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s e e P asr s, G MILLIONS AWARDED - BY CLAIMS BOARD These Represent 2,000 Demands. Against Germany w Washington, Aug. 13 (- able contribution to the annuls of International cooperation has been | made by the mixed claims commis- slon created to adjust the claims of American and German nationals | Browing out of the World war. ! In a report made public today | Robert W. Bonynge, the Americun | agent, disclosed that the old method of arriving at decisions by the long route of brief and counter brief has been thrown aside by the commis- afon, and that the agents for th two countries have sought in eac case to get together In an informal | way on the real merits of the claim, guiding their negotiations in rules previously lald down by the com-| mission. This method has worked #0 well Mr. Bonynge said, that in a large number of cases an agreed atatement of facts was placed before the commission by the two agents, | and the work of adjustment ex-| pedited accordingly. | “Before closing,” wrote the Ameri- | ean agents, “T desire to express my high appreclation of the very fair| and just manner in which tha agent of Germany and his assistants have cooperated with the agent of, the United States and his assistants In the examination, preparation and | adjustment of the thousands of) claims that have required the at-| tention of the two agents.” During the perlod June 16, 1923, to December 31, 1924, the commis- sion awarded $89,010,829 covering 2,000 American claims against Ger- many or German nationals, Tt dis- missed 5,524 claims totaling $205,- 052,348, At the close of 1924 there were 4,088 undisposed of claims be- fore the commission out of the 12, 416 separate clalms that have besn filed, WILD BIRDS MUST GET PROTECTION This Is Statement by Dr, W. T. Hornaday New York, Aug. 13 (A—Drastic revision of bag limits and open sea- sons 18 “imperative,” Dr. W. T Hornaday, trustes of the parmanent wild life protective fund, reiterated today 1f extinction of migratory bird life is to be averted. While the biological survey through its acting chief, Dr. A. K Fisher defended its competency to fix bag limits, Dr. Hornaday con- tended ‘that existing restrictions and | open scasons had not served to halt | the rapid increase of licensed hunt- ers. “Unless fmmediate steps are taken,” he said. “we shall be faced with a slow extinction of migratory bird life at the hands of hunters. This, the bislogical survey does not seem to realize. “In an eight year survey, covering | practically all the states in the| union, completed fn 1922, T found | the number of hunters have in- creased 195 per cent sinco bag- limits were fixed. Yet during this time there have been no compensat- ing additional protection for the birds. Bag limits have become In- efficlent."” Dr. Hornaday chacterized Dr. Fisher's statement that marshes and feeding grounds wre more lmportant A not. SAVED FRIEND FROM HOSPITAL Mrs. Heckman Decided to Try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound — Note Results— | Council Bluffs, Jowa. = ‘I had pains in my back and sides and headaches, 80 that I could not do my work. Once in a while I'would be sicka week. A f| friendtoldme that Lydia E.Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound had kept her out of | the hospital, so I thought I would tryit,asThadtried anumber of other S medicines. Now I feel like a different person and am " telling my friends about the Vege- table Cflm\mund helping me, hoping they will let it help them, too.’ - glrs. ETHEL HECKMAN, Box 21, R. F. D. No. 1, Council Bluffs, lowa. Saved From An Operation Monessen, Pa. — “I took Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound for a serious case o} female trouble. The worst pain I had was in my right side and back with swelling in my side so that ] was unable to walk atone time. 1 was ordered to go to the hospital, but here I am, still without an opera- tion. I saw your advertisement and bave taken the Vegetable Compound | withsplendid results.”’—Mrs. J.NEL- 8ON, 842 Donner Ave., Monessen, Pa. | directed by the bride, It { |1ey also have heen a | ters than limitation of the bag limit as “ridiculous.” “Of what use are marshes and feeding grounds it tho birds are ex- terminated?” Dr. Hornaday asked. “There ate more than enough marshes now, the birds are belng killed oft faster than they can multi- ply, In spita of the abundance of marshes, many species have been shot Into extinction.” WEDDING GUESTS SEE Unusual Film Production is Feature of Reecption Following Cermony Philadelphia, the wedding Thayer and Aug. 13.—Guests at sterday of Miss Peggy old Talbott later motion pleture show in the room of Redwood, Bryn . the home of the bride's r, that had heen written and was a recep- mothe ire of a brilliant tion atlended by many persons prominent in Philadelphia, New York, Baltimore and Washington so- novel feat | elety, Miss Thayer had written the scenarlo for the farce comedy just a few days before. She staged the scenes and directed those who acted hefore the camera manipu- lated hy Thomas Evans, She read the captions, most of them langhtel provoking bits. One T “Mar: Taw had turned Re A white overnight.” Miss 1 represented Mrs, Thayer, the bride's mother, as crying. As she dld not have enough tears, she dipped up a supply from a water bucket with a handkerchief. DESTROYERS ASSIGNED Will Re Stationed On Route Between V. S and Hawall To Aid Non- Stop Fllers, Two to Washington, A 13 (&) destroyers today v ordered take up station for the trip to San Francisco of the naval planes which will make a non-stop flight to Hawail later this montl. Commander John TRogers, in charge of the flight, notified the navy department that the destroyers William Jones and McCawley would stand by off Ca nd Cape the flight The sa 5 from San and later ro S two will gnard the P Diego to San IFrancisco, they will work with the planes until | satisfactory radio communication is 1. When the hopoft is madr, the destroyers will form links in the sea patrol which has heen arranged. The destroyers Jones and McCaw- \ed to escort tha Japanesa cruiser Tama when that, vessel arrives in Am with the body of the lat for Bancroft, who died HISTORICAL RELICS Will of the Late Frederick J. Hunt- an wa- Am- in ington Makes Bequests to Connec- ticut Historicnl Society. Norwich eles of historic double portrait of the Trumbull and his wife, their son. Colonel John Trnm and a sword carried by General Jed- diah Huntington during the Revolu- tlonary war are bequeathed to the Connecticut Historical society of Hartford In a will of the late I'red- erick J. Huntington, probated here today. Mr. H most of his late years abro here last week. The income of his estate, which is left in trust, is to be divided equally between two nieces, Sarali P. Websar and Helen M. Perkins, hoth of Oak- land, Calif. Upon their death the pri g0 to Yale university fe use of that institution of the value of the ecstate is avail- able here at present Aug. . died val will eral AUTOS IN VENICE Result Is Considevation of Rulding of Road Connecting City With Paduas isolation which t as an island, has turies is threatened by the &ge ments which have been completed for the construction oi Lile road conneet Later, it i road to the Pa he importance arises from the f the City of Venice Joined by road to the only commu beat or by trair by means of The betwe with 1 to never rest a pontoon b 1l polemics are \ the proponer ponents of the plan for landization" of Venice ¥ ek sion on the plan rests with the gov ernment SHAPIRO BANKRUPTCY Brilgeport, Aug. 13 (P n the case of Tsi 3 merchant, were filed today with teferee in Bankruptcy John Ke ies are Msted $16,964 ssets of §10.500. A tent or a first meeting 1 JF your eyes trouble you ult our optometrist is good here. EEKLY/} 277 MICHAELS, Inc. 354 Main St., New Britain, Conn, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1025, CALMLY SHOKES AS DOCTOR WORK Amputation of Foof 3,—Patrick . a French C: old, puffed at a o smiled yesterday at the Hoboken terminal of the Hudson and Man- | nattan tubes while a surgeon putated his Ioft foot without using |an anaesthetie, after Mongeon, a tube guard, had failen between two | cars of a train and his foot had been crushed heneath the wheels, Women passengers on hia train Mongeomw himself closed his fo suppress a he spoke it was cigarett th on. a years on oceasion hut whe only to call fol | He tra please couldn’t help him nother work asked ra if minu cars or otherwise rescue him a phy- | sician ar | Surgeon Operates Under Train | This was Dr. Buffone, Ma Hohoken. He was ad th cars mean ath for the guard ming w hospital sed that move wonld cortain d blood pois some immediate a | He decided to operate “It's going to hurt' he “Wa can't use an anaes- | warned [ Mongenn thetic," “All right, doe, replied Mongeon “It hurts Mke hell now. any worse fhan that.” operat cheerily Can't hurt Dr. ing Buffone commenced > voice laft cigarette s near when fina opera- v and th 1 will po kept him during the ambulance rlde and at St, Mary's. He is in a critical condition, hut probabiy will recover, Train Jerks, Causi Tl o Frank Zotynia, motorman of Mon- train, applied the brakes too on pulling into Hoboken n was standing between two feady 10 open the doors. He lost his footing and slid down be- twoen heavy which s in a vise, The subse 10ld up tube t geon lives at , Brooklyr Cuban Outfielder Sold to Boston Nationals . Aug. 13—Oscar Lst ldor of the Tampa cl L state le fo fainting fion was o was off, I ne “all when geon the him bumpers, zue, has been Doston Nationals and is September 5. Est- f Cuba, play no before coming here is lefthanded 1 to the hout New Yorker Shows Grit Daring | am-| After 45| of fruitless effort ta jack the | " lany physician. injured probably hastened home, Forced ning Demolishes Plane When forced to land at Penn Township, Pa., because of a broken oil line, U. S. marine ’nhsnr\'utinn airplane was wrecked and destroyed by fire. The pilot, Second Licutenant Thos. Cagel, and a companion are in a Pittsburgh hospital suffering from serious injuries and burns. MISSISSIPPI NEGRO IS LYNCHED BY MOB OF MEN Was Held in Connection With Mur- der of Aged Man and Woman | at Scobey. | i fieobey, Miss, Aug. 13 (D—Sidney { Townes, D [in connection with the death of { Jacob McMullent, a farmer and | Mrs, Mary Long, 70, was taken from Sherif Will Frost here late yester- | day by a mob of approximately 75 {men and shot to death The Negro was suffering from serious wounds inflicted with a shot gun by I. M. McMullen, 72, brother of the man killed when he was taken from the sheriff by the mol | whose members shot him many fimes The mob is reported to have formed shortly after the death of Mrs. Long. which occurred yester afternoon during the funeral of Jacob MeMullen, Townes, a giant in statue, quarel ed with his wife, and pursued her into the McMullen farm house yes- od fo have attacked McMullen nd Mrs. Long. instantly killing the .4 man, who was a brother of Long MASS. HAS ANOTHER - KLUXER DUTBREAK (Continued from First Page) wag well The white-robed said were not in session more th an hour when the outsiders gathere and jeer Klansmen an half 1 The them rags was followed by one of rocks. | andful of town police were » two factions sepa- arrived hetween ahle to keep t rated until reinforcen by stationing themselves the hostile lines. According fo antl-lklan gas liberations cam after shots were fired into their |Snon after the automobile which the klansmen used to illum- inate their meeting, were turned of the tear gas released. sides accuse the other of introduec- nts nen pistol midst., ing this modern weapon into kian | warfare. None of the score of Injured ap- plied for medical treatment at cither the Reading hospital or at Police said that - BRISTOL NEWS (Contlnued from Page Seven) an Charles L. Wooding, which m ded 262 volumes, bought during July, During July all records home reading were shattered as a total of 10,068 volumes were taken | out. ETHEL: That Sinking Feeling MO GYOCKINGS % B QOUED gro, who was being held | terday. During the melee he Is al- |, advertised. poilee | verbal bar- [ the Both | DOCTOR IS SHOT, HIS WIFE 1S QUESTIONED Mysterious Case — Was Former Trooper As the result of a mysterious ing yesterday afternoon, Dr. Linn 18 In a hospital in & condition and hs wite, Mrs ritical ters for questioning. DARROW FLAYED DY DAYTON M | : Scapes Prosecntor Galls Him a ‘Godless Han’ I ” | morning. Darton, Tenn., Anug. M—or of the T Memoria ciation last night was marked Ly scathing denunciation of Clarenc by A. T. Stewart, prosecut ing attorney in the Scopes evolution Judge John T. R 1. a4 charges made by Darrow that he had used the to further his political inter- 13 ryan Narrow Iston, who « association Fundamentalist nemory of Willilam Jennings ¥ as a goal the raising of on~ and It million dollars for bulidings i five n L erect schonl lions or! (hea endy Mr. Darrosw s A torney in the s ial was de Adby M “the itest menace elvili Vion has fo deal with.” “T Ao not helleve defense present dav thers wonld he godle spreading t were not for the his 11k mnd trying to des Bible, x x x x x His curse. Trnless the peos land suppress him, more evil Judze Raulston dac ‘mfl,,. that he had n mentalist heliofs to f litical tnter vas > 0 will he wholly on my re As e wd T don’t b Mr. am can n Darrow's | minds of the people asainst me. x | “Mr. Darrow now rofers to me as z ignorant and intimates that T m orthy of the off which 1 question be referred to the people in | - district rather than to him." | * | STUDENT A SUICIDE o Sem s B With Fatal Result—De- | i | spondent Over Studics | & dyracuse, N. Y., Aug. 13 (A—Miss Mary Hall, 20, to have 1espo over her failure in at the an year at Sy sity, died today, after ha lowed poison this morni Another Syracuse womar v White, living in anot tion of the city, is in the hospita as certain to die, as a f having swallowed the same noi {as Miss Hall at about the same } | Miss Hall confided to her 1 several weeks ago that she in to commit suicide and then sed her mother's mind wit statement she would not seck intil after a younger sister gra 4 from high school. Poison said lish June frosh sted | | | | M i advertising. By our membe Ginghamton Police Confronted With | | Binghamton, N. Y, Aug. 13 (P— |sensational investigation, which shoot- sulted {n his removal Willis | June 30, 1919, Midred |of the Linn, 18 detained at polce headquar- | duct Dear Mr, Bennett: Dr, Linn was found lying in the hallway partly inside his oftice door. Two shots had been fired through a glass partition into his shoulder. Batavia, N, Y. Aug, 13 (®—Dr. Willia Linn, who was shot while in his office in Binghamton yesterday, was formerly captain of Trooper A, New York state police, statloned here, and was the central figure in a re- from office The investigation in- volved Dr. Linn's conduct of affairs troop and his personal con- T e ——————————— RIS, dent of Rochester, obtalned a di- vorce, Dr. Linn later resided in varfous cities in western New York and finally located in Binghamton. There Miss Mildred Westbrook, & nurse, brought charges against the physician, having to do with an alleged false marriage performed in Washington In 1922, Announcement was made fn 1924 that Dr. Lion and Miss Westbrook were married at Montrose, Pa., about 20 miles from Binghamton, rank 1. Robinson, Gloversville, N 43 years a rallroad engineer, retired after having traveled s dis- In 1920 his wife, who was a resi- [tance estimated at 1,883,400 miles. Contentedly yours, MAX HONEYMAN, THE COFFEE AND ROLLS ARE STILL HOT A Confidential Letter To O. S. Bennett of The Union Laundry.) | I am beginning to wonder what was in the coffee that was served at that memorable Tibbets’ breakfast last Monday Here it is Thursday and the echoes of Monday morning can still be plainly heard. Is it your Desco Dry Cleaning Process that is responsible for this remarkable display of brilliance and pep? I read the letter Louie Jones wrote you in Tuesday’s Her- ald, and I must say that as a correspondent, he is a remarkable real estate dealer. But he certainly is as good a judge of motor cars as he is of real estate. (Don't forget his lots on Dover Road.) i When he looked for a car that combined whirlwind speed, with terrific strength and unsurpassed beauty, the only car he could logically choose, was the Hudson Coach he owns today. And like your remarkable Desco Dry Cleaning Process, the Hudson costs no more than ordinary cars. Ask the Chrysler man to laugh that one off. The Hudson Man, 139 Arch St. Investigate Before Investing Every advertiser—whether national or local—owes it to the best with A. B. C. verified reports. interests he represents to fully investigate every publication’s claim for circulation, etc., before he invests in “white space” It is the advertiser's right to demand facts, not theory. Super- ficial information is not the kind on which to build a successful ng campaign, and unless each copy is delivered and read, the advertiser is paying for waste circulation and his advertising dollars are not producing proper results. ship in the Audit Bureau of Circulations we safe- cuard the advertiser's money, for we want it known, that we’ make no claims of any nature that are not fully substantiated Get our last report. Know what you are buying. Then invest. NEW BRITAIN HERALD OVER 12,000 DISTRIBUTED DAILY The Herald is the Only Newspaper in New Britain With An Audited Circulation