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18 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1928, SARBINF PAEKINII- ¢ 8 a ™ # § al M[]T[]R '\ARs reqy . reas th and the they i > showed that the standard of them g ' while | little g . i by time- | ward 0 d > ueatio natitutio . ‘ | % AR OPEN &2 ; | Yk Cy y. it v " PFr sider, there are th days befere the war it whites i ¥ hos: students matriculated in these “KE N. Y. SUBWAY ) ok tan-ear iraine only 3 place ike Pan RFM“TE SEBTIUNS teok faur days to jour u::n:'ix_..;' i s matter of aus insttutions fa growing by . ¢ 5 1t we mean | b T st ¥ done in four heur the old — tracks the camel, heavily laden, still . eVer 80 mueh as ghven the two set Poople Jammed Into Cars Going ;27 aeadyan e |of'cars 1100k "wifh a1 o DIStADE Parts of Near Bast Now farniie i Seka ‘st he"heet o i actually even 'my caterpiliar car whieh made the The long-cherished idea of a quiek the shuttle trains, [trip ever the 5a would be regard. {0 Theaters BESR/(Ros thin B4 (he shwitie reion: |{r\p ovar the akaos Womid ha pagerd= Acoessable and reute frem the Medierrancan 1o - ! ¥ vallabie for the gular type ¢ The novelty of Bagdad and India alse has been New Yo June 1 o “oar made up 8¢ g a Pre r will appeal ——— brought within the realm of praetiea Hee led by playe 4 ess than o f ber of rieans, 1 think. There every- Beirut, Syria \0 15.=American [tXPerience by the develepment of & = . o . ¢ ' 1 evelt Yesterday is a Sutomebi nre te supplant vail moter car service between Belrut and pruggle 1 ) this § At Aol omes 10848 1n mar ts of the Near East, |Haifa and Haite and Damaseus, Thie wa . ot : o 9 1 = Seiey: » the "*'s‘ Yy _‘g’,,___ Through s Palestine, Megope. TOUte brings Bagdad within sixty gray , r s s g tamia and i y parts M Trans. | DOUP and journey of the Mediter- iordania and Arahia, fieets of Ameri. T8nean. The course takes one through Damaseys, then across the Syrian des. merly ehlé er ¢ Of estimate and a tianmer ' ¢ A : s L Gu D s eler a4 chedper and more comfortable |4!5tance of 580 miles, with enly one eently retaine L he pr n - e o™ journey than by rail stop halfway between Damascus and iy # Wroadway ‘ - S In some of the sparcely settied and | DAMAadJe at Rutba Wells, the only ng o ianaing No Only the 1o on w seattered regions of the Meditepran. |AV8llable water siE ' equent r ¥ paph Many New Means of Protecting New o, 204 interior eountries. Yankee e room 11 the sunways, | gy i o Poderal Reserve Rank Are I J1000 08, M8 L Mo veonss | SAYS EDUCATION WOULD Al =R A New Hires Product ing hways, the rep diseiones, with sometimes as many ax | C1a" Grove. Caviwell Vases ¥oln e hie only by loug and tiresome jour- - passenge e apacity ; 2o . neyvs on donkeys and camels. In Syria QIR e 5 wgsay | | . Cleveland, June 8.—The new tourth | ant uion oo por coms ot on s | CHECK NEGRO MOVEMENT HIRES HOUSEHOLD EXTRACT througn each of the five tunnels t : 4 z federal reserve bank bullding here 15 mobiles in use are of American make - 1084 away from Times Rquare : - . vapidly néaring completion, and will| Ameriean tourists to the Holy Land SR For making GINGER ALE at home Fuilure of the city to lmit the | ®" : M be ready for oceupancy about June 1. [are now able to make the frip from Prominent Professor Mtates That the This GINGER ALE EXTRACT is a worthy companion pumber of put halls In any given | 1 popt ssate. Clif. The bullding has many detalls of ar- | Belrut to Jerusalem by automobile Northward March of '.n: to HIRES HOUSEHOLD EXTRACT for making root- area, as in done in London and other | "% 10181 Mopuistic chitecture and ingenuity that make it |over excellent roads. Refore the ad- Would Bo Stoppe] Then beer at home. It makes a pure, delicious ginger ok with old world elties, is Dlamed by the r one of the most remarkable in tha Vent of the American car the 200 mile | o 0000 o June 15—The providing very little trouble or ex port for the conditior United States, arehitects and builders | trip from Beirut to the Holy City oe- 4 hee for the sAueation of the Bee One package makes 80 . 1f your dealer cannot supply you, send 25¢c and we will send postpaid package “Between 28th and f1st streets and strensth sty .. |cupled nearly a week; today it can be between Sixth and Fighth avenues,” HF ! ¢ :‘““:"h strength and satety the key .ufi' in ten ‘h"uu oy groes 18 one way to keep them ‘,n the u says the report, “thers are no less UM 4 The main vault s 30 feat below the | Americans at home who think of ""’"m'::‘.:""" :r"':h‘;h';'i‘:':(’:‘ "":;":: direct. | <t o Or. H THE CHARLES E. HIRES COMPANY, Philadelphia Palestine as it {s deplete th. e, ine 88 it 1s depieted In the Bible, | ol 7o Ton ion of Dr. H. €, Min- iy :?:“x:\’) e g e straet lovel Side and rear walls are| "o cioral land untouched by mode Ing eapac LB LA orty 1 " and untoue ¥y m rn o The front w even y L : 5 four of tham, with a capneity of 84, I]FMAND l]F FREN[:H fx feet thick, T r:"h sl & "d‘A " |)ife, would perhaps be surprised te | Nich, head of the State Normal Col. " feet thick and has the heaviest door g g oo "opnia raglon coversd by a |1*€€, Miami university in a statement 000 are within & cirele having & ra- fodls h § . in the world. The vault is designed | o, L "o )" natwork of splendid [made here upon his return from a dius of 1,000 feet from the center d ! A to hold upward of two billien dollara ‘oo, and fast-moving motor ears, The tour of the negro educational institu. tions of the south, According to Dean of Broadway and 42nd street ' " s o ) “Assume for a moment that of wafll Englfles That WIll Blll'n in goid and securities, according 10| wooqen plough, the hand seythe, and these 50,000 amusement aeakers, 45, D, C. Wils; chairman of the board. ¢he other primitive implements which | Minnich, one-third of the negro popu- 000 come from the Times Square LeS G ]' The first floor, for : transaction | (or thousands of years were used to | lation of the state of Georgia has mi- station between % and 8:30. From 5 brasoiine of publie business, is finished in Ital- | mqaye this land fertile and productive, | grated to northern states this station Interborough and Brook. tan marble, Customers can 10ck hgve given way to medern American Dean Minnich sald that unless the | lyn Rapid Transit trains run hoth themselves behind iron bars when agricultural machinery, 1In the larger [negroes are educated in the south| north and south, while a shuttle Paris, June 156 —France 1 10 or 12 | transacting business uu.h a teller, train runs to the Grand Central sta. Years behind the United § in au- A gallery of armor plate tion and the cast side Interborough |tomobile production, i the conclusion tha first floor, with loo line. If these 35,000 peopla were Of Andre Citroen, sometimes described which guards can see everything oc- equally distributed hetween these five 88 the Henry Ford of France, upon curring below, routes, it would mean that 7,000 peo- his return from America after making Truek driveways lead directly lnl: ple would have to be acrommodated & comparative study of manufacturing | the mail room, It cannot be *‘rushed | by each. Now if two-thirds of thig In the two countries, The truck first enters a vestibule and Citroen, "we |the street door must be closed and| total arrived between § and 8:15 and| "In France," said M one-third between $:15 and 8:30, it haven't mass production of automo- | locked behind it before the second | would mean that 4,700 people would [ biles yet because of a more limited door, opening direct into the mail arrive from each of these five mr.c.‘mnrku. Thera are 12,000,000 cars|room, can be opencd. | tions in the latter quarter of an hour, |in the United States, a very big mar- Armed guards can look down upon “The performances are over very|ket, whereas in France we have 300,- [ the mail room and command it with nearly at the same time, and the|000 cars, with, say, 75,000 customers, |rifles, and statues at each of the en- period during which the crowds wish | ®ach one of which buys a new car|trances to the building will conceal to reach the subway trains is con-|every three or four years. | machine guns, siderably shorter. Let us an.-umo,} “The chief difference in French and | however, that they will be ohliged | American cars,” said M. Citroen, “is Now you are talking business. Put| to occupy the same half hour in dis-!that of style. The French like a grace-| a Herald classified ad. in at once, | that streteh of desert. What A Customer Remarked— . . “Surely there is no need for people not to be well shod when they can buy Tr y ThlS ReClpe F Ol' Shoes so cheaply.”—That is just the point. Come and see the values we offer you, Raised Biscuits On Sale Satur day ‘ Almost every woman has her favorite recipe for making biscuits. Try this one, and see how the golden brown biscuits you get from it com- pare with any you have ever tasted. — Women’s — <] — Women’s — Patent leather P ' Patent King Tut atent leather Pumps. / ol Patent leather Sandals. g / Brown Kid Pumps. Black Satin Pumps. i Patent Strap Pumps. John Alden Flour, the flour of purity, whiteness Tan rubber sole Oxfords Patent Oxfords. | i and strength. Since then John Ald_en Flour Black and Tan Oxfords. Black and Brown : has always been their choice, not only in baking Oxfords. ._ but in every food that requires the use of flour. $2.98 ; ‘ ; $3.48 ' You will appreciate the wholesomeness ; , John Alden Flour imparts to your cooking. ot Because of the strength of the wheat from which BARGAINS IN WHITE SHOES ‘ it is made, John Alden Flour is famous for any- Children’s White Can- Women’s Pumps and Better grades in strap)|| | 1 j A vas Pumps and Oxfords ‘| Oxfords, small lot. effects and Oxfords, ‘ i thmg made out of yeast dough’ .Whether pre ‘ pared by the baker or the housewife. $1.19 $1.69 | . $1.49 $1.98 Years ago the women of New England learned that the secret of successful baking was Continental Products Company Women’s Serge Slippers | Children’s Tennis Children’s Pumps Belden Street, New Britain, Conn. brown and white and Oxfords ’ Raised Biscuits 8c 98¢ $ 1.79 : @ &‘-’E m@@@ w&fl%fi 13§ )80, £ cups) John Alden Kid House Slippers Misses’ Tan Oxfords I 1 cake yeast, 314 level teaspoon salt, and Oxfords Children’s Tan Sandals 1 and Patent Pumps el | $1.49 | 98¢ $1.98 | o i e | Dissolve the yeast and sugar — —e in the liquid, fi:liquid should — not be cold nor hot, but about | S S \ room temperature (80°) when the yeast is added. To get the &st ;enuluu!)he hmixtu;'e should ; - about ® throughout the — Men's — — Men’s — N W 1) ggoce]ss‘d “:i‘:imh thel yeasth i? g : . z 7 \ issolved, add the salt, one hall Groodyear Welt Oxfords Tan Scouts ...... $1.98 || ~ 74 N i the flour, the meited fat and Mtk snl brown 4 - ‘ g | N 77 then the rest of the flour. Knead / Work Shoes 8298 || W= P i g S for about five minutes. Put in Rubbher heels f s e ! i ) Sty the Same in Shoes Rubber Sole ..... $2.18 a J / \ 3 Y A\ war pla:or?:n p::v:f ‘,v:m: / water until it has risen to double its bulk. This will take two or $3.98 > Tan Army Shoes . $3.98 || 7/ 7 : J M [ j ‘ /il it { \ ‘ | three hours, according to tem- ature, Knead again and let it rise until it is 1§ times its original size. Shape into round balls with the hands. Brush over the top with melted butter. Allow them SELF-SERVICE SHOE MART || Nl P/ & =i “The Home of Shoe Bargains” Look for other recipes in 389 MAIN ST. Next To Mohican Market