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The Salem News from Salem, Ohio • Page 2

Publication:
The Salem Newsi
Location:
Salem, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TWO THE SALEM, OHIO, NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1941 THE SALEM NEWS Established in 1889 Miss Mabel Ray and friend. Miss Maud Morehead of ire visiting Miss Ray's mother in this city. Published by The Building. fUst Salwn. postof at Sal- 11 an matter un-ii-r act of March k.

1ST 9. 'I II1H I VFAKs AGO Issue of April 16, 1911: I. Nora Greenawalt of Woodland ave enter- MEMREH OF THE ASSO- PRLiSiv The Aasoci- xi iy entitled to the us- for re- tained her oririge club Friday evening 0 The Stars were gut ts of Mias Rebeoca published All rights at ion of Mounts of Lincoln ave Tli nr-day evening when they ipeciai herein SPECIAL RBPKE8ENT VE; The hn alien Company. New oik office, 630 fth office North Mehigin Hetroit i- Geiu-ral Building Culumi office. 40 fcourti Third St.

MEMBER AMERICAN NEW SPA PER ASSOCIATION. MEMBER AFOIT, BBHIfe.AU Of CULATJON MEMBER Orlio SEED LIST TEEKPHo'NES: department 4691 Elisine.1 s. ertisinK and illation department 4603 an-1 4604. played cards Mrs Ed Austin of Depot st hoftesft to the Raffia Fancvwork dub Thursday afternoon Mrs. Penrose of Ellsworth rd receded members of the Country club Friday altcrnoon.

Miss Schuler of this city, corresponding secretary of tiir Canton district, Epworth league, at- aminer had told them they had a tendeo the district cabinet meeting at A liance Sat rates urday. By Carrier, per 16 By mull, in Ohio, one year month 60 payable in advance wutaide of -me year 4 0, payable in advance. Miss Hden Platt of Grade Fourth St. school ertertained her pupik FYiday evening Wednesday, April 16. 1941 Mesdames John Heckler.

Wil lam Herkler. William the lieart and Fred Culler entertained the Fmklin ave I CONFESSIONS OF A WISHFUL THINKER CONCERNING "HEART PROBLEMS" Some Fallacies Regarding Defects Are Cited LOGAN LENDENING, M. D. neither real nor adds A a oman came weeping to me to the work of the heart puts an the other day because she had been extra strain on the heart muscle told her on had a heart murmur and tends to wear it out sooner I don't know how many people I than normal. have had to calm down because i Bat not necessarily much sooner! doe tor or hie insurance ex- Tpe weeping mother who had discovered her boy had a murmur can take heart iiom a news clipping one o'.

my colleagues brought me the other day It was from an obituary column in a medical journal somewhat more re- large heart or enlargement of the 011 technical points than the neart. Then there is the host of ordinary and recorded the death people who lead ten or twenty a doctor from valvular years of tragic life because they disease He died at the age of 92 hear they have valvular disease of That a long time to so dangerous a thing as a murmur. very A doctor in Toronto wnose wards little A valvular delect is rnerelv I was visiting asked me how Announce District Spelling Winners Estimates S40.000 Loss April 16 E. Saville. vice president of the Kuntz-Johnson Lumber Co estimated $40.000 loss caused by a 1 night fire that destroyed a ware- LISBON.

April 16 in house. seven of tht district spelling con- held Friday, who will be Since 19.18. Oregon ha. eligible for tne counts contest be nation's biggest state, taking the th HOWTO HELP been the lumber-producing held on Saturday. May 1, were state, taking the lea- from Wash- announced today by County SUpt.

ington which hau ranked Dr Clendening will answer questions of general interest only and then only through iii.s column. W. F. Robe rts, as follows: Ctnter grade. Patricia Ann alley.

Battle Ridge school; sixth crade Thomas McKenna. Mt. Hope school seventh giace. Mc.ry H. ler.

Battle Ridge; cir.htii grade. Ah'rt-d Andrulis. Mt. Hop school Knox Township Rural F.fTi graiie. Richard McCallum.

Homeworth, and Patsy Swindell Union Grove school; sixth grade. Lovell Smith Courageville, and Dorothy Jeon Stroup, Homewor-h school, seventh grade Iona Stoffer. North Georgetown, and Either Pand.n. Home worth eighth grade, Donnis K'bler. North Georgetown.

Pandin Homewortii top since 1905 PREVENT MANY COLDS' From Developing Quick-Put a Few Drops Va-tro-nol up your nose at the sniffle, sneeze, or sign of catchirur and let its stimulating artion ad ture's defenses against the com VICKS VA-TRONOl WL. i Fancywork club and husbands FYiday evening. a mechanical derangement in a many children I thought a woman Miss Forence Hole left Saturday morning for mechanical organ A murmur is with mitral valvular disease could Japan already pledged to go to the assistance of Beaver Falls, where she will be the guest of friends outward and visible sign of it be a lowed to have safely without and Tony Germany-Italy if the United States goes the whole ()Wr 8undav Enlargement, the heart is the damaging her heart muscle. I al- school way on aid to Britain, now has exchanged neutrality Lunle Emmom left Friday morning for Nature makes to lowed four He said this Butler Township Rural apainst 1 unmini overcome the mechanical derange- 1 -and took me into a room Robert Coppock promises with Russia plainly a war move against IniHanapolls ind where sue will remain some time ment 'where a patient of his with mitral and Bettv Devis the Anglo-American diplomatic front Oermanv The important thing to know defect had just had her thirteenth mechanized forces have advanced across Libya to Mrs. J.

Chapman and daughter Anna le Sat- I about the heart is whether it is child £gvpt faster than the retreated and may be i ljr(jav mornmg for Pittsburgh where they will be the doing its work It is a muscular Enlarged Heart threatening Suez months before the first supplies 0, fricnds for sewral I and a muscle is intended Saying that a person has an entrant the United States can reach that vital spot A Queer, vardmaster at tla- Pennsylvania The war in the Balkans, though in the Jumble that yards, was call' to Alliance FYiday afternoon, owing to the illness of his mother. characterize mechanized wars once the issue Ls closed, clearly 1 not going to be a resounding victory for thr AhRlo-Greek-Yugoslav forces The most, they can hope for Ls a standoff; thev lack both the nmnixwrr and equipment to score a victory The battle of the Atlantic is going as badly lor the British as they feared 4t would An Italian press puppet recently has snarled that big brother Germany is about ready to undertake the invasion of the Uniled Kingdom It looks like a long dry -spell for wishful thinkers TTiey have been folding up like confidence men at a police convention Anyone who can believe Japan is only kidding, that the British in Africa are to previously fortified way the French did in France--that Germany is going to yell, TUmerad! in the Balkans, or that the battle of Britain suddenly is going to turn out to be a bad dream, came equipped with more imagination than most standard models of homo carry when they come off the assembly line. But wishful thinking was great stuff, while it lasted. First, there never was going to be any more war at all. The statesmen would pass a law against it, the people would pass resolutions, and that would bo the end of war.

La tor. thje prospect had to bo whittled down to no more war among white men; what happened to men of color was relatively unimportant, because thfy were inclined to be backward. Then Tt began to appear that bad will had crept in among the white men, too. In fact, it began to appear that the only way to keep from having war was to trust In the French army and the British navy, because they were too tough to be challenged When that wishful thought, went with the wind, along with the whole French nation and all of northern Europe, responsibility came to rest on Great Britain There would always be an England- Americans hoped To prove how earnest they were about hoping there always would be an England, they promised to it all aid short of war. What they really meant Was all aid short of war and sacrifice, and they hoped that would be enough to turn tlie tide.

They also hoped it turn out to be another rase little and too late," because if it did that would mean a headache Meanwhile they hoped, if it did turn out to be a headache, that somehow the British navy would escape and come over here to protect Ahem, and that if it escape it would i)e destroyed after first sinking all the German navy. The story of wishful thinking runs on at great length. It contains many lootnotes and a large appendix. It Ls the story of human beings who hoped ao hard that something happen they uncon- 1 TWENTY YEAKK AGO of April 16, 1921) Mr and Mrs. I) Coy arrived home Monday evening from Lucrworth Fla where they had the winter Mr Mrs Charles Gamble of near Winona have received word the afe arrival of their son.

Arthur, in Warsaw, Russia Mrs. Ambrose Sater entertained Tuesday afternoon at her homo on Eiclid st for her nephew, Bruce Arnold, the occasion marking hLs birthday. Ralph Odey was surprised when friends paid him an unexpected visit at his home on the Lisbon Tuesday evening. Frank Probert and daughter. Leone, of Garfield were Youngstown visitors Wednesday afternoon.

Sixteen boys enjoyed the party given by Mrs Dallas Kellar from 4 until 7 m. Wednesday in honor of the birthday anniversary of her son Donald Beautiful gifts were bestowed upon Miss Helen Woerther, of I Fox of Alliance, when 30 gills complimented her with a shower at the home of Mr and Mrs. Joseph Woerther of FN'ans st. Miss Blanche Forney entertained the girls employed at the First National bank Wednesday evening at her home 011 Ellsworth ave. honoring Miss Esther Tomlinson Miss Marin Bishop of England and Miss Alice Trimble of Moylnnd, honor guests at an informal gathering at the home ol Mr.

and Mrs. Crawford Thursday evening. -----THE STARS SAY: organ and a muscle is intended and designed by Nature to do work larged heart is just saving that It is. true enough, the hardest the body reactions are normal. We worked muscle in the body But if all have enlarged hearts sooner or it does its work, which is to keep later When a bood pres- the blood clrcu ating.

other things sure rises as time goes on it about it are of minor significance does in three out of every five poo- Valvular Defect pie) if his heart doesn't enlarge he Of course a valvular defect if just isn't the enlargement of real and persistent of the the heart that keeps him alive ones that are so diagnosed are like saying to an engineer on a locomotive that is carrying a rPli'riVIlYlDn train up a you AYlVriljiAl have enlargement of your locomo- tive Of course he has if the loco- Mr. and Mrs Donald Beardsley motive is going to get the train up and children were visiting in the hill. But when the locomotive Bloomfield large or small is no longer able to Nicholas Eyrlch of Goshen, Lu- move the cars up the slope then cille Eyrlch and Frank Crew were 1 the engineer is reallv in trouble dinner guests oi Ernest Eyrlch i Only when your heart For Thursday, April 17 THIS day may be notab for the breaking up of long thwarted ambitions, the crumbling away of stagnations. Tilings should begin to stir in a dynamic and constructive manner which should place tli? fortunes and tiic objectives on a definitely stable basis But such efforts should be based on well matured plans and sound judgment, and with an eye to loop- I Mrs holes of iYaud, deception or misrepresentation, with Thursday evening at Howard particular as to writings and documents, Merl Cross and Some pecu iar or sinister matter may be dragged into family 0f Franklin, Pa and Cecil the open Cross of Detroit were weekend Those whose birthday it is may anticipate a state Mrs- A Cross of affairs which may be definitely and decisively de- and family recently. The Willing Workers class will meet with Mrs.

A Cobbs Thursday afternoon The men of the Lutheran church will vLsit at the home of A B. Williamson Thursday evening for the purpose of organizing a Brotherhood. The ladies of the Christian church are holding an all-day meeting at the church today. Fntertain Club Mr and Mrs. Howard Fiecht entertained club members Saturday evening at a card party.

Sunday evening dinner guests at the Cobourn home were Mr and Mrs. Donald Cobourn and family. George FYonk and children of Salem. Mi. and Mrs.

Myron Whln- nery of Winona. Carolyn Evrich. and Mr and Mrs. Howard Fiecht and family. Mr.

and Mrs William Marty, Mr. and Mrs Hilton Jones of East Palestine, Tom Frederick of Garfield called at Mollie home Sunday afternoon Mr and Mrs FYnnk Raurer, Clyde and Emma Jean Baurer were dinner guests of Paul Nichols Sunday. Mrs. Andrew Vaughn and sons, George and Stephen, and daughter, Martha Jane, spent Thursday with Mrs. Lily Dinsmore.

Mr. and Mrs. Otto Elser, Mr and Pat Green of Woodworth large or smalt, murmurous or not. no longer pumps the blood through the system need you begin to get perturbed about it. Questions And Answers Daily Reader: eating several tablespoons of coffee grounds each day cause harmful seems to me a very poor way to take coffee, but not necessarily harmful, although you get a good deal more coffee that way than you would in several cups of coffee.

D. What is the cause and cure for small white, seed warts 1 In a young girl?" are probably due 1 to infections. They are best treated Cither bv the application of the end of a cork moistened with formaldehyde. several times a dav. or by X-ray.

Fifth Winona ir HlghiUIld school; grade, Donna Walker, ihiirview school; seventh grade, Dorothy Hartley. Votaw school, and George Lanse. Winona; eighth, Mary Wolford. Votaw school, and Esther Holloway, Winona school. Hanover Township erade Marjorie Hanna, Guilford school, and Marilyn JPchncider, New Garden sixth grade, Buster McClendon, New Garden school; seventh grade Arthur Sell, Guilford, and Alia Mae Raley, Hanoverton school; eighth grade, Mary WLse and Dean Ftaley, both of Hanoverton.

Wayne Township Rural Fifth grade. Ruth Buckley, Oak Grove sixth grade, Robert Wilson, Pleasant Grove seventh crade, Grace Oak Grove; eighth grade. Leonard Welch, idea, -nt Grove scheool. FYanklin Township erahe. David Warco.

Millport school; sixth grade. Marguerite Bftchm, Millport; seventh Columbus West, Millport; eighth grade. Charles Hall, Millport school. Negley grade, Vivian Huston, Negley school; sixth grade, Grace Elliott, Negley school; seventh grade. Dorothy Mackall, Negley school; eighth grade, Shirley Gcrby, Negley school.

READ THE WANT COLUMN I vt loped 111 the direction of putting the fortunes and scioucly did almost everything under the sun I enduring and stable basis With well laid plans and sagacity there should be much progress and productive work, with many obstacles and tt happen The illusion has been destroyed, though it still is hard to face the blunt, cod llact st if. the same world it always has world of endless battling for survival, with the victory going to those who feel least, not most, secure. THE ALL-INCLUSIVE TERM Perhaps no worse than it always was. and it might even be bitter, but tlie hoodoo of the all- inclusive term still gets in its dirty work American labor is a label pinned blindly on the whole working population, without regard to the fact there arc as many dliferent points of view among laboring- men as there are anywhere else, that some believe in unionism of one kind, some in another kind, and some prefer to believe in 110 unionism at For conversational purposes there still is an in Europe, though ail evidence supports the belief that Italy lias been as completely absorbed In German military jxvwer as Hungary, or Bulgaria, or Rumania And there still is mention of the war being waged by the "detmvracie despite the fact the only near approach to a democracy on earth Ls the United States, which is not waging war Some of the byproducts ot war are the convenient tkinvicilons that all Britons an- keeping a stiff upjter Up. that al'.

Germans are refle -ed in the paranoiac personality of Hitler, that all Italiam are cast in the mold of Mussolini, that all news lrom abroad propaganda that South Americans want to be good neighbors, that the Japanese are martinets and spies that national unity which is the all-inclusive 1 term to end all-inclusive term should include everything everybody wants to have included. When lazier thinking is done, the all-inclusive termers will do it FROM THE NEWS FILES FORTY YEARS AGO (Issue of April 16, 1901) Mr and Mrs. Ephraim Bard of Wilson returned old frustrations and impediments swept away for good and all Some subtle or singular situations may be brought to the surface, but in all a fairs be alert to treachery and fraud and sign and read all papers with precaution. A child born on this day should be enterprising, energetic industrious and of sturdy character although with some inclinations toward accomplishing tilings by expediency rather than principle. ------------------------WHY DO THE WIN? By DEVON FRANC'IS The continued and apparently irresistible drive bv Geiman panzer columns toward debouchement into the great valleys of central Greece makes it appropriate at this time to examine the cause of the Allied retreat What was lost yesterday, and what may be gained today, seems second in importance to the fact that, starting almost a vear ago.

the Geiman military machine. like a blue-ribbon tootball team has chalked up an almost unbroken string of victories What happened in Poland. Norway the low countries and FYnnce appears to be happening now 111 the Balkans The technique is ihe same. Only the locale has been changed In all that time the Axis powers Italy, of course, entered the war only when Frame was desperately suf.ered on five setbacks, two of a negative and three of a positive character The Qermans failed to annihilate the RrhLsh forces Dunkerque Their scheduled invasion of the citadel of Britain, according to London accounts failed to come off. The Allies registered positive but ephemeral victories in Albania and north Africa The British Taranto and Capo Mntapan may be used for consideration here provide an Allied vtctoiy of more lasting importance.

Historians may see fir to attribute the long suc- of British setbacks to a combination of and family Mr and Mrs. Thrope of Washington. D. Mrs. Lewis Jones of Girard, and Mrs.

L. Bush of Clarksville were caller, over the weekend in the Pettit home. Attends Funeral Myron Griffith attended the funeral of Perry in Youngstown Tuesday afternoon Mr and Mrs. Glenn Warren of Pioomfield were Sunday evening r.s in the Eyrich home. Hailv Lang spent Sunday with ins son.

Albert Lang, and family. Mr md Mrs. Scott and Mr and Mrs Jav Sieple. son Le! land, enjoyed a trip along the Ohio uver Sunday. Mr and Mrs Beardsley attended the funeral of Mrs.

Mary ink in Canton recently. Tuition Fee WHITE PLAINS. Thomas, 19. received a suspended sentence when he expained why he stole a $50 typewriter from a comtminitv center He aid he pawned it to pay his tuition at poire training school WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE- Without And ou'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning to Go TXe liver pour pints of hile juice yi-ur hcw-vb every dny. If this hile is not flowing freely.

may not dl- rrst. It may just decay in the wela Then bloats up stomach. (ret ron- stipaie.i. You feel sour, sunk and the world ks punk. It takes those old I.ittle Liver to those 2 pints of bilr freely to muse you feel and Get a (arkajjo today.

Take as -sctsd. Amarine in making hile flfreely. Ask in' Carter's Lc.ti« Liver 1'iiU. 10 and 25e. EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr.

Clendening has seven pamphlets which can obtained by readers. Each pamphlet sells for 10 cents. For any one pamphlet desired, send 10 cents in coin, and a self-addressed envelope stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening. 235 E.

45th New York The pamphlets are: "Three Reducing Diet," and Constipation," "Reducing and "Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes," "Feminine Hygiene." and Care of Hair and Skin." YOU'LL ALWAYS BE CONSTIPATED UNLESS- You correct faulty living lesa liver bile flows freely every day into your intestines to help digest fatty foods and guard against constipation. SO USE COMMON SENSE? Drink more water, eat more fruit and vegetables. And if assistance is needed, take Dr. Olive Tablets. They not only assure gentle yet thorough bowel movements but ALSO stimulate liver bile to help digest fatty foods.

Olive Tablets, being purely vegetable, are wonderful! Usod successfully for over 20 years by Dr. F. M. Edwards in treating patients for constipation and sluggish liver bile, today Olive Tablets are justly FIRST choice of thousands of grateful users. Teat their goodness TONIGHT! 30c, All druggists.

Poor brakes, close shaves are ferrific on the nerves. Have Your Brakes Tested Today! no conAhom Of today bo of yoor EvoLm unnocottary itroNi of Know tko) wkm yoo apply yoor to yovf wiO do Alt for you char 9 Our pin Wagner Lochheed hydraulic parti, ariH your or. E. Pershing and S. Ellsworth PAUL GEORGE SERVICE I i.

CALIFORNIA last evening from East Palestine, where they had causes pussib a failure of the irneral staff to grasp been spending a few days with her son. William the import of th German iuuque of war are per- Pteher. haps a lack of mechanized and motorized equipment J. Gaston of Clarkson and Cope were in and disciplined soldiery well officered from the top the city today as representatives to the convention down, of the Knights of the Maccabees Ot the i Miss Donagan of New Castle, returned to German her home yesterday after having spent a week with the ranks of their enemies looks the most plausible Miss Anna Moff of Depot st It has been my conviction since the start of the war R. Carey and Daniel Sharpnack are 011 a that the Allies consistently underrated the strength fishing excursion in the vicinity of Ravenna the German luftwaffe in terms of airplanes Mrs.

S. Grove, Jr. and Mrs Mahlon Erwin of The very we 1 could hold true in the field uy reasons which might be assigned to the lack of proper equipment in Main st. went to Pittsburgh tociav William Viers of Pittsburgh is visiting his mother, Mrs. Rebecca Viers, south of the city.

of ground operations German tanks aie rumbling across Libya. They ate there de.spite the British Mediterranean fleet ROUND TRIP TO Sunday Excursions 2.00 PITTSBURGH OR CLEVELAND EVERY SUNDAY GOING SUNDAY MORNING Reluming Sunday Evening Good in Coaches Only Pennsylvania Railroad More Ways To Go More Sights To See More Savings To Enjoy Take your choice of many Greyhound routes out to the beckoning; West then a different way to come back, at no extra cost. Schedules are fast and the more exciting since you see America close-up when you travel by air-conditioned Super-Coach. And remember, miles of carefree Greyhound travel cost no more than one mile of driving yourself I Los Angeles Son Francisco San Diego One Way ixiving your sel .85 Round Trip S64.55 STYKK TRANSIT 139 Ell-worth Yve. Phene 1311 GREYHOUND i SALEM- tos's less Lhte in a So obtainablc deration shift Mi-more nlcVc from alRflOW lower and resilicntAir foam-U 01 NODE e' al ano Smith Garage Third Street at Vine Avenue Salem, Ohio GOOD NEWS FOR YOUR FLOORS! "America's Favorite Carpeting BIGELOW BEAUVAIS YARD IN SMART NEW PATTERNS AND COLORS Beauvais is the carpet that sturdy, long wearing quality, smart new styles, lovely colorings.

In our wide range of Beauvais patterns find just the one to givt your home distinctive new charm. Any size wall-to-wall or made into rugs. And the price includes installation. PH0NE 5254 FOR FREE ESTIMATES ON A NY NO OBLIGATION w. S.

ARBAUGH FURNITURE STORE Cor. E. State and Lincoln Ave. Salem, Ohio.

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About The Salem News Archive

Pages Available:
228,531
Years Available:
1906-1977