New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 20, 1919, Page 10

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NED FOR THEFT | OF WRIST WATH, i Mahoney Pays $30—Non-Supyort | Case Is Also Tried ; Although George E charged with theft, cla affair to be one of Judge James T. fine of $50 this morning on the charg Mahoney, med the whole misunde Meskill costs in standing, imposed a | and police court s brought. } Hartford ; police Mahoney Sunda was arrested in by the Hartford authorities, for the lo and held in that when Tt ticket y until brought that terday he was | here for trial. is alleged he took Mrs. her a pawn L watch owned | by a re- deemed gold’s, The was p on Vera and Bessie Fein- atch wned which by Mr: turday then Mrs it She in Scituate ticket with ing to this ticket and the watch plaint was made Mahoney st in dered. The watch w ar Loan company’s street, Hartford, and owner. Mahoney told of wateh in the local pawn shop taking it to Hartford where he secure $7 on it instead reason for his removin was to get the additional money for Mrs. Litchfield. The ticket was pre- | sented by his wife, he added, and his | signature w found upon the [ demption slip as his wife had a finge amputated a short time ago and was unable to write. | 1 her her home ] pawn Mahoney. upon | city found both the | gone. A | the policc Hartford s found in the | shop on Asylum returned to the com and o to the | and could The said, redeeming he Non-Support Charged. Frank Dycka will furnish a bond of $300 to pay his wife $6 a week for a year, or he will spend the next 60 days in jail by order of Judge Mes- kill in police court this morning. Dycka was brought in on complaint of his wife who charged him with neglecting to support her for tha past four months. Dycka is willing to support his wife and their child but is out of work, he said, and even when working is able to earn but $11 a week. The ac- cused denied choking her when she asked for money but later admitted that that was the reason why he was put out of his father-in-law’s home Edward Quigley was sent to the ! State Farm for drunkenness, having | been in on similar charges frequently of late. | Boy Thieves Fined. Two 15 -year old boys were chambers this morning, and fined $15 and costs for thefts to have been committed in Raphael’ Department store, April 7. The bo: admitted taking eight hats and five skirts and hiding them in the attics of their homes where th were found by the police vesterd Both have clean records with the exception | of the o for which they were fined, and this fact saved them from committal to the School for Boys. | This was their second attempt to en- ter the store the ving been scared | away on a previ occasion by the | breaking of a window. { the | handle | beyond NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1915 GASTORIA For Infants and Children. 33 = ;z‘ower; Ny Brusselsy, Fer "‘\’\’ L ’ S3E B Cologne oBern JTMogesne: gSM Ma/mp'q’yac oblenz \_ CZECHO - SLOVAKIA AY _ Lost to Germany Internationalized \ i /SWITZERLANDV) oL eipzig Dresden ity K« 00 STATUTE MILES DRAWN IN MAP DEPT. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Plebiscrtes Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria N e e ALGOHOL-3 P’BR GENT. | AVeéetablePre])mhmfiwAs-L || simitatingtheFood by Regula: i fingu\eSmmhsnnflBweli Thereby Promoting Digestion} Cheerfulnessand Rest Gontaits, | neither s, Morphine nord T NARGOTIC, RS g Fancian 1pful Remedy for A helpful Remedy unsfipafionanflbmm\m | and Feverishness and 1.0SS OF SLEEP restriting lherct"_r_mn-mlnfanfl)'- FacSimite Signatare of S B S NAG B I ris o de v = disto -na in mincr For Over Thirty Years PR i i8S 7234 B P2 Hina e 200 o el e g reme & comsequ | The new Germany as determined by the provisions of the peace conference: parts of Posen, to France; Eupen and Malmedy, 3 land. Internationalized areas inc! mission appointed by the Lea sive plebiscites in three arcas as i Washington, D. C. May 20.—In con- | nection with the accompanying map, prepared by the National Geographic | society, showing the territorial losses | | of Germany, indicated in the of-| the treaty | of peace official ficial summary the state- | subsequent ment indicating the boundary delimi- tations, the society has issued a bul- | and in letin explaining the extent, importance | areas Germany bulletin of This and the must forfeit. “To Germany lost of the United of peoples states: vy what take and from that of be done, the visualize more clea in territory a map States Texas deduct This may eliminating area Michigan roughly, by pan- and that rectangle | Rio Gre which El Paso in the northwest corner. western has The be an area approximately German the nde, result will the of empire before continental the armistice size the wvas signed. “From the area Germany loses sut- right her A parts of Silesia, Posen and West Prus- ill-gotten e-Lorraine, ue of Nations pending a pleb; 82 square miles, ceded to Belgium; lude: Danzig region, 729 square mile cite 15 vear: ndicated) and southeastern third of Courtesy National Geographic Soclety, Copyright 1919. Lost are £ and West Prussia, s and Saar Basin, 738 square miles, the hence. Plebiscites: Parts of s t Prussia, 5,785 miles. s include Alsace and Lorrain Schleswig, CASTORIA TAUR BOMPARY, NEW YORK GITY. 5,600 square miles restored 86 square miles, awarded to Po- Saar region to be governed by a com- 2,787 square miles (three succes- understood the points at issue and issue cause more irritation than did sia, the Danzig area, Eupen and Mal- This aggresate loss in is about equivalent to the area medy terri- tory of the State of Maine. “But that is not all. In addition there are areas in which a plebiscite Their total extent is lent to the area of the State of New Hampshire. They clude the southeastern third of JZast Prussia, part of Schleswig, and the Saar Valley. Even before the war it is likely that a plebiscite would have is to be taken. about equiv: in- found strong anti-German support in After the war, when between tax- burdened Germany other power there would seem to be little doubt but that the Saar regions will Schleswig will ecach of these areas. the choice is and some prefer France, to Denmark, area to Poland. and the East Prussian “Of course these comparisons do not mark the complete losses of Ger- many, for they do not take into ac- count the colonies which taken from her. Henceforth other nations, mandatories, are as will administer Food For Children serves a double purpose Growth must be pro- vided for, as well as replacement of daily wear and tear. At this vital time of the child5 life parents should consider uts — a real “building’ 2 food that constructs and maintains. Pure and Wholesorne revert-| | Kamerun, Togoland, German west and German East Africa, tau, German New Guinea, the lines and the Marshall islands, Samoa Caro- | and Pleasant island. “If you are more familiar with eastern states than with Texas, it may make the comparison more vivid to note that the post-war Germany will find her place under the sun to be about equal to the territory comprised in the New England states plus New York and Pennsvlvania, or that contained in New England and Oregon. “On her pre-war area equal to Texas minus Michigan, or Texas mi- nus all the New England states ex- cept Connecticut, Germany supported some 70,000,000 people, nearly two- thirds of the total population of the United States of America. How much of this population is removed from her it is difficult to say because the split- ting of territory does not correspond to units of census measurement. “But it is possible to arrive at a fairly accurate estimate of her reduc- ed population. For Germany’s citizens were distributed well over her former empire, and countless small cities and towns, and a dense rural population, rather than numerous large cities, made her average density of popula- tion high. “This average density was about 500 to the square mile in 1914, and the to- tal number of square miles either lost outright or subject to plebiscites at some future date approaches 45,000 square miles. Therefore it is not far from the mark to estimate that Ger- many loses a number of persons equivalent to the combined popula- tions of New York state and Massa- chusetts, including those glant new world cities, New York and Boston. Germany’s New Place Under the Sun. “Grievous as may have been the parting to her, Germany expected to lose Alsace and Lorraine if she lost the war. But to pay for her capital crimes against civilization with the Saar valley area must seem a heavy price. For in that region, not so large as Rhode Island, were contained coal fields rated among the richest in Eu- rope. In this historic area of natural bounty the earth has borne grapes for .rare old wines since Roman days. Then the surface was pierced for its vield of black treasure, though wood- ed hills, crowned with ancient abbeys and castles, still look down on busy factories and bustling towns. It was the eastern Pennsylvania of Germany —only with Pittsburgh left out—for Saarbrucken, metropolis of the area, has only about 30,000 population. “Not only was the Saar coal of in- dustrial importance to Germany, but some of it was diverted to Italy and Switzerland, a sort of ‘underground propaganda’ against the day when Germany should need their support. “Danzig has been a port of major importance since the days when it was one of four principal centers of the Hanseatic league. Not far inland is Marienburg, once the capital of the Teutonic Order of Knights. Formerly the grain of fertile Silesia and Poland poured through Danzig, but more re- cently the city has been a center for ship building and manufacture of mu- nitions, “Ever since the armistice Germany | has carried on an assiduous propa- | Banda to keep from losing her rich Posen and Silesian mining districts. Zine, iron and potash, the very life blood of her vaunted industrial organ- ism, came from the area adjoining Poland which Germany now is called upon to forfeit to that newly created nation so long debarred from this rightful inheritance. Hard coal also came from this region in considerable quantity. “By granting a plebiscite to Schles- wig (which is to be taken successively in three areas as indicated on the | map) Germany is likely to lose a province which has not the industrial importance of the v or Silesian dis- tricts, but which has a naval value re- lating to both the North and Baltic seas. Moreover Germany prized this | zegion- because it was €0 hard-to- ace South- | quire. sing- | complex, the so-called Schleswig-Holstein ques- tion in years gone by One historian remarked that only three men ever one was dead, another insane, and a third had forgotten what it was all about.” No Balkan nor problem ts more did the ace-Lorraine Let Us Send You a “Swift Dollar?” For a Pocket Piece It will interest you. It shows where the money goes that Swift & Company takes in. It shows that out of every dollar received by Swift & Company from the sale of meat and by-products in 1918— 1—Swift and Company paid for live animals - 85.00 cents 2—Swift & Company paid out for labor, freight and other expenses - 12.96 cents 3—Swift & Company had left a profit of only __2.04 cents Total 100.00 cents The 2.04 cents remaining as profit equals only a fraction of a cent per pound. It is too small to affect materially the price of live stock to the farmer or the price of meat to the consumer. A “Swift Dollar’’ will be mailed you on request. Address Swift & Company U. S. Yards, Chicago New Britain Local Branch, 29-43 Commercial Street J. R. Andrews, Manager

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