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The Daily Notes from Canonsburg, Pennsylvania • Page 4

Publication:
The Daily Notesi
Location:
Canonsburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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PAGE FOUR TXXB DULY W0TE3, OllTOlTIBUlta, F2. MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1943 f67Tfl BIRTHDXY CELEBRATION NOTES PRINTING COMPANY President Manager Secretary THE DAILY THE NOTES PUBLISHING A Robert U. Robinson John T. Robinson Charles E. Ross John H.

Clutter retiring president used that as a challenge, declaring Canonsburg, Pittsburgh, New York, any town or city could as well ask the question as could the Norwegians. He said in part: "What is to become of Oslo? YOU'RE 'JELLING fe By WILLIAM RITT Central Pros Writer Houston Phone 1009-W MANY OUT-OF-TOWJT FRIENDS ATTEND GOUIRAND FUNERAL Out-of-town relatives and friends who attended the funeral of Mrs. George Gouirand, of Cherry avenue included: Her sister, Mrs. THE DAILY NOTES George A. Anderson Editor R.

Neil Morris Busineia Manager Daily Edition founded April 18, 1894. Weekly Edition founded August 1, 1875. Published every afternoon except Saturday and Sunday at The Notes Build-in, 23 North Central Avenue, Canonsburj, Pennsylvania. Mary Martin, Mr. and Mrs.

Henry Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Heu- jm TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Single copy 4 cents. By carrier 18 cents per week. By mail (exceot where tbere is a Daily Notes' carrier) 1 year $6.00, 6 moKhs 3 months 1 monn 65 cents.

By mall (outside states of Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland and Kentucky) $7.00 per year; 6 months 3 months 1 month 60 cents. All ubscriptlon accounts payable strictly in advance. vel, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Martin and Mr.

and Mrs. Stephen Lipskl all of New Kensington, Pa. Arthur Martin and Miss Hilda Reeder of New Kensington Mr. and Mrs. Albei Gellel, Mrs.

Henry Fry of Canton, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Maras of Donora; Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Paul of Sharon; Mr.

and Mrs. Casemire Bessiere, Mrs. Private rtione Exchange 706 or 707 Rntered at the Fostoffice of Canonsburg, as Second-class matter. Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers' Association Pauline Hlliare of Monessen; Mrs. Bible Thought for Today Louise Arnold, Mrs.

Henry Nicolas, Mr. and Mrs. George Bernard, Mr. and Mrs. Leonce Faveda, of Yorkville, Ohio; Mrs.

Alex Barrett, IP THERE ARE NO GERMS OP' DECAY OR EVIL IN YOUR LIFE YOU CAN NEVER DIE. DO NOT Mr. and Mrs. J. Fedigan.

Mr. and SOME OF THE AXIS Balkan satellites, we read, want to back out. How come, don't those gujK3 know that only Hitler, Muso and the Japs have a copyright on treaty violation? Speaking ot scraps of paper, what ever became of that tattered sheet of FOOLScap on which Hitler wrote his conquest time table? I I You have but one No. 18 coupon but Italy has but one boot and getting mighty frayed around the edges. I Birds, according to a naturalist, seldom fly at altitudes higher than 3,000 feet.

The reason being, Zadok Dumkopf Imagines, that there are few trees, with nice branches on which to rest, that grow that high. I Japan's Sgurehead parliament is known as the Diet. Probably because its members are hungry ior just a little authority. iii And then there was the hoarder who stocked up on paper napkins only to discover his gas ration made picnics an impossibility. The closing of the Turkish-Syrian border was hardly front page news.

We can remember the old day3 when, if a border was closed, the ilxa was heard all over the That I believe is the most important question today; just as I told you a year ago, I believed, it was the most important question then. Today, about a year later, it is still unanswered and I believe it is a heartbreaking question that is crying for an answer in the minds of everyone of us. Oslo doesn't mean only Oslo. It means Canonsburg and Houston and Pittsburgh and Chicago. It means you and me, your children and mx children, the Bill of Rights and and the Constitution, the schools, the churches, the factories and polling places.

Fellow Rotarians, you must answer that question, you who are a cross-section of everything that is good, kind and decent in these United States and in fact, the whole world. We can't just sit back complacently and watch things go by. I know we all complain to our wives and best friends about a lot of things now but do we actually do anything about it. Do we try to figure out what is right and press for its adoption or do we just go on growling without offering a solution. I have got to admit I am in the growling group.

I don't like a lot of things that are going on right here at home: When this war is over, I want my children to be able to fuss about parking meters and to have the right to try to beat them. I want to help our Allies and I want the United States to help them all they can, to get back on their feet and become or remain, as you wish, world powers, but I don't want to work all my life and have my children work all theirs paying for that help. I want our Allies, this time to really owe a debt and to be forced if necessary to pay it. I think we should help to feed the entire world but I do not believe we should be expected to completely feed and rehabilitate everyone. All the other nations should be the main factor in helping themselves.

I don't believe the entire financial resources of this nation, as outlined by Morganthau, should be placed as collateral behind the monetary systems of all other nations to HARBOR EVIL THOUGHTS: And this is life eternal, that thev might know thee, the only true God1 and Mrs. Zael Fages, of Weirton, W. Jesus Christ whom they hast sent. John 17:3. and Corporal Raymond Gouirand from Keesler Field.

and Private Edmond Givandeau from Monday, June 28, 1943 Fort Lewis, Wash. Gouirand Funeral A large number of relatives and friends attended the funeral services Friday afternoon for Mrs. George Gouirand, held at 2:30 o'clock from the late home and were in charge of the Rev. Dr. W.

Franklin Harkey, pastor of the Third Presbyterian church, Washington. Many beautiful floral tributes surrounded the casket. The pallbearers were: Adrian Bissiera, Cashmere Bissiere, Zael Fages, Leo Faveds, A. Barrett and Paul Pra-dines. Burial was in Oak Spring cemetery, Canonsburg.

LITTLE HAS BEEN ACCOMPLISHED WHILE THERE IS A LIKELIHOOD THAT this week will sec most of the miners of 1 lie co ini try buck at work, we are prone to ask the question, what has been accomplished? The miners are continuing to talk and act beligerenlly, their leader is continuing to defy the AVar Labor Board ills delclaring that the men will work as long as the government is operating the mines, and congress is opposing the president's "work or fight order by declaring that it puts army service in the disciplinary or punishment category rather than on the highest pinacle of patriotism. The sum and substance of it all is that nothing is won, and all is in an unsettled and a ge ro condition. Tacked on to all of this is a double-edged sabotaging rumor with the United Mine "Work- stabilize them. I can't understand how we could yon navMTt gotten aronna Ofe baying a Second War Loan expect under that plan that anything but a eel-lapse of our own monetary system could happen and that our own financial structure would in a short time be no better than the worst. The Methodist Group 3Ieets stop and think what it would mean.

to you if our col-Y Aiers hadn't gotten round to Friday evening at 6:30 the Meth odist Talent committee held a cov Congratulations (he fight. ered dish dinner in the dining room of the church. Following the dinner, the devotional and business Through The Files (Birthdays Requested Day Before Publication) meetings were conducted by the president George Ridenour. Business Directory U. P.

Church Notes One Year Ago The Rev. W. A. Wishart of Wash ington preached both morning and Sunday, June 2S, 19J2 No edition. cvenign in the U.

I church Sun day. Regular mid-week prayer service Five Years Ago will be held Wednesday evening at CRANE'S MAGNESIA WATER FOB 'DRINKING JAMES P. HniKTr.M Tuesday, June 2S, 1039 7:30 in the church. Sunday, June 27; 1913 Thojnas Emery, West College street. Mrs.

Ralph McConnell, North Jefferson avenue. Fred Wilmer Dornon, Bluff street. James Weaver, Elm street. Donna Jean Williams, Houston. Molly Whitfield, MtGovern.

Florence Maslik, Weaver! own. Mrs. Fred Steiner, First Street Geraldine Ogrodowski, Canonsburg, R. D. 1.

Theresa N. Spatafore, Houston. Mrs. Katie Spin, Houston. Jimmy Chiera, Elm street.

Dickie Jones, Hanna's Gardens. Mrs. P. J. Karmelowecz, Highland avenue.

Carl Schley Zinn, Spruce street. Mildred Custer, Murdock street. George Donald Hutchinson, Orchard avenue. Lucille Vactor, Franklin avenue. Dorothy Bryant, East Pike street.

Agnes Israel, Franklin avenue. Friday and Saturday, September The Prayer and Recreation club powers that be, seem to be having one hell of a time right now keeping our own monetary system from going hay wire. Almost every directive coming out of Washington is aimed at stopping inflation. Now in the midst of it, and its far from licked, they want to use our poor gasping dollars to save all the other money. Superman is only a comic book character.

I want the right to vote out in the Second Ward for Rotarian Pollock for council and not spend all my time trying to beat some one else in another ward in which I haven't even a vote. Alban W. Barkley made the statement on June 14th, that it is not necessary to have a complete blue print to look the future frankly in the face. According to the methods used by the various government bureaus and the powers that they apparently either usurped or have been given, I will give gladly my right arm to see that blue print. On the same day that Mr.

Barkley made his statement, President Roosevelt was studying the Anti-Strike legislation passed by both the Senate and the House. I believe it is one thing for men not to strike voluntarily and an entirely different matter to take away their right to strike by legislation. I can not condone any strike at this criti-ical time but it seems to me that the Anti-Strike bill can be chalked up as just another slice taken out of our Constitution and Bill of Rights. I know that bill does not directly affect you or me but the next bill or the next act of the president might just as well be directed more at your rights under the guise of war expediency. A man is not necessarily an enemv of the ccv- will meet Thursday evening.

23 and 24, are the dales announced for the annual Washington County There will be no more meetings Phone 68ft Farm Show to be held at Ardeu of the Juniors and Pioneer groups 121 Jf. Jefferson Avenue Downs. One faction is declaring that John L. Lewis has sold out the miners and that henceforth "he will not be the big shot and make the decisions for us. Another faction is declaring that the followers of former President Patrick J.

Pagan, of this district, are fomenting trouble in the miners' union and that the miners would have gone back to work immediately, last week, had not the Fagan followers kept the pot of wrath steaming by urging the miners to stay out of the pits. Tn this way, the complainants say, they hoped to discredit the present regime and bring Pagan back to head District No. 5 embracing most of this section of the soft coal iiekl. It- all sunns up to one conclusion the coal mining industry is in a chaotic state and anything can happen, any day. On the economic front, it is patent that the miners, perhaps the strongest union in the nation, is fronting for all other unions and the until fall.

Convening at the home of John Jackovic, Spruce street, the local Club Outdoors Kiwanis club mot last night simul Members of the Candlewick club taneously with 2,000 other Kiwanis clubs of the nation. hold a lawn party Thursday eve ning at the rear of the Methodis Funeral services will be heid church. The hostesses were Miss Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock The AMON STUDIO COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHS Portraits Views Phone 92.R 40 Pike St Mary Louise Davis and Miss Elsie at the late home in Regent street, Monday, June 1943 Michaels. Moninger, for Mrs. Elizabeth Cummins Patterson, who died at her Mrs.

Merrill McCollough presid ed at the business meeting in the home Monday morning. Burial will be in the West Middletown ceme absence of the president, Mrs. tery. bteiia uarcliolak. Plans wero made for a picnic to be held next snginest relaxation in lavor ot the miners month in Town Park.

Ten Years Ago would only be the beginning of a general labor Bp Pretty Yet Practical! FREDERICS Permanents Houston Personals demand which would send inflation sky hi Mrs. Jane Reed Conley of Arn aim destroy an that tne government agen Jean Wonsettler, Murdock street. Edith Fife Morrow, Bangor, Me. Ethel Fife, Ridge avenue. George C.

Boone, Canonsburg. R. D. Phylls Dee and Eddy Lee Meneeiy, Houston (Twins.) Betty Faye Schoenfeld. Chestnut street.

Paul Grecgory Lazor, East Pike street. Mrs. Sarah Smiddle, McGovern. Joan Lorayne Sinionin. Moninger.

Becky Bell O'Bryon, Midland. Mrs. Fred Steiner, First street. Buddy Karmelowecz, Highland avenue. Paul Hluben: Houston.

John H. Williams, Weavertown. Mario Palmer, Murdock street. Hazel Koren, Third avenue. Chester Grego, McShane avenue.

Sarah McCready, South Central avenue. Isaac Leon, F'ranklin avenue. Ida Mae Mishik, San Ferendo, Calif. cies profess to have been building for months old avenue has received word that her husband has been promoted from lieutenant to Captain Robert complete "A y- Other Waves Wednesday, June 28, 1933 Sheldon Hays Keeney, 51 of Laboratory, father of Mrs. Chales Cole, Canonsburg, died at the Washington hospital yesterday following injuries sustained in a fall yesterday.

A joint expedition of the Sea Scouts under the leadership of There is no agreement on the part of these groups that all of the American people must F. Conley. He is with the Marine Air Corps, somewhere in the South S3 up CHARM BEAUTY SALON Haily Notes Bldp. Phone 119S Open Evenings by Appointment Pacific. He received the Distin share in the general curtailment, genera shortage and general sacrifice.

The adminis guished Flying Cross in February. Private Edmond Gevondeau who tration has done little to stave this off except ernment or an enemy of the people who does not agree with every thing that government does. My hat is off to any man who tights for his rights because in fighting for his, he is fighting for mine. This is given without any comment as to the validity of certain current claims and I must again say that I am extremely out of patience with strikes and absenteeism at this time. Last week I talked with a man in the coal business.

He told me that the government had taken his sons and now taken over his business. He was rather bitter and perhaps rightly so. He felt as though there was nothing more he could possibly do. I believe that' there he is wrong in his logic. He has a greater obligation now than he ever had.

He ewes if to his boys to go and on doing all he can to make things easier for them. They are out there, somewhere, fighting for what? for him and for all he cherishes. He owes it to them ta do all he can to hasten the end of the war and to see to it, with all his might, that they come back to a land where every opportunity he has had will be available to them. I am not at all worried about the outcome of the war. We have the best boys in our nation is stationed at Fort Lewis, and was called here oy the death of to talk of roll backs and then capitulate when any pressure group attacks the socalled roll his grandmother, Mrs.

Georce Skipper Otto Northen and Land Scouts led by Lee Kidder, journeyed to Cook's Forest and spent Saturday and Sunday. W. R. Price, South Central avenue, is a patient in the Canonsburg General hospital due to a fractured hip sustained in a fall. Gouirand, has returned to his back.

ORIGINAL MINSTREL base. PLAYED BY CROSBY Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bowers and If the president to to get his anti-inflation program under way, if he is to control the Belly's Beauly Shop 306 E. College St.

Phone 1769 Open Evenings Specializing in Creme and Oil Permanents $3.00 up Shampoo, Finger Wave 75c BETTY ESSICK, Owner son Paul, of Pike street left last Wednesday lor California HOLLYWOOD As the. leading labor situation, if he is to put into force minstrel of the modern American worhame anti-striKe program which all are state where Mr. Bowers will be employed by the government. IT'S A WISE DIRECTOR WHO KNOWS DAUGHTER scene, it is peculiarly appropriate mett may not mean much now. But Daniel Decatur Emmett is the man who wrote "Dixie" and such other smash hits as "Old Dan Tucker" and "Turkey in the Straw" all of which Crosby will sing and who, in 1813, founded the Virginia Minstrels, first of a long line of blackface entertainers whose most recent disciples are Cantor and Jolsou.

made to respect, it must come quickly and be Walter Sickels, seaman second that Bing Crosby, in his current made to work. light opera for Paramount, a Tech HOLLYWOOD On the "Saratoga Trunk" location in Pasadena's class who has been home on a short leave reported for service Sunday. He was visiting his A sharp grasp of the. immediate needs of nicolor picture entitled "Dixie," Busch Gardens, Director Sam Wood lined up an important scene with uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.

Wil lis Sickels of Grant street. war, emergency anti-strike legislation that will protect the nation from interruptions of vital production and a clearer long-view of what is should be impersonating the original minstrel man, Dan Enimett. To most devotees of Tin Pan Alley's tunes, the name Dan Eni Gary Cooper and Ingrid Bergman. A canning demonstration will be Suddenly, he noticed two girls far KEEP 'EM FIRING "WITH JUNK up the hillside, but in range of the hoped for after the war, would do much to held in the Houston U. P.

church Tuesday afternoon at 1:30. All camera. a a i- i i i. quiet uie rising uisturoance ana would give ladies are invited. "Get those children out of the SALLY'S SALLIES Rtg.it.r.d U.

Patent CHtc. background," he ordered. Raymond oouirand, who was called here by the death of his grandmother, Mrs. George Goui The "children" scrambled the nation a stronger sense of unity and unification with which to see the war through and for the fight to win the peace that lies beyond the clouds and smoke of war. through the shrubbery and came rand, of Cherry avenue, re Clean Cotton turned to service at Keesler Field, down to the camera.

They were Wood's daughter, K. T. Stevens, and Julie Warren, an actress Sunday. Mr. and Mrs.

Francis Menden- righting it for us and cur best is plenty good enough. Rotary you men will go on and on giving your every ounce of strength, every extra minute and every last dollar to help in evehy way you know how to win the war. I know that, because I know you all. Oppression cannot live in the same world with you. The four objects of Rotary will never be better presented not better practiced by any other group of Rotary.

My worry is what are they fighting for and what will they return to. What is to become of Oslo? We must have a going, free nation with opportunity for all of those brave boys when they come back. I close with this one thought QUOTAS and you have heard a lot about quotos. Our quota is not a billion dollars in bonds, nor is our quota 400 books, nor 50o tons of scrap, nor 750 pints of blood, nor $11,000 for Red Cross, nor so much for U. S.

O. We have only one quota. That quota must be met and if requires two very important things-winning the war and winning the peace. That quota is the combination and culmination of all quotas. Our quota, Fellow Rotarians is Victory.

Victory in War and Victory in peace. Any less friend. WHAT IS TO BECOME OF OSLO? hall and children of Wilkinsburg visited Sunday with the former's mother, Mrs. Nettie Meudenhall of Pike street. TUE HAVE A GUEST EDITORIAL WRITER today, although he was not aware of the mm fact at the time he was setting forth his inner Mrs.

Frances Crisafl Flis of Mid HORSES PROVE HARDER TO FIND THAN ACTORS HOLLYWOOD Horsepower problems are beginning to equal the manpower crisis for Warner "Saratoga Trunk" company. Director Sam Wood i using 165 land is a patient in the Mercy hospital, Pittsburgh under observation most convictions the other night. In his valedictory as president of the Canonsburg-IIous- aud treatment. human extra players, and 70 horses for wiping presses for scenes showing Ingrid Berg ACTRESS WILL SPEND BIRTHDAY IN CAPITAL man's arrival at Saratoga Springs. OVV KAML Copr.

194, King Features Syndiate, inc. TPorU rights rtwrvtA JHO -1 i ii i It was easy to get the 165 humans. It took a week to round un the I will pay quota is ana we nave not nlled our quota. Our Victory. 70 horses.

CAREY OKAY IN FILM BUT LOSES TO FENCE Science has rayon window screens ready for use when the war isi over. First indication ton Rotary Club, Fred A. Beedle unburdened himself of a personal philosophy which struck a. most, harmonious chord among his listeners. He told of meeting three Norwegian youths on his way home from Canada last year when he was a delegate to the Rotary International convention.

They had smuggled themselves out of Norway and joined the Canadian Air Corps. In conversation with the youths they invited Mr. Beedle and Mrs. Beedle to visit them in Oslo after the war. 'But we are forgetting our present predicament," one of the youths was credited with saying.

"What we are wondering is, what is to become of Oslo?" In his personal talk to the Rotarisns the HOLLYWOOD Beauteous Lita Ward, who is making her screen debut in the feminine lead in Para-mount's Pine-Thomas special, "Aerial Gunner," is getting ready to celebrate her 20th birthday in Washington, D. The young actress will leave Hollywood in two weeks to spend her birthday anniversary, July 17, with her parents in the national capital where her father. Claude HOLLYWOOD Harry Carey there are going to be flies in the millennium. went through the Pearl Harbor at 5c per pound Reserve right to reject unless clean SAVE YOUR TIME AND OURS! tack and the battle of the Coral Sea Do we hate the other fellow because he's without a scratch, in Warner 'Air Force." the aggressor, or is he the aggressor because But he didn't fare so well with we hate him 1 a bull calf and a barbed wire fence. The calf got caught at Carey's ranch during a branding roundup.

'Bud'" Ward, is production manager for NBC. Lita herself was radio singer in Washington for three years before coniiug to Holly If the Italians want to walk out on Mus solini, they haven't much time left. Carey's hands are reminiscent of the third day of the Midway battle. wood. 1.

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About The Daily Notes Archive

Pages Available:
162,680
Years Available:
1894-1973