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10 10 CREATE JEWISH Minerals and Firs Abundant in STATE N SIBERIA scorns a basin or tub. will be found a | hanging on the In some inns hrass receptacle wall and ending in a nozzle at the bottom so the visitor can wash under his desired trickle. *The Amur river, which separates the Amur province from Manchuria, can only ~ be nayigated about six months a year. In winter when it 1s frozen there is much sledge traffic over its icy surface—not all of it un- der customs supervision. In the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 192¢. World’s Greatest Armada Secn fo Be Destr(‘);ed‘ SAAZARMAY QUIT #" | CABINET POSITION ¢ Religious Dispute (Causes Por- ASSAIL HOOVER ON CRUISERS Distant Biro Bidjan {uguese Difficulty Madrid, Aug. 9 (UP)—A possi- bility that Antonio De Olivieira Sal- |azar, Portuguese minister of fipance, | might resign, was reported today in advices from fashon. Olivieira was said (o be in dis- agreement with army leaders over proposed re-introduction into Portu- gal of relizious organizations ex- pelled when the republic was pro- claimed Salazar favors re-admittini the ous hodies. Martins Carvalho, well-known lawyer, was mentioned as a possibie successor, If Olivielra resigns. summer the numerous islets which . | dot the rivel « r Westitnztons D, G Aug. 9—The ver form olorful pictures their fringe of white sand Slargest Jewish state in the world is |10 ! el $soon to be created in the Biro Bid- | |cocies and brillant foilage and an district of far eastern Russia Faccording to recent news dispatches. MBiro Ridpjan, or Birsk Bidpnay. as it was once known fies in th \m” Sriver rezion north Ma B s, Tt 1a i southern: Siberta. % “Not long wtextbook pre wdreary, treel Sexiles.” ZWashington, sthe National ¥The very 3’\»=1mh of Smoving *ranks bears AR LB ERE L S a4l ) flowers." -+ GHINESE MASSACRE . MAKES BODKS RARE Tibetan Classics Destroged, Those Here Are More Valuable l ago sented waste for a bulletin the headquarters of aphic Society eria’ conjured lines of prisoners | ak tundras, theis| cimated wolves | the whi every geography iber s fit .mn sa from D. ne ong across ble The DPortuguese cabinet passed {through a crisis a month ago after a dispute on liberalizing certain re- strictive religious Tegulations, and the cabinet of Col. Jose Vicente De | Freitas, signed. being replaced by one headed by Gen. Yvens Perraz, [the present premier. Washington slau DEGIFA —ehe | W of thousands of Chinese | »etans in Dangar. in Western | Land of Mineral and Fur Wealth orted in news dispatches, Vothing could be farther away ]h‘”’:\ put & result in Jrom the reality of Biro Bidjan than | \Yashington, D. ry. where ahis vision,” the bulletin continues. | It has probably enhanced in value ey province, in which it i Peyond all previously estimated Docated larger than France ani|Prices. a set of Tibetan classics,” e ntains almon as varied cemmery as |38 a bulletin from the Washington; SR . the exception | - C.. headquarters of the National | “bf the hern states, | GCO8raphic society. i comewhat | “Dangar lies close to Choni. e r Province, near n border,” continues the bul- and the great Buddhist Mon- at Chani and all its valuable contents were burned by the same Moslem army which massacred the [about 800 miles west and slightl inhabitants of Dangar. In this mon- |south of Peiping (Peking) on the | astery were housed the thousands of |upper reaches of the Hwang-Ho or wooden bloc 500 years old. from | Yellow River near where that stream which the best sets of the Tibetan |crosses from its Tibetan source into classics were once printed. {China. A little to the northwest is Tibetan Classics Brought From |the Koko Nor. salt lake of Monastery northeastern Tibet. The region on “Two years ago Dr. Joseph I°, (the Chinese side is a land of deep now leading a National Geo- |valleys carved in the soft locss soil. | Brooks Dudley c society expedition on the Tn happier days the valley lands and | whose body was found in a clos fibetan horder. four hundred the terraced hills produced much|her home July 29, had committed miles south of the rebellion area, wheat and many vegotables, and!suicide after she had been “ill with was in Choni, and obtained for the |supported numerous villages. The|a mental discase for 15 years.” Library of Congress a complete set | people are largely of Tibetan blood. ks reinite ot the Ut as Wi of the Choni-printed classics in 817| “During his stay of scveral Years | qievig death were that she had | volumes. These nriceless hooks are 'ago at Choni. Dr. Rock, through the | o oo 5 G ) T Lo e now on the library's shelves in |friendliness of the Prince of Choni. | oim iy (5 B oSl Washinaton was enabled closely to observe the | ¢ g s Rogd “Details of the | ceremonics of Lamaism. His des G s Sa T Ren Pl ety in Kansu which [tions have been published in the Na- [€OWWPse 0 the headquarters tional Geographic Magazine. He took | o, it 1t was learnad foday that icographic |hundreds of photographs, with de- | 3275 MOTIEAEE Certiicate Wi Ch A vincial papers liEea o tea fer i colon ofithe imens | BUciss haddantristed gloglhagicoms indicate that aatery builiinzsiithe libravy thelglaps | Rany had been paldiinipysth oot gar was only orate images and costumes, and of [523eer and Miss Dudley could have Foliage and pulls the trigger when |troubles that have scourged western | the ceremonial dances. It thus hap- | collected at any time. . = Qhe tiger appears on the sc Th. | Kansu since last October. In the re- |pens that this unique monastery ‘_m”‘]:‘ “";’l:‘{i";“P lr?:\ 'c'{;\.r_“{n" I atives make pines upon which they |81on. 150 miles wide hetween Dangar fnow in ashes in remote Western "0 " T2 s ‘_-hlm‘om_}"-*' “d” L‘)\: eplay a note resembling the cry of a|And Choni and in most of the sur- | China. still lives pictorially in \ha:}"" A 2 id when they hunt mountain goats, | FOUNdIng towns and villages, accord- |archives of the Geographic(insherheaciiniit, Siberlan Plumbing |ing to these published reports. there |society in Washington.” IRETTES R D e A o “’Wum been destruction by massacre, W York city has -4 Rlagoveshtchensk, the ‘City of | pillage and fire. Thousands of square | READ HE banks, 56 national han ®lad Tidings. with a population in | Mles of the once fertile countryside trust companies. B ioss of 55,000, It has wvide strests | N2V been lald waste. Tens of thou- iand some modern buildings. Prac- | sands of people. in addition to those Bically all the houses of Blagovesht | staughtered. have died and are dying ; 3 |of starvation. and the frantic pnp\)-‘ «fhensk are made of wood, some be- | s a1 e are said to be practicing can- =ng elaborately carved and others 10 1 I: }r‘nz;:m;\::-d m‘vh v\!\\rr:;, r\nz.: mr tri Ral(ars Tad by Youth ! N B o o oo nalled on themront] “The chiof force of Moslem raid- | ot the house at regular distances | org, necording to provincial corres- | ZThe stoves in the houses are built | ongents, consists of 25.000 cavalry- | Jnto the wall fromn the loor (0 they men mounted on the best hors '\ eilinng. A& the front is ‘flush withd tnp province, and led by an 18 .‘hv wall they look like decorative|olq general. Ma Changying (cajled | gnneh with their highly ‘colored{afectionately by his followers. Ka iles in varfous. designs, | si-ling. ‘Little General'). 'rhoso‘. 4 “The Siberian likes "to wash his|hard-hitting troopers have been | Sace and hands under a thin trick- | known to dash, 10,000 strong. 110 | uing stream of water and usually [milcs in 47 hours over mountain — ETHEL — 7 TAe QULES ARENT G0 ‘BPAD/ being d o Associated Press Pioto -Senator Frederick Hale of Maine (left) and Senator Claude A. Swanson of Virginia have assailed President Hoover's program to suspend work on cruisers. Senator Swanson declared the President SUICIDE VERDICT IN GUILFORD DEATH! st e esten « | scrapping and burn of their hter |China, re SSIFIED ADS READ HERAID ¢ ranges 10 to 12 thousand FOR BEATH !to Avenge the defeat of heir stragglers. In one such raid. |across the Tibetan horder.. all the | inhabitants of more than a hundred villages, from infants to old men and | | women, are said to have been mas- sacred. The region which has |center of the Moslem mas feet high some of | ates with th is one plateau b fertile 1y lowl avooded rar ®vith magnificent forests She scenery along the @nay achieve notoriety for sbeauty when the country is Zknown to the world at Jarge w ‘Nor is perpetual snow Seristic of the region amonths during the wirter 2be no snow at all altho Sperature seldom “wenty short Svarm o “There agricultural dis- Yricts in province and gold is .mined extersively. Coal has not been smined so much hut there is an Sbundant supply. The forests Qilled with game: bear, tig “panther. wild hoar. deer goat. killed Sray. A dog Stake at opical emergency fleet that the (left) ‘where many await he war for the L in the James river Tui 1t nchorel eight o ships (un As they ap: (lower right). , in | the : Kansu also ) are plateaus in the region with tall cless plains Much of inds col and tr R s | river | o5 Parker & Parker lie at | New Britain, Conn. [FOR ONE WEEK ONLY All Our Summer Coats and Dresses Will Be Further Reduced $1.00 Each Day hulls lie in the Potpmac | awaiting their fate. Within the remaining 65 ships will rest in Mallow's Bay. They have been towed their long resting place in the ames river, rusting and rotting. hey will be, burned to the water's cdge, hauled ashore for removal of scrap iron, and shoved back be- hind a vast barricade that has been built to safeguard navigation from | the drafting graveyard of forgjtten | ships. would have food and cquipment On August 3, 1917, the 1 of the nation were thrown behind | a gigantic undertaking—creation of an emergency fleet. Part of the heme was to put into service in the shortest possible time anything and everything that would float. Work started on 1,017 wooden ves- Is. In little more nistice was signed of the wooden ships had scen duty They were part of 589 under con- struction, principally in private ship- vards. Contracts for the remain- | ing 428 were cancelled. Then came the question of | posal. some were completed and | operated through privately-owned |lines, Many were sold outright. in- cluding valnable ocean-going tugs. In 1921, 40 wooden ships of all ¢ were sold at a price aver ing 360.000 apicce, as contrasted with an estimated cost of $1.000,- 900 each ow the last of no ships to ca across the Washington, Aug. 9 (A—Within a { year nothing will be left of the gov- |crnment’s “wooden armada,” the | greatest fleet that ever hoisted a | flag or struck a blow in its country’s | defens: Sixty-five of the vessels, ghostl remnants of a mighty wartime ges: ture, are tied up in the Potomac river, waiting to be dismantled, burned and sent to the bottom of Mallows Bay, ncar Quantico, Va. They wre the property of the West- ern Marine and Salvage company which already | scrapped 158 cargo carriers for their equipment, iron and saleable timber. It is the fortune of war. the conflict continued, these craft would have braved the enemy on the high seas, carrying cargo as a part of the United shipping board's proposed emergency flect of 1,017 ships, German astery been the acres lie s Miss Dudley “Hentally II," Med'cal Examiner Says river wild better Am in from New Haven, Aug. 9 (T)—Dr| De witt 1%, Smith, Guilford medical ex- aminer, filed a report with Acting Coroner James H. Corrigan today in which he said that Miss Katherine ch Ofte a rac- for wil tem- sreat gh the than a year, the Only a few is hig than degrees below ro. comfor summers a China- DUCHLESS BACK HOML Tondon. Aug. 9 (®—The Duchess Bedford, inglish ' roblewoman aviation enthusiast, arrived at | Croydon today, completing & round flight to India within a week establishing a new record for jourrey. The Duche rich the | of Jand Had dis- are bl wila novei to a - trp ne Moslera rehellion have just reached of the National society through pro- published in China, the massacre at Drn- an incident in the und a tied hich a ors, : kid a spot on srained by bein ired to a rest %!a:-m at little distance. The “hunter conccals himself hehind some are in today that a s took off from Lymip- ne Aug. 2 in a monoplane piloted by Captain T. D. Barnard with Bob Litfle 4s second pilot. The plane arrived at Karachi, India. Aug. 5 and unfinished |left earl} on the morning of Aug. 6 o i submarines and gun-fire | virtually had cleared the ocean of American craft and the high com-| mand believed that if troops ever reached France, the United States| a the = | 8 state ALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST R! Announcement The New O’Neil Purchase Plan Is available on a convenient basis of CORRECT FITTING AS WELL AS CORRECT VISION we in glas we should go one step further ani the type of lens fram: that aid appearance 1n the budgeted payments. belicve supplying *fhese Gty Okirte Are tLth = ¢ “But fhe%re No Goo specify and greatest way. FREE EXAMINATION Check Up On Your Eyes Now Trojan Batteries Goodyear Tires may be purchased by the owner who prefers the pay-as-you-ride arrangement. SrEEARIRNNRAR Y TSP FECEYY ts 252 LIAIN STREET it RS RS U IR RS R SR This plan of financing is still another fine feature of O'Neil Service....Effective immediately. Saturday IS THE Final Day OF OUR Mid-Clearance Sale Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn 127 Main St. A %N%_ Phone 1409 It will in no way conflict with the usual O’Neil policy of cash and charge acccunts. It is simply an effort on the part of this service organization to make posslble more service for more people. TIRE AND BATTERY COMPANY 39 WASHINGTON ST. PHONE 900 3 srragstefis Opp.