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Make iced tea in the morning Pour from the leaves when fresh, placeintherefrigers atortocool. Serve in tall, thin glasses with ice,sugarand a slice of lemon, " LIPTON'S 1CED TEA MEASURE IS BEING PREPARED COAL Winslow Bill Will Possibly Be Ready For Presentation Today— Borah Has One Too. ‘Washington, Aug. 22.—The house interstate commerce committee con- tinued work today on the Winslow bill proposing creation of a federal commission to make a sweeping in- vestigation of the coal industry. Re-| publican members hoped that the; measyre would be ready for presen- ! tation today. Chairman Borah called a meeting of the senate lahor committee to take | up the president’s recommendation and hoped to get action on his own bill, which differs in some respects from the Winslow measure, The outlook as to relief from the| coal shortage resulting from the sirike was somewhat brightened to- day by the forgcast of the central coal | distribution commission placing pro- | duction for the week beginning yes- terday at between 5,000,000 and 6,000,000 tons. This total which would he the, highest output since the ! beginning of the miners’ strike in-| cludes an estimated production of 1,500,000 tons resulting from the Cleveland agreement. BEACH PAVILION BURNS Canoes and Bathing Suits Also Lost in Holyoke Fire Holyoke, Aug. 22, from an overheated oil stove com- pletely destroyed the pavilion con- ducted by Wilfred D'’Amour at High Rock bathing beach up-river ecarly last, evening. The fire department responded to a telephone call at 5.44 1 o'clock, but the frail structure had been.licked up by the flames and was | in ruins when>the fire apparatus ar- | rived, The building, a one story! structure, was used both as a hath- houee and a refreshment pavilion. The loss includes besides a quanti- ty of household equipment, six canoes, one hundred bathing suits and con- fectionery stock valued at more than| $26. There were several people |ni' the pasilion at. the time the fire| broke out and they were abie to save | only a few articles. | CHRONIC DIGESTIVE | TROUBLES RELIEVED —ire starting | William H. Griffin, traveling sales- | oiher child was trying to coax a ]mme)”‘" ci Wwrites: “I am page kite into the air and when the | man, Oswego, N. Y very happy to say that Jaques' Little Wonder Capsules do everything you claim they will do.” Jaques' Little Wonder Capsules quickly help acute or chronic {indi- gestion. They break up the danger- ous, painful gas and will relieve you promply and surely from distressing dizziness, heartburn, constipation, acid stomach and dyspepsia. Easy and pleasant to take. | On salé at The Dickinson Drug Co., New | Dritain, Conn., or 60 cents by mail post- | nid from Jaques Cupsule Co., Pilatts- arg, N. Y. T — | | FOX’S Next Sun., Mon., Tues. “NANOOK OF THE NORTH” Dramatic As a Hand to Hand Fight. ‘lafter a tense fifteen |two officials of CONVICTS REVOLT IN N.J. PRISON City Police and étate Troopers Called in to Afd Guards Trenton, N. J,, Aug. 22.—Six hun. dred convicts at the state prison re. volted last night during the exercise hour, refusing to go fo their cells, but minutes Afly deputies, thirty state troopers and thirty city policemen surrounded the convicts and forced them at the point of revolvers to go back to the cells, Once there, however, they began shouting and scraming, creating so much disturbance that a, crowd of several thousand gathered’ outside the walls, The trouble began when the pris- oners complained about their food, They declared portions of peaches and cream they got for desert were too small. Sunday night each man recelved half a peach, and that night when locked in their cells they banged on the bars with their tin cups and broke. electric lights, The uproar lasted well into Monday morning. Joseph 8. Hoff, principal keeper, saw last night in the exercise hour that the men were disgruntled and ugly, 60 he sent a hurry call for dity policemen and state troopers. At the end of the exercise period the con- victs refused ‘to march to their cells, and Hoff called in the troopers and the patrolmen, James E. Kersey, as- sistant keeper, told the convicts they would get into serious trouble if they persisted in the revolt, and fifty of the men broke away and started to- ward their cells. These men were stoned by their companions, but a few minutes later another group broke away to the cell blocks. From then on small detach- ments left every few minutes unfil the whole six hundred had gone to their cells and been locked in for the night. Theé prison authorities asked the state troopers and the city police to post a special guard outside thée pris- on walls last night to prevent an out- break or jfall delivery. At midnight it was said the worst had begun to subside. : MEASURE HEAT OF STARS 10,000 Degrees Centigrade Is Finding of Smithsonian Observers ~The heat of Capella and Washington, Aug. 2 three stars—Aldebaran, Betelgeuse—has been measured by the Smithsonian In- stitution who have been making ob- servations at the Carnegie Bolar ob- servatory on the summit of Mount Wilson, Cal. R. G. Abbott and L. B. Aldrich reported today that they had succeeded in doing what had hereto- fore dever been dore. The heat of\ the three was brought to fogus by 100-inch telescope. The light then w passed stars first the giant heat and through a {prism and spread out into a rain- bow-colored spectrum. Delicate de- vices measured the light in each color as well as the invisible heat. As the hotter a body is the whiter and bluer s fits light, the intensities! of the heat in the various colors allowed an estimate of the tempera- ture of the stars which was fixed at approximately 10,000 degrees centigrade. 3-STORY FALL KILLS CHILD. Loses Balance While at Play on Fire- Escape and Fractures Skull, New York, Aug. 22.—Bella, the 6- vear-old daughteér of John Clark, 537 Avenue C, Bayonne,died from injuries received in a fall from the fire escape of her home yesterday afternoon. An- tail of the kite caught in the {iron- work, Rella reached far out to free it. She lost her balance and fell three stories to the concrete below. Her playmates screamed and Rella’'s mother ran to the sidewalk jost before an ambulance arrived Mother and child were rushed to the hospital, where the child died a few hours later. The mother was treat- ed for hysteria. ZIONISTS CONVENE Waterbury, Aug. 22.—The annual New England distrct conference of the A..M. E. Zion church opened in I this city today, at the local church, (The annual sermon was preached this 'afternoon by Rev. E. W. Gant of New | .ondon. The conference will ciose | Saturday afternoon with a big outing |in one of the local parks. An attend- ance of 500 pastors and delegates is | expected. The W. G. Simmons Corp. 85 WEST MAIN ST. Wednesday Footwear Specials As the summer draws to a close, we must£lean out cur stock of Summer Footwear to mak for Fall Goods. To move this stock, w oom e are offering the highest class of Footwear at greatly reduced prices in con- nection with our first anniversary sale now in progress. These bargains have d‘awn hundreds to our ACGIDENT PROVES FATAL | Man Injured On August 12 Dies of Fractured Skull He Didn't Know He Had. Willimantic, Aug. 22.—After ap- parently recoyering from the effects of an accident here August 12 Joseph W. Provest of Pawtucket, R. I, sudden- ly became ill last Thursday and died today from a skull fracture which had not been suspected. His wife and one child, who were also in the accldent are still in the hospital here, Provost was on an automobile trip to Canada with his family when his| car struck a bridge abutment. He seemed to have suffered no injuries and was waiting for the recovery of his wife and family. Thursday he complained of a severe headache and a skull fracture was found. Thompson and Seaburg Will Seek Re-Election Col. A. L. Thompson will be a can- didate to succeed himself as treasur- er, and Harold E. Seaburg will seek re-election as secretary at a state convention of the P. O. 8 of A, in| South Norwalk, Tuesday. The local| delegates to the convention are: KEd- ward N. Thompson, Lewis Carle, Frederick Carle, M. Y. Rancor, Wil- liam May, Willlam Houck, Joseph Martell, Paul Stahlbush, Baker Mann, {W. A. McDaniel, Nathan N. Han- cock, Frank Thomas, Gaston Paradee, C. W. Taylor, John Mercer and Rob- ert Dean. TAXPAY Asks Mayor of Schenectady Be Re- quired to Pay $8,524 to City. Schenectady, N. Y., Aug. 22— Mayor George R. Lunn was served with papers in an action brought by Edwin E. Becker, a taxpayer, to com- rel restitution into the city treasury of $8,524.02 received by the mayor from moving picture operators and partially dispensed by the mayor without publc accounting. The ac- tion involves the legality of the may- or's dispensing of private charity moneys received from theater pro- prietor for being permitted to have | Sunday shows under authority of an ordinance of common council. The state courts have decided that the moving plcture fund records are publig records. Mr. Becker demands payment by the mayor to the city treasurer of all moneys received from the exhibitors, of which,a little more than §$7,000 were dispensed, accord- ing to the mayor's report, finally opened to Mr. Becker’'s Inspection by | court order. The mayor yesterday sald he was| | | glad this action was brought, rather than a mandamus proceeding, so that 3e may be aired in the courts. |French Heirs Expezt Canadian Wealth Soon ~.Brussels, Aug. 22.—Several fam- {ifes of workingmen near Mons have had their hopes raised by the possi- bility of being the heirs of one Leon- ard, dead in Canada in 1004, leaving a fortune of 100,000,000 francs. These heirs, numbering about 40,! only recentiy heard of the death of er of several who was sal. 0 be own- er of sveral brush factories in the United States, Canada and France, Among them is a miner, several times wounded in the war and now unable to work. Criminal Cases Decrease In Tokio Say Police Toklo, Aug. 22.—Criminal cases are gradually decreasing this year, ac- cording to the investigation of the de- ipartment of justice. The number of crimes committed during the month of May were 32 less than during the preceding month and 3,316 cases less! than during May last year. The criminal cases in the army and navy were seven cases more than during the preceding month and 135 less than during May last year. During the month armed robberies numbered 2,274 and murders 2,945. K. K. K. CAUSES3 RIOT | Speech by I)strict Attorney in Cali- fornia ‘Signal For Trouble Sacramento, Cal., Aug. 22.—~A riot call brought a patrol wagon to aid of detectives to quell.a disturbance last night at a meeting where Thomas IL.ee Woolwine, district attorney of Los Angeles and candidate for the dem. ocratic nomination for governor dis- cused the Ku Klux Klan The disturbance followed extengive | heciling. When Mr. Woolwine started {tn tell of his activities Involving tie |weather along the coast and in Vreported the incident to unfon ' Regularly $45. NOwW .. $24 Bed to match the above. Regularly $35. Now N Reguiarly $65. $19 Colonial Mahogany Chifi. $35 0dd Walnut Full § Regularly $35. NOW 0Odd Walnut Chiffonier. Regularly $45. NOW ..... L‘l)‘ufilm A}{me Walnut Toilet 'able. Regu- larly $55. NOW $29 . %nl?lth" ORdd Walnut Toilet 'able. egu- larly $45. NOW $24 Mahogany Poster Bed. Regularly $55. $29 NOW .. - BIG GENUINE BA FOUR PIECE IVORY BEDROOM SUITE — For — $139.00 EIGHT PIECE WALNUT DINING ROOM SUITE — For — $149.00 RGAINS IN EVERY DEPT. THREE PIECE UPHOLSTERED LIVING ROOM SUITE — For — $195.00 B. C. PORTER SONS CONNECTICUT’S BEST FURNITURE STORE” STOPS WITHIN 30 FEET Aeronaut in Government Service Says Planes Can be Stopped on Ordinary Tennis Court. Farmingdale, L. I., Aug. 22.—What | was said to be a new record for quick landing by an airplane was establish- ed yestérday by Lawrence B. Sperry, | one of the governors of tha Aero- nautical Chamber of Commerce. Lying in an army ‘messenger" plane at Mitchell field, Sperry stop- ped within 50 feet of the spot where the machine first touched ground. The plane was equipped with a com- bination landing gear of wheels and skids,”” and when in flight the entire wheel gear was dropped to the ground. A successful landing was| then made with the skids. According to Sperry, the experiment shows the possibility of landing in a space as small as a tennis court. Brig. Gen. Mitchell, assistant chief of the air service, witnessed the flight. | ST WEATHER REPORT Wednesday Unsettled and Showers; Are Probable. Haven, Partly Aug. cloudy and warmer | tonlght; Wednesday unsettled prob- | ably showers; gentle to moderate south and southwest winds, | Conditions: Cloudy and unsettled weather prevails in the central sec- tions this morning, but pleasant the western districts, Showers have oc-| curred during the Jast 24 hours from | Kansas eastward to TIllinois. The | western disturbance 1s now central over Missourl. Conditions favor for this fair weather followed by cloudiness and probably local ers by Wednesday. New necticut: | vicinity increasing show-} ANOTHIIR STRIKE i Firemen on Southern Railway at Princeton, Ind., Go Out Today Princeton, Ind.,, Aug. 2 of the Southern railw: here today following refusal according to union officlals of & demuand that were on strike armed guards be withdrawn from the lccal shops. A fireman who was reporting for | duty declared that he had been halted | by a guard who flourished a gun. He‘ offi- | clals. A simflar difficulty here was setled last week. SUPHUR ISBEST TOCLEARUP UGLY. | BROKEN OUT SKIN Any breaking out or skin irritation on face, neck or body is overcome | quickest by applying Mentho-Sul- | phur, says a noted skin speclalist. | Becauss of its germ destroving prop- | crties, nothing has ever been found | to take the place of this sulphur preparation that Instantly bringa case | from the {tching, burning and irrita. | tion. Mentho-Suipht s eczema right For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. SOLD Boys’ Suits - $3.50 Boys' Suits—Two Pair Pants $4.50 Blue Serge—All Wool $5.50 —YES, WE ARE GOING— THE BANKRUPT STOCK NEW BRITAIN CLOTHING and DRY GOODS CO. — MUST BE SOLD — WE COULD NOT SECURE LEASE—STOCK FIXTURES MUST BE ATTENTION TO MOTHERS LET YOUR DOLLAR GET 100% BY BUYING YOUR CHILDREN THEIR CLOTHES FOR SCHOOL IN OUR PLACE Children’s Coats From $2.50 to $5.75 Children’s All-Wool Sweaters $3.50 Children’s Coats $1.00 Boys’ All-Wool Suits-2 Pair Pants Men’s.WOél shifls car and gmooth, store during the past week. Wise Wednesday morning shoppers will make no mistake in visiting the Simmons store tomorrow. We will have many choice bargains in the better class of Ladies’ Shoes and Pumps. We still have some good offerings in Hosiery including Sox for the children at cut prices. Put Simmons store, 85 West Main stréet, on your Wednesday morning shopping list. Ku Klux Klan in Los Angeles, scores of persons began hooting and cutea’l- lng. A man near the front row callad | the district attorney a liar. up, leaving the sk It seldom fails to rcileve the torment or disiigurement A little jar of| Mentho-Sulphur may be obtalned at| any drug store. It is used like cold| cream. $1.49 each Mea's Péfiéeé and Stnp;d SE‘; Witk Collars 50c¢ $7.50 Girl's Dresses $1.25 'ROUND WORLD FLIE STOP | Calcutta, Aug. 22.—Captain Nor-| man MacMillan and Captain Mailling who left here Saturday for Akyab,! |Burma, in continuation of the round- the-world flight abandoned by Major W. T. Blake because of iliness were /forced tc land on account of engine troubje and shortage of gasoline, says |a message received today by the 'Calcutta statesman, e ————— I I TR BARGAIN WEEK —At— BESSE - LELANDS