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" Horwich Bulletin und Goufied : . 122 YEARS OLD internéd. not only did the crews man- age to escape but one submarine act- ually get away without being captured. And during it all Spanish shipping has suffered the same as that of other neutral countries although not as ex- tensively as in the case of some of the northern neutrals. Word now comes to the effect that the serious damage which was done to a French transport, the Provence, fubseription price 12¢ & weel; S0e a Wostht $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffics at Norwich Counn., as second-clasa mattel Telephone Callsa Bulletin Business Cifice 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms 35-8. wy Willimantle Office. 625 Main Street &L Teiephone 210-2. Norw'eh, Thursd y, July 18 191!. CIRCULATION 1901, average ...... . 4412 1905, average ..A.........A..slszs July 13, 1918..,..... 10,056 s, MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assoclated Press is exclusive- ly entitled to the use for republica- tion of all news despatches credit- ed to it or not otherwise credit- ed in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special despatches herein are also teserved. B *Right is More Precious than Feace THE BATTLE IN FRANCE. From all indications, if it is possible Vto judge correctly from the reports being received from the battlefronts, the allies are holding their own and n most instances giving the Germans as good as they send in spite of the fact that they are not sparing men in their determination to advance their lines for the capture of important supply points and the surrounding of Rheims. the same s of their men s-are urging th face of te isregard for the the German gen- m forward in the ific ommm on. The r»riv.« the lose is bein, of the hest troops of which the kai- ser hoasts. It General Foch had carefully (hthutm “i'his forces in the regions whers the attacks are being made with the idea of holding the enemy from his objec- Jtives and when it is announced that he considers satisfactory results are being secured there are zood reasons for believing that he knows what he is talkirg about. The reception which the invaders received at the cpening of the offén- sive served to seriously upset their plans. They are nowhere near where Bulletin Job Office 35-2, nmc!e! upon mmo' actually took place in the harbor at Palamos with the submarine attacking the ship from the shore side, for which a Spanish lieutenant is now under ar- rest. This is of course only one of many instances where Spain appears to be fully justified in doing more than making a protest to Berlin. It indi- cates hew thoroughly the German agents have carried on their work in a neutral nation and the danger which is threatened as long as no serious attention is paid to it. Spain is being made a tool by Germany in a way it cannot afford to condone. PRODUCING MORE PORK. It was not so long ago that demands tion of hogs. The appeal went throughout the country and the re- ports which are being made even now show that it has been heeded and that results in keeping with the needs are being secured. The demand for hogs was large at the time the government asked the devotion of greater atten- tion to their production and it con- tinues to ba so. There is nothing which indicates a let up because the government’s purchases are bound to increase rather than decrease and the prices which hogs are bringing today are much higher than they were a vear ago and almost twice as high as they were two years ago. It was estimated by the department of agriculture the first of the year that there would be an increase of 3,- 871.000 hozs. How much better the people of the country have gone into the business is now indicated by the rcports to the effect that the number will be far exceeded. People who never thought of it before are going into the raising of pork while those who have proviously engazed in it are increasing their activity in that di- rection, The south is fully alive to the advantages as Is shown by the re- nert that Mi: crease of 100 per cent. in hog produc- tion while Alabama’'s increass is still greater. Rizht here in Connecticut the nd for little pigs was never so brisk or the price so high. People are seeing the importance of meeting the nation’s needs and they are doing it in a magnificent manner. The re- suit of it all, however, ought not to mean a steady advance in the prices HAYTI'S ACTICN. It isn't to be supposed that many is. going to be brought to its knees by the declara- tion of war which has been made by the republic of Hevti. Not even Hay- ti expected that but it was realized in the isiand republic that it was im- possible longer to countenance the conduct of the imperial German gov- srnment against humanity and it sim- shyws that Germany is steadily ing the who'e of the western hem- lined up against it, Ger- | nguestionably sympathizes I the nosition which has been | taken v the United States In the world v but it is not solely that sympatly which actuates it in its dec- laration. Hayt] resents the manner in which Germany has conducted and still continues to conduct its subma- rine warfare. It was months azo that Hayti had its own little experience. A number of its subjects lost their lives on a French vessel which was sent to the hottom by a U-boat, Hayt! pro- *hey expected to be on the first day ested. It may or mav not have ex- and troops which were not calculated | Pected that ;r_woum»ruei\e any sat- to get into the fighting until Wednes- | iSfaction, but if it did it was coomed day were called upon to particlpate right at the start. That was striking at ths enemy's reserves in a serious manner. Since then others have heen thrown into the battle but they have encountered the same sturdy resist- ance and where gains have been made they have been slight and in many cases they were quickly reversed. Cer- tainly from the progress which has been made Germany cannot get much comfort. The increased strength be- ing displayed by the allies bodes ill ‘o the Huns henceforth. QUENTIN ROOSEVELT'S DEATH, The whole country will sympathize with ex-President Roosevelt and fam- in the loss which has been sus- tained by the death of Quentin Roose- velt while fighting in France, the same as it does with every household where the supreme sacrifice has been made by one of its members. But nothing shows more plainly how thor- oughly the whele country is nunited in the opposition to the common enemy than by this instance where the son of a former president has glven his life in the struggle to bring about bet- ter eonditions for humanity. Young Roosevelt came of a fight- ing family and it is therefore bound to be a source of great pride that he should have lost his life while act- ually engaged in combat, while he was doing the best he could to beat back “the enemy. Without any previous special qualifications for such service “Quentin Roosevelt entered the most dangerous branch of the service ear- ‘ly in the war. He pdisplayed ability and rapidly became an air fighter with all the daring and courage possessed *’by the best of them. He was eager ,.tor combat and he had been doing his part not like a member of the royal - famlly far at the rear where there would be no danger, but right in the forefront. He fully understood the hazard as did his family but there was “ho disposition to seek something eas- ier or safer. The Roosevelt fighting . #pirit was characteristically displayed, ..2ven as it is being shown by his ‘brothers in other branches of the ser- _Vice and there can be no question but ~what the end came as he would have - .preferred, in harness. DISCREDITABLE TO SPAIN. For a long time there has been rea- _Bon to believe that advantage was be- ing taken of the pro-German senti- ment in Spain to advance the inter- ests of Germany. It has been known that that country was overrun with German agents, that they were con- piving with the anarchists or in fact sanyona who would accept German pay “for any services which they might be called upon to render and that there were those among the authorities and in the military circles of Spain who were inclined to favor Germany. Sub- arines were allowed to get supplies, |.!o make use of Spanish waters for re- to disappointment for the answer vhich was given by Berlin was curt and siznificant. The Haytian repre- sentative was immediately handed his passports and diplomatic relations were severed. Great big, noble Ger- many wasn't going to be dictated to by insiznificant Havti and Hayt! was us much as told that if it wanted to protect its citizens it should keep them at home for Germany had made on and was going to continue its ruthless submarine policy whether Hayti liked it or not. It has taken plenty of time but Hayti has at last acted and it is but natural that it should jein with the nations which are fightinz a common enemy of mankind. EDITORIAL NOTES. The man on the corner says: When it comes to activity it is impossible to heat idle curiosity. The buying period for thrift and war stamps is still open and there remain plenty of the government pledges to be had. It doesn't require very much warm weather to bring about a marked in- crease in the number of drowning ac- cidents. With the drive army experiencing counter attacks on the opening day, it must have given the German staff officers something to ponde: over. There is great need at the present time for the almost forgotten rubbish cans which used to receive much of the refuse which is now thrown into the street: The news that Japan is golng to build 30 more cargo carriers is wel- comed. We need all the ships we can get and as soon as it is possible to turn them out, Let the Germans maintain as long as they want to that there are not a million Americans in France for they are bound to ger the proof in a way they do not like. If Austria wants to talk peace there is nothing to stop it except of course there is the consent of Germany to be secured and the confldence of the al- lies to be gained. Of course Germany will still main- tain that America has an insignificant and contemptible litile army, but there are those among its fighters who know different. This latest drive is declared by the Germans to be a peace offensive. When it comes to peace Cermany never has been very strong except that Girmany could have its own wav. When Germany plans to gain miles and doesn’t get much more than as many vards there may be nothing the matter with the German war machine Prairs and to operate within ‘the terri- | but it is quite evident that it is oper- flona] limits of that country. Even in|ating against an aimost immevable ®™e case of U-boats which had beea body. were made for the increased produc-| frightened or| Connery focused his attentlon on his plate as his wife entered the room. The silence became oppressive. “Good afternoon.” she ventured. “Good evening,” Connery growled suggestively, “Now, dear, I'm only half an hour late—don't be cross.” “I've nearly finished my - dinner,” vonnery accused. “You've all day in which to amuse yourself, and I think the least you can do is to be at hime by 6 o'clock.” Mrs. Connery said nothing. “And,” continued her husband warming to his subject, idn’'t those othér women have any responsibilities —didn't they have any husbands or homes to go ta?" “I didn’t inquire about the inner working of their family circles,” Mrs. Connerv returned. “They were prac- tically all strangers to me and shouldn’'t like being so personal—-" “Ring the bell for Bedelia—she's keeping your dinner ‘hot.” interrupted Connery, ignoring the zarcasm “I don’'t want any dinner——I—" “So I've got to eat alone! FEliza. you know I'd rather not eat at all than to have to eat alone.” Mrs. Connery glanced suggestively at his almost empty plate. Her hus- band caught the zlance and grinned reluctantly. “After a man's worked hard all day——" he defended. Mrs. Connery smiled. “Sure. dear, I know—it's a hard life. It must tire you dreadfully to emoke ’steen cigars a day, sit in a swivel chair, and re- flect upon the immense arfount of business vou used to do before. the wal 1 seldom fail to greet you with ss, dear one,” she continued light- ¥, nd your old grouch can’t spoil my happy day.” “Don’t sce anything about a card party to make you so ‘happy—just gab- ble gabble and eat.” % don’t you say gabble and gob- rs. Connery inquired sweet “But you wait until I've told you my we all got new ideas on con e 5 “These days nearly everybody has some dear one in service. And no matter how brave those left behind try to be, they have their weepy davs. Mrs. Jenkins (she gave the party, you know) hus ene son on his way over, and another one who'll soon be cailed. Every woman there, with the ex- ception of myself, wore a service pin. A BIT OF CHEER 1! { They've all been knitting and doing! { war work, tabooing all forms of en-| | tertainment, so Mrs. Jenkins thcuv‘xl that an afternoon at bridge might be a good thing. “She’'s decidedly clever and she wrote a poem bringing ul all in (supposedly written after a conference iwth Mr. Hoover) advising each one of us to exclude some scarce article from our diet. I'm not to eat macaroni or anything with wheat in it,” Mrs. Con- nery continued. “and it made lots of fun, because she knew all our weak spots. The meid spread lunch cloths on the card tablet and served minia- ture sandwiches, midget pickles and the tiniest of spice cakes—only one of each. Mrs, Jenkins then awarded the prizes. I won the first. It was a little package, tied with pink rib- bon, and a rhyme was attached say- ing: “‘This prize iz nothing much, It's little and dinky and small But you should worry and fret The others get nothinz at all’” “What was -it?” asked Connery “A candy submarine,” Mrs. Connery announced. gleefully. “And the sec- ond prize was a loaded red, white and blue cannon, with a fitting rime at- | tached.” “You can't ‘help being hungry.” “Just wait. After Mrz Jenkins had had her fun our plates .were removed and we haq the most delicious spread-——" “Might have known “Not one single thing was served that Mr. Hoover wouldn't have ap proved pergonallv John Connery el had pressed chicken, potato chips. de- licious war bread sandwiches, pickles, and olives. She made what she calls a war eake—it’s dark but awfully good —and lemon ice and coffee. Her real | prizes were five pounds of rice flour | for the first and a great big loaf of war bread (she made it herself) for the wsecond. The packages were wrapped in white tissue and pasted | all over with small American flags. It a real party maery toyed jdly with his fork. ounds zocd to me—even to thej breud,” he conceded. “A little! war bit of cheer helps a lot. E he coaxed ('what you to our havin’' that kind of a party Saturday night?"—Exchange. STORIES OF THE WAR A Tale From the Trenches. A true “slice of life” from the trenches is given by Carcl K. Corey in a communication to the National Geo- zraphtc Society and issued by. the So- cietv as a war geography bu lehn The scene ‘'which the w! seribes oecurred in a Soldiers in Paris familiarly and affectionately dubbeq “Blighty.,” She says: “The room is nearly empty now and almost quiet, I've "about decided to leave when a gaunt. cadaverous person slouches in. Apologetically he asks if i too late for tea. Because he s0 wretched. I reply in the neg- ative, just as he notices the signs tea served after 6:45, He gratefully at me, with _a smile that changes all his face. We a little tired, I guess, and partly 1 a bit timid Dbefore b cause 1 feel thi most unusual type of visitor. Sud- denly, without a word of warning, he informs me: “‘You're right. 1 am a rough cus- tomer. I'm just out of clink’ (jail). “T say, ‘Ha. ha! Caught with a camera eh “*Worge than that’ eayvs he. “So0 I guess again: ‘You took all the temper out of your tin hat when you cooked eggs in it “But he finds no humor in that an- cient joke. When I state ‘You're not the sort for an 8. he murmurs sadly: ey it takes nerve to go in for a ‘self-inflicted wound. “His face is pinched and drawn, though almost triumphant, as he finally admits his offense: ‘I hit an officer.’ In epite of myself I gasp a little, for this serious business: But I say nothi for he has started a very flcod of talk. “'1 was the first volunteer from my town,’ he tells me, ‘because then I thought the war was right. My three brothers came, too. One is blind and two are dead. The littlest one was the prettiest boy 1 ever saw-—absolutely the pretti I’found him right after they “got” him, and he looked as though “he'd just come from a party. His face hadn’t been hit at all, and not a hair was out of place. I helped to bury him: then I sent a cable home, I'm forty years old, and all my life I've had men under me. My fath- er owned a big horse ranch, where I learneq how to treat men. And.when that young, impudent whipper-snapper @ ves, I break in. T know, but'— “ ‘You know,' laughs he. ‘You know nothing. You get up in the morning. in 2 steam-he2ted room, and you look out of the window If it happens to be drizzling, you say to yourself, “My, my, today T'll get my little boot soles wet.” When you've had to leave a mate to die in’ the mud, standing up, because you have only sufficient strength to pull your own legs out, then you know something about war and its glories. Oh, but it's cruel, that mud of the Somme! And that night, when I'd worked in it, siept in it, and swallowed a lot of it in my rations for ten days, that insufferable cad, that unmentionably odious tupenny ha’ penny captain'— “ Can't vou forget it for a little while now? Your tea will be stone cold. Besides one of these days we're all poing home,’ T say desperately. “‘Maybe so’ he sighs. ‘But some- how, after more than three vears, we sort of stop counting on i You see 1 sailed from Sydney on what should have been my weddinz day. I'd been engaged a long, long time. but would n't marry, for I'd bought a .bit of land and wanted to be out of debt first. For exactly a year I liveq alone in a hut. T was mv own cook, and I tell you frankly I was low and dirtv: but each month I knew I was getting a little closer to the end, because each month I was able to buy another cow or two. And there wasn't a happier cuss in the land’ First Ninht In The Trenches. (Correspondence of The Associated Press): What will the first night in the trenches be. is a question that thou- sands of American soldlers have faced { perhaps with some m ings, cer- i tainly with lively am.rlpu jon. The} cxperience of many of them must be ke that of a British plough-boy sol- ater described by Lord Dunsany, Cap- Sitain of the Inniskilling Fusiliers. ! “A man's first night in the front iline is an epoch-making experience,” he writes. “It is like a man's first vote, or his tfenty-first birthda: it is a milestone in his life, marking the cha: from the mimic warfare behind the lines to the grim realities of actual confiict. Perhaps I can best explain how this experience affects a spldier by telling you thn story of & recruit's firet night " | Cheege: are silent | for a few minutes, partly because I'm | if the trenches. Dick Cheeser, one of “It was a aquiet night, and dawn was | or so distant when Cheeser took his post. The Corporal | {told him where to stand, warned him to keep a good lockout, and left him. |- “There: Dick Cheeser, alone in the darl h an army in front of him, eighty yards away, a resource- | ful, erafty and (l?\pelale enemy. The stillness of tne night only added to feehng of responsibility. The stiliress awed not been a shell He put his | head over the parapet gingerly and ted. Nobody fired at him. He somehow that the night was wait- ing for him, that something uncanny ail night. the night stared back at him, | and seemed to be threatening him; was gray, gray and artful, or a fox. “It was uncanny, thought Cheeser. ells would come, or Germans or at all, you would know hew to take it; but this deathly quiet, like 2 mist over huge valleys! Anything izht happ Cheeser (waited and waited. and the night waited too. He felt that they were watching each other, the night and he, both creuch- i ing, both r 2. His mind grew head throbbed with ertion of thinkine. He was watching Wwith eyes and ears and imagination, hoping to anticipate by a second or two the dread Semething that he feit Wwas sure to happen soon in the omi- | jnous m of No-Man's Land. He thought of throwing a stone out into the blackness, just to see what \\ou‘d\ happen. Then he began to wish for his boyhood's slingshot. so that he could catapault a nice round stone jright across the blackness into the German lin “A little wind blew in the night, too | cold for the time of year. It made| for a moment a lane in the ‘mist over No-Man's Land. Cheeser peered into it, but the mist closed round again. ‘No,' Night seemed (o say, ‘You can't guess my secret’ And the awesome hush intensified. What are they up to now? thought the sentry. What are those crafty enemies planning iu all those miles of silence? “Even the VERY lights were few and far between. When one went up, far hills of shadow seemed to sit and brood over the vallev: black shapes grew up and vanished in the shadow. The rocket faded and the hills went back into mystery =zgain, and Cheeser still peered over the omi- nous valley. “All the dangers ang sinister shapes and evil destinies that the sentry taced that night cannot be pictured or described in mere weords. It was only two hours that he stood there, and not & shell fell in all that time, not a Ger- man stirred. “It is a weird and awful experience, that first night in the trenches. The next time it is an easy matter. i ike a cat Views of the Vigilantes FRANCE iBy Ellis Parker Butler of The Vigil- ante: I always think of France as going forth; of England as standing firm. Through the centuries the men of England have seemed to s: “These are our rights; we will not give them up!” while France has said: "Man- kind deserves new rights and liberties; we will go forth and win them!” of fratenity and equality, has always | been at least a fow steps in advance of | the fact, so that he has had to fight to make it a reality. The Englishman ,in nearly every case: acquived rights by growth, as a youth grows into man's estate. Hav- {ing grown, the Englishman fought te maintain. The Frenchman foresaw his rights while they were still ideal and | fought to make them real. The Eng- lishman, never yielding the rights he | had acquired, pushed his foot forward inch by inch to cever new rights. The Frenchman pictured new rights and leaped forward to crqate them. It was this readiness of his to de- mand—and die for—an ideal that gave us the erroneous theory that the} Frenchman was too emotional to be steadfast. Wars, battles and human rights are won in various ways; the Frenchman heals sick skins When your friends notice that your skin is disfigured orblotched; if yoy have pimples or eruptions; if you just have to scratch that itching place, regardless of where you areor who is with you—don’t be dizcouraged—let Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap help to heal your sick skin, and enable you to have a clear, soft complexion, 1 Used by doctors for many years. Soia by all dealers, my men, was a plough-boy just past 118 when he enlisted, and not 19, when he went on his first sentr {4 !in the front Lue. him. There had |’ {the foremost among free nations on a and unexpected would happen soen. | He heard voices in communication j | trench somewhere behind him: there | were a sentences of gruff. un-|S intellizible conversation: the voices died away There was a long silence. Cheeser fell to wondering whether the | night was black or grey; he stared hard at the night to study its exaet | color; | making today may be the The Frenchman’s ideal of liberty, as|; Today and Tonight VICLA DANA IN “THE ONLY ROAD” PEARL WHI'I'E IN “The Houze of Hate” THE KITCHEN LADY Mack Sennett Comedy Burion Holmes Travelogue the remnants of autocracy. After each charge ,each uprising, the Frenchman has held new ground, maintained new rights for humanity. The Bastille fell, freedom was won Napoleon followed. That seemed the overthrow of new-born democracy in France. It was but the momentary pause before the new advance. With half the world arrayed against her, France reformed the legions of her ideals behind the war legions of Na-1| poleon | It is amazing to note how through i centuries France has pressed forward steadily against regimes autocrats, customs and tems, protecting her | national life while winning the right | of man. Ideals are ragged aflairs, sending out tentacles of value and of error alike; when France has paused it has been to consolidate the trenches gained making permanent all | S value, discarding the er-| call France lacking in| when a glance shows her continent where autocracy blood and iron? To be steadfast to | i such an ideal France set herself | & means to advance to the rea tion of hat ide: This France has done. France is a free nation of free men. God grant that the fight France is last fight ainst autocracy and retragression the brave nation ma; be ealled upon to; make! In such a fight, side by side with | i a people, America may well be proud to give her last drop of blood, her last ounce of strength. And, if need be, will give! ill lives in OTHER VIEW POINTS The government has appealed to the} newspapers not to waste paper, and the press in general has responded. Publishers now await action by the government proper, in trying to fili every newspauer waste basket to over- fiowing every 24 hours, with a lot of useless junk manufactured at a high cost and employing a hor ment clerks to practically thrust on the people a lot of material they never {look at—Middletown Press. de of govern- Haven knows what until it burts” in this war. That leads all cities of the country in the number of men kiil- ed, wounded and missing since the New it means 3 EXTRAORDINARY m'nmc‘non n | Lest We Forget Pl gt u g sk e L Disaster That Sheok the World, Tnqudw the Scteen Under the Guidance of an Eye Witness. H THE INTERNATIONAL S"T'AR RITA JOLIVET WHAT HER EYES HAVE SEEN™ YOURS SHM:.L SEE The Sailing of the Lusitmin; the V:t Crowds of Friends Wishing Bon Vovage to the Passengers; France’s Ravaged Cathedrals; the Exiled Belgians; the Zep- pelin Raids, and Bombing of School- hcuees; the Most Vivid Battle Scenes of Trenches Cccupied by the Largest Num- ber of Soldiers Ever Shown on the Screen. SHOWN FCR THE FIRST TIME AT THESE PRICES MATINEE 17 CENTS—EVENING 28 CENTS AUGMENTED CRCHESTRA—Special Musical Score. oo o iR Thursday, Friday, Saturday The Smiling ‘Athletic Star DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS In the Five Part Comedy Thriller “SAY YOUNG FELLCW” ROY STEWART In the Five Part Western Play “THE.BOSS OF LAZY Y” FROM THE POFULAR STORY BY CHARLES ALDEN SELTZER o s s THE VERY LATEST EDITION Or CURRENT First Time Shown 3—SHOWS EVENTS in Norwich emssm e DAILY—3 Coming Mon., Tue,, Wed. THE AWE-INSFIRIN souL- STIRRING PATRIOTIC MESSAGE “THE UNBELIEVER” With the U.- S. Marines BASED ON THE BOOK “THE THREE THINGS” LOVE—FAITH— PATRIOTISM FEATURING BEAUTIFUL MAR- GUERITE CCURTOT AND RAY- MOND McKEE, AND PRODUCED IN CO-OPERATION WITH THE U. S. GOVERNMENT POSITIVELY THE GREATEST PHOTOPLAVH EVER SEEN IN T SEE the Mannes “Go Over the Top” Also ENID BENNETT in A Desert Wooing and a Pathe Comedy NO ADVANCE IN PRICES United States went to war. Its com- plete list of uaities up to Sun- day was 164 and the number grows daily. The regiment, made up so largely of New Haven men ha three companies of our Waterbur: boys who also have been bravel llacing dangzer.—Waterbury Republi- can. This is a day riotism, far thought and action. problem that this nation faces s the necessity of winning the war. |} Everything that can help us to win| precedence .over the ordina for outspoken pat- absolute unity of The greatest obstruction that must be put out of |§ our way. The man who is not heart and g soul and body with the TUnited States at this time is an enemy.—| Meriden Journal. BILLY Auditorium TODAY HALL AND HIS EXCELLENT MUSICAL COMEDY CO. When Men Are Tempted VITAGRAPH FEATURE WITH Mary Anderson and Alfrad Whitman CURRENT ALL THE LATEST WAR NEWS EVENTS Majestic ROOF GARDEN Coolest Place in Town DANCING EVERY EVENING from 8.30 to 11.30 T PRIZE DANCE THURSDAY - GOOD MUSIC LETTERS TO THE EDITOR the An Injustice Done, Mr. Editor: In your issue of July 12 jan.item was printed anonymous!s which in veiled ianguacg konesty of a well known and ed woman here, an old res: Canterbury and a member of the First Congregntional church, in good and regular standing. the tion as A woman who has cheerfully world's newspaper not theft m. carried work, w her heart dying tte Ler by ice he articles he has he wrongfully if names w o out of the kindness ere attached to so efficiently er share of and the In his does not mention found of whese accused her and for which accusation“he ewes apoloegy, There are few.-people at the Green not understand {he situatien which he has made no secret. Sym- r.\!h\ i8 with “the housekeeper. No ightest suspjcion attaches to her in 12 mind of anyene who knows her, but for the benefit of those whe do nm know the faets; as her paster I foel this word is due. (REV.) MARIAN; HASTINGS JONBS§. Minister. First Congregational Church Canterbury, Cenn.,, July 17, 1818 Of course you as editor did net re- robably that in the immediate inity of the Green, indeed in allf Canterbury, there is but one person who has had connection with the Philippines who employs a housekeep- er, so that to anyone familiar ywith the neighborhood the defaming state- ments in the anonymous communica- tion carry as definitely their inten- l D A AT e s t sz, Is mot & dve. doalers, m&vbom Phlolny(b, “lrk,N. WHEN YOU WANT to put your bus. has weon his rights by a long series of brilliant charges against autocracy and Iness before tne public, there is no medium better than through. the ade vertising colymns of The Bulletin, ployment. to work in a Quilt Mill beginning Mbfiday,%luly 22nd Light, pleasant, mtexestng work; no noise; steady em- All girls receive over $11.00 per- week, and piece work girls make up to $20.00 per week. Must be over 16 years of age. Inquire during the day at PALMER BROS CO,, Fitchville, Conr., télephone 111-4, or during the evening of E. A. BIDWELL, 136 Broad Street, Norwich, Conn.