New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 3, 1924, Page 4

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“ ing the earth, will hold its 4 SPECILEVENTIN | SWEDEN JULY 47H International Celebration Wil Take Place at That Time June the league of postal nations, Washington, . C July 4, the Universal Postal Union, emb ieth niversary at Stockholm, Sweden. “It is significant that the delegates of tlie nations of the carth gather fo Ahis celebration of po: July 4, American Indeps because to the United Stat honor of laying the found the Universal Pc Unior Out of regard for your own health, | i read this letter: anl e miore IR fwo wesks | than medicine faken in 20 years | L — | Mary's church on Sunday, J Sunday britAlN DALY HERALD, Iy Francis A. To Be O nes. Tt eleans, sweeps and puri- exactly as nature 1 necessary to in- crease caten. If eaten regularl} ellogg’s Bran is guaran- tced to bring perm: most chron groeer ret Kellogg s vour cfective, doctors reccommend o wonderfu!, mut-lik> flavor of TULODAY, JUNE 38, luad. [ completed nhis studies there this | spring. e fs 25 years old. 1In the | | Murphy rdained ‘lm al schools and at Holy Cross he | was one of the leaders of his class, | He will celebrate his first mass at June 15 LOS ANGELEY l}l]PS HEAR GREAT TALKS EGaplives Give Them Straight ' Dope at Conlerence 3.—Chief of | | Police August Volimer and his police | captains recently instituted a new | form of conference when they held a | round-t ission on crime, its | causes, n§ for its ]\l(\rnlmn‘ with the inmates of the Lincoin | Los A June ICED HSAm All T El A is so simply and cheaply made — 7ot is the most:.refreshing summer beverage known.—Make some today.. us, we're canned on a charge of bein, e e o e o ve'vs | Release Employes of days for having an empty stomach.” | Street Departmen( By an educated prisoner, Who said [ ... . At R he had made it his business to study The use of mechinery on jobs being carried on by the board of public crime from both sides: “There is, ap- | parently, only one thing for a man to | works has made it possible to reduce Heights jail her®. At a luncheon in the jail the prison- builetin of the National ( society from its headqus Washington, D. C. This confederation of fifty is the oldest co sive o zation of world nas reduced the by billions, anl iner d the lett exchanged by millions, 1t has made neighbors of Kalamazoo and Timbuk- tu and pnt sew:ng machines in Turk- ish harems. W New Zealand Lett he differ hetween $2.0 a 2 cent po stamp represer the individual the most dramatic ture of the Pestal Union's accom- | plishments. Ten years before the | Postal Union was thought of, it co $2.50 to send an ounce letter to New Zealand; today it costs 2 cents | “The blow to the high cost of mail- | ing illustrated by the United States- | New Zealand instance has been re- peated to a lesser degree with all for- eign correspondence. Reduction of the cost of an ounce letter to I from 12 cents to nts, to France from cents to 5 « razil | from cents to cents, dates bach to a conference called with the proval of Abraham Lincoln. Agree- ments of this conference were built | into the postal convention d at Berne, Switzerland, in 1873, Although the actual fif year anniversary oc- curred last year, the Universal Postal Union will celebrate it at Stockholm this year, since 1924 is the year of its regular meeting, A Heavy Steamer Mail “Dispatch of sacks of mail from the New \mv\ foreign mail post office is not uncommon today. On or trip recently the Mauretania brought in 14,000 sacks. “Last year the United S $10,000,000 do send 415,000 of mail, exchuding parcel post, abroad and received ,000 pieces, It is a far cry 'flnm these thousands of sacks of mafl to Burns Coffechouse, post office for* all Manhattan fora cen- tury. 1In this old tavern near the Bat. tery letters ware a rack to | be called for by the addresses, Tven the King of Hedjaz had to give up re- | cently the old custom of dumping mail in a pile where the pilgrims to Mececa, at their leisure, picked out letters sent for them “No man who sticks on a letter to a missionary h can realize the tribulati Ji Forced to | Sale Prices on Children’s Vacate Shoes and no place to go! Ordered out by July 1, we have marked every Shoe in the store at so low a price that you’ll want a dozen pairs. It’s the only way we can close out this fine big stock of good shoes. Remember, each pair is from our regular stock. letter only to dfather had to ¢ one of five ways of sending the It might rman mails Engla Italy, to ough Germany to through :10 when he is broke and hungry, and at the invitation of the chief, told |tha to ‘knock somebody off.’ I be- lthe arms of the law just what they |lieve that the majority of small erime thought of policemen, courts and law |is caused by that reason and no other. | services the board has dispensed this enforcement in genc Chief Vollmer | By a gray-haired inmate, whom al ar, unless the labor situation be learned much from the con- |saluted as Vincent: “Conditions are| comes so serious that the city is called , including the following. |not going to he a bit better until the [ upon to place laborers so they character of men arrested |public is taught to place trust and support their families, as was the ould he more closely investigated by |confidence in the police department, | three years ago. The only new the arresting officer. and they will not show that trust and | ing jobs to be done this year are Gar- A court should be established to |confidence until the department merits | den street and Arch street hetween AL handle vagrants exclusively it. At present some policemen will [ Shuttle Meadow avenue and Linwood 5 \|,“],1~ A sympathetic officer should he ap- |lic and cheat to convict a man.” | street. He re v a eas of these By an admitied bootlegger: “What | s 1 on other |1 want to know is this: when you | pinch a man and get 18 gallons of | remarks by prisoners | sood whiskey from nim, why is it that | conclusions were: | the r w you confiscated only the working forces and further re- L SRS | ductions may be made shortly, Ther. m ill be no work for those with whos: stat world's postage PRANCIS A, MURPHY young men who will priesthe Among the five he ordained to the | Joseph's Rishop J June 14 street, education in the local se ating from St. Mary's paroch in 19 and from the New High ool in 19 He then en- tered Holy ('ross college at Worcester, | Ry an Irish pri . called by I\NJ Mazs, and was graduated from that |co-inmates, Sam: “These cops pinch | | institution in Ju 0. He cn-us because that's their busincss and | of officers who did this, but tered St Berna E rinary, Rock they don't ecare if we're innocent or | warning from other prisoners, [ ter, N. in the fall of 1920 not. 1f they get nothing real against | bootlegger sat down. | States i t aturday, Murphy, grandfathers’ had to pay the cost over and above now na representatives | transportation costs, cancel do with checks, and | son to hear and thos petty charges, Some of the that led up to the age: tions' SMITH R, P. T .CAPTAIN Troy, N. Y. June 3.—Frank A. | mith of Auburn yesterday was elect- | ed captain of the Rensselaer Poly- Chief Vollmer asked for the names | technic Institution baseball team for at a | next season. Smith, who is a junior, the | plays center field and is a velief pitch- Ler, banks Not in Union world not repre- d in the Universal Postal Union ments today are Afghanistan, Baluchistan Johore and i in the Malay States, Mal- Northern and Southern Northern Rhode- , Piteairn Is- Tonga Islands. “Through the offices of the Univer- Postal Undon magazines have be- international as well as national of the cconomy in cost to IForeign mails take the magizine to 61 « “The parts of the 5- and Arab ands, , Nyasaland, Oudlet Millinery o Incorporated 177 MAIN STREET FIRST ANNIVERSARY IN OUR PRESENT STORE We are not going to go in detail in regard to our fast progress we have made in our new store; you all know it was necessary for us to open a Downstairs Store shortly after we came over to our new store as we had outgrown in a few months our Main Floor. To morrow and continuing all week we will put on sale practically all merchandise in the store. SALE STARTS TOMORROW AND LASTS UNTIL SATURDAY NIGHT 650 TRIMMED HATS $1 00 $2.00 $3.00 OFF ON ALL HATS 0 ON THE MAIN FLOOR | come hy virtue subscribers, National Geographic independent countries and to 92 de- pendencies. ‘The same material which is read by members of the society in the members sinia, Gabon, Zanzibar, the Society Is- wnds and the Seychelles.” SHORT STORIES who will retire as | the New Britain rday, will continue | to make his home in this city and will devote his entire time to writing fietion, Mr. Russell entered the short story writing field some time mecting with encouraging suce WILL WRITE 1 rt Russe editorial writer of Herald next 1, tes spent | pic Farphones in Chu Norfolk, Neb.—When some of the older people of the Grace Lutheran church here began to miss servie the found that they st away becau ey couldn't he: wrphones have s and connect Attendance is on stuck in Miss Ethel Sewell, Hin (Pa.) society girl, believes in being original in her attire, Here she is in her mah Jongg dress at the Wynnewood Pony and Dog Show, ! Wynnewood, Pa. Phitadeiphia so- ciety all turned out for the event, pastor S new special Pe ermons n placed in the ed with the pulpit » upward trend, b cent stamp ALL CHILDRENS SHOES Colored Tops 89¢ Children's White Kid and SMOKED ELK SHOES 89¢ Forced out of business WEDNESDAY SPECIALS FOR and and Children's Patent Leather PUMPS AND OXNFORDS $1.39 DRESS HATS—TAILORED HATS 1, PRICE To our knowledge Silk Stockings were never sold at these prices. ALL UNTRIMMED STRAW HATS AT ARE GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY H O S I E RY e Pure Thread \ SILK STOCKINGS Broken Sizes Values to $1.49 50¢ ._—_——_—J $2.35 Venus Full Fashioned Silk Stockings, s 1 : 75 all colors .... §2.50 Northampton Heavy Ingrain Silk Stockings, $l 85 blackonly ........ ALL BEADED BAGS AT TENNIS SHOES White or Brown—Special &89%¢ MEN Black Provn Dress Up-to-Date Pumps Shoes and Oxfords $1.95 $2.25 Plenty of Shoes for all--Every pair priced at a fraction of its FOR WOMEN Black. Grev and Airedale s ALL STOCKING A ra 0 Ly A rare opportunity Full Fashioned CLOCKED STOCKINGS Black and Cordovan, Value $2.95 $1.00 $1.95 Van Raalte and Lehigh Full Fashioned Silk 31 .39 Stockings, black only Lace Clocked Silk Stockings, Lisle Tops, and all Silk. SI .95 ; Regular $2.95 ..... Full Fashioned SILK STOCKINGS Broken Sizes Values to $3.50 to secure newest sty¥e, regular stock merchandise at half price and even less. TORE NEW BRITAIN former value—New Styles SAMPLE SHOL 193 MAIN STREE’ $2.25 Onyx Pointex Silk Stockings, black s l 59 only .. $1.59 Triumph Silk Stockings— black and all $1 .29 colors ..

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