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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1022, ) B e — — e S ———— R —— . WOMEN—READ! WATCH OUR WINDOWS i wat we ne 0| Automatic Bargain Event| i o e ¢ A DAY o iy 3650 | JAY’S COAT HOUSE)] ., U AL ars sow Al‘ly Coat Saturday cetean $1625 238 MAIN STREET—“ON THE SQUARE” Any Coat Fnday ,,,,,,,, 51650 And So On Until Every Coat Is Sold, Automati- cally Reducing 25¢ Daily On Each Coat. a . . Any Coat Saturday ...... 516 25 OUR EXPLANATION—Here We Are With a Stock of Winter Coats, and We Need All The Room in This Store; in Fact We Must Close Our Store at Least 10 Days The End of This Month to Allow The Carpenters a Chance to Make Extensive Alterations. Now Listen! Here is The Story in a Nutshell ¢ —Every Woman’s Coat in Qur Stock Must Go. This is How We Are Going to do It. None Sold To Dealers. CHOICE OF ANY COAT IN THIS STORE e iy a Life Time Thursday $§16.75 &z, CHOICE OF ANY COAT IN THIS STORE | ° Reguiar Prices - $29.75 to $65.00 : Frlday $1 6. 50 These Coats Are All This Season’s Styles No Back Numbers—All From Our Regular Stock CHOICE OF ANY COAT IN THIS STORE Saturday §1 6,25 e rishl: i b o e ver, Beaverette and Coney. Plain Models Included. 1 Any Woman’s Coat Here Reduced 25¢ a Day Until Every Coat is Sold — First Come, First Choice. These Coats Are all Silk Lmed Some lnter-Lmed and ke Each And Every One is of All Wool Materials That Consist of Evoras, Normandies, Suedines, Velours, Salt’s Peco Plush And Polo Cloths. OUR POLICY—We do Not Carry Stock From One Season To The Other, Always Keeping Our Stocks Fresh and New—Always to Give The Best Values in The City and Maintain a Reputation of Square Dealing. 238 MAIN STREET—“ON THE SQUARE” v actice for the University of Penn- nia haseball team will start next v, weather permitting. It is \ « Died on Floor . vesterday of pneumonia contending to|switch engine he was taken to a hos-| LENXIN&TON DEGREE WORK &nu- rehearsal of the r:u:r.m e 3 2 " = ;s . ko ] ks 3 applications are already on e and|sy []LI]EST PERS['N IN Cass Lake, Minn., Feb. 8.—Funeral "‘;‘ ‘ak!‘ that & bed was no place ’°"[pn.| but refused o bed, seeking/inatead | . - After the jregular meeting of Lexs | [EE' €ELANT B0 pe el b e e e e UG A lon, | ington lodge Thursday evening of this !pm", to an unusually Iarge class for week, G. H. Hockmuth will hold althe opening of degree work March 1 the first season in many years, Coach Services under the ritual of the|a “comfortable” place on the floor. He riss said, that the pitchers and todpy ® for Ga-be-nan-gewn-wonce |Catholic church, and devoid of anclent Ca p quLfl I]IES AT |37 (\\’rlnx led Meat) Chippewa Indlan, han',:? S S R e e e O e areal o oAl In tlathry [Hegnse catchers have had no indoor work. aid to have been 137 years old who Hit by Engine the floor three weeks until” he re-| Gaptain Joseph Slater will drill the | PRACTICE STARTS NEXT WEEK. |He plans to start the whole squad to- — mml on the floor of his cabin here| geveral years ago when struck by a (covered. Lexington guards immediately after| Philadelphia, 1%h. S -Outdoor | gether on I'ranklin Field. — Ga-BeNal-Gewn-Wonce Was % Chippewa Indian Warrior Cass Lake, Minn.,, I'eb. 8. Ca be nah-gewn-wonce, also known as John Smith, a Chippewa Indian, reputed to be 137 years of age, died here yester- day after a weelk's illncss with pneu- monia. bt The claim of Ga-be-na-gewn-wonce and the Indians on the Minnesota res- ervation that he was “the oldest living person in the world” was accepted by the United States Bureau of Tndian Af- other historic sa Remember 100 Years His remar mory of happen- ings a hundred ago was of valua- ble service to h ins. He was able . . . . H W C f bi to give e year, months and some- If You Use Gas For Lighting And Cooking It Will Help to Keep Your House Warm And Comfortable i R E s i : that had been lost track of. A year ag ; " the old Indian went blind, but his Tl'l C ld N' h A d M mind remained clear. 1'niil six months ese Lo lg tS n OrnlngS. ago he was able fo meet all trains en- tering " the village, Fond of Music His once powerful frame had wasted his hair has turned pure white and his face had become seamed like a (] ® ‘ o ‘ walrus hide, He was fond of music and seldom did he leave the honse in which he dived With Tom Smith, his j adopted son, without humming some © tune. Jazz and ragtime his favorites . i I and he would smile broadly when he v heard the music. Offen he walked i twelve miles to Ball club to hoar the piano or violin, his favorite musical instruments. Scout for Chippewas He claimed to have met the capedi- . tion of General Cass and Henry Schooleraft, which explored the Lake Superior copper regions in 1822, He recalled the changing of the name of | (h lake, then known as Ited edar to Cass Lake in honor of the leader of the eped lition, Ga-be- mh T e DOINGS, OF THE DUEFS R e U Uger Gl - ) BY ALLMAN Chipt in th hv i :v?\”: \Imu ‘uh\‘ ""s“m'"' lippewas n the wars w 0 BIOU, | e e e = i Metcor Shower in (K83 3 Y BROS. INC. —— r‘h:.“.’.;r'.iy lll‘:fv..‘f.fl :“‘ "’||yl)\]~‘ I;.“; M I:\'“ LR([:X][I&%RS AND | D%EufilE‘r;)/\Z% VES,| WENT | SUPPOSE NO, WE WERE MY, | WANTED To GET ONE' (I S e 5 the massacre of th i Indians . in sy | TODAY. H 2/ DOWN WITH YOU WENT | SHOPPING AND MRS. LEE BOUGHT ONE AND | OID GET ONE - Minnesoti 1 . * DECORATORS | TOPAY, HELENY VRS LEE TO TME SAW SOME OF THE IT WAS JUST A BEAUTY! ] \ ] 8 267 Chapman Street : MATINEE P | PRETTIEST HATS- \ KNEDv;Il ;/%:QE' to the Indians as Pah-de TEL. 755-13 - THEY WERE JUST WOULDN’ . a r‘n‘nf‘fl'unxr:n he 1\\:"!\ the Sioux and| Estimates cheerfully ziven on all tobe | STUNNISCf' Chippewags, Many hundreds of (he laf - | seee ter were slain. He also remembered | eSS o IARE T v for aeare oo nanet| BRING HOME THE § | never visited a big city. His firs i ‘v‘“:m |:ul~|'|'“m l'I:(U\‘ 1,:ml,- h‘r\ \’K ..‘ly. .‘H O Y S T E R S | .'r:‘f,"'“-‘ll}','.'lifr;'f‘ bl ,’ o HONISS’S | pe . | | : 20-30 State Street ' ML ’m ] ity Hartford toms of ¢ whites, for he contended ", " P » that they were contrary to the laws f'clephone 3374—3375 ef noture, \ ,