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tTwo—*©, lory o f? if After securing the new lodge hall in 1915, the lodge was heavily in debt. Now came a long struggle to pay for same. The old lodge hall was sold to the Knights of Pythias in the early '20's and the grind was kept up until February 17, 1951, when with the aid of the Rebekahs, all debts were retired and the mortgage was burned. This opened a new era for the members when they no longer had to wonder where the next payment on the debt was coming from. It left Olive Lodge No. 259 with one of the best halls in the state of Ohio, unincumbered, with generous incomes from rents and dues. We immediateley began im provements. First was the pur chase of new regalia for $2300, at wholesale price. It is regard ed as the best. Our old regalia was purchased in 1899. Next, the club room was paint ed, followed by the painting of the lodge hall, kitchen, anter rooms and halls. A new cover ing was placed. over the floor. This work was all donated by members of the order, only the materials were furnished by the lodge. The work was done at a sav ing of not less than $2,000.00 by the fellowing members, who have donated more free service to Olive Lodge in the past three years than was donated in all past century by all the members: Charles Milligan, D. Dyer, Harry Davis, Leighton Archer, Ed Ullman, Blake Davis, Carlos Rice, W. H. Carter, Lawrence Nichols, Gerald Kimnach, Bill Semon, Arthur McKee, Ed Boyd, IJoward Gill, Sul&ay Dahood, John Kirehner, Bill Christo pher, Charles Fogle, Elmer Gill, Elvin Hutchins, Earl Johnson, Bruce Gill, J. W. Robinson, Henry Simon ton, R. C. Moore and Cliff Keyser. In addition to this, Howard Gill has constructed an elegant china closet fi the kitchen at no cost. This history would be incom plete without mentioning one visiting brother, F. C. Boeshaar, a member of Palmer Lodge No. 251 of Lower Salem. He has Msjfup! ~vr 4 [v r/ k" W 'jf- 71 /1 Iti/M 'J I 1 I Mi si & Wl I i# W 4 If ,1 Lo Theis is the fourth in a series of articles concerning the history i*i Olive Lodge, No. 259, T. O. O. F. in observance of their centennial celebration. An elaborate program is being arranged for Saturday, -Oct. 2. The history was compiled and written by Charles Hutchins retired school teacher and §ne o lodge. It is as follows: the oldest members of the local been a member since 1899 and came to Caldwell in 1919 and attended lodge faithfully ever since. He has helped in every way and never refused to per form any service asked of him He is our champion visitor of the century. This lodge has had the en campment order two times. The first encampment was organized in 1391 and lasted about a dozen years. The second encampment was organized in 1919 and lasted about the same length of time. Prior to 1874, the Rebekah Degree was a part of the Sub ordinate Odd Fellows. The char ter for Noble Rebekah Lodge No. 376 was granted in 1893. They have a strong lodge and are, and always have been, of great ser vice to the order. Their present officers are: Marilyn Semon, NG Edna Davis, CG Margaret Archer, RS Louise Clark, FS: Ada Ack ley, treasurer Ruth Evilsizer, RSNG Mabel Parks, LSNG Kathleen Hupp, W Wilma Lin eicome, Mary Jo Heddleson, OG Doris Craft, IG Nellie Ullman, T?hap, Infcz Clark, PG Ellen Sanford, RSVG Jesse Young, LSVG Sadie Brothers, CB Musicians are Grace McKee and Sarah Nichols. Charles Milligan is District Deputy Grand Master of this district and has been very active in lodge affairs during the past 20 years. He, together with Jas. Robinson, Ed Ullman and Law rence Nichols, deserve a niche in our Hall of Fame. The present officers of Olive Lodge are Hillis Keeton, WG Subray Dahood, VG Blake Davis, Rec. Secretary Dwain Dyer, Fin. Sec. and Treas. Charles Milligan, RSWG Art Davis, LSWG Owen Picken paugh, Warden Ed Ullman, Cond. Ladd Wheeler, RSS Stewart Gordon, LSS Donald Conaway, JG Cecil Cain, OG Theodore Murphy, Chaplain trustees, Ed Ullman, Charles Milligan and Hiram Buckey Jas. Robinson, RSWG Leighton Archer, LSVG. During our hundred years of existence, we have had a total of 993 names on our roster of Savings Insured To $10,000 Real Estate Loans v fl tm pi itssM 5 MID LOAN ASSOCIATION South Fifth Street Zanesville fall is best of aUI Wtffi inffmenectfSfTrofcj i of membership. They have includ ed the high and the law, the rich and the poor, the learned and the unlearned, the good and the bad. Yet, after all, we are proud of these men who by their devo tion to the principles of friend ship, love and truth, have made Olive Lodge No. 259 I. O. O. F. the grand order that it is today. We wish to thank the Journal Leader for its wholehearted co operation in these humble articles and will end with an article from "The Ohio Odd Fel low" issued of June, 1954, rela tive to inspection of the lodge. It has been good news to me to know that there are some youth groups in the county which have been meeting dur ing the summer months. If you haven't started your fall pro grams, you should be getting th«*m underway. In planning to gether, let us think in terms of what we are going to do for the ntire year. In all Methodist churches across this conference .ind area, this is the year for the Yuuth Emphasis program. Most certainly, adults and youth need to work together to enlist more youth and it improve the youth program of its church. Arid where it is impossible to have a outh group, there should be a concern on the part of the churches to get its youth to Our k trt NORTH CAROLINA Indian Sammn is a beautiful tlnu for wMk-oM or vacation trip to this modern vacation resort. Kroin .low till early November the Great Smoky Moun tains reach the height of their glory in a riot of autumn colors. Fontana Village, largest resort ia this scenic wonderland, is open the year around less crowded in the Fall, but with full program Of recreation, entertainment and excellent food! Tackle-smashing bass are bitting n&w in 30-mile long Fontanu Lake and the bear and boar season opens October 15! Enjoy Smoky Mountain craft making program and old-fashioned square dances friendly atmosphere horseback riding shuffleboard tennis pack trips, auto tours or scenic boat trips into the Smokies and many more! Come now by smooth, scenic highway. Reasonable rates 56 room lodge, 286 modern, furnished cottages. 'Ji FREE COMNt FOLDER P. O. Box 777, Write to: Resident Mgr. Fontqno Village, N. C. .F. Beverly, Ohio March 22, 1954 Wm. F. Mault, DGM I am enclosing the report of Olive SL No. 259 of Caldwell. I inspected this lodge on the invitation of DDGM F. B. Welch of Marietta, who was unable to do so. From the time I entered the Lodge Hall I saw Odd Fel lowship on display as I think it should be. The hall and en trance to the building have just been painted, a new floor cover ing put on the lodge room floor, and they have a new neon sign large enough so every one can see it. Within the past year 11 new members have been initiat ed and 3 reinstated. Once each month on a meeting night they have a guest night with a dinner and entertainment, to which nrnsnpftiv3 PiPrrihers Circuit Rides Again By EVELYN WEAVER One reason you folks out in the county have been wonder ing the where-abouts of my pre sence, may be due to the fact I haven't written any news column since last June. It is most difficult to get back into the routine after many weeks of camp, vacation schools, con ferences and the like. I have really been working in the county since August and have been getting my thoughts and activities organized for the year. Right now, it appears to be another full year. Monday everting, we had a most successful night of plan ning for our county's youth's activities for the year. The first date which will be of interest to you folks is October 11. This is our Booth Festival at Belle Valley Methodist church. We are privileged this year to have a representative from the Meth odist Children's Home at Berea also representation from White Cross Hospital. A notice will go out to each local MYF group in the county regarding Booth Festival details. are invited. This has paid extre mely well Tor them. On inspec tion night one petition was read and they have worked some degree at each meeting except ing on guest nights. They have an excellent degree team and a complete new set of regalia for 16 men. The officers are pro ficient in their work, and candi dates are fully instructed. Their DDGM is a member of the lodge, and he has missed only one meeting night in two years. Their new members, as well as the old, are very good in helping out in civic affairs, and they have presented a radio to a young man of the community who is an invalid. Their kitchen and dining room facilities are modern and well-equipped. The Rebekahs meet in the hall and are not charged refit. The can didate who received the degree for inspection is the 4th since Jan. 1, and they have set a goal of 15 for the year, which I am sure they will reach. They visit other lodges in the district with their DDGM for his inspections. They are very particular about the type of men received into the Order and do not invite any who would be a detriment. I enjoyed the evening very much, and can only say that they have a model lodge, worthy of imitation, and show what can be done with a little interest and effort on the part of all our lodges throughout the state. In Washington (CoDiiiiLiKii tl'OJli 1-B) for social security. The other two per cent paid by the em ployer is sent to the Director of Internal Revenue, along with a list showing wages and social security account number of each employee. The tax for the farirl owner, or operator is three per cent of their earnings. They paid this once each year along with their income tax. The tax for both worker and employer is paid only on first $4,200 of wages. For those coming under social security for the first time, the first and most important step to take is to obtain a social se curity card from the nearest social security office. Self employed farmers do not pay tax on 1954 earnings. Early in 1956 you make a social se curity report of your 1955 earn iiag&~<and jLjciiL, O uTjRjtSAo-', CAUDTTSI/ij, OAIU ows John J. Atkinson county and district meetings. Tuesday evening, October 5, at the Caldwell Methodist church, there will be the annual meet ing of the Noble-County Associa tion of Methodist churches. This is the annual meeting at which time officers are elected for the year also to make plans for the year for the general improve ment of the Methodist churches in this county. Our district sup erintendent will be with us at this time. There will also be a program of inspiration as well «ib the business. This Sunday is World-wide Communion for most of the Pro testant churches of the world. We will observe it at East Union this Sunday and at Berne the following Sunday. It can be a rich spirtual experience for all Christians when we realize that all over the world, Christians are having the wme experience and fellowship. Most ccrtainly, it is also a time to share some of our material blessings with those who are in greater need. pay'saUia* tax, ceOt them. This report is part of your in come tax return. The amount re ported is on Net earnings or pro fit, after subtracting all farm expenses from total receipts. For farm workers—if you earn $75 from one farmer and $75 from another this would not count toward social security. You must earn at least $100 from one employer to have your wages count. So if you earn $100 from one, and $175 from another and so on, these wages would count toward your social se curity benefits. Stop Taking Harsh Drugs for Constipation Avoid Intestinal Upset! Get Relief This Gentle Vegetable Laxative Way! For constipation, never take harsh drugs. They cause brutal cramps and griping, disrupt normal bowel action, make re peated doses seem needed. Get sure but gentle relief when you are temporarily constipated. Take Dr. Caldwell's Senna Laxative com lined in Syrup Pepsin. No salts, no harsh drugs. Dr. Caldwell's contains an extract of Senna, one of the finest natural vegetable laxatives known to medicine. Dr. Caldwell's Senna Laxative Journal Mail llag fOntfnnen frorr 1-B) the Hill-Burton program. A White House statement ac companying the announcement that President Eisenhower had signed the Hill-Burton expansion bill said in part:" "Construction authorized by the new- act will release general hospital beds for the acutely ill that are now occupied by pati ents with long term illness. The need for more beds for chronic illness is intensified by the fact that although the population has doubled in the last fifty years, the number of people over sixty five has risen four fold, and with the ratio continuing to rise. "Furthermore, average number of days of hospitalization requir ed by persons over sixty five is twice that of persons under sixty five. Many of this older age group -can 'be cared for at minimum cost in the nursing homes to be built under the new authorization. "Construction of diagnostic and treatment centers will en able people, particularly in rural areas, to receive periodic medical examination in well equipped facilities without entering a hos pital. Such centers will have the function of an out patient de partment in a city hospital. "The new program went into operation in mid-July. Nothing can be done to stimulate nurs ing homes, clinics or rehabilita tion centers until completion of surveys to set up statewide priorities similar to those under the original Hill-Burton system." "However, there is nothing to interfere with the IMMEDIATE start of grants for chronic dis ease hospitals, provided the fed eral share can be scraped out of the regular appropriation or the few millions appropriated for the start of the new program." "The need for chronic disease beds has been kept under con tinuous survey and priorities are ALREADY established. The latest estimate of the Division of Hospital Facilities, U. S. Public Health Service, is that 265,649 more chronic disease beds are needed." *'If communities are ready to start on chronic disease hospi tals, officials of the division ad vise them to move right ahead, the first step is to contact the particular state health authority. By the time applications are processed, federal grants will be on hand for the program. In addition to the willingness of the community to raise its ,» if?"} v tastes good, gives gentle, comfortable, satis fying relief for every rrtember of the family. Helps you get "on schedule" without repeated doses. Even relieves stomach sourness that often brings. constipation Buy Dr. Caldwell's 300 sire today. Money back if not: .xisfied. Mail bottle to Bex 730, Kew'Yoik IB, "N. V. 4* /'&<l share of the cost, there are two other restrictions, first, spon sors must be public or non profit second, the center home or hospital must be under medi cal supervision or connected with a hospital, except that dental clinics musts be under dental supervision. The new act is expected to result in the building not only of more rehabilitation centers, but in more comprehensive ones. Presently, they are limited to physical thereaphy. The new type would be a good approach to the problem, providing for psychological testing, welfare, vocational training and sociologi cal services. Hospital management is big business. Each civic or voluntary hospital is directed by a Board of Governors, or Trustees. The connection with management is established through the Super intendent, the Administrator, or Director, who is, in many cases, the Secretary of the Board. The operation and direct man agement of the hospital is the responsibility of the Superinten dent, who is, in turn, assisted by a Medical Advisory Board and Department of Supervising nurses. The Board of Trustees establish the general policy and assist the management by decid ing on the merit and advisability of recommendations for man agement. It should be the con stant endeavor of the individual members of the Board and the management to improve the hospital facilities ,to make pro vision for and incorporate new and advanced medical techni ques, and to keep up to date on all the latest and most scienti fic equipment so that those who come to their county, com munity or state hospital will have nothing but the utmost confidence in being well receiv ed and efficiently cared for in their own community during their period of hospitalization. Congratulations, Noble county, and thanks to the civic minded citizens who are sponsoring pro posed legislation to provide funds to build our own hospital. Statistics are quoted from the "Wire from Washington" as it appeared in the Modern Hospi tal" Volume 83, Number 2, Aug., 1954. Very truly yours, Jean M. Gee, H. N. Box 147 Station E. Columbus, Ohio ft iwt:, .• w-,y Yop Yoo'ix A* t'% UD»TE !f. NEWS Waiver of summons and con sent to sell filed in the land sale of Donald Stout, administrator of Beulah Cooker vs. Bonnie J. Hughes, et. al. Legal presumption of death confirmed in the estate of Dan iel Brownfield, deceased. Will of Minnie B. Stevens, de ceased, filed. Application for probate of will filed. Petition for authority to transfer certificate of title to motor vehicle filed in the estate of A. A. Stevens, deceased, and authority issued. Application for appointment of guardian filed in the guard ianship of Edward Kraft. For hearing Sept. 25, 1954, at 10 a. m. Schedule of claims filed in the estate of Anna D. Hutcheson, de ceased. For hearing Nov. 8 1954 at 10 a. m. First and final ac count of Leighton Hutcheson. executor, filed. For hearing, Nov. 8, 1954 at 10 a. m. Entry dispensing with new appraisement and bond and or dering sale filed in the land sale of Lawrence Mallett, administra tor of Walter Mailett vs. Homer Mallett, et. al. Order of public sale issued. Schedule of claims filed in the estate of Charles G. Wilson, de ceased. For hearing Nov. 8, 1954 and first and final account of Paul McVay, administrator, fil ed. For hearing Nov. 8, 1954 at 10 a. m. Notice returned and filed in the guardianship of Edward Kraft. Waiver of summons and con sent to sell filed in the land sale of L. C. Young, administrator of Lucy Moore vs. Lavina Spring er, et. al. Entry filed in the guardianship of Agnes L. Lincicome. Application for appointment of guardian filed in the guard ianship of Betty Crura. Choice of guardian filed. For hearing Sept. 27, 1954 at 10 a. m. U i I rMkd get iw best "Ybuix muuflB Ford gives you advanced features today others may offer in the future. YOU GET LASTING QjUALITV INT FORD Built-in high quality keeps Ford's value up wh«n it's trade-in time. i.iice Fords uke -your. W 0. H. PICKtMPAUGH—315 West Street-Caldwell, Ohio Thcrrsday, September 30, in Ibna low price With all of its Worth More features, Ford offers more car than any in field. And, with its high trade-in value, Ford costs you less to own. Ford He'll go the limit to arrange a payment pi«m that is sure to fit your j&w* Ls Mary Brown, et. al. to Hillmer R. and Lola P. Carpenter, Marion township, 4 acres. Rebecca Leach to Emma H, and James S. Wheeler, Beaver township, 74.81 acres. John J. Varhola to Pearl Kohler Adrion, Noble township 40 acres. E. L. and Zieba Thompson to John and Thircilla Larrick Stock township, 20.30 acres. Homer E. and Mae Finley to Gladys Vivian Finley, village of Caldwell, .48 acre. v $5.00 it i" dealer^ easy terms & At first symptom Of battery weakness, drive in to as for expert trea^'iit Fast'^f and charge, Trade-In On Any Double Eagle Battery! I K E S I E S O Phone 200 Caldwell, Ohio ft s I Office Located in New Noble County Co-Op Bldg. FOR MIES OH SERVICE... SEE DON LEONARD-PHONE 95 Used car prices show that Ford returns a higher proportion of Us original cost at resale than i i any other ear. WiiSf- ytx/h PbHf ¥6* cfe&ith $ £4 font