Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 21 Sep 1911, p. 3

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..e.d`7` and it is hoped that the = the United states"ta1:`Ix, h That reciprocity will an the 31 resources of the United 3ItQl I;_; the expense of Canada ; `in let f0 |,'!1-. by President Tett in an article 00` tributed by himvto I.eai1a'eweel!I H a state: that as one ot`1.'he'o'b1 _ `oi the Agreeme $5.75 between the duty, on; restricted wood and no d ` made from unrestrictejd duce _the, provinces to._li;!;t tiona. It seems to treating the paper vision calculate'd..to source or at of a Million "Ha p: .~daily\use in. '0 REDIECED RATES~E VBA1i13r1a: `Aaimm .,-- _.;._._- . __T.mV)ug hbV special featuro are found ` a.,`1 l.lr_r_uted,_ Brantfzxrd. Ont. three o clocl< in the afternoon on any day of the holding of an exhibition, and upon his being satised that as at consequence the gate receipts were less than the `average of the previous three years of holding the exhibition, the society shall be entitled to receive a grant equal to one half of the diEer~ ence between the gate receipts of the currentryear and the average of the gate receipts of the previous three years, but the amount to be paid shall not exceed three hundred dol- lars, and the total amount so paid to all societies shall not exceed ten` thousand dollars. in Attendance 'uAuaVL BWHUUWGQ ish, this whale now gape for the 1111-. exploited, fair districts of Canada. Shall Canadians be. - considered as "little ones" and be eaten up or shall they throw the eeciprocity Jonah` overboard and continue their national` voyage to greatness on an untroubled sea? ` - ' a, step id ahd:lot..us W Thou hnhas been ATES--Single First- evening of September vuagxuwio U0 1!. 5- ' 25 years. sting-saus- The - Won-lds Famed Artistic and Acro- batic _Marvels Satisfaction% to in 28th. This vvalull 963? ,U ,.--- ..-yu--. yuvnnu UUll.IpHl.l_lUU iin Chicago, with tree . natural pro- ducts from Canada, one is inclined `to- believe Joe Cannon is right. * I-Iavin; almost swallowed the American` pare Whale DOW Dnnna Pint flu- -'-n ._v___ -u own-Iaclo I" Th; Reciprocity. Agremenf.:fei- speaker ".I'oe'f Cannon` of the` Unitd` fstates Cangzfesmsaya, is a machine- gtton of the trusts. And w~he'n"1t'ii' gconsidered that this trade pact pro- -- giposes to feed such huge octopuseg an l"the Big Six meat packing companies hf! (`,hInnnn ....u.1. un_--I- 5 ; Like Shakespeare : Wh_%l`e} ttriiz. inch` 1'41" A4" atroua Beet Trust of the United ijwm .never leave gaplng`t1l_l"`1teha\'Ie }"awallowed the. whole pari_sh."'e `pro-' Mded, of course, that Providence` doesn t send a Jonah. ' T ` ' ' `land who ii~vi7i""le[.v.3"-I`;-1:1`!-Ii _-'toy`ve pwalloewed the~ whole 4pcr1|,h;' go urch, steeple; bells and. all." ' V- " v-they ve swallowed they who]: mu-1.1.. . I Tame! an `065 In ,- g which Pm-pom o am ,1: J - Acbou to Our Llvo"8.tookf : ` 2 Third Flshermsn:-"M'ut'or. I mltvol. V zllow the ushes live In;-the l0n.."- ` .. .4 g It-at Fisherman:-~-"Why. any man. d_o~ `:1-land; the great ones out up the mac OI." . 3 4 "Such whales have I heard on 0' gland` never leave saying 1! -. ...... ua. um Duel: '.l`l'IlIC,'I The Chicago magnate; position in the Britinh ualv. and In 44.- 0--- -- `Prculdvont Taft Explains How Ho_ pact! to Get Canadian Pulp 5;]; ._ ...... uuucua LU 001119 cattle off the Canadian xeir export trade to Br!- Unlon Stock Yards` in largest purchases are |IIoAII- *-` ___.-- voqy IAAIUVI corporation. 3 Beef Trust _ 1| Rllinn 01....-. " 'EI{& `3 I6 direct :6]-.. " VIIIVIVIIIIUIIII ~OIA UQJIIUII IIBDIIVI IlAVyIp| I- I making cost _ use. Mr. Cleahorn'e' 1- comment to 1 United states Inquirer I-. me: You have the; who statesmen` 1- to keep your people employed." 'rhe`n~ 0 therein the oIle,`o!;men'I gloves, The . *9 largest Enulleh manufacturer ,9! glove: I 9 l0I,t.f80_ per ot. -_l1le.tb_\!e|1l!..IIpe_jwltl1_' 1 B the United State: -when -en duty` want"! '5 put on` this item]. :.;Wha.t wee` theirea * I eult? Before the ._tu_'ltt wa.;e...ejx_1ec_te;a ,;,~,1 so. these gloves, Io,ld...,to1'..: 3,1.-25; ,__a _-`pg .5: 1 AA!terwerde`~,;.p_1;l1%f;pa;1:_i ` t - 51 `.m.:'a s am. ';ni',s1f 'c. .T.Ei Thousands of men tromjnnce and elsewhere `were put to work In the kid. mtorxes at the United stgteu. War Pretectlon worth"1vhlle?. J. 0. Glue` horn, ot manna, V_me,nuto.ct_u_red Jig-u mu for cost: and emnlored` In his` tectorles 8.000. men and "women. `The . Uhlted State; put` 9;: e1 protecuve:tu- it! and -{he Gleshexfn -`factories were that up, " Three L -thoquhd were ` given: * em torment In United canton" Ihopl-. nae Ann` Ilnlnnnn. ~Iln ' IVIAQLA-0-:7 In the fsightiea Greuon and other French kid leather manufacturers. were sending ,to the United smug $5,000,000 worth oi `shoe _leather,~oharx- in; for it 60 cents per toot. TA proteo-- tive duty of 80 o'er cent, wan puton.` ' Greuou kid did not to to _78 .onta7per rtoot. It" dropped -to 45 cents. and then, n `A' lotancoi of `How .Proto,tlon. Wofkodvj to the Advantage of Labor D --vg can-gs vv uwu SUV] BIC Ills; u ID! a time at` least they will have to pay` prevailing prices for their help. Thin `will leave themopen to the competi- tion oi the farmers of all these other agricultural countries where wages I are much lower. _ _ L '- I 1 as V vvulyw Ialblllllu It` will take some years tor wages to adjust themselves to the new con- ditions, for the rate of wsges in Gnu- sda. depends moreron the lsnppli of laborers than `oh the cost 0`! living.`-' The farmers. of the West will not tind it an): easier to get labor when prices ; drop than when they are high`. and for - II. lanai flan: -uni`! L`... L. __-- HOW A TARIFF H.ELl5S` _r---vvu LL13 Ullltei away In Canada? _ . V g - 1: l- ;.Why Canada Should Reject the Ap- ` preaches from the United States `i. :---u I I a In knocking down tariff 7walls and , Entering. into the arena oi competition , ion equal terms with the rest oi the l -'wo`rld, young Canada would he doing a : __very daring thing. With her own : ',home market safeguarded, it is all ` ;very well for her to attempt to place ;her surplus products in competition with the. products of European coun- tries. but when, as has -heen shown frequently before, she will have to lgtight to hold her own market. it will he a very different proposition. Al- ready a surprising amount of foreign produce is. imported into the country . despite existing tariit protection. : Withvmore of this coming in, the Can- 4 -adian farmer will find prices for domestic produce` declining. There I will not be the same proiit in selling fat,_home. nor can he make up for the 1 loss in)he foreign markets.` for there I ,he` will be subjected to an_ even more i * severe competition. i i lt_'_will_. take _so_me years A V- . _v vv can v 90 IIVIII I- I. than the cost` to,;the1Dalrotatarmer-otja disposing of his wheat to_ the mlllersg 33 ot__ Minneapolis_ or seridin-g itrabroad 0- It. now, the duty is to be .ta,l;:en `oft? vheat and the Canadian wheat can; - 3. come to the 'mi_llers-`oi; pMinneapolist~ r. and other places, it can`and' will bef made into flour, because the capacity; of the American, mills. is `thirty-three. 3 per cent. ~gr'eaterth,an is needed to; [1 mill the wheat or this `country. Can-`= 1, adian `wheat can, be imported and - _1 ground into flour without materially` 1 -reducing the demand for or price of American wheat, and the surplus will, y be sent abroad -. as flour.` The price; 1 1 of Canadian wheat will doubtless Ibo.` % I increased a few cents by access. to, . the market nearer at hand, but the: ' , access to the market nearer at hand} i . will not reduce the price votV'his wheat, , to the American tamer. A veryma -: ; terial benefit to all the farmers of that country, especially the stock and cattle; raisers _and the dairy farmers, will be! -the by-products of bran and shorts; {from the flour mills likely to follow.` the tree export of wheat from Canada; ,to those `mills. These jby-products. are: now so scarce that many farmers are,` unable to procure them. What is trus' iot wheat is true or the other cereals."_f| I` I J 1 4 1 l 1 1 I ?. wan rmri! a natural produts ;. ' dent Tait dsaidf. 13 `an [ `-`The only i1n`_portat_ion'-_.ot_- _; `e .A cultural products that we my gtrom Canada of any iiderublaie ' amount will consist o1.wh,'eat, barley,-:p l rye and oats. '1`-he_ woi'ld_' price at these! four cereais is fixed abroadfwhere the` surplus from .the producing countries; is disposed of, and is little atfectedeby; I the place from which the supply is; derived. Canadian gvheatn nets `per-`I haps ten cents less a bushel to the pro-;' ducer than `wheat. grown in the Dako-j tas or in Minnesota; due to the fact} i that the cost or exporting that Wheat? _i and warehousing it and transporting; ' it to Liverpool is. considerabl$v,gre'ater ` th Df, fn fhn T\nIrAI>n On`------ -5 ` p...m.. m 3.3. the ,i ikT% . From canadlajitcmalo wm Hap` _ qgctgpq - thovAm orla;n Fujmui: " VT ~ * " Sag:- l1 A ommc PROPOSAL ~ vs` no uuvu. 13. Ill! growing, We` 1 tijtolf 'our%1?.Y`"1"people--.s It is ' I1-D011 "th].yd6fo;lopment so! the home F:*murk1:*.that?t!iIMur%:9fV th Canadian - sievelovment A mMj0f:-'h'9m.A1nf.-` *1 ` > er9, 5 {The Farmer Geta Better Prices In a Canada than In the United statee I` Statements have been made and is- ; , sued broadcast to the effect that hes: ,:.hring a higher price in Buffalo than `in Toronto and that Canadian farmers ' ow'6u_ld therefore get more for their Kori in the United states. Buffalo. owever. is not the whole: United _- Stated market, not is it as good a I barometer of hog conditions as Chi oaco. and. taking prices in their - broadest application to `Canada and I the United States as two countries. 1. indisputable authorities onhoth aided of the Line. prove; that . hogsare and have heen `worth more in7Canada.. and ' that ":the hog industry -is in a more ` 'I!ioui'ish1n oondition in Canada than ~ inthe United States. This condition exiets notwithstandina `the. fact that ' is 1 not a. esucoesstui `grower pt 5 Film are at hand from Canadian ` to ~ ooi'npanie_e.-~whe- have * -`kept . eo1nparative:.-v!."09.l'lI 0! 1110!} N109! "(in maths l1dI`~'o<&t.h! horde:-I tfbf v< powinao; 5008). Yet: ma.) .6, _, Jr: 7:1 . h`Imi C i` i8:;:tl:9s Iiynltttitn d 4 .3 _ `.._.`v~,-_._ ,__,:..,.;`.` m . V` . . '- '-;_ - - ;;:.,~..~rL,;,. r ..` o It is evident, then, that the Bee: `Trust has its eye on this country. _ II it not better to give its buyer: out cattle from our own markets tor ex- port, thua controlling our own 2 tion, than to have the live_Itock in~ duatry undermined and enaiaved by allowing the same power that ha` smitten the United "State: to have % c.m.~s ....,......... I , An Industry employing 1,000 hands. may be regarded ae,a large one. but the game percentage of results would follow In larger or smaller plants, no that one can easily begin to reckon -. tor hlmaelt what any particular indus- try wouldnean _to a `town or clty. l A '9") 3 havof: A. 1; | , - ,_. -_----u--u vb IVIIIU -Io0.UUU WI own. In round figure: theta men } would man at -least 81.056.822.250 to 5 the Donunlon. ` - `II .l|Iu6I`- A-----`M ` ` ' --~- 7-;--VIVIIV I-IIIIIUII Inc" (110 in one year through one great industry. DIG- _ some 435,000 uti- um. In rnnntl Man-..-. A-I---A ---~ .... uayuuulturo In clothing would be $168,750. - V With the annual paympnt of taxed added to the ,_total expenditure on summed up. this means that in- dustry gmploytng 1.000 hands is worth $831,000 3 year to the farmer: or the district. 0 - - ' A II.. . ` ,-.*_-_.- on 1`-|VVVgVVVo ' The annual expgndituro in food would be $83,000 In meat, 89,600 In` potatoes, 85.000 in sugar, -$18,250 In milk. 365,700 in butter. and $27,600 In 0888. n ugvj Quuv,oUU. "It represents `through its buildings` and the houses of its employee an in: veltment of $3,000,000. `` Th` IIIIIIIQI A-_..`.. :14, - ` -__.--' _- It Increases t`he::populat1on by 5.000 ' consumers. It ndds0$90.0o0 to the value `of pub- no utumea. The assessment is Increased bi 8800.000. "It pays out annually In salaries and use: 8559.800. ' 1 , no .------l--- ' ` _.... .. puaaunl. 18 being used to `hold -a. large proportion of the Bee! Trust ! export trade. Chicago regard their the market jealously, and-in the face .9!` the Argentine Republic's strong-com: it is the Beef- buyers our mun- J---- - vvlllllllllllluy It -.I.I... AA` - In Great Monatagy Worth the com- munlty wnm It In Located An interesting and accurate calcula- tion has Iran made of what an Indus- try employins_.,_1.000 hands means _to a community`: . 1 If `wanna--4- 4' -` " ported $367,256 worth. Indeed, `we im- ported $941,767 worth. Our. horned cattle, other than much cows, In 1909. were valued at $126,326,000. and *we only exported a shade over $10,000,000 worth. 0! $34,368,000 worth of swine rainedwe only exported $4,000 worth. 1 0! $15,735,000 `worth of sheep rained. we exported but $500,000 worth. .:.:~a`ff0T.rd A *fbfeakIn81r.lill--,.0t'ith1l"*h91 1 _ ., LIIl;fI!z:ke.t.'t-!?;l!,,`.`iF_1!"9`i` United ` ~}.8tIt.%- is ~..3'l" 7".t,5`971'|I'l,!.ll1l. ..`i .l:'1.; t bl! ?nd.-vP.W- =ex'_-t_tuljti-us't_s,', `who with little 5; ,to:;tl_lif eA-intere st- or wishes bicen- ,: sumer or produce_r.j, What will be the ._` eitect of takinggdown the "tariff `fence ,9 _an_d_ permitting. those trusts. to extend -their sphere or `influence. over `Canada? , ~; diet `us look into this thing and see what thevhome market means to the Canadian __tarmer. Of $289,000,000 of `Canada's largest and -most- easily - shlpiaed crops` in 1909,`the wholevont- side. world took less than`$85,000,000- worth The home marketconsnmed `over two hundred and four million dollars worth of grain more than` we sold to all the rest of the world. Now let us look at the conditions as tovroot crops. The home market con- sumed $53,600,000 worth, and the rest of the world bought $1,069,637 worth of our principal root crop, such as is used in every home. _ Hay is another of our big crops, and one which is always in demand. In 1909, Canada raised 11,877,100 tons, valued at $131,644,000 worth, while -the _l'O8t Of thG Wfl hnnaho O-1--:3 --- E" ` `E a x 3 VALUE orinfuiusrxv Tm: HOG `MARKET "expenditure In ciothing would` 8.750. -.. -..,.. wage urosscup at Chicago granted an injunction against the Bee! Trust, holding that it was an Illegal combination in the restraint of trade. As usual, the case was appealed, and `in the Supreme Court in 1905, Attor- ney-General Moody sustained the de- cision of Judge Grosscup. showing that (1) members of the Trust had ; agreed not to bid against one another 5 in the live stock markets of the various rates or credit were adopted, and black .1 lists were maintained, (5) common 4 and unfair cartage charges were made. and less than legal shipping rates 1` were obtained from railroads, thereby ` restraining competition. ` .` At the present time _the Beef Trust -` is looking for additional supplies from 1 "Canada. With the duties down, our .1 livestock, especially that from the " West, would be taken for consumption at Chicago.` The bonding privileges t now allow buyers from Artnours. d Swifts, Morris and the others to come `I over and buy the_ 1 markets for `their 1 tain. At the 1 Toronto, the purchases are d made by these American buyers, who ; absorb as niuch Canadian stock as Bwwi B; ? *1 F That the %co11i;;gwooa"-caiar oj ` Policeyis alwajfs on the ..'look-out- gar; anythihg that. concerns `the wqlfarefof; `ti1,e-- townspeopl .13 'mnnifbst '_ r57J`m jtglie % fact that on Friday. la,s_t,j: ha` isei`2.e :b_zead,"supply (if the" th'r9Q:f10cal*`hk1}l:. . `for walling lows ' 8 hi:L' uii '*3i`8h*a 33F9 .Th.Q11i8W095, _ se..r.-.2 1 The hreaid-,* 1I$> 9iVf.t`f'!!.?.z .W9;::u, 2 stlfitly re1e9.d; '*8 .?9`5$= `-D0`1. ;F?i13A9i7~i`5 f -gerewtvith :t.1iTn`9`7*lQ3`1~`*. `f%Id;;,18' `8.m I?I`e.` -1 * j ~: being:'%hq1aT;f~o:i .O,1Vi3; 3.99;; Wh 6ii'T`,`:33.5 .`3?-5_;` ' ' T` Quill DEEIVUDIIIV ` While -Master ChalmerIB1-own, who lives on_ Simcoe qtreetx Collingwood, was experimenting. with an invention that he has been constxfucting for some time, on 'l`hursday.`even__iEg, ah_can of carbide exloded, ,seriouslyn wounding V the. boy about thevface and possibly destroying his` eyesight, I Dr. McKa'y weasvfcalled, in, and` after the" .boy~'a_ wounds had been dressed he was .re-* moved to _g`.he' 'hogpial `in t _e_;doctor_; s". `antomobil-e. t Inst` fpo. the wfas; testing veasil_y.~. r._` If ` . ' I On the appehi to the Court of Ap-. pea! the question as to Michael Fraz-1 er : sanity may be narrowed to his ability to manage his own aairs.The* appeal will also be based upon the ac- tion of the Divisional Court in tak- ing new evidence; and in visiting the` subject or the siitigntion to .exa_mine him for themqeiveil; -jg I | 1 gation, has not nished with his legal I I " Michael Frazer, the . octogenariano Midland farmer, `whose $80,000 fortune 4 has been the storm centre of much liti- experiences. Acting for Mrs. Frazer, formerly Miss Hannah 0. Robert- son, of `l_)undas,'John King, K.C has ' served notice of appeal on Macdonell, ' McMaster & Geary, and the matter will 'lbe threshed out in-the Court of Ap- : pea]. It will probably . be set down * for the sittings-of thecourt,eommenc- ing on `September 18th, but it is not Ilikely to be reached) for some time. and Mrs. Frazer be was over eighty, and she was just thirty. He was the ' Past of seven brothers, and inherited all their property. His cousins insti- tuted proceedings to have him "decla_r- ed of unsound mind, and an issue to determine his sanity was tried before , Mr. Justice -Britten,` who pronounced` him sane. An `appeal was taken to- the Divisional Court, composed of Chief Justice Mulock, .with~ `Judges -Teetzel and Middleton. `This court pronounced him` in_capa- le of manag- ing? his aairs, and named a .trust company` as committee of his estate, -while Mrs. Frazerwas to `be commit- tee of his person; ` n__- LI , Noticg D. QUINLAN, President _ _.._.. _ c u... nova:-451 I III the Upera I-'Iot1se on the evening of` the [26th, by the old reliable MARKS BROS. t A1 Co., and other Special Attractions. 1 A side-s.plitting ac: - a perfect scream of laugh ter from start to nish. ` AFTER oun nzsouacss The. Acrobatic Dutch- ` man and !Scultz Appeal `at the September ' sminn. I earless and,SenSatiof1;1l Tricks accomplished with the greatest ease in mid-air. BOY snrdiisnr ntraian. rn..:1.. 'n'--L-- H` " Sensatl`onalj-~AVrfisIic-- llarlng and_Enlo`rf1inlng Original Bollini. Troupe g -uniquc attractions and performance will The`; Maxieig t`n ent hanve _sec`:urecf t 1ie` l."oII`owiV Parks` Boakinug} Circuit,---pf N ew York % City, "the_Grand Stand. ' ' 4 ` A ` mour & Co., Swift & Co., Morris &A,Co.. including the Fairbanks Canning Com- pany, the National Packing Company. underthe joint management of Ar- xnours, Switts and Morris ; Swarzchiid & Sulzberger, and Cudahy & Co. The main interest. "the Big Six," as-they -are called, control 72 subsidiary pack- ing companies. and these 73 tentacles ; stretch over the length and breadth : of the United States. feeding them- ; `selves on the fat of the land and crush- ' I Ills Gomdy lulu ., __. .._-= uuvIAlhl'\t\JUlu\IIIo `if. the nperinteddenb on or before the thirty-rst day of December in any year receives proof by the j(_)_int amdavit of the President and Sec- Lretary or Secretary-Treasurer that rain or snow has fallen at the` place of holding an exhibition and before Section '24 of the Agricultu-ral So-4 .cieties'_;Act is hereby amended by add- `ing the following subsection: Tl LL- y. up vast;-nu 9\l\lLE.I.'1 GATE RECEIPTS AFFECTED ` BY WEATHER. ;`i4;: 'l 5$.$0l1~W1.1,Y the" iia'p' V 'i"H5u`g"ht7" h`;-51:63:31 `h.@Qand1an.H6usewlfe s qtandar for bl1e-]gast,2l years. `I _r;mgg=..made- to give satisfaction, stln'g-sat,is- of-y9}1.;f._/t1eigl~1bors or fri`ends:wlll be sure to . ggpyv 1'_t;9ngh6_r'Range. Ask ibout._ it. , r . ...a yfxuaa i`n;`a.m .. =m:g.:~ :5 as llillion "'lI_?1iy Thouzh are =` I `fhli lgfve . 00., nuvinv in which the Beef Trust has operated and is Operating now in the United States should, alone. turn every citi- zen or Canada, and especially the .Western farmer, against a `tariff re Th '0`! `In-\nuI;I I-A- -` ` K The examples to hand ef the way. ` . :. _> '-luuuuid-I 91'!` y"~`.., u "W.h.1. '31 tango problem bothers you, :~_Kl0V.Y0i1:.:tlIa`reas - 1 th` v `1nhaOanadian'jH6h:n[:v:;:*T: ;.+...`. .".s`.. 9 u:mr...o.-~n...... 3.- - ..- rM9st/qr `t h:e Happy Thought specia . in no otherrange. ' . mflId.IIIumIna1od' oven Door _ Pqtnntod arnormomotor Egtontod Damper : . , Vlqtnforood m_I`d VontlIatod oven ` V |!!rl'!1.,l_| CV9 F030" FM? C-`.4-` ---'- A-- -~~ , __ _-_ -v \v\.nunlI.llll.\p~`IV ll LIIC irig improvements, and, last of all, when its 'aPp'earance.is all that could; be desired-such .43. range you can take a real pride in. It is _CaHe:d_-_the. " ` -7__ - Whefx you can dpend on your range to make `every baking day` _a success; to give yOua__steady, even heat on the oven and to pcrfectlyjon. the top at the " same time ; fwj'he`n it combinesvall the modern: labor-saw 0 0 - . J ' _ "IHIT Ifllfllunotnpuup.-5- A- Ailiange You Will Be Proud of T0 AGRICUL- -___-u `I-I class Fare going 2 3rd ; `returning on September includes Toronto. _-...-.. .,.......u, mane, turn eve en especial `tan .-arrangement" which would te bring the country under the `touch of this gigantic corporatic The 1TmI+...z cu-s-- '- - -

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