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"R—16 AGTION IS URGED IN CHINA KILLINGS Japanese Army Officials Convinced “Drastic Meas- ures” Must Be Taken. By the Assoctated Press. TOKIO, September 10.—Japanese Army officials asserted their conviction today the government must take *drastic measures” to settle killing of Japanese nationals in China. “Unless China is made to realize the real situation and sincerely seek better relations with Japan, she must expect & repetition of such incidents,” a war office statement said. The incidents referred to the slaying of two Japanese by a mob at Chengtu and the reported killing of another at Pakhol. (The Japanese government had al- e o Preasa (o wimatam, living, to present um. The interview—arranged by tele- phone between rebel and government commanders—took place inside carriage gate of the fortress. Rojo, without arms, approached the gate as government buglers signaled to the rebels. ) Once inside, he was bound and & handkerchief tied over his eyes so he could not see what damage the Socialist bombardment had done to the fortress-camp. Rojo was then led further inside and allowed to stop. Knowing that many of his former schoolmates were among the rebels, he called them by name. None answered. Mascarron eventually introduced himself and the parley began. The talk over, Fascist guards led Rojo back to the gate, rebel buglers gave the signal, and the major was released. Once the government officer was out of range, Socialist militiamen be- gan & deadly rain of hand grenades and dynamite into the fortress from nearby positions. Artillery took up the fire and for three hours the Alcazar was shaken by explosions. Then the bombard- the | Fascist Fascist THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10. 1936.° ment was halted for lunch and & siesta. Suddenly, three rebel bombing planes appeared over Toledo. The fiyers dropped eight bombe, killed 4 persons and injured 30 more, The air raid continued out- side the city in the western section. MOORISH REBELS REPULSED, Victories Are Claimed by Government About Madrid. BY the Assoclated Press. MADRID, September 10.—Govern- ment militiamen at Montoro, in Anda- lusia, repulsed an attack by Moorish rebels, killing 22 of the insurgents, the war ministry reported today. Capture of the towns of and San Roman, in the Talavera de la Reina sector in Toledo Province, also was claimed. The ministry declared s Fascist air- plane was brought down by govern- ment maching gunners near Avila. The ship was burned and all occu- pants killed. Aerial and artillery bombardment of Oviedo, in the northwest, contin- ued, the report added, while residents of Galicia were sald to be offering serious resistance to rebel advances. A column of government troops operating in Zargosa Province was reported by Col. Dias Sandino, So- clalist commander, to have surrounded two companies of rebels which started out from Puentes de Ebro. While the rebel headquarters was being destroyed by an artillery bom- bardment, the government militiamen launched & flerce attack against the Pascists and encircled the insurgents, halting both an advance and retreat. ‘The rebel companies were taken prisoner during the engagement, in which four rebel officers were killed, together with one government soldier. Five thousand fresh Socialist fight- ers arrived in the capital from Va- lencia and Catalonis and were imme- diately assigned to the Talavers sector, where fighting was reported heavy. NEW GOVERNMENT ADVOCATED. Extremist Leader Dissatisfied With Madrid Rule. (Copyright, 1036, by the Associsted Press.) by Antonio Moreno, acting general secretary of the Workers' Confedera- | i§ tion, who reads gas meters for & living. He described the Socialist tion of Self-governing Libertarian Communes”™: Free love, abolition of private prop- erty, abolition of the state, abolition of the principle of suthority, nationali- sation of wealth and all productive govern- ment in Madrid as “s pack of fools” | and outlined these principal points for his proposed “Iberian Confedera- activity and confiscation of super- fluous clothes and household goods. Moreno asserted members of his Extremist National Confederation of Labor were deeply dissatisfied with the “timid policy” of the Madrid adminis- NI A I v Lfl'kImA INL. M) TOCK YOUR o\’ SHELVES A Here's good news for the returning folks who find an empty cupboard—wholesome foods for the {gung children just returning to school—special values in items to assist in Fall houseclean- § g. All over the store you'll find many values. It's wise to buy American, * ““Where Quality Counts and Your Money Goes Furthest” tration. To his statement he added this blunt threat: “Henceforth we will hold the gove ernment directly responsible for any- thing that happens if it tries to place obstacles in our path.” N N NORFOLK OLD POINT COMFORT, $3' :.9 N Nightly 6:30 Way / / Two hundred miles each way via Potomae River \\_ and Chesapeake Bay. Surf bathing, fishing, rid- L ing, golf, tennis . . . all outdoor % molflx! HDMV. IA'hc:lmv @ SOUNDPROOF Mlu':'lill sports. Make reservations early. entral Airlines ofter it time-saving air ico between Washington, Pittsburgh, Akron, Cleveland, and Detroit. Dellehitnt ,:'.':,‘_l" Staferostns Cleveland _145Min. PHONE NATIONAL 2171 istri i i i 3 . N. W Chicago --41-3 Hrs, District Traffic Manager, City T tl;'ex'o‘lslzl;e_‘;:unl&l: N. W. ready begun an investigation of the Pakhol incident, sending two destroy- ers to Chinese waters to guard its nationals.) ‘Without specifically mentioning the Kuomintang, the Chinese Nationalist party, the statement assailed bitterly Chinese policies toward Japan since the Nationalist revolution in China in 1926. (Japanese extremists have been urging the Tokio government to de- mand dissolution of the Kuomintang as a part of the settlement of the FINE FLAVORED COOKED 'Corned Beef & 19° 4SC0' GELATINE FARMDALE EVAP. PRINCESS Desserts || MILK ||COCOA 9c No. 1 1 can Charles E. Shoemaker, Jr, Chengtu and Pakhoi affairs.) The newspaper Yomiuri declared the *Tokio government intends to demand that Nanking dismiss all officials con- nected with anti-Japanese movements, especially those favoring Sino-Russian friendship. The foreign office declined to confirm this statement. Spain _(Continued From First Page.) to the gates of San Sebastian, were reported turning their entire atten- tion today to the projected assault on Madrid. Insurgent commanders, who appar- ently agreed to an unofficial armi- stice in the advance on this resort city, were represented as believing sub- jugation of the major government posts on the coast was “as good as achieved.” San Sebastian was quiet for two Feasons: The rebels drew up short in their march on the city and Basque Na- tionalists inside took over municipal control with a strong hand. The Basques deported many anarchist sol- diers who sought to destroy the re- sort rather than let it fall to the enemy. The armistice, for which neither gide would acknowledge responsibility, terminated temporarily a long siege featured by steady advances by rebels through surrounding territory and dissensions among government de- fenders opposing the Faskcist assaults. All firing on both sides ceased. The key to the armistice apparently lay in a declaration by Municipal Gov. Antonio Ortega: “I disapprove thoroughly of the action of anarchists at Irun (which was sacked and burned during cap- ture by the rebels). There will be no burning of San Sebastian while I am alive.” The insurgents previously had re- fused an offer to negotiate a truce, and possibly surrender, extended for Gov. Ortega by his son. Despite the cessation of hostilities, more refugees fled San Sebastian in boats, bringing the total number of departing residents to approximately 40,000. The departures were coun- tered by the arrival of 25,000 refugees from the Irun area during the last days of fighting. Harmony in the government ranks inside the city was brought with the arrival of 500 armed Basques from Bilboa. They were greeted by an- archist commanders who told them they would be sent to the front line defenses at once. Their reply was curt: “We do not come to take orders, but to give them.” ‘The Basques took over police duties in the municipality, dispatched 625 Fascist hostages to Bilbao and or- dered all anarchists and other mil- itiamen whose defense plans might result in harm to the city, to proceed to the front. g ALCAZAR HOLDS OUT. Rebel Leader Defiant Over Demand to Surrender. ACopyright, 1936, by the Associated Press.) TOLEDO, Spain, September 10.— With supreme courage and icy calm, Col. Jose Mascarron, commander of voluntarily imprisoned rebels in the besieged Alcazar, refused a govern- ment demand to surrender today. “With Gen. Emilio Mola (rebel leader) at the gates of Madrid, you will be the ones to surrender,” Ma%- carron told a blind-folded Socialist officer who walked into the rebel camp to present the ultimatum. With the curt phrase: “Whatever befalls me and my men shall befall us all,” Mascarron dismissed & further request to release from the Alcazar the hundreds of women and children who have camped inside the shattered walls of the fortress for the last 51 days. The government promised safe conduct for the non-combatants. As an afterthought, Col. Mascar- Ton added: “You can send us a priest in case We need last sacraments.” Maj. Juan Rojo, staff officer of the government forces, braved the danger ©of possible death inside the Alcazar, Save Money on Small Lots of LUMBER For Any Repairs Fix up your basement, attic or | the porch now, before cold weather. Buy materials in any quantity you aeed now at real savings. Why not look around and see what materials you need for repairs? Bring your list to us for an estimate. Free Delivery 2121 Ga. 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