Northern Advance, 16 Jan 1908, p. 3

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` .(;_ V A Coniinfxeog Page 5. win probably .Tuck of New "ff1i'-T,,3l'.`)"i,. . p the `exports of ,pu1pwood~7;md;, .5`-saw. log"s,_fmariy ` "seem t9'~"forget, or. not to know, that Canada -has the most offthe best. greentrees _o_n ea i th,. and; thatiourpi rnagniilicentl a heritage of "evergreen, spruce and I pine trees ` proyicfes ,a crop that` only -requires. careful hand-. ling on our part to be a `permanent source of incalculablc wealth to the country; and that especially with re- ference to pulpwood, Canadian Spruce; makes the `strongest, longest, and most brous and feathery wood pulp obtainable anywhere, `far `superior _ to that `of Scandin_avi-a, Russia, Austria, Finland, or to what remains in-~t'he United States. -Canada has. over 2,- 600,000 square miles *(over 1,650,000,-' 000 acres) of green tirnber, very` largely spruce and pine, although there isbesides a greadedeal of hard- wood. V , Jrmnnxno1'i'r or pmmwoon, V H Canada s area of pulpwood isemuch' more the envy` of tne United"States than it is-.=+as it should be-the pride of` Canada. This is made clear when we realize that, out of 70,000 square `miles of timber lands under license in the Province of Quebec alone, the Yankees own nearly 15,000; there- fore, as _I5 is to.7o, so is the position of these mercantile rnarauders to the south of us with respect to Quebec timber lands. _ And unless we prohibit exporta- tion of pulpwood from"-Canada this ratio will increase year by year. In theilast quarter of a century, we have seen it `grow from practically nothing to its present alarming proportions,i and those who come after us` will nd it worsefor Canada.` and its pa.- per industry, unless a stop is put to [this marauding. ' Millions upon millions of spruce logs, hundreds of thousands of cords of pulpwood, from Quebec, On- tario, Nova Scotia and New Bruns- wick; go annually to feed the pulp and paper mills of the `Eastern, Mid- dle and Western States; Canada gets but little out of this`; the Government does not get one dollar a cord for the standing wood; the chopper, the loader and the teamster not much! Imore, and the railways only a low` rate on coarse freight; so that in all not over $6 to $7 a cord is left in Canada, on an average, for the hund- [reds of thousands of cords of pulp- wood taken out of our country an- nually. ' l i While pulpwood is a raw material of comparatively low value, it pro- tduces manufactured articles of high [cost I watch the disbursements for wages, and freight grow; every cord. of wood made into pulp will realize] about $20; when made into bre,| about $30 to` $32; when made into` paper, $40 to $45 and upwards. The {pulp and paper industry gives more healthy, steady, day and night em- ployment to a larger number `of men, women and children, at higher wag-m Grind this wood into pulp and es, all the year round, than any oth- er industryin Canada, LII. man y 1 Has Canada anything to'fear from! t 'the United States about` this ?~~.kCan| they retaliate? "Will they? No, they`? got about all they could stand of that t sort of medicine when the Dingleylf Tariff on eggs, aroused the great! 5 Canadian hen. President Roosevelt s'i big stick has no retaliation knobs on , it just now with which to whack E Canadian wood pulp. The President 1 and the press_of the United States-} urge the repeal of the United States import duty on pulpwood, wood pulp, and white news paper, and are now suggesting, nay may soon be `suing for and begging for, an agreement with -Canada to try"and prevent the Canadian Government_ from impos- ing an export duty on pulpwood or from prohibting the exportation of our wood and logs. But we must not permit `our country "and its pforestil products to be further devasta ted by 1 these marauders; let them come over ' `here and establish pulp and paperll mills; just as the Eddys, the Ba1d- ` wins, the Millens, the Bronsons, theil Youngs, the 'Westons, the IHughsons ` and others came here and established - sawmills. They are welcome to Can- . ada-. "We should like to see Hull ` _ the iHolyoke of Canada;". just as ` . much as the Prime Minister will be 1 ; glad to see Ottawa the Washing- ton 'of..th_e __ North, and in this will 1 A stand shoulder `to shoulder with '-Sir Wilfrid Laurier or ._any oth"e r '[m_an* f who will do these two -great: things for, Canada. Remember, what hap- i opened through>oi_1t..-tehe' Ge`orgi_a`n Bay _ district. .~wh_en .,t-he `Ontario `Govern- ment resttaatede the W exportaof saw- logs. into;-_ ihigan,.._ Wisconsin sand 1 other. :W'.este'rn,~- States. T` Sawmills , _sprang, up .. by -` the dozens, factories ` started -by.`the1-,score._. If"? all-our wood a W3f" kPt7ati.h0nie tosrbeeturned*in`tot . _pulpf-'and+`paper -in ;Cana_d3;; the ; result ;m'_ ,..te`n, eypars.iwould _`__,$trpass-V the ex - `petati<$nis:7`f{5 i > f fithe f " ' ' 1 a A g _ A p Asangtnne,-,";of `W; ewhi1rnsth;f5`%!t=n tWent,`;sars a.`*"?i'*,`$1.:"*r'?;=: *7*1Q`L5t7 h9*34:~ W59? ::iImas;,astsa 1* it `F?!"?`*C?!.m` k . THE; ANORTHERN ADVANCE -v- w-_v w w - -- Y-.g--, _. . _ _ _ . _ . , _,`, as `well that I gave ma deputationfofv the. liquor interests the assurance that legislation would be introduced ithe coming "session to enable the licenses in Collingwood to be issued at the old gure, pending the settle- ment of this litigation. ' ' Win 3... m.n.e of Test. `_ _in g pgningwoqd License} ` % T `By-Iw;'[ --u-9. .-u-, 4 9-av 9- A v v nnuvuuun u- - w-.. I I noticed 5. despatch from Coll-j ingwoiodg stating` that the Depiart-~ ment has undertaken to pay the `_e_x_- 3 pense: of both side to the litigationij that .may follow in testing the lega-~j ility of theby-lhawv passedpn Mon`-H day, Jan. 6th, xing the license fees 1 ,for the town at $2,500, and statingj Department` Cannot Temporarily Re- e .duce Fees,` says Mr; Hanna`. I anoynuu vc wanna ----._-_v_- The facts are `that I have intima- *ted to both sides, temperance peo- ple" and liquor people alike, that si_n- _r .1,` 1:._.:;. L- ___L:-|. FIS ll\.l ll\i\I\I| rvvrov ------, vv_-__- _, , ce the question of the limit to which the municipalities .may go is one of_ general interest, the Department would hear the expenses of a stated case. This we are prepared to do,_ but the other part of the des-patch is entirely without foundation. I was requested by a deputation from Col- lingwood to give an assurance that the licenses "would be issued on the `first of `May next at the old rate, but AI. _A. A.`_:_ __.-n p. ! , The ifollowinig Statement` withire-L I8a.rd"t'o the by-law pased by Col1i"ng-_- ;Hani1a, the Provincial Seretary.' f"-II wood to increase the liquor license fees was given out by. `Hon. Mr.` Auntie: vs a----J ----_- ..- -I told them at once that this was a] matter which would be useless to| discuss with me, that there was no discretion whatever in the Depart- ment with regard to the fees pay- able, as it was a matter of statute, and that if the by-law was carried Ithg $2,500 fee would be charged. ur~,_-_ -..- -2 4.1.... Ag.-.I>nb:nn than \ ogaoavuuvu _________ __a - ,9 I said at once that I could not give any assurance whatever on this score. I in no way promised to introduce legislation not to support it if introduced by anyone else. Ll? nP,aUU l.\..\. vvvunu -av v--_--._- Some_ one of the deputation then suggested amending legislation, but 1 ,1: __L ______ A: the Mouth of `st. John River. i when Water Flows Up`-HiI|. ; Speaking of freaks of the tide, there is nothing in this world to equal the phenomenon at the mouth of the St. John River, where water ows up hill and down twice daily. These revers- ing falls are in a class by themselves in _tLhe \yorld s natural curiosities. , -3 41.- `:1- :.. 4.1.- 1).... A6 (1 me Wunu 3 uuburtu. uuxxunxuca. The rise of the tide in the Bay of ` Fundy, which ranges up to sixty feet. averages at St. John harbor twenty- *eight or thirty feet. A6 ORA vnnusfk II` fhn Q . tnguu ur uuucu Lccu. I At the mouth of the St. John River the great body of wa_.ter is forced through a deep and narrow gorge. On the one side of this gorge the harbor opens; above it the St. John Raver. nearly 500 miles long, stretches. away into the province of Quebec. mm... on... HA. an Hm Row nf Fundv mto me provluce U1 uucucu. When the tide in the Bay of Fundy is on the ow, the waters rise with such rapidity that the level in the harbor becomes in less than an hour considerably higher than the level in thre`-Arivet. __--L__ :_ I--`AA Churn:-nu`! {tho me 1'lVe!'. , The water is forced through the; gorge at such a rate that it literally ` falls up into the river, the height of this fall reaching at times fourteen feet. so great is the area of the river, so great is the amount of water rising in the harbor and so narrow is the gorge that it would take hours longer than the interval of any tide to bring the river, level. up to that of the har- bor at high water. ` in II nnnnnnuuannn nftf *_`}'IQ `V in~BaArrie' `by Wm; Ctosksland, g an _-Robe`:-tso`n,i LGeo.' .M_onkman, _.. .D., H. -F.;.fB; `S:nji_ths. A_!_ M ._.4( _. :9: 9 ` . . ,. . nor an mgn Water. As a. consequence, alter the tide has turned and is on the ebb inthe hu- bor, the level is still so much higher than the river that the tide in the river continues to rise for two or three hours, the water still falling upward. `ML- --._._ 8..-...` uuvnv-Ira in {aha nw_ hours, the water suu raruug upwauu. ' The same force works in the flow. After the water in the harbor has fallen until the level in the harbor and in the river are the same the fall downward begins. During the next few hours the harbor recedes until the drop from the river to the harbor is as much as sixten or seventeen feet 3 at the very lowest tide. Once` more l the tide turns inward and comes up I i quickly, but over three hours elapon before it is suciently high to coin- teract the downward ow iron: e i-REE.` A At half tide there is _a- period something less than an hour wh { navigation is Lirnnossible. Canadian Hair Restorer. %-Z Will restore SE17 hair to iI:s natural color. ax--- A.nx_.. I._.l_' ._n-gain in an-nu! n I-.1111] Win raawru [ray unu; my sin u-mu... .~...... 1 shops falling hair` causes togrow on bald i heads. Cureudandrun'.!tchlnz,scalp diseases. By its use thin hair grows luxnrlantly. Contains no out or greasy ingredients. I: entirely `unlike any other hair `prepara- tion everoerodtorule. ` V % ' A good. relishlucanadlan preparation. _ -.....n.n..n -ngguuinnnnln. `L `Evin. Avnuu-any \n-.-------_ '-v..-_..._,,._. lluollcued Tutlnonhu. Aklidith 1:. Burkoafdhsionaxgy H. Chunk with two years using. Y P ' L. A. Hopes. Wllner. Montana. My hair und whiskers restored to natural colox. du- brown. by mint Canadian Halt Restorer. % -M.Orum.FI|l'glVllIe.O t. Canadinnalr the tlhavenevax-med. - - k C M hoadds I"! Ill #1 ` . .1 3.1;. 1: >.nm-a ~ ...`.~*-=-...}.;..*=,1..,...s~......r..'s.-,.% .m.9.=:. mtxiuu ullul r semen later that to 5 omga ` say in uncemon ck 2011017- 11 d :33 ; J6. Pnovmcn: -1'0} PAY; mm or Ti-IE noes. PAPERS it I PARLOR cook. regulai-i'p`1-`ice 540. for :32 M u M 5 u I ` Q. for Hoar's Harclware Store lass COLD FRONI NOW UNTIL JAN. 1st, 1909, FOR Northern Advance Ofher _ Heating Stoves afthe saxr}'c;li.9coun't. These stovcs are all this yea`rs s models. 7 ' 1%: those A who do not wish to take a daily %paper, this offer is UN-9 PARALLELED. V A ----FOR---- $|.25 [ALL AND _42`.oo.- fu 34.00 me which ion. kw] shall be nave:-cu. [1 Al` Vnnn to use tholl tside duh hey do [0 r such 06 `I c`. ." , and W AD I` 11151 q of- Jon, Erna 0; t more-: in In over Isl bacon I81 E ; Owen ` mg ilv; !3T 250 Floyd Semon, a `Wirv1dsor co1`ored, man, is dead from a dose of car- bclic acid. T 7: -2:-:--z~-:--1--1--t-a--s-+4-M-+++-:~1-I--m++-15 4-H-++-H-I-+4-!~l-I-+-I-H-I-I-~l-l-+-8-+-l-I_: Harold _S'a'vage of `Montreal com? mitted suxcxde by taking morphine. - 1; Serious damage was done by great storms on the Nova Scotia. and .New Brunswick coasts. .1 Iuvarnn. . n advuggg . no othq ven. Thi- The Prussian budget shows a d;:- cit of $uo,5oo.ooo. n1nuanwu-v.- w-..___. More than 1,900 unefnployed men have registered at the Toronto re- gistration bureau. Mr. 5. cookon vyas killed at Point `St. Charles by fallmg under a mov- ing train. V I- John Boyd, a negro, was hanged at the Toronto jail for the murder of! E. F. Wandle. " ' M. Jacques Flach, the French his- torian, says war between Japan and the United States It certain. It is reported in Winnigeg that the Canadian Northern has Just dis- charged seventeen conductors for it'- regularities. It is reported in Toronto that, ow-' ing to labor difficulties, the Coiling-| wood Shipbuilding Company has! closed down. | It is said that United States inter- ests are looking to the purchase of the Imperial Paper Mills and North- ern `Sulphite Mills at Sturgeon Falls. William Harris of Windsor, `Ont., was asphyxxated by fumes from a gas -sgove at Canton, Ohio. 'Rev. Dr. Mackay, Secretary of _the_i Presbyterian Foreign Missionary Society, tells of unrest in India. [mind thy; rtisemnnt. During 1907 Britain s imports in- _creased $190,078,380, and her exports Increased $253,146,290. It is understood -Germany is will-I ing to give France and Spain a freel hand in Morocco provided the open- door there is not disturbed. A large number of steamers, sail- ing vessels and shing craft have been wrecked on the west coast of Asia and many lives have been lost. The Ontario Railway and Munici- pal Board issued an order to the ef- fect that the Toronto Railway Com- pany must operate its cars in To- ronto Junction. Another_smelting company lis ap- `plied for exghty acres of land in Ash- bridgc s Marsh, Toronto. The crew of the Wabash train were held responsible for the Ti'llson- burg collision by a-Coroner's jury for_ not protecting the rear of their tram. It is claimed that tlie Canadian` N0rthern's new connection, the Win- nipeg & Duluth Railway, places, Winnipeg within forty-eight hours of New York. DHURSDAY, JANUARY T:6ii;J? - -:--a--:-+-:-z--x--i-++-I-1-z--1-on-1--2-+4-+-t-Ax-1-+-3-+ ance such (1, report,` . Ste am. =6-I-of I . THURSDAY. JAN. 9th. " 1? 1-jj :1-Q .' All new gold by a M-4 . ' _-"`i-'-"/1`-3%: . Events of the Week }Mr. Cyrus Finlay Allison, 21 Lon-. don traveller, was found dead in a Sarnia hotel. - ` {Iount Z_epplin is preparing to `buxld an an-ship capable of carrying` 100 passengers. . l Mr. Justice Barkei` succeed Chief `justice I Brunswick, resxgned. pi It is stated that the Canadian [Northern Railway i_s_ to have a new `[system of orgamzatnon. } Rioters inv Che Kiang Province, China, burned the Protestant chap- el and school at Klahsingfu. A A dephtatipn from Hm-oVn county asked t_he 'Mmi_ster `of. Publig Works `for assxstancehm bmldmg bndges. I Winnipcg s high pressu:-:2 water system has given; great` satnsfaction. F` A` resolution gnayjbe introduced ..in the City Coungil toreduce the num- ber of hotel hcenses in Toronto. _ Tye revenue from succession dut- xes m the Provmce for last year has fallen behind `I906 by $179,438. I` George E. Smith, a motomian in the empldy `of the Toron._to_Railway Company charged with crupxnal neg- lect, was committed for trzal. I An Abyssinian force has captured ithe towneof Lugh, held by Italy, on the east coast of Africa. The entire garrison has been slain. I A man named Chambers, from: [North Dakota, claims to have dis- covered his long-missing wife and two child:-en'at Brantford. He will take action to get the children back. r`Ir;drord 58- . _ The Whitq -Star Line has announ- ced a cut in its segond _and third }class passengers rates from English :ports to New York and Boston. \ After being `out twenty-two hours the jury_ at London failed to agree `in the case of Thomas Noah, cairg- ed with murder, and Chief Justice eMeredith discharged the jury. Judge Choquette of Montreal gave an Italian charged with attempted istabbing the longest term allowable, `three years in penitentiary. His Honor desires to discourage the kning practice among foreigners. % Four remen were killed in a dis-! astrous re in `New York. In Tororito, James Hunter, a bar-E Vbe_r, shot twice at W. O. Chute, and 1 massed him. { _ Five persons were killed in a eol:l 1151011 on the Alabama & Mississippz Railroad near Mob1le_ T 3' Mr. J<)h.n Talbot of London has ween appomted food .inspecto;' for |scveral western "Ontario countxes. Sed Fr -T 7A`lar'ge.grower J poppll` :eeey|_ :`Yooe 1 `.Santa~_Ron' is an exceptionally ne mix: .\ ture of Shin-ley Popviel. by far the best ye V have seen." We will `give absolutely (see 1 ; pnckageoftheseseeds to every person who will send for out new lupndoomely-llphguugd l_9ooceuloeuo- If you Drder. may `have: pdckegeofour canedinn Gem `rm-nip or condo`: Pride Tomato -seed in place of V the poppies. Write to-day mine your choice. Dutch 5. Hunter-Seed Co., Ltd. ` Lolxdon, Ont. o ` The choosing pf a panel of jury- men for the `trial `of 'Harry Thaw gas completed at New York yester- ay. ' _ John Kindness, a young farmer, was found dead in his stable near 1Embro. It it supposed a horse ikicked him. % The Opera House at Brantfordl iwas gutted by `re, and a number of ,stores underneath` suered damage by water. `The Transvaal gold `output .for bthe month of December was 583,526 ounces, which breaks the record by over 28,000 `ounces, _Leon Barash, a Roumanian, was found guilt in ';`oronto,of_stea1ing $225 from VilIiam Brandham in the Bank ofV.Hamilton,. ` _ % ' `Serious riots were caused in Ber- lin by crowds of "people who gather- ed before the .-Prussian Largdtag building, demanding Jnanhood suff- rage. I` ' ` - .- V Lucine. Millevoieya member of the French Chamber of Deputies, calls on France and .Britain to prevent war, between Japan and the United |'States. -. .. ~. : i As `a protest against the limited scope of inquiry into the `disappear? `ance of the Ifish'72.St"ate~rega1ia from Dublin Castle;-"7 -Sir" Arthur 1 Vicars, custodian of the "jewels, and `his cqunsel, have withdrawn,- SATURDAY, JAN, nth. FRIDAY, ` JAN. xoth.

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