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*GALL TEACHERS 1N - FRANGE BOLSHEVIK Want fo Ban “Marseillaise" and “Patherland” Tal Parla, Aug. 35, —The »p Bolahevism in France i 10 attraet the attention of p Jeaders and overnment authoritics The eventualiny of & eWih of communism 1 this coun ry always has been rpgaricd us very pemots bocause of the natural coi Servative tendency of the farmix , Which outnumbers the la boring elass, Lately, however, evi dences have been discoyercd that the Polshevik virus has penetrated th peasantry, thought until now to be agaonst all subversive do rine This outcome is attributed to the Influence of school teachers, Who are drifting more and more toward extreme radicallam, An example was furnished the ether day wheh a monument to the school teachers killed on the hattle feld waa to be Inaugurated in Department of Morbihan, The schou teachers association of the depart ent dacided by a large majority that the Inauguration should not be allowed to take place unicas the in “To the Behoo! Teachers of Hattle,” tims of langrrous on the Kield was changed to “To the V the War," They also demanded that there be mo mention of France or the “fatherland” in any ap and that the Marseillaise bo neit played por sung. The unsuspectedly large propors tion of the teachers of that depart- ment won to Bolshevism has startod an inquiry into the state of mind of teachers generally, and one function- ary of the department of cducation | said the communists wore nly | in the majority by a considerable margio. In some departments Bave prepared their own texts for dictation to puplls in which they have carefully cut out everything that In the regular text books smacks of patriotism or history, Even thé word “International” s becoming unpopular with these ex- tremists because of the last thre ayllables. The fight between classes is the pervading sentiment in the examples of these Improvised text books that have come to the notice of the au- thorities. How to deal with the situ- ation is a hard problem. ent government Is ‘ucliae! greatest leniency in .uch and the school teachers' influence in rural districts is such that there arc no means of corabating him on ais own ground. The Communists took wotes from the Socialists in the recent elections, and the coalition of the jatter with :he radicals is expected to drive a great many more fowtrd| Bolshevisin Lefors another election teachers 800,000 | [ NEW BRITAIN DAILY H SUB TAGKLE T0 PARADISE FOR BEARS IN HIDDEN VALLEY Glackal Fakes and Vast Waiwniall Pound Wigh i santoth Bange i Northorn California lowa; Former Enemy then took 1 Caribe e hidd headwaters mon horses and make 1 Pher Wi toet was ne trail mud ows sometimes ealled “heurs Aside rom th ane there wa little to dis tens ¢ tralning camp. tnguish the valley from ors ¢ Amer verson'a | Gordon Lock i 1o Lo In tant similar design in the Sawtooths waterfalls of vast heighta higk noon a He entered inton, lowa, In the fa e of the THIRTEEN YEARS 10 .. oo MAKE TELESGOPE = /= Pwice In his four years at fack) Univ, of Michigan Takes Look «cvcve ‘v = Amerien and Ships It to Africa haseball in s coptain of His other sport was which he excelled as an wielder, playlng fonr year eral teams, | Cubs, offered Aug. 20, —After fow University of inelud (*hicago to sign him, but ex months play In a confined his bas Upon his gradun Ingwerson was Immediately assistant foothall coach old teachar, Robert Zup s 24 years of age, the youngest conch of any mujor college “laven in the United States, He will work on a 12 montha' hasis here. Ann Arbor, Mich 3 years of waiting the Michigan has a prospect of behold ing its new telescope, the fourth largest in the country, completely | ganed as 7 ssembled and ready for use, late| \ndgap hy his year. son afterward it will be| pre He dlsmantled again and taken to South Africa for cight or ten years of study of the southern sky by univer- sity astronomers. Only three re- fracting t copes in United States will have lens surpassng its es of diamater measurement, Yerkes with 40 inches, that at Lick with 86 inches and one other meas- uring 80 inches. Difficulty In getting ciently large to make the responsible for the delay for the new te June 10, 1911, Lig pieccs of glass reached this coun- try from Germany. Sent to the ghop of Tobert R. Me- Dowell in Pittsburgh, it has been tion, Boys Ring False Alarm; Placed Under Arrest Three small boys let their desire to see the fire apparatus of the city in motion get them into trouble yes- {erday afternoon by sending in an 1 from Tiox #2 at the corner of ctte and Washington street They were apprehended shortly after by Policeman Patrick 0'M Dep- uty Chief Evgene 1 department spotted the | ning from the box as the tus hoys rnes of the fire | run- ERALD, MONDAY, AUGL COACH IN YEARS Ingwerson Takes Charge ol U, of HARRY O'NEILL &f 'PAUL REVERE ‘ in D.W,.GRIFFITH’'S "AMERICA” NOW AT THE PALACE | l} Vote Getter DISCOVER BONES OF WASHINGTON'S MEN (Three Skeletons of Revolution- ary Fighters Uncartted Norfolk, Va.. A The skele General ! Washington'a Revolutionary army,| dirfed nearly a ee iry and a half o near his camp #ite which now ‘s | part of Berkeley, a Norfolk eu-| Lurb, were unecarthed days | yard of a citizen of that| s were exhumed by a sewer line, bronze and| sated two | 1 the | have | { tons of three soldic o several ago in the place. The hol laborers in dizeing for Buttons of copper or other timeworn objete: of the men had b bones of one A he must been over eis feet in heighi. Whil» today there 18 nolhing Indicate the place, part o residantial seetion, was onc t burying ground, the found the other day make a total of ix dug up in the game place Within the Mrs. Emily Newell chairman of the demoeratic national committee, will have charge of votc getting work among the women of the west. She has opened head- quarters in Chicago. | Closed Wednesday At Noon ~HARTFORD We Have These Trunk Telephone Lines Patron Patrons in Windsor call 300 Patrons i Glastonbury oall 200, Ay now call us direct on the se wires without charge, rons in New fritain call 2 Patrons in Manchester call 1300 " The Last Week of The AUGUST FURNITURE SALE On Saturday This Semi-Annual Selling of Furniture at Reductions Ranging frém 1077 to 507 Will Come To An End. \_uu must come to the ('nn("ll.jmn that FOX'S is the logical place for you to choose vour furniture, for nowhere else will you find the same complete assortments of lovely pieces s0 moderately priced, it Don't wia longer- Take advantage of your credit; our Household Club Plan is an easy arrangement that brings home furnishings to responzible people NOW—but with payments distributed through the months to come. The Season’s Loveliest Berkey and Gay Bedroom and Dining Room Suites Developed in mahogany or walnut, often with beautiful crotch panels. This fur- niture is known the country over for the excellence of its making, for the distinction of its exclusive lines, for the pride and las brings. 10-piece Berkey & Gay room suite, consisting of buffet, table, china, server, 5 chairs and one arm chair. The chairs have tapestry Regular price $560. st Furniture Sale Price .. .. {-piece Berkey & walnut dining seats and cane satisfaction its possession always ing 10-piece Berkey & Gay mahogany dining room suite in Sheraton style, consisting of buffet, table, china, server, 5 chairs and one arm chair. Regular price $507.00. $195.00 August Furniture Sale Price .... $445.00 {-piece Berkey & Gay 5-piece Berkey & Gay bedroom suite in decorated hedroom suite; 4 post style ® bedroom suite in walnut, in solid maho: consists consists of bed, dresser, of bed, dress chiffonier chiflorette, portable mirror and dressing table. and semi-vanity dresser. s held. 11 this the school teachers' jnfluence is not felt, dut it is thought | gjaped and was being polished when that the presant gercration of coun- |y, Mehowell diad in 190 Search try lflg'ml chilidren will, 12 there is| ovealed no man able ta continue the not a Mgaction in the meantime, su work except one in MeDowell's shop the communist ranke ~imne; who was then working on a lens for | when it becomes of voting «ge. Yale. He furned his attention to e | the Michigan lens in , and will TUBERCULOSIS GETS | aniated wih i 1o s morute, ¥ GERMANS AND JAPS Gue to the fact that each three min- ntes of polishing demands a wait of 60 minutes for-cooling, Eventually, affer its trial test at Death Rate Falls Oft In Other Coun- | tries—Cut In Three Here Within 40 Years, New York, Aug. 25—Reports from approached and gave 2 but | guin they ran into a e old, recall leputy chicf was | pis father had pointed out the He took n old camp cemetery wsed by th youths | forces of Washington. — Soldic fcd there, accor to the , fell| An tties of Great Brid made late Satur | yesterday morni - Yeggs Fail to Open Safe | in Main Street Store| unsuccessful attempt was | v might or early | o open the safe | in the music’ store of C. L. Plerce 64 Main strect, The would-be 1 erackers gained entrance to the Dolan that | from an incident that oc d there | g by foreing the door leading to | 4 . . N A o rom the 5, | during the Revolutionar, I is| the cellar hatchway and then ,;,,,,K Furniture Section—KEighth Floor 25 Cent stove at the corner ed that money had been provid-|up the cellar stairs to the door lead- | g - - — = = Myrtle Sutur- the payment of the troops but | ing to the store. This door was | _ v - ied over to Miss Cora it could be distributed the|found Ly Policeman Thomas J. atant probation officer, | 167itish made a sudden attack ani. | oney, who investigated the break, | When In Hartford Dine With| | fearing its capture, the Americans to kave heer drilled in such a man- | | wed the money in a cannon and yeptiat the bolts holding it loosened R 5 5 opped it overboarl, After the land fllowed the Intruders to enter. | LOBSTERS, CRAB MEAT, SHRIMP! walnut, consists of bed, dresser, ~chifforette and semi-vanity. that in his boyho youngsters and the 4 bie ta pick them ouf. the names of some of the ind turned them over to Policeman 0'Ma The boys will be arraigned | it the b court 1 Money A monument long has marked the of the battle at Bridge. | at and Money o Regular price $510.00. Regular price $620.00. Regular price $500.00. August Furniture Sale Price, Special... $325.00 August Furniture Sale ce Special... $475.00 Furniture Sale $125.00 morning. August Price, Special. . . n juvenile I SHOPLIFTERS site Four young girls who admitted to man, Thomas €. had stolen goo slreets One family house on Camp Street for sale. This is a location where it would never come on the market, if the Ann Arbor and its sojourn under the ad skies of South Africa, the new le Main and | wilt become part of the equipment | at the university observatory. 23 countries representing one-third | of the population of the world, com- piled by G. J. Drolet, statistician of the New York Tuberculosis associa- | tion, indicate that In the last 43| years more than 18,000,000 people | have died from pulmonary tubercu- losis, according to a statement issucd today by the association. Tn practically all of the countries studied the death rate from tubercu- Josis is declining, with the exception of Japan where there is a marked increase. The central luropean eountries showed an increase during the war, but so far as figures are available since the war there has peen a decline. At the present time, ‘however, the death rate in Germany seems again to be mounting. In the United States the death rate from tuberculosis has steadily fallen from nearly 300 in 1880 to 97 for each 100,000 of population in 19 A QAR Three Separate Alarms for Franklin Sq. Fire| Gasoline that overflowed from an automobile tank which had been flled at the Franklin square filling | station conducted by nk Ra liffe Saturday night was ignited when somebody threw a lighted match on the ground where the gasoline had spilled. The gasoline burst into| flames with a loud explosion and a| general scramble for fire alarm boxes started with Patrolman Wil- Jiam A, Doherty pulling Itox 234 at the eorner of Whiting nd Main street. This was closely fol- Jowed by alarms from Box 6 at the E corner of Franklin square and Pearl L streets, and Box 124 at the corner of Glen street and Rockwell avenuc When the fire department arrived in answer to the series of alarms.| | the flames had spent their fur a | were put out without any damuge | resulting. Laurel CMtrect, Bristol, reported to Sergeant Patrick McAvay at pollce headquat fors last night that he thought an| Mtempt had been made to hold him Wp on tha Plainville road about mid pight. He iold the sergeant that he had struck something in the 1 Just in front of the Traut home fesring that it was an obstructior Pleced there to make him stop. 16 $ucied around quickly and went 1o the police station. He raid Wistance trom where he struck the ®Lject there was an Automobile full #f nien who appeared to be drur Bergt, McAvay sent Patrolman Gus fay Heiiburg out with Condon, hut 2 Brateh of the vieinity failcd | Veai unything suspicious a short to re Tablet of Goodwill, Friendship iy @i el STORIEL MORUMERTS JHICLLS LSRRG \ Ol THE HISTORY IS RACE ECTIQNATELY PRESSION OF D WILL 11 ANLWGY wnd friendship, a tablet ar wore presented of York, and, by ita god-child in America, t \ consisting of Rodman Wanamaker, Girove Dodge, A. C. Pearson, H. H. Charles, Frane MacKinnon and William H England. Above may be seen the mayor of Yorl ther Britgh n York and Duke of he ) w Yorly, A committee . Whalen, William H. Sisson, A, E. Rankin, conveyed the message to the ables accepiing the tablet. hich continued for several days | o combination on the safe in ry, efforts to locate th™ po siore was broken and the ping d futile and the money |y 4o yinges were broken off, but | 1o this day is supposcd to be lying| r as the thieves could buried in the mud in the e hut M, store, with ¥ ransac after Inspecting the all that was missing from was a few graphophone his campn ! tion, then one of the princi 1 Dizien oF Refiila said tha altiost enti er, thus as: ecleeted o sit 0 by W attack except by was he wit position, ac records. 1inst much cimens of e heen col- Bottles eontaining 2,800 different sands leeted by a scientifie institute in Chi- impressed . value of his g to the story handed down ations here, that Washi his canp as the site fo a national capitol, even zoing so far A. H. HARRiS Policemen Herbert Lyon, Themas \ . Anthony Walinczus, Charles —General, Trickin 0 WEST ST, cago. thy and W m . Doherty started today on their annual va- cations, The following reported for duty today after their vacations: Michael Cosgrove, G » Collin | Michael Mechan, James Skelley a Kumm CROWLEY BROS. IXNC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street Lstimates ¢y ully given on all fiobs, — Clarence FOR SALE Two family house on South High Street, 14 rooms. Excellent location. Y maipta TORENT I : FILLING | STATION 272 MAIN ST. = ‘r——__—-—— S |John J. Tarrant tor il Embalmer FR CONNECTICUT GENEAL INSURANCE €0, ESTATE MORTCAGY Specinl Agent e REAL 1A BOOM 202 N0, 0K WAIN ST PHONE 20, H. D. HUMPHREY B tate and Incurance Gaod companies and los<es prompily settled Office 272 MAIN STREET, National Bank Buildinz bt 8 OYSTERS, | STEAMING CLAMS Honiss Oyster House Co. Temporarily Located At | 25 CENTRAL ROW, Hartford Opposite Parsons Theater | family were not leaving New Britain, See us about it — Six cozy rooms with steam heat. Camp Real Estate Co. Main St Phone 343 Rooms 305-6, Bank Bldg. /HoLD ER NEWT,\ SHES AREARIN HUGHEY BOWERSOx WAS MADDE#L “THAMN S A WET HEN WHEN HE DISCOVERED HE HAD PLASTERED HiS LUNCH BOY )| THE OLD HOME TOWN Al 53 BY STANLEY e | HOPE =) HOPE - “fou- You - You-- CHOKE: ON THAT, ] ) REMEMBER TH™ TIME HE STEPPED | ON A FRESH CEME! SIDE WALK - AND HAD To GO HOME BARE FOOTED® INTE “THE CHIMAEY. A MISTAKING IT FOR A DISCOLORED BRICK (Coprrant. 1954, by NEA Service. |