Thursday, November 24, 1949
TOO MUCH
Drink costs the American people too much.
It causes too many alcoholics – hundreds of thousands of them, and the number is being increased faster than it is possible to rehabilitate them. It causes entirely too much drink-addiction, with its loss of human values.
It causes entirely too much drunkenness, which fills our jails and courts.
It causes too much “drunken driving” which is seldom really drunken driving, but just the dangerous driving of persons who have had enough alcohol to impair their judgment and physical efficiency.
It is responsible for too many broken homes and too much juvenile delinquency.
It opens hundreds of thousands of beer saloons and cocktail rooms to debauch young people. It monopolizes too many valuable business corners and takes into its cash registers vast sums of money which should go for commodities and services useful to the whole community.
It is responsible for a large proportion of the vast cost of government despite its contribution in the form of taxes, inevitably casting the burden upon the taxpayer…
It causes accidents in factories and in homes. It is the greatest causative factor in the creation of urban and rural slums.
The impairment of leadership caused by the custom of drinking imperils peace and prosperity…
TOP NOTCHERS
Beaver Creek school: Sterle Dean 4, Barbara Burr 5, Mildred Burr 5, Joy Underwood 5, Carolyn Underwood 5.
Boggs Run: Christine Kellison 4, Juanita Sparks 4.
Brushy Flat: Nellie Cain, Kenneth Friel 6.
Campbelltown: Ruth Irene Sharp 4, Duane Dilley 4, Tommy Beale 5, Neva Lee Davis 5, Charles Cutlip 6, Tommy Dunbrack 6, Dewey Ross 6, Peggy Jean Sharp 6.
Cass: Russell Burris 4, Retha Galford 4, Mary Geiger 4, Clenda Phillips 4, Lillie May Sheets 4, Virginia Weber 4, Elmer Workman 4, Mary Frances Gum 5, Yvonne Lambert 5, Ella Mae Shields 5, Jerry Long 5, Teddy Nelson 5, Vernon Sturgill 5, Kenneth Tallman 5, Marvin Moss 6, Harold Neighbors 6, Wayne Foe 6, Billy Geiger 6, Brown Meeks 6, Gene Kesler 6, Vigil Summerfield 6, Doris Mae Hamrick 6, Ernestine Moore 6, Barbara Slayens 6, Lorene Thomas 6, Carol Wright 6, Charles Howell 6, Hunter Hamrick 7, Eugene Meador 7, Gary McPherson 7, Wadella Brewster 7, Barbara Blackhurst 7, Marlene Cassell 7, Jessie Elza 7, Bernice Ryals 7, Sue White 7, Bobby Cassell 8, Bobby Dill 8, Lewis Mace 8, Ray Sage 8, Howard Slavens 8, Charlotte Cassell 8, Shirley Higgins 8, Betty Jane Nelson 8, Elva June Phillips 8, Betty Jo Simmons 8, Delorsie Lee Wright.
Clawson: Susie Friel 4, Nancy Friel 4.
Cloverlick: James Ware 4, Donald Ervin 5, Robert Shields 7.
Cummings Creek: Elaine Alderman. 4, Marilee Hamilton 5.
Dunmore: Carolyn Carpenter 4, Judy McLaughlin 4, Myrna Burgess 4, William Campbell 5, Donald Starcher 5, Lyndell Brooks 5, Roy Carpenter 6, Patsy Hall 7, George Prichard 7.
Seneca Trail: Lewis Beale 4, Robert Cross 4, Keith Mace 4, Ernest Shaw 4, Martha Vandevender 4, Donald Ware 4, Delmar Arbogast 5, Mary Jane Vandevander 5, Allen Gibson 6, Naomi Gibson 6, Harold Beale 7, Harold Channell 7, Rayburn Doyle 8, Joe Ann Rickett 8, Cletious Swecker 8.
BIRTH
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Craig Tallman, of Stony Bottom, a son, Jerry Wayne.
DEATHS
Mary Elizabeth Sharp Ervine, daughter of Henry and Caroline Curry Sharp, died November 19, 1949. The funeral was held from the Marlinton Methodist Church and her body was laid to rest in the family plot in Mt. View Cemetery.
In 1882, she was united in marriage to George Mack Ervine, and to this union nine children were born, six daughters and three sons…
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Mrs. Dema Barlow Galford, 86, widow of the late Brown Lee Galford, died November 14, 1949. Her body was laid to rest in Indian Draft Cemetery by the grave of her husband. The deceased was a daughter of the late Squire Nathan and Jeanette Allen Barlow, who lived near Edray…
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Pleasants Adam Barlow, aged 81 years, died September 11, 1949, at his home in Vancouver, British Columbia. He was a son of the late Squire Nathan and Jeanette Allen Barlow.