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NS INGREASE "UNREST OF GERNANS iloving Pictures in fimters Any- thing But Enjoyable to Audience Berlin, Aug. 7.—Germany's gold reparations payments to date, in 100~ mark paper notes, would encircle the earth 25 times, according to motion- picture propaganda which is being used in the Berlin cinema houses. A 100-mark note is 16 centimeters long, or about 6.3 inches. To _make the point as realistic as possible, there is flashed on the screen a picture of a common pedestal globe, such as is used in the geography classes of American schools, spinning rapidly about as a long string of these notas wrap round and round it. It is the last scene in a serial pic- ture of three parts which depicts by numerous {llustrations the vastness of Germany’s sufferings as a result of the Versallles treaty. The audiences sit almost breathless as reel after reel| shows how much territory, shipping, lvestock, coal, money, and material have had to be given up by the Fatherland. Fuel is added to the fire of indigna- tHon by including a reel to illustrate what an overwhelming proportion of the taxes must be devoted to repara- tions payments. It reminds the tax. paying spectator that this promises to continue until 1957. A general groan invartably greets this comforting bit of information. There can be little doubt as to the nature of feelings toward the Ver- sailles treaty and the entente with which the audiences leave a showing of this kind. One apparent effort is made at the end of the serial to guard it against charges of being provocative and con- ductve to sentiment against the treaty. As the spinning globe, with its miles upon miles of hundred mark notes fades out, a sub-title asks what is to come out of “all this chaos.” The an- swer, in huge inspiring letters, ends the film. It is: “Unity and justice and Uberty.” Hartford School Music Director Gets New Job Hartford, Aug. 7.—Ralph L. Bald- win, director of music in the public schools of Hartford and conductor of the Choral club, has accepted the eonductorship of the Mendelssohn elub of New York, one of the oldest and most famous of the male singing societies of the country. It was founded In 1866. Mr. Baldwin has had many years' experience in male chorus work, having been director of the Northampton Vocal club, North- ampton, Mass., for ten years, and for sixteen years has been director of the Choral club of Hartford. Married women, for the first time in the civic history of London are eligible to hold the freedom of the city. Warm health is needed in the cities. Farm foods bring you strength and happy meal- --times. ~The Farmer Boy Our farm foods repre- sent the finest edibles in the country. Our butter and eggs and cheese will help you set an appetizing table. They’ll help you keep house. THERE IS NO SUBSTI- TUTE FOR FRESH MILK United Milk Co. 49 Woodland St. New Britain LAWYERS TOP LIST A§ SKYSCRAPER TENANTS Reoords Show That Twenty Per Cent of Tenant Dwellers Are Engaged in Law Profession. Chicago, Aug. 7.—Twenty per cent of the tenants in American skyscrap- ers are lawyers, according to a survey made for the National association of Building Owners and managers by W. R. Ballard of Boston, Mass. The survey covers typical tenantry of 72 skyscrapers, and is said to be the first one of its kind ever made. Of the total of 3,733 tenants can- vassed, 833 were found to be lawyers. After lawyers come investment houses with 370 and real estate is a close third with 352 tenants. The survey will be used in aiding prospective builders to determine the proper way to lay out floor space. The tenants using the most space are hanks and trust companies, with oil concerns next and insurance com- panies third, the report showed. Thirty-eight different classes of busi- nesses were found to be housed in the various skykscrapers. WILL MAKE MOTOR CARS - SUIT ROAD CONDITIONS Automobile Passenger and Truck Service Not to Wait For New. Roads Stockholm, Aug. 7.—Sweden, con- sidering the motorizing of its highway traffic, declares that the general es- tablishment of regular automobile passenger and truck service cannot walit for the construction of new roads and the rebuilding of old ones, but that the motor vehicles must be adapted to the roads. The roads are to be divided into four classes, according to the weights which they are able to sustain. Trail- ers, rather than additional motor trucks are to be used wherever the traffic is large. A curious type of vehicle is recommended for winter use in northern Sweden. \, This car is to have sleigh runners instead of front wheels, and will be equipped with spe- cial drive wheels and gear. For the financing of this new serv- ice yearly subsidies have been pro- poeed, as well as a government loan fund. ASK BETTER FACILITIES Citizens of Osgood Hill Petition Coun- cil for Ymproved School Accommo- dations in That Vicin¥y, A resolution will be submitted at the meeting of the common council ‘Wednesday of next week asking for | better accommodations at the Osgood | Hill school. The resolution will be | reterred to the school department. Tt is signed by 64 persons and is as follows: ‘'We, the undersigned citizens, tax- payers and parents of children at- tending the Osgood Hill school, pe- tition your honorable body for more school facilities in the Osgood Hill district, as the need for such is very urgent for some of our children are at the present time attending schoa only half days and are not deriving enough benefits from half day attend- ance; furthermore, the portable s¢hool buildings are not fit for children to stay in. “We feel that our demands are not unjust and that the educational needs of our children should be considered and provided for as well as those of the children in other districts in the city.” Morehouse Bound Over For High Court Trial Bridgeport, Aug. 7.—Roger More- house, who was held by Coroner J. J. Fhelan eriminally responsible for the death of Joseph Hotz, was today bound over to the Superior Court un- der bonds of $5,000 by Judge Wil- liam J. Buckley in the city court. On July 4, Morehouse is alleged to have shot Hitz in a restaurant here. Ohio Governor Is Back With His Convict Aids Columbus, O., Aug. 7.—The contro- versy over admittance into Canada of two convict servants in the vacation party of Givernor Donahey ended last night with the return to Columbus of the governor and five of his six sons, Warden P. . Thomas of the Ohio penitentiary and the two convicts. The governor returned to attend fu- neral services for President Harding. DESIGN AERIAL RAMS T0 DEMOLISH PLANES Steel Prowed Battering Rams to be Rig Fastor in Airplane En- counters in The Future London, Aug. 7.—Heavily armored steel-prowed battering rams, for use in the leviathan airships, now being constructed secretly by British alr- craft experts, says the Dally Chron- lcle's aeronautical correspondent, These new terrors of the air will be launched at an immense height from the mother-ships and will rush down guided by a solitary man protected within their hulls, ready to strike hostile airships or bombing planes. “Without guns or any weapon save a knife-like, cutting bow,” says the writer, “the pilot of the ‘ram’ will seek as his garry the big, slow-flying troop-planes or transports, or he will swerve in deadly attack toward a hos- tile battleship of the air. Before he strikes his blow he will have the pow- er, by operating interior mechanism of drawing in his telescopie, metal wings. Then, with a fearful final plunge, like a great projectile, he will steer, not at the hull of the eraft he seeks to criple, but at vulnerable wings or control surfaces. Through these he will cut and rip his way, and the great craft he has rammed, stricken and put out of control, will reel earthward to destruction.” The writer then says the ‘‘air ram" will extend its wings again and check its pell-mell descent. The pilot will be able, after starting a powerful interi- or engine, to bring into action previ- cusly-shielded air screws, and by aid of these he will steal upward, regain- ing his mother airship and then pre- pare for another devastating dive. MASSACRE IN CHINA 750 Bandits Killed in Fight Which Follows Attempt of Prisoners to Es- cape. 8y _The Associated Press. Peking, Aug. 7.—Despatches from Teitsihar, Province of Holung Kiang, Manchuria, announce that 760 bandits were slaughtered by soldiers in the barracks there by command of the provincial tuchun, or military gover- nor. The victims were among 1200 out- laws who eurrendered recently and were being trained for the army of Chang Tso-Lin, the Manchurian war lord. Because of the mutinous at- titude of the prisoners, 50 were sum- moned before the military authorities, ostensibly for a reprimand. It subsequently transpired that the 50 had been executed whereupon the remaining bandits tried to escape. They were surrounded by provincial troops and a fight followed. The troops, using large guns, destroyed three camp buildings and wiped out most of the band. Fifty of the regulars were killed and many wounded. Actress Tumbles Over Footlights; Not Injured By The Associated Press. Paris, Aug. 7.—Mlle, Ceclle Sorrel, playing the part of Catherine in “The Taming of the Shrew,” at the Come- die Francaise, last night made such a vivacious entrance in a new pair of shoes that she slid several feet and tumbled over the footlights into the front row of seats. She was caught by Bupreme Court Judge Daniel De La: Rose. The audience was greatly alarmed, but the artiste was unhurt and resumed her part immediately. Australia anxfap;fi to Play Finals; Start Thurs. Chicago, Aug. 7.—Matches between sitting | COLUMBIA'S INDUSTRY VALUED AT 19 MILLION Fish Industry of- British Possession Gains $4,919,163 or 36 Per Cent Over Previous Year. Vancouver, B. C., Aug. 7.—British Columbia's salmon pack totaled 1,- 290,960 cases in 1922 valued at $10,- 109,927, This was an increase of 687,208 cases over the 1921 output and a gain in value of $4,175,983, accord- ing to a report compiled by the pro- vinclal department of mines and fish- eries. The total value of the output of British Columbia fisheries during the year, including fresh, canned, cured or otherwise -prepared, the report| shows, was $18,872,833, This was an increase over the previous year of $4,919,163, or 36 per cent. An interesting feature of the report was the fact that whaling operations which were suspended in 1921 were resumed in 1922 and produced an out- put valued at $158,814. Total capital invested in the fish in- dustry of British Columbia, the re- port shows, was $19,951,671. Of this $6,765,827 represented vessels, nets, traps, piers and wharves and §13,- 185,744 represented money invested in canning and curing establishments. he number of persons engaged in fish- ing operations and In canning and curing establishments, it is shown, was 14,930, JUST WANTS 70 SLEEP Henry Sullivan, Channel Swimmer, Says That He Has Had Fnough to Last Him for a Long Time. | By The Assoclated Press. Dover, Aug. 7.—Henry Sullivan, the hefty son of Massachusetts, who con- quered the English Channel yester- day, is content to rest %on the big achievement at least for the present. “I'm satisfled with what I've done; I'm not planning any other swim; all I want is sleep,” he said From start to finish Sullivan plug- ged away with a straight breast stroke. He says he had found from experience that to alter his stroke or flop over on his back for a rest caused the muscles to contract and boded badly for the achievement of an am- bition such as his. The conqueror of the channel found the water coldest in mid-stream. PURPOSE Its purpose 1s to bring vou food-cheer. Sei- bert’s milk is the milk you should nse in the kitchen, in the dining room and for a bever- age when you have a thirst. "MAKE SURE ITS SEIBERTS" ! E SEIBERT=SON/ YourMillman' jtennis teams representing Australia and Japan in the finals of the Ameri- can Zone Davis cup series will bn.' piayed here Thursday, Saturday and | Sunday Two singles matches will | comprise the program Thursday. The | winner of the matches here will play against France at Brookline, Mass. | August 16, 17 and 18. | Young oysters enjoy only 48 hours' | l1ife as moving creatures; then they | settle down for life, | FOR $PARK ST. PHONE:1720:% NEW BRJTAIN.CONN. (left) and Amalia Jak-Rak. present list. List $12.30 $13.95 $22.18 $25.51 $28.08 $28.98 $29.74 30x3%4 Fah. Cl. 36x3L5 Cord Cl 32x31/5 Cord S.S. 31X4 ““ “ 32x4 33x4 - 34x4 “ “ “« “ « “ Our Price $ 8.85 $10.65 $16.50 $18.95 $19.90 $20.90 $21.80 For Quick CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 2018. Estimates cheerfully given on all ]obs‘i CLAMS FOR CHOWDER CLAMS FOR STEAMING SHRIMPS—CRAB MEAT SOFT SHELL CRABS LOBSTERS Dining Room Connection HONISS’S 24-30 STATE STREET Hartford —DRINK — Stromberg Carburetor A. G. Hawker SALE | LADIES’ TAILORING SHOP—COMPLETELY EQUIPPED Established 15 Years PIZER 70 WEST MAIN STREET 'AYERS’ SODA WATER | Take home a bottle of cream soda | —Something you will like—it's deli- | cious. | Three size botties—5c, 10c, 15e. 0 WEST ST. Spanish artists, painters and writers have joined forces to find the most beautiful woman in Spain. Other countries, France especially, have been claiming the honor of having the most beau- tiful women in the world. Two of those selected by Spain to refute this claim are Genoveva Vix TIRE VALUES Special Opportunity to get a Standard Make of First Quality Full Oversize Tires at Exceptional Low Prices. Brand new stock—fully guaranteed. Just compare our cash offer with the '— SOLD FOR CASH ONLY —— List $36.40 $37.21 $38.11 $39.19 $45.27 $40.05 $47.52 $49.99 Our Price $27.20 $27.80 $28.90 $29.40 $33.90 $29.65 $34.90 $36.70 32x414 32x41/, 34x41/ 85x41/5 33x5 36x41/5 35x5 37x5 Coge “« “ “ “« « RACKLIFFE BROS. CO., Inc. PARK AND BIGELOW STREETS PHONE 1674 “Returns Use Herald Classified Adots. CINDERS FOR SALE A. H. —General Trucking— HOT WEATHER SPECIALS Refrigerators, all kinds Oil Stoves, Gas Plates. Ftc. A. LIPMAN Tel. 1329.8 Harris TEL. 1233-3 |34 Iafayette St. Look for Our Sign on that Cottage at No. 40 Chapman street. Here is a cosey little home with a fine big barn and garage and chicken coop in the rear. Plenty of garden room and take a look at the fine fruit trees. Then come and see US. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6, Bank Bldg, — FOR SALE — [ FOR SALE—Modern 3-family b~ 1se on Wolcott street, 2-car garage, lot 66x310. Large garden, all kinds fruit. Very reasonable. Near church, school and factory. For particulars see— H. DAYTON HUMPHREY 272 MAIN STREET THE OLD HOME (" TINWARE AND TOWN 7 =) ~ D B\ NATIONAL BANK BLD¢ BY STANLEY A= =FooTs % O | O [ Shoes \\\/ «“, THE MAIL SACK THROWN OFF THE LATE TRAIN | HIT THE NIGHTWATCHMAN BETWEEN THE BAGGAGE ROOM AND THE IRON PUMP ¢