Evening Star Newspaper, March 7, 1935, Page 10

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D. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1935. SIX D. C. CONVICTS |Check™s: e seconan. - = WILL BE PAROLED that such an announcement might handicap them in their effort to read- just themselves outside prison walls. No action has yet been taken by the District Commissioners to fill the vacancy .on the Parole Board ;caused sioner Hazen, who is 1ll, returns to his office. Wilbur La Roe, Jr. is acting as chairman, hands of members of the inventor's THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Diving Robot Capable of Greatest |3 e 5 i Depth Coming to Washington Soon|=5. ., s P A At Lorton today it was said the parole order had not yet been received, but that it is expected before arrange. ments can be made to place the pa- ECONOMIC REVOLT Soviet Orders Doubled. FAVORED BY OLSON Governor Praises Militant Spirit of Minnesota Farm : Marchers. By the Assoclated Press. ST. PAUL, Minn., March 7.—Echoes of & suggestion by Gov. Floyc B. Olson for an “economic revolution” were heard today while several hundred farm aid advocates marched back to their homes. Gov. Olson was called a “prophet” and the “next President of the United States” by Milo Reno of Des Moines, president of the National Farmers’ 3 Holiday Associa- tion, whose Min- nesota branch sponsored a trek by Minnesota farmers to the State house to demand legisla- tive relief for agriculture. Praises Militant Move. Addressing the farm delegation, the Governor yes- terday urged an Gevione: “economic _revo- fution” and praised the “mili- tant farm movement in Minnesota as one that is not talking about the tariff on coconut oil, but about legis- lation,” which prompted Reno to criticize “big business,” the A. A. A. and President Roosevelt. “If President Roosevelt had kept his pledge to the people,” asserted Reno, “we would have been out of this trouble in two weeks. The A. A. A.? It has no more chance to suc- ceed than did Herbert Hoover's Farm Board. The A. A. A. has gone up Salt Creek to keep company with the politicians who were put in charge of the Farm Board.” “I'm not preaching revolution,” Gov. Olson told the farmers, “but I do be- Yeve in economic revolution. Men who brought this country from a mere eolonial possession of a king were all revolutionaries and advocated violence for the purpose of bringing about Tevolution.” “Money Group” Criticized. He criticized the “money group” as using N. R. A as “protection for profit.” “They won't change the sys- tem, but Government can and will change it,” he added. The farmers' chief demands to the legislators were for changes in the tax systems and scaling down of rural credit farm mortgages. Gov. Olson told them the most im- portant measure now before the Legis- lature was an amendment to the Minnesota mortgage moratorium law. ‘The amendment, he said, would permit farmers to pay in kind instead of cash and “would make a partner of the man who holds your mortgage.” B BEARD TO BE ARRAIGNED Motion to Quash Indictment on 14 Is Overruled. Sam Beard and 13 other defend- | gia gots will be arraigned on gaming eharges tomorrow in District Supreme Court before Justice James M. Proc- tor, who yesterday overruled a de- murrer and motion to quash the in-| dictment. Beard and the others were arrested some time ago in a raid at the Mather Building, where a telephone set-up was alleged to be used for race-betting eperations. The defendant con- tended there was nothing to show there was any money placed there. | | BY DON BLOCH. N UNDERSEA robot capable of carrying divers to the greatest depths ever reached by man will be brought to the Washington river front within a few weeks. With the arrival here of this latest scientific device for recovering the sunken treasures of the seven seas, the Capital will become headquarters for what is tentatively known as the Submarine Engineering & Salvage Corp., and according to present plans will be made the starting point for the world-wide salvaging of treasure ships. This information comes from Lieut. Harry E. Rieseberg, formerly with the United States Bureau of Navigation and Steamship Inspection, and an in- ternational authority on sunken treasure, who will be treasurer and re- search engineer of the corporation. The metal monster weighing 1,400 pounds has been built to withstand depths beyond the 3,028-foot record dive of William Beebe’s “bathysphere.” It has 9-foot hydropneumatic tog- | gle-jointed arms which can lift a half ton or a dime and are so| sensitively controlled that a man in- side has successfully played a game of bridge under water and driven a | tiny nail. Picks Up All @bjects. With these arms the diver is en- abled to pick up large or small ob- jects from the sea bottom, a faector heretofore impractical in salvage op- erations, make a loop in a cable and lift heavier objects like & powerful nt. “Searchlights outside the sphere en- | able the diver to see as far as 100 feet in any direction, and as the robot is readily mobile it can move -about at will under the sea. | Oxygen is supplied by an appara- | tus inside the sphere. which, together | with an air purifier, make it possible for a diver to stay below fn it for. 16 _hours. For the past several years Riese- berg has made studies of the history and location’ of a great number of penitibath i —————————— R ——— sunken ships bearing treasures of jewels, gold and silver bullion. His international reputation in this unique fleld has been summed up in the newspaper supplements from coast to coast and in the national magazines in which his articles have appeared, as the man who “has charted the caches of more sunken treasure than any man in the world.” ‘Two years ago when Rieseberg was completing the manuscript of his book, “Cracking Davy Jones' Treasure Vaults,” information as to its un- usual contents leaked out. He was at once besieged by engineers, finan- ciers and adventurers in a flood of correspondence from all ‘over the world. Salvage Plans Evolved. At that time an obscure inventor in the State of Washington was per- fecting a new type of diving sphere for ordinary salvage work. He read about Rieseberg, and saw possibilities with his equipment. He got in touch with the Bureau of Navigation man in Washington and the two became in- terested. Eventually tentative plans were evolved for salvaging treasure ships in all parts of the world. Then the inventor died and the subsea machine was tossed into a sea of litigation. It | in Delaware with a capital stock of $1,500,000, with headquarters in Washington. The robot, which has already been tested, inspected and ap- proved in the State of Washington by naval officials and others, will be brought with full equipment to a dock on _the Potomac water front. Capt. Mayo of the 13th Naval Dis- trict and Lieut. D. A. Frost, ingelli- gence officer, are quoted in Seattle, Wash., newspapers as saying the new diving bell possibly constitutes “the greatest single stride forward ever made in deep-sea operation and’ as revolutionary in its element as the airplane was in the air.” The new deep-water robot has been patented in 14 countries and has been investigated by naval officials of the governments of Sweden, Italy, France, Argentina and jhe United States. Lieut. Rieseberg is at present work- ing on a comprehensive chart for use of the company, upon which is exactly located the position of 87 of the major sunken treasure vessels in the world's seas. A total of $1,663,862 in gems and bullion went down in the holds of these vessels alone. 311 7th St. N.W. more meat t| our prices with what you are Chicago Nut Oelo. .. .1b. 17¢ BACON No. 2 cans Tomatoes, No. 2 cans Peas.... 3 for zse CHEESE Fane: An STEAK :29c PRIME RIB ROLLED. ROLLED BOUILLON. . Fruit Cocktail No.2ean 15¢ ————— Refined in U. 8. A.—Cloth Bags. A GOOD BUY AND A HEN you come here you are @ssured of both, Where eise ean you get such a cheerful outside room with R.C.A. radio, such friendly service, such @ good ad- dress, for aslittieas $2¢ And we're fust @ step from all the interesting things in New York . . . shops, theatres, night clubs . . . we'll be glad to plan your frip for you ot no extra charge. MODERATE RATES ~ Singles — $2 to $2.50 with bath Doubles —$3 10 $4.00 “ Singles without bath — $1.78 Ask Travel Agent for litere- e s s SUGAR....10 . 48c ELR Aol i o, O oottt b IT PAYS TO SHOP DOWNTOWN Fresh stock, fast turnover, small profit—that is why we sell han any one meat market in Washington. CREAMERY BUTTER *~ 37¢ Ty, Machine 3 3 Rindless, Sliced 33¢ Ib. Mild or Semi-sharp Cheese, 1ic pks. FRESH BEEF HAMBURGER ... .... ... 15¢ Choice Sirloin SLICED STEER LIVER . Board Rejects Two-Thirds of Ap- plications From Lorton at Hearings. A half dozen District convicts were ordered released on parole by the Dis- trict Parole Board after a series of hearings at Lorton Reformatory, it was learned yesterday. ° The board considered the applica- tions of 18 men who had been de- clared eligible for conditional freedom, Rug Beauty Our Duty Call Mr. Pyle Nat. 3257-3291-2036 Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Ind. Ave. N.W. 3146 M St. N.W. Compare paying and note the difference. 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