New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 21, 1922, Page 15

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922 Sale Starts Saturday, July 22 at 9 A. M. The order is to clean house and the manner in which we have reduced the prices will undoubtedly crowd our store. PALM BEACH AND MOHAIR SUITS, ALL COLORS TO GO IN THIS SALE AT $10.50 69 SAMPLE SUITS All colors for young men and men. from $30 to $40. v $19.75 Come early to get this value MEN’S and YOUNG MEN'S SUITS Many models. All the wanted colors. Single or double breasted in Serges, Casgimeres, Herringbones, Unfin- ished Worsted from $25 to $30. vow $16.75 Nor have we ever attempted anything on so GREAT A SCALE as this GIGANTIC SALE. So buy now or regret later. Our The sterling reputation which this store MEN’S SUITS of good strong Worsted Fabrics such as Regulars,— Stouts, formerly sold at $25 to $30. ow $16.75 This store has never had the Sale Habit. motto has always been quality, not quantity. It is possible to find here not only a suit of the color you desire, but also the style or pattern. bears, backed by such representative lines as the Wonder Clothes Stores handle, truly the greatest collection of high class Men’s and Young Men’s Suits ever gotten together under one roof and is going to be sold at prices that will compel you to fill your needs for months to come. The opportunity of a life time. Don't miss it. Be in line on time! Formerly sold OPEN SATURDAY UNTIL 10 P. M. NEW BRITAIN, CONN. FROM OUR FACTORY gone by that the real estate value of the ground upon which the little | home is built, is estimated to have in- creased almost 40 times its original | cost. Forty-eight years ago Mr. and Mrs. nan who is very good looking but ha the slightest bit of sin in him; | face, once -handsome, hecomes drawn [and shrivelled as the years go by un- | til he is no longer good looking. all make you free; then you will be ruakes for real happiness in life. She|naon for a trip to a nearby beach.: } Fappy.” says she is perfectly happy now but is| kretz had just driven out of the not anxious to reach the century|Baker barnyard and upon the tracks Organist Appears, mark. which cross the highways at this Laughs at Interviewer. point, when the fast moving train In speaking of the world's advance [crashed {nto the machine. Baker,! in mechanical achievement the good |who had been standing in the yard OULD GOUNT HOMES Theodore Lundquist, of Cambridge, Mass, former organist at the local church, favored with vocal and organ selections during the evening. Mr. “There'are a great number of peo- ple who are trying to make the world FROM EAST BERLIN rs. Elizabeth Juengst Remem- bers ity in Its Infant Days Ninety years old as time rolls ound the face of the clock, but 90 ears young as youth is measured by [is the wife of Henry Dressel; others he spirit that abides in the human preast—Iliving in a cozy, one-story rame cottage, entirely vith beds of dahlias, marigolds and oses, Mrs. Elizabeth Juengst, of 419 fouth Main street, sits in her old ashioned rocker on the little overed front porch and calmly sur- beys the passing generations. Smile and Greeting for Friends, With a laugh in her eyves and & mile on her face, this little old lady ods and waves at passtng friends in rolleys and automobiles and tells of riends of other days to whom she vaved and smiled as they drove by vine | | | surrounded | mother, and the | 85,000, according to the estimate of a |property owner in that section of the a " when you came here?"” she was asked. Louis Juengst purchased the property | on South Main street, receiving a half acre of ground for $125. The same property today may be worth close to natured woman is not without the in- clination to have her little joke, and she did so yesterday afternoon, much to the surprise of her interviewer. She had referred to the passing of the family horse, the advent of the trolley car and the automobile, and was The couple was blessed with ninelasked: ‘Do you expect to live to see children, four of whom still live. One|flying machines come into common of the children, Mrs. Hattie Dressel,|use?" : With a smilé so broad it might al- most, without lack of respect, be con- strued as a grin, she replied: “They | are nothing new, I saw flying ma-/ chines before I left the old country, 68 years ago."” FAMILY DIES WHE , TRAIN HITS AUTO city. Mr. Juengst died 13 years ago. are, Henry Juengst, a mail carrier; Miss Adelaide, who lives with her Dressel family on South Main street, and Mrs. Frederick Ogle of Kensington. Besides her children, Mrs. Juengst has eight grandchildren and two great grand- children. Remembers Old Copper Mine. “What did New Britain look like A ruminating look came into her eyes as she pondered. “Well, over there, (pointing in an easterly direction from her home) was a copper mine. Just across the road was a carriage factory seven Kiled, One Injured in Grade Crossing Accident at waving good-bye to the party, nessed the accident, man Robert Kramer of Kenora, killed Canadian National ballast severely scalded yesterday near Horne Payne, moose, MOOSE WRECKS LOCOMOTIVE. 0Odd Rail Accident. Port Arthur, and Engineer Goodman of when the train ran into overturning the locomotive. Goodman is not expected to live. Wit~ One Man Killed, Another Hurt, in Ont., July 21.—Fire- was a train was 0T such Abel newly appointed Rev, Dr. dence, R. I., However, said that Jesus, “Ye the truth every person make he should adopt the words of all know the truth and | disbelieve the old doctrines which the that there is no evil | thing as the devil and that if there (ever had becn, he no longer exists. Ahlquist of Provi-| hiame it on God hecause He did not pastor | cause them to be horn rich Iike others. of the Swedish Lutheran church, at- They think that the only thing which | ity clc o f frienc ¢ sduca- !of the Brotherhood of the church. :»‘ "”"‘f- ","]: AR ":*' nd’ednoh This was the first appearance of the|'10n Will make them happy But they are all wrong. There is nothing to the capacity to greet him. 3 rust anc a Jod."” Dr. Ahlquist made a favorable im- | F! ",.”lnfiv"x'."yi"s-flml N, Dr. Ahlquist ess e members of the L Asrmon, Tt RIS [FRnAEHED: Mponi:ths gL Of the} 21 that this should be a land of lib- saying he was pleased at heing | appointed and he would do all in his | power to keep the church at its high Lundquist was greeted by his friends at the church and renewed many cther acquaintances. The Arpi Sex- tette favored with a number of se- lections. Following the program, refresh- ments were served in- the hall down- stairs, and ice cream was served on the church lawn. To Commence Soon, Dr, wonld Ablquist anounced that he preach his first sermon from the pulpit in the local church on the first Sunday after Labor Day, on Sep- tember 10, It will be the first tifie in years that another elected pastor ocupied the pulpit, which had Leen filed so ably by Rev, 8, G. Oh- nian, who 1s now in New York. The tree sycamore makes a good shade the city because smoke is not detrimental to it. for | . | Apostles and Prophets made in tht ‘ Rev. Abel Ahlquist Speaks at/ “Poor men and women who | tended a social event at the church|Cin make a person happy is wealth new pastor before the members of the 2 in the word which can make a man | church, ik v | 6tanding. olden times, trying to make people | believe | Swedish Lutheran Church | dWeaIsh Lutheran uuxc | ways in great sorrow nearly Vs | here last evening under the auspices|2Nd g00d times. Some say that pret- | bt 4 « e a as fillec | congregation and the hall was filled| & e/ WO WA €08 FAKE A o ot | The new pastor first spoke in Swed- Fhih Dot 2 He also spoke in English and told Buffalo, N. Y. the younger generation of the church that he meant to aid them in their| | work in every manner possible. Text of Sermon. ! Dr. Ahlquist went on to say, “There is a certain lust with which we cannot their spick and span carriages with ' VITAMINES FroM OCEAN DEPTHS Under Norwegian seas, Nature stores in the cells of the liver of the true cod-fish an cil that is far richer in vitamines than any other form of fat. Hgly ved, black and yellew wheels, | 5nd 8 paint shop. On ‘Nigger Hill rawn by the almost extinct old |there were only two houses and only amily horses |one or two on ‘Dublin Hill." e | 68 Years in New Britain. Mrs. Juengst was born in Germany Buffalo, July 21—A whole family of five and two other persons were killed and one serfously injured in a grade crossing accident on the Michigan Central railway, six miles west of Lridgeburg, Ont., yesterday afternoon, ' R R S T -The automobile of Daniel Fretz or} AT eihds | b In o wetEhe: or A | Colorado Springs, Col., was hit by a O [ which holds us down from a place in| | Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo pas- | the skies; keeps us tied down to idle- genger train running on the Michigan | e “antl selRatiness: Wil Aot lab Central tracks. o tings 1o R D Excellent Health, The dead are: Daniel Fretz, his wite | selves, There are so many things that dly e t ssing years| Mrs. Juengst is in excellent health,|and their three children, Ethel, aged | ld h | make us full of fear, and yet nobody | So rapidly hav he pa 8 Y | WOU SOOt e lin fact, outside of an attack of grip|1§, Harold, 13, and Carl, 8, and Rob- knows what it is or how to overcome | last winter, she says she has never|ert Baker, eleven-year-old son of Dep- it and turn to the right A sinful How I Got Rid 0 Ot The first application of Resinol Oint- f B . F t ment usually takes the itch and burn | known a real serious illness. She is|uty Reeve.James Baker of Bertie, nan is like a steam engine with no | right out of eczema and similar skin nd Pains from Corns and Bunions | exceedingly active, uses glasses only,cn(. These were killed outright. Mrs, | steam; it canot operate corectly. Tt OF PUREST VITAMINE'BE“R"‘G con'LIVER oiL | for reading and has splendid eyesight.| Raker, sister of l"‘rn-!z. died a few min- is the same with us, if are run supplies this wealth Of Nature‘s bounry Of health-buildingand She helps with the household work, |utes after reaching a hospital here, | down by the devil we canot do cor- h 5 b ity daie | even to the washing, ironing and bak- | Fler daughter, Scima, aged §, probably « z \ i ] | rectly the things we siould | growth-promoting vitamine in its most eftective form. !ing, putters around in the flower gar-(will recover affections. This gentle, healing oint- “We are treating God unjustly For adults vandown in vilality or the malnourished, ment seems to get right at the root of ioketvehild; TEoix fovd anditont e S Without Soaking, Powders, Plas- the trouble, and is almost sure to re- rickety child, it is food and tonic unrivalled. Start ters, Etc., After Suffering_Inde- store skin health in a short time, scribable Foot Misery for 20 Years, Resinol Ointment and Scap at all druggists, Prof. F. T. Mclntyre, well known world tourist and lecturer, says: ‘‘For | dens, which she exhibits to callers Fretz and his family motored to | Why? B we 46 not know Him; | v reat deal of justifiable pride, | Stevensville, Ont,, from Colorado to do not re what He is doing for ket L c ! (Seahin e i i enjoying Scott’s' Emulsion benefits today ! Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N J. years 1 was compelled to wear shoes wo sizes too large, to be able to walk land in general, seems to have dis-|spend a month with the Bakers, \‘ healing the sick who have at least« |covered that contentment which| party was made up yesterday after-| b AR tEaRY & Watch.n yitng with any comfortat all, I tried soaking my feet in medicated baths, powders, POLLY AND HER PALS the burning callouses and soreness re- : fused to go, while the pains from corns wATCH ME GIT. and bunions continued to torture both IS GOAT WHEA Imind and body, which upset my entire : Inervous system, One day, very fortun- ] tely, | met a lady from Egypt who gave nde a little box of Gypsy Foot Relief, which she said was a secret from the desert. After using it a short time, the awful burning stopped, the cal- louses came off in chunks, leaving the skin of my feet clean and' smooth, while the pains from corns and bunions seeraed to disappear as if by mugic. From that time, 1 said a joyful good- bye to over 20 years of indescrib- able foot misery. 1 would not take a hundred thousand dollars to again go chrough those years ofagony. Now | feel liketellingevery foot sufferertogeta box of the wonderful Gypsy Foot Relief.” Note.—Gypsy Foot Relief, referred 0 by Mr. McIntyre, may beapplied in minute, without fuss or bother. Sure, quick reliefcomes three minutes later, or he makers give back the small amount cou pay. It it sold in this city by ir Department Store. ““Where the Y. M. C. A. building| | now stands was the circus grounds. 0 years ago, For the past 68 years | Later the circus grounds were over he has resided in America, living all | there on the hill." (A general north- at time In New Britain, She ljved | Westerly direction was indicated). i v | “There were three churches in the t one time on Park street, where | he office of the New Britain Lumher|‘"1'»"~ they being the Baptist and the [o. now stands, and says she remem- | South and Center Congregational ers this city when “you could count | churches. ¢ houses from East Berlin,” us do flp we alize | us 22-14 = s - BY CLIFF STERRETT. Well, What-M-;)V;e Coul& Ash Do Cavse s e ‘1 | L TE 1) e ; g ORNE Y'EeMME: o | > OMME. 172 e Tmis IS ! | 2 HERES YER HAT, SIR! Copvria! Newspaper | eature Service Inc. Great Britain rights reserved

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