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AVERYMARKS R DIESINNEN YORK Rites Today for Former Edi- tor of Washington Times. Avery C. Marks, jr., 48, who, in 1919, became managing editor of the Wash- ington Times only eight years after he entered the news- paper fleld, died yesterday in Lis- ter Hospital, New York. Funeral services are being held in that city this afternoon. Mr. Marks left here for New York in 1928 to become & member of the executive staff of t h e National Broadcasting Co. ‘Three years later he became vice president of Radio Associates, the position he held at the time of his death. Native of Michigan. A native of Michigan, he joined a Grand Rapids paper in 1911. A year later he came to Washington for the Associated Press. He was once presi- dent of the National Press Club. He was chief of the radio division of the President’s Birthday Ball last January and was to have served in the same capacity next year. He was & Mason. In 1914 Mr. Marks married Miss Harriet Ennis of Cambridge, Md., who survives him. Other survivors are his father, Avery C. Marks of Greenville, Mich, and two sisters, Mrs. L. R. Cochran of Norwich, Conn., and Mrs. R. H. Woltjir of Greenville. Funeral Group Named. Avery C. Marks, Jr. The National Press Club named the | the | following members to attend funeral: Dan E. O'Connell, James William Bryan, Mark Foote, Homer Joseph Dodge. Grafton S. Wilcox, J. Irving Belt, Judson C. Welliver, Theodore C. Tiller. Mark L. Goodwin, George K. Shuler, Labert St. Clair. Frederick J. Haskin, Carter Field, Earl Godwin, J. Fred Essary, Ralph A. Collins, Michael W. Flynn, Senator Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan, John O. Williams and A. J. Montgomery. Theodore S. Huntley, William Ran- dolph Hearst, Hal H. Smith, Bascom N. Timmons, Robert B. Armstrong, John H. Craige, Thomas R. Shipp. Gene Buck., Vincent Callahan. Ulric Bell, Henry L. Sweinhart, Sevellon L. | Brown, John Oliver La Gorce, Avon M. Nevius, Harvey L. Cobb, William Atherton Du Puy, Richard M. Boeckel. Lynne M. Lamm, Robert M. Covell and | Frank B. Noyes. . China (Continued Prom First Page.) famed Temple of Heaven while many thousands looked on. At least 25 colleges and middle | schools were represented at the meet- ing at Chienmen Ratlway Station. It was marked by no violence, although | police rounded up several students. JAPAN EXTENDS SWAY. Army Takes Kalgan, Gateway on Great Wall of China. (Copyright. 1935. by the Associated Press.) KALGAN, Chahar Province, China, December 16.—The Japanese Army extended its sway deeper into North China today, incoming troops armed with bayonets and machine guns tak- | ing posts around the railroad station of this interior gateway city on the Great Wall. A virtual state of emergency ex- isted. All city gates were closed. The populace feared an extension of the hostilities in Eastern Chahar to this strategic inland section of the prov- ince. The swift coup by the Japanese apparently gave them control of the vital railway yards here. It accom- panied seizure by armed forces of the Japanese-supported East Hopeh au- tonomus state of Tangku, strategic seaport and railway center 200 miles to the southeast. Chahar Conflict Renewed. Chinese reports said hostilities were renewed in Eastern Chahar Province between Chinese Chahar troops and forces of the Northern, Japanese-ad- vised state of Manchukuo. ‘The occupation of Kalgan and the seizure of Tangku gave Japanese and Japanese-sponsored forces control of both ends of a 200-mile line extend- ing through Chahsr and Hopeh Prov- inces, from Kalgan down through Peiping, ancient capital of China, and Tientsin, important commercial city, to Tangku and the sea. The attackers moved into Tangku, 27 miles east of Tientsin, after a brief battle with the retiring garri- son. A few men were reported killed and wounded on both sides. Assault Timed Carefully. ‘The assault, however, had been timed carefully to take place while the peace reservation corps under Gen. Shang Chen, retiring Chinese governor of Hopeh Province, was being moved south. Japanese soldiers stationed at Tang- ku stood by «during the conflict while their officers undertook mediation be- tween the opposing Chinese camps. Japanese reports said the result was complete withdrawal of Gen. Shang’s forces from Tangku, removing the last elements of central Chinese govern- ment authority. # The seizure of Tangktu followed a — e OTC 2 SPECIAI. Ne¥ICES. AILY TRIPS MOVLii: L AND g.a: to and trom Balto. Aind Now ork Freauent trips fo v dabfe Bervice Since 1808 ° TRANSFER & STORAGE . Depent DAVIDSON ., _phone Decatur 2500. MARR ANNOUNCEMENTS 24 ‘lfn SERVICE. $3.76 UP S 1214 H St. Natl. 8172. \GE HO! ‘WANT RETURN LOAD FROM FLOI or points North Dec. 20 to 23, mnnllllglA. Call Georgia 6431. COLLECTORS. ATTENTION! two _signed P-nnell etchi: age: pendence Hal. Phila.." 1 " rl:hor. “St. Paul's lrm " BX71a .. $12; being_sold for storage patron. STA’ STORAGE O.. 418 Oth st. n.w. ROSSDHU CASTLE RENT NEW YEAR oo, Dol Taae Sror 2 dininy, reoe: ery teasonable. Call District 2850. ORIENTAL RUGS — NEW: APPROX. sizes: Sarouk. 9x12, $175; han, 9x12, $210; _Kerman. 9x12. Mereban, 9x12, $150; Sarouk. 9x15, $325. The a2y “Somparison. 51 Fuss y yourse! <o and prices. STATES STORAGE CO.. 420 i0th st. n.w. > I WISH TO NOTIFY MY PATRONS AND Iriends that I will take over stands of the New Market Pish Co.. ih Convention Hall Market, on December 16. 1935, E. [OMFORDT. . out Representation. your country— by grave emergencies— gress— it now suffers. wharves by the Japanese Army for military purposes. 10 REPORTED KILLED. 15 Also Injured in Clash With Police, Reuters Says. LONDON, December 16 (#).—A Reuters (British) News Agency dis- patch from Peiping said 10 students were killed today and 15 injured in a clash with police during demonstra- tions of protest against the North China autonomy movement. War (Continued From First Page.) “would attack Ethiopian sovereignty and dismember Ethiopian territory in favor of the state (Italy) condemned as an aggressor.” BALDWIN CALLS PARLEY. Confers With Leaders on Course of Peace Plan. (Copyright. 1935, by the Associated Press.) LONDON, December 16.—Stanley Baldwin held an emergency meeting with his ministers today as informed sources disclosed the prime minister was drawing up a counter-attack against critics of the Anglo-French plan for Italo-Ethiopian peace. Anthony Eden, minister for League of Nations affairs; Viscount Monsell, first lord of the admiralty; Alfred Duff.Cooper, secretary of war; Walter Runciman, president of the Board of Trade, and other cabinet members at- tended the session. A full cabinet meeting was ex- pected to be held before Eden leaves tomorrow for Geneva, where the League Council will discuss Wednes- day the proposals for peace. Reminiscent of the anxious days of August and September, just before the East African warfare broke out, a small crowd of curious braved & cold wind and snow flurries to await developments at No. 10 Downing street. Baldwin Presents Problem. Baldwin asked his principal advisers to consider the dilemma facing the government, both domestically and internationally. The first considerations before the By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va,, December 16.— The first arrest ever made here for “ | “jaywalking” under the usually un- TLANTA- | observed State and city law which makes it an offense for pedestrians A DEAL FUNERAL AT B RS THE EVE NING STAR, On December 16, 1773 Our Forefathers Said—Not With Flowers— REPRE- SENTATION This is the 162d anniversary of the Boston Tea Party. What was the Boston Tea Party? It was the American Colonists’ protest against Taxation with- YOU—YOU OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Are subjected to Taxation without Representation—without a voice or a vote in the levying of the taxes which you pay— Without a voice or vote in the making of any of the laws of Without a voice or vote in the vital issue of peace or war when the Republic, as it so often has been in the past, is confronted Without a voice or vote 1n3respect to any issue whatsoever which the rest of the country—the enfranchised citizenry of the United States—has a right to determine at the ballot box. YOU—YOU OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Have a duty—today—now—a duty from which the members af the Boston Tea Party did not shrink— The'duty to voice your demand for National Representation, for the right to have District of Columbia spokesmen in Con- The duty to call for the privilege of participation in the elec- tion of President and Vice President— The duty to ask access to the Federal Courts, access not denied to citizens of the States nor to aliens— The duty to appeal to Congress for a square deal for Wash- ington, for relief from the un-American disability under which HIGHLY RESOLVE This day that the spirit of Boston Tea Party still lives in the disfranchised District of Columbia. dispute over use of certain Tangku | ministers were whether Great Britain should support the peace plan it helped draft with France and how best to still the angry resentment which the government'’s alleged about- face hac stirred up in Great Britain. A secret meeting of the cabinet was expected for tonight, following the return of Sir Samuel Hoare, the foreign secretary by airplane from the continent. Baldwin's meeting with his prin- cipal advisers was preliminary to the cabinet session. The report circulated in London that the meeting of the League of Nations Council, scheduled for Wed- nesday at Geneva, possibly would be postponed until Friday in order to await a report from Premier Mussolini after a meeting of the Fascist Council in Rome. Sensations Expected. Political and diplomatic sources anticipated that the prime minister would make sensational disclosures when the House of Commons debates Britain’s part in the proposals Thurs- day. It had been widely believed that the recent general election, return- ing the government to power,had settled the issue of confidence in Baldwin’s policies. Outbursts against the peace pro- posals approved by his government became sc vehement, however, that the vote after Thursday’s debate was expected generally to turn on a new vote of confidence for the prime minister. “BAD MAN,” 12, CAUGHT Lad With Cap Pistol and Five- Year Court Record Is Held. RALEIGH, N. C., December 16 (#). —Twelve-year-old Milton Haire, jr., & cap-pistol toting bad man with a five year court record, was back in the tolls of the law today. A burglar alarm summoned police to & sporting goods store last night. Milton was inside with a cartridge belt of wooden bullets and a realistic toy revolver strapped about his waist. Outside was Leon Sasser, 11, and he too was taken into custody. Milton’s police record goes back to the time when he was 7 years old and tried to wreck a train by driving a spike between two rails near the Union Station here, Couple Facing “Jaywalking” Charges, First in Alexandria Saturday night, were apprehended by TALWADGEOFFERS “DBLE PROGRAN" Would Have Sabbatical Year for Agriculture—Sees Roosevelt Defeat. BY BLAIR BOLLES. Two blocks from the White House he hinted he might seek to occupy for four years beginning January 20, 1937, Eugene Talmadge, Jeffersonian Democratic Governor of Georgia, yes- terday predicted the downfall of President Roosevelt and offered his own answer to the New Deal in & platfarm he found in the Bible. ‘The Messiah of the deep South, his square jaw jutting and his black forelock falling over his big tortoise- shell spectacles, greeted the press in his. Willard Hotel suite and con- demned the administration as com- munistic, denounced the Townsend old-age pension plan as the summit of hypocrisy and foretold the end of all economic woe in the establishment of a sabbatical year for agriculture along the lines recorded by Moses in the Book of Genesis. The leader of the Southern anti- Roosevelts intimated he would be & candidate for the Democratic nomi- nation in 1936 in the Georgia pri- mary if Georgia has a primary. Before he settled to the business of explaining his politics, the color- ful Talmadge ordered an ice bucket filled with bottles of Georgia's native drink, Coca-Cola, and shok hands warmly with his dark-haired daugh- ter and two of her pretty college friends. Frowns on Third Party. Then he sat down on a Louis XIV sofa and poured forth a stream of homely phrases in answer to a bar- rage of questions. The man who re- fused to attend the ceremonies at- tendant to Mr. Roosevelt's speech in Atlanta, Talmadge's capital city, be- cause he “dislikes hypocrisy,” de- clared, among other things: “We'll be all through this foolish- ness after 1936. “I don't think a third party will solve real issues. I hope the Demo- refusing to renominate Roosevelt and rewrite the platform of 1932 and pick out the Democratic candidates that could carry it. “I'm for the country first, but I like to see the Democrats in power. “I'm opposed to any pension but a soldiers’ pension. “There is more hypocrisy in the Townsend plan than anything ever put before the American people. “I think Huey and I were driving }lor the same results, but we were | going down different sides of the | mountain.” Would he run for the presidency? He replied: “Don’t you think any sane man would consent to run? Did you ever hear of one who wouldn't? But the Jjob is bigger than any fellow's per- sonal wishes. It is a pretty big- sized job to stop the Communistic trends of this country. We have the worst elements of communism. There | are some pretty good elements in Russia, but they haven't crossed the ocean yet."” Stands by Party. Would he vote Republican if Roose- velt were renominated? “A party is a declaration of princi- ples and adherence to those principles. It is not composed of one individual or several individuals. I'm a Jeffer- sonian Democrat. I'm hoping our party will return to that.” nounced he and John Henry Kirby of Houston, Tex., have called a conven- mocracy, known officially as Scuthern Committee to Uphold the | Constitution, for Atlanta the last week | in January. Kirby is chairman of the group. many anti-New Deal delegates to the clared. “Our appeal is to the true Democrats of this country, regardless nf geography. And let Mr. Farley continue to whistle in the dark.” T Governor, best known and per- haps the most colorful politician in the South since the assassination of Huey Long, came to Washington Sat- urday for the Gridiron dinner. Yes- terday he chuckled at the skits rib- bing the New Deal, terming them “marvelous.” them for the benefit of the country at large. Lawyers to Argue Case. He tore the administration's agri- cultural program to shreds during the interview, but said he would let his lawyers argue the case brought to the Supreme Court by Talmadge in the name of the State of Georgia against the Bankhead act, which levies & 6- cent-a-pound tax on all cotton ginned in excess of a Government-set quota. “About all the A. A. A. was started for was to get taxes,” he said. “I think Wallace is after something new now, a manufacturers’ tax. But we'll be all through that foolishness after '36. “I've got a substitute for the A. A. A. It comes from the Bible. It's the sabbatical year—a holiday on cotton. No cotton at all every seven years. The plan would work for all major products. It would teach the people to be provident, to look out for the rainy day, and it would be the death of Townsend plans, old-age pensions, relief, dole, most troubles. The matter with American people today is they are improvident; they make $500 and spend $520. My plan would keep the barns full. The Bible says if this plan is followed the people could raise more in six years than they could in seven, and the benefits would extend over into the eighth and ninth years. “That's my plan. The Townsend- LAWYERS' BRIEFS TING ADAMS BYRON S, A.Xahn Jne. 43 YPARS ¢ 025 P STREET WASHINGTON, D. C, crats will do the courageous thing by | To insure the return, Talmadge an- | tion of the Southern Jeffersonian De- | the | | “We are going to ask the delegates | | to return home and work to send as| 5 matter of course. Smith, who took convention as pocsible,” Talmadge de- | He suggested filming ! MONDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1935. Smile for the Governor Gov. Eugene Talmadge of Georgia shown greeting (left to right) his daughter Margaret and her two college roommates, Joyce Clayton and Mary Ellen Lilly, before he lashed the New Deal at a press conference here yesterday. | ites plan is their business. But I| say the Government can't support the people; the people have to support | the Government. It's not right for & man to loaf around pool rooms and | smoke cigarets until he is 60 and then go on the pension and smoke & pipe and be honorable.” TEST EXPECTED IN GEORGIA. Talmadge and Smith May Enter Pri- mary Next Year. ATLANTA, December 16 (#).—A bal- lot-box test of the New Deal's strength in the cotton country against at least two opposing factions is in prospect through the conditional decision of Gov. Eugene Talmadge to become a presidential candidate in 1936. Bordered by “ifs,” the picture is that of President Roosevelt matched next Spring before Georgia voters against the Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith of the | share-our-wealth movement and Tal- madge, who is particularly hostile to the theory of restricted farm produc- tion. Whether the Talmadge-controlled State Democratic Executive Commit- tee, spurred by vehement minority members, would consent to a presi- | dential preferential primary was one question. | Talmadge announced in Washington | he “probably” would be a candidate | if the committee provided for the| primary. Hugh Howell, chairman of the Ex- | executive Committee and an adviser of | the Governor, commented only that “great pressure is being brought to bear to have the committee select an uninstructed delegation to the Na- tional Democratic Convention.” The committee has power to name an instructed or uninstructed delega- tion of 24 or call a primary to elect delegates to a State assembly, which, in turn, wWould name the representa- tives. Should the primary be held Mr Roosevelt's name would be entered as up direction of Huey P. Long's share- | the-wealth movement after the assas- sination of the Senator, amnounced | several weeks ago he would enter, Plans Airport. Moscow is to have a new airport. Make the world brighter for some one this Christ- mas by giving them a Pair of ETZ glasses. ETZ Optometrists 1217 G St. N.Y. | 1y they intend to do so later. —=Star Staff Photo. Republicans (Continued From First Page) renomination of Mr. Hoover, apparent- They may be waiting until the situation clarifies. Or Mr. Hoover may not be- come a candidate at all. It is an interesting coincidence that Mr. Hoover is making a speech in St. Louis tonight on the date of the meet- ing of the Republican National Con- vention here. This will be the third of Mr. Hoover's major speeches in his present campaign against the Roose- velt New Deal. Vacancies. Are Filled. The committee, quickly organized for | business today, first elected formally | the new members from those States in which resignations or deaths have | removed members of the committee. | Those formally elected today are Daniel F. Field of Maine, former Sen- | ator O. E. Weller of Maryland, Arthur M. Curtis of Missouri, Mrs. Charles | E. Runyon of Oregon, former Senator David A. Reed of Pennsylvania, Sen- ator Jesse H. Metcalf of Rhode Island, Mrs. Jesse F. Cannon of Utah, Ed- ward V. Robinson of Wyoming, Chris- tine Bradley South of Kentucky and Miss Margaret E. White of Alaska. A committee to draft a call for the Republican National Convention was appointed, headed by John Richard- son. national committeeman from Massachusetts. Other members of the committee were Mrs. Grace Semple Burlingham of Missouri, Mrs. Guy P. | I Gannett of Maine, Mrs. Bertha D. Baur of Illinois, Ezra Whitla of Idaho, Mark L. Requa of California, Robert Burroughs of New Hampshire, Joseph L. Crupper of Virginia, Mrs. Cara L. Ebert of West Virginia, Mrs. Horace H. Sayre of Oklahoma, John Hamilton of Kansas and John E. Jackson of Louisiana. Mrs. Worthington Scranton of Christmas Gifts AT Low Prices Guaranteed Electric Heating Pads, spe- b e Guaranteed . El.clril: Irons, complete witl up cord, special 98c Guaranteed Electric Te iters, complete with gsc Guaranteed ironm, special Electric Table Lamp, special ___ Shaving Outfit 25 Double-Edge Blades 1 Tube Bay Ram Shaving Cream 1 Bottle Lotion for After Shaving 1 Bottle Toilet Water 1 Bottle Brilliantine All 35€ for A Great Offer Open Evenings Until § PM. Gibson’s Drug Store Important Collection of Valuable SILVERWARE, DIAMONDS and JEWELRY to be sold at PUBLIC AUCTION Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Dec. 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th, at 1 P.M. Each Day. = 1dree g 1% earats, Perfect Diamond and Modern Rings. SILVERWARE: A Sterling Tea and Sheffield Tea Service, an ”i“' t by 8. Kirk ine C . Entree Sheffie ON EXHIBITION BISHOP OFFICIATES ATGYM'S OPENING Most Rev. John M. McMa- mara Conducts Christ Child Dedication Rites. Most Rev. John M. McNamara, Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore, of- ficlated at dedication exercises yes- terday formally opening the new two- | story gymnasium of the Christ Child | Society’s Settlement House, 608 Massa- | chusetts avenue northeast. Several | hundred persons attended the cere- monies. The dedication marked completion of one of the most modern settle- ment houses in the country, after two | years of effort. Bishop McNamara | blessed each room as he was escorted through the building by a committee representing the Calvert Club. “This building has its foundations in Bethlehem, because the Christ Child said all done for litile ones is dohe for Him,” the bishop said. | About 1,000 boys and girls will use | the gymnasium, which also will serve | as an auditorium. In addition, the | building provides lockers, showers and dressing rooms for girls and boys. Mrs. Arthur P. Mullen, vice presi- | dent of the society and chairman of | the Settlement Committee, presided- at the opening, assisted by a board | of managers and Boy Scout Troop No. 92. Several boxing bouts between the boys and a concert by the Holy Com- forter Boys’ Band were included on the program. e Communist Clash Fatal. BOFIA, Bulgaria, December 16 (#). —One gendarme was killed and two were seriously wounded in a clash with Communists in the village of Gorno-Dremovo_today. i Pennsylvania was appointed chairman | of a committee to draw up resolu- tions in memory of those members | of the committee who died since its last meetng. Another committee, headed by Mrs. Martha McClure of Iowa, was appointed to prepare reso- lutions paying tribute to Mrs. Alvin | T. Hert of Kentucky, who had re- | signed as a member of the committee and as one of its vice chairmen. Chairman Fletcher, when he made the | appointment of the latter committee, | paid tribute to Mrs. Hert. He called | attention to the fact that she served ‘ on the National Committee ever since | women have been given representa- | tion on that committee. Members of the Republican National Committee smiled broadly today when they spoke of Gov. Eugene Talmadge | of Georgia, who has become enemy No. 1 of President Roosevelt and his administration among the Democrats The statement by Gov. Talmadge that he may become a candidate against Roosevelt was music in their ears. Every vote he can take away from Roosevelt, the Republicans will con- sider as an asset to thei Republican candidate for President. A3 PROBE LAUNCHED INTANNER DEATH Autopsy Ordered on Body of Estranged Wife of Po- liceman. An autopsy was to be held at the Morgue today to determined what caused the death of Mrs. Maude Alice Tanner, 45, World War nurse and estranged wife of Policeman Paul E. Tanner of No. 3 precinct. Mrs. Tanner had been dead from 24 to 48 hours when her body was discovered by relatives who went to her home at 4719 Brandywine street yesterday after neighbors reported having seen lights burning constantly in the house for several days. Bruises on Body. The unclothed body lay upon a divan. Bruises on the shoulders and elbows were believed to have resulted from a fall following a stroke. Mrs. Tanner had been under treatment ree cently at Mount Alto Veterans' Hose pital. Several empty liquor bottles were found in the kitchen. Coroner A. Magruder MacDonald said the autopsy today was ordered to determine if death was due to a stroke or to al- coholic poisoning. Neighbors had not seen Mrs. Tanner for several days. She had been estranged from her husband for about a month. The latter was injured in an automobile accident several weeks ago and only Saturday was discharged from a hospital. He spent Saturday night at the home of a fellow police- man. Nephew Calls Police. ‘The neighbors notified Mrs. Tan- ner’s nephew, Kinney E. Baxter, 3224 Wisconsin avenue. With his wife, Baxter went to the home and obtained o response to his knocks. He found several days’ accumulation of mail on the front porch. Baxter sent for a policeman and Pvt. Edward M. Brown of No. 8 pre- cinct responded. The door was forced and the body discovered. Mrs. Tane ner was pronounced dead by a phy= sician who came with an ambulance from Emergency Hospital. Dr. MacDonald said he was cone vinced Mrs. Tanner did not commit suicide. —_— GUILD LEADER NAMED Mrs. Ralph 8. Bubb Choser by Woodside Episcopal Group. Special Dispatch to The Star. WOODSIDE, Md., December 16.— Mrs. Ralph S. Bubb was unanimously elected president of the Woman's Guild of Grace Episcopal Church at the an- nual meeting in the parish house. Other officers elected were Mrs. Hugh Buckingham, vice president; Mrs. Howard P. Bailey, treasurer; Mrs. Marshall Lehman, recording secretary; Mrs. Elmer E. 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