Euclid Avenue Chapel Canonsburg U.

P. church. Mrs. J. This war came to an end, by the signing of the Treaty of Ghent, on Christmas Eve, 1S14; although, owing to slow communications, the fact was yet unknown; and in meantime its most historic battle, the Battle of New Orelans, was fought January 8, LSI 5.

It resulted in a great American victory, with more than 2,000 British cas M. Heagen, missionary. Bible MILITARY SUICIDE rrilF JAPANESE AKK FANATICAL FIGHT- ers. They are likely to die rather than retreat. Our people's first observation of that school, 2 p.

m. Preaching, 3 p. in charge of the Rev. H. Ross Hume, pastor.

YPCU, 7:30 p. m. -Mrs. Catherine Itanium Mrs. Catherine Barnum, of 501 Union avenue, Pittsburgh, mother of Mrs.

Fred Liechti, 414 Bluff street, and Mrs. Stewart Christner of Centre church, died suddenly yesterday fr0m a cerebral hemorrhage. The deceased was 70 years old and was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Wyant, being born in Cumberland, Md.

quality was in the IJusso-Japanese war at the PENNSYLVANIA TO GET U. S. MINE INSPECTORS hhe is also survived by two I1ARRISBURG, Dec. 13 than two-thirds of the first class of -12 federal mine inspectors undergoing training at Pittsburgh will he assigned to Pennsylvania, the United Press learned today. J.

J. Forbes, chief of the Fed Hills Station Mission Miss Edythe V. Dickson, missionary. Sunday school, 2 p. at school house.

Chorus1 practice, 6:30 p. in charge of Miss Simpson. Evening service, 7:45 p. m. Thursday; Young people's meeting, 6:30 p.

Miss Simpson in charge. Prayer meeting at school house, 7:45 p. in. Saturday: Boys' and Girls' club meets at school house. 2 p.

with Miss Fazzalore in charge. som man, whose artifacts have been found bver much of this continent. Bryan said it was indicated that the ancestors of the Minnesota girl, whose bones were found a few years ago in silt deposited in a glacial lake in Minnesota, may have entered North America at the same time as the Sandia man. "On such a supposition," Bryan said, "ample iime would be available to develop several unlike cultures by the time of th? bginning of the retreat of the Mankato ice sheet. "The marine shell found as an ornament with the Minnesota girl without doubt came from the Gulf coast, but if settlement had been so long established, it might easily have been obtained through well-established trade between Minnesota and the Gulf." sisters, Mrs.

Gertrude Zoner of Toledo, and Mrs. Mary Hewett, Huntingdon, Pa. Funeral services were conducted today at 3:30 p. m. from the Hinton Funeral Home with the Rev.

Edward J. Keifer, pastor of the First Methodist church, in charge. Interment took place in Oak Spring beginning of the century, their iirst strugle against a modem power. All westren natious were impressed by the storming of. Port Arthur.

They moved up the hill slowly, steadily, resistlessly, like thousands of little brown beetles, regardless of terrific losses, and finally took the stronghold. That can be done by people who are slill living largely in a medieval world of their own, who regard their emperor as divine, and whose sense of honor used to make them shame au enemy by disenibowling themselves on hi.s doorstep. They may do that very thing figuratively, at least, in tin's war. ualties, and an American loss of about a dozen; bringing to General Andrew Jackson "old Hickory" a renown which in time elected him to the Presidency. Perhaps the great feature of the War of 1812 was its Treaty of Ghent, which brought to both sides nothing but lasting peace! Reduced to simple terms the Treaty of Ghent said, "Whereas we have been fighting, therefore we will quit." On the other hand, in the Treaty of Versailles, bringing to a close the first World war, its terms may be stated.

"We have buried the hatchet but we have left the handle sticking out of the ground. Thus a second World war is upon us, and its dogs turned loose. It eral Mines Bureau's coal mine in THE AMERICAN LEGION TN THIS EARLY HOUR OF A NATION AT war we cannot too definitely stress the power, influence and prestige which the American Legion can and is going to exercise in the months, perhaps years, aehad of us. The American Legion in Canonsburg and Houston is headed by Leslie P. Speaknian, as commander, this and by virtue of that office, Mr.

Speaknian becomes one witli a definite challenge facing him. Only second to him is the challenge to every ex-service man to be a leader in community affairs, community preparedness, community defense and above all community patriotism and frame of mind. Because it represents all of the service me it of tiie first World War, the American Legion is nominally the organization to which spection division, said the inspec tors will be graduated from the course about Dec. 23 and will begin work "shortly after tiie cemetery. new year." A new class opens Church of God, McGovern Rev.

W. W. White, pastor. Eiblf school, 10 a. ni.

Morning worship 11 o'clock. Young people's service 7:30 p. m. ruder tentative assignments, lf of the first graduates will work in Pennsylvania's bituminous coal fields and 10 others in the anthra Read the Ads ir The Daily Notes Every Day cite section. Most, of the remain Is clear to all now, as it should have 'been at the first, that in the prior conflict, though Japan was ing; 13 men will be assigned to oth (lertnaus are told now to st-jp peeling their potatoes.

By eating the skins they save taters to make alcohol to run army tanks. South iew Gospel Mission Edythe V. Dickson, missionarj Sunday school, 9 a. ni. Boys' and Girls' clubs, Friday, 5:30 p.

m. Prayer meeting, Friday, 7:45 p. m. er states in district A -Northern aligned with the Allies, she wan TRY THE CLASSIFIED AD SECTION AND BE SURE 0 QUICK RESULTS! West Ohio and Maryland. eve.ii then out for pelf, with full.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1894-1973