i‘ illiir‘"’v."l>"rt*¥“""'l"evt~" ., - . . 'l ennui nrvunni , unis nnnllll Pillliil t ion be “ominated and directed by the question, "What is heat for Canada?’ a‘ MONTREAL AGRICULTUR- ISTS ALL PROTECTIONIBTS i’. l ill I Under the stimulaton of protec- “lm "1016 Jlss been a remarkable ‘development in the Canadian to. bacco industry in the last twenty. n" Yeflll- 311683!!! before the factories of United States firms, Mr. 0. H. Cote, Industrial Com- missioner of Quebec city, told the Tariff Committee that since his appointment in April last he had retina" namm Ila n mm ma The economic relationship which exists between agriculture and in- dustry was emphasized at the Montreal when Mr. Jack McAvoy, hearing of the Tariff Committee in _ 158 PAIIIIAI Avm, Hermann. ."For three years, 1 refers! great P458 in the lower part oi‘ my body, Ilfll Idling or bloating. I fly q lpofillat who said I must undergo altoperutioh I refused. Mlrd w! " rail-adieu" p Jailed a n; a. Th! flirt b6! gave great relief; and Tariff Commit e at Quebec. Mr. J09- Plcflrd; Manager oi the Rock ; - City Tobacco Company, pointed -, out that twenty-five years ago ~ practically all the ,toba.cco used in Canada was foreign-grown, im- borted either in the leaf or in manufactured form, while the Production oi raw tobacco in Can- ada was very small. in 1897 in addition to the excise stamp tax in effect at that time. the Govern- ment imposed a duty of 10 cents per pound on imported leaf. Under the uragement thus afforded, . Mr. Picard said that the amount “of Canadian raw leaf taken for j use in tobacco and cigar manu- facturng plants in the Domini increased from 555,684 pounds in 1896 to 5,572,187 pounds in 1908, while the amount of foreign ra\v speaking for over 3,000 members oi the Market Gardeners‘ Associ- ation of_the Province of Quebec appealed against any reduction of the tariff on vegetubes, fruit, and curly products of every kind pro- duced in (fanada “We realize," he said. "that the presence of in- Im-flluodumkamunh No. my dustrial workers in Montreal is 55ml i. exoguwt_l ‘m h” o! essential to our existence, and we p1h_md Iv" r-FfiiHih-Vu" my Iiollevg likewise that tour nctlvi. yum‘; Quanta. itlos in our market gardening in the Mm°_ R GAREAU vicinity of Montreal are beneficial flh_lboxlsfor$-z_5o'tflllfiuaa. to the industrial workers by illv ‘gm d-hntor “n: Postpaid b, ing them better and ffesllrztt vefi“. Lg‘ mmi§°d|otu'._ etnbes ut low/er prices than they would have to pay were we not € ,operating as “ye do." the de-elopment of desirable in- "Ben"? 1997 market 2111118111118 dustries, such duties should be in- hi“! ""1110 V01‘! little progress in crgaggrL what g5- bes; fm- can. this vicinity with the result that - all; i3 best in the “mg mu 1-m- rity consumers had to tionend to communicated with no fewer than 30 difierent manufacturing ilrms in the United States desir- ing to locate branch factories in the Province. "lt is an admit- ted fact today," he declared, "that the American ind tries which are looking forward to establish- in: branch factories in Canada are forced to do so owing to. the protective tarii! now existing. 1i we want our American neighbors to continue the movement started some time ago and come to Chn- sda and establish branches of their factories, the admitted son for their doing so must 0t be removed." ‘ , "Ho!!! q Eponlllll nil-me’ ' A concrete example is iurni by the Julius Kayser and pany,"Ltd., oi Sherbrooke, They have ova-r FIJHItLIlttU invest ed hot houses. 4-2‘: r $i_.',u().000 in hot beds. and on r xwuauon in the products generally. Immediately after this was (lone a marked de- velopment commenced to talu- Chaies HAT Berialvonerl box of enquire (‘Dc/ede” C/rocolnu brings back the joyous memories of honeymoon days and hoops romance ‘ leaf was increased from 10 to 28 leaf taken for use in the same fac- tories advanced only from 10,773,- 741 pounds in 1896 to about l5,- 000,000 pounds in 1908. In that year, the import duty onlforeign cents per pound, with the result that the amount oi Canadian to- bacco taken for use in the Cana- dian tobacco and cigar manufac- bec. This branch of the York company oi the same n_ was established in Canada in 14 and now has an investment of ap- proximately $800,000 in Sher- brooke where it is operating two plants ‘manufacturing silk gloves, hosiery, and chamoisette gloves. [Their representative, appearing before the Committee, ssid:,"'l?he ulation. the manufacturers. as it is also best for every element in our pop- As you undertake your revision of the tariff, we ask no- thing more than that such revis- n great extent upon importntionu to furnish their l'Pi|-lll\:lll9lll.:4. As the Commission is aware, the tariff revision of 1007 place-l n duty oi‘ from 20 to 2:’. |nzr ceut on plactauntl at the present time thcrve are in this-vicinity 3000 market gardeners who temploy 15,000 farm hands (luring the entire year and 75,000 during ilu- busy season. vegetables and market gardening: .>._..__1 rolling stuck iivvu- . Iu market their output. '|‘||< n- n» rurely tow- er than 700 lllilllivl mirth-hers‘ rfla _,... ._....._.___.. (Continued on Page Eight) - —~.-_ .- r:-' _.-—_-=xa 4*’ l: all other teas. alive in awry-day life. Ori nsiedhy @~*.sr*:=.§.i.2e.sn!"" " Makn fir yo Yam afFine Qsmlun. tarifli was the determining factor in bringing our industry to Canada, and had it not been m: the oatm- dian customs dutlesit wouldlhdve been to our advantage to have supplied the Canadian market from our factory in tho United States. in addition to our paints. another large branch of an Unit- ed States silk manufacturing con- corn has been brought to Cana- ada-and is now operatng at Nia- gara Falls, Ont.“ , torles still further increased from 5,572,687 pounds to 10,848,385 ior 1914: while the consumption oi foreign leaf increased only from 15,000,000 pounds to 18,776,803 pounds in 1914. In 1918 the duty on foreign leaf was stil further advanced to 40 cents per pound. Under the stimulus thus afford- ed to the Canadian tobacco grow, ers by the tarilf, production haa been t. ’ ‘y enlargedllrom practically ,;i1othlng twenty-live years ago, the production for all Canada increased to about 22,000,- 000 pounds in 1919. Estimates for this year place the production of burley ‘tobacco in Essex and ad- jacent counties in Ontario between 19,000,000 and 20,000,000 pounds. with between 1,500,000 to 2,000,- 000 pounds 0t tobacco of the vir- ginia type The production ln the Province of Quebec is estimated this year at about 12,000,000 pounds, all oi the cigar type. The Canadian tobaccoucrop lasryear was in "$666 of ‘the require- ments of the Canadianmarket and this year again there has been a] “g8 ovefiprwucwm la” the Canadian manufacturers have not use oi Canadian leaf is greatly ex- ' tended A! a result of the proltaken advantage of the tariif to k prices on their product as d Elmer $2332.11. Z12??? L‘; ‘l’; i223 ‘finch e wcme- Must“ . celvln a roximately 1.0 cents "I'- wm Show that semnglprlcéu of l undgmzpe f r hi rodu- tllldu variably bu“ “mu w“ o! pro‘ i: ‘m ‘:11 s‘ ufh "st {If duction Competition a nothing geiggfzwgbacco S! smnztnquazl“ ‘else. would control this condition. _ and last year the value of the Cirz- _ adian tobacco crop was estimaud High prices curt." volume of bu! . - . I ness, ‘at 89,000,000. The consumption of i tobacco in Canada at the present Low pr c“ atlmuhm “d an“ larger sales, time is approximately 35,000,000 Larger m“ ma“ gram" Fromm pounds a yesr. “hing” tion t l AMERICAN lNDU8TRIE8 Gm °zoaflzdgfgffctfgg““° “w” l COME OVER Lower cost of production means lower prices. A Christmas Idea You know that the biggest thing you can do for your family this Christmas is to maize sure that never in the future will good cheer and comfort be lacking. To provide for them "come what may”— Why not do it .7 Your future Christmas Days as they may be._ TARIFF DOES NOT BOOST PRICES Reiuting the contention that Canadian manufacturers‘ prities are determined by the amountof protection which they enjoy and notby- costs of production, Mr .l~‘. W. Stewart, President of the Mon- trenl Branch oi the Canadian Man- ufacturers Association, appearing before the Tariff Committee in Montreal, said _“A careful study of prices of goods made in, Can- adian factorierras against goods of similar quality and standard in other countries, will prove that Make “Christmas" Certain a Deposit with the Canada Life each year less than you pay for personal luxuries. Less than a motor car's uplceep. Less than you lose in a year on a rash previous methods of communication. so is specu]atjon_ “TIPTOP TBA" an advance In quality over Deposit such a sum with us ancl we will guarantee your family l A Monthly Cheque The amount may be $50, $100 or more, es you may arrange. Pure Strawberry lam Pure, Raspberry lam Made from Fruit and Granulated lllllr Only Iolled with can In sliver [IIIII Even a $2.5 monthly income will pay the rent, it necessary, leaving a woman's mind free on Emphasizing the value of the score at leash Canadian tariff in securing the " d tlo d d establishment in Canada of branch Pm “c n an more pm ‘w- tlon is what all manufacturers strive for; for it means placing the manufacturer in a better posi- tion to meet competition. With the large number of industries in Canada. and small population to consume their output, every man- ufacturer must flght bard for the business he secures, and statis- tics will show that a very consid- prable percentage of manufac- turers who start in business in Canada do not survive on account of not being able ‘to profitably meet compettion. We wish to emphatically refute charges made in certain sections of our country that prices of products of Cana- dian factories are regulated by the tariff and not by cost of pro- duction, and we beg to draw at- tention to the fact that, after cir- culatlng these charges for many years, those who made them did not produce evidence in support of their statements at" any of the previous hlttings of this Commis- sion." in conclusion, Mr. Stewart said: "The manufacturinl interests of- the city oi Montreal _rssmrm their conviction ‘that the' prosberit)’ and continued development of the Dominion will be safe-mm“! It"! ’vanced by [the maintenance of adequhte was prptectloll tor the mannfacturinl ipdustriea of this country. They believe that protec- tion‘ which is not high enough lo be effective is worse than useless. They babe their casefor‘ continued protection. not on mdividupl. but Rm"- Bracelets Rosaries. silverware, etc. on natural grounds and rumor vodly accept the principle tint my i.iw.iunttsou .,, , ' _ ‘ ' -. '1 . ' " ‘V ’ . my} tlonal consideration "1 lewd!“ ' om: l: aluéiliilifistfia. But they *1‘ 9""! srnlrr ... e v-"W" r- " " also ma» its‘: the principle ought to work both wtys use um m use any present duties are ‘onsatorrlfqwfl- P- 1:. '- A woman can keep a family together on even a small income, provided it is REGULAR. The great advantage of this Canada Life “ policy is that should you live your deposits will provide for you later on. ASK YOOKGROCER FOR l1’ This means protection for your family now and provision for yourself in olcl age. Here is an enduring worth-while Christmas present. Let us sencl you particulars. Canada Life Assurance Company \\' . K. ROG HRS, Today a onwa- nut hlled, rhooolate it ‘W’ t xttu L our n“ °| Christmas gifts include‘ Bracelet Watches Dhmager for l" n I" ruff links, ransom. Pearl Necklsts, Ohpinn Lockets’ (lh""°“°t"“'"' "flnrfplns, nude Manitfs Merit a dainty all? calht. -- and fortifiee his old age with a substantial income. gonad to be inadequate to mm"