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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 8

Location:
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

-PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTEt MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1838- U. S. Expert Is Co Ml. Washington Woman Recovering From Hurls ILTtnnU 25. of 243 World War Dead Honored lo Discuss Highfest Court RuleonNLRB Collects Ton In Tinfoil Members of the The New Deal Viewpoint Pittsburgh's Builders Asks Share of Jobs Albert street Mt.

Washington, who I.WM i am i in i Ml I I nKemm ni- iiiij.i.-ajvww accidentally shot fierseii tne ten foot with a revolver while hunting -araa reported to be re cieiy wm near a lectUre leum by Dr. F. d. May; Be Today covering iast night Mrs. Ostwald National Bureau" 0f Thursday night at 8 odJN Ion Institiifs rv.i.

Campaign Silences Significant Board's Scope at Issue told police ana got me jun she thought she heard a prowler the house. She was treated Hold Housing Projects include H. lWsk New York'is Power SAN LEANDRO, Cat, Nov, (United Presa.) Manuel Agrella, San Leandro fireman, collects tinfoil to be able to make a Christmas donation to the Shrine Crippled Children's Hospital at San Francisco. Already this year be baa collected 1,279 pounds and expects to have a ton by the time he is called upon to enact his SanU Uaua role again. and W.

W. Weinrich F' at Southsida Hospital. ST i T7 A II Intended as Stimulus To Business. Firm's Case. Ernest K.

Lindley- WASHINGTON. Nov. mm i Pittsburgh builders are prepar The supreme court may clarify to- morrow the regulatory authority of ing to fight, if necessary, for their iraise wem wearer the National Labor Relations Board. I Directly at issue in a case before (The views expressed arm Mr. Lindlmy'i own opinion ond arm not to be construed at the edi-torial policy of this newspaper.

WHAT IS left tumid in a campaign may be as revealing as what ift said. worst breath offend share of contracts for work on Government slum-clearance projects. Apparently expecting the lion's share of the work to go to out-of-town construction firms, President A. N. Young of the Home Builders' mittee'for Industrial Organization also is involved.

Consolidated Edison had entered into a collective bargaining contract with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Work- a f.Hrflf inn affiliate. 'Nd Mora Than a Moulh Wash" say AuthorJ 1 USSY TTNTVTT 1 In this campaign there hasi Ihe board ordered this contract feel better. Tens of thouuA Polident a Ht. I '-iff rV i 5' it-, convenience and hypen been no important criticism of the President's handling of our affairs during the recent European crisis. Yet that crisis occurred when it might have created campaign issues of the greatest moment.

There has been no important dissent from the President's thesis that the national defense must be strengthened. At the de nmir Bum j. abrogated, acting upon a compiaini by the United Electrical and Radio Workers of America, a CIO affiliate, that Consolidated Edison employes had been given no chance to express their preference between the two organizations. Decision is possible tomorrow on whether the proposed constitutional amendment tn abolish child labor the court is whether the board nas supervision over the Consolidated Edison Company of New York, which sells electricity, gas and steam. There has been no indication, however, whether a decision will be delivered at tomorrow's court session.

The utility contended that its operations were entirely within New York state and that hence the labor board had no jurisdiction. The board's authority is limited to industries affecting interstate commerce. The board argued that Consolidated Edison sold its product to other concerns which did operate in interstate commerce and that a Consolidated Edison strike would direct'y affect the interstate commerce of these companies. AFL, CIO Also Involved. A conflict between the American Federation of Labor and the Com- Association of Allegheny County declared yesterday, on behalf of the organization: "The first slum-clearance project here will comprise more than 400 units, and, if that is let in on lump, it is Just as likely the lowest bidder will be a Chicago or New York firm as a local one.

Intended as Stimulus. "These housing projects were not intended as housing alone, but were intended by the Government proved by Good Housekeeping Bureau and by leading dentists everywhere. Plates and bridges soak tip odors and impurities like a sponge 1 A thin dark scum collects on them. This scum holds gerzoa and decay bacteria. It Is so tough that ordinary brushing seldom removes it And, It gets into every tiny crevice where brushing can't even reach.

Almost always it results in "denture breath" probably the most offensive of all breath odors. Yet there's a perfect way to clean and purify false teeth without brushing, acid or danger. It is Poli-dent the powder that dissolves away all scum, stains, tarnish and odor. Makes breath sweeter-and plates or bridges look better and may be ratified by states specifi Add BmlT! cally Kansas ana itentucKy wnicn previously have rejected it. NOW vou can ret immediate tails of the program are worked out and presented there will be debate, perhaps sharp differences, but on the general aim thre seems to be substantial agreement.

as a stimulus to local business. Should the contracts go to outsiders, one of the primary aims of the whole undertaking would be defeated, and every business in the want ad service by" calling the mVinna wtimher of want nd headquarters ATlantic 6125 Advt Pittsburgh district would be a loser." Young suggested that the Pitts POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT. POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT. POLITICAL ADVtRTIstMn, POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT. OX THE domestic front In silences of the opposition are most significant.

Among the creations of the Roosevelt administration which have come through this campaign free of criticism are: The Civilian Conservation Corps. The National Youth burgh Housing Authority advertise for bids on blocks small enough for local contractors to be able to compete on something like an equal basis with large engineering companies. Slum Clearance in Rocks. Post-Gaiettl Photo. Disabled American Veterans of Allegheny county yesterday unveiled 12 plaques at Aspinwall Veterans Hospital in honor of the men who died overseas.

Shown conducting the ceremony are Department Commander Harry Martin, kneeling, and, standing in the usual order, Mrs. W. A. Gordon, American War Mothers, Dr. Robert C.

Cook, manager of the Veterans Facility at Aspinwall, and Henry Rivlin, county commander. The slum-clearance program of Election the United States Housing Au thority. The Securities and Exchange Commission and the -three major a Parade of 55 Ancient Cars Day' Day for laws which it administers includ Ing the Public Utility Holding While the city authority was pondering this suggestion the county authority was going ahead with plans for a slum-clearance project in McKees Rocks its third project Edward J. Leonard, secretary of the county group, refused to disclose the actual site being considered for this project but revealed that dwellings in the community's flood-ridden "Bottoms" will be torn down and re Friday To Open Auto Show Glean is up Entries to Start at Schenley Park and Travel By Own Power to Motor Square Garden. A parade of 55 ancient automo placed by at least 1,000 modern house, and apartment units on a higher level.

biles some as much as 40 years old. and including more than a the Overland, Chalmers, Maxwell, Metz, Locomobile, Saxon and Jackson. They will include rope-driven automobiles, steamers, one-cylinder buggies, buckboards, three-wheelers Penns ylv ania Company Act The Soil Conservation Service. P. W.

A. The banking legislation of the last four years. The Tennessee Valley Authority which was earmarked for a major attack until the T. V. A.

investigation blew up last summer. The list could be extended. The Fair Labor Standards Act has become law without a national uproar. There has been no attack on the principle of social insurance. Criticism is addressed to certain of its fiscal features, but the main demand is for the application of the principle on a greater scale.

If all the avowals could be taken at face value, nearly everybody now acknowledges that the protection of the right to bargain collectively is a proper function of government Here one is entitled Auto Mishap and high-wheeled equipages. Officially, the show will open at Kills Banker K. W. Daly of Charleroi dozen discontinued kinds will open this year's automobile show at Motor Square Garden. The parade, drawing entries from throughout the Tri-State district will start from Schenley Park Friday with each of the "jallopies" required to travel un-der its own power to Motor Square Garden.

Six prize-winners will be housed in a special section of the show, according to George P. Gray, director of the "jallopy" derby. Among the discontinued brands represented in the parade will be Falls Out of Machine. 8 o'clock Armistice Day morning, but the doors will remain closed until five hours later, at the completion of the parade. The show will end November 19.

Afternoon and evening entertainment programs will include Maurice Spitalny and his KDKA orchestra, and other attractions from an especially-erected stage. Many of the performances will be broadcast. CHARLEROI, Nov. 6. Kerfoot W.

Daly, 64, president of the National Bank of Charleroi and Trust Company, was killed in to doubt that real accord has been reached. Some of the amendments proposed to the National Labor Relations Act would come near to destroying it. But the area in wnich unionism is a reality and collective Bargaining is the prac nue, son of Traffic Inspector Jacks who died at 'the time of the St. Patrick's Day 'flood; Melvin R. MacDonald of 725 Bayridge avenue, son of City Detective Earl MacDonald, and Joseph S.

Flynn of 4825 Plum way, veteran clerk in the homicide division at Extra Police Sworn For Christmas Duty Safety Director Fairley swore in 27 sub-patrolmen Saturday for special Christmas duty. Among those appointed were Albert A. Jacks of 208 Pacific ave lice nas rapidly expanded. It is significant that even the die-hard opposition has turned from the sledge-hammer to the monkey- stantly yesterday when he hurtled from his automobile as a door flew open on a curve in Route 50, near Redhouse, W. Va.

Mr. Daly was returning with Dr. John McNaughton of Charleroi from the former's hunting lodge at Brownings Dam, near Swallow Falls, W. Va. He died of a fractured skull.

Dr. McNaughton escaped injury. A hunting dog in the machine also was killed. Reconstructing the accident West Virginia state police said Mr. Daly, who was driving.

ap wrencn. H'PA IS under flr hut the campaign for the cash dole, in prefer ence to work for the unemployed, has gone underground. Even the clamor for an Immediate balancing of the budget has become less stri Assorted After Dinner Mints delightfully freshing and low Fancy BRICK CHEESE makes good sandwiches, the price is special. parently was rounding a left curve when the door swung open. While attempting to close it he was pulled from the driver's seat and the car crashed into an embankment Mr.

Daly end Dr. McNaughton had been hunting in West Virginia since last Thursday. They were priced today. Lunch today for 27 cents in ths cafitoria or E. Liberty Restaurant II to 2:30 p.m.

Creole Beef and Spaghetti with Parmesan Cheese Roll and Butter All the coffee you want to drink. 19c ib. Monday your family, your friends, your neighbors do the same. No matter what corrupt schemen may tell you, your vote is secret. It makes no difference how you arc registered whether you voted in the primary, or not you can vote against the GufFey-Lawrence-Earle gang and for the Republican ticket.

And One Last Caution This victory is too vital to let it be stolen away. So join us in making certain that there is honest voting, and an honest count. The Republican party will accept no help from cheaters; it will not permit such help to others. Special watchers volunteers for good' government will be on the job tomorrow to see that thii Clean-Up election is kept clean. The District Attorn ey of Al legh eny County-has made ear.

the heavy penalties which will inflicted on any violator of election laws. Read his warning carefully, and note especially the provisions against illegal assistance to voters. We promise our fullest aid to him in seeing to it that these laws are enforced to the letten Pennsylvanians know November 8th is more than Election Day. It is also Clean-Up Day. It is a day when Pennsylvanians will record their decision to clean up the mess at Harrisburg to restore honest and competent government.

Republican victory means to Pennsylvania and to you the elec-' tion of men who will represent not be the stooges of some boss. It means a program which will revive Pennsylvania industry, and so give Pennsylvania workers regular jobs at decent wages. It means relief and work relief humanely and fairly administered. It means an end to political white- washing an end to special favors for political contractors and other bosses. It means an end to themacing of public employees.

With Republican victory, Pennsylvania will see the last of Democratic attempts to browbeat and abuse the poor and unfortunate. The One Sure Way to Victory To Pennsylvanians we say: This victory yours. Make sure of your share in it. Be at the polls early, and vote for this statewide clean-up. See that Special ftR descending Cheat mountain when the accident occurred.

Monday lb. Funeral services will be held Chocolate Criam Plinit Clusttrs, spaoial 29c Hard Candy Sqaarts lb. 25e Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the Daly residence, 601 Fifth Imported Cheess in fancy crocks for gifts. 49e up street Charleroi. Burial will be held in Monongahela cemetery.

dent: too many business men have seen with their own eyes how the 1938 spending program stopped a recession and started the present enjoyable upswing. Less than six years ago none of these laws and agencies existed. Most of them came into being only after hard legislative struggles and In the face of an hysterical opposition. Two years ago many of them were still solemnly asserted to be unconstitutional and these judgments were In harmony with the doctrine of a majority of the Supreme Court as it was then constituted. Some of the veterans of the fight against the Supreme Court bill still like to hash over their days of glory.

But those have gone. After all, the President won. The Supreme Court now has a liberal majority and the issue of 1937 Is dead. Every one of these reforms has Involved new or wider uses of the power of the Federal Government A few orators and publicists still declaim against the danger of con- the scope of the social security act. There has been no outcry.

Indeed. Mfi'CAN INI the official proposals are sensibly mud beside those with which several candidates of both parties are nirnng. A big national health program is Monday only features In our two big stores Old Fashioned IPari in the making. Its content was advertised to the country in July. Mollis ipi: HOc Twelve rolls baked together in a pan.

Light and bready when you pull them apart. Warm them in a covered pan and they taste just like fresh-baked rolls. Applt Strudlo ...2 for 25c One cuts 3 or 4 servings. Serve with sugar and cream for dessert. Swoot or Riisid Donuts 19c uovernment administrators and experts have been conferring with representatives of the American Medical Association and other professional groups.

There have been few cries of alarm; in fact in this field, public opinion seems to have run well ahead of the New Deal. The election tomorrow may register a few small changes in the political weather; but you have to look back only a few years to realize how the political climate has changed. Copyright, 1938. 28 etralized power. They are against it in the abstract and so is almost everyone else.

But few politicians 'advocate openly the undoing of 'what has been done. Most of them have found that there is a big vein of practicality in the American people. SIGNIFICANT also Is the silence with which the opposition has observed the preparations that have been made in full view for still fl IT ETIIFK Kind Iof all Rtstyiin Rapalrir pairing 9 i further reforms. First there is the monopoly investigation. Thia investigation has not shown its hand, it is true.

It is still in the prelimin-'. ary stages and the first public 5 hearings were postponed until after election. But only a few months ago it was openly charged that the main purpose of the inquiry was political in the narrow sense. The i investigation certainly will cause many business men discomfort; but they seem wisely to have decided to wait and see what happens. In plain sight the Social Security Board has been preparing amend-.

ments which will greatly broaden A good meat buy Fancy Veal CUTLETS specially priced Monday Onfy ono small CTJ bono prac- Jl if tioally no O) waste. lb. Veal Cutlet makes a grand dinner. Dip it in and cracker crumbs and brown; then add a little water and simmer until tender. If you can't use the veal tonight, buy it while the price is low for dinner later in the week.

Loin Voal Ib. 29c Sirloin Voal Ib. 25o Chicken Cats for 27o Fresh Oysters 0 Cleaning Drpend a I and jr it I Tako homo a pail today Pure Clover HON J. Reasanable. I BRANDT A Liberty.

JUdc, 7th tiRsnt 4212. Tomorrow is Clean-Up Day. It is Victory Day, too. To win this victory to bring back prosperity and good living to Pennsylvania and its people VOTE REPUBLICAN! Republican Executive Committee of Allegheny County FRANK J. HARRIS, Chairman" MRS.

A. G. H. FRAZIER, Vice Chairman RAYMOND D. EVANS, Treasurer GREGG L.

NEEL, Secretary MRS: WINIFRED I. FOLEY, Vice Chairman, City Committee. JAMES F. MALONE, Chairman, Campaign Committee No matter how you are registered. Specially priced Monday 49.

The winter's long and you'll be using lots of honey oa hot cakes buy. a pail today when it's specially priced. Check the list of canned foods below for the other good values you shouldn't miss today Monday. Solid Pack. Finest Kind.

pt.23c PEANUT BUTTER Ground while you wait. Inexpensive. Fresh. 2 lbs. 25c FRESH COCOANCT Grated while you wait.

Grand for-cakes. 14 lb. 10c FRESH PIE DOCGH From our bakery, ready to roll out. 2 lbs. 29c WE MAKE MTJSH Chicken broth flavors It, Blocks weich 1 lbs.

3 blocks 19e Dr. Phillips Grapefruit Juice, No. 2 .4 cans 35e Mapls Syrup. Canoe Club. Pint Jug.

39e Campbells Tomato Soup. New pack. 3 cans 20e Klnneys Red Salmon 25c size 2 cans 43e Canoe Club Elderberry Jelly 2-lb. Jar. each 23 Red Kidney Beans Joan of Are.

..4 cans 20 Lares Baked Apples with that shiny look. Serve with sugar and cream. 2 for 19c Chicken Croquettes large 4 for 23c Uver Sausage extra quality, lb. 23c Millions of people Cfei wlieM use Luoen's..

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Pages Available:
2,104,727
Years Available:
1834-2024