Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 296, Decatur, Adams County, 16 December 1937 — Page 7
WMISSING" I UNDER ARREST B%wr | In Russia BLJjBBi. <U.R> H was S W 1 " l! " ■' w who < I a Ked of |‘i ’> "' i ”" i ' Eenawnt ■ The MS’' • I ' , ’H"K " llh B matte* I' l '* ie 1,111,10 °f DonE u>nM Wl'mr"" and Huth Nor- ~!<• '£' ' "'-kvis' move *BEt A ig|t ■ brought against TUs " Is about as Kotts aK could bo brought K could el- "I ' h '' ,l, ' !1 ' 11 l"' llall > Bi-,.,,,. since the disappearance of E "ReMw s " 11,81 "f'ek officials K inaiQno'i rigid silence as to Er fat*. '"" "" Cino. '■Lfy tour information. But the the Elr.ed th' passports "on th" Ej, of |<> meats belonging to who E» broke th- silence here. ! i Jflie nefsp per Izvestia, offici
ar lift Good Only Saturday. 12 Noon to 8 I*. M. ■BBBfc^.*BWi?~ SS SB! J 49 c I I 6 IIOITHS ONIA I 149® THIS CERTIFICATE AND ONLY 49c i f Entitles Bearer to One of Our Beautiful y /■’ I V CROSS NECKLACES \/ | This 49c merely helps pay for local advertising, express, salespeople, '£y 8 ate. Nothing more to pay. ’ I I 1 NEW STREAMLINE DESIGNS Q nrl' B O These beautiful Cross Necklaces are the new fashion sensation, now Mg [Q? K ||Hj being worn morning, afternoon and evening. Variety of styles for a E women and girls, in plain nr fancy designs, cmpletc with chain. 1 I | LIMIT 3 TO A CERTIFICATE > This offer made possible by the manufacturer Limited supply for this Smmb gwwrfSP special sale. We reserve the This certificate k is good only while Advertising Sale Is mi. ■ CHOK E WHITE OR YELLOW’ This ,s an Introductory offer and the Cross Necklace will be sold •< *«*■ ' 49c during this sale onl' [ I E Holthouse Oirtsg Co 11 Man ■ WH I I !"'■ <*x I r a | Good Only Saturday. 12 Noon to 8 I*. M. i Sri/. fI g^HHHJggNRur*SF I U B Twl T-U <. BiMr -Jr -*77 I k. B, U I .<,■•.>. < f’B K 4 I ■*i IfeP A ’ tflky f I J E w ggEi yr ri fl i 19J8 MOSW- w6l V /- i J m ““'t „,. w V Jsstl. I R '' nße "’X^^ tarly ' ,r, lj jB -Bm >»*i»ii 5 T?******' Jg ar f UKs} ® This year you can give her the refrigerator ■■ !/ riles always wanted ... a big. roomy Genera K i y ■fectric. America's favorite food s.r.er Neu ' W fU>*" General Electric Triple Thrift Retngerutors ire J her. . ready for Christmas going' 'l"’ »X | »'‘l" ever! Mori cut. „•’ "•' '' ■” " ' thrifty than ever! And at prices and terms that will not blast Santa's to bits. a < it's "Sandy" Claus this Year! Here's the bonnic gift that will please the lady no end .. and s.n e taoney. too. The refrigerator that always cost less 5 toiown is now popularly priced...you save tre I Wiys... on first cost, on current and on upkeep. I H. L. LANKENAU CO I 116 North First St. Phone 739 n Decatur, Ind. 339
I organ of the government, publishI etl today the newa that the couple waa under arrest. In its story, discussing statements of American followers of Leon Trotsky, exiled war lord, that the "Robinsons i were not connected with the Trotskyist movement, Izvestia said: "It Is noteworthy that American I Trotskyists, somehow Implicated | In this affair, now hasten to cover I up the truces and are denying a i connection." Then Izvestia said: "The ballyhoo concerning the Robinson' couple is a typical example of the sensationalism of ' certain American newspapers, i "The declaration of the state 'department (that the couple oil I tallied their passports fraudulent-1 ly) leaves no doubt, that it is ai question of certain sinister ele I ! ments trying to pass as Ameri I ' cans.” Thus the Implication was not I • only that the "Robinsons" got 1 their passports fraudulently but | that they were not even Ameri-1 cans. There the story ended Who the | couple are. why they came to 1 Russia, how they wore arrested remained a mystery. On November 6, "Donald L. Robinson" and his woman companion "Mrs. Ruth N. Robinson."! arrived in Moscow. The man was 1 represented to be a writer of New ' York City. They did not. like! most American visitors, get into 1 contact with the American embassy and they did not, apparently.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, DECEMBER IC>, 1937.
•lassoclnte with American residents s hero. •I Early last week "Robinson" disi appeared. December S the woman 11 asserted that he had gone to « hospital because he had a fever, ■ and that in the hospital he had ; contacted pneumonia. She seemed i: nervous. Dec. io, she disappeared, 'i r, SIX ARRESTED .-'.CCy.'yi'KD FRny fa as: riNtm ~ wage Increase had been going on . in the central office at New York ■ for a week but that "they have been stalled for four days." He said average wages now being paid were approximately $55 | to SBO a month and that the union . is Insisting upon a 20 percent raise. Company officials hero refused to comment. I Zlttel called together all of the 250 members claimed by the union , in the principal postal office where j a demonstration was held. o COALITION IN OX)NTINU EI> FROs: , AGE ONE) terms. It proposed to revise the capital gains and undistributed profits tax j without reducing revenue; make a i steady approach to a balanced budget; assure just relations between ' capital and labor; discourage tin- ; necessary government competition with private enterprise; promote reasonable returns on investment; maintain the American compet-
‘I ; Homes Find New Ways • To Say “Merry Christmas” 1 _ . c : ' : ■ IyvMWMMIKjyW .. wgKyy £ Ib MR ~ ~ Decorating the outside of a home has become a yearly custom of thousands of families throughout the country.
By Jean Prentice s [HAVE a bag-full of ideas on how to light the exterior of homes for a merrier Christmas. These were garnered all over the country from homes decorated last year. Along about this time cf December the faces of many houses in cities and towns begin to shine with Christmas joy. Decorating of the outside of the bouse has become a yearly treat for hundreds of families. Shrubbery is strung with lights. Window decorations shine out upon new fallen snow, or perhaps upon real poinsettias in balmier climes. Decorations Delight Children Townsfolk in many places make an annual pilgrimage to streets noted for their decorated homes. Cars roll slowly by. In many of these are children peering out in delight. With just the simple use of several floodlights placed in the shrubbery some houses can give an aura of Christmas joy. Evergreens planted in front of a t house are of course a tine background for strings of outdoor lights. These can be given additional sparkle with a silvered Christmas tree placed among them on either side of the doorway. Gables of a house inspire a variety of decorations. At the tip, against the sky, may be built frames outlining a star or_ a Christmas
itive system.. Referring to labor-capital rela-i 1 tions. the manifesto said: "We insist on constitutional: guarantees of the right of persons i and pioperty; the right of tin-, worker to work, or the owner to 1 possession of and of every man to enjoy the fruits of his labor.” Other points of the manifesto dealt with maintenance of credit j “by profitable operation of concerns in which sto< ks are certili cates of interest and bonds evi-| deuce of debt." o— Noland Whitehurst Reported Improved Noland Whitehurst, formerly of, Berne, who sustained a fractured I skull in a Fort Wayne auto acci- ■ dent last week continues to improve , at the Lutheran hospital, where he ' has been confined since the carsh. a 1,500 State Employes To Administer Affairs! Indianapolis, lnd„ Dec. Iti —(UPt j - Indiana's new unemployment compensation act will need 1,50" | employes to administer the affaire , of nearly 750,000 workers in the | state, the Indianapolis chapter of | the national association of cost ac-1 countants was told last night. Clarence A. Jack'son, director of I the Indiana unemployment compen j sation division, told the chapter j that the division would handle I many millions under the new act
Oil Boy! Santa Claus f . ) | will make his annual call A /'J at ’he CASH COAL & SUPPLY Dec. 2A - 2 to 3 p.m. for ail kiddies between the ages of 4 and 11 years. Be Here! Your package will be waiting. Cash Coal & Supply R. A. STUCKEY
tree. Strings of lights are wound around the frames. Front windows, doorway, gables, even a chimney may be strikingly outlined with ropes of laurel and strings of bulbs. By day the laurel supplies a rich green decoration. Bv night it twinkles with light. Symbols Popular One of the symbols of good will to men at Christmastime is a candle in the window. Red electric ones provide safety and tradition as well. Some these come in graduated sizes for the window sill. A trellis can be made a point of beauty with evergreen twined through it and dotted with lights. Even though a house or lawn has no shrubbery, a lighted Christmas tree may be fashioned with strings of lights. Attach these to the top of a pole inserted in the ground. Extend the ropes of light to the ground and stake them in position in Maypole fashion. Many elaborate displays abound each season. Some feature multiplane designs of religious or Santa Claus scenes. These are placed above the doorway or centered in a gable. Some homes sparkle with an originality all their own. Original or not, simple or elaborate, I like the decorated home because it is another way to spread good cheer iu the world.
I which becomes effevtive April 1. 1938. : "We shall be charged with handling approximately $55,000,000 which | does not belong to the state of Indj iana. noi to the employer.'; of the estate, but to the workers ol Indi!ana," Jackson said. o —. RELATIONS BETWEEN j ■’nv’t'iviTn w'rrriS* '• 5 "-F nvn' navy, visited Emperor Hirohito "I today and it was understood that Ibe told the emperor the navy's | version of an attack by Japanese | I navy airplanes on the United | i States gunboat i’auay and three I | Standard Oil steamships. At the foreign office exnerts ; were drafting the second note to j the United States from Japan. Officials refused to discuss j President Roosevelt's requ'St that the emperor be advised that he I was "deeply shocked and concernI ed” by the attack. However, the spokesman said J that there would b - "no difficulty” I lin complying with the requests made in the note of protest sent I from Washington. Most of the I points in tile note had been coverled already, tlfe spokesman said, so | the drafting < f the reply was largely a matter of phraseology. Admiral Recalled Shanghai ,D c. 1(1 (U.R) Rear | Admiral Teiz-i Mitsunami. chief of | aerial operations of the Japanese forces in China, was ordered home I today in Japan’s first move to make renaration for her aviator’’
iittack on the United States gun-| boat I'anay and three Standard Oil steamships. Admiral Mitsunami was ordered to return to Tokyo al once, and it was understood that on hls arrival 1 lie would be removed formally from Ills post, one of the most Im-, portnnt in the entire Japanese I > military set up. The recall of the admiral was! frankly described as u move, the
I ,rad '"9>~rpr«e’°c„ W 1 I niumflßV SQa*'P"**• tow .. ■ jJ j CtTiTkl F 4 • f-Y r - ZZt *On Matfot De Luge models only CHEVROLET MOTOR DIVISION Genera* Motors Safes Corporation, DETROIT, MICHIGAN P. A. Kuhn Chevrolet Co. DECATUR, IND. VORTH 3rd STREET 9 - flminw :g .. • & —and here is the ‘‘perfect” place to buy it. Our store is 5 B tilled with ail that is new and beautiful and at prices that - B y are surprisingly low. I Just A Few Timely Suggestions I I |j? 3-piece 2-piece Living Beautiful Dining Bed Room Suites . Room Suite Room Suites M ’ UM w Newest of construe- A beauty and selling Good selection. Buy M tion. A Real Gift. for only for Christmas. a I $35-®° ss9®® f t rr, Choose From These’ i Cedar Chests (large size) sls Heatrolas $49.00 fl? Lamps, al! kindss3.so up Breakfast Setssl LOO Ip Occasional Tables $5.75 Kitchen Cabinetssl6.oo g End Tables $1.50 g x i 2 Felt Base Rug $4.50 Lounging Chairssls.oo 9x12 Wilton Rugs4s.oo y Occasional Chairsss.so 9x12 Axminster Rug — $22.00 Coil Bed Springss7.oo Large Selection of Other C/; Felt Mattressess6.oo Gifts to select from. | - Open Evenings - | | Stucky &Co | || Monroe, Ind. 6 Miles South
first, In pursuance of the Japanese government's pledge to the United States, in a note on the airplane attack, to punish the men responsible. Tiwn was Interest here on what might happen to any other Individuals who might bo penalized not only' for the Punny attack but for attacks on British warships which have caused in Great Britain anger much hotter than that of
PAGE SEVEN
Americans. . Private Japanese sources say that suicide —the ceremonial Hart Karl, disembowelment with a sword -would be almost automatic for men involved. A Japanese navy spokesman disclosed that some pilots. Involved in previous attacks on foreigners, had been sent home in disgrace and that others had been "otherwise" punished
