New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 28, 1923, Page 19

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1923. | _,_éfix &Q'nmp_gg__ SHELL FINALLY SOFTENED IN SAAR VALLEY e | Hartford Hartford Economic and Social Sityations| " "er Mt e e Still gflse Anxiety Are You Sharing the Great Ready- ALWAYS ENOUGH FOOD FOR ALL HUMAN NEEDS President C. C. Plehn of University of | . PROJEGT TO HELP GRECIAN REFUGEES League of Nations Undertakes Big- | . i gest Pmblem 0[ Hls[m.y | Berkeley, Cal., Dec. 28.—Will the population of the world ever increase | to such numbers that the food supply | will run out? “No,” predicts Profes- sor C. Plehn of the department of | Satisfactory from | baffled horticulturists. It had a economics in the University of Cali-|Some points of views, the economic|,,.. and delicate flavor, was a fornia. and social situation of the Saar Val-|yop 45 cpieure, buti ts shell was about But the professor qualifies his nega- | ey territory causes anxiety from oth-|,c hardest khown to mankind, The N tive by saying that if the population | ®rs, according to a report received b¥ | gse of u small pigeon's egg, brown ations, has officially opened the | of the world ever increases as fully as| the League of Nations from the gov-i, .4 ghiny, one might ump on it and | greatest project of reestablishing a|it has the power to, there certainly | erning commission of the district. The [ mor it with one's heel without hom refugee population that|will be a shortage of food. He ex-|Saar Valley, which extends along the |\l e einoee smoeacion probably ever has been undertaken. | plains that, a matter of statistics, this| I'ranco-German frontier handed | o0 43¢ heel. One might put it ih the With John Campbell of Great Britain | probabiy never can happen, since|OVer to the league for control during . ciice of a door hinge, and it would the second member of the commis-| eyvents and conditions always inter-|& period of years after which the in- the fulcrum to break down th- sion, Mr. Morgenthau made a brief|vene to prevent over-population. | habitants by a plebiscite will decide] o, "ot S B S e of a | survey of refugee conditions in Salon- Yet, he concedes, in certain m,,n_‘\lhnlr future polit atus, g acksmith’'s hammer and anvil was iki and adjacent territor after tries this economic over-population| The commission reports that thel . uireq to smash the shell which the two commissioners pro-|has occurred. He cites the annual| territory is gradually recovering ‘rom After years of disappointed experi ceeded to Athens to confer with the | famines in China and India, whica|the effects of the miners’ strike and| . oio ' in varigusp arts of the worl government and start drafting plans|ne contendw, are due to the fact that|that there is a large incrbase in the | jpicio) word comes now that for the agricultural settiements|the birth rate never has been kept| 8ross yield from the mines. However,|ye oot WOIE CREEE PO AV Wwhich the league has authorized in|down in those countries and conse.| the territory as a whole has not re-| o o0 xo o souin Wales, its loan of $25,000,000 to Greece. auently the food supply proves inad-| Sained its proaperity, the situation be-|0C O SIS S OULL (NS A8 B At the present time hundreds of eral plant generations have demon equate. | ing aggravated by continual difficul- thousands of refugees are crowded strated the success of the new nut “Dread diseases always follow ties in transport to the east, by the "I‘Wu:'a:?m:':\klr‘ .\Il:nr“(-dnnm and wrlslrry‘\ famine in the train of excessive pop-|scarcity of certain raw materials and scording to the Quecnsland govern 108, GLpandent upon governmen botanist snd the director of A shortase 4. | by the rise in the cost of living which doles and what feeding can be given """,’?" and v”mm‘t, o 2“”,1" ““";xi:\.;;.‘. ‘::s“x;"(: Binen June . the|ment . Ly British and American relief organ- {'m;'\‘wmp?m‘s | on fraic Thas Lecnl the anly legal | (i coulaite Jwhotiuspected the Wl fsatibnns Tha immediate’ purpoes at] e g e R e | erency 1l Ehe ldIstrict irepiacing the| L op farm t L ate purpose o y is proportionately over-|currency in the « repiacing ! The made-over bush nut is said to he commission is to establish the ag- German mark., The effort of the gov- retain the flavor, and the indestruc. riculturalists among them upon the | erning commission to prevent exploi- ${b1e alioll has o o topiicedlby bhe untilled lands of Macedonia and west- tation of the currency reform at first | p oy S onln g ol ek Thrace. This involves a scientic succeeded, but in August and Sep- oo 0 cstimate of the nature of soils, the tember a somewhat alarming increase division of the refugees into groups |in the cost of living set in, the main such as wheat, tobacco and vine cul- causes being the rarity of credits, dif- tivators for assignment to various dis- | food to satisty everybody, even| flcultics in obtaining supplies, the tricts and the providing of houses, | though agricultural methods im-|enormous rise of prices in Germany, barns, live stock, implements and | nrove more slowly than the popula-|and the ever-widening use of the gold seeds which will enablé them to get| tion increases. The amount of effort|unit for the establishment of prices. | 7 H L WH0E (A ¥ RIEETEE S0I0HE into production. expended in labor and machinery for However, prices are now lower than s ric a ecently reached the The commission will getting food Is Increasing steadily, go|In Germany. The commission has| “or'd. f' Ving| pecontivgreached iLie Russlan system of building ShEt aithoieinbs it n , his elevation to ) ion tends to in-| Adopted measures to deal with the | ™ ¢ . N 3 ; ol A 1 the military rank of regimental com- adjoining agricultural lands. crease more rapidly than food, there agitation tendency in labor circles e e ”A] £ };l om settlement will consist of about = heis ith his christen- 1 N, ation f results of censuy never will be danger of food giving Compilati DLTERLIS 0SSR DBUS. constructed, | guy taken last shows that the total Land Saar populatio 713,105, The & oung K California Says There Never Will Be World Starvation. Qualities of its Covering N. 8. W, Dec. 25.—For| ny years the delicious bush nut of | | Australia, known variously as the | | Australian, Queensland and Polar nut | iney, Saloniki, Dee. 28.—The arrival in Geneva, Dec. 28 Saloniki of Henry Morgenthau, for- mer United States ambassador to Tur- | key, as chairman of the Refugee Set- | tlement Commission of the League o dish save =1 to-Wear Values of the Year? Women’s Misses’ and Junior Coats, Suits, Frocks, Sweaters, Blouses north has pro “In America, especially, population has always been held in check. Peo- ple are made to realize the import-| ance of keeping a balance between | the population and the food supply. Farmers manage to produce enough reasonable ern CRADLE RAIDED FOR A COLONEL Belgrade, Dec, 28.—The heir to the £ Jugoslavia holds the dis- tinction of being the youngest colonel crown follow the villages Euch 2,000 ing will be year 1eres, Houses and tools and satisfactory Bargain kilometers ns will & from 12 to 15 ATS. It is hoped that agricultural banks may, in the future, relieve the com- mission by handling a portion of the and contracts. Later efforts will be made to interest foreign capital in the drainage of the Strouma and Vardar valleys, which would result in the re- An impecunic oom L rweral m declared his lund- | you halfway. I am| half of what you| paid his “look here K RT ready to meet forget light. Tl meet you. 1'Nl forget the other half.”—Buen Humor (Ma-| drid) Uncle May Have Long Wait o to copr with the the of living and succeed in balancing the that problem of eventually budget. Closer Home is the island of Cuba sit. uated?” asked the teachor of a for lorn-looking boy “I dunno, mam."” “Where Her Immunity After the epidemie had been check- d, an old negress protested vigorously when the health officers started (e take down the sign they had put on her house, “Why dan't it down?" you want us to take one of the officers asked ---FURS--- all high class models which are bound to be suitable to wear another season clamation of large areas of excreme- Iy fertile land. No distinction Leen made between Greek and other | Anattolian refugecs, in drafting the ns of these refugees settiements, “Don’t you know where vour r! “Ere ain’t be'n a bill collectah neah come from?" dis house sence dat sign was nailed “Yes, mam, we borrow it from next| up. You all please let it e i, we . Yo i s Women’s Apparel—Third Floor - ' Misses’ Apparel—Fifth Floor Reductions On All Men’s Overcoats and Suits The United States ha a $22,000,000 judgment against Germany, and prob- ably will collect it about Judgment Day.-—Little Rock Akansas Gaz ! alone?’ JANUARY SALE OF FURS JANUARY SALE OF FURS January (Clearance Sale —OF HIGH GRADE— -FURS- Our entire stock of high grade furs has been reduced to lowest possible prices and it is only at this time of the year that we can offer the people of New Britain such values. Don’t delay, take advantage of the greatest price cuts that we have ever of- fered. Every garment in our stock will be sold by the end of this sale, and ad- vise early selections while our stock is complete. CONNECTICUT FURRIERS 86 WEST MAIN ST. HARTFORD 65 CHURCH ST. Largest Retail Fur Manufacturers in Conn. Including the Famous Soriety Brand Clothes And Others Men’s Clothes Shop—Fifth Floor CLEARANCE SAL of 0YS’ CLOTHIN Boy's Shop--Fifth Floor Overcoats, Suits, Mackinaws Sheep-Lined Coats Every Garment Reduced We Advise Early Shopping For Choice Selections 2 STORES

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