Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“I feel” he said, “that Congress | vy Department should | possible for the pro- tection of the men aboard the sub- .1 have been thinking of nts such as befell the unfor- {tunate S-4. 1f there had been some |sort of approved device so that | : O 3]] | those men left alive might have | Congress, at Next Session Will nce sn ject aiwve misne | | have come to the surface, those in SAFETY DEVICES -~ FOR SUBS SOUGHT m 0“[ Q“wuon the compartment not jammed | might have been saved. | e ‘L vealize,” Mr. Britten said, | ot S s | “that in order to employ some of | AWashington Correspondent, the types of safety devices that | Washington, D. C., Aug. roblem of equipping bl been presented to me for my iformation we would have to have Bubmarines with adequate ja very large submarine to carry Uevices will be threshed out finally | them in addition to the othey | during the short sion of con- | equipment.” | gress which convenes in Decemiber.| The essential elements of safety | This prediction was made here by in submarines was stressed by Rep. members of the naval aff resentatiy s com- Anthony J. Griffin of | mittees of the senate and house New Yo He outlined these ele- Whose interest in the problem has|ments as follows: | been stirred by the feat of the| 1. A double hul | Malians in raising the ¥-14 from| 2. Dividing of the interior into 131 feet of water in 34 hour compartments, “I am thoroughly counvinced that — $. A drop Keel, a releasalle false | the S-4 was sunk and 40 precious keel | lives lost through the gross neglect | 4 The telephone and signal | Bnd stupidity of those directing our | PUOY 10 indicate location of a sub- | naval strateg Senator [Edwards of New Je the senate naval Edward 1. member of committe marine that has met with disaster. | H Grappling rings or eyve-bolts | to facilitate the raising of the ves- | declared. el = 1 believe that the navy was lack- | 9 Sulvage vessels equipped with | Ing in progressiveness in not having 11VINg itus, cranes, and suit- | the same means that the Italian |*"® D2 rnalia to render quick | government has to quickly raise | SSStance. | submarines that go to the bottom, | M- Griffin says practically an| “It is the duty of the senate rm!\-‘;”h';';:””“ ire constructed on the mittee on naval affairs to take up |, . kol principle, with double hulls and fitted with compartments, | He says “no invention of any mo- | ment has ever cvolved out of the | and I believe that committce will hore G I;:ps,}:"’f}?m»‘ B0 duto e whisle | sanieot sy e ol o BT AVIAton. the v inkas December session.” | : Predicts Action Senator Robert B. Howell of \ISOUTH m]s ; braska, also a member of the sen- | willing to make a comparison be- this subject at the coming session, to require every safeguard for the men that go out in the submarines tween the raising of the S-4 and th ——— F-14 but predicted that congress| shot and Killed in Street by As- will do whatever is nec to Pprovide for emergoncic m\yl sallant Who Flees in department and congress are keen- | Automobile. 1y alive to the possibilities and dan- | Eers and some action should be| gou Bend, Ind., Aug. 14 @) — | taken during the coming NS Tl M | Sy s. Lillic Mae Carmean, 33, a fac- Before leaving Washington « for Berlin to attend the session, tory worker, was shot to death by | Interparlia- an unknown man in a mysterious mentary conference, Representative laying here yesterday afternoon. | Fred A. Britten of 1llinois, Chair- Although Mps, armean was shot | FE BL the Mause MNevel APMR|tonr times on ®iie of the principal Commiittee, declared that Congress streets of the city, police could find no witnesses to the slaying and both Mrs, Carmcan and her assail- |ant were unidentified for some time, | Although they did not witness the local business men D Tr——— shooting, two BALM fllllCKlY said they saw a man carrying a |revolver jump into an automobile | REUEVED MY land speed away immediately after —— they had heard several shots. The liccnse plates on the machine were issued to Austin Pavy of South |Bend. Police had been unable to [locate Pavy toa. The body of Mrs. Carmean, left Iving in the street by her assailant, | “Last week-end we went down to the shore. We | Was not identified until last night. | spent practically all day in bathing suits, andas | Hearing a description of the body we were not used {piit, you can imagine the ter- | being broadcast over radio station rific sunburn we got. By the time we got home | WSBT of the South Bend Tribune, | Iate Sunday night, we were in agony—(aces, |a former neighbor of the Carmeans | shoulders, neck, arms and legs, red and almost | rav, and 80 tender to touch them was agony. We just dove for the Rabalm jar, and believe me, ‘We were never more grateful for anything in our lives. 1t seemed o help the moment it touched the skin. It was 5o soothing that long before morning we were ablc to get some sleep, and |induced Mr. Carmean to go to the | |police morgue where he identified now, three days later, my skin is in & normal eondition again.” Bhould act promptly in secing that ‘our submarines are adequately safe- Buarded. the body as that of his wife. Carmean told police he had no |trouble with his wife and said that |she was happy when she left for | work yesterday morning. He denicd | knowing anything about how or | why she met her death. Police in- | Rabalm requires no painful rubbing in. Just |dicated they would question him | #mooth on lightly. Quickly relieves pain and re- | further, | Stores skin to normal condition. Will not stsin | Three of the bullets entered the | linen. Pleasantly fragrant. Two sizes, 50-cents | Jeft breast of the woman. The | snd $1.00 containing 3 times as much. RA- BALM is for sale by ail druggi |fourth struck her in the left arm. | | keep fit { gram for their care, | pas | Special refrigeration has been in- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1928, Cold Shower Baths to Keep Dogs In Condition on Byrd’s Expedition Elaborate precautions are being taken by Dr. David E. Buckingham, (Inset) veterinarian on the Byrd Antarctic expedition, to keep the party's | dogs in good shape. Cold shower baths will protect them from the heat | they will pass through, Above is a group of huskies being trained for | the South Pole trip, Washington, Aug. 14 (®—Cold ! medicine from 1908 to 1918, and Br- shower baths and cod liver oil are|Eanized and headed the board of expected fo| VEteTINATY medical examiners of B {the District of Columbla. He re- the dogs that will haul \gards the Byrd assignment as the | Comm. Richard E. Byrd and his| most interesting of his carecr. | expedition over antarctic snows. Dr. David E. Buckinham, Wash-|London Women Called ington veterinarian, will ot the H ir huskics for the Byrd sleds and he| yoooo It\‘ugPOllce o hus miapned oub s elahorate pro-{y, 0 O S8 S € (Feiemen |revigion of regulations governing | the action of police and public pros- ecutors, | Strong feminine complaints were made when no woman was given a place on the commission which in- | vestigated Scotland d's conduct |of the case involving Sir Leo Money | and Miss Irene Savidge. As a result | /two were name on the commission | which is to investigate the police powers in general. They are Dame | Meriel Talbot, intelligence officer of the overseas settlement department | of the government, and Miss Mar- | garet Beavan, lord mayoress of Li erpool. two things that are The big-muscled, heavy-coated, hot-blooded dogs will step into their own private shower baths, of wa ter cooled to 60 and 70 degrees, they near the equator, and when g through torrid weather, Dogs of the type needed, s the veterinarian, have a normal high temperature. Nature has made them hot-blooded to withstand the rigors of the northland. When they get into a hot climate they suffer | intensely and many contract brain | feve The cold showers will keep them fit, Dr. Buckingham says. | stalled on the §. 8. Larsen, the | whaler on which the journey will be made. Cod liver oil, the same kind thar | anxious mothers give children, win | be poured over the dogs’ biscuits | when they reach the antarctic where the nights are months lo. The extra vitamins in tne oi wi be needed to keep cheerful and healthy, rian says. Piles Go Quick Without Salves or Cutting Thousands who have piles have nat learned that quick and perma- the huskics | nent relief can only be accomplished the veterina- | with internal medicine. Neither cut- | |ting nor any amount of treatment | The lead dog will be Chinook, a|with ointments and suppositories | veteran of the cold snows, and will remove the cau many of his progeny will be among | Bad circulation causes piles. There the othiers. Dr. Buckinham will [is a complete stugnation of blood in select most of the dogs in Canada |the lower bowel and a weakening of Arthur T. Walden, owner of Chi-|the parts. Dr.J. §. Leonhardt found nook, will be in charge of them on |the remedy and called his prescrip- | the expedition, | tion HEM-ROID. He tried it in 1000 | The dogs, to get into the Byrd jcases with the marvelous reford of | party must weigh hetween 50 and |success in 96 per cent and now it is 75 pounds. They will be gathered [sold by druggists everswnere under at Clark City, Canada, in Septem- la rigid money-back guarantee. ter and taken overland to the west! Don't waste any more time with coast where they will embark on | outside applications. Get a package the Larsen at San Pedro, Calif., in |of HEM-ROID from Fair Drug Dept. | October. |today. It has given safe and last- Dr. Buckingham organized and |ing relief to thousands and will do was dean of the George Washing- |the same for you, or costs you noth- ton University college of veterinary |ing. e S ez 14 (A—Women| opsiruction of i ot R MANCHURIAN 1SSUE FAR FROM SETTLED Williamstown Institute Hears of This Problem Williamstown, Mass., Aug. 14 (®— The present controversy over Man- churia between Japan and the Na- tionalist government of China event. ually will mean a reopening of sino- Japanese relations since 1896, G. Bronson Rea, pubiisher of the Far Lastern Review of Shanghai, told a | round table group at the Institute of | Politics teday. “The simply this, treati were luress, Manchuriapr problem s " Mr. Rea said, “the 1925 invalid because they xtracted and signed under The question was fully | threshed out at the Washington con- ference, where Japan refused to ad- mit the Chinese contention and China reserved to herself the right to rcopen the issue on all future ap- propriate occasions. On the expira- tion of the original Laiotung lease in 1923, China officially notified Japan to get out and early this year she again protested agaiust the proposed Morgan loan to the South Manchuria rallway on the ground that the 1915 treaty was invalid. A very clear cut issue therefore exists. “If the 1915 treaties are null and void, Japan's rights in Manchuria are therefore determined by the terms of the Portsmouth peace treaty. If China’s contention be conceded then Japan, in order to safeguard rights, will be compelled to go be- hind the Portsmouth treaty and re- mind China of her secret alliance with Russia in 1896 which provoked the Russo-Japanese war. Under the terms of this treaty aimed at Japan, Chir secret handed over her territory to Russia for the military raflways that would facilitate the transport of the Russian armies to the men- aced points on the Korean frontier. - - _— e . . — her | The treaty was faithfully carried out on the part of China. Its duration was for 15 years and was in force at the time of the Russo-Japanese VAST SECTION OF lages and from the populous towns of the Indus valley of the Punjab and to give the warning. Sometime ago bazaars and hospitals in towns war. Owing to the profound secrecy along the river were ordered aban- surrounding its existence, Japan doned. fought the war and went to Ports- 8Sir Francis Younghusband, ex- — mouth in complete ignorance of its terms, “‘China came out of the war as the innocent and injured victim and es- caped paying any indemnity for her part in bringing it about. At the Washington conference ten years after the expiration of the treaty, China, for the first time, officially ad- mitted its existence and filed a copy of the text with the secretary of state, “There is no statute of limitations to the acts of a nation. When China officially confessed that the treaty had existed and that she had faith- fully complied with her part of the bargain, she became even at that late date liable for any just reparation that Japan might demand. In re- fusing to recognize the validity of the 1915 treaties China therefore invites a reopening of the whole Manchur- ian question based on her confession at Washington. “It is impossible to understand the Japanese viewpoint, unless the bear- ing of this secret treaty on her po- sition in Manchurla is kept in mind.” COMMITS SUICIDE Webster, Mass, Aug. 14 (P— Charles Watson, 68, for the past 35 years baggagemaster on the South- plorer and former British resident in Kashmir, said the site of the ice dam 140 miles north of Leh is al- most inaccessible, even by yak. —_— The Strait of Bab-el.Maneb, con- necting the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden, is called the Gate of Breaking of Glacil Dam Lets Loose Great Flood London, Aug. 14 M—Loosed by the bursting of a glacial dam in Kashmir, India, 17,000 feet above the sea, twenty million tons of wa- ter are rushing upon the valley of the Indus. Bonfires blazing on the peaks gave warning to those in the path of the torrent when the glacier, which had stored up the waters for two years, gave way. Cannon were also fired by men posted along tha gorges to signal the flood's approach and clear the last lingering moun- taineers from their homes. RBritish officials, however, shared grave anxiety for the safety of the peopla i despite these elaborate warnings. | The mountaineers are traditionally slow in giving up their homes ang | in the valley of the Indus the own- ers of carefully irrigated and culti. vated alluvial farms always hesitato to evacuate their flelds. Almost certain death Tears because there are so many shipwrecks there. Your Lucky Day By Edna Wallace Hopper Wouldn't you call it a lucky day when you found a hair dressing that threatens bridge and Webster branch of the ¢ b ended wave troubles for the summer Ne“,g‘,mk‘ New Haven & Hartford |!P05¢ Who failed to heed danger |season? Here It fs. Wave and Sheen railroad, committed suicide by fin- haling gas yesterday, Watson bor- rowed the room of an acquaintance to accomplish his purpose. Watson retired on a pension four years ago and police said they were unable to find any reason for his act. TO WITHDRAW TROOPS Tokyo, Aug. 14 (®—Imperial sanction has been obtained for the withdrawal of five companies of in- fantry from Tientsin, China. It is expected that the evacuation of the sixth division from Shantung also will be ordered shortly as otherwise it would be necessary to organize winter quarters, signals. All crops in the path of the flood are expected to be wiped out. The flood waters began to form in the Shyok valley in 1926 when the Khumdan glacler crept across the stream. There in a land of the sky 1,700 feet above the valley of the Indus the waters piled up. A |you are ready to dress, your hair lake nine miles long was formed |will have not only a soft, flattering behind a dam of ice 1,000 feet wide | wave but a glorious sheen. On the and 1,200 feet thick. hottest days you can be happy in British officlals saw that its|the knowledge that vour hair is in breakup would loose a mighty flood | keeping with your dainty summer |through the mountain gorges tribu- |toilette. tary to the Indus. Preparations Get a bottle of Wave and Sheen were made to get the inhabitants|today at any toilet ewunter. Your |out of the Kashmir mountain vil-|75 cents back it you are not pleased. ia the only product I have found which will keep the hair in perfect trim, Apply it before waving or setting your wave. (I use a comb. It can be applied with a brush.) Then put in your curlers, or set your wave if you have a permanent. By the time ROBART’S — HARTFORD’S LEADING FURRIERS Buy Your Fur Coat at Robart’s AUGUST SALE On Your Own Terms! ES, madame, we mean just that. Select the coat you want from among the great variety of beautiful coats on our racks and we will arrange the terms of payment to SUIT ‘A LIBERAL ALLOWANCE MADE ON YOUR OLD FUR COAT TOWARD THE PURCHASE OF A NEW ONE FUR COATS OF THE LATEST STYLE TO PICK FROM YOUR CONVENIENCE. ment; no set terms. We No fixed down-pay- want you to own a Robart’s fur coat for the happiness it will bring you, and to make it possible you may PAY US AS YOU CAN. We trust you implicity. In making this liberal offer Robart’s is opening the Road to Happiness for thousands who might never be able to buy a fur coat for cash or on exacting credit terms. have the fur coat you have Now you CAN wanted so badly. Up To $495 Hudson Seal, Muskrat, Jap Mink, Opossum, Broadtail, Raccoon, Squirrel, Caracul COME in today and try on the coats that ap- peal to you most. You can be sure of buy- ing at Robart’s for the least possible money for the quality received! Best of all, you can have your coat when you want it, wear it when you want to, and pay for it on terms of your own making. We protect you against unforeseen circumstances and ask only that you be honest with yourself. nothing more liberal. All Transactions Surely nothing can be fairer— Confidential! Pleasant conference rooms are provided for your convenience, insuring privacy for all transactions, We do not ployer, friends or relatives. refer to your em- The matter of vour purchasing a fur coat, and the manner of your paying for it is strictly between you and us. 00 PRATT ST. COND FLOOR- NEW STCICER BLDC Your confidence is respected absolutely. OPEN ALL DAY WED.-AND SATURDAY ROOM 207 - EVENINGS