Salem Elks Lodge #305

Salem Elks Lodge #305 Fraternal Organization supporting the principles of Charity, Justice, Brotherly Love and Fidelity.

This Wednesday...June 17th.  Only 4 cards left.
06/15/2026

This Wednesday...June 17th.

Only 4 cards left.

Flag Day Ceremony at the NE District mtg at Berea Lodge. Historical Flags were presented by the OEA Stare Officers. Very...
06/15/2026

Flag Day Ceremony at the NE District mtg at Berea Lodge. Historical Flags were presented by the OEA Stare Officers. Very nice ceremony.

Huge shout out and thank you to all that helped, supported and came out this weekend to the Bugers Brawts and..more  eve...
06/14/2026

Huge shout out and thank you to all that helped, supported and came out this weekend to the Bugers Brawts and..more event!

Great music, amazing people. Fantastic view of the Cruise. Even met fellow Elks from East Liverpool, New York, etc.

Looking forward to 2027 Super Cruise and seeing what we can do to make in even bigger.

Thursday June 11th @ 7:00pmSalem Elks Flag Day Celebration
06/10/2026

Thursday June 11th @ 7:00pm

Salem Elks Flag Day Celebration

Tonight might be your night!!!!
06/10/2026

Tonight might be your night!!!!

Hope to see your wares
06/10/2026

Hope to see your wares

Attention all Vendors....2026 Salem Elks Vendor Fair is set!

Saturday Nov 7th and Sunday Nov 8th.

Sign up today!!!!

"250 years ago today, a man with four fingers missing from his left hand stood up in a sweltering Philadelphia room and ...
06/10/2026

"250 years ago today, a man with four fingers missing from his left hand stood up in a sweltering Philadelphia room and said the words that could have gotten him hanged.
It is June 7, 1776. The Pennsylvania State House. The windows are shut against eavesdroppers despite the summer heat. Richard Henry Lee of Virginia rises from his chair.
He knows how to hold a room. They call him the American Cicero. Years before, a hunting gun had exploded in his hands and taken the fingers of his left hand clean off — and ever since, he has worn a wrapping of black silk over the ruin. He has learned to use it. When he speaks, he lifts that shrouded hand and lets the dark silk fall, and every eye in the room follows it.
Today he lifts it, and he reads three sentences.
The first is the one that changes the world: ""Resolved, That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved.""
He is not asking a question. He is proposing that thirteen colonies stop being British.
John Adams seconds it before Lee has fully returned to his seat.
And then — nothing happens.
This is the part almost everyone forgets. There was no roar, no signing, no leap. Congress looked at what Lee had just put on the table and flinched. They voted to wait. Several delegations had no authority from home to take so enormous a step. Some men wanted alliances and a plan of confederation settled first. And some were simply afraid. They called a recess so the delegates could ride home and ask their people the unaskable question: are we ready to commit treason together?
Because that is what it was.
Every man who would eventually say ""aye"" understood the arithmetic exactly. There was no legal independence yet, no nation, no army that had won anything decisive. There was only a king with the largest military on earth and a very long memory. If the war was lost, the document they were debating became a confession. The punishment for that confession was a rope.
They knew it. They debated anyway.
The next day, Congress appointed a small committee to draft a statement explaining the decision, should they ever find the nerve to make it — Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, Sherman, and Livingston. They handed the pen to the quiet Virginian, Thomas Jefferson. The famous parchment we frame on walls and read aloud every Fourth of July was, in a sense, the footnote. It exists to justify Lee's motion. The motion came first.
And here is the detail that ought to be carved somewhere.
When the final vote on independence finally came, on July 2, 1776 — Richard Henry Lee was not there.
His wife had fallen ill. Virginia was building itself a new government and needed him home. So the man who stood up and proposed American independence climbed onto a horse and rode away before the question he'd asked was ever answered. Adams stood in for him and carried the argument across the line.
He proposed it.
He didn't cast the vote for it.
He never seemed to mind who got the credit.
The resolution passed on the second of July. Adams was so certain that date would be remembered forever that he wrote home predicting Americans would celebrate it for all time with bonfires and parades. He was off by two days. We kept the fourth — the day the explanation was approved — and let the seventh, the day a man first dared to say it out loud, slip quietly out of the calendar.
But the courage was never really in the parchment.
The courage was in being first. In standing up in a closed room, lifting a maimed hand, and reading three sentences that made you a traitor the instant they left your mouth — with your name attached, in front of witnesses, before a single other colony had promised to stand with you. Then trusting that strangers would find the same nerve, and finish what you'd started, even if you weren't in the room to see it.
So next month, when the fireworks go up, you might think of an earlier evening. A hot day in June. A man who had already lost part of himself, raising what was left of his hand and betting his life that other people would be brave enough to agree with him.
The question he asked that day was never really about Britain.
It was the same question every generation eventually has to answer for itself: when the right thing is also the dangerous thing, and someone has to say it first —
would it have been you?"

Attention all Vendors....2026 Salem Elks Vendor Fair is set!   Saturday Nov 7th and Sunday Nov 8th.Sign up today!!!!
06/08/2026

Attention all Vendors....2026 Salem Elks Vendor Fair is set!

Saturday Nov 7th and Sunday Nov 8th.

Sign up today!!!!

DAP Logo  DEA Amplifies Life-Saving Campaign as the United States Prepares to Welcome the World for FIFA World Cup 2026™...
06/08/2026

DAP Logo



DEA Amplifies Life-Saving Campaign as the United States Prepares to Welcome the World for FIFA World Cup 2026™

Washington - As the United States prepares to host millions of international visitors for the FIFA World Cup 2026™, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration is committed to ensuring the safety of fans, teams, and communities during this historic, global sporting event.

DEA is focused on keeping visitors and communities safe on and off the field, as the U.S. continues to confront the deadly synthetic opioid crisis. Significant progress has been made in the fight against fentanyl; however, fentanyl is still involved in approximately 200 deaths every day and remains the leading cause of death for Americans aged ages 18-to-44 years old.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid often mixed with other illicit substances, such as methamphetamine, co***ne, and he**in, or pressed into counterfeit pills made to look like legitimate medications like oxycodone, hydrocodone, Adderall, and Xanax. When mixed or pressed into pills, fentanyl is nearly impossible to detect – you cannot see, smell, or taste it. Just 2 milligrams of fentanyl – small enough to fit on the tip of a pencil – can be deadly, and many people don’t know they’ve ingested it until it is too late.

The illicit drug supply is becoming increasingly more unpredictable and lethal, as indicated in a Public Safety Advisory issued by DEA last month. Fentanyl is now being combined with a dangerous array of synthetic substances including xylazine, nitazenes, cychlorphine, and medetomidine, which are often undetectable and not approved for human consumption.

Counterfeit pills may appear legitimate, but when purchased online or from an unlicensed source they are likely to contain fentanyl. The only safe medications are those obtained from a pharmacy and used as directed under the supervision of a licensed medical professional.

Your safety is our goal. Throughout FIFA World Cup 2026 ™ host cities, fans will see DEA’s One Pill Can Kill Campaign, which aims to draw awareness about the dangerous, deadly, and deceptive illicit drug supply. The campaign encourages people to stay vigilant, only take medications from trusted and licensed pharmacists, and understand the risks associated with illicit drugs.

Public Safety Guidance for Fans and Visitors:

Never take a pill that wasn’t prescribed to you and dispensed by a licensed pharmacy.
Assume all illicit drugs may contain fentanyl or other deadly additives.
Carry naloxone and be trained in how to use it but understand it may not fully reverse all substances present.
Call 911 immediately in any suspected drug poisoning or overdose. Time is critical.
Stay informed and spread awareness. This threat is evolving rapidly.

DEA has a robust prevention and awareness program aimed at educating communities about the risks associated with illicit substances. The One Pill Can Kill Campaign and Fentanyl Free America initiative were created to protect both visitors and communities from the dangers of fentanyl. Public awareness and prevention are critical to saving lives – one pill, one time can kill.

DEA’s free outreach and awareness resources are available at FIFA 2026 | DEA.gov. As we welcome the world to the U.S., your safety remains our number one goal.




Sincerely,

Frank Burr

Elks National Drug Awareness Commission


Elks National Drug Awareness Program | 366 Vt Route 313 W | Arlington, VT 05250 US

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NO BURN OUT PIT.    JUST A PLAY ON WORDS!!!Come hang out....good tunes....good food....good drinks!!!Friday 6.12Saturday...
06/08/2026

NO BURN OUT PIT. JUST A PLAY ON WORDS!!!

Come hang out....good tunes....good food....good drinks!!!

Friday 6.12
Saturday 6.13

4:00pm to whenever 😀

Address

824 E State St
Salem, OH
44460

Opening Hours

Monday 2pm - 10pm
Tuesday 2pm - 10pm
Wednesday 2pm - 10pm
Thursday 2pm - 10pm
Friday 12pm - 10pm
Saturday 12pm - 10pm

Telephone

(330) 337-3222

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