Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 28 Jul 1910, p. 3

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Grain and other field crops for the harvest of-1911 will be taken by areas only, as none of these crops will 'be ripe at the taking of the census. The products of these ‘crops Will be gathered later in the year from the reports of correspon- dents; ‘ A despatch from Ottawa,- says: Iile area, product and value of field cmps harvested in 1910 will be enumerated for fall wheat, spring wheat, barley, oats, rye, corn for husking, buckwheat, beans, peas, 'flax, mixed grains, hay and clo- ter, alfalfa or lucerne, corn for for use, other forage crops, turnips, mangolds, sugar beets,»other field roots, tobacco and hops; and grass seed, red clover seed and alsike clover seed will be enumerated for product and value. ° Animals and animal products. al- :0 under- the head of agriculture; The headquarters of the new Company will be at Galt, Ontario. The intention of the new Company Is to perfect the organization of the different factories upon a uni- form basis, thereby eliminating the txce‘ssive duplicating of; special ma- nhin'ery which has taken place in the rast. Now That the Strikers Are Willing the ' Company Refuses, The Next Census Will Be Taken Under ‘ ‘ Date of June lst, 1911 ' HAYS WILL NOT ABBITR’ATE The Companies taken over con- stitute practically all the concerns in Canada, manufacturing the light- er grades of woodworking machin- ery and tools. They also constitute I large percentage of the manufac- turing capacity of iron working tools in Canada. ' CENSUS OF AGRICULTURE Montreal, July 24,â€":An official announcement that all of the G. T. R. shops from Chicago to Portland will be opened to-morrow morning, giving w rk to thousands .of hands, and the, distinct refusal of the Grand Trunk to arbitrate ‘un- der any condition, and the accept- ance of the strikers to arbitrate with acceptable arbitrators, the starting of all through freight trains are chief featnres of to- night’sflsitnation. Fxrst Mortgage 6 p. c. sinking ‘ ‘ Fund bonds ..$1,000,000 $400,0 Preferred Stock, 7 p. c. Cumulan _ tive . . . . . . 1,500,000 850,000 Common Stock . 1,500,000 625,000 Mr. Hays .has closed corresponâ€" dence with Hon. Mackenzie King as follows: “Your telegram of 23rd re- ceived. As you know from the many conferences urging your" action be- fore the strike took place and from our offer, urged and repeated be- fore the committee, we were desir- ous of arbitration to avoid existing troubles. The time for such action All Companies Manufacturing Wood Working Machinery and Tools. Mr. Garnet P. Grant, to-day made the oflicial announcement in connection with "the Canada Ma;- chinery Corporation consolidation and the Companies to be included in it. In hismnnouncement Mr. Grant stated that the new Company would include’the MacGregor. Gourlay & Company, Limited, of Galt, On- tario; The John Ballantine & Com- pany, Limited, of Preston, Ontario; The Hespeler Machinery Company, Limited, of Hespelér. Ontario, and the Woodworking Machinery De- partments of Goldie 8: McCulloch Company, Limited, of Gait. On- tario, and of the Sussex Manufac- turing Cornpany, Limited, of Sus- has now passed and it is only nec- essary that we should have protecâ€" titn to which we are entitled to en- Mr. Fitzhugb stated this after- noon that he was never more con- fident, of complete victory, mg all they required was protection. - \The capitalization of the new Company will be as follows: Authorized. Now Issued. The Canada Machinery Corpora- A BIG CONSOLIDATION. Pure-bred animals registered," or eligible forregistration, which are Owned ~at“th‘e time KM Vdglaking the census, WiII' be tnu‘m‘erated for horses, cattle, sheep, and swine, but their number will also be counted with all -other animals: under three years, milch cows, other hornedvor neat cattle, sheep, swine, turkeys, geese, ducks, hens and chickens and hives of. bees held or owned by each person at the date of the census on 1st June of 1311. The number of horses, milch cows, other horned or neat, cattle, sheep, swine and poultry sold in 1910, will be recorded, as well as the wool, milk. home~made butter, home-made cheese, eggs and honey products of the year, and the quan- tities of milk and cream sent to fac- tory or sold. will include the numbers of horses three years old and ov¢_r,_ horses v A party of twenty Doukhobours who were preparing to march through the country have been lan- d< d in Brandon Asylum as insane. Savings to be effected in the pur- chase of raw material and in admin- istration, economies in selling, dis: tributing, manufacturing and trans- portation charges. tion has been fortunate in the men it has secured for its first Board of Directors, as it will include, acâ€" cording to the o‘flicial announce- ment made to-day, all the leading interests who have built up the various Companies that are now being included in this important consolidation. Mr. George D. Forbes, President of the Taylor- Fc rbes Company of Guelph, will be the First President of the New Crmpany, the Vice-Presidents be- ing Mr. R. L. McCulloch of the Goldie, McCulloch Co. of Galt, Mr. R. MacGregor, Sr., President of the MacGregor, Gourley‘ Co. of Galt, and Mr. S. H. White, Presi- dent of the Sussex Manufacturing 00., Ltd., of Sussex, N. B., while the other directors will be Mr. '1‘. H. Watson of Toronto, Vice President and General Manager of the Can- ada Bolt and Nut 00., ‘Aleo. G. Gourley of Galt, Garnet 'P. Grant, Montreal, President Dominion Can- ners, and Harry' Cockshutt of Brantford, Managing Director of the Cockshutt Plow Co. Increased efiiciency resulting in economies by specializing the out- put at the different factories and by eliminating the unnecessary dupli- cation both in the output and pat- terns. ' Your correspondent learns this e‘ening that before Mr. Hays took his stand in the strike situation, he cabled to London seeking their views, the answer being that; Mr. Hays being on the spot to do as he saw fit. Mr. George D. Forbes, the Preâ€" sident of the new Company, when asked toâ€"day to point out the re- sults that would be achieved throngh the consolidation, stated that they might briefly be summar- ized as follows: Vice-President Murdock, in an of- ficial statement handed out this ev- emng, says that it is untrue that the riots have been caused by the strikers, although he did not ex- piain any of the arrests, and it is said the men in custody can prove an alibi. ' Mr. Murdock claims that the men ficm one end of the line to the other would remain true to the principles for which they. quit work, and added that the company would Huff a few more of the men back to 'work.’ The men also claim that'it wiil be an absolute impossibility for the company to run their freight txains as promised. They admit, however, that the suburbans are running, generally in charge of in- experienced hands. able us to resume the full opera- tions of the toad. (Signed) Chas. M. Hays.” _ _ -' Toronto July 26.~Barleyâ€"Car lots, ex-store. No. 3. 540 ; No. 4, 500. Cornâ€"American, No. 2 yellow, car lots, ex-store, 68%0; No. 3 yellow, 68c Green meats out of pickle, 10 less than smoked. Oatsâ€"Car lots, ex-store, Nov 2 Imports for June tOtalled $39.- Canada west, 45%0 to 460'; No. 3, 705.237. an increase» 0f $8,363,675 44%(3 to 45c. - _ (-verJune of last year. For the Millieedâ€"Bl‘un, Ontario, $20.50 three months i'fioorts totalled $1091: Rolls, smoked, 150 t6 15%0; méaiâ€" um and light hams, 180 to 18%0; heavy, 16%c to 170; bacon, 190 to Smoked and Dry Salted Meatsâ€" Long clear bacon, tons and cases, 15140 to 15%c; backs (plain), 210 to 21%0; backs (pea-meal), 21%0 to 220; shoulder'hams, 14c to 14%0. Wholesale quotations :~. Porkâ€"Short cut, $31 to $31.50 per barrel; mess $28 to $28.50. Potatoesâ€"A few new Ontario po- tatoes have come in, selling at $1 to $1.25 per‘ bushel. New Ameri-V can stock, $2.25 per barrel in car lots on track, Toi‘onto. Old pota- toes, 150 132) 390 per bag. ‘ _ Lardâ€"Fifm; tierces, 15%0; tubs, 15%0; pails, 15%0; stocks steady. Beansâ€"$2 t6 v$2.10 fo'r‘primes and $2.15 to $2.25 per bushel for hand- picked. Oats â€"â€" Canada western. No. 2, 450; No. 3 Canada western, 440, at lake ports for immediate shipment; Ontario No. 2 white, 39c to 400, out-l side; No. 3 White, 37c to 380, out- side; 410 to 42c on track, Toronto. Barleyâ€"No. 2, 510 to 520; No. 3 extra, 49c to 500 ; No. 3,*46c to 47c outside; Manitoba, No. 4', 46%c on track, lake. ' Peasâ€"No. 2, 690 to 700. Manitoba, F burâ€"Quotations “at Toronto are :~Firat patents, $6.20; second patents, $5.20; strong bakâ€" ers’, $5.50; 90 per cent., Glasgow heights, 25c. Butterâ€"Local vwholesale quota.- tions 2â€"Creamery prints, 230 to 240 ; separator prints, 200 to 210; dairy prints,choice. 190130 200; do., tubs, We to 180; inferioxj tubs, 16c. ’ Eggsâ€"49¢ to 19%0 pe'z" dozen in case lot-s, Toronto. Cheeseâ€"New cheese, 11720 for large and 11%0 per lb. for twins; 01g cheese} 12%(: to 12%0. Ofitario Flourâ€"Winter wheat patents nominal at $4.30 to $4.50 in_ ygyers’ bags, outside. Millfeedâ€"Maniboba bran, $20 per ton; shorts, $22 per ton, track, To- ronto. Ofitario bran, $20 per ton; shorts, $22 per ton on track, To- ronto . Toronto, July 26â€"Ontario Wheat â€"No. 2 winter, $1.09 to $1.10 out- side. Coinâ€"American No. 2 Srellow, 710 to 71%c; No. 3 yellow, 700 to 7C1éc, Totqnto fireights. Ma, itoba Wheatâ€"Nominal. No. 1 northern, $1.21; No. 2 northern, $1.18; No. 3 northern, $1.15, at lake ports for‘immediate shipment. THE WORLD’S MARKE l'S The Liver both causes and cures Obstinate Constipation or Paralysis of the Bowels. When the Liver becomes torpld or weak, then it cannot give up enough Bile to move the Bowels. “Fruit-a-tives" acts directly on the liver and makes the liver strong and active. By curing the liver. "Frult-a-tlves’fl enables this Important organ to give off sumclent'Blle to move the bowels regularly and naturally, and thus cure "‘Intestlnal Paralysis." “Fruit-a-tives" Is made of fruit juices and tonlcs and is undoubtedly the onLv medicine ever discovered that will positively cure Constipation in any- form. ‘ Price; of Cattle. Grain, cheese I!“ Other Dairy Produce at Home and Abroad. “Fruit-a-tives" is sold by all dealers at 50¢ a. box, 6 for $2.50. or trial .box, 25c, or maybe obtained from Fruit-a.- tives, Limited. Ottawa. REPORTS mo,“ mm LEADING mum CENTRES. MONTREAL MARKETS. INIESIINAL-» ' ’ mamas COUNTRY PRODUCE. :-a-tives” The Only Medicine That. Will Really Cure. Constipation. BREADSTUFFS. PROVISIONS. ~A despatch from Ottawa. says: The total trade of Canada for June was $66,000,000, an increase of $10,- 354,623 over June of last year. For the first quarter of the present fisâ€" ca‘ year the -total trade has been $171,173,690, a comparative increase (f $36,606,000, or over 25 per cent: A despateh from Kenora, Ont., says: Bush fires are burning at in- tervals of every few miles from Rainy River north to the Grand Trunk Pacific, and already a vast amount of timber has been con- sumed. A number of islands in the Lake of the Woods have been badly scorched. On Monday the village of- Norman, one mile from here, was the scene of a fire of unknown origin which completely destroyed the Rat l’ortage lumber mill and five houses in the vicinity. Embers, evidently from this fire, almost im- mediately started a blaze on the Canada’s June Trade Totalled Sixty-81x3 ANOTHER LARGE INCREASE Woods Along Turtle River and Gull River Are Being Destroyed. ' A: Buffalo, July 26.â€"â€"Wheatâ€"â€"Spring zâ€"Strong; No. 1 Northern,_ carloads store, 81.31%; Winter, firm. Corn ~Firmer; No. 3 yellow, 70%0; 'No. 4 yellow, 68%0; No. 3 corn, 68%0; No.4 4 corn, 66%(3, all on track through billed. Oatsâ€"Stronger; NC. 2 white, 48%0; No. 3 white, 47c; No. 4 white, 45%0. - A despatch from Brockville says: A mob, estimated to number about 1,000 persons, late Friday. attackâ€" ed a number of non-union Grand Trunk employes in the station here, severely assaulted about a dozen of them and badly wrecked the build- ing. Two men had to go to ,the hospital. Although the crowd had been gathering around the station f1 om about seven o’clock, only two town policemen were on the job, and they were useless. The disâ€" order followed the arrival of the local passenger train‘from Toronto and a freight. Half a dozen Thiel detectives. a couple of trainmen and Road Foreman Szammer of Belleville were in the station agent’s office, when the crowd made an ominous movement in that direc- tion. Those inside bolted the door, but. while some of the crowd used a, baggage truck for a battering mm, others began to stone the win- dcws, and others againngot out the company’s hose and began to flood the oflice. Minneapolis, July 26.â€"â€"Wheat â€"â€" No. 1 Northern. July, 551.25%; September, $1.17%. . Flourâ€"Manitoba spring wheat patents, firsts, $6.30; seconds, $5.- 80; winter wheat patents, $5.40 to $5.50; Manitoba strong bakers’, $6.50; straight rollers, $5.10 to $5.- 20; straight rollers, in bags, $2.40 to $2.50; extra§, $1.90 to $2; Butterâ€"Best creamery, 22%0; Creamery, 21%0. Cheesé-lâ€"Wéétern, llc to 11%(2 eastern, 103/40 to 110. Eggs+SeIe_cted stock. 21c dozen; straight receipts, 17c to 17%0 doz- en; second grade, 12%0 to 13c. BUSH FIRES IN .- ONTARIU The occupants, unable to with- stand the siege, came out on the to $21; Manitoba, $20; middlings, Ontario, $21 to $22; shorts, Mani- toba, $21; mouille, pure grain, $33)“) $313; mixpd, $25 foo $28, IUTIN‘G- 1 AT BROCKVILLE Crde Attacks Depot and VSeveral Men ‘ Brutally -- Assaulted. , LIVE STOCK MARKETS. Montreal, July 26.â€"~Calves, $3 to UNITED STATES MARKETS. Million 'The principal increase in expo war in agricultural products, whio show a betterment of nearly six millions as compared with the cor responding period of last year. The customs revenue for June was 85m 866,906, and for the three monthq 3.6,501‘3411, increases of $1,044,» 647 and $3,657,352 respective”- Exporfis of domestic predicts ' f1 the quarter totalled $57,648,937, a increase rof $8,321,923. :184,187, an_ ipcreasgv of $27,281,997. Dollars. tivc work, the “ situation ‘is still very dangerous, and precautions are being taken in the town tq Ward off occasional embers from the fire_ scene. Turtle River, sixty miles south of Dinorwick, and als Gull River, in the same direction” are being devastated and already‘ miles of timber and sawlogs hava, been consumed despite the work ol the fre rangers and C. P. R. men,}‘ who are assisting the fighters. I southeast corner of Tunnel Island. and on the mainland, across from the dam and though many from the town andrvicinity {are doing effeg: Toronto,'July 26.â€"Picked lots of butcher cattle sold in some in- stances for as much as $6.75. Good loads of butcher cattle brought from $5.80 to $6.25, and medium from $4.25 to $4.75,. Choice grades o[ cows were also up, some having sold for as much as $5.60, straight loads fetching up to $5.25. Com- mon and medium cows sold at $3.- 50 to $4.75. Three loads of Mauiâ€" toba stockers sold at from $5 to $5.25. Sheep and lambs comprised a large part of the run, and the Market for them was up higher, but was rather easier. Hogs were comparatively scarce, and were decidedly stronger, being: quoted at $9.40 f.o.b., and $9.70 fed and wat- ered ofi cars Toronto. In some. cas< cs hogs sold at $10 per cwt., fed and watered. ' John Roberts was sentenced 9A London, Ont., to three years in pcpitentiaryflfor _robbery._ ‘ l' ’u " v . Over a mxle of nets were sexzed near Gananoque by _the Govern- me nt steamer. Navdrch. $8; livehogs, $10 to $10.20 per 100 pcunds; sheep, 3%0 to 3%0 1b.: lambs, $4 to $6; steers, choice, 6%0 to 6340; good, 60 to 6%0; middle, 51/2c to 5%0; fair, 50 to 51/,c; con» man, 4%0 130 5c. The Windows, dqors and furni- ture of the station are practically destroyed. Then the crowd moved against the telegraph ofl‘ice, where P. F. Wilcox of Toronto, the conductor of the local' from Toronto, with two other Toronto men and a despetch~~ er named Johnson of Belleville, so it is said; were sitting, ’ Somebody in the office fired a. revolver shot through the. window to scare the invaders, but they came right on. forced the men out, and set upon them so savagely that Wilcox had to go to the hospital, suffering from cuts about the head and body. _ E. Course, a private " detective from Montreal, is also in the hos- pital._ His shirt was soaked with blood when he was admitted. Ha said he had been hired to act as a special: oflicer to protect train: along the line to Montreal. ,Wil- Cox says he was out of employment when ,- he was engaged by the tail; was; in VT_or9nto.' platform, when they were surround. ed by the crowd, and struck and kipked and generally assaulted: situation Es still and precautions in the town tq

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