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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, .1922. SPECIAL DISPLAY OF THE NEWEST AND BEST DESIGNS OF FURNITURE AND IN CONNECTION WITH THE NATURAL “BETTER HOMES IN AMERICA” WEEK. EVERYONE WELCOME. Our Reputation While at one of the Grand Rapids Markets ovr buyer was introduced to another big buy- er from California by the presi- dent of one of Grand Rapids finest and largest factories as “—from B. C. Porter Sons, Con- necticut’s Best Furniture Store” We have won this enviable reputation by always selling Good, Honest Furniture at the Lowest Possible Prices, and al- ways giving. complete satisfac- IN OUR BIG KITCHEN DEPARTMENT you will find many styles of Kitchen Cabinets, tion. i Porcelain Top Tables, Chairs, Refrigerators and Linoleums. Our new stock of the fam- ous Dutch Kitchenettes is well worth seeing. We also have a large line of Printed and 5':I:giiiin§iil:10]l:'lilc’:?rom 640 "E)rd 95c 9 $l ‘ 10’ $l -859 $2|25 SONS E52 SEPRAcEER BEEEIsoninaze sdeRaldnsir EEN Ax=ifsesals 2i OVERSTUFFED LIVING ROOM SUITES are very popular and on onr second floor we are showing some very handsome new styles. We have them in Mohair Tapestry, Ve- lour, and Denim. Select your own covering. Three piece suites with separate spring Ask Those’Who Know Us Best _I cushions, all hair filled, covered in tapestry or $l 95 OO " e e = B. C. PORTER “CONNECTICUT’S BEST FU RNITURE STORE” We Sell Whittall We Sell Berkey & Gay Furniture STATUE OF BURKE| MILES NERER LAND Sulgrave Institute of England Course Has Altered in Last Ten Presents It to the City Months, Sailors Say TeeT Rapid Strides Made In Aerial Deliveries, Detroit, Oct. 11.—More than 12,000 pounds of first class mail is delivered trom three to fo hours earlier each day than would bhe the case if the > , postotfice department had no air mail | _Norfolk, Va. Oct. 11.—Marine men service, A tant Postmaster Gen, | &8€rt that the Guif Stream is thirty Henderson declared today in an ad- | Mies nea notemthangiorwast ten at the international aerial meet | MONthS ago.. To this (yey attribute The point of view of the de.| '€ hot wave now sweeping the coun- partment, he added, “is that the peo- | "¥:. : ple are entitled to and should be given | NAVy men agree with the marine full advantage of additional speed in [ Men and say they believe the stream the matisr of handling mall: meiter” | 148 SWUNE' i0fo another doures, - dex Mr. Henderson explained that tie | SPite the fact that scientists are skep- iir mall service at the present consists | €41 or disagreed on the question. of a relay advance of mail from New | 1 the theory, however, that the York across the continent and vice | Clan&e in the Gulf Stream's course versa, none being taken for a com- HeDrenBbrolEhy, abont byigtonme S R and other sea causes rather than by Mr. Henderson further explained to | &PY canstruction work on the Florida “get from the airplanc all that it may | Last Coast Railroad along the Florida cffer in the .+ of postal service, it | F€YS: Sl ry to fly at nigh : The marine men deelare that the thought in mind,” he | f&ct that the weather now is almost continued, Ywe have for the past four | At @ July temperature is due to the T .| warm water of the Guif Stream be- of experiments and study. Our ex. | N8 S0 near the shore. One day out T e A el from Norfolk the weather is so hot it is, I th fe to conclude that it| M&N on ships can wdrk on the open PR R decks In their undershirts and then We expect within a few weeks REs HSOmEorsablys et light as an cxperiment our Chi Buckets of water dipped up out of fiold and T predict that in six or eight , (¢ GUIf Stream by the crew of the months we will be able to fiy from | Steamer Eastern Trader was so hot a e A i hand could not be kept in it for more than a minute without danger of hav- ing the skin blistered. The Gulf Stream, it is said, affects the weather for the reason that when FOR WINE AND BEER | it is nearer shore it 1 he effect of cooling storms at sea before the wind EraEmERegs Washington, Oct. 11—The statue of Edmund Burke, member of the Brit- ish parliament and staunch friend of the American colonists, was presented to the clty of Washington and to the nation today by the Sulgrave Insti- tute of England, It is of bronze in heroic size, weighing 2300 pounds, and is a reproduction of the statue erected in memory of the beloved Irishman, at Bristol, England. It de- picts Burke in an impassioned atti- tude in the midst of a speech. The site, on Ma “husetts avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets, {s on a triangular park in the midst of the residential section, overlook- ing several historic points, and facing toward the Carnegic public library The Sulgrave Institute is a body composed of Americans, Englishmen and Canadians, whos promotion of friendly tions among those countries. Tt is the owner of Sulgrave manor, whenee it l‘uhfi the > z - H - 5 il 5 §35gcsRde name, the birthplace of Geo ash ington's father, and long the home ot the English branch of that famil The impressive dedication exe were attended by a group of promin- ent English members of the soclety, who journyed to this cou to pre- sent the American memor| to three S Englishmen, famous in the bistory of |37 v thnt country and the tnited States, | V BT ERANS TO FIGHT The three statues were given to Am- erlcans by the socicty and erccted at their expense, only the sites being e kAl b HHEAN] given. President Harding was asked — :"_;';;‘\'\"‘-nv:"'i"\]‘;’_”””"\l;":ml\h“ e to receive the Burke statuc in beha'f lpyg jeque Will in Al Probability Be | 300 miles off the Virginia Capes, cold of the nation, The other two mem- | winds passing over the warm water orials congisted of busts of Willian Taken Up at New Orleans Bt e AR R B Pitt, Earl of Chatham during Am become cool before e u-\in'”"i)“ can Revolutionary days, and of Vi P aching the E:.:[:: ]I;i’\(f”“ ,,‘,m\‘\i‘Q;;',KL.I,”:,'“_“M L (A T T Ry T 11 (By Asso- 1t is r ‘WHN‘I that expert weather The Pitt bust was 'presented by tie | ciated Pross).—Light wine and beer “"1‘\ Shp oved by the government soclety to the city ©f Dittsburgh, | Will in all probaility be made an fs-| Will obtain from sea captains the ac- Pennsylvania, named in honor of the | Sue before the fourth national con- ""j'!-j of 1,'» (Guit Stream at the pres- Englishman ®ho stood high in the | Vention of the American Legion which "’“ tme for the purpose of arriving hearts of the early settlers of this|OPens here October 16 and continues " ."""l_f‘ -gomp w'ymnv opinion of country. fat his untiring work in the [until the 20th. 'This information [JUst what effect the fre: ream of British parliament to ease the tax|came today from sources in close ;"'“" “wllr‘l \vnu:‘h.rls of miles at sea burdens of the colonists and to grant | touch with the convention plans. 1as on the weather on shore, them stronger powers of local selt [ National officials of the Legion here government. Pittston, Massachusetts, | in advance of the convention, ex- also was named in his memory. pressed doubt g to whether the light Viscount Bryce, historian, econom- [ Wine and beer issuc would reach the ist and statesman, as well as diploma- | floor of the convention, declared it to tist, w the author of a number of | be their opinion that any pesolution Tokio, Oct. 11.—Now that the old volumes on cconomies and history, [ on the subject would not go further | Kokuminto party is dissolved. the and an authority on American history | than the resolutions committee. Deie- | publie attention is concentrated on the and government. His extensive wo gates already here, however, were in- i futyre of the Kakushin club, a bl The American Commonwealth, is used | clined to think that the possibility of | that s to form the nucleus of the new on the subject being|party. On the day of dissolution, the Delivering the goods your voice over the telephone system-— that operates rail- road switches, and lights farms and yachts. Experience in making bat- teries for all purposes, from the very dawn of the storage battery industry, is available to you when it comes time to replace the starting and light- ing battery inyour automobile. You will find Exide quality an economy in long service Convention, The horse is being driven closer to his stable; the gas truck (started and lighted by an Exide Battery) goes on long hauls; and through the great zone in between, the electricstreet vehicle is coming into its own. Propelled by an Exide-Ironclad Battery, it de- livers the goods—with least trouble and most economy. NEW JAPANESE Il'.\R'I‘\' Public At tion Fastened on Future of The Kakushin Club, Propulsion is only one of the many functions that Exide as a text book, not only in universi- | a resolution ties all over the world, but by lawy and statesmen, Edmund Burke is remembered, sometimes not so fondly by younger gtudents, for his several addresses be- fore the parliament, favoring colonial government for the Americans, and lessened taxation with some represen- tation in parliament, that body which imposed the taxes withomt allowing the colonists to be represented in its arguments. His ech on Concilia- | tion with America,” is still a master- piece and a text for American school study. | The Pitt bust was unveiled in| Pittsburgh on September 14; the Bryce statue will be unveiled with appropriate ceremony in the Capitoi| building here, tomorrow. HORNE COMING TO U. S London, Oct. 11. — (Dy Associ Press)—Sir Robert Horie, ¢ of the exchequer, stated today that he| was going to the United States at the head of the British debt funding mis- sion despite intimations in the press here to the contrary. There might be a delay of a couple of weeks in his departure, he said, owing to the Near Eastern situation and internal afiairs but there would be no change in the membership of the mission. brought before the convention was more favorable than it had been at any previous convention It is conceded generally that po- litical issues will be made sharper at this convention than at any previous session Criticism of Brig. Gen. C. B, Saw- ver, personal physician to the presi- dent and acting as co-ordinator of the activities of the veterans bureau in its hospitalization work for the ben- etit of wounded veterans is generally expected, Gen. Saw s attitude has| been sharply criticised national | officials of the Legion. SCHOOL ENTERTAINMENT Smith School Pavents and Teachers' | Association Meets Friday Night, | On Friday evening of this weel, the | Parents and Teachers’ a sociuiion of the Smith sciiool will hold a meeting in the school building At 7:30 o'clock the teachers will meet the parents in their respective rooms to talk over the work of the children The Clements Entertainment burcau | of Hartford, will furnish the enter-| tainment at the social which wili fol- | low. the meeting. Dancing will alto | i t | officials he jchicf members of the club met on the old premices of the dissolved party to tormulate the political platform upon which the new party will be organiz- ed. The priaciples are universal suffrage, reduction of armament, ad- ustment of prices, administrative re. form and improvements in diplomacy 815,000 BOND FORFEITED. Bail Put Up by Haywood and Also by Rothfisher Taken by Court. Chicago, Oct. 11 The bhonds of | William D. Haywood and Charles Rothfisher, convicted T. W. W. lead- | ers, have been ordered forfeited to- day by Federal Judge George T, 6 Deputies were terday to colleet the bond In the Haywood case bail was fixed at $15,-1 000 the bond being signed by William | Rross Lloyd, Mary rey and Otto Rothfishe bond was 1l was signed by Lioyd. | 1 to Russia and about | nt a message to federal | that he would return to Chicago to serve his term, but he has never appeared and is belfeved to be | in Russia at present. The where. | ordered yes- | be enjoyed, abouts of Kothfisher is unknown to tederal officials, I RADIO Get an Exide Radio battery Jor your radio set Wherever you see this sign you ean be confident of skilful repair work o every make THE LCONG-LIFE Batteries perform in the daily life of the nation. They sup- ply the reserve power for most wireless plants; they provide the current that sends and dependable power. When you need a new Exide or repairs on any make of bat- tery, let the nearest service station be of help to you. Inquiries about batteries other than auto- mobilc batteries should be addressed to The Electric Storage Battery Company, Philadelphia Service Stations Everywhere BATTERY FOR Branches in Seventeen Cities YOUR CAR A. G. HAWKER, Local Agent 52-56 ELM ST. N TEL. 2453