Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
& rwich Bulletin sud @ansics, 115 YEARS OLD. s ic Offiee, Meom 23 Murray uitding. Telephone 210. iae Circulation of ihe Bulletin. The Bulletin Sma the lnrgest efr- culation of amy paper fm Easters Cemmecticut, amd frem three te four times e that of may in Norwich. It la delivered te sver 3.000 of the 4,053 houses ia Nor- @ read by mimety-three per of the peeple. Ju Wimdlam Easter: ceticut mime towus, ome humdred postol rural free delivery routes. oo gy o T o T Bty CIRCULATION R ¢ CHRISTMAS. wishes every reader a ear, wrot It sometimes, and ristmas, when Founder was 2 child him- sgnized as nations, pause to give to impress symbolizes t the per- tes the ages mansions In iating cause the set before ma: harmeny and pow before seen on ea 1 man saw er death—tha: It has been well said that Unknown out of w was never o continued life trlumphed was eterna the Great °h we come is ir- radiated at Bethlehen the glories ¢ the Eternal Purpose. And the great darkness s is all e with the Glory of the Infinite. Unto us this divine child is born s day! We not expose Him to ndiffere 1t weicome to the warm sanctua r lives this messeng A MAJORITY IN TWO STATES BLACK. Director Durar ording to a 1 paren as shown A i ates have een n a previous bulle- percentage of the i n as S50 per cent. cent.; negro, 10.7 per hers as 0.4 per cent. = T4.4 per cent. are native borp of native parents, d 20.5 per cemt, were born of for- 114.756 p n of Con- 095,932 te, an In- per cent., | parents, and The negro decreased in 1910 3 s" are nese, and given as last ten s ars na states . mpared with her red. Massachu- e of colored pop- * 190 per cent. and a gain of 4.8 per cent shows that in two states olored ilation out- Misissippi, 5.5 per en r lation are ne- s Carolina the stor con- e I war t W bloody hristmas eve revelers th New Tork found no dific n cvading the iquor law. They hought their wine in legal time and drank it as they pleased. What about widening Liitle Water street” Do vou realize it can never be done as reasonably again and that is a sadly needed improvement? A western woman with a gun came to the rescus of her hushand who had een treed by a bear, and hen it was Al over the bear dead. At Hiswa . P T. Barnom ias taken out a He marriaga license. wasn't the author of the woolly horse, et get but he may one, Francisco woman of 71 knecked out two burglars with an Indian club. Sha ought to be eligible B A San 25, 1911. | but they are of rarticular interest to | increase by | cen.. 10 per cent. or more) as in his judgment may be required to secure fair treatment for American products, @ to apply such rates mot only to dutlable articles, but also to articles | now the free list, or to either or both classes as may best serve the purpose in view. AMERICAN TRADE WITH THE BRITISH, Over a billion dollars’ worth of mer- indise passed between the Uinited | WORKING FOR AMERICAN INDUS- TRIES. The tariff policy of President Taft ought to find more cordial support from congress, the ple than is being a press and the peo- corded 3¢, By pay- ing due respect to foreign complaints and being reasonable in adjusting schedules to promote rather than | check the sale of American products abroad. ¢ Discriminations, however, against American trade bave apparently not yet all been removed. This is evi- denced by complaints, for instance, in the south, of the discrimnatory treat- ment which the overnment of Austro- Ilungery uccords cottunseed ofl. It Is said that the warket in Austro- Hungary is clesed for the ofl and that the former trade of approximately five millions of doiters per annum has been utterly aestreved Ly the increase of the tarifr The fertilizer manufacturing indus- try in the scwih, as well as the con- | sumers or “fercfizers throughout the | countey, iclieve thor if » modification | or Section 2 can re stenred, the exist- |ing unfortunate sity respecting | th rrice of potush saits can be speed- | ity anl satistacierily cleared up. Ths instances above are but two of | & larsc runiber ¢t similar complaints, of the south. tha peop! Sentiment svp ta be rapidly crowing for the view that the demo- ratic party can, with much credit to tself. aid in ving such situations s the above, by heeding the recom- mendation of the president. He should »e empowered, in his discretion, to administrative order, the more articles now im- ertain foreign countries inder minimum tariff rate—not necessarily to the full extent of the maximum rate (25 per cent. increase) but to such intermediate rates (5 per ported on one or from tes and British territory in the ten | months ending with October for which | have been compiled. The | ureau of statistics of the department of commerce and labor reports that exports from the United States to British flag has been steady, and in aggregated million and imports therefrom 383 million dollars, thus indicating ‘hat for every dollar's worth of merchandise imported from the ter- ritory in .uestion, two dollars’ worth »f American products are exported thereto. The grow‘h of American commerce with countries and colonies under the | statistics iritish faly has been steady and in the case of certain countries, notably | Canada, very rapld, In 1905 the ten | months’ record of imports from Brit- | ish territory was 289 million, 1911, 383 million dollars, an of 94 million dollars. The 1 wwes are, however, slightly less than the total for 1910, when the ten months, imports agsregated mil- fion dollars, Exports. to British terri. tory for corrcsponding per ! ears named neantime grew from 583 | dollars in 1905 to an increase of 176 million dol- ‘he share of the imports into 13 Tnited States brought from Brit- tory is about 30 per cent. wh'e about 43 per cent. of the export K¥ocs thereto: and of the total foreign trae, approximately 40 per cent. is with Eritish territory. The term Brit- ish territory here used includes Eng- and, Scotiund, nd, Canada, Aus- tralia, New Zealund, India and other Bridis Indics, Dritish Honduras, British Aden, Gibraltar, the Falkiand Hongkons, British Newfoundland and Labrador, itish West Indies, and other s. To all these, with un- ant exceptions, the exports from tically unknown, HRISTMA birthday of a Peasant-Carpenter, the loftiest character in his- and The = applied to the crimes whi A CHRISTMAS MESSAGE To Men Who Believe In Jesus By A Wall Street Broker apreme teacher of the race. human affairs, h disgrace is the greatest birthday celebration in the world, the If His teachings were prac- poverty would be impossible, wars civilization would vanish, and humanity would be made free to live a complete life, and to develop into the high, seriousiy, t type of spiritual beinss. Is it not about time for people who believe in Jesus to take Him cated plan Jesus, and this Message is not for you. that His is the only practical plan for the conduct of The fact is, and to demand that You say that is impractical? human affairs. has produced evils untc very ot the world be run on His plainly indi- Then you don’t believe in plan ever tried, including the present one, 4, and the people have always suffered injustice and exploitation at the hands of a few who claimed to be their masters. His is a plan for showing us how to make a heaven out of this world rather than how is adopted, howeve! suffering, to get into : heaven somewhere else. this world will continue to be the scene of poverty, strife, crime, and unrequited toil—to eppose that plan, even Until His plan nezatively, is to turn our back on Him and to merit His rebuke. “Why call ta but glibly about the how each other for jobs. enslave the children n brotherhood profits and honor; mie Lord, Lord, and do not the things I say?" Fatherhood of Ged and the brotherhood really exist while we are fizhting while we rob the worker and By these things we make this brotherhood im- other sacrilege of denying Jesus demands justice, vet under the alth of the world are left without wealth. it arises the inevitable con- sor, which will continue until we adopt an possible and by so doing we commit the this Fatherho © one will question that present wage system we compel men to produce two dollars of value for one dollar of wages; we deny the oiler the product of his toil, and those who produce the w This is the supreme injustice, and from flict botween capital and economic system based on justice as Jesus taught it. will He tells us at the same time on Mammon's plen, and He taught us to pray, “Thy be done on earth,” plainly that we cannot run things on God's plan and vet we vote to continue the present Mammon- ruled plan under which the doing of His will 1s impossible—a proceed- ing which He must, condemns soener or all later, end in dire calamity. unkindness and injustice to children; vet, ac- cording to the census of 1900, over 1,750,000 children between six and fourteen years of age are wearing out their lives in mills, mines and factories that we plenty may freezing next W birth of Washington by this slavery. cons: enemy country of Lincoln, we were to consent to and by our votes perpetuate chattel enting of Ji Him, It was by no fortultous chofce that e pointed out Mammon, or what is in we resolutely joyous, rejolce over brothers and sisters are sy; “If a man love not loyal to the great m lovalt “hay % this day © set nis own set babies are door to would be called traitors, if, while we annually celebrated the we were to consent to and perpetuate the rule of Or if, while we celebrate the birth and by more coal yards. king. a foreisn robbed of the joys and opportunities of childhood in order dividends and profits. starving across the street from milk depots and And in this land of Yet both of these combined would not equal the sacrilege of votes perpetuating the rule of the chief 1s while we celebrate His birth and prefess loyalty to to ourselv :s against the rule pitalism, as His chief enemy, and until of capitalism we cannot Him or even to believe in Him. A great deal is being said against bringing into Christmas any but thoughts lover of all men but how can one who has the Christ spirit Dblessings while he realizes that millions of his stematically Tobbed of those same blessings? his brother whom he hath seen,” how can he bs 7 And if a man have but a spark of brotherly love, how can he fail to oppose, still less sanction and support, an economlc tyranny which systematically destroys his brothers and filches from them gifts the Creator intended for all? The heart of humanity cries out for Jesus' plan; for a, social system economically just anc Jesus continue, either from plan, then deliverance no profession, are, in their deals of Jesus than many who call © ye men who believe in Jes) coming, in spite of you if it certainty of all the future, whole creation moves. the common law ethically ignorance or prejudic will arise from the multitudes who, while making enship, more fundamentally true to the themselves Christians. the kingdom of brotherhood is must be, but its coming is the one great the “one far-off divine event to which the The genuine Christmas spirit will then becoma ¢ the land and, will dominate and control all human Christian. If the believers in . to oppese this | | | | A Mement as a Measure of Time. Mr. Bditor: T read with e inter- est in a recent imsue of Bulletin the clipping entitied “Conscience Ver- sus Art” which stated that shortly after Tennyson's poem, “The Vision of 8in,” appeared an ent mathema- tician sent the poet a letter criticising him for what tho letter termed the uniwarranted statement, “Every mo- ment dies a man, and every moment one is born.” ‘The mathematician draws the infer- ence from the quotation that, if it be true, the world's population would re- main in a state of perpetual equipose. 1 think, however, the mathematician made a serious mistake i ntrying to be funny, for a moment isn't a fixed | portion "of time, and therefore one | moment is not exactly the equal of | another. Moments are like mb_"‘:: are | “lengthened sweetness los drawn | out,” and some are no longer than they | are’ broad. No one has yet learned how | many moments make an hour. ! Although moment s synonymous with instant, vet the former allows a | beginning and end, but when one is talking to a pretty girl, no one can | compute the space between the two | points, not even “The Man Who | Talks.” An instant is indivisiable and | expresses more brevity and urgency | than moment—very much like the time occupied by the fulling of the trap- door to a gallows, or the time conceiv- | ed by the girl who says her fellow’s | propostal is “so sudden.’ A’man may say, “Wait for me on Washington Sauare a moment,” . but not the “waiter” would need @ Up {6 tell when the time was up. i A horse never trots a mile in three moments, at least, no watch can verify it. Momentg depend very much on our moods and the moods of oth- ers. Tennyson was poetical in his rela- tive measurements of time In the po- em, but the mathematician was incon- sisient In his corollary With exactmg mathematics. Had he been musicatls | inclined, he might have asked a farmer how many beats there are in| & measure? But there are beets and beats, You know, that differ, &HL TALCOTT. Norwich, Dec. 23, 1911, Schedule K. Editor of The Bulletin: T hope ev- “high tarlff,” high cost of living." will be (In & measure, at least) exploded. There has been for some time de thinking golng on alone tarift iines, | and many of the most ardent anti-pro- | tectionists can now be found among |the doubtful column to say the lewst. The report of the tariff board Is just only that $4.77 spent for cloth. The | tarift board estimates that out of $23 Tost of cloth . = Cost of trimming: 1,963 9 $1.793 $0.5 i |1ows: The cost of a suit of clothes from the back of a sheep to the back of a man is completed in the tariff board" report. The wholesale price of the suit is $16.50, the selling price s $23, which tairly were compare s found th reach even more than 200 per c the American f Dutles ass porte pair vested Does the Aldricl store to make su say before he got oreizn comparable, an | zoods, non | igures are as follows: Total of forelgn prices w! ssed = it Total .. . 4 2.071 profit? Credit waste [018 The da i z high cost Total cost of stock 4. 1118 (e BREED THEATRE MAMMOTH CHRISTMAS DAY ATTRACTION Arrah-Na-Pogue The Gem of Irish Drama IN THREE MONSTER REELS 3,0 EVERY SCENE 00 Feet MADE IN IRELAND Christmas Tree for the Children after the Matinee. See the Real Santa Claus. h for ad valorem of which would hey hich had price, pius’ th Picasant to ¥ 18 almost At on §00ds entir ed the nominal rates of duty would | this country weeks ago he saw a | of curtains on exhibition In a | Puy TWO MATINEE PERFORMANCES Beginning at 1 o’clock. SAM nd the mill prices date. It y exclud- e sam te of 150 or nt., |ery reader of The Bulletin will care- |ing market at from only 60 to 80 per | tully scan the report of the tariT board | u}:mm;‘u};).:r":n{:u"Lu":’xiurb soods ol |on Schedule K; and if they do I think | oimead | there is no doubt but the old bogy of | “"5ot%y. iy sazaples of forelgn is imported, the $41.84 have been been im- auty, i above > my made at Cutler r sale, | Imported ¥ what I expected, for 1 never could see | 4 'tun. }wh:'r:ha Righ wool tarXt caused such | AemeL nmerlis Urice la price for the suit of clothing | iy ch for the first report of t | when the fact is ever present that the | o0 Ty foF, the firat vep | entire cost orl )r,nnt-rl‘l is less than|ghines this one fact: | one-quarter of the cost of the suit. To ; e [ o rxect Twil auote. the fisures OF the | tave” o5 summy “en demanas” 7 ¢ | guiA slenificant tabie shows that in a | iice"s day or two age is worth dic | suit retailing for $23 the cloth (wool) | {ne® fore” T eloth A \ffi'.fflnfi.'fi w oS | apat Boes N0 | mills in this village is second to none e o Yoo, Jabor And man-|made on earth; the yarn, workmanship | ufacture, selling cost, the manufactur- | gnd finish all being perfect before the |§1e%,, Saling what = cost $432 for |goods are offered . fo 50, the retaller puiting it on the | & 4 | Gitimate consumer's body for $55. 'Of | Uamble, the manager of the plant, | |course, tho wool tariff directly affects i fnd™ Yl figure, isn't it tariff enable ich on eno here when of beef will be charged tariff of 15 per cen! his The time is almost f hot-air mpeeches—b delivered n « tue of the high prices on the poor, old, ove le cngress, cave to prini t. on hides. A4d frelght ...... 025 019 006 |day is almost here when the campaisn e ~—lorator will go_ around showing the Total .......... 4354 2072 1124 |"bottom seum of his coat open =o that From the back of the sheep to the | shoddy can run out” (that's what ax | back of you the board reports as fol- (0ld friend, Ashbel Crandall, used tc cond teeth). here whe v the way, never | but zlone by vir- will blame al but that | is actuaily sold in | Charles The a iot || CHRISTMAS E PRICES ! | CHRISTM THE ROLLICKING, + BRIGHT, BR A KNOCKOUT I E window at _Providence, R. I, | |the “farmer, or wool grower, makes|>oTe I = - 4 = > g marked “$48.” Those curtains were | - 3 1 WroEy i made from fen yards of cloth woven | MADE THOUSANDS LAUGH—SO WILI The report as to linings for the sult |,y Nir. Gamble at the mill kere, and | e £ 5 the ode Island firm for 13 Body lining, $0.33 1-4 per yard: other | fonts per Sacns o o for b e lnings, 30.18 per yard, Number of | t'curtains. What kind of & tariff law | |Pleces P e It (@) Coat, 1.8; (b)|could reduce the price of those cur- | CAST YOUR OPTICS rouscrs. 085 (o) waisteedt’ 0. | (2inil "Witae ‘Kind"or monetary laws | £ J = S pryag e o s el Uit l will polnt a way to Mr. Gambie and Y A S 4 |—(a) Per yard, $1.328; (b) total, $4.78. | \ig 1CTs "aiso the poorly paid clerks in | LOOK WHAT’S COMING Waist- | ke Providence siore, getiing their Coat. Trousers. coat. | share of the $46.70 profit on $1.30 in- —AN " AUDITORI WEEK 1 “Hello Bill” A LAUGH IN EV, ZY and BRILLIANT THE WOMAN IN THE CASE b) “BREWSTER’ 7 o’clock in the Evening. GCOME EARLY! AS WEEK ROARING SUC( RY LINE PERFECTLY KILLING YOU B S MILLIONS” CHRISTMAS DAY Continuous 2.30, 4.45, 7.10 i BASSITT & BROWN e affairs. the United States are larger in 1911 s { ke * o Shaor in Sa At i e It is yours to hasten or hinder that great event, for you have the ||the board thinks is the average price | Worked tariff case, and if 'the ‘reader ; | : 5 riier yes - in American cliizen pays for & suit. _ |cf The Bulletin will - just carefully || World's Champion Walker and Champion Walker of New England the United Kingdom, tive largest || power either to make the will of God to be done on earth or to per- ‘The farmer receives for the weol In |Fead these reports of the fariff board, : o ridlsh market for American Droducts, || petuate tho present Memmon-riled social system which Is the opposite | [such o xult 533, wnd hix prait iy | 1o can tntcliiiently ‘snap nis ingers ai wo Walking Machines on stage. Challenges all come | ir fen months’ exports increased from 3 s 68 cents; the wholesale clothing dealer | them all, and not be ng in o~ will; but you cannot do both, and there §s no middle ground. . - ngpl g Pyl D o M o 993 million dollars in 1910 to 419 myl- || Of that Will; but ¢ & receives for his product $16.50, and hix | hix own ideas of what great troubics BILLIE JAMES WARD & CULLEN ion in 1911; those to Canada, mext in profit is 32.18; the retail clothing deal- | high or low tarif will make for him. | R S el o D S tten M m g rofs b e | Yours T EH | Baritone Blackface Comedians i I e St thy | eoiibetins’ o€ reumomantitive wum- | i MERY period advanced from 201 million dol- Iples ‘was made in England of goods| Packer, C 1910 249 milion In 1411, @ Fangini “rom those Which cunnot b | THE BASEBALL BUG—Funny but interesting pioture wre than double the total Yor BT “hristmas din. | MPorted at all to those which are im- | The largest photographic negative srresponding period of Ane- | Incresaing | markets” fof ‘our manufac: fof ‘vislots and e omristmas din- | portea continually. These wero then | ever taken of a Sitter was 64x23 inches, | ralia and New Zealand rank third | tUres. On the other hand, British ter- | hor Eift of freedom would suit|mgtched with a collection of samples | or practi ally size It was the| — x s LT British domInions as a mar- | FIOTY xupplies @ large proportion of | Bl ‘beut soduy of American made cloths which were | vork of a Dublin firm | likely to hecome law ¢ Kot o 25 sumar- | e import requirements—manufac- Wi cis P rlcan, Soods WIth & ten | tures of various kinds rom the United || __Bible Question Box i million and 1 mitton 1 j9os | Kingdom und foodstuffs and raw ma- | |ute an Monday, 1e T e e i o 1902 | terials, such as cocoa, tea, tropical uentions will be am- | | vident that a : Hca | its, india rubber, clothing’ wool, and inmas or by mal mbers were in the ten months® exports increased from s indin subber, : I sent further consideration ostpo 11 million in 1905 to 12 million in 1910 | fibers from the British colonies. atvar, following " r ! and 13 million in 1911; those to the ETTGRIAL NOTES: —_— D A B . British West Indies from 8 million in : = Q—H d when will the angelic oo s P 1805 to 9 million In 150 and 10 fil. | FEverybody doesn’t tear off the price| , | @—How and when wil o R lion in 1911; and those to India 4 3-4 | tag, neithe judge by proclamation be fulfillad?—*Behold we | {he muinire s i illion dolless,tn. 2905 ‘toiC B bring you good tidings of great joy | [Tt i Tton i 1010 and 10 miien b 1913, | One way to kec into print mace e = = Vhich SHALL BE UNTO ALL RO | Siiakries throughout the cour The remaining British communities | !!P80Ished citlzen is to live 100 years. PLE.” And again “Glory to God in the | Senator | g S which show in each case a total in| v, : R highest, and ON EARTH PEACE, /uena i Western Maine is atill reported to be - by the fodera ‘ excess of 1 million dollars in the ten [, “antle OG" usty as at midsume GOOD WILL TOWARD MEN."—Luke | PV the fof o months include Hongkong, to which | g’ ii, 10, 14. (0. 8. C.) | Turpose. of th many see our exports in ten months were valued Answer.—Many earnest-hearted. no- | to think | to inventign million dollars; Newfoundland and | The American hen is doing all she ble men and wonfen have wondered, | And even lexis d tabor. brador, 4 millton; the Straits Settle- | can to keep fresh eggs reasonable in in view of the longf centuries th i) e il nts, 13-4 million: British Guiana, | price: ace THE BUSINESS Stled away since This glorious execu . 1 1-2 million; British Honduras, 1 3-4 TROLLEYS CENTER mation wis heraided forth, it the un- | only nillion: and Aden and Bermuda, each| A Kansas judge has decided it is not LEAD TO OF NORWIOH Saving: that glad tidings” shoula | f ! h wbout 1 million dollars. To Gibraltar | a crime for a man to desert his moth- e ol Thit gaace and | tharefor o th the total was about $400,000; to Malta, | er-in-law. od will wo o established through- | FERts" Drinciple u Goza, ete, about $200,000; and to 5 o SO it aratively few of | (itizens, both north ar ) L British China, the Falkland islands,| Russia didn't expect Uncle Sam to have¥ever heard | voied ind miscellancous other British pos- | sive it to him in the neck for & Christ- paring _fo Indusirinl con- s 8.4 d States, Great Britain is again first| There was a time when the sleigh- . z . o hoard of the only Nams where- | breau ure infant mor livided among the British communi- | bells jingled on Christmas: but that | by they must be maved.” Peace and | rile phys ,. e ties, with a ten months’ record. of 208 | was long ago TO YOU | 200 will are far removed from the | it ielinauen onile on dollars in 1911, compared with - — — A I I Sarih—the nations wrming and . pre ertion, dinge pations, million 1n 1910 and 138 cton tn| Congress is having a good time now their message. 1t will b fulfillea wh | donts and” discanes, employme 1905; Cwnada is second. 76 million dol- | aRd) When it comes together again it flict that in being waged Is worla wida | [C€Islation affecting children i Tacs againat §3 million In the|may Bet right down to work | . {nousands wna milions of the poor | Va5l ¥ nd territorie : are in want and poverty. Dynamite| 1 b like of 1910; Indi — e tm. b, wirikes | more logltimat- reaso ; et e AT o il alien | mmancipation waists are coming, the At Christmas play, and make good cheere, gutrages bread riots. mobs, srilies | TS 0K A sty ceding vear; the Straits Settlements, | fashion papers tell us. They hook up ST ) S e | vest und the lack of peace and good |information and reporting 20 million: other British Fast Indies, | 0 the wearer can hook them herseif. For Christmas comes but once a yeere. i, 'No: the angeln did not over-tata | conditions under which il 7 1-2 million; British West Indies, = S thefrr mess: Wil bo fuitlesd ab. | Smpleved (han haye doctors a 1L 1.2 million: Australla, New Zea | Tappy thought for teday: It is all solutely at the seoond coming of | SSTIe{os, bechuag, it Prop Jt : . R T, o . s Christ, when Iie returns to set Up His WIUh infant mortatity. e L T Rl G s e Kingdom of Peace—the Kingdom of [ It I8 reating fa million ongkong, 2 million; Aden, | o Heaven. ‘ of the arguments thus fa 1 1-2 infllion; and British Honduras | OUt WE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY TODAY CoEard Rraliins ¥he Dpodset and Newfoundland, cach 1 million dol- T A‘GIFT.FROM UNCLE SAM ‘ ongress, have been based i One week from teday the United : TO HIS MANY CHILDREN. | apprenersion ns (o fta acon: Raw cotton, meats, and breadstufrs | States is going to swear off from . ~ ; pose, The ehildren’s buren form the bulk of the exports fram the | absinthe. It might have dne so be- $ Will It Be the Federal Children's Bu- | [oses (o (onl with a1l proo United States to the United Kingdom, | fore. . reau Bill Just Reported to House of [ Lo the welfare of the i chinery and plg copper are tmportant | driven to drink cannot show that much Are all the children in the United |7 <780 21 (ems 10 the yearly sales to that coun- | force Was required o make him ge States fo secnive/ s Chilstras presax 1 B i e e e e e Tredria make s wet from Uncle Sam? A fine gitt for thom | Moving piciures are | em : ports to Canada cover & and one which they can get from him | to teach the less 1 very wide variety, including manufac- | - Glons 1s the early passuge of thi ehil- | scns in isgien: tures Cf iron and steel, eutomoblles, 1l- | Tafc was in New York thirty hours Gren’s bureau bill, which has Just been luminating oll; corn, ‘cotton; coal. to-|and ate five times on invitation. There Teported favorahly to (he house of rep- X TRGbH el Yraciiiei YeL Rtleii i s thing ‘as Killing & asn with rementatives by unanimous veia o the | Qhildren Cry enumerated in the export séhedule, | kindness committes on labor, The bll ut prex . Australia and the varlous colonies of — v = entlla on'uilo caienar I Both houses k FOR FLETCHER'S : olonies o fnd There seemu (s be no reasen for 4 CASTORIA the United Kingdom offer large andl Richeson ls still receiving bouquetsl further delay, The measure now seems