Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Pittsburgh Press from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 32

Location:
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ITant Ad Headquarters, Court 4900 Other Press Departments. Court 7200 WEDNESDAY. JULY 10. 1944 TITE PITTSBURGH PRESS. Rogers Outstrips Hurray Text of Mr.

Request for as free. The apologists for despotism and those who aid them by whisperinst defeatism or appeasement, assert that because we have not devoted our full energies to arm! and to preparation for war that we are nw incapable of defense. I refute that imputation. North of the Border CANADIAN GOLD FIELDS' FUTURE HINGESON WAR Nazi Victory Would Destroy U. S.

Market, Miners Think By JOHN W. LOVE Srripps Howard Staff Writer ler wins the 'war the Porcupine investment trusU and news trict micht. as aell shut, rioan nlnslPnnt PaPr. B'l The United Press WASHINGTON, July 10 Following is the text of President Roosevelt's new defense message: To the Congress of the United States: As President of the United States end as commander-in-chief of its armed forces. I come again to the representatives of the people in Congress assembled to lay before them an extraordinary estimate of funds and authorizations required for the rational defense.

In my opinion, it is necssary now that the people of this nation and their representatives in Con- gress look at the rrob'-rm of the national defense with utterly dispassionate realism. Never have we as a nation attempted to define the word "defense" in terms of a spe- cific attack at a certain place at aj certain time or with specified land end sea forces. In the Ion? swee cf the century and a half since car defenses have been concentrated end unified under the Constitution. if has been a prime obligation of the President and commander in chief promptly to advise the Congress with respect to any world circumstances calling for either increased or diminished defense needs. From time to time during the last even years.

I have not failed to sdvlse the people and their repre-fentatives of grave dangers threatening the United States and its people, and the institutions of democracy everywhere. time to time 3 have availed myself of opportunities to reassert and implement the right of all the nations of the Ameircan hemisphere to freedom from attack or control by any non-American power. 13.13 Address Recalled A year and a half ago. on January 4, 1939. in mv address to the Congress.

I referred to the fact that I had felt it necessary on previous occasions to warn of disturbances abroad, and the need of putting our own house in order in the face of storm sicnals from ecross the seas. On that day I faid that a war which threatened to envelop the worid in flames had been averted, but that it had become increasingly clear that peace was not assured I said then that all about us raged undeclared wars, militarv and economic. I said then that all about us were threats of new aggression, military and economic. I said then that the storms from abroad directlv challenged three institutions indispensable to Americans religion, democracy and International good faith. Unhappily, many Americans believed that those who thought they foresaw the danger of a great war.

were mistaken. Unhappily, those cf us who did foresee that danger, were riaht. A week later, on January 12. 1939. I submitted a progoram considered bv me as commander-in-chief of the Army and Navy and bv my advisors to be a minimum program for the necessities of defense, saying taht.

everv American was aware 'Won't Send Troops We fully understand the threat of the new enslavement which men may not speak, may not listen, may not think. As these threats become more numerous and their dire meaning more clear, it deepens the determination of the American people to meet them with wholly adequate defense. We have seen nation after nation, some of them weakened by treachery from within, succumb to the force of the aggressor. We see great nations still gallantly fighting against aggression, encouraged by high hope of ultimate victory. That we are opposed to war is known not only to every American, but to every government in the world.

We will not use our arms in a war of aggression; we will not send our men to take part in European wars. But, we will repel aggression against the United States or the Western Hemisphere. The people and their representatives in the Congress know that the threats to our liberties, the threats to our security, the threats against our way of life, the threats to our institutions of religion, of democracy, and of international good faith, have increased in number and gravity from month to month, from week to week, and almost from day to day. Asks Nearly Five Billions It is because of these rapid changes; it is because of the grave danger to democratic institutions, and above all, it is because of the united will of the entire American people that I come to ask you for a further authorization of for the national defense. Let no man in this country or anywhere else believe that because we in America still cherish freedom of religion, of speech, of assembly, of the press; that because we maintain our free democratic political institutions by which the nation after full discussion and debate, chooses its representatives and leaders for itself let no man here or elsewhere believe that we are weak.

The United States is the greatest industrial nation in the world. Its people, as workers and as businessmen, have proved that they can unite in the national interest and that they can bring together the greatest assembly of human skills, of mechanical production, and of national resources, ever known in any nation. Hie principal lesson of the war up to the present time is that partial defense is inadequate defense. If the United States is to have any defense, it must have total defense. 'People Ready to Sacrifice We cannot defend ourselves a little here and-a little there.

We must Roosevelt's Defense Funds of the peaceful intentions of this government and of this people, and that every American knew that we have no thought of aggression and no desire for further territory. The Congress granted that request for the minimum program then deemed necessary. At the beginning of September the storm broke, and on the twenty-first of that month, in a message to the extraordinary session of the Congress, I said that this Government must lose no time or effort to keep this nation from being drawn into the war, and I asserted my belief that we would succeed in these efforts. We have succeded. I believe we shall continue to succeed.

In September last, I increased the strength of the Army, Navy. Coast Guard and the Federal Bureau of Investigation within statutory authorizations made by the Congress. In January. 1940. I submitted a budget to the Congress which included provision for that expansion of personnel, as well as estimates for the national defense, amounting to approximately two bUiion dollars for the fiscal year 1941.

On May 16. in a message to the Congress. I pointed out that the swift and shocking developments of that time forced every neutral nation to look to its defenses in the light of new factors loosed bry the brutal force of modern offensive war. I called attention to the treacherous use of the "Fifth by which persons supposed to be peaceful visitors were actually a part of an enemy unit of occupation, and called especial attention to the necessity for the protection of the whole American hemisphere from control, invasion or domination. I asked at that time for a sum totaling $1,182,000,000 for the national defense.

Third Request for Funds On May 31. 1940. I again sent a message to the Congress, to say that the almost incredible events of the then past two weeks in the European conflict had necessitated another enlargement of our military program, and at. that time I asked for $1,277,741,170 for the acceleration and development of our military and naval needs as measured in both machines and men. Again today, in less than two months time, the changes in the world situation are so great and so profound that I must come once again to the Congress to advise concerning new threats, new deeds, and the imperative necessity of meeting them.

Free men and free women in the United States look to us to defend their freedom against all enemies foreign and domestic. Those enemies of freedom who hate free institutions now deride democratic governments as weak and inefficient. We. the free men find women of the United States, with memories of our fathers to inspire us and the hopes of our children to sustain us. are determined to be strong as well billion years, to when the liquid gold from the deeps was squeezed up under the mountains and collected in the porphyry.

The mountains were as high as the Canadian Rockies, but were planed off flat in succeeding eras. Some time later came Benny Hol-linger. prospecting the old Indian portage between Porcupine Lake and the Mattagami River, which flows north to the bay. Noah Timmins and his brother, Henry, backed him. They had been running a store at Mattawa, near North Bay, when silver was discovered at Cobalt, the mother of all the hard-rock camps of the North.

With money made in silver they dug the Hollinger. Today the shaft goes a mile deep and has paid 100 million dollars in dividends. The Timmins sons are in many things, banking, chromium and copper Other Mines Rich Many another mine has yielded its millions. Wright-Hargreaves at Kirkland Lake enabled William Wright to buy and combine morning papers in Toronto and build their beautiful publishing plant. at Porcupine, is the Jules Bache interest.

The Fisher brothers of Detroit are in Faymar, just south of Porcupine. Other great properties close at hand are Mc-Intyre Porcupine, Pamour, Buffalo Ankerite, Coniarurum, Broulan and Paymaster. Gold has a tremendous past, but what of its cloudy future? Prime gold stocks may be bought in Toronto for six. times their dividends. Fortunes are there still, in plain sight, no prospecting provided you know the future of gold itself.

Next: Canada's Frontier. Buy Spear Bonded Glasses! Should you break them while vacationine, just mail frame to us. We'll fix them instantly, return to you in a jiffy! No charge for this service! Glasses repaired free: SPEAR Optical Office on Balcony Uownlown! a mi JSainsi Breakit W3 mm i In Oklahoma's Primary By The United Press OKLAHOMA CITY. July 10 Oklahoma's nine Incumbent Democratic Congressmen seeking re election pulled away from their opposition today as votes were tubulated in the tate primary. Representative Will Rogers, who campaigned a New Deal platform, polled 113.812 votes to rm Oov.

William H. Murray's B4.446 with 2739 preclnts of the state's 3613 reporting. Murray, a former Mr. Murray Congressman, ran as an anti-Roosevelt Democrat. Another former Oklahoma Dem ocratic Governor, E.

W. who served a term in Congress In 1932, failed in his bid for the eighth district congressional nomination. Representative Phil Ferguson of Woodward. was leading in that district by a substantial margin. The state's other seven representatives appeared ceratin of renom-ination.

McKeesport to Delay Registration Drive McKeesport officials said today that aliens would not be arrested for failing to register under Mc-Keesport's "anti-Fifth Columnist" ordinance, pending further study of Solicitor General Francis Bid-die's opinion that municipalities do not have the authority to force aliens to register. Mayor George H. Lysle. City Solicitor Harry M. Jones and members of City Council announced that action under the ordinance would be postponed until it was decided whether the McKeesport measure conflicted with a new Federal law requiring aliens to register.

Mr. Jones declared he believed there was no conflict, but that McKeesport might be invading a legal field over which only the Federal government has control. Nazis Use Frisco As Clearing House Bi The United Press SAN FRANCISCO, July 10 San Francisco has become the clearing house for German code documents and diplomatic mail since the outbreak of the European war has practically closed the Atlantic to the Reich, it was revealed today. Captain Fritz Wiedemann, German consul-general today explained the part he was playing in the diplomatic service, and sought to clear two countrymen held in Los Angeles and Panama City as alien agents who had failed to register. Wiedemann said he had "nothing to conceal" from American authorities who caused the arrest of Dr.

Herbert Hoehne in Los Angeles and Dr. Emil Wolff in the Canal Zone. "We do not believe the law requires the registry of German citizens who are acting merely as messengers, on the normal routes of their business travels, and without compensation," Wiedemann said. Woman's Skull Fractured With a possible skull fracture, Mary Tibbitts. 31, of 524 Lockhart was taken to Allegheny General Hospital last night.

Miss Tibbitts was unable to tell police how she suffered the injurs'. Five stitches were placed in a laceration on her forehead. rf i -TV be able to defend ourselves wholly and at any time. Our plans for national security, therefore, should cover total defense. I believe that the people of this country are willing to make any sacrifice to attain that end.

After consultation with the War and Navy Departments and the Advisory Commission of the Council of National Defense, I recommend a further program for the, national defense. This contemplates the, rio- ivisio nof funds and authorization (for the material requirements without which the. man power of the nation, if called into service, cannot effectively operate, either in the production of arms and goods, or their utilization in repelling attack. In broad outline our immediate objectives are as follows: 1 To carry forward the naval expansion program designed to build up the Navy to meet any possible combination of hostile naval forces. 2 To complete the total equipment for a land force of approximately 1,200,000 men.

though of course this total of men would not be in the Army in time of peace. 3 To procure reserve stocks of tanks, guns, artillery, ammunition, for another 800.000 men. or a total of two million men if a mobilization of such a force should become necessary. 4 To provide for manufacturing facilities, public and private, necessary to produce critical items of equipment required for a land force of two million men, and to produce the ordnance items required for the aircraft program of the Army and NaTy guns, bombs, armor, bombsights and ammunition. 3 Procurement of 15.000 additional planes for the Army and 4000 for the Navy, complete with necessary spare armaments and the most modern equipment.

The foregoing program deals exclusively with material requirements. The Congress is now considering the enactment of a system of selective training for developing the necessary man power to operate this material can be guaranteed. Progress Reported I take this occasion to report the excellent progress being made for the procurement of the equipment already ordered under authorization by the Congress. Every week more and more is being delivered. The several branches of the Government are working in close co-operation with pach other and with pricate manufacturers.

We are keeping abreast of developments in strategy, tactics, and technique of warfare, and build pur defenses accordingly. The total amount which I ask of the Congress in order that this program may be carried out with all reasonable speed is $2,161,441,957, which it is estimated would be spent out of the Treasury between now and Julv 1. 1941, and an additional $2,686,730,000 for contract authorizations. So great a sum means sacrifice. So large a program means hard WOrk the participation of the whole country in the total defense of the country.

This nation through sacrifice, and work and unty proposes to remain free. How Senate Voted On Seatins Stimson By The United Press WASHINGTON, July 10 Here Is how the Senate voted yesterday in confirming Henry L. Stimson as the new secretary of war. The vote was 56 to 28. FOR CONFIRMATION Democrats (45): Adams, Andrews, Ashhurst, Bailey, Barkley.

Bilbo, Burke, Byrd, Byrnes, Caraway, Chandler, Chavez. Connally, Downey, Ellender, Gerry, Green, Harrison. Hatch, Hayden, Herring, Hill, Hughes. King, Lucas, Maloney, McKellar, Mead, Miller, Minton, Neely, O'Mahoney, Overton, Pepper, Pittman, Radliffe, Reyonlds, Schwartz, Schwellen-bach, Shephard, Slattery, Stewart, Thomas of Oklahoma, and Thomas of Utah. AGAINST CONFIRMATION (28) Republicans (10): Austin.

Barbour, Bridges. Davis. Gibson, Gurney, Hale, Lodge, McNary and White. Democrats (14) Bone. Bulow, Clark of Clark of Gillette, Holt, Johnson, of Me-Carran, Murray.

Smith, Tydings, Van Nuys, Walsh and Wheeler. Republicans (12) Capper, Dan-aher, Holman. Johnson of CaU Nye, Reed, Taft, Thomas of Tobey, Townsend, a ndenberg and Wiley. Progressive (1) La Follette. Farmer Labor (1) Lundeen.

Independent (1) Norris. Miss Mathilda Morgan Miss Mathilda Morgan, of 527 S. Pacific teacher in the South Side public schools for 42 years, who died Monday, was buried this afternoon in the Allegheny Cemetery. Friends were received in the John F. Semmelrock Chapel, 2134 Brownsville with services in the Bingham Street Methodist Church.

Miss Morgan, 88, had been a member of the church for 74 years and for 85 years had been enrolled in its Sunday school. Born in Louisville, daughter of the late David and Mary Davis Morgan. Miss Morgan went to the South Side to live when she was two and a half years old. She was president of the Ladies Aid Society of the Bingham Street church for 27 years. Miss Morgan was the last of her immediate family.

Among her nephews are Attorney James H. Duff, Republican leader, and Munro Lemon. TVrt WEATHER SKTPPtH SAYS: Scattered showers and thunderstorms today and tomorrow. COOt OFF A 1 li you 'oiwfmtippen to Proposals NOTICE OF THE SALE OF TEMPORARY LOAN NOTE OF THE ALLEGHENY ror.NTY HOI.SING AUTHORITY propoU will b- received br th Alifehmy CcmniT Hoimnc Authority at im office in the City ot Pittsburgh. Commonwealth of 1 o'clock i Eastern Standard Time).

(2 o'elock m.iDavurht Savinr Trme). on tha 17th df Zf, Julv lor the na of a ee- fotianie temporary loan note or note of aid Allechery County Housing Atitbonty "1 iTr' f-irtoiBal amount of Fthi Twenty-Three Thousand Dollar fk.aonnt, and riemmated Temporary Loan Note (Firm Series. Such note, or note, wijj he dated Juty nd U1 be parable to bearer on January 31. 1P41. 1 he proceeds ol such note or notea are i used to pay the exrene lncur-ed or to be incurred in the development of a frttwi located in 'hs Poronsh of MrKee, Rock, and for wh'ch the I nited State Housinr Authority as VJ loan ounty Housing- Authority to ait in tl- det-elnpment thereof payment of the prt-i- on su.

note or notes. rnimi, m1 of ld Allesben- oiintr Housm Authority w.u he pledged no" nr no" be further secured by requisition agreement hetwee-t n-T "unty Homing Author" i nrrwii. nri Brre tn vn note to be deposi at the Bank at whfh auch temoot. poia noies la paybal benefit of tha nr ki.4 Surh note or note. heaV li 4Per "i the prop0a" h'r1' 'f accepted to, th.

purchaei of ri.Ji.7' Principal nA interest of eurh note or notea will be nay; ahle at any incorporated Sank or Trust, tornp nT designated by the purchaser th ffes or charges, if any. of Uch Fak or h' Ptir-chafer The note or notes will provid ha hr are not s-atid until after Bank or Trust rompany a.gned th agreement, appearing on each note to as paving arent After taking rielrery of and paying for the note or note the mir-rha'er shall obtain the signature of aij.h Fank or Trust Company upon the note or notes as aforesd. Each bidder will be required to specify in his proposal the rate of interest which such note or notes he proposes, to pnr- hRse shall bear Bank or Trust Company nt which he desires such note or notes to be payable E-h bidrW will also -pecify in his proposal the rienominatina in which he dcsirea such note or notes to ne issued uch note or notes win .1 offering to pay th cosi. in compufin the interest mt k. fc v.

which h.7.n,d'",nn any wnicri the bidder offer, to pgy. All nr- notes shall he submitted in the form set accrued interest 'which interest si all bi 2 "i2 be. enter-Ifich ''M the full amount of r.i. iiirmcr intormation apply to 3 nti Aittnority a he in the City of Pittst JOSEPH E. PUR JJirecyor AND A DR J) TO A I Ff flPi AlWhenV th.

the 'asgregatel princinai attached hereto which made 1 part of a aaT8 01 delivery Plu shall bear interest' at t'k-' note Pwahle." at r.V?n',V ai note( and both the tha i. in'rrpst ot notelt shall ti. -V Jd notet) in de'nominationa and nunibers as follows of the vThJJ of and the validity of the advance loan note described me attached notice i'i me tity of of Star. 1 uppn the understanding that. Hn-'Au-tho-ty'-d the'd" rlnla Notcci THORP rrpn STRONG.

AttorneyV-atrrSti" Buildin Kiven of liter oy i ti- corporation to be organised undc the Commonwealth Mi. dii ri-iuiryivaiiu. approvetl oth, 1H3.1. said pnrnnrati.n v- t) Sf. Yotinestown Alloy Company.

The lor whlch in hnV h'1 1'. JIa and ete-I and any other metal and any and all articles of commerce composed in whole or lrn or ary other metal. 4 To purchase or otherwise acquire, hold, improve, operate, develop, deal in. dispose of lind, Muildmrs. manufacturinr plants and any and all other kinds of property, real, personal and mixed.

To acquire. by purchase, subscription or otherwise, and to hold cell, trans-fer. exchans-e. pledi-e. mortgaee or otheo wise dispose of share of capital atoclt.

bonds securities and obligations of corporations, associations and companies- to pay therefor in cash or property or to issue in exchange therefor shares of the capital stock bond or other obligation ol h' pirnoration: and while the owner or holder of any such stocks, bondi. securities or obligations of other corpora. Hons companies or associations, to exercise all the rights, powers and privilcre of ownership, lncludins- the right to rni thereon for any and all purpose, and for these purposes to have, possess and enjor all the riirhta. benefits, and privileges of nd Act of Assembly. Thorp.

BoHwick. Kecd Armsifony. Solicitors. STATE OF JAMES DB CEASED. Information is reouired fnur stiant to an order of the Chancery Divt- sion of the Hich Court of Justice.

North over .30 year co. Persons claiming to be or cwrnnanip or a. oaurhtep-of William should immediately s-end full particulars of such claims tV Jackson Holmes. Solicitor. Antrim.

N. 0r 10 tne Assisiani met Clerk, Chancery Division Foval Courta of Justice. Belfast. N. Ireland Claima received after September 30th.

lf40. will not, be (onsidcred Approved thia 3rd day nf June. 1940. J. Caldwell.

Assistant Chief flerk. IN the Court of Common Pleas of Alle-chnv Counts Pa. In re application ot JOSEPH KARNBAUER lor di'charge under th insolvent laws. No. 26 October Trm, cred-tors of sid JOSEPrT KARNBAHER.

Petitioner: Please take notice that, the petition of JOSEPH KABN-B ACER has been filed tn the Court Common Pleas of Allegheny County at the above number and term, pravin the aid court for the benefit of the insolvent raws 01 tnig ommonwealth ami for m. discharge thereunder, and that the said Court has fixed Tuesday. July 23. 1040. -it o'c ock A.

Eastern Standard Time, at the City-County Building. Pitts burgh Pa as the time and place for hearinr aid Tetition. when and where all persons interested may appear and be heard. Joseph A. rinllo.

Attorney for Petitioner. 11 1 Plaza Bldg WALDO P. BREEDEN Attorney. 603 Law A Finance Bldg No of Mn. Notice) that letters of administration on the estate of Joseph Wagner, deceased.

late of Pittsburgh. Allegheny County, having been granted, all persons indebted to aid estate will make payment and the? having 'laims will present them barley Waj-ner Administrator. Wt-son Pitfiburgh. Pa RORERV W. BALDRKiE.

Attorney. Tnion Trust Bldg. No. 68TO of 1933. Notire that letters testamentary oti th estate of Henrv Semen, deceased.

la of Edrewood Boro. Allegheny County oar. mg been granted, all person indebted aid estate will make payment and tho having claims will present them to Ruth Hazel Jordan. Executrix. Bruce wood Drive.

Mt. Lebanon Pa. ALEXANDER BIELSKI Attorney. 31 Bakewell Bldg C334 ol 1940.. JTot.i-e that letters of administration be estate of Joseph Flanyak.

deceased, late of Port Vue. Allegheny County. hv ng been granted, an person indented tei sid estate, will ma.ke payment nd those) having claims will present them to John Flanyak Administrator. 1289 Washington; Port Vue. Pa A.

H. KAUFMAN KACFMAN A LEVT. Attorneys. 710-12 Keystone Buildlnr, Pittsburgh. P.

No. 27.S5 ot 140. Notice that letters testamentary 00 the estate tit Elizabeth Geisler. deceased, late of Etna-. Allegheny County, having been granted, all person indebted to said estate wil: make pavmenl and those havinr claims will present them to Rosella Geisler, Exenitrix Ambassador Apartments.

Craft Arnue Pittsburgh. Pa. GFORGE SH A RM AN. Attorney. 159 Berger Bldr No 2nS8 ol 1940.

Keti that letter ot administration on tha esta'f 1 of Katherine M'-Bnde deceased, late Pittsburgh. Allegheny County. hayir ben grarned all persons indebted to said et'e will make payment and tho-e havi" claims will present them to Fred Oll'X Administrator. O. Bos 311.

Bridgevi Pa, HARRT J. GRAHAM. Attorney. 1007 Feo-plee Banlt Bidg. No.

2rif0 of ltn. Notice that letters testamentary on 'h estate of Robert Stadelmao. deceased. of Pittsburgh Allegheny County ha'rtri' been rranted all persons indebted to said estate will make payment and those hs'irj claima will present them to Robert A. O'teirs ind Wsrev Tnshrsr.

Executors. Farmere JJatL Bank Sldi- states Hllll.ln. "rm "h.ch atre.me.nt i Housing Authority aerel aiif loan note of til nAI''' County Housing Authority I ioanr "-h tempi rxrvt loan note or notes in an -ufTicient to nay ih. 7r'' ih F.rl RE of th rommdnwea.th IVn'nsvlvn Harrihburg. on Monday the 1 Sth riZ- rf bcVvL" E'ke'ls1 Wllil'm Neil and Charles Hewitt for Certificate of fv "1 Ior 'i a.

rmnoiea rm ireiandi about, the daughters of Wil. liam Johnstone, brother of deceased. Wil- ham Johnstone came from Ireland about 50 years aso. and is known to have lived in Pittshurjh. Ta.

One of his daughters, Known as Bessie, mArrtA on i- Ms summer? the Kirkland Lake and the New Rand of Canada running 150 miles to the east, and their cities Timmins. Larder Lake. Rouyn. Noranda and thtt new town of Malartic. For these are the places whence came one of the billions in America's hoard of gpld.

A German victory, the way they figure it here, would dethrone gold over a great part of the world. The United States might then conclude that its 20 billions of gold was enough. Toronto is the managing headquarters of this gold-mining industry, but Tirnrnlns is the operating center. The town of 16.000 I saw a dozen years ago is now 27,000. and the Porcupine has 40.000 altogether, all of it built on gold mining and the top layer of it built on the New Deal's gold-buying policy.

Uncle Sam has been a real uncle to this otherwise dreary part of the North. Built on Buying Any tapering off of American gold buying during the war would be a blow to Canada and this region so ji terrible that nobody around here can even think of it. As for what the states are going to do with the gold. I was told Toronto that its America's baby, but that a partial solution might be to start paying it out as money. They would be happy in Canada if we should circulate gold money in the states again.

Timmins calls itself the greatest of mining camps on the continent, which it is, and it still a camp. The houses are small and close together, many of them sheathed in roofing paper. On a warm after noon, when all the windows are open, one misses no part of a radio program as he saunters along the street. Four-story 'Skyscraper The highest structure here is the Empire Hotel, four stories. My host, Leo Mascioli, who also owns a string of theaters, has necessarily left the care of his guests to employes, for he has been interned since Italy entered the war.

Besides neglecting to take out citizenship he had accepted Fascist decorations. Timmins has more nationalities in close propinquity than any other city in the dominion. The Ukrainian Temple is under the ban, also two labor organizations, all alleged to be red-tainted. Bullish on the Porcupine's future is Roy H. Thompson, who is completing a $100,000 building for the Timmins Daily Press.

Mje. Thompson started with broadcasting, then added newspapers, a route the reverse of most. His chain of English and French papers reaches up the gold country to the east of here as far as Val D'Or, in the Malartic area, the most active of the belt which starts at Swastika. This rich section now rivals the Porcupine in production, except that it stretches out farther. Billion-Year History Porcupine's history goes back a Street MAIL sPEAR Pieate super obUgation.

Name 11 Married, pf v. xs rY-J i v- i -l i nil I I I I I jj -i Vegetable Hydrator! Capacious Storabin! 5-Year Protection! 4 nRFSSES. LIKE UNDIES. ABSORB PERSPIRATION 1 I ODOR-BUT NEW QUICK LUX TAKES IT rim AND NEW QUICK rn w-: i LUX IS THRIFTY. IT COSTS ABOUT A PENNY TO LUX mil a v-f- i MY DRESS LOOKS LOVELY NOW NEW QUICK Ut I LUX IS SO GENTLE KEEPS FABRICS NEW- LOOKING LONGER.

BEST OF ALL, MAKES ME SURE OF DAINTINESS A DRESS Easy to use box for as for than Get on the bandwagon. Choose this popular candidate for food protection honors Yes, this new, better, super-value Philco possesses every desirable feature needed for efficient, thrifty, convenient food protection meal preparing! Giant ice cube capacity. Sealed cold unit creates more than enuf protective cold Over 6 cu. ft. of space Choose Philco, name famous in millions of homes! Get a refrigerator with everything! avoid offending New Quick UJ PLAY SAFE in hot weather.

Lux dresses frequently. New, quick Lux removes every trace of perspiration odor! Yet it's safe all your dresses safe in water! It's fast, too. In water as cool your hand, new, quick Lux dissolves 3 times as fast as any of 10 other leading soaps tested. Goes further, gives more suds (ounce ounce) even in hard water any of these other soaps. of no extra cost to you! Small Deferred Pa'tnent Charge COUPON TODAY A CO 911-B21 Pene Pa sfnd m- complete details of your new value Philco 6 relriieratore without rive Husband A Wile lit Name had a ntr To Speed Service, if you have or have -Spear Aeuat.

-please rive In the same familiar 111-921 Prir AYenne Broad it Collins Avtnut I Art, and Wood SU Pittsburgh..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Pittsburgh Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Pittsburgh Press Archive

Pages Available:
1,950,450
Years Available:
1884-1992