Evening Star Newspaper, October 28, 1937, Page 47

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1937. 36,000 WORKERS TO GET | tertay by W. 8. Furih, prosient. - Last year the company made a sim- British Withdrawal Held Aim Of Repeated Japanese Attacks Mme. Chiang Declares Invaders Then Would Have Unre Smash Chinese By MME. CHIANG KAI-SHEK, Wife of the Chinese Generalissimo. NANKING, Oct. 28.—Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and I are convinced that these Japanese attacks on the British settlement are carefully pre- meditated and are inspired by the Jap- anese general staff in an effort to influence the withdrawal of all foreign forces from their various settlements. If this were accomplished the Jap- fnese would have unrestricted freedom to smash through the Chinese lines at Shanghai. I have reason to be- lieve that these attacks against the foreign settlements, and the troops quartered therein, will be repeated | until the Japanese discover that this | effort is abortive. Vietory Ordered by October 30. T also am able to reveal that the Japanese have no intention of par- ticipating in any negotiations with China until they are victorious at Shanghai, and that the Japanese gen- eral staff has issued orders from Tokio to drive the Chinest forces out of Shanghai before October 30. These orders have followed their | very dramatic efforts to prove to the | world that gas shells are being used by the Chinese Army against them. My husband asks me to state em- phatically that no gas shells are in our possession. Even if we wished to use them we do not have any at hand. The shells which the Japanese claim | We used against them are not from | Chinese sources and were not used by Chinese troops. Their failure to con- vince the world that we also are us- ing gas shells is now causing the| Japanese to hesitate in using gas shells | ference. Today we have received the opinion of military experts from Eu- rope, who are studying strategy for us, that the resistance offered Japan by the Chinese forces is & complete surprise to the Japanese general staff | &t Tokio. It becomes increasingly ob- vious that Japanese plans for this in- vasion have been carefully made over many years and have been completely miscarried. The Japanese general staff has greatly underrated the efficiency of the Chinese forces. In view of the gpirit of our troops and the material we have at hand, their present efforts seem totally inadequate to achieve this Japanese victory. The Japanese expected to seize Shanghai very easily under the cover of their naval guns. This stubborn resistance by the Chinese forces was unanticipated The greatest surprise that the Jap- anese have suffered so0 far has been the brilliant showing of my air force, which they believed was ® negligible quantity. They did not appreciate that our airmen have been trained stricted Path to at Shanghai. by the world's greatest aerial experts. Today the Chinese air force rapidly turned the tables against the Japanese airmen who were attempting to carry the war into the Chinese camp. (Copyright, 1937.) GIRL’S BROTHER-IN-LAW ACCUSED OF BEATING 12-Year-0ld Pupil's Wrist Broken. Tells of Being Struck by Board. By the Associated Press. SUTTON, W. Vp, Oct. 28.—A few hours after 12-year-old Irene Lemon | was taken to a hospital for treatment of & broken arm and body bruises, Magistrate Will F. Davis issued a war- rant yesterday charging her brother- in-law, Garland Six, about 25, with felonious assault. The warrant was sworn to by Ernest Harris, principal of the Sutton Graded School, who said the girl told him she was placed over & log yesterday morn- ing and beaten with a board paddle. Mr. Harris said Irene came to school on the bus with her three younger brothers and was scarcely able to walk into the building. Dr. Earl Fisher said the girl had a fractured bone in the left wrist and was bruised about the back and legs. Garland Six is a tenant farmer. Production of cellulose 1s rapidly | increasing in Austria. BONUS OF $4,000,000 Standard Oil of New Jersey to Credit Thrift Accounts With $50 or More. By the Associated Press. NEW. YORK, Oct. 28.—A distribu- tion of $4,000,000 out of earnings of the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey to 36,000 eligi sle employes in the form of credits to their accounts in the com- pany's thrift plan was announced yes- ) THB PERFUME OF THE DANCE Do you like to discover perfumes? Wear "Ls Vertige''| This heady Coty fragrance strikes an exciting new tempo! Presented in deep-cut crystal —it makes an incomparable gift. At $35, $18.50, $10. themselves, but they are using every| other desperate means to achieve vic- tory over us before the Nine-Power ‘Treaty Conference. Chinese Resistance & Surprise. If they are able to complete the| subjection of Shanghai, t hen they | will refuse to acknowledge this con- says 500-Mile Spe ilar special deposit in the employes’ fund amounting to $2,500,000. All domestic employes with a year's service, regardiess of. their participa- tion in the thrift plan, will receive a minimum credit of $50, the announce- ment stated. An additional contribu- tion for the benefit of each partic- ipant in the plan, equivalent to 22 per cent of his own and thg company's contributions during the period from November 1, 1936, to October 31, 1937, will be made. ‘The plan took the place of & former pension and stock acquisition program., ¢ ) has the stuff it takes!” edway’s 1937 Winner, WILBUR SHAW, famed as a Great American Car Designer! @ You'll get a friendly lift from this warm, tasty break- fast! It's rich in food energy, rich in flavor, yet costs only % cent per serving! Everyone, young and old, needs a daily supply of the precious Vitamin B, so rich in Quaker Oats, to com- bat nervousness, constipa- tion and poor appetite! Order either 24 minute quick-cooking or regular Quaker Oats. WITH NATORES wramin B! % |MPORTANT! AC | N.’ Maél this coupon before our supply of lamps is exhausted! SPRY, Cambridge, Mass., Dept. LD 178 Enclosed are 50¢ in coin and the cardboard disc from the top of a Spry can. Please send me the beautiful electric table lamp shown above, complete with silk cord and plug. IMPORTANT: To insure safe mailing, fold the Spry cardboard disc tightly around coin before inserting in envelope. D s csmsessiies R R S IR State....... 27 R PR ST P = ) L e ——— e D > > P e o e D b e = S - - FOR 'HIS amazing offer is too good to miss! A beautiful electric table lamp—12 inches high! Designed in neutral tones that harmonize perfectly with any of your rooms, no matter what the color scheme. The base isthelatest —a sphere onamod- ernistic pedestal. You'll love the soft ivory-and-taupe finish, with rich gold band. Your friends will admire the smart parchment type shade with its sheepskin finish. It’s bound in taupe braid and dec- orated with flowers. It won’t tilt THIS LOVELY 250 L FLECTRIC TABLE LAMP 0//175 0 f . =and the cardboard disc from the top of a Spry can either. A novel tripod holder keeps it firmly in place. What’s more, it scientifically throws the light down soasto avoid eye strain, This lamp would sell as high as $2.50 in 2 high-class gift shop. And here’s your chance to get it for only 50¢ and the card- board disc from a Spry can (any size). Frankly, this amazing of- fer is made to introduce you to Spry, the new, purer ALL-vege- table shortening. Don’t delay! Order Spry and send for this beautiful lamp now. This offer good for a limited time only. Compare Spry with any other shortening. See how much easier Spry creams. Notice the extra lightness and fine flavor of your cakes. See how much more tender and flaky your pastry is. Fry with Spry. Foods are crisper, tastier, so digestible a child can eat them and no smoke or frying odor. Spry keeps fresh without refrigeration, too. Get Spry today. pry The new, purer ALL-vegetable shortening= TRIPLE-CREAMED! It takes 12 people to make you a perfect cup of coffee - ® P kd The skilled reaster who de- 11 Thevacuumpacker,who has the justly fa- mous coffee flavor * high-vacuumsealed within 20 minutes after roasting. velops the celebrated flavor and aroma; work- ing to within exact min- utes of time and exact de- grees of temperature and coldor. All ; ecked again o and again by..« ¢ng eup-tester who now constantly tests here. Checked by S hourly granulation individual roasts for sampies special skill and knowledge bring the valuable coffee cargo thousands of miles to port in the best of condition. 13 The grecer. A man of good judgment who offers you a coffee whose flavor is the glory of hund of years of coffee de- velopment. The grinder. A me- ticulous process a The Beech-Nut buyer who thoroughly checks each lot of green coffee for ab- solute uniformity, 3 The cup-tester who ° checks the blend the ceffes chemist. Ever; (uniformity, you day he assembles cof- sece). charts, watches to seeif a fine coffee can. © notbemadeeven finer, form so many of the hand operations on those precious berries. The planter, whose high altitude soil alone yields that mellow mountain- flavor. [3 ch-Nut blender subtle blending with a large proportion of mountain coffee be- gins the actual flavor DCC making process. ch-Nut Ouwes its flavor to itsextra large portion of mountain beans from ““the mellow favor belt.” Your first taste will tell, . IN TWO GRINDS DRIP GRIND~For all drip and glass coffee makers. REGULAR GRIND (Stesl Cat) —for percolator and coffee pot. REASONABLY PRICED VACUUM-PACKED —FRESHI

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