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J 


SESSIONAL   PAPERS. 


VOL.  XXX-PART  VII. 


FOURTH  SESSION,  EIGHTH  LEGISLATURE 


OF    THE 


iPRO'v^insrcE  o]p  oostt^a^rio. 


SESSIOIT    189T-8. 

J. 


I. 
TORONTO : 

PRINTED  FOR  L.  K.  CAMERON,  QUEENS  PRINT 

BY  WARWICK  BRO'S  &  KUTTER,  68  and  70  FRONT  ST.  WKS^ 

1§9§. 


n  P 1 2  0  r 


LIST  OF  SESSIONAL   l^APERS. 


ARRANGED  ALPHABETICALLY. 


Accounts,  Pnlilic 
Aiji-icnltnral   C(jlle;4'e,  Report 

Farm  Proper 

"  "  Purchase  money  .  . 
A(^ricultui"al  Experimental  Union,  Report 
Algon(|uin  Paik,  Sales  of  Jewellery  in  .  . 
Asyhuiis,  Repoit 


No. 

Remarks. 

2 

Printfid. 

17 

" 

62 

Not  jfyrinted. 

05 

Printed. 

52 

51 

Not  printed, 

10 

Printed. 

Bee-Keepers'  Associations,  Report    21 

Births,  Marriages  and  Deaths,  Report I  29 

Blind  Institution,  Repoi't 14 

jjutter  and  Cheese  Associations,  Report 24 


Canadian  Niaoara  Power  Company,  Agreement 

Children's  Protection  Act,  Report    

Children,  British,  Immigration  of,  Report 

Colonization  Roads,  expenditure       

Courts,   business  done     

Crown  Lands,  Report     


Deaf  and  Dumb  Institute,  Report 
Division  Courts,  Report     


Education,  Report : 

"           Examinations,  Report  (port  of) 
"  School  Books,  Report 

Engledue  Syndicate,  correspondence    

"  "  mining  concessions 

Entomological  Society,  Report.  

Estimates     

Examinations,  Report  on  (part  of) 


Facuories,  Report    

Farmers'  Institutes,  Report 

Forestry  Commission,  Report    

"  Report  on    

Fruit  Experiment  Stations,  Report . 
Fruit  Growers'  Association,  Report . 


Printed. 


48 

Not  printed. 

16 

Printed. 

60 

" 

44 

Not  printed 

63 

" 

4 

Printed. 

15 

Printed 

6 

" 

1 

Printed. 

1 

t( 

64 

t( 

66 

a 

47 

Not  printed 

20 

Printed. 

1 

" 

27 

Printed. 

26 

" 

45 

" 

34 

" 

19 

" 

18 

' 

Title. 


Game  and  Fish  Commission,  Report    

Gaols,  Prisons  and  Reformatories,  Report    .... 
Guardian  ad  litem,  Account 

Health,  Report    

Hospitals,  Report    

Humber  piggery,  Cholera  in 

Immigration,  Report = 

Industries,  Report 

Insurance,  Report 

Legal  Offices,  Report 

Live  Stock  Associations,  Report 

Loan  Corporations,  Report    

Man  vers,  audit  of  accounts 

Mines,  Report 

Mining  Concessions    

Moore  Lumber  Company 

Mosgrove,  Judge    

Municipal  Auditor,  Report    

Official  Guardian,  ad  litem,,  account 

Poultry  Associations,  Report     

Public  Accounts 

Public  Works 

Queen  Victoria  Niagara  Falls  Park  Report    .  . 
"  "  "      Agreement 

Refuge,  Houses  of.  Report     

Registrars,  fees   

Road-making,  Report 

Rondeau  Park,  water  fowl    

Secretary  and  Registrar,  Report 

Spraying,  Report    

Statutes,  Report  re  Consolidation     

Stisted,  Lot  18  in    

Sullivan,  John,  Payments  to 

Tavern  and  Shop  Licenses,  Report 

Timber,  Coffin  addition . , 

"         Manufacture  of    

Toronto  University,  Auditors'  Report 

"  "   .        Finance     

Upper  Canada  College  Report 


No. 

Remarks. 

80 
11 
61 

Printed. 
Not  printed. 

35 
13 
41 

Printed. 
« 

Not  printed. 

5 

32 

9 

Printed. 
« 

It 

28 
25 
36 

Printed. 

46 
33 

47 
59 
39 
43 

Not  printed. 
Printed. 
Not  printed. 

{< 
Printed. 

61 

Not  printed. 

22 
2 

8 

Printed. 

31 

48 

Printed. 
Not  printed. 

12 
57 
23 
50 

Printed. 
Not  printed. 

56 
49 
42 
58 
55 

Printed. 
Not  printed. 

7 
54 
58 
88 
87 

Printed. 
Not  printed. 
Printed. 

40 

Not  printed. 

LIST  OF  SESSIONAL   PAPERS. 


Arranged  in  Numerical  Order  with  their  Titles  at  Jull  length  ;  the  dates  when 
Ordered  and  when  presented  to  the  Legislature ;  the  name  of  the  Member 
who  moved  the  same,  and  whether  Ordered  to  he  Printed  or  not. 


No.     1 


No.     2. 


No.     3... 


No. 

4. 

No. 

5.. 

No. 

6.. 

No. 

7.. 

No. 

8... 

No. 

9.. 

CONTENTS  PART  I. 

Report  of  the  Minister  of  Education  of  the  year  1897,withtheStatistics 
of  1896.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  16th  December,  1897. 
Printed. 

Public  Accounts  of  the  Province  for  the  year  1897.  Presented  to  the 
Legislature  8th  December,  1897,  and  10th  January,  1898.   Printed, 

Estimates  for  the  year  1898.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  De- 
cember, 1897.  Printed.  Estimates  (supplementary)  for  the  year 
1898.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  12th  January,  1898.  Printed. 
Estimates  (vote  of  credit).  Presented  to  the  Legislature  20th 
December,  1897.     Not  Printed. 


CONTENTS  PART  IL 

Report  of  the  Commissioner  of  Crown  Lands  for  the  year  1897.  Pre- 
sented to  the  Legislature  13th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Report  of  the  Department  of  Immigration  for  the  year  1897.  Presented 
to  the  Legislature  13th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Report  of  the  Inspector  of  Division  Courts  for  the  year  1897.  Presented 
to  the  Legislature  12th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Report  on  the  working  of  the  Tavern  and  Shop  Licenses  Acts  for  the 
year  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  12th  January,  1898. 
Printed.  ^     ,  1 

Report  of  the  Commissioner  of  Public  Works  for  the  year  1897.     Pre- 
^_^^  sented  to  the  Legislature  12th  January  1898.     Printed. 

Report  of  the  Inspector  of  Insurance  and  Registrar  of  Friendly  Societies 
for  the  year  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  9th  December, 
1897.     Printed. 


No.   12.. 


No.  15.. 


No.   17.. 


No.  18.. 
No.  19.. 
No.  20.. 
No.  21.. 
No.  22.. 


CONTENTS  PART  III. 

Report  upon  the  Lunatic  and  Idiot  Asylums  for  the  Province  for  the 
year  ending  30th  September,  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature 
12th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Report  upon  the  Common  Goals,  Prisons  and  Reformatories  of  the  Pro- 
vince for  the  year  ending  30th  September,  1897.  Presented  to  the 
Legislature  12th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Report  upon  the  Houses  of  Refuge  and  Orphan  and  Magdalen  Asylums 
of  the  Province  for  the  year  ending  30th  September,  1897.  Pre- 
sented to  the  Legislature  1 2th 'January,  1898.     Printed. 

CONTENTS  PART  IV. 

Report  upon  the  Hospitals  of  the  Province  for  the  year  ending  30th 
September,  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  12th  January,  1898, 
Printed. 

Report  upon  the  Institution  for  the  Education  of  the  Blind,  Brantford, 
for  the  year  ending  30th  September,  1897.  Presented  to  the 
Legislature  9tli  December,  1897. 

Report  upon  the  Institution  for  the  Education  of  the  Deaf  and  Dumb, 
Belleville,  for  the  year  ending  30th  September,  1897.  Presented  to 
the  Legislature  9th  December,  1897.     Printed. 

Report  of  the  Work  under  the  Children's  Protection  Act  for  the  year 

1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  13th  January,  1898.  Printed, 

Report  of  the  Ontario  Agricultural  College  and  Experimental  Farm 
for  the  year  1897.     Presented  to  the   Legislature  10th  January, 

1898.  Printed. 

CONTENTS  PART  V. 

Report  of  the  Fruit  Growers'  Association  of  Ontario  for  the  year  1897. 
Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Report  of  the  Fruit  Experiment  Stations  of  Ontario  for  the  year 
1897.     Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.  Printed, 

Report  of  the  Entomological  Society  of  Ontario  for  the  year  1897. 
Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.     PHnted. 

Report  of  the  Bee  Keepers'  Association  for  the  Province  for  the  year 
1897.     Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.    Printed. 

Report  of  the  Poultry  and  Pet  Stock  Associations  of  the  Province  for 
the  year  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898. 
Printed. 


No.   23.. 


So.  24.. 


No.   2.5. 


CONTENTS  PART  VI 

Report  of  the  Provincial  Instructor  in  Road  makino-  in  Ontario  for  the 
year  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898. 
Printed. 

Report  of  the  Butter  and  Cheese  Associations  of  the  Province  for  the 
year  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898- 
Printed. 

Report  of  the  Live  Stock  Associations  of  the  Province  for  the  year  1897 
Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.     Printed. 


No.  26..  Report  of  the  Superintendent  of  Farmers' Institutes  of  the  Province 
for  the  year  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  Januar^, 
1898.     Printed. 

No.  27 .  -  Report  of  the  Inspectors  of  Factories  for  the  Province  for  the  year  1897. 
Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

No.  28 .  .  Report  of  the  Inspector  of  Legal  Offices  for  the  year  1897.  Presented 
to  the  Legislature  12th  January,  1898.     Printed. 


CONTENTS  PART  V(L 

No.  29 .  .  ;Report  upon  the  Registration  of  Births,  Marriages  and  Deaths  in  the 
Province  for  the  year  1896.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  12th 
January,  1898.     Printed. 

No.  30 ..  Report  of  the  Ontario  Game  and  Fish  Commission.  Presented  to  the 
Legislature  10th  January,  1898.    Printed. 

No.  31 ..  Report  of  the  Commissioners  for  the  Queen  Victoria  Niagara  Falls 
j  Park  for  the  year  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  14th  Janu- 
I         ary,  1898.     Printed. 

No.  32.  .  Report  of  the  Bureau  of  Industries  for  the  year  1897.  Presented  to 
the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.     Printed. 


No.  33.. 


No.  34, 


No.  35, 


CONTENTS  PART  VIH. 

Report  of  the  Bureau  of  Mines  for  the  year  1897.  Presented  to  the 
Legislature  12th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Report  of  the  Clerk  in  charge  of  the  Forestry  Branch,  Crown  Lands 
Department.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  11th  January,  1898. 
Printed. 

Report  of  the  Board  of  Health  for  the  year  1897.     Presented  to  the 
;;;^:|  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.     Printed. 


No.  S6 


No.  37 


No.  38. 


No.  39. 


No.  40. 


No.  41 


No.  42, 


No.  43 


No.  44. 


No.  45 
No.  46 


Report  of  the  Financial  Statements  made  by  Loan  Corporations  for 
the  3^ear  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January.  1898. 
Printed. 

Report  of  Standing  Committee  on  Finance,  Toronto  University,  for 
the  year  1897-98.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  20th  December, 
1897.     Printed. 

Auditor's  Report  on  Capital  and  Income  Accounts,  Toronto  University 
for  the  year  ending  30th  June,  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legis- 
lature nth  December,  1897.     Printed. 

Copy  of  an  Order  in  Council  directing  the  payment  out  of  the  Surplus 
Surrogate  fees  of  S500  to  His  Honour  Judge  Mosgrove.  Presented 
to  the'^Legislature  9th  December,  1897.     Not  Printed. 

Reports  of  the  Principal,  and  Statements  of  Bursar  of  Upper  Canada 
College,  shewing  receipts  and  expenditures  1896-97.  Presented 
to  the  Legislature  16th  December,  1897.     Not  Printed. 

Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  13th  day  of  December, 
18!:' 7,  for  a  Return  shewing  the  value  of  the  hogs  which  died,  or 
were  slaughtered  at  the  Humber  piggerj^  during  the  outbreak  of 
cholera  in  July,  1896.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  16th  Decem- 
ber, 1897.     ]\ir.  St.  John.     Not  Printed. 

Report  of  the  Commissioners  appointed  to  revise  and  consolidate  the 
Public  Statutes  of  the  Province.  Presented  to  the  Legislature 
23rd  December.  1897.     Not  Printed. 

Report  of  the  Provincial  Municipal  Auditor  for  the  year  ending  30th 
November,  1897.  Presented  to  Legislature  28th  December,  1897. 
Printed. 

Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  thirty-first  day  of  March,  1897, 
for  a  Return  shewing  the  expenditure  on  Colonization  Roads, 
Bridges  and  other  Roads  in  the  Province  for  the  last  live  years, 
shewing  in  each  case  the  Electoral  District  or  Districts  in  which 
each  of  the  said  Colonization  Roads,  Bridges  and  other  Roads  was 
situated.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  3Uth  December,  1897.  Mr. 
Little.     Not  printed. 


Report  of  the  Forestr}^  Commissioners,  Preliminary. 
Legislature  4th  January,  1898.     Printed. 


Presented  to  the 


Return  to  an  Address  to  His  Honour  the  Lieutenant-Governor  of  the 
seventeenth  day  of  December,  1897,  praying  that  he  will  cause  to 
be  laid  before  the  House  a  copy  of  the  Petition  presented  to  the 
Lieutenant-Governor  in  (Council  asking  for  an  Audit  of  the  Books, 
Vouchers,  etc,  of  the  Township  of  Man  vers.  A  copy  of  the  Com- 
missioner's original  report,  together  with  his  supplementary  report. 
Also  copies  of  all  correspondence  in  connection  with  the  matter. 
Presented  to  the  Legislature  6th  January,  1898.  Mr.  Willoughby. 
Nut  printed. 


No.  47. 


No.  48. 


No.  49, 


No.  50.. 


No.  51 .  . 


No.  52. 


No.  53, 


No.  54, 


Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  thirteenth  day  of  December, 

1897,  for  a  Return  of  copies  of  all  correspondence,  papers  and 
documents  between  the  Government,  or  any  Department  thereof, 
and  all  parties  who  have  made  application  for  mining  concessions 
of  a  similar  nature  to  those  now  enjoyed  by  the  Engledue  Syndi- 
cate under  agreement  with  the  Government ;  or  any  other  conces- 
sions not  now  provided  for  by  or  within  the  provisions  of  the 
present   Mining  Act.     Presented  to  the  Legislature  6th  January, 

1898.  Mr.  St.  John.     Not  printed. 


Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  twenty-second  day  of  December, 
1997,  for  a  copy  of  the  Agreement  entered  into  between  the 
Commissioners  of  the  Queen  Victoria  Niagara  Falls  Park  and  the 
Niagara  Falls  Electric  Railway  Company  and  the  Canadian 
Niagara  Power  Company  for  the  use  of  the  surplus  power  of  the 
said  Railway  Company  in  the  generation  of  electricity.  Presented 
to  the  Legislature  6th  January,  1898.     Mv.  German.     Not  printed. 

Report  of  the  Superintendent  of  Spraying,  Ontario,  for  the  year  1897 
Presented  to  the  Legislature  10th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Copy  of  an  Order  in  Council  amending  the  Regulations  respecting  the 
shooting  and  taking  of  wild  duck  and  other  water  fowl  in  the 
waters  within  two  miles  of  Rondeau  Provincial  Park  in  Rondeau 
Harbor.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  11th  January,  1898.  Not 
printed. 

Copy  of  an  Order  in  Council  respecting  the  sale  of  watches,  jewellery 
or  other  goods  of  a  like  kind  in  Algonquin  National  Park.  Pre- 
sented to  the  Legislature  11th  January,  1898.     Not  printed. 

Report  of  the  Agricultural  and  Experimental  Union  for  the  year  1897. 
Presented  to  the  Legislature  12th  January,  1898.     Printed. 

Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  twenty-second  day  of  December 
last  for  a  Return  of  copies  of  papers,  documents  and  all  corre- 
spondence between  any  member  or  officer  of  the  Government  and 
any  other  person  or  persons  in  reference  to  Lot  No.  13,  Concession 
3,  Township  of  Stisted.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  12th 
January,  1898.     Mr.  Langford.     Not  printed. 

Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  twenty-ninth  day  of  December 
last  for  a  return  of  copies  of  all  correspondence  between  the  Com- 
missioner of  Crown  Lands,  or  any  official  of  the  Department,  and 
any  person  or  persons  in  reference  to  the  cutting  of  timber  under 
license  or  trespass  in  the  tract  of  land  known  as  "  Coffin  "  Addi- 
tion. Presented  to  the  Legislature  12th  January,  1898.  Mr. 
Miscampbell.     Not  printed. 


10 


No.  55 


No.  56 


No.  57 


No.  58, 


:No.  59, 


No.  69, 


No.  61 


No.  62, 


Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  sixth  day  of  January,  1898, 
for  a  Return  shewing  all  payments  made  to  Captain  John  Sullivan, 
an  eviployee  of  the  Government  since  January  1st,  1897,  and 
shewing  the  time  list  since  that  date,  where  he  was  employed  and 
amount  received  since  that  time.  Such  Return  to  state  if  paid  by 
month,  year,  fees  or  day  wages.  Presented  to  the  Legislature  12th 
January--,  1898.     Mr.  Eeid  (Addington).     Not  printed. 


Report  of  the  Secretary  and  Registrar  of  the  Province  for  the  year 
1897.     Presented  to  the  Legislature,  12th  January,  1898.     Printed. 


Return  of  all  Fees  and  Emoluments  received  by  the  Registrars  of  Deeds 
of  the  Province  for  the  year  1897.  Presented  to  the  Legislature, 
12th  January,  1898.     Printed. 


Documents  re  the  Manufacture,  in  Canada,  of  Pine  Timber  cut  on  the 
Crown  Domain.  Presented  to  the  Legislature,  12th  January, 
1898.     Printed 


Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  twenty-second  day  of  December 
last  for  a  Return  of  copies  of  all  papers,  documents  and  corres- 
pondence between  the  Government,  or  any  Department  thereof, 
and  any  other  person,  persons  or  corporations  in  any  way  relating 
to  the  dealings  of  the  M  ^j  re  Lumber  Company  with  the  Crown 
Lands  Department  or  with  the  Government ;  together  with  a  full 
return  of  copies  of  the  evidence  taken  at  the  investigation  of  the 
said  Company's  dealings  with  the  Government,  or  any  Department 
thereof,  and  of  all  other  documents  and  correspondence  in  connec- 
tion therewith,  as  well  as  a  copy  of  the  report  and  finding  of  the 
Commissioners  appointed  to  investigate  the  same.  Presented  to 
the  Legislature,  12th  January,  1898.     Mr.  St.  John.     Not  printed. 

Report  on  the  Immigration  of  British  Children.  Presented  to  the 
Legislature,  13th  January,  1898      Printed. 


Account  of  the  Official  Guardian  ad  litem,  for  the  year  1897. 
to  the  Legislature,  13th  January,  1898.     Not  printed. 


Presented 


Return  of  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  thirty-first  day  of  March,  1897, 
for  a  Return  shewing  how  many  acres  of  land  are  contained  in  the 
"Farm  Proper"  at  the  Ontario  Agricultural  College,  and  how 
many  horses,  cattle,  sheep  and  pigs  were  kept  on  the  farm  in  the 
year  1896.  Shewing  as  well,  if  the  farm  produced  sufficient  food 
or  fodder  to  maintain  the  stock  for  the  whole  year  And  shewing 
how  much  it  cost,  over  and  above  what  was  raised  on  the  farm,  to 
maintain  the  stock  for  the  year.  Presented  to  the  Legislature, 
13th  January,  1898.     Mr.  Haggerty.     Not  printed. 


11 


No.  63. 


No.  64. 


No.  65 


Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  eighth  day  of  March,  1897,  for 
a  Return  shewing  the  business  done  during  e^ich  of  the  years  1892, 
1893,  1894,  1895  and  1896  in  the  following  Court  in  this  Province, 
namely:— 1.  The  High  Court  of  Justice:  (1)  The  number  of  wiits 
issued  out  of  the  High  Court  of  Justice  in  each  of  the  above  years  ; 

(2)  The  number  of  Records  entered  for  trial  of  the  said  years; 

(3)  The  number  of  cases  set  down  for  appeal  to  the  Divisional 
Courts  of  the  High  Court  in  each  of  the  above  years ;  (4)  The 
number  of  cases  set  down  for  appeal  to  the  Court  of  Appeal  for 
each  of  the  above  years ;  (5)  The  number  of  cases  appealed  to  the 
Supreme  Court  at  Ottawa  for  each  of  the  above  years.  2.  The 
County  Courts :  (1)  The  number  of  writs  issued  out  of  the  County 
Courts  of  the  Counties  of  the  Province  in  each  of  the  above  years  ; 
(2)  The  number  of  Records  entered  for  trial  in  the  County  Courts 
of  this  Province  in  each  of  the  above  years ;  (3)  The  number  of 
County  Court  cases  set  down  for  appeal  from  the  said  County 
Courts  to  the  Court  of  Appeal  in  each  of  the  above  years.  3.  The 
Division  Courts :  (1)  The  Number  of  writs  issued  in  the  Division 
Courts  of  this  Province  in  each  of  the  said  years ;  <2)  The  number 
of  cases  tried  in  the  Courts  in  each  of  the  said  years ;  (3)  The 
number  of  appeals  taken  from  the  Division  Courts  to  a  higher 
Court  in  each  of  the  above  years  ;  (4)  The  number  of  Judgments 
by  default  entered  during  each  of  the  above  years  in  the  Division 
Courts.  Presented  to  the  Legislature,  13th  January,  1898.  Mr. 
Marter.     N'ot  printed. 


Report  of  the  Commission  appointed  to  enquire  into  the  matter  relative 
to  the  price  of  School  Books,  etc.  Presented  to  the  Legislature, 
14th  January,  1889.     Printed. 

Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  twenty-fourth  day  of  March, 
1897,  for  a  return  shewing  the  cost  of,  or  purchase  money  paid 
for  the  Ontario  Agricultural  College;  acreage  of  the  property, 
together  with  the  amount  of  land  now  under  cultivation ;  expendi- 
ture thereon,  since  its  establishment,  upon  buildings,  stock,  fencing, 
drainage  and  all  other  accounts.  Together  with  receipts  from 
students  in  fees,  sale  of  stock,  produce  and  other  sources.  Pre- 
sented to  the  Legislature,  14th  January,  1898.  Mr.  Willoughby. 
Printed. 


No.  66.. 


Return  to  an  Order  of  the  House  of  the  fourteenth  day  of  January, 
1898,  for  a  Return  of  copies  of  all  correspondence  or  reports  in 
the  possession  of  the  Government  respecting  the  operations  of  the 
Engeldue  Syndicate  during  the  past  season  on  the  locations  or 
concessions  granted  at  the  beginning  of  the  year.  Presented  to 
the  Leo-islature,  14th  January,  1898.     Mr.  Dickenson.     Printed. 


REPORT 


RELATING   TO  THE   REGISTHATION   OF 


BIRTHS,  MARRIAGES  AND  DEATHS 


PROVING  K  OF  ONTARIO 


YEAR  ENDING  31st  DECEMBER 


1896. 


PRINTED   BY  ORDER  OF 

THE   LEGISLATIVE   ASSEMBLY   OF   ONTARIO. 


TORONTO  : 
WARWICK    BRO'S  &  RUTTER,  Pbintebs  &o.,  68  and  70  Fbont  Stbekt  West. 

1898. 


CONTENTS. 


Page. 
Report   proper 5 

Population  adopted  as  basis  of  calculation      ,5 

Completeness  of  returns 5 

Tables  showing  increase  of  returns 7—8 

Statement  showing  expenditures  and  volume  of  work 9 — 10 

Study  of  birth  returns 10 

Study  of  marriage  returns 11 

Study  of  death  returns 12 

Table  showing  increase  and  decrease  of  deaths  in  cities 13 

"    giving  principal  causes  of  deaths 14 

"         "      deaths  from  .contagious  diseases  in  three  quinquennia 14 

Study  of  deaths  from  diphtheria , 15 

"  "  tuberculosis 15 

Diagram  showing  comparative  deaths  from  tuberculosis 15  (A) 

Table  showing  deaths  from  tuberculosis  by  groups  of  counties - 16 

"  "         *'        by  monthly  returns  of  contagious  disease 19 

Report  of  the  Inspector 20 

Tables  in  extended  form 22 

Table  1 — Showmg  total  births,  marriages  and  deaths  by  counties 22 

"     2—         "  "  "  "  towns 24 

"     3—         "  "  "  "  cities 25 

"     4— Showing  principal  causes  of  deaths  for  1895  and  1996 26 

"     5 — Recapitulation  of  classes  of  diseases  by  counties 28 — 29 

"     6-         "  "  "  cities 28-29 

"     7—         "  "  "  towns' 30—31 

"     7(B)       "  "  "  smaller  towns 30 — 31 

"     8— Death  rate  per  1,000  by  countie    32—33 

"     9 — Illegitimate  births  in  Province 34 

"  10 — Table  showing  proportion  of  male  and  female  births 34 

"  11—  "  births  by  months 35 

"  12 — Marriages  by  months  and  quarters 36 

"  13 —         "  denominations 36 

Appendix p.  iv.— ccxviii. 

[3] 


Office  of  the  Reqistrar-Gbnekal  for  Ontario, 

Toronto,  December  1st,  1897. 

To  Sir  Oliver  Mowat,  K.O.M.G., 

Lieutenant-Governor  of  the  Province  of  Ontario. 

May  it  Please  Your  Honour  : 

In  compliance  with  the  Statute  in  that  behalf,  the  undersigned  respectfully  presents 
to  Your  Honour  the  Annual  Report  of  Births,  Marriages  and  Deaths  for  the  year  ending 
31st  December,  1896. 

Respectfully  submitted, 

E.  J.  DAVIS, 

Registrar-General, 


[5] 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.    29^ 


A.  1898 


Toronto,  December  Ist,  1897. 

To  THE  Hon.  Elihu  James  Davis, 

Registrar-General  of  the  Province  of  Ontario. 

Sir, — I  have  the  honor  herewith  to  present  the  twenty-seventh  annual  report  of 
birthsj^marriages  and  deaths  for  the  Province  of  Ontario,  being  for  the  year  1896. 

Population. 

The  population  utilized  as  the  basis  of  calculation  for  the  several  tables  of  the  report 
is  estimated  upon  the  difference  between  the  number  of  recorded  births  and  deaths.  The 
total  births  returned  ia  46,908  and  the  total  deaths  24,857,  or  an  actual  increase  of  22,051 
persons  over  1895,  or  practically  one  per  cent,  upon  the  assumed  population  in  1895.  The 
population  adopted  in  this  report  for  1896,  as  the  basis  of  calculation,  is  therefore, 
2,263,492. 

The  comparison  of  the  population  for  1896  with  that  of  some  years  ago,  always  admits 
in  addition  to  the  constant  variation  due  to  immigration  and  emigration  during  the  year, 
an  irregular  one,  according  as  each  year  finds  new  settlements  which  have  sprung  up  in 
the  unorganized  territory  takirg  on  municipal  organization,  or  being  united  to  some 
District  Division  for  purposes  of  registration  under  Registrars  appointed  by  the  Registrar- 
General.  Thus  it  is  found  that  for  1896,  the  number  of  municipalities,  mostly  townships, 
added  to  the  registering  divisions  in  one  or  other  of  such  ways  is  as  follows,  as  compared 
with  1892  :— 

Increase  of  Municipal  Registration  Divisions  (organized  and  un- 
organized)    81 

"         of  Division  Registrars  (organized) 12 

"         in  District  Registrars  (unorganized) 6 

"         of  assumed  registering  population  (based  on  the  aver- 
age population  of  525  for  each  of  the  71  organized 
townships  of  Muskoka,  Parry  Sound  and  Nipissing)      42,525 
Total  increase  of  birth,  marriage  and  death  returns  in  1896 

as  compared  with  1892 6,891 

Completeness  of  Returns. 

Assuming  that  the  population  adopted  herein  approximates  the  actual  population,  then 
on  the  completeness  of  returns  will  depend  the  estimate  of  the  relative  healthfulness,  as 
also  the  marriage  and  birth  rates  of  the  Province. 

With  regard  to  the  completeness  of  such  returns,  a  somewhat  extended  reference 
was  made  in  the  report  by  the  Registrar-General  for  1895,  and  the  provisions  under  the 
Revised  and  Consolidated  Act  of  1896  for  improving  the  returns  were  outlined.  The 
Act  went  into  force  in  August,  1896,  so  that  the  returns  for  four  months  have  been 
influenced  to  that  extent  by  the  new  Act.  The  following  table  gives  the  returns  for 
five  years  : — 


Year. 

Births. 

Marriages. 

Deaths. 

Total. 

1892 

1893 

1894 

1895 

1896 

42,176 
42,894 
42,051 
41,628 
46,908 

14,482 
14,475 
14,341 
13,987 
14,904 

23,120 
22,903 
22,538 
22,461 
24,857 

79,778 
80,292 
78,930 
78,076 
86,669 

61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No    29).  A.  1898 


From  these  returns  collected  with  as  much  care  as  the  powers  given  under  the  Act 
of  1886  have  admitted  of,  it  will  appear  that  practically  no  increase  took  place  in  the  total 
returns  during  the  five  years  preceding  1896.  If  it  be  assumed  that  the  first  part  of  th» 
year  1896  would  have  had  a  proportionate  increase  had  the  new  Act  been  then  in  force, 
we  would  have  the  following  results  : — 

Table  comparing  1895  with  1896, 


Rates  of  in- 

rcease 

per  12  months^ 


Births 5,280  12,672 

Marriages 917  1,760 

Deaths 2,396  5,752 

Total 8,593  1          20,184 


In  addition  to  the  regular  returns  for  1896,  there  has  been  moreover  an  increasing 
number  of  registrations  on  special  forms,  under  the  permission  of  the  Registrar-General, 
especially  of  births,  whose  registration  had  been  neglected.  The  total  number  of  births, 
marriages  and  deaths  entered  in  a  special  register  since  the  work  began  is  2,400. 

Alterations  of  christian  names,  made  under  the  authority  of  the  Registrar- General, 
add  to  the  completeness  of  returns,  while  a  very  notable  improvement  in  the  complete- 
ness of  the  particulars  called  for  in  any  return  has  resulted  by  sending  schedules  back  to 
the  Division-Registrars  to  have  omissions  filled  in,  and  by  withholding  certificates  until 
such  have  been  made,  as  far  as  practicable,  complete. 

The  insertion  of  a  clausa  in  the  Marriage  Act  of  1896,  requiring  every  license  issuer 
to  make  a  "  post  card  "  return  to  the  Registrar -General  of  every  license  issued  by  him 
has  served  an  important  purpose  through  enabling  omissions  of  clergymen  to  make  marri- 
age returns  to  be  corrected.  This  entails  much  extra  labor  in  the  office,  since  it  often 
happens  that  a  license  is  issued  in  cne  and  the  marriage  celebrated  in  another  munici- 
pality, or  even  another  county.  The  total  number  of  license  cards  received  by  the  office, 
from  1st  of  August  to  December  31st,  1896  was  6,500,  and  the  marriages  added  to  the 
returns  for  1896  through  this  means  have  amounted  to  1,500. 

The  decision  of  the  Post-master  General  to  allow  all  blank  "  Forms  "  to  pass  free 
through  the  mails  is  an  invaluable  aid  in  obtaining  complete  returns. 

The  amendment  to  the  Marriage  Act  made  in  1897,  by  which  the  Marriagfr 
Registers  are  to  be  supplied  free  to  clergymen  by  the  municipality,  in  return  for  which 
they^are  requested  to  eend  a  half-yearly  list  of  marriages  celebrated  by  them  to  the  Division. 
Registrar,  will  further  assist  in  making  the  marriage  returns  complete.  The  increase  in 
the  fee  for  each  registration,  and  the  imperative  duty  laid  upon  Division-Registrars  of 
making  diligent  enquiry  into  the  facts  regarding  any  birth,  marriage  or  death  rumoured 
to  have  taken  place,  and  the  greatly  increased  interest  of  physicians  in  the  operation  of 
the  Act,  by  the  regular  reporting  of  births  and  deaths,  has  undoubtedly  resulted  in  the 
splendid  increase  of  births  already  illustrated.  The  required  certification  as  to  the  cor- 
rectness cf  "  cause  of  death  "  by  the  Medical  Health  Officer  in  cities,  towns  and  villages 
prior  to  the  issue  of  a  burial  permit,  has  resulted  in  a  notable  increase  in  precision  as  ta 
the  particular  cause  of  death,  not  to  mention  the  fact  of  its  importance  from  the  public 
health  standpoint. 

The  importance  of  the  monthly  return  of  contagious  diseases  required  to  be  made  by 
every  local  registrar,  in  enabling  the  Provincial  Board  of  Health  to  note  the  appearance  of 
outbreaks  and  take  action  for  their  limitation  cannot   be  over  estimated,  and  now  that- 

8 


6 1  Victoria 


Sessional  Paperr,  (No.   29 


A.  1898 


the  operation  of  this  section  of  the  Act  is  better  understood,  local  registrars  who  are  also 
the  secretaries  of  the  Local  Boards  of  Health,  are  reporting  splendidly,  as  the  returns 
for  the  month  of  October,   1897,  numbering  600,  indicate. 

The  amendments  to  the  Registration  Act  of  1897,  by  which  in  the  case  of  townships  a 
Burial  Permit  may  be  issued  by  the  Division-Registrar  of  one  municipality  when  the 
death  took  place  in  a  neighboring  rural  municipality,  with  the  provision  that  the  registra- 
tion be  made  where  the  death  occurred,  has  further  improved  the  working  of  the  Act  by 
making  registration  more  easy,  and  has  tended  to  increase  the  completeness  Sknd  accuracy  of 
the  returns. 

How  general  has  been  the  increase  in  returns,  will  be  observed  by  a  reference  to 
Table  1,  giving  the  births,  marriages  and  deaths  by  counties,  as  well  as  in  Tables  2  and  3 
giving  the  same  returns  for  cities  and  for  towns. 

Comparing  these  with  the  returns  for  1895,  the  following  results  are  obtained  : — 


Counties. 

Counties   showing 
an  increase. 

Counties  showijig 
a  decrease. 

(1)  Births, 

1895  . 

1896  . . 

1895  . . 

1896  . . 

1895  . . 

1896  . . 

1895  . . 

1896  . . 
1895. 
1896  . . 

1895  . 

1896  . . 

16 
36 
19 
26 
21 
36 

5  . 
10 
5 
9 
8 
6 

24 

4 

(2)  Marriages 

21 

14 

(3)  Deaths, 

1 1 

19 
4 

(1)  Births, 

Cities. 

8 
3 

(2)  Marriages, 

8 

4 

(3)  Deaths, 

5 

7 

Table  showing  Increases  and  Decreases  of  Births,   Marriages  and  Deaths  in  the  thirteen 

cities  of  Ontario  over  1895  : — 


- 

Increase. 

Decrease. 

Toronto           

290 
124 
301 
255 
105 
22 

Ottawa  .  .        •" 

Brantford    

St   Thomas             

8 

3 

9 
10 

Belleville             

Stratford                      

25 

Windsor               

70 
62 

1,248 

Total                     

36 

9 

61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


The  following  Increases  and  Decreases  occurred  in  Different  Towns  over  1895 : — 


Berlin 

Brockville 

Cornwall 

Lindsay  

Niagara  Falls .... 
Owen  Sound  .... 

Peterboro' 

Sarnia 

Toronto  .Junction 
Woodstock 


Total 


Increase. 


104 
75 


o 
35' 


46 
60 


325 


Decrease. 


26 


41 

12 

is' 


92 


The  following  table  will  be  of  interest  as  stating  the  actual  increases  of  popula- 
tion in  the  principal  cities.  This  may  depend  upon  two  chief  factors,  either  an 
increase  of  the  birth  rate  or  decrease  of  the  death  rate. 

Table  showing  actual  increase  or  decrease  of  population  in  Ontario  cities,  1896,  or  differ- 
ence between  births  and  deaths  : — 


Increase. 

Decrease. 

Toronto 

1,278 
398 
116 
209 

Hamilton , 

Ottawa 

London 

Kingston 

6 

Brantford    

72 

60 

119 

27 

St.  Thomas 

Guelph 

St.  Catharines    

Belleville 

14 

Stratford 

56 
94 
33 

Windsor 

Chatham    

Total 

2,462 
2,442 

1 

20 

Actual  increase 

In  connection  with  the  completeness  of  returns,  it  is  proper  to  mention  that  the 
endeavors  to  establish  the  closest  possible  relations  between  the  Registrar-General  and 
T-he  758  Division  Registrars,  have,  as  seen  by  the  results,  been  most  successful.  This 
has  been  accomplished,  however,  only  by  a  very  considerable  labor,  through  supplying 
t,o  Division  Registrars  information  on  the  many  points  regarding  which  questions  have 
been  asked,  through  the  preparation  of  circulars  bearing  on  important  matters  in  con- 
nection with  the  operation  of  the  Act,  and  the  supplying  of  ample  blank  forms  facilitat- 
ing the  obtaining  of  prompt  and  complete  returns. 

10 


61  Victoria. 


ISessional  Papers  (JNo.   29). 


A  1898 


The  following  table  will  be  of  interest  as  showing  the  volume  of  work  in  the  Depart 
ment ; — 

Statement  showing  the  Expenditures  and  Volume  of  work  in  the  Department  of  the 

Registrar-General. 

F.xpf-nditure. 


1871. 

1873. 

1892. 

1896. 

Salaries  (from  annual  report  for  1871)  . 
Other  expenditures  .  .• 

§2,612  00 

8,267  10 

§4,500  00 
6,395  44 

§6,440  00 
3,154  32 

§6,600  00 
3,578  18 

Totals    

§10,879  10 

10,895  44 

§9,594  32 

2,670  00 
2,500  00 

§10,178  18 

Salaries  extra  temporary  clerks  to  re- 

{^  cover  arrears  of  indexing  to  the  extent 

of  about  200,000  registrations 

(Special  grant  for  above  work) 

Volume  of  Business. 


Births  indexed 

Marriages  indexed.. 
Deaths  ' ' 


Totals 

Indexing  in  arrears  completed  in  1892 — 

Births      

Marriages    

Deaths 


Total    ■. 

Comparing  and  revising  indexing  in  1892- 

Births 

Marriages    

Deaths 


Total 


Preparing  annual  report,  pages 

Letters  written  and  iiled    

Tabulating  circulars  issued  re  cemeteries. 
Certificates  issued  of — 

Births    

Marriages    

Deaths 


1871. 


19,536 

17,336 

6,905 


43,877 


Receiving,  tabulating  and  pubUshing  summarj'.  of 
8,000  monthly  contagious  disease  returns 

Fees  received  for  certificates  issued  (refunded  to 
Treasury) 

Fees  for  searches  made  for  certificates  applied  for 

Inspections  made  by  Inspector  of  Div.  Reg.  Offices, 
interviews  with  clergymen  and  doctors  and  reports 
thereon  in 

Annual  reports  issued  and  mailed    

11 


20 
109 


1873. 


27,552 
21,996 
11,069 


60,617 


38 
81 


1892. 


44,754 
28,378 
21,558 


94,690 


82,831 
92,443 
22,417 


1896. 


46,908 
29,808 
24,857 


101,573 


197,691 


84,098 
26,267 
14,834 


125,199 


294 

1,386 

750 

85 

38 

148 


271 


41,628 
27,974 
22,461 


92,063 


280 
2,241 


135 
64 

214 

413 


§135  50 


14  counties 
1 21  munici- 
palities. 
3,000 


8,000 


§206  50 

§150  00 

25 

91 

G,500 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29 ). 


A.  1898 


Volume  of  Business. — Continued. 


1871. 

1873. 

1892. 

1896. 

Receiving  returns  from  Div.  Registrars,  entering  num- 
ber in  register,  arranging  of  same  into  libers  for 

1,.300 
36,000 

1,700 
45,000 

( 

3.550 
81,000 

Prepared 
1892. 

750 
750 

3,500 

318,500 

Revision  of  Act  respecting  the  Registration  of  Births, 
Marriages  and  Deaths,  with  amendments  in  new 
bill                      

} * 

1 

40 
40 

I 

40 
40 

Official  acknowledgment  of  semi-annual  returns,  30th 

758 

Annual  certificates  for  returns  issued  to  District  Divi- 
sion Registrars   and  Division  Registrars 

768 

Revising  and  extracting  from  indexes  births,  marriages 
and  deaths  being  over  the  two  year  limit  allowed 
by  the   Registration   Act,   and   re-indexing   from 
1869  to  1894  mclusive— 

Births 

1,240 

Marriages      ' 

395 

Deaths 

145 

Comparison  of  forms  of  proposed  marriages  returned  hy 
License   Issuers,    with   the    returns    of    Division 
Registrars,  and  the  tracing  the  place  of  marriage 
and  having  marriages  registered  in  their  proper 

1896 

1 

1,950 

1 ■■" 

Act  Consolidated  and  Revised  and  passed  in  1896. 


Births. 

The  total  births  recorded  in  1896,  as  seen  in  Table  1,  is  46,908,  being  an  increswe 
over  1895  of  5,280.  This  gives  a  birth  rate  of  20.7  per  1,000  for  the  Province  as  a 
wholSi  and  of  21.2  for  the  cities. 


Table  of  Births  in  Cities  ef  Ontario  per  IfiOO  of  population. 


1891 23.4 

1892 20.8 

1893 21.7 


1894 20.5 

1895 19.3 

1896 21.2 


1 


The  following  table  of  birth  rates  in  other  countries  is  of  interest : — 


England  and  Wales 

Scotland 

Ireland 

Denmark 

Switzerland 

Belgium   

France 

Massachusetts 


12 


per  1,000 


i 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  29).  A.  1898 


Excluding  the  cities  and  large  towns,  the  rural  population  of  1,757,393  gives  a  birth 
rate  of  20.5  per  1000. 

The  references  made  in  previous  reports  show  not  only  the  increasing  population  of 
our  new  territory  in  north- western  Ontario,  yearly  b^ing  opened  to  settlement,  but  also 
the  increased  area  to  which  the  operation  of  the  Registration  Aot  has  bean  entended. 

Thus :     Algoma  shows  an  increase  in  1896  over  1895,  of 523  births. 

Muskoka  "  "  "  439      " 

Hastings  "  "  " 341      " 

Renfrew  "  "  "  149      " 

Other  increases,  as  in  Essex,  344,  illustrite  especially  the  increased  accuracy  in  the 
operation  of  the  Act. 

Births  by  Months. — Minor  variations  in  the  number  of  births  by  months  in  1896  as 
compared  with  1895,  are  seen  in  Table  11  of  report  proper.  The  month  of  August,  as  in 
former  years,  returns  the  highest  number. 

Illegitimate  Births. — The  total  number  of  illegitimate  births  recorded  in  Ontario  in 
1896  was  578,  as  compared  with  587  in  1895,  or  one  to  every  81  births  in  the  Province. 
That  this  return  is  -^erj  imperfect  may  be  gathered  from  the  investigations  of  the  Medical 
Health  Officer  of  Toronto,  who  reports  some  500  births  in  private  lying-in  houses  in  Toronto, 
mostly  illegitimate,  in  a  single  year. 

The  birth  of  triplets  was  recorded  on  six  occasions  in  1896.  , 

Marriages. 

The  total  marriages  recorded  in  1896,  as  seen  in  Table  1,  number  14,904,  or  29,808 
persons  in  all,  being  a  rate  of  6  5  marriages,  or  13.0  individuals  married  for  every  1,000 
of  the  population. 

The  fact  of  marriages  being  celebrated  to  a  proportionately  large  extent  in  the  larger 
centres,  is  shown  by  the  following  figures  : — 

Marriages  in  rural  districts  (population  1,757,393)   5.5  per  1,000 

cities  and  towns  (population  506,099) 10.1     "    1,000 

The  total  number  of  marriages  celebrated  in  several  cities  on  the  United  States  bor- 
der, is  illustrated  by  the  following  comparison  : — 

General  marriage  rate  in  Ontario 6.5  per  1,000 

Marriage  rate  in  all  cities  and  larger  towns 10.1  " 

"             Toronto  8.1  " 

*'             Hamilton 8.3  " 

"            Ottawa 10.1  " 

"            London 15.2  " 

"             Windsor    53.8  " 

Samia 13.7 

"            Niagara  Falls 15.3  " 

These  figures  are  of  interest  for  comparison  with  other  countries,  as  they  are  known 
to  be  fairly  complete.  The  excessive  marriage  rate  in  the  cities  situated  near  the  United 
States  border  is  seen  in  Windsor,  Samia  and  Niagara  Falls. 

Average  Marriage  rate  in  various  countries  : 

Massachusetts,      1895 9.2     marriages  per  1,000  population. 

New  South  Wales,  1894 6.2  "  " 

New  Zealand, .  .  .  1894 6.15  "  " 

Belgium, 1894 7.7  " 

Ireland, 1896 5.06 

13 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No   29). 


A.  1898 


The  distribution  of  marriages  by  naonthp,  as  referred  to  in  Table  11,  is  seen  to  main- 
tain praetically  the  same  relations  as  in  other  years.  The  same  may  be  said  \Fith  regard 
to  marriages  by  denominations.     Thus  : — 


Methodists  10,585  persons  married 

Presbyterians 6,056 

Church  of  England 4,576 

Roman  Catholics 4,576 

Baptists 1,776 


Lutherans , 

Congregationalists 

Evangelical  Association , 

Mormonites 

Quakers 

Other  denominations  . .  . 
No  denomination  given 


761 
266 
202 
144 
44 
732 
140 


Deaths. 

The  total  recorded  deatbs  during  the  year  1896,  as  seen  in  Table  1,  are  24,857,  or 
an  increase  of  2,396  over  1895.  The  rate  per  1,000  of  population  is  10.9.  Allowing  an 
increase  of  1  per  cent,  in  population,  the  mortality  ra  e  in  1896  is  practically  the  same 
as  in  1895. 

The  following  table  gives  comparative  death  rates  in  several  foreign  countries  and  states 


Deaths  in  (liferent  Countries. 


England  and  Wales,  1895,  18.7  per  1,000 

Scotland "      19.7 

Ireland "      18.4 

Italy "      25.2 

Denmark "      16.9         " 


Massachusetts 1895,  19.0  per  1,000 

Maine 1894,  16.5         " 

Rhode  Island 1895,  19.6 

AllNewEngl'ndSt's      "      18.4 

Ontario 3896,  10.9 


The  following  table  shows  the  percentage  of  population  in  urban  and  rural  districts, 
in  several  countries  and  state?,  and  comparative  mortality  in  the  several  classes  of  muni- 
cipalities : — 

Tables  showing  Urban  and  Rural  Populations  in  different  Countries,  with  deaths  per  1000, 

Scotland. 


Groups  of  Districts. 


Principal  towns 
Large  towns  . . . 
Small  towns  .  .  . 
Mainland  rural.. 
Insular  rural .  ,  . 


Pop.  in 

census  year 

1881. 


1,397,445 
441,105 
771,204 
995,431 
130,388 


Deaths 

per 
1,000. 


22.70 
19.10 
18.76 
15.60 
15.53 

14 


Census. 
1891. 


1,583,566 
509,952 
851,611 
954,566 
125,952 


Deaths 

per 
1,000. 


22.94 
21.76 
20.34 
17.37 
17.89 


Census 
1894. 


1,H50,267 
533.306 
877,438 
939,430 
124,250 


Deaths 

per 
1,000. 


18.71 
17.51 
16.62 
13.35 
15.27 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.   29). 


A.  1898 


England  and  Wales. 


Urban  population. 
Rural 


1881. 


17,029,393 
8,945,046 


1891. 


19,763,264 
9,239,261 


Increase. 


16  per  cent. 
3i         " 


*  Urban  includes  all  towns  with  a  population  over  5,000. 
United  States. 


1870 
1880 
1891 


Total  popula- 
tion. 


38,558,371 
50,155,783 
62,622,250 


Increase    dur- 
ing 10  years. 


Urban  pop.  in 

cities  of  8,000 

or  more. 


Percentage  of 
whole. 


22.63  per  cent 

30.08 

29.20 


8,071,875 
11,318,547 
18,284,385 


20.93  per  cent. 

22.17 

29.20 


The  death  rate  in  Ontario  cities  for  1896  is  15.5,  or  .1   per  1,000  less  than  in  1895. 
The  following  increases  and  deci easts  are  recorded  for  different  cities  : 

Table    shewing    Increase  or    Decrease    of   Births   and   Deaths   in  1896, 
as  compared  with   1895. 


Increase  or 

Births,  rate 

Deaths,  rate 

Cities. 

Births. 

Deaths. 

decrease. 

per  1,000. 

per  1,000. 

Toronto   

4,246 

2,968 

1,278=1 

21.6 

15.1 

Hamilton 

1,128 

730 

398=1 

21.8 

14.1 

Ottawa 

1,198 

1,082 

116=1 

25.8 

21.1 

London            

599 
3  5 

390 
341 

209=1 
6=D 

18.3 
16.5 

11.9 

Kingston 

16.8 

Brantford    

340 

268 

72=1 

25.3 

19.9 

St.  Thomas 

220 

160 

60=1 

20.1 

14.6 

Guelph    

240 

121 

119=1 

21.6 

10.9 

St.  Catharines    

159 

132 

27=1 

16.5 

13.7 

Belleville 

143 

157 

14=D 

13.7 

15.0 

Stratford  

159 

103 

56=T 

15.9 

102 

Windsor ;  .  .  .  . 

257 
16f 

163 
132 

94=1 
33=1 

23.  (i 
17.3 

15.0 

Chatham 

.13.8 

Total 

9,189 

6,747 

2,442 

21.2 

15.5 

Table  8  page  (32)  shows  the  average  death  rates  in  different  counties  over  a  period  of 
ten  years.  The  increase  above  the  average  which  is  seen  in  all  but  nine  counties,  is  due 
rather  to  an  increased  completer  ess  of  returns  than  to  an  actual  increase  of  the  mortality. 
This  is  especially  to  be  noted  in  Algoma  and  Renfrew,  where  the  number  of  Registrars, 
as  already  mentioned,  has  been  more  than  doubled  in  five  years. 

Highest  Causes  of  Death. — These,  as  seen  in  Table  4  (page  28)  show  practically  the  same 
relationship  between  the  several  diseases  in  the  list  as  in  1895.     The  class  designated 

15 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.   29 


A.  1898 


pre-natal  stands  first,  and  includes  all  still-births,  all  deaths  returned  as  heart  failure 
under  one  year,  and  those  dying  within  two  or  three  months  of  birth  without  any 
definitely  assigned  cause.  This  classification  must  be  considered  very  unsatisfactory,  but 
inasmuch  as  children  delicate  at  birth  continue  throughout  their  brief  life  in  a  lingering 
death,  and  frequently  are  but  casually  seen  by  physicians,  it  is  probably  as  fair  to 
ascribe  the  cause  of  death  to  immature  development  as  to  anything  else.  Senile  decay 
with  all  the  indefiniteness  attaching  to  this  term,  similarly  claims  a  high  place  in  the 
causes  of  death,  being  but  229  less  than  pre-natal.  Together  these  two  ill  defined  classes 
amount  to  5,315,  or  21  percent,  of  all  deaths  recorded  In  England  in  1895,  13,173 
deaths  were  uncertified  as  to  cause,  or  2  3  per  cent,  of  the  whole ;  but  in  eight  counties 
uncertifi9d  causes  amount  to  more  than  10  per  cent,  of  the  whole.  The  deaths  for  all 
England  from  old  age  in  1895  were  12,845,  and  premature  births  9,858.  Adding  the 
three  ill-defined  classes  together,  there  is  a  total  of  6  6  per  cent,  more  or  less  com- 
parable to  the  21  psr  cent,  of  ill-defined  causes  in  the  Ontario  returns. 

The  highest  in  number  of  definitely  assigned  causes  of  deaths  is  phthisis,  excluding 
other  tubercular  diseases,  showing  a  total  mortality  of  2,758  for  1896 — or  with  the  latter 
2,922. 

Pneumonia,  with  a  slight  absolute  increase  over  1895,  maintains  the  same  relation- 
ship to  the  other  principal  causes  of  death.  Valvular  diseases  of  the  heart  have  increased 
their  absolute  number  and  relatively  to  the  other  principal  ten  causes.  Diphtheria 
stands  next  in  the  causes  of  death,  but  shows  a  small  absolute  decrease  over  1895, 
Typhoid  fever,  although  amongst  the  ten  highest  causes,  agjain  shows  a  small  absolute 
and  greater  relative  decline,  being  36  deaths  less  than  in  1895.  Wounds  and  accidents 
show  an  increase  over  1895  of  74. 

The  following  table  shows  the  number  of  deaths  due  to  10  principal  causes  : 
Principal  Causes  of  Deaths. 


Total 
deavhp. 

Pre-natal 2,772 

Phthisis 2,758 

Old  age    2,543 

Pneumonia 1,638 

Valvular  diseases 980 

Diphtheria 932 

Cholera  infantum 905 


To'ial 
deaths. 

Paralysis 847 

Convulsions    701 

Typhoid  fever     552 

Wounds  and  accidents 536 

Bronchitis 526 

Whoopiug  Cough   1 87 

Scarlatina    99 

Measles 36 


With  regard  to  the  more  serious  of  the  preventable  communicable  diseases,  it  is 
satisfactory  to  note  the  almost  continuous  diminution  in  the  mortality  from  them,  taken  as 
a  whole,  during  the  three  past  quinquennia. 

The  following  table  illustrates  the  decrease. 

It  may  be  stated  that  the  inclusion  of  all  deaths  from  croup  with  those  due  to 
diphtheria,  makes  the  falling  ofi"  in  the  last  period  probably  less  than  it  comparatively 
should  be. 

Table  of  Deaths  in  the  Three  Five-year  Periods. 


1st  period 
2nd  period 
3rd  period 


1882-1886 
18S7-1891 
1892-1896 


Smallpox. 


16 


128 
16 


Scarlatina. 


1,929 
650 
993 


Diphtheria 


5,028 

4,774 
4,774 


Typhoid. 


3,027 
3,060 
1,642 


! 


^ 


'I 


s 


5^ 


•4  s 

II 


^ 


^^    s^   K  S 

!^    ^  ^  -"^ 


t 


^    Ai    vi^  K^ 


2i;«^!q^^^f^^^^^^ 


-^1 


^'•^^ 


^^1 


a 


-§ 


1  <^  1 

"^  ^  til  1^1  ^ 


111 


81  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


The  absolute  percentage  decrease,  as  shown'  by  the  above  figures,   is  given    witbout 
eliminating  the  further  percentage  decrease  with  an  increasing  population       The  first 


period  is  represented  by  100  per  cent  : 


1st  period 
2nd  period 
3rd  period 


1882-1886 
1887-1891 
1692-1896 


Smallpox. 


100% 
88% 
93% 


Scarlatina. 


100% 

67% 
50% 


Diphtheria 


100% 

6% 

6% 


Typhoid. 


100% 
No  decrease 
46% 


Diphtheria. — Although  the  deaths  from  diphtheria,  as  illustrated  in  the  previous 
table,  show  the  least  decrease  of  the  several  more  serious  contagious  diseases  during  the 
three  quia  quennial  periods,  nevertheless  it  has  within  the  last  three  years  shown 
a  steady  decrease,  although  the  deaths  due  to  croup  are  all  included  under  it  : 

Thus  in  1894  the  total  deaths  were  1,075,  or  .  5  per  1,000. 

1895  "  "  942,   "  .  4      " 

1896  "  "  925.   "  .39       " 

The  death  rates  in  the  thirteen  Ontario  cities  for  the  same  three  jears  were  : 

1894 380 

1895 313 

1896 305 

Comparative  tables  from  other  places  will  be  found  interesting  for  comparison, 
illustrating  as  they  do  the  steadily  increasing  ability  to  lessen  the  outbreaks  of  this 
disease  and  the  percentage  mortality  of  cases. 


Comparative  Table  re  Diphtheria. 


England 1883 

1895 

Scotland " 

Ireland 1896 

Massachusetts 1893 


Rate  per  1,000 32 

26 

30 

07 

71 


Tuberculosis. — This  disease  shows  a  slight  total  increase  in  1896  over  the  preceding 
years,  thus  : 


1887 2,566 

1888 2,521 

1889 2,417 

1890 2,503 

1891 2,486 


1892   2,592 

1893 2,552 

1894 2,379 

1895 2,472 

1896 2.758 


If  the  total  increase  in  deaths  for  the  year  is  conndered  the  absolute  increase  in 
tuberculosis  over  1895  is  accounted  for.  The  percentage  of  deaths  due  to  this  disease 
compared  with  the  total  deaths  was  11  per  cent,  in  both  1895  and  1896.  This  percent- 
age is  closely  maintained  in  other  countries  Thus  the  census  of  1890  of  the  United 
States  gives  for  consumption  a  percentage  of  12.1  of  all  deaths. 

2*  R.G.  17 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  29).  A.  1898 


Table  showing  percentage  death-rates  from  phthisis  of  the  deaths  due  to  all  causes  in  census 

of  1890. 

Massachusetts 13.4  per  cent. 

Rhode  Island 12.4 

Vermont 12.5 

New  York    12.1 

Delaware 15.8         " 

If  we  compare  the  death  rate  from  tuberculosis  in  Ontario  cities  with  those  of  the 
United  States  for  the  census  year  it  will  be  seen  that  a  similar  percentage  to  the  total 
death  rate  exists,  thus  : 

New  York  City 13.5  per  cent, 

Brooklyn 11.3 

Philadelphia 12.3 

Rochester    12.3 

Cincinnati    12.6 

Buffalo 9.4 

Chicago    8.3 

Detroit 8.0 

St.  Paul   7.4 

Ontario  cities  (thirteen) 13.35 

There  is,  however,  a  notable  difference  both  in  the  rates  in  Ontario  cities  and  also  in 
these  as  compared  with  neighboring  American  cities,  if  the  death  rate  per  1,000  is 
estimated. 

The  diagram  following  well  illustrates  this  point. 

Referring  to  the  death  rates  in  the  different  counties  and  cities  in  Ontario  compari- 
sons in  past  years  have  been  instituted.  The  remarkable  fact  is  again  revealed  that 
there  are  distinctive  and  seemingly  permanent  differences  between  different  geographical 
areas  of  the  province  as  regards  the  provaknce  of  consumption.  Thus  1896  is  compared 
with  1893. 


18 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


Dpaths  from  phthisis  or  consumption  in  Ontario  by  groups  of  counties  during  1892  3 
and  1896 : 


County  group. 

Georgian  Bay  Group. 
Group  I. 


Simcoe 
Grey  . 
Bruce  . 
Huron 


•"^outh  Western  Pemihsula. 
Group  II. 


Deaths  per  1,000. 


1893. 


} 


Lambton 
Essex  .  . . 
Kent   ... 


Lake  Erie  Growp. 
Group  III. 


Elgin   . . 
Norfolk 


Niagara   Peninsula. 

Group  IV. 

Haldimand 

Lincoln   

Welland    


Western  Lake  Ontario  Group. 

Group  V. 

Wentworth 

Halton    

Peel  


Central  Lake  Ontario  Group. 

Group  VI. 

Ontario   

Northumberland  &  Durham. 
Prince  Edward 


Eastern  Lake  Ontario  Group. 

Group  VII. 

Hastings  

Lennox  and  Addington  .... 
Frontenac 


.95 


1.1 


1.05 


L23 


1.1 


1896. 


1.2 


1.0 


1.2 


1.3 


1.3 


1.2 


County  group. 


River  St.  Lawrence  Group, 

Group  VIII. 

Leeds  and  Grenville   

Stormont,     Dundas   and 
Glengarry 


Lower  Ottawa  River  Group. 

Group  IX. 

Carleton 

Prescott  and  Russell     


Eastern  Inland  Group. 
Group  X. 


Lanark 
Renfrew 


Central  Inl'and  Group. 

Group  XL 

Victoria 

Peterboro' 


Deaths  per  1,000. 


1893. 


1.22 


1.2 


.92 


Western  Central  Plateau. 


Group  XII. 

Perth  

Middlesex 

Waterloo 

Wellington 

Dufferin 

Brant 

Oxford     


Laurentide  Group. 

Group  XIII. 

Algoma    

Muskoka  and  Parry  Sound. 
Haliburton 


1.1 


)-     .95 


.71 


li) 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


From  the  comparison  of  the  death  rates  for  a  number  of  years  it  is  quite  apparent 
that  from  whatever  causes,  whether  the  character  of  the  population,  or  climatic  and  soil 
differences,  tuberculosis  shows  a  relitively  high  mortality  attaching  to  several  counties 
bordering  on  Lake  Ontario  and  the  River  St.  Lawrence. 

The  question  of  population  density,  so  prominent  in  the  comparative  mortality  rates 
of  the  great  cities  of  Europe  and  the  United  States  can  hardly  yet  be  sa'd  to  enter 
largely  into  the  study  of  Ontario  cities. 

In  the  Annual  Report  for  1893  the  following  table  from  the  report  of  the  Registrar 
General  for  Scotland  was  published  : 

Table  showing  deaths  from  phthisis  in  Scotland  for  di^erent  papulation  areas  : 


Whole  country .... 
Principal  towns .... 

Large  towns 

Mainland  (rural) .  .  . 
Insular  "      .  .  . 

City  of  Glasgow   .  . 

"       Edinburgh. 

"       Dundee  . . . 


Scotland. 


Deaths  per  1,000. 


1889. 


2.46 
2.93 
2.62 
1.83 
1.83 


1892. 


2.3 
2.8 
2.4 
1.7 
1.7 
3.0 
2.5 
2.8 


Similar  results  are  illustrated  in  the  mortality  returns  of  the  Massachusetts  report 
of  the  State  Board  of  Health  for  1895.  There  the  basis  of  comparison  is  where  dense 
refers  to  areas  where  there  is  less  than  one  acre  to  each  inhabitant,  medium  to  where 
there  is  less  than  one  acre  but  Itss  than  four,  and  sparse  to  where  there  is  more  than  four 
acres  to  each  inhabitant. 


Mortality  from  consumption  in    dense  districts 1,000 

"  medium       "        810 

"  "  "  "     sparse       "       727 

The  comparison  is  made  for  a  total  mortality  of  112,604  deaths  from  consumption. 

The  inland,  hill  area  of  Berkshire,  Mass.,  with  a  death  rate  per  1,000  of  2.3  is  taken 
as  a  local  standard  of  comparison  and  is  represented  by  100.  Compared  with  it  we  have 
the  following  : 

Berkshire  county 100 

Connecticut  River  counties 116 

Worcester  county 117 . 7 

Sea  coast  counties  (excluding  Boston) 191 . 1 


If  comparison  be  made  of  the  Lauren tian  areas  in  the  frontier  districts  of  Muskoka, 
Nipissing  and  Algoma,  largely  a  forest  area,  with  some  of  the  older  counties,  an  index 
may  be  had  of  how  a  sparsely  settled  district,  with  a  young  and  active  population,  largely 
engaged  in  out  door  pursuits,  compares  with  older  and  more  thickly  settled  counties. 

20 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


Muskoka .  . 

Nipissing  \ 

Algoma      ) 
Wellington 

Grey 


Rate  per  1,000. 
0.6 


.55 
0.9 
0.8 


Prince  Edward 

Leeds  and  Grenville 

Lincoln  

Wel'and 


Rate  per  1,000. 

1.6 
1.7 
1.3 


1.2 


Soch  figures  become  of  extreme  importance  in  view  of  the  intense  interest  which  on 
every  hand  is  being  taken  in  the  problem  of  how  the  mortality  from  this  disease,  which 
causes  one-third  of  all  the  deaths  in  the  population  of  many  temperate  climates,  may  be 
lessened.  While  the  general  recognition  of  the  contagiousness  of  the  disease,  and  the 
general  advances  of  sanitation  in  European  countries  and  on  this  contiuent  are  un- 
doubtedly lessening  the  annual  mortality,  nevertheless,  the  monthly  returns  of  deaths 
from  municipalities  in  Ontario  continue  to  show  that  as  compared  with  all  other  pr^-vent- 
able  diseases  tuberculosis  holds  a  place  so  high  that  the  national  and  individual  health 
interests  demand  that  every  possible  use  of  statistics  be  made  in  order  that  the 
people,  and  through  them  their  legislators,  may  devise  still  more  practical  measures  for 
dealing  with  this  disease. 

1896-1897. 

Table  showing  deaths  from  consumption  compared  loith  total  deaths  from  monthly  reports 
of  contagious  diseases  in  Ontario  from  June,  1896,  to  October,  1897. 


Total    deaths    from 
scarlatina,    diph- 
theria,   smallpox, 
typhoid,    measles, 
whooping    cough 
and  ccmsumption. 

Deaths  from  consumption. 

Months. 

Total. 

Percentage 

of  all  deaths 

returned. 

Percentage  of 
population 
of  Province 
reporting. 

1896. 
June 

148 
156 
168 
192 
235 
19r 
263 

216 
244 
255 
211 
243 
211 
167 
189 
204 
216 

102 
100 
89 
92 
91 
91 
133 

112 
137 
156 
126 
173 
130 
111 
120 
122 

lis 

70% 

64 

57 

48 

38 

46 

50 

52 
56 
61 
59 
70 
61 
70 
63 
60 
54 

July 

August     

September 

63 

October    

67 

November   

64 

December 

68 

1897- 
Januarj^ 

63 

February  

62 

March    

April    

May    

June 

59 
44 
64 
67 

July    

57 

August 

56 

September 

October 

59 
59 

From  these  tables  much  is  taught  rsgarding  the  positive  influences  at  work  in 
Ontario  tending  to  limit  the  prevalence  of  the  acute  cmtagious  dis-^ases,  while  the 
compaiison  of  deaths  from  other  causes  with  those  with  the  death-rate  from  tuberculosis 

21 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


seems  clearly  to  point  to  the  demand  for  the  more  extended  application  of  methods,  not 
new,  but  nevertheless  new  in  the  development  of  the  positive  knowledge  that  rapid 
and  certain  reduction  in  the  death-rate  from  consumption  is  possible. 

I  have  the  honor  to  be, 

Your  obedient  servant, 

P.  H.  BRYCE, 

Deputy  Registrar-General. 


REPORT  OF  THE  INSPECTOR. 

Toronto,   Dec.   1st,   1897. 

To  iHE  Honourable  E.  J.  Davis, 

Registrar-General  of  Ontario  : 

Sir, — I  have  the  honour  to  report  that  during  the  past  eleven  months  I  have 
visited  for  purposes  of  inspection,  the  Division-Registrars  of  91  Municipalities  within 
the  Counties  of 

Elgin, 

Hal  ton, 

Lennox  and 

Addington, 

Oxford, 

Simcoe, 

Well  and  and 

York. 

I  also  interviewed  many  mayors,  reeves,  clergymen,  physicians,  undertakers  and  others 
from  whom  any  information  was  likely  to  be  gleaned  on  the  subject  of  registra- 
tion of  births,  marriages  and  deaths.  I  furthermore  made  enquiries  as  to  registration 
books  kept  in  churches  and  elsewhere,  prior  to  the  Act  of  1869,  and  personally  inspected 
a  number  of  these  records,  many  of  which  dite  back  to  the  early  years  of  the  history 
of  Upper  Canada. 

In  regard  to  the  working  of  the  amended  Act,  I  have  very  little  to  add  to  the  remarks 
made  in  my  report  of  last  year.  The  Division-Registrars  in  most  instances  seem  to  be 
making  strong  efforts  to  have  all  the  provisions  of  the  Act  carried  out,  and  that  they 
are  succeeding  fairly  well,  is  evidenced  by  the  returns  for  the  first  six  months  of  this 
year.  Not  only  are  they  considerably  larger  in  number  in  comparisoa  with  th^  same 
period  of  1896,  but  far  more  complete  in  every  respect.  I  do  not  wish  it  understood 
that  these  returns  are  by  any  means  complete  even  yet,  but  if  the  same  marked  improve- 
ment continues  as  has  been  shown  ever  since  the  new  Act  came  in  force  in  the  spring 
of  last  year uf or  a  few  years  longer,  there  is  no  doubt  but  that  before  the  closing  years 

22 


Brant, 

Carleton, 

Dufferin, 

Essex, 

Frontenac, 

Grey, 

Hastings, 

Kent, 

Lambton, 

Lincoln, 

Muskoka  and  Parry 

Middlesex, 

Northumberland 

Sound, 

Ontario, 

and  Durham, 

Peel, 

Perth, 

Waterloo, 

Wellington, 

Wentworth, 

61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  29).  A.  1898 


of  this  century,  the  Vital  Statistics  of  Ontario  will  be  very  reliable  and  pretty  near 
complete.  I  regret  exceedingly  that  I  am  compelled  to  report  once  more,  that  a  num- 
ber of  physicians  do  not  do  their  share  of  the  work  called  for  in  certain  sections  of  the 
Act,  and  in  consequence  many  Division-Registrars  have  considerable  extra  labor  forced 
upon  them.  I  give  all  credit  jo  a  great  many  medical  practitioners  for  the  conscien- 
tious manner  in  which  they  assist  the  Division-Registrars  in  every  possible  way,  and 
hope  that  all  of  the  profession  will  soon  fall  into  line,  as  their  active  aid  will  do  more 
than  that  of  any  other  section  of  the  community  to  ensure  the  proper  carrying  out  of 
the  Act.  Much  satisfaction  is  expressed  on  all  sides  at  the  change  made  last  session, 
which  allows  reports  of  deaths  to  be  made  to  and  burial  permits  granted  by  the  nearest 
Division  Registrar  no  matter  whether  he  belongs  to  the  same  municipality  in  which  the 
death  occurred  or  not.  This  concession  to  a  great  extent  does  away  with  objections 
mentioned  in  my  last  report  in  referring  to  the  difficulty  in  obtaining  burial  permits 

In  regard  to  search  for  old  records,  I  was  more  successful  than  I  had  hoped  to  be, 
as  I  find  that  most  of  the  Episcopalian  and  Roman  Catholic  Churches  throughout  the 
Province,  as  well  as  many  of  other  denominations  have  books  showing  the  records  of 
baptisms,  marriages  and  burials,  extending  from  the  organization  of  their  churches  down 
to  the  introduction  of  the  Registration  Act  in  1869.  One  of  these  Registers  that  I  had 
the  privilege  of  examining,  began  in  the  year  1787,  and  many  others  show  entries  in 
the  early  years  of  this  century.  These  records  if  collected,  would,  I  think,  become 
invaluable  to  the  Province,  both  from  a  historical  and  practical  point  of  view.  The 
Department  frequently  has  applications  for  certificate 4  of  births,  deaths  and  marriages, 
which  occurred  prior  to  1869,  and  only  in  the  latter  case  have  they  any  opportunity  of 
aflording  the  necessary  information,  and  that  in  a  very  limited  degree.  With  the  addi- 
tional data  referred  to  above,  in  their  possession,  this  office  would  be  much  better 
equipped  as  a  bureau  of  information.  1  most  strongly  recommend  that  steps  be  taken  at 
an  early  date  to  ensure  the  preservation  of  these  old  records,  as  many  of  them  are  apt  to 
be  lost  or  destroyed  through  the  ravages  of  fire,  and  could  not  be  replaced  at  any  cost. 

In  closing  this  report,  I  desire  to  place  on  record  the  obligation  I  am  under  to  many  of 
the  clergymen  and  officials  connected  with  the  diflferent  churches,  synods,  etc  ,  in  placing  at 
my  disposal  all  information  in  their  possession  in  regard  to  the  registration  of  births, 
marriages  and  deathp,  and  also  to  state  that  throughout  the  whole  Province,  I  find  a 
greatly  increased  interest  taken  in  vital  statistics  by  all  classes  of  the  community, 
which  augurs  well  for  an  increased  efficiency  in  the  returns  for  the  future. 

I  have  the  honor  to  be,  Sir, 

Your  obedient  servant, 

R.  B.   HAMILTON, 

Inspector. 


23 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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27 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


table! 
Recapitulation  by  Classes 


Sex. 

Nativity. 

Social 
condition. 

Ages. 

'6 

"i 

V 

Cause  of  death. 

"§ 

03 

fl 

"§ 

'i 

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1713 

S 
1755 

.... 

is 

1 

3010 

0/ 

408 

^     to 
50  2697 

304 

4J 

o 
567 

T3 

a 
1060 

905 

OS 

to 
426 

156 

05 
?-l 
lO 

T-l 

102 

m 

Zymotic  disfases 

Constitutional  diseases 

2763  2925 

4  3900 

1 

1616 

176  1567 

1 

1381 

2744 

391 

189 

92 

172 

363 

57< 

48144213 
2755  2461 

3|5719 
48^3203 

2976 
1975 

335  3376 
1 
86  1817 

1890 
957 

3764 
1490 

1429 
2800 

793 

294 

214 

294 
12 

34] 
41 

Violent  deaths 

781 

216 

611 

317 

69 

333 

80 

584 

12 

75 

71 

68 

72 

8: 

Cause  not  specified 

171 

228 

7 

293 

64 

49 

189 

77    140     32 

81 

28 

21 

13 

1) 

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28 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


No.  4. 

'of  Diseases  by  Counties,  1896. 


Ages. 

Monthf. 

> 
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272 

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138 

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414 

530 

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464 

481 

464 

468 

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1347 

514 

160 

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653 

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653 

782 

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101 

31 

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24 
25 

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71 

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73 

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63 

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415 

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104 

424 
106 

464 
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338 
78 

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37 

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82 

102 

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99 

72  95 

87 

112 

997 

19 

37 

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29 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A  1898 


TABLE 
Recapitulation  by  Classes  of 


Caube  of  death. 

Zymotic  diseases .   . .   . . . 

Conatitutional  diseases. 

Local  diseases , 

Developmental  diseases  , 

Violent  deaths . 

Cause  not  specified 

Total *. . . 


Sex. 


498 
718 
1345 
667 
173 
16 


467 

816 

1238 

682 

64 

25 


Nativity. 


O 


841 


1522 

1049 

1    134 

25 


Social 
condition. 


112 
505 
995 
328 
82 
15 


12 


Ages. 


in  I  !i 


758'  61 '  146  368 


P  I  J. 


411  468 
68  1031 


314  752 


173 


4401114  502 


970 

74 

6 


160 
30 
14 


254 

134 

21 


961 


201 


106  37 


37 


55   18  26  102 

I 
232  96 1  72  76 

1 

16 


41 

128 

78 

6 

19 
4 


TABLE 
Becapitulation  by  Classes  of 


Sex. 

Nativity. 

Social 
condition. 

Ages. 

TJ 

rj 

T3 

Cause  of  death. 

ft 

« 

"^ 

« 

V 

a 

« 

a 

eS 

e8 

be 

•s 

fe 

S 

o 

p 

6 

o 

a 

cS 

IS 

O 

a 

9? 
to 

6 

i-i 

S 
^ 

Zymotic  diseases 

87 

74 

140 

19 

?. 

110 

18 

33 

54 

24 

15 

7 

9 

9 

Constitutional  diseases 

88 
217 
122 

109 

171 

101 

5 

9 

.... 

138 
262 
140 

59 

123 

81 

3 

9 

68 
154 
195 

53 
94 
40 

76 
140 

58 

15 

65 

1?!? 

7 
45 

4 
12 

7 
13 

18 
10 

20 

Liocal  diseases 

14 

Developmental  diseases 

Violent  death 

1 

24 

9 

20 
1 

9 

1 

8 

3 
1 

18 
3 

1 

2 

2 

1 

3 

2 

1 

© 

N 

M 

i« 

OJ 

oc 

b- 

© 

t<i 

Total 

(0 

o 

n 
w 

OC 

o 

n 

t^ 

« 

N 

1 

^ 

30 


61  Victoria.. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29) 


A.  1808. 


No.  5. 

Diseases  by  Cities,  1896. 


Ages. 

Months. 

s' 

g 

i 

05 

s 

> 
o 

S 
e5 

a 
> 
'ail 

*3 

a 

OS 
J2 

a 

>> 

01 

a 

>, 

1 

s 

o 

S 

> 

a 
s 

"cS 

s 

i 

s 

g 

g 

g 

Z 

Em 

§ 

§ 

3 
•-5 

< 

(LI 

O 

% 

Q 

c 

25 

39 

32 

25 

19 

19 

14 

2 

58 

58 

54 

42 

38 

81 

205 

154 

81 

62 

38 

94 

965 

150 

227 

183 

188 

180 

73 

18 

13 

109 

lOi 

134 

115 

141 

116 

158 

124 

139 

110 

137 

147 

1534 

77 

162 

201 

278 

364 

305 

123 

19 

234 

233 

232 

200 

191 

194 

228 

188 

176 

230 

194 

285 

2585 

6 

12 

4 

161 

231 

2 

101 

93 

13-^ 

12^ 

}?,?, 

99 

139 

^n 

106 

96 

1?4 

138 

1.384 

19 

24 

22 

29 

25 

15 

9 

8 

12 

6 

11 

19 

24 

23 

33 

25 

24 

17 

23 

21 

238 

3 

11 

6 

4 

8 

1 

5 

3 

4 

1 

2 

7 

7 

2 

2 

4 

2 

2 

41 

© 

tn 

ac 

^ 

(0 

w 

>ft 

»n 

a> 

»- 

t- 

Oi 

oc 

o 

© 

l« 

oc 

o 

00 

t^ 

X 

t' 

^ 

N 

0> 

t- 

o> 

^ 

9 

«o 

OS 

M 

t- 

o 

0» 

^* 

oc 

N 

«» 

^ 

in 

Hi 

K5 

PS 

U5 

•^ 

« 

^ 

»n 

IS 

t- 

«e 

»« 

»« 

« 

«D 

No.   6. 

Diseases  by  Towns,  1896. 


Ages. 

Months. 

g' 

^ 

5 

35 

05 

CO 

g 

> 

o 

T3 

a 

> 

CS 

c 

>> 

'C 

>> 

c 

>, 

1 

ft 

0 

s 

0) 

> 

Si4 

a 

"3 

S 

g 

© 

§ 

6 

CD 

o 

g 

;?; 

cS 
1-5 

* 
fe 

% 

«s3 

s 

3 

^ 

02 

O 

^ 

Q 

o 

10 

9 

6 

7 

5 

6 

11 

10 

12 

7 

3 

5 

27 

31 

17 

13 

15 

10 

161 

21 

32 

23 

15 

24 

8 

3 

19 

16 

15 

18 

19 

18 

21 

11 

12 

16 

14 

18 

197 

19 

26 

33 

37 

51 

48 

14 

1 

24 

40 

35 

26 

34 

16 

32 

26 

37 

32 

36 

50 

388 

1 

2 

1 



42 

52 

2 

19 

26 

17 

15 

18 

11 

19 

30 

20 

17 

15 

16 

223 

4 

3 

4 

1 
2 

2 

2 

2 

2 

4 

3 

2 

1 

3 

7 

5 

1 
1 

2 

29 

1 

2 

4 

UJ 

w 

i^ 

w 

N 

© 
1—1 

■H 

M 

* 

w 

«D 

H 

m 

© 

© 

M 

« 

N 

<0 

N 

in 

t' 

50 

« 

XI 

t' 

^ 

t- 

0) 

00 

CO 

t- 

w 

0) 

t- 

QC 

0» 

^ 

31 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (>  o.  29). 


A.  1898 


TABLE 
Recapitulation  by  Classes  of  Diseases  in  the  Smaller  To^wns 


Sex. 

N-*-i*y-         condTon. 

Ages. 

CauFe  of  death. 
Zymotic  diseases 

6 

228 
301 

£ 

239 

419 

0) 

a 

1 

4 

t8 

1 
S 
eS 

D 

404 
480 
765 
412 
122 
43 

(S 

w 

c 
bD 

"2 

o 
Eft 

57 

216 

396 

244 

53 

13 

Si 

1 
O 

7 
17 
36 
14 

15 

1 

© 

1 

344 
182 
427 
355 
54 
25 

00 

n 

"6 
.2 
'C 

IS 

50 
219 
280 
136 

12 
5 

1 

00 

o 

74 
312 
490 
179 
124 

27 

© 

'>, 

u 

03 

-a 

171 

34 

195 

350 

6 

1 

id 

A 

89 

14 

ICO 

o 

s 

45 

7 
42 

xa 

T-l 

© 

17 
12 
25 

>o 

16 
57 
36 

1 

17 
3 

© 

1'' 

Constitutional  diseases 

75 

Local  diseases 

Developmental  diseases 

617.  580 
363    .S03 

35 

4 

Violent  deaths 

Cause  not  f  pacified 

Total 

159 
31 

31 

26 

14 

12 

Ci 
N 

12 
4 

© 

11 

4 

14 

4 

2 

32 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No    29). 


A.  189  8 


No  7. 

not  given  in  Detail  in  the  Appendix,  but  included  in  Table  V. 


Ages. 

Months. 

^ 

^ 

o 

o 

6 

S 
g 

> 
1  o 

•o 

B 
c3 

O 
00 

> 
"So 
o 

1.. 

s 

s 

1 


•  1— ; 

a 

a 

31 

s 

bo 

3 

02 

O 

"5 
o 

a 

> 

& 

1 

18 

15 

15 

13 

20 

'  22 

8 

i 

25 

^ 

27 

22 

23 

20 

70 

95 

62 

25 

38 

35 

468 

75 

93 

81 

88 

106 

48 

15 

8 

50  49 

55 

58 

55 

58 

74 

64 

57 

08 

57 

68 

713 

48 

78 

85 

104 

184 

176 

67 

22 

89 

105 

122 

107 

93 

78 

74  113 

100 

88 

103 

125 

1197 

4 

8 

2 

131 

167 

3 

28 

54 

53 

48 

32 

52 

66  8i 

1 

66  60 

68 

59 

670 

13 

27 

19 

20 

18 

9 

6 

4 

8 

9 

12 

14 

12 

13 

28  32 

14 

22 

16 

10 

190 

.^1 

.5 

4 

7 

4 

4 

3 

7 

4 

(i 

S 

f; 

1 
3   s 

6 

4 

3 

4 

57 

m 

«o 



N 

N 

o 

m 

00 

M 

o 

w 

»n 

1 
00  i 

in 

•a 

t' 

© 

-s 

M 

o 

M 

n 

OD 

o 

© 

o 

t' 

t!i 

<■« 

N 

c& 

o 

;s 

cs 

© 

a 

1 

rt 

w 

M 

n 

TO 

N 

1 

1 

N 

« 

"i 

N 

w 

n 

M 

M 

N 

« 

w 

RG. 


83 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (Nc.  29). 


A.  189  8 


TABLE  8. 

Showing  the  Death-rate  per  1,000  of  Population  in  each  County  of  the 
Province  for  ten  years. 


Counties. 


Algoma 

Brant 

Bruce    

Oarleton 

Dufferin   

Elgin    

Essex 

Frontenac   

Grey 

Haldimand 

Halton 

Haliburton 

Hastinga    

Huron 

Kent 

Lambton 

Lanark 

Leeds  and  Grenville 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Lincoln 

Middlesex 

Mu'-koka  and  Parry  Sound . . . 

Norfolk    

Northumberland  and  Durham 

Ontario 

Oxford 

Peel 

Perthi 

Peterborough 

i:'rescott  and  Russell 

Prince  Edward 

Renfrew 

Simcoe 

Storjiont,  Dundas  and  Glen 

garry  

Victoria 

Waterloo 

Welland 

Wellington 

Wentworth 

York  


1887 


12.3 

14.0 

8.3 

17.5 

12.5 

9.7 

14.4 

12  8 

8.1 

8.8 

8.1 

ii!6 

8.0 

10.0 

9.7 

9.8 

8.0 

8.4 

11.8 

10.7 

11.4 

7.1 


9.7 

10.6 

11.4 

9.0 

9.7 

14.9 

10.1 

8.5 

7.9 

8.1 

9.0 

11.2 

9.0 

8.6 

16.3 

20.2 


Average  rate 11.5 


1888 


7.4 

11.2 

7.7 

19.6 

9.1 

11.4 

15.8 

10.2 

7.6 

10.0 

9.4 

7.8 

10.7 

7.5 

9.0 

9.8 

9.2 

8.9 

7.4 

13.1 

10.4 

10.0 

8.7 

8.8 

10.0 

n.3 

11.0 

8.4 
10.6 
13.1 
11.4 

8.2 

8.0 

5.5 

7.7 
14.2 
10.9 

9.1  1 
15.8 
19.3 


11.0 


1889, 


9.7 

12.7 

7.4 

18.2 

9.7 

9.2 

12.1 

15.9 

7.0 

8.5 

8.6 


1890. 


11.9 

12.3 

7.1 

18.4 

10.0 

9.9 

12.5 

15.7 

7.3 

6.7 

8.9 


10.7 

7.3 

8.6 

9.5 

8.4 

8.2 

9.4 

11.4 

10.4 

9.1 

7.3 

8.1 

9.3 

10.9 

9.2 

8.3 

10.6 

14.3 

10.1 

8.8 

8.0 


9.1  I 
11.1 
11.1 
10.0 
15.1 
19.0 


10.6 

7.4 

8.3 

9.1 

8.9 

8.8 

7.3 

12.8 

11.6 

10.2 

8.1 

9.9 

9.4 

11.1 

7.8 

8.2 

11.4 

14.3 

11.3 

7.2 

6  4 

9.2 

7.7 

11.9 

9.4 

9.2 

14.4 

16.3 


10.7 


11. 1 


1891. 


1892. 


9.6 

10.5 

8.3 

8.9 

10.8 

9.2 

12  0 

13.7 

7.4 

8.2 

9.3 

8  0 

8.3 

8.2 

8.4 

8.1 

6.6 

7.1 

10.1 

10.9 

8.9 

5.8 

8.5 

10.7 

9.8 

9.7 

7.7 

8.9 

11.1 

10.6 

11.1 

7.7 

8.1 

8.5 
9.9 
11.6 
12.4 
10.1 
13.2 
15.9 


10.2 


9.6 

11.4 

8.3 

13.6 

9.6 

9.1 

12.2 

14.5 

7.7 

10.3 

9.9 

9.2 

8.9 

8.5 

8.7 

8  4 

7.4 

72 

7.7 

14.3 

10.9 

7.3 

9.5 

10.1 

11. 0 

11.4 

7.5 

9.1 

12.1 

12.9 

11.5 

9.5 

8.1 

8.9 
10  9 
10.5 
10.5 
10.6 
11.7 
16.4 

10.7 


1893. 


1891. 


1895. 


9.1 

11.3 

8.3 

15.5 

8.9 

9.9 

11.9 

12.4 

7.7 

6.6 

9.0 

8  6 

9.0 

9.1 

8.7 

9.1 

7.6 

8.2 

7.0 

11.4 

10.1 

7.0 

8.2 

9.7 

10.3 

10.9 

7.9 

8.1 

10.8 

11.7 

11.6 

9.6 

8.2 


10.0 
9.9 

11.1 
9.8 

13.1 

16.1 


10.6 


10.9 

10  4 
8.7 

16.9 

7.3 

.  8.5 

11.6 

11  1 
7.8 
9.5 
8.7 
8.2 
7.9 
7.4 
9.3 
8.0 
8  9 
6  5 

'0.2 

13.0 

10.0 

7.3 

8.1 

10.5 

lii.O 

10.9 

7.8 

8.9 

12.6 

14.3 

12.8 

10.6 

9.3 

7.3 

9.7 

9.9 

9.5 

10.3 

12.5 

13.1 


10.3 


9.8 
12.1 

7.9 
17.7 

7.9 
10  2 
12.0 
11.2 

8.1 

8.4 

8  9 
10.7 

9  2 
7.7 
9  2 
7.6 
6.9 
7.3 
6.8 

13.1 
9.6 
6.6 
9.2 
9.9 
9.8 

10  3 
7.1 
9.0 

10.4 

11.7 
9.7 
9.9 
7.4 

7.8 
9.0 
10. 1 
11.0 
9.0 
12.7 
13.2 


1896. 


12.1 

12.3 

9.7 

17.9 

8.0 

10.1 

12.6 

13  3 

9.7 

7.7 

9.2 

12.4 

11.2 

8.3 

9.8 

8.6 

10.2 

10.9 

9.4 

12.2 

8.7 

8.8 

9.4 

10.1 

10  2 

11.3 

9.4 

8.8 

11.2 

13.1 

13.8 

12.2 

10.7 

9.0 
9.8 
10.1 
12.1 
9.5 
13.2 
12.4 


10.5 

11.8 

8.2 

16.4 

9.4 

9.7 

12.7 

13.1 

7.9 

8.4 

9.0 

'9'7 
7.9 
9.0 
8.8 
8.4 
8.1 
8.3 

12.4 

10. 1 
8.3 
8.4 
9.6 
9.9 

10.8 
8  6 

8  6 
11.0 
13.1 
11  3 

9.2 
8.2 

8.2 

9  2 
11.0 
10  7 

9.6 
13.8 
16.2 


10.1     10.9 


10.7 


34 


6 1  Victoria. 


Sessional  rai;r8  (No.  29). 


A.  189  8 


TABLE  No.  9. 
The  Ten  Highest  Causes  of  Death  in  1896,  and  other  Special  Diseases. 


Counties, 

IS 

it 

<u 

05      ! 

o 

'3 

o 
S 
a 

a 

.3 

"u 

ft 

Q 

=  -s 
^-^ 

11 
11 

24 

82 
12 
33 
48 
38 
27 
5 
4 

12 
32 
22 
15 
34 
14 
24 
5 
8 
14 

12 

7 

14 
14 

7 
10 

5 
10 
69 

3 
26 
17 

43 
17 
14 
13 
11 
16 
149 

932 

J 

a 

o  s 
O 

29 

19 

30 

84 

7 

16 

21 

18 

21 

3 

3 

27 

7 

42 

25 

8 

22 

8 

15 
26 

20 
9 

21 
10 

7 
10 

9 

8 
13 

6 
34 
30 

21 
9 

23 
7 

11 

44 
182 

905 

m 

u 
^  <C 

> 

12 
16 
26 
47 
7 

17 

26 

20 

41 

8 

9 

3 

25 
27 
23 
23 
18 
38 
7 
20 
50 

12 
10 

24 

20 

19 

3 

24 
27 
18 
6 
13 
19 

25 
13 
24 
19 
26 
53 
162 

980 

OS 
PU 

m 

°^ 

1- 

9 
19 
26 
47 
13 
18 
22 
46 
24 
17 
11 

2 
18 
20 
27 
12 
18 
24 
11 
17 
32 

6 
21 

25 
11 

5 

8 
20 

6 
13 
14 

9 
32 

25 
16 
22 
24 
22 
39 
96 

847 

i 

<B 

-d 
■3 

J3 
ft 
P>> 

H 
&^ 

9 
11 
16 
23 

1 
14 
22 
19 
24 
5 
4 

'22 

10 

13 

8 

6 

11 

2 

15 

14 

12 
11 

21 

17 

7 

5 

5 

14 

11 

7 

12 
29 

14 

11 
15 
12 
16 
20 
64 

552 

m 

a 
0 

'ra 

> 

a 
0 

0 

!: 

25 
7 

19 

118 

2 

17 

9 

18 

21 

5 

6 

6 

11 

19 

20 

17 

7 

4 

2 

9 

17 

17 

7 

15 

11 

11 

3 

19 

10 

6 

4 

23 

22 

12 
8 

23 

11 
8 

30 
102 

701 

0 
0 
0 
ti 

n 

8 

9 

17 

30 

2 

2 

11 

15 

18 

7 

3 

1 

■OT) 

0'3 
s  0 

^^ 
^'^ 

22 

6 
21 
26 

7 
15 
10 
15 
11 

2 
10 

2 

00 

cS 

w 

"i 
1 
1 

&0 

n    ■ 

n 

u-,43 

2 

3 

4 

11 

a 

i 

1- 

m 

1- 

Algoma 

brant 

Bruce 

Carleton 

42 
47 

58 

152 

19 

58 

87 

81 

62 

28 

18 

6 

74 

60 

70 

51 

48 

108 

29 

42 

109 

36 
20 

90 
62 
36 
20 
49 
44 
58 
31 
50 
98 

101 
33 
51 

1         38 

59 

138 

495 

120 
67 
59 

266 
17 
29 

122 
47 
65 
12 
28 
6 
27 
44 
55 
39 
43 
41 
21 
34 
61 

98 
16 

53 
33 
25 
12 
43 
52 

131 
26 

101 
83 

68 
35 
40 
36 
59 
127 
531 

17 
51 
89 
98 
22 
64 
71 
82 

105 
19 
37 
9 
93 
78 
49 
46 
58 
78 
39 
38 

117 

35 
50 

131 
60 
70 
SO 
64 
46 
46 
33 
58 
85 

77 
37 
49 
39 
88 
74 
211 

48 
34 
43 

78 
16 
30 
52 
44 
30 

7 
11 

3 
57 
50 
39 
40 
23 
74 
11 
37 
59 

35 
22 

54 
36 
27 
13 
39 
39 
5 
23 
36 
39 

36 

17 

32 

36 

:        40 

101 

222 

1,6.?8 

.... 

13 
3 

Elgin  

Essex 

"1 
"  1 

1 
'"3 

"i 
1 

2 
1 

"i 

"i 

7 

3 
4 

2 
6 

1 
2 

'"3 
5 

12 
3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
5 

12 

7 

1 
4 
3 

1 
1 

"1 

1 

4 

Frontenac 

C3^rey    

Haldimand 

b 

Halton   

i 

Haliburton    

3 

Hastings 

Huron 

5     16 
19;     10 

3 
1 

Kent 

Lambton    

9 
12 
5 
6 
3 
5 
23 

15 
6 

6 

10 

6 

5 

11 

6 

4 

3 

12 

22 

12 
6 
19 
13 
14 
32 
114 

526 

19 
3 
9 

16 
8 

13 

22 

20 
11 

12 

17 

8 

4 

14 

12 

6 

3 

16 

14 

8 

7 

9 

9 

16 

25 

62 

536 

1 
2 

Lanark  

Leeds  and  Grenville 

Addington 

3 

Lincoln 

Middlesex 

Mnskoka  and  Parry 

Sound 

Norfolk 

.... 

1 
1 

Northumberland  and 
Durham 

2 

Ontario 

Oxford    

i 

Peel 

Perth 

Peterborough   

"3 

9 

Prescott  and  Ruesell 

7 
2 

2 
3 

1 

'"2 
1 

"■'2 
2 

36 

12 
12 

2 

1 
5 

5 

Simcoe    

4 

Glengarry    

6 

Victoria 

6 

Waterloo   

Welland 

Wellington   

Wentworth 

York  

1 

2 

6 

47 

187 

'"i 

7 

Totals  

2,758 

2,772 

2,543 

99 

35 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.   29^- 


A.  189  8 


TABLE  10. 
Illegitimate  Births,  Twins  and  Triplets  in  the  Province. 


Illegitimate  Births. 


No. 


578 


Proportion  to  whole  number  of  Births. 


Ratio  to  1,000 
births. 


Number  of  pairs 
of  twins. 


One  to  every  81  births 


12.1 


2.50 


Number  of  cases 
of  triplets. 


TABLE    11. 
Births  in  the  Province  in  1896,  shewing  the  proportion  of  Male  to  Female  Births. 


Sex. 

s 
a 

>. 

<S 

ti 
Si 

1,768 
1,687 

>, 

1 

a 

•-5 

s 
io 

3 

u 

S 
S 

m 

o 
o 
O 

S 

> 
o 

^3 

a 
§ 

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Q 

o 

Males    

Females   

1,722 
1,697 

i,9;^2 

1,834 

1,899 
1,765 

2,129 
1,953 

2,003 
1,880 

2,260 
2,026 

2,294 
2,138 

2,267 
2,018 

2,125 
2,005 

1,948 
1,787 

1,955 

1,776 

24,342 
22,566 

Totals  

3,419 
101  4 

3,455 
104.8 

3,806 
107.5 

3,664 
107.5 

4,082 
109.0 

3,883 

4,286 
111.0 

4,432 
107.2 

4,285 
112.3 

4,130 
105.9 

3,735 

3,731 
110.0 

46,908 

Male   births   to 
100    female 
births  . 

106.5 

109.0 

107.8 

TABLE  12. 
Order  of  Births  by  Months  in  the  Province. 


Months. 

Males. 

Months. 

Females. 

Months. 

Total 

Males  and 

Females. 

August 

2,294 
2,267 

2,138 
2,026 
2,018 
2,005 
1,953 
1,880 
1.834 
1,787 
1,776 
1,765 
1,697 
1,687 
22,566 

August 

4,432 

September. . 

.Tiilir  . 

Julj' 

4,286 

July 

May 

2,260     September  

2,129      lOnhnhpr 

September 

October 

May 

4,285 
4,130 

October 

2,125 

2,003 

Mav 

4,082 

June 

.TnnP 

3,883 

March 

1,972      IMarrh   .  _ 

March 

3,806 

December 

1,955 
1,948 
1,899 

1            

November 

3,735 
3,731 

November 

December : . . 

April 

A.pril 

Anril.                    . 

3,664 

February 

1,768      I.Taniiarr- 

February 

January 

Total 

3,455 
3.419 

January 

1,722 

' 

February 

Total 

24,342 

Total 

46.908 

36 


Gl  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.   29). 


A.  1898 


TABLE  13. 
Marriages  by  Months  in  the  Province . 


• 

Sl\:Months. 

1895. 

Months. 

1896. 

Quarters. 

1895. 

Quarters. 

Quarter  ending  Dec.      31 

"            "      June   30 

"     March  31 

"      Sept.  30 

Date  not  given 

Total 

1896. 

October 

1,447 

1,442 

1,413 

1,289 

1,197 

1,191 

1,094 

1.042 

1,040 

996 

930 

890 

16 

June 

December  . . 
September  . 

October  

January 

November. . 

April     

March 

February . . . 

July 

August 

May 

Nodategiv'n 
Total  .... 

1,743 

1,583 

1,468 

1,383 

1,296 

1,277 

1,171 

1,087 

1,067 

1,050 

890 

868 

21 

Quarter  ending  Dec.  31 
"  June  30 
"  March  31 
"      Sept.  30 

Date  not  given 

4,051 
3,466 
3,279 
3,176 
16 

4,243 
3,782 
3,450 
3,408 
21 

December 

September  . . . 
January 

November 

April  

March 

February 

July 

Total 

May 

August 

No  date  given. 

Total 

13,987 

'14,904 

13,987 

14,904 

TABLE  14. 
Marriages  by  Denominations  in  the  Province. 


DenodDinabions. 

Number  of  persons 
married. 

Per  cent,  of 
whole. 

Proportion  to  the  whole  number 
of  persons  married . 

Methodists 

Presbyterians 

10,535 

6,056 

4,676 

4,576 

1,776 

761 

266 

202 

IH 

44 

732 

140 

35.3 

20.4 

15  3 

15.3 

6.0 

2.6 

.9 

.7 

.5 

•1 

2.5 

.4 

2.8 
4.9 

Church  of  England 

Roman  Catholics 

Baptists 

6.5 

6.5 

16.7 

Lutherans 

39.1 

Congregationalists 

112.0 

Evangelical  Association 

Meononites 

147.5 
207.0 

Quakers 

677.3 

Other  denominations 

No  denominations  given 

40.7 
212.8 

Total 

29,808 

100.00 

E.G. 


37 


APPENDIX 


1    R.  0. 


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BIRTHS. 


[iii.] 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.   29). 


A.  1898 


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61    Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29^ 


A.  1898 


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Sessional  Papers  (Nc.  29 ). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


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XI. 


MARRIAGES. 


[xiii.] 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   29). 


A.  1898 


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XV. 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  l*apcrs  (No.  29 


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60  Victoria. 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  92). 


A.  189/ 


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XXVI. 


60  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1897 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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60  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1897 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1897 


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60  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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so  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1897 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  {No.  29. 


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Ixxxix. 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


A.  1898 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  '2d). 


A.  1898 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  29). 


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EEP  OKT 


OF   THE 


ONT AR lO 

GAME  AND  FISH  COMMISSIONERS 


:b'oti    'mE    ^^rnn^A-ii, 


1897. 


PRINTED    BY    ORDER    OF 

THE   LEGISLATIVE  ASSEMBLY  OF  ONTARIO. 


-^&» 


TORONTO: 
WARWICK   BRO'S  &  RUTTER,  PRINTERS,  &c.,  68  &  70  FRONT  STREET  WEST. 

1898. 


REPORT 


OF   THE 


ONTARIO  GAME  AND  FISH  COMMISSION. 


His   Honour   the  Lieutenant-Governor  of  Ontario : 

Sir, — Your  commissioners  in  their  sixth  annual  report  will  endeavor  to 
make  it  as  concise  as  is  consistent  with  a  short  account  of  what  has  been  done 
in  the  Department  during  the  year. 

The  wardens  have  reported  from  their  several  districts,  and  we  are  glad  to 
know  that,  although  there  have  been  some  infractions  of  the  law,  as  there  always 
will  be,  yet,  on  the  whole,  it  has  been  fairly  well  observed.  We  are  glad  to  be 
able  to  congratulate  the  wardens  upon  the  good  work  which  they  have  accom- 
plished. We  hear  of  but  few  objections  to  the  law  on  the  part  of  the  general 
public,  and  the  only  changes  proposed  seem  to  be  on  the  part  of  sportsmen,  who, 
to  their  credit  be  it  said,  favor  further  restrictions. 

In  this  direction  some  important  petitions  have  been  received  from  inHuen- 
tial  quarters,  asking  that  the  open  season  for  quail  be  confined  to  the  last  six 
weeks  of  the  general  open  season,  or  from  November  1st  to  December  loth. 
This  is  partly  owing  to  the  great  number  of  immature  birds  seen  in  October  of 
each  year.  Others  urge  very  strongly  that,  as  ducks  are  slowly  but  steadily 
decreasing  in  numbers,  the  slight  restriction  of  shortening  the  season  from 
September  1st  to  September  15th  should  at  least  be  adopted  for  a  year  or  two, 
after  which  further  protection  should  be  given  them.  Almost  without  exception 
sportsmen  are  opposed  to  the  use  of  skegs  and  sailboats  in  the  taking  of  duck. 
These  devices  are  chiefly  adopted  by  market  shooters,  and  the  skeg  is  only  an- 
other form  of  sunken  punt,  which  has  been  prohibited  by  law  for  many  years. 
Then,  again,  many  advocate  an  extension  of  the  non-sale  clause,  so  as  to  include 
all  game  birds  and  animals.  Whether  the  country  is  ripe  for  this  sweeping 
change  your  commissioners  are  not  prepared  to  say,  and  until  the  sentiment  has 
become  more   general  and  more  developed,  they  are  not  prepared  to  recommend 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  30,.  A  1898 

such  a  ohange.  We  are  confident,  though,  that  no  measure  would  have  such  a 
tendency  to  preserve  what  game  there  is,  as  such  a  provision,  which  would 
prevent  pot-hunting  and  persons  from  making  a  living  by  the  pursuit  and  sale 
of  game,  since  it  is  well  known  that  those  men  making  a  business  of  hunting^ 
learn  all  about  the  haunts  of  game,  its  habits,  and  the  most  destructive  means  of 
taking  it,  pursue  it  day  after  day,  and  thus  prove  a  very  destructive  element. 
In  sympathy  with  these  men  is  the  consuming  public,  who  do  not  consider  for  a 
moment  where  the  supply  comes  from  as  long  as  they  may  indulge  in  such  deli- 
cacies as  they  have  alwa3^s  to  a  great  extent  been  indulged  in  at  reasonable  rates. 
This  section  of  the  community  would  feel  it  an  infringement  of  their  rights,  not 
to  say  tastes,  if  it  were  debarred  from  purchasing  game  for  the  table  by  a  non- 
sale  clause.  On  the  other  hand,  and  probably  the  largest  class,  are  the  lovers  of 
nature,  and  the  true  sportsmen,  who  desire  to  preserve  the  game  as  long  as  pos- 
sible, to  furnish,  if  for  nothing  else,  an  inducement  for  those  'field  sports  which 
have  done  so  much  to  develop  both  physically  and  mentally,  the  better  men  of 
the  country.  These  two  conflicting  sections  of  the  public  have  to  be  pacified,, 
and  yet  your  Government  will  have  to  take  into  consideration  the  gradually  de- 
creasing supply  of  game  which,  on  account  of  its  scarcity,  is  being  more  keenly- 
hunted  because,  being  rarer,  it  is  more  valued.  Although  there  is  no  doubt  that 
the  law  is  evaded  often  in  the  matter  of  the  sale  of  grouse,  quail,  &c.,  yet  it  is 
not  done  to  any  great  extent,  and  the  provision  has  had  a  great  effect,  notably  in 
preserving  the  supply  of  these  birds. 

The  wardens  are  still  only  four  in  number,  a  force  quite  inadequate  to  cope 
with  such  onerous  duties  extending  over  so  great  an  extent  of  territory.  How- 
ever, it  must  be  said  of  them  that  they  have  done  good  work  during  the  past 
year  in  preventing  the  illegal  slaughter  of  game  birds  and  animals  as  well  as 
fur-bearing  animals.  As  in  our  last  report  we  tried  to  draw  attention  to  this 
fact,  now  again  in  this  we  wish  to  emphasize  it,  that  these  men  cannot  possibly 
cover  the  ground  properly,  and  to  urge  that  new  wardens  be  appointed,  or  that 
a  certain  number  of  deputies  be  paid  a  small  sum  annually.  We  wish  to  recom- 
mend that  only  those  deputies  who  reside  in  certain  important  game  districts 
receive  the  money,  and  let  them  be  as  at  present  removable  for  cause  at  the 
pleasure  of  the  commission.  We  are  confident  that  these  men  would  more  than 
earn  their  money,  and  better  protection  would  be  afforded. 

Your  commissioners  feel  that  now,  since  they  have  devised  means  by  which 
the  revenue  of  their  Department  is  more  than  enough  to  cover  the  present  ex- 
penses, it  would  not  be  out  of  place  to  increase  the  efficiency  of  the  work  by  a 
greater  expenditure  of  money. 

Game  in  Ontario. 
Your  commissioners  feel  that  although  now  for  several  years  they   have  felt 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No    30).  A  189  8 

it  their  duty  to  urge  your  Goverument  to  do  something  in  the  way  of  re-stock- 
ing the  country  with  useful  game  birds,  still  nothing  or  next  to  nothing  has  been 
■done  or  is  being  done.  We  have  felt  no  small  degree  of  pride  in  endeavoring  to 
keep  Ontario  abreast  of  the  times  in  this  respect,  and  it  is  humiliating 
to  us  to  see  other  and  less  pretentious  States  far  in  advance  of  our 
Province  in  thus  encouraging  the  introduction  of  birds  which  would  not 
only  furnish  delicacies  in  the  way  of  food  supply,  but  also  tend  to  beautify 
the  country,  make  it  more  interesting,  and  furnish  an  incentive  for  busi- 
ness men  and  others  to  take  healthful  recreation  and  exercise.  This 
work  must  be  done  in  order  to  replace  the  native  birds,  which  in 
many  cases  are  becoming  practically  extinct,  and  which  cannot  be  restored  by 
propagation  or  otherwise.  No  better  example  of  this  industry  need  be  cited 
than  that  of  the  mother  country,  where  much  is  done  in  this  line.  It  is  idle  to 
wait  until  our  native  birds  are  a  thing  of  the  past,  because  such  work  takes 
time  and  the  sooner  it  is  begun  the  more  satisfactory  will  be  the  result.  It  is 
true  that  g,  good  many  pheasants  are  being  reared  at  Rondeau  Park  under  the 
able  management  of  Mr.  Gardiner,  jr.,  and  perhaps  there  will  be  six  or  seven 
hundred  there  this  year.  A  certain  number  of  these  birds  should  be  planted  in 
Algonquin  Park  as  an  experiment,  Mongolian  as  well  as  English  pheasants.  If 
they  do  well,  let  that  magnificent  tract  of  game  country  be  liberally  stocked 
with  them.  If  found  unsuitable  on  account  of  the  snow,  then  let  some  other 
more  southern  parts  of  the  Province  be  given  a  start  with  these  birds,  and  we 
are  sure  the  public  will  be  ever  grateful.  We  say  plainly  that  we  feel  no  com- 
punction in  asking  that  a  certain  amount  of  money  be  devoted  to  this  laudable 
object,  because  now  that  the  work  of  the  game  laws  is  about  self-sustaining,  we 
feel  that  the  Government  should  devote  some  of  the  moneys  to  this  end. 

For  some  time  we  have  repeatedly  called  the  attention  of  your  Government 
to  the  abominable  practice  which  prevails  in  some  parts  of  the  Province,  of 
hunting  waterfowl  with  steam  tugs  and  sailboats.  The  law  prohibits  shooting 
from  such  vessels,  but  it  is  the  practice  to  use  them  in  connection  with  skegs 
and  small  boats,  driving  the  birds  over  the  shooters.  This  proves  not  only  a 
very  killing  way  of  taking  the  birds,  but  its  chief  fault  is  in  driving  them  from 
their  haunts  and  feeding  grounds.  We  believe  that  no  other  state  on  the  con- 
tinent allows  this  barbarous  mode  of  hunting  waterfowl  in  their  waters,  except 
it  be  on  the  seacoast,  and  we  again  most  urgent! j'^  desire  to  draw  the  attention 
of  your  Government  to  this  great  grievance,  and  pray  that  they  may  enact  at 
once  such  amendments  to  th-"  law  as  will  effectually  prevent  it.  The  mass  of 
hunters  who  are  unable  to  afford  the  use  of  such  an  expensive  way  of  taking 
waterfowl  feel  very  keenly  the  disadvantage  at  which  they  are  placed,  besides  the 
grievance  of  having  the  birds  driven  from  the  country  altogether. 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30).  A.  1898 


Deer. 
Your  commissioners  are  delighted  with  the  success  of  the  law  as  applied 
to  the  preservation  of  deer.  The  number  of  deer  killed  under  the  license  and 
coupon  system  is  greatly  lessened.  They  are  not  wantonly  killed,  as  before,  and 
shipped  out  for  sale  or  to  friends  during  the  first  part  of  the  season  by  hunters 
who  were  then  enabled  to  bring  out  their  quota  with  them  on  their  way  home 
from  the  woods.  The  system  also  yields  a  handsome  revenue,  quite  enough  to 
cover  a  large  part  of  the  expense  of  the  Department,  and  thus  disarm  the  adverse 
criticism  of  a  class  of  persons  who  take  no  interest  in  the  preservation  of  the 
birds  and  animals  of  our  country. 

Insectivorous  Birds. 

Your  commissioners  cannot  let  this  opportunity  pass  without  demanding^ 
that  fewer  permits  to  collect  birds  eggs  and  skins  be  granted.  This  we  a.sk  in 
the  interest  of  the  agriculturist  as  well  as  the  fruit  grower  and  lovers  of  nature. 
We  do  this  because  we  know  how  important  to  the  above  industries  i§  the  pre- 
servation of  bird  life.  If  farmers  and  fruity  growers  were  alive  to  their  own 
interests  they  would  demand  this  as  one  of  the  first  duties  to  their  fellow -workers, 
as  well  as  to  themselves.  They  only  need  to  know  how  industriously  during  the 
whole  season  of  their  stay  in  the  Province  do  the  birds  wage  their  war  against 
destructive  insect  life,  to  make  both  farmers,  gardeners  and  fruit  groovers  look 
upon  them  as  one  of  their  greatest  helps  to  success.  Through  ignorance  of  their 
o-reat  value,  we  find  that  almost  any  boy  whose  family  are  political  friends  of  the 
member  for  the  county  in  which  he  resides,  can  get  through  him  a  permit  to  col- 
lect as  many  birds'  eggs  or  skins  as  he  wishes  ;  or  it  may  be  a  taxidermist,  if  he 
can  bring  political  influence  to  bear,  can  get  a  permit  to  enable  him  to  kill  all  the 
brifditly  colored  and  most  useful  insectivorous  birds  which  he  needs  to  fill  cases 
for  sale  to  adorn  bar-rooms  or  other  places,  and  yet  this  is  all  under  the  guise  of 
"  for  SL-ientitic  purposes."  We  have  no  hesitation  in  again  urging  as  strongly 
as  we  can  that  the  plan  your  commissioners  recommended  last  year  be 
adopted  as  likely  to  control  to  some  extent  this  nefarious  slaughter  of  some  of  the 
most  useful  as  well  as  most  beautiful  objects  in  nature.  The  plan  suggested  was. 
that  a  fee  of  not  less  than  S5  be  charged  for  this  permit,  that  no  one  under 
eighteen  years  of  age  be  granted  one,  and  then  only  where  recommended  hy  two 
reliable  and  well-known  scientific  men  ;  also  that  the  applicant  be  required  to 
give  bonds  of  at  least  $200  that  the  permit  will  not  be  used  for  other  than 
strictly  scientific  purposes,  and  not  for  barter. 

If  the  above  plan  were  adopted,  it  would  lessen  greatly  the  wanton  slaughter 
of  our  beautiful  and  useful  songsters,  and  would  lead  the  outside  world  to  under- 
stand that  Ontario,  an  agricultural  country,  was  well  aware  that  this  important 
factor  in  the  success  of  the  farmer  should  be  and  was  being  protected. 

6 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  30)  A.  1898 

A  change  in  the  Insectivorous  Birds  Act  should  also  be  made,  since  many 
of  the  hawks  and  owls  now  recognized  as  highly  useful  birds,  are  ignorantly 
killed  at  sight,  and  not  protected  by  law,  as  they  should  be. 

Fisheries. 

Your  commissioners  regret  that  the  vexed  question  of  jurisdiction  does  not 
seem  yet  to  be  settled.  This  we  feel  the  more,  because  we  believe  that  in  the 
meantime  the  Americans  having,  to  a  great  extent,  secured  control  of  much  of 
our  lake  fisheries,  are  depleting  them  as  rapidly  as  they  have  done  their  own,  by 
senseless  and  greedy  fishing,  regardless  of  any  close  season  or  other  regulations 
which  tend  to  allow  the  fish  to  reproduce  their  species  in  the  natural  way.  Our 
fisheries  are  one  of  our  greatest  and  most  valuable  heritages,  and  it  is  deplorable 
to  know  that  for  a  paltry  few  dollars  paid  as  a  license  for  the  use  of  the  nets, 
thousands  of  tons  of  our  most  valuable  fish  are  being  carried  into  a  foreign  coun- 
try, to  enrich  a  few  of  its  citizens,  while  a  few  of  our  people  are  made  catspaws 
of  and  merely  paid  labourers'  wages  for  merely  catching  the  fish.  Let  us  hope 
that  Canadians  will  awake  to  the  fact  that  our  fisheries  are  being  ruined  as 
rapidly  as  possible  by  extravagant  and  illegal  fishing,  and  that  by  foreigners. 

Recommendations. 

Your  commissioners  feel  that,  although  the  law  relating  to  game  is  very 
satisfactoiy,  still  there  are  a  few  recommendations  which  should  be  crystallized 
into  law  before  we  can  rest  satisfied  that  the  Act  is  near  perfection.  We  are,, 
with  the  general  public,  thankful  for  what  advance  has  been  made,  and  do  not 
hope  to  have  everything  granted  at  once,  but  there  are  some  provisions  which 
should  be  made,  viz  : 

1.  The  use  of  steam  vessels.,  sail  boats  or  skegs  should  be  prohibited  in  the 
pursuit  of  w^ater-fowl. 

2.  All  game  birds  and  animals  should  be  protected  between  the  hours  of 
sunset  and  sunrise. 

3.  The  position  of  blinds  or  hides  should  be  restricted  to  fifty  or  one  hun- 
dred yards  at  most  from  any  point  of  land  or  natural  bed  of  rushes. 

4.  Some  provision  should  be  made  to  prevent  foreigners  from  employing 
guides  to  shoot  game  for  them,  as  being  only  a  form  of  selling  game. 

5.  There  should  be  a  provision  to  prevent  boys  and  idle  men  from  hunting 
rabbits  with  guns  during  the  close  season  for  other  game. 

•     6.  Some  more    simple  and  easy  way  should  be  devised  by  which   wardens, 
and  deputy  wardens  could,  when  necessary,  procure  search  warrants. 

All  of  which  is  respectfully  submitted. 

G.  A.  MacCALLUM, 
Chairman,    Ontario  Game  and  Fish  Commission. 
Dunnville,  31st  December,  1897. 

7 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30^-  A.  189  8 


REPORT    OF   CHIEF    GAME    WARDEN. 

Toronto,  December,  1897. 

O.  A.  MacCallum,  Esq.,  M.  D., 

Chairman  of  the  Ontario  Fish  and  Game  Commission: 

Sir, — I  have  the  honor  to  submit  for  your  respectful  consideration  and 
approval  the  work  of  the  commission  for  the  year  ending  December  31st,   1897. 

During  the  Legislative  Session  held  in  the  spring  of  1897,  amendments 
were  made  to  the  Game  Laws,  extending  the  close  season  for  several  species  of 
game  birds  and  fur-bearing  animals,  also  prohibiting  the  sale  or  barter  of  others. 
The  usual  record  of  convictions  will  not  appear  in  this  report,  in  consequence  of 
the  early  meeting  of  the  Legislature.  It  is  again  my  pleasant  duty  to  acknow- 
ledge the  valuable  assistance  rendered  me  by  the  press.  Railway,  steamboat  and 
express  companies  have  also  rendered  most  effective  assistance.  A  number  of 
Orders-in-Council  have  been  passed,  copies  of  which,  with  other  matters,  are  re- 
ferred to  in  this  re]3ort,  and  which,  I  trust,  will  meet  with  your  approval. 

Wardens. 

It  is  a  pleasure  for  me  to  again  extend  my  warmest  commendations  to  the 
wardens  in  charge  of  districts,  for  the  faithful  and  intelligent  discharge  of  their 
duties,  which  have  been  added  to  by  the  increased  espionage  required  for  the 
effective  enforcement  of  the  Game  Laws  for  the  better  protection  of  deer. 
It  is  impossible  for  the  wardens  ,to  give  personal  supervision  to  all  of  the  im- 
mense territory  in  their  respective  districts.  They  have  done  all  or  more  than 
could  be  reasonably  expected,  and,  in  many  instances,  under  most  difficult  cir- 
cumstances. 

Deputy  Wardens. 

There  has  been  a  slight  increase  in  the  number  of  deputy  wardens  during 
the  year,  there  being  on  the  list  518  for  this  year,  as  against  511  for  the  j^ear 
1896.  Recent  appointments  have  been  made  from  a  class  of  men  specially 
adapted  for  the  positions,  and  in  localities  where  their  services  are  most  required. 
It  augurs  well  for  the  future  of  game  and  fish  protection  to  have  so  many  appli- 
cations for  appointments  as  deputy  wardens  from  professional  and  business  meti. 

Game  in  Ontario. 

I  have  much  pleasure  in  reporting  a  favorable  increase  in  some  species  of 
game,  and  also  of  fur-bearing  animals.  Deer  are  reported  being  found  in  increased 
numbers  in  many  localities,  while  in  others  the  reports  are  less  favorable.     I  am 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  80).  A  189  8 


pleased  to  report  a  gratifying  decrease  in  the  annual  slaughter  of  deer,  in  a  large 
measure  due  to  prohibiting  the  shooting  of  them  in  the  water,  and  the  stringent 
requirements  of  the  license  system,  making  illegal  shipments  almost  impossible. 
Reports  reach  me  to  the  effect  that,  regardless  of  the  strongly  worded  circulars 
from  the  Honourable  Commissioner  of  Crown  Lands  to  the  owners  of  timber 
limits,  many  of  them  are  in  collusion  with  their  managers  and  foremen,  in  having 
their  respective  camps  supplied  with  moose  meat  and  venison  illegally  procured. 
If  the  retention  of  their  leases  depended  on  the  strict  observance  of  the  laws  it 
would  have  a  most  salutary  effect. 

Moose  are  reported  to  be  increasing,  notwithstanding  the  number  alleged  to 
be  killed  by  Indians  on  their  reserves  and  vicinity.  Deer  are  making  their  way 
farther  north  than  ever  reported,  owing,  no  doubt,  to  the  gradual  decrease  of 
wolves  in  the  northern  portions  of  the  province. 

Ruffed  grouse,  better  known  as  partridge,  have  not  been  so  numerous  as  in 
1896,  in  consequence  of  the  cold  wet  weather  that  prevailed  during  the  nesting- 
season.  This  grand  species  of  game  being  common  to  the  whole  province,  a  large 
illegal  traffic  prevails,  which  is  fostered  to  some  extent  by  the  apathy  of  the 
magistrates  and  justices  of  the  peace,  many  of  whom  inflict  nominal  or  the  small- 
est possible  fines,  thus  assisting  to  make  the  traffic  profitable 

Quail  have  been  more  plentiful  in  the  western  counties  than  for  many  years 
past,  affording  excellent  sport.  In  agricultural  districts,  denuded  of  timber,  quail 
will,  if  properly  protected,  furnish  sport  and  good  bags  for  the  ardent  sportsman 
when  nearl}^  all  other  species  of  game  have  for  ever  disappeared  from  these 
cleared  localities. 

There  are  still  a  few  flocks  of  wild  turkeys  left  in  Essex  and  Kent.  I  regret 
to  say  that  they  are  not  increasing  to  the  extent  desired,  in  consequence  of  their 
nests  being  located,  and  the  eggs  taken  and  hatched  under  tame  birds,  the  vandals 
obtaining  large  prices  for  the  young  ones.  This  practice,  and  the  cutting  of  the 
timber,  will,  in  a  few  years,  remove  the  last  vestige  in  its  wild  state  of  this,  the 
finest  game  bird  in  Ontario. 

Insectivorous  Birds. 

It  is  a  difficult  matter  to  effect  the  desired  reduction  in  the  number  of 
permits  annually  issued,  enabling  the  holders  thereof  to  take  insectivorous  birds 
and  their  eggs.  Many  of  the  applications  for  permits  come  it  is  feared  from  those 
desiring,  in  many  instances  to  shoot  birds  for  amusement,  and  it  is  extremely 
difficult  to  sa}^  how  many  of  such  applications  are  received  from  men  who  really 
require  the  permits  for  bona  Jide  scientific  purposes.  I  have  issued  fifty- one 
permits  during  the  year,  as  against  fifty-five  in  1886,  and  sixty-eight  in  1895,  a 
reduction  of  seventeen  in  two  years.  Probably  not  more  than  twenty-five  should 
be  issued   each  year.      To  prevent  the  numerous  applications    and  consequent 

9 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  30).  A.  1898 


destruction  of  our  beautiful  feathered  songsters  and  the  farmers'  best  friends,  I 

feel  convinced  that  it  will  be  advisable  in  the  near  future  to  impose  a  fee  for 

each  permit  issued.     This  would  be  the  most  effective  way  to  secure  the  desired 

reduction. 

Fish. 

The  question  of  jurisdiction  over  the  fisheries  in  Provincial  waters  is  still, 
unfortunately,  undecided.  This  is  a  question  of  the  greatest  importance,  inasmuch 
as  while  it  is  in  abeyance  we  are  practically  powerless  to  prevent  the  destruction, 
and  punish  the  wholesale  violations  of  the  laws  of  nature  and  common  sense. 
The  construction  of  dams  on  the  rivers  and  streams,  without  the  necessary  fish- 
ways  to  enable  the  fish  to  reach  the  spawning  grounds,  and  the  illegal  netting  at 
all  seasons,  will  result  in  depleting  our  northern  lakes  and  streams  of  fish  to  such 
an  extent  that  years  of  labor  and  immense  expense  will  be  required  to  restore 
to  these  waters  even  a  semblance  of  their  former  character,  viz. :  that  of  being^ 
the  best  general  fishing  resort  on  the  continent,  a  character  so  ruthlessly 
destroyed  for  the  purpose  of  enriching  a  few  unprincipled  companies  engaged  in 
the  work  of  illegal  extermination.  Many  complaints  reach  me  from  railroad 
officials,  tourists,  members  of  fishing  clubs,  proprietors  of  summer  resorts,  etc.,. 
bitterlj^  complaining  of  the  illegal  and  senseless  destruction  prevailing,  and  asking- 
that  measures  be  at  once  taken  to  remedy  the  abuses  complained  of.  Recent 
eflforts  by  Warden  Willmott  to  stop  some  of  the  illegal  doings  have  been  frustrated 
by  the  action  of  Dominion  Fishery  ofiicials,  who  are  largely  responsible  for  much 
of  the  illegal  destruction  referred  to  in  consequence  of  the  foolish  system  of 
issuing  licenses,  permitting  the  use  of  nets  of  the  most  destructive  and  illegal 

character. 

Shooting  Licenses. 

Fifty-three  non-resident  licenses  have  been  issued  as  against  forty-nin& 
issued  in  1896.  There  will  be  a  considerable  reduction  in  the  number  of  deer 
hunting  licenses  issued,  which  is  to  be  expected  when  we  take  into  consideration 
that  nearly  2,800  permits  have  been  issued  to  settlers,  many  of  whom  bought 
licenses  in  1896.  What  the  decrease  will  be,  I  am  at  present  unable  to  estimate,., 
in  consequence  of  a  number  of  accounts  from  issuers  being  still  unclosed. 

All  of  which  is  respectfully  submitted. 

Your  obedient  servant, 

E.  TINSLEY, 

Chief  Warden.. 


E.  TiNSLEY,  Esq.,  Beaumaris,  30th  Nov.,  1897. 

Chief  Warden, 

Toronto. 

Sir, — I  have  the  honor  of  submitting  my  annual  report  in  respect  to  games 
in  that  portion  of  the  Province  over  which  I  have  charge. 

10 


16  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (JSo.  30y.  A.  1898 


The  open  season  for  deer  which  terminated  on  the  15th  instant  was  marked 
by  a  decided  falling  oH  in  the  number  of  deer'  killed,  and  I  estimate  that  not 
more  than  one  to  one  and  a  quarter  on  an  average  was  taken  out  by  each  hunter. 

Previous  to  the  season,  deer  were  reported  very  plentiful  all  over  the 
northern  districts.  Many  hunters,  however,  complain  of  a  marked  falling  off  in 
numbers,  this  especially  in  localities  where  hunting  has  been  carried  on  to  an 
extreme  for  years,  in  consequence  of  which  it  is  impossible  for  the«e  animals  to 
hold  their  own.  Through  the  kindness  of  an  officer  on  board  one  of  the  Muskoka 
Navigation  Go's,  steamers,  the  number  of  deer  shipped  by  these  boats  has  been 
kept  for  the  last  three  years.  In  1895  the  number  was  in  the  neighborhood  of 
600,  in  1896  somewhere  under  400,  and  this  year  only  230.  Should  there  be  a 
proportionate  falling  off  experienced  by  other  carrying  companies,  there  is  only 
one  conclusion  to  arrive  at,  and  this  is  that  deer  are  getting  scarcer,  and  the 
key-note  to  the  future  preservation  and  also  the  multiplication  of  these  animals 
is  to  stop  the  dogs  altogether.  I  have  been  suprised  to  meet  several  parties  who 
this  year  have  come  up  without  dogs,  and  I  believe  the  anti-dog  sentiment  is 
growing  fast. 

The  fast  of  the  railway  companies  charging  carriage  on  dogs  this  3-ear  has, 
no  doubt,  been  the  means  of  lessening  the  number  brought  into  the  woods. 

The  prohibition  against  killing  deer  in  the  water  has  been  well  observed  and 
is  most  popular. 

The  system  of  issuing  permits  to  settlers  has  not  worked  so  well  as  we 
might  have  expected,  simply  because  some  clerks  have  acted  most  indiscreetly. 
Many  have  issued  permits  to  residents  of  other  townships,  others  have  issued  them 
to  residents  of  villages  who  had  no  right  whatever  to  them,  but  who  should  have 
taken  out  a  S2  license.  These  clerks  being  paid  for  their  work,  should,  in  future, 
be  made  personally  responsible  for  the  misappropriation  of  these  permits.  It 
would  also  be  advisable  to  give  a  clear  definition  of  a  "  settler  "  in  the  Act,  so  that 
in  future  no  mistakes  could  occur  through  any  misinterpretation  on  this  head. 

Partridues  have  been  very  scarce  this  season,  owing,  no  donbt,  to  the  wet  and 
cold  weatlier  during  the  nesting  season. 

From  many  points  in  Algoma  word  comes  to  the  effect  that  moose  and 
caribou  are  on  the  increase,  and  that^red  deer  are  working  their  way  west,  many 
being  found  in  places  where  formerly  they  weve  unknown. 

Beaver  and  otter  are  reported  in  many  places,  where  for  years  past  their 
absence  has  been  remarked. 

It  is  to  be  hoped  that  the  Privy  Council  will  not  long  defer  giving  their 
decision  with  regard  to  the  jurisdiction  of  the  inland  waters  (whether  Dondnion 
or  Provincial). 

The  laws  on  the  whole  have  been  well  observed,  and  so  there  has  been  a 
falling  off  in  prosecutions  as  compared  to  last  year. 


I  am.  Sir, 

Your  obedient  servant, 


JOHN  H.  WILLMOTT, 

Game  Warden. 


11 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30).  A.  1898 


Belleville,  Dec.  6th,  1897. 

E.  TliX.SLEY,  E.SQ., 

Chief  Warden. 

Sir, — I  have  the  honoi*  of"  submitting  my  annual  report  as  warden  of  the 
eastern  district. 

It  is  quite  apparent  that  deer  have  largely  increased  in  numbers  during  the 
last  two  years,  which  is  to  be  attributed  to  the  prohibition  of  killing  them  in  the 
water,  and  to  the  unfavorable  weather  prevailing  during  the  hunting  seasons, 
and  also  to  the  fact  that  the  young  forests  rapidly  growing  up  in  our  northern 
districts  afford  them  such  excellent  cover. 

I  cannot  say,  however,  that  the  clause  prohibiting  the  killing  in  the  water 
has  been  observed  to  the  extent  that  was  expected,  nor  do  I  think  that  the  law 
generally   has  been  as  well  obeyed  this  year,  as  I  have  a  number  of  charges  to 

nvestigate,  which  include  shooting  in  the  water,  and  even  clubbing  and  cutting 
the   throats    of  the  helpless   victims,  the  latter  methods   resorted  to  so   that  the 

eports  of  the  guns  might  not  be  heard  and  the  violations  located. 

There  is  grave  doubt  as  to  whether  canoes  and  boats  of  all  kinds  used  in  the 
pursuit  of  deer  in  the  water  can  be  legally  contiscated,  and  I  submit  that  this 
should  be  clearly  defined  in  the  Act. 

The  imposition  of  the  license  fee  for  deer  shooting  is  still  regarded  favour- 
ably by  all  legitimate  sportsmen,  and  the  exemption  of  the  actual  settler  has 
'  eceived  public  approval ;  but  the  means  adopted  for  getting  the  permits  into  the 
hands  of  the  settlers  are  not  satisfactory,  as  many  of  the  township  clerks  have 
ssued  them  indiscriminately,  and  many  obtained  permits  to  whom  it  was  not 
intended  the  exemption  should  apply,  such  as  residents  of  villages  in  the  exempted 
districts.  These  villages,  not  being  incorporated,  all  came  under  the  head  of 
settlers  ;  besides  which,  in  some  instances,  clerks  did  not  confine  the  issue  of 
permits  to  those  who  reside  in  their  own  municipalit}'.  It  will  be  necessary, 
then,  to  provide  against  this  in  future. 

Ducks  have  been  unusually  plentiful  this  season  and  have  afforded  excellent 
«port  to  those  who  prefer  that  kind  of  shooting. 

Partridge,  I  regret  to  say,  are  remarkably  scarce,  caused,  no  doubt,  by  the 
light  snow  of  last  winter,  thereby  depriving  them  of  their  protection  in  times  of 
severe  frosts,  by  the  unfavourable  hatching  season,  and  by  the  heavy  rainfall  in 
June  an'l  July,  in  which  large  numbers  of  the  large  clucks  must  have  perished. 
I  am  led  to  these  conclusions  by  the  fact  that  in  the  small  bags  made  by  sports- 
men, there  are  few  young  birds  to  be  found,  showing  the  necessity  that  exists 
for  a  clause  being  inserted  in  the  Act,  enabling  the  Lieutenant-Governor  in  Coun- 
''il  to  establi-sh  a  special  close  season  for  this  or  any  other  game  in  an  emer- 
gency like  the  present. 

Respecting  fur-bearing  animals,  I  may  say  as  regards  beaver,  that  there  are 
ao  indications  (in  this  district)  of  their  return  to  the  creeks  and  marshes,  from 
which  they  have  been  exterminated,  and  which  is  to  be  regretted,  not  only  on 
iccount  ot"  the  value  of  the  fur,  but  on  account  of  the  meadows,  which  heretofore 
have  been  ot"  great  value  to  the  settler  and  which  are  fast  becoming  useless  as  a 
source  of  food  supply  for  their  cattle. 

The  reports  concerning  otter  are  more  favourable,  as  it  is  said  with  the  in- 
3reasing  density  of  the  woods  growing  up  around  the  lakes  and  streams,  they 
are  finding  their  way  back  to  waters  that  have  been  deserted  by  them  for  yeai"S, 

12 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (Nc.  30).  A.  189  8 


but  I  am  convinced  that  numbers  of  them  are  illegally  killed,  on  account  of  the 
market  that  is  afforded  the  trapper  by  local  storekeepers,  who  have  easy  means 
of  shipping  the  pelts  out  of  the  Province. 

The  close  season  for  muskrats  is  generally  approved,  although  infractions 
of  the  law  frequently  occur,  the  offences  being  committed  by  a  class  that  are 
absolutely  in  need,  and  by  Indians,  who  take  them,  primarily,  for  food. 

The  issue  of  non-resident  licenses  this  season  is  much  smaller  than  usual  in 
this  locality,  and,  while  a  number  of  attempts  at  evasion  of  the  laAV  by  Ameri- 
can summer  visitors  and  sportsmen  have  been  frustrated,  there  is  reason  to  believe 
that  some  have  been  successful.  It  would  therefore  be  a  great  assistance  to  us 
if  the  Dominion  Customs  authorities  would  prohibit  them  from  bringing  in  firearms 
altogether,  instead  of  allowing  them  to  retain  possession  of  them  by  merely 
depositing  a  sum  of  money  equal  to  the  amount  of  the  duty. 

There  is  also  a  class  of  American  visitors  who  own  and  reside  in  cottages 
for  a  number  of  months  each  summer.  These  have  spent  large  sums  of  money 
in  improving  their  properties,  and  are  ratepayers  in  the  diflferent  localities,  and 
claim  they  are  residents  (for  the  time  being  at  least),  and  exempt  from  tlie  oper- 
ation of  clause  14  of  the  Act.  A  proper  definition,  therefore,  of  their  rights  is 
necessary. 

I  would  also  draw  your  attention  to  the  fact  that  numbers  of  Americans 
come  into  our  waters  wdth  steam  and  sailing  yachts,  and  violate  the  law,  as  it 
is  impossible  to  eftect  their  capture,  for  the  want  of  a  fast  steam  yacht,  wath 
w^hich  to  go  in  pursuit  of  them. 

I  must  now  allude  to  a  matter  of  importance,  viz.,  the  appointment  of  the 
Deputy  Wardens.  I  am  more  convinced  than  ever  of  the  necessity  of  reorgani- 
zing this  branch  of  the  service.  Complaints  are  numerous  of  their  not  only 
violating  the  law  themselves,  but  permitting  others  to  do  so  and,  while  it  would 
be  unfair  to  condemn  them  all,  it  must  be  admitted  tiiat  many  of  them  are  worse 
than  useless. 

I  have  the  honour  to  be.  Sir, 

Your  obedient  servant. 

H.  K.  SMITH. 


Leamington,  Nov.  29th,  1897. 

Mr.  Edwin  Tinsley, 

Chief  Game  Warden, 

Toronto. 

Sir, — I  have  the  honor  of  submitting  to  you  mv  annual  report  for  tiie  year 
1897. 

I  continue  to  hold  the  wardenship  over  some  very  important  counties,  and 
oversee  a  very  difiicult  district,  on  account  of  international  lines  between  Canada 
and  the  United  States,  from  Amherstburg  to  Sarnia,  commencing  at  the  mouth 
of  Lake  Erie  to  the  mouth  of  Lake  Huron,  making  a  frontier  line  of  about  ninety 
miles.  1  only  hope  that  the  Government  can  see  its  way  clear  to  introduce  a 
small  launch  during  the  hunting  season,  W'ith  one  good  man,  as  it  will  pay  for  it- 
self in  a  very  .short  time. 

13 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  30).  A.  1898 


Duck  and  quail  shooting  is  our  principal  game  in  this  district,  and  I  am  sorry 
to  say  that  the  former  has  been  very  poor  this  year,  owing  to  the  continuing 
warm  weather,  although  plenty  of  ducks  can  be  seen  on  Lake  Erie  and  Lake  St. 
Clair.  The  only  good  shooting  which  came  under  my  observation  was  at  Erie 
Eau,  Kent  County,  which  will  be  for  many  years  a  "  Sportsman's  Paradise." 

I  am  pleased  to  inform  you  that  the  State  of  Michigan  has  adopted  similar 
laws  to  those  of  Ontario,  and  hereafter  spring  shooting  is  prohibited,  and  also 
shooting  from  steam  yachts.  The  American  game  warden  has  oftered  his  assist- 
ance to  me  in  the  future,  which  will  be  a  great  help,  and  has  already  prosecuted 
parties  for  shooting  from  steam  j^achts  in  the  Detroit  River,  which  he  patrols 
with  a  steam  launch. 

I  have  been  requested  by  many  sportsmen  to  lay  before  you  the  consideration 
of  the  changing  of  season  for  duck  shooting,  the  change  from  the  1st  to  the  1 5th 
of  September  and  extending  it  to  the  31st  of  December,  claiming  that  the  latter 
part  would  give  the  sportsmen  better  chance  for  river  shooting. 

Extra  note. — Large  flights  of  ducks  have  lately  been  coming  from  the  north. 
Mallards  by  thousands  in  Lake  St.  Clair  arrived  between  the  19th  and  the  25th 
of  November. 

Quail  are  plentiful  in  the  counties  of  Essex,  Kent  and  Lambton,  and  more 
birds  have  been  shot  this  year  than  any  year  previous.  A  great  many  farmers 
think  the  season  is  too  long,  and  would  hail  a  change  with  pleasure.  The  recom- 
mendation of  the  Commissioners  last  year  was  looked  upon  as  a  wise  one,  and 
hope  that  it  will  be  adopted,  making  open  season  for  quail  from  INovember  1st 
till  December  Loth.  I  have  sent  you  some  newspaper  clippings,  parties  complain- 
ing about  railroad  employees  exporting  game,  but  no  proof  can  be  had  to  warrant 
a  conviction,  as  it  is  mostly  based  on  hear  say. 

All  complaints  sent  to  me  by  letter  are  promply  attended  to  when  signed  by 
the  writer,  but  without  signature  I  cannot  make  a  conviction. 

Partridge  and  snipe  are  generally  not  very  plentiful  in  this  locality,  yet  good 
shooting  and  plenty  of  birds  can  be  found  back  of  Marshfield,  in  the  Camp  Palmer 
District,  Colchester  North,  and  also  back  of  Renwich  on  the  L.  E.  &  D.  R.  R.  The 
birds  have  been  spared  owing  to  the  dry  season,  and  no  reports  of  large  bags  have 
come  under  my  notice. 

The  best  snipe  shooting  is  along  the  Thames  River,  between  Jannettes  Creek 
and  Tilbury,  where  I  have  seen  several  large  flocks  in  driving  throughout  that 
part  of  the  country. 

I  hope  the  Pelee  Islanders  will  succeed  in  getting  partridge  from  the  Park 
for  propagation.  They  are  willing  to  pay  for  them.  Application  for  the  same 
has  been  made  also  for  black  squirrels.  Pelee  has  plenU'  of  quail  and  rabbits, 
and  by  adding  partridges  and  squirrels  it  will  in  time  be  a  great  attraction  to  the 
sportsmen,  and  as  valuable  as  their  fishing  clubs. 

Deer  in  Essex  are  gradually  increasing,  since  the  Order-in-Council  was  pass- 
ed protecting  them  for  ten  years.  Quite  a  few  fawns  have  been  seen  during  the 
early  summer,  and  no  complaint  up  till  now  has  been  received  by  me.  The 
sportsmen  of  Colchester  give  all  their  aid  for  protection,  and  also  Mr.  Walker, 
who  owns  large  tracts  of  land  in  that  district.  I  shall  take  a  run  through  there 
as  soon  as  a  little  snow  comes,  and  if  anything  of  importance  turns  up,  will 
report  to  you. 

Turkey  in  Kent.  I  am  sorry  that  I  cannot  give  a  v^r}^  positive  report  regard- 
ing turkey,  owing  to  my  report  being  a  month  earlier  than  other  j^ears,  but  have 

14 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30).  A.  1898 


been  informed  by  reliable  parties  that  they  are  holding  their  own,  and  that  the 
Indians  have  not  molested  them  yet.  I  shall  make  a  special  report  as  regards 
these  game  birds  later  on,  and  send  you  a  statement  of  the  same. 

Non-residents  License  Forms.  I  would  recommend  that  you  add  a  clause  in 
your  license  form,  that  all  parties  who  wilfully  and  knowingly  harbor  non-resident 
hunters  or  poachers,  will  be  held  liable  for  the  present  penalty  attached  to  the 
non-resident  clause.  I  believe  that  this  clause  will  do  good  and  less  perjury  will 
be  committed,  as  many  foreigners  pass  themselves  as  Canadians  during  the  hunt- 
ing season  and  keep  in  the  outlying  districts,  away  from  villages  and  towns,  com- 
ing on  the  early  train  and  leaving  on  the  late  one,  and  get  gun  and  dogs  on  this 
side  of  the  river,  and  therefore  make  it  very  difficult  to  establish  proof  regarding 
these  poachers,  who  travel  under  false  name  and  country. 

There  has  not  been  a  great  deal  of  complaint  from  the  Anderdon  members 
as  regards  violation  from  the  Wyandotte  and  Ecosse.  I  have  patrolled  the  same 
quite  often  between  Fighting  Island  and  Turkey  Island,  and  Canard  river.  Mr. 
William  Fountain,  keeper  of  Fighting  Island,  has  been  very  helpful,  and  assisted 
me  to  keep  away  poachers.  I  believe  that  the  people  of  Petite  Cote  have  not 
sent  many  complaints  this  year. 

I  shall  give  the  ship  canal  of  St.  Clair  Lake  some  attention  for  the  balance  of 
this  year,  and  also  the  clubs,  as  I  have  not  received  the  amount  of  revenue  due 
to  the  Government. 

Detroit  River  Fisheries.  Mr.  Parker,  of  the  Government  Fish  Hatchery  at 
Sandwich,  is  busy  catching  whitefish  for  spawning  purposes.  The  general  catch 
is  small  compared  with  some  j^ears,  although  some  good  catches  have  been  made 
by  some  of  the  fisheries.  It  is  to  be  hoped  that  the  jurisdiction  regarding  lakes  and 
rivers  fisheries  will  soon  be  settled,  and  that  a  law  will  be  enacted  prohibiting 
seine  fishing  in  inland  bays,  which  should  be  left  for  hook  and  line  fishing 
absolutely,  thus  protecting  our  bass,  the  gamest  fish  of  the  Western  district. 

The  people  of  Mitchell's  Bay  look  forward  to  this  session  of  Parliament  for 
such  law  to  be  passed,  and  that  the  efforts  of  Mr.  W.  B.  Wells,  of  Chatham, 
will  bear  fruit  regarding  our  fisheries. 

Capt.  Meloche  of  the  fishery  yacht  wants  it  stated,  and  wishes  to  make  a 
proposition  to  the  Government  for  using  the  yacht  part  of  the  time  foi'  patrolling 
the  river  when  not  used  by  the  hatchery.  Perhaps  some  arrangement  no  doubt 
could  be  made,  between  the  Chief  Game  Warden  and  parties  concerned,  which 
will  give  great  satisfaction  and  aid  to  me. 

I  am,  Sir, 

Your  obedient  servant, 

F.  C.  QUALLINS, 

Warden. 


E.  TiNSLEY,  Esq.,  Dunnville,  December  12th,  1897. 

Chief  W'lrden. 

Sir, — I  have  the  honour  of  submitting  this  my  sixth  annual  report.  The 
close  of  the  past  season  continues  to  show  the  very  favourable  effect  of  game 
protection. 

The  open  season  for  duck  is  much  too  early  in  my  district.  It  would  be 
advisable  to  extend  the  close  season  up  to  the  20th  of  September,  or,  if  possible, 

15 


61  Victoria  Sessional  Papers  (No.  30).  A.  189& 


the  1st  of  October.  Many,  if  not  the  majority  of  our  local  ducks  are  very 
immature  and  busy  feeding  and  growino-  up  to  the  1st  of  October,  and  they 
should  not  be  disturbed  up  to  this  date,  while  the  northern  ducks  do  not 
commence  to  migrate  south  to  any  extent  till  about  October.  Another  cogent 
reason  for  extending  the  close  season  to  the  1st  of  October  is  that  poachers,  boys 
and  others,  who  lack  the  true  instinct  of  sportsmen  take  advantage  of  being  on  the 
ground  with  their  guns  to  kill  all  the  other  varieties  of  game  which  do  not  come 
in  till  the  15th  and  later.  In  fact  a  very  large  majority  of  sportsmen  recommend 
the  change  to  a  much  later  date,  and  to  have  the  .season  open  for  all  our  game 
birds  at  the  same  date,  except  quail  and  turkeys,  which  might  remain  as  at 
present. 

American  poachers  are  still  in  the  habit  of  shooting  from  steam  yachts  along 
the  Niagara  River  and  the  north  shore  of  Lake  Ontario.  I  find  that  it  is  next 
to  impossible  to  capture  this  class  of  poachers  without  a  small  steam  yacht  of 
shallow  draught  to  patrol  the  river,  lake  shores,  and  bays,  at  certain  seasons  when 
the  ducks  frequent  these  places. 

It  is  also  impossible  to  enforce  the  law  around  Long  Point,  and  in  the  bay 
off  Port  Rowan  between  Long  and  Turkey  Point,  without  the  help  of  a  steamer 
of  Jight  draught  and  a  speed  of  ten  to  twelve  knots  an  hour.  In  this  bay  the 
steam  and  sail  yacht  poachers  simply  have  things  their  own  way,  a  row  boat 
being  useless  to  capture  them  unless  the  Warden  knew  every  man  he  saw  in  the 
act  of  poaching,  which  he  does  not.  I  think  the  Commissioners  should  strongly 
advise  the  Government  to  place  at  the  disposal  of  the  Wardens  of  the  three 
south-western  districts  at  least  one  good  high  speed,  light  draught  steam  yacht, 
which  would  at  once  overcome  all  our  difficulties  in  regard  to  this  class  of  law 
breakers;  also,  I  hope  the  Commis-sioners  will  urge  the  close  season  on  the  cotton- 
tail rabbit,  except  where  it  is  found  in  the  act  of  committing  damage  in  gardens 
or  young  orchards. 

Partridges,  quail,  plover,  and  woodcock  were  fairly  plentiful  this  year,  and 
would  be  much  more  so  if  the  cottontail  hunters  all  the  year  round  were  stopped. 
Black  squirrels  in  good  supply  in  sections  where  their  natural  food,  nuts,  etc., 
were  plentiful.     Grey  squirrels  still  ver3'^  scarce. 

I  have  the  honour  to  be,  Sir. 

Your  obedient  servant, 

J.  A.  GILL, 

Warden. 


Copy  of  an  Order  in  Council    .approved   by  Colonel   Sir  Casimer   Stanislaus  Gzowski, 

K.C.M.G.,  Administrator  of  the  Government  of  the  Province  of 

Ontario,  the  22nd  day  of  January,  A.D.  1897. 

Upon  consideration  of  the  re])ort  of  the  Honourable  the  Commissioner  of  Crown  Lands, 
dated  19th  January,  1897,  the  *  ouimittee  of  Council  advise  that  the  Commissioner  be  authorized 
to  refund  license  fees  paid  by  settlers  in  the  northern  parts  of  the  Province,  where  it  may  be 
established  to  the  satisfaction  of  the  Chief  Game  Warden  that  sucli  refunds  come  within  the 
class  of  cases  mentioned  in  the  Commissioner's  report,  and  that  any  refunds  of  license  fees- 
already  made  in  such  cases  be  ratified  and  confirnied. 

Certified, 

-  J.  LONSDALE  CAPREOL, 

Asst.  Clerk,  Executive  Council. 

16 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30).  A.  189  8 


€opY  OF  AX  Order  ln  Council   approved   by   Colonel   Sir   Casimer  Stanislaus  Gzowski, 

K.C.M.G.,  Administrator  of  the  Government  of  the  Province  of 

Ontario,  the  12th  day  of  March,  A.D.  1897. 

L  ,  .1  the  recommendation  of  the  Honourable  the  Commissioner  of  Crown  Lands,  the  Com- 
mittee of  Council  advise  that  the  salary  of  Game  Warden  John  Gill  be  increased  from  three 
hundred  dollars  ($300)  to  three  hundred  and  fifty  dollars  ($350),  to  take  effect  from  the  1st  day 
of  January,  1897- 

Certified, 

J.  LONSDALE  CAPREOL, 

Asst.  Clerk,  Executive  Council. 


Copy   of   an   Order   in   Council   approved   by   His   Honour   the   Lieutenant-Governor, 

the  6th  day  of  May,  A.D.  1897. 

Referring  to  the  Order  in  Council  of  22nd  January,  1897,  and  upon  the  recommendation  of 
he  Honourable  the  Commissioner  of  Crown  Lands,  the  Committee  of  Council  advise  that  the 
persons  named  in  the  accompanying  schedules  be  paid  refunds  of  two  dollars  ($2)  each,  being 
the  license  fees  paid  by  them  for  deer  shooting  licenses  during  the  open  season  of  1896. 

Certified, 

J.  LONSDALE  CAPREOL, 

Asst.  Clerk,  Executive  Council. 


<^opv  OF  an  Order  in  Council  approved  of  by  His   Honour  the  Lieutenant-Governor, 

THE  8th  day  OF  May,  A.D.  1897. 

Upon  consideration  of  the  report  of  the  Honourable  the  Attorney-General,  dated  5th  May, 
1897,  His  Bonour  the  Lieutenant-Governor,  by  and  with  the  advice  of  the  Executive  Council  of 
Ontario,  has  been  pleased  to  order,  and  it  is  hereby  ordered  that,  any  penalty  alleged  to  have 
been  incurred  by  H.  K.  Smith,  of  the  City  of  Belleville,  Game  Warden,  for  not  returning  the 
conviction  of  one  James  Johnston,  made  by  him  under  "The  Game  Protection  Act,  1893," 
pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  chapter  76  of  the  Revised  Statutes  of  Ontario,  be  remitted. 

Certified, 

J.  LONSDALE  CAPREOL, 

Asst.  Clerk,  Executive  Council. 


Copy  of   an   Order   in   Council   approved   by    His   Honour   the    Lieutenant-Governor, 
the  20rh  day  of  september,  a.d.  1897. 

His  Honour  the  Lieutenant-Governor,  having  had  under  consideration  the  report  of  the 
Honourable  the  Attorney-General,  dated  15th  September,  1897,  has,  upon  the  advice  of  the 
Executive  Council  of  Ontario,  been  pleased  to  order,  and  it  is  hereby  ordered,  that  the  term  of 
imprisonment  of  sixty  days  for  which  John  Patterson,  junior,  Richard  Patterson,  William  Pat- 
terson, Martin  Bailey,  Richard  Bailey,  and  Thomas  Bailey  were  sentenced,  under  a  conviction 
dated  28th  August  last,  at  the  Town  of  Bracebridge,  for  hunting  deer  during  the  close  season, 
be  reduced  to  thirty  days. 

Certified, 

J.  R.  CART  WRIGHT, 

Clei'k,  Executive  Council. 


Copy  of  an  Order  in  Council  approved  by  His  Honour  the  Lieutenant-Governor,  the 

14th  DAY'  of  October,  A.D.  1897. 

Upon  the  recommendation  of  the  Honourable  the  Cooimissioner  of  Crown  Lands,  the  Com- 
mittee of  Council  advise  that  pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  Section  3  of  60  Victoria,  Chapter  54, 
amending  "The  Ontario  Game  Protection  Act,  1893,"  members  of  the  Provincial  Police   Force 

2  G.F.  17 


61  Victoria  Sessional  Papers  (No.  30).  A.  189  8 


have  conferred  upon  them  and  be  authorized  to  exercise  the  powers  and  authority  given  to  the 
Chief  Game  and  Fish  Warden,  and  the  other  Game  and  Fish  Vardens  by  sub-sections  2  and  3 
of  Section  12  of  the  said  Ontario  Game  Protection  Act,  1893. 

Certified. 

J.  LOXSDALE  CAPREOL, 

Asst.  Clerk,  Executive  Councih 


Copy  of  ax  Order  in  Council  approved  by  His  Honour  the  Lieutenant-Governor,  the 

14th  day  of  October,  AD.  1897. 

Upon  consideration  of  the  report  of  the  Honourable  the  Commissioner  of  Crown  Lands,  dated 
12th  October,  1897,  the  Committee  of  Council  advise  that  settlers'  permits  to  hunt  deer,  in  the 
form  hereto  attached,  be  granted  to  bona  fide  settlers  in  the  following  territory,  being  portions 
of  the  Province  recommended  by  the  Chief  Game  Warden,  namely  : — 

The  Township  of  Matchedash,  in  the  County  of  Simcoe  ; 

The  District  of  Muskoka  ; 

The  District  of  Pai-rj^  Sound  ; 

The  District  of  Nipissing,  and  that  portion  of  the  Province  to  the  west  thereof  and  to  the 
north  of  Lakes  Superior  and  Huron  ; 

The  north  lialf  of  thf^  To\vnship  of  Rama,  County  of  Ontario  ; 

That  portion  of  the  County  "f  Victoria  including  and  lying  north  of  the  ToAvnships  of 
Carden,  Bexley  and  Somerville,  and  including  the  whole  of  the  District  of  Haliburton  ; 

That  part  of  the  County  of  Peterborough  including  and  lying  north  of  the  north  half  of  the 
Township  of  Harvey,  the  Township  of  Burleigh,  and  tlie  north  half  of  the  Township  of  Belmont. 

That  part  of  the  County  of  Hastings  including  and  lying  north  of  the  north  halves  of  the 
Townships  of  Marmora,  Madoc  and  Elzevir  ; 

That  part  of  i.he  County  of  Addington  inclnding  ?nd  lying  north  of  the  Township  of 
Kaladar  ; 

That  part  of  the  County  of  Frontenac  including  and  lying  to  the  north  of  the  Townships  of 
Kennebec,  Olden,  and  Oso  ; 

That  part  of  the  County  of  Lanark  including  the  Townships  of  North  Sherbrooke,  Lavant, 
and  Darlington  ; 

That  part  of  the  County  of  Renfrew  including  and  lying  to  the  west  and  north-west  of  the 
following  Townships  :  Blythfield,  Brougham,  Grattan,  Wilberforce,  Alice,  and  Petewawa. 

The  Committee  further  advise  that  residents  in  towns  and  villages  in  the  above  exempted 
areas  of  the  Province  shall  not  be  exempted  under  the  foregoing  provisions  of  the  Game  Laws, 
but  that  such  exemptions  shall  apply  only  to  the  bona  fide  settler  in  the  rural  districts. 

And  the  Committee  further  advise  that  in  connection  with  the  issuing  of  the  said  permits, 
power  be  given  to  the  local  issuers  thereof  in  various  portions  of  the  exempted  territory  to  charge 
a  fee  not  exceeding  twenty-five  cents  in  the  case  of  each  permit  actually  issued,  and  that  the 
provisions  hereof  for  exemption  from  the  necessity  of  taking  out  the  regular  license  to  shoot  deer 
be  .subject  to  this  provision  authorizing  the  imposition  of  this  small  fee  by  the  issuers  of  the  .said 
permits. 

Certified. 

J.  LONSDALE  CAPREOL, 

Asst.  Clerk,  Executive  Council. 


Copy  of  an  Order  in  Council  approved  by  His  Honour  the  Lieutenant-Governor,  the 

17th  day  of  November,  A.D.  1897. 

Upon  the  recommendation  of  the  Honourable  the  Commissioner  of  Crown  Lands,  the  Com- 
mittee of  Council  advise  that  Mr.  James  Dickson,  of  Fenelon  Falls,  County  of  Victoria,  and  Mr. 
W.  J.  Parish,  of  Athens,  County  of  Leeds,  be  re-appointed  Commissioners  under  "  The  Ontario 
Game  Protection  Act,"  their  terms  having  expired  on  the  first  day  of  April  last. 

Certified. 

.J.  LONSDALE  CAPREOL, 

Asst.  Clerk,  Executive  Council. 

18 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.    30.  A.  1898 


Shooting  Licenses  Issued  to  Foreign  Sportsmen,  1897. 

J    Bedoe St.  Clair  Flats,  Mich. 

W.  J.  Higham Detroit,  Mich. 

M.  M.  Stanton 

W.  P.  Hutchins "  ''        ,^.  , 

C.  Hutchins St.  Olair  Flats,  Mich. 

F.  H.  Walker Detroit,  Mich. 

Orien  Scatten • '  ,/,  •  , 

Fred.  Bedore St.  Clair  Flats,  Mich. 

Samuel  Baugh Detroit,  Mich. 

Frank  Eddy 

Charles  Campbell •      "  ' ' 

J.  L.  Rhoards Lockport,  N.Y. 

L.  D.  Smalley Boston,  Mass. 

G.  N.  Smalley "  ;; 

George  Farmer Montreal,  Que, 

Charles  Meredith "       _^;^' 

A.  J.  Davies Lachme,  P.Q. 

D.  Robertson Montreal,  P.g. 

L.  Nichols 

E.  G.  Wyckofr Hatche,  N.Y. 

J.  A.  Putman Cape  Vincent,  N.Y. 

Louis  Dorien New  York,  N.Y. 

Albert  Buckman ".  ' 

A.  G.  Brush Detroit,  Mich. 

.J.  Evarts  Tracy -New  York    N. Y. 

P.  McKenzie Montreal.  P.Q. 

S.  W.  Rodman Nahant,  Mass. 

B.  F.  Dutton Boston,         " 

T.  S!  Hathaway Mew  Bedford,  Mass. 

Lawrence  Curtis Boston,  Mass. 

John  T.  Lord New  YoA-,  N.Y. 

Frank  Caswell Niagara  Falls,  N.  \  . 

A.   Hemenway Boston,  Mass. 

H   C.  Hagerty Rochester,  N.Y. 

G.  H    Richards Boston,  Mass. 

A.  S.  White Syracuse.  N.Y. 

W.  B.  Dickerman New  York,    " 

Dean  Sage Albany,  " 

James  McAfee Pittsburg,  Pa. 

T.  B.  Hutchinson 

F.  W.  Gill 

G.  C.  Hartman 

S.  H.  McKee "    ^ 

Major  R.  C.  Cokayne-Frith England. 

Captain  F.  L.  Campbell England. 

E.  Winter Pittsburg,  Pa. 

James  Grove 

Isaacs Niagara  Falls,   N.Y. 

Donald  McLean Detroit. 

H.  Y.  Meredith '|  f'-  ■ -^ 

James  McMillan " 

R.  B.  Burrell Wyandotte,  Mich. 

M.  P.  Hutchins Detroit, 

List  of  Deputy  Wardens  by  Counties. 

Algoma. 

Anderson,  Alexander Pearl  River,  C.P.R. 

Brown,   Frank Port  Arthur 

Bole,  Duncan Sault  Ste.  Marie. 

Black,  Andrew Richard's  Landing. 

19 


eiVictoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30).  A.  1898 


Congrave,  Geo.  (care  of  Hugh  Munro)  . .    Port  Arthur 

Emmons   John Rat  Portage." 

rraser,  D a         a 

Geddes,  Thomas  R ."...■.'.■.■.■.■ .' .' .' .' ." ." .' .' .' ."  .Jack  Fish  Bay. 

Gihiiour,  Wm g^ult  Ste.  Marie. 

Gardnier   J , Rat  Portage. 

Harris,  John Sault  Ste.  Marie. 

?i!f "'.'  ^i'" Thessalon. 

Little,  J .  T         Iron  Bridge. 

^'5^'?"' J   ^ Tekkummlh. 

McKirdy,  Wm   Nepigon. 

Patterson   M.J Webbwood . 

Riley,  Edward Port  Arthur. 

P  ^  'w  A^''^ Sault  Ste   Marie. 

Reid  W.D. Thompson. 

Smith,  Alfred  Bird Schrieber. 

Jhalen,  Joseph Port  Arthur. 

Wood.s,  J.  M Thessalon. 

HaSnes^,*  m'  .' ." .' .' .' : .' Silver  Lake,  Manitoulin  Island 

g'^'g'  -^  ;;  •  •  •  • Beaver  Mine. 

Hymer,  G a         ^ 

g^""^"'  T ■.".■.  .■.■.■.■.;.■.■.■ ;:;::::: ;  :Muriiia. 

Uyman,  G a 

^P-'^iD     ■■ ■    '''^:'. '.■.'.'.■.■.■.■:.'.■.::.■.' .W'siate  River. 

Sril:::: -foTl^^tr*- 

T>  -k  -T  ort  \\  illiam. 

ftr^lV Port  Arthur. 

Lialonde  E k         1 1 

Grattan,  H    .  .  .  .  n         n 


McIwraith,J ^r     ■ 

™^«^'J^ Schrieber. 

^'^'^^^^  T Manitowanin. 

Tennant,  D Uplands 

Carmichael,  A.  R <inr1Knvlr' 

T"«.K.w :::::.:::::::::::copperciiff. 


Addingto7i. 
Donaldson,  William  J Donaldson's  Mills. 

Bruce. 

Armstrong,  Jo.sepli Kinloss. 

Barie.y,  Edward Li^„^3  ^ead. 

Farquharson   .Tc^n Teeswater. 

Gardiner,  John  H Lucknow. 

Grey,  ^\  e.sley Chesley. 

Henry,  George p^^  Elgin. 

Henderson,  James Kincirdine 

nf rT'  ^w  ^'^ ■.■.■.■.■.■.■::::::■ :  waikerton. 

Hogg,  ^\  m    W Taislev 

Lawson,  W.  H.  r>    i    tr      i 

Millions.  Robert.. ■■■::.■: •■■■•^S.^.T.- 

Manly,  David  :^alkerton. 

Tvr^TT-i         TT     1 Riversdale. 

McKillopHugh Hepworth. 

Mclvor,  John .  Mclvor 

McFarlane,  Duncan '  '  r„,i  r„_ 

McDonald,  Donald rSipv     ' 

Pratt    John  -tvipiey. 

Richards,  cl;;;  x  ■:::::: : fam'^'"^"'- 

Scott,  John .'.■.■.'.'.■.■  .Dyer's  Ba.y. 

20 


i 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No    30)  A.  1898 


Brant. 

Montgomery,  C.  A Brantford. 

McGlaughlin,  Geo.  W " 

Irving,  Robert  P Glenniorris. 

Garleton. 

St.  George,  George Ottawa. 

Taylor,  A.  H 

Portt,  Robert  L South  March. 

JDtifferin. 

Durkio,  Wm Bowling  Green. 

Gordon,  James , Monticello. 

Aubbard,  James  J Orangeville. 

Marshall,  James  E Shelburne. 

Durham. 
Carson,  J Durham. 

^  Du7idas. 

Cameron,  Lachlin Iroquois. 

Price,  James Inkerman. 

Elgin. 

Fairbrother,  Wm St.  Thomas. 

Fowler,  .Jacob Fin<ml. 

Hannen,  Isaac Union. 

Hopkins,  John . St.  Thomas. 

Huffman,  .Jeremiah Aylmer. 

Hammond,  John " 

Kirkpatrick,  Donald West  Lome. 

Miller,  Robert Lawrence  Station, 

Neely,  John  R Fingal. 

Philpott,  Wm.  J lona. 

Thornton,  Henry St.  Thomas. 

Gardiner,   H Morpeth. 

Chute,  Ernest  A Lakeview 

Goodall,  James Wallacetown. 

Essex. 

Ontago,  Daniel Sandwich. 

Banks,  Anthony Harrow. 

Britt,  G Wheatley. 

Cornette,  Chas.  F Belle  River. 

Campbell,  Duncan  C Staples. 

TeUer,  Wolfe Walkerville. 

Gignac,  Horace Gordon. 

Gormley,  John Essex. 

Holland,  Hugh Comber. 

Hillman,  Jonas Hillman. 

Ives,  Arthur , Leamington. 

King,  George Ruthven. 

Lindsay,  William   Comber. 

Lemaitre,  Seraphrin Tecumseth. 

21 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  30 ).  A.  1898 


Marters,  AUios Sandwich. 

Meloche,  Joseph , " 

Robert,  Joseph " 

Rivard,  Napoleon Tecumseth. 

Soulliere,  Stephen " 

White,  James  H Pelee  Island. 

Walker,  Noll St.  Joachim. 

Louchereau,  Stephen St.  Clair  Siding. 

Mills,  Chas Wheatley. 

Reid,  R Blji^hewood. 

Hugill,  W Staples. 

Frontenac, 

Albertson,  George Verona. 

Brickwood,  James  H     Kingston. 

Burke,  Robert,  Jr Clarendon  Station. 

Clark,  Norman Mississippi. 

Darcy,  Sydney  W Murvale. 

Dermott,  J.  A     Tichborne. 

Dowker,  W"m.  S Harrowsmith. 

Gilbert,  Robert Ompah . 

Gates,  George Westbrook. 

Greenwood,  George   Wolfe  Island. 

HaUiday,  F Mississippi  Station. 

Martin,  John Barriefield. 

Pallier,  Alexander Wilmur. 

Smoke,  Edward  H Desert  Lake. 

Smith,  David  John    Parkham. 

Sly,  Henry Verona. 

Tryon,  Levi Sharbot  Lake. 

Tallon,  James Arden. 

Theobald,  John  N Kingston. 

Vaness,  Marshall   Harlow. 

Walker,  Nelson : Cataraqui. 

Woods,  J.  M Arden. 

Woodman,  W.  G    Allen  (Wolfe  Island). 

York,  E.  M Belbock. 

Grey. 

McKnight,  Thomas   Dornach. 

Campbell,  Malcolm    Hanover. 

Holmes,  Geo.  B Walter's  Falls. 

Long,  William    Kolapore. 

Simmons,  M.  H Oxenden. 

Leigman,  Ludwig Neustadt. 

Wilson,  William  H    Shouldice. 

Myers,  J Orchard. 

Munshaw,  P    Eugenia. 

Webb,  J Vandeleur. 

Hickling.  J Maxwell. 

Peterson,  W.  H Dundalk. 

Glengarry. 

Clark,  James Dominionville. 

Dickson,  Daniel WiUiarastown. 

Dunn,  Ambrose South  Lancaster. 

McGillivray,  Donald  W Dalkeith. 

McNaughton,  J.  P     Laggan. 

McRae,  Donald  C North  Lancaster. 

Stewart,  M.  W Greenfield. 

Pepin,  E Bainsville. 

Sutherland,  Hugh " 

22 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No    30).  A.  1898 


Hastings. 

Airhart,  Geo.  W     Stirling. 

Adams,  George   H  ermon. 

Barr,  Peter Maynooth. 

Brinklow,  Heniy    Ormsby. 

Bii-rel,  James    Glanmire. 

Bowel,  W.  .T    Tweed. 

Faulkner,  Dr.  D.  W Foxboro. 

Faulkner,  Dr.  G.  W Stirling. 

Foster,  Alexander Egan  Creek. 

Mairs,  James  H Bridgewatei-. 

Rupert,  Thomas   Springbrook. 

Speck,  William Bridgewater. 

Sweet,  VV.  H Bancroft. 

Sweet,  W.  James Bancroft. 

Tivy,  Richard  S Coe  Hill. 

Unwin,  Walker Bannockburn. 

Hubbell,  B.  C     Marmora. 

Taylor,  J Murchison. 

Halton. 

Bradley,  Stinson    Milton. 

Brown,  Robert  M Campbellville. 

Crawford,  Murray Campbellville. 

Johnson,  Walter  N    Milton. 

Lawson,  John   : Acton. 

Racey,  C.  S Milton. 

Saunders,  Edward  G Agerton. 

Wilson,  James    Bronte. 

Huron,. 

Creech,  James     Exeter. 

Dalton,  Morgan Kingsbridge. 

Gill,  J  ohn    Exeter. 

Horton,  George .   Gorrie. 

Naftal,  Chas   J.  S. Goderich. 

Rider,  J   Clinton. 

Ross,  John  M Blyth. 

Sands,  John    Saltford. 

Seager,  Charles Goderich. 

Scott,  Alex Westfield. 

Watt,  R  Brussels 

Halibiirtoi. 

Day,  Joseph    Essonville. 

Paul,  Joseph   Haliburton. 

Turnbull,  James     Minden. 

Haldimand: 

Chrysler,  Robert    North  Cayuga. 

Everingham,  Wm Canfield. 

Farrell,  John Cayuga 

Winslow,  Martin    Dunnville. 

Kent. 

Boles,  Gordon     Chatham. 

Crouch,  Samuel Ridgetown. 

Eberts,  Frank  G Chatham. 

23 


<5l  Victoria  Sessional  Papers  (No.  30).  A.  1898 


Johnson,  W.  J Fargo. 

Gardiner,  Isaac Morpeth 

Kime,  George Big  Point. 

Monday,  Frederick    Mitchell's  Bay. 

Merritt,  Asa    Omrj\ 

McCollum,  Thomas    Morpeth. 

Robertson,   Victor Chatham. 

Southgate,  R.  M    Wallaceburg. 

Thomas,  Joseph Williams. 

Fisher,  B Wallaceburg. 

McGregor,  J.   D Chatham. 

Dagneau,  David Mitchell's  Bay. 

Lambton. 

Blair,  William Port.  Lambton. 

Bell,  John   Port  Franks. 

Deans,  James Inwood. 

Everest,  G.  M Arkona. 

Kennedy,  Joseph Port  Lambton. 

Miller,  Frank Port  Franks. 

Mott,  Edwin  L  Alvinston. 

Taylor,  J.  P    Watford. 

Mountain,  H Walpole  Island. 

Sarvis,  A .  E    Samia. 

Lanark. 

Deacon,  Ephraim   Bohngbroke. 

Farnall,  William    Smith's  Falls. 

Mair,  David  J Lanark. 

Kirkwood,  James  W Levant  Station. 

Millford,  R Carp,  ^f.f^''"'"? 

Patterson,  J.  R Christie^Lake. 

Leeds. 

Bilton,  George Newboro'. 

Gibson,  John  R Mallorytown. 

Lappin,  J.J Westport. 

Murchie,  Robert W'ilstead. 

Smith,  Justus Charleston. 

Sly,  Lester Morton. 

Sliter,  A.  E Morton. 

Stone,  W Gananoque. 

Mathen,  H Brockville. 

Lennox. 

HuflF,  Hiram  W Napanee. 

Lincoln. 

McPherson,  James St.  Ann's. 

Kennedy,  C.  A Smithville. 

Middlesex. 

McCann,-  Peter London, 

Beverly,  John Dorchester  Station. 

Dixon,  Michael Cashmere. 

McConnell   Wayland  F '. Gladstone. 

O'Neill,  W.  H Dorchester. 

Ralph,  Thos.  J Ballymute. 

24 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (]So.  '30 }  A.  1898 


Ward,  R.  W London  West. 

Williams,  Alfred  M Lobo. 

Foreman,  J Dorchester  Station. 

Heney,  J London  West. 

Monck. 

Thompson,  W Port  Maitland. 

McDowell,  Andrew Stromness. 

Moore,  Daniel Perry  Station. 

Muskoka. 

Butler,  C.  F Point  Kaye. 

Brown,  Robt.  D Port  Sydney. 

Brooks,  Edgar,  Jr Huntsville. 

Berry,  William Walkers'  Point. 

Bradley,  Genos Beaumaris. 

Chapman,  Chas.  IS Huntsville. 

Crompton,  W.  B Aspdin. 

Dart,  Stephen Dorset. 

Davidson.  E.  M Brackenrig. 

Foreman,  Walter .• Port  Carling. 

Gouldie,  E   J Dwight. 

Gohm,  William Bracebridge. 

Grenke,  Gustav Rosseau. 

Henderson,  Charles Bracebridge. 

Harbour,  Joseph Whiteside. 

Hey,  Joseph , Bracebridge. 

Laurence,  John Shannon  Hall. 

McLeod  John Hammill's  Point. 

Paget,  George   Huntsville. 

Smith,  J.  D Kilworthy. 

Stephens,  George Shannon  Hall. 

Shannon,  Peter Port  Carling. 

Traves,  Elias  H Fraserburg. 

Taylor,  C.  N Gravenhurst. 

Thornton,  Richard Huntsville. 

Wood,  Michael Clevelands". 

Warne,  Francis,  P Baysville. 

Warden,  John Bracebridge. 

Easton,  R.  T Whitoff. 

Hays,  J Parry  Sound. 

Harrison,  J Whitstone. 

Smith,  R Golden  Valley. 

Traves,  T Fraserburg. 

Norfolk. 

Baker,  Huit WinghamJCentre. 

BroAvn,   Isaiah Port  Rowan. 

Barrett,  A.  P Port  Royal. 

Clark,  Benjamin Simcoe. 

Duncan,  James  L Forestville. 

Dowswell,  John Lynedoch. 

Ewing,  Alex.  B Waterford. 

Fick,  Jerome  B Port  Dover. 

Hambley,  William  E Rockwood. 

Kramer,  Conrad .Delhi. 

Mickenow,  W.  F Simcoe. 

Randall,  Robert Bookton. 

NoHhiimberland. 

Diamond,  T Cobourg. 

Field,   Cyrus  W Cobourg. 

Fairbanks,  Chas.  S    Cobourc. 

25 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30  .  A   1898 


Merrian,  H.  N   Harwood. 

Row,  George Murray  P.  O. 

Weblock,  James Beiisfort. 

Wallace,  Thomas    Gore's  Landing. 

Hicks,  E.  C Baltimore. 

Terrill,  Esli Wooler. 

Aiuslie,  Alfred    Trent  Bridge. 

Nipissing. 

Armstrong,  John Haileybury. 

Bailey,  John   North  Bay. 

Garrow,  E   .    Nipissing  Junction. 

Huntington,  S.  A North  Bay. 

Jessup,  Robert  Nipissing. 

McNab,  Donald Nipissing. 

Meeks,  Mortimer Whitney. 

Smith,  E Whitney. 

Perant,  I   Bonfield. 

Hill,  W Rutherglen. 

Oxford. 

Cuthbert,  George Woodstock. 

Huntingford,  Henry Woodstock. 

Martin,  Richard   Woodstock. 

Tisdale,  J.  E Woodstock. 

Hobson,  J   Woodstock. 

Thornton,  J.  B Woodstock. 

0)dario. 

Woodworth,  Daniel   Cannington. 

Bagshaw,  Abed  E Vroomanton. 

Frankish,  F.  M Uxbridge. 

Hall,  Maxwell    .  .Longford  Mills. 

Sniber,  James  . Longford  Mills. 

Gordon.  John Pickering. 

Henery,  T.  S Cedardale. 

Miller,  Ai-thur    Seagrave. 

McGrath,  Michael Beaverton. 

McDermott,  George Port  Perry. 

Pettit,  George Port  Perry. 

Sutlifil,  James Prince  Albert. 

Williams,  Charles Glen  Major. 

Remey,  J.  W Dorset. 

Crandall,  M.  L   Port  Perry. 

Steele,  J Uptergrove. 

Prince  Edward. 

Lake,  Stephen    West  Lake. 

Rorabeck,  Athol Craf ton. 

Sprague,  George  G Demorestville. 

Peterborough. 

Hortley,  E.  J Peterborough. 

Moore,  F.  J Laketield. 

Moore,  D.  H Peterborough. 

McWilliams,  J.  B Peterborough. 

Smith,  J.  W. . . Peterborough. 

Wedlock,  Wm Keene. 

Brown,  H.  W Peterborough. 

Crow,  C    Stoney  Lake. 

King,  Noah Havelock. 

Otto,  Wm'; Haliburton. 

Lundy,  R.  B Stoney  Lake. 

2(j 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30).  A.  1898 


Parry  Sound. 

Burns,  C.  W   South  River. 

Butler,  Clarence Trout  Creek. 

Carmichael,  William Powassan. 

Doupe,  Sydney Lawrence  Mills. 

Draycott,  F.  W Ashdown. 

Fry,  Arthur Seguin  Falls. 

French.  Benjamin Dunchurch. 

Greer,  A.  J '. Parry  Sound. 

Groom,  Henry Kearney. 

HoUingshead,  Walter  M. Sprucedale. 

Hall.  Wm.    H   Sprucedale. 

Johnson,  John  A    Parry  Sound. 

Kennedy,  W.  E Magnetawan. 

Le  Brash,  JamesP Maple  Island. 

Mainprise   N Golden  Valley. 

Mitchell,   Robert Cecebe. 

McDonald,  Arch Sundridge, 

McDermott,  G.  Benj Sundridge. 

McGowan,  Wm Parry  Sound. 

McAmmond,  Wm Dunchurch. 

Ricker,  David Commanda. 

King,  J ....  Parry  Sound. 

Brown,  Duncan Starrat. 

Prescottt 

Bonville,  Leon St.  Isidore  de  Prescott. 

Barrett,  John Turnier. 

Cunningham,  A Oendover. 

James.  Richard Alfred. 

La  Belle.  Leonce Curran. 

LeRoy,  Ralph Barb. 

La  Faivre,  Hercule , Le  Faivre. 

Marston,  Lewis  F L'Orignal. 

Martineau,  Joseph Alfred. 

McKercher,  Peter L'Orignal. 

St   Pierre,  Pierre St.  Eugene. 

Scott,  David Riceville. 

Taneck,  Sonis Riceville. 

Feel. 

Rayburn,  John ; Caledou . 

Wal.terhouse,  Edward • Cooksville. 

Perth. 

Climie,  W Listowel. 

Wilton,  R    Stratford. 

Renfreiv. 

Brady,  John    Renfrew. 

Biggs,  William  E Pembroke. 

Briggs,  Aaron Pembroke. 

Coffey,   Vm   Pembroke. 

Halliday,  J ames .  Springtown. 

Johnson,  S.  M    Amprior.        // 

Kennedy,  John Pembroke.    / 

McCagherty,  P Pembroke,  jj 

McDonald,  Alex   Pembroke./ 

Planut,  Xavier  Renfrew. 

Smith.  Robert  R .  E^^anvill/ 

McLaren,  J   Smoke  /    ver. 

Yull,  Wm Calabogie. 

George,  W Barry's  Bay. 

27 


i 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.    30).  A.  1898 


Russell. 

Stewart,  Peter    Grant. 

Sinuoe. 

Kerr,  J Bala. 

Baker,  Daniel Uthoff. 

Bathie,  Edward Cookstown. 

Beardsley,  Alfred  W Barrie. 

CoomlDS,  John Levering. 

Chapman,  James Cookstown. 

Fildey,  George    Cookstown. 

Hiiies,  John Barrie. 

Keams,  George Ivy. 

Kitchen,  Joseph Lovering. 

Muir,  John Cookstown. 

McLaughlin,  James  Anten  Mills. 

Primrose,  Alex Apto. 

Pollock,  Thomas Cookstown. 

Ross.  Joseph Cookstown. 

Regan,  John Orillia. 

Rawson,  Wm Coldwater. 

Somerville,  David Stayner. 

Upton,  George Nicholston. 

Wilson,  J.J Fesserton. 

Silk,  C Torrance. 

Staunton,  T Hamlet. 

Stromberg,  N Torrance. 

Laughlin,  T New  Lowell. 

Reid,  E Everett. 

Campbell,  J Ragged  Uapids. 

Peckman,  G.  C   Alliston. 

Cheesman,  B.  C    Stayner. 

Wood,  P.  V Port  Severn. 

Lynn,  Wm Penetanguishene. 

Pratt,  W Midland. 

Watson,  T.  A Creemore. 

Nixon,  Chris Elmvale. 

Victoria. 

Bowins,  Charles Coboconk. 

Crowe,  Nathaniel Bobcaygeon. 

Dewdney,  Arthur  W Bobcaygeon. 

Daniel  John Balsam. 

Ellis,  J.  A Fenelon  Falls. 

Galloway,  David Moore's  Falls. 

Howie,  John  Bury's  Green. 

Harris,  Noxon    Bobc  'ygeon. 

Jvmkin,   James Fenelon  Falls. 

Lysh,  William Bobcaygeon. 

McArthur,  Donald Manilla. 

Silverthorn,  George Balsam. 

Ray,  John    Kirkfield. 

McArthur,  A.  M Balsam  Grove. 

Arnberg.  Claes   Bobcaygeon. 

Bryan,  Benj Lindsay. 

Wetland. 

Augustine,  Elias Stonebridge. 

Barkhart,  Geo Sherkston. 

Beam,  Horace  H Black  Creek. 

Griffin,  Richard Fort  F  rie. 

Hersley,  Milford Garrison  Road. 

Miller,  Chas.  A Black  Creek. 

28 


L 


eiVictoruv.  Sessional  Papers  (No.   30).  A.  iF^ 


Michener,  Cyrenus Ridguway. 

Neff,  Peter Mai^shville. 

Nixon,  J.  C We'land. 

Page,  A.  E.  O Ridgeway. 

Rose,  Charles,  jr Garrison  Road. 

Risley,  E.  E International  Bridge. 

Teal,  Irwin Ridgeway. 

Teal,  C Ridgeway. 

Wentviorth. 

Gallin,  Warren   Waterdown. 

Raspberry,  Wm  . West  Fkmboro'. 

Graham,   H Hamilton. 

Hazell,  J Hamilton  Beach. 

Anderson,  H.J Bartonville. 

IVaterloo. 

Bulmer,  George .  Elmira. 

Devitt,  John Waterloo. 

Eraser,  Alex New  Hamburg. 

Gillier  Peter   Gait 

Gress,  Philip  Blair. 

Hall,  James H  awksville. 

Mengers.  William St.  Jacob's. 

Mayers,  Frederick Bridgeport. 

Mickers,  Joseph Heidleberg. 

Mc Master.  Thomas Hespeler. 

Stark,  John Hespeler. 

Springess,  Joseph Kossuth. 

Gammon,  W.  E Ayr. 

Riddell,   W , Ayr. 

McCruden,  Robt Gait. 

Hurtlung,  Carl Berlin. 

TVellington. 

Atkinson,  George  Osborn Guelph. 

Gilchrist,  John  W Gillean. 

Hull,  Wellington Erin. 

Love,  James    Guelph. 

Lang,  George Hillsburg. 

McGinnis,  Alex Arkell. 

Robertson,  Thos Kilean. 

Stewart,  Donald Crieff. 

Smith,  George Eden  Mills. 

Stovel,  Thomas Mount  Forest. 

Williams,  Heniy  M Guelph. 

Landoni,  L Dracon. 

Robertson',  C Hillsburg. 

Black,  T Elora. 

Ireland,  Dr Harriston. 

York. 

Hope,  W.  B Toronto. 

Tidsberry,  James  L Coleman. 

Kennedy,  James Toronto. 

Blea,  D  Humber  Bay. 

Sanderson,  W.  H Toronto. 

Humphrey,  P Toronto. 

Province  oj  Quebec. 

*Crowley,  E.  B Montreal. 

*Finme,  Dr.  J.  T , Montreal. 

*  These  officers  have  been  especially  appointed   to  enforce  the  Game   Laws  on  Lake  St. 
Francis,  which  is  partly  in  Ontario  and  partly  in  Quebec. 

29 


61 


V^ictoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  30). 


A.  189  8 


LIST  OF  ISSUERS  OF  DEER  LICENSES. 


Name. 


J.  H.  Willmott .  . , 
William  Kirk.  .  .  .  , 

H.  K.  Smith 

R.  Kimber  Johns  , 

J.  Sharp  

J.  A.  Ellis 

J.  A.  Johnson  .  .  . 

C.  W.  Burns 

H.  K.  Shaw 

S.  A.  Huntington . 

John  Hines 

R.  S.  Scarlet 

John  Regan    

W.  H.  Lawson ... 

W.  Climie 

P. 
J. 
J. 
C. 


M.  Shannon  

B.  Mc Williams 

H.  Brickwood 

A.  Richards 

John  Nott ■ 

W.  Fielding 

J.  Walmsley  ....    

George  Eady 

Wm.  Mathieson 

Wm.  Carmichael   

S.  M.  Johnston 

Albert  Chard 

C.  S.  Gillespie   

F.  J.  Moore   

A.  H,  Taylor 

Thomas  Beasley 

James  Dougherty 

T.  Fraser    

B.  O'Hara 

W.  Prust 

R.  Cockbum 

R.  Rush 

J.  J.  Bamfield 

Dr.  G.  A.  McCallum  . . . 

J.  T.  Robinson 

B.  J.  Gilligan 

Major  Lloyd 

T.  G   Eastland 

W.  A.  Field 

Austin  Moran 

Peter  Munshaw j  Eugenia. 

William  Long Kolapore. 

F.  C.  Quallins Leamington 


Address. 


Beaumaris. 

Bracebridge. 

Belleville. 

Gravenhurst. 

Burk's  Falls. 

Fenelon  Falls. 

Parry  Sound. 

Trout  Creek. 

Rosseau. 

North  Bay. 

Barrie. 

Huntsville. 

( 'rillia. 

Park  Head. 

Listowel. 

Port  Carling. 

Peterboro'. 

Kingston. 

Tara. 

Port  Perry. 

Minden. 

Wiarton. 

Renfrew. 

Havelock. 

Collingwood. 

Arnprior. 

Marmora. 

Campbellford. 

Lakefield. 

Ottawa. 

Hamilton. 

Stouffville. 

Norwood. 

Madoc. 

Haliburton. 

Sturgeon  Falls. 

Sault  Ste.  Marie. 

Niagara  Falls. 

Dunnville. 

Bobcaygeon. 

Mattawa. 

Newmarket. 

Apsley. 

Lanark. 

Dacre. 


Address. 


William  Lynn    I  Penctang. 

J.  L.  Keays,  Jr Perth. 

B.  C.  Hubbell    Marmora. 

W.  J.  Gallagher |  Frank  ford. 

H.  Wesley  Huff jNapanee. 

M.  Maybee Madoc. 

J.  Cleak [Bancroft. 

A.  R.  Carmichael [Sudbury. 

Barrie. 

Stayner. 

Lindsay. 

Waterford. 

Dundalk. 

King. 

St.  Thomas. 

Alliston. 

Almonte. 

Wooler. 

Brockville. 

Picton. 

Cannington. 

Beaverton. 

Union  ville. 


Chris.  Hart. 

F.  J.  Stewart 

Benjamin  Bryan    . 

A.  N.  Ewing 

W.  J.  Warden.  .  .  . 

B.  F.  Carley 

J.  Y.  Hammond  . 
George  Packham .  . 
W.  P.  McEwan... 

Esli  Terrill 

Heni'y  Mathen  . . . 
J.  F.  Gillespie   . .  . 

D.  Woc^dward. 
Duncan  McMillan . 
H.  A.  Lunan .    ... 

J.  E.  Gould lUxbridge. 

Geo.  Sootheran I  Millbrook. 

E.  J.  Breen lUxbridge. 

Andrew  Hunter IMorewood. 

H.  B.  Harrison [Owen  Sound. 

Henry  Taylor I  Perth. 

O.  Bascom |Kemptville. 


Wm.  Pratt 

G.  A.  Pollock 

John  Wright 

N.  D.  McCallum... 

A.  E.  Sarvis 

Jas.  Martin 

J.  C.  Ray    

David  Williams.  .  .  . 
G.-W.  Stoddart.... 

J.  N.  Christie 

Duncan  McFarlane 

Chas  Webster 

A.  H.  Brandon .  . .  . 
J.  H.  Anderson.  .  . . 

James  Scott    

J.  Austin    

James  Reeves 


Midland. 

Aurora. 

Flesherton. 

Carleton  Place. 

Sarnia. 

Hillsdale. 

Cambray. 

Gooderham. 

Bradford. 

Mitchell. 

Red  Bay. 

Lions  Head. 

Gelert. 

Tory  Hill. 

Gooderham. 

Kinmount. 

Egansville. 


30 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (ISo.  80). 


A,  1898 


ISSUER  OF  SETTLERS'  PERMITS. 


Township. 


Muskoka  : 

Morrison .    .  .  . 

Ryde    

Oakley 

Draper 

Muskoka.  .  . . 

Wood 

Baxter .... 

Gibson 

Medora    .  .  .  '. 

Monck 

Macaulay .  . . 
McLean  .... 
Ridoufc  .... 
Franklin .... 

Brunei 

Stephenson . 
Freeman .  .  .  . 

Watt    

Cardwell . .  . . 
Stisted  . .  .  . 
Chaffey  . . . . 
Sinclair  .  .  . . 
Parry  Sound  : 

Mowat 

Blair     

McConkey  . 

Hardy 

Patterson  . 
W^allbridge . 
Brown-.  . .  .  - 
Wilson     .  .  . 

Mills    

Pringle  .... 
Nipissing.   . 

Curd     

Himsworth, 
Himsworth, 
Harrison . . . 
Burton .  .  .  . 
McKenzie   . 

Feme 

Lount  

Macliar  .  .  .  . 
Laurier  .  .  . 
Burpee .  .  .  . 
Hawerman  , 

Croft    

Chapman . 
Strong .... 

Joly 

Carling ... 
Ferguson . 
McDougall 
McKellar. 
Spence .  . . 
Ryerson  .  . 
Armour   .  . 


Name  of  Clerk. 


Address. 


William  Young  .  . 

W.  Tingey 

A.  Cooke  

David  Cairns  .  .  .  . 
R.  E.  Suttaby  .  .  . 
United  to  Medor; 


H.  C.  Guy 

W.  H.  Spencer  .  . . 

Wm.  Cohen 

A.  Slemont 

United  to  McLean 


Severn  Bridge. 

Germania. 

Vankoughnet. 

Uffington. 

Gravenhurst. 


Dudley. 
Bracebridge. 

Baysville. 


H.  Farnsworth 
D.  Bain 


H.  W.  Gill 

M.  Wilson 

Thos.  Lakeman, 
Wm.  Clarke    .  .  . 


Emberson. 
Utterson . 

ilfford. 
Rosseau. 
Aspdin. 
Huntsville. 


William  Haltby. 


W.  S.  Ellis... 
James  Burke. 


Richard  Cole 


D.  J.  Bailey.  . 
F.  N.  McFie. 


Jos..  Wilson  . 
John  Carter 
Jos.  Peacock 


D.  McFarlane 
G.  B.  Lee   ... 


Nipissing. 

Callendar. 
Trout  Creek. 


South  River. 


Evansville 
Dunchuvcli 


E.  Geddes     

Alexander  Mackie . 

31 


Magnetawan. 
Sundridge  .  . 
Vavasour. 


Parry  Sound. 
McKellar. 

Midlothian. 
Burk's  Falls. 


61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.   30). 


A.  1898 


ISSUER  OF  SETTLERS'  ^'EBMITB.— Continued. 


Township. 

Name  of  Clerk. 

Address. 

Parry  Sound  : 

Proudfoot    , 

1 

Foley . 

A.  Oastler 

Wells  Thompson 

Featherston. 

Christie    

Orrville. 

Monteith     

McMurrich 

Thomas  Upton 

E.  B.  Clearwater 

Spencedale. 
Scotia. 

Perrv 

Bethune 

Conger 

Humphrey    . 

Co.  Ontario  : 

Rama       

Wm.  Ditchbum 

John  Waldron    

A .  Montgomery 

Wm.  Maxwell,  united  to 

Longford  and  Laxton .  .  . 
See  Di^bv 

Rosseau. 
Fawn. 

Victoria  : 

Dalton    

Sebright. 

Dio^bv 

Laxton 

Head  Lake. 

Carden  

John  Walsh    

Kirkfield. 

Somerville 

Samuel  Suddaby 

Burnt  River. 

Bexley 

Thomas  Winter 

Coboconk. 

Co.  Haliburton  : 

McClintock  and  Stanhope 

Livingstone 

Wm.  Cooper 

Boskung. 

Sherbourne 

44 

44 

Lawrence .  .  , 

44 

44 

Nightingale 

44 

44 

Havelock 

44 

44 

Hindon    

Anson 

T.  H.  Rogers 

Minden. 

Minden    

W   S.  Morrison     

Guilford 

W.  Prust 

Haliburton. 

Dysart 

4. 

Eyre 

;;  :::::■::.;;::::: 

44 

Clyde 

44 

Bruton 

'44 

Harborn    

44 

44 

Harcourt 

4. 

44 

Dudley 

Lytterworth   

Snowdon 

1                    4» 

>       " 

J.  H.  Hulbig 

1E.  B    Munn    

Minden. 

Glamorgan ... 

1 D   ^Villiams  .              

Irondale. 

Monmouth 

'J.  H.  Anderson 

Tory  Hill. 
Deer  Lake. 

Cardiff 

A.  W.  Willis 

P.  Collins 

P.  W.  C.  Siiewan    ...... 

J.  W.  Ratcliff      

Peterborough  Co.  : 

Galway 

Cavendish 

Mt.  L'win. 

44 

An.struther 

Apsley. 
Lasswade. 

Chand<-)S 

Harvey,  N  ^ 

Burleigh 

J.  S.  Cairnduff 

Bobcaygeon. 

United  to  Anstruther  .... 

Methuen 

Belmont,  N.  ^ 

Hastings  Co.  : 

Maclure 

Porter,  Preston 

United  to  Bangor 

Blairton. 

Wicklow 

D.  Card 

Bangor 

Herschel 

Maynooth. 

Monteagle 

John  Spence  

Hybla. 

32 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (JNo.   30 j. 


A  1898 


ISSUER  OF  SETTLERS'  -PEBMITS.— Concluded. 

Township. 

Name  of  Clerk. 

Address. 

Hastings  Co. : 

Carlow 

W.  D.  Parkhurst 

Frederick  MuUett 

James  Spurr 

Boulter 

Faraday     

Bancroft 

Dungannon 

Mavo   

Robt.  Ramsbottom 

Geo.  Orr 

Hermon 

WoUaston    ....    

Coe  Hill  Mines 

Limerick 

Jas.  W.  Ham          

St   Ola 

Cashel , 

United  to  Tudor 

Lake 

United  to  Marmora 

Tudor ■ 

Charles  Donaldson 

United  to  Elzevir 

Milbridge. 

Grinisthorpe , 

Marmora,  N.  i 

H.  M.  Jones,  M.D 

J.  R.  Ketcheson    

R.  W.  Miller 

Marmora 

Madoc,  N.  ^ 

Elzevir,  N.  i 

Madoc. 
Actinolite 

Lennox  and  Addington  : 

Ashby 

Paul  Stein ...    . 

Denbigh. 

Denbigh 

(( 

Effingham   

(( 

^i 

Abinger 

li 

'( 

Anglesea 

M.  Lessard,  jr   

Flinton 

Kaladar 

a 

Frontenac  Co.  : 

Barrie 

Thomas  Nerle  .  .        

Cloyne. 

Miller 

United  to  Clarendon 

North  and  South  Canonto 

J.  Elkington 

Ompah. 

Palmerston 

(( 

Clarendon   

A.  W.  Wood 

Plevna 

Kennebec 

A .  Osborne 

Arden. 

Olden 

W.  M.  Price  . 

Mountain  Grove 

Oso 

Lanark  Co : 

Levant 

S.  C.  Bourk    

J.  M.  Browning 

Oso  Station. 
Levant. 

Darling    

A.  Watt 

Lloyd. 
McDonald's  Corn'rs 

North  Sherbrooke 

W.  Geddes 

Renfrew  Co.  : 

Petewawa    

Geo.  Guestin  . . 

Petewawa 

McKay 

Not  organized 

Burns 

United  to  Hagarty 

Richards 

(( 

Lyndock 

United  to  Brudenell 

Eraser 

J.  M.  Kennedy 

Pembroke. 

Alice 

it 

(b 

Griffith 

John  Holly 

Balvenie. 

Jones   

United  to  Hasrertv 

Sherwood    

o            ./ 

Brougham   

Michael  Sheedy 

Sheedy. 
Rochefoi't. 

Hagerty 

T.  Roche 

Algoma    

E.  Bennett 

Castile. 

Matawatchan 

United  to  Griffith 

Wilberforce 

Geo.  Stone 

J.  E.  N.  Miller 

Eganville 

Ridcliffe '. 

Combermere. 

Blithefield 

M.  Ryan,  united  to  Bagot .  . 
John  Whelan 

Ashdod. 

Brudenell 

Brudenell 

Sebastopol 

Carl  Walther 

Wm.  Gorman 

United  to  Radcliffe 

Vanbruch. 

Grattan 

Eganville. 

Raglan 

3  G.F. 


33 


s 


^  PARK. 


A  RIO. 


\ 


KV'iiKK,,  PRiNTEBa   &0.,  68  AND  70  Fbont  Stkibt  WasT 
1898. 


E  E  P  O  R  T 


OF    THK 


COMMISSIONEES 


OUEEN  VICTORIA  NIAGARA  FALLS  PARK. 


1897. 


1 


PRINTED    BY    ORDER    OF 

THE   LFXxISLATIVE  ASSEMBLY  OF  ONTARIO. 


T  ORON  TO : 

WARWICK    BRO'S  k  RUTTE^R,  PRiNXUBa   &o.,  68  and  70   Front  STKan  Waat, 

1898. 


Toronto,  12th  January,  189<S. 

Sir, — I  Imve  the  honor  to  transmit  herewitli,  for  submission  to  His  Honoi- 
the  Lieutenant-Governor,  the  twelfth  annual  report  of  the  Commissioners  for  the-^ 
Queen  Victoria  Niagara  Falls  Park,  being  for  the  year  ended  31st  December,  1897 

I  have  the  honor  to  be, 

Sir, 
Yi)ur  obedient  servant, 

•  J.  W.  LAN(;MUm, 

Chairman. 

Hon.  E.  J.  Davis,  -M.P.P.. 

Provi)icial  Secretarv. 


L3] 


TWELFTH  ANNUAL  REPORT 


COMMISSIONERS 


OUEEN  VICTORIA  NIAGARA  FALLS  PARK, 


To  the  Honourable  Sir  Olivej{  Mow  at,  K.dM.G., 

Lieutenant-Governor  of  the  Province  oj  Ontario. 

May  it  please  your  Honor  : 

The  Commissioners  for  the  Queen  Victoria  i^iajj;ara  Falls  Park  beg  to  submit 
their  twelfth  annual  repoi't,  together  with  a  statement  of  the  receipts  and  expen-^ 
ditures  for  the  year  ended  3Lst  December,  1897. 

Before  entering  on  the  record  of  their  operations  during  the  past  year  the- 
Commissioners  gladly  aYail  themselves  of  the  opportunity  to  express  their  great 
gratification  in  finding  your  Honor  once  more  officially  associated  wdth  the 
important  work  in  which  they  are  engaged.  They  can  never  forget  that  the 
establishment  of  the  Park  as  a  national  heritage,  under  the  control  of  the  Gov- 
ernment of  Ontario,  as  well  as  its  subsequent  extension  and  maintenance,  has 
from  the  first  found  in  your  Honor  a  warm  friend  and  supporter. 

In  their  last  annual  report  the  Commissioners  referred  at  some  length  to  the 
application  made  to  them  by  the  Canadian  Niagara  Power  CompanjTor  an  exten- 
sion of  the  time  stipulated  in  the  agreement  of  April,  1892  (ratified  by  Statute  of 
Ontario  bb  \\c.  c.  chap.  8)  for  the  commencement  of  the  operations  of  that  Com- 
pany in  the  Park.  The  report  fully  sets  out  the  reasons  wdiich  led  the  Commis- 
sioners to  recommend  as  they  did  that  the  time  allowed  the  Company  for  the 
completion  of  the  first  section  of  the  work  should  be  extended  for  a  period  of 
eighteen  months  from  1st  November,  1898.  Although  the  Government  could  not 
see  its  wa\'  to  sanction  the  recommendation  for  the  extension  of  the  time  limit 
allowed  the  Company  for  this  work,  they  came  to  the  conclusion,  after  protracted 
negotiations  and  after  giving  the  matter  the  fullest  consideration,  and  havings 
regard  especially  to  the  urgent  demand  for  electrical  power  by  various  industries. 

[5] 


€1  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1898 


located  in  the  immediate  neighborli(jod  of  the  Falls,  to  grant  permission,  as  the 
Commissioners  recommended,  to  the  Canadian  Niagara  Power  Company  to  arrangi- 
with  the  Niagara  Falls  Park  and  River  Railway  Company-  for  the  utilizing  of 
the  surplus  power  which  the  latter  Companj-  had  available  for  use  in  its  power 
liouse  in  the  Park.  In  accordance  with  this  authority  an  agreement,  authorized 
by  the  Lieutenant-Governor  in  Council,  has  been  approved  by  the  Commissioners, 
wldch  will  permit  of  a  substantial  supj^ly  of  electricity  for  lighting  and  power 
purposes  being  furnished  local  users  witliout  delay.  This  arrangement  does  not 
in  any  way  relieve  the  Canadi  m  Niagara  Power  Company  from  its  covenant  in 
the  original  agreement  as  to  the  time  for  tlie  commencement  and  completion  of 
their  proposed  works  within  the  Park. 

The  terms  of  this  agreement  are  as  follows  : 

This  agreement  made  the  twenty-seventh  day  of  November,  one  thousand 
•eiidit  hundred  and  ninety-seven  between  the  Canadian  Niagara  Power  Compan}- 
<^hereinafter  called  the  Power  Company)  of  the  first  part  and  the  Niagara  Falls 
Park  and  River  Railway  Company  (hereinafter  called  the  Railway  Company)  of 
the  second  part,  and  _the  Commissioners  for  the  Queen  Victoria  Niagara  Falls 
Park  acting  herein  on  their  own  behalf  as  well  as  on  behalf  and  with  the  approval 
•of  the  Government  of  the  Province  of  Ontario  (and  hereinafter  called  the  Com- 
missioners) of  the  third  part, 

The  expression  "  statutory  agi-eenient "  as  hereinafter  mentioned  and  applied 
to  said  Companies  respectively  shall  be  deemed  to  relate  to  the  agreement  and 
istatutorj^  enactments  contained  in  the  statutes  respectively  relating  to  the  said 
Companies. 

Whereas  the  Power  Company  and  the  Railway  Company  respectively 
•derive  their  powers  and  rights  under  the  Acts  of  the  Legislature  of  the  Province 
of  Ontario  passed  in  the  fifty-fifth  year  of  Her  Majesty's  reign  and  numbered 
•chapters  eight  and  ninety-six  of  1892,  wdiereby  agreements  made  with  the  Com- 
missioners are  confirmed  and  declared  to  be  binding  on  the  parties  hereto ; 

And  whereas  the  Railway  Companj'  by  its  statutory  agreement  with  the 
'Commissioners  obtains  from  the  watei's  above  the  Falls  at  the  point  of  intake 
now  used  water  power  to  generate  electricity  for  the  purposes  of  working  the 
railwaj'^  and  the  machinery  necessary  to  operate  and  light  the  railway. 

And  whereas  the  Railway  Company  has  capable  for  development  in  its 
power-house  by  the  means  aforesaid  hydraulic  power  in  excess  of  its  present 
needs  for  the  above  purposes  (and  as  by  the  agreement  limited)  : 

And  whereas  the  Power  Company  until  such  time  as  it  shall  be  prepared  and 
ready  to  generate  electricity  or  pneumatic  power  in  terms  of  its  statutory  agree- 
ment with  the  Commissioners  or  as  may  be  i-equired  thereby  is  desirous  to  supply 
the  demand  for  immediate  use  of  electricity  for  manufacturing  purposes  by  local 
users  of  power  within  Ontario,  provide<l  such  power  can  by  consent  of  Com- 
missioners be  obtained  : 

And  whereas  the  Railway  Company  and  the  Power  Company,  subject  to  the 
a,pproval  hereinafter  mentioned,  have  agreed  to  develop  electric  power  as  herein- 
after set  forth  l)y  means  of  the  said  hydraulic  power  if  duly  licensed  to  deal  with 
the  same  and  the  Commissioners  have  approved  of  their  proposals  to  supply 
power  for  the  purposes  afoi'esaid  and  are  willing  to  extend  to  the  Railway  Com- 
pany power  to  use  such  surplus  hydraulic  power  as  may  now  be  developed  by 
the  intake  of  water  as  now  taken  and  used  without  further  increasing  the  volume 
of  water  now  taken  at  such  point  of  intake  and  such  concession  to  the  Railway 
Company  bv  the  Commissioners   being   also  made  at   the  request  of  the   Power 

6 


II 


61  Victoria.  Ses-ional  Papers  (No.  31).  A    1898 


I'oiupany,  such  request  being  testified  by  beino-  parties  to  these  presents  and  for 
their  advantage  notwitlistanding  anything  in  the  statutor}^  agreement  between 
the  Commissioners  and  tlie  Power   (.'ompaiiy  contained  : 

Tliese  presents  witness : 

1.  The  Railway  Company  will  without  unnecessary  delay,  and  at  its  own 
expense  in  its  power  house  within  the  Park  as  now  located  and  as  the  demand 
thereof  may  arise  (but  within  the  capacity  of  its  phxnt),  develop,  generate  and 
furnish  to  the  Power  Company  hydraulic  power  upon  a  horizontal  shaft  attached 
to  the  shaft  of  the  turbines  and  above  the  floor  of  the  power  house,  and  the 
Powder  Company  will  without  unnecessary  delay,  and  at  its  own  expense,  supply, 
instal  and  operate  the  necessary  electrical  machinery,  apparatus  and  conductoi-s 
to  transmute  such  hydraulic  power  into  electrical  power,  which  electrical  power 
the  Power  Company  will  transmit  to  points  beyond  the  Park  and  supply  the 
same  to  all  persons,  parties,  or  corporations  desirous  of  using  the  same  within  a 
radius  of  four  miles  from  the  said  power  house  in  the  Park,  at  prices  and  terms 
to  be  agreed  upon  between  the  Power  Company  and  the  Railway  Company,  the 
prices  and  terms  not  to  exceed  the  prices  charged  for  similar  quantities  and  ser- 
Aices  supplied  for  similar  purposes  and  at  similar  distances  by  the  Niagara  Falls 
Power  Company  on  the  American  side  for  use  on  said  American  side.  Provided 
-always,  that  all  works  to  be  done  and  executed  by  the  said  Companies  or  either 
of  them  within  the  park  or  within  the  boundaries  of  the  Park  as  such  boun- 
daries are  now  known  shall  be  in  accordance  with  the  terms  and  conditions  and 
subject  to  the  approval  of  the  Commissioners  as  by  the  statutory  agreement 
between  the  Comndssioners  and  the  Power  Company  hereinbefore  mentioned  is 
stipulated,  whether  such  terms  and  conditions  relate  to  works  of  construction  or 
works,  wires  and  cables  for  the  transmission  of  electricity  or  pneumatic  power 
to  points  within  or  beyond  the  park,  and  the  said  Companies  or  either  of  them 
shall  not  execute  works  within  the  Park  other  than  limited  or  specified  by  the 
.said  statutory  agreement  between  the  Commissioners  and  the  Power  Company 
and  in  accordance  with  the  terms  thereof  and  as  provided  and  limited  by  these 
])resents. 

2.  Annually  during  the  continuance  of  this  agreement,  the  Power  Company 
shall  pay  to  the  Railw^ay  Company  a  sum  of  money  eqilal  to  ten  dollars  per 
electrical  horse  power  per  annum  foi"  each  electrical  horse  power  furnished  and 
sold  under  this  agreement  for  lighting,  heating  or  power  purposes,  excepting  for 
the  one  hundred  horse  power  referred  to  in  the  fourth  clause  of  this  agreement. 
Such  payments  shall  be  made  within  thirty  days  after  the  expiration  of  each 
three  months  during  this  agreement,  and  within  ten  days  after  the  expiration  of 
the  said  three  months  the  treasurer  of  the  Power  Company  shall  make  and 
<leliver  to  the  Railway  Company  a  verified  statement  of  the  gross  amount  of  its 
receipts  from  such  sales  for  the  preceding  three  months,  and  the  books  of  the 
Power  Company  shall  be  open  to  inspection  and  examination  by  the  treasurer 
of  the  Railway  Company,  for  the  purpose  of  verifying  the  correctness  of  such 
statement  as  to  such  gross  receipts. 

8.  Six  months  after  the  receipt  of  written  notice  from  the  Power  Company 
(seived  after  1st  October,  1899)  of  its  readiness  to  deliver  power  by  means  of 
works  and  plant  constructed  under  and  in  pursuance  of  its  statutory  agreement 
with  the  Commissioners  hereinbefore  mentioned,  the  Railway  Company  agi-ees 
that  the  Power  Company  ma}'  take  over  such  customers  and  contracts  as  it  may 
then  have  for  electric  power  to  be  supplied  or  sold  under  this  agreement,  and  the 
-Railway  Company  shall  cease  operations   hereunder  and    the   Power   Company 

7 


61  Victoria  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  189^ 


shall  thenceforth  supply  the  same  from  its  own  works  and  plant,  and  thereupon 
this  agreement  and  all  rights  of  the  Railway  Company  thereunder  shall  cease 
and  terminate. 

4.  While  the  Power  Company  is  cunstructing  its  proposed  works  within  the 
Park,  under  and  in  pursuance  of  its  statutor}'  agreement  with  the  Commissioners 
hereinbefore  mentioned,  the  Railway  Company  shall  during  such  construction 
allow  the  Power  Company,  out  of  such  available  surplus  power  free  of  charg<» 
and  when  and  as  called  for  at  the  Railway  Company's  power  house  in  the  Park, 
power  for  light  and  power  purposes  during  such  construction  but  not  in  excess 
of  one  hundred  electrical  horse  power,  provided  that  if  at  such  time  that  amount 
of  surplus  electrical  power  be  not  available,  the  Railway  Company  may  and  will 
furnish  in  lieu  thereof  and  free  of  charge  power  to  that  amount  on  the  horizontal 
sliaft  attached  to  the  shaft  of  the  turbine  abo\'e  the  floor  of  the  power  house  and 
space  within  its  power  house  sufficient  for  the  operation  of  a  dynamo  providing 
such  amount  of  power  driven  by  the  shafting  from  the  turbines  of  the  Railway 
Company,  all  of  which  shall  be  operated  in  the  Railway  Company's  power  house 
for  the  benefit  of  the  Power  Company  during  the  construction  of  the  firat  section 
of  its  works  specified  in  clause  ten  of  Power  Company's  said  statutory  agreement 
with  the  Commissioners,  provided  also  that  if  during  the  term  of  this  agreement 
the  Power  Company  shall  at  no  time  have  sold  two  hundred  and  fifty  (250) 
horse  power  then  the  Railwa\-  Company  shall  not  be  obliged  to  furnish  the 
Po?ver  Company  any  free  power,  anything  in  this  clause  to  the  contrary  not- 
withstanding. 

.5.  This  agreement  as  between  the  Railway  Company  and  the  Power  Com- 
pany shall  be  operative  for  the  term  of  three  years  from  1st  October,  1897,  but 
may  be  terminated  by  the  Power  Company  at  any  date  after  1st  October,  1899, 
provided  six  months'  written  notice  shall  have  been  given  to  the  Railway  Com- 
pany, as  hereinbefore  provided,  and  upon  such  termination  the  Power  Company 
will,  to  the  extent  of  the  abilit}^  of  its  works  then  completed,  assume  and  fulfil 
all  contracts  then  outstanding  for  the  sale  of  power  which  shall  have  been  there- 
.tofore  made  by  the  Power  Company,  with  the  Railwa}'  Company's  prior 
approval. 

t).  It  is  mutually  agreed  by  and  between  all  the  parties  hereto  that  neither 
the  execution  of  this  agreement,  nor  any  operation  thereunder,  shall  be  construed 
as  in  any  way  constituting  a  waiver  or  suspension  of  an}'  right  of  the  Power 
Company  or  the  Commissioners  under  the  charter  and  statutorj-  agreement  be- 
tween the  company  and  its  incorporators  and  the  Commissioners,  nor  as  conceding 
by  the  Government  or  by  the  Connnissioners  any  extension  of  the  rights  of  the 
Railway  Company  under  its  charter  or  its  statu toiy  agreement  with  the  Com- 
missioners, nor  as  in  any  way  waiving  the  individual  liability  of  any  of  the 
corporators  of  the  Power  Company  named  in  its  said  charter  and  statutory 
agreement,  nor  as  in  any  way  affecting  the  terms  and  conditions  o^  the  statutory 
agreement  heretofore  made  between  the  Commissioners  and  the  Power  Company' 
or  Railway  Company  (excepting  the  temporar\^  light  hereunder  given  by  the 
Power  Company  to  the  Railway  Company-),  nor  as  in  any  way  extending  the 
time  of  the  Power  Company  or  the  contracting  parties  under  the  Power  Com- 
pany's charter  or  statutory  agreement  to  begin  and  complete  the  works  under 
the  said  statutory  agreement  with  the  Commissioners,  nor  as  any  delay  or  sus- 
pension of  notice  already  given  to  proceed  with  such  works,  nor  as  any  authority 
or  excuse  for  any  delay  in  the  commeneeraent,  construction  or  completion  of  said 
works, 

s 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (Xo.  31)  A.  1898 


7.  If  this  agreement  is  terminated  b}^  the  Power  Company-  either  by  notice' 
consent  or  effluxion  of  time,  then  upon  such  termination,  and,  provided  the 
Power  Company  be  not  ready  to  assume  and  fulfil  the  contracts  then  outstand- 
ing as  provided  in  the  fifth  clause  of  this  agreement,  the  (.Commissioners  shall 
have  the  right  in  their  discretion  to  acquire  from  the  Power  Company  the 
electiical  machinery,  fixtures  atid  appliances,  contracts  and  business  operated 
hereunder,  and  the  same  shall  in  case  they  shall  be  taken  over,  become  vested  in 
the  Commissioners  at  the  then  value  of  such  electrical  machinery,  fixtures  and 
appliances  as  such  without  claim  for  componsation  for  such  contracts  or  business 
as  may  (if  the  parties  cannot  agree)  be  determined  by  a  commission  to  be 
appointed  b}'  the  Lieutenant-Governor-in-Council.  ]n  such  case  the  Railway 
Company  undertake  and  agree,  upon  request  of  the  Commissioners,  to  carry  out 
the  terms  of  this  agreement  upon  their  part  upon  the  same  terms  as  for  the 
Power  Company  for  such  time  as  tlie  Commissioners  may  desire.  In  the  event 
of  the  Commissioners  taking  o\'er  the  said  machinerj^  fixtures  and  appliances, 
they  shall  have  the  same  right  to  give  notice  terminating  the  agreement  with  the 
Railway  Company  as  the  Power  Company  has  hereunder. 

8.  And  for  greater  certainty  it  is  hereby  agreed  by  and  between  the  Com- 
missioners and  the  said  parties  severally  as  follows : — 

(a)  By  the  Power  Company,  its  corporators  and  promoters  in  the  Act  of 
Incorporation  named,  and  an}'  or  either  of  them,  that  neither  these 
presents  nor  any  other  act,  matter  or  tldng  herein  or  hereby  contained, 
nor  any  matter  or  thing  done  in  pursuance  hereof  shall  be  taken  or 
held  to  be  any  acknowledgment  or  recognition  l)y  the  Connnissioners 
that  the  Power  Company  has  been  properly  oi-  fully  organized  or 
formed  within  the  terms  of  the  Act  or  statutory  agreement,  nor  shall 
the  said  corporators  or  promotei-s,  or  any  or  either  of  them,  be  deemed 
to  have  been  freed  or  released  from  their  individual  liability,  if  any, 
to  the  Commissioners  in  respect  to  the  said  Act  and  statutory  agree- 
ment. » 

And  the  Power  Compan3%  its  corporators  and  promoters  as  aforesaid  covenant 
with  the  Commissioners  that  if  at  any  time  prior  to  the  termination 
of  this  agreement,  said  Power  Company,  its  corporators  and  promoters, 
in  order  to  terminate  the  statutory  agreement  and  lease  of  7th  April. 
18"2,  with  the  Connnissioners,  shall  give  three  months'  notice  in 
writing  required  by  clause  five  thereof,  or  if  at  any  time  duriuo-  the 
continuance  of  this  agreement,  the  Power  Company,  its  corporators 
and  promoters,  shall  fail  to  pay  the  annual  rental  reserved  under  the 
terms  of  said  statutory  agreement  of  April  7th.,  1892,  as  therein  pro- 
vided, then  and  in  either  such  case  the  Power  Cornpan}^  will  surrender 
its  rights  under  this  agreement,  and  this  agreement  shall  terminate 
and  cease  and  the  Connnissioners  shall  have  the  privilege  of  exercis- 
ing the  right  granted  thetn  under  the  seventh  clause  of  this  agreement 
in  the  case  of  its  termination  by  notice,  consent  or  efifiuxion  of  time. 

And  the  Power  Company,  its  corporators  and  promoters,  covenant  with  the 
Commissioners,  that  up  to  and  including  the  1st  of  November,  1898. 
the  Power  Companj-  will  pay  the  Commissioners  the  rental  aoreed 
to  be  paid  half-yearly,  notwithstanding  anything  in  the  statutor\- 
agreement  provided. 

{}>)  By  the  Railway  Company  :  That  nothing  in  this  agreemeut  contained 
shall  be  taken  to  confer  upon  the  Railway  Company  any  powera  or 
rights  save  those  hereby  expressly  conferred,  oi-  permit  the  Railv\^a\' 

9 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A   1898 


Company  to  use  or  supply  more  water  or  enlarge  or  extend  the 
capacity  race  flume  or  intake  of  water  without  the  consent  in  writing 
oi"  the  Commissioners  to  he  first  approved  by  the  Lieutenant-Govei-nor- 
in-Council. 

9.  And  the  Commissioners,  parties  to  the  third  part  hereto,  hereby  grant  to 
the  Railway  Company  the  riglit  to  use  the  surplus  power  to  be  derived  from  the 
Niagara  river  as  hereinbefore  described  for  their  behoof  and  advantage,  and  the 
Commissioners  do  also  grant  the  same  to  the  Power  Company  in  so  far  as  such 
is  capable  of  being  developed  and  extended  by  the  Power  Company  in  accord- 
ance with  the  terms  of  these  presents,  and  such  grants  to  the  said  Companies  are 
upon  the  conditions  and  are  accepted  by  such  Companies  as  subject  to  the  con- 
ditions that  such  Companies  do  observe  and  perform  towards  the  Couimissioners 
all  duties  and  obligations  towards  the  said  Commissioners  in  tliese  presents  con- 
tained, and  upon  breach  of  any  of  the  said  duties,  obligations  and  conditions 
herein  agreed  to  be  done  and  performed  by  the  said  Companies,  or  either  of  them, 
it  shall  be  optional  with  the  Commissioners  to  withdraw  and  cancel  such  grants, 
rights  and  privileges  to  either  or  both  of  the  said  Companies. 

10.  It  is  hereby  agreed  by  and  between  the  Power  Compan}-  and  the  said 
parties  respectively,  and  these  presents  are  upon  this  express  condition  that  the 
said  Power  Company  shall,  within  fifteen  days  after  the  execution  hereof,  enter 
into  contracts  for  the  supply  of  the  machinery  necessary  to  the  generation  of 
power  as  hereinbefore  mentioned,  and  shall  further  be  prepared  to  provide  electric 
power  as  herein  agreed  upon  within  a  period  not  exceeding  five  months  from  the 
date  of  the  execution  of  the  .>aid  agreement. 

In  witness  whereof  the  parties  liereto  liave  dulj^  executed  these  presents. 


Signed,  sealed  and  delivered  in  the  EDWARD  B.  OSLER, 

President. 
R.  A.  SMITH, 

Secretary. 


presence  of 

FRANCIS  U.  WILCOX. 


Attest    as    to    the    signatures    of  The  Canadian  Niagara  Power 

N.   F.    P.  and    R.   Ry.  Co.  and        !  Company. 

Commissioners,  ' 

,  ALBERT  D.  SHAW, 

WALLACE  NESBITT.  !  President. 

I  W.  B.  RANKING, 

Secretary. 
J.  W.  LANGMUIR, 

Chairman. 


While  it  is  a  matter  oi  regret  to  the  Commissioners  that  the  carrying  out  of 
its  undertaking  should  have  been  so  long  delayed  by  the  Power  Company,  and 
that  the  benefits  to  the  locality  which  have  been  so  eagerly  looked  forward  to 
have  thus  been  deferred,  yet  the  Commissioners  are  of  opinion  that  the  experience 
"fained  in  the  construction  of  the  very  extensive  generating  plant  on  the  American 
side  will  be  of  verv  great  advantage  to  the  Company  in  establishing  its  works  in 
C'anada  on  a  sound  basis  from  the  beginning.  This  will  especially  hold  true  in 
respect  to  the  transmission  of  electrical  energy  to  distant  points,  the  successful 
accomplishment  of  which  will,  without  doubt,  be  one  of  the  chief  inducements  to 

10 


61  \  ictoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1898 


generate  power  on  a  large  scale  at  this  place.  The  knowledge  now  being  gained 
by  the  actual  working  of  the  Niagara  Falls,  Buffalo  and  other  long  distance 
transmission  lines,  cannot  but  greatly  add  to  the  ultimate  success,  in  a  broad  and 
comprehensive  manner,  of  the  Canadian  Niagara  Power  Company's  plant  in  the 
Park. 

Reference  was  made  in  last  year's  report  to  the  desirabilit}^  of  securing  the 
thirty-three  or  thirty-four  acres  comprising  the  remainder  of  the  ordnance  lands 
at  Queenston  Heights,  in  order  that  these  outlying  parts  of  this  territory  might 
be  embodied  in  the  Park  and  be  cared  for  conjointly  with  the  lands  now  under 
Park  control.  While  there  is  every  reason  to  believe  that  the  Government  of 
Canada  favors  this  proposal,  the  Connnissionei-s  have  not  up  to  the  present  been 
put  in  possession  of  these  lands.  With  reference  to  the  several  petitions  from 
public  bodies  presented  to  the  Governments  of  Ontario  and  Canada  proposing  to 
transfer  to  the  jurisdiction  of  the  Commissioners  the  lands  forming  the  ordnance 
reserves  at  Fort  Erie  and  Niagara-on-the-Lake,  no  further  steps  have  been  taken, 
as  the  funds  at  the  disposal  of  the  Commissioners  will  not  permit  of  their  under- 
taking additional  burdens  without  substantial  assistance. 

The  Commissioners  regret  to  leai-n  that  the  woi'k  of  spoliation  in  connection 
with  the  historic  remains  at  Fort  Erie,  which  was  referred  to  in  the  special  report 
of  the  Park  Superintendent  of  August,  1896,  is  still  going  on. 

During  the  past  season  application  was  made  on  behalf  of  several  gentlemen, 
At  Toronto,  for  certain  privileges  in  connection  with  the  developing  of  the  water 
power  of  the  Niagara  river  below  the  Falls,  the  specific  requests  being  for  rights 
at  the  outlet  of  the  Whirlpool  and  at  Niagara  Glen,  In  order  that  the  Com- 
missioners might  be  able  to  consider  these  applications  intelligently,  instructions 
were  given  to  the  Park  Superintendent  to  make  a  survey  of  the  river  levels  and 
to  report  to  the  board  on  the  possibility  of  utilizing  the  rapids  of  the  river  between 
the  Cantilever  Bridge  and  Queenston  for  the  purpose  of  power  development, 
together  with  a  plan  showing  the  various  sections  of  the  river  where  power 
could  with  advantage  be  obtained,  and  the  approximate  relative  cost  and  import- 
ance of  each  separate  development.  The  Superintendent  carried  out  his  instruc- 
tions with  all  practicable  despatch,  aiid  submittecl  the  following  report  on  this 
important  subject  to  the  Board  : — 

J.  W.  Langmuir,  Esq., 

Chairman. 

Dear  Sir  — In  compliance  with  the  instruction  of  the  Board,  I  beg  to  make 
the  following  report  upon  the  practicability  of  developing  power  for  commercial 
purposes  at  various  points  along  the  west  shore  of  the  Niagara  river  between  the 
Cantilever  Bridge  and  the  Village  of  Queenston. 

According  to  the  surveys  made  from  time  to  time  by  the  United  States 
geological  and  lake  surveyors,  there  appears  to  be  a  total  mean  difference  of  level 
between  the  waters  of  the  Niagara  river  at  the  base  of  the  Horse  Shoe  Fall  and 
the  waters  of  Lake  Ontario  of  110  feet.  Of  this  total  about  two  feet  is  found  in 
the  navigable  reach  of  the  river  from  Lake  Ontario  to  Queenston,  and  about  six- 
teen feet  from  the  base  of  the  Horse  Shoe  Fall  to  the  beginning  of  the  rapids,  a 
short  distance  south  of  the  Cantilever  Bridge,  leaving  some  ninety-two  feet  for 
the  fall  accomplished  in  the  rapids  above  and  below  the  Whirlpool.  The  total 
■<listance  covered  by  the  rapids,  if  measured  along  the  centre  of  the  river,  is  about 
five  miles. 

11 


61  Victoria.  Sessitmal  Papers  (No.  81).  A.  18y8 


The  inclination  of  the  surface  of  the  river,  in  the  portions  covered  by  the 
rapids,  does  not  by  any  means  present  a  uniform  cross-section,  owing  to  the  con- 
tracted width  of  the  stream  at  some  points  and  the  ver^?  broken  nature  of  the 
waterway.  For  instance,  the  part  of  the  river  locally  known  as  the  Whirlpool 
Rapids  has  a  magnificent  and  resistless  sweep  all  the  way  from  the  Cantilever 
Brido-e  down  to  the  most  noi'therly  extremit}'  of  the  Whirlpool,  but  on  either 
shore,  owing  to  the  obstructions  caused  by  immense  boulders  and  masses  of  rock 
projecting  well  into  the  stream,  the  onw^ard  flow  of  the  water  is  interfered  with, 
numerous  eddies  or  counter  currents  are  formed,  and  the  inclination  of  the  sur- 
face of  the  water  at  the  shore  line  is  made  very  irregular,  and  at  some  points  is 
much  below  the  central  elevation  of  the  stream.  A  short  distance  south  of  the 
Whirlpool  the  shore  line  on  the  Canadian  side  recedes  considerably,  forming  a 
long  shallow  bay,  called  on  the  plan  "  The  Whirlpool  Rapids  Eddy,"  in  wdiich 
there  is  a  strong  current  flowing  up  stream  along  the  shore  for  the  whole  leng-tb 
of  the  bay.  Precisely  the  same  condition  holds  with  respect  to  the  Whirlpool 
itself,  whei-e  the  sweep  of  the  current  after  cros.sing  to  the  northerly  extremity 
or  the  head  of  the  pool  is  deflected  to  the  left  and  northwards,  and  flows  swiftly 
along  the  Canadian  shore,  and  against  the  direction  of  the  main  stream,  to  the 
southerly  extremity  of  the  Whirlpool,  a  distance  of  over  half  a  mile.  At  other 
points  along  the  river,  especially  at  either  end  of  Niagara  Glen,  the  same  con- 
ditions prevail  :  and  where  the  changes  are  well  deflned  and  are  a  permanent 
characteristic  of  the  stream,  the  ditterence  of  level  Ijetween  the  adjacent  counter 
currents  indicates,  in  each  case,  the  head  which  may  be  obtained,  and  the  direc- 
tion of  the  shore  eddies,  .above  and  below  the  rapids,  deflues  clearly  on  the  oround 
the  distance  which  will  have  to  be  overcome  by  means  of  a  conduit  or  otherwise 
in  order  to  obtain  the  greatest  advantage  from  the  head  of  water  at  the  point  in 
question. 

By  a  reference  to  the  plan  accompanying  this  report  it  wall  be  seen  that 
there  are  four  or  live  principal  points  at  which  it  would,  in  my  opinion,  be 
entirely  feasible  to  take  advantage  of  the  difl'erence  of  the  shore  levels  of  the 
river  to  develop  substantial  water-power  plants,  and  by  the  aid  of  electricity  or 
other  means  of  transmission  to  points  above  the  cliff,  make  them  available  for 
commercial  purposes  generally  at  a  reasonable  outlay. 

These  .several  divisions  or  distinct  water-powers  may  for  convenience  l>e 
referred  to  by  numbers,  as  on  the  plan,  and  will  be  considered  separately. 

No.  1.     From  the  head  of  the  rapids  near  the  Cantilever  Bridge    at  "A 
on  plan  to  the  head  of  the  Whirlpool  Rapids  eddy  at  "  B,"  in  a  distance  of  some 
ri,400  feet  there  is  a  continuous   rapid  with   a  fall  at  mean  water  level  of  about 
forty-four  feet. 

No.  2.  From  the  northern  extremity  of  the  Whirlpool  Rapids  eddy  across 
tVie  projecting  point  which  separate-i  it  from  the  AVhirlpool  proper  in  a  distant* 
of  about  500  feet  there  is  a  mean  fall  of  seven  and  one-half  feet. 

No.  3.  At  the  exit  of  the  Whirlpool  there  is  another  decline  of  nearly  se\eij 
feet  in  a  distance  of  less  than  300  feet. 

No.  4.  Niagara  Glen  has  a  frontage  of  4,0()0  feet  measured  along  the 
margin  of  the  river,  with  a  difference  of  level  between  the  north  and  south  ends 
of  twenty  feet,  but  in  a  direct  line  a  waterway  to  secure  the  total  head  would  not 
measure  over  3.500  feet. 

No.  5.  At  the  head  of  Niagara  Glen  in  a  distance  of  1,000  feet  a  fall  of  about 
fourteen  feet  is  found. 

12 


♦»1  Victoria  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1898 


Below  the  eddy  at  the  foot  of  Niagai-a  Glen  the  river  is  very  swift  for  over 
two  miles  :  unqui-stionably  tlie  difference  in  head  at  one  or  two  points  could  be 
made  to  yield  water-powers,  but  the  facilities  for  development  are  not  nearly  so 
favorable  as  at  the  other  points  indicated,  and  consideration  of  their  merits  may 
well  be  deferred  for  the  present. 

The  conditions  under  which  these  several  powers  can  be  best  developed  sre 
not  at  all  uniform.  Nos.  1  and  4  are  large  units  and  can  onl}^  be  developed  at 
considerable  cost,  while  Nos.  2,  3  and  o  are  comparatively  small  units  and  will 
not  require  so  large  an  outlay  to  obtain  in  each  case  remunerative  developments. 

In  the  case  of  No.  1  a  conduit  or  tunnel  of  large  dimensions  could  be  con- 
structed as  a  head  race,  and  the  development  of  the  water  into  electric  or  other 
form  of  transmitted  power  be  made  in  suitable  erections  placed  at  "  B  "  on  the 
plan,  where  a  space  can  be  had  at  the  margin  of  the  river  sufficient  for  that 
purpose  bv  suitable  excavations  in  the  talus  oi-  sloping  bank  of  the  river  under 
the  (-lift: 

A.ssuming  the  head  race  to  be  a  circular  wood-lined  conduit  of  twent}'  feet 
internal  diameter,  and  with  a  loss  of  head  of  fourteen  feet  in  the  entire  length  of 
.'5.400  feet,  a  total  water  power  capacity  of  from  22,000  to  24,000  horse  power  could 
be  obtained  under  an  available  head  r  n  the  water  wheels  of  thirty  feet.  The 
cost  of  .such  a  conduit  (wood-lined)  with  suitable  terminal  works  and  buildings 
should  not  be  over  $450,000  ;  and  the  total  capital  outlay  required  to  equip  the 
works  complete  with  water  wheels,  generators,  etc.,  etc.,  and  distribute  the  energy 
at  convenient  points  on  the  high  bank  above  would  probably  not  exceed  $60  to 
$65  per  electrical  horse  power,  and  the  effective  output  of  power  available  for 
consumers,  after  allowing  for  loss  in  machines,  etc.,  etc.,  would  be  about  15,000  or 
16,000  horse  power.  This  proposition  will,  I  tliink,  compare  favorably  with 
any  of  the  large  schemes  for  the  development  of  power  projected  in  or  around 
Niagara  Falls. 

By  \ising  a  head  race  of  still  larger  dimensions  a  nuich  greater  power  could 
be  obtained  at  a  less  outlay  per  unit.  Thus  a  conduit  of  twenty-four  feet  internal 
diauieter  laid  to  the  same  grade  would  afford  fully  fort}'  per  cent,  more  power, 
while  the  cost  of  terminals  of  the  raceway,  buildings,  inclines,  etc.,  would  be  nearly 
the  same  in  either  case. 

No.  2  is  a  comparatively  small  power,  but  very  eonqjact  and  conveniently 
situated  in  the  innnediate  vicinity  of  the  town,  and  therefore  very  suitab'e  for 
local  users.  It  could  be  most  readily  developed  bj^^  an  open  cutting  in  the  rock 
across  the  point  separating  the  Whirlpool  Raj  ids  eddy  from  the  Whirlpool  froper. 
or  by  a  flume  sunk  in  the  talus  at  the  water's  edge,  in  either  case  the  cost  would 
approximately  be  the  same.  As  the  head  is  small  the  cost  per  horsepower  would 
be  somewhat  greater.  A  raceway  of  thirty  feet  Avide  and  ten  feet  deep  would  give 
a  net  capacity  of  over  2,000  electrical  horse  power. 

No.  3,  which  is  at  the  outlet  from  the  Whirlpool,  could  be  made  to  develop 
power  at  a  comparatively  small  cost.  As  the  distance  to  be  overcome  is  very 
short  and  the  material  to  be  removed  to  form  an  open  cutting  or  flumeway  is  of 
good  quality  sandstone,  and  as  much  of  the  stone  quarried  would  Ix'  suitable  for 
building  the  protective  works  and  other  constructions  needed  for  the  work,  a 
moderate  capital  outlay  per  horse  power  would  suffice  to  construct  and  e()uip 
a  power  of  1,500  or  2,000  horse  power  capacity. 

No.  4  is  in  some  respects  well  adapted  for  generating  a  water  power  on  a  large 
scale,  but  it  would  be  much  more  costly  per  unit  of  power  developed  than  any 
of  the  others. 

13 


61  Victor  a.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1898 


Tlie  method  of  development  proposed  for  No.  1  would  certainly  be  the  best 
adapted  for  this  situation;  but  (nving-  to  the  difference  in  the  relative  fall  of  the 
water  between  the  terminals  tlie  t^reatest  economic  head  that  could  be  obtained 
would  be  about  thirteen  ieet,  and  the  same  description  of  flume,  if  applied  in 
this  case,  would  yield  less  than  one-third  the  water  power,  while  the  cost  of  flume, 
terminals,  etc.,  etc.,  would  be  practically  the  same,  and  the  cost  of  water  wheels 
and  generators  somewhat  more. 

This  scheme  has  some  compensating  advantages  which  make  it  well  worthy 
of  consideration :  for  instance,  the  opportunity  of  choosing  a  site  for  buildings 
and  appurtenances,  with  an  abundance  of  room  for  the  same,  advantages  in 
selecting  terminal  points  for  the  flumeways,  etc.,  and  a  large  quantity  of  the  best 
building  material  on  the  ground.  With  all  these,  however,  it  is  the  least  desirable 
of  the  several  schemes  outlined,  as  the  capital  outlay  per  horse  power  required 
for  construction  and  equipment  would  amount  to  nearly  three  times  that  of  No. 
1,  and  the  same  size  of  conduit,  if  laid  to  the  most  effective  gradient,  would  not 
yield  over,  say,  -5,000  electrical  horse  power. 

No  5  would  make  an  admirable  and  coii\  enient  water  power,  and  could  be 
developed  by  either  a  tunnel  oi-  a  flume  laid  along  the  shore,  as  might  be  found 
the  most  desirable  on  closer  scrutin}-.  The  cost  of  development  would  he  about 
$75  per  eflective  horse  power,  and  a  twenty  feet  conduit  for  a  head  or  tail  race 
would  give,  say,  5,000  electrical  horse  power.  In  this  case  there  would  be  no 
diflficulty  whatever  in  duplicating  the  plant  at  any  future  time  should  the  require- 
ments of  the  market  for  power  demand  it.  The  power  house  could  be  placed  on 
level  ground  and  the  excavations  would  be  in  good  quality  of  sandstone. 

In  projects  Nos.  1,  2  and  -S  the  talus  would  have  to  be  cleared  off"  and  exca- 
vations made  where  the  power  houses  would  be  erected,  and  in  each  instance 
access  secured  from  the  top  of  the  bank  by  means  of  inclined  planes  or  vertical 
lifts,  and  approaches  made  by  which  men  and  materials  could  be  got  to  the  site 
of  the  works,  something  after  the  principle  adopted  in  respect  to  the  Niagara 
Falls  Hydra\)lic  Power  CompaEy's  works  on  the  American  side. 

As  the  water  level  of  the  Niagara  is  subject  to  considerable  fluctuations, 
chieflj'  by  reason  of  storms  on  Lake  Erie,  it  would  be  necessary  in  each  case  to 
make  provision,  for  this  in  designing  the  machinery  and  appliances.  As,  how- 
ever, the  fluctuations  are  in  general  very  quickly  and  uniformly  distributed  over 
the  whole  course  of  the  river,  the  hydraulic  head  at  any  of  the  points  referred  to 
does  not  at  such  times  var}"  much  from  the  mean,  and  the  change  in  levels  can 
in  some  cases  be  pi'ovided  for  in  the  arrangement  of  the  draft  tubes  of  turbines, 
but  in  other  cases  where  low^  heads  are  used  special  provision  will  have  to  be 
made  to  avoid  detention  during  periods  of  extreme  high  or  low  water. 

The  problems  of  how  best  to  deal  with  floating  ice  and  frazil,  which  are 
inseparable  from  works  of  this  nature,  will,  as  usual,  have  to  be  considered,  but 
as  the  intake  would  in  each  instance  be  located  innnediately  at  the  parting  of  the 
waters,  where  the  very  best  possible  opportunity  exists  for  solving  the  problem, 
without  doubt  the  practical  dealing  with  the  question  will  be  made  comparatively 
easy. 

In  order  to  effect  an}^  one  of  these  several  water  power  developments,  certain 
works  would  of  necessity  have  to  be  constructed  near  the  water's  edge  at  either 
extremity  of  the  raceway,  and  in  each  case  the  natural  scenery  would  be  effected 
to  some  extent;  but  this  feature  cannot  be  avoided  if  the  development  of  the 
water  power  is  to  take  place.  With  careful  study  the  works  may  be  made  an 
interesting  featui^e  of  the  landscape — certainly  vastly  less  prominent  or  objection- 
able than  the  Vaiilding  of  a  low  level  railway  all  along  the  shore. 

14 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (Xo.  31).  A.  1898 


Tlie  adoption  of  electricity  as  the  most  economical  and  desirable  form  of 
power  for  use  in  street  railways  has,  within  the  last  ten  years,  become  almost 
universal,  and  it  is  generally  believed  that  within  a  very  short  period  electricity, 
as  a  motive  power  will  laicjely  supercede  steam  on  the  railways  of  the  country. 
Shoulrl  this  prove  to  be  the  case  a  very  large  market  for  power  would  be  created 
in  the  immediate  vicinity  of  Niagara  Falls  which  is  alread}'  a  great  railway 
centre,  and  the  utilization  of  the  water  power  of  both  the  falls  and  the  rapids 
would,  doubtless,  be  reijuired  to  supply  the  needs  of  the  railways  and  manufac- 
turers at  the  lowest  competitive  rates. 

As  the  privileges  of  developing  water  power  at  tlie  Horse  Shoe  Falls  has 
already  been  granted  to  a  strong  company,  it  seems  to  be  quite  reasonable  to 
suppose  that  the  privileges  now  referred  to  will  be  eagerh^  sought  for  by 
capitalists  :  and  that  the  park  revenue  will  be  considerably  increased  l)y  means 
of  the  rentals  to  be  obtained  therefrom. 

The  whole  respectfully  submitted. 

(Sgd.)  .TAMKS  WILSON, 

Superintendent. 
Niagara  Falls,  June  20th.  1897. 


Since  the  Commissioners  received  the  foregoing  report,  a  further  application 
has  been  made  on  behalf  of  the  Town  of  Niagara  Falls  for  rights  in  the  water 
power  of  the  river  at  the  well  known  Whirlpool  Rapids  in  front  of  the  northern 
part  of  the  town,  and  as  far  as  the  Whirlpool. 

The  Commissioners,  realizing  the  vast  importance  of  this  subject  and  the 
necessity  of  their  being  in  a  position  to  recommend  a  definite  line  of  policy  wheii- 
ever  the  Government  might  deem  the  time  opportune  for  dealing  with  the  ques- 
tion, have  taken  steps  to  secure  the  services  of  hydraulic  and  electrical  engineer- 
ing experts  to  be  associated  witli  the  Park  Superintendent  in  the  preparation  of 
detailed  plans  for  the  best  practical  method  of  using  the  waters  in  the  rapids  of 
the  lower  river  for  power  purposes. 

The  expenditure  on  the  maintenance  of  the  Park  propert}^  lias  Ijeen,  as 
usual,  confined  chiefly  to  the  front  portion  of  the  Park  proper  at  Niagara  Falls, 
and  to  the  Queeuston  Heights  Park  :  the  funds  at  the  disposal  of  the  Commis- 
sioners not  permitting  of  much  l)eing  done  to  the  extensive  territor}^  at  Niagara 
Glen  or  to  the  long  connecting  reaches  along  the  bank  of  the  river. 

A  con.siderable  improvement  has,  however,  been  made  to  a  portion  of  the 
Victoria  Parkway,  in  front  of  the  Town  of  Niagara  Falls,  in  cutting  down  the 
sidewalk  to  the  level  of  the  roadway,  and  in  acquiring  some  additional  lands  at 
the  Tapper  Suspension  Briilge  where  the  traffic  is  greatest,  and  where  the  accom- 
modation afibrded  by  the  original  chain  allowance  was  too  mucli  restricted.  A 
small  additional  strip  was  also  added  to  the  roadway  at  this  point  by  an  exchange 
of  lands  effected  between  the  Bridge  Company  and  the  Commissioners. 

A  noticeable  improvement  has  also  been  made  to  the  Victoria  Parkway  at 
the  crossing  of  the  Grand  Trunk  Railway  Bridge,  the  substitution  of  a  steel  arch 
in  place  of  the  suspension  bridge  erected  by  Roebling  in  1855,  permitting  a  por- 
tion of  the  space  formerly  occupied  by  the  steel  towers  supporting  the  cables 
being  left  more  open.  This  has  been  put  into  a  neat  condition  in  accordance 
with  the  arrangements  entered  into  with  the  Bridge  Company. 

For  a  full  resume  of  the  various  works  which  have  been  undertaken  during 
the  year  reference  can  be  had  to  the  report  of  the  Superintendent  of  the  Park, 
which  will  be  found  appended  hereto. 

15 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1898 


FINANCIAL. 

The  tollowino-    suniuiary  will  sliow  the  receipts  ami   expenditures  for  the 
year : 

Receipts. 

Rental  from  the  Canadian  Niagara  Power  Couipanv  for 

one  year  to  1st  November,  1897 \  .  ..  $25,000  00 

Rental  from  the  Niagara  Fall.s  Park  'ind  River  Railway 

Company  to  1st  December  (1-5  months) 12,500  00 

Rental  from  Messrs.  Zybach  &  Co.  for  refreshment  and 

photo  privileges,  one  year  to  31st  December,  1897.  8,200  00 
Receipts  from  tolls  at  DufFerin  Islands  and  at  Brock's 

Monument 1.721   15 

Receipts  from  sundry  sales  of  old  materials,  etc,  etc.  .  85  44 

Imperial  Bank  overdraft .  428  51 


Total    S47,98n  10 


E.XI'KNDITURES. 

Paid  Imperial  Bank  account  of  overdraft  January  1st.  .     S3,473  06 
Capital  Account ; 

Permanent  improvements,  including  cost 

of   mateiials,  etc     $2,987  00 

Wages  of   mechanics  and  laborers  ....      2,884  95 

Land  purchases  and   surveys 411   18 

Miscellaneous,  including  legal  expenses.         54S  99 

$6,802   18 


Maintenance  Account  : 

Salaries  and  wages,  ineluilino    waoes  of 

laborei-s,  teams,  etc $10,132  45 

Cost  of  materials,  etc 2,652  56 

Office  expenses    191   45 

Commissioners"  expenses 235  94 

Miscellaneous 150  15 

Interest  on  bank  overdrafts Ill   20 

13,473  75 

Coupon  interest  on  debentui-es,  and  charges 24,126   11 

Total    S47.935  10 

All  f)f  which  is  respectfullv  suluiiitted. 

J.  W.  LANGMUIR, 

Chairman. 

GEORGE  H.  WILKES. 

J.  W.  CHARLTON. 

J  AS.  BANFIELD. 

16 


i 


01  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1808 


REPORT  OF  THK  SUPERINTENDENT. 

To  Ihe  (■oiniiiissioners  for  the  Queen  Victoria  Niagara  Falls  Park  : 

Gentlemen,. — 1  beg  to  submit  my  report  of  the  works  done  in  eoimectioii 
with  the  Park  dui-iug-  the  3'ear  endincr  the  81st  December,  1897. 

Genekai,    A1  aintenan<  -e. 

Tlie  usual  works  incident  to  the  proper  maintenance  of  the  grounds,  build- 
ings and  other  structures  pertaining  to  the  Park  system,  were  all  carried  on 
during  the  past  season  with  as  much  care  and  attention  as  the  means  at  command 
for  this  part  of  the  work  would  admit  of,  and  it  is  beUeved  that  the  results 
attained  met  with  the  hearty  approval  of  the  residents  of  the  vicinity  and  of 
visitors  generally. 

As  heretofore  our  efforts  wet  e  chiefly  contined  to  the  Parks  proper  at  Niagara 
Falls  and  Queenston  Heights,  but  something  was  also  accomplished  at  Niagara 
Glen  and  on  \'ictoria  Parkway  in  front  of  the  Town  of  Niagara  Falls.  Owino- 
to  the  unfavorable  spring,  some  of  the  ornamental  beds  of  shrubbery  and  peren- 
nials did  not  show  up  as  well  as  anticipated.  The  stock  of  flowering  plants, 
however,  has  been  largely  augmented  during  the  season,  and  nnicli  better  results 
may  be  hoped  for  in  the  future. 

New  Trees  and  Shrubs. 

A  large  con.signment  of  the  choicest  ornamental  and  flowering  trees  suitable 
foi-  the  l(jeality  were  procured  from  reliable  nursery  men  and  planted  out.  These, 
together  with  the  planting  of  previous  seasons,  will  in  a  very  few  years  add 
materially  to  the  appearance  of  the  property,  ajid  in  all  probability  will  amply 
suffice  for  some  portions  or  it. 

All  new  stock  and  many  varieties  of  the  .standard  trees  and  shrubs  ha\e 
l)een  labelled,  the  ]iroper  and  eonnnon  names  being  printed  plainly  on  cardboard 
and  encased  in  tight  fitting  copper  and  mica  frames,  and  attached  to  the  growing 
wood  by  adjustible  copper  fastenings.  Great  care  has  been  exercised  in  securing 
accurate  identification  of  each  species,  and  it  is  hoped  the  laV)els  will  prove  to  be 
waterproof  and  enduring. 

The  instructions  given  several  years  ago  to  secure,  as  far  as  was  possible, 
specimens  of  all  the  desirable  varieties  of  trees  and  shrubs  which  might  reason- 
abl}'  be  expected  to  grow  in  this  favored  locality,  and  thus  lay  the  foundation  for 
a  comprehensive  botanical  garden,  where  the  student  of  arboriculture  could  com- 
pare the  various  classes  of  trees  and  shrubs,  has  been  constantly  kept  in  mind  : 
and  already,  notwithstanding  the  paucity  of  the  appropriations  made  from  year 
to  year  by  the  commissioners  for  planting,  and  the  great  extent  of  ground  requir- 
ing treatment,  a  good  beginning  has  been  made  and  a  large  variety  of  specimen 
trees  of  the  choicest  kinds,  together  with  many  of  the  best  of  the  flowerino' 
shrubs,  have  been  set  out. 

Arrangements  have  also  been  made  for  a  considerable  addition  chiefly  of  n<-w 
and  (U'sirable  forms  of  shrubbery  to  be  planted  out  next  season. 

Cribwork  Protection  to  the  River  Bank. 

The  protection  works  around  the  shore  of  the  river  opposite  to  the  Duflerin 
Islands,  where  serious  erosion  had  taken  place,  as  referred  to  in  previous  reports, 
and  which  important  work  has  been  in  course  of  consti'uction  for  the  past  four 
2  N.E.  17 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1898 


years,  was  completed  early  in  the  season  by  tilling  in  the  gap  left  from  the  end  of 
last  season's  work  to  the  summer  house  at  the  southern  end  of  Riverside  Ramble. 
The  depth  of  water  to  be  overcome  along  this  portion  of  tlie  work  was  greater 
than  encoinitered  on  most  of  the  work  previously  <lone,  n(^cessitating  a  greatn' 
expenditure  of  labor  and  material  in  its  construction. 

The  completion  of  this  cribwork  opened  up  the  way  for  the  extension  ol 
Riverside  Ramble  around  the  shore  of  the  mainland  all  the  way  to  Dufterin  (Jato, 
a  distance  of  nearly  half  a  mile.  This  work  was  thoi'oughly  well  <lone.  The 
cribbing  was  filled  up  to  the  top  with  large  stones,  and  a  nicje  gravelle<l  walk, 
averaging  six  feet  in  width,  was  constructed  over  tlie  whole  distance,  tliereliy 
atlbrding  a  delightful  and  permanent  and  well  sha<led  w'alk  aiouml  this  pleasant 
reach  of  the  river. 

In  addition  to  the  filling  of  the  cribwork,  the  space  behind  has  also  been  tilled 
up  even  with  the  top  of  the  walk  with  heavy  stone  and  gravel  foi'  most  of  the 
distance,  thus  securing  a  firm  "  toe  "  for  the  foot  of  the  steep  hill  adjoining,  which 
will  hereafter  effectually  prevent  a  repetition  of  the  sliding  of  the  hill  side  into 
the  river. 

The  portion  of  Riverside  Ramble  soiith  of  the  foot  of  Suspension  Bridge  was 
found  upon  examination  to  be  entirely  worn  out ;  the  old  cribwork  foundation 
had  become  quite  useless  as  a  protection  to  the  shore,  and  a  considerable  slide 
occurred  at  a  steep  point  of  the  hill  side  during  the  early  spring.  It  was,  there- 
fore, deemed  necessarx'  to  renew  the  work.  The  depth  of  water  was  not  as  great 
as  was  found  south  of  the  summer  house,  and  the  work  was  expeditio\isly  accom- 
plished. A  solid  gravel  walk  with  stout  cedar  giiard  railing  was  also  placed 
along  this  portion  of  the  work. 

The  remaining  portion  of  Riverside  Rand^le  should  be  taken  in  hand  next 
spring,  and  the  same  permanent  character  given  to  the  cril)Work,  especially  as  it  is 
now  in  need  of  substantial  repair. 

During  the  season  it  was  found  that  the  very  swift  current  at  Dufferin  (late 
had  underminded  the  protection  work  in  front  of  the  gateman's  hou.se.  'J'lie  old 
work  was,  therefore  taken  out  and  a  crib  resting  on  very  large  timbers,  thoroughly 
bolted  to  the  bed  rock,  was  put  in.  This  was  also  filled  with  stone  and  surfaced 
with  gravel  and  should  last  for  many  years. 

Conservatory. 

The  erection  of  a  small  conservator}^  having  been  authorized,  in  which  to 
keep  the  exotic  plants  we  now  have  on  hand  as  well  as  many  which  may  be  added 
from  time  to  time,  and  to  afford  room  for  visitors  to  enjoy  a  modest  display  of 
winter  blooming  plants,  work  was  begun  in  the  autumn  on  a  structure  sixty  feet 
long,  twent}^  feet  wide,  fourteen  feet  high  at  the  ridge  and  six  and  a  half  feet  at 
the  wall  plate.  Owing  to  the  smallness  of  the  appropriation,  the  construction  of 
the  permanent  walls  had  to  be  deferred  until  next  .season,  and  the  building  made 
to  rest  on  temporary  posts ;  for  the  same  reason  the  flower  benches  and  walks 
were  not  made  permanent,  but  otherwise  the  structure  is  complete,  and  has  proved 
to  be  very  serviceable.  A  large  hot  water  furnace  has  been  put  in,  and  the  new 
building,  together  with  the  two  small  forcing  and  propagating  houses  erected  in 
l<Sf)4,  are  now  all  warmed  by  hot  water  circulating  through  four  inch  pipes. 

Flagstone  Walk. 

Tlie  difKculty  of  maintaining  gravel  walks  in  fit  condition  for  use  by  visitors 
in  the  vicinity  of  the  Horseshoe  Fall,  owing  to  the  excess  of  moi-^ture  in  .summei' 
and  accumulations  of  ice  in  wintei-,  has  been  referred  to  in  previous  re])orts.     As 

18 


f>l  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1898 

an  expcriiuent,  Rainljow  Rainl)lc  vvliich  <'xteiid.s  tVoiii  Table  Itock  to  Cedar  Island 
has  been  provided  with  a  split  tlaostone  pavement  of"  Credit  Valley  freestone,  four 
feet  wide,  laid  in  tlie  centre  of  tiie  gravel  path  ;  whicli.  while  inexpensive,  appeal's 
tt>  answer  the  purpose  very  well.  The  location  of  this  walk  is  likely  to  be 
cluingetl  in  a  year  or  two,  and  tlierefore  only  such  a  class  of  walk  as  could  be 
readilt'  taken  up  and  )-e]aid  was  availal)le. 

PeHMAXKN'T    lioADWAVS    IvF.QIi  HIED. 

I  ha\'('  again  to  uigv  the  early  construction  of  a  ])eriiiancnt  I'oadwaj',  with 
its  complement  of  sidewalks,  curbstones,  etc.,  from  the  restaurant  southwards  at 
least  as  far  as  Table  Rock.  Over  this  portion  of  the  park  the  traffic  is  at  all 
times  very  heavy,  and  the  incessant  moisture  from  the  falls  keeps  the  roads  aiid 
pathways  in  an  unfit  condition  for  either  driving  or  walking  over.  The  only 
remedy  which  suggests  itself  is  to  construct  brick  on  cryncrfti^  for  the  driveway, 
and  a  brick  or  cement  walk  for  pedestrians, 

Tliis  is  certainly  an  urgently  needed  work,  and  one  which  would  add  very 
greatly  to  the  comfort  and  convenience  of  many  thousands  of  visitors  each  year, 
and  it  is  hoped  that  means  may  be  found  of  undertaking  the  work  early  in  the 
spi'ing  of  next  year. 

SrNDRV    WOIIKS   OF    IMPROVEMENT. 

It  was  found  desirable  to  enclose  tlie  upper  pond  in  the  picnic  gi-onnd  with 
a  stone  coping  similar  to  that  which  was  last  year  put  around  the  pond  near  the 
monument  to  Sir  Casimir  Gzowski.  The  small  fountain  pond  still  re([uires  pro- 
tectiijn  of  a  similar  nature,  as  during  the  busy  season  several  children,  for  want 
of  such  protection,  fell  into  the  water,  and  had  not  prompt  assistance  been  at 
lumd,  the  consequences  might  have  been  more  serious. 

A  con.signment  of  park  settees  of  neat  design  and  finish  was  procured  iiud 
distributed  through  the  grounds  during  the  early  part  of  the  season,  which 
appears  to  suit  the  requirements  of  visitors,  and  should  be  added  to  during  the 
coming  season. 

Three  new  spring  water  drinking  fountains  were  added  tliis  year  to  the  six 
in  number  wliich  had  been  alread}^  provided,  one  near  the  Mowat  Gate,  one  at 
the  play  grounds,  and  the  third  on  the  front  walk  near  to  the  picnic  garden. 
These  have  large  chisled  sandstone  basins  or  reservoirs,  and  are  provided  with  an 
abundance  of  clear  spring  water  conveyed  to  them  by  pipes  from  living  springs  at 
tht!  foot  of  the  high  Ijank  bounding  the  park. 

\'icToiUA  Parkway. 

Under  an  agreement  entei'ed  into  with  the  town  of  Niagara  Falls,  an  import- 
ant improvement  was  made  to  Victoria  Parkway,  \vhich  fronts  the  town  on  the 
river  side  and  forms  the  principal  approach  to  the  park  from  the  railway  stations 
in  the  town.  The  sidewalk,  which  was  in  Several  places  considerably  above  the 
level  of  the  street,  was  cut  down  to  a  uniform  grade  therewith  and  .S(mie  low 
places  in  the  roadway  adjoining  the  walk  filled  in.  The  undergrow^th  and  Ijrush- 
wood  along  the  edge  of  the  river,  where  it  obstructed  the  views  of  the  rivei-  ami 
gorge  to  any  appreciable  extent,  was  kept  trimmed,  and  all  decayed  timber  cut 
down. 

19 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  31).  A.  1898 


XiAGARA  Glen. 

The  work  ot"  opening'  up  tlie  i-are  lieauties  of  Niagara  Glen  so  as  to  make 
tlieni  leasonably  accessible  to  tlie  general  public,  was  continued  this  year,  and 
the  pathway  which  had  been  opened  down  to  near  the  water's  edge  was  extended 
southwards,  its  general  couise  following  the  bank  of  the  river  as  nearly  as  was 
I'ound  to  be  practical)le,  and  now  tei-minates  at  the  water's  edge  at  the  limits  of 
the  glen.  A  branch  path  was"  also  made,  leading  to  .some  pot-hole  stones  of 
gigantic  dimensions,  which  are  well  worthy  of  a  visit. 

Another  shoi-t  Ijranch  ])ath  was  made  to  a  spring  gusliing  out  of  the  face  of 
the  cliti*  which  foiiiis  the  lower  or  present  ri\'er  channel. 

It  i.?  hoped  nuich  more  may  be  done  in  the  coming  j^ear  to  open  u})  the 
delightful  scenery  of  this  romantic  glen. 

Whirlpool  Point. 

A  beginning  has  been  made  to  remove  the  nakedness  of  Whirlpool  Point. 
As  the  rock  formation  at  this  point  is  practically  at  the  surface  of  the  ground, 
the  first  thing  to  be  done  was  to  give  the  whole  a  good  coating  of  soil,  in  which 
shrubs  and  trees  could  find  a  foothold.,  and  on  which  grass  would  grow.  This 
has  been  pai-tially  done,  and  by  next  spring  some  shrubbery  may  be  planted  out, 
and  shade  trees  b}'  the  autumn. 

This  is  a  charming  spot  from  which  to  view  the  might}'  whirlpool,  and  it 
should  be  Tiiade  attractive  to  visitor.s. 

QUEENSTON    HeIGHT.S    PaRK. 

Not  very  much  has  been  attempted  this  year  in  the  way  of  improvements  at 
Queenston  Heights.  The  thick  undergrowth  in  the  grove  was  all  cut  away,  and 
the  boundary  near  the  west  end  of  the  lands  patented  was  correctly  defined  and 
fenced  oft'  Brocks  Spring  was  also  made  more  secure,  and  the  pipes  leading  the 
waters  to  the  front  of  the  ground  were  changed  and  enlarged  to  insure  ?  better 
flow.  An  additional  foiintain  was  also  placed  .half  way  down  the  heights,  for  the 
accommodation  of  pedestrians  going  up  from  the  village.  A  new  pathway  has 
also  been  connnenced,  leading  up  from  the  village,  which  will  make  the  ascent 
less  fatiguing. 

At  the  cenotaph  which  marks  the  spot  where  Sir  Isaac  Brock  fell,  the  lands 
which  had  to  be  purchased  in  order  to  improve  the  surroundings  were  fenced  with 
a  neatly,  patterned  garden  railing  of  wire,  well  secured  to  turned  cedar  posts,  all 
nicely  painted,  and  furnished  with  two  gates.  The  ground  was  cleared  of  stone, 
ploughed  deeph',  levelled  off'  covered  with  good  soil,  and  .so\vn  with  lawn  grass. 
A  choice  selection  of  ornamental  shade  trees,  manj^  of  them  of  weeping  habit,  was 
])lanted  out.     A  gravel  walk  was  also  made  around  the  monument. 

Altogether,  the  appearance  of  the  place  has  been  transformed,  and  if  the 
township  authorities  could  be  induced  to  put  the  road  which  runs  alongside  the 
ground  in  something  like  good  condition,  the  tout  ensfmble  would  be  more  worthy 
of  the  events  commemorated. 

The  whole  respectfull}^  submitted. 


JAMES    WILSON, 

Superintendent. 


NiAiJARA  Falls,  December  3Ist,  1897. 

20 


ANNUAL  REPORT 


BUREAU  OF   INDUSTRIES 


PROVINCE  OF  ONTARIO 


1897. 


PARTS    I,   II  AND  III-AGRICULTURAL   STATISTICS. 
PART  IV-CHATTEL  MORTGAGES. 

[PUBLISHED  BY  THE  ONTARIO  DEPARTMEKT  OF  AOBICULTUBE^  TORONTO,) 


PRINTED    BY    ORDER    OF 

THE  LEGISLATIVE  ASSEMBLY  OF  ONTARIO] 


TORONTO: 
WARWICK  BRO'rf  «:  RUTTER,  Pbtnters,  6«  ani>  70  Front  St.  Wist. 

1898. 


SIXTEENTH  ANNUAL  REPORT 


BUEEAU  OF  INDUSTRIES 

PARTS  I,  II,  III  AND  IV. 


1897. 


To  THR  Honorable  the  Minister  of  Agriculture  : 

Sir, — I  have  the  honor  to  present  herewith  Parts  I,  II  and  111  of  the  Sixteenth 
Annual  Report  of  the  Bureau  of  Industries,  being  the  Agiicuhural  Statistics  of  Ontario 
for  the  year  1897  ;  also  Part  IV,  relating  to  Chattel  Mortgages. 

I  have  the  honor  to  be,  Sir, 

Your  obedient  servant, 

0.   C.   JAMES, 

Secretary. 
Toronto,  Oct.   12th,  1898- 


CONTENTS. 


PACK. 

Leti'kb  of  Tkansmission.  iii. 

PART  I.-THE  WEATHER  AND*  THE  CROPS. 

The  Weather  :   General  review,  showing  temperature,  rainfall  and  sunshine  dnring  the  growing 

season 1 

Note?  from  Temiacamingue  District 3 

Notes  from  Rainy  River  District 4 

Farm  Lands  :  Statistics  by  county  groups  showing  rural  area  assessed,  cleared  lands,  woodland  and 

swamp,  marsh  or  ivaste  lands 5 

Pasture  6 

Acreage  under  crop  and  proportion  per  1,000  acres  of  cleared  land   *> 

FiBLO  C^OPS  :  Geaeral  description,  showing  by  couniy  groups  the  area  and  production  for  1896  and 
1897  as  compared  with  the  annual  averages,  with  extracts  from  remarks  made  by  corres 
pondents : 

Fall  wheat 7 

Spring  wheat    9 

Barley     10 

Oats 11 

Rye 11 

Peas ^ 12 

Corn      ' 14 

Buckwheat    16 

Beans 16 

Potatoes 17 

Mangel- wurzels 17 

Carrots    18 

Turnips 19 

Hay  and  clover    -         ■  •    •    20 

Comparative  Yebld  of  Field  Crops  :  Showing  ratios  of  yields  to  the  annual  averages 21 

FRttT  AND  Fruit  Trees  :  Showing  general  condition,  and  giving  statistics  by  county  groups,  of 

apple  trees  and  of  orchard  and  vineyard 23 

Remarks  ok  Corrkspondknts  :  26 

The  Wabigoon  District 36 

Thk  Weather  :  Giving  statistics  in  detail  by  months  and  stations  or  districts: 

Temperature,  1897 ^ 

Temperature,  1882-97 39 

Sunshine 40 

Rain  and  snow 40,  41 

The  weather  at  Toronto    43 

The  weather  at  Lake  Temiscamingue 44 

RoRAL  Area  :  Showing  by  counties  and  districts  as  taken  by  municipal  assessors  for  1897  the  total 

area,  acres  cleared,  acres  in  woodland  and  acres  in  waste  lands 45 

Field  Crops  :  Showing  by  counties  and  districts  the  acreage  and  production  of  the  several  field  crcJps 
for  the  yeirs  1895  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  year?,  1882-97  ;  also  the 
yields  per  acre  : 

Fall  wheat 46 

Spring  wheat 47 

Barley 48 

Oats ; 49 

Rye    50 

Peas 51 

Corn  . . . . ;    52 

Buckwheat 53 

Beans 64 

[v.] 


61  Victoria  Sessional  I'apers  (No  32).  A.  1898 


Potatoes ^^ 

Mangel-wurzele    •''6 

Carrots •^7' 

Turnips -^8 

Hay  and  clover    ^^ 

Ratios  of  total  production  in  1897  to  yearly  averages  of  each  crop  i>0 

Ratios  of  yields  per  acre  in  1897  to  yearly  averages 61 

AcRKAGK  rNDKB  Cbof  :  Shov/irg  by  counties  and  districts  the  aggregate  area  of  the  above  14  crops; 

also  the  area  in  pasture,  in  orchards  and  in  vineyards 62 

Apples  :  Show  ing  the  number  of  trees  and  estimated  productii  n 63 

Ratios  of  Abeas  cndee  each  Crop  per  1,000  A  cres  of  Cleared  Land 64 

Ontario  vs.  A  merican  States  :  A  c<  mparison  in  yields  of  cereals  per  acre 66 

The  Wheat  Crop  of  the  World  :  American  and  Euro^^ean  estimates 66,  67 

Principal  Crops  of  the  United  Statep  in  1897 *>8 

PART  II.^LIVE  STOCK,  THE  DAIRY,  AND  THE  APIARY. 

LrvE  Stock  ok  Hand:  Geceral  review  of  the  condition  of  live  stock  in  1897,  and  showing  by  county 
groups  the  numbers  of  the  several  classes  on  hand  on  July  1,  with  comparative  totals  for  five 

years.     Renjarks  of  correspondents 6& 

Hordes  . 70 

Cattle    70 

Hogs 71 

Sheep 71 

The  wool  clip 72" 

Poul' ry 73 

Live  Stock  Sold  :  Showing  the  numbers  sold  or  slaughtered  in  the  years  ending  June  30th,  1896 

and  1897 "6 

The  Apiaky  :  General  condition,  and  shewing  by  county  groups  the  number  of  colonies  of  bets  and 

their  value  (inc'uding  outfit)      ....    77 

The  Dairy:   General  condition  and  n  marks  of  correspondents;  statistics  of  cheese  factories  and 

creameries 80 

Cheese  factories,  comparative  total  f»r  fifteen  years   85 

Chef  se  factories,  monthly  statistics 86 

Creameries,  comparative  totals  for  five  years 8S 

Statistics  of  Live  Stock  :  Showing  details  of  numters  by  counties  and  districts  ; 

Horses 88 

Cattle 8» 

Hogs 88 

Sheep 90 

Poultry   ^ 

Live  stock  sold ...'. 91 

Bees 93 

Wool 92 

Statistics  of  Cheese  Factories  :  Showing  by  counties  and  districts  for  1897  the  amount  of  milk 
used,  the  quantity  and  value  of  cheese  made,  the  number  of  patrons  and  the  amounts  paid  to 

them,  etc    94 

(The   list  of  cheese  factories  fojmerly  printed    in   the  report  has  befn  issued   this  year  as  a 

eeparate  pamphlet,  for  greater  convenience  and  utility.) 

PART  III. -VALUES.  RENTS    AND  FARM  WAGES. 

Va  tes  cf  Farm  PROPKtTY :  Shcwirg  statistics  by  county  groups  for  1896  and  1897  of  the  va'ues 
placed  by  farmers  on  Farm  Lands,  Farm  Buildings,  Implements  and  Live  Stock,  with  com- 
parative totals  for  fifteen  ye.'  rs 

Values  per  acre 


95 
96 
Rentals  of  leased  farms •^' 


Values  of  Live  Stock  :  Showing  by  county  groupp,  in  1S97,  the  values  of  the  several  classes  ot  live 
ttock  on  hand  on  July  1,  and  of  those  sold  or  slaughtered  in  the  year  ending  June  30: 


Horses 

Cattle - . 

vi. 


97 
98 


61  Victoria.  .  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Sheep 98 

Hogs    98 

Poultry   99 

Values  per  head     f9 

Valuks  OF  FiELU  Ck0P3  :  Shuwing  the  yaluas  of  fchj  tuoal  prolaction  of  tlie  uevdral  crop:)  : 

Market  prict  s  for  sixteen  years 100 

Value  of  crops  for  five  years   101 

Value  of  pi  o  Juce  per  acra 102 

Ratios  of  values  per  acre  ia  1897  to  yearly  average  of  sixteen  years 102 

Farm  Labok  and  vVagks  :  Showing  general  condition,  with  statistics  of  average  wages  by  county 

groups  for  farm  laborers  and  domestic  servants 103 

Remarks  by  correspondents 104 

Farm  PROPKRTy  :  Giving  statistics  by  counties  and  districts  for  1896  and  1897  : 

Farmlands    108 

Farm  buildings 108 

Implements  (including  vehicles) 108 

Live  stock 109 

Rentals  per  acre 109 

Values  per  acre    110 

LlVK  Stock  Values  :  Giving  statistics  by  couaties  and  distiicts  for  1896  and  1897  : 

I          Horses Ill 

Cattle HI 

Hogs 112 

Sheep ' 112 

Poultry   112 

Live  stock  sold 113 

Live  stock  per  head 114,  116 

Market  Prices  :  Showing  foe  the  leaJin^  markets  of  Ontario  the  average  prices  of  agricultural  pro- 
ducts for  the  last  six  months  of  1897,  with  comparative  statistics  for  three  ytars 116-119 

Field  Crop  Values  :  Showing  by  c  mnty  groups  the  values  at  above  market  prices  of  the  total  pro- 
duction of  the  several  field  crop  1  f')r  18J6  aad  1897,  as  compared  with  the  yearly  averages 
derived  from  sixteen  years,  1882-97  : 

Fall  wheat 120 

Spring  wheat 120 

Barlty 121 

Oats 121 

Rye 122 

Peas 122 

Corn  123 

Buckwheat 123 

Beans 124 

Potatoes    ..... 124 

Maugel-wurzels 126 

Carrots    125 

Turnips  126 

Hay  and  clover 126 

All  field  crops  as  above 127 

Value  of  the  Wool  Clip  :  Statistics  by  couaties  and  districts 127 

PART  IV. -CHATTEL  MORTGAGES. 

OHAri'EL  Mortgages  on  Rkcjbd:  Showing  comparative  total  for  nine  years;  also  by  county  group 

for  four  years 133 

GooNTY  Divisions  :  Showing  by  couaties  and  districts  the  total  number  and  amount  of  chattel  mort 

gages  on  record  aad  discharged  134 

Fabmehs:  Shoiving  by  coaaties  and  districts  the  number  and  amount  of  chattel  mortgages  regis- 
tered against  Farmers    135 


Ikdkx 13ti 

vii. 


PART  I. 


THE  WEATHER  AND  THE  CROPS. 

THE  WEATHER. 

At  no  time  in  the  history  of  Ontario  agriculture  has  closer  attention  been  paid  to 
weather  conditions.  In  the  endeavor  to  raise  cheaper  fodder  for  live  stock — southern 
corn  for  the  silo,  lor  instance — plants  are  being  introduced  which  require  special  con- 
ditions of  warmth  or  moisture,  and  so  the  records  of  temperature,  precipitation  and  sun- 
shine, and  general  weather  statistics,  have  cjme  to  be  regarded  by  many  farmers  as  some- 
thing more  than  a  mere  compilation  of  figures. 


Temperature.  In  commenting  upon  the  table  showing  the  temperature  of  the 
months  November  to  April,  1896-97,  the  May  bulletin  said  :  "On  the  whole  the  winter 
was  milder  than  usual.  December  was  the  only  month  below  the  average,  it  having  been 
ten  degrees  colder  than  the  average  of  the  fifteen  years  1882-96.  March  was  seven  decrees 
warmer  than  in  the  two  previous  years,  but  not  up  to  the  temperature  of  1894." 

The  following  table  gives  the  temperature  from  April  to  September  inclusive prac- 
tically the  growing  season — at  ten  well  distributed  poinrs  in  Oatario  for  the  years  1896 
and  1897,  and  also  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882  97  : 


M(  nths. 


(1897  .. 

April <  1896  ., 

(1882-97 


May 


June 


1897  . . 
1896  . 
1882-97 


( 1897  . 
. <  1896  . 
(.1882-97 


( 1897  . . 

July <  1896  .. 

(.1882-97 

( 1897  . . 

AupTust    . .  <  1896  . . 

(1882-97 

( 1897  . . 

September  <  1896  . . 

( 1882-97 


Mean  (1897  ..    56.54    59.49 

for  six        <  1896  . .    58  14    62  09 
months.      (l882-97|  55.701  59.31 


69  60 
65. 8S 
64.37 

63.20 
64.87 
62.84 


41.09;  44.30  44.72 

44.99!  50.05  50.32 

39.34J  43.13  44.49 

48.90;  .52.72  55  Oti 

56.16:  62.85  65  22 

50.03    54.43  56.21 

55.61    61.00  64  55 

62.02    64.25  6S.89 

60.49    61.75  66.52 


71.30  73.49 
69.80  71  82 
67  99j  69.79 

64  77'  66.20 
67.45  68.93 
65.30    66.72 


60.87  62.86  63.34 
54.95  58.13  59.31 
57.111  60.24    60.64 


42.70 
47.63 
42.76 

52.90 
61  16 
53.99 

61.41 
65.. S3 
65.07 

70.91 

68  95 
68.12 

63.45 
66.1.T 
65.16 

60.49 
56.57 
59  01 


61.23  58  64 
64.081  60.96 
60.7l|  59.02 


O 


45.31 
47.34 
43.86 

55.00 
61.79 


42.79 
45.77 
41.60 

52.49 
59.79 


41.37 
46.01 
40.09 

52.50 
59  25 


40  70 

44.83' 
38.90 

52  63 

58.59 


43.11 
43.81 
40.66 

54  55 
59,15 


so 

a 

o 

Pi 


41.23  42  73 
43.35  46.31 
37.30  41.21 

I 

52  16  52.89 
57.46  60.14 


54.69    52.65    53.03    52.43    55.22,  51.47  53.42 


64.72 
65.92 
66.47 

74.78 
71.81' 
70.90 

67  75 
71.77' 
69.17, 

65.73 
60.94 
61.99 


61.30  59.70  59.46  62.02159.0160  88 
64.75  64.06  64.89  64.08'  63.55  64.77 
63.61.63.79    63.39    65.60    61.74  64.14 


72.11 
68  72 
67.72' 

64.75 
67.49 
65.55 

60.84 
57.41 
59.09 


62.21  59.05 
63. '26  60.66 
61.18    58.-37 


71.26 
67.72 
66.68 

I 
62.30 
66.92 
63.88 

i 
.^8.10 
55  42 
56.72 

57.54 
69.73 
57.36 


71.88 
67.95 
66.68 
■  I 
62.71 
66  61 
63.73 

58  38 
55  22 
56.96 


72.35  71.63171.93 
6S.94  66. 40' 68  79 
68.36,  64.56,67.52 

64.071  62.-37  64  16 
66  99  64  92  67.21 
65.26    60  92  64.85 


59.42' 
56  08 


58.41 
53.80 


60.84 
56.78 


67.47,  53.18  58.23 


57.63  59.25  57.47  58.91 
59.68  59  84'  58  25  60.67 
57.021  58.761  54.86  58.23 


The  mean  temperature  for  the  s'x  months  was  58.91°,  which  is  .68°  above  the  averace 
for  the  sixteen  years,  although  1  76°  below  the  figures  for  1896.  June  showed  a  very 
low  temperature  cocnpared  with  preceding  years,  and  August  also  fell  below  the  average 

[1] 
1  B.I.  (14) 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


but  the  remaining  four  months  of  the  table  show  a  higher  temperature  than  usual,  July 
and  September  particularly  so,  the  former  month  exceeding  its  averag9  by  4.41°,  Stony 
Creek  resumes  its  place  as  having  the  highest  mean  temperature  for  the  six  months,  Lon- 
don falling  to  second  place  ;  while  Saugeen  again  shows  the  lowest  mean  temperature  for 
the  six  months. 

r.h'^s  Precipitation.  The  table  following  gives  the  fall  of  rain  and  snow  in  the  winter 
months  by  districts  for  the  years  1896-7  with  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97. 
An  inch  of  rain  is  the  equivalent  of  ten  inches  of  snow. 


Months. 

1 

Wei^t  and 
Southwest. 

Northwest 
and  North. 

Centre. 

East  and 
^fortheast. 

Province 
average. 

Rain. 

Snow. 

Rain. 

Snow. 

Rain. 

Snow. 

in. 
4.6 
3.9 
5.7 

Rain. 

Snow. 

Rain. 

Snow. 

November  . . ' 

r 1896  . . 
1895  . . 
.1882-90 

in. 
2.59 
1.63 
2.40 

in. 
3.0 
3.8 
6.8 

in. 
2.28 
1.77 
2.06 

in. 
13.4 
15.2 
14.2 

in. 
2.43 
3.74 
2.38 

in. 

2.72 
2.73 
2.06 

in. 

3.8 
7.8 
8.4 

in. 
2.51 
2.47 
2.23 

in. 
6.2 

7.7 
8.8 

December  ...< 

(-1896  .. 

1895  .. 

[  1882-96 

0.45 
2.70 
1.61 

9.7 
11.1 
12.9 

0.27 
1.57 
1.12 

14.9 
21.5 
20.7 

0..S4 
1.75 
1.43 

8.4 
10  8 
11.0 

0.41 

2.87 
1.13 

5.5 

9.5 

13.8 

0..S7 
2.22 
1.32 

9.0 
13.2 
14.6 

January « 

(1897  .. 

1896  . . 

(.1882-97 

1.11 
0.59 
1.14 

15.6 
10.5 
16.4 

1.53 
0.23 

0.91 

25.2 
24.4 
28.0 

0.87 
1.54 
1.12 

13.1 
13.9 
18.2 

l.U 
0.25 
0.89 

15.3 
19.7 
21.7 

1.15 
0.65 
1.01 

17.3 
17.1 
21.1 

February  . . .  - 

(1897  .. 
(  1896  . 
( 1882-97 

1.05 
0.43 
1.46 

7.7 
20.7 
12.0 

0.40 
0.19 
0.68 

21.2 
18.6 
21.1 

1.10 
0.91 
1.10 

10.4 
28.0 
14.3 

1.03 
0.32 
0.67 

16.9 
30.6 

18.7 

0.89 
0.46 
0.95 

14.1 
24.5 
16.5 

March ■ 

(1897  .. 
{ 1896  . . 
( 1882-97 

1.12 
0.83 
1.15 

6.5 

10.4 

9.4 

1.26 
0.51 
0.78 

17.8 
11.2 
13.9 

2.16 
0.82 
1.11 

11.8 

12  0 

9.5 

1  53 

0.><0 
0.88 

14.7 
12.0 
13.1 

1.52 
0.74 
0.98 

12  7 
11.4 
11.5 

Totals  for 
five  months 

(1897  .. 
{  1896  . 
(.1882-97 

6.32 
6.18 
7.76 

42.5 
56.5 
57.5 

5.74 
4.iJ7 
5.45 

92.5 
90  9 
97.9 

6.90 
8.76 
7.14 

48.3 
68.6 
58.7 

6.80 
6.97 
5.63 

56  2 
79.6 

75.7 

6.44 
6  64 
6  49 

59.9 
73  9 

72.5 

The  rainfall  of  the  Province  for  the  five  months  was  normal,  but  the  fall  of  enow  was 
unusually  light.  March  was  the  only  month  in  which  the  fall  of  snow  exceeded  its  own 
average  record,  and  the  rainfall  of  that  month  was  also  considerably  over  the  average. 
The  rainiall  of  December  was  only  about  one-fourth  of  the  normal. 

The  rainfall  during  the  growing  season  (April  to  September  inclusive)  is  of  greater 
importance  than  the  winter  precipitation,  and  the  figare3  for  the  six  months  are  given  in 
the  following  table  : 


Months. 


April . . 
M  ay  . . 
June  . . 
July     . 

August 
September. 

Totals. 


West  and 

Northwest 

Southwest. 

and  North.     1 

1897. 

1882-97. 

1897. 

1882-97. 

in. 

in. 

in. 

in. 

2.41 

1.84 

2.53 

1.47 

3.3^ 

3.45 

3.21 

2  59 

2.95 

.S.13 

2.70 

2.72     1 

4.43 

2  62 

5.75 

2.68 

2.56 

2.64 

3.66 

2.87 

0.68 

2.56 

0.91 

2.94 

16.42 

16.24 

18.76 

15.27 

Centre. 


1897.     1882-97. 


ID. 

2.65 
3.. 39 
2  89 
6.12 
2.32 
0.41 


1.58 
2.84 
2.80 
2.4S 
2  36 
2.30 


17.78  I  14.31 


East  and 
Northeast 


Province 
average. 


1897. 

1882-97. 

1897. 

in. 

in. 

in. 

2.47 

l.m     1  2.52  1 

3.^2 

2.64 

3  38 

2.79 

2.63 

2  83 

5.15 

2.81 

5  36 

1.95 

2.60 

2.62 

1.30 

2.30 

0.83 

17.18 

14.34 

17.54 

m. 
1.56 

2  88 
2  82 
2.64 
2  62 
2.52 

15  04 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


The  rainfall  of  the  six  months  was  17.54  inches,  or  2.5  inches  more  than  the  average 
of  the  sixteen  years.  This  increase  was  confined  to  the  first  four  months  of  the  table, 
July  showing  over  double  its  ordinary  precipitation,  and  nearly  one-third  of  the  rainfall 
of  the  six  months,  although  J  une  barely  went  over  its  own  average  August  experienced 
exactly  an  average  rainfall,  but  in  September  only  .83  inch  of  rain  fell  as  compared  with 
its  average  of  2.52  inches  for  the  sixteen  years.  The  largest  rainfall  of  the  season  was 
reported  in  the  Northwest  and  North  district,  while  the  lowest  record  was  made  in  the 
West  and  Southwest  district,  which,  however,  has  the  highest  record  for  the  sixteen  years. 


Suns  H INK.  The  amount  recorded  for  the  six  months  April  to  September  inclusive 
for  the  years  1896-7,  and  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97,  are  given  in  the  fol- 
lowing table.     The  last  column  gives  the  hoars  of  possible  sunshine  for  latitude  45°. 


Months. 


C1897  .. 

April    <1896 

(.1882-97 

( 1897  . . 

May <1S96  .. 

(.  1882-97 

( 1897  . . 

June <  1896  . . 

(1882-97 

(•1897  .. 

July '(1896  . 

(1882-97 

(1897  .. 

August <  1896  . . 

(1882-97 

(1897  .. 

September <  1896  . . 

(18S2-97 

Totals  for  six  J  ,  nqg  * ' 

months.  (1882-97 


1 

O 
O 

o 

fl 

o 
u 

o 

hours. 

hours. 

144.2 

180.3 

141.1 

191.8 

178.8 

196.2 

186.4 

191.3 

272.9 

282.0 

205.7 

219.3 

234.0 

223.3 

262  0 

.%0.2 

242.2 

259.5 

253.8 

269.6 

245.9 

246.7 

271.1 

280.1 

269.4 

287.6 

2S2.3 

272.2 

234.7 

252.2 

239.1 

237.7 

159.5 

180.2 

186.3 

215.5 

1326.9 

1389.8 

1313  7 

1473.1 

1318.8 

1422.8 

P3 

hours. 
180.0 
156.4 
175.6 

190.4 

218.0  I 
199.0 

202.7 
329.7 
2.32.3 

268.9 
220.6 

257.2 

240.3 
272.1 
220.9 

258.3 
161.6 
171.0 

1340.6 
1358.4 
1256.0 


a 

hours. 
183.4 
195.2 
202.8 

193.8 
276.1 
216.9 

212.5 
310.4 
256.1 

255  5 
209.3 
269.3 

244.8 
259.4 
243. 8 

243.1 
154.4 
202.3 

1333.1 
1404.8 
1394.2 


M 

hours. 
182.9 
217.1 
195.7 

222.8 
261.7 
219.8 

226.7 
308  4 
249.0 

245.5 
266.3 
267.8 

270.0 
276.9 
248.3 

207.1 
184.3 
196.9 

1.355.0 
1514.7 
1377.5 


hours. 
174.2 
180.3 

189.8 

196.9 
262.1 
212.2 

219.8 
302.1 
247.8 

2.58.7 
237.8 
269.1 

262.4 
262.6 
240.6 

237.1 
168.0 
194.4 

1349.1 
1412.9 
1353.9 


33      > 


w 


hours. 
Uo6.4 

461.1 
1465.7 
U7O.9 
U34.5 

376.3 
I26I4.9 


A  total  of  1349.1  hours  of  sunshine  was  recorded  out  of  a  possible  2614.9  hours, 
being  63.8  hours  less  than  in  1896,  and  4.8  hours  less  than  the  average  for  the  sixteen 
years.  August  and  September,  however,  the  latter  month  especially,  were  relatively 
bright  months.  Although  July  shows  the  greatest  number  o!  hours  of  sunshine  for  the 
average  of  the  sixteen  years,  August  has  had  more  hours  of  sunshine  for  the  past  two  years. 
The  most  sunshine  wasthis  year^registered  at  Toronto  and  the  least  at  Woodstock. 


Seasonal  Noies'^froji  the  Temiscamingue  District.  Fol- 
lowiug  are  selections  from^the  notes  of  the  Government  meteorological  observer  at  Hailey- 
bury  tor  the  year  1897  : 

January    3, — Snow  gone  except  in  drift. 

February  5. — Air  very  damp  moielike  an  English  winter  day. 

April         3. — Last  sleighing  on  land. 

5. — Small  warblers  singing. 


3 


61  Victoria. 

April 

7.- 

15. 

22. 

24.- 

27.- 

28.. 

30.- 

May 

5. 

8. 

23.- 

June 

2.- 

July 

18.- 

19.- 

August 

23.- 

Sept. 

18.- 

20.- 

Nov. 

19.- 

20.- 

Dec. 

3.- 

7.- 

Sessional  Papers  (No.  S2). 


A.  1898 


— Ice  on  lake  30  inches  thick. 

, — Robins  arrived. 

— Last  sleighing  on  lake. 

— Last  trip  of  mail  on  ice. 

— Frogs  piping. 

— Put  bees  out. 

— Last  snow  of  season. 

— Blackbirds  arrived. 

— Swallows,  ice  went  out. 

— First  thunder. 

— Last  frost 

— Green  peas  ready. 

— Haying  began. 

— Frost  touched  tender  things,  thermometer  30° 

— Last  thunder  storm. 

—  First  snow. 

First  sleighing. 
— Ice  taking  at  head  of  lake. 

-Ice  forming  fast  on  lake. 

Ice  nearly  all  broken  up. 


The  folio  ving 


April 


Seasonal    Notes    from    Rainy   River    District. 
notes  are  taken  from  the  report  of  the  observer  at  Etno  River,  1897  : 

February  13. —  Blinding  snow  storm  continuing  on  14th,  snow  fully   four  feet  deep. 

March       18. — Took  bees  out  of  cellar. 

21. — No  spring  birds  yet. 

26= — Snow  on  level  15  to  18  inches  deep  ;  Rainy  river  channel  opening  up. 
Indians  say  they  never  knew  so  much  deep  snow  as  this  winter. 

1. — First  geese  and  ducks. 

4. — Blackbirds  and  robins  ;  Rainy  river  open  here. 

8. — First  plowing. 

9. — Rhubarb  and  small  fruits  budding,  grass  shewing  green. 

1 1. — Digging  out  potatoes  that  had  been  in  the  ground  ah  winter  ;  several 
patches  not  frozen. 

14. — Gulls  flocking  inland. 

15, — Frogs  croaking. 

16. — Sowing  peas  ;  17th  sowing  wheat,   planting  general. 

22. — Seeding  general  ;  30th  young  fruit  budding. 

4. — First  rhubarb  used  ;  14th  plum  trees  in  full  bloom. 
18. — First  thunder  ;  Slst  ice  formed. 

28. — Strawberries  ripe  ;  spring  wheat  heading  out ;  peas  in  bloom. 
18. — Haying,  two  to  four  tons  to  the  acre. 

1. — Haying  general ;  16th,  pea  and  oat  harvest  begun. 

23. — Frost ;  thermometer  27° ;  26th  wheat  harvest,  fine  crops. 

17. — First  severe  frost  of  season  ;  30th,  no  plowing  can  be  done  ground  ac 
hard  and  dry. 


May 

June 
July 
August 

Sept. 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32/ 


A.  1898 


FAEM  LANDS  OF  THE  PROVINCE. 

Rural  Area  Assessed.  The  following  table  gives  the  acreage  assessed  in 
townships  which  are  municipally  organized  by  county  groups,  the  total  for  the  Province 
being  given  for  all  classes  of  land  for  1896  and  1897  : 


Districts. 


Acres  assessed. 


Resident. 


Lake  Erie    

Lake  Huron    

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland   

Lake  Ontario    

St.  Law.  and  Ottawa 
East  Midland'  ...  . 
Northern  Districts . . 


2,318,779 
2,290,339 
1,977,603 
3,216,842 
2,996,347 
5,187,819 
2,566,910 
1,848,421 


The  Province 


(  1897  22,403,060 
\  1896  22,174,899 


Non- 
resident. 


23,443 

39,29i 

49,724 

35,107 

52,151 

195,362 

164.267 

398,023 

957,368 
997,509 


Total. 


2,342,222 
2,329.630 
2,027,327 
3,251,949 
3,048,498 
5,38.3,181 
2,731,177 
2,246,444 


Acres  cleared. 


1897. 


1,609.885 
1,487,058 
1,189,2221 
2,466,688 
2,391,149 
2, 562,  .394 
929,700 
216,985 


23,360,428'  12,853,081 
23,172,4081 


1896. 


1,580,256 
1,474,676 
1,172,118 
2,446,0.36 
2,386.741 
2.497,197 
909,858 
204,969 


12,671,851 


Acres 
woodland. 


636,303 

568,460 

536,004 

496,289 

352,148 

1,774,001 

1,272,328 

1,658,493 

7,294,026 
7,264,167 


Acres 
swamp 

or 
mar;^h. 


S  ^ 


96,034  68.7 
274,112163.8 
302,10158.7 
288,972  75.9 
305,201178.4 
1,046,786'47.6 
529,149|34.0 
370,966 1  9.7 

3,213,32155.0 
3,236,390  54.7 


The  total  rural  area  cleared  now  reaches  12,853,081  acres,  which  is  181,230  acres 
of  an  increase  over  the  preceding  year's  figures.  Nearly  a  million  acres  are  given  as 
non-resident,  although  there  are  20,141  acres  less  of  this  class  of  land  then  was  reported 
in,  1896.  There  are  yet  over  seven  million  acres  of  woodland  in  the  organized  townships 
of  the  Province,  and  over  three  million  acres  of  swamp  and  marsh  land.  The  area  cleared 
reaches  55  per  cent.,  or  .3  per  cent,  more  than  in  the  year  before. 


Area  in  Pasture.  The  following  table  gives  the  number  of  acres  in  pasture 
by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  for  each  of  the  five  years  1893  97,  and  also  the 
percentage  of  cleared  lard  in  pasture  in  1897  : 


Year. 


1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Rate  per  1, 000  cleared 
in  1897       . . 


>, 

xs 

c 

-a 

a 

■5 

h 

fi  > 

a 

o 

m 

c3 

<^  (S 

<D 

s 

■a 

a 

$*^ 

"O 

a'S 

W 
O 

^ 

O 

S 

■5  " 

-3 

-3 

8 

<v 
acreo. 

1-:? 

SO 

a; 

acres. 

acres 

acres. 

acres. 

acres. 

acres. 

acres. 

249,918 

349,412 

227,658 

49.3,514 

.368,546 

730,330 

204,162 

34,705 

247,681 

356,243 

2.32,149 

605,052 

383,382 

706,650 

20  i,  931 

33,656 

261,181 

373,061 

235,602 

518,394 

391,876 

705,175 

209,859 

33,507 

247,530 

369,178 

233,9.35 

519,802 

388,225 

711,042 

200,979 

32,560 

247,557 

376,258 

228.361 

535,379 

367,048 

695,576 

199,514 

32,487 

155.2 

235.0 

191.4 

200.1 

154.1 

285.0 

219.6 

159  9 

acres. 
2,658,245 
2,669,744 
2,728,6.55 
2,703,241 
2,682,180 

206.8 


There  are  now  2,658,245  acres  in  pasture  in  the  Province,  a  decrease  of  11,499  acres 
compared  with  the  preceding  year,  although  the  Lake  Erie  and  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 
groups  and  the  Northern  Districts  make  a  better  showing  than  their  respective  figures  in 
1896.  Out  of  every  1,000  acres  of  cleared  land  206.8  were  given  to  pasture  in '1897. 
The  Lake  Huron  counties  have  the  highest  ratio  of  pasture  to  cleared  land. 


01  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Acreage    under    Crop.     The  following  table  gives  the  acreage  under  crop 
for  each  of  the  five  years  1893-97,  together  with  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years,  1882-97  : 


Field  crops. 


Fall  wheat 

Spring  wheat   .... 

Barley    

Oats 

Rye ... 

Peas 

Co— -{Fo^dlS^ 

Buckwheat    

Beans 

Potatoes 

Mangel-wurzels  . . 

Carrots 

Turnips 

Hay  and  clover   . . 

Total  .... 


1897. 


acres. 

950,222 

323,305 

451,515 

2,432,491 

187,785 

896,735 

335,030 

209,005 

151,669 

50,691 

169,333 

41,175 

12,025 

149,336 

2,341,488 

8,701,705 


1896. 


acres. 

876,955 

255,361 

462,792 

2,425,107 

148,680 

829,601 

317,667 

178,962 

145,606 

68,369 

178,965 

36,101 

12,333 

148,234 

2,426,711 

8,511,444 


1895. 


acres. 

743,199 

223,957 

478,046 

2,373,309 

120,350 

799,963 

302,929 

149,899 

135,262 

72,747 

184,647 

34,383 

13,002 

151,806 

2,537,674 

8,321,173 


1894. 


acres. 
778,992 
230,016 
486,261 
2,342,766 

90,144 
785,007 
267,348 
111.361 
145,268 

59,281 
167,253 

27,670 

11,186 

147,657 

2,576,943 

8,227,153 


1893. 


acres. 
913,954 
356,721 
467,315 
1,936,644 

68,486 
738,741 
217,294 

95,865 
133,828 

48,858 
142,601 

21,519 

9,288 

136,604 

2,766,894 

8,054,612 


1882-97. 


acres. 
891,144 
479,758 
642,350 
1,875,240 
107,804 
719,650 

|-    276,063 

95,565 
37,194 

158,937 
23,646 
10,751 

119,543 
2,379,377 

7,817,022 


The  total  area  under  field  crops  now  reaches  8,701,705  acres,  which  is  the  largest 
acreage  yet  reported  in  the  Province.  Hay  has  been  displaced  from  its  position  in  the 
lead  by  oats,  of  which  crop  2,432,491  acres  were  grown  in  1897.  Barley,  beans,  potatoes 
and  carrots  have  also  decreased  in  acreage.  The  increase  in  the  acreage  of  both  spripg 
and  fall  wheat  continues. 

The  acreage  of  all  crops  mentioned  in  the  preceding  table  is  given  in  the  following 
table,  and  for  the  same  periods,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  : 


Year. 


1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Average 
1882-97 


>. 

a 

c5 

o 

CQ 

^ 

& 

w 

_(4 

ac 

M 

<D 

J 

O 

! 

' 

acres. 

acres. 

acres,    i 

1,144,347    982,592^    814,595| 

1,097,435    946,198:    792,817 

1,057,730    909, 262 1   77.3,416 

1,047,297 

873,424 

758,184 

1,046,128 

869,971 

733,656 

983,343 

832,622 

706,096 

acres. 
1,722,480 
1,692,840 
1,651,847 
1,594,356 
1,535,218 

1,524,080 


acres. 
1,727,077 
1.707,294 
1,676,762 
1,687,718 
1,660,138 

1,645,192 


6  t8 

TJ 

§ 

£s 

-o 

a-8 

1^ 

•J  "2 

S 

■5  « 

*:  * 

§ 

SO 

02 

^ 

acres. 

acres. 

acres. 

1,545.908 

603,197 

161,509 

1,519,090 

604,692 

151,078 

1,511,493 

597,027 

143,636 

1,529,255 

596.254 

140,665 

1,490,433 

581,869 

137,199 

1,442,381 

572,343 

110,965 

acres. 
8,701,705 
8,511,444 
8,321,173 
8,227,153 
8,054,612 

7,817,022 


All  of  the  groups  show  an  increased  acreage  compared  with  any  of  the  previous 
years,  except  the  East  Midland  district,  which  fails  to  equal  its  record  of  1896.  The 
Lake  Ontario  group  still  has  the  largest  area  under  field  crops,  although  the  West  Mid- 
land district  is  drawing  closely  up  to  it. 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Proportional  Areas  under  Crop.  The  relative  distribution  of  the 
various  crops  per  1,000  acres  cleared  is  given  in  the  following  table,  by  county  groups 
and  for  the  Province  for  1896  and  1897,  together  with  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years, 
1892-97: 


Districts. 

1 

-1 

02 

o 

i 
^ 

i 

d 

o 

ca 

xs 

o 

s 

10.8 

10.0 

9.1 

00 

a 

pa 

23.0 
31.3 
19.2 

IS 

C 

1 

Pi 

11.1 

11.9 
11.9 

4)    N 

to  '" 
eS  ^ 

2.0 
1.9 
1.3 

03 

o 

t 

O 

.8 
.8 
.6 

.5* 

u 

a 
H 

1.8 
2.1 
1.9 

ID 

> 

"S 

1 

Lake  Erie 

(■1897.. 
<1896.. 
( '82-97. 

146.7 
141.3 
162.3 

2.6 
1.4 
6.8 

21.5 
19.8 
25.4 

139.0 
143.2 
130.6 

16.1 
16.7 
10.1 

37.8 
31.7 
42.5 

112.4 

108.5 

82.5 

1 

185.2  710.8 
173.8  694.4 
202.8707.0 

Lake 

Huron 

(■1897.. 
<1896.. 
(  '82-97. 

98.7 

91.1 

107.7 

7.4 

7.0 

21.9 

28.9 
29.1 
41.1 

199.8 
203.8 
165.4 

4.5 
3.2 
1.3 

83.1 
74.0 
69.6 

29.7 
'.28.2 
14.4 

2.7 
1.4 
1.3 

1.8 
2.3 
1.0 

9.3 
9.6 
9.9 

4.2 
3.5 

2.4 

.710.8 
.8  11.3 
.8:11.1 

179.2:660.8 
176.4  641.7 
195.2  643.1 

Georgian 
Bay 

ri897.. 
-^1896.. 
t  '82-97. 

76.2 
64.9 
74.1 

29  6 
24.4 
56.7 

37.6 
41.5 

48.0 

205.3 
213.6 

175.7 

9.8 
6.4 
3.6 

106.9 
98.7 
86.4 

15.8 

13.1 

5.1 

10.4      .8 
7.8      .9 
3.0      .5 

13.3 
14.3 
13.8 

1.5 
1.2 
1.0 

.6 

.7 
1.0 

15.8 
15.8 
14.1 

161.4  685.0 
173.2(676.5 
194.0677.0 

West 
Midland 

(■1897.. 
-^1896  . 
L '82-97. 

105.8 

97.7 

109.0 

16.2 
15.2 
29.0 

42.4 
44.4 
53.4 

212.4 
216.9 
173.7 

10.8 

10.7 

3.8 

69.8 
63.0 

62.7 

34.1 
33.8 
18.4 

3  0 
2.7 
1.5 

1.0 
1.6 

.7 

12.4 
13.7 
12.2 

5.5 
4.9 
3.4 

1.0,19.0 
1.1  18.7 
1.0.17.0 

164.9 
167.5 

183.8 

698.3 
691.9 
669.6 

Lake 
Ontario 

("1897.. 
-^1896.. 
t '82-97. 

79.1 
70.1 
70.7 

40.4 
29.5 
61.1 

55.2 

60.4 

103.9 

172.2 
174.1 
142.2 

26.1 
19.3 
14.7 

97.5 
94.3 

77.7 

35.7 
32.0 
18.6 

19.7 
22.3 
13.8 

1.2 
2.1 
1.2 

15.9 
17.0 
14.6 

3.9 
3.4 
2.6 

.917.6 

.9  18.0 

1.114.8 

156.9 
171.9 
181.7 

722.3 
715.3 
718.6 

St.  Law- 
rence and 
Ottawa 

ri897.. 
-^1896.. 
t  '82-97. 

3.0 
4.4 
6.0 

34  4 

28.3 
46.6 

19.1 
18.8 
33.6 

198.1 
193.2 
181.2 

11.7 

8.7 

12.5 

32.9 
33.3 
39.0 

39.8 
34.0 

17.7 

16.7 
15.7 
13.9 

1.3 

1.6 
1.5 

14.0 
15.0 
16.7 

1.6 
1.5 
1.0 

1.1 
1.0 

.8 

3.1 

2.8 
2.2 

226.5;603.3 
250.0  608.3 
258.7  631.4 

East 
Midland 

fl897.. 
-^1896.. 
t '82-97. 

19.0 
27.1 
29.2 

46.8 
35.2 
75.6 

43.8 
41.3 

78.0 

194.6 
197.8 
162.0 

25.1 
16.4 
19.9 

81.7 
81.8 
70.1 

29.4 
25.4 
14.4 

20.5 
20.6 
12.6 

1.0 
1.7 
1.0 

13.4 
14.1 
14.7 

2.7 
2.8 
2.0 

1.2 
1.2 
1.1 

12.0 

11.8 

9.0 

157.6 
187.4 
194.9 

648.8 
664.6 
684.5 

Northern 
Districts 

(-1897.. 
-^1896.. 
t  '82-97. 

6.6 
5.6 
4.7 

23.1 
20.8 
51.0 

14.2 
11.6 
15.2 

199.0 
193.2 
175.9 

5.5 
4.2 
6.0 

90.5 
87.4 
81.3 

7.3 
5.5 
3.8 

5.3 
4.9 
5.1 

.9 
.6 
.7 

22.7 
23.4 
24.4 

1.1 

1.0 

.7 

2.1 
2.0 
1.6 

15.8 
15.5 
16.8 

350.2 
361.6 
368.2 

744.3 
737.3 
755.4 

The 
Province 

("1897.. 
-^1896.. 
t '82-97. 

73.9 
69.2 
77.1 

25.2 
20.2 
41.5 

35.1 
36.5 
55.6 

189.3 
191.4 
162.2 

14.6 

11.7 

9.3 

69.8 
65.5 
62.2 

42.3 
39.2 
23.9 

11.8 

11.5 

8.3 

3.9 
5.4 
3.2 

13.2 
14.1 
13.8 

3.2 

2.8 
2.0 

.9 
.9 
.9 

11.6 
11.7 
10.3 

182.21677.0 
191.51671.6 

205.8  676.1 
1            1 

There  are  677.0  acres  under  field  crops  out  of  every  1,000  acres  cleared,  an  increase 
of  5.4  acres  compared  with  the  year  immediately  preceding,  although  two  of  the  districts 
— the  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  and  the  East  Midland — do  not  equal  their  ratio  of  1896. 
These  two  districts  were  also  the  only  ones  showing  a  decline  in  the  previous  year. 


FALL  WHEAT. 

The  bulletin  issued  in  November,  1896,  thus  described  the  condition  of  the  fall  wheat 
just  put  in :  '•  There  has  been  considerable  increase  in  the  area  of  fall  wheat  sown  this 
year.  Seeding  was  done  between  the  latter  part  of  August  and  the  25th  of  September, 
with  the  soil  in  favorable  condition,  and  while  many  correspondents  speak  of  a  good 
showing,  some  complain  that  there  is  hardly  as  much  top  as  usual.  A  few  complain  of 
brown  spots,  which  in  some  instance  are  ascribed  to  the  Hessian  fly,  and  in  others  to  lack 
of  rain.  Dawson's  Golden  Chaff,  Ked  Clawson  and  Manchester  appear  to  be  the  most 
popular  varieties." 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  1898 


The  following  is  taken  from  the  May  bulletin  :  "  In  the  western  half  of  the  Province 
correppondents  are  practically  ananimous  in  reporting  the  fall  wheat  good.  Very  little 
irjury  was  done  in  the  winter.  On  some  low  lying  fields  spring  frosts  and,  later,  spring 
rains  did  some  damage,  hut  the  general  prospects  are  above  the  average.  The  following 
are  condensed  reports  cf  frequent  occurrences  :  *  Very  good.'  '  Excellent.'  '  Best  for 
years.'  '  Never  saw  better.'  'Looks  better  than  for  several  years.'  No  injury  by  insects 
has  been  reported.  Little  or  none  of  the  crop  will  be  plowed  up.  When  we  go  to  eastern 
Ontario,  however,  the  reports  are  quite  the  reverse.  From  all  sections  come  reports  of 
poor  condition  and  the  crop  being  a  failure ;  but  as  most  of  the  fall  wheat  of  the  Pro- 
vince is  grown  in  the  western  half  we  may  conclude  that  the  good  fall  wheat  acreage 
greatly  exceeds  the  poor,  and  the  prospects  on  the  whole  are  very  fine.  In  November 
last  we  concluded  that  an  increased  area  had  been  laid  down  to  wheat.  The  crop  of  this 
year  at  present  promises  to  exceed  in  total  yield  the  crops  of  the  two  preceding  years." 

The  reports  from  correspondents  in  August  were  summarized  as  follows  :  "  The 
amount  of  fall  wheat  plowed  up  this  year  was  55,000  acres,  or  30,000  acres  less  than  in 
1896.  Three-fourths  of  the  plowed  up  area  was  east  of  Toronto.  With  an  increased 
area  of  73,000  acres,  the  promise  at  present  is  nearly  ten  million  bushels  greater  than 
was  reported  a  year  ago.  The  high  average  of  25.5  bushels  per  acre  is  estimated.  Over 
80  per  cent,  of  the  fall  wheat  is  grown  west  and  north-west  of  Toronto,  and  the  reports 
of  condition  are  in  the  main  very  favorable.  The  comment  :  '  Best  crop  for  many  years' 
is  quite  common.  There  are  some  complaints  of  too  much  rain  at  harvest  time  ;  but  on 
the  whole  the  crop  was  harvested  in  good  condition.  The  fall  wheat,  therefore,  shows, 
as  compared  with  August,  1896,  an  increased  acreage,  an  increased  yield  per  acre,  and  an 
increased  value  per  bushel  in  the  market." 

The  last  crop  bulletin  of  the  year,  issued  in  November,  thus  alluded  to  the  crop  : 
'•  Revised  returns,  computed  from  results  of  threshing,  still  show  a  high  average  yield  for 
fall  wheat,  but  reports  regarding  the  weight  and  general  quality  of  the  grain  are  not  quite 
BO  satisfactory.  In  the  Lake  Erin  district  the  grain  is  spoken  of  as  excellent  in  quality, 
and  in  most  of  the  western  counties  the  quality  is  graded  as  from  fair  to  good,  with  some 
references  to  '  sprouting '  owing  to  wet  weather  at  harvesting.  In  eastern  Ontario  fall 
wheat  sufiered  even  more  severely  from  this  cause,  two  reliable  correspondents  in  North- 
berland  claiming  that  some  of  the  grain  sprouted  while  standing  uncut  in  the  fields.  A 
dozen  correspondents  scattered  over  the  Province  call  attention  to  the  fact  that  the  red 
winter  varieties  were  but  little  affected  by  rain  at  harvesting,  but  that  the  white  sorts 
proved  more  susceptible  to  injury  from  this  source.  Taking  the  Province  over,  however, 
there  has  been  a  large  supply  of  first-class  fall  wheat  grown." 

In  the  following  table  the  acreage  and  yield  of  fall  wheat  are  given  by  county  groups 
and  for  the  Province  for  1896  and  1897,  together  with  the  average  of  the  Province  for 
the  sixteen  years,  1882-97  : 


Districts. 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Huron 

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario   

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

The  Province 


1897. 


Acres. 


236,206 

146,698 

90,621 

260,983 

189,046 

7,555 

17,671 

1,442 

950,222 


Bushels. 


5,554,377 

3,639,365 

2,300,268 

7,167,780 

4,915,057 

114,854 

273,381 

22,969 

23,988,051 


23.5 

24.8 
25.4 
27.5 
26.0 
15.2 
15.5 
15.9 

25.2 


1896. 


Acres. 


223,216 

134,325 

76,122 

239,078 

167,336 

11,077 

24,662 

1,139 

876,955 


Bushels. 


3,157,724 

2,206,407 

1,471,295 

4,583,684 

2,911,035 

222,177 

496,)-59 

29,260 

15,078,441 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 


14.1 

16.4 
19.3 
19.2 
17. 4 
20.1 
20.1 
25.7 

17.2 


225,667 

1.39,440 

77,334 

248,077 

161,868 

13,643 

24,427 

688 

891,144 


Bushels. 


4,270,057 

2,822,046 

1,636,332 

5,217,571 

3,341,450 

251,072 

470,419 

13.801 

18,022,748 


18.9 
20.2 
21.2 
21.0 
20.6 
18.4 
19.3 
20.1 

20.2 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898, 


Six  of  the  districts  show  an  increase  in  the  area  of  fall  wheat,  compared  with  the 
preceding  year,  but  the  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  and  East  Midland  groups  fail  to  do  so. 
The  net  increase  for  the  Province  is  73,267  acres,  which,  with  the  magnificent  yield  of 
25.2  bushels  per  acre — as  against  17.2  bushels  in  1896  and  an  average  of  20.2  for  the 
sixteen  years — brings  the  total  yield  of  fall  wheat  up  to  23,988,051  bushels,  or  8,909,610 
bushels  more  than  in  1896.  The  West  Midland  group  is  credited  with  having  both  the 
greatest  acreage  and  the  heaviest  yield  per  acre,  over  seven  million  bushels  of  fall  wheat 
having  been  grown  in  that  group  of  counties. 


REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS. 

From  the  August  Returns. 

Howick,  Huron  :  Fall  wheat  is  the  best  crop  we  have  had  in  many  years. 

Tuckersmith,  Huron  :    Threshers'  returns  show  large  yields  of  fall  wheat.     Very  few  fall  below  thirty 
bushels  to  the  acre.     I  think  the  root  crop  ol  1897  will  be  the  best  for  several  years. 

Kinlosp,  Bruce  :  We  have  had  no  such  fall  wheat  crop  here  for  fifteen  years. 

Inniffil,  Simcoe  :    What  fall  wheat  was  cut  before  July  27th  is  badly  sprouted  ;  what  was  not  cut 
shelled  out  badly. 

Loutb,  Lincoln  :  The  damage  by  pprouting  wheat  is  not  nearly  so  great  as  many  report. 


The  New  Fall  Wheat.  November  reports  were  to  the  following  effect : 
"Preparations  were  made  early  in  the  season  for  a  greatly  increased  acreage  of  fall 
wheat,  but  the  drouth  prevailing  at  seed  time  upset  many  calculations,  seeding  in  some 
cases  being  delayed  until  too  late.  Reports,  however,  would  indicate  that  an  increased 
area  has  been  sown  to  fall  wheat  in  the  western  half  of  the  Province,  where  the  bulk  of 
Ihe  crop  is  raised,  and  that  the  usual  acreage  will  be  grown  further  east.  Reports  vary 
as  to  the  present  condition  of  the  crop,  as  seeding  took  place  during  a  period  extending 
from  the  latter  part  of  August  to  the  middle  of  October.  Where  sown  on  fallowed  or 
early  plowed  land  the  crop  is  spoken  of  as  in  excellent  condition,  while  that  put  in  on 
pea  ground  almost  invariably  found  an  inhospitable  bed.  Only  three  correspondents 
speak  of  Hessian  Fly,  while  many  positively  claim  entire  exemption  from  all  insect 
pests  for  the  growing  crop  of  fall  wheat.  Forty-five  favorite  varieties  are  named. 
Dawson's  Golden  Chaff"  and  Clawson  are  away  in  the  lead,  Manchester,  Genesse  Giant, 
Democrat,  Surprise  and  Michigan  Amber  come  next,  and  the  remainder  are  scattering." 


SPRING  WHEAT. 


The  sowing  of  spring  wheat,  and,  in  fact,  of  all  spring  crops,  was  late,  owing  to  the 
wet  and  rather  cold  weather  prevailing.  The  reports  sent  in  by  correspondents  in  Novem 
ber  went  to  show  that  in  the  western  counties,  where  the  acreage  of  spring  wheat  is 
small,  both  yield  and  quality  were  considered  rather  poor,  while  from  the  other  half  of 
the  Province  the  reports  were  much  more  encouraging.  The  general  quality  of  the  grain, 
however,  was  not  up  to  the  average,  much  of  it  being  shrunken  as  the  result  of  rainy 
weather  about  the  harvest  time. 

9 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A. 1898 


The  acreage  and  yield  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  are  presented  in  the 
following  table : 


Districts. 


Lake  Erie     

Lake  Huron 

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

The  Province   


1897. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


4,167 
11,043 
35,160 
39,916 
96.478 
88,054 
43,475 

5,012 

323,305 


58,126 
152,842 
497,826 
458,337 


» 


1896. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


13.9 
13.8 
14.2 
11.5 


1,647,867117.1 


1,328,566 

650,260 

74,277 

4,868,101 


15.1 
15.0 

14.8 

15.1 


2,198 
10,283 
28,576 
.S7,106 
70,307 
70,604 
32,022 

4,265 

255,361 


26,112 

98,083 

360,525 

454,051 


11.9 

9.5 

12.6 

12.2 


940,14713.4 


],  153, 803 

424,606 

61,995 

3,519,322 


16.3 
13.3 
14.5 

13.8 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Acres. 


9,411 

28,331 

59,092 

65,944 

139,792 

106,471 

63,221 

7,496 

479,758 


Bushels. 


3  c8 

P3 


134,41114.3 
400,044114.1 
860,411  14.6 
986,415  15.0 
2,153,203  15.4 
l,732,307il6.3 
887,174  14.0 
129,426  17.3 

7,283,391115.2 


Spring  wheat  appears  to  be  again  coming  into  favor,  there  being  323,305  acres  in 
crop  in  1897,  or  67,944  acres  more  than  in  1896,  when  there  was  also  a  decided  increase 
over  the  figures  of  the  preceding  year.  The  average  yield  for  the  Province  is  15.1 
bushels,  which  is  .1  bushel  less  than  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years,  but  1.3  bushels 
more  than  the  average  for  1896.  The  t,otal  yield  is  4,868,101  bushels,  or  1,348,779 
bushels  more  than  in  the  preceding  year.  The  Lake  Ontario  group  has  both  the  largest 
acreage  and  the  highest  average  yield  for  the  year. 


BARLEY. 


The  wet  harvest  affected  barley,  and  a  large  quantity  of  plump  grain  was  unfit  for 
malting,  owing  to  discoloration,  and  had  to  be  fed  to  live  stock.  The  crop,  while 
above  the  average  in  yield,  was  rather  short  in  straw. 

The  following  table  gives  the  acreage  and  yield  by  county  groups  : 


Districts. 


Lake  Erie ...   

Lake  Huron 

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

The  Province   . . 


1897. 


Acres. 


34,603 

42,884 

44,718 

104,542 

131,939 

49,020 

40,732 

3,077 

451,515 


Bushels. 


890, 
1,161, 
1,191, 
2,874, 
3,598, 
1,237, 

997, 
70, 


12,021,779 


25.7 
27.1 
26.7 
27.5 
27.3 
25.3 
24.5 
22.9 

26.6 


1896. 


Acres. 


31.332 

42,936 

48,590 

108,718 

144,265 

47,035 

37,543 

2,373 

462,792 


Bushels. 


799,883  25.5 
1,221,655  28.5 
1,371,161128.2 
3,158,429i29.1 
3,890,595:27.0 
1,234,128126.2 

937,025  25.0 
56,868  24.0 

12,669,744,27.4 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years,  1882-97 


Acres. 


35,303 

53,207 

50,077 

121,631 

237,820 

76,847 

65,236 

2,229 


Bushels. 


864,447  24.5 
1,412,327  26.5 
1,295,609  25.9 
3,384,778 
6,050,729 
1,849,557 
1,549,427 
51,648 


642,350  16,458,522 


27.8 
25.4 
24.1 
23.8 
23.2 

25.6 


10 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A. 1898 


The  average  yield  per  acre  was  less  than  in  the  preceding  year,  but,  was  exactly  one 
bushel  more  than  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years.  The  total  area,  however,  was  only 
451,515  acres,  which  is  11,277  acres  less  than  in  1896,  and  90,835  acres  less  than  the 
average  for  the  sixteen  year  period,  although  an  increase  took  place  in  the  Lake  Erie, 
St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa,  and  East  Midland  groups,  and  in  the  Northern  Districts.  The 
total  yield  of  barley  was  12,021,779  bushels,  which  is  more  than  half  a  million  bushels 
less  than  in  1896. 


OATS. 

Oats,  and  indeed  all  the  other  grain  crops,  suflFered  considerably  from  the  heavy 
rains  in  the  latter  part  of  July.  November  reports  regarding  this  crop  varied  greatly. 
Many  correspondents  spoke  of  a  good  return  both  as  to  yield  and  quality,  while  a  large 
number  reported  the  grain  as  light  in  weight.  There  were  some  complaints  of  rust,  and 
many  referred  to  injury  from  rain.  But  even  with  these  drawbacks  the  crop  was 
regarded  as  a  fair  one. 

The  acreage  and  yield  are  presented  in  the  following  table  by  county  groups  : 


Districts. 

1897. 

1896. 

Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years,  1882-97. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

V 

a  . 

M 

32.9 
34.4 
31.0 
37.7 
34.4 
34.2 
30.6 
29.6 

34.2 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

223,704     7..S29.360 

32  8 

226,228 
300,479 
250,352 
530,443 
415,569 
482,444 
179,997 
39,595 

2,425,107 

7,438,753 
10,341,863 

7,752,362 
19,971,313 
14,300,271 
16,496,205 

5,505,8.58 

1,173,367 

82,979,992 

181,694 
214, 126 
183,256 
395,293 
325,538 
414,050 
135,440 
25,843 

1,875,240 

6,239,933 

34.3 

Lake  Huron 

Georpflan  Bay 

West  Midland    

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  &  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts... 

The  Province   

297,168 
244,134 
523,972 
411.725 
507,672 
180,938 
43,178 

2,432,491 

11,033,382 

8,722,030 

20,.S52,945 

15,025,423 

16,774,058 

5,823,213 

1,254,717 

86,318,128 

37.1 
35.7 
38.8 
36.5 
33.0 
32.2 
29.1 

35.5 

7,592,857  35.5 

6,135,939  33.5 

14,796,612  37.4 

11,486,945  35.3 

13,251,999  32.0 

4,188,256  30.9 

783,510,30.3 

64,476,05134.4 

Although  there  has  been  a  decrease  in  the  west  and  central  portions  of  the  Province, 
the  two  eastern  groups  and  the  Northern  Districts  show  an  increase,  and  the  net  result 
is  that  the  area  of  oats  in  the  Province  has  been  enlarged  by  7,384  acres.  The  average 
yield  of  the  year  is  a  large  one,  exceeding  the  figures  of  the  other  two  periods  of  the 
table,  and  the  total  yield  of  the  Province  has  reached  86,318,128  bushels.  The  magni- 
ficent average  yield  of  38.8  bushels  per  acre  occurred  in  the  West  Midland  group,  which 
district  also  has  the  largest  area. 


RYE. 


May  reports  were  to  the  effect  that  this  crop  is  growing  in  favor  both  for  pasturing 
and  soiling,  although  the  area  is  still  comparatively  small.  It  came  through  the  winter 
in  excellent  condition,  more  especially  where  sown  on  light  j.oils. 

Later  reports  described  the  crop  as  being  a  most  encouraging  one,  and  an  increased 
area  was  predicted. 

11 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


The  following  table  gives  the  acreage  and  yields  by    county  groups  and  for  the 
Province  : 


Districts. 


1897. 


Acres. 


Lake  Erie    

Lake  Huron    

Georgian  tSay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts   

The  Province   


25,890 
6,682 
11,621 
26.679 
62.419 
29,9.54 
23.346 
1,194 

187,785 


Bushels. 


446,011 

138,880 
208,766 
.'i4P,030 
1,120,001 
496,018 
402,113 
21,186 

3.382,005 


ICQR 

Yearly 

iverage  for  the 

sixteen 

years,  1882-97. 

bl 

ft  . 

au 

a 

.   <D 

Acres. 

Bushels.    J3  £ 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

.  0 

§   «* 

2  1^ 

s  « 

17.2 

M 

W 

26  466 

342,121 

12.9 

14,007 

214,664 

15.3 

20.8 

4,6.52 

72,752 

15.6 

1,693 

30,801  18.2 

18  0 

7,501 

129,643 

17.3 

3,722 

64,86117.4 

20  6 

26,284 

430,548 

16.4 

8,686 

152,063  17.5 

17.9 

46,176 

662, 392 1 14. 3 

33,710 

506,444  15.0 

16.6 

21,799 

366,598116.8 

28,455 

497,  R03  17.5 

17.2 

14,931 

213,10814.31      16,645 

258,21215.5 

17.  y 

871 

13,711 

15.7 

886 

16,639 

18  8 

18.0 

148,680 

2,230.873 

15  0 

107,804 

1,741,187 

16.2 

Every  group  except  the  Lake  Erie  district  has  had  more  or  less  of  an  addition  to 
the  acreage  of  rye,  the  figures  for  the  Province  showing  an  increase  of  39,105  acres  over 
the  preceding  year.  The  average  yield  per  acre  is  a  large  one,  being  1.8  bushel  above  the 
average  for  the  sixteen  years.  The  total  yield  is  3,382,005  bushels,  or  more  than  half  as 
much  again  as  that  of  the  previous  year  ;  but  it  is  well  to  remember  that  much  of  the 
rye  grown  is  for  green  feed,  and  that  the  figures  for  the  yield  of  this  grain  are  to  a 
certain  extent  merely  nominal. 


PEAS. 

The  following  reference  was  made  to  peas  in  the  November  bulletin  : 

"  While  a  few  correspondents  report  a  good  yield  of  peas,  the  greater  part  have  a 
diflTerent  story  to  tell — that  of  a  poor  yield  of  unusually  small  peas,  among  which  the  "  bug" 
has  been  uncommonly  active.  In  a  few  sections  of  Northumberland  and  Durham  the  crop 
wo jld  not  properly  ripen.     This  has  been  one*  of  the  worst  years  for  fancy  pea  growers. " 

The  following  table  gives  the  acreage  and  yield  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  : 


Districts. 


Lake  Erie  

Lake  Huron  

Georerian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario   

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

The  Province 


1897 


Acres. 


60,940 

123,526 

127,098 

172,146 

233,169 

84,2641 

75,9581 

19.6341 


Bushels.  1-^  S 

P3 


734,043  12.0 
1,990,188  16.1 
1,886,720  14.8 
2,479,686  14.4 
3,763,382,16.1 
1,448,798  17.2 
l,2r5,921  15  9 

358,405  18.3 


896,7351  13,867,093  15.5 


1896. 


Acres. 


50,088 

109.133 

115,721 

154,155 

22.5,181 

83,028 

74,391 

17,904 

829.601 


Bushels. 


853, 
2,525, 
2,745, 
3,272, 
4,541, 
1,685, 
1,463, 

404, 


784;i7.0 
91323.1 
115:23.7 
58621.2 
7.^9  20.2 
737120.3 
61219. 7 
662 '22. 6 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


17,493,148  21.1 


Acres. 


59,132 
90,067 
90,087 
142,763 
177,914 
89,111 
58,650 
11,936 


Bushels. 


1,022,325  17.3 
1,944,060  21.6 
1,893,447  21.0 
2,931,758:20.5 
3,435,50719.3 
1,702,94019.1 
1,098,49218  7 
265,296  2.22 


719,650,  14,293,82519.9 


12 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32>  A.  189  8 


An  increase  occurred  in  eveiy  district  in  the  acreage  of  peas,  and  the  total  area  is 
now  896,735  acres,  or  67,134  acres  more  than  in  the  previous  year.  The  total  yield  of 
the  Province,  however,  is  3,626,055  bushels  below  that  of  the  year  befoTp,  as  the  average 
yield  per  acre  was  only  15.5  bushels,  or  5.6  bushels  less  than  in  1896,  and  4.4  bushels 
below  the  average  for  1882-97.  Not  one  group  equals  the  average  yield  per  acre  of  the 
Province  for  the  sixteen  years. 


REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS. 

From  the  August  Returns. 

Pelee  Island,  Essex  :  Peas  get  very  buggy  here. 

Harwich,  Kent :  Very  few  peas  raised  here  on  account  of  the  bug,  and  because  corn  is  more  productive 
and  profitable. 

R-*leigh,  Kent :  Peas  are  not  now  grown  to  any  great  extent.     Corn  is  taking  their  place. 

Windham,  Norfolk  :  The  early  peas  in  some  cases  took  a  second  growth,fand  that  crop  will  not  amount 
to  much. 

Stanley,  Huron  :  Early  peas  are  mostly  wormy,  but  a  great  many  sow  late. 

Wawanosh,  W.,  Huron  :  Early  sown  peas  were  in  blossom  the  time  of  the  hot  weather  from  the  latto 
the  10th  of  July,  when  the  blossoms  were  scorched  and  fell  off. 

Brant,   Bruce  :  Much  wet  weather  has  caused  too  great  a  growth  of  straw. 

Glenelg,  Grey  :  Hot  weather  caused  a  decay  in  the  lower  part  of  the  vine,  and  a  second  growth  from 
the  root.     Some  fields  have  been  injured  by  mildew. 

Vespra,  Simcoe  :  Heavy  rains  in  thf>  spring  had  n.n  injurious  effect ;  a  spell  of  fine  weather  in  June 
helped  to  recover,  but  heavy  rains  recently  have  .again  proved  detrimental. 

Oxford,  E.,  Oxford  :  Early  sown  were  injured  by  the  b"g,  but  late  sown  bid  fair  for  ja  good  crop. 

Miryboro',  'VVellin?';on  :  Peas  appear  to  be  blighted  with  the  wet.     Some  early  fields  are  not  so  bad 
but  late  onns  will  be  hardly  worth  harvesting. 

Pu^linch.  Wellioerton  :  Early  peas  are  a  poor  crop.     The  grain  will  be  small  and  sprouted  in  the  pod. 
Late  sown  will  be  much  better. 

Dumfries  N.,  Waterloo  :   A  few  early  sown  peas  were  fair  and  others  useless.     Later  sown  have  taken 
second  growth  and  are  still  green.     There  is  mildew  in  places, 

Glanford,  Wentworth  :  The  heavy  rain  and  hail  storm  of  July  14th  laid  thepeas  flat  on  the  ground, 
and  they  have  made  a  kind  of  second  growth. 

Saltfl-'et,  Wentworth  :  The  round  pea  was  sown  late  to  prevent  injury  from  ,bug  and  is  not  ripening 
well.     The  greatest  acreage  is  sown  with  grass  peas,  which  will  yield  well. 

Nelson,  Halton  :  Peas  are  a  good  crop  to  sow  only  for  the  bugs. 

Brock,  Ontario  :  Probably  peas  are  the  most  injured  crop  we  have  ;  it  was  damaged  by  heat  while  in 
bloom  and  by  storm  whan  ripe. 

Ameliasburg,  Prince  Edward  :  Early  fields  were  injured  by  wet,  and  many  fields  have  been  ruined  for 
seed.     A  good  many  peas  are  grown  here  for  seed  companies. 

Hallowell,  Prince  Edward :  Peas  were  prime  when  cut,  but  nearly  ruined  by  rain  afterwards. 

Bedford,  Frontenac  :  Peas  got  caught  in  blow  at  the  time  of  the  hot  weather,  and  are  not  half  a  crop. 

Kenyon,  Glengarry  :  For  some  reason  the  peas  keep  blossoming,   which  would  indicate  a  light  crop. 

Laxton,  Victoria  :  Peas  were  sunstruck,  or  the  great  heat  seemed  to  dry  the  flower  up,  and  some  never 
have  filled. 

Asphodel,  Peterborough  :  The  great  heat  caused  the  blossom  to  fall  off. 

Chandos,  Peterborough  :  All  on  high  land  died   for  want  of   rain  ;  and  what  were  on  low  land  were 
injured  by  sprouting  by  the  later  rain. 

Monk,  Muskoka  :  Peas  are  a  complete  failure  ;  there  is  only  a  spot  here  and  there  where  the  ground  is 
high.     The  rest  are  all  drowned  out. 

Morrison,  Muskoka  :  The  continued  rains  have  done  great  injury  to  the  peas.     The  crop  is  doing  best 
on  sandy  soils. 

Campbell  and  Carnarvon  :  There  is  good  prospect  of  a  heavy  crop  at  present.     The   pea  crop  here  is 
always  very  good. 

Rainy  River :  The  pea  crop  is  an  extra  good  one.     Peas  are  improving  much,  and  adapting  to  the 
climate. 

13 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


CORN. 

The  November  bulletin  said  :  "  Wet  weather  at  the  time  of  planting  caused  a  por- 
tion of  the  seed  to  rot  in  the  ground,  and  some  replanting  was  necessary.  The  result 
was  that  some  ot  the  late  corn  was  nipped  by  frost,  although  it  is  difficult  to  estimate  the 
extent  of  loss  from  this  source.  On  the  other  hand  the  rapid  growth  of  the  crop  was 
surprising,  and  losses  from  poor  seeding  appear  to  have  been  more  than  made  up.  Oom 
will  be  certain  to  gain  in  favor  from  the  past  season's  experience. 

"  While  some  correspondents  claim  that  the  silo  is  not  increasing  in  popularity,  others 
state  that  a  steady  advance  is  being  made.  It  certainly  seems  to  be  in  favor  in  the  dairy 
counties.  A  correspondent  in  Blanshard,  in  the  west,  says  that  six  silos  have  been  put 
up  in  that  township,  while  one  in  Oxford  (in  Grenville  county),  claims  that  fifty  silos 
have  been  erected  in  that  township  this  year." 

The  following  table  shows  the  acreage  and  yield  of  corn  by  county  groups  : 


Districts 

For  husking. 

For  silo  and  fodder. 

Total  area. 

Acres. 

Bushels 

(in  the 
ear). 

6 

X   u 

s  — 

33 

Acres. 

Tons 
(green). 

O    * 

1897 
acres. 

180,879 

1896 
acres. 

171,457 

Average 
1882-97 
acres. 

114,777 

Lake  Erie 

ri897 
•\1896 

162,429 
153,583 

12,589,798 
12,282,095 

77.5 
80.0 

18,450 
17.874 

161,215 
158,799 

8.74  1 
8.88  j" 

Lake  Huron . . 

ri897 
•\1S96 

23,891 
23,961 

l,56?,962i65.4 
1,917,844  80.0 

20,323 
17,579 

251,836 
194,212 

12.. 39  » 
11.05/ 

44,214 

41,540 

18,665 

Georgian  Bay. 

ri897 
•\1896 

4,155 
3,752 

213,595.^1.4 
180,617  48.1 

14,598 
11.612 

197,216 
143,652 

13  511 
12.37  f 

18,753 

15,364 

5,324 

West  Midland 

ri897 
•\1896 

45,043     3,.S81,44175.1 
45,791'    3,623,603  79.1 

1                    1 

38,942 
36,933 

494,361 
40 ',.544 

12.69  1 
10  87/ 

83,985 

82,724 

41,890 

Lake  Ontario  . 

fl897 
••\1896 

40,865     2,877,823  70.4 

37,467     2,605,158  69.5 

1                    1 

44,466 
38,936 

556,619 
397,048 

12.52) 
10.20  f 

85,331 

76,403 

42,311 

St.  Lawrence  ar 
Ottawa.. 

dfl897 
.  .\1896 

45,5381    3,265,976:71.7 
41,336     2,786,746,67.4 

56.404 
43,538 

804,814 
535,816 

14.27  1 
12  31/ 

101,942 

84,874 

40,522 

East  Midland . 

riS97 
• -'1.1896 

12,423        742,243  59.7 
11,220        648,46557.8 

14,924 
11,929 

193.001 
112,140 

12.93  1 
9.40/ 

27,347 

23,149 

12,021 

Northern  Dis- 
tricts  

ri897 
. .  "1  1896 

686          30,16044.0 
5571         26.836  48.2 

898 
561 

209,005 
178,962 
139,416 

10,760 
5.569 

2,669,822 
1,948,70 
1,573,742 

11.98) 
9.93/ 

12.77) 
10.89  > 
11.2dJ 

1,584 
544,035 

1,118 
496,629 

563 
276,063 

The  Province  < 

ri897 
1896 
1892-97 

335,030 
317,667 
270,289 

24,663,998 

1  24,071,364 

19,188,845 

73.6 
75.8 
71.0 

Corn  for  husking  has  an  enlarged  area  in  every  district  except  the  Lake  Huron  and 
West  Midland  groups,  the  total  increase  for  this  class  of  corn  being  17,363  acres.  Silo 
corn  has  been  extended  in  area  by  30,043  acres,  every  group  sharing  in  the  increase.  The 
area  given  to  both  classes  of  corn  is  now  544,035,  or  47,406  acres  more  than  in  the 
previous  year.  The  crop  has  just  doubled  its  area  in  five  years.  The  yield  per  acre  of 
husking  corn  (in  the  ear)  is  73  6  bushels,  or  2.6  bushels  above  the  average  of  the  sixteen 
years,  although  not  up  to  the  yield  of  1896,  while  the  average  yield  of  silo  corn  is  12.77 
tons,  which  is  considerably  above  that  of  either  of  the  other  periods  shown  in  the  table. 


14 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 

REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS. 

FROir  THE  Mat  Returns. 

Colchester,  N.,  Essex  :  Corn  is  the  grain  that  is  principally  fed  here  in  fattening  cattle  and  hogs.  The 
etalks,  or  fodder,  are  fed  to  cattle,  sheep  and  horses. 

Bosanquet,  Lambton  :  There  are  some  silos  here,  but  windmills  for  cutting  and  grinding  corn  are 
coming  into  much  more  general  use. 

Stanley,  Huron  :  Corn  has  formed  a  principal  part  of  the  fodder  this  winter.  Considerably  more  waa 
grown  than  was  used,  and  some  of  it  has  been  burnt.     There  will  not  likely  be  so  much  sown  this  year. 

Sydenham,  Grey  ;  We  have  quite  a  few  silos  here.  There  is  something  wrong  with  them,  for  cattle 
scoured  badly  and  an  odd  one  died. 

Stori'ington,  Frontenac :  Most  of  the  farmers  in  this  section  depend  greatly  upon  corn  for  winter  feed. 
Those  who  have  not  silos  Btook  their  corn  and  save  it  as  well  as  they  can,  and  generally  cut  it  in  the  winter 
as  they  want  to  feed  it.     But  it  is  far  more  work,  and  does  not  make  as  good  food  as  ensilage. 

Leeds  and  Lansdowne,  Leeds :  People  are  beginning  to  see  the  benefits  of  corn,  and  are  growing  more 
of  it  than  in  former  years.  There  will  be  a  large  quantity  of  oats  sown  for  cutting  green  to  take  the  place 
of  hay.  The  Annual  Report  of  the  Agricultural  College,  just  received,  is  a  valuable  book,  and  I  receive  a 
lot  ot  information  from  it. 

Beckwith,  Lanark  :  I  built  a  silo  last  summer  and  saved  about  20  per  cent.,  and  I  never  had  the  cattle 
in  better  condition.     It  is  the  only  silo  in  this  neighborhood,  but  I  think  there  will  soon  be  more  of  them. 

From  the  August  Returns. 

Ashfield,  Huron  :  The  corn  in  this  section  is  first  class.     The  rains  have  not  affected  it  injuriously. 

Denbigh,  Leeds  and  Grenville  :  There  has  so  far  been  but  little  barley  sown  here,  but  it  is  doing  well, 
and  more  will  be  sown  hereafter.     The  area  of  ensilage  corn  is  being  increased  here  yearly. 

Yonge  and  Escott  Rear,  Leeds  :  There  will  be  a  large  crop  of  corn,  although  much  of  the  seed  had  to 
be  planted  the  second  and  even  the  third  time. 

Drummond,  Lanark :  A  great  deal  of  corn  and  millet  was  sown  for  fodder  to  make  up  for  the  shortage 
of  the  hay  crop. 


THE  SILO. 

From  the  November  Returns. 

Harwich,  Kent :  There  are  not  many  silos  around  here.  Those  who  have  them  speak  very  highly  of 
them. 

Raleigh,  Kent :  The  silo  has  not  received  much  attention  here,  but  where  used  it  has  given  excellent 
results.  The  crop  was  slightly  injured  by  frost  before  cutting,  but  the  ensilage  is  keeping  well  and  will  be 
of  good  quality. 

Malahide,  Elgin :  Several  new  silos  have  been  erected  this  season. 

Yarmouth,  Elgin  :  Very  few  have  built  silos.  We  raise  such  heavy  crops  of  ears  we  do  not  think  it 
would  pay  to  raise  it  for  silage. 

Dunwich,  Elgin  :  There  are  but  two  silos  in  this  township. 

Walpole,  Haldimand  :  The  fcilo  is  not  held  in  much  fdvor  here  yet,  there  being  only  one  that  I  know 
of  in  this  neighborhood. 

Walpole,  Haldimand  :  The  silo  has  been  adopted  in  very  few  places  in  this  locality.  The  great  trouble 
is  to  till  the  silo  at  the  proper  time.  ; 

Stamford,  Welland  :  There  are  only  about  half  a  dozen  silos  in  this  township. 

Stamford,  Welland  :  Several  farmers  are  giving  ensilage  a  trial.  Some  of  our  more  enterprising  xilen 
have  secured  American  corn  harvesters  this  year,  and  speak  very  highly  of  them. 

Wainfl-et,  Welland  :  There  is  but  one  silo  in  this  neighborhood. 

Dawn  and  Euphemia,  Lambton  :  There  is  only  one  silo  in  the  neighborhood. 

Colborne,  Huron  :  More  silos  have  been  built  in  this  district  this  season  than  in  any  previouB  year. 

Hay,  Huron  :  There  are  a  few  silos  here. 

Stanley,  Huron  :  Two  new'  silos  have  been  built  here  this  season.  One  is  circular,  built  outside  ;  the 
other  is  nearly  square,  built  inside,  and  both  will  hold  the  product  from  eight  to  ten  acres  of  corn. 

Tuckersmith,  Huron  :  The  silo  does  not  appear  to  find  favor. 

Wawanosh,  E.,  Huron  :  There  are  about  five  or  six  silos  in  this  township, 

Arran,  Brvce :  If  the  barrel  silo  proves  a  succees,  I  think  the  acreage  of  corn  will  increase  very  fast. 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18£8 


BUCKWHEAT. 

This  crop  is  coming  back  into  favor.  Some  of  it  was  caught  by  frost,  but  the  crop 
generally  was  a  most  satisfactory  one,  both  as  regards  yield  of  grain  and  for  turning  under. 
Several  correspondents  prophesied  an  increased  acreage. 

The  following  table  gives  the  acreage  and  yield  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  : 


Districts. 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Huron    

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland  

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

The  Province 


1897. 


Acres. 


17.374 

4,046 

12, 423 1 

7, 504 1 
47,207| 
42.8841 
19,0831 

1,148 

151,669 


Bushels. 


1896. 


Yearly   average    for   the 
sixteen  years  1882-97 


313,886[l8.1 

99,:43i24.5 

292,46923.5' 

I68.I50I22.4! 

1,054,247122.3, 

1,074, 355!  25.1 

437,215  22.9 

24,71121.5 

3,464,186  22.8 


Acres. 


15,837 

2,0t2 

9,100 

6,558 

53,216 

39,106 

18,750 

997 


Bushels. 


EC     U 

s  — 


284,801  18.0 
:^6,786  18.0 
175,512  19.3 
130,700  19.9 
868,3.54  16.3 
808,356  20.7 
280,31515.0 
18,845  18.9 


145,606     2, 60.%  669, 17. 9 

I  I 


Acrss. 


12,723 

1,667 

3,106 

3,417 

31,605 

31,767 

10,534 

746 

95,565 


Bushels. 


5ft 
23 


I 

232,87918.3 

31,7.'^919.1 

63, 094 1 20. 3 

65.808!l9.3 

B17,761[19.5 

671,637j21.1 

203,182  19.3 

16,043  21.5 


1,902,163 


19.9 


The  year  has  been  a  favorable  one  for  buckwheat.  Every  group  except  the  Lake 
Ontario  district  had  an  increased  area,  and  the  average  yield  per  acre  of  the  Province  was 
22.8  bushels,  which  is  2.9  bushels  above  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years.  In  the  St. 
Lawrence  and  Ottawa  counties  the  yield  per  acre  averaged  25.1  bushels.  One-half  of  the 
buckwheat  of  the  Province  is  grown  in  the  Lake  Ontario  and  the  St.  Lawrence  and  Otta- 
wa districts. 


BEANS. 

Correspondents  had  even  less  than  usual  to  say  about  beans.     The  crop  had, a  large 
yield,  and  the  sample  was  good.     The  acreage,  however,  is  still  very  limited. 

Tho  yield  and  acreage  of  beans  are  given  in  the  following  table  by  county  groups  and 
for  the  Province  : 


Districts. 


1897. 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Huron     

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland   

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

The  Province 


Acres. 


37,017 
2,fil9 
1,008 
2,570 
2,814 
3,424 
953 
186 

50,591 


1896. 


Bushels.  |-=  a! 


Acres. 


711,51119.2      49,468 


50.121  19.11 
22,69022.5 
49,78419.4 
5.^,44l|l9  0 
74.007  21.61 
17,103  17.9! 
2,682|14.4| 


.3,447 
1,063 
3,932 
4,906 
3,913 
1,515 
1261 


Bushels. 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 


863,051  17.4      26,689 


62,175 
21,014 
72,035 
76,221 
77,181|19.7 
24,051  15.9 
1,807|14.3 


18.0 
19.8] 
18.3 
15.5' 


1,2.54 

489 

1,671 

2, 806 1 

3, 376 1 

803 

106 


Bushels. 


454, 
22, 
9. 
29, 
49, 
69, 
13, 
1, 


460  17.0 
537  18  0 
144  18.7 
519  17.7 
318  17.6 
382  20.6 
475  16.8 
836  17.3 


981,340  19.41     68,369     1,197,535  17.5      37,194        649,67117.5 

I         1  I  I 


16 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No  32). 


A.  1898 


Beans  have  decreased  in  area  in  every  group  except  the  Northern  Districts,  where, 
however,  the  acreage  is  merely  nominal.  Only  50,591  acres  are  reported  in  the  Province 
this  year,  or  17,778  less  than  in  1896.  The  average  yield  per  acre  for  the  Province  is  a 
generous  one,  being  19.4  bushels,  or  almost  two  bushels  an  acre  more  than  the  average  of 
the  sixteen  years.  About  two-thirds  of  the  been  crop  of  the  Province  is  raised  in  the 
Lake  Erie  district. 

FIELD  ROOTS. 

The  leading  feature  of  these  crops  of  1897  is  the  fact  that  roots  were  as  a  rule  smaller 
than  usual,  even  though  the  average  yield  per  acre  in  many  instances  was  greater  than 
usual.     These  crops  were  housed  under  favorable  conditions. 


Potatoes.  The  November  bulletin  said  :  "  This  crop  suffered  from  rains  in  the 
early  part  of  the  season,  and  a  blight  or  rot  struck  it  in  September  in  nearly  every  dis- 
trict— Manitoulin  Island  and  Algoma  being  the  only  localities  reporting  absolute  freedom 
from  rot.  In  some  sections  fully  fifty  per  cent,  of  the  crop  was  lost  from  this  cause, 
while  in  other  localities  the  destruction  was  not  so  serious.  It  is  cheering  to  learn,  how- 
ever, that  since  the  crop  was  taken  up  the  rot  appears  to  have  been  stayed,  although 
farmers  are  still  keeping  an  anxious  watch  on  the  pits.  The  b  eetle  was  as  active  as 
usual,  and  a  good  many  small  potatoes  are  the  result." 

The  following  table  shows  the  acreage  and  yield  of  potatoes  by  county  groups  and 
for  the  Province : 


Districts. 


1897. 


189ti. 


Yearly  average  for  the 
bixteen  years  1S82-97. 


Acres 


Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Ijake  Ontario   

St.  Liwrence  and  Ottawa. . 

East  Midland 

Northern  Uis  ricts   


Lake  Erie 17,S40 

Lake  Huron l:-t,851 

15,811 
30,527 
38,06t) 
35,883 
12,436 
4,919 

169,333 


Bushels 


The  Province , 


1,189,427 
1,1*1,532 
1,495,833 
2,481,296 
3,225,3:6 
4.  .S3  J,  533 
1,491,041 
741,809 

16,100,797 


67 

82 

95 

81 

85 

121 

V20 

151 

95 


Acres. 


18,818 
14,094 
16,715 
.33,543 

40,658 
37,e57 
12,798, 

4,782 


Bushels. 


Acres 


1,917,627 
1,773,993 
2,288,300 
4,348,947 
4,2.57,913 
4,808,176 
1  200.960 
679,561 


178,965  21,305,477 


100 

16,566 

126 

12,848 

137 

14,355 

130 

27,758 

105 

33,357 

128 

38,144 

94 

12,325 

142 

3,584 

119 

158,937 

Bushels. 


1,6.55.580 
1,458.758 
1,805,902 
3,293,699 
3,683,511 
4,6»o,187 
1,48^,708 


100 
U4 
126 
119 
110 
123 
120 


531,664    148 
I 
18.598,009    117 


The  acreage  of  potatoes  in  the  Province  has  been  reduced  by  9,632  compared  with 
the  preceding  year,  the  Northern  Districts  alone  showing  an  increase  in  area.  The 
average  yield  was  small  in  the  first  five  groups  comprising  the  table,  especially  in  the 
Lake  Erie  district,  but  the  Northern  Districts  have  had  a  splendid  yield.  The  average 
yield  of  the  Province  is  95  bushels  per  acre,  which  is  22  bushels  below  the  average  for  the 
sixteen  years.  The  decrease  in  area  and  the  falling  oflf  in  the  average  yield  p^^r  acre 
bring  the  total  yield  down  to  16,100,797  bushels,  or  over  five  million  bushels  less  than  in 
1896. 


Mangel  Wurzels.  This  class  of  roots  appears  to  be  retaining  the  favor  of 
farmers,  and  many  correspondents  have  a  good  word  for  them.  The  yield  was  from  fair 
to  large,  and  the  quality  good,  although  the  roots  were  hardly  as  large  as  usual.  The 
crop  was  practically  all  out  of  the  ground  as  correspondents  wrote. 


2  B.I.  (1.4) 


17 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A  1898 


The  acreage  and  yield  are  given  in  the  following  table  by  county  groups  and  for  the 
ince  : 


Provi: 


Districts, 


1897. 


Acres. 


]jake  Erie 

Lake  Huron   

Georgiau  Bay 

West  Midland   

Lake  Ontario   

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

P.ast  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

The  Province   


1896. 


Bushels. 


3,279 
6,155 
1,770 
13,690 
9,353 
4,131 
2,546 
251 

41,175 


1,277,870 
2,688,763 
793,134 
5,965,785 
4,497,485 
1,694.830 
1,103,992 
81,528 

18,103,387 


aj 

IB    u 

X  * 

1^ 

Acres. 

aq 

390 

2,974 

437 

5,215 

448 

1,374 

436 

12,017 

481 

8,042 

410 

3,751 

434 

2,624 

325 

204 

440 

36,101 

Bushels. 


u 

II 


1,319,664    444 
2,653,298    509 

589,5.i0:  429 
6,453,306'  537 
3,243,868,  403 
1,516,514 

995  299 
77,902 


16,849,401 


467 


Yearly  average  fnr  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 


],755 
3,179 
1,094 
7,726 
5,857 
2,259 
1,666 
110 


Bushels. 


■I » 


725  698 
1,460,821 

463,541 
3,582,540 
2,590,533 

875,479 

6^9,422;  414 
34,492    314 


414 
460 
4-24 
464 
442 
388 


23,646:  10,422,526 


441 


Every  district  rpports  an  increase  in  the  area  of  mangel  wurzela.  the  net  iacrease  for 
the  Province  being  5,074  acres.  The  average  yield  per  acre  is  440  bushels,  or  one  bushel 
less  than  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years.  Nearly  one-third  of  this  class  of  roots  is  grown 
in  the  West  Midland  district.  The  average  yield  per  acre  in  the  Lake  Ontario  group  was 
481  bushels. 


Carrots.  There  appears  to  be  a  disposition  to  grow  less  carrots.  The  yield  this 
season  was  a  good  one  in  most  sections,  although  drouth  at  times  checked  the  growth  of 
these  and  other  roots.     The  crop  was  well  secured. 

The  following  table  gives  the  acreage  and  yield  by  county  groups  and  for  the 
Province  : 


Districts. 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Huron    , 

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland    

Lake  Ontaiio 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

Eas-t  Midland 

Ivi cithern  District s   

The  Province   


1897. 


Acres.      Bushels. 


1,340 
1,075 

736 
2,.392 
2,236 
2,717 
1,074 

455 

12,025 


412.414  308 

390,355  363 

267,301  363 

898,  .505  376 

911,026  407 

953,743  351 

4.50..598  419 

149,6861  329 


4,433,628    369 


1896, 


Acres. 


1,320 
1,197 

787 
2.761 
2,112 
2,622 
1,1.^5 

399 


Bushels. 


5  c 

03 


490,579, 
526,274, 
290,474' 
1,191,693 
672,700 
9.34,6601 
.380,423 
131,6381 


372 
440 
369 
432 
319 
356 
335 
330 


Yearly  average  fir  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres 


Bushels. 


12,3331    4,618,4411  374 


874 
1,028 
1,032 
2.257 
2,499 
1,9041 
926 
231 

10,751 


27.3,151 
370,868 
373,823 
850, 0K6 
923,190 
620,179 
317,758 
67,311 

3,796,366 


313 
.361 
362 
377 
369 
326 
343 
291 

353 


Four  of  the  groups  stoiv  a  slight  increase  in  acreage  and  the  other  four  a  decrease, 
the  result  being  that  there  were  308  acres  of  carrots  less  in  the  Province  than  in  the  year 
preceding.  The  yield,  howtv^r,  is  a  favorable  one,  being  369  bushels  per  acre  or  sixteen 
bushels  above  the  average.  The  average  yield  per  acre  in  the  Lake  Ontario  counties  was 
407  bushels. 


18 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32). 


A.  189  8 


Turnips.  Reports  regarding  turnips  were  variable,  although  for  the  most  part  favor- 
able. In  a  few  localities  the  louse  was  said  to  be  injurious,  and  in  some  of  the  more 
eastern  counties  the  Greystone  variety  was  inclined  to  rot,  but  a  fair  crop,  generally,  was 
gathered,  although  not  up  to  standard  in  size  and  quality  in  many  places.  A  small  por- 
tion of  the  crop  had  yet  to  be  housed  as  correspondents  wrote. 

The  acreage  and  yield  of  turnips  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province,  are  given  in 
the  following  table  : 


Districts. 


1897. 


Lake  Erie    

Lake  Huron   

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa. 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts   

The  Province   


Acres.      Bushels. 


^2 


2,900  1,020,893  352 

16096  7,800,556  485 

18.810  8,746,994  465 

46,879  21,149,337  451 

42,078'  20,099,941  478 

8,037  3,352,248  417 

11,097  4,924,296;  444 

3,439'  1,202,883  350 


1896. 


Acres, 


149,336  68,297,148 


457 


3,374 
16.701 
18,516 
45,750 
42,849 

7,102 
10,760 

3,182 


Bushels. 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 


1,230,8991  363 
7,925.800,  475 
8,740,5321  472 
24,286,436'  ,531 
18,941,817  442 
3,171,355 
4,430,594 
1,087,408 


I  ^  o 

."Si  « 

Bushels,    "S  » 


148,234  69,814,841 


471 


2,660 

14,359 

14,765 

38,745 

33,995 

5,070 

7,482 

2,467 

119,543 


960,033 

6,035,668 

6,328,630 

17,008,433 

14.861,799 

1,916,322 

2,924,055 

817,121 

50,852,061 


361 
420 
429 
439 
437 
378 
391 
331 

426 


There  were  149,336  acres  in  turnips,  or  1,102  acres  more  than  in  1896,  although  the 
Lake  Huron,  Lake  Erie  and  Lake  Ontario  districts  fail  to  equal  their  figures  of  that  year. 
The  average  )ield  for  the  Province  is  457  bushels  per  acre,  which  is  32  bushels  per  acre 
more  than  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years,  but  14  bushels  less  than  the  average  yield 
of  1896.     The  Lake  Huron  group  are  credited  with  the  best  average  yield  of  turnips. 


REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS. 


Fiioji  THE  August  Returns. 


TilDury,  E.,  Kent :  Roots  are  not  largely  grown  in  this  section  as  a  field  crop. 
Grey,  Huron  :  The  root  crop  is  splendid  ;  never  sa\v  it  look  better. 

Howick,  Huron  :  Turnips  have  been  much  injured  by  being  eaten  through  the  root,  just  above  the 
ground,  by  an  insect  of  some  kind. 

Tuckersmith,  Huron  :  I  think  the  root  crop  will  be  the  best  for  several  years— excepting  potatoes. 

Bentinck,  Grey  :  Most  of  the  injury  to  roots  was  caused  by  the  rank  growth  of  weeds  and  the  difficulty 
of  keeping  the  crop  clean. 

Osprey,  Grey  :  I  tried  a  few  rows  of  sugar  beets  but  they  were  no  good,  only  a  few  came  up, 

Medonte,  Simcoe  :  Roots  are  a  little  irregular  in  rows  from  the  heat  at  time  of  sowing. 

Blandford,  Oxford  :  Roots  suffered  from  cold  and  dry  weather  at  first,  and  weeds  got  possession  in  the 
case  of  turnips. 

Zorra,  E.,  Oxford  :  Roots  have  suffered  from  heat  and  the  great  growth  of  all  kinds  of  weeds. 

Luther,  Wellington  :  Roots  are  very  forward,  but  very  weedy  from  wet  weather. 

Clinton,  Lincoln  :  Roots  look  well,  but  on  account  of  the  excessive  wet  weather  weeds  have  the  lead. 

Niagara,  Lincoln  :  There  has  been  a  good  deal  of  trouble  fighting  weeds. 

Glanford,  Wentworth  :  Hail  damaged  mangels  but  they  are  recovering. 

Osgoode,  Carleton  :  Turnips  are  being  more  extensively  raised,  as  they  have  not  been  troubled  with 
the  Hy  for  the  past  two  or  three  years. 

LaxtoD,  Victoria  :  Turnips,  where  not  hurt  by  the  grasshopper,  look  well. 

Glamorgan,  Haliburton  :  Turnips  look  better  than  usual  this  year,  no  grasshoppers  being  at  them— the 
great  scourge  of  the  last  two  yearp. 

Cockburn  Island,  Manitoulin  ;  Roots  will  be  fair  where  a  stand  was  obtained.  Cut  worms  were  a  sad 
pest  this  season. 


19 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


HAY  AND  CLOVER. 

The  May  bulletin  said  :  "  Reports  regarding  clover  are  not  only  varied,  but  in  many 
cases  they  are  contradictory,  although  the  matter  of  draining  largely  explains  why  men 
in  the  same  locality  sometimes  send  entirely  opposite  reports.  Clover  made  a  poor  catch 
in  1895,  and  in  the  following  spring  the  seeding  turned  out  only  a  little  better,  except 
where  sown  with  barley.  Young  fields  are  doing  better  than  old  meadows  in  the  western 
half  of  the  Province.  On  low-lying  lands  a  good  deal  of  heaving  occurred,  although  this 
evil  was  in  some  instan^^f  s  largely  repaired  by  a  prompt  and  careful  use  of  the  land  roller. 
In  the  eastern  part  of  the  Province  there  are  more  unfavorable  reports  than  otherwise 
regarding  clover.  In  a  number  of  localities  it  is  playing  out  to  a  discouraging  extent, 
and  spring  frosts  have  done  more  injury  there  than  in  the  west.  Taking  the  Province 
as  a  whole,  it  is  yet  possible  for  the  crop  to  recover  and  give  a  generous  yield  by  mowing 
time.     In  both  the  east  and  the  west  alsike  has  done  much  better  than  red  clover." 

The  August  returns  were  to  the  effect  that  the  crop  was  a  large  one,  although  com- 
paratively light  in  some  of  the  eastern  sections. 

The  November  reports  regarding  clover  peed  were,  on  the  whole,  unfavorable^ 
although  in  some  districts  correspondents  spoke  of  excellent  returns.  The  yield  of  sef  d 
in  most  cases  was  not  equal  to  the  promise  of  stalk  and  head.  The  midge  was  more 
active  than  usual,  especially  in  the  south-west  part  of  the  Province.  Alsike  did  not  turn 
out  as  well  as  expected.     Young  clover  was  said  to  be  looking  very  promising. 

The  following  taV-le  gives  the  acreage  and  yield  by  county  groups  and  for  the 
Province : 


I'istrictp 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Huron . . 

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawi  ence  &  Ottawa 

East  Midland. .    

Northern  Districts... 

The  Province    .... 


1897. 


Acres. 


298,208 
266,  .535 
191,9.'?2 
406,69.5 
375,216 
580.^71 
146,541 
75,990 

2,341,488 


Tons. 


1896. 


Acie^ 


577,624  1.94 
532.224  2,00 

342,1911.78 
8.58,891,2.11 
60.S,  754  1.61 
6.39.980  1.10 
lG6.811il.l4 
90,043  1.18 

3,811,518,1.63 


274,6.59 
260,154 
203,037 
409,771 
410,274 
6M,178 
170,515 
74,123 

2,426,711 


Tons. 


340.412 
248, 6S9 
164,716 
440,184 
301,407 
5^6,473 
1.39,1."6 
86,223 

2,260,240 


Yearly  avera?e  for  the 
sixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Acres. 


1.241 
.96 

.811 
1.071 

.741 

.86 

.82' 

1.16 


282,085 
252,778 
202,363 
418,222 
416,120 
590,762 
162,967 
54,0£0 


Tons. 


00    *^ 


407, 
345, 

259, 
633, 
566, 
773, 
189, 
66. 


6101.44 


.93     2,379,3771    3,242, 


515 

1.37 

818 

1.28 

454 

1.51 

803 

1.36 

314 

1.31 

295 

1.16 

228 

1.22 

037 

1.36 

The  number  of  acres  in  bay  and  clover  is  given  as  2,341,488,  a  falling  off  of  85,223 
acres  compared  with  the  preceding  year,  although  an  increased  acreage  occurred  in  the 
Lake  Erie  and  Lake  Ontario  counties  and  in  the  Northern  Districts.  The  average  yield 
per  acre  for  the  Province  is  1.63  tons,  as  against  .93  in  the  preceding  year  and  1.36  for 
the  sixteen  years,  which  brings  up  the  total  yield  to  3,811,518  tons.  The  average  yield 
in  the  West  Midland  group  reached  2.11  tons,  and  in  the  Lake  Huron  district  2  tons, 
but  in  the  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  counties,  which  have  the  largest  acreage,  an  average 
of  only  1.10  tons  per  acre  was  returned. 


FROM  THE  AUGUST  RETURNS. 
Tilbury,  N.,  Essex  :  Farmers  cannot  get  room  in  their  barns  for  hay  and  grain. 

Harwich,  Kent :  Most  of  the  hay  here  was  got  in  in  good  condition.     Mine  was  never  in  better  con* 
dition.     It  currd  green  as  graes. 

Bayham,  Elgin  :  Never  in  my  recollection  have  I  seen  such  a  growth  of  grass. 
Yarmouth,  Elgin  :  The  best  crop  of  hay  cut  in  forty  years. 


20 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32^- 


A.  189  8 


Grey,  Huron  :  Hay  is  a  verj'  heavy  crop,  but  much  has  been  wasted  owing  to  the  wet  weather  prevail- 
ing during  the  latter  lialf  of  July. 

McKillop,  Huron  :  Hay  was  a  larerer  crop  this  year  than  was  ever  known  in  the  same  breadth,  but  a 
good  deal  was  spoiled  by  the  wet  weather. 

Greenock,  Bruce  :  About  half  the  hay  crop  was  saved  in  grand  order,  but  most  of  the  remainder  will  be 
unsaleable,  and  about  five  per  cent,  will  be  totally  spoilt. 

Holland,  Grey  :  Two-thirds  of  the  hay  in  this  township  is  useless.  A  lot  of  it  is  rotting,  and  is 
not  much  better  than  pea  straw.     Pasture  was  never  better. 

Innisfil,  Simcoe  :  Hay  was  a  big  crop.  Some  of  it  is  still  uncut  although  ripe.  A  lot  was  never  drawn 
in,  and  is  still  in  cocks  since  the  26th  July  ;  tons  of  it  are  rotting  on  the  ground.  Still  a  lot  of  good  hay 
was  saved,  although  there  is  verj'  little  Al  hay.  Clover  cut  early  is  in  better  condition  than  timothy. 
Some  are  drawing  hay  to  the  barn-yard  for  manure. 

Biddulph,  Middlesex  :  Hay  cut  before  the  10th  of  July  was  harvested  in  first-class  condition  ;  almost 
1^1  cut  later  was  bleached  by  rains,  and  some  was  almost  completely  spoiled. 

London,  Middlesex  :  Probably  less  than  half  of  the  hay  crop  was  housed  in  good  condition  before  the 
wet  weather  set  in,  but  a  great  deal  has  lain  on  the  ground  for  nearly  two  weeks  past  and  is  utterly  worth- 
iess  for  feeding. 

Erin,  Wellington  :  More  than  half  the  hay  was  spoiled  by  so  much  rain.  In  some  cases  it  was  left  on 
the  fields  as  manure,  not  being  worth  taking  in. 

Nassagaweya,  Halton  :  The  very  best  hay  I  ever  saw,  and  plenty  of  it. 

North  Gower,  Carleton  :  In  twenty-five  years  we  have  not  had  so  light  a  crop  of  hay  in  the  township, 
but  when  it  was  found  that  the  hay  crop  was  going  to  be  I'ght  we  plowed  up  and  sowed  corn,  etc. 

Morrison,  Muskoka :  Hay  and  clover  were  k  fine  crop  here,  but  we  had  no  chance  to  properly  dry  and 
cure  it.     It  was  as  if  nature  gave  with  the  one  hand  and  took  away  with  the  other. 


COMPARATIVE  YIELD  OF  FIELD  OROPS. 

Aggregate  Yield  op  Field  Orops.  The  total  yield  of  the  field 
crops  for  each  of  the  past  five  yearp,  and  also  the  average  of  the  sixteen  years,  1982-96, 
Is  given  in  the  following  table.  Both  acreage  and  yield  enter  into  the  compilation  of  the 
figures : 


Field  crops. 


Fall  wheat 

Spring  wheat. .. 

Barley 

Oats 

Rye 

Peas 

Buckwheat    . 

Beans 

Potatoes 

Mangel  wurzels. 

Carrots 

Turnips    

Com  for  husking 

Corn  for  fodder 
Hay  and  clover. 


1897. 


bushels. 
23,988,051 

4,868,101 
12,021,779 
86,318,128 

3,382,005 
13,867,093 

3,464,186 

981,340 

16,1(0,797 

18,103,387 

4,433,628 
68,297,148 
24,663,998 
tons. 

2,669,822 

3,811,518 


1896. 


1895. 


bushels. 
15,078,441 

3,519,322 
12.669,744 
82,979,992 

2,230.873 
17,493,148 

2,603,669 

1,197,535 
21.305,477 
16,849,401 

4,618,441 
69,814,841 
24,071,364 
tons. 

1,948,780 

2,260,240 


1894. 


bushels. 
14,155,282 

3,472,543 
12,090,507 
81,697,566 

1,900,1171 
15,568,103' 

2,791,749 

1,494,179 
29,390,884 
15,961,502 

4,581,373 

63,496,702 

24,819,899 

tons. 

1,775,654 

1,849,914 


bushels. 
16,512,106 

3,  .367, 864 
10,980,404 
70,172,516 

1,386,606 
14,022,888 

2,534,335 

827,514 

17,163,130 

11,532.127, 

3,716,140 
61,694,487 
16,275,352 
tons. 

1.049,765 

3,575,200 


1893. 


1882-97. 


bushels. 

17,54.5,248 
4,186,063 
9,806,088 

58,584,529 
994,771 

14,168,955 

2,380,456 

664,3l0 

12,911,212 
8,582,568 
2,971,450 

56,975,355 

14,072,961 
tons. 
1,049,524 
4,963,557 


bushels. 
18,022,748 

7,283,391 
16,458,522 
64,476,051 

1,741,187 
14,293,825 

1,902,163 

649,671 

18,598,009 

10,422,526 

3,796.366 

50,852,061 

*19,188,845 

tons. 

*1, 573, 742 

3,242,037 


*  These  figures  are  the  averages  for  six  years,  1892-97. 

Of  the  fourteen  crops  comprising  the  table,  barley,  peas,  beans,  potatoes,  carrots  and 
turnips  fail  to  equal  their  respective  figures  for  1896,  and  spring  wheat,  barley,  peas  and 
potatoes  fall  below  their  own  averages  for  the  sixteen  years. 


21 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Average  Yields  per  Acre.  The  following  table  gives  the  yield 
per  acre  for  each  of  the  leading  held  crops  by  county  groups  for  1897,  and  for  the 
Province  for  both  1896  and  1897,  together  with  the  average  (or  the  sixteen  years,  except 
in  the  case  of  corn,  which  has  been  separated  into  two  classes  for  only  six  years  : 


Field  crops. 


Fall  wheat 

SpriusT  wheat   . . . 

Barley 

Oats 

Rye 

Peas 

Buckwheat    

Beans 

Potatoes 

Mangel  wuizels. . 

Carrots 

Turnips 

Com  for  husking . 


Corn  for  fodder  (green). 
Hay  and  clover 


bush. 

23.5 

13.9 

25.7 

32.8 

17.2 

12.0 

18.1 

19.2 

67 

390 

308 

352 

77.5 

tons. 

8.74 

1.94 


bush. 

24.8 

13.8 

27.1 

37.1 

!  20.8 

16.1 

24.5 

19.1 

82 

437 

363 

485 

65.4 

tons. 

112.39 

2.00 


a 

"Sc 

o 
a; 

O 

1 

g     Lake  Ontario. 

a  <^ 

73 

a 

a 

O  ■« 

The  Province. 

1897. 

1896. 

1882- 
97. 

bush. 

bush. 

bush. 

bush. 

bush. 

bush. 

bush. 

bush. 

25.4 

27.5 

26.0 

15.2 

15.5 

15.9 

25.2 

17.2 

20.2 

14.2 

11.5 

17.1 

15.1 

15.0 

14.8 

15.1 

13.8 

15.2 

26.7 

27.5 

27.3 

25.3 

24.5 

22.9 

26.6 

27.4 

25.6 

35.7 

38.8 

36.5 

33.0 

32.2 

29.1 

35.5 

34.2 

34.4 

18.0 

20.6 

17.9 

16.6 

17.2 

17.7 

18.0 

15.0 

16.2 

14.8 

14.4 

16.1 

17.2 

15.9 

18.3 

15.5 

21.1 

19.9 

23.5 

22.4 

22.3 

25.1 

22.9 

21.5 

22.8 

17.9 

19.9 

22.5 

19.4 

19.0 

21.6 

17.9 

14.4 

19.4 

17.5 

17.5 

95 

81 

85 

121 

]20 

151 

95 

119 

117 

448 

436 

481 

410 

434 

326 

440 

467 

441 

363 

376 

407 

351 

419 

329 

369 

374 

353 

465 

451 

478 

417 

444 

350 

457 

471 

425 

51  4 

75.1 

70.4 

71.7 

59.7 

44.0 

73.6 

75.8 

*71.0 

tons. 

tons. 

tons. 

tons. 

tons. 

tons. 

tone. 

tons. 

tons. 

13.51 

12.69 

12.52 

14.27 

12.93 

11.98 

12.77 

10.89 

*11.29 

1.78 

2.11 

1.61 

1.10 

1.14 

1.18 

1.63 

.93 

1.36 

*  These  figures  are  the  average  for  six  years,  1892-97. 

The  average  yields  of  the  field  crops  make  an  excellent  showing  compared  with  their 
respective  figures  for  the  sixteen  years'  period.  Peas  and  potatoes  show  a  decided 
decrease  in  the  average  yield,  and  spring  wheat  and  mangel  wurzels  fall  slightly  below  their 
record,  but  all  the  other  crops  have  an  enlarged  average  yield.  The  highest  average  yields 
for  1897  are  found  in  the  following  groups  :  Lake  Erie,  corn  for  husking  ;  Lake  Huron, 
rye,  turnips  ;  Georgian  Bay,  beans  ;  West  Midland,  fall  wheat,  barley,  oats,  hay  and 
clover  ;  Lake  Ontario,  spring  wheat,  mangel  wurzels  ;  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa,  buck- 
wheat, corn  for  fodder  ;  East  Midland,  carrots  ;  Northern  Districts,  peas,  potatoes. 


Ratios  op  Aggregate  Crops.  The  total  yield  of  each  crop  in  1897  is 
presented  in  the  following  table  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province,  100  representing 
the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  : 


Districts. 

60 

.2 

*fcH 

a 

43 

38 
58 
46 
77 
77 
73 
57 

67 

>> 

a 

n 
103 

O 
117 

6 

208 
451 
322 
361 
221 
100 
i5r. 

i 

72 
102 
100 

85 
110 

85 
110 
135 

97 

S8 

-G 

a 
312 

CD 

m 

157 

CO 

o 

=3 
*s 

O 
PLI 

72 
78 
83 
75 
88 
93 
100 
140 

87 

00 

3 
& 

% 

be 

a 

CS 

176 
184 
171 
167 
174 
194 
160 
236 

174 

1 

b 

o 

161 
105 

72 
106 

99 
154 
142 
222 

117 

03 

'3 
H 

106 
129 
138 
124 
135 
175 
168 
147 

134 

> 

W 

142 
154 
132 
136 
107 
83 
88 
136 

118 

Lake  Erie 

130 
129 
141 
137 
147 
45 
58 
166 

133 

Lake  Huron   

82:  145 
92    142 

4641  248 
256'  169 

West  Midland 

85 
59 
67 
64 
136 

73 

138 
131 
127 
139 

171 
160 
215 
151 

182 

108 
107 
127 
146 

151 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa . . 
East  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

160    127 

The  Province 

134 

194 

22 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


In  this  table  both  acreage  and  yield  also  influence  the  result.  Taking  the  total 
for  the  Province,  spring  wheat,  barley,  peas  and  potatoes  fail  to  touch  100,  the  first- 
named  crop  not  reaching  the  standard  in  a  single  group,  while  oats,  rye,  buckwheat, 
beans,  mangel  wurzels  and  turnips  show  100  or  over  in  every  group.  Buckwheat 
this  year  has  a  ratio  as  high  as  464  in  the  Georgian  Bay  district,  while  in  the  Lake 
Huron  group  spring  wheat  has  a  showing  of  only  38. 


Ratios  of  Yield  per  Acre.  In  the  following  table  the  average  yield 
per  acre  in  1897  is  compared  with  that  of  the  sixteen  years  1882-97,  the  latter  being 
represented  by  100  : 


Districts. 

1^ 

la 

O 

6 
>> 

a 

1 

M 
o 

S 

M 

99 
128 
116 
116 
114 
119 
119 
100 

116 

i 

pa 

113 
106 
120 
110 
108 
105 
107 
83 

111 

i 

o 

n 

o 

67 
72 
75 
68 
77 
98 
100 
102 

81 

w 

94 
95 
106 
94 
109 
106 
105 
104 

100 

o 
O 

98 
101 
100 
100 
110 
108 
122 
113 

105 

"5 

u 
3 

98 
115 
108 
103 
109 
110 
114 
106 

>,a 

K 

135 
146 
139 
140 
118 
84 
98 

Q7 

Lake  Erie  

124 

97 

105 
102 
103 

99 
107 
105 
103 

99 

104 

96 
105 
107 
104 
103 
103 
104 

96 

103 

112 
114 
103 
118 
119 

75 
111 

94 

111 

69 
76 
70 
70 

83 
90 

85 
82 

78 

Lake  Huron 

123,  98 
120 1  97 
131   77 

Georpfian  iJay 

West  Midland  

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  . . 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts 

126 
83 
80 
79 

125 

111 

93 

107 

86 

99 

The  Province 

108  1^ 

"  1 

Spring  wheat,  peas  and  potatoes  fall  below  the  100  mark,  while  mangel  wurzels 
exactly  touch  it.  Of  the  nine  crops  going  over  the  standard,  fall  wheat  reaches  125  for 
the  Province,  although  three  districts  fail  to  reach  100  for  that  crop.  In  fact  not  a  single 
crop  goes  100  or  over  in  every  group.  The  Lake  Ontario  and  East  Midland  districts  have 
eleven  of  the  thirteen  crops  comprising  the  table  showing  three  figures,  one  crop  in  the 
latter  group  just  reaching  the  100. 


FRUIT  AND  FRUIT  TREES. 

As  May  opened  it  was  considered  by  the  majority  of  correspondents  that  the  season 
was  hardly  as  advanced  as  usual,  but  it  was  thought  that  as  there  had  been  plenty  of  rain 
there  would  be  rapid  growth  when  the  warm  weather  came.  In  most  parts  of  the  Pro- 
vince there  was  a  good  bite  of  grass  for  sheep  and  young  cattle,  but  live  stock  generally 
had  not  been  turned  out  to  pasture.  Fruit  buds  on  trees  were  ready  to  burst  into  bloom, 
and  gooseberries  and  currants  were  nicely  leafing.  The  May  bulletin  went  on  to  say  : 
"  One  or  two  correspondents  reported  injury  to  peach  buds  from  frost,  but  the  majority 
speak  hopefully  regarding  this  fruit.  In  the  county  of  Essex  hundreds  of  acres  of  peach 
and  plum  trees  have  been  set  ou^  during  the  last  year  or  two.  Apples  will  not  likely  be 
a  large  crop  this  year,  except  in  a  few  localities,  owing  to  the  immense  yield  of  the  previous 
season.  Many  trees  are  badly  disfigured  by  the  breaking  of  limbs  owing  to  the  great  load 
of  apples  on  them  last  year.  Pear  trees  promise  well,  except  that  a  number  of  cases  of 
blight  are  reported.  Where  plum  trees  have  been  properly  looked  after  there  is  a  proba- 
bility of  a  good  yield,  althougb.  in  the  case  of  this  fruit  and  cherries  complaints  are  still 
being  made  as  to  the  neglect  of  the  law  regarding  black  knot.  Small  fruits  generally  give 
good  promise.     Some  damage  was  done  to  fruit  trees  during  the  winter  by  field  mice." 

August  returns  were  thus  summarized  :  "  The  supply  of  apples  will  be  far  below  the 
average,  as  might  be  expected  after  the  immense  yield  of  last  year.  In  a  few  instances 
large  yields  are  spoken  of,  but  a  considerable  number  of  correspondents  report  the  opposite, 

23 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32 ). 


A.  1888 


and  too  frequently  mention  is  made  of  scab.  Of  the  standard  winter  varieties  the  North- 
ern Spy  has  done  best.  Pears  will  give  a  better  yield  relatively  than  apples,  but  mention 
is  made  here  and  there  of  the  blight.  Plums  suffered  considerably  from  curculio  and  rot, 
but  many  speak  of  large  yields,  and  the  season  has  been  a  good  one  for  careful  and  intel- 
ligent growers.  Peaches  are  yielding  heavily  in  Lincoln,  although  there  has  been  a  ten- 
dency to  rot  among  some  early  varieties.  In  Essex  and  other  counties  this  fruit  has  done 
very  poorly.  On  account  of  the  ravages  of  black-knot  comparatively  few  cherry  trees 
have  been  left  in  the  Province,  but  as  a  rule  these  have  been  loaded.  Several  correspon- 
dents complain  of  the  non-enforcement  of  the  law  governing  black-knot  in  plum  and  cherry 
orchards.  Grapes  promise  a  fair  to  good  yield,  although  in  many  quarters  threatened 
with  mildew  on  account  of  the  damp  season.  This  crop  is  reported  to  be  a  week  or  two 
late.  In  most  sections  of  the  Province  small  fruits  were  abundant,  raspberries  especially 
giving  a  magnificent  yield." 

The  November  bulletin  had  the  following  :  "  The  general  condition  of  fruit  trees, 
vines  and  bushes  is  good,  although  occasional  cases  of  blight  occur  among  pear  and  other 
orchard  trees,  and  black-knot  is  still  too  common  on  cherry  and  plum  trees  It  is  some- 
what re-assuring,  however,  to  know  that  cherries  and  plums  bore  generously  this  year, 
being  relatively  the  largest  yielders  among  the  fruit  trees.  Apples  were  small  in  both 
yield  and  size,  and  scab  was  very  common  amongst  unsprayed  fruit.  A  good  many 
wormy  apples  were  also  reported.  The  tent  caterpillar  was  much  complained  of  in  some 
of  the  counties  along  Lake  Ontario  and  the  St.  Lawrence.  The  Northern  Spy  is  often 
alluded  to  as  the  best  yielder  among  the  winter  apples  this  year.  Pear  trees  suffered  a 
little  from  blight ;  but  the  yield  was  fair  in  most  quarters.  Peaches  were  abundant  in 
Went  worth  and  Lincoln,  but  along  Lake  Erie  thay  did  poorly.  Grapes  bore  largely,  but 
some  cf  the  fruit  was  caught  by  frost.  Small  fruits  yielded  abundantly,  and  in  a  few 
places  a  market  could  not  be  found  for  the  surplus." 

Apples.  The  table  following  gives  the  number  of  apple  trees  in  the  Province  in 
1896  and  1897.  under  and  over  fifteen  years  old,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province, 
together  with  the  yield  of  apples  per  tree  and  the  total  yields  for  the  same  periods  : 


Districts. 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Hurcn 

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East   Midland 

Northern  Districts 

The  Province 


Apple  Trees. 


15  years  and  over. 


1897. 


1,161,558 

772,270 

448,519 

1,095,234 

1,766,184 

582,853 

263,756 

12,025 


1896. 


Under  15  years. 


Yield  of  apples 
in  1897. 


1897. 


1,068,063 

729,3251 

442,216' 

1,075,992 

1,739,191 

576,921 

273,649 

8,549 


6,102,3991    5,913,906 


1896. 


Bushels. 


493,210 
392,187 
393, 146 
445,147 
826,253 
554,619 
261,742 
68,714 

3,435,018 


515,176 
395,319 
417,074 
448,223 
875,356 
557,010 
271,514 
68,386 

3,548,058 


2,154. 
1,452, 

924, 
2,174 
4,064, 
1,723, 

823, 
27, 


Yield  of  apples 
in  1896. 


^7. 


1.86 
1.88 
2.06 
1.99 


517 

401 

291 

6lO 

148'2.30i 

251  2.96 

234  3.12 

235  22.6 


Bushels. 


,056 
,435 
,025 


Bush, 
per 
tree. 


12.25 
9.92 
7.47 


13,343,720  2.19 


13,087 

7,236, 

3,303, 
11,804,969110.97 
14,273, 

4,360 

1,798 
31 


,665 
,144 
,647 
,814 


8.21 
7.56 
6.57 
3.72 


55,895,755 


9.45 


An  increase  occurred  in  the  nambar  of  apple  trees  over  fifteea  years  old  in  every 
group  except  the  East  Midland  district,  there  now  being  6,102,399  trees  of  that  age  in  the 
Province,  or  188,493  more  than  was  reported  in  the  preceding  year.  Every  group,  how- 
ever, shows  a  decrease  in  the  number  of  apple  trees  under  fifteen  years  old,  and  the  num- 
ber reported  is  now  only  3,435,018,  or  113,040  less  than  in  1896.  The  average  yield  per 
tree  was  small,  being  but  2.19  bushels  per  bearing  tree  (fifteen  years  old)  compared  with 
9.45  bushels  in  the  previous  year,  and  the  total  yield  amounted  to  only  13,343,720  bushels, 
as  against  55,895,755  bushels  in  1896. 

24 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


The  following  table  presents  the  acreages  in  orchard  and  garden,  and  in  vineyard,  in 
1897,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province,  together  with  the  total  acreage  of  these  in 
the  years  1895,  1896  and  1897  : 


Year. 

.2 

'u 
1-5 

a 
2 

D 
W 

cS 

T3 

a 

-is 

acres. 
57,317 
513 

57,830 
56,382 
55,442 

0)  a 

acres. 

91,516 

5,212 

96,728 
94,036 
91,863 

cS   O   ra 

m 

acres. 

34,207 

368 

34,575 
31,066 
30,454 

T3 

a 

W 

acres. 
16,792 

72 

16,864 
15,744 
16,813 

O 

"> 
o 

Orchard  and  garden. . 
Vineyard 

(-1897.... 

Totals..  <  1896.... 

(.1895.... 

acres. 
62,534 
3,700 

66,234 
61,496 
60,141 

acres. 
35,817 
636 

36,453 
34,514 
33,210 

acres. 
25,217 
553 

25.770 
24,224 
22,729 

acres. 

2,941 

46 

2,987 
2,660 
2,135 

acres. 

326,341 

11,100 

337,441 
320,122 
312,787 

The  Lake  Ontario  and  Lake  Erie  groups  lead  in  the  acreages  in  fruits.  Over 
eleven  thousand  acres  are  now  given  to  growing  of  grapes  in  Ontario.  The  total  rural 
area  in  fruit  is  337,441  acres,  or  17,319  acres  more  than  in  the  preceding  year,  every  dis- 
trict sharing  in  the  increase. 


REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS. 

From  the  Mat  Returns. 

Gosfield  S.,  Essex :  The  farmers  of  this  township  are  having  a  mania  for  peaches  and  tobacco.  Thou- 
Bands  of  acres  have  been  planted  with  peaches  and  hundreds  with  tobacco. 

Raleieh,  Kent :  There  is  no  abatement  in  the  craze  for  setting  out  peach  and  plum  trees  by  the  thou- 
eands  all  through  this  section  bordering  on  Lake  Erie. 

Nelson,  Halton  :  Pear  blight  was  very  prevalent  last  year  which  necessitates  a  great  deal  of  replacing 
in  the  spring. 

Haldimand,  Northumberland  :  Our  municipal  authorities  do  not  pay  the  least  attention  to  the  power 
given  them  by  the  Provincial  Parliament  re  black-knot  and  other  enemies  of  fruit.  Plums  and  cherries 
are  blackening  and  dying  all  over  the  township,  so  that  it  is  of  little  use  for  an  owner  to  cut,  trim  and 
spray. 

From  the  August  Returns. 

Harwich,  Kent :  From  an  orchard  of  five  hundred  apple  trees,  I  will  not  have  more  than  enough  fo 
home  consumption. 

Harwich,  Kent :  Something  appears  to  be  going  wrong  with  the  grape  vines  ;  many  of  them  are  turn 
ing  yellow  and  mach  like  as  if  they  are  going  to  die. 

Canboro',  Haldimand  :  The  law  against  black-knot  on  plum  and  cherry  trees  is  sadly  neglected  in  this 
township.     Bees  have  never  worked  and  swarmed  better. 

Morris,  Huron  :  Many  of  the  apple  trees  are  not  growing.  The  leaves  seemed  blighted  or  shrivelled 
np,  but  why  I  do  not  know. 

Glenelg,  Grey  :  Apple  trees  are  affected  by  some  kind  of  blight.  The  fruit  is  scabby,  and  a  great  many 
have  fallen  off  the  trees. 

Grantham,  Lincoln  :  Berries  are  abundant ;  hardly  worth  picking. 

Louth,  Lincoln  :  There  are  about  eight  or  nine  barrels  of  apples  where  there  were  a  hundred  last  year. 

Glanford,  Wentworth  :  Cherries  have  yielded  largely,  but  there  are  only  a  few  trees  left  now  owing  to 
the  ravages  of  black-knot.     Berries  have  been  the  greatest  crop  ever  grown. 

Darlington,  Durham  :  Tent  caterpillars  are  very  plentiful  this  year. 


FARM  SUPPLIES  IN  THE  SPRING. 

The  following  was  in  the  May  bulletin  :  "  There  was  a  good  supply  of  hay  in  the 
hands  of  farmers  last  fall,  but  various  causes  led  to  large  sales  to  pressors  and  liberal 
feeding  to  live  stock,  and  except  in  a  few  sections  here  and  there,  there  is  but  little  more 
hay  than  is  necessary  for  local  emergencies.     Oats  are  still  plentiful,  although,  owing  to 

25 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


low  prices,  large  quantities  of  this  grain  were  fed  to  live  stock.  Some  farmers  are  still 
holding  on  to  wheat,  but  the  majority  have  parted  with  the  bulk  of  their  supply,  and  in 
most  districts  there  is  little  more  than  is  necessary  for  home  needs.  There  was  a  lively 
movement  in  cattle  during  the  winter  and  spring,  especially  in  the  western  part  of  the 
Province,  where  a  large  number  of  beeves  were  purchased  and  shipped  to  the  Buffalo  and 
other  American  markets,  good  prices  being  given.  A  considerable  number  of  cattle  have 
also  been  purchased  for  the  British  market,  to  be  finished  on  grass  for  May  and  June 
delivery.  There  are  less  fat  and  store  cattle  for  sale  than  usual  in  the  Province,  although 
in  some  Eections  there  will  still  bo  more  than  are  required  for  local  purposes." 


FALL  PLOWING. 


At  the  time  correspondents  wrote  in  November,  the  extent  of  the  fall  plowing 
reported  did  not  nearly  equal  that  done  at  the  same  date  last  year.  Several  things  con- 
tributed to  this,  the  chief  cause  being  the  dry  weather  which  prevailed  during  October, 
and  which  left  the  ground  in  a  hard — on  certain  soils  almost  impenetrable — condition 
during  the  last  week  or  two  of  that  month.  Welcome  rains  ushered  in  November  and 
soaked  the  soil,  and  up  to  the  time  correspondents  wrote  plows  were  being  rushed  all 
over  the  Province,  and  the  probability  is  that  the  area  turned  under  will  be  fully  up  to 
the  average.  Another  and  more  satisfactory  cause  of  delay  in  plowing  was  the  fact  that 
owing  to  the  large  yields  of  grain,  threshing  operations  occupied  more  than  usual  of  the 
time  of  the  farmers  this  fall.  The  lateness  of  the  harvest,  generally,  also  threw  plowing 
late. 


THRESHING  AND  MARKETING. 

The  November  bulletin  gaid  :  "  Most  of  our  correspondents  report  threshing  either 
as  completed  or  as  nearly  dene.  Advantage  has  been  taken  of  the  good  condition  of 
the  roads  to  market  a  considerable  amount  of  wheat — many  say  about  one-half  of  the  crop — 
but  as  the  yield  was  high  a  large  quantity  still  remains  in  farmers'  hands,  ready  to 
be  rushed  to  market  should  prices  improve.  Oats,  peas  and  rye  have  also  been  freely 
marketed,  and  a  good  deal  has  also  been  fed.  Most  of  the  barley  is  being  retained 
for  feeding  stock  on  the  farm,  and  a  good  deal  of  corn  is  also  being  fed." 


FARM  IMPROVEMENTS. 

The  usual  amount  of  underdraining  has  been  gone  on  with  during  the  year,  and  a 
large  portion  of  it  has  been  done  with  tile.  But  few  machines  are  in  use  for  this 
work.  Many  improvements  are  being  made  in  fencing — wire  fences,  and  combinations 
of  straight  rail  and  wire,  being  the  favorites.  A  fair  amount  of  progress  has  been 
made  in  building,  chiefly  in  brick  or  stone  basements  to  barns  and  stables. 


REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS. 

Undeedbaining. 

Colchester,  N.,  Essex :  Considerable  underdraining  has  been  done  this  year,  but  I  think  more  will  be 
done  next  year,  as  money  will  be  more  plentiful. 

Maiden,  Essex  :  We  are  finding  out  that  it  pays  to  drain,  and  so  there  is  good  progress  being  made. 

Harwich,  Kent :  A  little  underdraining  is  going  on  all  the  time,  but  many  farmers  are  not  yet  able  to 
do  much,  as  times  have  been  so  hard. 

Harwich,  Kent :  Nothing  will  pay  the  farmer  so  well  as  a  few  dollars  spent  on  tile  drainage.  In  some 
cases  it  will  pay  the  first  crop,  and  when  properly  done  it  will  improve  with  age.  As  a  rule  tile  should 
never  be  laid  less  than  three  feet  deep  when  there  is  an  outlet  for  it. 

26 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Oxford,  Kent :  Farmers  are  all  the  time  putting  down  more  or  less  of  drains.  Every  nook  and  corner 
where  water  lodges  will  soon  be  drained. 

Howard,  Kent:  Fanners  are  always  underdraining  more  or  les?,  as  circumstances  will  allow.  The 
supply  of  tile  is  abundant. . 

Raleigh.  Kent:  Hitheito  open  drains  have  betn  the  means  uted  to  rid  the  soil  of  surplus  water,  but 
now  tile  drainage  is  being  resorted  to  with  marked  success,  and,  where  sufficient  outlet  can  be  obtained, 
it  is  being  generally  adopted.  Local  manufacturers  furnish  the  supply  of  tile  in  sufficient  quantities  to 
meet  all  demands.     The  tile  is  usually  put  in  by  the  farmers  themselves  during  the  spi-ing  time. 

Dorchester  S.,  Elgin  :  Underdraining  is  steadily  going  on,  and  many  faims  are  now  thoroughly  drained. 

Malahide,  Elgin  :  Underdraining  is  being  done  to  about  the  same  extent  as  other  years.  Most  of  our 
farms  are  more  or  less  tiled. 

Southwold,  Elgin  :  Not  much  underdraining  has  been  done  this  year,  but  as  times  get  better  more  will 
be  done,  for  nearly  all  farmers  now  know  the  advai  tage  of  it. 

Canboro',  Haldimand  :  No  progress  in  underdraining  ;  only  by  open  ditches. 

Monitor,  Haldimand  :  Our  farmers  do  not  underdrain  but  do  a  lot  of  open  drain  work,  which  seems  to 
be  most  in  favor  for  our  soil  owing  to  the  difficulty  of  getting  enough  fall. 

Dawn,  Lambton  :  Farm«r8  are  making  great  progress  underdraining,  especially  those  who  are  able  to 
pay  the  cash,  and  tome  who  have  not  the  ready  money  are  borrowing  from  the  county. 

Warwick,  Lambton  :  There  has  been  a  continued  advance  in  tile  draining  for  a  number  of  years  back 
in  this  township.  Tile  of  the  best  quality  is  manufactured  here,  and  the  advantages  of  using  tile  is  so 
apparent  that  there  are  but  few  farmers  who  have  not  done  eo. 

Grey,  Huron  :  There  has  been  a  good  deal  of  tile  draining  this  year,  probably  more  than  was  ever 
done  before  in  one  season. 

Howicb,  Huron  :  More  drainirg  has  been  done  this  year  than  in  any  previous  one. 

Morris,  Huron  :  There  has  been  a  great  deal  of  draining  done  this  year,  but  there  was  not  a  very  good 
supply  of  tile,  and  the  digging  was  let  by  the  rod  to  drainers. 

Arran,  Bruce  :  Very  little  draining  tile  is  made,  and  people  think  they  cannot  afford  to  pay  for  the 
labor.  However,  there  has  been  considerable  draining  done,  filled  with  ttone  and  cedar,  but  the  rats 
have  spoiled  a  lot  of  them. 

Brant,  Bruce :  There  was  some  tile  draining  done,  perhaps  more  than  usual.  The  wet  spring  and 
early  summer  compelled  farmers  to  think  about  it. 

Huron,  Bruce  :  There  has  been  considerable  underdraining  done  this  year.  Tile  was  very  scarce  the 
fore  part  of  the  season,  but  is  now  plentiful. 

Kinlosp,  Bruce :  Good  progress  has  been  made  in  underdraining.     The  supply  of  tile  has  been  adequate. 

Bentinck,  Grey  :  The  most  of  the  land  here  requires  draining,  but  there  is  very  little  of  it  done.  We 
have  no  tile  within  twenty  miles  of  here. 

Ofprey,  Grey  :  No  underdraining  nas  been  done  here  this  year,  but  it  is  needed  badly  enough.  I  put 
in  some  last  summer,  but  we  did  the  work  ourselves. 

Essa,  Simcoe  :  Farmers  have  been  making  good  progress  in  tile  draining.  In  travelling  through  the 
country,  piles  of  tile  for  draining,  and  men  at  work  laying  them,  are  frequently  to  be  seen. 

Tecumsetb,  Simcoe  :  Considerable  tile  draining  has  b'-en  done  here,  but  much  remains  yet  to  be  done. 
Tile  is  plentiful  and  within  easy  reach.  No  tile  machines  are  used  here.  Men  follow  draining  as  a  trade, 
and  put  in  tile  at  from  eight  to  twelve  cents  per  red. 

Vesprp,  Simcoe  :  There  has  been  a  greater  amount  of  tile  draining  than  ever  before,  and  preparations 
are  being  made  for  yet  more  next  year,  the  loss  of  crops  from  heavy  rains  showing  the  necessity.  From 
what  I  hear  hand  labor  is  as  cheap  as  machine  work  in  making  drains,  and  more  satisfactory. 

Dorchester  N.,  Middlesex  :  Not  very  much  has  been  done  as  to  thorough  draining,  but  a  good  many 
large  drains  have  been  put  in  to  receive  water  from  small  drains  through  fields. 

Dorchester  N.,  Middlesex  :  Quite  a  bit  of  draining  is  being  done,  as  farmers  find  it  pays. 

Williams  E.,  Middlesex  :  Farmers  are  getting  their  farms  pretty  well  underdrained.  There  has  been 
a  good  supply  of  tile  and  diggers. 

Dereham,  Oxford  :  A  large  amount  of  underdraining  has  been  done.  There  is  plenty  of  tile  and  also 
plenty  of  good  men  to  put  them  in.  As  for  ditching  machines,  you  could  not  give  one  away.  Several  have 
been  tried,  but  for  practical  work  are  a  failure. 

Blanshard,  Perth  :  Underdraining  is  carried  on  here  extensively.  All  the  low  land  is  being  drained 
rapidly,  but  all  done  in  the  old  primitive  way.  The  supply  of  material  is  sufficient.  There  are  two  tile 
yards  in  the  township,  fitted  up  with  modern  machinery,  and  turning  out  excellent  tile. 

Elma,  Perth:  Undei  draining  has  made  considerable  progress  this  year.  The  supply  of  tile  in  the 
forepart  of  the  season  was  not  equal  to  the  demand,  but  at  present  the  supply  seems  adeejuate.  I  have 
not  seen  any  tile  draining  machines  at  work  here  ;  we  use  the  old  fashioned  shovel  and  hand  scoop. 

Elma,  Perth  :  There  have  been  a  good  many  tile  put  in  here  this  year,  as  usual.  There  was  plenty  of  tile 
and  plenty  of  men  to  put  them  in.  Tile  draining  machines  are  not  in  use  here  any  more,  as  they  did  not 
seem  to  give  satisfaction  where  they  were  used. 

Logan,  Ptrth  :  The  wet  weather  has  had  a  stimulating  effect  in  the  work  of  draining.  Tile  are  plenti- 
ful.   The  ordinary  farmer  and  his  hired  man  do  the  bulk  of  the  work, 

27 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Mornington,  Perth  :  Owing  to  the  wet  spring  there  has  been  a  good  deal  of  underdrainmg  this 
summer. 

Waterloo,  Waterloo  :  A  lot  of  draining  was  done  and  will  be  done  this  fall,  as  this  year  the  difference 
between  drained  and  undrained  land  could  be  seen  everywhere  from  the  roadside,  especially  on  peas.  Our 
Drainage  Act  is  still  very  imperfect,  and  needs  reform  in  some  sections. 

2siagara,  Lincoln  :  Tile  draining  has  been  done  in  this  vicinity  on  only  one  farm.  They  used  a  tile 
draining  machine. 

Binbrook,  Wentworth  :  Quite  a  lot  of  draining  has  been  done.  No  tile  machines  are  used  here.  We 
use  plows  with  the  mould  board  off,  and  thev  cut  down  very  well.     Then  we  shovel  it  out. 

Saltfleet,  Wentworth  :  Considerable  tile  draining  has  been  done  this  year.  The  supply  of  tile  is  suffi- 
cient. Draining  machines  have  been  abandoned  as  a  failure  for  our  land ;  hand  labor  being  cheaper  and 
better. 

Mara,  Ontario  :  A  large  amount  of  underdraining  has  been  done  this  year. 

Manvers,  Durham  :  On  the  average  farm  in  this  district  there  does  not  seem  to  be  much  draining 
needed. 

A  meliasburg,  Prince  Edward :  There  is  a  gradual  awakening  to  the  importance  of  underdraining. 
Still  there  is  not  as  much  done  as  there  should  be. 

Yoige  and  Escott  Rear,  Leeds  :  A  number  of  farmers  are  'putting  in  tile,  as  many  have  seen  good 
results  from  it. 

Storrington,  Fronten'ic  :  There  is  a  gradual  improvement  in  farming.  Many  are  improving  by  tile 
drains. 

Williamsburg,  Dundas  :  The  most  of  the  driining  done  here  is  by  the  open  scoop  ditch. 

Otonabee,  Peterborough  :  There  has  been  some  tile  draining  done,  but  not  enough.  The  manufacturer 
of  the  tile  says  it  hardly  piys  him  to  get  up  machinery  for  making  them. 

Fescing  and  Building. 

Gosfield  N.,  E-tsex  :  Several  new  barns  and  houses  and  other  buUdinga  have  been  put  up  duriag  the 
past  summer,  and  a  good  deal  of  wire  fencing  has  been  done. 

Maiden,  Essex  :  A  good  deal  of  wire  fencing  is  being  done.  We  are  building  warmer  stables  than 
formerly, 

Mersea,  Essex  :  Farmers  are  building  most  of  their  new  fences  out  of  woven  wire. 

Camden,  Kent :  Some  farmers  are  planting  hedges. 

Harwich,  Kent :  The  fencing  used  now  is  a  great  improvement  on  the  old  crooked  rail-fence,  being 
mostly  of  wire  and  straight,  doing  away  with  the  old  dirty  fence  row. 

Orford,  Kent  :  The  old  rail  fence  is  being  continually  replaced  by  one  or  other  of  the  wire  fences. 

Tilbury  E.,  Kent :  Wire  fencing  is  being  adopted,  and  some  are  planting  hedge?.  A  few  farmers 
during  the  year  have  built  barns  with  brick  foundation,  the  lower  story  being  used  for  cattle. 

Malahide.  Elgin  :  Many  are  taking  down  the  old  worm  fences  along  the  roadsides  and  lanes  and 
putting  up  some  sort  of  wire  fence. 

Yarmouth,  Elgin  ;  We  have  not  yet  got  the  best  wire  fence,  and  farmers  are  experimenting  them- 
selves—a very  costly  way  of  doing.  Our  model  and  experimental  farms  migrht  solve  that  problem  for  us, 
viz.,  the  best  and  cheapest  wire  fence  for  the  farm — one  that  any  ordinary  farmer  can  put  up. 

Yarmouth.  Elgin  :  A  great  amount  of  wire  and  picket  fence  is  building.  Many  farmers  are  building 
their  barns  higher  and  making  basements  to  them. 

Yarmouth,  Elgin  :  The  old  worm  fence  is  rapidly  disappearing.  Straight  rail  and  wire  fence  is  now 
the  order. 

Middleton,  Norfolk  :  Two  of  my  neighbors  have  built  extensive  basement  walls  and  placed  large  barns 
on  them. 

Canboro',  Haldimand  :  Farm  buildings  and  fences  are  improving  all  the  time. 

Walpole,  Haldimand  :  Wire  fencing  has  taken  the  lead,  and  a  few  are  trying  hedge  plants. 

Bosanquet,  Lambton  :  Old  fences  and  build. ngs  are  being  replaced  by  new  and  better  ones,  and  signs 
of  progress  are  to  be  seen  all  around. 

Dawn,  Lambton  :  Wire  fences  and  better  buildings  are  bemg  put  up. 

Warwick,  Lambton  :  Several  miles  of  hedges  have  been  planted  and  a  good  deal  of  wire  fencing  has 
been  erected.  A  number  of  barns  have  also  been  remodelled,  and  stone,  concrete  or  brick  basements  built 
beneath  for  stabling. 

Ashfield,  Huron  :  Considerable  building  has  been  done  in  this  neighborhood. 

Grey,  Huron  :  There  has  been  a  good  deal  of  wire  fencing  done,  and  a  number  of  new  bams  with  good 
stone  stabling  underneath  have  been  erected. 

Stanley,  Huron  :  Considerable  fencing  has  been  done — mostly  wire — and  also  some  building.  Upon 
the  whole  it  has  been  a  prosperous  season. 

Arran,  Bruce  :  There  has  been  some  improvements  in  building,  and  considerable  in  fencing. 

28 


61   Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  189  8 


Greenock,  Bruce  :  Farmers  are  waking  up  to  the  need  cf  a  better  system  of  fencing  and  laying  out  of 
fields.     Buildings  are  also  getting  their  share  of  attention. 

Greenock,  Bruce  :  There  are  too  many  fences  on  our  farms.  A  good  system  of  portable  fences  is 
required  and  farmers  should  also  do  away  with  their  rubbish  gardens.  Farmers  have  to  cut  too  many 
small  patches  preparatory  to  getting  the  binder  to  work. 

Kincardine.  Bruce  :  A  good  many  farm  buildings  have  been  erectei.  A  number  of  new  fences  have 
also  been  built,  chiefly  of  straight  rail  and  wire. 

Saugeen,  Bruce  :  Some  fine  buildings  have  been  put  up,  and  also  a  good  deal  of  substantial  fencing. 

Bentinck,  Grey  :  There  has  not  been  much  improvement  in  fencing,  but  there  has  been  a  decided 
improvement  in  buildings. 

Egremont,  Grey  :  There  has  been  considerable  building  done  here.  Many  are  putting  in  cement  stable 
floors.  There  are  several  kind.-i  of  patent  fences,  which  are  very  good  for  letting  young  pigs  and  lambs 
through,  and  making  farmers  swear. 

Keppel,  Grey  :  Wire  is  rapidly  taking  the  place  of  rails  for  fencing. 

Gwillimbury,  W.,  Siracoe  :  There  are  some  improvements  in  buildings,  but  little  in  fencing.  The  chief 
improvements  in  buildings  are  stone  stabling  under  the  barns. 

Medonte,  Simcoe :  Wire  is  taking  the  place  of  rails,  and  stone  basements  are  being  placed  under  barns. 

Sunnidale,  Simcoe  :  There  has  been  considerable  progress  both  in  fencing  and  building. 

Tecumseth,  Simcoe  :  The  old  crooked  fences  are  being  replaced  by  the  more  sightly  wire  fence.  In 
this  respect  a  great  improvement  is  noticeable. 

Dorchester  N.,  Middlpsex  :  There  have  been  a  few  cas?s  of  raising  up  old  barns  and  enlarging  them 
generally  in  width  and  height,  with  concrete  basementi.     New  fences  are  now  usually  built  of  wire. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :  Various  new  stylei  of  fence  are  being  tried,  and  mu-t  be  used,  as  our  old  rail  fence 
cannot  be  long  continued.     Many  barns  are  being  lifted,  and  all  new  ones  have  basement  stables. 

Lobo,  Middlesex  :  Wire  fence=<  of  various  styles  are  being  adopted.  Some  of  our  farmers  are  raising 
barns  and  putting  in  stables  under  them, 

Westminster,  Middlesex  :  A  number  of  bank  barns  with  concrete  basements  and  floors  have  been  built 
this  season.  Generally  t^ie  o'd  barn  has  been  raised  up  and  the  basement  put  under.  Fences  are  also 
greatly  improviner,  as  wire  is  cheap. 

Blandford,  Oxford  :  Wire  of  some  kind  is  superseding  wood  for  fencing  and  is  a  very  decided  improve- 
ment.    I  can  only  think  of  two  farms  in  the  north  that  have  not  bank  barn.". 

Dereham,  Oxford  :  A  great  many  farmers  are  raising  barns,  and  putting  stone,  brick  or  concrete  foun- 
dations under  them  for  stable  purposes. 

Oxford  W  ,  Oxfrrd  :  A  considerable  extent  of  straight  rail  fence  has  been  built  this  summer,  and  not  so 
much  wire  has  been  used  as  formerly.     A  number  of  barns  are  being  put  on  stone  walls. 

Dumfries  S.,  Brant ;  A  great  many  are  fencing  with  wire,  and  some  are  trying  hedges. 

EUice,  Perth :  A  good  deal  of  hedge  has  been  planted  this  year,  and  I  believe  it  will  make  a  good 
fence. 

Elma,  Perth  :  A  few  new  barn^  have  been  put  up  this  year,  but  as  a  rule  building  has  been  in  the  way 
of  straw  and  driving  sheds,  and  additions  to  barns. 

FuUarton,  Perth  :  Wire  is  taking  the  place  of  rails  in  fencing.  Farmers  are  rapiily  putting  in  stone 
or  brick  basements  to  their  barns. 

Luther  E.,  Dufferin  :  A  great  deal  of  fencing  has  been  done  this  summer,  and  a  large  number  of  houses 
and  barns  have  been  built.     Some  barns  have  also  been  ra'sed  on  stone  walls  and  enlarged. 

Mono,  Dufferin  :  Fencing  has  been  considerably  improved.  Some  new  buildings  have  been  erected 
particularly  barns.  * 

Ancaster,  Wentworth  :  A  great  many  are  planting  hedges. 

Flambnro'  W.,  Wentworth  :  Wire  fences  are  slowly  but  surely  replacing  stumps  and  rails.  Builders 
are  busier  than  usual. 

Fla-nbi.ro'  W.,  Wentworth  :  Patent  fencing  and  bank  barns  are  all  the  go.  There  has  been  more 
building  during  the  last  year  than  I  have  seen  for  a  long  time. 

Salt  fleet,  Wentworth:  There  has  been  a  steady  improvement  in  farm  ImihJings.  In  the  fruit  district 
fences  are  being  removed  almost  entirely,  except  where  needed  for  pasture  fields. 

Esquesing,  Halton  :  Wire  is  gradually  replacing  rail  for  fencing.  New  buildings  have  been  going  up 
all  over  the  township. 

Trafalgar,  Halton  :  A  good  deal  of  hedge  planting  has  been  going  on  during  the  last  three  year?,  and 
many  fitrmers  are  using  wire,  as  being  less  expensive. 

Georgina.  York :  Considerable  improvements  are  being  made  in  fences  and  outbuildingp.  Zig-zag 
fences  are  being  replaced  by  straight  r^ils  and  posts,  and  also  some  wire  fences.  Barns  are  being  raised 
and  stone  stables  put  underneath. 

Markham,  York  :  Wire  fences  are  being  built.  Farmers  are  raising  their  barns  to  enable  them  to 
have  stabling  under  them. 

Scarboro',  York  :  Some  fencing  has  been  done,  but  farmers  show  a  disposition  to  do  with  as  few  fencea 
as  possible.     Several  new  barns  have  been  erected,  but  building  has  not  been  as  brisk  as  last  year. 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


York,  York  :  Some  excellent  barns  with  stone  foundations,  stables  and  root  houses,  have  been  built. 
W^ire  fencing  is  gradually  taking  the  place  of  other  kinds. 

Mara,  Ontario  :  Several  kinds  of  wire  and  wood  fences  have  been  built  during  the  year.  The  straight 
rail  fence  wired  to  cedar  posts  sunk  into  the  grouad  seems  to  be  in  greatest  favor.  Dozens  of  bank  barns 
and  brick  houses  has  been  erected  duriner  the  past  summer,  and  some  are  now  busy  building.  In  fact,  the 
people  seem  to  have  had  a  mania  for  building  this  year. 

Hamilton,  Northumberland :  Most  wet  lands  have  been  underdrained,  bat  where  required  tile  has 
been  placed. 

Richmond,  Lennox  :  Very  satisfactory  progress  has  been  made,  both  in  the  improvement  of  fences  and 
buildings. 

Denbigh,  Addington  :  Some  very  good  buildings  have  been  put  up  by  farmers,  and  some  wire  and  rail 
fences  have  been  built. 

Yonge  and  Escott  Rear,  Leeds  :  The  snake  fence  appears  to  be  going  out  of  use,  especially  among 
farmers  who  have  but  a  small  supply  of  timber.  Where  farm  buildings  are  being  erected  more  attention  is 
given  to  warmth  than  was  given  a  few  years  ago. 

Hawkesbury  E.,  Prescott:  There  have  been  great  improvements  made  in  fencing  and  farm  buildings 
during  the  past  season. 

Rumpel],  Russell  :  But  little  progress  has  been  made  in  fencing  this  year,  but  a  goad  deal  has  been  done 
in  buildings,  which  are  every  year  being  made  warmer  and  more  convenient. 

Osgoode,  Carleton  :  Wire  fences  are  last  supp'anting  the  old  rail  fences,  but  the  most  of  them  do  not 
appear  to  be  a  success  Barbed  wire  is  not  considered  dangerous,  and  common  smooth  wire  is  of  little  or 
no  use  to  stop  cattle  with.  They  will  wa'k  through  it  at  any  place.  There  is  a  woven  wire  fence  which 
appears  to  be  very  suitable,  but  it  is  found  to  be  very  expensive  to  fence  a  farm  with. 

Gower  N.,  Carleton  :  There  have  been  great  improvements  going  on  in  raising  old  barns  and  under- 
pinning them  for  cattle  stables  and  root  houses. 

Gower  N.,  Carleton  :  Our  council  is  giving  ten  cents  per  rod  for  all  substantial  wire  fences  built  along 
the  highway,  and  a  good  many  have  availed  themselves  of  the  chance. 

Rolph,  Wylie  and  Buchanan,  Renfrew  :  I  notice  that  a  good  many  farmers  are  fencing  with  wire,  par- 
ticularly along  the  highways,  and  also  that  frame  buildings  are  replacing  the  old  log  buildings. 

Eldon,  Victoria  :  There  have  been  a  good  many  new  farm  buildings  put  up,  and  some  improvements  in 
fences. 

Harvey,  Peterborouerh  :  Several  bank  barns  have  been  built,  and  fencing  (no  wire  used)  is  progressing 
with  cedar  and  black  ash,  mostly. 

Glamorgan,  Haliburton  *•  Straight  rail  or  barbed  wire  are  being  used  instead  of  the  old  snake  fence, 
and  frame  houses  are  taking  the  place  of  log  buildings. 

Tyendinaga,  Hastings  :  A  general  improvement  has  begun  in  rebuilding  and  repairing  old  barns. 

Oakley,  Muskoka:  As  a  rule  our  fencing  is  bad  -  generally  of  logs  or  rails,  and  some  fence  with  the 

dog  I 

Hilton,  Algoma  :  A  large  amount  of  fencing  has  been  done  this  year,  and  a  large  addition  has  been 
made  to  farm  buildings. 

Flax. 

Harwich,  Kent :  None  grown  except  an  occasional  strip  for  seed.  There  is  probably  not  ten  acres  in 
the  whole  township. 

Raleigh,  Kent :  None  grown  except  in  small  patches  to  mix  with  feed  to  horses. 

Grey.  Huron  :  .Short,  and  not  likely  to  be  a  heavy  yield. 

McKillop,  Hurjn  :  On  account  of  the  flix  mill  not  running  there  is  very  little  grown,  but  what  there  is 
is  good. 

Wawanosh,  Huron  :    None  sown  this  year  ;  the  mill  shut  down. 

Biddulph,  Middlesex  :  In  good  condition.  All  pulled  at  present.  It  is  not  generally  grown,  there 
being^only  occasional  fields. 

Westminster,  Middlesex  :  There  is  a  good  deal  grown  near  Belmont,  and  it  looks  well. 

Zorra  E.,  Oxford  :  Short,  but  a  fair  crop.  It  was  too  dry  at  first,  then  too  wet  and  hot,  and  was  very 
weedy  as  a  rule. 

EUice,  Perth  :  Flax  is  very  short  in  the  fibre,  and  is  ripening  faster  than  the  pullers  can  get  at  it. 

Wallace,  Perth  :  Not  much  sown  on  account  of  the  Listowel  mill  not  running. 

Guelph,  Wellington  :  Not  so  much  sown  as  laat  year. 

Peel,  Wellington  :  A  good  heavy  crop,  but  injured  by  rain.     A  large  quantity  of  flax  is  sown  here. 

Waterloo,  Waterloo  :  None  sown,  as  the  flax  mills  do  not  buy  any  more. 

11 1  '"'Derb'gh,  Lennox  and  Addington  :  Very  little  grown  in  this  part  of  the  Province.     One  family  only  is 
growing  flax  to  my  knowledge,  and  only  about  a  quarter  of  an  acre. 

Russell,  Russell :  Very  little  flax  is  grown  here. 

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61  Victoria,  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Minden,  HaJiburton  :  None  grown  as  a  regular  crop  in  this  part  of  the  Province. 

Watt,  Muskoka  :  Not  much  sown,  but  small  experimental  plots  are  good.     If  we  could  utilize  tke  fibre 
probably  more  flax  would  be  raised  here. 

Rainy  River  :   Flax  is  in  a  very  good  condition,  and  will  be  fit  for  pulling  in  about  two  weeks.     It  is 
three  feet  long. 

Hops. 
Gosfield  N.,  Essex  :  Very  few  grown  here,  but  they  are  good. 

Ameliasburgh,  Prince  Edward  :  Hops  are  looking  well.     Have  heard  of  no  injury. 
Belmont,  Peterborough  :  A  good  crop  if  nothing  happens  before  picking  time. 

Harvey,    Peterborough  :    Hops   were  promising  early  in   the  season,  but  insects  are  now  eating  the 
leavep.     There  are  no  hop  yards  around  here  ;  we  raise  for  own  use  only. 

Watt,  Muskoka  :  Not  grown  as  a  crop.     Small  patches  are  grown  for  domestic  use. 

Rainy  River  :  Hops  grow  wild  in  abundance  along  creeks  and  meadows. 


GENERAL  REMARKS. 
From  the  Mat  Retdrns. 


Gosfield  N.,  Essex  :  A  large  quantity  of  hay  has  been  pressed  and  sold  for  §5  a  ton,  and  in  several 
cases  farmers  had  received  §10  for  the  same  hay  in  the  winter  and  spring  of  1896.  It  would  then  have  been 
hauled  fmm  iheir  barns  by  the  purchaser,  but  now  they  have  had  to  board  a  gang  of  men  and  teams  while 
pre.-(Sing  the  hay,  and  had  to  haul  it  also.  Cattle  and  live  stock  generally  are  not  as  well  cared  for  in  this 
county  as  in  Huron,  where  I  formerly  resided. 

Chatham,  Kent  :  Bluebirds  are  here  nesting  for  the  first  time  in  three  years. 

Harwich,  Kent :  Farmers  work  their  land  very  much  more  than  formerly  before  planting,  thus  killing 
a  large  number  of  weeds.  A  large  number  of  apples  are  yet  in  pits  and  cellars  awaiting  a  market.  Some 
have  been  sold  here  lately  for  fifty  cents  a  barrel,  and  many  have  been  fed  to  stock  during  the  winter. 

Howick,  Huron  :  Our  land  is  getting  to  be  badly  infested  with  weed^,  the  principal  '^f  which  are  a  burr 
with  a  bluish  blossom,  wild  mustard,  sow  thistle,  wild  oats  and  Canada  thistle— the  first  three  the  worst, 

Wawanosh,  E.,  Huron  :  Many  farmers  are  sowing  flax  this  spring,  which  is  somethmg  new  for  this  part 
of  the  country. 

Amabel,  Bruce  :  If  the  ground  dr'es  up  in  time  there  will  be  more  corn  planted  around  here  than  ever 
before,  as  it  is  being  found  that  this  is  the  cheapest  cattle  food  that  can  be  raised.  I  believe  our  Govern- 
ment is  doing  an  incalculable  amount  of  good  by  their  liberal  distribution  of  books  and  pamphlets  on  agri- 
cultural subjects. 

Sullivan,  Grev  :  When  drouth  and  grasshoppers  destroyed  the  hay  and  oat  crops  corn  was  tried  as  a 
Bub-titute  for  feed  ff^r  stock,  when  its  many  good  qualities  were  found.  It  will  now  be  one  of  the  neces- 
sary cropi  grown.  The  benefit  of  the  silo  is  now  recognized  by  all,  and  this  past  winter  a  large  number  of 
farmers  have  made  preparations  for  building  silos  before  the  next  corn  crop  is  harvested.  Thanks  to  the 
f-xperimental  department  of  the  Ontario  Agricultural  College,  and  also  to  the  infiueuce  of  the  Farmers' 
Institutes,  farmers  around  here  are  beginning  to  realize  that  farming  may  yet  be  able  to  pay  a  fair  percent- 
age fur  the  labor  and  capital  expended. 

Vespra,  Simcoe  :  It  has  been  a  wondwrful  spring  for  maple  sap.  More  syrup  and  sugar  have  been 
made  than  for  years  before  by  those  who  "were  wise  enough  to  reserve  maple  erroves  on  their  farms. 
One  of  cur  farmers  informed  me  that  his  maple  grove  of  500  trees  returned  him  more  profit  than  the  rest  of 
his  farm. 

Adelaide,  Middlesex  :  I  sowed  some  lucerne  last  year,  as  did  also  some  of  my  neighbors,  and  it  is  all  on 
the  top  rif  the  ground.  This  spring  the  roots  are  from  eight  to  twenty-four  inches  long,  and  all  dead.  It 
is  no  use  here  ;  it  will  not  ttand  the  winter. 

Ekfrid,  Mif^dlecex  :  Although  the  quantity  of  snow  we  had  was  small— perhaps  that  is  the  reason  the 
frost  went  deeper — I  have  nev^r  seen  the  roads  so  cut  up  and  spoilt  as  they  have  been  this  spring.  It  is  a 
pity  that  p  rsons  are  not  prohib  ted  from  hauling  heavy  loads  on  vehicles  with  narrow  tires,  at  least  in  the 
hhcrt  and  ciitical  season  when  the  frost  has  just  thawed  out  of  the  soil.  What  a  tax  it  takes  to  repair  the 
damage. 

Grimbsy  S.,  Lincoln  :  As  to  good  roads,  the  Government  should  utilize  convict  labor. 

Flamb'<rough,   Wentworth  :  Clover  in  mopt  places  was  pastured  off  last  fall,  which  is  in  my  opinion 
very  bad  plan,  unless  it  gets  a  very  heavy  top  in  the  fall  of  the  year. 

Chandos,  Peterborough  :  Since  the  country  is  cleated  the  drouth  fets  more  severe,  and  lately  the  pest 
of  grassh  ippers  is  getting  so  prevalent  that  many  are  becoming  discouraged. 

Bangor,  Hastings  :  One  settler  made  500  pounds  of  sugar,  although  he  says  he  lost  the  best  runs  of  sap 
The  cheese  busine  s  is  looking  up  this  epring.     Our  factory  has  been  running  for  the  past  ten  days. 

Sidney,  Hastings  :  There  is  some  improvement  in  farm  methods  ;  better  feeding  and  care  of  stock  ; 
more  thoiough  preparation  of  land  for  seed,  Vmt  there  is  yet  p'enty  of  room  for  improvement.  If  more  far- 
mers would  attend  Institute  meetings  we  could  soon  revolutionize  some  of  the  farm  methods ;  but  those 
most  in  teed  of  knowledge  seldom  attend  an  Institute. 

31 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Emo  P.  0.,  Lash  Township,  Rainy  River :  The  severest  winter  of  ten  years  ;  snow  from  middle  of 
November  to  last  of  March  ;  fully  four  feet  on  level.  No  frost  in  ground  ;  so  little  that  potatoes  left  in  the 
ground  were  harvested  and  sold  m  good  condition  this  spring.  Snow  went  away  gradually  by  warm  sun ; 
only  a  little  rain  twice  this  spring.  Commenced  plowing  April  8th,  sowing  on  21st,  all  in  before  May  Ist, 
fields  green  on  May  5th  ;  soil  in  fine  condition.  Considerable  new  land.  Forest  trees,  such  as  balm  of 
Gilead  and  poplar,  out  in  leaf  by  5th  May.  All  small  fruits  in  leaf  and  blossom  ;  plum  trees  out  in  full 
bloom  on  5th.  Rhubarb  grown  in  open  air  used  for  pies,  etc.,  siace  May  5th.  Sprina:  work  will  be  fairly 
through  by  15th  to  20th.  Planted  potatoes  on  April  25th.  Farm  help  scarce  and  need  for  more,  but  wages, 
are  too  high,  $20  to  $25  a  month. 

From  the  August  Returns. 

Oxford  E.,  Oxford  :  Early  sown  peas  are  injured  with  the  "  bug  ;  "  late  sown  bid  fair  for  a  good  crop.. 

Dorchester  W.,  Middlesex  :  In  a  drive  of  eight  or  ten  miles  yesterday  afternoon,  I  was  astonished  and 
considerable  chagrined  to  see  so  many  thistles,  docks,  ox-eye  daisy  and  other  weeds  along  the  public  roads. 
Fields  of  oats  were  purple  and  white  On  one  farm  looking  to  the  west  the  air  was  laden  with  dowQ 
enough  to  seed  a  county.     The  thistle  law  as  now  administered  is  a  humbug. 

Waterloo,  Waterloo  :  In  some  parts  of  the  county  of  Wellington  hail  destroyed  nearly  everything,  and 
some  farmers  have  to  buy  oats  and  peas.  Even  their  potatoes  were  injured.  Farmers  should  be  insured 
against  loss  by  hail  as  is  often  done  in  the  west. 

Lindsay,  Victoria  :  Apples  have  been  injured  by  the  codling  moth  more  than  last  year. 

Kenyon,  Glengarry  :  For  some  reasons  the  peas  keep  blossoming,  which  would  indicate  a  light  crop. 

Harvey,  Peterborough  :  Grasshoppers  are  worse  than  last  year.  They  have  been  hard  on  the  timothy 
nd  late  oats. 

Tehkummah,  Manitoulin  :  Turnips  were  all  eaten  by  grasshoppers, 

Cockburn  Island,  Manitoulin  :  Crows  and  cut  worms  did  much  injury  this  season. 

Rainy  River  :  Spring  wheat  does  so  well  here  that  we  consider  it  less  risk  to  grow  it  than  to  sow  fall 
wheat,  although  the  latter  will  do  all  right  here.  Spring  wheat  will  yield  from  thirty  to  thirty-five  bushels 
per  acre  this  year.  It  is  an  extra  fine  crop,  well  matured,  and  both  grain  and  straw  are  bright.  We  never 
look  for  frozen  wheat,  and  so  far  we  have  not  had  any.  Oats  are  yielding  from  forty  to  seventy  bushels 
per  acre,  and  the  mining  and  lumber  camps  and  parties  working  on  colonization  roads  ofier  a  good  market 
for  this  and  other  fatm  produce.  Hay  is  a  sure  crop,  timothy  and  clover  doing  well  here  every  year  ;  the 
yield  is  from  two  to  three  ton.=,  and  extra  fine  weather  enablf  d  it  to  be  secured  in  a  fine  green  condition. 
This  year,  our  ninth  crop  of  hay  grown  in  succession  on  the  same  land,  was  so  heavy  that  it  had  to  be 
mown  in  short  swaths,  and  in  all  directions,  to  get  it  done,  and  it  was  nearly  all  clover.  This  is  not  a  spp- 
cial  case,  but  is  an  instance  of  what  is  being  done  all  over.  With  ordinary  good  tillage  it  seems  impossible 
to  exhaust  this  soil.  Corn  is  now  in  th«^  ear,  and  some  is  ready  for  table  use.  We  consider  it  a  safe  annual 
crop.  Potatoes  are  among  our  best  products,  and  other  roots  cannot  be  beaten  if  proper  cultivation  is  given. 
All  kinds  of  berries  do  extra  well  here,  and  citrons  and  melons  will  also  thrive. 

Lake  Temiscamingue :  The  townships  of  Bucke  add  Dymond  are  practically  all  settled,  and  about  one- 
quarter  of  Harley  and  Kerns,  also  a  part  of  Harris.  At  present  there  are  about  150  settlers  living  in  the- 
settlement,  quite  a  numbar  of  whom  hav^  their  families  here.  The  amount  of  land  under  cultivation  is  not 
large,  but  is  rapidly  increasing.  I  have  been  here  about  four  months  and  hav<i  not  seen  any  crops  taken  ofiE' 
yet,  but  considpring  the  unusual  backwar.tness  of  the  season  during  April  and  May,  the  crops  are  looking 
well  now.  A  few  farmers  have  commenced  haying  and  others  will  be  starting  soon.  I  understand  tber& 
were  some  extra  crops  harvested  last  year. 

The  timber  already  has  a  small  market  value  after  paying  the  expenses  of  taking  it  ofiF,  that  is  for 
those  who  are  near  the  water  or  the  mil). 

There  are  two  things  that  we  stand  in  special  need  of  just  now,  viz.  :  lower  freight  rates  from  Mattawa 
up,  and  help  to  build  bridges  and  colonization  roads.  We  do  not  claim  to  have  found  a  place  that  has  no 
drawbacks,  but  we  do  c'aim  to  have  found  a  good  climate,  a  good  clay  soil  free  from  stones,  good  wate 
easily  obtained  and  a  lot  of  valuable  timber.  If  we  receive  the  aid  that  we  confidently  expect  to  receive,  I 
believe  the  prospects  for  making  an  independent  living  and  a  comfortable  home  are  good  for  those  who  are 
not  afraid  of  work  and  will  not  give  up  ;  and  in  a  few  years  I  expect  to  see  this  district  as  progressive  and 
prosperous  as  any  other  part  of  Canada.  This  does  not  include  the  White  River  settlement  at  the  head  of 
the  lake. 

From  the  Novembek  Retubns. 

Colchester  S.,  Essex  :  Tobacco  is  quite  largely  grown  this  season — more  so  than  for  years— and  pricea 
have  been  good.  Some  are  now  cutting  their  second  crop,  which  is  an  extraordinary  thing  here.  Ona- 
grower  sold  his  second  crop  for  $10  an  acre. 

Gosfield  N.,  Essex  :  The  thing  that  is  draining  this  country  is  the  payment  of  interest  at  a  high  rate 
to  loan  companies.  It  is  an  outrage  that  when  our  Government  can  borrow  unlimited  sums  at  2 J  per  cent, 
farmers  are  obliged  to  pay  six  per  cent,  to  loan  companies  and  give  thera  what  should  be  the  very  best- 
security  in  the  world — a  mortgage  on  an  improved  Ontario  farm.  While  the  price  of  farm  produce  has 
dropped  one-half,  the  rate  of  interest  on  the  mortgage  has  remained  the  same. 

Gosfield  W.,  Essex  :  Nearly  every  user  of  the  dirty  weed  raises  some  tobacco,  generally  enough  for 
home  consumption,  while  several  this  past  season  have  grown  for  sale  and  have  realized  good  prices.  The 
result,  no  doubt,  will  be  that  next  year  nearly  every  farmer  will  devote  more  or  less  land  to  the  raising  ot 
tobacco,  and  if  there  be  overproduction  the  price  will  fall  below  zero. 

32 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No,  32 }.  A.  1898 


Maiden,  Essex  :  This  county  is  good  for  sorghum,  and  a  lot  of  cane  of  good  quality  is  raised. 

Mersea,  Essex :  A  good  many  farmers  raise  enough  sorghum  to  make  from  twenty  to  fifty  gallons, 
which  they  get  made  up  for  their  own  use. 

Pelee  Island  :  A  good  deal  of  tobacco  of  excellent  quality  is  grown  here.  A  few  are  experimenting 
with  the  Bweet  potatoes,  peanut«,  cotton  plant,  celery,  etc  ,  and  bo  far  with  good  success. 

Harwich,  Kent :  Some  sorghum  grown  here  was  cut  by  frost,  but  it  did  not  seem  to  affect  its  quality. 

Raleigh,  Kent :  The  rearing  and  feeding  of  beef  cattle  is  attracting  considerable  attention  here  now, 
and  the  demand  for  young,  well-bred  bulls  suitable  for  this  purpose  is  in  excpss  of  the  supply.  Daii-ying 
is  also  taking  a  hold  upon  the  attention  of  farmers,  and  enquiries  are  being  made  as  to  best  dairy  breeds. 
Farmers  are  beginciner  to  realize  that  the  old  time  practice  of  selling  all  the  grain  off  the  farm  nvist  be 
abandoned,  and  new  lines  entered  upon.  I  am  rlfased  tn  see  that  some  of  the  leading  stockmen  of  the 
Province  are  making  an  effort  to  meet  the  demand  for  a  class  of  cows  that  will  do  well  at  the  milk  pail,  and 
also  bear  calves  that  will  grow  into  steers  suitable  for  export,  and  the  time  is  not  far  distant  when  the 
milking  Shorth'^rn  will  be  numbered  among  the  mo^t  popular  of  our  bree  Is  of  cattle. 

Harwich,  Kent :  A  good  deal  of  lucerne  has  been  raised.  It  is  a  fine  grower,  and  will  yield  two  or 
three  crops  per  year,  but  it  is  not  much  thought  of  for  hay,  as  live  stock  do  not  seem  to  like  it. 

Zone,  Kent :  We  are  sowing  a  good  deal  of  rape  for  pasture.  Fcir  two  years  we  have  sown  in  the  corn 
and  It  mak'-s  good  feed  after  the  corn  has  been  taken  off  We  sowed  seven  acres  alone  on  -luiy  1st,  and  it 
is  all  eaten  off  ntiw.  We  sowed  twenty  acres  of  rape  in  our  corn,  on  which  we  will  put  the  sheep  and  cattle 
in  a  few  days.     Sheep  do  exceedingly  well  on  it. 

Yarmouth,  Elgin  ;  Many  farmers  are  growing  fields  of  rape^  and  find  it  a  great  benefit  in  raising  lambs 
and  pigs. 

Middleton,  Norfolk  :  I  buy  all  the  wood  a^hes  I  can  get  at  five  cents  a  bushel.  I  am  sorry  to  say  that 
tons  and  tons  of  this  excellent  fertilizer  are  being  shipped  across  the  lines.  I  would  like  to  see  an  embargo 
put  u[)on  ashes. 

Walsingham  S.,  Norfolk  :  Turnips  are  being  abandoned  owing  to  their  exclusion  by  the  cheese  fac- 
tories. 

Canboro',  Haldimand  :  t  built  a  hip-roofed  bank  barn  this  year,  and  I  use  slings  with  a  centre  trip 
which  will  carry  up  cornstalks,  light  hay,  or  anything  that  I  want  to  take  up.  I  think  they  are  a  great 
improvement. 

Dawn,  Lambton  :  Many  slothful  r°sident  property  owners  will  not  help  to  fence  their  Hnds  bec^u3e 
their  clearings  are  not  so  far  back  as  their  neighbors',  and  the  law,  it  seems,  will  not  compel  them.  I  trust 
a  law  will  shortly  be  pas'-ed  compelling  both  residents  and  non-residents  to  either  piy  for  or  build  their 
portion  of  the  line  fence  between  them  and  their  neighbors. 

Sarnia,  Lambton  :  Ti'armers  here  have  been  in  the  habit  of  using  scrub  male  animals,  but  are  beginning 
to  see  the  felly  of  it,  and  are  using  better  stock,  which  will  be  a  great  benefit  to  them.  There  is  still  much 
room  for  improvement  in  this  line. 

Warwick,  Lambton  :  It  is  hard  to  get  some  men  out  of  the  old  ruts,  but  thanks  to  the  work  of  the 
Agricultural  College  and  farmers'  institutes  the  outlook  for  the  future  is  a  bright  one. 

Colborne,  Huron  :  I  grew  about  four  acres  of  rape  in  drills,  and  was  greatly  pleased  with  it.  I  fed  it 
off  with  young  cattle  and  never  s^w  them  do  so  well.  It  did  not  grow  again,  consequently  it  was  not  a 
profiiible  crop,  as  I  only  got  pasture  for  fourteen  head  for  one  month. 

Hullett,  Huron  :  Lucerne  is  being  introduced  by  many  farmers,  and  so  far  seems  to  be  doinsr  well.  It 
has  generally  been  sown  along  with  some  grain  crop,  which  keeps  iu  back  the  first  year,  but  this  fall  it  has 
made  good  growth. 

Stanley,  Huron  :  Flax  is  one  of  the  leading  crops  here  at  present.  Although  there  was  sca^cly  as 
large  a  crop  this  year  as  last,  the  crop  is  a  much  better  one,  and  the  yield  of  seed  and  tow  will  be  about  the 
same  as  last  year. 

Turnberry,  Huron  ;  There  was  a  good  deal  of  flax  grown,  but  it  was  a  vfiry  poor  crop — not  more  than 
one  and  a  half  tons  to  the  acre— and  some  of  it  was  not  worth  pulling.  It  was  cut  and  threshed  for  the 
seed  and  the  straw  burnt. 

Wawanosh  E.,  Huron  :  A  flax  mill  has  been  started  in  Wingham  and  many  farmers  have  grown  some. 
This  was  not  a  good  year  for  flax  here. 

Arran,  Bruce  :  We  have  commenced  to  sow  rape.  It  has  done  well,  and  will  likely  increase,  as  't  gives 
a  lot  of  feed  when  mo^t  needed.  It  is  generally  sown  with  a  grain  crop  A  considerable  amount  of  millet 
has  been  sown  as  a  catch  crop.  Lucerne  does  well  on  high,  sharp  land.  Farmers  are  paying  more  atten- 
tion to  the  feeding  of  live  stock. 

Bentinck,  Grey  :  There  is  an  improvement  in  farming  over  late  years.  Rape  is  sown  as  feed  for  sheep, 
and  millet  was  a  p'entiful  crop  this  summer.  Farmers  here  are  growing  more  corn  and  roots  and  have 
started  to  build  silos,  and  have  taken  a  greater  interest  in  feeding  cattle,  sheep  and  hogs. 

Egremont,  Grey :  We  are  getting  several  bad  weeds  into  this  part  of  the  Province.  Seedsmen  are 
gnatly  to  blame.  They  should  keep  noae  but  the  very  best  and  most  carefully  salecoed  seed,  as  weeds  not 
only  mean  extra  work,  but  also  a  tremendous  loss  in  the  yield  of  crops. 

Kepp"],  Grey  :  In  most  cases  less  land  and  better  farming  would  meac  a  great  deal  more  money.  Land 
is  not  tilled  the  way  it  should  be.  Manure  is  too  often  carelessly  handled,  and  frequently  cattle  are  allowed 
to  run  on  pastures  so  bare  that  the  animals  cannot  do  well. 

Sarawak,  Grey  :  We  are  introducing  the  sugar  beet  as  a  root  for  feeding  stock,  but  more  for  sugar- 
making.     We  have  a  company  formed  and  charter  secured,  and  stock  subscribed  to  the  extent  of  $28,000, 

3  B.I.  (1-4)  33 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


principally  am'^ng  farmer^.  800  of  whom  are  shareholdert",  and  400  of  them  grew  beets  this  year.  We  have 
had  100  fields  n.easurfd  &nd  weighed  ;  they  run  fiom  five  to  thirty-five  tons  per  acre,  and  will  average  over 
twenty-three  tons.  We  are  gbtting  forty  samples  of  six  beet"  each  tested  for  sugar  at  the  Ontario  Model 
Farm,  Gaelph,  and  fifty  s-amples  by  the  Dominion  analyst  at  Ottawa.     We  hope  for  a  good  sugar  test. 

Gwillimbury  W.,  Simcoe  :  While  this  township  is  essentially  a  grain  growing  one,  mixed  farming  is 
generally  practised.  Some  farmers  give  considerable  attention  to  cattle,  while  others  raise  a  large  number 
of  hogs,  and  very  little  grain  is  sold,  except  wheat  and  a  limited  quantity  of  barley. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :  Millet  has  been  grown  here  with  success  for  nearly  forty  years.  Lucerne,  or  alf- 
alfa, has  been  tried  of  late  and  it  does  well,  and  rape  makes  an  immense  growth  in  this  township.  These 
crops  will  be  more  generally  grown  in  the  near  future. 

Westminster,  Middlesex  :  Farmers  are  better  satisfied  with  the  outcome  of  the  past  year  than  for  some 
time,  and  generally  tpeak  hopefully  of  the  future.  Land  is  selling  again,  and  business  generally  is  in  a 
progressive  shape. 

Elma,  Perth  :  Flax  was  only  a  midling  crop  this  year,  and  not  so  much  was  sown  on  account  of  the  flax 
mill  not  running. 

Fullarton,  Penh  :  The  flax  mill  at  Miicheil  did  not  run  this  fall  and  would  not  buy. 
Fullsrton,  Perth  :  Hng  raising  and  feeding  cattle  for  export  is  on  the  increase.     Farmf-rs  are  making 
considerable  improvements  in  the  way  of  bank  barns.     Farms  ap|)ear  to  be  increasing  in  value  again. 

Nicho),  Wellington  :  A  great  deal  of  flax  is  grown  in  the  adjoining  townships.  The  price  was  low  and 
the  quantity  and  quality  low,  which  will  t-omewhat  discoutage  the  future  growth  of  this  plant. 

Luther  E..  Dufferin  :  A  good  many  people  in  this  section  grow  rape  for  fall  feed,  with  good  results. 
Some  sow  it  with  oats,  and  it  did  splendidly  that  way  this  season. 

Luther  E.,  Dufferin  :  The  farming  industry  is  in  a  much  better  shape  than  at  this  time  last  year.  The 
farmers  have  more  money,  and  are  getting  better  prices  for  horses,  cattle,  sheep  and  hogs  than  for  years 
past. 

Clinton,  Lincoln  :  In  this  township  fruit  is  a  leading  industry,  and  it  has  been  so  thoroughly  overdone 
that  many  of  us  will  have  to  abandon  this  branch  as  the  present  low  price  will  not  bear  the  cost  of  produc- 
tion, etc. 

■Niagara,  Lincoln  :  It  would  be  a  great  deal  to  the  advantage  of  fruit  growers  if  they  could  be  prevailed 
upon  to  sprav  their  apple  Irtes.  It  is  done  by  a  few,  but  the  great  majority  do  not  pay  any  attention  to 
such  a  necessary  item. 

Beverly,  Wentworth  :  I  planted  my  potatoes  at  the  us'Ual  time  this  year  (about  the  end  of  May)  but 
they  failed  to  giow.  I  then  replanted  on  July  2nd  and  had  a  fair  crop.  This  may  show  that  we  need  not 
be  t  ed  down  to  the  old  time  for  planting,  if  not  so  convenient. 

Nelson,  Halton  :  I  think  the  Canadian  farmer  s-hould  give  his  attention  to  the  production  of  beef,  oork, 
cheese  and  butter.  With  cold  storage  properly  conducted  I  see  no  reason  why  these  food  products  s-hnuld 
not  compete  successfully  with  the  products  of  any  other  country  in  the  British  market.  Cheese  and  butter 
for  export  should  be  made  in  factories  and  placed  on  the  matkec  early. 

Markhain,  York  :  I  would  suggest  that  a  law  be  enacted  whereby  those  who  manufacture  and  sell  cer- 
tain kinds  of  feed  stuffs  should  have  the  same  analysed,  an  ■  a  label  giving  description  and  analysis  attached 
to  each  bag.     Of  course  some  penalty  should  be  attached  if  it  fails  in  quality  or  is  not  true  to  name. 

Markham,  York  :  Farmers  are  more  hopeful  than  for  many  years.     Crops  have  been  abundant,  and 
he  pr.  spect  for  better  prices  are  very  encouraging.     The  export  of  butter  to  England,  and  the  prospect  of 
getting  good  prices,  is  giving  an  impetus  to  the  butter  industry  which  was  much  needed. 
Whitchurch,  York  :  Rape  is  coming  in  fast  for  tall  pasture  for  lambs  and  cattle. 

Mara.  Ontario  :  Rape  is  grown  rather  extensivelj'  here.  Some  farmers  raise  from  five  to  ten  acres  of 
it.  They  turn  in  lambs  and  sheep  and  also  cattle  to  fatten  upon  it,  and  soon  have  them  in  good  condition 
for  the  market.     Millet  is  also  grown,  and  is  n.  good  substitute  for  winter  feeding. 

Hope,  Durham :  The  general  outlook  is  better  than  for  a  number  of  years,  but  the  low  price  for  grain 
leaves  a  very  small  margin  over  and  above  the  cost  of  growing. 

Manvers,  Durham  :  I  believe  we  shall  have  to  go  in  for  sprayine  our  fruit  trees  of  all  kinds.  There 
re  getting  to  be  so  many  insects  and  fungous  diseases  that  it  will  become  necessary  to  do  so  if  we  are  to 
ave  good  fruit. 

Brighton,  Northumberland  :  Tomatoes  are  grown  in  large  quantities  in  this  section  for  canning  pur- 
poses. Last  season  there  were  some  thirty-three  car  loads  shipprid  from  Brighton  station,  and  large  quanti- 
ties were  drawn  to  Colborne  and  Trenton.  This  season  they  turned  out  well.  The  light  frost  that  wilted 
the  tops  was  a  benefit  to  them,  as  they  ripened  more  rapidly  after  that.  I  think  I  am  safe  in  saying  that 
there  were  forty  carloads  shipped  from  Brighton  this  season. 

Cramahe,  Northumberland  :  Hops  are  raised  here  by  a  few  but  not  very  largely.  The  low  prices 
received  of  late  years,  and  the  idea  that  other  things  are  taking  the  place  of  hops  in  breweries,  are  diecourag- 
ing  farmers  from  raising  this  article. 

Hamilton,  Northumberland  :  Better  crops,  with  prospects  of  better  trade  relations,  have  given  farmers 
a  new  impulse  and  greater  confidence  Farms  placed  on  the  market  find  ready  purchasers,  and  otbers  are 
enquiring  for  farm  lands.  Several  farms  in  this  neighborhood  have  changed  hands,  and  not  to  strangeis, 
but  those  living  in  the  township  have  been  the  buyers. 

Ameliasburgh,  Prince  Edward  :  Lucerne  is  now  being  grown  to  a  considerable  extent,  and  last  spring's 
seeding  is  looking  well,  as  is  also  other  clovers. 

34 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Hillier,  Prince  Edward  :  The  fancy  pea  business  being  in  a  bad  way,  farmers  are  growing  more  spring 
wheat. 

Elizabethtown,  Lpeda  :  I  notice  one  sad  neglect  with  farmers  on  every  hand,  which  is  the  allowing  of 
fall  weeds  to  grow  along  the  roadside,  in  fence  cf>rner«  and  vacant  lot^,  a  neglect  that  should  be  prohibited 
by  law,  and  an  officer  should  be  appointed  in  every  locality  to  see  that  the  law  was  enforced.  I  have  cut 
them  along  my  farm  for  the  last  twenty  years  until  few  remain. 

Leeds  and  Lansdowne,  Leeds ;  The  farming  business  as  a  whole  is  looking  up.  The  cold  storage 
movement  is  a  good  one.  Prices  have  been  better  this  season  than  for  some  years,  and  there  has  been  an 
inc-»»ased  production.  If  farmers  will  only  move  with  caution  and  economize  they  are  as  well  off  as  any 
•other  class. 

Williamsburg,  Dundas  :  In  our  municipality  they  are  goiner  into  corn  pretty  f-xtensively.  as  the  dairy 
industry  is  the  main  staple  of  the  farmer.  I  would  suggest,  however,  that  more  clover  be  raised,  as  there 
ia  less  labor  about  it  and  it  improves  the  fertility  of  the  soil,  while  corn  is  exhausting. 

Clarence,  Russell  :  The  position  and  prospects  of  farmers  appears  better  than  for  some  years,  especially 
in  the  case  of  those  who  have  adopted  the  modern  improved  methods  of  farming.  The  Farmers'  Institutes, 
Associations  and  Experiment  Stations  are  doiner  an  excellent  work  in  inducing  farmers  to  follow  th^ir  pro- 
fession in  a  more  busmess-like  and  scientific  msnner,  and  although  they  may  not  be  banking  money  they 
«re  improving  their  farms  and  are  more  comf ortabiy  off  than  formerly. 

Laxton,  Victoria  :  Rape  was  grown  by  one  farmer  near  me  this  summer.  He  pastured  it  with  sheep 
and  lambs      He  considers  it  a  grand  crop  for  them,  and  will  try  again. 

Xipissmg  District  :  The  clearances  have  b<»en  well  extended  of  late  years,  the  stones  placed  in  heaps, 
and  land  better  pulverized  and  more  fit  for  the  plow.  Nipissing  is  remarkably  well  situated  for  stock 
taising  and  for  home  dairying,  and  especially  for  sheep  breeding. 

Campbell  and  Providence  Hay,  Maritoulin:  Manitoulin  Island  is  undoubtedly  better  adapted  for 
stock  raising  than  for  grain.  Wheat  is  a  failure  h»re  ;  in  f^ct  on  this  head  it  resembles  Ireland  to  ac°rtain 
•extent,  and  like  that  place  grows  e>cel)ent  crops  of  oats.  The  natural  grasses,  particularly  the  immense 
^owth  of  white  c  over,  give  an  abundant  and  nutritious  sujjply  of  fodder. 


3o 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32;.  A.  189  a 


LAKE  WABIGOON  DISTRICT. 

The  following  is  the  report  on  April  24th,  of  the  Superintendent  of  the  Pioneer  Farm 
at  Dryden,  situated  on  the  C.  P.  R.,  half  way  between  Port  Arthur  and  Winnipeg : 

The  fall  wheat  came  through  the  winter  in  good  style  ;  apparently  none  of  it  was 
winter  killed.  On  18th  and  19ch  we  had  some  cold  weather  which  checked  its  growth 
badly.  The  clover  is  commencing  to  grow  again,  and  I  cannot  find  any  of  it  killed  or 
heaved  out.  There  are  now  only  two  lota  for  sale  in  Dryden.  Three  representatives  of 
English  capital  from  Australia  and  South  Africa  have  purchased  lots,  two  of  whom,  and 
perhaps  the  third,  will  build  and  make  their  headquarters  there  this  year. 

There  are  plenty  of  laboring  men  here — a  lot  too  many  until  the  summer  work  com- 
mences. Five  cars  of  settlers'  effects  arrived  here  yesterday,  and  two  more  are  expected 
to-day.  The  population  of  Dryden  and  vicinity  is  probably  300  or  350,  including  visi- 
tors. There  are  a  lot  waiting  to  buy  town  lota  as  soon  as  more  are  surveyed.  The  saw 
mill  is  running  night  and  day,  and  cannot  furnish  lumber  as  fast  as  is  needed.  Board 
lumber  shiplaps  can  be  had  for  about  $16.50  and  B.  C.  cedar  shingles  at  $2,75.  Our 
stores  are  reasonable.  I  have  sown  clover  on  the  fall  wheat.  The  land  will  not  be 
ready  for  about  a  week. 

On  August  11th  the  Minister  of  Agriculture  visited  Dryden  and  the  adjoining  town- 
ships The  following  address  was  presented  by  the  citizens,  300  of  whom  were  present, 
and  it  is  reprinted  as  showing  the  condition  of  affairs  from  the  settlers'  standpoint : 

"To  the  Hon.  John  Dryden,  Minister  of  Agriculture  for  Ontario:  On  behalf  of  the  citizens  of  the 
town  of  Dryden  and  the  townships  "f  Van  Horn,  VVainright  and  Eton,  we  extend  to  you  a  most  hearty 
welcome  to  the  future  metropolis  of  New  Ontario.  We  feel  assured  that  the  growth  of  the  settlement  must 
be  to  say  the  least,  a  source  of  gratification  to  you,  as  well  as  to  the  other  members  of  the  Ontario  Govern- 
ment. Whereas  last  year  at  the  time  of  your  visit  the  number  of  settlers  could  be  counted  on  your  finger 
ends  now  there  is  a  population  of  from  400  to  500.  We  desire  to  express  our  appreciation  of  the  action  of 
the  Government  in  op'=ning  up  colonization  mads.  Inside  of  two  years  about  sixteen  miles  have  been  built, 
besides  a  good  substantial  bridge  of  about  145  feet  in  length  has  been  put  across  the  Wabigoon  River,  and 
we  desire  to  acknowledge  the  great  benefit  these  improvements  have  been  to  our  p?ople,  and  would  beg 
leave  to  suggest  that  roads  be  opened  up  to  the  lands  in  the  newer  townships  as  speedily  as  possible.  Not 
only  in  agriculture,  but  also  in  mining,  there  has  been  great  activity  in  this  region.  To  the  south  of  our 
agricultural  lands  there  lies  evidently  a  rich  mining  district.  There  have  been  a  large  number  of  prospects 
purchased  from  the  Government,  and  several  properties  have  had  considerable  work  done  on  them,  with  very 
gratifying  results.  These  mines  are  markets  for  our  produce,  we  believe  unthought  of  when  the  Govern- 
ment decided  to  open  up  this  rpgion  for  settlement.  Looking  forward  to  the  future  welfare  and  convenience 
of  our  people,  we  think  it"  might  not  be  out  of  place  for  the  Government  to  reserve  this  pleasant  and  beauti« 
fully  situated  grove  we  are  assembled  in  this  afternoon  for  a  public  park. 

"The  farmers  of  the  Province  of  Ontario  have  good  reason  to  be  jiroud  of  the  fact  that  at  the  head  of 
the  most  important  department  of  the  Ontario  Government  there  is  a  thorough,  practical  and  progressive 
farmer,  one  who  is  willing  to  adopt  any  means  whereby  he  may  be  enabled  to  assist  the  farmers  in  adverse 
circumstances  or  against  combinations,  a  helper  of  the  masses  against  the  classe.-,  but  whose  zeal  is  always 
tempered  by  wisdom.  After  close  observation  we,  irrenpective  of  party  politics,  desire  to  place  on  record 
our  approval  of  all  the  work  done  by  yourself  as  Minister  of  Agriculture.  We  sincerely  hope  that  after  so 
long  and  successful  a  career  your  usefulness  to  the  Province  may  still  be  greater  in  the  future  than  it  has 
been  in  the  past,  and  that  you  may  long  be  spared  to  enjoy  the  fruits  of  your  labors  as  Minister  of  Agricul- 
ture of  the  most  important  Province  of  the  Dominion. 

"  Signed  on  behalf  of  the  citizens  of  the  town  of  Dryden  and  the  townships  of  Van  Home,  Wainwright 
and  Eton  :  G.  W.  Yeomans,  A.  R.  Hutchison,  M.  C.  Cassidy,  Chas.  Wright,  George  Sharp  and  A.  E^ 
Annis,  committee." 


36 


STATISTICS  OF 

THE  WEATHER  AND  THE  CROPS. 


[37] 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189K 


THE    WEATHER. 

Table  I.     Showing  for  each  month,  the  highest,  lowest,  mean  highest,  mean  lowest  and  mean  tempera' 
ture  at  the  principal  stations  in  Ontario  in  1897  ;  aUo  the  annual  mean  for  each  station. 


January . 


February ...  -J 


March 


April 


May 


June 


July 


August . 


September  .  ■{ 


October 


November . .  -I 


December  . .  -{ 


f  Highest 

Lowest 

-{  Mean  highest . . 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

f  Highest 

Lowest 

Mean  highest . . 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

f  Highest 

Lowest 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest  . 
L  Monthly  mean . 

f  Highest 

Lowest  

Mean  highest  . 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

f  Highest 

Lowest  

Mean  highest . . 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

C  Highest 

'  Lowest 

Mean  highest . . 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

f  Highest 

'  Lowest 

{  Mean  highest.. 
,  Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

f  Highest 

Lowest 

{  Mean  highest. . 
I  Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

r  Highest 

Lowest 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L  Monthly  mean . 

( Highest    

I  Lowest 

Meaa  highest. . 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

f  Highest    

Lowest  

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

f  Highest   

Lowest 

Mean  highest.. 

Mean  lowest  . . 
L Monthly  mean. 


54.8 
-3.0 
29.6 
14.9 
22.28 

39.9 
-7.2 
29.5 
15.0 
22.40 

50.3 
-15.9 
36.2 
20.3 

28.25 

72.9 
14.1 
50.7 
31.4 
41.09 

78.2 
31.6 
57.9 
39.9 
48.90 

80.0 
32.3 
65.0 
46.2 
55.61 

92.9 
54.3 
78.7 
60.5 
69.60 

82.0 
42.2 
72.3 
.54.1 
63.20 

85.9 
32.1 
70.5 
51.2 

60.87 

77.1 
29.2 
59.9 
40.9 
50  42 

62.8 
17.6 
43.0 
30,7 
36.86 

53.1 
2.5 
33.7 
21.0 
27.36 

Annual  mean  43.90 


58.1 
-12.8 
27.9 
15.6 
21.75 

44.4 
0.1 
30.1 
20.5 
25.30 

57.1 
-0.5 
38.6 
24.7 
31.65 

74.3 
22.9 
52.4 
36.2 
44.30 

72.6 
31.9 
61.7 
43.7 

52.72 

82.1 
36.5 
71.3 
50.7 
61.00J 

94.9 
51.0 
80.8 
61.8 
71.30 

83.5 
43.8 
74.7 
54.8 
64.77 

90.0 
29.0 
73.9 
51.8 
62.86 


55.0 
-14,5 

28.9 
13.0 
22.02 

43.0 
-7.0 
31.1 
18.0 
24.86 

60.0 
-2.5 
41.0 
23.5 
33.60 

74,0 
21.0 
54.3 
34.1 
44.72 

80.0 
30.0 
63.8 
43.0 
55.06 

83.5 
36.0 
73.3 
49.7 
64.55 


a  «- 
CO 

o 

o 

55.2 

59  2 

-12.0 

-5.0 

28.0 

32.6 

12.1 

17.3 

21.12 

21.52 

40.0 

43.0 

-7.0 

0.0 

29.4 

33,7 

15.9 

12.7 

23.. 57 

27.77 

55.5 

60.0 

-2.5 

4.0 

38.1 

41.6 

21.8 

27.0 

51 


7 
-7.2 
29.7 
15.6 
23.15 

44.1 
1.0 
30.8 
18  2 
25.01 

53.6 

2.0 

38.5 

24.6 

30.371  34.11    31.58 


96.0 
52.0 
82.9 
61.2 


72.4 
20.0 
.52.3 
32.6 

42.70| 

77.5 

29.5  I 

62.6  I 
41.7 
52.90 

81.7 
38.0 
71.6 
48.8 
61.41 


77.0 
24.0 
54.6 
36.8 
45.31 

76.0 
36.0 
64.4 
45.6 
55.00 

88.0 
44.0 
74,9 
53.4 
64.72 


100.0 

59.0 

84.8 

65,5 

73.49'  70.91    74.78 


94.0 
51.8 
81.5 
59.5 


88.0 
40.0 
76.4 
52.2 
66.20 

94.0 
26.5 
76.1 
47.4 
63.34 


83.7 

85.0 

29.0 

25.5 

62.1 

64,1 

42.9 

39.0 

."^2.50 

52.79 

59.3 

60.0 

15.1 

12.0 

42.6 

44  3 

32.7 

29.1 

37.62 

37.25 

53.2 

53.0 

-3  0 

-8.2 

32.1 

33.0 

22.7 

20.8 

27.40 

27.81 

46.10 

47.14 

86  0 
40.4 
74.3 
51.2 
63.45 

90.0 
28.0 
72.9 
47.2 
60.49 

82.0 
25.0 
60.4 
37.7 
49.87 

58.5 
15.0 
43.6 
29,0 
36.77 

54.2 
-5.2 
32,7 
19.5 
26.65 

45.02 


86.0 
47.0 
78.3 
57.2 
67.75 

97.0 
33.0 
77.3 
53.4 
03.73 

89.0 
28.0 
65.4 
43.0 
54.68 

66.0 
21.0 
48.1 
33.9 
40.25 

62.0 
1.0 
37.7 
24.4 
31.21 


71.1 
20.9 
51.2 
34.7 

42.79 

74.3 
33.6 
61.0 
44.1 

52.49 

84.4 
37  5 
71.2 
51.0 
61.30 

93.3 
53.8 
81.4 
03.5 
72.11 

82.8 
44.2 
74.5 
55.2 
64.75 

93.2 
33.6 
71.0 
50  4 
60.84 

85.7 
27.6 
59  1 
41.7 
50.88 

60.8 
19.5 
44.0 
31.9 
37.95 

54.2 
-5.3 

33.8 
20.8 
28.28 


>> 

i 

c 

0 

o 

52.2 

48.0 

■19.5 

-24.5 

27.4 

26.2 

9.4 

8.3 

18.37 

16.51 

41.8 

40  0 

-9.4 

-22.2 

27.9 

28,0 

11.4 

8.8 

20.08 

18.83 

52.2 

48.0 

-9.8 

-27.6 

.36.5 

34  8 

18.3 

15  2 

45.5 

-25.7 

22.0 

5.3 

13.69 

40.0 
-12.0 
26.1 

8.5 
17.27 

49.9 
-18  0 
33.2 


44.0 

-26.0 

21.5 

2.2 

11.55. 

40.0 

-32.0 

25.4 

0.2 

12.82 

53.0 

-33.0 

33.9 


16.5     11.4 
24.82    22.70- 


73.6 
13.8 
53.3 
31.7 
41.37 

73.7 
32,0 
63.7 
42.7 
52,50 

82.7 
34.4 
71.8 
48.2 
59.70 

95.6 
52.8 
82.9 
61.0 
71.26 

84.8 
41.9 
74.7 
52.1 
62.30 

88.4 
28.8 
70  8 
47.1 
58.10 

82.1 
23.5 
58.7 
36.9 
46.69 

58.6 
9.0 
39.2 
25.2 
32.08 

48.5 
-12.9 
29.7 
14.0 
22.53 


72.0 
15.0 
50.8 
29.2 
40.70 

75.0 
31.0 
62.4 
41.3 
52.63 

81.0 
34.0 
69.8 
4/. 7 
59.46 

97.0 
52,0 
82.5 
60.6 
71.88 


77.0 
13.2 
53.9 
32.3 
43.11 

76.0 
33  5 
65.0 
44.1 
54,55 

84.0 
36.8 
72.6 
51.4 
62.02 

97.2 
55.2 
82.2 
62.5 
72.35 


48.82    45.93    42  67 


84.0 

■     1 
85.2 

42.0 

42  2 

74  1 

74.3 

52.6 

53.8 

62.71 

64.07 

87.0 

92.0 

27. 0 

32.3 

70.4 

71.1 

47.6 

47.7 

58.38 

59.42 

77.0 

85.0 

25.0 

22.2 

59.3 

59.0 

38.7 

36.3 

47.83 

47.67 

59.0 

54.0 

12.0 

6.8 

39.7 

36.3 

26.6 

23.6 

32.36 

29.92 

46.0 

45  0 

-12.5 

-15.6 

29.1 

25.4 

13.2 

9.6 

22.31 

17.49 

42.41 

42.20 

78.0 
8.0 
.54.3 
28.1 
41.23 

78.0 
26.0 
64.5 
39.8 
52.  m 

85.0" 

30.0 

71.5 

46.5 

59.01 

100.0 
50.0 
83.6 
59.7 
71.6a 

85.0 
36.0 
73.0 
51.7 
62.37" 

93.0 
30.0 
71.2 
45.6 
53. 4V 

80.0 
23.0 
58.0 
36.9 
47.43 

54.0 
0.0 
34.7 
22.0 
28.33 

41.0 

-22.0 

24.1 

6.4 

15.27 

40.27 


38 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


THE    WEATHER. 

Table  II.  Showing  for  each  month  the  annual  average  of  the  highest,  loweat,  mean  highest,  mean 
lowest  and  mean  temparature  at  the  principal  stations  in  Ontario  derived  from  the  sixteen  years^ 
1882-97  ;  also  the  average  annual  mean  at  each  station  for  the  same  period. 


January 


Febru  *ry . 


March 


Highest    

Lowest 

Mean  highest. 

Mean  lowest . . . 

L Monthly  mean. 


45.3 
-7.8 
27.4 
12.5 
20.02 

Highest    44.7 

Lowest -10.9 

Mean  highest 28.1 

Mean  lowest 11.6 

L  Monthly  mean 19 .  37    20 .  68 


April 


May 


■^ 


Jaae 


Jaly 


August. 


December  . .  -{ 


f  Highest    

Lowest 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest. . . 
L  Monthly  mean 

f  Highest    

Lowest 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest. . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

f  Highest    

Lowest 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest . . . 
L  Monthly  mean . 

f  Highest    . 

Lowest . 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest. . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

Highest    

Lowesb 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest . . . 

L Monthly  mean. 

( Highest    

Lowest 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest . . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

r  Highest    

I  Lowest 

September  .  ■{  Mean  highest . 
Mean  lowest . . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

( Highest    

I  Lowest 

October  ....  -J  Mean  highest . . 
Mean  lowest . . . 
L Monthly  mean. 

Highest    

Lowest 

November . .  -i  Mean  highest . . 
Mean  lowest . . . 
L  Monthly  mean . 


f  Highest    

Lowest 

Mean  highest. . 

Mean  lowest. .. 
(^  Monthly  mean . 

Annual  mean 


46.4 
-10.2 
26.2 
13.5 
19.86 

46.9 
-12  5 
27.7 
15.6 


51.7 
-5.4 
33.5 
16.4 
24.15 


56.1 
-5.3 
34.5 
19  1 
26.44 


73.9 

77.5 

13.6 

16.7 

49.4 

52.8 

30.8 

.^3.5 

39.34 

43.13 

79.7 

82.7 

28.6 

28.7 

60.6 

65.5 

40.8 

43.4 

60.03 

54.43 

85.0 

88.2 

37.1 

36.6 

70.9 

76  4 

50.6 

53.1 

60.49 

64.75 

87  2 

91.8 

42.3 

41.6 

78.3 

80.0 

54.8 

55.9 

64.37 

86.4 
40.8 
73.5 
54.1 
62.84 


67.99 

90.6 
40.0 
76  8 
54.2 
65.30 

87.1 
32.3 
70.8 
49.6 
60.24 

75.6 
23.6 
50.2 
39.1 
47.63 

63.4 
12.4 
42.6 
30.4 
36.50 

49.9 
-2.7 
32.5 
21.0 
26.76 


46.7 
-9.8 
27.8 
13.0 
21.54 

46.1 
■10.9 
29.2 
13.0 
21.98 

55.9 
-3.8 
35.7 
18.6 
28.06 

76.4 
18.4 
52.4 
32.1 
44.49 

81.9 
30.5 
65.7 
43.9 
56.21 

87.7 
.S9.0 
76.2 
53.8 
66.52 

90.7 
44  3 
79.4 
56.6 
69.79 

89.5 
39.7 
76.8 
53  7 
66.72 

86.0 
.SI.  3 
70.8 
49.4 
60.54 

74.1 
23.6 
56.4 
37.4 
47.42 

62.2 
11.8 
43.7 
29.2 
36.84 

51.4 
-3.3 

33.8 
20.3 

27.82 


46.7 
-12.8 
27.4 
10.1 
20.19 

45.6 
-12.1 
29.0 
10. 7 
21.35 

54.9 
-4.8 
35.0 
16.8 
26.76 

76  1 
16.5 
53.0 
31.3 
42.76 

81.1 
29.1 
64.4 
41.8 
53.99 

87.7 
38.2 
76.3 
51.9 
65.07 

90.4 
43.7 
79.6 
54.7 
G8.12 

89.9 
40.4 
77.4 
50.2 
65.16 

86.8 
30.5 
70.5 
46.3 
69.01 

74.1 
22  7 
65.7 
35.7 
46.24 

62.0 
9.6 
42.6 
27.3 
35.70 

49.4 
-4.3 
32.7 
18.0 
26.28 


oO 


51.3 
-4.5 
32.4 

18.6 
22.19 

47.9 
-6.0 
32.9 
17.7 
23.85 

57  6 
4.2 
39.0 
24.4 
30.12 

78.1  I 

23.4 

54.4 

36.8 

43.86 

83.5 
35.3 
65.7 
45.8 
54.69 

91.5 
44.1 
78.7 
57  5 
66.47 

95.1 
49.9 
82.8 
60.7 
70.90 

92.4 

46.8 
80.2 
58.6 
69.17 

90.0 
36.3 
74.0 
53.1 

61.99 


6 

o 
u 

H 

•a 

a 

o 

o 

44.5 

41.8 

-8.1 

-21.7 

28.0 

23.6 

13.2 

5.7 

21.21 

14.98 

44.2 

42.5 

-8.6 

-18.1 

29.2 

26.0 

13.5 

G.O 

21.91 

16.30 

51.8 

48.8 

2.5 

-9.3 

34.6 

32.4 

20.1 

14.1 

27.45 

23.04 

70  6 

74.4 

20.7 

12.5 

50.2 

51.4 

33.2 

29.9 

41.60 

40.09 

42.1 
27.5 
23.3 
3.4 
14.20 


40.1 
-22.8 
lii.O 
1.0 
10.58 


77.6 
.S2.3  I 
62.0  , 
43.4  I 
52.65 

86  1 
42.6 
73.7 
53.7 
63.61 

89.4 
47.8 
77.7 

57.8 
67.72 

86.9 
45.7 
75.3 
56.3 
65.55 

83.5 
36.5 
68.4 
49.  S 


44.47    45.66,  44.22 

39 


75.1 

71.0 

27. 0 

26.2 

59.8 

54  6 

41.0 

39.1 

48.91 

47.04 

65.7 

59.1 

16.9 

13.9 

46.9 

42.9 

32.7 

30.3 

39.23 

36.791 

55.0 

48.0 

1.6 

-2.0 

37.2 

33.8 

24.1 

20.9 

30.50 

27.81 

46.82 

44.37 

82.2 
28.7 
65.2 
41.5 
53.03 

89.2 
38.2 
76.5 
51.3 
63.79 

91.8 
42.8 
79.8 
.54.2 
66.68 

90.1 
38.6 
77.1 
52.3 
63.88 

86.3 
30.0 
69.5 
45.6 
56.72 

74.3 
20.1 
54.4 
35.0 
43.69 

59.8 
4.0 
40.3 
25.5 
32.63 

45.2 
14.0 
29  3 
13.6 
22.00 

41.40 


43.0  40.0 
-24.6  '-22.5 
25.7  I  21.7 
4.3  I  2.4 
15.69    12.68 


48.4 
■15.8 
32.5 
12.4 
22.25 

70.1 
10.3 
49.5 

28.4 
38.90 

81.2 
27.9 
63  5 
41.6 
52.43 

87.8 
37.0 
75.1 
51.5 
63.39 

89  6 

43.6 

78.1 

55.3  I  .57.3 

66.68    68.36 

88.9 
42.4 
75.7 
64.2 
65.26 

84.3 
31.8 
68.2 
46.9 


39.8 
75.6 
53.0 
63.73 

83.6 
30  8 
68.7 
46.5 
56.96 

71.4 
21.6 
54.9 
36.4 
44.71 

59.9 
6.5 
40.7 
25.6 
33.04 

46.4 
-13.7 
29.7 
13.8 
22.42 

41.20 


37.7 

-33.1 

17.9 

-6.1 

6.03 

42.0 

-34.5 

21.9 

1.8 

8.47 

44.5 

-25.2 

31.7 

5.2 

18.59- 

74.1 
4.9 
50.2 
25.6 
37. 30^ 

85.4 
24.8 
65.3 
38.4 
51.47 

90.0 
34.3 

75.9 
47.8 
61.74 

91.4 
41  1 

78.0 
52.9 
64. 5& 

88.9 
38.0 
74.8 
50.4 
60.92 

84.6 
29.2 
67.7 
43  2 
57.47i  53^18 


45.3 
-10.9 
30.8 
12.7 
22.02 

73.2 
12.6 
50.1 
30.2 
40.66 

82.9 
30.9 
65.9 
43.8 
55.22 

88.7 
41.4 
76.2 
54  0 
65.60 

91.1 
47.4 

78.8 


69.9 
22.6 
52.8 
36.2 
44.26 

57.8 
4.7 
38.4 
24.8 
31.96 

43.6 

-16.8 

25.1 

8.9 

17.65 

40.97 


72.1 
18  5 
62.3 
32.8 
41.16. 

56.4 

1.0 

36.7 

21.8 
28.76 

42.2 
-24.1 

24.7 

5.3 

14.7ft 

37.25 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


THE    WEATHER. 

ABLE  III.  Monthly  summary  of  bright  sunshine  at  the  principal  stations  in  Ontario  in  1897,  showing 
the  number  of  hours  the  sun  was  above  the  horizon,  (he  hours  of  registered  sun.'hine,  the  total  for  the 
year,  and  the  average  derived  from  the  sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Stations. 

u 

S 

a 

(5 

hrs. 

u 

cS 

< 

S 

s 

"a 

1 

be 

S 

ID 

a. 

a; 

xn 

0 
0 

§3 

Si 

> 
hrs. 

u 

a 

u 

c 
D 

cS 

.2  ^ 

r 

hrs. 

hrs. 

hrs. 

hrs. 

hrs. 

hrs. 

hrs. 

hrs. 

hrs. 

hrs.      hrs. 

Hours    of  sun      ( 
above  horizon.  ( 

285.7 

291.4 

369.9 

406.4 

461.1 

465.7 

470.9 

434.5 

376.3 

340.2  286.9 

274. 3' 4463. 3 

1 

Wood-       (1897.. 
stock.  1 1882-97 

64.9 
59.4 

67.5 
83.8 

140.4 
134.2 

144.2 

178.8 

186.4 
205.7 

234.0 
242.2 

253.8 
271.1 

269.4 
234.7 

239.1 
186.3 

166.2 
131.1 

55.4 

68.8 

23.7  1846.0 
54.9il851.0 

( 1897 
Toronto,   -j  j 882.97 

75.0 
76.2 

87.3 
100.4 

156.3 
158.7 

180.3 
196.2 

191.3 
219.3 

223.3 
259.5 

269.6 
280.1 

287.6 
252.2 

237.7 
215.5 

157.9 
144.4 

68.1 
78.9 

53.2  1987.6 
60.32041.7 

■D      •          (1897  .. 
Barne       11882-97 

48.1 
52.4 

95.2 
76.7 

131.9 
138.5 

180.0 
175.6 

190.4 
199.0 

202.7 
232.3 

268.9 
257.2 

240.3 
220.9 

258.3 
171.0 

143.4 
112.5 

46.2 
48.3 

28.3i1833.7 
41.61726.0 

( 1897 
Lindsay.  {1892.97 

72.7 
73.4 

98.3 
100.2 

148.7 
163.6 

183  4 
202.8 

193.8 
216.9 

212.5 
256.1 

255.5 
269  4 

244.8 
246.8 

243.1 
202.3 

If  7  9 
135.1 

64.7 
69.1 

38.811914.2 
57.111992.8 

■v-       L       (1897  .. 
.Kingston  j  1882.97 

91.3 

72.8 

120.0 
104.3 

164.1 
163.4 

182.9 
195.7 

222.8 
219.8 

226.7 
249.0 

245  5 
267.8 

270.0 
248.8 

207.1 
196.9 

179.5 
135.9 

69.8 
76.3 

59.0  2038.7 
70.6  2000.8 

Average     ri897  . . 
of  five      \  1896  . . 
stations.  U  882-97 

70.4 
52.3 

66.8 

93.7 

104.0 

93.1 

148.3 
188.1 
151.7 

174.2 
180.3 
189.8 

196.9 
262.1 
212.2 

219.8 
302.1 

247.8 

258.7 
237.8 
269.1 

262.4 
262.6 
240.6 

237.1 
168.0 
194.4 

161.0 
135.5 
131.8 

60.8 
69.8 

68.3 

40.6  1923. » 
80.8  2043.4 
56.9!  1922 .5 

Table  IV. 


Monthly  summary  of  inches  of  rain  ard  snow  precipitation  in  the  several  districts  of  Ontario 
in  1897  ;  also  the  average  derived  from  the  sixteen  years  1882-97. 


>> 

>. 

u 

n 

§1 

Districts. 

s 

2 

s> 

c 

at 

< 

® 

a 
a 

3 
< 

in. 

b 
"S. 

0 
m 

in. 

0 
•8 

0 

in. 

> 
0 

in. 

s 
■^ 
0 

Q 
in. 

IS 

West  and  Southwest : 

in. 

in. 

in. 

in. 

in. 

in. 

in. 

in. 

[R  .„            fl897.... 
*^^'° 1  1882-97  . 

1.11 

1.05 

1.12 

2.41 

3.39 

2.95 

4.43 

2.56 

0.68 

1.47 

4.31 

1.56 

27.04 

1.14 

1.46 

1.15 

1.84 

3.45 

3.13 

2.62 

2.64 

2.56 

2.64 

2.52 

1.60 

26.75 

( ] 897 

15.6 
J6.4 

7.7 
12.0 

6.5 
9.4 

2.6 

2.8 

S 
0.3 

8.5 
6.9 

13.5 
13.0 

54.4 

onow  ....-^  1882-97. 

0.1 

60.9 

■Northwest  and  North: 

^^'° i  1882-97" 

1.53 

0.40 

1.26 

2.53 

3.21 

2.70 

5.75 

3.66 

0.91 

3.38    2.06 

1.24 

28.63 

0.91 

0.58 

0.78 

1.47 

2.59 

2.72 

2.68 

2.87 

2.94 

2.86 

2.06 

1.13 

23.59 

( 1 S97 
•Snow  ....-[1882-97.' 

25.2 
28.0 

21.2 
21.1 

17.8 
13.9 

2.8 
3.9 

S 
1.9 

12.9 

24.1  1104.0 

0.4 

14.1    20,9 

104.2 

Centre  : 

p„-             /1897.... 
^''^° 1 1882-97. 

0.87 

1.10 

2.16 

2.65 

3.39 

2.89 

6.12 

2.32 

0.41 

1.71 

4.05 

2.11 

29.78 

1.12 

1.10 

1.11 

1..58 

2.84 

2.80 

2.43 

2.36 

2.?0 

2.21 

2.34 

1.45 

23.64 

^--••-{Sbv: 

13.1 

10.4 

11.8 

2.8 

S 

5.6 

15.3 

58.9 

18.2 

14.3 

9.5 

3.0 

0.1 

0.5 

5.7 

11.3 

62  6 

^ast  avd  Northeast : 

Pain             fl897.... 
^^^'^ \  1882- 97. 

1.11 

1.03 

1.53 

2.47 

3.52 

2.79 

5.15 

1.95 

1.30 

1.74 

3.19 

2.00 

27.78 

0.89 

0.67 

0.88 

1.36 

2.64 

2  63 

2.81 

2.60    2.30 

2.06 

1.96 

1.16 

21.95 

f  1897 
Snow  ....{ 1882-97  : 

15.3 

16.9 

14.7 

1.8 





S 

8.8  il7.2 

74.  V 

21.7 

18.7 

13.1 

3.9 

0.2 

0.7 

8.4  114.0 

80.7 

The  Province  : 

Rain            /1897.... 
"*'° 1  1882-97  . 

1.15 

0.89 

1.52 

2.52 

3.38 

2.83 

5.36 

2.62 

0.83 

2.07 

3  401  1.73 

28.30 

1.01 

0.95 

0.98 

1.56 

2.88 

2.82 

2.64 

2.62 

2.52 

2.44 

2.22I  1.33 

23.97 

Snow  ....{ 1897  gy; 

17.13 

14.1 

12.7 

2.5 

S 

8.9 

17.5 

73.0 

21.1 

16.5 

11.5 

3.4 

0.2 

0.8 

8  8 

14.8 

77.1 

40 


^1   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


THE   WEATHER. 

Table  V.  Summary  of  the  total  fall  of  rain  and  snow,  and  the  number  of  days  on  which  rain  or  enow 
fell  in  Ontario  during  the  years  ]89()  and  1897,. at  stations  reporting  tor  the  whole  year,  and  the  average 
for  the  Province. 


Station. 


'Essex  : 

Cottam  

Pelee  Island 

'Kent  : 

Dealtowa 

Chatham   

Elgin  : 

Cowal 

Port  Stanley  . . . 
INOBFOLK  : 

Port  Dover 

Haldimand  : 

De  Cewsville  . . . 
Wblland  : 

Welland     

Lincoln  : 

St.  Ann's  

Niagara ....... 

JLambton  : 

Sarnia    

Birnham 

Wyoming 

CtcRON  : 

Goderich  L.  H.. 

Sunshine    

•Brcce  : 

Lucknow   

North  Bruce  . .. 

Point  Clark    . . . 

Saugeen 

Grky  : 

BogDor  

Owen  Sound 

Durham  

Presque  Isle 

•"SlMCOK  : 

Barrie     

Coidwater  

Orijlia 

Middlesex  : 

Coldstream   

London  

Uubrey 

"Oxford  : 

Princeton 

Woodstock    . 
©RANT  : 

Paris  

St.  George 

Perth  : 

St.  Mary's 

Stratford 

'Wellington  : 

Mount  Forest  .. 

Erasmus 

©CFFEKIN  : 

Orangeville  . . . . 


Observer. 


S.  G.  Brooker 

J.  Quick 

S.  J.  Pardo 

R.  C.  Burt 

S.  Maccoll 

M.  Payne 

J.  L.  Morgan 

R.  E.  King 

J.  A.  Gilchreese.. 

G.  A.  Snyder  ..   . 
J.  i)eW.  Randall. 


Wm.  Mowbray 
J.  8.  Mellor  . . 
J.  Osborne  .... 


R.  Campbell  . . 
G.  Hood     


Rain. 


1896. 


M.  Macdonsld  .. 

J.  B.  Muir 

M.  McDonald  ....I 
Mrs.  J .  R.  Stewart 

J.  A.  McPherson . . 

D.  Mackenzie 

J.  Gunn,  M.D 

J.  McKenzie 

W,  H.  Buttery.... 
J.  B.  Lazonby  .... 
H.  A.  Fitton 

C.  Zavitz 

J.  S.  Dewar 

H.  Anderson 

D.  Beamer 

Woodstock  College. 

John  Kay   

Dr.  Kitchen    

J.  Thomson 

Wm.  Dick 

W.  E.  Brooks 

G.  Wood  

N.  Gordon 


33.44 
26.51 

33.00 
31.64 

28.25 
29.37 

27.56 

27.98 

23.41 

15.22 
23.46 

26.07 
26.37 
23.75 

10.72 
25.00  I 

24.45 
23.83 
18.29 
18  06 

23.55 
22.01 
17.86 
24.69 

25.73 
22.52 
23.49 

26.35 
28.20 
25.83 

23.82 
23.19 

28  59 
23.89 

24.39 
24.55 

17.84 
19.68 

22.66 


95 
45 

102 

87 

61 
126 

110 

90 

91 

60 

80 

57 
86 
59 

51 
90 

97 
108 

43 
106 

91 
99 
74 
86 

113 
80 
90 

114 

108 
68 

82 
84 


70 

99 

98 

80 
96 


1897. 


61 


41 


32.94 
34.26 

28.15 
29.46 

32.24 
28.34 

33.45 

32.08 

34.55 

30.93 
29.33 

24.67 
31.37 
27.55 

20.03 
30.37 

28.66 
32.53 
26  69 
27.26 

36.86 
33.29 
30.07 
40.27 

28.27 
26.02 
31.66 

27.25 
30.07 
25.17 

27.20 
27.13 

29.80 
32. 78 

27.37 
29.91 

27.66 
29.73 

38.09 


99 

55 

90 

87 

63 
124 

129 

92 

91 

88 
85 

60 

87 
68 

57 
96 

120 

117 

51 

112 

103 
117 

85 
91 

117 

74 

100 

94 
102 

62 

67 
80 

87 
65 

93 

98 

109 
118 

80 


Snow. 


1896. 


.^^8.7 
31.0 

31.1 
61.3 

36.0 
73.1 

56.3 

62.0 

93.7 

31.7 
67.4 


28 


1897. 


26.5 
67.4 
23.0 

13 
42 
12  1 

66.0 
89.6 

21 
52 

83.9 

75.8 

66.0 

108.0 

70 
68 
15 
90 

158.1 
98.6 

150.0 
95.0 

72 
57 
42 
48 

117.8 
137.9 
109.3 

78 
57 
61 

61.3 
63.6 
50.0 

33 

58 
29 

84.4 
26.3 

41 
12 

48.8 
59.8 

28 
30 

77.0 
93.3 

51 
45 

110.4 
75.6 

76 
90 

114.5 

49 

27.8 
27.0 


21.6 
41.2 


20.0 
61.3 


64.3 

40.7 

72.0 

48.4 
44  0 


.S8.0 
55.0 
34.0 

81.0 
105  3 

122.4 
75. C 
58.7 

131.5 

170.5 
168.2 
179.0 
111.2 

162.6 
149.2 
121.0 

77.7 
49.0 
33.0 

57.0 
32.0 

41.5 
71.2 

94.0 
93.2 

106.5 
83.5 

104.8 


21 

17 

25 
24 

16 
64 

47 

68 

29 

59 
27 

19 
42 
15 

32 

66 

75 
65 

26 
88 

70 

67 
65 
49 

76 
61 
63 

41 
72 
27 

38 
28 

23 
37 

50 
49 

72 
99 

48 


61  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32) 


A.  1898 


Table   V.    THE   W  E  AT  H.ER.- Continued. 


Observer. 

-    Rain. 

Snow. 

Station. 

1896. 

1887. 

1896. 

189/ 

o 

a 

>> 

Q 

CI 

"3 

a 

hi 

>> 

(8 

Q 

o 

c 
1— 1 

CO 

>> 

Q 

i 

a 

Wentworth  : 

Stony  Creek 

Halton:      ■'.-£ 

Georgetown 

York  : 

Aurora   

C.  F.  Van  Wagner. 
J.  Barber 

27.52 

20.54 

19.04 
21.01 
21.37 
21.77 

29.21 

20.50 

20.20 

20.94 

20.71 
23.11 

79 

101 

67. 
91 
78 
104 

86 

77 
88 
78 

76 

87 

33.66 

26.36 

24.06 
29.10 
20.76 
27.74 

28.64 

24.70 

22.86 

23.98 

22.04 
25.10 
13.50 

20.37 

30.69 

25.09 
28.07 
29.01 

35.58 

31.76 
36.73 

36.74 
36.33 
35.92 
31.85 

32.69 
33.72 
39.03 

20.97 
17.10 
10.03 
23.31 

25.89 

81 

114 

77 

92 

79 

110 

85 

104 

98 

99 

89 

100 

44 

66 

102 

68 
113 
111 

90 

73 
100 

87 
94 
89 
67 

122 

81 

105 

73 
26 
59 
35 

88 

60.4 

99.2 

68.4 
68.2 
44.7 
73.3 

98.3 

73.6 

.55.8 

103.8 

150.0 
99.6 

62.6 

121.2 

57.5 
72.9 
93.5 

72.7 

143.9 
69.2 

133,3 
141.0 

128.8 
62.0 

115.2 

92.5 

157.5 

36.9 

44.0 

103.3 

57.0 

79.7 

30 

65 

32 
37 
36 
43 

53 

51 

44 

44 

65 
60 

24 

58 

21 
42 
39 

51 

60 
43 

58 
62 
56 
42 

74 
34 
81 

37 
30 
82 
22 

45 

29.0 

93.8 

68.2 
33.9 
39.7 
47.4 

93.6 

50.6 

54.6 

90.5 

119.0 
94.0 
52.0 

48.0 

116.4 

81.0 
79.2 
86.1 

77.7 

129.2 
77.1 

110.1 

113.5 

106.8 

86.5 

135.9 
101. 0 
144.5 

35.4 
67.0 
75.4 
57.0 

79.8 

28 
70 

Rev.  R.  W.  Amos  . 

R.  Martin 

J.  Reeve 

41 

Scarboro'    

Deer  Park   ,    ... 

56 

28 

Toronto  

Ontario  : 
Stouffville 

Observatory 

T.  Smyth 

43 

47 

Peel  : 
Alton 

W.  J.  Dodds 

A.  P.  Knight,M.A. 

W.  T.  Ellis 

A.  Schultz 

36 

Fbontenac : 

Kingston  

Carleton  : 

Ottawa 

73 

62 

Renfrew  : 

Clontarf 

52 

Rockliffe 

Renfrew 

C.  Mclntyre 

H.  Wright 

68. 
21 

Lanark  : 

Oliver  Ferry 

Victoria  : 

Lindsay  

W.  J.  McLean  .... 

Thomas  Beall 

J.  N.Telford 

W.  Peters     

H.  A.  Lempriere  . . 

C.  R.  Stewart 

J.  Cleak  

22.01 

20.62 

20.22 
24.31 
19.73 

26.87 

21.81 
30.16 

30.67 
30.02 
26  30 
26.46 

21.51 
26.76 
25.92 

17.79 
21.01 
16.09 
24.74 

23.76 

57 

87 

49 
80 
94 

89 

67 
85 

81 
95 
73 
65 

106 
77 

85 

66 
41 
83 
35 

82 

20 
67 

Peterborough  : 

Enni-smore 

Peterborough   , , . . 

Lakefield 

Haliburton  : 

Haliburton   ...... 

Hastings  : 

Bancroft    

29 
60 
44 

59- 

57 

Deseronto 

Muskoka  : 

Bala 

Beatrice 

J.  Russell    

E.  B.  Sutton 
J.  Hollingworth . . . 
T.  M.  Robinson  . . . 
C.  A.  Wuttson 

Rev.  R.  Mosely  . . . 

A.  Kirkham 

P.  Macdonald 

W.  P.  Cook    

Agent  C.  P.  R 

G.  E.  Whitehead  . . 
Thomas  Baker 

e  Province 

47 

79 
58 

Gravenhurst 

Huntsville  

Parry  Sound  : 

Parry  Sound 

Sorucedale 

Uplands 

65 
37 

77 
34 
73 

Algoma  : 

Port  Arthur 

Savanne 

44 
31 

White  River 

Thompson 

Average  for  th 

104 
43 

49-' 

42 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


THE     WEATHER. 

Table  VI.  Comparative  Meteorologica  JRegister  for  the  seven  years  1891-97,  as  recorded  at  Toronto 
Observatory,  in  Latitude  43°  39.4  N.,  and  Longitude  5h.  17m.  31.653.  W.  Height  above  the  sea  350 
feet. 


Averflge  tempsrature   

Difference  from  average  (57  years) 
Thermic  Anomaly  (Lat.  43°  40)  . . 

Highest  temperature 

Lowest  temperature . . 

Annual  ranges   

Average  daily  range    

Greatest  daily  range    


Average  height  of  barometer  at  32°  Fahr. , 

Difference  from  average  (5b  years) 

Highest  barometer   

Lowest  barometer 

Annual  ranges  


Average  humidity  of  the  air. 
Difference  from  average. . . 


Average  elasticity  of  aqueous  vapour . 
Average  temperature  of  dew  point. 


Average  of  cloudiaess 

Difference  from  average  (43  years) 


Resultant  direction  of  wind 

"         velocity  of  wind     

Average  velocity  (miles  per  hour) 


Total  amount  of  rain  in  inches 

Difference  from  average  (57  years) 
Number  of  days  of  rain 


Number  of  fair  days    

Number  of  days  completely  clouded 


Number  of  auroras  observed 

Possible  to  see  aurora  (No.  of  nights) . , . . 


1897. 


45.93 
+  1.72 
—5.09 

93.3 
-7.2 
100.5 

16  21 

36.0 


1896. 


45.36 
+  1.15 
-5.66 

91.3 
-17. 9 
109.2 

17.58 

38.9 


1895. 


44.28 
+  0.07 
-6.74 

93.4 
-21.2 
114.6 

17.26 

36.9 


1891. 


29.6319    29.6382'  29.6171 
+    .0125  +    .0188  —   .0023 


30.353 

28.779 

1.574 

76 
0 

0.274 

42.7 

0.61 
.00 


33.422 

28.734 

1.688 

75 

—  1 

0.254 

38.9 

0.60 

-  .01 


30.240 

28.746 

1.494 

75 

—  1 

0.253 
41.3 

0.57 

—  .04 


Total  amount  of  snow  in  inches  

Difference  from  average  (57  years) ! — 20.97 

Number  of  days  of  snow 


Number  of  thunderstorms 
Number  of  fogs  


Number  of  hours  of  bright  sunshine  . 
Number  of  hours  of  possible  sunshine 


46.75 
+  2.54 
-4.27 

90.7 
-9  9 
100.6 

16.27 

34.3 

29.6246 
+  ,0052 
30  516 
29.035 
1.481 

76 
0 

0.277 
42.9 


1893. 


1892. 


43.53 
-0.68 
--7.49 

93.3 
-17.8 
111.1 

17.15  I 

36.3   I 

29.5996; 

-  .0198, 

30.467 

28.227  I 

2.240 

77 
+   1 

0.262 
41.5 


0.60    0.59 
-  .01  !—  .02 


N89  W 
2.42 
12.33 

N88  W 
0.75 

8.44 

S  78  W 
1.36 
5.60 

27.737 

+  0.523 

110 

21.770 
-  5.444 
104 

22.531 
—  4.683 
101 

47.4 
—20.97 
43 

73.3 

+  4.8 
43 

54.8 
-13.7 

48 

173 

58 

174 
55 

196 
48 

3 
179 

18 
194 

11 

195 

19 

28 

25 
30 

23 
33 

1987.6 
4463.3 

2146.7 
4474.4 

2150.7 
4463.3 

N  78  W 
1.10 
5.67 

25.785 
—  1.429 
114 


37.8 

-30.7 

32 

179 
43 

23 

199 

36 
30 

2017.7 
4463.3 


N  66  W 
1.95 
8.59 

31.145 

+  3.931 

105 

85.7 

i-17  2 

61 

156 
50 

18 
208 

41 
31 

2052.4 
4463.3 


44.61 
-0.40 
-6.41 

93.5 
-10.2 
103.7 

15.58 

38.6 

29.6325 
f  .0131 
30.356 
28.846 
1.510 

77 
+   1 

0.272 
42.5 

0.61 
.00 


N  54  W 

1.81 
8.17 

25.285 
—  1.929 
119 

42.2 

-26.3 

43 

165 

57 

33 
195 

40 
36 

2054.4 
4474.4 


1891. 


45.87 
+  1.66 
-5.15 

91.9 
—2.0 

93.9 

16.45 

37.8 

29.6385 
+  .0191 
30.266 
28.536 
1.730 

75 

-  1 

0.267 
42.0 

0..59 

-  .02 


N  57  W 
1.63 
7.33 

26.735 
-  0.479 
108 

47  8 

-20.7 

50 

193 
60 

18 
212 

19 

38 

2065.4 
4463.3 


43 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No  32). 


A.  189  8 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 ). 


A.  1898 


RURAL    AREA. 

Table    VIII.      Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  Rural  Area  of  Ontario 

as  returned  by  municipal  assessors  for  1897. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin    

Norfolk  . 
Haldimand 
Welland     . . 
Totals.. 


Lambton    . 
Huron    . . . 

Bruce  

Totals. 


Grey    

Simcoe 

Totals , 

Middlesex 
Oxford  .... 

Brant    

Perth 

Wellington 

Waterloo   . 

Dufferin.    . 

Totals. 


Lincoln 

Wentworth   

Vfalton   . 

Peel 

York 

Onttrio 

I  *urham      

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  &  Addington. 

Frontenac   

I<eeds 

GrenvilJe   

Tlundas 

Stormont   

Glengarry    

Vresrott 

Russell 

Car'eton 

Renfrew     

Lan<rk 

Totals 


Acres  of  assessed  land. 


Resident. 


Victoria 
Peterborough . 
Haliburton  . . . 

HasMngH 

Totals.... 


Muskoka   .    . 
Parry  Sound 

Nipisuing 

Manitoulin . . 

*Alg<ima 

Totals... 


The  Prnvin,.;,     i  189^   22,403,060 
lliei'rovmca..-Jjj,g^  22,174>99 


425,  «91 
561,673 
437,419 
393,920 
277,-530 
222,546 
2,318,779 

648.979 

796,937 

844,423 

2,290,339 

1,050,489 

9-27,114 

1,977,603 

749,19 1 
467,148 
213,908 
514,810 
625,769 
302,966 
343,047 
3,216,842 

184,121 
265,855 
2i0,317 
285,250 
631,257 
489,232 
366,321 
432,719 
221,275 
2,996,347 

434.160 
613,824 
464,883 
269,928 
236,438 
246,018 
287,580 
266,814 
230,152 
554,601 
930,089 
653,332 
6,187,819 

549,203 
544,132 
557,374 
916,201 
2,566,910 

497,769 
500,359 
207,499 
186,685 
456,109 
1,848,421 


Non- 
resident. 


Total 
occupied. 


5,322 
4,456 
422 
5,210 
3,265 
4,768 
23,443 

10,920 

3,585 

24,786 

39,291 

12,368 
37.356 
49,724 

6,694 
4,917 
2,270 
."^,476 
1,809 
3, 1 97 
12,741 
35, 107 

7,350 
6,5.50 
4,088 
3,318 
4.450 
9,197 
4,407 
2.?66 
10,525 
52,151 

6,350 
76,274 
4,088 
1.187 
1,250 
2,140 


19,286 
z0,972 
9,  .367 
28,  .362 
26,086 
195,362 

39,546 

20,»56 

8,998 

95,067 

164,267 

36,184 
50,500 
81,454 
25,683 
204,202 
398,023 

957,368 
997, -^09 


Acrei  cleared. 


4.31,013 
566,129 
437,841 
399,130 
280.7!  5 
227,314 
2,342,222 

659,899 

800,522 

869,209 

2,329,630 

1,062,857 

964.470 

2,027,327 

755,888 
472,065 
216,178 
51S,286 
627,.57'^ 
.306,163 
355,791 
3,251  949 

191,471 
272,405 
224,405 

?8S,5(;8 
5^5,707 

4n8.42;*i 

370,7'J8 

434.9*5 

231,801 

3,048,498 

440,510 
690,098 
468,971 
271,115 
237,688 
248,158 
287,580 
286,100 
251,124 
563,968 
958,451 
679,418 
5,383,181 

588,749 

664,788 

566,372 

1,011,268 

2,731,177 

533,953 
550  859 
288,953 
212,368 
660.311 
2,246,444 


1897. 


1896. 


265,337 
369,934 
318,341 
2.53,126 
225,557 
177,59:) 
1,609,885 

374.040 

607,548 

505,470 

1,487,058, 

620  072 

569,1,50 

1, 189,222 

574,559! 
366,18ll 
180,-532 
406,865 
465,314 
244,305' 
228,9321 
2,466,688 

I 
161,412] 

213,907 

169,887 

246,1231 

424,952 

355,007 

290,155 

337,975 

191,731 

2,391,149 

236  325 

252,868 
270,082 
170,459 
147,779 
133,733 
180,147 
157,558 
92,968 
.308,092 
3ii5,332 
,307,051 
2,562,394 

268,067 
245,556 
35,443 
380,634 
929,700 

60,030 
59,653 
21.090 
37.003 
39,209 
216,985 


23.360,428   12,853,081 
23,172,408 


Acres 
woodland. 


256,561 
367.504 
.309,947 
249,  F09 
224,455 
171,980 
1,580,256 

370,409 

601,937 

4ti9,3.30 

1,474,676 

622,5:'5 

.549,583 

1,172,118 

568,414 
.^63,921 
176.623 
400,104 
462,443 
245.738 
228,793 
2,446,036 

160,339 
210,290 
169,74.': 
249,543 
42.3,441 
.357,285 
290.056 
335,064 
190,978 
2,386,741 

215,033 
229,751 
270,277 
166,211 
145,234 
129,278 
170,621 
159,192 
86,645 
303,843 
310,663 
310.449 
2,497,197 

263,041 
241,219 
34,915 
370,683 
909,858 

57,011 
57,730 
18,648 
38,868 
.32,712 
204,969 


12,671,851 


Acres 
swamp 

or 
marsh. 


156,758 
170.113 
110,  .397 
113,455 
48,045 
.37,535 
636,303 

241,675 

99,008 

227,777 

568,460 

242,"27 
293,677 
536,004 

165,056 
7.5,131 
13,389 
74,8''i6 
73,980 
42,300 
51,567 

496,289 

28,656 
36,  .363 
31.137 
26,985 
.5.3,137 
5S,019 
41.421 
.59,632 
21,798 
352,148 

95,166 
251,659 
123,483 

33,771 

42,693 
103,435 

92,962 
118,944 
146,906 

90,606 

473,124 

201,252 

1,774,001 

131, .582 
219  518 
490,  .523 
430,705 
1,272,328 

375,887 
39.3,509 

218,618 

107,662 

562,817 

1,658,493 

7,294,026 
7,264,167 


8,918 
26,082 

9,103' 
32,  .549 1 

7,193' 
12,1891 
96,034| 


61.6 
65.3 

72.7 
63.4 
80.3 
78.1 
68.7 


44,184'  56.7 

93,966  75.9 

1.35,962  58.2 

274,112  "  63.8 

I 

200,458  58.3 

101,643  59.0 

302,101  58.7 


16,273 
.30,7-^3 

22,257 
36,555 
88,284 
19,5,'i8 
75,292 
288,972 

1,403 
22,135 
23,381 
15, 460' 
57,618 
90,403 
39,152 
37,378 
18,271 
305,201 

109,019 

185,571 

75,406 

66,885 

47,216 

10,990 

14.471 

9,598 

11,250 

165,270 

179,995 

171,115 

1,046,786 

189,100 

99,714 

40,406 

199,929 

529,149 

98,036 
97,697 
49.245 
67,703 
58,285 
370,966 

3,213,321 
3,236,390 


76.0 
77.6 
83.5 
78.6 
74.1 

79. 5 

64. a 

75.9' 

84.3: 

78.5 
75.7 
85.3 
79  3 
71.2 
78.3 
77.7 
82.7 
78.4 

53.6 
36.6 
57.6 
62.9 
62.2 

53. 6 
62.6; 
55.7 
37.0 
54.6 
31.9 
45.2 
47.6 

45.5 
43.5 
6  3 
37.6 
34.0 

11.2 

10.8 

7.3 

17.4 
5.9 
9.7 


55  0 
.^4.7 


Including  Thunder  Bay  and  Rainy  River  Districts  in  this  and  succeeding  tables. 

45 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18S8 


AEEA    AND    PRODUCE-FALL    WHEAT. 
Table    IX.      Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of  Fall 
Wheat  in  Ontaiio  in  the  years  1896  atd  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97;  also 
the  yield  per  acre. 


1897. 

1896. 

Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 

Counties. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bush. 

per 
acre. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bufh 
per 
acre. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bush. 

per 

acre. 

Essex 

Kent  

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand   

Welland  

Totals 

Lambton    

32,520 
67.440 
42,724 
38,604 
36,624 
18,294 
236,206 

51,007 

59,280 

36,411 

146,698 

27,697 
62,924 
90,621 

75.943 
42,900 
31,068 
44,310 
17.344 
40,285 
9, 133 
260,983 

19,180 
27,885 
25,916 
31,867 
40,631 
17,265 

9,476 
12,226 

4,600 
189,046 

2,566 
880 

1,565 
42 
619 
294 
161 
194 
156 
90 
206 
782 

7,555 

1,929 

4.909 

243 

10,590 

17,671 

93 
40 
39 

1,014 
256 

1,442 

950,222 

741,456 

1,517,400 

1,076,645 

995,983 

867.989 

354,904 

5,554,377 

],  040543 

1,677,624 

921,198 

3,639,365 

714.583 
1,685,6^5 
2,300,268 

1.92S,?^52 
1,30*,1GO 

879,224 
],311,?>76 

475,226 
1,059,496 

209, 146 
7,167,780 

483,336 
814,242 
780,072 
879,529 

1,121,416 

391,916 

175,306 

188.280 

80,960 

4,91.5,057 

38,490 

14,520 

18,780 

6S0 

8,728 

4,969 

1,900 

3,783 

3,245 

2,025 

.3,708 

14,076 

114,854 

.36,651 

85,908 

3,621 

147,201 

273,381 

1,786 

780 

390 

16,224 

3,789 

22,969 

23,988,051 

22.8 
22.5 
25.2 
25.8 
2.-t.7 
19.4 
23.5 

20  4 
28.3 
25.3 
24.8 

25.8 
25.2 
25.4 

25.4 
30.4 
28.3 
29.6 
27.4 
26.3 
22.9 
27.5 

25.2 
2(1.2 
30.1 
27.6 
27.6 
22.7 
18.5 
15.4 
17.6 
26.0 

15.0 
16.5 
12.0 
15.0 
14  1 
16.9 
11.8 
19.5 
20.8 
22.5 
18.0 
18.0 
15.2 

19  0 
17.5 
14.9 
13.9 
15.5 

19.2 
19.5 
10.0 
16.0 
14.8 
15.9 

25.2 

30,267 
68.671 
44,401 
34,690 
28.098 
17,089 
223,216 

48,873 

53.588 

31,864 

134,325 

24,437 
51,685 
76,122 

76,080 
39,666 
27,456 
36,  .^50 
14,242 
37,473 
7,611 
239,078 

17,492 
25,710 
23,781 
26.064 
33,978 
12,891 
10,  .397 
16,778 
245 
167,336 

2,2.53 

218 

3,49n 

354 

631 

.304 

109 

40 

50 

26 

360 

3,237 

11,077 

6,455 

11,022 

177 

7,008 
24,662 

33 

30 

21 

803 

252 

1,139 

876,955; 

475,192 
1,181,141 
577,213 
586,261 
199,496 
138,421 
3,157,72^1 

992,122 

857,408 

.356,877 

2,206,407 

344,562 
1,126,733 
1,471,295 

1,415,088 
7.57,621 
447,533 
771,205 
336,111 
693,251 
162,875 

4,58.^684 

204,656 
.336,801 
411,411 
445,694 
631,991 
293,915 
232,893 
350.660 
3,014 
2,911,035 

29,064 

3,314 

76.541 

6,938 

11,610 

6,080 

2,420 

920 

1,250 

520 

6,156 

77,364 

222,177 

147,174 

257,915 

3,469 

88,301 

496,859 

620 
375 
420 

21,520 
6,325 

29,260 

15,078,441 

15.7 
17.2 
13.0 
16.9 
7.1 
8.1 
14.1 

20.3 
16.0 
11.2 
16.4 

14.1 

21.8 
19.3 

18. »; 
19.1 
16.3 
21.1 
23.6 
18.5 
21.4 
19.2 

11.7 
13.1 
17.3 
17.1 
IS. 6 
22  8 
22.4 
50.9 
12.." 
17.4 

12.9 
15.2 
21.9 
19.6 
18.4 
20.0 
22.2 
23.0 
25.0 
20.0 
17.1 
23.9 
20.1 

22.8 
23.4 
19.6 
12.6 
20.1 

18  8 
12  5 
20.0 
26.8 
25.1 
25.6 

17.2 

.32,064 
61,106 
4.3,297 
34,402 
.33,601 
21,197 
225,667 

38.505 

59,987 

40,948 

139,440 

24,129 
53,205 
77,334 

71,794 
39,757 
28,514 
41,232 
20,120 
38,449 
8,211 
248,077 

20,543 

29,143 

21,962 

25,. 377 

34,640 

9,206 

4,971 

12,703 

3,323 

161,868 

2,638 
1,229 

J    3,933 

779 

425 

366 

65 

139 

907 

650 

2,512 

13,643 

5,977 

8,808 

1.34 

9,508 

24,427 

52 

55 

9 

}      572 

688 

891,144 

623,660 
1,228.215 
869.641 
644,500 
562,702 
341,^39 
4,270,057 

761,028 
1,255,101 

80.5,917 
2,822,046 

478,840 
1,157,492 
1,636,332 

1,499,183 
855,367 
564,591 
890,367 

19.5 
20.1 
20.1 
18.7 
16.7 
16.1 
18.9 

19.8 
20.9 

19.7 

Totals 

Grey 

Simcoe    

Totals.         

20.2 

19.8 
21.8 
21.2 

20.9 

Oxford 

Brant 

'->erth 

21.5 
19.8 
21.6 

(Wellington  

421,9581     21.0 

821.672 

21.4 

Duflferin  

Totals 

uincoln 

Wentworth 

H  alton    

164.5.^3 
5,217,571 

377,952 
568,957 
454,991 
549.780 
775,011 
203,757 
101,914 
249,967 
.59,121 
3,341,450 

47,.^99 
22,908 

72,725 

14,551 

7,825 

6,113 

991 

2,566 

14,392 

11,891 

20.0 
21.0 

18.4 
19.5 
20.7 

Peel 

York 

Ontario 

Dutham    

21.7 
22.4 
22.1 
20.5 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward 

Totals 

Lennox  and  Addington. 

Frontenac   

Leeds 

Gtenville    

19.7 
17.8 
20.6 

18.0 
18.6 

18.5 

18.7 

Stormont 

vrlengarry   

Prescott  

Russell 

■Carleton 

Renfrew    

18.4 
16.7 
15.2 
18.5 
15.9 
18.3 

Lanark 

Totals 

Victoria   

49,711      19.8 
251,072|     18.4 

120.299'    20.1 

Peterborough 

Haliburton 

Hastings    

Totals 

Muskoka   

Parry  Sound 

17.3,024 

2  194 

174,902 

470,419 

892 
88« 
139 

11,884 

13,801 

18,022,748 

19.6 
16.4 
18.4 
19.3 

17.2 
16.4 

Nipissing 

Manitoulin 

Algoma 

15.4 
20.8 

Totalb 

20.1 

The  Province 

20.2 

46 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 ). 


A.  1898 


AREA    AND    PRODUCE-SPRING    WHEAT. 

Table  X.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  cf  Spring 
Wheat  in  Ontario  in  the  yeara  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ; 
also  the  yield  per  acre. 


Counties. 


1897. 


Essex    

Kent  

Elgin      

liorfolk     .  . . 

Ualdimand 

Weliand  .    . 

Totals, 


Acres. 

848 
1,873 


Lambton    . 

Huron  . . . . 

Bruce  .  .    . . 

Totals. 


<jrrey    

Simco»» 
Totals. 


Middlese-x  . 

Oxford 

HiauB 

I'erth 
Wellington 
Waterloo   . . 
Dufferin , . . . 
Totals   . 


Xiincoln 

Wentworth   

Halton     

Peel   

York     , 

Ontario 

T)urham     

^Northumberland . 

SPrince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

iLeeds      

Grenville   

Dundas 

•Stormont     

Olengarry 

Prescotc 

Kusieli   

Oarleton 

Renf I  ew  

Xanark       

Totals 


Bushels. 


151 
1,054 

241 
4,167 

669 

4,417 

5,957 

11,04.H 

14,903 
20,257 
35,160 

62^ 

9S2, 

624 

3,539; 

16, 330 1 

875 

16, 99.^' 

39,916 

I 

155 

1,099 

2,018 

8,489 

16,973 

22,133, 

18,434 

18,572 

8, 605 1 

96,478 

5,608 

7,6871 

5,2441 

1.506 

2,083 

2.869 

5.133 

4.413 

2,167 

14,899 

26,351 

10,094 

88.054 


Victoria 18.420 

Peterborough  13.708 

"Haliburton   870 

Hastings 10.477 

Totals I  43,475 


Muskoka 
Parry  Sound 
Nipissing  . . . 
Manitoulin    . 

Algoma 

Totals  .. 


The  Province 


670 

434 

493 

1,906 

l,fi09 

5,012 

323,305 


13.144 
25,847 


1,^ 
14,018 

3,229 
58,126 

9.433 

65,372 

78,037 

152,842 

181, 8'7 
316,009 
497,826 

I 

9,906 

16,683] 

11,731 

56, 270 1 

169,832 

15,488 

178,427 

458,  .337 

2,.542 

15,606 

33,297 

128,184 

330,974 

.S69,fi2l 

313,378 

315,724 

138,541 

1,647,867 

85.802 

112,230 

72,367 

20,632 

2y,579j 

39,018 

78.  .5.35 

56,04fsl 

35,322 

2i4,773 

397,9'0 

146,363 

1,328,566 

28:^668 

196,024 

9,2221 

161,3461 

650,260 

8,710' 
6,?50l 

8,282' 
24,778 
26,2=i7l 

74,2771 


Bush 

per 
acre. 

15.5 
13.8 

12.5" 
13.3 
13.4 
13.9 

14.1 

14.8 
13.1 
13.8 

12.2 
15.6 
14.2 

15.9 
17.9 
18.8 
15.9 
10.4 
17.7 
10.5 
11.5 

16.4 
14.2 
16.5 
15.1 
19  5 
16.7 
17.0 
17.0 
16.1 
17.1 

15.3 
14.6 
13.8 
13.7 
14.2 
13.6 
15.3 
12.7 
16.3 
17.1 
15.1 
14.5 
15.1 

15.4 
14.3 
10.6 
15.4 
15.0 

13.0 
14.4 

16.8 
13.0 
17.4 
14.8 


1896. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


4,868,101     15.1 


299 

977 

46 

74 

661 

141 

2,198 

962 

3,940 

5,381 

10,283 

13,310 
15,266 
28,576 

6151 

848' 

.5051 

.3,526 

17,1.30 

1.013 

13,469 

37, 106 

284 

597 

884 

5,937 

12,700 

21,290 

12.686 

12,848 

.3,081 

70,307 

3,620 

5,712 

4,  .506 

1,654 

1,893 

1,8.58 

4,  .339 

3,910 

1.273 

10,950 

22,055 

8,834 

70,604 

13,267 

11,465 

759 

6,531 

32,022 

473 

339 

389 

2,025 

1,039 

4,265 

265,^61 


47 


3,110 

13,092 

520 

692 

7,007 

1,791 

26,112 


Bush, 
per 
acre 


10.4 
13.4 
11.3 
8.0 
10.6 
12.7 
11.9 


9,428  9.8 

38,612  9.8 

50,043j  9.3 

98,083  9.6 

143,748  10.8 
216,777  14.2 
360,5251  12.6 


7,319 

8,904 

4,798 

39,844 

191,856 

12,764 

188,566 

454,051 

2.357 

5.433 

10,520 

86,680 

185,420 

276,770 

161,112 

170,878 

40,977 

940,147 

I 

52,490 

79,3971 

68,942 

25, 802 1 

.34, 642 1 

.31,772 

73,. 329  i 

69,207 

23.932 

210  2401 

36.3,908 

120,142 

1,153,803 

188,391! 

141,020 

9,639 

8%  556 

424,606, 


11.9 
10.5 
9.5 
11.3 
11.2 
12.6 
14.0 
12.2 

8.3 
9.1 
11.9 
14.6 
14.6 
13.0 
12.7 
13.3 
13.3 
13.4 

14.5 
13.9 
15.3 
15.6 
18.3 
17.1 
16.9 
17.7 
18.8 
19.2 
16  5 
13.6 
16  3 

14.2 
12.3 

12.7 
13.1 
13  3 


Yearly  average  for  ihe 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


6.. 3.38  13.4 

4,000  11.8 

7,586  19.5 

27,135]  13.4 

16  936  16.3 

61,995  14.5 

3,519,322  13.8 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 


1,277 
2,835 
1,105 

617 
2,658 

919 
9,411 

4,603 
12,506 
11,222 
28,331 

29,843 
29,249 
69,092 

6,814 

6,174 
992 

9,418 
20,042 

3,632 
18,872 
65,944 

1,583 

2, 223 1 

3,447| 

12,2051 

22.453' 

40,149 

29,128 

23.141 

5,463 

139,792 

5,096 
7,840 

[  10,  910 

3,87l| 

3,855 

6,961 

7,207 

3,292 

19,730 

24,399 

1.3,310 

106,471 

27,604 
22,220 
1,283 
12,114 
63,221 

1.086 
1,072 

188 

I   5,150 
7,496 

479,758 


1- 

18.867 
43,3»4 
17,186 
8,652 
33,789 
12,523 
134,411 

66,123 
176,380 
157.641 
400,044 

418,409 
442,002 
860,411 

103,  .348 

99,291 

13.735 

142,515 

298,835 

54,486 

274,205 

986,415 

I 

21,981 

32,263 

50,011 

195,  .327 

371,783 

646,719 

448,  .^02 

312,027 

74,590 

2,153,203 

73,423 
117,621 

171,060 

71,534 

66,671 

112,410 

11.3,316 

54,943 

348,742 

399,276 

203.311 

1,732,-307 

401.451 

289,776 

16.407 

179,5*1 

887,174 

15,975 

16.503 

3,169 

93,789 

129,426 

7,283,391 


14.8 
15.3 
15.6 
14.0 
12.7 
13.6 
14.3 

14.4 
14.1 
14.0 
14.1 

14.0 
15.1 
14.6 

15.2 
16.1 
13.8 
15.5 
14.9 
15.0 
14.5 
15.0 

13.9 
14.5 
14.5 
16.0 
16.6 
16.1 
15.4 
13.5 
13.7 
15.4 

14.4 
15.0 

15.7 

18.5 
17.5 
16.1 
15.7 
16.7 
17.7 
16.4 
15.3 
16.3 

14.5 
13.0 
12.8 
14.8 
14.0 

14.7 
15.4 
16.8 

18.2 

17.8 

15.2 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  S 


AREA    AiSD    PRODUC  E-B  A  R  L  E  Y. 

Table  XI.  Showing  by  County  Municipilitie-i  and  groups  of  C  .unties  the  area  and  produce  of  Barley 
in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixeeen  years  1882-97  ;  also  thfr 
yield  per  acre. 


Counties. 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


I  Acres. 


Essex 
Kent  ...     . 

>''lgin     

Norfolk  . . . . 
Haldimand 
Welliiud 


6.149 
13,098 
6,630 
2.425 
5,436 
865 


Totals I     34,603!       890,603 


Lambton   11,763 

Hu'on 20,228 

Bruce !  10,893 

Totals 42,884 


Grey  

Simcoe 

Totals  , 

Middlesex. , 
Oiford    ..., 

Brant 

Perth    

We'lington 

Waterloo   . . 

Duif  erin . . . . 

Totals . 


Lincoln 

Wentworth    

Ha'.ton 

Peel 

Yo  k   

Ontario 

Durham     

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

FioDtenac 

Leeds    

Grenville  

Dundas    

Sormont   

Gler.garry 

Prescdtt 

Russell   

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark     

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough 
Haliburton    . . 

Hastings 

Totals.... 


Muskoka  . . . 
Parry  Sound. 
■Jipissing  ... 
Manitoulin    . 

Algoma 

Totals... 


The  Province. 


16,578 
28,140 
44,718 

16,6S4 
14  075 

7,349 
18,785 
23,785! 
14,361 

9,503 
104,542 

1,276 

5,113 

5,521 

21,643 

32,350 

20,384 

22,538 

11,675 

11,439 

131,939 

I2.933I 

4,4tS' 
4,694; 
2,479; 
2,8461 
2,292 
3,348 
3,134 
2,233 
7,042 
866' 
2,705 
49,020 

18,413 

5,701 

280 

16.338 

40,732 

692 
947 
285 
428 
725 
3,077 


492,178 
334.985 
184,460 
531,616 
665.9801 
409,289 
255,631 
2,874  139 

27,944 
137,028 

146.859 
606,004 
380,205 
564,637 
601,765 
287,205 
247,082 
3,598,729! 

310,6851 

100,080 

111,717 

64, 702  i 

77.980, 

59,36^1 

96,7571 

80  857 

59,398 

191.542 

17.666! 

67,0S4l 

1,237,831 

443,753 
131,693 
5.236 
416,619 
997,301 

13,079 
19,698 
7,980 
10,058 
19,503 
70,318 


451,515;  12,021,779 


29.5 
23.8 
25.1 
28.3 
28.0 
28.5 
26.9 
27.5 

21.9 
26.8 
26.6 
28  0 
30.3 
27.7 
26.7 
24.6 
21.6 
27.3 

2t.l 

22  5 
23.8 
26.1 
27.4 
25.9 
28.9 
25.8 
26.6 
27.2 
20.4 
24.8 
25.3 

24.1 
23.] 
18.7 
25  5 
24.5 

18.9 
20.8 
28  0 

23  5 
26.9 
22.9 

26.6 


Lores. 

Bushels. 

4,741 

134,644! 

10,864 

317,229' 

7,076 

155,672 

2,843 

69.085' 

5,173 

110,185 

635 

13,068 

31,332 

799,883 

11,728 

320,174 

20,626 

612,592 

10,582 
42,936 1 

15,ri63 
33,527 
48,590 

18,716 
12,781 
9,351) 
17,688 
25,293 
14.  .524 
10,.%5 
108,7181 

972 

4,9451 

6,184 

26,308 

31,332! 

22,4  9] 

25.682 

ll,96l| 

14,4?2 

144,265 

13,179 
3,859 
4,510 
2,877 
2,611 
2,202 
2,522 
2,601 
1.566 
7,637 
916 
2,555 

47,035 

18,172 

4,902 

221 

14,248 

37,543 

677 
630 
156 
284 
626 
2,373 

462,792 

I 

18" 


288,889 
1,221, 655 1 


28.4 
29.2 
22.0 
24.3 
21.3 
20.5 
25.5 

27.3 
29.7 
27.3 
28.5 


372,0561  24.7 

9-t9,105;  29.8 

1,371,161  28.2 


510,9471 
377,040l 
242,191 
581,935 
743.614 
412,482 
290,220 

3,158,429, 
1 
17.204 
129,5.59 
156,455 
678,746; 
918,0281 
660,295 
757,619! 
272.711' 
299,978 

3,890,595; 

30:^,117 
89,529 

115.907] 
82,853 
80.680' 
60,775 
65,320 
71,267 
43,378 

224,  £28 

20,885 

75,884 

1,234,128 

472,472 
123010 
5,260 
336,253 
937,025 

13.743! 

16,3171 
4,165 
6,617 

16.026 

56,868 

12,669,744 


27.3 
29.5 
25.9 
32.9 
29.4 
28.4 
28.0 
29.1 

17  7 
26  2 
25.3 
25.8 
29  3 
29.4 
29.5 
22  8 
20  8 
27.0 

23.0 
23.2 
25.7 
28.8 
30.9 
27.6 
25.9 
27.4 
27.7 
29.4 
22.8 
29  7 
26.2 

26.0 
25.1 
23.8 
23.6 
25.0 

20.3 
25  9 
26.7 
23.3 
25  6 
24  0 

27.4 


Acres. 


3,804 
7,713 
5,S53 
4,794 

10,74i 
2,894 

35,303 

13,290 
24,186 
15,731 
53,207 


Bushels. 


Bu'h. 
per 


99,289 
213,689 
139,732 
118.175 
227,762 

6.5,800, 
864,447 

3.36,165' 

664,984 

411,178, 

1,412,327 


19,125  473,166; 
.30,9.52  822,4431 
50,077     1,295,609 


15,217 
15,049 
15,721 
16,410, 
31,677, 
16,219 
11, .338 
121,631' 

3,299 
10,709 
10,388 
30,823 
47.829 
32,571 
38,934 
33  178 
30  0S9 
237,820 

28,056 
12,375 

j-    9,444 

.5,076 
2,436 
2,327 
3,169 
1,716 
8,030 
1,344 
2,874 
76,847 

26,392 

9.929 

247 

28,668 

65,236 

632 

725 
95 


[      777 
2,229 

642,350 


407,103 
434,248 
403.13S 
484  1:0 
884,481 
477.978! 
293  6601 
3,384,778 

77,940! 
281.612 
277,864 
822,987 

1,349,-^95 
890.593 

1,004,9741 
726.808 
618  .356 

6,050,729 

617,487 
280,978 

229,122 

145  0841 
64,414 
55.1821 
8', 0.57' 
42,3.-6, 

228,666 

31,189, 

74,0221 

1,849,5571 

661,977 

234,052 

5,651 

647,747! 

1,549,427! 

13,182' 

16,297! 

2,273 

19.896 

51,648| 

16,458,522 


25.6- 
23.2 

25. ft 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A. 1898 


AREA    AND    P  RO  D  U  C  E— O  ATS  . 
Table   XIT.     Showing  Hy  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Countie=i  the  area  and  produce  of  Oa*i8 
in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ;  also  the 
yield  per  acre. 


Counties. 


Eosex 

Kent.    

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand 

Welland 

Totals 

Lambton   

Huron 

Bruce    

Totals 

Grey   

Simcoe     

Totals 

Middlesex 

Oxford    

Brant    

Perth 

Wellineton   

Waterloo 

Duff  rin 

Totals  

Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Halton    

Peel 

\'  ork 

Ontario 

Durham   

Northumbnrland  . 

Prince  Edward    . . 

Totals 

Lennox  &Adding'n 

Frontenac   

Lead" 

Granville 

Dundas    

Stormont 

Glengarry 

Prepcott 

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark       

Totals 

Victoria 

Peterborough  

Haliburton     

Hastings 

Totals 

Muskoka   

Parry  Sound  .... 

Nipip&ing 

Maoitoulin    

Algoma 

Totals 

The  Province 


1897. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


47,000 
44,826 
41,394 
33,04.^ 
33,860 
2.%  68 1 
223,704 

68,082 
126,134 
102,952 


1,677,900 

1,685,458 

1,428,093 

915.2911 

971,782 

650,836 

7,329,360 

2.294,363 
5,032,747 
3,706,272 


297,168  11,033,382 

144,109  5,231,157 
100,025'  3,490,873 
244,134     8,722,030 


94,784 
72,809 
25,580 
87,436 

124,183 
55,797 
63,383 

523,972 

22,364 

86,16t 
25,961 
47,563 
94,595 
71,752 
46,551 
46,02^ 
20,752 
411,725, 

34, 136 1 
43, 620 ! 
48,4381 
35,355; 
36,929| 
28,0.S8 
37,696 
37,134 
22,1^3 
79,460 
56,901 
47,782 
507,672| 

66,043' 

47,055 

7,4:^6 

60,404' 

180,938 

I 

12,467 

13,479 

4,073 

5.396 

7,763 

43,178 


2,432,491 


3,668.141 
2,839,551 
762,284 
3,628,594 
4,843,1^7 
2.120,286 
2,490.952 
20,352,945 

670.920 
1,'?47,65S 

8^8,251 
1,84.^444 
3,916,2.33 
2,661,999 
1,675,836 
1,495,748 

616.334 
15,028,423 

1,024,080 
1,203,912 
1,550.016 
1,177,  .322 
1,347,909 

939,273 
1,372,134 
1,340,537 

754,222 

2,717,.532 

1,803,762 

1,54.3,3.59 

16,774,058 

2.265,275 
1,430.472 
164.. 336 
1,963,130 
5,823,213 

331 ,622 
411.110 
110,786 
141,915 
259,284 
1,254,717 

86,318,128 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 

35.7 
.37.6 
34.5 
27.7 
28.7 
27.fi 
32.8 

33.7 
39  9 
36.0 
37.1 

.36.3 
34.9 
35.7 

38.7 
39  0 
29.8 
41.5 
39.0 
38.0 
.^9.3 
38.8 

.30.0 
34.5 
.34.6 
38.8 
41.4 
.37.1 
36.0 
32.5 
29.7 
36.5 

30.0 
27.6 
32.0 
33.3 
.36.5 
33.5 
36.4 
36.1 
34.0 
34.2 
31.7 
32.3 
33.0 

34.3 
30.4 
22.1 
32  5 
32.2 

26.6 
30.5 
27.2 
26.3 
33.4 
29.1 

35.6 


1896. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


49,403 
45,770| 
41,432 
32,635 
32,847 
24,141 
226,228 

71.167 
128,446 
100,866 
300,479 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 


1,600,657 
I,fi75,is2 
1,416,974 

969.260 
1,037,965 

738,715 
7,438,753 

2,661,646 

4,482,765 

3.197,452 

10,341,863 


144,585  4,135,131 
105,767  .3,617,231 
250,352     7,752,362 


4  B.I.  (1-4) 


97,412 
72.895 
25,021 
93.537 

123,151 
56,86S 
62,559 

530,443 

21,967 
36,  .381 
26,097 
47,751 
97.170 
72,773 
48,607 
45,013 
19.807 
415,569 

33,063 

.39,562 
46,556 
33,890 
33,126 
25,797 
35,140 
35,  .590 
21,347 
79,238 
53,992 
4.S143I 

482,4441 

I 

67,328 

47,8141 

6,048 

58,807 

179,997 

11,753 

12,193 

3,734 

.5,430 

6.485 

39,595 

2,425,107 
"49 


3,64.3,209 
2,893,932 
928,279 
3,872,432 
4,273,340 
2,039,182 
2,320,939 
19,971,313 

623,863 
1,204,310 

926,444 
'  1,566,233 
3,507,837 
2,597,996 
1,861,648 
1,399,904 

612,036 
14,.300;271 

879,476 
1,064,^18 
1.699,294 
1,216,651 
1,228,975 

856,460 
1,170,162 
1,199,-383 

817,590 

.3,082,-358 

1,706,147 

1,575,491 

16,496,205 

2,073,702 
1,616,113 
151,805 
1,6H4,238 
5,605,858 

338,4^6 
3-34,088 
126,209 
174,846 
199,7-^8 
1,173,367 


Yearly  average   for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


32.4 
.36.6 
34.2 
29.7 
31.6 
30.6 
32.9 

37.4 
34.9 
.31.7 
34.4 

28.6 
.^4.2 
.31.0 

37.4 
39.7 
.37.1 
41.4 
34.7 
36.5 
.37.1 
37.7 

28.4 
33.1 
35.5 
32.8 
36.1 
.35.7 
38.3 
31.1 
30.9 
34.4 

26.6 
26.9 
36.5 
35.9 
37.1 
.^^3.2 
33.3 
33.7 
38.3 
38.91 
31.61 
.34.9 
34.2 

30.8 
33.8 
25.1 
28  3 
30.6 

28.8 
27.4 
33.8 
32.2 
.30.8 
29.6 


82,979,992     34.2 


Acres. 


36,059 
36,937 
34,758 
27,856 
25,482 
20,602 
181,694 

49,303 

92,003 

72,820 

214,126 

105,804 

77,4.52 

183,2.56 

79,9.30 
58,562 
19,933 
67,992 
K6,382 
42,299 
40,195 
395,293 

19,077 
30,277 
21,412 
.35,238 
74,011 
57,239 
38,777, 
.34,539! 
14,968 
325,538 


25,12^ 
31,496 


Bushels. 


1,321,775 

1,437,006 

1.250,114 

842,249 

776,604 

612,185 

6,239,933 

1,757,620 
3,420,485 
2,414,752 
7,592,857 

.^,422,247 
2,713,692 
6,135,939 

2.969,920 
2,247,986 
679,782 
2,760,5''0 
3,16f.,993 
1,549,011 
1,42.3,400 
14,796,612 

594,509 
1,047,609 

746,283 
1,291,458 
2,889,884 
2,119.619 
1,.354,672 
1,024,676 

418,235 
11,486,945 

704,676 

888,336 


Bush. 

per 


\      7U,648     2,193,322 


31,086 
24,846 
31, 893 1 
29,079! 
19,41«| 
65,106 
44,642 
40,713 


1,088,786 

83.5,0"  4 

1,016,729 

902,680 

626,885 

2,274,492 

1,417,173 

1,303,896 


414,050  13,251,999 


47,936' 

35,414 

.5,404' 

46,686,' 

135,440, 

9,872 
7,570, 
1,409| 

\        6,992 

25,843 

1,875,240 


1,-592,750 
1,086,266 
141,831 
1,367,409 
4,188,266 

284,286 

222,233 

43,315 

233,676 

783,610 

64,476,051 


36.7 
38.9 
.36.0 
30.2 
30  5 
29.7 
34.3 

35.6 
.37.2 
33.2 
35.5 

32.3 
.35.0 
33.. > 

37.2 
38.4 
34.1 
40.6 
36  7 
36. & 
35.4 
37.4 

31.2 
34.6 
.^4.9 
36.6 
39.0 
.37.0 
34.9 
29.7 
27.9 
35.3 

28.0 

28.2 

31.0 

35.0 
.33.6 

ai.9 

31.0 
32.3 
.34.9 
31.7 
32.0 
32.0 

.33.2 
30.7 
26.2 
29.3 
30.9 

28.8 
29.4 
30.7 
33.4 
30.3 

34.4 


01  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


AREA    AND    PRODUCE-RYE. 

Table  XIII.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  gfoups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of  Rye 
in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ;  also  the 
yield  per  acre. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand    

Welland 

Totals 

Lambton   

Huron 

Bruce    

Totals ... 

Grey   

Simcoe   

Totals.... 

Middlesex 

Oxford    

Brant  

Perth 

Wellington   

Waterloo 

Duflterin   

Totals 

Lincoln 

Wentworth   

Halton   

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward 

Totals 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds  

Grenville  

Dundaa 

Stormont 

Glengarry 

Prescott  

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew     

Lanark  

Totals 

Victoria 

Peterborough 

Haliburton    

Hastings 

Totals , 

Muskoka   , 

Parry  Sound , 

Nipissing , 

Manitoulin 

Algoma , 

t;^  Totals 

^    KIM 

The  Province   .    ... 


Acres. 


1,725 
2.130 
3,578 

12,368 
2,201 
3,888 

25,890 

1,245 
2,235 
3,202 
6,682 

3,172 

8,449 

11,621 

2,584 
3,274 
5,521 
924 
5.500 
3,900 
4,976 
26,679 

2,346 

3,862 

2,384 

6,690 

4,678 

10,654 

10,813 

14,193 

6,799 

62,419 

3,733 

3,357 

3,800 

3,721 

2,565 

1,151 

12 

54 

61 

2,070 

6,826 

2,604 

29,954 

4,998 

6,362 

465 

11,521 

23,346 

308 
218 
21 
411 
236 
1,194 

187,785 


1897. 

Bush. 

Bushels. 

per 

acre. 

35,363 

20.5 

40,044 

18.8 

67,266 

18  8 

191,704 

15.5 

42,039 

19.1 

69,595 

17.9 

446,011 

17.2 

24.776 

19.9 

50,064 

22.4 

1896. 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 


64,0401 
138,8801 

65.9781 
142,7881 
208,7661 

52,197 

66,135 
108,212 

19,312 
115,500 

82.680 
104,994 
549,030 

48,093 

91,529 

47,680 

147,849 

96,367 

193,903 

179,496 

201.541 

113,543 

1,120,001 

63,461 

47,669 

65,740 

55,443 

51.300 

26,358 

240 

713 

1,342 

34,983 

105,803 

42,906 

496,018 

93,463 

107,518 

7,580 

193,552 

402,113 

5,298 
3,619 
399 
7,480 
4,390 
21,186 

3,382,005 


20.0 
20.8 
I 
20.8 
16.9 
18.0 

20.2 
20.2 
19  6 
20.9 
21.0 
21.2 
21.1 
20.6 

20. R 
23.7 
20.0 
22.1 
20.6 
18.2 
16.6 
14.2 
16.7 
17.9 

17.0 
14.2 
17.3 
14.9 
20.0 
22.9 
20.0 
13.2 
22.0 
16.9 
15.5 
16.51 
16.6 

18  7 
16.9 
16.3 

16.8 
17.2 

17.2 
16.6 
19.0 
18.2 
18.6 
17.7 


Bushels. 


2,3551 
2,688 
4,276, 

13,  .344 1 
1,196 
2, 607 1 

26,466, 

1,248 
1,606 
1,798 
4,652 

1,748 
5,753 
7,501 

3,298 
4,022 
5,634 
878 
4,441 
3,204 
4,807 
26,284 

1,5.52 
3,134 
1,441 
2,335 
2,336 
8,-594 
8,803 

12,174 
5,807 

46,176 

2,916 
2,212 
1,911 
3,564 
1,376 
675 
8 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 


Acres. 


89 

2,307 

4,617 

2,124 

21,799 

2,192 

4,721 

353 

7,665 

14,931 

228 
155 
39 
272 
177 
871 


18.0    148,680 
50 


37.916 
44,352 
H2,002 

146,784 
14,830 
36,237 

342,121 

20,966 
25.535 
26.251 
72,752 

29,541 
100,102 
129,643 

52,108 
60,330 
92.398 
19,316 
75,497 
54.468 
76,4311 
430,548 

22,194 

47,6371 

21.0391 

35,259' 

34,1061 

145,239: 

128,5241 

168,0011 

60,3931 

662,392} 

36,158 
35,392 
.35,545 
63,796 
31,098 
10,125 
120 


1,8511 

40.8341 

73,872] 

37,fi07 

366,5981 

29,811 

71,287| 

7,766 

104,244' 

213,108 


3,534 
2,279 
780 
3,808 
.3.310 
13,711 


16.11 
16.5 
14  5' 
11. Oi 
12.4 
13.91 
12.9 

16.8 
15.9 
14.6 
15.6 

16.9 
17.4 
17.3 

15.8 
15.0 
16.4 
22.0 
17.0 
17.0 
15.9 
16.4 

14.3 
15.2 
14.6 
15.1 
14.6 
16.9' 
14.6 
13.81 
10.4 
14.3 

12.41 
16. Oi 
18.6 
17.9' 
22.6 
15.0 
15. o! 


20.81 
17. 7| 
16  0 
17.8 
16.81 

13.6 
15. l| 
22.0 
13  6 
14.31 

15.5 
14.71 
20. 0' 
14.0 
18.7 
15.7 


2,230,873     15.0 


1,099 
1,098 
1,916 
7,971 
903 
1,020 
14,007 

433 

545 

715 

1,693 

829 
2,893 
3,722 

998 
1,627 
1,820 

339 
1,520 
1,047 
1,336 
8,686 

670 
1,356 
749 
1,568 
1,715 
3,494 
5.290 

11,226 
7,642 

33,710 

3,976 
3,183 

i    5,002J 

1,219 

4.'?8 

54 

1811 

2471 

4,37l| 

6,374 

3,410' 

28,455; 

1,487 1 

3,716| 

257 

11.185 

16,645 

312 

279 

37 

\       258 

886 

107,804 


Bushels. 


Bush, 
per 


21,120 
21,455 
32,859 

108,304 
14,289 
16,637 

214,664 

7,8.57 
10,225 
12,719 
30,801 

14,742 
50,119 
61,861 

18.034 

26,732 

29,351 

6,5.50 

27,418 

19,373 

24,605 

152,063 

I 

11,261 

24.346 

12,726 

29,924 

29,609 

60, 5  =.0 

79,588 

1.50,376 

108,064 

506,444 

58,927 
50,489 

85,518 

26,816 

8,690 

884 

3,219 

4,773 

78,  .334 

117,102 

62,751 

497,603 

24,792 

56,700 

4,327 

172,  .393 

258,212 

6,667 
5,649 

628  j 

4,6951 
16,639! 

1,741,187 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 ). 


A.  1898 


AREA    AND    PR  O  D  UC  E— P  E  AS  . 

Table  XIV.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of  Peas 
in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  18!17,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ;  also  the 
yield  per  acre. 


Counties, 


1897. 


Acres. 


Essex 

Kent   

Elgin  . . . .  , 
Norfolk  . . . . 
Haldimand 
Welland  ... 
Totals . , 


Lambton 

Huron 

Bruce  

Totals . 


Grey   

Simcoe   . . . 
Totals. 


Middlesex   , 
Oxford    .   .. 

Brant  

Perth 

Wellington 

Waterloo   . , 

Dutferin  .  ,  , 

Totals  . 


Lincoln 

Wentworth  

Halton   

Peel  

York  

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward    . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington. 

^rontenac 

Leeds    , 


Grenville  . 
Dundas  . . . 
Stormont  . 
Glengarry 
Prescott . . . 
Russell  . . . 
Carleton  . . 
Renfrew  . . 
Lanark  . . . 
Totals. 


Victoria 

Peterborough 
Haliburton   . . 
Hastings    . . , . 

Totals..,. 


Muskoka  . . . 
Parrv  Sound 
Nipi.sising  . . . 
Manitoulin    . 

Algoma 

Totals... 


The  Province 


1.904 
5,136 
10,250 
16,995 
19,386 
7,269 
60,940 

11,312 

52,517 

59,697 

123,526 

65,835 

61,263 

127,098 

22,110 
18,858 
14,137 
33,2.S0 
40,548 
20,773 
22,480 
172,146 

8,062 
15,156 
16,002 
24,063 
44,058 
32,324 
32,558 
35,660 
25,286 
233,169 

19,965 

10,528 

j  4,647 

1 1,466 

1,579 

1,284 

3,192 

3,404 

2,275 

8,2'?9 

24,915 

9,880 

84,264 

24,791 

21,526 

2,679 

26,962 

75,958 

3,993 
4,2.50 
1,988 
5,911 
3,492 
19,634 


Bushels. 


Bush. 

per 

acre 


37,318 
89,880 
137,350 
190.344 
209,  .369 
69,782 
734,043 

140,269 

835,020 

1,014,849 

1,990,138 


371,448 
316.982 
159,748 
501,773 
543,343 
332,368 
254,024 
2,479,686 

112,062 
221,278 
307,2.^8 
440,353 
801.8.''6 
478,305 
494,882 
563.428 
343,890 
3,763,382 

200,958 

169,501 

85.029 

29,320 

30,317 

21,186 

67,032 

53.783 

45,500 

164,  .580 

418,  .572 

163,020 

1,418,798 

404,093 

372,^.52 

.'^5,631 

393,645 

1,205,921 

57,499 
76,500 
31,80i^ 

110,536 
82,062 

358,403 


896,735  13,867,093 


19.6 
17.5 
13.4 
11.2 
10.8 
9.6 
12.0 

12.4 
15  9 
17.0 
16.1 


967,775     14.7 

918,945      15.0 

1,886,720      14.8 


16.8 
16.8 
11.3 
15.1 
13.4 
16.0 
11.3 
14.4 

13.9 
14.6 
19.2 
18.3 
18.2 
14.8 
15.2 
15  8 
13.6 
16.1 

16.5 
16.1 
18.7 
20.0 
19.2 
16.5 
21.0 
15.8 
20.0 
20.0 
16.8 
16.5 
17.2 

16.3 
17.4 
13.3 
14.6 
15.9 

14.4 
18.0 
16.0 
18.7 
23.5 
18.3 

15.5 


1896. 


Acres,  j  Bushels. 


Bush. 

per 

acre. 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 


2,682 

.3,904 

8,151 

12,  .^09 

16,696 

6,146 

50,088 

10,204 

45,443 

53,486 

109,133 

56,597 

59,124 

115,721 

18,791 
16,310 
12,396 
29,465 
.37,899 
19,273 
20,021 
154,155 

7,137 
14,253 
13,696 
21,328 
41,117 
31,225 
34,468 
35,715 
26,242 
225,181 

12,230 

11,149 

4,063 

1,635 

1,507 

1,595 

2,776 

2.864 

1,712 

9,136 

23,704 

10,667 

83,028 

24,059 
21,794 
2.328 
26,210 
74,391 

3,797 
3,874 
1,632 
5,8,32 
2.769 
17,904 


47,203 
74,176 
136,937 
225,162 
273,814 
96,492 
853,784 

166,121 

995.202 

1,374,590 

2,525,913 

1,284,752 
1,460,363 
2,746,115 

315,689 
340,879 
247,920 
701,267 
841,358 
397,024 
428,449 
3,272,586 

104,200 
263,681 
280,768 
420,162 
842,899 
711,930 
789,317 
664,299 
464,483 
4,541,739 

207,910 

186,188 

81.666 

33,191 

.34,812 

31.741 

59,962 

57,  .365 

40,746 

204,646 

509,636 

2.37,874 

1,685,737 

505,239 

468,571 

44,232 

445,570 

1,463,612 

78,218 
84,841 
41,942 

137,635 
62,026 

404,662 


829,601  17,493,148 


17.6 
19.0 
16.8 
18.0 
16  4 
15.7 
17.0 

15.3 
21.9 
25.7 
23.1 

22.7 
24.7 
23.7 

16  8 
20.9 
20.0 
23.8 
22.2 
20.6 
21.4 
21.2 

14.6 
18.5 
20.5 
19.7 
20.5 
22.8 
22.9 
18.6 
17.7 
20.2 

17.0 
16.7 
20.1 
20.3 
23. Ij 
19.9 
21.6 
20.1 
23.8 
22.4 
21.5 
22.3 
20.3 

21.0 

21.6 
19.0 
17.0 
19.7 

20.6 
21.9 
25.7 
23.6 
22.4 
22.6 

21.1 


Bu.shel9. 


3,254 
7,652 
12,044 
16.259 
15,101 
4,822 
59,132 

9,282 
37,869 
42.906 
90,057 

49,584 
40,503 
90,087 

20,706 
16,501 
10,836 
25,551 
37,803 
16,577 
14,789 
142,763 

5,622 
12,024 
11,. 500 
16.918 
33,144 
29,291 
26,537 
25.2.59 
17,619 
177,914 

9,860 
10,644 

j-  5,941 

1,499 

2,161 

4,709 

6,4691 

3,070 

11,597 

21,778 

11,383 

89,111 

18,724 
17,327 
1,907 
20,692 
58,650 

3,269 

2,481 

646 

\    5,600 

11,936 

719,650 


Bush. 

l>er 

acre. 


61,402 
143,662 
211,527 
283,984 
245,431 

76,319 
1,022,325 

163,683 

823,673 

956,704 

1,944,060 

1,024,669 

868,778 

1,893,447 

391,728 
333,886 
194,677 
657,635 
805,814 
365,499 
293,019 
2,931,758 

9\227 
225,620 
232,992 
.335,298 
701,988 
581,181 
511,726 
441,498 
309,977 
3,435,607 

174,452 
187,342 

111,764 

31,841 

42,082 

81,869 

10.5,768 

57, 878 1 

243,498 

433,406 

233,050 

1,702,940 

.369,663 

330,626 

33,235 

364,968 

1,098,492 

64,704 
50.593 

12,847 

137,152 
265,296 


18  9 
18  8 
17.6 
17.5 
16.3 
15.8 
17.3 

17.6 
21.8 
22.3 
21  6 

20.7 
21.4 
21.0 

18.9 
20.2 

18  0 
21  8 
21.3 
21.4 

19  8 
20.5 

16.9 
18.8 
20.3 
19.8 
21.2 
19.8 
19.3 
17.5 
17.6 
19.3 

17.7 
17.6 

18.8 

21.2 
19.5 
17.4 
16.3 
18.9 
21.0 

19  9 
20.5 
19.1 

19.7 
19.1 
17.4 
17.6 
18.7 

19.9 

20  8 
19.9 

24.5 

22.2 


14,293,825   19.9 


51 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189S 


AREA    AND    PRODUCE-CORN. 

Table  XV.  Sho\vinef  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area,  produ-e  and  yield  per 
acre  of  Corn  for  husking  and  for  silo  and  fodder  in  Ontario  for  the  years  1896  and  1897,  also  the  total, 
acreage  for  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years   1882-97. 


Counties . 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin     

Norfolk 

Haldimand  

Welland 

Totals 

Lambton   

Huron 

Bruce    

Totals 

Grey   

Simcoe     

Totals  

Middles?x  

Oxford    

Brant  

Perth 

Wellington  

Waterloo   

Dufferin  

Totals 

Lincoln 

Wentworth   

Halton    

Peel  

York  ..: 

Ontario    

Durham .....' , 

Northumberland   

Prince  Edward    , 

Totals , 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds 

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont 

Glengarry    

Prescott 

Russell  

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanai  k , 

Trjtals 

Victoria 

Peterborough  

Haliburton   

Hastings , 

Totals 

Muskoka   

■Parry  Sound 

Nipissing  , 

Manitoulin    

Algoma 

Totals 

The  Province , 


For  husking. 


Acres. 


57,842 
43,536 
25,889 
20,495 
4,398 
10,269 
162,429 


Bushels. 


4,569,518 

3,569,952 

2,148,787 

1,393,660 

281,472 

626,409 

12,589,798 


For  silo  and  fodder. 


20,055'  1,323,630 

2,7241  177,060 

1,112  62,272 

23,891  1,562,962 


1,690 
2,465 
4,155 

2?,589 

11,725 

6,892 

901 

580 

2,196 

160 

45,043 

9,033 
4,874 
1,437 
962 
2,023 
3.326 
2,969 
6,551 
P,C90 
40,865 

4,889 
4,110 
9,212 
5,535 
5,651 
3,643 
1,989 
3,638 
1,220 
2,503 
997 
2,151 
45,538 

567 

727 

217 

10,912 

12,423 

317 
147 

57 
110 

55 
686 


1,694,175 

9.^8,000 

503,116 

66  674 

24,940 

144,936 

9,600 

3,381,441 

713,607 
375,298 
119,271 
57,720 
137,564 
259,428 
169,233 
406,162 
639,540 
2,877,823! 

312,896 
291,810 
718,536 
437,265 
463,382' 
302,369 
137,241 
236,470 

62,220 
152.683' 

47,856, 

•k  03, 248 1 

3,265,976 

35,154 

55,252 

8,029 

643,808 

742,213 

12,997 
6.733 
2,850 
6,600; 
1,980 

30,160 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 

79.0 
82.0 
83  0 

68  0 
64. Ol 
61.0 

77.5 

66.0 
65.0 
56.0; 
65.4 


87,880  52.0 
125,715  51.0 
213,595     51.4 


335,030,  24,663,998 


75.0 
80  0 
73.0 
74  0 
43.0 
66  0 
60.0 
75.1 

79.0 
77.0 
S3  0 
60.0 
68.0 
78.0 
57.0 
62.0 
66.0 
70.4 

64.0 
71.0 
78.0 
79.0 
82.0 
83.0 
69.0 

65. o; 

51.0' 
61.0' 
48.0 
48.0 
71.7 

62.0 
76.0 
37.0 
59.0 
59.7 

41.0 
39.0 
50.0 
60.0 
36.0 
44.0 


Acres. 


2,206 
3,482 
3,174 
3,821 
3,318 
2,449 
18,450 

5,129 

8.077 

7,117 

20,323 

9,504 

5,0941 

14,598 1 

7,652 
8,805 
.^388 
7,856, 
6,263 
3,689 
1.289 
38,942 

2,648 
5,051 
3,854 
4,239 
8,845 
5,795 
3,945 
5,815 
4,274 
44,466 

3,557 
5,714 
7,573 
5,337 
5,603 
4,147 
5,680 
1,823 
1,660 
6,720 
2,784 
5,806 
56,404 

2,445 

3,472 

227 

8,780 

14,924 

323 

206 

49 

186 

134 


Tons. 


Tons 

per 

acre. 


Total  area. 


12,773 
23,712 
37,866 
38.095 
29,397 
19,372 
161,215 


5.79 
6.81 
11.93 
9.97 
8.86 
7.91 
8.74 


53,803  10.49 
104,516'  12.94 

93,  .517 1  13.14 
251,836    12.39 

130,230    13.71 

66,986'  13.15 

197,216    13.51 


92.  .589 


12.10 


13.38; 
12.71, 
12  89 


117,811 
43,061 

101,264 
81.106  12.95 
40,690'  11.03 
17,840    13.84 

494,361    12.69 


28,9f6 
56,925 
50,526 
5.5,828 

118,611 
72,4951 
47,340' 
69,780, 
56,118 

556,619 

39,554 
80,796 
99,433 
71,569 
82,420 
70,789 
96,219 
24,118 
22,792 
99,322 
3S,.357| 
8V.445 
80J,814 

30,342 

46,178! 

3,307 

113,174 

193,001 


10.95 
11.27 
13.11 
13.17 
13  41 
12  51 
12.00 
12  00 
13.13 
12.52 

11  12 
14.14 
13.13 
13.41 
14.71 
17.07 
16.94 
13.23 
13.73 
14.78 
12.70 
14.20 
14.27 

12.41 
13.30 
14.57 
12.89 

12  93 


73.6    209,005 
~~52 


4,099  12.69 

2,074  10.07 

490  10.00 

2,275'  12  23 

1.822  13.60 

10,760  11.98 


1897. 
Acres. 


1896 
Acres. 


1882-97. 
Acres. 


60,048 
47,018 
29, 06:^ 
24,316 
7,716 
12,718 
180,879 

25,184 

10,801 

8,229 

44,214! 

11,194 

7,559 

18,753 

30,241 

20.530 

10,280 

8,757 

6,843 

5,885 

1,449 

83,985 

11,681 

9,92.5 

5,291 

5,201 

10,868 

9,121 

6,914 

12,366 

13,964 

85,331 

8,446 

9,824 

16,785 

10,872 

11,254 

7,790 

7,669 

5,461 

2,880 

9,223 

.3,781 

7,957 

101,942 

3,012' 

4,19'^' 

444 

19,692, 

27,347' 

640 ; 

353 
106 
296 
189 
1,584 


2,669,822    12. 77    544,035    496,629    276,063- 


56.309 
43,169 
27,977 
25,0S9 
6,884 
12,049 
171,457 


38,37r 

31,180 

18,246- 

16,403- 

2,974 

7,597 

114,777 


24,543  12,44.S 

10,077  3,91» 

6,920[  2,29S 

41,540  18,655 


9,296 

6,068 

15,364 

31,228 

20,847 

10,153 

7,929 

6,297 

5,176 

1,094 

82,724 

10,964 

9,868 

.5,334 

4,309 

8,901 

7,765 

6,070 

11,070 

12,122 

76,403 

7,924 
8,153 

1.5,111 
8,855 
9,.368 
5,9^2 
6,635 
4,357 
2,398 
7,2.37 
2,692 
6,212 

84,874 

2,179 
3,n'6, 

294 1 
17,660 
23,149 

460 
271 
116 
161 
107 
1.118 


2,775 
2,549' 
5,324 

16,470 

11,949- 

5,983 

2,79J> 

2,100 

2,228 

.%1 

41,890 

7,406 
6,015 
2.214 
1,653 
3,  MO 
4,067 
3,101 
6,332 
7,985 
42,311 

3,904 
3,629' 

11,939 

3,973 
2,852 
2,6^1 
2,485 
1,181 
.3,704 
1,273 
2,951 
40,522 

993 
1,226 

16-2 

9,640 

12,021 

289 

116 

32^ 

.  126 

563 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


AREA    AND    P  R  0  D  U  C  E— B  U  C  K  W  H  E  A  T. 

Table  XVI.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of 
Huckwheat  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  yeais  1882-07  ; 
also  the  yield  per  acre. 


1897. 

1896. 

Yearly 
sixteen 

average  for  the 
years  1882-97. 

Counties. 

Acres. 

1,2.32 
1,285 
2,731 
7,704 
1,170 
3,2.52 
•  17,374 

1,086 
1,400 
1,560 
4,046 

3,G90 

8,733 

12,423 

1,435 

1,137 

896 

756 

1,412 

293 

1,575 

7,504 

814 

1,288 

473 

1,020 

3,294 

6,710 

7,608 

14.086 

11,914 

47,207 

6,728 
2,758 
3.869 
4,863 
2,558 
2,795 
1,859 
1,655 
1,228 
6.379 
2,924 
5,268 
42,884 

6,180 

4,036 

652 

8,215 

19,083 

429 
255 
93 
210 
161 
1,148 

151,669 

Bushels. 

Bush, 
per 
acre. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bush. 

per 

acre. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bush, 
per 
acre. 

Essex 

Kent 

KIgin 

Norfolk    

27.720 
23,644 
.58,717 

125,575 
21,645 
.56,585 

313,886 

25,087 
.37,240 
36,816 
99, 143 

93,357 
199,112 
292,469 

26,691 
23,650 
16,038 
14,062 
37,983 
5,626 
44,100 
168,150 

15.222 

28.207 

7,237 

27.336 

75.762 

148,291 

178,027 

308.483 

265,682 

1,054,247 

148,689 
57,366 

100.594 

130,328 
76,228 
8.5,248 
49,078 
36,079 
31,560 

165,854 
68,480 

134,861 
1,074,365 

161.298 

94,030 

12,649 

169,229 

437,215 

8,194 
5,789 
2,632 
4,260 
3,896 
24,711 

3,464,186 

22.5 
18.4 
21.5 
16.3 
18.5 
17.4 
18.1 

23.1 

26.6 
23  6 
24.5 

25.3 
22.8 
23.5 

18.6 
20.8 
17.9 
18.6 
26.9 
19.2 
28.0 
22.4 

18.7 
21.9 
15.3 
26.8 
23.0 
22.1 
23.4 
21.9 
22.3 
22.3 

2M 
20.8 
26.0 
26.8 
29.8 
30  5 
26.4 
21.8 
25.7 
26.0 
20.0 
25.6 
25.1 

26.1 
23.3 
19.4 
20.6 
22.9 

19.1 
22.7 
28.3 
20.0 
24.2 
21.5 

22.8 

1,132 
1,014 
2,286 
8,270 
815 
2,321 
15,837 

659 

733 

650 

2,042 

1,938 
7,162 
9,100 

1,237 

1,447 

1,343 

584 

850 

144 

953 

6,558 

676 

1,172 

404 

658 

2.966 

7,027 

9,372 

18,714 

12,227 

53.216 

6,301 
2,447 
3,061 
4,899 
2,093 
2,408 
1,526 
1,884 
1,364 
6,194 
2,377 
4,552 
39,106 

5,423 

4,656 

644 

8,027 

18,750 

304 
279 
113 
163 
148 
997 

145,606 

22,414 
16,731 
44,7i<6 

141,417 
14,426 
45,027 

284,801 

13,180 
11.581 
12,025 
36,786 

35,853 
139,659 
175,512 

28,451 
28,506 
18,131 
13,023 
18,700 
2,023 
20,066 
130,700 

12,371 

13.126 

6,060 

9,870 

62,583 

127,891 

160,261 

273.224 

202,968 

868,354 

112,158 
46,004 
71,321 

118,556 
43,953 
45,752 
26,400 
39,752 
30,281 

141,223 
43,737 
89,219 

808,356 

85,r>83 

55,406 

13,202 

126,024 

280,315 

6,019 
4,687 
1,978 
2,831 
3,330 
18,845 

2,603,669 

19  8 
16.5 
19.6 
17.1 
17.7 
19.4 
18.0 

20  0 
15.8 
18.5 
18.0 

18.5 
19.5 
19.3 

23.0 
19.7 
13.5 
22.3 
22,0 
20.3 
22.0 
19.9 

18.3 
11.2 
15.0 
15.0 
21.1 
18.2 
17.1 
14.6 
16.6 
16.3 

17.8 
18.8 
23.3 
24.2 
21.0 
19.0 
17.3 
21.1 
22.2 
22.8 
18.4 
19.6 
20.7 

15.8 
11.9 
20.5 
15.7 
15.0 

19.8 
16.8 
17.6 
18.5 
22.5 
18.9 

17.9 

1,005 
1,152 
1,843 
5,713 
796 
2,214 
12,723 

688 

458 

521 

1,667 

882 
2,224 
3,106 

808 
803 
794 
199 
336 
155 
322 
3,417 

751 

941 

236 

334 

939 

2,855 

5,053 

10.985 

9,511 

31,605 

4,375 
2,016 

f    6,118 

1.784 
2,258 
1,354 
1,663 
1,062 
4,176 
1,741 
5,221 
31,767 

2,496 

1,993 

375 

5,670 

10,534 

342 

167 

60 

}       177 
746 

95,565 

20,394 
21.981 
36,246 

101,.5R0 
13,528 
39.200 

232,879 

12,703 
9.196 
9.860 

31,759 

17,423 
45,671 
63,094 

16,040 

14,587 

13.428 

4,062 

7,727 

2,668 

7,287 

65,808 

14,281 

17,811 

3,939 

6,159 

20,652 

58,703 

102,512 

211,474 

182.140 

617,761 

90,415 
42,294 

128,150 

43,581 
51,740 
27,818 
32,361 
24,097 
89,435 
34,840 
106,906 
671.637 

47,361 

37,126 

6,834 

111,861 

203,182 

7,679 
3,269 
1,279 

3,816 

16,043 

1,902,163 

20.3 
19.1 
10.7 
17.8 

17.0 

Welland 

17.7 

Totals 

18.3 

Lambton    

Huron 

18.5 
20.1 

18  9 

Totals 

19.1 

Grey 

19.8 

Simcoe   

Totals 

20.5 
20.3 

Middlesex 

19.9 

Oxford 

18.2 

Brant  

Perth 

16.9 
20.4 

Wellington   

23.0 

Waterloo   

17.2 

Dufferin     

Totals 

22.6 
19.3 

Xiincoln 

19.0 

Wentworth  

18.9 

Halton 

16.7 

Peel 

York 

18.4 
22.0 

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward 

20.6 
20.3 
20.2 
19.2 

Totals 

19.5 

Tiennox  and  Addington  . 

Frontenac 

Leeds  

20.7 
21.0 

Grenville   

20.9 

Dundas 

24.4 

22.9 

Glengarry 

20.5 

Prescott 

Rufisell 

19.5 
22.7 

■Carleton 

21.4 

Kenfrew 

20.0 

Lanark  

20.5 

Totals 

21.1 

Victoria 

19.0 

Peterborough 

18.6 

Haliburton   

18.2 

Hastings 

19.7 

Totals 

19.3 

Muskoka   

22.5 

Parry  Sound 

19.6 

Nipiesing 

Manitoulin    

21.3 
21.6 

Algoma 

Totals 

21.5 

The  Province 

19.9 

53 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


AREA    AND    P  R  0  D  U  C  E— B  E  A  NS. 

Table  XVII.  Showing  by  Countj'  Municipalities  and  group?  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of 
Beans  in  Ontario  in  the  years  189t>  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ; 
also  the  yield  per  acre. 


1897. 

1 

189^. 

Yearly 
sixteen 

average  for  the 
years  1882-97. 

Counties. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bush. 

per 

acre. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bush, 
per 
acre. 

1 
Acres. 

741 

21,425 

2,617 

695 

240 

971 

26,689 

964 

160 

130 

1,254 

225 
264 
489 

837 

267 

374 

65 

44 

45 

39 

1,671 

177 

149 

44 

71 

225 

334 

452 

861 

493 

2,806 

219 
273 

}       397 

240 

174 
188 
459 
209 
489 
507 
,           221 
3,376 

169 
156 
35 
443 
803 

48 
24 
11 

}         23 

106 

37, 19  J 

Bush. 
Bushels.       per 
acre. 

Essex 

Kent 

558 

28,968 

4,804 

1,053 

386 

1.248 

37,017 

2,039 
403 
177 

2,619 

316 

692 

1.008 

1,.340 

359 

.582 

41 

61 

53 

134 

2,570 

104 
208 
38 
281 
350 
313 
507 
563 
450 
2,814 

216 
455 
216 
148 
247 
249 
97 
357 
210 
560 
439 
230 
3,424 

189 
136 
43 
585 
953 

9g 
34 
IS 
IS 
25 
18C 

50,591 

9,988 

567,773 

93,678 

16.637 

5,713 

17,722 

711,511 

37,925 
7,859 
4,337 

50,121 

6,636 
16,054 
22,690 

25.058 

7,288 

11,116 

820 

933 

1,219 

3.350 

49,784 

1,706 

4,181 

711 

5,620 

6,405 

5,791 

10,039 

11,429 

7,560 

53,442 

4,450 
9.055 
3,974 
2,664 
4.965 
7,370 
2,687 
7,426 
4,599 

13,328 
7,946 
5,543 

74,007 

3,478 

2,761 

830 

10,004 

17,103 

882 
680 
475 
260 
385 
2,682 

98l,34C 

17.9 
19.6 
19.5 
15.8 
14.8 
14.2 
19.2 

18.6 
19.5 
24.5 
19.1 

21.0 
23.2 
22.5 

18.7 
20.3 
19.1 
20.0 
15  3 
23.0 
25.0 
19.4 

16.4 
20.1 
18.7 
20.0 
18.3 
18.5 
19.8 
20.3 
16.8 
19.0 

20.6 
19.9 
18.4 
18.0 
20.1 
29.6 
27.7 
20.8 
21.9 
23.8 
18.1 
24.1 
21.6 

18.4 
20.3 
20.0 
17.1 
17.9 

9.0 
20. C 
25. C 
20. C 
17. c 
14.4 

19.4 

847 

38,750 

6,802 

1,137 

354 

1,578 

49,468 

2,829 
369 
249 

3,447 

449 

613 

1,062 

2,780 

312 

440 

138 

64 

93 

105 

3,932 

216 

211 

77 

228 
487 
565 
746 

1,547 
829 

4,906 

270 
394 
221 
228 
274 
232 
203 
411 
170 
729 
576 
205 
3,913 

380 

224 

61 

850 

1,515 

43 
38 
15 
2C 
IC 
126 

68,36£ 

12,874 
678,125 
124,477 

19,784 
5,699 

22,092 
863,051 

50,922 
6.273 
4,980 

62,175 

10,103 
10,911 
21,014 

51,708 
5,304 
7,920 
2,070 
1,440 
1,860 
1,733 

72.035 

2,808 

4,093 

1,155 

3,420 

9,740 

6,893 

10.742 

23,300 

14,010 

76,221 

4,779 

8,668 

4,044 

2,394 

5,179 

3,480 

4,060 

7,193 

3,604 

17,642 

12,038 

4,100 

77,181 

6.080 

2,083 

1,098 

14.790 

24,051 

387 
570 
30C 
40C 
15C 
'           1,807 

1,197,53c 

15.2 
17.5 
18.3 
17.4 
16.1 
14.0 
17.4 

18.0 

17  0 
20.0 
18.0 

22.5 

17.8 
19.8 

18.6 
17.0 
18.0 
15.0 
22.5 
20.0 
16.5 
18.3 

13  0 
19.4 
15.0 
15.0 
20.0 
12.2 
14.4 
15.1 
16.9 
15.5 

17.7 
22.0 

18  3 
10.5 
18.9 
15.0 
20.0 
17.5 
21.2 
24.2 
20.9 
20.0 
19.7 

16.0 
9  3 
18.0 
17.4 
15.9 

9.0 
15.0 
20.0 
20. 0 
15.0 
14.3 

17.5 

13,492 
364,680 

49.090 

10,248 
3,704 

13,246 
454,460 

16,759 
3,377 
2,401 

22,537 

4,108 
5,030 
9,144 

15,361 

5,229 

5.265 

1,323 

747 

807 

18.2 
17.0 

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand   

18.8 
14.7 
15.4 

Welland 

13.6 

Totals 

17. a 

Lambton 

17.4 

Huron 

Bruce  

Totals 

Grey   

Simcoe   

21.1 

18.5 
18.0 

18.3 
19.1 

Totals 

18. T 

Middlesex 

18  4 

Oxford    

19  & 

Brant 

Perth 

14.1 
20.4 

Wellington   

17.0 

Waterloo 

17.9 

Duflferin  

7871    20.2 

Totals 

29,519     17.7 

Lincoln 

'       1 
2.9871     16.9 

Wentworth 

Halton   

2,743'     18.4 
755'     17.2 

Peel 

1,417,     20.0 

York 

Ontario 

4,609      20.5 
5,562     16.7 

Durham  

7,652 

14,841 

8,752 

16  Q' 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward 

17.2 
17.8 

Totals 

49,318 

17. (> 

Lennox  and  Addington  . 
Frontenac  

4,441      20.^ 
5,859     21.5- 

Leeds    

Grenville  

7,328     18.5- 

Dunda.'i 

5,131      21.4 

Stormont 

4,032     23.2 

Glengarry 

3,502,     18.6 

Prescott 

9,886      21.5 

Russell 

Carleton 

4,005 
10,417 
10,116 

19.2 
21.3 

Renfrew 

20. a 

Lanark  

4,665!     21.1 

Totals 

Victoria 

69,382 

2.721 

2,279 
?95 

20.6 
16.1 

Peterborough 

14.6 

Haliburton 

17.0 

Hastings 

1           7,880;    17.8 

Totals 

1         13,475|    16.8 

Muskoka   

752'     15.7 

Parry  Sound 

4111     17.1 

Nipissing 

1              230     20.9 

Manitoulin 

443     19. a 

Algoma 

Totals 

1.836 

)     17. S 

The  Province   

[        649,671 

L      17.5 

54 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A  1898 


AREA    AND    P RO D U C E  —  P O T A T O E S  . 
Table     XVIII.      Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of 
Potatoes  in  Ontario  in  the  yeara  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ; 
also  the  yield  per  acre. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin    

Norfolk 

Haldimand  

Welland 

Totals 

LambtoD    

Huron 

Bruce  

Totals 

Grey   

Simcoe    

Totals 

Middlesex  

Oxford    

Brant 

Perth    

Wellington   

Waterloo  

Dufferin 

Totals 

Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Halton   

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland  

Prince  Edward 

Totals 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac  

Leeds  

Grenville   

Dundas 

Stormonc 

Glengarry 

Prescott 

Russell  

Carletoa 

Renfrew 

Lanark  

Totals 

Victoria  

Peterborough 

Halibufton    

Hastiiigi 

Totals 

Muskoka   

Parry  Sound 

Nipissing 

Manitoulin   

Algoma 

Totals 

The  Province 


1897. 


Acres, 


Bushels. 


3,575 
3,618 
2,974 
3,610 
1,533 
2,630 
17,840 

4,177 

5,054 

4,620 

13,851 

7,341 

8.470 

15,811 

6,425 
2,999 
2,651 
4,281 
6,474 
3,230 
4,467 
30,527 

2,304 
4,304 
1,707 
4,756 
9,555 
5,317 
3,316 
4,896 
1,911 
38,066 

2,801 
3,75S 
3,249 
3,166 
2,300 
1,825 
2,328 
2,313 
1,400 
5,500 
4,142 
3,101 
35,883 

3,223 

3,167 

689 

5.357 

12,436 

l,352i 

1,381 1 

6251 

712, 

849, 

4,919, 


350,350 

238,788 

193,310 

234,650 

81,249 

91,080 

1,189,427 

233,912 

454,860 

452,760 

1,141,532 

682,713 

813,120 

1,495,833 

417,625 
254,915 
201,476 
312,513 
517,920 
281,010 
495,837 
2,481,296 

163,584 
314,192 
150,216 
437,552 
746,290 
505,115 
315,020 
435,744 
168,613 
3,225,326 

308,110 
375,800 
425,619 
402,082 
266,800 
180,675 
286,344 
268,308 
166,600 
676.500 
497,040 
480,655 
4,334,533 

389,983 

456,048 

77,168 

567,842i 

1.491,041 

206,856 
200,245 
98,750 
101,816 
134,142 
741,809 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 


169,333  16,100,797 


98 
66 
65 
65 
53 
36 
67 

56 
90 

98 
82 

93 
96 
95 

65 
85 
76 
73 
80 
87 
111 
81 

71 

73 
88 
92 
78 
95 
95 
89 
83 
85 

110 
100 
131 
127 
116 
99 
123 
116 
119 
123 
120 
155 
121 

121 
144 
112 
106 
120 

153 
145 
168 
143 
158 
151 


1896. 


Acres. 


3,390 
3,730 
3,482 
3,813 
1,447 
2,956 
18,818 

3,977 

5,221 

4,896 

14,094 

7,439 

9,276 

16,715 

7,380 
3,411 
2,748 
4,195 
7,395 
3,381 
5,033 
33,543j 

2,539, 
4,839 
1,886] 
4,750: 
9,780; 
6,102; 
3,547 
5,072 
2,143 
40,658 

2,805 
3,751 
3,510 
3,414 
2,426 
1,882 
2,279 
2,354 
1,396 
6,021 
4,488 
3,231 
37,557 

3,220 
3,319 

728 

5,531 

12,798 

1,379 

1,375 

650 

680 

698 

4,782 


Bushels. 


Bush, 
per 


328,830 
410,300 
414,368 
377,487 
144,700 
271,952 
1,947,627 

401,677 

730,940 

641,376 

1,773,993 

1,100,972 
1,187,328 
2,288,300 

885, 60  J 
426,375 
348,996 
654,420 
983,535 
415,863 
634,158 
4,348,947 

205,659 
658,104 
184,828 
603,500 
958,440 
659,016 
361,794 
512,272 
214,300 
4,257,913 

277,695 
408,859 
459,810 
385,782 
303,250 
201,374 
289,433 
383,702 
182,876 
812,835 
637,296 
465,264 
4,808,176 

309,120 

302,029 

97,552 

492,259 

1,200,960 

175,133 
203,500 
104,000 
102,000 
94,928 
679,561 


Yearly   average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 


97 1 
110 
119 

99 
100 

92 
100 

101 
140 
131 
126 

148 
128 
137 

120 
125 
127 
166 
133 
123 
126 
130 

81 
136 

98 
106 

98 
108 
102 
101 
100 
105 

99 
109 
131 
113 
125 
107 
127 


Bushels. 


Bush. 

per 

acre. 


95,    178,965  21,305,477 

~55 


127 

148 
160 
150 
136 
142 

119 


2,972 
3,353 
2,969 
3,370 
1,419 
2,493 
16,566 

3,196 
5,015 
4,637 

12,848 

6,821 

7,634 

14,355 

5,785 
3,229 
2,297 
3,818 
6,064 
2,997 
3,568 
27,758 

1,963 
3,796 
1,631 
3,351 
7,880 
4,683 
3,254 
4,511 
2,288 
33,357 

3,126 
3,901 

7,180 

2,351 
1,967 

2,357 


163 

2,408 

131 

1,458 

135 

5,968 

142 

3,969 

144 

3,459 

128 

38,144 

96 

3,137 

91 

2,889 

134 

688 

89 

5,611 

94 

12,325 

1,337 
996 
283 

I       968 

3,584 

158,937 


280,927 
379,076 
.300,767 
329,706 
139,094 
226,010 
1,655,580 

304,210 

613,928 

540,620 

1.458,758 

844,893 

961,009 

1,805,902 

624,965 
361,069 
251,009 
451,604 
763,748 
356,333 
484,971 

3,293,699 
I 
187,462 
432,448 
178,379 
352,679 
851,665 
575,557 
399,410 
493,720 
212,191 

3,683,511 

346,708 
405,580 

860,030 

315,466 
219,846 
261,555 
308,887 
161i759 
756,121 
564,502 
484,733 
4,685,187 

399,606 

349,130 

92,020 

642,952 

1,483,708 

179,533 

150,674 

43,289 

158,168 

531,664 

18,598,009 


95 

113 

102 

98 

98 

91 

100 

95 
122 
117 
114 

124 
128 
126 

108 
112 
109 
118 
126 
119 
136 
119 

95 
114 
109 
105 
108 
123 
123 
109 

93 
110 

111 
104 

120 

134 
112 
111 
128 
111 
127 
142 
140 
123 

127 
121 
134 
115 

120 

134 
151 
153 

16a 

148 

117 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1S98 


AREA    AND    P  ROD  U  C  E  -  M  AN  G  E  L  -  W  U  R7  E  LS  . 

Table  XIX.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of 
Mangel-Wurzels  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years 
1882-97  ;  also  the  yield  per  acre. 


1897. 

1896. 

Yearly 
sixteen 

average  for  the 
years  18*^2-97. 

Counties. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bush. 

per 
acre. 

Acies. 

Bushels. 

Bush, 
per 
acre. 

Acres. 

Bushels. 

Bush 
per 
acre. 

Essex 

491 
595 
934 
599 
433 
227 
3,279 

1,183 
3,743 
1,229 
6,155 

942 

828 

1,770 

2,966 
2,448 

779 
3,776 
2,376 
1,126 

219 
13,690 

387 

1,166 

941 

1,039 

2,795 

1,375 

748 

750 

152 

9,353 

149 
464 
396 
263 
283 
228 
299 
149 
204 

1,039 
252 
405 

4,131 

1,395 

511 

43 

597 

2,546 

72 
36 
45 
61 
37 
251 

41,175 

219,477 

239,785 

428,706 

225,823 

99,1.57 

64,922 

1,277,870 

427.063 
1,665.635 

596,065 
2,688,763 

409,770 
383,  ."^64 
793,134 

1,24.5,720 
1,069,776 

387,163 
],.551,936 
1,149,984 

481,928 

79,278 

5,965,785 

157,122 
572,506 
494,025 
537,163 

1,266,135 

671,  OCO 

381,480 

£60,750 

.57,304 

4,497,485 

43,955 
143,376 
161,172 
129,133 
114,049 

91,200 
144,417 

47,233 

95,064 
482,096 

94,500 

148,635 

1,694,830 

581,715 

263,676 

12,040 

246,561 

1,103,992 

23,760 
14,868 
13,500 
18,300 
11,100 
81,528 

18,103,387 

447 
403 
459 
377 
229 
286 
390 

361 
445 
485 
437 

435 
463 

448 

420 
437 
497 
411 
484 
428 
.362 
436 

406 
491 
525 
517 
453 
488 
510 
481 
377 
481 

295 
309 
407 
491 
403 
400 
483 
317 
466 
464 
375 
367 
410 

417 
516 
280 
413 
434 

330 

413 
300 
300 
300 
325 

440 

546 
603 
839 
463 
.S40 
183 
2,974 

1,055 
3,143 
1,017 

.5,215 

713 

661 

1,374 

2,716 

2,009 

600 

,3,464 

2,207 

812 

209 

12,017 

311 

883 

881 

829 

2,492 

1,229 

597 

587 

233 

8,042 

144 
350 
370 
2l3 
247 
230 
255 
136 
382 
892 
242 
290 
3,751 

1,434 

447 

44 

599 

2,524 

64 
22 
29 
55 
34 
204 

86,101 

204,750 
278,586 
452,221 
198,627 
115,940 
69,540 
1,319,664 

521,170 
1,684,648 

447,480, 
2,653,298 

307,303 
282,247 
589,550 

1,453,060 

1,121,022 

354,000 

1,939,840 

1,127,777 

349,972 

107.635 

6,4.53,306 

109,472 
439,734 
338,304 
328,284 
912,072 
540,760 
241,188 
249,475 
84,579 
3,243,868 

43,200 

120,570 

137,270 

82,218 

104,975 

99,590 

70,125 

62,424 

178,394 

380,884 

92,444 

144,420 

1,516,514 

635,262 
140,805 
10,780 
208,452 
995,299 

18,880 
8,250 
5,800 
30,250 
14,722 
77,902 

16.849,401 

375 
462 
539 
429 
341 
380 
444 

494 
536 
440 
509 

431 
427 
429 

535 
558 
590 
560 
511 
431 
515 
537 

352 
498 
384 
396 
366 
440 
404 
425 
363 
403 

300 
345 
371 
386 
425 
433 
275 
4.^9 
467 
427 
382 
,       498 
]       404 

443 
315 
245 
348 
394 

295 
375 
200 
550 
433 
382 

467 

318 
377 
430 
279 
204 
147 
1,755 

579 
2,028 

572 1 
3,179 

462 

632 

1,094 

1,707 

1,438 

429 

2,163 

1,280 

569 

140 

7,726 

258 
554 
536 
558 

1,886 
843 
539 
519 
164 

5,857 

132 
220 

}       333 

143 

79 

117 

94 

167 

642 

144 

198 

2,259 

793 

358 

15 

1          500 

1,666 

52 

1            15 

7 

}        36 

no 

23,646 

130,174 
161,498 
196,884 
114.492 
64,121 
58,529 
725,698 

242,988 

968,775 

249,058 

1,460,821 

195,836 
267,705 
463,541 

767,058 
690,640 
214,657 

1,012,855 

589,470 

247,608 

60,252 

3,582,540 

102,284 
269,976 
243,814 
233,101 
834,908 
385,629 
242,105 
226,918 
51,798 
2,590,533 

44,500 

77,707 

134,344 

60,842 
30,358 
45,542 
34,362 
64,225 

247,732 
54,745 
81.122 

875,479 

364,522 
139,158 
4,398 
181,344 
689,422 

14,662 
5,488 
1,983 

12,359 

34,492 

10,422,526 

409 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk    

Ha'dixnand 

428 
458 
410 
314 

Welland 

398 

Totals  

414 

Xiambton   

420 

Huron 

B'uce  

478 
435 

Totals 

460 

Grey   

Simcoe   

424 
424 

Totals 

424 

Middlesex 

449 

Oxford    

480 

Brant 

500 

Perth 

Wellington   

468 
461 

Waterloo  . 

Dufferin 

Totals 

435 
430 
464 

Ijincoln 

Wentworth 

3S6 

487 

Halton   

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

455 
418 
443 
457 

Durham 

449 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward 

437 
316 

Totals 

442 

Lennox  and  Addington  . 
Frontenac   

337 
353 

Leeds  

Grenville . 

Dundas 

Stormont 

403 

425 
384 

G-lengarry    

389 

Prescott 

Russell 

Carleton 

366 
409 

386 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

380 
410 

Totals 

388 

Victoria 

Peterborough  

460 
389 

Haliburton    

293 

Hastings 

363 

Totals 

414 

Muskoka   

'      282 

Parry  Sound 

366 

Nipissing 

283 

Manitoulin 

Algoma 

343 

Totals 

'      314 

The  Province  

'      441 

56 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


AREA    AND    PRODUCE-CARROTS. 

Table  XX.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of  Carrots 
in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ;  also  the 
yield  per  acre. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk    . . . 
Haldimand 
Welland  . . . 
Totals.. 


Lambton   . 

Huron 

Bruce    

Totals. 


■Grey  

Simcoe   . . . 
Totals. 


Middlesex   . 
Oxford    .... 

Brant    

Perth 

Wellington 

Waterloo   . . 

Dufferin  . . , 

Totals . , 


Tiincoln 

Wentworth 

Haltcn   

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

Durham 

"Northumberland. 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals  ..   .   . 


Ijennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds 

Crenville   

Dundas 

Stormnnt 

Glengarry   

Pre'cott 


Russell 
Carleton  . . 
Renfrew  . . 
Lanark 
Totals. 


1897. 


Victoria 

Peterborough 

Haliburton    . . 

Hastings    . . . . 

Ti.tals.... 


Muskoka  . . . 
Parry  Sound 
Nipissing. . . . 
Manitoulin    . 

A'g'^ma    

Totals . . . 


Acres. 


The  Province 


224 
219 
284 
34'' 
1S3 
88 
.  1,340 

398 

381 

296 

1,075 

325 
411 
736 

896 
320 
165 
305 
248 
336 
122 
2,392 

186 
324 
114 

408 
492 
126 
227 
297 
62 
2,236 

94 
316 
183 
238 
289 
183 
259 
188 
220 
397 
153 
197 
2,717 

190 

466 

23 

395 

1,C74 

1681 

105 

20 

83 

79 

455 

12,025 


Bushels 


Bush, 

per 
acre. 


64,736 
71,832 
98,548 

106.704 
46,482 
24,112 

412,414 

121,390 
137,541 
131,424 
390,355 

106,600 
160.701 
267,301 

353,920 
108. 160 

56,430 
117,425 
102,176 
119,280 

41,114 
898,505 

70,680 
134,460 

44,346 
179,928 
179,088 

50,274 
115,089 
114,345 

22,816 
911,026 

24,534 
78,052 
53,985 
96,390 
94,792 
64,233 

128,723 
56,844 
94,820 

151,654 
44,676 
63,040 

953,743 

61,750 

216,224 

5,934 

166,690 

450,598 

56,952 
32,340 
6,000 
27,307 
27,087 
149,686 

4,433,628 


1896. 


289 
328 
347 
312 
254 
274 
308 

305 
361 
444 
363 

328 
391 
363 

395 
338 
342 
385 
412 
355 
337 
376 

380 
415 
389 
441 
364 
399 
507 
385 
368 
407 

261 
247 
295 
405 
328 
351 
497 
313 
431 
382 
292 
320 
351 

325 
464 
258 
422 
419 

339 
308 
300 
329 
343 
329 

369 


Acres. 


254 
185 
371 
300 
145 
65 
1,320 

476 

385 

336 

1,197 


Bushels. 


100,330 
74,000 

144,319 

108,600 
41,035 
22,295 

490,579 

246,092 
1.50,150 
130,032 
526,274 


313  124,574 
474  165,900 
787   290.474 


1,016 
349 
197 
341 
355 
365 
138 

2,76l| 

208 
252 

77 
365 
483 
1C5 
221 
311 

90 
2,112 

83 
218 
199 
204 
280 
207 
249 
156 
233 
398 
170 
2251 
2,622 

236 

382 

55 

462 

1,135 

144 

112 

22 

66 

55 

399 

12,333 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 


432,816 
165,775 

87,468 
155,155 
141,645 
151,840 

56,994 
1,191,693 

59,580 

113,148 

18,865 

96,725 

152,145 

33,495 

76,687 

97,965 

24,390 

672,700, 

23,6551 
70,6321 


395 
400 
389 
362 
283 
343 
372 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 


3981 
3.501 
369 

4261 

475 
444 
4551 
399, 
416 
413 
432 

285 
449 
245 
265 
315 
319 
347 
315 
271 
319 

285 
324 


64,078 

322' 

67,932 

3331 

91,840 

328 

86,940 

420 

87.150 

350 

56,940 

365 

115,102 

494 

134,126 

337 

49,640 

292 

86,625 

385 

934,660 

356 

97,704 

4141 

122,240 

320 

11,715 

213 

118,764 

322 

380,423 

335 

42,768 

297 

37,632 

336 

4,950 

225 

27,258 

413 

19,030 

346 

131,638 

330 

4,618,441 

374 

116 
173 
211 
195 
99 
80 
874 


517  259 

390,  461 

387  308 

440  1,028 


Bushels. 


5921 
3341 
189 
368 
312 
324 
138 
2,257 

133 
224 
108 
306 
597 
379 
398 
286 
68 
2,499 

68 1 
180 

250 

138 

91 

110 

78 

1721 

504 

139 

174 

1,904 

276 
379 
28 
243 
926 

104 
61 

7 

59 
231 

10,751 


34.051 
54.791 
75,053 
60,065 
25.686 
23,505 
273,151 

87,447 
176,421 
107,000 
370,868 


Bush. 

per 


481   172,803 

551 ;   201,020 

1,032 1   373,823 


209,942 
133,688 

77,214 
140.731 
110,289 
131.529 

46,693 
850,086 

41,583 

87,103 

40,920 

104,907 

235,773 

146,176 

152,865 

97,163 

16,700 

923,190 

19,1?8 
49,058 

81,595 

51,f08 
29,493 
37,248 
23,939 
61,950 

164,213 
42,5371 
59,510, 

620,179 

101,690 

133,133 

7,579 

75.356 

317,758 

30,240 

17,899 

1,920 

17,252 

67,311 

3,796,366 


294 
317 
356 
308 
259 
294 
313 

338 
.383 
347 
361 

359 
365 
362 

355 
400 
409 
382 
353 
406 
338 
377 

313 
389 
379 
343 
395 
386 
384 
340 
246 
369 

281 
273 

326 

373 
324 
339 
307 
360 
326 
306 
342 
326 

368 
351 
271 
310 
343 

291 
293 
274 

292 

291 

353 


57 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 ). 


A.  18&8 


AREA    AND    PRODUCE-TURNIPS. 

Takle  XXI.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of 
Turnips  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ; 
also  the  yield  per  acre. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand 

Welland  . . . 

Totals.. 


Lambton    . 

Huron  . . . . 

Bruce    . . . . 

Totals. 


Grey   

Simcoe   . . . 
Totals. 


Middlesex . , 
Oxford    .... 

Brant    

Perth 

Wellington 
Waterloo   . . 
Uuflferin . . . . 
Totals.. 


Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Halton   

Peel 

York  ...   

Ontario 

Durham   

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac  

Leeds    

Grenville   

Dundas 

Stormont 

Glengarry    , . 

Prescott 

Russell 

Carl«ton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 


Victoria   

Peterborough 

Haliburton   ,. 

Hastings    . . . . 

Tota's.... 


Muskoka  . . . 
Parry  Sound 
Nipi?sing  .. ., 
Manitoulin   . 

Algoma 

Totals... 


1897. 


The  Province 


Acres. 


Baohels 


299 
191 
419 

1,460 
285 
246 

2,900 

464 

7,908 

7,724 

16,096 

10,724 

8,086 

18,810 

2, 941 1 
7,839 
4,876 
6,018 
14, 460 1 
6,8261 
4,919 


Bush, 
per 


86,411 

63,412 

172,628 

538,740 

86,640 

73,062 

1,020,893 

181,888 
3,772,116| 

3,846,552| 
7,800,556 

4,922,316 
3,824,6781 
8,746,994 

1,299,922 
3  754,881 
2,194,200 
2,515,524 
6,664,840 
2,586,744 
2,233,226 
46,8791  21,149,337] 


449 
3,427 
2,548 
2,492 
7,473 

13,214 

6.713 

5,595 

167 

42,078 

127 

794 

804 

141 

220 

87 

256 

236 

710' 

2,1881 

1,214' 

1,260' 

8,037' 

I 

5,1811 

2,853 

267 

2,796 

11,097| 

829' 
1,336' 
253] 
409 
612 
3,439; 


188,580 
1,679,230! 
1,19.5,0121 
1,186,192 
3,497.364 
.5,919,872 
3,604.881 
2,769,5251 
59,285 
20,099,9411 

33,909; 

241,376 

353,760| 

73,461 

85,800' 

36.018 

137,728' 

89,916 

391,920 

914,584 

441,8961 

551,880 

3,352,248 

2,124210 
1,48.%560 
103,062 
1,213,464 
4,924,296 

271,912 
468,936 
58,949 
159.510' 
243,5761 
1,202,883 


1896. 


289 
332 
412 
369 
304 
297 
352 

392 

477 
498 
485 

459 
473 
465 

442 
479 
450 
418 
454 
444 
454 
451 

420 
490 
469 

476 
468 
448 
537 
495 
355 
478 

267 
304 
440 
521 
390 
414i 
538 1 
381 
552 
418 
364 
438 
417 

410 
520 
386 
434 
444 

328 
351 
233 
390 

398 
350 


Acres. 


209 
254 
518 

1,942 
224 
227 

3,374 

522 

8,315 

7,864 

16,701 

11,036 

7,480 

18,516 

2,775 
8,113 
4,485 
5,612 

14,445 
5,865 
4,455 

45,750 

468 
3,826 
2,545 
2,338 
7,130 
13,413 
7,237 
5,653 

239 
42,849 

\ 

163 

577| 

665 

189 

165 

125 

221 

254 

451 

2,167 

1,140 

985 

7,102 

5,156 

2,901 

325 

2,378 

10,760 

826 
1,233 
206 
383 
534 
3,182 


Bushels. 


149,336,  68,297,148'      457    148,234 
58 


56,221 

97,028 

232,064 

703.004 

65,856 

76,726 

1,2.30,899 

193,140 
3,957,940 
3,774,720 
7,925,800 

5,374.532 
3,366.000 
8,740,532 

1,443,000 
4,421,585 
2,565,420 
2.963,136 
7.496.955 
2,914,905 
2,481,435 
24,286,436 

142,272 
2,031,606 
1,045,995 
1,031,058 
2,773,570 
5,901,720 
3,329.020 
2,606,033 
80,543 
18,941,817 

44,173 

223.876 

266,  OOD 

82,782 

63,030 

47,500 

80,665 

105,410 

225,  .500 

1,011,989 

514,140 

506,290 

3,171,355 

2,119.116 

1,212,6181 

100, 100 1 

998,760 

4,430,594 

261,016 
469,773 
43,878' 
141,3271 
171,414 
1,087,408 

69,814,841 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 


269 
382 
448 
362 
294 
338 
365 

370 

476i 
480 
475 

487 
450 
472 

520 
545 
572 
528 
519 
497 
557 
531 

304 
531 
411 
441 
389 
440 
460 
461 
337 
442 

271 
388 
400 
438 
.382 
380 
365 
416 
500 
467 
451 
514 
447 

411 
418 
308 
420 
412 

316 
381 
213 
369 
321 1 
342 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres,  j  Bushels. 


241 
352 
423 

1,300 
144 
200 

2,660 


68,109 
121,747 
161,929 
499,040 
42,435 
66,773 
960,033 


Bush, 
per 
acre. 


411  143,294 

7,342  3,068,134 

6,606  2,824,240 

14,359^  6,035,668 

9, 997 1  4,208.424 

4,768  2,120,200 

14,765  6,328,630 


2,040 
6,268 
3,333 
6,123 

13,592 
5  360 
3,029 

38,745 

2921 
2,8S3: 
1,971 
1,678 
4,553' 

12,687 

5,820 

3,974l 

137 

33,995 

162 
446 

442] 

lOD 
94 
111 
173 
431 

1,734 
722 
655 

5,070 

4,006 

1,837 

314 

1,325 

7,482 

917 

833 

931 

624 

2, 467 1 


815,320 
2,879,912 
1,555,964 
2,130,215 
6,051,700 
2,241,899 
1,332.423 
17,008,433 

103,163 

1,356,671 

868,210 

690,225 

1,913,724 

5,529,959 

2,676,467 

1,682,756 

40,624 

14,861,799 

40,542 

139,8801 

170, 927 1 

36,903 

28,374 

47,926 

66,6411 

193,100' 

663,651 

262,822 

265,556 

1,916,322 

1,593,419 

757,322 

90,896 

482,418 

2,924,055 

294,083 

270,707 

28  444 


223,887 
817,121 


471'  119,543  50,852,061 


359 
331 

42& 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  82). 


A.  189.8 


AREA  AND  PRODUC  E-H  AY  AND  CLOVER. 

Table  XXII.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  prroups  of  Counties  the  area  and  produce  of 
Hay  and  Clover  in  Ontario  in  the  years  18U6  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years 
1882-97  ;  also  the  yield  per  acre. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent.   .   ... 

Elgin 

Norfolk.... 

Haldimand 

Welland.   ., 

Totals., 


Lambton   . . . 

Huron 

Bruce 

Totals . . . 


Grey   

Simcoe   . . . 
Totals. 


Middlesex . . 
Oxford   .... 

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington 
Waterloo . . . 

Dufiferin 

Totals. 


Lincoln 

Wentworth   

Halton   

Peel  

.York. 

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward    . 

Totals  


Lennox  and  Addington. 

Frontenac 

Leeds 

Grenville  

Dundas 

Stormont   

Glengarry 

Prescott 

Russell    

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough 
Haliburton.  . 

Hastings 

Totals..., 


Muskoka  . . . 
Parry  Sound. 
Nipiasing. . . . 
Manitoulin    . 

Algoma 

Totals... 


The  Province 


1897. 


Acres. 


44,027 
58,2()5 
57,935 
36,023 
50,672 
51,286 
298,208 

68,335 
106,040 

92.160 
266,535 

109,751 

82,181 

191,932 

92,631 

63,292 
27,716 
71,813 
79,865 
39,034 
32,344 
406,695 

37,923 
40,094 
29,248 
28,994 
63,225 
55,925 
41,681 
52,053 
26,073 
375,216 

50,517 
63,493 
58,235 
38,571 
32,951 
31,028 
41,862 
45,111 
23,466 
64,032 
72,929 
58,176 
580,371 

34,434 
34,839 
11,809 
65,459 
146,541 

22,478 
21,466 
7,857 
12,535 
11,654 
75,990 

2,341.488 


Tons 


83,211 
122,357 
121,084 

64,481 
100,331 

86,160 
577,624 


Ha 


1.89 
2,10 
2.09 
1.79 
1.98 
1.08 
1.94 


142,137  2  08 
213,140  2.01 
176,947  1.92 
532,224  2  00 

197,552  1.80 


144,639 
342,191 


197,304 
139,87.T 

58,481 
159,425 
165,321 

77,678 

60,8"i7  1.88 
858,891  2.11 


1.7G 
1.78 


2.13 
2.21 
2.11 
2.22 
2.07 
1.99 


72,433 

70,966 

51,184 

48,130 

104,954 

101,784 

60,021 

57,258 

37,024 

603,754 


1.91 
1.77 
1.76 
1.66 
1.66 
1.82 
1.44 
1.10 
1.42 
1.61 


62,136  1.23 
98, 414 1 1.55 
73,958;  1.27 
46,285  1.20 
48,767  1.48 
41.888  1.35 


47,304 
36,089 
22,527 
53,787 
63,448 
45,377 
639,980 

37,877 
34,839 
13,580 
80,515 
166,811 


1.13 

.80 
.96 
.84 
.87 
.78 
1.10 

1.10 
1.00 
1.15 
1.23 
1.14 


30,570  1.36 
23,827  1.11 
6,364  .81 
12,034  .96 
17,248  1.48 
90,043  1.18 


1896. 


Acres. 


Tons. 


39,882 
50,007 
52,582 
.S2,8.50 
49,023 
50,315 
274,659 

63,985 
102,359 

93,810 
260,154 

117,371 

85,666 

203,037 

87,903 
60,434 
27,900 
74,752 
86,928 
38,175 
33,679 
409,771 

38,867 
,38,636 
30,319 
33.855 
73,718 
59,995 
48,690 
57,088 
29,106 
410,274 

53,778 
63,414 
66,521 
41,511 
36,288 
35,524 
43,508 
46,914 
24,564 
72,890 
73,726 
65,540 
624,178 

43,939 
39,806 
11,515 
75,255 
170,515 

23,383 
20,728 

7,022 
12,985 

9,999 
74,123 


3,811,518  1.631    2,426,711 

59 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Acres. 

Tons. 

hS. 

60,621 
82,512 
86,234 
36,464 
33,826 
40,755 
340,412 

82,541 

91,100 

75,048 

248,689 

83,333 

81..-<83 

164,716 


130,096  1.48 

78,564  1.30 

27,063 

68,772 

79,104 

28,631 

27,954 
440,184 


23,709 
24,727 
17,282 
19,636 
50,865 
58,195 
52,098 
45,670 
12,225 
304,407 


40,871 
36,146 
50,5.=)6 
36,530 
34,111 
26.643 
50,034 
45,507 
25,792 
72,890 
65,616 
51,777 
536,473 

47,894 

35,825 

7,254 

48,163 

139,136 

23,389 
16,168 
9,690 
19,478 
17,498 
86,223 

2,260,240 


1.00 
.78 
1.38 
1.50 
1.75 
1.16 

.93 


38,502 
52,713 
51,700 
39,858 
50,884 
48,428 
282,085 

59,727 

101,985 

91,066 

252,778 

120,574 

81,789 

202,363 

91.745 

62,585 
31,012 
70,427 
85,856 
41,792 
34,805 
418,222 

10,688 
44,247 
33,099 
37  826 
75,220 
55,058 
44,272 
54,784 
30,926 
416,120 

53,163 
64,197 

V  111,262 

36,247 
33,694 
39,274 
38,406 
20,408 
63,846 
66,661 
68,604 
590,762 

40,633 
39,321 
10,887 
72,126 
162,967 

21,652 

14,419 

2,940 

j-   15,069 

.54,080 

2,379,377 


60,570  1.57 


82,847 
79,289! 
54.272 
65,050 
65,582 
407,610 


1.57 
1.53 
1.36 
1.28 
1.35 
1.44 


87,986  1.47 
142,800,1.40 
114,729  1.26 
345,615  1.37 


149,893 
109,925 
259,818 


143,217 

99,352 

46,067 
107,372 
128,116 

62,624 

46,707  1.34 
633,454  1.51 


1.24 
1.34 
1.28 


1.66 
1.58 
1.49 
1.52 
1.49 
1.50 


55,321  1.36 
63, 437 1 1.43 
45,144  1.36 
53,189  1.41 
104,353  1.39 


79,142 
60,675 
66,892 
38,750 
566,803 


1.44 
1.37 
1.22 
1.25 
1.36 


64,160,1.21 
79,070,1.23 

140,616  1.26 

55,112  1.52 
48,690ll.45 
58,580  1.49 
53,952ll.40 
28,61441.40 
1.3G 
1.12 
1.31 
1.31 


86,971 

74,474 

83,075 

773,314 


48,817  1.20 
43,384  1,10 
11,10211.02 
85,992  1.19 
189,295  1.16 

26,362  1.22 
16,0491.111 

3,76511.28 

20,052  1.33 
66,22811.22 

3,242,037  1.36 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 ). 


A.  18v^8 


RATIOS    OF    AVERAGE    PRODUCTION. 

Table   XXIII.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  per  cent,  ratios  of 
total  yields  in  1897  to  average  of  total  yields  far  the  sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Counties. 


_l^ 

CS 

^ 

(E 

e: 

o 

^ 

J= 

& 

tit 

S 

^ 

r& 

xn 

1 

Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand 

Welland 

Group 

Lambton 

Huron 

Bruce  

Group 

Grey 

Simcoe 

Group 

Middlesex   , 

Oxford 

Brant    

Perth 

Wellington 

Waterloo 

DufiFeria 

Group 

Lincoln 

Wentworth , 

Halton , 

Peel 

York....    

Ontario , 

Durham , 

Northumberland , 

Prince  Edward , 

Group , 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac   

Leeds  and  Granville.  . 

Dundas 

Stormont 

Glengarry    

Prescott 

Russell , 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Group , 

Victoria 

Peterborough 

Haliburton , 

Hastings 

Group , 

Muskoka 

Parry  Sound 

Nipissing 

Alg*ma,  etc 

Group 

The  Province 


119 
124 
124 
155 
154 
104 
130 

137 
134 
114 
129 

149 
137 
141 

129 
152 
156 
147 
113 
129 
127 
137 


S.   '^ 


171 
160 
145 
192 
172 
75 
137 
147 


63 
27 
tiO 
64 
31 
382 
126 
14 
31 
28 
45 


70,  162 

60'  17 

...  12 

22  48 

411  43 

26  27 

43  103 


128   12 
143   48 


67 
66 
89 
57 
70 
101 
186 
77 


81  117 


95 
54 
41 
59 
70 
49 
64 
73 
100 
72 
77 


30 

7l! 

50 

68 

165 

56 

84 

90 

58 

73 

200 

55 

88 

38 

281 

262 

168 

54 

166 

57 

133 

67 

m 

<c 

(8 

>> 

o 

« 

127 

167 

117 

187 

114 

205 

109 

177 

125 

29  i 

106 

418 

117 

208 

131 

315 

147 

490 

153 

.503 

145 

451 1 

153 

448, 

fu 


61 
63 

65' 
67  i 
85 
91| 

n 

86 
101 
106! 
102 

94' 

92  129  2^5'  106 
92  142  322,  100 


74 
156 
191 
162 
lot 
134 
157 

526 
233 
181 
222 


121'  124  289 
77  126  247 
112  369 
295 
421 
427 
427 


46 
110 
75 
86 
87 
85 

36 

49 

53 

74 

73 

63 

60 

40 

40'  147 

59  131 

50  145 
36  13^ 
77  124 
54  124 
92 

175 

100 


131 
153 
137 
175 
138  361 

I 
1131  427 

119  376 

120  375 


143 
136 
126 
124 
146 


140 
84 
57 
91 
67 


494 
325 
320 
226 
134 
106 
221 

108 

94 

142 

91 

112  303 

135   27 


136 
108 
162 
124 
160 
144 
135 

197 
405 
373 
312 

536 
436 
464 

I 
166 
162 
119 
346 
492 
211| 
6051 
256 

107 

158 

184 

444 

367 

82  252 

97 1  174 

128  146 

ml  146 

110  171  108 


125 
63 
64 
71 
58 
40 
72 

77 
74 
84 
78 


_c  X 

. 

X 

txi: 

c 

'S 

5  i# 

c5 
0 

169 

190  127 

148 

131 

52 

218 

131 

107 

197 

178 

108 

155 

181 

204 

111 

103,  109| 

176 

151 

106 

^rci 

1QQ 

lOT 

95 
95 

82 
90 
67 
93 

87 
85 

118 
98 
1.32 
131 
114 


162  81 

319'  85 

248'  83 

163'  67, 

139  71 

211i  80 

62  69 


172  78, 

239  123 

184  105 1 

i  I 

209  62, 

143  80; 
171 


72 


137 
148 
153 
119 
154 
131 
142 


127  162 
123  149 
1361  154 
129  154 

I 
117.  132 
180  132 
138  132 


162  169. 
1.55   81 


159 

130 


138 
141 


125 
151 


426;  102 
169   75 


180 
153 


57 
162 

94 
397 
139 
104 
131 

77 

86 


149 
120 
1191 

127 
118 


127  100 


67  142  377 
56  132  190 
93  116 1  175 
64  144  112 
64 1  139  156 


99  117 
1211  185 
3511  256 


1151 
90 

1021 
1951 
50l 
82 1 
51| 
79 
681 
97 1 
70 
85 

109 
113 

107 
108 


1641  100 
136)  155 
180  91 
175  97 
165!  183 
176'  77 
111  75 
131  115 
185'  128 
168  79 
1261  119 
160j  107 

341  128 

253  121 

185  145 

151  127 


87 
73 

8tj 
124 
88 
88, 
79 
88' 
75' 


195  93 

195  91 

132  88 

167  106 

154  170 

212  1.54 

203  108 

230  172 

152  76 

174  34 

158  75 

159  118 
111'  137 
174  99 


89  99 
93I  185 
96'  216 


85 
82 

109 
87 

103 


187 
300 
317 
137 
148 
195 
88  173 
99'  183 
93  194 

98  160 

131  189 

84'  274 

88  136 


128 
159 
184 
184 
218 
346 


141  127 
118  149 
1081  129 
115  124 
168  130 
124  136 

183  131 
124  112 
138'  113 
172;  90 
183  101 
107  i  129 
1.35  99 
166  86 
146  96 
135  107 


84 
173 
250 
233 

127 

287 


110  215  127  100  160 


107,  117 


151  177 
248  206 


149  1721  253  140  212 


136,'  160  127'  135 


731  134'  194   97 


154 
182 


166 
207 
146 
146 

151 


115 
133 
228 
149 
140 


246 1  135 

153  203 
92]  138 

105'  168 
106  208 

154  175 


61 
162 


221 


133 
196 
113 
252 
142i  168 


162  188'  92  116 

271  181 1  178  148 

6811  313  507  169 

238,  315  180  146 

236  222  1471  136 

87  174'  117  1341  118 


97 
124 
86 
88 
86 
81 
67 
79 
62 
86 
56 
S3 

78 

80 

122 

94 


60 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32;. 


A.  1898 


RATIOS   OF   AVERAGE   YIELDS   PER    ACRE. 

Table   XXIV.     Showing  by  County   Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  thp  per  cent,  ratios  of 
average  yields  per  acre  in  1897  to  average  yields  per  acre  for  sixteen  yeara  1882-97. 


Counties. 

117 
112 
12.5 
1.S8 
142 
120 
124 

103 
135 
128 
123 

130 
116 
120 

122 
141 
143 
137 
130 
123 
115 
131 

137 
1.50 
145 
127 
123 
103 

105 
90 

>> 

CS 

03 

100] 

10=« 

O 

97 
97 
96 
92 
94 
93 
9 

95 

107 
b6 
110 
114 
121 
110 
112 

1101 

i 

(0 

104 

93 
76 
64 
66 
61 

CS 

aj 
o 

3 
CQ 

111 

96 

109 

92 

1 

e    1 
03 

98 
115 
104 

lli7 

2 

eg 

103 

58 
64 
66 
54 
40 
67 

(E    N 

a  2 

109 
94 

100 
92 
73 
72 
94 

o 

Ui 
U 
cS 

U 

98 
103 
97 
101 
98 
93 
98 

90 

94 

128 

101 

91 
107 
100 

111 

"S 
H 

102 
96 

108 
96 

103 
89 

"2  -• 
>..2 

Essex 

Kent  

120 

134 

...1  103' 

1.37 

Norfolk           

89 

105 

99 

97 

98 

105 

94 

98 

87 

103 

97 

105 
111 
136 
105 

70 
118 

79. 

95 

85 

91 

105 

96 

132 

Haldimand  

Welland 

109      96 
98    104 

155 
124 

69  99    113 

70  125;  107 
73    132      92 
76    125i  132 

98    135 

1 
59      86! 

112 
114 

141 

103    107:  1191 

74 

84 
72 

75 
75 
75 

60 
76 
70 
62 
63 
73 
82 
68 

75 
6« 
81 

88 
72 

77 

77 
82 
89 
77 

99 
96 

108 
87 
88 

111 
91 

107 
97 
85 

111 

93 

111 

95 

103 
109 
106 

91 
91 
99 
88 
105 
98 
84 
94 

103 
101 
115 
124 
102 
107 
114 
110 
119 

144 

Bruce 

105 
102 

107 

lfi8 
105 

11^ 

112 
114 

117 

98 

116 

152 

75    128 

711  128 
70    111 
70    116 

89     93 

106 

115 
121 
120 

102 
104 
135 
98 
90 
128 
124 
110 

97 
109 
109 
100 

89 
111 

115 

109 
106 
108 

111 

146 

fxrey   - . . 

145 

lOlj  100 

131 

Group 

103,  107 

103 

139 

Middlesex 

no 

82 
98 
96 

100 
97 

104 

104    112 

137 

Oxford    

102 
87 
102 
106 
104 
111 
104 

96 
100 

99 
106 
106 
100 

123 
122 

108 
117 
115 
115 

83 
63 
69 
63 
75 
57 

114 

106 
91 
117 
112 
124 
116 

98 
116 

92 
146 
105 
107 

85 

104 

140 

84      96 

142 

Perth            

101 

117 

87 

100 

100 
102 
106 
103 

146 

Wellington    

Waterloo   

139 
140 

Group 

77 

99 

118 

70 

100 

103 

140 

Lincoln  

118 
98 

114 
94 

117 

104 

93 
102 
100 
105 
107 
101 
103 
112 
105 
107 

122 
132 
118 
116 
119 
105 

82 
78 
95 
92 
86 
75 
79 
90 
77 
83 

88 
91 

101 
91 
85 

121 
97 

106 
95 
84 

121 
107 
103 
199 

119 
104 
107 
116 

140 

124 

129 

118 

York     

92 

111 

119 

103.  103 

1?6 

90 

110 

103    111 
109    106 
106    118 
103    119 

115,  117 
108]  118 
1161     94 

132 
113 
150 

117 

117 

i:?o 

109 

107 
97 
118 
106 
137 
124 
99 
123 

105 

78 

99 

126 

83 
89 
65 
75 
92 
71 
128 

126 
118 
111 

106 
92 

90 

114 

Group 

114 

107 
99 
126 
122 
133 
129 
112 
113 
121 
100 

108 

:o. 

93 

98 

94 

128 

149 

97 

114 

112 

91 

114 

105 

114 
139 
118 

96 
107 

57 
117 
120 

95 

109   no 

lis 

Lennox  and  Addington 

1 

no'  107 

99       98 

115 
89 
94 
91 

116 

122 
74 

114 
94 
84 
90 
95 

112 
110 
97 
109 
111 

95 

82 

112 

101 

94 

111 

88 

88 

109 

95 

104 

124 

87 

114 

120 

99 

QO 

.93 
90 

no 

88 
108 
147 
102 
120 
117 
95 
94 
108 

88 
132 

95 
136 

122 

116 
105 
109 
115 
113 

105 

102 

Frontenac  

1V6 

88    lOil  105 
77      P6,  104 
79      98    100 

98 

Dundas 

97 
93 

Glengarry 

95 
81 

122    114 
101    116 

76 

57 

Rassell   

112]     98 

108    105 

69 

142      97i     95|     98 
98 1     92'     88    100 

1  1091     62 

Renfrew     

100      78 

Lanark     

91      95 
83      93 

96,   101 
1051  103 

96    103 

80 

1*^5 

108 

103 
126 
!  134 
119 
114 

102 

108 
76 

no 

106 
108 

60 

Group 

90 

83 
91 

76 
83 
85 

72 
87 
80 
84 
1     82 

78 

119 

137 
11-5 
107 
105 
119 

85 
116 
133 
101 

98    106 

95  91 
119,  133 

84      96 

92  114 
100    105 

114    117 

96  113 
103    1C6 

93  87 
102!  104 

84 

Victoria 

95 
89 
91 
76 
80 

112 

121 

65 

76 

79 

1^5 

106 

92 

Peterborough   

110 

98      99 

91 

Haliburton 

83!     82      84 
1041  113    111 
107    103    104 

88      f.0;     92 

113 

103 

Group 

98 

Muskoka       

in 

Nipiseing 

94      92 

100    117 

821  lOO 

86      9 

99    104 

104 
89 
91 
96 

103 

100 
63 

Algoma,  etc 

91 

Group 

100     83 
115    111 

97 

The  Province  

81 

100 

120 

1 

1 

1 

61 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


ACREAGE   UNDER   CROP:    ALSO    PASTURE   AND   ORCHARD. 

Table  XXV.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  in  Ontario,  the  total  area 
under  crop  enumerated  in  tables  ix-xxii  for  the  years  1896  and  1897.  with  the  yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97  ;  also  the  area  in  Pasture,    in  Orchard  and  Garden  and  in  Vineyard. 


Acres  under  crop. 

Pasture. 

Orchard  and 
garden. 

Vine- 
yaid. 

Counties. 

1897. 

1896. 

1882-97. 

1897. 

1896. 

1897. 

1896. 

1897. 

acres. 
1,085 
229 
64 

acres.     ' 
200,600 
274,662 
20.3,720 
178.693 
160.939 
125,733 
1,144,347 

246.944 
400,541 
3.'<5,107 
982,692 

416,-577 
398,018 
814,595 

351.603 
251,782 
132,224 
283,971 
3.39, 42<; 
191,774 
171.697 
1,722,480 

107.231 
150,015 
118.162 
184,606 
3.^1,337 
266,613 
208,084 
228,955 
132,174 
1,727,077 

141,019 

152,382 

152,025 

102.831 

96,723 

80,113 

104,171 

103,803 

.59,393 

201,108 

201,899 

150.441 

1,545,908 

188,398 
149,468 
25,943 
239,388 
603,19' 

44,289 
44..3.34 
16,917 
29,385 
27,.584 
161,609 

8,701,705 

acres. 
192,316 
270,586 
200,2.38 
169.939 
143,903 
120,453 
1,097,435 

242,228 
384,251 
319,719 
946,198 

404,295 
388,522 
792,817 

361,947 
243,444 
128.229 
278.6.59 
340,697 
185,  .366 
164,498 
1,692,840 

103.653 
144,710 
11.3,606 
177,055 
324,590 
26^433 
217,123 
234.531 
126,593 
1,707,294 

138,729 

142,016 

154,699 

103.487 

92,285 

78.971 

99,770 

101.461 

56.995 

205.822 

191.055 

153,800 

1,519,090 

193,440 
156,469 
2.3.552 
231.2.'<1 
604,692 

43,570 
41,279 
14,144 
29,152 
22,9.33 
151,078 

8,511,444 

acres. 
159,829 
228,066 
176,902 
159,712 
145.250 
113,584 
983,343 

193,6§3 
348,464 
290,475 
832,622 

371,531 
334,-565 
706,096 

.31.5,443 
224,543 
122,227 
24.5,904 
.307.128 
171,693 
137,142 
1,524,080 

102,462 
144,  .541 
109.297 
167,906 
308,632 
252.856 
206,526 
229.298 

I  130.674 
1,646,192 

1 

139,898 
141,628 

l}    243,799 

88,506 

75,370 

92.4.52 

91.9.36 

52,960 

190.804 

174,.343 

150,685 

1,442.381 

180.623 

145.. ^73 

21.7.% 

I        224.411 

572.343 

.39.954 

28.763 

5,817 

||      36,431 

110,965 

7,817,022 

acres. 
38,9.32 
51,338 
65,649 
34,999 
32,756 
26,244 
249,918 

84.662 
14.5,248 
119,602 
349,412 

140,558 

87,100 

227,658 

164.666 
82.176 
25,507 
82,998 
76.353 
27,059 
34,755 

493,514 

23,3*24 
32,267 
29,069 
33,4'>7 
.50,580 
53,763 
44.798 
64,194 
37,124 
368,546 

53,422 

65,707 

r      87,274 

t      63,681 

38,847 

39,818 

52,029 

43,.541 

20,852 

79,192 

78.298 

117,669 

730,330 

42.722 

57,767 

1           7.018 

1         96,6.55 

204.162 

1         10.069 

10.857 

2.4''6 

f        6.872 

\        5,481 

84,705 

2,658,245 

acres. 
.^4,273 
49.615 
65.146 
36,846 
34.507 
27,294 
247,681 

80,575 
148,840 
126,828 
356.243 

149,763 

82.386 

232,149 

165,225 
81,. 595 
27,150 
84.412 
81.999 
29,646 
.35,025 

505,052 

24,582 
.34,339 
31,860 
.36,268 
51.973 
56,573 
■16,352 
64,546 
36.889 
383,382 

51,016 

66.  .577 

87,234 

50,439 

37,424 

.^9,616 

48,706 

1         39,594 

20,047 

79,225 

73.725 

113.047 

706,660 

44,697 

54,678 

7.901 

97,655 

204,931 

9.925 
10,834 
2,604 
5.446 
4.847 
33,656 

2,669,744 

acres. 
10,459 
16,143 
10,293 
10,300 
6,403 
8,936 
62,534 

11.156 
14,446 
10.215 
35,817 

14,484 
10,733 
25,217 

16,621 
10,519 
6,.349 
7.549 
7.467 
5,557 
3,255 
57,317 

16,430 

11.685 
7,673 
5,992 

11,990 
8.175 
7,031 

13,726 
8,814 

91,516 

4,725 

4,no 

4,102 
2.831 
2,770 
2,2.55 
2,109 
1,593 
939 
3,576 
2,420 
2,777 
34,207 

.^.831 

3.848 

475 

8.6-38 

16.792 

989 
621 
177 
609 
545 
2.941 

326,341 

acres. 

10,484 

14,998, 

9,841 

9,962 

6,340 

9,871 

61,496 

10,554 

14,042 

9,918 

34,514 

13,520 
10,704 
24,224 

16.038 
10,820 
5,984 
7,497 
7.451 
6,698 
2,894 
66,382 

18,408 

13,230 
9,060 
5,489 

11,8=^7 
7,666 
7,201 

13,077 
8.0.58 

94,036 

4,135 
3,749 
3.716 
2,380 
2,747 
2.025 
1,915 
1,298 
887 
.3,539 
2,202 
2,473 
31,066 

3,503 

3,316 

1          396 

1       8,.529 

15,744 

1 

963 
693 
162 
1           562 
380 
2,660 

320.122 

j^gnti         ' 

Norfolk 

73 
327 

WelUnd 

Totals     

1,922 
3,700 

420 

182 

34 

Totals  

636 

Grey 

497 
56 

Totals 

553 

Middlesex  

162 

Oxford      

119 

Brant  

Perth       

33 
150 

12 

Waterloo 

38 
9 

Totals 

513 

2,900 

1,616 

246 

40 

13 

66 

4 

141 

186 

5,212 

54 

16 

2 

1            46 

!          10 

11 

70 

24 
33 
76 
26 
368 

45 

9 

1 

18 

72 

10 

21 

5 

10 

46 

11,100 

Lincoln 

Halton     

T>eel 

York  

Durham 

■Northumberland  

Prince  Edward    

Totals 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac    

Leeds  .   . . j 

Orenville   

Dundas 

Stormont  

Glengarry 

Prescott 

Carleton 

Totals  

Victoria 

Peterborough 

Hastings    

Totals 

Muskoka    

Parry  Sound , 

Nipifsing   

Manitouiin 

Totals 

The  Province   

62 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  1898 


APPLES. 

Table  XXVI.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  in  Ontario,  the  number  of 
apple  trees  in  i896  and  1897  ;  also  the  estimated  yield  and  average  yield  per  tree  for  the  same  years. 


Counties. 


Essex    . . . . . 

Kent  

Elgin     

Norfolk 
Haldimand . 
Welland     . . 
Totals  . 


Lambton . . 

Huron; 

Bruce 

Totals 


Orey 

Simcoe    

Totals 

Middlesex!  , 
Oxford   .... 

Tyrant    

Perth    

Wellington 

Waterloo . . , 

Dufferin  . . , 

Totals  , 


liincoln        

Wentworth 

Halton   

Peel  

York  

Ontario 

T^urham   

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward    . 

Totals  


Lennox  &  Addington. 

Frontenac   

Leeds     

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont 

Glengarry   

Prescott  

Russell 

Carleton , 

Renfrew 

Lanark , 

Totals  


Victoria   

Peterborough. 
Haliburton  . . . 

Hastings 

Totals  ... 

Muskoka 

Parry  Sound  . 

Nipissing 

Manitoulin    . , 

Algoma    

Totals     . . 


Apple  trees. 


15  years  and  over. 


1897. 


1896. 


175,391 
277,679 
187,181 
184,039 
142,030 
19\238 
1,161,658 

227,368 
326,182 
218,720 
772,270 

271,411 
177,108 
448,519 

317,055 
196,461 
109,276 
159,805 
l.'il,626 
110,180 
50,831 
1,095,234 

238,980 
16^U5 
165,283 
111,416 
228,931 
158,892 
135,088 
352.6-0 
209,799 
1,766,184 

76,756 
72,  .%5 
76,313 
58,.'<49| 
50,S00| 
57,462. 
40,125 
35,594' 
10,124 
46,9981 
16,092 
41,875 
582,8531 

66,011 

58,604] 

2. 283 1 

136,  S58: 

263,756 

5.810 
2,342 
296 
1,510 
2,067 
12,025 


Under  15  years. 


147.081 
251,490 
184,407 
156,014 
134,321 
194,7.50 
1,068,063 

203,892 
319,768 
205.665 
729,325 

266.453 
17.5.763 
442,216 

314,365 
202  281 
103,435 
145,707 
148,919 
117,113 
44,172 
1,075,992 

222.913 

166,420 

167.631 

110,273 

236,064 

157,772 

152,7681 

331.9071 

193,443 

1,739, 191 1 

\ 

81,799 

67,354 

72,488! 

59,095' 

71,4781 

53,220 

35,609 

27,270 

7,616 

44,928 

15,247 

.37,817 

576,921 

56,561 

65,199 

2,265 

149.624 

273,649 

3,857 
1,379 
428 
1,529 
1,356 
8,549 


The  Province 1    6,102,399     5,913,906 


1897. 


112,827 
174,189 
98.410 
45,067 
30,281 
32,436 
493,210 

154,005 
137,056 
101,126 
392,187 


148,761 
47,263 
44,378 
55,375 
68,156 
37.650 
43,.564 

445,147 

35,2.39 

47,564 

49,346 

41,658 

98,935 

122,518 

100.338 

2.30,601 

100,059 

826,253 

78,591 
57,519 
67,574 
29,867 
37,149 
36,124 
36,493 
36,409 
21,146 
61,387 
43,570 
48,790 
554.619 

53.0-^8 

56,939 

11,542 

140,233 

261,742 

23,929 
12,627 
2,435 
15,632 
14,091 
68,714 


1896. 


115,548 
179,523 
96,141 
50,232 
36,969 
36,763 
515,176 

14.';,733 
140,067 
109,519 
395,319 


221,388  23.\.544 
171,758  181,530 
393,146        417,074 


Yield  of  apples  in 
1897. 


Bushels. 


145,691 
44,315 
42.552 
54,513 
77,974 
38,249 
44,930 

448,223 

41,149 

58,687 

78,207 

48,630 

104,473 

111,609 

91,022 

231,642 

109,937 

875,356 

71,506 
61,156 
63,388 
30,031 
39,171 
39,573 
36,073 
31,271 
23,167 
70,411 
42.994 
48,269 
657,010 

57.144 

f>4,974 

ll,269i 

148,127 

271,614 

25,219 
13.6711 
3,087 
13,297 
13,1121 
68,386: 


Bushel 
per  tree. 


219,239 
366,536 
381  849 
511,628 
355,075 
.320.190 
2,154,517 

409,262 

590,389 

452,750 

1,452,401 

575,  .391 
348,903 
924,294 

504,117 
394, 8S7 
276,468 
324,404 
342,675 
186,204 
145,886 
2,174,640 

492.299 
.343,505 
330.566 
229,517 
354,84'^ 
266,939 
330,966 
998,000 
717,513 
4,064,148' 

227,198 
222,884' 
277,016 
143,539 
M0,716 
184,453 

83,059 
139,884 

31.283 
167.313 

43.931 

61.975 
1,723,251 

197,373 
222,695 
6,278 
396,888 
823,234 

1.3,944 

5,691 

592 

2,461 

4,547 

27,235 


3,435,018     3,548,058  13,343,720 

63 


1.25 
1.32 
2.04 
2.78 
2.50 
1.64 
1.86 

1.80 
1.81 
2.07 
1.88 

2.12 
1.97 
2.06 

1.59 
2.01 
2.. 53 
2.03 
2.26 
1.69 
2.87 
1.99 

2.06 
2.08 
2.00 
2.06 
1.55 
1.68 
2.45 
2.83 
3.42 
2.30 


2.96 
3.08 
3.63 
2.46 
2.77 
3.21 
2  07 
3.93 
3.09 
3.56 
2.73 
1  48 
2.96 

2.99 
3.80 
2.75 
2.90 
3.12 

2.40 
2.43 
2.00 
1.63 
2.20 
2.26 

2.19 


Yield  of  apples  in 
1896. 


Bushels. 


Bushel 
per  tree. 


1,519,837 
3,040,514 
2,413,888 
2,048,464 
1,532,603 
2,531,750 
13,087,056 

2,285,629 
3,309,599 
1,641,207 
7,236,435 

1,875.829 
1,427,196 
3,303,025 

4,105,607 

2,496,148 

1,226.7.39 

1,492,040 

1,057,3251 

1,132,4831 

294,627 

11,804  969 

I 

2,666,039! 
1,694,156 
1,419,835 
8?.3,739 
1,909,758 
1,046,028 
1,029.656 
2,432,878 
1,5.51,576 
14,273.665 

779,303 
550,956 
538,586 
400,664 
536,085 
372,540 
261,014 
175,073 
49,047 
312,250 
128,227 
256,399 
4,360,144 

273,755 

436,181 

8,426 

1,080,285 

1,798,647 


10.33 
12.09 
13.09 
13.13 
11.41 
13.00 
12.25 

11.21 

10.35 

7.98 

9.92 

7.04 
8.12 
7.47 

13.06 

12.34 

11.86 

10.24 

7.10 

9.67 

6.67 

10.97 

11.96 

10.18 

8.47 

7.47 

8  09 

6  63 
6.74 
7.33 
6.47 
8.21 

9.19 
8.18 
7.43 
6.78 

7  50 
7.00 
7.33 
6.42 
6.44 
6  95 
8.41 
6.78 
7.56 

4.84 
6.69 
3.72 
7.22 
6.57 


15,582 

4.04 

4,482 

3.25 

1,284 

3.00 

5,856 

3.83 

4,610 

3.40 

31,814 

3  72 

55,895,765         9.45 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A  189  8 


RATIOS  OF  AREAS  UNDER  CROP. 

Table  XXVII.     Showing  by  County  Municipalitiea  and  groups  of  Counties  the  number  of  acre  b 
under  the  various  crops  in  Ontario  in  1897,  per  1,000  acres  of  cleared  land. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin 

Norfolk  . . . . 

Halditnand 

Welland  ... 

Group   . 


Lambton    . 
Huron 

Bruce  

Group. 


Grey    

Simcoe    . . 
Group . 


Middlesex 

Oxford    

Brant  

Perth 

Wellington    ... 
Watf^rloo    .. . . , 

Duff  erin , 

Group 


Lincoln 

Went  worth  

Halton   

Peel  

York 

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward    . 

Group 


Lennox  &  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds  

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont  

Glengarry 

Prescott 

Russell  

Carleton    , 

RpTifrpw     

Lanark  

Group 


Victoria 

Peterborough 

Haliburton    . . 

Hastings    . . . . 

Group.... 

Mu'koka    

Parry  Sound . . 
Nipissing  . . . . 
Manitoulin    .. 

Algoma 

Group.... 


02  S 


» 


122.6  3.2  23.2 
182.3  5.135.4 
134.2....  20.8 
152.5  .6  9.6 
162.4;  4.7  24  1 
103.0    1.4    4.9 

146.7  2.6  21.5 


177.1  6.5 

121.2  5.7 
130.0  11.2 
130.5  48.9 


150.1 
132  8 
139.0 


136.4  1.8  31.4  182.0 
97.6'  7.3  33.3|  207.6 
72.011.8  21.6  203.7 
98.71  7.4  28.9    199.8 


44.7  24.0 

110.6  35.6 

76.2,29.6 


9 

21.9 
16.1 

3.3 
3.7 
6.3 
4.5 


26. 7|  232.4  5.1 
49  4  175.7,14  9 
37. 6    205.3    9.8 


132.2  1.129.0 
117.2,  2.6  38.4 
172.11  3.540  7 


108.9    8.7 
37.3  35. 1 

164.9    3.6 
.39.9  74.2 

105.8116.2 

46.11 
51.1 
58  8 
41.5 
42.4 

118.8    1.0 
130.4    5.1 

7.9 
23.9 

165.0  4.5 
198.81  8.9 
14r.7j30.6 
214.9  2  3 
266  9  11.8 
228.4116.0 
276.921  7 
212.4  10  8 


152.6111. 

129,534. 
95.6  39, 
48.6  62, 


32.7 
36.2 
24.0 
79.1 


32.5 
87.9 
76.1 
57.4 
77.7 
.34.5 
59.7 


1.38.6 
169.1 
152  8 
193.3 
222.6 
202.1 
160.4 


14.5 
18.1 
14.0 
27.2 
11.0 
30.0 
37.3 


10.9  23, 
3.6  30, 
5.8  19. 


.3 
4.2 
2.2 

.9 
1.2 
1.7 

.3 

.7 


8 
14 
21 
28 
28 
23 
48 
§6 
2.532 
3.0  34 


4  65.2 

I 
7  54.7 
4  17.6 
4  17.4 
814.6 
lil9.3 
5117.1 
518.6 
019.9 
3  24.0 


22.9 

2.8 

8.8 

19.1 


7.2J68.7 
20  0  55.8 

6.924.6 
27.8  27.5 


136.2|42.0 
108.2135.5 
172.2:26.11 

1  I 
144.4115.8 
172.5]l3.3' 
179.314.1' 

207.4'21.8| 


249.9 

209.7 

209.3 

235.7 

?38.6 

257.9 

186.3  22.3 

155.6    8.5 

198.111.7 


17.3 

8.6 

.1 

.3 

.6 

6.7 


19.0  46.8  43.8 


1.6  11.2  11.5 
.7    7.3  15.9 


1.9 

27.4 

6.5 


68.7    246.418.6 

23.2    191.6  25.9 

7.9    209.8  13.1 

158.7  30.3 

194.6  25.1 


42.9 


23.4  13.5 

51.5  11.6 
38  5118.5 


6.6.23.1114.2 


207.7 
226.0 
193  1 
145.8 
198  0 
199.0 


TheProvince   73.9125.2  35.11  189.3  14.6 


5.1 
3.6 
1.0 
11.1 
6.0 
5.5 


O 


7.2 
13.9 
32.2 
67.1 
85.9 
40.9 
37.8 

30  2 

86  4 

118.1 

83.1 

106.2 
107.6 
106.9 

3S.5 

51.5 
78.3! 
81.7 
87.2 
85.0 
98.2 
69.8 

49.9 

70.9 

S4.2 

97.8 

103.7 

91.1 

112.2 

105.5 

131.9 

97.5, 

54.9 
41.6 
16.8 

8. 6 1 
10.7 

9.61 
17.71 
21.6! 
24.51 
26.71 
81.6 
32.21 
32.9 

92.51 
87.71 
75.6, 
70.81 
81.71 

66. 5I 
71. 2| 
94.3,' 
159.7 
89.11 
90.5 


M       M 


226.3 
127.1 
91.3 
96.1 
34  2 
71.6 
112.4 

67.3 
17.8 
16.3 
29.7 

18.1 
13.3 
15.8 


IStg 


4.6    2.1113.5 

3.5  78.31  9.8 

8.615.1i  9.4 

30.4    4.214.3 

5  2    1.7    6.8 


52.6 
56.1 
56.9 
21.5 
14  7 
24.1 
6.3 
34.1 


18.3 
10.8 

2.9 
2.3 
3  0 
2.7 

6  01 

15  3 

10.4 

I 

I  2.5 

3.1 

5.0 

I  1.9' 

3.0 

1.2 

6.9 

3.0 


72.4 
46.4 
31.1 

21.11 
25. 6| 

25.7  18.9 

23.8  26.2 


5  0 
6.0 
2.8 
4.1 

7.8 


41.6 
62.1 
19.7 

28.5 
10  9 
14.3 

28.5 


36.6 

72.8 
35.7 

35.7 
38.9 
62.2 
63.8 
76.1117.3 
.58.2  20.9 
42.6  10  3 
34  7|10 
31.0:13.2 
29.9  20.7 
12.41  9.6 
25.9  17.2 
39.8  16.7 

11.223.1 
17.1  13.4 
12.5  18.4 
51.721.6 
29.4  20.5 


10.7 
5.91 
5.0 
8.0 

4.81 
7.3| 


7.2 
4.3 
4.4 
5.7 
4.1 
5.3 


7.0  14.2 
23.0  11.1 

i 

5  511.2 
.7  8.3 
.4    9.2 

1.8    9.3 

.511.8 
1.2  14.9 

.8  13.3 
I 
2.311.2 

1.01  8.2 
3.2|14.7 

.110.5 
.113.9 
.2113.2 
.619.5 
1.012.4 
I 

14.3 
20.1 
10.0 
!9.3 
22.5 
9  15.0 
11.4 
14.5 
10.0 
15.9 


1.9| 
1.61 
2.9 
2.3 
1.9i 
1.3 
2.01 

3.2I 
6.2 
2.4 
4.2 

1.5 
1.5 
1.5 


.6 
1.0 

.2 
1.1 


1.7 
1.6 
2.3 

1.2 


.9111.9 

1.814.9 

.8112.0 

.9  18.6 

1.7  15.6 

1.9  13.6 


9.3 
5.1 
4.6 
1.0 
5.5 

2.4 
cA 
5.5 
4.2 
6.6 
3.9 


3.9 


.5 
2.3 
2.2 
1.8 


12.9 
14.7 
15.1 
17.9 


1.413,6 

.810.1 

1.3  14  0 


.7 

.6 

1.2 


12  0 
12  9 
19  4 


1.5  14.1 
1.013.4 

I 
1.6122. 5 
.6  23.1 
.9  29.6 
.4119  2j 
.6|21.7 
.9  22.7, 


1.7 
1.71 

.9 
2.21 
3.4 

,8 
1.3' 
1.61 

5  2 
2.1 
1.2 
l.fi 
2.7 

1.21 
.6 

2.11 

1.6 
.9 

l.ll 


.8 
.6 
.9 
1.3 
.8 
.5 


1.1 

.5 

1.3 

5.8 
1.3 
1  4 
1.8 


1.1  1.2 
.6  13.0 
.6  15,3 

.710.8 

.5J17.3 
.7  14.2 


.6 


1.6 

.9 


15.8 


5.1 
21.4 
.9  27.0 
.7  14.8 
.5  31.1 

1.4  23.8 
.521.5 

1.0  19.0 

1,2    2.8 

1.5  16.0 


.7 
1.7 
1.1 

.4 


15.0 

10.1 

17.6 

37.2 

23.1 

.9116.6 

.3'     .9 

.9  17.6 


.4 
1.2 

.7 
1.4 
1.9 
1.4 
1.4 
1.2 
2.4 
1.3 

.5 

.6 
1.1 


.5 
3.1 
3.0 

.8 
1.5 

.7 
1.4 
1.5 
7.6 
7.1 
4.0 
4.1 
3.1 


.719.3 
1.911.6 

.71  7.5 
1.0  7.4 
1.2  12.0 

2.8I13.8 
1.8!22.4| 
1.012.0 
2.211.1' 
2  0  15.6 
2.115.8 


165.9  756.0- 

1^7.5  742  6 

182.0  639.9' 

142.3'  705.9 

224.61  713.5 

288.8  708.0' 

185.2  710.8 

181.7  660.2 

174.5  6.59.? 

182.3  663.0 
179.2  660  S' 


177 
144. 
161 

161 

172 

153 

176 

171 

159.8 

141,3 

164.9 

234.9 
187.4 
172.2 
117.8 
148.8 
157.5 


6-1.8 
699..^ 
685.0 

612.0 

687.  e. 

7.32.4 
697.9' 
729.5 
785.0- 
750  0. 
698. » 

664.$ 
701.3 
695.5 
749.6 
779.7 
751.0 


143.71  717.1 

154  0  677.* 

136.0  689.4: 

156.9!  722.3; 


213.8 
2.51.1 
215.6 
226.3 
223.0 
232,0 
232  4 
286  3 
2=12,4 
207.8 
238,9 
189,5 
226.5 

128.5 
141.9 
S.S3.2 
172.0 
157.6 

374.4 
.^59.8 
372.5 
3.'?S.8i 
297  2 
350.2 


596.7 
602.6 
562.9' 
603. » 

654.5 
599.1 

.^78.3 
658.8 
638.8 
652.8 
661.2 
490.0 
603  3 

702.8 
608.7 
732.0 
628.9 
648.8 

737.8 
743.2- 
754.7 
794.1 
703.5 
744.3 


69.8     42.3111.8    3.9 13. 2I  3.2      .9  11.6    182.2,677.0 


64 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


ONTAKIO    VS.    AMERICAN    STATES. 


Table  XXVI.  A  compirison  of  the  average  yield  per  acre  of  cereals  in  Ontario  and  the  principal 
grain-growing  States  of  the  American  Union  and  Manitoba  is  presented  in  the  following  table  for  the 
year  1897,  together  with  the  detailed  and  annual  averages  tor  the  previous  ten  years,  1887-96. 


Fall  wheat. 


Ontario 


New  York  .  . . 
Pennsylvania 

Ohio    

Michigan   .  . . . 

Indiana 

Illinois 

Missouri 

Kanpa-«     

California 


Spring  wheat. 

Ontario 

Manitoba 


Wisconsin  . 
Minnesota. 
Iowa  . . . . 
Nebraska 
Dakota,  N 
Dakota,  S. 


Barley. 


Ontario 


Manitoba  . 

New  York . 
Wi'^consin. 
Minnesota . 
Iowa  .  . 
Nebraska 
California 
Dakota,  N 
Dakota,  S. 


Ontario 


Oats. 


Manitoba 


New  York 
Pennsylvania 
Ohio  . 

Michigan   

Indiana    

Illinois       . . . . 

Wisconsin 

Minnesota 

Iowa    

Missouri 

Kansa-t  

Nebraska  . . . . 
Dakota,  N  . . . 
Dakota,  S  ... 


1897. 


Sush .    Bush 


26.2 

21  4 
19  7 
16.9 
15  6 
13.0 
7  9 
9.0 
15.5 
10.0 


1896. 


15.1 1 

14.1 

12.51 
13.01 

13  0 

14  5 
10  3 

8.01 


26.6. 

20. 8J 

25.0 
28.0 
25.5 
24.0 
22  0 
2S.0 
22.5: 
20.0 


35.5 
22.7 

31.0 
28.2 
32.0 
26.0 
30.2 
32  0 
34  0 
?6.0 
30  0 
22.0 
24.0 
31.0 
23.0 
22  0 


1895. 


17.0 

16  0 
14.0 

9.0 
12.8 

9.0 
14.7 
11  7 
10.6 
14  6 


Bu6h 

19.0 

18.1 
16  6 
13.3 
IS.  2 

9.2 
11.0 
12.0 

7.7 
13.0 


13.8     15. ft 


14.3 

13.3 
14.2 
16.0 
14.0 
11.8 
11.2 


27.4 

24.8 

23.21 
27. 4i 
27.2! 

26  3 
19.9 
21.6 
16.1 
28,5 

34.2 

28.3 

33  0 
31  0 
31.0 
30.0 
29.0 
28  0 
33.4 
33.0 

27  5 
18.0 
13  0 
19  0 
22  0 
27.5 


27.8 

15.5 
23.0 
19.5 
12.0 
21  0 
12.0 


25.3 

36.7 

22.9 
29.3 
36.0 
28.0 
28.4 
20.3 
30.4 
19.5 

35.7 
46.7 

31  7 
31.7 
31.7 
23.9 
22  9 
24.4 
33  8 
39  9 
46.2 
27  7 
17.9 
23.8 

32  1 
25.3 


1894. 


1893.     1892.    1891. 


Bush. 

Bush. 

21.2 

19.2 

14.8 
15.0 
19.0 
15.8 
18.4 

14.5 
14.0 
14.5 
13  2 
14.1 

18.2 
15.il 
10. 4i 
11.3 


14.6 

17.0 

16.5 
13.5 
14.8 

7.0 
11.8 

6.6 


22.6 

24.9 

17.5 
28  6 
23.5 
15  6 
5.7 
15  2 
20  1 
14.7 


30.0 

28.8 

21.1 
22.3 
30  3 
26  1 
32  3 
36.1 
.'12.9 
28.1 
25  6 
23  3 
17.9 
12.6 
25  9 
7.6 


5   B.I.  (1-4) 


11.5 
9  5 
8  4 

13.3 


11.7 
16.6 

13  3 

9.6 
11  5 

8  7 

9  6 
8.5 


21.0 

22.1 

20  3 
24  0 

22.1 
22.6 
12.0 
22.6 
15.2 
16.4 


30.3 
25.3 

24  0 

26.8 
^8.6 
26.0 
27.5 
27.2 
27.6 
24  8 
24.8 
23.4 
18..^ 
15  0 
21.9 
21. 5 

65 


Bash. 

21.2 

16.2 
14.6 
13.6 
14.7 
14  7 
16.2 
12  5 
17.4 
13.0 


12.7 
16.5 


12.5 


24.6 

29.0 

22.2 
25.5 
24  9 
21  1 
22.2 
24.0 
24.3 
23.3 


34.8 

35.0 

28.0 
25.2 
26  3 

28.7 


1890.     1889 


1888.  I  1887. 


Bush. 

25.7 

16.6 
16.6 
17.1 
18.8 
18.1 
18.0 
13.6 
15  5 
13.0 


21.0 
25.3 


Bush. 

19.8 

14  5 
12.0 
12  5 
13.5 
11.2 
9.8 
11  0 
13.7 
12.0 


Bush. 
15.8 

13  8 
12.3 
14.6 
14.7 

14  7 
16.0 
13.0 
18.4 
13.3 


12  2 

12.2 
11.3 
10  8 


29.2,     22.2 
35  6     32.1 


23.3 

26  5l 
27.31 
27.3! 
27. 2| 
23.7! 


16  7 
22.7 
22..^ 
22  6 
17.3 
22.3 


30.0  1,0  5 
28  5  J  ^^-^ 


40.8 

48.3 

31.5 
27.2 
31.3 
32  5 


26  5 

23  5 

26  3 

36  2 

30  2 

33.3 

27.3 

36.5 

25  4 

36  7 

20.0 

23.8 

28  5 

30  0 

26.7 

35.6 

26.5 

33.6 

26.3 

32.3 

17.81 
17  2 
18.0 
26  6 
17.5 
21.0 
26  0 
25  6 
25.8 
17.4 
24.01 
21.3 


Bush.  Bush. 


12  8     14.3 
21.1;     12.4 


14  2 
14.6 
13.1 
12.0 


9.6       9.4 


26.7 

13.6 

21.1 
24  5 
25.6 
22.4 
22  7 
20.3 


28.0     33.5 
41.31     16.8 


26  0 
26.2 
31.3 
32.7 
28.2 
37  5 
34.5 
34.0 
36.3 
25.5 
26.5 
27.6 


21.0     18.7 


16.7 


11.5 
9  0| 
9.8j 
9.3 


16.1 


1  15 

5  9 

8!  13, 

61  U. 


>  >> 


17  5     11.6 
27.7 


10.3 
11.6 
10.0 
10.1 


9.7     14  3 


26.1 

22.31 
36.3 

21.6 

19.8 

22  6 

18.5 

20.9 

19  3 

21.3 

19.0 

22  5 

17.7 

20.0 

20.6 

20.3 

18.3 

36.4 

29.6 

46.2 

29.0 

23.5 

26.5 

25.5 

31.8 

30.0 

33.2 

29.6 

26.5 

27  0 

35.8 

29  5 

29.4 

24.2 

28.7 

30.0 

26.2 

30.5 

25.2 

29.3 

25.3 

26.6 

■J5.8 

27.5 

27.2 

31.4 

Bush. 

19.2 

15.4 
13.7 
13.8 
14  5 
13.3 
14  4 
12.7 
12.7 
12.7 


14.5 

19.7 

13.2 
13.7 
13.3 
11.1 

12.1 


24.8 

28.3 

20  9 
25.0 
24.9 
22  0 
19.6 
21.0 

21.6 


33.2 

36.2 

26.7 
26.0 
29.0 
28.9 
26  1 
30.2 
30.5 
30.8 
30.5 
23.4 
22.8 
23.5 

26.0 


61  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.32) 


A.  1898 


THE    WORLD'S    WHJlAT    CROP. 

la  one  or  two  cases  of  obvious  errors  in  tbe  American  and  Indian  official  returns,  commercial  estimates 
are  given  in  preference  (in  bushels).     {Corn  Trade  Netcs,  Sept.  20,  1898). 

Estimates  are  given  in  Imperial  bushels  (2218.19  cubic  inches). 


1897. 


1896 


1895. 


1894. 


1893. 


America  : 

U.  S.  A 

Canada  

Mexico 

Argentina 

Chili    

Uruguay  

Total  America  

Europe : 

France  

Russia  proper 

Poland 

Caucasia 

Hungary    

Austria •    - . 

Croatia  and  Sclavonia   . . 

Horzogovina  and  Bosnia 

Ita'y   

Germany 

Spain 

Portugal    

Ronmania    

Bulgaria 

Eastern  Roumelia 

Servia 

Turkey-in-Europe 

Greecf        

United  Kingdom 

Belgium    , 

Ho'land    

Switz'^rland 

Siveden ^ 

Denmark , 

Xorway    

Cyprus,  Malta,  etc   

Total  Europe — 

Asia  : 

India  

Turkey-in- Asia 

Persia 

Japan      

Total  Asia 

Africa  : 

Algeria 

Tunis 

Egypt.  .-. 

The  Cape 

Total  Africa 

Australasia  : 

Victoria 

S'^uth  A-ustralia 

New  Zealand 

New  South  Wales 

Tasmania 

West  Australia 

Queensland 

Total  Australasia   . . . 


t590,000,000  ,    t470,000,000 


.'>2, 000,000 
15,000,000 
50  000,000  i 
14,000,000  ; 
4.000,000 
725,000,000  I 

248,000,000  i 

237.003,000  ; 

18,000,000  I 

:-!0,ooo.ooo  ; 

<)3, 000.000 
32,000,000 
2,000,000  i 
2,000,000 
88,000,000 
107,000,000  : 
100,000,000  ' 
10,000,000 
35,000,000  • 
25,000,000  I 
.^,000,000 
7,030,000  : 
16,000,000 
3.000,000 
56,000.000  ; 
17,000,000  ! 
5.000,000  . 
4,000,000 
4,400,000 
3,300.000 
400.000 
2,400.000 
1,148,500,000  I 

248  00^000  i 
.50,000,000  ' 
20.000,000 
14,000.000  t 

332,000,000  , 

16,000,000  ' 
.5,000.000 
6,000,000 
4,000,000 

31,090,000  : 

10,400,000 
4,000,000  i 
6,800,000  j 

10,500,000 
1,000,000 

500,000  ; 
1,000,000  I 

34,200,000 


.38,100,000 
l."),000,000 
25,000,000 
13,  or  0,000 
.3,000.000 
564,100,000 

340,000,COO 

*oOO,000,000 

19,600,000 

45,000.000 

139  600.000 

41,600,000 

5,800,000 

2,200,000 

134.000,000 

110,0(10,000 

70,000,000 

6,000,000 

80,000,000 

40.000,000 

8,000,000 

14.100,000 

2-2,000,000 

4.800.000 

58,500,000 

19,200,000 

6.400,000 

4,000.000 

4,-560,000  , 

5,000,000 

400,000 

2,400,000  . 

1,483,960,000  1 

184,000.000 
40,000,000 
20,000,000 
14,000,000  I 

258,000,000  ' 

17,600.000 
5,600,000 
7,200,000 
2.000,000 

32,400,000  ; 

7.000  000  I 

2.700,000  : 

5,900.000  , 

8,800,000  : 

900,000  I 

200.000  { 

650,000 

26,150,000  I 


1490,000,000 
.53,2ro,CfO 
14,000,000 
44,000.000 
15.000.  OPO 
5,000.000 
621,200,000 

340.000,000 

*291,000,000 

17,000,000 

66,800.000 

14.^600,000 

40,000,000 

6,100,000 

2,000,000 

114,000,000 

i03,coo,roo 

100,000.000 
7,000.000 
66,400.000 
30,400,000 
4.000,000 
11,200,000 
18,000,000  ; 
3.600,000  '< 
38.300,000  1 
17,600,000 
5,60r.000 
6,000,000 
3,600,000  , 
4,400.000 
.S!=,0,000 
2  200,000 
1,442,150,000 

206,000,000 
45.000,000 
22,000,000 
16,000.000 

289.000,000 

25.000,000 

7,200,000  : 

8.000.00) 

2,  .500, 000 

42,700,000 

5,669,000 

,5,929,000 

6,843,000 

5,195,000 

1,164.000 

188.000 

123.000 

25,111,000 


f525,000,000 
42,000,000 
20.000,000 
60,000,000 
15,000,000 
8,800,000 
670,800,000 

342.800,000 
*3!0,000  000 
17.000,000 
59,000.000 
146,000,000 
47,000,000  I 
7,000,000  I 
2,000,000  I 
112,000,000  j 
111,000,000 
104,000  000 
10,000,000  I 
44,000,000  ! 
25,000,000  i 
2,000,000 
7.200,000 
16,000,000  I 
5,000,000  I 
61,000,000  1 
19,000.000  I 
5,200,000  ' 
5,000,000 
4,  .300, 090 
4,000,000 
400,000 
2,OCOO0O 
1,497,900,000 

t256,000,000 

43,000,000 

22,000,000 

1.5,010,000 

336,000,000 

30,000,000 

10.000,000 

7,600,000 

5,000,000 

52,600,000 

11,415.000 

7,500.000 

3.613,000 

7,044,178 

872,000 

550,000 

600,000 

31,624,178 


t475,0C0,000 
42,300,000 
17,000,000 
90.  f  00,000 
15  Of  0,000 
5,500,000 
644,800,000 

278,000,000 

*3fiO,COC,000 

'0,000,000 

66,000,000 

150,000,000 

42.000,000 

6,800,000 

2,000,000 

131,000,000 

110.000,000 

80,000,000 

6,000,000 

58  OCO.OOO 

29,000,000 

3,000,000 

10,000,000 

16.OCO.000 

7,000,000 

51,000,000 

17,000,000 

5,500,000 

?,400,0f0 

3,900,000 

4,800.000 

400,000 

2.000,000 

1,467,800,000 

t254,000,000 
45,000,000 
19,000,000 

1 5,000,009 
333,000,000 

20,000.000 
6,000,000 
8,000.000 
4,800,000 

38,800,000 

15,555,000 

13,618,000 

4,891.000 

6,502,000 

8:^3  000 

.I- 20.000 

41.3,000 

42,032,000 


World's  total  bushels 


2,270,700,000     2,364,500,000     2,420,161,000  j  2,588,924,178  I     2,526,432,000 


N.B. — The  crops  are  those  harvested  prior  to  the  1st  September  in  the  years  mentioned,  excepting  in 
the  cases  of  Australia,  Argentina,  Uruguay,  the  Cape  and  Chili,  which  are  those  of  the  Nov. -Feb.  following. 

*  The  1893  census  of  area  taken  from  this  date,     t  Commercial  estimates  taken  in  preference  to  the 
officia'. 

66 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A. 1898 


THE  WORLD'S  WHEAT  CROP. 

jReporc  of  the  Statistical!  of  the  Department  of  Agriculture,  Washington,  U.S.A.     Estimates  are  given  in 

Winchester  bushels  (2150.42  cubic  inches). 


Country. 


1897. 


America  : 
United  States 

Canada  

Mexico   

Argentina .... 
Uruguay  .... 
Chili   


Totals 

Europe  : 

Austria    

.  Hungary   ...... 

CroatiaSclavonia  . . 
Bosnia- Herzegovina 

Montenegro 

Servia 

Roumania   

Turkey-in-Europe  . . 

Bulgaria 

<Treece  

Italy   

'^pain    

Portufifal 

France    

Swit/.erland 

Germany   

^'elgium 

Netherlands 

'ireat  Britain 

Ireland 

Denmark     . , 

Sweden 

Norway    .  .  . . . 

Russia-in-Europe    . . 


Totals  

A.SI.\  : 

Russia-in-Asia. 
British  India  . 
Asiatic  Turkey 

Persia 

■Japan 

Cyprus    


530,149,000 
.56,597,000 
12,000,000 
32.000,000 
.3,t)00,000 
10,500,000 

644,846,000 

35,187.000 

89,912,000 

P,  27 1, 000 

2,000,000 

200,000 

6.000,000 

36,448,000 

17,800.000 

30,739,000 

3,000,000 

86,919,000 

86,647,000 

9,000,000 

251,298.000 

4,300,000 

107,800.000 

19,000.000 

4,4'^0,000 

53,327,000 

1,200,000 

3,700.000 

4,572.C00 

300,000 

286,338,000 


427,684,000 
40,809,000 
10,000,000 
48,000,000 
6,000.000 
12,000,000 

544,493,000 

39,160.000 

149,954,000 

9,614,000 

2,050,000 

220,000 

9,300,000 

71,194,000 

24,000,000 

48,275,000 

4,800,0C0 

115,233.000 

69,772,000 

5.600,000 

340,271,000 

4,800.000 

110,539,000 

19.200,000 

5,400,000 

58.851,000 

1.191.000 

3,689,000 

4.704.000 

300,000 

365,145,000 


1,146,358,000      1,493,262,000 


9'.  922. 000 
176,668,000 
48,000,000 
20,000,000 
18.000,000 
2,400,000 


88,990,000 
181,997,000 
44,000,000 
20,000,000 
18,000,000 
2,400,000 


ToflWs 

Africa  : 

EgTi'pt 

Tunis 

Algeria 

Cape  Colony 


Totals 

Australasia  : 

New  South  Wales  . 

Victoria       

South  Australia     . . 
Western  Australia. 

Tasmania 

New  Zealand    

Queensland 


358,990,000         355,387,000 


12,000,000 
6.000.000 

16,000,000  ; 
2,200,000  ■ 


Totals. 


36,200,000  I 

9,132,000 
7.299.000 
2,893,000 

252,000 
1.327,000 
6,113,000 

620,000 

27,636,000 


12,000.000 
5,600,000  I 

17,600,000  I 
2,257,000  i 

37,457,000 

5,359,000  ! 
.0.848.000  ' 
6,116,000 

194,000 
1,202,000 
7,059,000 

128,000 

25,906,000 


Grand  totals i     2,214,030,000      2,456,505,000 


467,103,000 
57,460,000 
10,035,000 
60,000,000 
10,000,000 
15,000,000 


400,267,000 
44,-583,000 

8,570.000 
80,000,000 

8,915,000 
16,000,000 


619,598,0001        618,335,000 


41,767,000 

158,012,000 

8, 661, 000 1 

2,000,000 

220,0001 

9.400,000 

68, 50'?.  COO 

21,500,000 

37,000,000: 

4,000,000 

118,162,000: 

81,218,000i 

7,000,000 

339.599,000' 

5,000,000 

103,160,000, 

18,730,000 

4,282,000 

38,348,000! 

1,109,000 

3,467,0001 

3,705,000 

260,000! 

376,886,000; 

I 

1,451,988,000 

85,3Rl,000 
234,.379.OO0 
46,000,000 
22,000,000 
20,341,000 
2,200,000 

410,281,000 

14,000,000 
7,.500,000 

24,400,000 
2,542,000 

48,442,000! 

7,263.000( 
11,807.0001 

8,027,000! 
176,000 
899,000 

3,727,0001 
562,000 

32,461,000 

2,562,770,000 


48,190,000 

141,855,000 

8,786,000 

2,000,000 

250,000 

7,500,000 

43,587,000 

20,000,000 

30,600,000 

5,500,000 

121,59,5.000 

105,600,000 

9,000,000 

344,184,000 

4,500,000 

110,681,000 

17,618,000 

4,166,000 

61,038,000 

1,532,000 

4,162,000 

^,362,000 

27.5,000 

418,242,000 

1,515,223,000 

I 

88,421,000 

252,784  000' 

45,000,000' 

22,000,000 

2O,.30S,0OO 

2,000,000 


1893. 


396, 132,000 
42,650,000 

6,731,000 
57,000,000 

5,703,000 
19,000,000 

527,216,000 

43,660,000 

15^,42.5,000 

8.223,000 

2.000,000 

250,000 

8.7v'6,C00 

60,74.5,000 

20,000,000 

3.^9S7,000 

6,500,000 

13.5,228,000 

95,266.000 

5,-500,000 

279,754,000 

3,300,000 

110,040,000 

17,305,000 

4,971,000 

50.800.000 

1,0)66,000 

4,661,000 

3,893,000 

275,000 

461,888,000 

1,519,063,000 

76,130,000 
268.5.^9,000 
48  000,000 
20,000,000 
16,847,000 
2,000,000 


430,513,000!        431,516,000 


12,000,000 

10.700,000 

28,900,000 

3,195,000 

54,795,000 

6,708,000 

15,736,0^0 

14,047,  OOOl 

5.37,000 

860  000 

5,046,000 

426,000 

43,360,000 

2,662,226,000 


1 0.000,  Of' 0 
4,000,000 

20,907,000 
4.014,000 

38,921,000 

7,032,000 

15,282,000 

9,  .531,000 

44.3,000 
1,051,000 
8,612,000 

477,000 

42,4.^8,000 
2,559,174,000 


1^. 


67 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


THE  PRINCIPAL  CRUPS  OF  THE   UNITED  STATES  IX  1897. 


States. 


Maine 

New  Hampshire 

Vermont    

Massachusetts  . . 
Rhode  Island   . . 

Connecticut  . 

New  York 

N«w  Jersey 

Penayslvania  . . , 

Delaware 

Maryland 

Virginia 

North  Carolina    , 
South  Carolina  . 

Georgia , 

Florida 

Alabama     

Mississippi 

Louisiana 

Texas    

Arkansas  

Tennessee    

\V.  Virginia 

Kentucky , 

Ohio    

Michigan 

Indiana 

Illinois    

Wisconsin 

Minnesota.    . . .    . 

Iowa      

Mi.-souri 

Kansas 

Nebraifka 

S.  Dakota 

N.  Dakota 

Montana    

Wyoming 

Colorado    

New  Mexico 

Arizona  .    

Utah 

Nevada . 

Idaho  

Waphiagton 

Oregon   

California  .    

Oklahama 


Total,  1897. 
"  1896 
"  1895 
"  1894 
"      1893 


Wheat. 


bushels . 


21.651 

8,176 

59,806 


Corn. 


Oats. 


3,000 
7,374,61li 
2,154,5841 

28,2.59  011 
l,2i9,520| 

12,!J77,056, 

8,451,864i 

4,169,680, 

757,726, 

1,633,946, 


302,8691 
12,370 


7,028,251 

1,78.3,120 
10,0.'J2,44.S 

5,883,431 
1-',  283. 343 
38,049,133 
28,700,144 
32,675,201 
11,578  003 

7,690,775 
59,891,104 
13.153,114 
14,104,4i8 
47,998,1521 
27,452,6471 
21,441,248, 
28,353.5521 

2,268.240, 
477.0751 

5,117,514; 

4,282.818, 
370.7821 

3,190.740 
833,4411 

2,707, 672| 
20,124  648  i 
18,155,0311 
32,394,0201 
10,389,5421 


bushels.       I 

366,411 

818,176, 

1,583,295; 

1,283,  j95  I 

263,3141 

1,425,627, 

15,335,142. 

8,545,4141 

44,866,116, 

6,373  417 1 

20,353, 542  i 

31,552, 164 

31,323.565, 

15,307,929 

32,173.0i4; 

3,810,976 

30,524,328' 

30,345,948 

21,575,5331 

72,175,1421 

35,580,  60  i 

63. 672, 5881 

17,004,298 

64,485,7441 

92,1CJ,580| 

31.201  096! 

109,825,320, 

232,928,0851 

3.3,645, 1S3| 

25,840  880| 

220,089,149 

171. 923. 882 1 

162,442,7281 

241,268,4901 

23,855,688, 

426, 020  i 

19,1701 

28, 308 1 

3,3.53.9751 

661,581; 


186,494 


bushels. 

4,139,740 

1,058,260 

3,497,043 

488,768 

118,080 

608,9711 

45,953,036, 

2,555,650 

31,842..o38 

411,620 

1,938,1921 

.5,23.3,0921 

5,820,5811 

3,830,500, 

5,517,540, 

395,811 1 

3,929,8.351 

1,670,620, 

665,334 

16,311,150 

5,284,824 

3,842,890 

3142,420 

7,841.9161 

29,907,392' 

22,940,450 

33,706,582. 

92,7!)8,496| 

62,125.3101 

41,147,002| 

103,72  slOOl 

22.078.166, 

38, 680, 080 1 

51,731.095 1 

13,647,656; 

11,397,144 

2,589,888 

479.255 

2,968,540 

258,795 


Barley. 


bushels 


838,355, 


116,586 

331.4.50 

1,912,680, 


1.046,6741 
3,822,528 
5, 75%  776 1 
1,029,114 


305,775 

112,838 

500,546 

59.650 

8.736 


Potatoes. 


4,786,075 
'218^491 


51,325 
35^514 


.32,820 

674,338 

1,014,864 

96.292 

34.5,850 

7,800,328 

9.241,328 

9,163,560 

1.5.181 

306,600 

943.360 

2,182,600 

4,663,305 

197,144 


338,492 
38,318 


183,520 


378,630 

1,695,9601 

955,7601 

20,277,9271 


bushels . 

•2,464.371 

881,994 

1,064  8101 

1,565,0661 

681,1201 

1,301,616 

21,060,098, 

2,878,100, 

10,650,780 

302,100 

1,-594,108 

2,120.116 

1,075,470 

26.3,835 

267,124 

97,125 

362,175 

347,274 

559.552 

789,720 

1,. 327. 645 

1,168,200 

2,058,672 

2,004,208 

7,3H»,226 

12,602,880; 

3,003,6211 

6,450,1201 

14,731,992, 

11,443,7601 

12,036,300; 

4,104,114 

4, 882, 080 1 

9,076,053, 

.5,093,2021 

2,9.55,843 

702,936 

455.100 

3,106.134 

65,430 


783,364 

182,115 

544,320 

2,354,670 

2,389,600 

2,256,765 


530,149,168,  1,902,967,933  698.767,809. 
427,634,346  2,283,875,165.  707,346,404 
467,102,947,     2,151,138,580     824,443,537, 


460,267,416     1,212,770,052 
396,131,725,     1,619,496,131 


662,036,028 
638.854,850 


66,685,127,  164,015,964 

69,695,223,  252,234,540 

87,072,744  297,237,370 

61,100,4651  170,787,338i 

I 

69,869,4051  183,034,203 


Hav 


toaa. 

1,053,774 

692.689 

1.107,950 

819,288 

84,0;« 

558,  .'^02 

6,0U9.S9» 

700,556- 

3.690,439 

70,834 

390,1.54 

592,114 

165.634 

137,795 

167, 04» 

6.38.1. 

78,401 

82,125- 

46,031 

427,20S- 

186,042 

409, 154 

680,590 

410,3:14 

2.619,97fr 

2,100.699 

2,399.544 

2,602,541 

1,972. 420 

2.378,537 

6,711,30» 

2.546,304 

4.06.3,605 

3,069,88.- 

2,358,38.^ 

621,061 

492,458 

377,723 

1,765,436. 

132,918 

101,883 

540,396- 

364,302 

422,00R 

6,57. 0.*^^ 

1,087,94: 

2,716,0i*'.: 


60,664,87^ 
59,282,158 
47,078,541 
54,874,40* 
65,766,15*' 


According  to  the  eleventh  census  of  the  United  States  (1890)  the  average  number 
of  acres  per  1,000  acres  of  cleared  land,  devotei  to  wheat  was  93.9  ;  corn,  201.6  ;  oats^ 
79.2  j  barlej,  9.0;  hay,  148.1  ;  and  cotton,  56.2. 

^8 


PART  II. 


LIVE  STOCK,  THE  DAIRY  AND  THE  APIARY. 


LIVE    STOCK. 


•'Taking  a  general  survey  of  the  field,"  said  the  May  bulletin,  "live  stock  may  be 
said  to  have  come  through  the  winter  in  good  condition.  Horses  are  perhaps  a  little 
chin,  but  apart  from  odd  cases  of  "  distemper  "  they  have  been  almost  completely  free  from 
disease.  Cattle  have  also  done  well,  although  in  the  desire  to  husband  fodder  some  of 
the  animals  were  allowed  to  get  too  lean.  Two  or  three  cases  of  disease  were  complained 
of,  but  those  were  evidently  due  to  local  causts.  Sheep  generally  are  in  excellent 
condition,  and  lambs  are  abundant  Some  cases  of  scab,  however,  were  reported  from 
York  and  Victoria,  and  elsewhere  one  one  or  two  complaints  of  a  different  ailment. 
Swine  have  not  done  so  well  as  usual.  Many  litters  have  been  lost.  In  Essex  and  other 
Lake  Erie  counties  there  has  been  an  outbreak  of  hog  colera,  and  importations  from  that 
district  led  to  other  cases  appealing  in  parts  of  Lambton,  Middlesex,  Oxford  and  York. 
The  disease  appears  to  have  been  promptly  stamped  out." 

The  November  bulletin  thus  described  pastures  and  live  stock  :  "  Pastures  were  poor 
in  the  Lake  Erie  District,  in  the  west,  and  the  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  group,  in  the 
€a8t,  but  they  were  good  in  the  Georgian  Bay  counties  ;  while  the  remaining  districts 
may  be  reported  as  only  fair.  Live  stock  generally  are  describ  d  as  looking  well,  and 
less  disease  is  reported  among  them  than  for  years,  A  large  number  of  cattle  were  sold 
early  in  the  year  for  shipment  to  the  Buffalo  market,  and  during  the  summer  sales  were 
large  ofi  the  grass  ;  it  is  probable  that  less  than  utual  will  be  tied  up  for  winter  feed- 
ing. A  correspondent  in  East  Garafraxa  township  states  the  suggestive  fact,  that  '  A 
great  number  of  cattle  have  been  fetched  here  from  Manitoba  to  be  fattened  for  the  spring 
market.'  Sheep  appear  to  be  fewer  in  number  also,  the  demand  for  lambs  being  steady 
during  the  summer.  A  good  many  sheep  have  been  turned  off  on  rape  this  fall.  The 
swine  industry  has  been  brisk  during  the  year.  More  hogs  were  sold  on  foot  than  formerly, 
and  a  more  or  less  regular  supply  of  young  animals,  weighing  from  150  to  200  pounds., 
are  being  sent  to  market  at  all  times  of  the  year.  Consequently  there  is  not  the  usual 
number  of  swine  awaiting  killing.  There  is  an  abundance  of  fodder — hay  and  straw — 
and  also  a  large  quantity  of  plump  but  discolored  barley,  and  the  live  stock  will  enter  the 
winter  not  only  in  good  trim  but  also  well  provisioned.  The  large  quantity  of  corn  fodder 
raised  this  season  has  contributed  to  the  husbanding  of  the  more  expensive  foods  of  many 
farm  animals,  and  a  great  deal  of  corn  for  the  silo  has  also  been  grown." 

[69] 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189 B 


Horses.  In  the  following  table  the  number  of  horses  is  given  by  classes  for 
1896  and  1897,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  ;  also  the  number  of  horses  in  each 
district  for  each  of  the  five  years  1883-97  : 


Horses. 

o 

a 

l-H 

Georgian 
Bay. 

'6 

-la'O 

1^ 

•So 

1-3 

St.  Law- 
rence and 
Ottawa. 

s 
— 

IS 

30.171 
29,755 

4,219 
4,063 

6,676 
8,169 

41,066 
41,987 
43,218 
45,760 
47,844 

Northern 
Districts. 

The 
Province. 

(  1897 
Working  horses .      •■  ogg 

r,      J-                   r  1897 
Breeding  mares. -^  -jgyg 

Unbroken  hor.«  38  j   ,gQg 

rl897 
1  1896 

Totals -i  1895 

1  1894 
11893 

62,511 
60,633 

9,314 
8,325 

15,381 
17,601 

87,206 
86.559 
88,711 
93,41H 
96,091 

44,601 
43,962 

9,336 
8,888 

12,826 
14,076 

66,763 
66,926 
70,004 
72,9.^8 
73,8.56 

38,849 
38,419 

6,839 
6,432 

9,265 
10,515 

54.953 
55.366 
56:888 
59,460 
60,065 
1 

84,230 
84,985 

14,55S 
14,104 

22,257 
26,389 

121.045 
125,478 
131,593 
135.239 
135,597 

88,989 
89,776 

12,378 
12,514 

21,911 
25,961 

123,278 
128,251 
133.750 
139,962 
142.043 

79,869 
79,778 

11,921 
11,011 

16,397- 
18,504 

108,187 
109,293 
113,477 
118,463 
120,351 
1 

7,701 
7,076 

1,375 
1,546 

2,096 
2,267 

11.172 

10,889 

10,055 

9,539 

9,340 

436,921 
434,384 

69,940 
66,883 

106.809 
123,482 

613,670 
624,749 
647,696 
674,777 
685,187 

Taking  the  figures  for  the  Province,  an  increase  of  2,537  has  occurred  in  the  number  of 
working  horses,  and  an  increase  of  3,051  in  the  number  of  breeding  mares;  but  there  is 
a  decrease  in  the  number  of  unbroken  horses  of  16,673.  The  Lake  Erie  counties  and  the 
Northern  Districts  show  an  increase  in  the  total  number  of  horses  compared  with  the  pre- 
ceding year,  but  none  of  the  groups  have  an  increase  in  the  three  classes  ot  horses.  The 
largest  number  of  horses  is  credited  to  the  Lake  Ontario  group,  although  the  West  Mid- 
land counties  have  the  greatest  number  of  breeding  mares  and  unbroken  horses. 

Horned  Cattle.  The  number  of  horned  cattle  in  the  Province  is  given  in 
the  following  table  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  for  1896  and  1897,  together 
with  the  total  number  in  each  of  the  five  years  1893-97  : 


Cattle. 

.2 

i 

K 

a 

C 
cS 

Lake 
Ontario. 

St.  Law- 
rence and 
Ottawa. 

Northern 
Districts. 

The 

Province. 

Working  oxen  {1^7 

361 
367 

208 
371 

374 

587 

124 
213 

.0, 

154 

371 
539 

137 
383 

614 
797 

2,  .320 
3,411 

Milch  cows,,,  {;89- 

98,943 
93,110 

82,962 
81,968 

66,883 
66,449 

173,805 
174,614 

146.957 
146,308 

272,422 
263,849 

81,059 
77,679 

17,205 
16,369 

940,236 
920,346  1 

Store  cattle         f  1897 
over  2  years.  \  1896 

39,743 
38,765 

64.570 
65,772 

38,812 
41,114 

87.170 
84,700 

47,165 
51,196 

60,471 
58,935 

20,331 
22;545 

7,144 
7,382 

365,406  ! 
370,409 

Young  and       /  1897 
other  cattle.  (.  1896 

94,759 
91,023 

120.182 
123,399 

88,-500 
90,819 

183,770 
186,941 

130,8«5 
135,581 

170,  .587 
173,395 

61,791 
63,130 

23,890 
23,504 

874,364 

887,792 

r  1897 
1    1896 
Totals  .....-!    1895 
1    1894 
L  1893 

233,806 
223,265 
214,795 

2i.%6n 

218,320 

1 

267,922 
271,510 
271,183 
•JOS,  7  3 
265,366 

194,569 
198,969 
202,925 
2.jl,329 
194,065 

444,869 
446,468 
445,280 
438,413 
433,118 

32.5,108 
33:^,239 
326,662 
310,767 
300,067 

503,851 
496,718 
482,681 
461,882 
446,433 

163,318 
163,737 
16?.  655 
161,014 
160.165 

48,883 
48,052 
43,922 
41,672 
40,348 

2,182,326 
2,181,958 
2.150,103 
2,099,301 

2,057.882 

Milch  cows  have  increased  in  number  by  19,890,  while  the  other  three  classes  have 
decreased,  the  net  result  being  an  increase  of  368  in  the  total  number  of  cattle  in  the 
Province  over  the  previous   year.     The  ox  is  now  scarce   enough   to   be  somewhat  of  a. 

70 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18£8 


curiosity  in  many  of  our  more  settled  agricultural  districts.  The  sustained  interest  in 
dairying  may  be  noted  from  the  fact  that  out  of  the  f-ight  districts  only  one  fails  to  sliow^ 
an  increase  in  the  number  of  milch  cows.  The  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  counties  have 
the  greatest  number  of  milch  cows,  and  seems  bound  to  increase  the  lead.  The  West 
Midland  District  makes  the  best  showing  in  the  number  of  store  cattle,  and  also  in  the 
number  of  young  cattle  on  hand. 

Hogs.  In  the  following  table  the  total  number  of  swine  are  given  by  county 
groups  and  for  the  Province,  by  classes,  for  1896  and  1897,  together  -with  the  total  for 
each  of  the  five  years  1893  97  : 


1      Hogs. 

i 

Lake 
Huron. 

s 
a 

6 

•is  * 

St  Law- 
rence and 
Ottawa. 

J.l 

(V 

1  Over  1  year. . 

fl897 

45,227 

20.737 

19,912 

41,990 

34,455 

50,149 

17,796 

5,213 

235.479 

■  1. 1896 

44,804 

20,743 

21,631 

43,494 

37,768 

51,44) 

18,511 

5,362 

243,756 

Under  1  year 

ri897 

217,429 

106.146 

95, 4.^:6 

223,439 

186,810 

147,684 

59.336 

13,184 

1.049,484 

•  1  1896 

201,385 

100,869 

90,474 

225,499 

196,699 

139,078 

57,580 

14.291 

1,025,875 

ri897 

262,656 

126,883 

115.368 

265,429 

221,265 

197,833 

77,132 

18,397 

1,284,963 

1  1896 

246,189 

]  21,612 

112,105 

268,993 

234,467 

190,521 

76,091 

19,653 

1,269,631 

j  Totals 

-;  189,^ 

24.5,109 

120,977 

116,711 

276,076 

242,425 

19.3,505 

84,211 

20,059 

1,299,072 

1  1894 

212,536 

99,443 

106,648 

231,534 

211,781 

182,598 

79,368 

18,2-.'5 

1,142,133 

11893 

183,004 

87,737 

94,857 

203,816 

185,726 

168,885 

71,8.59 

16,138 

1,012,022 

There  has  been  an  increase  of  15,332  in  the  total  number  of  swine  in  the  Province, 
although  there  was  a  falling  off  ot  8,277  in  the  total  number  of  those  over  one  year. 
Three  of  the  groups,  namely,  the  West  Midland,  Lake  Ontario  and  Northern  Districts, 
fail  to  equal  their  respective  figures  of  the  previous  year  for  the  total  number  of  hogs. 
The  Lake  Erie  district  is  the  only  one  showing  an  increase  in  the  number  of  both  classes 
of  swine.  The  West  Midland  group  has  the  largest  total  number  of  hogs,  although  the 
most  old  hogs  are  found  in  the  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  counties. 

Sheep.  The  table  following  gives  the  number  of  shtep,  by  classes,  in  1896  and 
.897,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province,  together  with  the  total  number  in  each  of 
the  five  years  1893-97  : 


Sheep. 


Over  1  year. 


/1897 
\  1896 


Under  1  vear   ^  ^^^^ 
unaer  i  year.  ^^  ^^gg 


Total? 


ri897 
I  1896 
-;  1895 
I  1894 
U893 


104,0841 
108,684 

91,44.j' 
95,955 

195,529 
204,639 
229,264 
229,052 
214,008 


-ffi 


117,902 
134,172 

117,787; 
131,715 
I 
235,6891 
265,887 
291,4441 
294,759; 
289,683 


c 

1'^ 
1l5 

h5  C 

fe  n  ^ 
5  =«  S 

w:2 

9-- 

The 

rovince. 

O 

153,985 

133,766 

175,807 

6.3,971 

34,411 

eu 

113,759 

897,685 

128,521 

172,449 

157,079 

194,124 

fir,,438 

34,149 

995,616 

101, 1?9 

138,423 

114.465 

150,507 

52,928 

25,981 

■792,665 

107,772 

156,676 

130,637 

1.5.5,350 

50,611 

25,016 

853,732 

214  888 

292,408 

248,231 

326.314 

■  116,899 

60.392 

1,690,350 

2i6,293 

329,125 

287,716'  349,474 

117,049 

59,165 

1,849,348 

267,614 

362,122 

307,836  384,223 

123,892 

56,340  2,022.735 

265,689 

360,188 

295,900  .383,740 

135,772 

50,705  2,015,805 

239,715 

353,928 

284,3141  370,288 

1 

139,093 

44,909  1,935,938 

1 

The   Northern   Districts   show  an   increase   in   the   number  of  both  classes  of  sheep,  and 
the  East  Midlatd  counties  have  increased  in  the  number  of  sheep  under  one  year,  but  in 

71 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32^ 


A.  1898 


every  other  group  both  classes  of  sheep  have  decreased  in  number.  The  total  number  of 
sheep  in  the  Province  is  given  as  1,690,350,  or  158,988  less  than  in  1896.  The  largest 
number  of  both  classes  of  sheep  are  found  in  the  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  counties. 

The  Wool  Clip.  The  table  following  presents  the  total  number  of  fleeces, 
with  total  and  average  weights,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  for  1896  and  1897, 
together  with  the  average  of  the  Province  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  : 


Diitricts. 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Huron 

Georgian  Bay     

West  Mid'and 

Lake  Ontario   

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland  

Noithern  Districts 

The  Province   


1897. 


Fleeces. 


102,345 
116,959 
113,952 
151,639 
132,292 
172,691 
62, 8n 
34,<i04 


Pounds. 


1(2 'c 


603,820  5, 
697,122o 
664,509!5. 
917,688:6. 
828.957:6. 
891,3585. 
353,28315. 
183,247,5. 


1896. 


Fleeces. 


90  107, 

96  134, 

82!  129, 

05!  171, 


887,003     5,139,98415.79 


156. 
192. 

65. 

33, 


Pounds.     »<» 


625,055  5,81 
775,90715.75 
730,167  5.65 
1,001,499  5.84 
934,599  5  96 
982,49115.11 
352,^815.38 
179,29815.29 


991,3711    5,581,387.5.63 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882  97. 


Fleeces. 


108,374 

128,998 
121,388 
lt''5,638 
156,435 
211,437 
67,611 
18,924 

998,805 


Pounds. 


I 


614, 
747, 
683, 

1,079, 
935, 

1,054, 
358, 
104, 


467  5.67 
613  5.80 
113  5. 6S 
486  5.81 
212  5.98 
118  4.99 
132  5.30 
414  5.52 


5,576,505  5.58 


There  is  a  decided  increase  in  the  average  weight  per  fleece,  the  figures  for  the  year 
being  5.79  pouncs,  which  is  .16  pound  more  than  in  the  year  immediately  preceding,  and 
.21  pound  more  than  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years.  There  has  been  a  decrease  in 
the  total  number  of  fleeces  compared  with  those  reported  in  1896,  and  consequently  the 
total  clip  was  441,403  pounds  less  in  1897  than  in  the  previous  year.  The  Lake  Ontario 
•counties  have  the  heaviest  fleeces.  , 


Live  Stock  Sold.     The  following  table  gives  the  number  of  each  class  of  live 
stock  sold  in  1896  and  1897,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  : 


Live  Stock  sold. 

'E 
'^ 

s> 
^ 

a 
iJ 

5,673 
5,698 

54,256 
45,842 

87,388 
92,498 

259,248 
231,268 

537,890 
465.955 

1^ 

6,258 
6,633 

79,917 
71,366 

113.111 
119,668 

152,335 

137,158 

273,479 

247,184 

3. 

"Si  >i 

O 

4,510 
4,263 

51,969 
45,832 

90,960 
92,959 

120,345 
108,243 

219,461 
201,295 

IJ 

9,130 
9,079 

125,837 
107,529 

129,345 
142,241 

33.5,236 
321,935 

558,315 
510,028 

6 

S"S 

'■is 

8,448 
8,698 

78,174 
70,109 

115,354 
127,444 

27?,509 
268,930 

637,2.58 
617,461 

1  ^  i 

5,970 
6,384 

72,611 
62,203 

132,634 
133,644 

156,780 
144,103 

521,455 
468,944 

•0 

.u  a 

2,680 
2,951 

29,719 
24,455 

44,555 
41,989 

84,450 
75,229 

167.468 
157,588 

a  of 

0)   0 

812 
8^2 

10,494 
9,115 

19,525 
16,453 

18,064 
17,493 

49,895 
43,316 

1 

■S  > 

P4 

Ho^es    {Jg7 

C-tle ...{S 

«^eep.. {Zl 

"°^^   tlS96 

p-i^-^y IS 

43,511  ' 
44,458 

50.%007 
436,451 

732,872 
766,896 

1,399,967 
1,304,359 

2,965,221 
2,711,771 

Taking  the  figures  for  the  Province,  less  horses  and  sheep  were  sold  than  in  1896,  bat 
more  cattle,  hogs  and  poultry  were  disposed  of  than  in  that  year.  The  West  Midland 
group  is  credited  with  the  largest  number  of  sales  of  horses,  cattle  and  hogs,  in  the  St. 
Lawrence  and  Ottawa  district  the  most  sheep  were  sold,  and  the  Lake  Ontario  counties 
•disposed  of  the  greatest  number  of  poultry. 

72 


<)1   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


REMARKS    OF   CORRESPONDENTS. 

From  the  May  Returns. 

Mala  hide,  Elgin  :  Farmers  are  putting  in  less  grain,  leaving  more  to  grass  for  early  summer  pasture  to 
^nish  the  steers  and  supply  the  dairy  with  cheap  food. 

Wainfleet,  Welland  :  Farmers  are  going  into  swine-raising  more  e.xtensively  than  in  the  past. 

Huron.  Biuce :  Fat  cattle  are  principally  sold  to  drovers.  Store  cattle  are  scarce.  Great  numbers 
went  to  Buffalo  and  the  Xorth-vvest. 

Bentinck,  Grey  :  I  think  that  by  the  way  drovers  have  been  scouring  the  country  for  the  past  two 
months  fur  cattle  to  the  Buffalo  market  that  there  is  scarcely  a  carload  left  in  the  township  available,  fat 
or  lean. 

Sunnidale,  Simcoe  :  A  great  many  farmers  are  building  underground  stabler,  and  instead  of  throwing 
«thb  roots  to  the  siock  whole,  farmers  are  now  pulping  them  and  mixing  them  with  cut  straw  ;  also  grinding 
girain  instead  of  feeding  it  whole. 

Maikham,  York  :  A  go(d  deal  of  feeding  is  done  in  this  locality  by  watching  the  results  from  different 
rations.  There  is  a  diversity-  of  opinion.  Some  of  our  largest  farmers  think  there  is  nothing  like  ensilage 
and  chopprd  oats  combined— two  bushels  of  ensilage  and  about  six  quarts  of  oats.  Others  feed  pulped 
turnips  and  mangels  with  chopped  oats  and  barley  mixed  together,  and  say  there  is  nothing  like  it.  Others 
feed  roots  and  cut  straw  by  pulping  the  roots  and  mixing  the  straw  together  with  chopped  grain  ;  and  some 
few  feed  roots  and  hay  only.  People  are  doing  a  great  deal  more  daii-ying  than  formerly,  and  thereby  feed- 
ing more  of  their  grain  on  the  farm. 

Athol,  Prince  Edward  :  Perhaps  the  past  winter  furnishes  the  best  example  of  a  widely  practised 
economy  in  the  feeding  of  stock  that  has  occurred  for  many  years.  Everything  has  been  stabied  in  warm 
-quarters  much  more  comfortably  than  formerly,  and  thus  much  less  food  has  sufficed  than  would  otherwise 
have  been  necessary. 

Barrie,  Frontenac  :  Too  many  horses,  especially  old  ones,  are  kept,  and  their  keep  help  to  starve  the 
iAttle  in  some  instances.  Too  often  are  these  horses  turned  out  in  the  woods  to  provide  fcr  themselvee.  It 
is  cruelty  to  animals. 


POULTRY. 

With  the  exception  of  odd  cases  of  cholera  reported  in  two  of  the  Lake  Erie  coun- 
ties, there  appears  to  have  been  but  little  disease  of  a  serious  nature  among  fowl  this  year. 
•Correspondents  are  still  divided  as  to  the  profits  in  poultry,  some  claiming  that  they  pay 
as  well  as  any  other  class  of  live  stock  kept  on  the  farm,  as  they  use  as  food  much  that 
otherwise  would  go  to  waste,  while  others  hold  that  they  destroy  much  valuable  grain, 
and  that  there  is  no  gain  at  all  in  their  keep  However  there  appears  to  be  a  growing 
confidence  in  the  industry,  and  one  correspondent  enthusiastically  alludes  to  the  good 
«ffecS  of  the  addresses  on  poultry  raising  delivered  at  farmers'  institute  meetings. 

The  number  of  poultry  are  given  in  the  following  table,  by  classes,  for  the  years 
1896  and  1897,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  ;  also  the  total  number  for  each 
of  the  five  years  1893-97  . 


e 

o 

•o 

a 

ario, 

1 

u 

B 

•  ^ 

3 

•D 

■*^ 

S^ 

•^ 

Oo 

> 

Poultry. 

0) 

§ 

« 

So 

'^, 

a;  (3 

.a* 

c8 

CS 

o 

^ 
a 

*J    '^ 

cS 

gQ 

'Turkeys/ S 

J 

J 

rs 

1-^ 

M 

W 

^ 

H 

120,897 

107,447 

71.701 

173,541 

154,377 

188,903 

56,405 

16,957 

890,228: 

92,079 

84,915 

51,787 

140,131 

1,S0,756 

154,476 

49,285 

12,341 

715,7701 

Geese      f  ^897 

47,030 

51,316 

44.348 

79,324 

71,506 

80,150 

28,974 

7.067 

409,715 

ueese  . .  ^^  ^g^g 

42,911 

49,831 

39,880 

75,300 

71,257 

78,326 

28,020 

6,022 

391,547 

Other      / 1897 

1,126,855 

803,117 

576,119 

1 ,444,592 

1,333,403 

1,258,864 

478,863 

113,585 

7,135,398 

fowl.     L 189G 

993,470 

742,298 

540,898 

1,337,730 

1,288,327 

1,171,124 

445,999 

107,004 

6,626,850 

ri897 

1,294,782 

961,880 

692,168 

1,697,457 

1,559,286 

1,527,917 

564,242 

137,609 

8,435,341 

:  1896 

1,128,460 

877  044 

632,565 

1,553,161 

1,490,340 

1,403,926 

523,304 

125,367 

7.734,167 

Totals. .  -i  1895 

1,092,252 

861.992 

635,942 

1,537,230 

l,5.=>9,84a 

1,417.580 

518,100 

129,902 

7,752,840 

1  1894 

1,029,046 

825,368 

651,343 

1,498,649 

1,501,417 

1,420,990 

498,690 

127,159 

7,552,662 

L1893 

921,453 

764,568 

622,164 

1,424,418 

1,388,009 

1,396,371 

480,717 

116,736 

7,114,436 

73 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  189& 


Turkeys  have  increased  in  number  by  174,458  compared  with  the  previous  year, 
geese  by  18,168,  and  other  fowl  by  508,548,  the  total  number  of  all  classes  of  fowl  on 
farms  being  8,435,341,  or  701,174  more  than  in  1896.  Every  district  .'shares  in  the  total 
increase.  The  West  Midland  group  has  the  greatest  total  number  of  poultry,  although 
tha  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  counties  have  the  largest  number  of  turkeys  and  geese. 


REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS, 
From  the  November  Bulletin. 

Gosfield  N.,  Essex  :  Large  numbers  of  geese,  turkeys  ducks,  and  chickens  are  raised.  I  suppose  thky 
pay,  or  farmers  would  not  continue  raising  them.  Most  of  them  are  sold  t  o  hucksters  who  come  from 
JJetrcit. 

Pelee  Island  :  Poultry  is  in  good  condition.  We  cannot  tell  their  profits,  as  they  are  all  consumed  at 
home,  except  a  few  eggs. 

Harwich,  Kent :  Poultry  are  the  most  neglected  of  any  stock  on  the  farm,  and,  handled  as  they  are. 
are  not  very  profitable.  A  good  many— in  some  cases  whole  flocks — have  died  off  around  here  this  summer- 
Harwich,  Kent  :  I  think  poultry  would  pay  if  proper  attention  were  given  to  them.  They  are  allowed 
to  forage  for  themselves,  and  although  they  have  a  house  to  roost  in,  they  seem  to  delight  to  sit  in  the  trees, 
or  on  the  binder  or  buggy  back,  or  on  some  of  the  implements,  wher»i  th^j'  deposit  their  droppings  where 
its  fertility  is  not  required,  and  where  it  is  not  only  u^^eless  bub  also  objectionable. 

Oxford,  Kent :  Poultry  raising  is  very  successful,  and  is  one  of  the  chief  sources  of  income  to  the 
farmer.  The  number  of  fowl  raised  will  be  nearly  one-third  more  than  last  year,  and  the  number  of  eggs 
sold  this  year  must  have  been  exceedingly  large. 

Zone,  Kent :  A  few  cases  of  hen  cholera  occurred  in  some  places. 

Dorchester  S.,  Elgin  :  More  poultry  are  kept  than  formerly.  They  pay  well  if  properly  looked  after,, 
but  if  not  attended  to  they  are  kept  at  a  loss. 

Malahide,  Elgin  :  \'ery  few  farmers  p<iy  much  attention  to  their  poultry,  and  consequently  they  get 
light  returns.  The  price  of  eggs  has  ruled  rather  lower  than  usual  on  account  of  greater  production  and  the 
American  duty. 

Southwold,  Elgin  :  A  great  deal  of  poultry  kept.  This  branch  of  husbandry  id  usually  run  by  the 
farmers'  wives  and  daughters,  and  considered  their  property ,  as  it  ought)  to  be. 

Yarmouth,  Elgin,  A  larger  number  of  poultry  are  being  raised  than  in  the  past.  Last  year  a  large 
quantity  were  shipped  to  England. 

Canboro,  Haldimand  :  Poultry  are  in  good  condition,  and  are  the  best  paying  stock  on  the  farm. 

Walpole,  Haldimand  :  Poultry  have  been  affected  with  cholera,  and  many  have  lost  the  greater  part 
of  them.     The  profits  are  very  good  when  disease  is  kept  away, 

Bertie,  Welland  :  Poultry  are  in  fine  condition.  Eggs  have  commanded  a  fair  price.  The  market  far 
live  and  dressed  fowl  has  been  good. 

Stamford,  Welland  :  Poultry  are  in  good  condition.  Farmers  are  raising  more,  as  we  consider  poultry 
profitable  when  properly  cared  for. 

Thorold,  Welland  :  This  has  not  been  a  very  good  year  for  raif iner  poultry,  at  least  the  early  part  of  it. 
In  some  localities  the  gapes  (or  cholera)  caustd  loss  to  young  fowls.  With  proper  attention,  however^ 
poultry  raising  is  profitable. 

Wainfleet,  Welland  :  No  disease  has  been  reported  among  poultry.  Where  properly  cared  for  they  are 
profitable.     More  attention  is  given  to  this  branch  of  farming  than  formerly. 

Sarnia,  Lambton  :  A  great  improvement  is  goiog  on  in  poultry  raising.  Farmers  are  seeing  the  value 
of  pure-bred  males  in  their  yards,  and  are  beginning  to  see  that  by  right  treatment  there  is  a  profit  in  the 
business. 

Warwick,  Lambton  :  Although  I  keep  a  nvimber  of  fowl  I  have  never  kept  an  account  of  what  they 
cost  or  of  what  they  produced. 

Ashfield,  Huron  :  More  value  is  attached  to  the  hen  than  formerly.  She  does  not  cost  the  farmer  as 
much  as  he  feeds  her  on  unmarketable  grain. 

Colbome,  Huron  :  This  has  been  a  good  year  for  all  kinds  of  poultry.  Hens  and  turkeys  appear  to  be 
most  profitable. 

Hay,  Huron  :  Poultry  are  pretty  much  as  usual  in  condition,  and  are  likely  to  be  cheap.  Turkeyo  are 
rather  scarce,  as  they  did  not  thrive  this  year. 

Howick,  Huron  :  All  kinds  of  domestic  fowl  are  in  good  condition.  There  seem  to  be  larger  flocks  of 
poultry  here  this  year  than  formerly,  especially  turkeys, 

Howick,  Huron  :  Poultry  farming  may  pay  if  well  conducted  near  a  good  market.  But  in  a  part  o 
the  country  situated  far  from  good  markets  I  am  doubtful  if  it  would  pay  to  go  extensively  into  the  p  jultry 
business,     However,  I  think  every  farmer  is  benefitted  by  keeping  a  limited  number  of  poultry,  as  they  can 

74 


►il  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A,  1898 


be  fed  partly  on  inferior  grain  and  other  refuse  that  under  the  circumstances  might  go  to  waste.  I  do  not 
know  of  anyone  who  makes  poultry  raising  solely  a  business  in  this  part  of  the  country.  Is  it  because  no 
one  has  confidence  in  it  being  a  paying  business ': 

Wawanosh  E.,  Huron  :  Poultry  pay  the  best  of  anything  on  the  farm  for  the  money  invested  in  them. 
Our  local  shows  are  encouraging  the  fai-mers  to  grow  bigger  eggs  by  giving  a  prize  for  the  largest  and  most 
uniform  eggs. 

Wawanosh  W.,  Huron  :  I  think  a  limited  number  of  hens  pay,  as  they  eat  a  good  deal  of  what  other- 
wise would  go  to  waste. 

Amabel,  Bruce  :  Poultry  are  the  most  profitable  of  anything  kept  on  the  farm,  but  the^e  is  consider- 
able trouble  in  attending  to  them. 

Brant,  Bruce :  I  am  of  opinion  that  hens  properly  cared  for  are  more  profitable  than  any  other  stock 
on  the  farm  for  the  amount  of  food  consumed. 

Brant,  Bruoe  :  There  are  a  large  number  of  turkeys  this  year  and  they  look  well.  Prices  have  been 
rather  low. 

Culross,  Bruce  :  It  is  questionable  whether  any  farmer  can  show  a  "dividend  "  from  keeping  poultry 
from  the  produce  he  sells,  but  the  luxury  of  getting  a  fresh  egg  or  a  roasted  chicken  in  season  will  compen- 
sate a  good  deal. 

Huron,  Bruce :  i  oultry  have  been  healthy.  People  are  divided  in  opinion  as  to  their  profit.  Some 
believe  they  pay,  and  others  think  there  is  no  profit  in  them.  May  be  it  is  becauje  the  women  get  the 
money  for  the  eggs  and  fowl. 

Artemesia,  Grey  :  Poultry  will  pay  if  proper'.y  managed.     Turkeys  are  a  failure  this  season. 

Bentinck,  Grey  :  Turkeys  and  geese  are  largely  raised,  and  all  fowls  are  in  good  condition.  Hens  are 
mostly  kept  for  their  eggs,  from  which  farmers'  wives  receive  fairly  go  id  jirofits. 

Egremont,  Grey  :  It  has  not  been  so  easy  to  raise  poultry,  especially  turkeys,  this  season  on  account  of 
the  wet  spring.     There  has  been  a  fair  increase  of  all  kinds  of  domestic  fowl. 

Glenelg,  Grey  :  Poultry  are  in  fairly  good  condition,  but  I  think  profits  are  small  if  the  costi  of  feci 
and  care  is  taken  into  consideration. 

Holland.  Grey  :  I  cannot  vouch  for  the  profit  in  poultry.  The  women  generally  look  after  them,  and 
>  ju  may  depend  upon  it  they  feed  them  well  as  long  as  there  is  anything  left  in  the  barn. 

Sydenham,  Grey  :  Profits  arising  from  poultry  are  a  secret,  being  mostly  pin  money  for  the  women 
folks. 

Gwillimbury  W.,  Simcoe  :  On  the  profits  of  poultry  opinions  differ  widely  In  general,  women  think 
there  is  a  profit,  whi'e  many  men  think  the  destructive  habits  of  fowl  counterbalance  the  piofits.  As  a 
rule  fowls  are  not  sufficiently  well  sheltered  in  winter,  and  there  are  practically  no  winter  eggs.  In  the 
summer  they  do  much  injury  to  gardens  and  grain  fields. 

Ofo,  Simcoe  :  Very  few  farmers  keep  an  account  of  what  is  given  to  poultry. 

Sunnidale,  Simcoe  :  The  condition  of  fowls  ci  all  kind  are  very  good.  If  hens  are  properly  cared  for 
they  are  very  profitable,  as  eggs  sell  well  generally.  As  for  geese,  turkeys  and  ducks,  if  the  feed  was  kept 
account  of  I  do  not  think  there  is  much  profit  in  them. 

Veopra,  Simcoe  :  Poultry  are  not  properly  kept  or  attended  to.  They  are  kept  in  such  a  way  that 
there  can  be  little  or  no  profit  in  them.  Farmers  have  a  great  deal  to  learn  yet  about  this  branch  of  the 
live  stock  industry.     There  is  a  good  {>rofit  in  them  when  proper  y  kept. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :   Poultry  are  a  profitable  part  of  our  farm  products,  and  have  done  well  this  year. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :  I  think  the  Canadian  hen  has  been  doing  her  duty  fairly  well  as  compared  with 

other  operations  on  the  farm. 

Lobo,  Middlesex :  Poultry  did  well  this  year,  but  the  beginning  of  the  s.ason  was  too  wet  for  young 
larkeys.     They  are  worth  all  we  can  get  for  them. 

Williams  E  .  Middlesex  :  Poultry  as  a  rule  do  not  get  the  attention  they  should,  but  some  farmers  are 
:iiaking  money  out  of  them. 

Oxford  W.,  Oxford:  Ducks  and  chickens  have  been  raised  in  large  quantities.  Poultry  is  taking  the 
place  of  other  meats  to  quite  an  extent.     They  appear  to  pay  well. 

I  Dereham,  Oxford  :     Poultry  are  healthy,  but  1  do  not  think  farmers  will  ever  get  rich  at  the  business. 

Zorra  E  ,  Oxford  :     More  attention  is  being  given  to  poultry  every  year— better  breeds  and  better  care. 

Bra  it.  Brant :  This  county  could  easily  be  made  a  large  producer  of  poultry.  A  good  deal  of  atten- 
tion is  given  to  the  industry  in  a  local  way. 

Blanshard,  Perth  :  I  cannot  give  you  anything  definite  in  regard  to  poultry.  The  women  run  this 
part  of  tde  farm  and  pocket  the  proceeds.  I  do  know  there  is  often  a  big  hole  made  in  the  grain  bins,  but 
whether  the  poultry  pay  for  it  or  not  1  do  not  know. 

Elma.  Perth  :  Poultry  are  plentiful  and  in  good  condition.  Eggs  are  selling  weU  at  paying  prices. 
Chickens  and  ducks  sell  like  hot  cakes  at  prices  that  pay  for  the  raising.  I  think  farmers  would  do  well 
to  keep  mora  poultry  for  home  consumjition. 

Elma,  Perth  :  This  was  a  very  bad  spring  for  young  fowls.  I  do  not  think  there  is  much  profit  or  loss 
in  the  way  fowls  are  kept  around  here.  As  a  rule  it  is  a  case  of  "  root  hog  or  die  "  the  greater  part  of  the 
year.     Poultry  of  all  kinds. are  in  good  condition  at  present. 

75 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Logan,  Perth  :  The  farmer's  wife  tends  the  hens  and  turkeys.  They  do  not  pay  her,  but  she  cannot  see 
it.     Too  large  flocks  and  inbreeding  are  to  blame. 

Wallace,  Perth :  Keep  enough  poultry  on  the  farm  to  pick  up  what  would  be  lost  if  they  were  not 
there,  and  that  is  enough  in  my  opinion. 

Eramosa,  Wellington  :  Hens  d'd  fairly  well.  I  keep  Leghorns  and  I  believe  they  paid  me  well, 
although  I  do  not  know  anyone  who  keeps  an  account  of  profit. 

Guelph,  Wellington  :  A  little  more  attention  is  being  given  to  poultry  on  the  farm  than  formerly. 
Farmers  are  realizing  that  there  is  ju^t  as  much — and,  where  proper  attention  is  paid  them,  a  little  more — 
money  in  them  than  in  any  other  class  of  stock. 

Xichol,  Wellington  :  Poultry  is  kept  only  as  a  secondary  branch  of  farm  stock,  and  there  are  not 
many  who  can  speak  definitely  as  to  profits. 

Puslinch,  Wellington  :  Poultry  rre  plentiful  and  generally  in  good  condition.  There  are  large  flocks 
of  turkeys  and  geese. 

Dumfries,  N.,  Waterloo  :  T.aken  as  a  whole  it  has  been  a  good  year,  with,  perhaps,  the  exception  of 
turkeys— a  lot  dying  with  what  some  have  termed  "liver  complaint." 

Wellesley,  Waterloo  :  It  has  been  the  mrst  profitable  season  for  many  years  to  owners  of  hens. 
Cleanliness,  exercise,  good  feed  and  shelter  are  the  main  requisites. 

Garafraxa  E.,  Duflerin  :     A  great  many  turkeys  died  in  the  spring.     They  cannot  S'tand  much  wet. 

Luther  E.,  Dufferin  :  Poultry  are  in  good  condition,  but  as  regards  profits  I  thirk  Ihey  are  on  the 
other  side  of  the  house. 

Grimsby  S.,  Lincoln  :  Poultry,  in  general,  are  in  good  condition.  There  is  not  much  profit.  During 
the  year  eggs-were  cheap  and  there  was  not  much  demand  for  *'owl. 

Ancaster,  Wentworth  •  Hens  are  rot  well  attended  to  by  most  farmers.  They  shculd  be  kept  for 
only  two  years,  half  of  the  flock  beinu  pul'ets  and  half  yearlings— pullets  for  summer  layers  and  yearlings 
for  breeding.  There  is  no  profit  in  hens  allowed  to  run  in  garden  and  grain  ;  keep  them  penned  and  feid 
plenty  of  green  stuff. 

Glanford,  Wentworth  :  Poultry  seems  to  have  done  pretty  well,  although  there  were  some  complaints 
of  a  good  many  old  hens  dying  early  in  the  Rummer,  and  some  loss  of  chickens  and  turkeys  from  the  heavy 
rains.  The  markets  have  been  bttter  supplied,  but  the  price  has  been  lower  than  the  last  two  or  three 
years. 

Saltfleet,  Wentworth  :  The  only  poultry  kf  pt  here  are  a  few  fowls  kept  by  farmers.  I  know  of  no 
one  who  is  paying  particular  attention  to  the  business. 

Trafalgar,  Halton  :  Poultry  do  not  get  a  fair  show  on  the  majority  of  farms,  but  I  find  that  sentiment 
is  rapidly  improving  in  this  respect,  and  younger  farmers  are  beginning  to  realize  that  they  have  a  treasurp 
in  the  hen.     I  believe  they  are  the  best  paying  factor  on  ihe  farm. 

Toronto  Gore,  Peel :  It  has  been  a  good  year  for  poultry.  Their  condition  at  present  is  good.  They 
pay  about  as  well  as  anything  on  the  farm. 

Etobicoke,  York  :  My  experience  is  that  poultry  are  a  good  thing  to  have  on  the  farm.  They  meet 
many  small  demands,  and  enable  the  farmer  to  pay  as  he  goes,  and  not  to  open  book  accounts  in  stores 
during  ihe  summer  season. 

Georgina,  Vork  :  We  notice  considerable  improvement  all  along  the  line— improved  poultry  houses, 
improved  breeds  acd  improved  methods.     A  great  many  consider  the  hen  the  keeper  of  the  house. 

Markham,  York  :  Poultry  are  mostly  doing  well.  There  would  not  be  much  profit  if  it  were  not  for 
picking  up  what  would  be  waited  otherwise. 

Markham,  York  :  It  has  been  a  good  year  for  poultry,  especially  for  the  late  hatches  in  May  and 
.June.  The  dry  weather  at  that  time  kept  chicks  growing,  and  there  was  no  disease  prevalent.  I  think 
fowls  properly  fed  will  pay  a  greater  profit  to  the  amount  ir vested  than  anything  else  on  the  fjirm  or  on 
the  ordinary  quarter-acre  lot. 

Vaughan,  York  :  As  a  rule  farmers  all  keep  more  a  less  hens,  etc,  but  keep  no  account  of  cost  or 
profit.  The  fowls  run  about  the  farm  yard,  and  we  do  not  know  what  it  costs  to  keep  them.  Certainly 
we  would  not  be  without  them.     They  are  in  fair  condition. 

Brock,  Ontario:  Poultry  are  in  good  condition  and  laying  well  at  present,  which  keeps  the  price  of 
fresh  eggs  low.  Poultry  pays  well  if  looked  after  carefully.  I  would  advise  those  who  keep  pouitry  to 
keep  them  pure. 

Mara,  Ontario:  Poultry  have  been  doing  wt-ll  this  season  and  yielding  good  prcfits.  Farmers  are 
going  more  extensively  into  this  line  of  farming,  and  building  more  suitable  hen-houses.  The  egg  trade  of 
this  township  has  reached  enormous  proportions. 

Cartwright,  Durham  :  The  low  price  of  eggs  makes  the  hen  unprofitable  from  a  financial  standpoint. 
Of  course  every  farmer  kf  eps  erough  for  his  own  use,  but  few  here  do  anything  more.  Large  numbers  ('f 
turkeys  and  geese  are  raised  for  market  and  seem  to  pay  very  well. 

Alnwick,  Northumberland  :  The  profits  from  poultry  will  compare  very  favorablj-  with  those  from 
cattle. 

Brighton,  Xorthumbei land  :  Poultry  have  done  well  this  season.  I  did  not  hear  of  any  complaints. 
Eggs  have  been  in  good  demand  and  at  rather  better  prices  than  last  year. 

Hamilton,  Northumberland  :  There  is  no  change  in  this  industry.  Farmers  keep  poultry  but  do  noti 
know  if  they  pay  or  rot,  as  they  keep  no  track  whatever  of  their  cost. 

76 


»31  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Percy,  Northumberland  :  Turkeys,  I  think,  pay  very  well  for  the  care  given  them,  as  they  are  insect 
oaters  and  injure  grain  but  very  little  in  the  summer  time.  They  can  be  fitted  for  market  in  three  weeks 
in  the  fall. 

Percy,  Northumberland  :  Poultry  raising  ia  not  much  gone  into  here.  A  few  have  turkeys— from 
twenty-five  to  thirty  in  a  fiock — but  not  many  are  at  it.  There  are  a  large  lot  of  hens  kept,  principally  for 
eggs- 

Hillier,  Prince  Edward  :  A  great  improvement  ia  taking  place  in  caring  for  poultry.  This  ia 
especially  noticeable  in  the  oflferings  on  the  market  of  dressed  poultry. 

Storrington,  Fronten.ac  :  Poultry  of  all  kinds  have  done  well,  and  more  pains  are  taken  to  improve 
than  formerly.     The  market  has  been  well  supplied. 

Leeds  and  Lansdnwne,  Lfeds  :  Poultry  has  done  well  this  year.  The  egg  production  has  been  large, 
and  prices  were  rather  low  in  con.sequence.  I  think  there  is  more  profit  in  poultry  than  in  anything  else 
on  the  farm  for  the  outlay. 

Ynuge  Shud  Esc<itt,  Leeds  :  The  condition  of  poultry  is  good.  Many  farmers  are  feeding  them  betten 
and  making  the  buildings  more  roomy  and  comfortable  than  formerly,  besides  improving  their  breeds. 
The  profits,  however,  are  not  as  good  as  we  could  wish. 

Williamsburg,  Dundas  :  Farmers  generally  keep  a  few  fowls  of  dififerent  kinds,  not  calculating  to  make 
any  great  profit  out  of  theip.     Once  and  a  while  they  will  have  a  few  turkeys  and  ducks  for  sale. 

Kenyon,  Glengarry  :  The  condition  of  poultry  is  good  while  the  women  have  the  grain  bins  open  ; 
but  where  the  profits  come  in  I  cannot  find  out. 

Hawkesbury  E.,  Prescott :  Poultry  have  paid  well  this  season.  We  have  had  a  cash  rrarket  and  fair 
prices  for  eggs.  Poultry  are  bett'::r  cared  for  then  they  used  to  be— more  care  in  breeding  and  more  com- 
fortable housed. 

Clarencp,  Russell :  All  hatchings  were  late,  and  conseqiiently  young  birds  of  all  classes  are  less  then 
in  other  years.  The  turkeys  especially  were  small  in  number,  but  they  are  doing  well.  Poultry  keeping 
is  not  considered  directly  profitable. 

Russell,  Russell  :  No  specialty  is  made  of  poultry  raising,  but  most  farmers  are  doing  more  than 
formerly  in  having  a  moderate  number  to  sell  in  the  fall— principally  turkeys  (bronze  grades)  and  chickens. 

Elmsley  N.,  Lanark  :  More  attention  has  been  given  to  poultry  raising  since  tho^e  stirriner  addresses 
were  given  at  the  Farmers'  Institute  Meeting.  Poultry  houses  are  springing  up  like  mushrooms  on  every 
hill. 

Bexley,  Victoria  :  I  cannot  say  much  about  poultry,  but  it  appears  as  if  more  people  are  going  into 
keeping  them. 

Marisposa,  Victoria :  Poultry  are  coming  to  the  front  quite  conspicuously  as  a  source  of  revenue  to 
the  farmer,  but  more  care  needs  to  be  exercised  in  their  management. 

Harvey,  Peterborough  :  Some  people  who  have  provided  goood  warm  houses  for  poultry  say  that  eggs 
and  chickens  pay  well  for  feed  and  care.  Others,  who  do  not  provide  shelter  and  feed  for  their  poultry, 
grumDle  and  make  light  of  the  question  of  profits. 

Dysart,  Haliburton  :  I  once  kept  an  exact  account  of  my  poultry,  and  found  that  they  paid  me  3^ 
cents  an  hour  for  the  time  employed  upon  them. 

Monmouth,  Haliburton  :  As  for  profits  in  poultry,  I  do  not  think  there  is  anyone  in  the  Province 
who  takes  enough  interest  in  them  to  estimate  the  matter. 

Tyendinaga,  Hastings  :    Fowl  pay  well  for  their  keep.     I  have  about  a  hundred. 

Medora,  Muskoka  :    Poultry  pay  fairly  well.     Some  improved  breeds  are  coming  in. 

Zvlorrison,  Muskoka  :  Poultry  are  in  good  condition,  and  ready  to  consume  everything  vrithin  their 
reach.     A.s  to  the  profits  of  their  keep  the  writer  remains  skeptical. 

Watt,  Muskoka  :  I  could  speak  about  losses  rather  than  profits  so  far  a3  poultry  are  concerned.  We 
do  not  give  them  the  necessary  care  to  secure  profits. 

Humphrey,  Parry  Sound  :  Poultry  give  good  results  when  properly  attended  to.  Fresh  eggs  and 
young  chicks  are  a  ready  sale  at  good  prices  in  summer  months — the  tourist  season. 

Assiginack,  Manitoulin  ;  The  condition  of  poultry  is  good.  Hens  and  turkeys  can  be  kept  profitably 
with  a  little  judicious  care. 

Cockburn  Island,  Manitoulin  :  Every  settler  has  some,  but  none  can  say  as  to  their  profit.  How- 
ever, allacknowledge  some  good  from  them  in  the  house. 


THE  APTARY. 


The  August  bulletin  has  the  following  :  "  Bees  swarmed  frequently  this  season,  and 
several  correspondents  state  that  they  had  never  more  difficulty  in  keeping  them  from 
Sfttl  Dg  m  the  woods.  Most  of  the  honey  has  been  made  from  white  clover  and  alsike, 
haaawood  blossoms  (or  linden)  being  unusually  scarce.     Only  odd  mention   is   made  of 

77 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


disease.  In  Western  Ontario  the  average  yield  of  honey  per  colony  will  be  rather  over 
fitty  pounds,  while  in  the  eastern  portion  of  the  Province  it  will  bardy  average  forty 
poands." 

Bees  were  reported  in  good  condition  in  November,  and  correspondents  spoke  of 
them  as  being  free  from  foul  brood.  Yfry  little  honey  was  made  from  bass  wood.  In 
Western  Ontario  the  yield  ranged  from  60  to  100  pounds,  but  in  the,  eastern  portion  of 
the  Province  only  about  half  that  quantity  was  realized. 

The  table  following  gives  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  the  number  of 
hives  of  bees  kept  in  township  munioipalities  during  each  of  the  six  years  1892  97, 
together  with  their  value  (including  outht)  in  each  of  the  five  years,  1893-97  : 


a 

o 

pa 

1 

4.3 

13    ^ 
D  .3 

. 

Bees. 

H 

a 

CI 

.2 
'S: 

o 

J 

s  O 

> 
p 

^ 

•i 

o 

0) 

23,014 

OS 

■d  * 

|S 

cQ 

13 

1-3 

hA 

o 

26,325 

50,700 

11,371 

/C 

&H 

rl897 

26.755 

16,464 

11,113 

1,069 

166,811 

'1896 

•2.3,107 

14,406 

9,347 

20.195 

29,425 

4«.55l 

13,924 

1,121 

160.076 

1  189.0 

27,264 

18,368 

11,708 

2.%  625 

36,023 

43,880 

11,013 

1,292 

173,173 

No.  of  hives  . . 

•  ■]  1894 

36,019 

2.5,159 

14,644 

29,146 

.^9,514 

46,231 

8,094 

1,257 

200,094 

1  1893 

37,816 

27.786 

14,019 

31,244 

.38,.594 

46,.382 

8,161 

1,166 

205,168 

L1892 

36,191 

28,924 

12,030 

28,201 

38,672 

43,730 

7,064 

1.010 

195,822 

$ 

S 

S 

S 

s 

? 

S 

$ 

S 

r]897 

1.30,369 

94,161 

07,966 

131,136 

148,273 

248,739 

58.579 

5,973 

885,196 

1  1896 

120.266 

80,435 

52.400 

119,940 

162,125 

241,521 

70,957 

6.764 

854,408 

"Value  of  Bees 

-i  1895 

148,  .386 

104,990 

60,6:^0 

140,489 

198.504 

217,098 

60,884 

7,677 

938,658 

and  outfit. 

1  1894 

179,126 

139,685 

78.  .575 

167,578 

207,983 

226,867 

44,857 

6,903 

1,051,  .574 

11893 

201,855 

186,265 

72,663 

209,213 

222,465 

220.952 

42,569 

6,963 

1,162,945 

The  total  number  of  hives  reported  in  the  Province  is  166,811,  or  6,735  more  than 
th©  previous  year,  although  the  Lake  Ontario  and  East  Midland  groups  and  the  Northern 
Districts  fail  to  reach  their  respective  figures  for  1896.  The  largest  number  of  bees  are 
found  in  the  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  counties  The  total  value  of  bees  and  outfit  in 
the  Province  is  given  as  $885,196,  of  $30,788  more  than  last  year. 


REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS. 

Gosfield  W.,  Essex  :  Bees  have  done  fairly  well,  though  not  so  well  as  in  former  years,  though  they  are 
in  good  shape  for  winter  and  no  foul  brood  has  affected  them  here. 

Orford,  Kent :  Bees  built  up  splendidly  in  spring,  and  the  flow  of  nectar  from  white  clover  was  large  ; 
but  the  bees  swarmed  in  the  middle  of  the  flow,  and  took  themselves  to  the  woods  without  even  clustering, 
the  refcult  being  that  the  surplus  is  bmall. 

Middleton,  Norfolk  :  Bees  have  done  very  well,  but  I  never  knew  so  many  to  get  away. 

Caiiboro,  Haldimand  :  Honey  has  been  a  splendid  crop.     I  have  a  neighbor  that  had  7,000  lbs. 

Walpole,  Haldimand  :  Bees  produced  a  fair  quantity  of  honey  and  of  tine  quality.  They  did  not  swarm 
as  much  as  usual.     No  foul  brood  in  this  locality. 

Wainfleet,  Wetland  :  Plentj'  of  swarms  ;  not  much  honey ;  no  foul  brood. 

Willoughb}',  Wetland  :  Bees  .swarmed  frequently,  and  stored  considerable  honey. 

Sombra,  Lambton  :  Bees  have  done  better  this  year.  Pews  at  night  have  done  well  for  them  as  buck- 
wheat was  pli-nty.  If  there  is  no  dew  there  will  be  no  bees  on  buckwheat  in  the  daytime.  The  honey  is  so 
white  and  tempting  looking,  it  is  fid  for  the  Queen  of  England. 

Warwick,  Lambton  :  The  past  season  has  not  been  a  good  one  for  the  producti'^-n  of  honey. 

Ashfield,  Huron  :  There  has  been  a  good  crop  from  white  clover.     Basswood  did  not  bloom  this  year. 

Hay,  Huron  :  There  has  been  a  poor  supply  of  honey  this  year  ;  nothing  in  surplus  boxes. 

Tuckersmith,  Huron  :  Bees  have  done  well  this  year,  yielding  between  60  and  70  lbs.  of  honey  to  the 
colony,  with  sufficient  honey  left  for  winter. 

78 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  189  8 


Wawanosh  W.,  Huron  :  Bees  have  done  more  at  swarming  than  at  honey  eatherin?.  Thev  will  not 
average  fifty  pounds  to  the  hive.     No  foul  brood. 

-;  Brant,  Bruce  :  This  has  been  rather  a  good  year  for  bees.      Although  some  report  it  as  rather  poor  mv 
experience  has  been  the  other  way.  ^      '      ■' 

Brant.  Bruce  :  Bees  are  in  fine  condition.  White  clover  was  the  honey  harvest ;  no  basswood.  No 
foul  brood. 

Culro^s,  Bruce  :  Bees  have  done  very  well,  and  will  go  into  winter  quarters  well  and  healthy. 

Glenelg,  Grey  :  I  got  a  fairly  good  swarm  on  the  1st  of  July,  but  they  did  not  get  enough  for  themselves 
;and  I  had  to  feed  them  some  to  ht  them  for  winter. 

Sydenham,  Grey  :  Bees  are  healthy,  and  have  yielded  about  forty  poundp. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :  Bees  have  produced  largely,  although  kept  back  by  a  cold,  wet  spring. 

Norwich  S.,  Oxford  :    Bees  are  becoming  scarce  throughout  the  township. 

Brantford,  Brant :  The  honey  produce  of  the  year  will  be  about  100  lbs.  per  colony,  and  of  the  best 
quality  Do  not  know  of  any  foul  brood  in  the  country.  There  was  ore  suspected  case,  but  the  bacteriolo- 
gist at  the  0.  A.  C.  said  it  was  not  foul  brood. 

Mornington,  Perth  :  It  has  been  a  great  season  for  swarming,  and  a  good  season  for  honey. 

Luther  E.,  Dufferin  :  Bees  are  in  fine  shaoe.  In  fact,  they  have  gone  into  winter  quarters  in  the  best 
shape  for  year.<.  There  was  a  good  flow  of  honey  in  July  and  September  ;  August  was  a  poor  month  tor 
bees  as  it  was  so  wet  and  cold.     There  is  no  foul  brood  in  this  locality. 

Anoster,  Wentworth  :  The  produce  of  the  apiary  is  equal  to  the  demand.  Bees  have  made  a  large 
<|uantity  of  honey. 

Beverly,  Wentworth  :  Hardly  any  bees  around  here.  I  lost  mine  by  foul  brood  the  other  year.  I  tried 
-all  the  dii.  infect  ants.  I  believe  I  may  have  got  the  disease  from  comb  foundation,  although  some  argue 
otherwise. 

Glanford,  Wentwnrth  :  The  season  has  been  favorable  for  bees.  Although  the  surplus  honey  crop  was 
rather  light  there  has  been  a  continuous  bloom  throughout  the  season,  and  bees  are  in  good  condition  for 
winter.     There  is  no  foul  brood  or  other  disease. 

Trafalgar,  Halton  :  This  has  been  a  splendid  year  for  bees— the  best  for  years.  I  have  heard  of  no 
losses,  except  that  some  bees  at  swarming  time  refused  to  go  into  the  hives  and  went  to  the  woods  instead. 

Etobicoke,  York  :  It  has  been  an  average  year  for  honey ;  there  were  no  basswood  blossoms.  There 
weie  a  few  cases  of  foul  brood. 

Markham,  York  :  There  are  very  few  bees  in  this  neighborhood.     The  yield  of  honey  has  been  good. 

Markham,  York  :  Bees  have  not  done  well.     The  spring  was  wet  and  cold,  and  the  sununer  too  dry. 

Scarooro',  York  :  Judging  by  our  own,  I  think  bees  must  have  done  fairly. 

Vaughan,  York  :  One  of  our  largest  and  most  successful  bee-keepers  told  me  that  he  had  never  seen  fou^ 
't)rood,  although  he  was  anxious  to  see  it. 

Whitchurch,  York  :  Bees  are  not  extensively  kept,  but  it  has  been  the  best  season  for  years. 

Brock,  Ontario :  Bee-keepers  complain  of  the  drouth  afifecting  the  blossoms  in  summer,  and  therefor® 
honey  is  not  so  plentiful. 

Cartwright,  Durham  :  I  am  told  that  bees  have  not  been  nearly  so  profitable  as  in  years  past.  A  con- 
siderable shortage  is  reported  in  the  honey  produce. 

Darlinerton,  Durham  :  Bees  have  done  very  poorly.  There  has  been  scarcely  any  white  honey  but  plenty 
of  dark.     There  never  has  been  any  foul  brood  in  this  locality. 

Brighton,  Northumberland  :  Bees  have  not  made  much  honey  this  season  and  very  little  increase.  They 
;ippear  to  be  healthy  at  present. 

Cramahe,  Northumberland :  Bees  have  had  a  very  poor  year,  with  but  little  swarming,  some  bee-keepers 
with  fifty  hives  having  had  not  more  than  five  or  six  new  swarms. 

Haldimand,  Northumberland  :  Bees  have  not  done  well.  Some  think  the  wet  in  the  spring  and  lack  of 
clover  was  the  cause. 

Hamilton,  Northumbprland  :  Bees  have  given  a  small  yield  of  honey  generally  ;  but  mine  have  done 
fairly  well,  although  below  the  average. 

Percy,  Northumberland  :  Bees  have  not  done  well  in  this  locality.  We  have  no  clover  or  light  honey 
this  year.  The  nights  in  June  were  too  cold,  and  the  jlover  cups  did  not  fill  with  nectar.  We  must  have 
warm  nights  in  June  to  get  nice  honey. 

Percy,  Northumberland  :  Honey  is  scarce.  It  was  a  poor  year  for  it,  but  improved  when  the  buckwheat 
came. 

Athol,  Prince  Edward  :  The  yield  h^s  been  light  in  this  section.  There  was  but  little  swarming.  Bees 
are  in  good  condition  for  winter,  with  plenty  of  stores. 

Bedford,  Frontenac  :  Bees  swarmed  enough,  but  the  honey  was  scarce,  averaging  only  about  20  lbs.  per 
colony. 

Lansdowne  Front,  Leeds :  Bees  have  done  fairly  well.  A  lady  near  by  with  twenty-eight  swarms 
•extracted  l,.oOO  lbs.  of  honey,  besides  some  comb  honey. 

Leeds  and  Lansdown,  Leeds  :  Bees  have  done  well  this  year,  and  more  are  going  in  for  keeping  them. 

79 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Yonge  and  EscoU  Rear,  Leeds :  Bees  did  well  this  year,  and  the  produce  was  fair,  although  the  quality 
was  not  80  good  as  in  18d6. 

Williamsburg.  Dundas  :  Honey  has  been  a  very  good  crop,  but  is  rather  dark  in  color  in  our  townfehip. 

Hawkesbury  E.,  Prescott :  Every  bee-keeper  with  whom  I  have  spjken  reports  very  little  honey.  Bees 
are  healthy. 

Clarence,  Russell :  Beea  wintered  badiy  as  a  general  thing  from  a  variety  of  causes,  those  wintering  in 
cellars  doing'best.  Fully  one-third  of  the  colouies  were  lost,  and  the  remainder  were  more  or  less  weak., 
Very  little  white  clover  or  ba^swood  honey  was  gathered,  and  not  much  surplus  honey  from  any  source.  It 
was  the  poorest  season  for  many  years. 

Brudenell  and  Lynedocb,  Renfrew  :  Bees  are  in  good  condition  for  winter.  Honey  is  not  half  of  an 
average  crop.     Xo  foul  brood. 

Bexley  Victoria  :  I  had  twenty-two  sDocks  this  summer.  In  early  season  there  was  hardly  any  whitfr 
clover,  being  winter  killed,  and  the  bees  did  not  make  much  light  honey  ;  but  July  and  August  were  first- 
clasi  months.  I  took  1,000  pounds  of  hone^  from  my  twenty-two  hives.  The  most  of  the  honey  was  of  a- 
slightly  dark  color. 

Bangor,  Hastings  :  Bees  have  done  well.  There  was  a  good  flow  of  honey  in  the  latter  part  of  the- 
season. 

Morrison,  Muskoka  :  The  honey  produce  was  very  light  on  account  of  the  wet  and  cold  season. 


THE  DAIRY. 


Most  of  the  reports  concerning  dairying  received  in  November  were  favorable. 
Cheese  factories  were  well  patronized,  and  there  was  a  good  supply  of  milk  during  the- 
season.  Several  corre^pondent8  describe  the  cheese  industry  as  beiiig  in  a  flaurishing; 
condition.  The  factories  not  making  this  year  were  few.  As  correspondents  wrote, 
winter  butter-making  was  being  started  in  several  cheese  factories.  While  a  few  of  them 
complain  of  poor  prices  during  the  summer,  most  of  those  reporting  regard  the  butter 
business  as  improved,  3ompared  with  previous  years,  prices  having  been  somewhat  higher 
as  the  result  of  a  better  and  more  uniform  make.  Several  allusions  were  made  by  corre- 
spondents to  the  good  work  done  by  the  Ontario  Government  Travelling  Dairy.  Durham 
grades  are  mostly  kept  on  Canadian  farms,  bat  a  large  number  of  Ayrshires  are  to  be 
found  in  the  eastern  half  of  the  Province,  and  many  Holsteins  and  Jerseys  have  been, 
introduced  into  western  Ontario. 


REMARKS  OF  CORRESPONDENTS. 

Fbom  the  May  Rktoens. 

Chinguacousy,  Peel :  This  used  to  be  a  grain  growing  county  ;  barley  was  the  staple  production.  Now 
it  is  largely  a  dairy  county,  with  bank  barns  and  improved  methods  of  feeding.  Corn  growing  for  ensilage- 
is  largely  practised.     Owiag  to  the  hard  times  farmers  employ  but  littld  hired  help. 

Haldimand,  Northumberland  :  Two  of  the  greatest  sources  of  income  the  farmers  have  are  providing 
milk  for  cheese  factories  and  fattening  live  stock  for  the  market. 

Drummond,  Lanark  :  If  it  were  not  for  the  cheese  industry  we  would  be  in  a  much  worse  plight,  every- 
thing raised  on  the  farm  being  so  low  in  price. 

From  the  August  Rktubns. 

Pwaleigh,  Kent :  The  horn-fly  has  been  a  little  troublesome. 
Aldburough,  Elgin  :  No  scarcity  except  of  gilt-edged  butter. 

Canboro",  Haldimand  :  The  grass  on  wheat  fields  and  pastures  and  meadows  looks  more  like  May  lOtbt 
than  August  lOlh. 

Moulton,  Haldimand  :  Stock  are  in  fine  condition,  and  cows  are  giving  a  good  flow  of  milk. 

Dunn,  Haldimand  :  There  has  been  plenty  of  cheese,  but  butter  has  been  scarce. 

McKillop,  Huron  :  Cheese  and  butter  factories  have  not  be^n  a  success  here. 

Culross,  Bruce  :  There  is  an  abundinie  of  fodder,  and  the  dairy  product  will  exceed  that  of  1S96. 

80 


61  Victoria  Sessional  Papers  (No,  32).  A.  1898 


Fentinck,  Grey  :  I  never  saw  better  pastures  in  August.  The  make  of  both  butter  and  cheese  will  be 
over  the  average. 

Glenelg,  Grey  :  The  supply  of  dairy  produce  is  abundant,  owing  to  good  pastures. 

Holland,  Grey  :  The  only  cheese  factory  we  had  in  the  township  is  closed  and  the  stock  sold. 

Biddulph,  MiddlPBex  :  The  farmer.s  of  this  section  for  the  most  part  h.'indle  their  own  milk  and  make 
their  own  butter.  Excepting  during  the  hot  spell  in  the  first  part  of  July  the  flow  of  milk  throughout  the 
summer  has  been  good. 

Blandford,  Oxford  :  Cheese  is  first  always  here,  and  this  year  more  than  ever  before. 

Oxford  E.,  Oxford  :  Pastures  are  fresh  pnd  are  growing  nicely  Live  stock  are  in  grod  condition,  and 
the  prospects  are  good  for  a  full  supply  of  feed  for  faU  and  winter.  The  supply  of  dairy  produce  is  the 
largest  on  record. 

Fullarton,  Perth  :  A  creamery  plant  is  being  added  to  one  of  our  local  cheese  factories. 

Wallace,  Perth  :  Pastures  have  been  good  all  summer.  Cattle  are  in  good  condition.  The  prospects 
for  winter  feed  are  very  good.  Cheese  factories  have  been  doing  a  large  business,  and  are  doing  so  yet  on 
account  of  the  good  pastures. 

Dumfries,  Waterloo  :  Pastures  are  good,  and  prospects  are  good  for  the  fall.  Butter  is  abundant,  but 
not  much  has  been  put  up  for  export. 

Beverly,  Wentworth  :  Cheese  is  more  plentiful  than  for  some  years. 

Esquesing,  Halton  :  Dairy  produce  has  been  so  far  a  drug  in  the  market,  but  is  improving  now. 

Trafalgar,  Halton  :  Live  stock  are  looking  well,  and  the  prospects  for  winter  are  better  than  for  tha 
last  two  or  three  years. 

Vaughan,  York  :  Our  local  creamery  has  been  converted  into  a  cheese  factory. 

Hope,  Durham  :  The  dairy  industry  i«  in  a  good  sound  condition,  the  output  of  the  cheese  factories 
being  fully  15  per  cent  larger  up  to  date  than  during  the  same  period  in  the  last  five  years,  with  a  prospect 
of  the  increase  being  fully  maintained.  The  product  has  found  a  ready  sale,  and  has  been  graded  as  the 
finest  quality  by  tlie  buyers. 

Barrie,  Frontenac  :  Cloyne  factory,  burned  last  year,  has  been  rebuilt. 

Kennebec,  Frontenac  :  Cows  are  keeping  up  well  in  the  supply  of  milk  to  cheese  factories. 

Storiington,  Frontenac  :  It  is  estimatf  d  that  there  were  825,000  worth  of  cheese  made  in  this  township 
in  ,Tune,  and  the  milk  supply  keeps  up  well.  This  year's  output  of  cheese  will  be  the  largest  ever  produced 
in  this  township. 

Williamsburg,  Dundas  :  The  supply  of  dairy  produce  is  above  last  year's  by  nearly  25  per  cent. 

Lancaster,  Glengarry  :  There  is  more  cheese  made  here  this  season  than  ever  before. 

Hawkesbury  E.,  Prescott :  The  sixteen  cheese  factories  are  all  in  operation. 

Elmsley  N  ,  Lanark  :  The  cheese  industry  is  the  only  hold  for  farmers  in  this  country.  We  may  thank 
th«  Farmerrt'  Institutes  for  helpful  information  regarding  growing  corn  for  stock,  and  for  giving  the  cheese 
industry  an  impetus. 

Bat  hurst,  Lanark  :  Cows  have  given  a  good  flow  of  milk,  and  more  cheese  is  being  made  in  this  sec- 
tion than  heretofore. 

Eldon,  Victoria  :  We  have  three  cheese  factories  in  this  township,  all  doing  well,  one  of  which  is  a 
new  one. 

Chandos,  Peterborough  :  Severe  heat  and  dry  weather  caused  the  flow  of  milk  to  decline. 

Watt,  Muskoka  :  Butter  has  been  very  low  in  price,  but  is  now  looking  up. 

Tyendinaga,  Hastings  :  The  dairy  outlook  is  good.  There  will  be  a  large  amount  of  milk  for  fall  make 
of  butter  and  cheese. 

From  thb  Novembkb  Returns. 

Gosfield  N.,  Essex  :  Cheese  factories  were  better  supplied  than  usual  during  the  past  season,  and 
patrons  seem  satisfied  with  their  returns. 

Mersea,  Essex  :  There  has  been  more  cheese  made  this  year  than  ever  before,  and  consequently  leas 
batter. 

Harwich,  Kent :  The  butter  and  cheese  trade  needs  working  up  in  this  locality. 

Harwich,  Kent :  The  Travelling  Dairy  was  a  good  thing  for  instructing  in  butter-making,  but  was  not 
attended  as  it  should  have  been.     Every  woman  thinks  she  already  knows  sill  about  batter-making. 

Raleigh,  Kent:  A  steady  increase  in  the  quantity,  and  an  improvement  in  the  quality  of  the  butter 
uroduced  is  perceptible,  and  were  it  possiblH  to  get  another  visit  from  the  Travelling  Dairy  great  interest 
would  be  taken  in  the  meetings  and  good  results  follow. 

Tilbury  E.,  Kent :  Less  butter  has  been  made  this  year  than  cheese. 

Dorchester  S. ,  Elgin  :  The  cheece  peason  is  being  shortened.  The  factory  to  which  my  milk  is  sent 
begins  making  butter  to-morrow  ( .Vovember  9th). 

Yarmouth,  Elgin  :  The  dairy  business  is  increasing,  Farmers  are  keeping  more  cows,  and  are  making 
winter  butter  at  factories. 

6   B.I.  (1-4)  81 


61   Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32>  A  1898 


Houghton,  Norfolk :  The  production  of  cheese  is  very  much  greater  than  that  of  butter.  Two  cheese 
factorips  in  this  neighborhood  have  put  in  a  butter-making  plant.  The  price  of  butter  is  higher  than  at 
this  time  last  year. 

Canboro',  Haldimand  :  Our  Canboro'  che^jse  factory  made  more  cheese  this  year  then  in  several  years 
before. 

Walpolc,  Haldimand  :  The  butter  business  has  been  poor  as  compared  with  cheese.  However,  good 
butter  was  always  saleable  at  fair  prices. 

Waicfleet,  Welland  :  More  attention  is  being  devoted  to  the  dairy  industry. 

Ashfield,  Huron  :  This  is  the  best  dairy  year  for  four  years.  Three-fourths  of  our  farmers  send  milk  t© 
the  cheese  factory.  The  quality  of  butter  has  improved  smce  the  Travelling  Dairy  came  around,  but  the 
better  business  will  always  be  a  failure  if  the  store-keepers  and  dealers  do  not  provide  better  places  for 
Btoring  it  in. 

Goderich,  Huron  :  Cheese-making  has  completely  out-stripped  the  butter  industry. 

Howick,  Huron :  Cheese  is  much  ahead  of  butter,  although  butter  is  now  much  better  than  formerly, 

Howick,  Huron  :  The  dairy  industry  has  been  encouraging  indeed.  Prices  have  been  fair  and  pas- 
tures have  been  good,  with  a  consequent  large  production.     Butter  has  been  of  a  better  quality. 

HuUett,  Huron  :  Creamery  butter  is  on  the  increase.     It  got  a  good  start  this  year. 

Turnberry,  Huron :  Dairying  has  been  doing  well.     Our  milk  nearly  all  goes  to  the  cheese  factories. 

Wawanosh  E.,  Huron  :  The  dairy  industry  is  increasing  every  year.  Formerly  there  was  little  factory 
butter  in  proportion  to  cheese,  but  it  is  not  so  now,  although  there  is  much  more  cheese  made  than  butter. 

Amabel,  Bruce :  The  butter  business  is  a  losing  one  for  the  farmer  here,  at  the  way  butter  has  been 
selling— good  and  bad  alike  at  the  same  price— as  they  make  no  difiference  at  the  stores. 
Arran,  Bruce  ;  Dairy  butter  is  improving  in  quality  and  perhaps  in  quantity. 

CulroBS,  Bruce  :  The  dairy  industry  is  very  satisfactory.  The  prevailing  opinion  here  is  that  butter- 
making  is  the  more  profitable,  as  the  skim  milk  is  left  on  the  farm  and  is  used  for  feeding  purposes. 

Greenock,  Bruce  :  Patrons  of  cheese  factories  have  made  grand  returns  this  season,  succulent  food 
being  plentiful,  and  the  price  of  the  finished  commodity  being  good  and  steady. 

Artemesia,  Grey  :  Cheese  is  said  to  have  paid  better  than  butter  this  year. 

Bentinck,  Grey  :  Butter  is  more  plentiful  than  last  year,  is  of  better  quality  and  has  received  a  better 
{urice. 

Bentinck,  Grey  :  Farmers  here  prefer  the  creameries  to  that  they  can  have  the  milk  for  raising  the 
calves.    The  quality  of  butter  is  much  better  chan  last  year. 

Egremont,  Grey  :  We  have  had  a  good  year  for  butter,  our  creamery  at  Holstein  having  far  exceeded 
last  year's  make.     The  cheese  season  for  milk  was  a  good  one. 

Osprey,  Grey  :  I  would  suggest  that  the  Legislature  pass  a  law  putting  a  tax  on  scrub  bulla  and  lei 
thoroughbreds  go  free.     In  a  few  years  the  farmers  would  find  it  money  in  their  pockets. 

Flos,  Simcoe  :  Milk  is  largely  sent  to  the  cheese  factories,  and  not  much  butter  is  made  except  for  the 
home  market.  I  think,  however,  there  has  been  an  improvement  in  butter-making  compared  with  previoos 
years. 

Oro,  Simcoe  :  Considerable  attention  is  being  given  to  both  cheese  and  butter-making.  We  have  two 
cheese  factories  and  one  creamery,  tatrons  tf  e-u^ix  seem  fairly  satisfied  with  rebults.  Butter  has  sold  at 
about  two  cents  higher  than  last  year. 

Orillia,  Simcoe  :  The  dairy  industry  has  been  very  fair,  although  prices  were  very  low  for  butter.  The 
cheese  factories  did  well.     There  has  been  an  improvement  in  the  quality  of  butter, 

Vespia,  Simcoe  :  More  patronize  cheese  factories,  but  the  creamery  is  getting  more  into  favor  A 
great  many  patronized  the  creamery  this  year  to  get  the  milk  for  calves  and  hogs.  The  quality  and  price 
of  butter  were  superior  to  those  of  last  year . 

Biddulph,  Middlesex  :  Cheese  paid  a  little  better  than  butter  this  year,  although  I  patronized  the 
creamery. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :  The  majority  of  farmers  send  milk  to  the  cheese  factories. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex :  Dairying  ha^  been  good  in  the  batter  line,  which,  however,  is  lees  in  quantity 
than  cheese. 

Westminster,  Middlesex  :  One  hundred  pounds  of  cheese  are  made  here  to  every  pound  of  butter — in 
fact  there  has  been  too  much  cheese  made  this  year  and  the  market  is  demoralized. 

Westminster,  Middlesex  :  The  dairy  indusiry  is  sound  in  the  country.  Prices  have  been  very  good. 
There  is  a  drop  in  cheese  which  will  stimulate  the  butter  business  and  help  to  relieve  the  cheese  situation. 

Blandford  N.,  Oxford:  Butter  is  of  no  account  whatever  compared  with  cheese,  it  being  king  and 
queen,  too,  for  that  matter. 

Dereham,  Oxford  :  Nearly  all  the  milk  is  made  into  cheese.  Some  factories  make  Saturday  nights 
milk  into  butter. 

Dereham,  Oxford  :  There  are  separators  in  nearly  all  the  cheese  factories  here  for  the  manufacture  of 
butter  during  the  winter.  It  is  better  to  make  cheete  during  the  summer  months  and  butter  in  winter,  a« 
the  price  is  tnus  made  better  for  both.     We  can  now  find  no  fault  with  the  quality  of  our  butter, 

Oxford  N.,  Oxford  :  The  dairy  business  has  been  fairly  prosperous.  Cheese  has  been  more  in  favor  than 
batter. 

82 


61    Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32y.  A.  1898 


Oxford  W.,  Oxford  :  It  has  been  a  good  season  for  cheeBe.  I  think  the  butter  will  be  good,  as  cows  are 
milking  fairly  well  at  present. 

Zirra  E.,  Oxford  :  Some  of  the  large  cheese  factories  are  putting  in  butter-making  plants  to  operate 
through  the  winter. 

Blansbard,  Perth  :  Cheese  still  takes  the  lead  here,  but  the  new  butter  factory  at  St.  Mary's  will  tend 
to  put  butter  in  its  right  place. 

Blansbard,  Perth  :  The  manufacture  of  butter  appears  to  be  increasing  in  this  township  and  that  of 
cheese  decreasing. 

Elma,  Pf  rth  :  The  condition  of  the  dairy  industry  this  year  has  been  good.  There  has  been  a  large 
make  of  cheese,  and  prices  have  been  good  for  the  early  months,  but  the  makes  of  September  and  the 
balance  of  the  season  is  not  yet  sold. 

Ellice,  Perth  :  There  has  been  a  central  creamery  erected  in  the  town  of  St.  Mary's.  It  will  be  ready 
to  commence  work  in  a  short  time,  and  will  have  tkimming  stations,  which  will  haul  the  cream  to  the 
central  station  for  manufacture,  which  will  run  all  the  year  around.  There  will  be  cream  separators  at  the 
skimming  stations. 

Elma,  Perth :  TDere  are  quite  a  number  of  butter| plants  bting  put  into  cheese  factories  about  here  for 
the  purpose  of  making  butter  in  the  winter  months. 

Elma,  Perth  :  It  haslbeen  a[gccd  year  for  cheese^in  this  township,  and  an  etoimous  quantity  has  been 
made. 

E'ma,  Perth  :  Three  of  our  cheese  factories  will  be  engaged  in  making  butter  during  the  coming  winter. 
Neither  cheese  nor  butter  should  have  a  turnipy  flavor.  If  turnips  are  fed  at  all  to  milch  cows  they  should 
be  first  c(oked,  then  mixed  with  bran  or  father  chop,  and  fed  with  care.  All  roots  require  to  be  fed  with 
care  to  milch  cows. 

Mornington.  Perth  :  The  Milverton  cheese  factory  has  put  in  a  crepmery  plant  this  fall,  and  since  they 
quit  cheese-makinp  they  have  been  making  butter.     So  also  has  the  Carthage  factory. 

Dumfries  N.,  Waterloo  :  Our  dairying  industry  has  been  successful  where  properly  attended  to,  and  I 
think  it  is  increasing  every  year. 

Dumfries  N.,  Waterloo  :  Butter  is  of  better  quality  and  better  price  than  it  was  last  year. 

Mulmur,  Dufferin  :  Butter-making  has  fallen  off  and  cheese-making  has  increased. 

Clinton,  Lincoln  :  Butter  predominates,  as  the  two  cheese  factories  in  this  township  have  been  aban- 
doned. 

Grimsby  S.,  Lincoln:  Dairying  is  coming  to  the  front  here.  This  year  cheese  has  paid  better  than 
butter. 

Beverly,  Wentworth  :  I  sent  milk  to  cheese  factories  for  a  year  or  two,  but  such  calves  and  young  pig» 
M  I  had  !    I  do  not  believe  in  sour  whey  for  calves  or  pigs. 

Nelson,  Halton  :  The  dairy  business  is  in  fairly  good  shape.  Butter-making  has  been  less  profitable 
than  cheese-making. 

Trafalgar,  Halton  :  The  dairy  industry  has  been  satisfactory  this  year.  Cheese  has  kept  up  a  good 
price,  and  butter  has  been  better  than  for  the  last  two  or  thiee  years.  No  dcnbtit  has  been  affected  by  the 
good  price  of  cheese. 

Georgina,  York  :  The  dairy  business  is  in  quite  a  thriving  state.  More  butter  is  being  made  than 
cheese. 

Scarb«>ro',  York  :  Most  farmers  here  send  their  milk  to  Toronto. 

Brock,  Ontario  :  The  butter  industry  is  on  the  increase  ;  cheese  is  not  advancing  mach  but  is  holding 
its  own. 

Mara,  Ontario  :  The  dairy  industry  continues  to  prosper.  Butter  was  not  in  it  at  all  as  compared  with 
cheese  this  summer,  but  we  expect  butter  t.o  have  its  innings  during  the  winter.  The  Travelling  Dairy  has 
■ot  been  travelling  in  vain  through  this  section  of  the  country. 

Cartwright,  Durham  :  The  cheese  trade  has  paid  fairly  well  this  season,  and  butter  on  the  whole  equally 
as  well. 

Hope,  Durham  :  The  cheese  industry  has  been  very  saccessftil  the  present  year  with  good  pricee  and 
ready  sale. 

Manvers.  Durham  :  There  is  not  as  much  butter  made  in  this  section  as  formerly,  as  the  people  think 
cheycan  make  more  money  by  sending  their  milk  to  the  cheese  factory. 

Brighton,  Northumberland  :  The^dairy  industry  is  in  a  flourishing  condition  in  this  section.  All  the 
cheese  factories  have  done  well. 

Haldimand,  Northumberland  :  Our  milk  when  sent  to  the  cheese  factory  brings  in  more  money  than 
any  other  branch  of  faiming  ;  apples  are  second  and  hogs  are  thiid. 

Hamiltcn,  Northumbfrland  :  IrtWest  in  dairying  is  increasirg  every  year,  with  a  noticeable  increase 
in  the  number  of  cows  per  farmer.     Cheese  is  still  in  the  lead.     Butter  is  of  belter  quality  than  a  year  ago. 

Percy.  Northumberland:  We  have  a  cheese  factoiy  at  almost  every  four  corners,  one  every  three  or 
four  miles  all  over  the  county.  We  have  several  V  utter  factories,  but  for  the  timnmer  I  think  cheese-making 
the  best.     There  aie  ttill  tro  many  turnips  fed  to  make  Al  butter. 

Ameliabbujgh,  Prince  Edward  :  Dairjirg  is  prcfitable,  althruph  cheese  is  not  as  much  in  demand  as 
a»iticipated .  Butter  production  is  in  its  infancy  here  as  compared  with  cheese,  but  1  opine  that  joint  pro- 
duction, where  pofsible,  would  be  most  remunerative. 

83 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


HiUier,  Prince  Edward  :  Cheese-making  is  largely  on  the  increase  in  this  county. 

Marysburgh,  Prince  Edward  :  Cheese-making  is  extensively  practised,  and  has  been  profitable  the  past 
season. 

Richmond,  Lennox :  The  dairy  interest  is  progressive,  but  the  production  of  butter  has  fallen  ofl  as 
compared  with  cheese. 

Crosby,  Leeds  :  This  township  depends  on  dairying  to  a  great  extent,  especially  on  cheese-making.  W9 
have  no  summer  creameries  but  have  plant  in  our  factory  for  fall  and  winter  butter-making. 

Leeds  and  Lansdowne,  Le^ds  :  The  condition  of  the  dairy  business  is  good.  There  is  more  butter  made 
than  formerly,  but  cheese  is  away  ahead  of  butter  by  long  odds.  Butter  is  better  in  quality  and  price  than 
last  year. 

Lacsdowne  Front,  Leeds :  Butt«r-tnaking  is  claiming  the  attention  of  dairymen  more  and  more  each 
vear.  We  have  but  two  creameries  in  Lansdowne  yet,  but  there  should  be  more,  as  cheese  made  after  the 
iBrst  of  November  is  not  much  in  favor  in  the  market.  Butter  is  all  that  can  be  desired  in  quality,  and 
prices  are  better  than  at  the  same  time  last  year. 

Yonge  and  Escott  Rear,  Leeds  :  Rut  little  butter  i«  made  here  in  comparison  to  the  quantity  of  cheese, 
but  quite  a  number  of  factories  quit  making  cheese  on  the  30th  ult.,  and  are  now  making  butter. 

WilliamRburg,  Dundas  :  The  state  of  the  dairy  industry  is  very  prosperous.  Cheese  has  been  far  more 
extensively  manufactured  this  year.  Butter  has  not  been  manufactured  as  extensively  as  last  year,  but 
has  averaged  better  in  price  and  quality. 

Lancaster,  Glengarry  :  The  dairy  industry  is  prospering  here,  especially  cheese.  Some  are  talking  of 
fixing  up  their  cheese  factories  for  the  miking  of  butter  also,  as  we  find  stock  raising  and  dairying  far  more 
profitable  than  raising  grain  over  and  above  that  needed  on  the  farm. 

Hawkesbufy  E.,  Prescott :  There  are  sixteen  cheese  factories  in  this  township,  and  they  are  preferred 
by  farmers  to  creameries. 

Clarence,  Russell :  Dairying  in  conjunction  with  hng  raising  seems  to  be  the  most  pipular  and  profit- 
able branch  of  farming  here.  A  larg^  majority  of  the  farmers  patronize  the  cheese  factories,  the  disposal  of 
their  milk  that  way  involving  less  labor  and  risk. 

Fitzroy,  Carleton  :  The  dairy  industry  is  growiner  fast  here.  A  good  deal  of  cream  is  sent  to  the  Ren- 
frew creamery,  but  cheese  t^kes  the  largest  share  of  the  milk, 

Drummond,  Lanark  :  The  cheese  industry  is  our  first  consideration  in  this  township.  Very  little  butter 
is  made  here. 

Eldon,  Victoria :  We  have  within  our  township  three  cheese  factories,  and  within  reach  of  pirt  of  the 
township  a  creamery  was  in  operation  this  season. 

Otonabee,  Peterboro' :  There  are  five  cheese  factories  in  this  township,  but  no  creamery.  There  is 
hardly  enough  butter  for  local  consumption. 

Asphodel,  Peterboro' :  There  has  bean  a  large  flow  of  milk  and  fair  prices  for  cheese. 

Lutterworth,  Haliburton  :  It  is  all  butter-makingf  here.  The  quality  has  steadily  improved  here, 
thanks  to  the  Travelling  Dairy  and  the  valuable  bulletins  supplied  by  your  Department. 

Bangor,  etc.,  Hastings  :  The  dairy  product  is  the  source  from  which  we  make  our  money.  There  is 
but  little  butter  manufactured  except  what  farmers  make  for  home  consumption. 

Huntingdon,  Hastings  :  If  the  farmers  in  this  locality  could  be  induced  to  establish  one  butter  factory 
at  a  central  point,  with  skimming  stations  in  the  other  localities,  instead  of  manufacturing  and  marketing 
their  own  butter,  it  would  be  money  in  their  pockets. 

Huntingdon,  Ha'^tings  :  Farmers  here  depend  almost  entirely  on  the  proceeds  of  the  cheese  output  for 
their  cash  income,  and  as  yet  no  butter  factory  has  been  established  in  this  township. 

Tyendinaga,  Hastings :  The  dairy  industry  is  in  a  first-class  condition.  Cheese  is  yet  the  main  pro- 
duction. 

Watt,  Muskoka :  Butter  is  depressed  in  price  here  even  for  a  good  article  ;  it  does  not  pay  as  well  as 
cheese. 

Humphrey,  Parry  Sound  :  Dairying  is  about  equally  divided  in  the  making  of  butter  and  cheese.  In 
the  neighborhood  of  the  lakes  butter  leads  ;  back  from  the  lakes,  cheoie  with  those  who  are  within  reach  of 
the  factory. 

McKellar,  Parry  Sound  :  Dairying  is  steidily  inoreasinp.  About  one-half  oi  the  farmers  have  availed 
themselves  of  the  new  cheese  factory  started  about  the  middle  of  June  last  at  McKellar. 

Campbell  and  Carnarvon,  ManitouHn  :  Butter  is  produce!  in  large  quantities  and  very  much  improved, 
hanks  to  the  Travelling  Dairy  and  lectures. 


84 


61  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32) 


A.  1898 


Ohbese  Factories.  The  following  table  gives  the  statistics  of  1,161  cheese 
factories  operated  in  Ontario  in  1^97.  These  figures  are  given  by  groups  of  counties. 
Comparative  figures  are  given  for  the  Province  for  fifteen  years. 


Districts. 

Number. 

Quantity  of— 

-a 
O 

4i 

Z  o 

(Bis 

2  o, 

a,  <» 

>  o 

< 

Milk  required 
to  make  lib. 
of  cheese. 

OO 

la 

> 

Amount  paid  to 
patrons. 

Milk  uped. 

CheeHe 
made. 

Total. 

lb. 

■ 
lb. 

lb. 

$  c. 

$ 

cts. 

Lake  Erie  ....{S 

81 
.    75 

117,444,177 
84,552,872 

10,903,092 
7,879,868 

907,194 
642,466 

7,555 
5,520 

10  77 
10.73 

8  32 
8  15 

716,980 
499,128 

61.0 
59.0 

f  1897 
Lake  Huron  . .  ■!  jggg 

60 

62' 

72,728,347 
52,742,169 

6,689,569 
4,882,466 

558,217 
405,991 

5,231 
4,301 

10.87 
10.80 

8  34 
8  32 

428,373 
305,523 

58.9 
57.9 

f  1897 
Georgian  Bay.  jjggg 

33 
30 

25,178,632 
13,576,704 

2,389,121 
1,556,055 

197,007 
102,610 

1,883 
1,282 

10  .54 
10.81 

8  25 
8  17 

153,919 
.     73,824 

61.1 
54.4 

West  Midland  U^^J 

144 
145 

313,698,478 
230,300,812 

28.972,817 
21,380,422 

2,453,538 
1,772,431 

12,161 
10,660 

10.83 
10.77 

8  47 

8  29 

2,032,746 
1,435,222 

64.8 
62.3  1 

Lake  Ontario.  {JgJ 

105 
105 

145,093,784 
100,317,494 

13,580,3.50 
9,295,847 

1,151,419 

773,827 

7,677 
6,684 

10.68 
10.79 

8  48 
8  32 

924,545 
610,523 

63.7  : 

60.9  i 

St.  Lawrence     f  1897 
and  Ottawa.!  1896 

576 
581 

605,328,329 
491,687,286 

58,049,994 
46,982,415 

5,010,702 
3,915,222 

23,906 
22,397 

10.43 
10.47 

8  63 
8  33 

4,245,281 
3,264,822 

701  1 
66.4  1 

East  Midland.  {{IgJ 

153 
145 

173,776,150 
134,160,389 

16,520,939 
12,642,336 

1,420,285 
1,028,159 

7,353 
6,717 

10.52 
10  61 

8  60 
8  13 

1,193,312 
848,083 

68.7 
63.2 

Northern           /1 897 
Districts..  U896 

9 
4 

2,689,251 
786,933 

257,034 
74,576 

21,106 
6,029 

278 
74 

10.46 
10.55 

8  21 

8  08 

13,848 
3,802 

51.5 
48.3  ! 

The  Province : 

1897.... 

1,161 

1,455,937,148 

137,362,916 

11,719,468 

66,104 

10.60 

8  53 

9,709,004 

66.6 

1896.... 

1,147 

1,108,124,6.59 

104,393,985 

8,646,735  57,635 

10.62 

8  28 

7,040,927 

63.5 

1895.... 

1,164 

1. 174,008,-592 

109,230,340 

8,607,389 

65.661 

10.75 

7  88 

6,922,962 

59.0  1 

1894.... 

1,011 

1,027,577.831 

97,284,547 

9,441,247 

54.8S9 

10.56 

9  70 

7,931.022 

77.2  1 

1893.... 
1892.... 
1891 .... 
1890.... 
1889.... 
1888.... 

897 
856 
838 
817 
784 
737 

911,791,204 
984,356,444 
865,453,574 
836,387,516 
760,146,327 
686,369,013 

86,166,719 
93,848,948 
81,929,042 
79.364,713 
72,592,847 
65,299,751 

8,338,709 
8  959  939 

50,870 

10  58 

9  68 

10  49 

9  65 

7,656,484  45,066 
7,189,957  44,838 
6,787,619  43,215 
6,031,470'42,065 

10  66 

9  35 

10  54 

9  06 

10  47 

9  35 

1 

10.51 

9  24 



1887.... 

737 

691,934,579 

6.5,638,656 

6,918,913 

42,512 

10.54 

10  54 

1886. . . . 
1885.... 
1884.... 

770 
752 
751 

654,703,243 
733,437,254 
685,964,727 

63,721,621 
71,209,719 
66,939,573 

5,893,818 
5  781  569 

37,605 

10  27 

9  25 

10  30 

8  12 

......  i 

6,998,889  38,640 

10.25 

10  46 

1883.... 

635 

539,696,197 

53,513,032 

5,589,339  32,036 

10.08 

10  45 

1 

Yearly  average  : 
1883-97.. 

870 

874.392,554 

83,233,094 

7,637,436  47,637 

10.51 

9  18 

*7,900,979 

*66.3 

*  Average  for  four  years  1894-7. 

There  was  a  slight  increase  in  the  number  of  factories  operated  in  1897,  but  the  out 
put  of  cheese  was  increased  by  nearly  33  million  pounds  over  the  drouth  year,  1896.  The 
price  of  cheese  also  showed  an  advance  so  that  the  patrons  received  $9,709,004,  or  $2,- 

85 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18£8 


668,077  in  excess  of  the  previous  year.  The  value  to  the  patrons  per  100  pounds  of  milk 
averaged  66.6  cents  as  compared  with  63.5  cents  for  1896,  and  59  cents  in  1895,  although 
1894  gave  them  77.2  cents.  The  number  c£  patrons  more  than  doubled  the  figures  for 
1883.  Oxford  county  again  leads  in  quantity  of  cheese  made,  Hastings  coming  second 
and  Leeds  third.     (See  page  94.) 

Monthly   Statistics   op  Oheese  Factories.     The  following  table 
has  been  compiled  from  returns  of  cheese  factories  which  give  full  monthly  statistics  : 


i 

Months. 

Milk  required  to 
make  1  lb.  of  cheese. 

Gross  value  of 
cheese  per  pound. 

Gross  value  of  product 
of  100  bs.  of  milk. 

Per  cent,  of  cheese    { 
made  in  month. 

1897 

1896 

1893-97 

lb. 

11.10 
10.76 
10.94 
11.29 
10.96 
10.30 
9.55 
9.35 

10.67 

1897 

1896 

1893-97 

1897 

1896 

1893-97 

1897 

1896 

1893-97 

April    

May 

June    

July 

August 

September. . 

October 

November .  . 

The  season  . 

lb 

11  05 
10.76 
10.70 
11.31 
10.87 
10.46 
9.72 
9.46 

10.65 

lb. 

11.28 
10.86 
11.12 
11.46 
11.13 
10.24 
9.60 
9.52 

10.71 

Ct9. 

9.76 
8.49 
8  24 
8.07 
9.. 30 
8.67 
8.17 
7.60 

8.50 

cts. 
7.05 
6.71 
6.87 
7.20 
8.84 
10.05 
9.88 
8.83 

8.25 

cts. 
8.81 
8.22 
8.26 
8.31 
9.20 
9.61 
9.53 
9.22 

8  81 

cts. 
88.3 
78.9 
76.9 
71.4 
85.5 
82.9 
84.0 
80.4 

79.8 

cts. 
62  5 
61.8 
61. 8 
62.8 
79,4 
98.1 
102.9 
92.7 

77.1 

cts. 
79.4 
7c5.4 
75.5 
73  6 
83.9 
93  3 
99.8 
98.4 

82.6 

2.0 
11.6 
18.9 
17.7 
17.4 
16.4 
13.4 

2.3 

.8 
12  7 
19.0 
16.6 
15.4 
16.2 
14.2 
4.9 



1.6 
13.4 
20.7 
18.5 
16.1 
14.4 
12.2 

2.8 

The  amount  of  cheese  made  in  March  and  December  is  very  small,  while  95  per  cent, 
of  the  cheese  is  produced  in  the  six  months.  May  to  October.  Taking  the  averages 
derived  from  five  years,  we  observe  that  the  milk  is  poorest  in  cheese  producing  qualities 
in  July  and  it  increases  in  richness  till  the  close  of  the  season.  June  is  the  largest  cheese 
month.  The  price  of  cheese  is  lowest  in  May  and  reaches  its  highest  point  for  September 
and  October  make. 

iiiC  REAMERiES.  The  following  table  gives  the  statistics  furnished  by  78  public 
creameries  for  1897,  showing  the  quantity  and  value  of  butter  made,  the  average  number 
of  patrons  and  the  average  price  per  pound  ;  of  the  78  creameries  making  returns  14  are 
operated  in  summer,  45  in  winter,  and  19  are  going  all  the  year,  from  twice  a  week  up  : 
It  also  gives  an  estimate  for  all  creameries  in  operation  for  the  five  years  1893-97. 


Creameries. 

a 

u 

S 

"S 

"o 
d 

Butter  made. 

Average 

No.  of 

patrons. 

Average 

price  of 

butter  per 

pound. 

Milk 

required 

to  make 

1  lb. 

of    butter. 

1 
Cream 
required 
to  make 

lib.      j 
of  butter. 

Quantity. 

Value. 

Summer  

14 
45 
19 

lb. 
1,103,344 
803,328 
1,623  281 

$ 
191,083 
148,555 
303,136 

3,022 
2,246 
3,391 

cts. 
17.32 
18  49 

18.67 

lb. 
25.00 
23.29 
24.16 

lb. 
4.46 

Winter 

All  the  year 

4.39 

Total  estimated  for  all 
creameries    in    oper- 
ation : 

1897 

214 
170 
135 
115 
74 

7,708,265 
6,0.33,211 
4,553.708 
3, 162,.'^  50 
2,707,570 

1,493,609 

1,101,232 

868,382 

662,297 

574,156 

18,909 

12,245 

9,664 

8,298 

7,852 

18.21 

18  25 

19  07 
20.94 
21.21 

23.97 
24.13 
24.75 
23.79 
23.58 

4.44 
3.98 
4.15 
4.00 
4.28 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

The  number  of  creameries  (including  skimming  stations)  operated  in  Ontario  is 
reported  as  2l4.  The  figures  above  are  only  for  creameries  that  have  sent  in  statistics  to 
the  Bureau.  The  number  so  reporting  fir  1897-8  is  78  or  98  if  we  jastly  include  skim- 
ming stations.  The  estimated  output  of  the  214  creameries  on  this  basis,  may  be  placed 
at  7,708,265  pounds  valued  at  §1,403,609.  The  patrons  received  81,139,463  or  63.1  cents 
per  100  pounds  of  milk.  The  amount  of  butter  made  at  the  214  public  creameries  in 
1897  was  five  million  pounds  more  than  at  74  creameries  operated  in  1893. 

86 


STATISTICS    OF 


LIVE  STOCK  AND  DAIRY  PRODUCTS 


t87j 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32). 


A.  189  8 


HORSES    AND    HOGS. 


Table  I.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Countiea  the  number  of  Horses  and  Hog& 

in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand   

Welland 

TotalB  

Lambton   

Huron 

Bruce    

Totals 

Grey    

Simcoe   

Totals 

Middlesex 

Oxford 

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington    .   . . 

Waterloo 

Dnfferin 

Totals 

Lincoln 

Went  worth..   .. 

Halton    

Peel  

York 

Ontario 

Durham     

Northumberland 
Prince  Edward  . 

■  Tola's 

Lennox  & 
Addington  . . . 

Frontenac 

Leeds   

Grenville   

Dundas 

Stormont. .. 

Glengarry 

Pr&«cott 

Russell 

Carleton .  . . . 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 

Victoria 

Peterborough . . . 

Haliburton    

Hastings 

Totals 

Muskoka 

Pany  Sound 

Ni pissing.    

Manitoulin   

Algoma 

Totals 

The  ProTinee  . . 


Horses. 


Work- 
ing 
horee?. 


Breed- 
ing 


12,129 

14,745 

11,102 

9,731 

7,697 

7,107 

62,611 

12,133 
17,826 
14,642 
44,601 

19,691 
19,158 
38,849 

19,573 

13,051 

6,881 

13,373 

16,502 

8,950 

6,900 

84,230 

7,167 
8,567 
6,324 
8,550 

16.248 

12,781 
9,915 

12,066 
7,371 

88,989 

7,290 
7,335 
8,132 
5,430 
5,632 
4,741 
6,071 
4,750 
3,303 

10,241 
9,076 
7,! 

79,869 

8,360 

7,392 

1,172 

13.247 

30,171 

2,271 
2,021 
761 
1,253 
1,395 
7,701 

436,921 


Un- 
broken 

horses. 


1,819 
2,785 
1,712 
1,242, 
1,216, 
5401 
9,314 

2,188 
4,436 
2,712 
9,336 

3,315 
3,524 
6,839 

3,441 
2,015 
762 
2,933 
2,675 
1,430 
1,302 
14,658 

637 
1,094 

742 
1,334 
2,658 
2,252 
1,352 
1,547 

762 
12,378 

866 

728 

905 

451 

679 

657 

1,349 

1,266 

683 

1,719 

1,49c 

1,133 

11,921 

1,716 
1,095 
156 
1,252 
4,219 

350 
375 
180 
253 
217 
1,375 


2,266 
4,381 
3,264 
2,170 
1,866 
1,434 
15,381 

3,315 

5,776 

3,735 

12,826 

4,101 
5,164 
9,265 

5,882 
3,025 
1,799 
3,692 
3,868 
],959 
2,032 
22,257 

1,201 
2,158 
1,539 
2,631 
3,939 
3,370 
2,599 
3,019 
1,555 
21,911 

1,574 
1,385 
1.191 

742 
1,093 

764' 
],558! 
1,148 

767 

2.7901 

2.021 

i;364 

16,397 

2,041 
1,844 
390 
2,401 
6,676 

.529 
572 
227 
432 
336 
2,096 


Totals. 


1897.        1896 


16,214 
21,911 
16,078 
13,143 
10,779 
9,081 
87,206 

17,636 
28,038 
21,089 
66,763 

27,107 
27,846 
54,953 

28,896 
18,091 
9,442 
19,998 
22,045 
12,339 
10,234 
121,046 

9,005 
11,819 

8,605 
12,415 
22,845 
18,403 
13,866 
16,632 

9,6!-8 
123,278 

9,730 

9,448 

10,2'J8 

6,623 

7,404 

6,162 

8,978 

7,154 

4,753 

14,750 

12,592 

10,385 

108,187 

12,117 
10,331 
1,718 
16,900 
41,066 

3,1^0 
2,968 
.  1,168 
1,938 
1,948 
11,172 


69,940    106,809    613,670    624,749J   235,479 


15,507 
21,308 
15,987 
13,144 
11,189 
9,424 
86,559 

16,707 
28,352 
21,867 
66,926 


Hogs. 


Overl 
year. 


29,890 
18,494 
9,984 
20,694 
23,504 
12,720 
10,192 
125,478 

9,310 
11,814 

8,986 
13,176 
24,093 
19,209 
14,822 
17,067 

9,774 
128,251 

10,087 
9,079 

10,954 
7,044 
7,468 
6,240 
9,186 
6,718 
4,450 

15.063 

12,643! 

10,?61| 
109,293 

12,779 
10,615 
1,861 
16,732 
41,987 

3,174 
2,983 
1,043 
2,044 
1,645 
10,8891 


Under  1 
year. 


14,052 
13,045 
7,652 
5,087 
3,355 
2,036 
45,227 

6,792 

7,339 

6,606 

20,737 


Totals. 


27,711  8,279 
27,655  11,633 
66,366      19,912 


9,371 
6,729 
3,199 
6,741 
7,138 
3,968 
4,844 
41,990 

1,906 
2,894 
2,142 
3,840 
7,416 
5,901 
3,610 
4,781 
1,965 
34,455 

2,840 
3,382 
6.155 
2,994 
3,234 
2,655 
4,398 
3,758 
2,461 
6,282 
7,759 
4,231 
50,149 

4,110 

3,621 

650 

9,415 

17,796 

9761 
1,003 

886 
1,330 
1,018 
6,213 


57,795 
65,001 
43,809 
25,543 
15,108 
10,173 
217,429 

36,339 

41,619 

28,188 

106,146 

38,970 
56,486 
95,456 

51,638 
39,693 
16,521 
33,104 
37,696 
24.218 
20,569 
223,439 

10,211 
17,115 
13,607 
19,918; 
41,039 
30,917 
19,995 
24,7821 
9,226' 
186,8101 

12,4.561 
12,3271 
17,415 
10,550 
12,612 
7,927 

11,111: 

8,178 

6,122 

18,576 

14.945 

15,465 

147,684 

18,148 
16.518 
1,945 
22,725 
59,336 

3,068 
3,180 
1,615 
2,690 
2,631 
13,184 

1,049,484 


1X97. 


71,847 
78,046 
51,461 
30,630 
18,463 
12,209 
262,656 

4.3,131 

48,958 

34,794 

126,883 

47,249 

68,119 

115,368 

61,009 
46,422 
19,720 
39,845 
44,834 
28,186 
25,413 
265,429 

12,117 
20,009 
15,749 
23,758 
48,455 
36,818 
23,605 
29,563 
11,191 
221,265 

15.296 
15,709 
23,570 
13,544 
15,846 
10,582 
16,509 
11,936 
8,683 
24,858 
22,704 
19.696 
197,833 

22,258 
20,139 
2,  .595 
32,140 
77,132 

4,044 
4,183 

2,roi 

4,020 

3,649 

18,397 

1,284,963 


88 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  181' 8 


CATTLE. 

Table   II.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  number  of  Cattle  in  Ontario 

in  the  years  1896  and  1897. 


Connties. 


Easex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk.  ... 

Haldimand . 

Welland  ... 

Totals. . 


Work- 
ing 
oxen. 


Lambton . . 

Huron 

Brace   . . . . 
Totals. 


G  rey 

SimcoB 

Totals. 

Middlesex   . 

Oxford 

Brant    

Perth 

Wellington . 
Waterloo... 

Dnfferin 

Totals . . 


Lincoln 

Wentworth . . . .   . 

Halton 

Peel 

"iork 

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac   

Leeds , 

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont 

Glengarry    

Prescott  

Russell  

Carleton  

Renfrew 

Lanark  

Totals 


Victoria  

Peterborough . 
Hal  i  burton   . . 

Hastings 

Totals... 


Muskoka 

Parry  Sound 
Nii-issing. . . . 
Manitoulin . . 

Algoma 

Totals... 


The  Province. 


Milch  cows. 


61 
10 
62 

137 
76 
15 

36] 

29 

59 

120 

208 

119 
255 
374 


72 
124 


28 

33 

101 

68 
47 
16 


25 


13 

35 

45 

371 

10 
24 
76 
27 
137 

203 

162 

93 

95 

91 

644 

2,320 


1897. 


1896. 


Store  cattle  over 
2  years. 


1897. 


17,250 
19,753 
21,442 
17,628 
12,911 
9,959 
98,943 

21,455 

32,727 
28,780 
82,962 


15,238 
18,020 
20,219 
16,573 
13,203 
9,857 
93,110 

20,087 
31,804 
30,077 

81,968 


35,384  36,854 
31.499.  29,595 
66,883      66,4i9 


39,490 
36,960 
12,443 
31,930 
26,728 
15,059 
11,195 
173,805 

8,692 
15,241 
11396 
13,098 
25,261 
19,908 
14,729 
24,864 
13,768 
146,9571 

18,562 
23,114 
33,056 
19,724 
22,094 
19,221 
25,161 
18,783 
12,183 
31,472 
22,788 
26,264 
272,422 

14,4P6 
18,936 
3,. ^69 
44,318 
81,059 

5,798 
4,545 
1,564 
2,820 
2,478 
17,205 

940,236 


38,936 
37,223 
11,932 
31,417 
28,603 

i.^in 

11,392 
174,614 

8,894 
14,806 
12,032 
13,353 

25,145] 
20,098 
14,906 
24,118 
12,9561 
146,308 

18,832| 
21,9881 
33,2651 
19,1611 
20, 737 1 
17,753 
2.^,724 
17.871 
11,2751 
31,189' 
22,962' 
2.%091 
2o3,849 

1.3,8.54 
17,559 
2,9?8' 
43,328, 
77,679 


7,852 

10,598 

10,382 

3,832 

3,9i2 

3,167 

39,743 

16,781 
27,624 
20,165 
64,570 

21,310 

17,502 

38,812 

I 

25,569 

12,883 

3,062 

16,839 

16,505 

4,597 

7,715 

87,170 

2,153 
4,152 
4,688 
5,324 
7,073 
9  674 
6,383 
6,004 
1.714 
47,165 

3,313 

4,862 

5,184 

2,211 

2.292 

2,359 

4.506 

2,606 

2,766 

10,231 

10,390 

9,751 

00,471 

7,490 
5,.S72 
1.414 
6,055 
20,331 


1896. 


Young 

&nd 
other 
cattle. 


5,538 

2,184 

4,456 

1,8.51 

1,3.35 

5GS 

2,830 

1,399 

2,210 

1,142 

16,369 

7,144 

920,346 

365,406 

6,058 
9,818 
9,561 
4,789 
4,810 
3,729 
38,765 

1.5,616 
2S,696 
21,461 
65,772 


16,925 
23,608 
22,115 
12,343 
11,. "87 
8,181 
94,759 

30,640 

.50,118 

39,424 

120,182 


Total  cattle. 


23,245  50,962 
17,869  37,538 
41,114      88,500 


23,980 

10,934 

3,386 

16,310 

17,212 

4,726 

8,152 

84,700 

2,201 
4,307 
4,884 
5,927 
7,8.59 

10,174 
6,870 
6,616 
2,358 

51,196 

3,773 
5,114 
5,165 
2,687 
2,135 
2,232 
3,723 
2,894 
2,864 
9,372] 
9,270 
9,705 
58,935 

7,847 
6,351 
1,327 
7,020 
22,545 

2,392 
2,024 
500 
1,465 
1,001 
7,382 


44,775 
24,192 
10,886 
35,951 
86,991 
15,402 
16.573 
183,770 

6.953 
12,039 
11,202 
12,631 
19,348 
26,730 
17,461 
17,580 
6,941 
130,885 

10,879 
12,474 
14,145 

8,252 
lO.OSfi 

8,701 
13,129 
10,875 

8,044 

26,344 

26,218 

21,440 

170,587 

20,487 
15,044 
4,477 
21,783 
61,791 

7,092 
6.451 
1,9.38 
4,843 
3,5(;6 
23,890 


370,409  874,364 


1897. 


42,088 
53,969 
54,001 
33,  .140 
28,496 
21,312 
233,806 

68,905! 
110,5281 

88,489| 
267,9221 

107,775 

86,794 

194,569 

109,867 
74,035 
26,391 
84,731 
80,224 
35,066 
34,655 

444,869 

17,793 
31,444 
27,309 
31,053 
51,682 
56,312 
38,573 
48,476 
22,461 
325,108 

32,822 
40,497 
52,401 
30,187 
34,497 
30,281 
42,820 
32  362 
22,993 
68,060 
59,431 
57,500 
503,851 

42,423 

39.376 

9.336 

72,183 

163,318 

15,277 

13,009 

4,163 

9,1?>7 

7,277 
48,883 

2,182,326 


1896. 


37,256 
49,007 
49,999 
33,594 
30,746 
22,663 
223,265 

65,203 
112,023 

94.284 
271,510 

114,238 

84,731 

198,969 

105,028 
72,507 
26,360 
84,303 
86,627 
35,490 
36,153 

446,463 

18,998 
31,620 
28,420 
32,045 
51,692 
58,442 
40,257 
48,387 
23,378 
333,239 

34,951 
40,332 
54,170 
29,949 
32,434 
29.393 
40,905 
31,522 
21,843 
66,898 
57,601 
56,720 
496,718 

42,064 

38,961 

8,001 

74,111 

163,737 

15,284 

13,100 

3,655 

9,409 

6,604 

48,052 

2,181,958 


89 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


SHEEP    AND    POULTRY. 

Table   III.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  tbe  number  of  Sheep  and 
Poultry  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897. 


Sheep. 

Poultry. 

Totals.              1 

Totals. 

Counties. 

Over 
1  year. 

Under 
1  year. 

Turkeys 

Geese. 
12,179 

Other 
fowls. 

1897. 

1896. 

1897. 

1896. 

Essex 

16,8'6 

14,018 

30,834 

31,006 

26,487 

257,161 

295,827 

255,8+4 

Kent 

21,785 
23,555 

19,527 
21,978 

41.312 
45:533 

3a,  338 
44,798 

26,595 
25,717 

12,087 

7,  SOS 

272,672 
202,248 

311,354 
235,473 

257,701 

Elgin 

208,334 

Norfolk 

16,196 

13,549 

29,745 

33,720 

20,373 

6,515 

155,465 

182,3.53 

163,166 

Haldimand   . . 

14,315 

12,728 

27,043 

31,213 

11,975 

6,119 

120,283 

138,  .377 

123,915 

Welland 

11,417 

9,645 

21,062 

24,564 

9,750 

2,622 

119  026 

131,398 

119,600 

Totals.... 

104,084 

91,445 

195,529 

204,639 

120,897 

47,030 

1,126,855 

1,294,782 

1,128,460 

Lambton    

26,525 

26,462 

.52,987 

56,967 

34,740 

10,978 

249,156 

294,874 

247,662 

Huron 

43,326 

44,459 

87,785 

98,677 

42,011 

22.911 

335,454 

400,376 

371,267 

Bruce 

48,051 

46,866 

94,917 

110,243 

30,696 

17,427 

218,507 

266,630 

258,115 

Totals.   .. 

117,902 

117,787 

235,689 

265,887 

107,447 

51,316 

803,117 

961,880 

877,044 

Grey   

57,014 

53,959 

110,973 

128,912 

36,578 

20,355 

285,696 

342,629 

308,812 

Simcoe    

56,745 

47,170 

103,915 

107,381 

;^5,I23 

23.993 

290.423 

349,539 

323,753 

Totals.... 

113,759 

101,129 

214,8S8 

236,293 

71,701 

44,348 

676,119 

692,168 

632.565 

Middlesex 

33,533 

29.877 

63,410 

70,077 

56,159 

18,157 

394,104 

468,420 

413,511 

Oxford    

10,009 

9,841 

19,850 

23,535 

25,072 

6,132 

210,461 

242,265 

226,771 

Brant 

8,819 

7,969 

16,788 

19,619 

7,800 

3,272 

94,661 

105,7.33 

96,380 

Perth 

23,855 

22,8951 

46,750 

51,603 

24,264 

16.691 

246,715 

287,670 

261,197 

Wellington   . . 

44,646 

39,370 

84,016 

96,223 

29,964 

17,513 

226,256 

273,733 

264,086 

Waterloo   

14,535 

12,176 

26,711 

.30,870 

8,973 

4,318 

159,137 

172,428 

163,018 

DufPerin 

18,588 

16,295 

34,883 

37,298 

20,709 

13,241 

113,258 

147,208 

129,198 

Totals .... 

153,985 

138,423 

292,408 

329, 125 

173,541 

79,324 

1.444,592 

1.697,457 

1,553.161 

Lincoln    

9,727 

9.046 

18,773 

21,952 

7,341 

3,208 

97,342 

107,891 

100,959 

Wentworth . . . 

10,196 

8,950 

19,146 

24,733 

11,557 

4,526 

117,090 

133,173 

135,167 

Halton    

10,416 

9,516 

19,932 

22,192 

13,814 

6,613 

94.852 

115,279 

96,126 

Peel 

11,808 
24,034 

9,101 
19,442 

20,909 
43,476 

26,651 

50,786 

23,141 
29,939 

12,244 
13,981 

147,864 
230,291 

183,249 
274,211 

164,918 

York  

2.58,462 

Ontario    

25,148 

20,705 

45,853 

51,680 

20,723 

13,162 

225,224 

259,109 

248,770 

Durham  

19,543 

17,380 

36,923 

38,961 

20,  .338 

8,815 

155,046 

184,199 

186,613 

Northumb'd . . 

16,951 

14,503 

31,454 

34.878 

17,612 

6,762 

169,892 

194.266 

193,695 

PrinceEdward 

5,943 

5,822 

11,765 

15.883 

9.912 

2,195 

95,802 

107,909 

104,631 

Totals.... 

133,766 

114,465 

248,231 

287,716 

154,377 

71,506 

1,333,403 

1,559,286 

1,490,340 

Lennox  &  Ad. 

9,200 

7,723 

16,923 

20,016 

8,519 

.5,339 

96,142 

110.000 

98,376 

Frontenac   . . . 

1.5,787 

14,204 

29,991 

27,372 

17,336 

6,432 

102,850 

126,617 

105,456 

Leeds  

12.248 

11,986 

24,234 

26,308 

19,851 

7,175 

121,377 

148,403 

136,-350 

Grenville   

6,942 

7,035 

13,977 

15,299 

20,741 

5.569 

91,862 

118,172 

109.218 

Dundas 

6,668 

6,047 

12,715 

11,691 

17,760 

4.963 

111,726 

134,449 

116,978 

Stormont 

6,304 

4.886 

11,190 

13,159 

11,347 

3,607 

88,963 

10;<,917 

87,001 

Glengarry   . . . 

11,557 

9,434 

20,991 

23,.58» 

9,305 

4,388 

96,478 

110.171 

n7,335 

Prescntt   

8.526 

6,474 

15,000 

15,572 

11,745 

3,617 

73,713 

89,075 

83,065 

Ru-sell  

6,732 

4.924 

11,656 

12,387        8,984 

3,841 

57,442 

70,267 

60,285 

Carleton  

22,145 

18,911 

41,056 

45,178      28,931 

16,635 

173,627 

219,243 

211,989 

Renfrew 

38,545 

30,772 

69,317 

76,528      19,982 

10,096 

115,171 

145,249 

145,853 

Lanark     

31,153 

28,  111 

59,264 

62,380      14.403 

8,438 

129,513 

152.354 

142,021 

Totals 

175,807 

150,507 

326,314 

349,474'   188,903 

1 

80.150 

1,258.864 

1,527.917 

1,403,926 

Victoria 

23,984 

19,474 

43,458 

41,268 

17,. 361 

9,361 

134,475 

161.197 

l.'>3,951 

Peterborough . 

14,340 

11,915 

26,255 

'         27,791 

21,586 

10,327 

1.36,166 

168.079 

158,281 

Haliburtoa  . . . 

5,200 

4,005 

9,205 

8,422 

2,279 

1,078 

15,424 

18,781 

15.870 

Hastings 

20,447 

17,F3i 

.37,981 

39,568!     15,179 

8,208 

192,798 

216,185 

196,202 

Totals  ... 

63,971 

52,928 

116,899 

117,049      56,405 

1 

28,974 

478,863 

561,242 

523,304 

Muskoka  

10,566 

7,527 

1         18,093 

17,329 

5,867 

1,634 

34,778 

42,279 

39,227 

Parry  Sound  . 

9,181 

7,121 

16,302 

16,247 

3,971 

2,163 

28,715 

34,849 

32,935 

Nipi.^sing 

1,477 

799 

2,276 

2.455 

1,518 

545 

12,171 

14.234 

12,297 

Manitoulio . . . 

8,825 

7,383 

16,208 

16,531 

2,431 

1.460 

17,460 

21,351 

20,872 

Algoma 

4,332 

.'^,151 

7,513 

6,603 

.3,170 

1,265 

20,461 

24.896 

20,036 

Totals 

34,411 

25,981 

60,392 

59,165 

16.957 

7,067 

113,585 

137,609 

125,367 

The  Province. 

897,685 

792,665 

1,690,350 

1,849,348J   890,228 

409,715 

7,135,398 

8,435,341 

7,734,167 

90 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A-  1898 


LIVE    STOCK    SOLD. 

Table  IV.  Showing  by  County  MunicipalitieB  and  groups  of  Counties  the  number  of  Horses,  Cattle, 
Sheep,  Hogs  and  Poultry  sold  in  the  Province  of  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  ending  June  30th 
of  each  year. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand   .... 

Welland 

ToUls 

Tiambton   

Huron 

Bruce 

Totals 

Grey  

Simcoe   

Totals 

liiddlesex   

Oxford    

Brant   

Perth    

Wellington   .... 

Waterloo  

Dafferin 

Totals 

Lincoln        

Wentworth 

Halton   

Peel 

York 

Ontario    

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward  . 

Totals  

Lennox  and  Add 

Frontenac   

Leeds  

Grenvilie 

Dunr^as 

Stormcnt 

Glengarry   

Preecott 

Russell   

Oarleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 

Victoria  

Peterborough . .  . 

Haliburton    

Hastincrs 

Totals 

Muskoka   

Parry  Sound  . . . 

Nipipsing 

Manitoulin    .... 

Algoma 

Totals 

TThe  Province . . . 


Horses. 


1897.        1896. 


850 

1,562 

1,240 

803 

712 

506 

0,673 

1,456 
3,0)8 
1,744 
6,258| 

2,342 
2,198 
4.540 

1,980 
1,416 

482 
1,775 
1,579 

882 
1,016 
9,130 

510 

415 

521 

992 

1,749 

1,620 

1,127 

1,030 

484 

8,448 

711 
316 
488 
232 
517 
326 
486 
503 
248 
856 
677 
610 
5,970 

936 
729 
199 
816 
2,680 

224 
257 
65 
126 
140 
812 

43,511 


Cattle. 


1897.    1896 


1,011 

1,500 

1.119 

709 

682 

677 

5,598 

1,451 
3,327 
1,855 
6,633 

2,056 
2,207 
4,263 

2,087 
1,523 

429 
1,775 
1,552 

875 ; 

838 
9,079, 

379 

584 

414 

1,1631 

l,779l 

1,638 1 

1,1081 

1,161 

472, 

8,698 

618 
346 
549 
383 
462 
348 
569 
519 
3^91 
889 
741 
631 
6,384 

1,080 
761 
174 
936 

2,951 

267 
167 
125 
188 
105 
852 


7,600 

12,432 

14.868 

7,711 

6,771 

4,874 

54,256 

20,029 
32,479 
27,439 
79,947 

31,361 

20,608 
51,969 

30,262 
20,571 

6,182 
21,461 
23,769 
13,643 

9,949 
125,837 

4,971 
7,615 
6,380 
7,056 

14,560 

14,653 
9,363 

10,512 
3,064 

78,174 

6,247 

6,119 

6,944 

3,789 

5.633 

3,417 

4,615 

3,745 

2,980 

8,992 

10.016 

10,114 

72,611 

9,774 

6,764 

2,005 

11,176 

29,719 

3,335 
3,122 
595 
1,897 
1,545 
10,494 


Sheep. 


1897.        1896. 


44,458    503,007 


6,089 

10, 357 1 

12,690| 

7,3731 

5,3391 

4,094 

45,842 

18,189 
28,393 
24,784 
71,366 

27,995 
17,837 
45,832 

27,361 
16,113 

5,614 
17,117 
21,919 
12,189 

7,216 
107,529 

3,912 

6,470 

5,441 

6  640 

12,491 

14,491 

8,581 

8,847 

3.236 

70,109 

4,521 
5,102 
7,213 
3.837 
3,735 
3,172 
3.957 
3,087 
2,800 
7,912 
8,294 
8,573 
62,203 

7,864 
5,743 
1,591 
9,257 
24,455 

2,664 
2,640 
552 
1,835 
1,424 
9,115 


11,018 
16,025 
22,360 
14,907 
12,.530 
10,548 
87,388 

22,616 

44,378 

46,117 

113,111 

53,148 

37.812 
90,900 

27,077 
11,289 
8,131 
20,613 
34,239 
12,712 
15,284 
129,345 

10,710 

9,730 

8,623 

n,427 

22,300 

17,835 

14,469 

12,691 

7,569 

115,354 

9,301 

13,702 

10,611 

5,876 

6,057 

5,603 

7,228 

6.146 

5,982 

16,689 

21,948 

2.3,491 

132.634 

16,522 

9,963 

2,996 

15,074 

4  4, 565  i 

5,731 
5,345| 
443! 
.5,817 
2,189 
19,525 


436,451    732,872 


Hogs. 


9,874 
16,951 
24.282 
16851 
13,.S06 
11,234 
92,498 

25,920 

46,030 

47,718 

119,608 

54,943 
38.016 
92,959 

31,317 
11,528 
8,108 
22,781 
41,263 
13,680 
13,564 
142,241 

9,362 

13,088: 

9,580' 

13.962, 

21,230' 

22,6601 

16,689 

13,229' 

7,644 

127,444' 

I 

9,546' 

14,3941 

11,912: 

6,9781 

5,771 

5.276 

7,312 

6,983 

4,782 

16,216 

22,610 

21,864 

133,644 

15,650 
10.092 
2,180 
14,067 
41,989 

4.769 
4,021 
518 
5,175 
1,970 
16,453 


1897. 


1896. 


Poultry. 


1897. 


.55,110 
70,477 
60,?69 
37,454 
21,986 
13,852 
259,248 

45,919 

63,581 

42,835 

152,3351 

53,830; 

06,515| 

120,3451 

69,9181 
61,132 
28,527 
51,355 
59,353 
38,189 
26,762 
335,236 

15,638 
24, 490  i 
21,791 
29,751 
62,498 
46,962 
26.613 
33,454 
12,312 
273,509 

16,063 

14.083 

17,931 

9,  .592 

12,752 

10,024 

11,0.50 

7,651 

6,176 

20,439 

14,954 

15,465 

156,780 

24,460] 
23,510 
2,099 
34,381 
84,450 

4,350| 
4,7731 
1,260 

3, 828 1 

3,853 

18,064 


766,896  1,399,967 


48,237 
56,566 
53,691 
36,218 
21,620 
14,936 
231,268 

39,533 

58,369 

39,256 

137,158 

50,799 

57,444 

108,243 

66,218 
58,893 
30,815 
46,327 
63,176 
36,393 
20,113 
321,935 

15,097 
24,442 
20,407 
30,569 
57,460 
45,211 
29,061 
.34,748 
11,935 
268,930 

13,008 

10,563 

17,162 

10,228 

11,269 

8,8871 

10,770, 

6,870l 

5,6051 

19,160 

15,580 

15,001 

144,1031 

22,514 

17,426 

1,984' 

33.3051 

75,229 

4,192 
4,623 

1,045 

3.982 

3,651 

17,493 

1,304,359 


1' 8.502 
114.524 
94,299 
68,217 
71,720 
70,628 
537,890 

77,621 
117,674 

78,184 
273,479 

108,729 
110,732 
219,461 

160,677 
78,402 
42,813 
77,761 
89,960 
67,999 
50.703 

558,315 

55,  .381 
67,697 
48,732 
89,684 

126,415 
93,817 
56,782 
67,949 
30,801 

637.258 

37,4e0 
54,080 
50,830 
38,581 
38,821 
30,743 
34,823 
33,160 
24,108 
88,867 
45,411 
44,571 
521,455 

46,325 

47,463 

5,983 

67,692 

167,468 

16,942 

10.617 

5,442 

7,597 

9,297 

49,895 

2,965,221 


The  total  number  of  Poultry  sold  in  1895  was  2,711,771. 
91 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898- 


WOOL. 

Table  V.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  clip  of  Wool  in  Ontario  in  tha- 
years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  :  also  the  average  number  of 
pounds  per  fleece. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin    

Norfolk 

Haldimand  

Welland 

Totals  

Lambton    

Huron 

Bruce 

Totals  

Grey 

Simcoe    

Totals 

Middlerex   

Oxford       

Brant  

Perth 

Wellington     

Waterloo  

Dufferin       

Totals 

Lincoln 

Wentworth     

Halton    

Peel , 

York       

Ontario 

Durham , 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward , 

Totals 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds    

Grenville  

Dundas 

Stormont ; , 

Glengarry 

Pre?cott 

Russell ■ 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark  

Totals , 

"Victoria 

Peterborough   

Haliburton    

Hastings      

Totals 

Muskoka       

Parry  Sound 

Nipissing   

Manitoulin    

Algoma 

Totals 

The  Province   


1897. 


No.  of 
fleeces. 


Pounds. 


lb.  per 

fleece. 


15,963 
22,015 
23,133 
15,834 
14,026 
11,374 
102,345 

26,304 
43,267 

47,388 
116,959 

57,247 

56,705 

113,952 

32,742 
10,373 
8,823 
23,263 
43,993 
13,759 
18.686 
151,639 

9,844 
10,381 
10,439 
11,633 
24,322 
24,076 
19.100 
16,712 
5,785 
132,292 

9,554 

15,6C0 

12,1531 

6,681! 

6. 673 1 

6,4491 

10.P02 

8,663 

6,815 

22,107 

35,900 

31.1941 

172,6911 

24  133 
13,916 
5,127 
19,645 
62,821 

10.801 
9,084 
1,.^99 
8,730 
4,290 

34,304 

887,003 


92,252 

147,787 

139,110 

84,620 

83,635 

56,416 

603,820 

160,213 
254,912 
281,997 
697,122 

333,680 
330,8291 
664,509 

213,544 
65,225 
51,5151 

LSI,  985! 

266,889; 
75,1331 

113, 397 1 


50,727 

62,50S 

67,731 

76.535 

160,302 

161.049 

117,840 

102,646 

29,621 

828,95 

51,889 

81,950 

63,171 

35,776 

34.240 

36,571 

56,342 

45,786 

36.187 

120,703 

168.082 

160,661 

891,358 

144,723 

79,655 

26,087 

102,818 

353,283 

51,918 
50,229 
6,629 
49,392 
25,079 
183,247 

5,139,984 


5.78 
6,71 
6  01 
5.34 
5.96 
4.96 
5  90 

6.09 
5  89 
5.95 
5.96 


1896. 


No.  of 
fleeces. 


16,495 
20,631 
2.s,011 
18,663 
15,788 
12,963 
107,551 

27,891 

49,521 

57,463 

134,875 


5.83  68,4.55 
5.83  60,785 
5.83    129,240 


6.52 
6.29 
5.84 
5,67 
6.07 
5.46 
6  07 


Pounds. 


917,6881     6.05 


5.15 
6.02 
6.49 
6.58 
6  59 
6  69 
6  17 
6.14 
5.12 
6.27 

5.43 
5.25 
5.20 
5.35 
5.13 
5.67 
5.17 
5.29 
5.31 
5.46 
4.68 
5.15 
5.16 

0.00 
5.72 
5.09 
5.23 
5.62 


35,404 
12,064 
10,396 
25,725 
50,6?6 
17,066 
20,112 
171,393 

11,459 
13,115| 
11,962, 
15,252 
28,810 
27,713 
20, 451 1 
19,412 
8,543 
156,717 

11,233 

14,742 

14,277 

8.10(> 

6,074 

8,014 

12,527 

9,150l 

7,403j 

25,3.fi6 

41,867 

33,455 

192,204 

22,776 
15,288 
5,143 
22.280 
65,487 


4.81 

1 
10.  .341 

5.53 

9,261 

4.74 

1,570 

5.66 

8,873 

5.85 

3,859 

5.34 

33,904 

5.79 

991,371 

lb.  per 
fleece 


Yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


No.  of 

fleeces. 


Pounds. 


98,422 

131,157 

138,318 

100.395 

93,906 

62,857 


626,0.55     5  81    108,374        614,467 


5.971 
6.36 
6.01 

5.m 

5.95| 
4.851 


14,906 
20,980 
24,198 
17,  .556 
17,159 
13,575 


165,346 
283,124 
327,437 
775,907 

.°84,603 
345.554 
730,157 

217,645 
69,493 
60,260 

146,895 

297,6.58 
92,523 

117.025, 
1,001,499 

57, 081 1 

76,118i 

7.5,5211 

97,264' 

178,558 

170,736 

119,214 

116.947 

43.130 

934,699 

60.704 

76,724 

72,265 

41,217 

31,455 

42,6.53 

66,935 

51,330 

38,288 

134,868 

196,420 

160,6321 

982,491 

131,024 

83,522 

26,039 

111,796 

352,381 

50,300 
.50,  .550 
7,336 
49,073 
22,039 
179,298 

5,581,387 


5.93 
5  72 
5.70 
5.75 

6.62 
5.68 
5.65 

6.15 
5.76 
5.80 
5.71 
5.88 
5.42 
5.82 
5.84 

4.98 
5.80 
6,31 
6,38 
6.20 
6.16 
5.83 
6.02 
5.05 
5.96 


5.40 
5.20 
06. 
08 
18 
32 
34 
61 
17 
32 
69 
07 
11 


5.75 
5.46 
5.06 
5.02 
5.38 

4.86 
5.46 
4.67 
5.53 
5.71 
5.29 

5.63 


27,076 

50,383 

51,539 

128,998 

72,054 

49,334 

121,388 

38,267 
17,210 
12,619 
30,480 
47  686 
20,770 
18,606 
185,638 

10,911 
14,664 
11,642 
1.5,370 
27.436 
26,800 
21,318 
19,769 
8,525 
166,435 

13,730 
17,579 

I  .31,680 

9,036 

9,014 

13,911 

10,401 

7,990 

26,441 

37,963 

33,692 

211,437 

22,961 
16,478 
3,996 
24,176 
67,611 

7.165 

4,6.52 
475 

I  6,632 

18,924 

998,805 


84,765 
1?3,308 
141,200 

94,171 
102,914 

68,109 


159,356 
290.047 
298,210 
747,613 

404,929 
278,184 
683,113 

233,463 

99,580 

72,874 

174,987 

277,473 

11.3,740 

107,319 

1,079,436 

.56,242 

85.108 

7.^,672 

100,773 

167,535 

166,537 

125,727 

114,444 

45,174 

935,212 

73,069 
89,643 

166,690 

45.958 

47,?5.T 

68,.3'=>5 

53.06^ 

40,564 

136,939 

177,026 

165,454 

1,054,118 

129,480 

88,313 

19,703 

120,6:^6 

358,132 

36,931 

26,131 

2,294 

39,058 

104,414 

5,576.505 


lb.  per 
fleece. 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


BEES. 

•Table    VI.     Sbowingr  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Oounties  the  number  and  value  of  hives 
of  bees,  and  also  the  value  per  hive,  for  the  years  1895,  1896  and  1897. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

■Norfolk  . . . . 
Haldioiand 
Wei  land     . . 
Totals.. 


Lambton   . 

Huron  . . . . 

Bruce    .  . . . 

Totals. 


<3rey   

-Simcoe 
Totals. 


Middlesex . . 
Oxford    .... 

Brant    

Perth 

Wellington 
Waterloo   . , 
Duflferin . . . 
Totals. 


Fi'ncoln 

Wentworth  

Halton    

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

Durham   

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addiagton 

Frontenac 

Leeds 

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont  . . 

Glengarry 

Prescott 

Russell  

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark   

TotaN 


Victoria   

Peterborough 
Haliburton    . , 

Hastings    

Totals..., 


Muskoka 
Parry  Sound 
Nipiwing  . . . 
Mamt'iulia   . 

Algnraa 

Totals... 


No.  of 
hives. 


1897. 

Value  of  Value 
beeaandl    per 
outfit,     hive. 


4,6.57 
4,921' 
3,85*1 
6,1231 
4,1601 
3,040 
26,755i 


18,675 
2 +,654 
18.037 
34,044 
20,093 
14,866 
130,369 


7,488  39.087 

4,200  26,418 

4,776  28,656 

16, 46  i  I  94,161 


1896. 


No.  of 
hives. 


$    c. 

4  Oil 

5  01 

4  68| 

5  561 
4  83l 
4  89 


{5,9.56, 
5,1571 

11,1131 
I 
6,631 1 
3, 6.53  j 
3,61l| 
3,0791 
1,819 
989 
3,232 

23,014; 


'39,190 
28,776 
67,966 

37,797 
21.187 
20,149 
16,134 
11,460 
6,181 
18,228 
131,136 


6  22' 
6  29; 
6  OOl 

5  72| 

6  58! 

5  58 

6  12 


1,197 

7,290 

2,182 

12.939 

1,0.33 

5,  .578 

1,6?9 

10,410 

4,260 

29,351 

3,301 

20.202 

2,571 

1?,958 

8,230 

39  998 

1872! 

9,647 

26,325, 

148,273 

5,373 
3,186 
5,264 
2.6911 
3,404' 
1.8351 
8,207 
4,805 
2,116 
5,024 
3,690 
.5, 10=) 

50,700 

I 

4,580 

1,874 

52 

4,865 

11,371 

444 
146 

"'"'4.54 

25 

1,069 


25,575 
18,288 
25,  .530 
11,168 
16,643 
10,680 
40,9.53 
2.^,641 
10,263 
25,070 
18,413 
22,615' 
248,739. 

22,900 

8,5641 

260 ; 

26,8551 
58,579, 

2,0471 
994 


4  76 

5  74 

4  85 

4  15 

4  86 

5  82 

4  99 

4  92 

4  85 

5  00 

4  57| 

6  001 

5  52 

5  16 

4  61 

6  81 


Value  of  Value 

bees  and     per 

outfit,      hive. 


4,122 
3,506 
4,  .543' 
5,689! 
2,651! 
2,5961 


18,260 
18,196 
23,487 
31,745 
14,819 
13,759 


2,765      6  09! 

1671     6  69 

6,973,    6  59 


The  Province 165,811    885,196     5  31    160,076,   854,408     5  34|   173,173    938,6581    5  42 

98" 


5,898 

4,613' 

3,995' 

14,406' 

4,814| 
4,533; 
9,3471 

6.623 
2,330 
2,380 
3,672 
1,449 
1,176 
2  665 
20,195 

1,542 
2,364 
1,475 
2,036 
3,480 
3,682 
2,806 
8.931 
3,109 
29,425 

4.377 
2,919 
5,797 
1,903 
2,947 
1,985 
6,164 
4,354 
2,180 
6,2931 
4,  .336; 
.5,296' 
48,551 

6.007 

1,565 

80 

6,2721 
13,9241 

529 
1781 

«l 
397 

91 

l,12l| 


4  87 1     23,107,    120,266     5  20 


30,257! 
26, 807 1 
23,3711 
80,435 

27,15l! 
25,2491 
52,400 

42,6.52] 
14,9361 
12,947| 
17.396 

8,143 

7,7971 

16,070| 

119,940 

8,219| 
15,059 

9,  .322 
12,399; 
23,699: 
19,956 
15,209 
42,779 
15,483 
162,1251 

22,804' 
17.2221 

28,289 
7,916 
15.472 
10,421 
29.094 
2'2,815 
10,224 
31.906 
21,8971 
2.3,461 
241,.521 

28,8341 

8,6701 

400 

33, 0.53 1 

70,957 1 

3,2901 
1,1571 

40 
2,219 

52 
6,764 


1895. 


No.  of 
hives. 


4,491 
3,758 

.  4,117 
6,943 
3,549 
4,406 

27,264 


Value  of  Value 

bees  and     per 

outfit,      hive. 


5  13  5,404 

5  94  7,892 

5  85  5,072 

5  58  18,368 


5  64 
5  57 

5  61i 

6  44| 
6  411 
5  44 


5  33 

6  37 
6  32 
6  09 
6  81 
5  42 

5  42 
4  79 
4  98 

6  51 


21 
90 
88 
16 
25 
25 
72 
5  24 

4  69 

5  07 

6  05 
4  43 
4  97 

4  80 

5  54 

6  00 
5  27 
5  10 


23 1 

50 
00 
59  1 

811/ 
03 


7,094 

4,614 

11,708 

9,103 
2,203 
2,299 
3,213 
2.827 
1.215 
2,705 
23,625 

1,308 
2,806 
1,630 
4,000 
4,602 
4,396 
3,710 

10,070 
3,601 

36,023 

2,881 
1,341 
7,632 
1,868 
2,963 
2,247 
3,951 
5.043 
1.650 
6.702 
3, 105 
4,597 
43,880 

3,4.55 

1,310 

109 

6,139 

11,013 

663 

160 

17 

4.52 

1,292 


$ 

21,6471 
21,195 
21,6971 
40,200 
20,868 
22,779 
148,386 

27,290 

49,246 

28,454 

104,990 

35,115 
25,515 
60,6301 

55,316 
)5.6S3 
13,104 
16.740 
16,H23 
7,764 
16,229 
140,489 

6,213 
17,734 
10,514 
21,560 
30,143 
24,364 
20,368 
47,7.32 
19,886 
198,504 

15,629 

7,898 

38.187 

8,014 

14  934 

10,269 

18,056 

25,820 

7,244 

35,118 

14,469 

2l,.560 

217,098 

16,791 

8,070 

591 

35,432 

60,884 

4,303 
1,070 
85 

2,219 

7,677 


5  05 

6  24 
6  61 
5  72 


6  08 
6  93 
6  70 
5  21 

5  88 

6  39 
5  63 
5  95 


76 
32 
45 
39 
55 
64 
49 
74 
68 
51 

39 
89 
07 
29 
04 
57 
67 
12 
39 
24 
66 
69 
95 

86 
16 
42 
77 
63 

49 
69 
Ob 

91 

94 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189 B 


FACTORY  CHEESE. 

Table    VII.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  group?  of  Counties  the  quantity  »nd  value  of 
Cheese  made  at  1,161  factories  in  Ontario  in  1897,  the  amount  paid  to  patrons,  etc. 


.2  a 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin  

Norfolk 

Haldin  and   

WeJland 

Totals 

Lambton    

Huron 

Bruce > 

Totals. 

Grey  

Simcce   

Totals 

Middlesex' 

Oxford 

Brantj 

Perth 

Wellington    

WatTloo  

Duff  eriu 

Totals 

Lincoln 

Wentworth  

Halton    

Pe«l 

York  

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince   Edward  .    .   . . 
Totals 

Lennox  and  Addiogton 

Frontenac 

Leeds  

Grcnville  

Dunda*! 

Stormont  

Glengarry 

Prescott 

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark   

Totals 

Victoria 

Peterborough   

Haliburton     

Habtings    

Totals 

Muskoka    

Parry  Sound    

Manitoulin 

Totals 

The  Province  


No. 
11 

7 
24 
25 
11 

3 
81 

20 
19 
21 
60 

16 
18 
33 

39 

45 

9 

24 

12 

9 

6 

144 

3 

7 

2 

5 

6 

6 

12 

41 

23 

105 

30 

69 
78 
38 
55 
42 
52 
59 
36 
53 
23 
41 
576 

17 

34 

6 

96 

153 


Quantity  of- 


Milk  used. 

lb. 

11.067,197 

6,319,888 

42,091,456 

36,014.988 

17,610,671 

4,339,977 

117,444,1771 

20.616,649 
26,154.894 
25,956,80 » 
72,728,347 


Cheese 
made. 

lb. 

1,036,734 

584,023 

3,862.868 

3,1^51.5.08 

l,6f5,104 

40«,805 

10,903,092 

1,306,320 
2,389,1-22 
2,393,327 
6,689,569 


14,036,093  1,330,807 
11,142,539'  1,058,314 
25,178,6321    2,389,121 


Gross 
value  of 
cheese. 


70,815, 

133,929, 

15,357, 

58,225, 

20,398, 

9,608, 

5.464, 

313,698, 


404  6,511,653 
032|  12,414,474 
689  1.413,251 
5,360,725 
1,890,914 
868,704 
51.3,096 
28,972,817 


4,4P9,69l 

9, 192,  J  96 

1,63?<,648 

4,070,735 

6,446,656 

4,493.002 

16,864,370 

63,142,139 

34,786,347 

145,093,784 

56,604,386 
58,393,113 
96,182,486 
49,703,442 
68,711,818 
50,950  714 
35,879. 022 1 
37,6'.;9,848 
3^,706.014] 
49,5.':2,013 
16,377,6791 
52,637.794 
605,328,329, 


419,196 

846,642 

155,402 

390,873 

597.074 

407,646 

1,552,334 

5,882,366 

3,328,817 

13,580,350 

5,532,9.'?4 
5,672,393 
9,142,723 
4,670,682 
6,571,614 
4,952,144 
3,424,5.^8  i 
3,654,287 
3,163,541 
4,725,403 
1,667,168 
4,972,567 
5^049,994 


14,883.415     1,390,798 

40,782,644,    3,769,690 

1,788,024         175,469 

116,322,0671  11,184,1^82 

173,776,150  16,520,939 


664,873 
1,439,2631 

585,1151 
2,689,251 1 


63,474 
138,154 

5.5,406 
257,034 


83,8331 

48,043  j 

322,634' 

280,003 ; 

138,8861 

33,7951 

907,194  j 

159,046 
201,4821 
197,689! 
558,217! 

110,005! 

87,002 

197,007 

548,776 
1.049,757 

118,803 

460,581 

158,567 

73,768 

43,286 

2,453,6^8 

34,613! 

69,7961 

12,7901 

32,362! 

50,  £96 

34,256 

133,764 

496,587 

286,855 

1,151,419 

481,602! 
483,262 
790,585' 
409, 366 1 
677,8081 
431,591 1 
.300,127! 
309,435! 
272,644 
402,803 
131,938' 
419,541 
5,010, 702 

119,865 

329,227 

14,687 

9.56,506 

1,420,285 

5,334 
11,4821 

4,290 
21,106! 


flu  «s  i 

-  s-z 


•< 


1,033 
431 
2,140 
2,268 
1,316 
367 
7,555 

1,726 
1,793 
1,712 
5,231 

1,072 

811 

1,883 

2,869 

4,011 

738 

2,441 

1,121 

60.3 

378 

12,161 

374 

529 

140 

117 

450 

331 

1,065 

2,909 

1,762 

7,677 

2,493 
2,576 
2,829 
1,786 
1,949 
1,905 
1,338 
2,024 
1,354 
2,182 
1,19( 
2,340 
23,966 

1,047 
1,948 
112 
4,246 
735? 

66 
145 

67 
278 


J=  — 
w  o 


P  5 

> 


lb.         $  c. 


1,161  1,455,937,1481137,362,9161  11,719,468      66,104 


10.68 
10.82 
10.90 
10.73 
10.64 
10.62 
10.77 

10.81 
10  94 
10.85 
10.87 

10.55 
10.53 
10.54 

10.88 
10.79 
10.87 
10.86 
10.79 
10.95 
10  65 
10.83 

10.64 
10  86 
10.54 
10.41 
10.80 
11.02 
10.86 
10.73 
10.45 
10.68 

10.23 
10.29 
10.52 
10.64 
10.46 
10.29 
10,48 
10.30 
10.34 
10.49 
10.45 
10. 5e 
10.43 

10.71 
10.82 
10.19 
10.40 
10.62 

10.471 
10.42! 
10.56 
10.46 

10.60 


09 
8  23 
8  35 
8  34 
8  39 
8  27 
8  32 


8  27: 
8  22 
8.25' 

8  43 
8  46 
8  41 
8  59 
8  29 
8  49 
8  44 
8  47 

8  26 
8  24 
8  23 
8  28 
8  44 
8  40 
8  62 
8  44 
8  62 
8  48 

8  70 
8  52 
8  65 
8  76 
8  79 
8  72 
8  76; 
8  47 
8  62! 
8  52i 
8  42| 
8  44 
8  63 

8  62 
8  73 
8  37 
8  55 
8  60j 

8  40' 
8  31 

7  74 

8  21 

8  53 


60748 

35,857 

269,970 


cts. 
54.9 
56.7 
64.1 


219,6981  61.0 
105,691    ""  ' 
25,116 
716,980 


8  34  117,307 

8.43  157,205 

8  26  15.3,861 

8  34  428,373 


87,513 

66.406 

153,919 

446,391 

896,816 

94,016 

375,051 

128,54? 

57,926 

34,C04 

2,032,746 

25,757 

52,281 

10,275 

27,477 

38,756 

27,175 

102,946 

409,503 

230,375 

924,545 

392,442 
412  727 
679,775 
352,232 
498,549 
375,134 
256,824 
261,163 
233,117 
342,642 
97,845 
342,831 
4,245,281 

95,9541 
272,8181 

■  ll,0a4| 
813,5061 

1,193,3121 


60. 0» 

57.9 
bl.a 

56. (V 
60.1 
59.3 
58.9' 

62.3 
59.6- 
61.1 

63.0 
67.0 
61.2 
64.4 
63.0 
60.3 
62.2 
64.8 

57.8^ 
56. J^ 
62.7 
67.. 5 
60.1 
60.5- 
61.0 
64.9' 
66.2 
63.7 

69.5^ 
70. 7 
70.7 
70.9- 
72.6 
73.6 
71.6 
69.4 
71.3 
69.1 
59.7 

65  1 
70.1 

64.5 

66  9 
61.7 
69. i> 
68.7 


3,718]  55.9 

7,.375|  51.2 

2,755|  47.1 

13,848.  51.6 

9,709,0041  66.6 


The  list  of  cheese  factories  and  creameries  in  Ontario  has  been  published  as  a  separate  pamphlet. 

94 


PART   III. 


VALUES,   RENTS  AND  FARM  WAGES. 


Values  of  Farm  Property.  The  followiDg  table  gives  the  values  of 
farm  lands,  buildings,  implements  and  live  stock  by  county  groups  for  1896  and  1897, 
and  for  the  Province  for  each  of  the  fifteen  years  1883-1897  : 


Dietricts. 

Farm  land. 

Buildings. 

Implements. 

Live  stock. 

Total  farm 
property. 

$ 

? 

$ 

$ 

$ 

TiAlrn  TT.rift 

/1897.. 

78,671,601 

28,165,204 

7,28.5,555 

12,080,804 

126,209,164 

J-iO&D    XJl  Jt? 

11896.. 

79,725,118 

27,874,501 

7,239,255 

11,822,619 

126,661,523 

Tj&lro    ViTirf tn 

fl897.. 
\1896.. 

63,256,194 

21,520,389 

5,583,061 

11,428,589 

101,788,233 

AJmMLV     i^Klt%Jil 

63,579,494 

21,317,994 

5,445,614 

11,696,398 

102,039,400 

Georgian  Bay 

ri897  . 

42,713,156 

15,730,513 

4.414,029 

8,249,360 

71,107,058 

U896.. 

42,641,677 

15,715,313 

4,385,099 

8,474,255 

71,216,344 

Wftflti  MiH1;^nr) 

(1897.. 
118%.. 

116,184,328 

44,619,626 

10,177,878 

19,390,350 

190,372,182 

**  VOV     i.lAJvllaUU         ■  •  ■  <  ( 

118.158,208 

44,500,793 

10,128,166 

20,039,127 

192,826,294 

T.>aWa   Ontjkrin 

ri897.. 

115,757,971 

45.283,916 

9.958,770 

16,498,245 

187,498,902 

AJ^&C     V/U  WSX  LKJ ■>• 

U896.. 

116,438,638 

45,747,934 

9,989,493 

17,662,063 

189,828,128 

St.  Lawrence  and 

ri897.. 
11896.. 

96,231,088 

36,706,694 

9,892,534 

18,069,571 

160,899,887 

Ottawa 

95,719,280 

36,027,872 

9,631,239 

18,898,682 

160,277,073 

TR&at  XTiHIanH 

(1897.. 

33,793,194 

11,739,269 

3,181,964 

6,008,109 

64,722,536 

XyfltSIr   lU-IUlttfJU  ........ 

U896.. 

34,086,985 

11,901,758 

3,152,560 

6,289,096 

55,430,399 

"Ml^rt-KATTk    Dist'.rini'^ 

fl897.. 

7.447,020 

2,324,548 

805,307 

1,918,776 

12,495,651 

l-^XJtvUVtU      l^lCuri^vC  .   •   , 

U896. 

7,118,870 

2,149,264 

759,032 

1.985,296 

12,012,462 

n897.. 

554,054,552 

206,090,159 

61,299.098 

93,649,804 

905,093,613 

1896.. 

557,468.270 

205,235,429 

60,730,358 

90.857,56(i 

910,291,623 

1895.. 

572,938,472 

204,148,670 

60,944,385 

103,958,047 

931,989,674 

1894.. 

587,246,117 

204,071,566 

51,530.172 

111, .547.652 

9.04,395,507 

1893.. 

602,664,361 

i00,189,8};8 

61,435,919 

116,070,902 

970,361,070 

1892.. 

615,828,471 

195,644,258 

51,003,020 

117,501,495 

979,977,244 

1891. . 

621,245.223 

191,268,.327 

50,651,442 

108,721,076 

971,886,068 

The  Provinoe « 

1890.. 

622.886,000 

193.438.826 

50,515,583 

104,086,626 

970,927,036 

1889.. 

632,329,4.^3 

192,464.237 

51,685.706 

10%731,288 

9S?,210,664  i 

1888.. 

640,480,801 

188,293,226 

49,754,832 

102,839,  ?35 

981,.S68,094 

1887.. 

636,883,755 

184,753,507 

49,248.297 

104,406.655 

976,292,214 

1886.. 

648,009,828 

183,748,212 

50.530,936 

107,208,935 

989,497,911 

1885.. 

626,422,024 

182,477.905  1 

48,569,725 

100,690, 0«G 

9.5^169,740 

1884.. 

625,478,706 

173,386,925 

47,830,710 

103,106,829 

949.803,170   ' 

a883.. 

654,793,025 

163,030,675 

43,  .522,530 

100,082,365 

961,428,595 

The  foregoing  table  gives  cause  for  encouragement,  as  the  total  value  of  farm 
property,  T»hich  had  decreased  by  $22,405,933  in  1895  and  by  821,698,151  in  1896,  has 
fallen  oil'  by  only  $5,198,010  in  1897,  the  figures  now  being  $905,093,613.  The  decline 
in  the  value  of  farm  lands  in  1896  was  $15,470,202,  while  in  1897  it  was  but  $3,413,718. 


[95] 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  {No.  32, 


A,  18S8 


This  is  the  smallest  falling  off  in  value  of  farm  land  since  1891.  Live  stock  in  1896  had 
decreased  in  value  by  $7,100,481,  while  in  1897  the  decrease  is  only  $^,207,762  In 
189G  there  was  a  slight  decline  in  the  value  of  implements,  but  in  1897  there  is  an 
improvement  of  $568,740  ;  while  buildings  have  increased  in  value  by  $854,730,  although 
hardly  up  to  the  gain  of  the  preceding  year. 

Value  Per  Acke  Occupied.  The  value  per  acre  occupied  of  the  various 
classes  of  iarm  property  is  given  in  the  following  table  by  county  groups  and  for  the 
Province  for  the  years  1896  and  1897: 


Districts. 


Lake  Erie     

Lake  Huron    

Georgian  Bay   

West  Midland  

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa. 

East  Midland   

Northern  Districts 

The  Province 


Farm  lands. 


1897      1896 


Buildings.      Implements.    Live  stock. 


1897      1896      1897      1896     1897      1896 


$    c. 

3S  59 
27  15 
21  071 
35  73 1 
37  97 1 
17  87 
12  37 
3  32| 


S  c.| 

34  10 
27  29 
21  07 
36  30 
38  21 
17  90 
12  ."iS 
3  37 


$  CI  $  c.  $  c. 


23  72  24  06 


12  02 
9  24 

7  76 

13  72 

14  fG 
6  82 
4  .SO 
1  03 

8  82 


$  c. 


11  92 

3  n 

3  10 

9  15 

2  40 

2  34| 

7  77 

2  17 

2  17 

13  67 

3  18 

3  111 

15  01 

3  27 

3  28l 

6  74 

1  84 

1  eo; 

4  S'i 

1  17 

1  161 

1  02 


36, 


36 


5  79 

3  53 

2  31 

94 


8  85'  2  20:  2  19,  4  01   4  18 


Total  farm 

property. 

1897 

1 

1896 

S     c. 

$     c. 

53  88    54  18 

43  69    43  80 

35  07    35  20 

58  54    59  23 

61  51    62  29 

29  89    29  97 

20  04    20  38 

5  561    5  69 

38  75 

.39  28 

The  average  value  of  all  classes  of  farm  property  per  acre  occupied  is  $38.75,  which 
is  53  cents  below  that  of  the  preceding  year.  None  of  the  districts  show  an  increase  in 
total  value  per  acre  compared  with  their  respective  figures  for  1896.  For  the  Province 
farm  land  shows  a  decline  of  34  cents  per  acre  and  buildings  3  cents,  while  implements 
increase  1  cent  per  acre,  and  live  stock  17  cents.      J 

Value  per  Acre  Cleared.  The  following  table  gives  a  still  better  basis 
of  comparison,  as  the  values  are  here  given  per  acre  cleared  or  in  use  by  county  groups 
and  for  the  Province. 


( 

T3 

2 

t3 

c 

03 

2 

'u 

The  Province.              1 

a 

o 

** 

s 

cS 

O 

,2 

Farm  property. 

c 

g 

£0 

•c 

U 

a    . 

a 

Sm 

e 

u 

<t> 

td 

c 

OS 

a; 

s 

« 

•O 

1897. 

1896. 

1883. 

1883-97. 

1 

iJ 

K^ 

o 

is 

^ 

m 

f^ 

^ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

n 

$ 

$ 

$ 

Buildings 

17  49 

14  47 

13  23 

18  09 

18  94 

14  33 

12  63 

10  71 

16  03 

16  20 

15  00 

16  41 

Implemencs 

4  53 

3  75 

3  71 

4  13 

4  16 

3  86 

3  42 

3  71 

3  99 

4  00 

4  13 

4  29 

Live  stock  

7  51 

7  69 

6  94 

7  86 

6  90 

7  05 

6  46 

8  84      7  29 

7  64 

9  50 

9  04 

Total 

29  53 

25  91 

23  88 

30  08 

30  00 

25  24 

22  61 

23  26    27  31 

27  84 

28  63 

29  74 

Buildings  show  their  best  value  per  acre  cleared  in  the  Lake  Ontario  group,  imple- 
ments in  the  Lake  Erie  counties  and  live  stock  in  the  Northern  Districts,  bat  the  average 
value  for  all  these  items  is  credited  to  the  West  Midland  group.  Each  of  the  items  falls 
below  its  respectiv^e  value  per  acre  for  the  Province  compared  with  the  previous  year, 
the  figures  for  the  three  being  $27.31  per  acre,  or  53  cents  less  than  those  given  for  1896. 


96 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18ye 


Rentals  op  Leased  Farms.  The  following  table  gives,  by  districts^ 
ibe  average  value  and  rental  of  such  leased  farms  as  were  reported  in  farmers'  schedules. 
retomed  to  this  Bureau  in  1897  : 


Leaseii  Farms. 


Average  value — 

Land 

Buildings 

Average  rental 

Rent  per  acre  based  on — 

1 1897 

Acres  occupie  1    \  1896 

11886-97 

j'1897 

Acres  cleared '.  1896 

U886-97 

/  lgQ7 

Per    cent,    ratio   of  rental   to  j  -toqi* 
value  of  farm    11888-97 


3,247 

1,341 

216 


2  14 
2  29 

2  18 


3,541 

1,334 

218 

$  c. 
1  62 
I  89 
1  89 


2  75|  2  32 

2  84  2  38 

2  91  2  54 

4  71  4  47 

4  52,  4  42 

4  23  4  29 


a 

PQ 

•o 

1     .5 

S 

S? 

0 

to 

O 

c: 

$ 

1 

2,998 

4,314 

1,214 

1,714 

186 

263 

$   c. 

$  c 

1  50 

2  191 

1  53 

2  30 

1  56 

2  20 

2  02 

2  71 

2  11 

2  85 

2  IS 

2  94 

4  42 

4  36 

4  .^8 

4  47 

4  36 

4  28 

51 


4,088    3,200    3,052 

1,650    1,428     1,168 

264        196        191 


$  c. 
2  34 
2  44 
2  85 

2  80 

2  97 

3  15 

4  60 
4  60 
4  491 


$  c]  So. 

1  401  1  23 

1  461  1  30 

1  37|  1  41 

2  071  2  04 
2  12  2  001 

2  15  2  29| 

I  I 

4  24!  4  53 

4  16!  4  68' 

3  96;  4  58, 


3,483  1 

1,413  ! 

219  [ 


71 


The  yearly  rent  per  acre  occupied  in  the  Province  has  decreased  by  16  cents,  every 
district  sharing  in  the  decline  in  value.  The  rent  per  acre  cleared  has  decreased  by  10 
cents  for  the  Province,  although  an  increase  is  noted  in  the  East  Midland  group  and 
Northern  Districts.  The  per  cent,  ratio  of  rental  to  the  value  of  the  farm  is  4.47,  or  .1 
less  than  that  of  the  preceding  year.     The  average  yearly  rental  of  a  farm  is  $219. 

Value  of  Horses.  The  value  of  each  of  the  four  clasEea  of  farm  horses  i& 
jpven  in  the  following  table,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province,  together  with  the 
total  value  for  1896  and  1897  ;  also  the  value  of  all  classes  of  horses  sold  in  the  year. 


District*. 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Huron     , 

Georgian  Bay     

We»t  Midland 

Lake  Ontario   

8t.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

Ba«t  Midland 

Northern  Districts   


Totals  /1"*^»7   26,-559,966 

^^  11896  27,167,276 


3,715,550 
2, 925,021 1 
2,427,263 
5,103,778 
.5,483,2211 
4.6.^%263: 
1,720,388 
549,482; 


.575,4821 
6.38,596, 
434,799 
944,175 
810,817 
740,282! 
231,884] 
94,316' 

4,470,?5l| 
4,289,645- 


639,958 
629,066 
365, 765 
902,383 
925,028 
590.980 
238,046 
80,625 

4,271,851 
5,001,581 


115,808 

93,598 

68,731 

121,861 

187,600 

179,449, 

20,6.50 

21,940 


809,637   36,111, -tOD;    2,700,479 
724,191  37,185,693j    2,712,884 


$ 

$ 

5,046,798 

342,701 

4,186,281 

408, 400 

3,296,558 

262,744 

7,072,197 

612,3.36 

7,406,66fi 

551,749 

6,145,974 

341,002 

2,210,968 

140.023 

746,363 

41, .524 

The  total  value  of  horses  reported  in  the  Province  is  given  as  $36,111,805,  which 
is  $1,073,888    lees  than  the   figures  for   the   preceding  year,  although  there  has  been  a. 
7  B.I.  <l-4)  97 


131  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32) 


A.  1898 


considerable  increase  in  the  value  of  both  breeding  mares  and  stallions.  The  Lake 
Ontario  district  still  has  the  largest  total  value  in  horses,  although  the  West  Midland 
makes  the  best  showing  in  the  value  of  breeding  mares  and  of  sales.  The  totnl  value  of 
horses  sold  in  the  Province  during  the  year  is  a  little  below  the  record  of  1896. 

Value  of  Cattle.  The  following  table  gives  the  value  of  the  various  classes 
•of  cattle,  together  with  their  total  values  in  1896  and  1897,  and  the  value  of  cattle  sold 
in  1897,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  : 


,                     Districts. 

•5  G 

1 

o 

o 

Store  cattle. 

a    . 

■a    . 

$ 
14,470 

9,809 
17,9--2 

4,960 

4,390 
14,750 

6,240 
24,569 

97,140 
148,307 

2,670,026 
2,281,661 
1,705,232 
4,951.407 
4.073,563 
6,544,814 
1,903,229 
439.623 

24,569,555 
25,404,630 

$ 

938,258 
1,813,012 

863,441 
2,369,970 
1,057,464 
1,163,866 

384,602 

139,213 

8,72y,826 
8,894,948 

$ 

1,197,076 

1,384,261 

859,094 

2.036.035 

1,4.57,702 

1,6.54,111 

575,749 

223.019 

9,287,036 
9,935,753 

$ 

4,719.829 
5,488,743 
3.44%7i9 
9,362,362 
6,-593,119 
9.377,541 
2.869,820 
826,424 

42,683,557 
44,383,638 

$ 

1,333,162 
2.414,249 
1,246,484 
3,840,961 
2,204,826 
1,498.702 
607,556 
204,283 

13,350,223 
12,381,248 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario   

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa.    . 
East  Midland 

i        Totals   {S: 

Oxen  have  decreased  in  value  from  $148,307  to  897,140,  and  the  other  three  classes 
have  also  declined  in  value,  the  result  being  that  the  total  value  of  cattle  is  placed  a6 
$42,683,557,  or  $1,700,081  less  than  in  1896.  The  total  value  of  cattle  sold  exceeds  the 
figures  for  the  previous  year.  Over  one-fourth  of  the  sales  occurred  in  the  West  Mid- 
land district. 

Value  of  Sueep  and  Hogs.  The  following  table  presents  the  values  of 
all  classes  of  sheep  and  swine  on  hand  and  sold  in  1897,  by  county  groups  and  for  the 
Province  ;  also  the  figures  for  the  Province  for  1896  : 


Districts. 

Sheep. 

Hogs. 

Over  one 
year. 

Under 
'one  year. 

Total 
on  band. 

Total 

sold  in 

year. 

Over  one 
year. 

Under 
one  year. 

Total 
on  hand. 

Total 

sold  in 

year. 

$ 

$ 

S 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

Lake  Erie 

440.323 

238,130 

678.453 

304,163 

500.377 

794,321 

1,294,698 

1,887,048 

Lake  Huron . . . 

546,349 

332,266 

878,615 

402,606 

2.^6,892 

388,979 

625,871 

1,008,040 

Georgian  Bay.. 

493,706 

257,746 

751,452 

309,867 

223,493 

341,.^05 

561.998 

838,932 

West  Midland. 

734,397 

390,451 

1,124,848 

497,701 

491,805 

885,707 

1,377,512 

2,356,185 

Lake  Ontario. , 

6  7,515 

312,057 

949,.572 

423,054 

438,787 

673,019 

1,111,806 

1,879,828 

Sc.  L.  &  Ottawa 

667,876 

363.100 

1,030,97.-. 

399,578 

552,697 

511,144 

1.063,841     1,369,448  | 

East  Midland. . 

260,017 

123,660 

383,677 

138,629 

185,253 

209,266 

394,519 

603,073 

Northern  Dists. 

145,466 

60,135 

205,601 

62,573 

55,014 

44,951 

99,965 

138.258  _ 

j       Totals.  {}gj 

i 

3,925,649 

2,077,5 15 

6,003,194 

2,538.171 

2,684,318 

3,848,892 

6,533,210 

10,080,812 

4,390,800 

2,261,402 

6,652,202 

2,646,709 

2,712,652 

3,792,575 

6,505,227 

10;022,525 

The  total  value  of  sheep  on  hand  is  given  as  $6,003,194,  or  $619,008  less  than  in 
the  preceding  year,  a  decrease  having  occurred  in  both  clisseg.  Tlie  vilue  o^  the  sales 
of  sheep  made  during  the  year  was  $2,538,171,  or  $108,539  less  than  in  1896.  Ttie 
total  value  of  hogs  on  hand  is  $27,983  above  that  of  the  preceding  year,  and  the  total 
value  of  swine  bold  exceeds  the  figures  of  1896  by  $58,287.  The  West  Midland  district 
is  credited  with  the  highest  values  of  both  sheeo  and  hogs  on  haad,  aad  also  with  iBikiag 
the  most  sales  of  these  two  classes  of  live  stock. 

98 


'61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  B 


Value  of  Poultry  and  Total  Live  Stock.  The  following  table  gives  the 
value  of  poultry  (by  classes),  and  also  the  total  value  of  live  stock  on  hand  and  sold 
during  the  year,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  : 


Districts. 

Poultry. 

Total  value 

cf  live  stock 

on  hand. 

Tota!  value 
of  live  ^tock 
sold  in  year. 

Turkeys. 

Geese. 

Other 
fowls. 

Total 
on  hand. 

$ 
347,026 
249,079 
190,633 
453,431 
437,082 
451,239 
149,125 
40,423 

2,318,038 
2,130,807 

Total 

sold  in 

year. 

Lake  Erie 

$ 
79,267 
63,354 
45,831 

111,516 
99,652 

130,325 
32,583 
10,572 

573,100 
466,214 

S 
27,055 
26,272 
23,817 
t3,670 
42,091 
46,8S7 
15..S97 

4,354 

229.543 
219,856 

$ 

240,704 
159,453 
120,985 
298,245 
295,339 
274,027 
101,145 
25,497 

1,515.395 
1,444,737 

$ 

177,f29 

95,707 

7.^549 

221,124 

240,979 

193,176 

64,805 

16,946 

1,083,914 
985,629 

a 

12.086,804 

11,428,589 

8,219,360 

19,390,350 

16,498,245 

18,069.571 

6,008,109 

1,918,776 

93,619,804 
96,8.57,559 

$ 
4,044,703 
4,329,002 
2,731,576 
7,528,307 
5,300,436 
3,801,905 
1,554,086 
463.584 

29.753,599 
28,748,995 

Lake  Huron  

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland 

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawr.  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland 

Northern  Districts  . . 

Totals {S; 

All  classes  of  fowl  show  an  increase  in  value,  the  total  now  reaching  ^2  318,038 
The  value  of  all  classes  of  poultry  sold  in  the  year  was  $1,083,914,  an  increase  of  $98,285 
over  the  figures  for  1896.  The  value  of  all  classes  of  live  stock  on  hand  is  $93,649,804, 
or  $3,207,755  less  than  in  the  preceding  year.  The  total  value  of  live  stock  sold  is  given 
as  $29,753,599,  or  $1,004,604  more  than  in  1896.  The  West  Midland  counties  lead  in 
the  value  of  live  stock  sold  and  on  hand. 

Value    of    Live    Stock    per    Head.     The  value  of  the  various  ciaaaes 
of  live  stock  per  head  on  hand  on  July  Ist,  1897,  is  given  in  the  following  table  : 


Farm  Live  Stock. 


Horses : 
Working  horses 
Breeding  mar&s 

Colts 

Stallions 

Cattle : 
Working  oxen . 

Milch  cows  . . . 

Store  cattle 

Other  cattle ... 
Sheep  : 

Over  one  year .  . 

tJnder  one  year 
Hogs : 

Over  one  year  . 

Under  one  year 
Poultry  : 

Turkeys  

Geese  

Other  fowls  . . . 


59 

62 

43 

257 

40 

S  c. 
26  99 
23  61 
U  58 

4  23 

2  60 

11  06 

3  65 

Ctf. 

66 
58 
21 


>> 

a 

<s 

o 

n 

3 

a 

a 

a 

^ 

O 

c3 

<D 

h^ 

O 

$ 

r. 

66 

62 

68 

64 

42 

40 

326 

311 

47 

48 

$   c. 

$    c. 

27  50 

25  .50 

28  08 

22  25 

11  52 

9  71 

4  63 

4  34 

11  42 

i 
11  22 

3  66 

3  58 

cts. 

cts. 

59 

64 

51 

54 

20 

21 

61 

65 

41 

326 

40 
$  c, 
28  49 
27  19 
11  08 

4  77 

2  82 

11  71 

3  96 
cts 

64 
55 
21 


62 

66 

43 

328 

43 

9  c. 
27  72 
22  42 

11  14 

4  77 

2  731 

12  74 

3  60 
cts. 

65 
59 
22 


^O 


58 

62 

38 

252 

40 

$  c 

24  02 

19  25 

9  70 

3  80 

2  41 

11  02 

3  46 
eta. 

69 

58 
22 


&^ 


Ho 
to  u 


a; 


57 

55 

36 

181 

46 

$  c. 

23  48 

18  92 

9  32 

4  06 

2  34 

10  41 

3  53 

cts. 
58 
53 
21 


$ 
71 
69 
41 

170 

38 

$  c 

25  55 

19  49 

9  34 

4  23 

2  31 

10  55 

3  41 

ct.'*. 
62 
62 
22 


The 
Province. 


1897 


1896 


61 

64 

41 

283 

42 

$  c. 
26  13 
23  89 

10  62 

4  37 

2  62 

11  40 

3  67 
cts. 

64 
56 
21 


63 
•  64 

41 
263 

:  43 

•$  c, 
27  60 
24  01 
11  19 

4  41 

2  65 

11  13 

3  70 
cts. 

65 
.56 
22 


Stallions,  and  hogs  over  one  year  old,  show  an  increase  in  value  per  head,  but  aM 
the  other  animals  in  the  table  only  equal  or  fall  below  their  respective  values  on  the  sam« 
rate  in  1896 

99 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No  32). 


A.  189^ 


The  following  table  gives  the  value  per  head  of  the  various  claases  of  farm  stock  sold 
in  the  years  endicg  June  ,^Oth,  1896  and  1897  : 


Farm  Live  Stoclc. 


/1897 
U896 


Hones : 

Sold  in  year 

Cattle : 

Sold  or  kill?d  in  year j  jgg^ 

Sheep : 

Sold  or  killed  in  year ->  jggg 

Hogs: 

Sold  or  killed  in  year.. 
Poultry  : 

Sold  or  killed  in  year . . 


§  c.i 
60  00, 
64  00 

24  57  i 
26  4ll 

3  48 
3  41 


fl897 

7  2S\ 

(.1896 

7  78 

cts. 

/ 1897 
1 1896 

33 

31 

>> 

a 
o 

CQ 

3 

c 

a 

CS 

be 

M 

O     - 

ce 

4J 

^ 

C5 

$     C. 

$    c. 

65  00 

58  00 

63  00 

57  00 

30  20 

23  99 

32  52 

25  41 

3  56 

3  41 

3  51 

3  32 

6  62 

6  97 

7  07 

7  50 

cts. 

cts. 

35 

34 

36 

83 

$    c. 

67  oo; 

6J  00. 

30  52 

31  781 

3  85: 
3  85j 

7  03 
7  39 
cts. 
40 
39 


c 

®  g 

s 

S  <3 

.s 

a 

&c 

O 

o 
Ji 

^  c 

c4 

JT 

$     C. 

$     C 

65  00 

57  00 

62  00 

58  oo! 

28  20 

20  64 

30  08 

22  81 

3  67 

3  01 

3  62 

3  03 

6  87 

8  73 

7  25 

9  64 

cts. 

cts. 

38 

37 

38 

39 

52  00 

54  oo; 

20  44 
22  11 

3  111 
3  17. 
I 
7  14 
7  72 
cts, 
39 
37 


Tho 
Province. 


1897      1896 


$    c. 


§   c.     8 


51  00    62  OO 

59  00 1  61  00 


19  47 
21  90 


3  20 

3  37 


26  54 


28  37 


3  461 


3  46 


7  65 

7  20 

8  09 

I 

cts. 

cts. 

34 

37 

31 

7  68 
cts. 


36 


There  is  a  slight  increase  in  the  value  per  head  of  horses,  sheep  and  poultry  sold,  but 
there  has  been  a  considerable  falling  off  in  the  prices  paid  for  cattle  and  hogs. 

Market  Prices.  The  table  following  is  compiled  from  reports  from  twenty- 
eight  fairly  distributed  market  points,  and  the  figures  are  taken  for  the  period  when  each 
of  the  various  articles  of  farm  produce  named  in  the  table  ia  marketed.  The  average 
prices  for  the  sixteen  years,  1882-97,  are  also  given  : 


Markets. 


1897. 

1H96.. 

1895. 

1894. 

1893.. 

1892. 

1891.. 

1890. 

1889.. 

188S., 

1887.. 

1886.. 

1885., 

1884.. 

1883. , 

1882.. 


1882-97 . 


cts. 

78.2 

71.0 

69.3 

55.0 

59.9 

70.7 

95.1 

94.2 

88.4 

102.4 

78  4 

73.6 

81.5' 

80.5: 

105.0 

101.0 

i 

81.8' 


^ 

4 

JS 

3 

3 

»  3 

o. 

s 

bc-^ 

>.j= 

Q. 

o. 

c  2 

•^^ 

li 

« 

>> 

OJ 

CQ 

o 

3(3 

cts. 

cts. 

cts. 

cts. 

78.6 

27.0 

22  6 

37.7 

70.6 

31.6 

20  0 

36.6 

69.8 

40.4 

29.1 

45.6 

55.5 

40.5 

30.8 

44.2 

59.4 

40.1 

33.2 

47.5 

67.8 

41.3 

30.8 

55.8 

92.9 

49.1 

36.5 

72.3 

91.3 

50.2 

41.1 

52.7 

88.1 

44.0 

30.5 

.50  9 

99.3 

60.1 

40  5 

60.2 

78.0 

56.7 

34  6 

49.5 

72  5 

51.3 

32.0 

52.2 

80  6 

55.2 

31.5 

.55.2 

81.4 

53.6 

33.1 

59.7 

107.0 

57. 0 

.S8.0 

62  0 

106.0 

65.0 

43.0 

64.0' 

84.4 

49.8 

32.2 

53.0 

cts. 

42.1 

44  0 

54.8 

53  6 

54.0 

59.0 

63.8 

60.3 

55.7 

65.4 

.55.9 

52  6 

58.0 

64.4 

71.0 

74  0 

57.5 


cts. 

19.7 

19.6 

22.6 

26.1 

26.5 

26  3 


^■5 


P3 


31.1 

30.5 

25.9 

29.3 

28  7 

27.6 

27.9 

45.0 

cts. 

30.0 

30.5 

36.8 

39.2 

41.8 

42.2 

44.1 

43  0 

39.5 

49.3 

45.0 

33.7 

39.2 

40.0 


W 


cts. 

65.2 

68.4 

94.7 

110.4 

118.0 

98  8 

106.1 

128.5 

126.7 

113.7 

97  9 

83. 7| 

80  0 

118.0 


197.0, 


5J= 


cts. 

$    c 

cts. 

39.9 

7  18 

18.4 

26.2 

9  68 

18.4 

20.2 

12  30 

20.0 

35.4 

7  56 

16.9 

39.5 

7  64 

18.2 

50.4 

8  20 

18.2 

32.6 

11  91 

19.4 

44.3 

7  95 

20.5 

45.5 

9  98 

20.7 

31.7 

16  17 

20.4 

62.8 

11  62 

22.1 

44.9 

9  69 

19.1 

41.1 

9  85 

17.4 

40  0 

9  56 

17.8 

62.0 

9  02 

16  9 

64  0 

11  54 

16.9 

5      40.4 


9.52    18.7 


None  of  the  twelve  articles  comprising  the  table  equal  their  respective  values  for  the 
average  of  the  sixteen  years  1882-97.  Compared  with  the  figures  for  1896,  howevar, 
the  following  crops  show  an  increase  in  price  :  Fall  wheat,  spring  wheat,  oats,  rye,  com, 
and  potatoes,  whUe  the  price  of  wool  remains  unchanged. 

100 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32), 


A.  1898 


Value  of  Crops.  The  table  following  gives  the  valae  of  each  crop,  based 
upon  market  prices,  acreage  and  yield,  for  each  of  the  five  years  1893-97,  together  with 
the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  : 


Crjps. 


1897 


1896. 


1895. 


Fall  wheat    18,758,656 

Spring  wheat   3,826,3271 

Barley    3,245.880 

Gate    19,f)07,897 

Rye  1,275,016 

Peas    5,838,046 

„        \  Husking  |  4,858,8081 

^"*  J  Silo    5.339,6441 

Buckwheat     1.039,256] 

Beans 639.834i 

FoUtoes    6,424,218 

Mangel-wurzeh 1,4<8,271 

Carrots -. 554,204 

Turflips 6,829,715 

Hay    ;  27.366,699 


10,705, 

2,484, 

4,fi03, 

16,  .595, 

816, 

7.696, 

4,717, 

3,897, 

794, 

819, 

5,582, 

1,347, 

577, 

6,981, 

21,879, 


1894. 


1893. 


Average 
1882-97. 


693 
641! 
639' 
9981 
500l 
9851 
987 1 
5601 
119| 
114 
035; 
952 
305 
484 
123 


Totals 106,952,471  88,900,135 


9,809  610, 
2,423,835; 
4,884,565 

24,646,992 
866,453 
8,531,3201 
5. 609. 297 1 
3,  .551, 308 
1,027,3611 
1.414,988| 
5,936,959 
1.276,9201 
572,672| 
6,  .349, 670, 

22,753,9421 


9,081,658| 

1,869,169 

4.447,0641 

21,613,1351 

612,8801 

7,516,2681 

4,247,867 

2.099,5301 

993,4591 

913,575! 

6,075,7481 

922,5701 

464,5181 

6,169,4491 

27,028,512 


10,509,6041 

2,486,5211 

3,932,2411 

19,450,0641 

472,5161 

7,651,236, 

3,729,335 

2.099,0481 

99.5,0311 

783,8861 

5,099,929; 

686,605 

37U431 

5,697,535 

37,921,575 


99,655  8951  94,056,3921    101,886,557 


$ 

14,741,391 

6,144,027 

8,190,849 

20,745.906 

923,492 

8,220,036 

I  5,127,981 

736.119 
659.486 

7,504.663 
833,802 
474,546 

5.085,206 
30.860,623 

110,248,127 


The  total  value  of  the  fourteen  field  crops  comprising  the  table  is  $106,952,471,  an  im- 
provement of  $18,052,336  over  the  preceding  year,  notwishstanding  the  fact  that  barley, 
peas,  beans,  carrots  and  turnips  fail  to  equal  their  respective  figures  of  1896.  The  total 
value  for  1897,  however,  is  still  below  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97. 

Crop  Valwes  by  Oou>fTy  Groups.  The  value  of  field  crops  is  given  in 
the  following  table  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province  for  the  past  five  years,  together 
with  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  : 


Districts. 


1897 


1896. 


Lake  Erie 

Lake  Huron 

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland  

Lake  Ontario   

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

East  Midland    

Northern  Districts 

The  Province   


15,001,7681 
12,858,138; 

9,920,460 
24,191,327, 
21,650,319 
15,594,316 

6,073,736. 

1,662, 407i 


S 

11,999,345 

9,989,032 

8,080,330 

20,261,547 

16,982,563 

14,462,720 

5,4.56,850 

1.667,748 


106, 95?,  47 11  88,900,135 


1895. 


1894. 


13,409,752i 

10,713,179, 

9,186,194 

20,567,204 

18,866,763, 

19,317,779, 

6,015,770, 

l,.^79,254l 


12,013,990 

10,128,930 

8,836.448 

19,653,430 

19.105,548 

16,649,877 

6,093,892 

1,573,277 


1893. 


13,268,186 

10,995,090 

9,197,514| 

21,542,6741 

20,536,270 

17, 893, 991 1 

6,659,7591 

1,793,073| 


1882-97. 


14,184,858 

11,898,947 

9,829,515 

23,530,337 

23,201,574 

18,989.742 

7,119,076 

1,494,078 


99,655,895  94,055,392     101,886,557  110,248,127 


All  the  groups  except  the  Northern  Districts  show  an  increase  over  their  respective  figures 
for  the  preceding  year,  while  the  first  four  groups  of  the  table  go  above,  and  the  last  foor 
fall  below,  their  own  averages  for  the  sixteen  years  1832-97. 


101 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,    32). 


A,  18S8 


Value  of  Produce  Per  Acre.  The  value  per  acre  raised  of  each  of  the 
gtaple  field  crops  is  given  in  the  following  table  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province ; 
also  the  totals  for  1896,  and  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97.  The  average  value 
of  ail  crops  is  also  given  : 


Crops. 

6 

c 

2 

w 

C5 

a 
•3 
% 

if 

B 

o 

il 

so 

i 

2-1 
la 

The  Province. 

1 

1897. 

1896. 

1 
1882-97. 

Fall  wheat 

$   C. 

18  39 
10  9fi 

6  95 

7  40 
6  49 
5  07 

15  27 

17  48 

5  42 

$    c. 
19  40 
10  88 

7  31 

8  39 

$  c. 
19  85 
11  13 

7  20 

8  07 

S  c. 

21  48 

9  03 

7  42 

8  78 

$     c. 
20  33 
13  43 

7  36 

8  25 

$     c. 
11  89 
11  86 

6  82 

7  47 

6  24 

7  24 
14  13 

$  c. 

12  10 
11  76 

6  61 

7  27 
6  49 
6  68 

11  77 
25  86 
6  87 
11  70 
47  84 
34  69 
52  44 
44  38 

8  17 

1  10  07 

$    c. 

12  46 
11  65 

6  17 
6  57 

6  69 

7  69 

8  66 
23  96 

6  46 

9  40 
60  17 
26  98 
41  12 
34  98 

8  51 

10  29 

11  04 

13  46 

$  c. 
19  74 

11  84 

7  19 

8  02 
6  79 
6  51 

14  60 

25  55 

6  85 

12  65 
37  94 
35  17 
46  09 
45  73 

11  69 

12  29 

$   c!    $   C.: 

12  21(  16  64 
9  73   12  81 
8  65,  12  76 
6  84!  11  06 

Spring  wheat 

Barley  

Oats 

Rye  

Peas   

7  84  6  77 

6  78  6  26 

12  89  10  13 

7  76  6  76 

6  06|  6  80 

14  79:  13  87 

9  49 

9  28 

14  85 

8  67  ; 
11  42 

Buckwheat 

24  78 
7  35 

27  02 
7  06 
14  68 
37  76 
35  85 

45  40 

46  50 
12  80 

12  80 
10  19 

13  92 

25  39 

6  72 

12  63 

32  4H 

25  04  28  54 

6  70  7  52 

12  38  14  09 

33  81]  48  20 

21  78^  18  o« 
6  45.   7  70 

Beans  

12  53 
26  60 

12  48 
32  88 

11  98 
31  19 

17  73 
47  22 

Mangel- wurzela  

31  18 
38  47 
35  20 
13  91 

13  11 
10  93 

14  43 

34  96 
45  39 
48  46 
14  34 

13  09 
10  56 

14  29 

34  86 

38  47 1  32  82 

37  34 

46  81 

47  10 
9  02 

36  26 
44  14 
42  54 
12  97 

Carrots .  . . 

Turnips  

Hay ■ 

All  crops : 
1897 

46  95 
46  11 

15  16 

14  04 
11  97 

16  44 

50  93 
47  77 

11  66 

12  51 
9  95 

14  10 

1  43  88 

1  41  71 

7  92 

10  09 

1896 

1882-97 

9  52|  9  02 
•    13  171  19  44 

10  44 

"*i4*i6' 

1 

In  the  foregoing  table  both  yield  and  price  go  to  make  up  the  result.  Barley,  peas,  corn, 
mangels,  carrots  and  turnips  fail  to  equal  their  respec<^ive  figures  for  1896,  but  the  other 
crops  make  a  more  or  less  better  showing  than  in  the  preceding  year.  Every  group  except 
the  Northern  Districts  shows  an  improvement  in  the  average  total  value  of  crops  per  acre 
compared  with  1896,  and  the  average  of  the  Province  is  $12.29,  compared  with  $10.44  in 
1896,  and  $14.10  for  the  sixteen  years.  The  West  Midland  district  has  the  highest  aver- 
hge  value  per  acre,  and  the  East  Midland  group  has  the  lowest  figures  in  this  regard. 

Per  Oent  Ratios  of  Values  per  Acre.  The  following  tables  com- 
pares the  values  per  acre  of  the  various  crops,  by  means  of  per  cent,  ratios,  with  their 
respective  averages  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province: 


CS 

4-> 

f 

9 

Districts. 

JZ 

119 
117 

113 

u 

a 

'u 

cc 

91 
92 
89 

'C 
U 

58 
56 
58 

o 

06 
74 
75 

a; 

>> 

83 
91 

77 

s 

50 
55 
52 

d 

C 

D 

83 
101 
115 

s 
pa 

76 
101 

98 

73 
74 
82 

1 

65 

72 
75 

CO 

a 
a 

94 

95 
106 

i 

o 
u 
u 
cS 

D 
98 

'a 

u 
S 

H 
98 

OS 

K 

101 
111 

105 

2 

91 
92 
88 

Lake  Huron  

101 1  116 

lOo;  108 

Georgian  Bay 

West  Midland  

125 
121 

73 
10'> 

55 
57 
56 

73 

72 
72 

94 
86 
63 

51 

62 
65 

104 
112 
114 

93 
88 
92 

70 
67 
62 

69 

77 
96 

91 
109 
106 

100  103 

no;  109 

1081  110 

106 
90 
63 

91 
89 

77 

Lake  Ontario 

St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa 

75  88 

East  Midland 

76'  98 
76  78 

55 

58 

1 

74 
.69 

s 

62 
61 

119 
129 

92 
1  '' 

67 
52 

96 
101 

105 
104 

122  114 

74 

74 

81 
76 

Northern  Districts 

113 

106 

The  Province 

119  92 

56 

1 

1  '" 

1 '' 

57 

101 

89 

1  '' 

80 

100 

104 

107 

90 

87 

1 

Fall  wheat,  corn,  carrots  and  turnips  go  over  100  in  their  figures  for  the  Province, 
and  mangel- wurzels  exactly  reach  the  standard,  while  all  the  other  crops  fall  below  it 
The  highest  figure  reached  by  any  district  for  all  crops  is  91. 

102 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189S 


Labor  and  Wages  . — The  August  bulletin,  speaking  of  labor  and  wages, 
aaid :  "  There  has  been  a  surplus  of  farm  laborers,  except  in  sections  where  the  wet 
weather  delayed  haying,  and  caused  a  rush  for  a  few  days  during  harvest.  Wages  still 
exhibit  a  downward  tendency,  while  several  correspondents  complain  that  but  few  good 
farm  hands  are  among  those  applying  for  work." 

The  following  appeared  in  the  November  bulletin  :  "  There  was  plenty  of  farm 
labor  oflfering,  especially  during  the  early  part  of  the  season,  but  in  some  quarters  labor 
was  scarce  about  harvest  time,  some  correspondents  attributing  the  dearth  of  laborers  to 
the  fact  that  a  number  of  young  men  had  gone  to  Manitoba  on  the  harvest  excursiona. 
There  appears  to  be  a  sufficient  number  to  do  all  necessary  farm  work,  but  the  quality 
of  help  is  often  of  a  poor  character,  and  some  correspondents  speak  lightly  of  the  work 
done  by  young  immigrants  introduced  by  various  '  Homes  '  Some  expect  wages  to  rise 
in  sympathy  with  prices  of  farm  produce,  while  others  predict  a  fall  in  wages,  as  farmer* 
cannot  afford  to  pay  so  much  for  help.  Others  claim  that  wages  will  not  go  up  higher^ 
and  cannot  fall  much  lower.  Domestic  servants  are  hard  to  keep  on  the  farm.  Some 
oorrespondents  assert  that  the  spread  of  co-operative  dairying  in  cheese  factories  and 
creameries  will  permit  farmers'  wives  and  daughters  to  give  more  attention  to  actual 
domestic  work." 

The  following  table  gives  the  rates  of  wages  paid  farm  laborers,  by  the  year  and  by 
the  month,  with  and  without  board,  by  county  groups  and  for  the  Province,  in  1896  and 
1897,  together  with  the  average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97  ;  also  the  monthly  wagea 
of  domestic  servants  on  the  farm  : 


• 

Per  year. 

Per  month  in  working  season. 

Domestics 
per  month 
with  board. 

Districts. 

With  board. 

Without 
board. 

With  board.        i 

Without  board. 

00 

1-1 

CD 

05 
GO 

$ 

143 
145 
141 
144 
145 

142 
138 
167 

144 

00 
00 

$ 

156 
169 
155 
157 
160 

157 
159 
172 

158 

OS 

00 

$ 

234 
224 
248 
239 
244 

223 
234 

237 

236 

i 

00 

$ 

246 
241 
242 
242 
243 

239 
243 
258 

243 

Oi 

i 

Oi 

00 

1 

i 

00 

to 

00 

i 

i 

i 

i-H 

$c. 
6  43 
6  22 

5  79 

6  08 

6  27 

5  93 

5  67 

6  31 

6  11 

Lake  Erie 

$ 

146 
146 
141 
143 
147 

139 
139 
159 

144 

$ 

248 
253 
2.i4 
248 
252 

248 
254 
273 

251 

$  c. 
14  60 
13  92 
13  88 

13  89 

14  47 

14  32 

13  89 
16  26 

14  29 

%  c. 
14  30 
14  60 
14  38 
14  41 
14  28 

14  91 
14  31 

17  60 

14  57 

$    c. 

16  69 

17  09 
]6  91 
16  72 

16  86 

17  08 
16  85 

18  99 

16  92 

$    c 

24  59 
24  29 
24  37 
24  10 
24  69 

23  45 

24  59 
26  23 

24  47 

$   ci    $    c'     $  c. 

23  44:  25  72      6  35 

24  06;  26  74     5  87 

25  16    26  58      5  64 
23  871  25  97,     6  16 

23  171  26  05'     6  12 

24  01    25  99     5  78 

Lake  Huron 

1  Georgian  Bay 

1  West  Midland 

1  Lake  Ontario  

1  St.  Lawrence  and 
Ottawa 

Eaat  Midland 

Northern  Districts. 

The  Province. . 

23  96 
28  68 

24  11 

1  26  24 
1  28  73 

26  29 

5  67 
5  91 

5  97 

The  average  yearly  rates  of  wages  for  the  Province,  with  board,  is  $144,  the  same  as 
that  of  the  previous  year  ;  three  of  the  districts  fail  to  equal  their  respective  figures  for 
1896,  four  exceed  their  own  record,  and  one  has  the  same  figures  for  each  year.  Yearly 
wages  without  board  show  a  falling  off  in  every  group  except  the  Georgian  Bay  and  Lake 
Ontario  districts,  the  average  for  the  Province  being  $236  compared  with  $243  in  1896. 
All  the  groups  except  the  Lake  Erie  and  Lake  Ontario  Districts  fall  below  their  respective 
figures  for  the  preceding  year  for  the  rate  of  wages  per  month,  with  board,  and  the  average 
for  the  Province  is  $14.29,  or  28  cents  less  than  in  1896.  Five  of  the  groups  exceed  their 
respective  figures  for  the  previous  year  in  the  rate  of  wages  per  month  without  board,  thd 
average  for  the  Province  being  $24.47,  or  36  cents  more  than  in  1896.  Domestic  servanU 
on  the  farm  average  $5.97  a  month,  or  14  cents  less  than  in  the  previous  year. 


103 


61    Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32;.  A.  IH^S 


Imported  Fabm  Labor. 

Cclborne,  Huron  :  Keep  the  "  Home  "boys  away,  and  try  and  eet  laboring  men  from  the  old  conntried 
•vrho  would  in  time  become  owners  of  farms. 

Arbemesia,  Grey  :  All  I  can  Siy  is,  keep  the  foreign  waifs  out.  Our  own  countrymen  are  the  best  W6 
can  get  for  farm  work. 

Gwillimbury  W.,  Simcoe  :  In  general  those  imported  from  the  "  Homes  "  do  not  turn  out  very  well. 
This  remark  applies  to  both  boys  and  girls.     They  are  generally  of  a  low  type  of  character. 

Caradoc,  Middlesex  :     Banish  English  dudes. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :  The  sup])ly  of  domestic  servants  is  rather  scant,  but  the  importations  are  becom 
ing  a  help  to  supply  the  deficiency. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :  The  supply  of  domestic  servants  from  the  different  "  Homes  "  seem  to  require 
•about  three  years  to  learn  the  work  well. 

Lobo,  Middlesex  :     The  imnjigrants  we  get  are  generally  of  very  little  use  to  us. 

Dumfries  S.,  Brant  ;  A  general  complaint  is  that  good  farm  laborers  cannot  be  secured.  The  real 
reason  is  that  but  few  farmers  offer  permanent  or  yearly  employment  to  their  male  help,  and  the  young 
men  drift  to  the  towns  or  elsewhere  in  the  hope  of  securing  more  steady  employment. 

Blanshard,  Perth  :  We  should  not  encourage  bo  many  of  these  waif^.  but  encourage  good  farm  lab 
•orers  to  come. 

Elma,  Perth  :  We  want  more  immigration  of  the  right  sort,  but  do  not  want  street  arabs  from  Lon- 
don. England. 

Fullarton,  Perth  :  I  think  one  Canadian  lad  worth  three  "  Home  "  boys,  and  the  same  in  regard  to 
■domestic  servants. 

Ancaster,  Wentworth  :  I  hope  the  Government  will  stop  the  importation  of  young  criminals  of  both 
sexes  into  this  country. 

Ancaster,  Wentworth  :  It  would  be  better  if  immigrants  were  not  sent  here,  especially  of  the  class 
that  usually  comes.     Plenty  of  domestic  servants  could  be  got  from  the  "  Homes  "  but  they  will  not  suit. 

Esquesing,  Halton  :     We  want  no  more  English  paupters. 

Trafalgar,  Halton  :  Nine  out  of  every  ten  of  the  farm  labors  in  this  locality  are  boys  that  have  bee» 
brought  out  by  the  various  "Homes."  After  spending  a  few  years  in  this  country  they  make  very  good 
laborers. 

Markham,  York  :     No  wiifs  wanted 

Markhani,  York  :  l^nless  farm  laborers  come  voluntarily  from  the  Old  Country  they  are  not  worth 
having. 

Whitchurch,  York  :     We  want  immigrants  of  the  proper  sort. 

Brock,  Ontario  :     Encourage  a   better   class   of   immigrants,    but  let   those   "  Home "'  boys  and  girla 

stay  at  korae. 

Whitby  E.,  Ontario  :  Domestic  servants  are  always  wanted,  but  none  from  the  "  Homes,"  They  have 
generally  done  badly  and  are  not  wanted. 

Cartwfight,  Durham  :     We  do  not  want  any  more  "  Home  "  lads.     They  are  not  of  much  use. 

Brighton,  Northumberland  :     What  we  want  is  a  better  class  of  English,  Scotch  and  Irish  immigrants, 

Hamilton,  Northumberland  :  There  shouM  be  some  means  used  to  import  more  good  domestic  help 
into  Ontario.     The  farming  community  need  it. 

Leeds  and  Lansdowne,  Leeds  :    Keep  out  the  poor  kind  and  also  tramps,  as  we  have  no  use  for  them. 

Osgoode,  Carleton  :  As  for  the  English  orphans  we  want  no  more  of  them.  They  have  not  been  a 
success  as  farm  laborers. 

Br,)mley,  Renfrew  :  Domestic  servants  might  be  brought  out  from  Europe  through  the  Immigration 
Agency.     Inducements :    Higher  wages  and  better  prospects  in  life. 

Garden,  Victoria :  Stop  im  nigration.  of  poor  from  orphaas'  homes.  I>et  every  country  keep  their 
•own  poor. 

Domestic  Labor  on  thk  Farm. 

Gojfield  N.,  Essex  :     It  is  hard  to  get  a  girl  to  do  home  work. 

Maiden,  Eisex  :  There  are  plenty  of  girls,  but  many  of  them  think  work  degrading.  A  woman  told 
me  she  would  rabher  her  daughters  drowned  themselves  then  work  for  a  living.  This  is  a  bad  state  of 
society. 

Harwich,  Kent  :  Domestics  are  out  of  the  question.  I  think  the  country  will  have  to  resorb  to 
Chinesd  labor  for  domestic  purposes.  A  female  with  any  ambition  gets  an  education  and  becomes  a  school 
tea'jher,  book-keeper,  type-writer  or  something  of  the  sort,  and  many  marry  the  first  chance  they  get. 

Tilbury  E.,  Kent :     Females  might  be  secured  through  the  various  "  Homes." 

Dunwich,  Elgin  :     By  all  means  let  the  supply  of  domestic  servants  be  from  among  the  resident  popula 

tion,  and  not  be  brought  in  from  the  old  country  cities,  which  help  is  generally  such  as  might  be  expected 
MalaLide,  Elgin  :    The  demand   for  domestic  servants  is  not  so  great  since  creameries  and  cheese 

factories  are  in  full  blast. 

104 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1893 


•         Yarmouth,  Elgin  :    The  supply  of  domestic  aervauts  is  very  poor.     It  drives  many  farmers  to  the  city 
in  their  old  years.     They  rent  or  sell  their  farms  on  account  of  not  being  able  to  get  suitable  servants. 

Middleton.  Norfolk  :  Domestic  servants  are  rather  scarce,  but  we  have  trained  ourselves  to  stand  the 
pressure. 

Dawn,  Lambton  :  It  is  almost  impos.sible  to  get  domefctic  servants  to  work  on  the  farm  ;  nearly  ail 
tlock  to  the  towns  and  citie-s. 

Ashfield,  Huron  :  The  supply  of  domestic  servants  is  nearly  run  out,  and  those  left  are  trying  to  get 
domesticated. 

Wawanoah  E.,  Huron  :  Native  born  make  the  beat  servants.  Many  treat  their  servants  as  of  a  low 
caste,  which  is  discouraging.     They  should  be  treated  better  socially. 

Arran,  Bruce  :  Domestic  servants  are  scarce.  They  think  they  are  not  respected  as  such,  and  go  to 
ihe  toA-ns  and  lejirn  trades. 

Artemesia,  Grey  ;  Domestic  servants  are  scarce  owing  tu  the  fact  that  there  are  greater  inducimenta 
:>r  that  class  in  the  cities  and  towns. 

Osprey,  Grey  :  The  supply  of  domestic  servants  is  ample.  A  good  many  go  to  the  cities  as  they  get 
"better  pay. 

St.  Vincent,  Grey  :     There  should  be  some  institution  to  train  girls  for  domestic  servants. 

■  Dorchester  N.,  Middlesex  :  Servant  girls  are  said  to  ba  sjmewhat  scarce,  and  sa  a  matter  of  course 
have  bjcome  dictators  for  a  while.  This  most  useful  class  of  the  community  appear  to  be  most  difficult  to 
control,  especially  on  a  dairy  farm.  They  have  a  great  aversion  to  milking,  and  especially  to  bein^  oa 
hand  on  Sundays. 

Ekfrid,  Middlesex  :  There  are  too  many  of  our  young  people  who  think  that  farm  work  is  degrading 
*nd  they  are  running  to  the  tjwns  and  cities  for  an  easy  job,  which  has  a  very  demoralizing  effect. 

Westminster,  Middlesex :  Law  clerks  and  unattached  school  teachers  might  relieva  the  domestic 
famine. 

Blaadford,  Oxford  :  Teach  b jys  and  girls  that  work  is  honorable  and  laz'.ness  a  disgrace.  There  are 
plenty  tJ  do  all  the  work  if  they  are  willing. 

Elma,  Perth  :  Domestic  servants  are  not  much  needed  in  rural  districts,  nearly  every  farmer  having  a 
-fvtll  supply  of  his  own  on  hand. 

Logan,  Perth  :     Domestic  servants  are  among  the  luxuries. 

Mornington,  Perth  :     There  are  lots  of  girls  but  they  will  not  hire  out. 

Garafraxa  W.,  Wellington  :  There  are  girls  who  need  work,  but  who  are  too  dignified  to  accept  CDm- 
"fortable  positions. 

Clinton,  Lincoln  :    The  girls  go  to  everything  but  housework,  and  get  married  as  soon  as  they  can. 

Saltfleet,  Wentwoith  :  Domestic  servants  are  scarce  and  will  continue  to  be  so,  &a  they  can  command 
higher  wages  in  cities  and  towns  than  the  ordinary  farmer  can  afford  to  pay.  The  most  of  that  class  pre- 
fer the  pleasure  of  the  city  to  the  drudgery  of  the  country. 

King,  York  :  If  they  got  as  good  wages  and  the  same  privileges  in  the  country  that  they  do  in  tha 
"town  s  and  cities  there  would  be  more  domestics  stay  among  farmers. 

Mara.  Ontario  :     Domestic  servants  are  scarce,  always  have  been,  and  will  likely  continue  so. 

Haldimand,  Northumberland  :  Many  wives  are  doing  some  of  their  own  work  and  letting  some  go 
undone  rather  than  pay  an  impudent  servant  to  waste  and  demand  higher  wages. 

Storrington,  Froutenac  :  Active  and  industrious  male  and  female  servants  would  be  sare  of  employ- 
ment, but  in  the  case  of  those  unacquainted  with  the  work  of  the  country  there  is  no  use  for  them. 

Lancaster,  Glengarry  :  With  the  great  changes  in  farm  machinery  and  dairying  now  taking  place 
there  will  be  less  need  for  farm  laborers  and  domestic  servants  in  a  great  many  homes. 

North  Gower,  Carleton  :  Domeitio  servants  are  scarce  and  hard  to  be  got,  so  the  people  have  adapted 
iihemselves  to  the  inevitable  and  are  doing  the  best  they  can. 

Admaston,  Renfrew  :     Make  it  easier  for  girls  on  the  farm  and  domestic  servants  will  be  mora  plentiful. 

Harvey,  Peterborough  :     A  good  servant  always  finds  employment_at  fair  wages. 


10.5 


STATISTICS  OF 


VALUES,  RENT  AND  FARM  WAGES. 


107] 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


FARM    V  ALUE3.-L  AXD,    BUILDINGS    AND    IMPLEMENTS. 


Table    I.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  e:roups  of  Counties  the  value  of  Farm'Laad,  Building* 
and  Implements  in  Ontario  for  the  years  1896  and  1897. 


C  J  unties. 


Farm   Land. 


1897 


1896 


Farm   Buildingf. 


1897 


1896 


lanu   Implements. 


1897 


1896 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin    

Norfolk  . . . . 

Haldimand 

Welland  . . . 

Totals  . 


Lambton    . 
Huron  .    . . 

Bruce  

Totals . 


Grey    

Simcoe    . . . 
Totals . 


1.5,.o27,353 
21,254,892 
15,323,701 
10,339,636 
8,127,488 
8,098, 531 
78,671,601 

17,227,365 
26,881,467' 
19,147,3621 
63,256,1941 

20,359,0411 
22,353,5151 
42,713,1561 


15,147,951 
21,582,237 
15,477,492 
10,408,615 
8,279,318 
8,529,4751 
79,725,118. 

17,219,413 
27,395,798 
18,964,253^ 
63,579,491 

20,278,907 
22,362  770 
42,641,677 


4,751,2951 
6,146,4131 
5,538,286 
4,447,5691 
3.667,180 
3,614,4611 
28,165,2041 

5,441,664 

9,333,212! 

6.745.5131 

21, 520, 3891 

7.820,700| 

7.909,813| 

15,730,513 


4,. 589  860 
6,05!,  759 
5,485,596 
4,347.662 
3,752.343 
3,645,281 
27. 874,  .501 

5,195,255 

9,344,763 

6,777,976 

21,317,994 

7,844,575 

7,870,738 

15.715,313 


1,.343,592| 
1,719,484| 
1,451,0651 
1,090,2251 
9 16.  .527 
764,662| 
7,285,555! 

1,501,6691 
2,331,2581 
1,750,134| 
5,  .583,0611 

2,300,0341 
2,113,9951 
4,414,029 


1,346,738 
1,701,083 
1,394,869 
1,085,244 
912.237 
799,114 
7,239,255 

1,419,240 
2,280,456 
1,745,818 
6,445,514 

2,318,378 
2,066.721 
4,.S85.099 


Middles  jx . . 
Oxford    .... 

Brant 

Perth  ... 
Wellington 
Waterloo  . 
l>ufferin  .. 
Totals 


Lincoln  

Wentworth   

Halton    

Peel   

York  

Ontario 

Durham  

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addingtoa. 

Frontenac 

Leeds  

Grenviile   

Dundas 

Stormont  

Glengarry ; . 

Prescott 

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark .    

Totals 


Victoria    

Peterborough. 

Haliburton    . . 

Hastings    . . . . 

Totals.... 

Muskoka  

Parry  Sound  . 

Nipissing 

Manitoulin    . . 

Algnma 

Tota's.... 

The  Province 


28,  .503, 756 

29,467,482 

10,.562,4<)3 

10,521,892 

2,449,4641 

2,423,982 

19,761.117 

20, 159,875 

7,509,293 

7,527,189 

1,564,7631 

1  550,440 

9,217,692 

9,30S,864 

3,865,118 

3, 865 -915 

721,6161 

745,913 

19,739,483 

19,834,063 

7,299,230 

7,222.921 

1,770,221 

1,764,341 

19,141,667 

19,417,098 

7,547,385 

7,671,355 

1,757,836 

1,761,617 

11,614,324 

11,852,747 

5,101,045 

5,015,608 

1,106,520 

1,130.631 

8,206,289 

8,118,079 

2,735,092 

2,676  013 

747,458 

751,242 

116,184,328 

118,158,208 

41.619,620 

44,500,793 

10.177,878 

10,128,166 

9,674,100 

9,380,363 

4,274,062 

4. 300,  .586 

912,269 

892,343 

13.063,526 

12,900,034 

5.093,973 

5,091,413 

1,111,530 

1,084,275 

9,282,956 

9,619,837 

3,789,798 

4,012,581 

740,974 

757,082 

11,168,749 

11,280,665 

4,608,167 

4,634,117 

9.08, 56 1 

984,929 

25,123.653 

24,797,253 

8,818,387 

8,730,511 

1,911,014 

1,865,061 

16,084,761 

16,404,549 

6,154,696 

6,205,308 

1,372,453 

1,383,462 

12,281,196 

12,735,487 

4,402,142 

4,.597,122 

989,080 

1,018,303 

12,637,573 

12,635,897 

.5,149,814 

5,154,492 

1,251,462 

1,267.689 

6,441,457 

6,684,553 

2,992,877 

3,021,804 

711,437 

736,346 

115,757,971 

116,438,638 

45,283,916 

45,747,934 

9,958,770 

9,989,493 

7,637,889 

7,144,936 
7,469,273 

3,068,582 

1        3,037,109 

751,097 

697,743 

8,161,111 

3,086,733 

i       2.858,730 

842,895 

764,933 

10,262,906 

10,548,335 

4.038,323 

4,157,032 

991,724 

999,046 

6,336,642 

6,475,199 

2,611,069 

2,598,309 

040,005 

639.197 

6.726,905 

6,877,579 

2,704,617 

!        2,648,741 

708,622 

707,754 

5,614,336 

5,609,222 

2,423,293 

'        2,267,168 

57^,995 

570,273 

6,251,266 

6,063.182 

2,950,063 

2,778,784 

764,226 

714,891 

0,170,512 

6,296.080 

2,512,887 

2,584  753 

692,536 

669,324 

4,370,895 

4,347,072 

1,265,629 

1        1,193,135 

447,. 359 

438,321 

16.485,402 

17,011,412 

5,074,045 

1        5,160,243 

1,533,149 

1,. 528,506 

9,022,602 

8,784,930 

3,493,879 

;        3,347,183j 

1,101,635 

1,052,225 

9,190,622 

9,092,060 

3,477,574 

i        3,396,685i 

840,391 

849,026 

96,231,088 

95,719,280 

36,706,694 

36,027,872 

9,892.534 

9,631,239 

10,4:0,.503 

10,029,569 

3,287,4911 

3,  .338,061 

907,366 

939,642 

9,440,699 

9,466,244 

3,013,777 

3,143,.333 

760,008] 

748,964 

933,^:02 

994,628 

283,345 

294,916 

99,142] 

94,656 

12,.99S,590 

12, 990,  .544 

5.154  654 

5,126.448 

1,415,448 

1,369,398 

33,793.194 

34,086,985 

11,739,26£ 

11,901,768 

3,1«1,964 

1 

3,152.560 

1,957,538 

1,913.258 

726.327 

695,635 

250,937 

243.291 

1,763.913 

1,729,983 

596,484 

564,146 

210,411 

203.855 

899,569 

78.3,183 

254,607 

1           217,036 

79,465 

67,436 

942,799 

94.5,856 

305,611 

!           284,196 

118,008 

116,058 

1,883,201 

1,746,590 

441,484 

388,251 

146,486 

128,392 

7,447,020 

7,118,870 

2,324,.54J 

2,149,264 

805,307 

759,032 

554.054,652 

5.57,468,270 

206,090, 15i 

>j    205,235,429 

51,299.0981 

50,730,358 

108 


1^1 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


FARM   VALUES-LIVE   STOCK    AND  TOTAL   PROPERTY-RENTALS. 
T  A  B  L  K    II.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  values  of  Farm  Live  Stock 
and  totol  Farm  Property  in  Ontario  lor  the  years  IbW  and  1897;  also,  the  rent  per  acre  of  leased  farms 
as  reported  in  1897,  with  the  average  derived  for  the  twelve  years,  1886-1897. 


Counties. 


Eesex 

Kent 

Elgin  .... 
Norfolk... 
Haldimand 
Welland ... 
Totals. 


Lambton  . . 

Huron 

Bruce    

Totals. 


<5rey 

Simcoe 

Totals. 


Middlesex   . 

Oxford 

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington . 

Waterloo. . . 

Dofferin  . . . 

Totals . . 


Lincoln 1,101,636 

Wentworth 1,6^6,056 

Halton 1,260,1)67 

Peel 1,636,193 

York  .3,165,915 

Ontario 2,691,699 

Durham 1,832,.379 

Northumberland 2,160,153 

Prince  Edward 1,053,247 

Totals 16,498,245 


Lennox  and  Addington  . . 

Frontenac   

Leeds    

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont 

Glengarry    

Preecott 

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 


Farm  Live  Stock. 


1897. 


2,237,216 
.3,047,980 
2.648,602 
1,639,620 
1,369,144 
1,144,242 
12,086,804 


1896. 


3,004,903 

4.811,862 

3,611,824 

11,428,589 


2,0t7,946 

2,937,778 
2,458,884 
1,6.55,984 
1,454,860 
1,257,197 
11,822,649 

2,865,93S 

4,943.002 

3,887,4?  8 

11,696,398 


4,226,442  4,412, 
4,022,918  4,061, 
8,249,360     8,474, 


4,945,085 
3,285,820 
1,235,370 
.3,423,355 
3,453,674 
1,656,927 
1,390,119 
19,390,350 


5,f23, 
3,276, 
1.311, 
3,397. 
3.825, 
1,76H, 
1,437, 
20,039, 


532 

723, 
255. 

123! 
653| 
6601 
779 
862 
674 1 
376; 
127 


1,202.775 
1,699,105 
1,410,002 
1,834,655 
.3,342,371 
2,876,^96 
l,940,7h7 
2,2.32,797 
1,112,^75 
17,652,0631 


1,216,057 
1,517,080 
1,784,959 
1,113. 379  j 
1,261,082 
1,044,375' 
1,461,082! 
1,194,1951 
793,9031 
2,593,124  2. 
2,104,7f6  2 
1,95.5,579  2, 
18,069,571    18, 


325 
494, 
94  4, 
146, 
243, 
085, 
497, 
177, 
794, 
858, 
271, 
058, 
898, 


,050 
,491 
,802 
845 
809 
091 
762 
435 
934 
636 
382 
445 

68: 


Victoria |    l,6'^5,386l 

Peterborough  

Haliburton 

Hastings 

Totals 


Mnskoka  . .  . . 
Parry  Sound 
NipiRsing  . . . 
Manitoulin . . 

Algoma    

Totals... 


The  Province. 


l,43.3,.390i 

26.3.4101 

2,655,923 

6,008,109 

543,983 
498, 321 : 
188.310: 
3^2,185 
335,977! 
1,918,776 


1,739,347 
1,49.\200 
272,200 
2,782,259 
6,289,096 

.'572,458 
546,547 
172,718 
.393  756 
299,817 
1,9^5,296 


93,649,804  96,8.57,5<J6 


Total  Farm  Prop  rty. 


1897. 


23,859,456 
.32,168.769 
24,961,654 
17,517,0.50 
14,0>i0,339 
13,621,896 
126,209,164 

27,175,601 

4.3,  .357, 799 

31,2.54,8.33 

101,788,233 

34,706.817 
36,400,241 
71,107,058 

46,400,768 
32,120,993 

15,039,790 
.32,232,289 
.31,900,562 
19.538,818 
13,078,9.58 
190,372,182 


15, 
20, 

]\ 
18, 
39. 
2(i, 

21, 

11, 

187, 


962,067 
875,085 
074,695 
371,670 
008,969 
303,609 
504,797 
198,992 
199,018 
498,902 


12,703,625 

13,607,819 

17,077,912 

10,701,095 

11,401,226 

9,660.999 

11,426,637 

10,670,130 

6,877,786 

25,685,720 

16,722,772 

1.5,464,166 

160,899,8871 

16,270,748 

14, 647. 774 1 

1,579.399 

22,224,filo| 

54,722,536' 

.  I 

3,478,785: 

3,0K9,129 

1,421.951 

1.718.638 

2.807,118 

12,495.651 


1896. 


Rent  per  acre  on  land — 


Occupied. 


1897 


$  S  c.  I 

23,442,465  2  50 
32,274,867  2  67 
24,81 6, 841 12  03 


17,497,505 
14,  .398, 788 
14,231,067 


1  99 
1  67 

1  68 


126,661,.C23  2  14 


26,699.876 

4.3,964,019 

.31,375.505 

102,039,400 


1  82 

2  08 
1  23 
1  62 


1886-97 

•S  c. 
2  28 
2  61 
2  27 
1  92 

1  77 

2  04 
2  18 

1  84 

2  17 
1  63 
1  89 


34,854,392  1  26 
36,.361,952  1  82 
71, 2 16,  .344  1  50; 


2  22 1 

2  47; 


47,4.36,479 
32,.514,1.57 

1.5,232,3,52  2  44 

.32,219,104  2  27 

32  67.5,932  1  95 

19,76,5,56012  21 

12,982,710  1  68 

192,826, 294|2  19 


15,776, 
20,774, 
15,799, 
1><,734, 

:«.7;«, 

26,870, 
20.291, 
21,290, 
11,555, 
189,828, 


067  2  87 
827  2  76 
502 '2  41 
366 12  39 
199  2  88 
215  2  24 
699  1  95 
876  il  90 
378  1  83 
128  2  34 


12,204 

12,587 

17,619 

10,8.59. 

11,477 

9  531 

11.0.54 

10,727 

6.773 

26,5P8. 

15,455; 

]=^,.396, 

160,277, 


,838 
,427 
1,215 


1  57 
1  34 
1  53 


1,560  1  58 
,883  1  78 
,7.M  1  57 
619  1  35 
,.592  1  51 
,4^2  1  85 
,797  1  69 
720  78 
216  87 
073  1  40 


16,646, 
14,853 
1,6.56 
22,273, 
55,430,399  1  23 


,619 

><31 

1.300 

i.649 


1  59 

1  13 

31 

1  25 


3.424,642| 
3,044..'<31 1 
1,240,  .373 
1, 7.3-1,866 
2.663,0.50 
12,012,462 


2  3G 
2  94 
2  36 

2  66 

3  05 
2  64 
2  59 
2  01 
2  03 
2  58 

1  55 
1  23 

}in 

1  73 
1  48 
1  42 
1  59 
1  33 
1  76 
86 
86 
1  37 

1  64 
1  26 
35 
1  57 
1  41 


40 
.34 

77 
49  1 
48  / 
44 


36 
41 
49 

68 

44 


Cleared. 


1897     1886-97 


2  75, 

2  37 
2  63 
2  09 
2  32 

1  79 

2  31 
2  02 

2  80i 

3  10 
3  01 
2  69 
2  41 
2  67 
2  13 

2  71 

3  34 
3  16 
3  06 

2  71 

3  32 
2  78! 
2  36 
2  36 1 
2  17 
2  80 


$  c. 
3  21 
3  55 
3  05 
2  57 
2  24 

2  eo 

2  91 

2  71 
2  73 
2  23 
2  54 

1  88 

2  53 

2  18 

3  21 
3  40 
3  32 
2  92 
2  55 
2  76 
2  18 
2  94 

2  86 

3  65 
3  06 
3  17 
3  67 
3  27 
3  13. 
2  60 

2  48. 

3  16. 


J  2  22;  1 


1  85 

1  94 

2  22 

1  96 
51 

2  33 
2  05 
2  40 
2  75 
2  .30 
1  56 

1  43 

2  07 

I 
2  .32 
1  86 

1  07l 

2  02 
2  04 


2  51 


1  41 

2  16 

2  50 
2  03 

1  36 

2  .36 
2  29 


1  9l!     1  66 

1  48      1  74 

2  96      2  56 

[2  08  f'-  ^^ 
1  84      1  76 


905,093,613     910,291,623 1  73      1  95         2  44 
109 


2  71 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18i^8 


FARM    VALUES-AVERAGE    PER    ACRE. 

Table    III.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Countie3  the  average  value  {>er  acre 
occupied  of  Farm  Land,  Buildings,  Implements  and  Live  Stock  in  Ontario  for  the  years  1896-97. 


Counties. 


Essex    

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk.  .  . , 
Haldimand 
Welland  ... 
Group. 


Lambton  . . 

Huron  . . . . 

Bruce.     ... 

Group . 


Grey    

Simcoe  . . . 
Group . 


Middlesex    . 
Oxford  .    . . . 

Brant    

Perch.  ... 
Wellington 
Waterloo  . . 
Dufferin  . . 
Group . , 


Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Halton 

Peel  

York     

Ontario.  , 

Durham   

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Group 


Victoria   

Peterborough. 

Haliburton . . . 

Hastings    . . . . 

Group. . . . 


Land. 


1897.     1896 


«  c. 
.36  03 
37  54 
:i5  00 
25  91 
2S  94 
.3.5  63 


Buildings. 


1897.     1896, 


3^  92 
38  27 
35  37 
26  15 
29  54 
37  42 


33  59,  34  10 


11  02,  10  67 

10  86    10  73 

12  65  j  12  53 

11  14    10  92 

13  06 I  13  38 
15  90.  15  99 

12  02    11  92 


26  11    26  06      8  25 


33  581  34  27 
22  03  21  82 
27  151  27  29 


n  66 
7  76 
9  24 


7  86 

11  69 

7  80 

9  15 


Implements. 


1897.     1896 


S  C.I    S^ 


19  15  19  15  7  36  7  41 
23  18  23  19  8  20  8  16 
21  07    21  07|     7  76     7  77 


37  71 

.38  90; 

41  86 

42  69 

42  64 

43  09 

38  09 

38  23 

30  50 

.30  93, 

.37  94 

38  69 

23  06 

22  77 

35  73 

36  30 

50  53 

49  06 

47  96 

47  42 

41  .37 

42  77 

38  70 

39  16 

46  90 

46  21 

.32  27 

.32  93 

.^3  13 

34  33 

29  05 

28  96 

27  79 

29  19 

37  97 

38  21 

17  34 

16  41 

11  83 

11  09 

Lennox  and  Addington 17  34 

Frontenac   

Leeds    

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont   

Glengarry 

Prescott  

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 


21  88  22  39 
23  .37;  24  08 

28  30    29  01 

22  62  22  43 
21  74  21  29 
21  .57  21  94 
17  41 '  17  31 

29  23    .30  07 
9  41      9  24 

13  .53    13  .53 
Group 17  87    17  90 


13  97| 

15  91} 

17  88 

14  OSl 

12  03 1 

16  66 

7  69| 

13  72 

22  32 

18  70 
16  89 

15  97 

16  46 
12  .35 
11  87 

11  84 

12  91 

14  80 

6  97 

4  47 

8  61 

9  63 
11  38 

9  77 
10  26 

8  78 

5  04 

9  00 
3  64 

5  12 

6  82 


13  89 

15  94 

17  90 
13  93 

12  22 

16  37l 

7  50 

13  67 

22  49 

18  72 

17  84 
16  09 
16  271 
12  46 

12  39 
11  81 

13  20 
15  01 

6  98 
4  25 

8  83 

9  66 
11  17 

9  06 


9  76 
9  Oil 

4  75, 
9  12 
3  .52 

5  05, 

6  74 


17  70  18  01 
16  71,  16  86 
1  65  1  76' 
12  85]  12  951 
12  37'  12  53 


Muskoka 3  67 

Parry  Sound 3  20 

Nipissing 3  11 

Manitoulin 4  44 

Algoma  i  2  85 

Group 3  32 


The  Province 23  72,24  06'  8  82 


3  65 
3  34 

3  23 

4  56 

2  83 

3  37 


1  36 
1  08' 

88 
1  44 

07 
1  03 


1  33 
1  09 

89 
1  37 

63 
1  02 


3  12 
3  04 
3  31 

2  73 

3  26 
3  36 
3  11 

2  27 
2  91 
2  01 
2  40 

2  16 
2  19 

2  17 

3  24 
3  31 
3  34 
3  42 

2  80 

3  81 

2  10 

3  13 

4  77 
4  08 
3  30 
3  .32 
3  57 
2  75 
2  C,7 

2  88 

3  07 
3  27 


70 

22 

12 

36 

98 

33 

65 

42 

78 

2  72 

1  15 

1  23 

1  84 


54 
35 
18 
40 
17 

47  j 
.38 
28i 
55 1 
22 
36' 


8  85   2  20 


Live  Stock. 


1897.  1896 


3  13i 
3  02; 
3  19 

2  73 

3  25 
3  51 
3  10 


«  c. 

6  19 

5  38 

6  05 
4  11 

4  88 

5  031 
5  16 


Total 
property. 

1897.  1896 


4  79  55  36 

5  21;  56  82 
5  62;  57  01 

4  16  43  89 

5  19  50  14 
5  51  59  92 
5  06  53  88 


9  c. 
54  61 
57  23 
56  71 
43  9« 
51  .36 
62  43 
54  18 


2  15'  4  55  4  34  41  18  40  41 

2  85'  6  01  6  18  54  16  54  99 

2  01  4  16  4  47  35  90  36  10 

2  34  4  90,  5  02  43  69;  43  80 


2  19 
2  15 

2  17 

3  20 
3  28 
3  45 
3  40 

2  81 

3  69 

2  11 

3  11 

4  67 
3  98 
3  37 
3  42 
3  47 
2  78 
2  75 

2  90 

3  21 
3  28 

1  60 
1  14 

2 


1  59 

1  33 

T7 

1  36 

1  16 

I 
461 
.391 
28 
.56 
21 1 
36 

2  19 


3  98 

4  17 

4  07 

6  54 
6  96 

5  71 


5  75 
5  89 
5  62 
5  67 
5  89 
5  40 
4  94 
4  97 

4  54 

5  41 


2  81 
2  54 
46 
2  63 
2  20 

1  02! 
91 
65 1 

1  66 
51 
85 

4  01 


4  16:  .32  65|  32  91 
4  21'  37  74  37  71 
4  19  35  07  35  20 


6  63 
6  94 
6  07 
6  55 
6  09 
5  76 
4  03 


61  46 
08  04 
69  57 

62  19 
50  83 

63  82 
36  76 


6  15;  58  54 


6  29 
6  25 
6  27 
6  37 
6  23 
5  77 
5  23 
5  12 

4  86 

5  79 


04 

22 
13 
26 
25 
34 
26 
10 
17 
5  05 

2  39 

3  06 
3  53 

2  95 

2  66 

48 

2  77 

2  31 


83  37 
70  63 
67  18 
63  66: 
72  82 
52  77  i 
52  61 
48  74; 
48  .31 
61  51, 

28  84 

19  72 
36  42 
39  47 
47  97 

38  93 

39  73 
36  95 
27  39 
45  55 
10  40 
22  76 

29  89 

27  64 

25  94 

2  79 

21  98 

20  04 

6  52 
5  57 
4  92 
8  09 

4  25 

5  56 


62  62 
68  85 
70  51 

62  11 
52  06 

64  51 

36  41 

59  23 

82  61 
76  37 
70  25 

65  04 
72  18 

63  94 
54  70 
48  79 

60  46 
62  29 

28  03 
18  70 

37  47 
40  38 
48  42 

38  11 
38  82 
37  38 
26  97 
46  94 
16  26 
22  90 
29S*7 

28  21 
26  46 
293 
22  18 
20  38 

663 
6  87 
5  11 
8  39 
4  15 
669 


4  18  38  75  39  38 


110 


61  Yictoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUES— LIVE     STOCK. 

Table  IV.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counbies  the  value  of  Horses  for  l;896'aiid 
1897.  Milch  Cows  and  other  Cattle  for  1897,  and  the  total  Cattle  for  1896  and  1897. 


Counties. 


Esi*ex 

Kent 

Elgin    . . 

Norfolk 

Ualdimand   

Welland 

Totals  

Lambton    

Huron 

Bmce    

Totals 

Grey   

Simcoe   

Totals 

Middlesex 

Oxford    

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington       

Waterloo 

Dufferin 

Totals 

Lincoln , 

Wentworth 

Halton   

Peel  

York  

Ontario 

Dnrham 

Northumberland ....... 

Prince  Edward 

Totals 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac  

Leeds , 

Grenville  

Dandaa 

Stormont 

Glengarry , 

Prescott , 

Russell  , 

Carleton , 

Renfrew 

Lanark  

Totals 

Victoria  

Peterborough  , 

flaliburton    

Hastings    

Totals 

Muskoka   

Parry  Sound 

Nipissing  

Manituulin    .... 

Algoma    

Totals 

The  Province 


Horse-s. 


1897. 


189«. 


915,170 
1,304,0!« 
982,342 
712,150 
596,651 
536.392 
5,046,798 

1,028,951 
1,874,568 
1,282,762 
4,186,281 

1,597,427 
1,699,131 
3,296,-558 

1,711,532 

1.134,669 

494,747 

1,290,139 

1,219,015 

684,487 

537,608 

7,072,197 

551,027 

721,470 

505,182 

720,049 

1,527,658 

1,147,559 

785,639 

916,608 

531,474 

7,406,666 

514,796 
537,662 
529,024 
342.492 
416,138 
326,293 
482,046 
452,292 
286,095 
933,130 
765,742 
560,264 
6,145,974 

644.172 

519,226 

88,942 

958,628 

2.210,968 

199,368 
189,917 
81,200 
124,518 
151.360 
746.363 

36.111,805 


Cattle. 


Milch  cows. 


Other  cattle. 


Total. 


869,966 
1,340,529 
972,813 
731,124 
638, 3n8 
586,626 
.5,139,416 

977,909 
1,869,108 
1,394,327 
4,241,344 

1,649,240 
1,695,882 
3,345,122 

1,771,562 

1,136,205 

518.438 

1,277,917 

1,303,486 

706,229 

514,419 

7,258,266, 

589,9661 

761,2531 

531,766! 

785,428, 

1,575,8671 

1,148,307] 

835,736 

929,090 

542,481 

7,699,894 

549,145 
511,398 
.591,876 
384,260 
422,4121 
.331,7641 
486,1 12 j 
402,6521 
262,100l 

1,013,6491 
811,566 
599,227 

6,366,1611 

701,818 

560,534 

98,613| 

1,008.2581 

2,369,223 

210,505 
203,488 
78,4571 
146,616 
127,211 
766,277 

37,185,693 


446,430 
546,763 
625,2491 
442,8151 
336,590 
272,179 
2,670,025 

599,882 
924,865 
756,914 

2,281,661  i 

I 

908,307 

796,925 

1,705,232, 

1,179,5661 
1,050,0341 
349,5241 
887,973' 
787,140 
426,923 
270,247 
4,951,407 

255,719 
415,774 
328,547 
371,459 
770,208 
581,911 
401,660 
646,215 
302,070 
4,073,563 

406,508 
549,189 
787,394 
472,193 
558,5.36 
469,569! 
605,625 
431,070 
284,717 
814,495 
517,060 
648,458 
6,544,814 

363,932 

446,132 

70,749 

1,022,416 

1,903,2291 

I 

144,486 

117,12?! 

40,992 

69,7671 

67,253! 

439,623 


377,167 
565,714 
551,571 
183,987 
207,179 
164,185 
2,049,803 

887,569j 
1,337,542 

981,971 
.3,207,0821 

998,012 

742,475 

1,740,487 

1,346,603 
694,453 
180,004 
794,835 
798,264 
288,914 
307,882 

4,410,955 

138,459 
242,533 

228,128 
275,376 
376,025 
528,207 
347,501 
287,138 
95,889 
2,519,556 

157,041 
207,694 
220,339 
139,985 
133,236 
121,584 
199,5.55 
1.58,038 
118,644 
504,290 
448,307 
424,014 
2,832,727 

370,327 
228,969 
58,451 
308,844 
966,591 

10.5,7.35, 

100,782 

36,718 

79,877 

63,689 

386,801 


24,569,5551   18,114,002 


1897. 


1896. 


823,597 

1,112,477 

1,176,820 

626,802 

543,769 

436,364 

4,719,829 

1,487,451 
2,1462,407 
1.738.885 
5,488,743 

1,906,319 
1,-539,400 
3,445,719 

2,526,169 

1,744,487 

529,528 

1,682,808 

1,585,404 

715,837 

578,129 

9,362,362 

394,178 

658,307 

556,675 

647,135 

1,146,233 

1,110,118 

749,161 

933,353 

397,959 

6,593,119 

563,  F49 
756,883 

1,007,733 
612,178 
691,772 
591,153 
805,180 
589,108 
403,361 

1,318,785 
965,367 

1,072,472 

9,377,541 

734,259 

67.-,  101 

129,200 

1,331,260 

2,869,820 

I 
2.50,221 
217,907 
77,710 
149,644 
130,942 
826,424 

42,683,557 


734,997 

1,050,07& 

l,033,69t 

625,153 

586,416 

484,6.5i3 

4,514,999 

1,436,008 
2,374,136 
1,833,014 
6,643,158 

1,994,194 
1,570,147 
3,564,341 

2,552,394 

1,741,637 

559,594 

1,666,173 

1,815,319 

764,728 

615,025 

9,714,870 

431,707 

689,387 

672,173 

766,486 

1,250,197 

1.258,950 

778.129 

955,304 

441,482 

7,243,816 

615,107 

775,867 

1,097,708 

610,592 

678,786 

614,402 

827,842 

618,944 

412.942 

1,468,686 

1,025,783 

1,121,4*4 

9,868,093 

753,341 

698,078 

129,544 

1,393,078 

2,974,011 

260,476 
244,307 
68,901 
163, 74& 
122,889 
860,321 

44,383,638 


111 


^1   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32;. 


A.  189  a 


VALUES-LIVE    STOCK. 

T  A  B  L  B    V.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and   groups  of   Counties  the  value   of   Sheep,  Hogs  and 

Poultry,  for  the  years  1896  and  1897. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin 

Norfolk  , . . . 

Haidimand 

Welland  . . . 

Totals . . 


Lambton    . 

Huron 

Bruce'    

Totals. 


Grey    

Simcoe    . . . 

Totals . 


Middlesex . , 

Oxford 

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington 

Waterloo  .. 

DufiFerin . . . . 

Totals.. 


Lincoln 

Wentworth   

Halton  

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland . 

Prince   Edward  . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac   

Leeds    

Grenville  

Dundas 

StormDut  

Glengarry 

Prescott 

Russell   

Carletfjn 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough 
Haliburlon    . . 

Hat<tine.«    

Totals.... 


MuBkoka  . . . 
Parry  Sound 
Nipi&sing  . . . 
Manitoulin  . 
Algoma  —  . 
Totals . . . 


The  Province 


Sheep. 


1897. 


98,806 

156,383 

163,846 

94,575 

93,598i 

7 1,245 

678,4531 

193,457 
3H9,085 
346,073! 
878,615 

.S8C,023 
365,429 
751,452 

262,173 
79,086 
70,273 

175,471 

328,7^8 
92,484 

116,023 
1,124,848 

60,189 

81,865 

84, 4 15 

76,882 

107,822 

181,851 

138,213 

111,665 

40,640 

949,572 

51,630 

95,927 

74  618 

46,975 

38,023 

36,438 

62,^^50 

48,997 

34,048 

140,784 

203,995 

.    197,291 

1,030,970 

137,309 
104,034 
28,047 
114,287 
383,677 

61,885 
50,832 
7,575 
52,263 
27,046 
205,601 

6,003,194 


1896. 


Hogs. 


$  I 

104,926 
142.052 
155  253 

99,215 
105,512 

84,148 
091,106 

198.632 
376,498 
415,579 
990,709 

450,395 
383,327 
833,722 

289,048 

88,510 

85,311 

190,048 

382,420 

122,592 

130,094 

1.2«8,023 

82,689 
105.254 

95,229 

97,249 
209,095 
204,914 
140,931 
124,842 

48.006 
1,114,269 

61,186 

87,730 

81,193 

49,632 

36,670 

44,265 

74.200 

51,405 

42.574 

158,923 

233,207 

207,758 

1,128,863 

138.832 
103,234 
27,404 
121  230 
390,700 

67,053 
62,154 
7,6.oP 
54,042 
23,903 
214,810, 


1897. 


321,931 

392,454 

2.59,214 

159,796 

95.223 

66,080 

1,294,698; 

218,44l! 
234,983 
172,4471 

625,871 

244,349 
320,649, 
664,998 

315,778 
262,fc80 
112,139 
203,746 
245,668 
122,317 
114,984 
1,377,512 

58,892 
107,853 

80.322 
1.33,948 
2,35,110, 
184,787 
109,348 
147,683 

53,863: 
1,111,8061 

87,7821 

89,849' 

131,6771 

73,1691 

74,823 

63,316 

81,482 

76,756 

47,342 

129,984 

124,009 

83,592 

1,063,841 

97,106 

90,158 

11,848 

195,407 

394,519 

20,595 
23,032 
17.670 
19,828 
18,840 
99,965 


6,652,202         0,633,210 

I 

112 


1896. 


283,150 

340,745 

246,  .560 

1.58,874 

90,193 

08,864 

1,188.386 

190,051 

231,310 
178,574 
599,941 

239,383 
319,606 
559,049 

292,857 
251,819 
122,571 
201,061 
2.50.405 
134.228 
108,797 
1,361,738 

67,940 
103,202 

82.840 
134,412 
232,606 
196,940 
128,471 
166,45b 

54,197 
1,167,064 

71,743 

87,921 

139,325 

68,715 

72,800 

70,253i 

80,997 

77.570 

55,711 

146,073 

162,977 

88,385 

1,112,536 

106,121 

85,433 

12,563 

205,966 

410,083 

22,193 
27,401 
13,805 
2.3.298 
19,733 
106,430 

6,505,227 


Poultry. 


1897. 


77,712 
82,573 
00,380 
46,297 
39,903 
34,161 
347,020 

76,603 
100.819 

7l,e57 
249,079 

92,324 

98,5j09 

190,63b 

129,4:^3 
04,098 
28,68:s 
71,191 
74.849 
41,802 
42.775 

453,431 

31,350 
36,501 
34,343 
58,179! 
79.092; 
67,384 
50,018 
50,844 
29,311 
437,082 

28,300 
36.769 
42.007 
38,.565 
40,326 
27.175 
:^0,024 
27,042 
23,057 
70,441 
45,683 
41,960 
451,239 

42,540 

44,871 

5,373 

56,341 

149,125 

11,914 

10,633 

4,155 

5,932 

7,789, 

40,423 


2,318,038         2,130,807 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  {No.    32). 


A,  18J:8 


VALUES    OF    LIVE    STOCK    SOLD. 

Table    VL     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  of  Live  Stock  sold  or 
killed  for  the  years  ending  .Tune  30th,  189B  and  1897. 


Counties. 


Essex    

Kent  

Elgin    

Norfolk  . . . '. 
Haldimand 
Welland  . . . 
Totals . . 


Lambton  . 
Huron  . . . . 
Bruce 

Totals. 


Grey   

Simcoe 
Totals . 


Middlesex. . 
Oxford  .... 
Brant . . 

Perth    

Wellington 
Water'oo   . . 

Dufferin 

Totals.. 


Lincoln 

Wentworth  

Halton   

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

Durham   .       .      . 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington. 

Frontenac   

Leeds    

Grenville  

Dundas    

Stormont  

Glengarry 

Prescott 

Russell  

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark  

Totals 


Victoria  . . 
Peterborough 
Hal) burton   . . 

Hastings    

Totals 


Musk  oka 
Parry  Sound 
Nipissing   . . . 
Manitoulin   . 

Algoma 

Totals  . . 


The  Province 


Horses. 


42,. 500 
98,406 
8.3,080 
47,377 
38,448 
32,890 
342,701 


151,848 
344,015 
444,702 
13(5,793 
135,352' 
119,852 


88,816  589,253 

220,176  1,048,747' 

99,408  776,249 

408,400  2,414,249 

126,468  727,575 

13(i,276  518,909 

262,744  1,246,484 


144,540 
103,368 
25,546 
133,125 
93,161 
54,684 
57,912! 


853,086 
651,278 
l'-.2,772 
618,077 
825,97.", 
495,377! 
234,398! 


612,336  3,840,9611 


26,010 

21,995 

35,428 

67,456 

125,928 

108,540 

78,890 

54,590 

32,912 

551,749 

39,816 
15,484 
31,232 
12,064 
29.469 
16,952 
24,300 
.-0.683 
14,880 
59,064 
36,5.58 
30,500 
341,002 

50,544 
39,366 
10,945 
39,108 
140,023^ 

10,. 528 

12,850 

3,2.50 

5,796 

9,100 

41,524 


130,240 
175,754 
186,74? 
108,505 
439,421 
472,120 
275,360 
261,433 
55.244 
2,204,826 

114,882: 

97, 231  [ 

129,7831 

67.0271 

107,083 

67,349 

88,147 1 

06,886! 

66, 484  j 

234,781 

209,334 

249,715 

1,498,702 

268,425; 

135,686 

29,163 

184.292! 
607,556! 

.59,86:? 
58,069 
13.274 
39,458 
33,619 
204,283 


36,800 
01,376 
79,825 
49,491 
40,697 
36,074 


1,333,102   304,163 


4lV570 
549,721 
433,449 
244,575 
150,384 
98,349 
1,887,048 


80,5131  320,974 

159,761  426,629 

162,332  260,437 

402,606  1,008,040 


180,172 
129,695 
309,867 

117,243 
51,026 
32,030 
70,084 

131,135 
45,128 
51,049 

497,701 

.^6,414 
40,282 
31,733 
45,694 
87,416 
6.3,314 
51,799 
41,373i 
25,129 
423,054 

28,089 
38,503 
.33,106 
17,804 
19,928 
16,697 
19,805 
18,131 
18,245 
53,739 
63,649 
71,882 
399,578 

50,723 

37,361 

6,981 

43,564 

138,629 

19,256 
17,852 

1,49:^ 
16,113 

7.859 
62,573 


8  B.L  (1-4) 


2,700,479  13,350,223  2,538,171 


374,657 
464,275 
838,932 

474,044 
464,603 
221,370 
349,728 
395.885 
276,870 
173,685 
2,356,185 

110,810 
181,226 
145,128 
199,629 
381,238 
.322,629 
191,081 
247,894 
94,187 
1,879,828 

125,291 
120,410 
147,034 

87,287 
100,613 

87,008 
10.3,336 

76,051 

63,613 

175,162 

153,428 

1S0,215 

1,269,448 

107,5.51 
164,670 
14,126 
266,826 
003,073 

31,581 
36,848 
9,878 
29,782 
30,169 
138,258 

10,080,812 


Totals 


.33,181 
38,938 
33,948 
22,512 
20,799 
-28,251 
177,629 

28,720 
41,186 
25,801 
95,707 

34,793 
,38,756 
73,549 

67,484 
31.361 
14,556 
27,216 
.36,884 
20,300 
23,323 
221,124 

21,046 
26,402 
20.467 
34,080 
50,566 
28,145 
24,416 
24,462 
11,396 
240,979 

11,613 
21,091 
15,249 
15,047 
10,305 
10,45s 
10,447 
12,932 
12,054 
31.992 
18,164 
17,828 
193,175 

18,993 
21,. 301 
1,4.36 
23,015 
64,805 

6,591 
,3,610 
1,959 
2,811 
2,975 
16,946 

1,083,914 


674,899 

1,093,056 

1,075,004 

500,748 

385,580 

315,416 

4,044,703 

1,108,276 
1,896,499 
1,324,227 
4,329,002 

1,443,665 
1.287,911 
2,731,576 

1,6' 6, 397 

1,301,636 

456,280] 

1,198,230* 

1,483,038 

892,359 

540,367 

7,528,307 

330,525 
445,6.59 
419,499 
656,264 

1,084,569 
994,748 
621,652 
629,752 
218,868 

5,300,436 

319,691 
292,719 
356,404 
199,229 
273,398 
198,469 
246,035 
204,683 
175.276 
564,738 
481,133 
600,140 
3,801,905 

546,236 

398,344 

62,641 

546,865 

1,654,086 

126,819 

129,229 

29,854 

93,960 

83,722 

463,584 

29,753,599 


651,65r» 
989,071 
990,076 
516,775 
370,347 
302,186 
3,826,114 

1,026,345 
1.823,188 
1,368.316 
4,217,849 

1,421,093 
1,171,6F3 
2,592,74& 

1,548,57a 

1,149,861 

47.3,086 

1,089,641 

1,560,892 

85.3,583 

446,161 

7,121,797 

288.168 

441,932 

398,775 

588,678 

1,068,516 

1,026,894 

632, 82e 

629,  .399 

217,015 

5, 292, 20s 

283,924 
295,144 
.395,163 
226,087 
236,399 
198,738 
237.762 
206.804 
179,318 
538,016 
480,940 
486,808 
3,765,103 

6C5.596 

367,030 

55,633 

554,482 

1,472,741 

123,5^!> 

123,2.35 

.S5,.576 

98,761 

79,331 

460,442 

28,748,995 


6 1    Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32^ 


A.  lyyg 


VALUES-LIVE    STOCK    PER    HEAD. 

Table  VII.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  per  head  of  the 
several  classes  of  Horses  and  Cattle  in  the  Province  for  the  year  1897,  and  also  the  value  per  head  of 
all  Horses  and  Cattle  sold  for  the  same  period. 


^Counties. 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin    

Norfolk    

Haldimand   

Welland 

Group 

Lambton    

Huron 

Bruce  

Group 

Grey   

Simcoe    

Group 

Middlesex 

Oxford    

Brant  

Perth 

Welliogcon    

Waterloo   

Dufferin 

Group   

Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Halton   

Peel 

York  

Ontario     

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward 

Group 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac   

Leeds    

Grenviile  

Dundas 

Stormont   

Glengarry   

Prescott 

Rusiell  

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark   

Group 

Victoria     

Peterborough   

Haliburton     

Hastings 

Group 

Muskoka    

Parry  Sound 

Nipissinff 

Manitoulin 

Algoma 

Group 

The  Province  


Horses. 


58 
61 
62 
56 
57 
62 
59 

61 

70 
64 
66 

61 
64 
62 

61 
65 
55 
67 
67 
57 
57 
61 

63 
62 
61 
59 
68 
63 
59 
57 
58 
62 

55 
56 
52 
54 
60 
56 
56 
58 
.61 
66 
62 
57 
58 

56 
53 
56 
60 
57 

67 
69 
70 
72 
82 
71 
61 


£  S 


56 
68 
64 
57 
61 
55 
62 

58 
75 
66 

68 

61 
66 
64 

69 
67 
48 
70 
65 
59 
55 
65 

62 
64 
58 
65 
76 
68 
61 


41 
45 
37 
37 
33 
41 

44 

49 
46 
37 
47 
44 
43 


59 
56 

41 
37  ; 

66 

43  ' 

55 

.S9 

65 

44 

54 

42 

44 

38 

50 

36 

53 

34 

64 

31 

77 

37 

66 

38 

73 

41 

63 

36 

53 

33 

62 

38 

57 

35 

52 

37 

45 

35 

56 

37 

55 

36 

60 

39 

68 

42 

70 

46 

62 

39 

90 

42 

69 

41 

64 

41 

^ 

a 

o 

SD 

^ 

U 

M 

s 

S  i 

36 

250 

44 

238  , 

50 

300  i 

40 

300  I 

39 

250  . 

43 

200 

43 

257 

42 

300 

45 

361 

38 

310 

42 

326 

41 

311 

40 

311 

40 

311 

43 

375 

47 

325 

300 
336 
300 
319 
250 
326 

300 
300 
300 
300 
400 
400 
300 
250 
200 
328 

200 
283 
200 
150 
200 

200 
275 
250 
250 
275 
250 
252 

200 
200 
200 
150 
181 

163 
160 
150 
175 
250 
170 

283 

Tu" 


50 
63 
67 
59 
54 
65 
60 

61 
72 
57 
65 

54 
62 
58 

73 
73 
53 
75 
59 
62 
57 
67 

51 
53 
68 
68 
72 
67 
70 
53 
68 
65 

56 
49 
64 
52 
57 
52 
50 
61 
60 
69 
54 
50 
57 

54 
54 
55 

48 
52 

47 
50 
50 
46 
65 
51 

62 


Cattle. 


S 
47 
40 
40 
40 
33 
49 
40 

40 
51 
47 
47 

48 
48 

48 

40 


40 


40 
40 
40 


50 
50 


40 
40 
43 

40 
40 
40 


40 


40 
41; 


40 
40 
38 
40 

40 
40 
50 
40 

46 

33 
38 
40 
42 
44 
38 

42 


S  o 


25  88 
27  68 
29  16 

25  12 

26  07 

27  33 
26  99 


i  c3 

CO 


S  c. 
23  42 
25  92 
25  90 
16  37 

20  81 

21  04 
23  61 


27  96  1  30  51 

23  26  27  41 

26  30  26  97 

27  50  I  28  08 

25  67  '  23  32 

25  30  20  94 

25  50  22  25 


29  87 
28  41 

28  09 

27  81 

29  45 

28  35 

24  14 

28  49 

29  42 

27  28 

28  83 

28  36 

30  49 

29  23 
27  27 

25  99 
21  94 
27  72 

21  90 
23  76 
23  82 

23  94 
25  28 

24  43 

24  07 

22  95 

23  37 

25  88 

22  69 

24  69 

24  02 

25  21 

23  66 
21  00 
23  07 

23  48 

24  92 

25  77 

26  21 

24  74 

27  14 

25  55 

26  13 


22  65 

23  88 

21  75 
23  50 

22  28 

23  82 
22  08 
20  29 
18  49 
22  42 

16  37 

18  24 

19  16 

20  84 

18  63 

19  82 

17  53 

18  16 

16  72 

21  07 

19  47 

20  09 

19  25 

20  56 

17  52 
15  98 

18  81 

18  92 

17  16 

19  72 

20  36 


U  25 

12  31 

12  67 

9  38 

10  62 

11  86 

11  58 

12  22 
11  52 

10  97 

11  52 

9  72 
9  69 
9  71 


31  46 

12  08 

31  69 

11  83 

22  95 

10  08 

23  20 

11  23 

24  81 

10  51 

27  80 

10  44 

20  62 

9  37 

27  19 

11  08 

12  90 
11  86 
11  16 
11  92 
11  29 
11  14 
11  83 
9  34 


9  03 
11  14 

9  20 
9  39 

8  51 

11  38 

8  90 

8  60 

9  11 
9  82 
9  00 


10  94 
9  33 

10  56 
9  70 

10  54 

8  90 

7  16 

8  90 

9  32 

8  68 

9  01 
11  06 


21  98 
20  07 
19  49 

9  32 

10  31 

9  34 

23  89 

10  62 

61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUES  —  LIVE    STOCK    PER    HEAD. 


Table  VIII.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  per  head  of  Sheep. 
Hogs  and  Poultry  in  the  Province  for  the  year  1897,  and  also  the  value  of  each  per  head  sold  for  the 
same  period.  • 


Counties. 


Essex    

Kent 

Elgin    

Norfolk 
Haldimand . 
Welland  ... 
Group 


Lambton  . 

Huron  . . . 

Bruce    . . . 

Group 


Grey 

Simcoe 

Group  . 

Middlesex    . 
Oxford  .    . . . 

Brant    

Perth      . . . . 
Wellington . 
Waterloo . . . 
Dufferin   . . 
Group  . 


Lincoln      

Wentworth   

Halton 

Peel 

York 

Ontario    

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Group  


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac  

Leeds  

Grenville 

Dundas  

Stormoat 

Glengarry  

Prescott 

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew  

Lanark 

Group  


"Victoria  

Peterborough 
Haliburton . . . 

Hastings 

Group  . . . 


Muskoka 

Parry  Sound  . 

Nipissing 

Manitoulin  . . . 

Algoma  

Group  . . . 

The  Province. 


Sheep. 


$  c. 

3  85 

4  83 
4  .S9 

3  84 

4  12 
4  01 


a  >. 


2  43 

2  62 

2  75 

2  39 

2  72 

2  64 

4  52 

4  83 

4  52 

4  63 

4  31 

4  37 

4  34 

5  19 

5  Ofi 

3  78 

4  06 

4  19 

4  29 

4  09 

4  09 

4  51 

4  23 

4  37 

$  c. 
3  34 
3  83 
3  57 
3  32 
3  24 
3  42 


Hogs. 


o 


$  c. 

10  53 

11  10 
11  49 
11  88 

10  64 

11  57 


4  23i  2  60  3  48,  11  06 


2  78 
2  92 
2  75 
2  82 

2  60 
2  49 
2  55 


2  79 

3  28 
2  81 
2  70 
2  76 


3  56 
3  60 
3  52 
3  56 

3  39 
3  43 

3  41 

4  33, 

4  52 
3  94 
3  40 
3  831 
3  55 
3  34' 


11  67 

12  00 

10  53 

11  42 

I 

10  78 

11  54 
11  22 

11  27 

13  23 

14  19 
11  22 
13  24 

9  22 
9  30 


rH 

"O  <D 

a  >, 

$  c. 

3  01 

3  81 

3  91 

3  89 

3  94 

4  18 

3  65 

3  83 

3  53 

3  65 

3  66 

3  98 

72 


3  85 j  11  71 


3  07 
3  75 
2  33 

2  89 

3  11 


11  88 

12  37 

13  55 

14  29 
13  22 
12  86 
11  68 
11  97 

11  26 

12  741 


13  19' 
10  421 

10  671 

11  261 
11  32 
10  891 

10  191 

11  72' 

10  63 

11  85 
10  52 

10  40 

11  02 

9  85 

9  48 

9  13 

11  10 

10  41 


2  34 
2  45 

1  92 

2  19 
2  34 
2  31 

2  621  3 


36 

11  42 

34 

12  12 

37 

12  78 

77 

7  89 

59 

9  72 

20 

10  55 

46 

11  40 

4  04 
4  43 
3  79 
3  74 

3  03 

4  34 

3  30 

4  00 
3  46 
2  99 
2  84 

2  56 

3  46 

3  12 
3  38 

3  04 

4  00 
3  53 

3  08 
3  42 
3  93 
3  47 
3  40 
3  41 

3  67 


$  c. 

7  45  61 

7  80   72 


Poultry. 


6  99 
6  71 
6  08 
6  62 


3  98 

6  96 

3  30 

0  98 

3  58 

6  97 

4  07 

6  78 

4  38 

7  60 

4  04 

7  76 

3  87 

6  81 

4  01 

6  67 

25 1 

6  49 

7  03 

7  47 

7  40 

6  66 

6  71 

6  10 

6  87 

7  18 
7  41 
7  65 

6  87 

7  80 

8  55 

8  20 

9  10 

7  89 

8  68 

8  87 

9  94 
10  30 

8  57 

10  26 

8  42 

8  73 

6  85 

7  00 

6  73 

7  47 
7  14 


^1 


-Ji 


7   18  67 
6  53 

6  84 

7  lOi  67 


62 1  21 

511  21 

621  22 

58   52  20 

70   63 1  23 

55 1  22 


60 
61 
55 
59 

I 
60 
68 
64 

I 
65 
66 
76 
61  i 
621 

66: 

62 
64 

I 
60 
6LI 
61 
69 
661 
62 
62 
65 
72 
65 

1 
67 
60 
68 
74 
67 
58 
79 
74 
72 
72 
71 
65 
69 


7  26  63 

7  72i  70 

7  84  59 
7  78 


7  83  58 
7  65,  62 


7  20j  64 


61  54 

51  5L 

69 1  .52 

62 1  55 

58;  53 


50 
66 
62 

56 


7  28  66,  58.  21 


551  20 
55  21 


50 1  22 

59  i  22 


41 
45 
24 
34 
39 

56   21   33 

71 1  22   34 

36 

37 

25 

22 


62,  24 
22 


21 


28 
34 
36 
33 
29 
40 
33 

37 
35 
33 
35 

32 
35 
34 

42 
40 
34 
35 
41 
35 
46 
40 


26,  38 

23  39 

23  42 

231  38 


20 

22 

20 

22 

23 

21 

21 

22 

2o 

23 1  36 

22   40 

21 1  40 

221  37 


40 
30 
43 
36 
37 
38 

31 
39 
30 
39 
42 
34 
30 
39 
50 


32 
34 

37 


115 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


MARKET 
Table  IX.     Showing  the  average  price  of  Agricultural  Products  at  the  leading  mark«»ha  of  Ontario  for 


Products. 


(C 

> 

:^ 

eS 

.2 

> 

S 

is 

« 

V 

o 

32 

CU 

CO 

cte. 

cts. 

"■7    Fi 

cts. 

pq 


Fall  Wheat  :  per  bush.        '  cts.   cts.   cts.   cts 

July      65.0177  5  74.0  65.5 

August 68.8  77.5.80.0  73.5 

September     i70.0  79.0'88.5  84.0 

October    ,68.8  70.0!88.8|73.9 

November l70.0  75.0  77.5;76.:< 

December 70.0  77.5177.6,78.0 


1-1897 
Average s  1896 

(1895 
Spbing  Wheat  :  per  bush. 

July    

August  

September    

October 

November 

December 


68.876.2lSl. 
67. Ol.  ..  72, 
66.0  69.8  ... 


Average .... 

Baelet  :  per  bush. 

July    

August  

September     

October 

November 

December 


(-1897 
<1896 
tl895 


72.9 
68.6 


22.0  20. 5 

22  0'2fi  5'24.0 


8,74.9 
2  71.0 
.  68.9 


19  v.... \ 
72.2  69.6 
....  68.61 


23.8  30.0 
25.0  27.5 
25,0  20.0 
25.0  30.0 


(1897  23.8 
Average <  1896  29.1 

ll895,35.0 
Oats  :  per  bush, 

July    

Augu.«t 

September    

October      , 

November 

December 


27.5  22.51 
22. 5I 
22. 5| 
25.11 
26  5 
26.5 


25.7 
30.0 
30.0 
30.0 


28.5|28.1 
29.8i29.3 
41.1  .... 


(1897  22, 

Average <  1896  18 

(.1895  25 


24.4 
30.4 
39.3 

24.0  18. 0!20. 0  23.5 
24.0'20.5i21.0|23.5 
21.2123.0  21.2  21.6 
20.5  21.6  20.8  21.0 
20.9  19. 5|20. 0,21.0 
22.019.3120.8  21.2 


Rye  :  per  bush, 

■  July    

Augupt  

September    .. 

October 

November  . . . . 
December  . . , , 


(1897 

Average <  1896 

(.1895 
Peas  :  per  bush 
July 
August 


September 
October  . . 
November . 
December  . 


Average. 


120.4:20.6  21. 
2  19.5il7.8  20. 
0  30.51....  27, 


,0'32. 5132.0 
,0  36.3|40.0 
942.044.8 
540.043.3 
5  43.5  42.0 
5  43.5144.3 

I         I 
139.7  41.7 
3  38.2  34.4 
2  45.8  .... 


41.5140.0 
41.5  40.0 
43.6I4I.8 
45.042.3 
42.5141.0 
42.5  41.8 


(1897  41.0  42.8 

.<  1896  41.7143.8 

(.1895  51.0|£0.7 


41.3 
42.3 


40.1 
43.7 
52.0 


CQ 


cts. 

65.9 

74.1 

80.9 

76.3 

77.4 

77.4 

75.6 
69.7 


m 


o 


cts.  cts.  cts. 
77.7  67.5  69.0 
89.0  75.6  74.0 


O 


O 


cts.  cts. 
64.9  71.6 
67.3,76  8 


101.0  83.3  84.0  82.5  84.6 
91.9  82  0  78.1  75.8  77.5 
91.7|81.8  80.3179.6  81.6 
94.4,83.3  80.3  80.0  82.0 


K 


cts. 
71.3 

76.8 


« 


cts.  cts.  I  cts 
73.5  67.0  65.7 
81.8i73.1J76.8 


82.6  87.1|86.9|83.5 
80.3|85.5  77  2|79.4'75.f> 
78.5  84.0  80.0183.0  75.5 
78.5  83. 5'80. 0,82. 2,77. 5 


91.6  79.4  77.2  75.879.3  78.2  82.4 
76.8  68.2  K4.2  68.6  ...   |70.li77.4 


77.578.376.2 
69.3  69.6,70.0 


66.4     74.8  66.4  61.9  67.1  68.1,68,7  69.0  70.0.66.7  66.2 


65.9 
74.1 
80.9 
76.3 
79.6 
77.4 

76.0 
69.3 
68.4 

22.8 
26.6 
28.0 
25.4 
26.1 
28.1 

26.3 
28  6 
41.2 

20.6 
25.0 
25.1 
20.5 
22.1 
24.9 

23.2 
19.3 
39.5 

28  5 
31.9 
42.9 
39.6 
41.1 
42.2 

38.1 
M.9 
46.8 

36.6 
40.0 
42.1 
40.0 
40.0 
39.5 

39.81 
42.01 
52  5| 

116 


77.3 
89.0 
101.0 
91.7 
91.3 
94.8 


91.6  .... 
78. 2I... 
78.3  67.2 


31.0 
32.0 
35.0 
32.2 


18.5 
18.6 
20  2 
22.3 


31.024.0 
3O.6I24.O 

,32.0  21.4 
36.941.9 
44.5  35.7 


65.3 
70.5 


69.3 


62.0'65.7:64.8 
70.0|74.6  64.8 

80.6  83.5185.9 
75.5  79.3  74.6 
80.0182.571.8 


73.8  80.0  82.272.5 


31  7 
30.6 
23.8 
29.7 


....167.471.8 
57.1  ....i77.9 
60.3,68.9  71.4 


74.9  77.9 
64.8  69.3 
69.867.0 


30  5  26.0  24.1  20.0  27.9  23.5 
30.5  26.0  24.0  20.0  29.5  23.5 


73.1 
67.5 
66.2 


30.9 
32.1 
31.5 
32.0 


28.8  31.3 
36.5 
41.8 


28.O,2O.0ilS.0  20.8  24.3 
28.0121.6  20.0  21. 7'23. 3 
25.0;i9.5!20.8l21,7  22.5 
24.4119.0120.0  21.5  22.5 
23.7|20.l'20.3i20.8:23.3 
24.0  20.9  21.0  22.7124.5 


25.4 
23.9 
35.4 


20.2 
16.5 
25.8 


35.5125.0 
38.5  25.0 
45  0  25.0 
41.8  25.0 
41.7 
43.0 


25.0 
29.5 
42.5 


41.2 
40.4 
54.9 

46.0 
46  0 
45  0 
43.6 
43  0 
43  0 


44.3 
47.4 
57.0  56.6 


19.9  21.6123.4 
15.8  18.7121.6 
23.8  27.4  28.7 


|.... 133.0 
....33.0 
36.0I42.2 
39.043.4 
40.0  42.5 
140.0  42.5 


'38.8 


26.0  24.0120.4131.6  23.5 
26.0  24  0  23.2  31.3  23.5 
26.0  24.0'23.3  30.0  23.5 
26.0  24.0  23.0  29.5  27.5 

26.0  24. 0121. 8'29. 9  24.2 
35.5128.3  25.8  25.2  28.3 

41.3  40.3  37.9  39.2  37.1 

26.0  23.6:23.5  23.519.5 
26.9  23.6123  0  23  3  19.5 

26.4  22. 3123. 3.24. 9  21.5 
23.0  22.4  21.3  21. 8|20.0 
23.122.0  20.8  23.4  20.0 
24.9  22.0123.0  24.6  22.5 

25.122.7'22  4  23.6  20.1 
22  7  20.4118.7  19. 7|18. 4 
30.7  27.7  27.4  28.3  26.0 


35.0  31.0130.8  40.0 
.S7.5  30.3  37.l'40.0 
41.033.0138.042.5 
41.3  40.8:35.8  39.0 
43.0:40.035  0  39.0 
.!43.0'40.4  35.0  39.0 


39.7 
36.3 
46.2 


....140.136.335.240.1 
42. 537. 8[33. 931.11.... 
49.3  45.5  38.8  52.0  42  5 


!35.5  42.ll39.142.5  39.0  37.5 
•37.2'42.5  38.0  44.9  39.0  38.5 


41.6  42. 5141. 8|4o  6  41.5 
41.6  46.6144. 5146. 5  41.7 
40.0145.6141.5  43  5  42.6 


42.4 


39.0 
39.0 
42.1 


43.5142.1 

44.841.0 

..  40.8'46.5  41.9|43.0  43.0  44.6  41.0 

...  39.7  44.1  41.2i44.3  41.2  41.8  40.9 
...  41. 7  44. 4  50. 4(44. 9  45. 4'.'^8. 8  42.6 
,..,50.8  55.2  54.9154.3  55.7  57.4  51.5 


61  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32) 


A.  1898 


PRICES. 

July-December,  1897,  and  the  average  for  the  half  year  and  for  the  Province  for  the  years  1895, 1896  and  1897. 


bo 

The  Province. 

o 

3 

<C 

o 

a 

c3 

i 

H 

a 

W 

a 
s 

o 
a 

.a 

o 

60 

o 
o 

s 

Is 

o 

a 
o 
u 

"si 

c4 

1 

5 

1897. 

1896. 

1895. 

Pm 

Ph 

cts. 

Pi 

Cd 

02 

•M 

H 

^ 

^ 

^ 

^ 

cts. 

ctg. 

cts. 

cts. 

cts 

cts. 

cts. 

CtP. 

cts. 

cts. 

cts. 

ct<i. 

cts. 

Ctj". 

cts. 

72.0 

73.0 

85.0 

66.2 

65.0 

65.0 

62.5 

66.0 

71.6 

68.0 

70.5 

70.8 

67.0 

69.6 

64  7 

82.5 

73.8 

77.5 

85.0 

76  6 

75.0 

72.0 

68.0 

74.0 

77.4 

73.6 

79.4 

76.6 

74.3 

75.7 

62.9 

73.9 

82.0 

82  0 

85  0 

93.3 

83.2 

84.6 

77.6 

81.0 

82  3 

85  0 

82.5 

85.3 

82.8 

83.8 

63.0 

61.5 

74.8 

82.0 

85.0 

80  1 

78.0 

79.5 

67.5 

78.0 

83.0 

77.7 

79.8 

68.8 

78.2 

78.6 

71.5 

63.6 

77.5 

82.5 

88.3 

78.9 

81.3 

82.3 

76  7 

80.5 

85.7 

79.8 

83.0 

72.5 

80.5 

80.0 

81.5 

67.6 

79.4 

82.5 

86.7 

76.3 

80.0 

84.0 

75.0 

80.0 

84.6 

82.2 

SI. 4 

72.5 

81.4 

80.4 

82.9 

65.4 

76.7 

79.9 

85.7  78.6 

76.8 

77.6 

72.9 

76.5 

80.6 

78.3 

79.5 

74  4 

77.1 

78.2 

74.9 

75.0 

82.6 

67.7 

66.8 

67.3 

67.4 

68.2 

75.2 

71.6 

69  7 

73.3 

69.8 

71  0 

68  .S 

81.7 
73.0 

84.5 
77.5 

69.6 
62.5 

64.3 

65.0 

67.0 

66.2 

71.8 

75.9 
68.0 

67.1 

73.1 
70.5 

74.4 

69.3 

68.2 

65.6 

84.2 

80.5 

77.5]71.4 

71.5 

.    76.0 

75.0 

64  0 

74.6 

92.5 
92.5 

90.0187.4 
90.0179.4 

85.3 
72.5 

87.1 
81.5 

63.4 
70.0 

62.8 

62.8 

83.0 

90.0 

78. 8 

72.5 

78.7 

79.9 

66.4 

83.0 

90.0 

80.3 

74.4 

80.1 

81.0 

65.1 

81.0 
74.6 
80.7 

27.0 

85.7 
79.6 
82.5 

40.0 

76.6 
63  1 

70.0 
70.6 

73.8 

27.5 

"69.7 
65.7 

28.0 

75.1 
75.3 

77.8 

22.5 

78.6 

70.6 

m  7 

69.8 
22.0 

96.6 
27.0 

69.8 

30.0 

19.3 

23.1 

22.2 

32.5 

25.7 

33  5 

45.9 

30.0 

27.0 

40.022.0 

19.3 

26.3 

22.1 

27.1 

27.5 

28.0 

23.5 

32.5 

26.2 

32.6 

44.5 

32.0 

28.5 

40.0  22.6 

19.3 

30.0 

21.3 

28  9 

27.5 

22.5 

31.9 

27.2 

31.9 

40.2 

31.6 

28.5 

40.0 

24.5 

19.3 

30.0 

24.3 

30.8 

27.5 

26.5 

30.0 

27.7 

31.2 

37.4 

28.4 

28.5 

40.0 

26  0 

19.3 

28.3 

21.5 

31.6 

27  5 

26.7 

30.0 

27.3 

31.4 

35. » 

29.5 

28.0 

40  0 

27.0 

19.2 

25.0 

22.2 

31.4 

27. 5 

27.0 

30.0 

27.8 

28.8 

36.2 

30.3 

28.0 

40.0 

24.0 

19.2 

20.8 

22.2 

29.4 

27.5 

28.0 

24.8 

31.1 

27.0 



32.0 

37.7 

36.2 

31.9 

45.1 

24.3 

24.8 

32.8 

29.0 

29.0 

29.3 

34.2 

31.6 

40.1 

36.0 

42.0 

38.2 

42.0 

39.1 

36.1 

42.1 

34.2 

40  6 

44.5 

43.7 

40.4 

23.1 

19.0 

23.0 

25.0 

22.7 

20.0 

22.6 

21.2 

27.1 

21.0 

26.7 

21.3 

20.8 

22.5 

20.9 

36.8 

25.5 

19.0 

23.0 

^5.5 

23.1 

25.0 

25.9 

21.5 

26.8 

21.0 

25.  C 

22.2 

23.0 

23.4 

19.7 

33.4 

25.5 

20.5 

23.0 

25.1 

22.7 

20.8 

22.5 

22.3 

26.6 

21.0 

24.0 

20.8 

22.1 

23.1 

18.6 

26.5 

20.0 

20.5 

22.3 

21.8 

20.0 

25.1 

22.5 

20.8 

24.7 

20.7 

24.0 

21.3 

21.4 

21.7 

19.5 

25.4 

21.1 

19.8 

22.0  21.5 

20.5 

20.6 

22.5 

21.0 

26.5 

21.0 

24.0 

20.3 

20.5 

21.6 

21.2 

25.3 

22.4 

18.8 

22.3  22.4 

1 

22.1 

22.0 

26.7 

21.9 

26.2 

23.0 

24.0 

20.0 

22.3 

22.9 

19.8 

25.1 

^3  n 

19.7 
21  4 

22.7|2.S  fi 

21.9 
19.7 

23.1 
19.2 

23.9 
18.3 

21.5 
18  7 

26.3 
22.9 

21.4 
20.9 

24.7 
21.7 

21.0 
20.7 

21.7 
19.7 

22.6 

20.5 

21.0 

19.8 

20.0 

29  « 

32.4 
28.0 

29.2 
30.0 

30.8 
30.5 

27.1 
30.0 

27.6 

27.5 
28.4 

25.7 

31.2 
.33.7 

28.2 
46.0 

29.1 

31.6 
31.0 

30.1 

29. i 

31.9 

41.8 

47.7 

28.0 

30.0 

30.5 

.30.0 

34  5 

35.3 

46.0 

3.48 

34.0 

.39.1 

47.7 

29.0 

36.0 

.37.1 

30.0 

40.8 

45.8 

46.0 

44.0 

39.2 

.35.4 

45.6 

29.0 

42.0 

40.6 

30.0 

39.0 

41.8 

37.5 

40.0 

39.0 

34.8 

45.4 

32.0 

42.0 

41.0 

30.0 

40.0 

46.0 

39.9 



40.0 

40.3 

34.5 

44.2 

36.0 

42.0 

43.7 

30.0 

40.0 

45.3 

41.0 

40.0 

41.1 

34.1 

43.2 

30.0 
37.7 

36.5 
34.3 

37.2 
33.8 

30.0 

36.8 
32.4 

41.3 
39.9 

42.7 
46.0 

38.2 
32.0 

37.7 

40.0 

36.6 

40.0 

43.1 

39.5 

39.6 

53.0 

46.2 

45.9 

46.0 

50.0 

.... 

45.6 

38.4 

37.0 

42.5 

41.0 

38.5 

37.8 

38  8 

45.4 

37.5 

45.0 

.39.3 

40.0 

40.1 

46.5 

60.7 

37.5 

38  5 

42.5 

41.8 

38.5 

41.1 

40.4 

46.0 

37.5 

45.5 

42.4 

40.0 

41.0 

45.6 

.58.9 

42.7 

42.7 

46.5 

42.8 

38.5 

46.5 

44.0 

49.5 

37.6 

45.6 

42.5 

40.0 

43.2 

42.8 

53.8 

43.4 

43.0 

47.0 

43  8 



38.9 

41.0 

42.0 

45.6 

41.7 

47.5 

41.9 

42.5 

43.2 

43.4 

51.4 

4'i.4 

40.3 

45.744.9 

40.5 

41.2 

40.0 

46  2 

40.5 

47.5 

41.0 

42,5 

42.6 

43.6 

51.9 

42.1 

38.5 

42.0  42.8 

41.0 

41.5 

41.2 

46.1 

42.0 

43.0 

42.5 

42.5 

42.5 

42.1 

40.6 

41.1 

40.2 

44.5  42.8 

39.2 

41.6 

41.1 

40.5 

39.5 

45.6 

41.6 

41.3 

42.1 

42.9 

41.7 

44.1  43.3 

44.5 

38.3 

43.7 

46.4 

45.4 

43.0 

50.6 

48.4 

44.0 

b3.0 

52.0 

51. 7^58.2 

53.5 

49.9 

51.3 

57.9 

52.4 

53.3 

60.0 

61.6 

54.8 

11, 


61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18&8 


MARKET 
Table  IX.    Showing  the  average  price 


Products. 


CoBX  :  (in  ear)  per  bush. 

October 

November 

December 


cts. 


M 


I 
cts.  '  tt? 


(1897 

Average <  1896 

tl895 
Buckwheat  :  per  bush.  I 

October    27.5  i30.0 

November 273  |31  5 

December J28.5  j31.0 

(1897  27.8    30.8 

Average <  1896  26.2    31.1 

(.1895  32.7  .35.9 
Beans  :  per  bush. 

October 

November 

December 


(1897 

Average <  1896 

[  1895 
Potatoes :  per  bush. 

October 

November |30.0 


29.5 

28  0 
29.5 

29  0 
27.6 


cts. 


31.6 

32.5 

December 135.0  '28.3    30.0  , 37^6 


(1897 

Average ■{  1896 

(.1895 
Wool  :  per  pound. 

July    

August 

September    

October 

November 

December : 


Average . 


Hat  :  per  ton. 

July    

August  . .   . . 
September 

October 

November . . . 
December  . . 


Average. 


(1897 
<  1896 
(.1895 


ct? 


aj 

l-i 

g 

> 

e8 

J4 

^ 

o 

£.4 

M 

D 

cts. 


20.0  20  5 
18.3  20.5 
18.3.20.5 

18.8  20.5 
18.1119  8 
23.2  24.9 


30.0 

28.3 
30  0 


30.6 
30.0 
31.0 


45  0  62  5 
45.0162.5 
55.0  62.5 


34.0 
25.2 
17.8 

20.0 
20.0 
20.0 


48.8 

87.5 

122.5 

46.3 
48.0 


62.5 
74.8 


35.5 
32.5 
48.4  37.5 


47.1 

27.9 
24.1 


(189719.5  17.8 
<  1896  17  9  17.6 
11895-20.2    18.6 


zu.u 
20.0 

20.0 

20.0 

19.2 

16.0 

17.2 

S  c. 

S  c. 

9  00 

6.44 

6.75 

5.63, 

6.75 

6.40 

6.75 

6.50 

6  75 

6.38 

6.75 

6.00 

cts. 


cts 


23  3    27.4 

22.3  25.0 

23.4  .25.0 

23.0  26.0 
22  9  25.7 
16.6    15.2 


26  9 
25.9 
26  5 


29.5  30  6  26.4 
28  2  31.5  25.7 
34.936.9     38.3 


56.3 
52.0 
49.0 

52.1 
48.9 
95.0 


O 


cts. 


40.0    50.0 


7.18 
11.37 
14.00 


35.6 
30.4 
25.3 

16.0 
115.8 
15.0 
15.0 
17.0 
18.0 

16.1 
18.7 
20.0 

$  c. 

9.50 

9.25 

9.50 

9.50 

9.50 

9.50 


6.22(  9.46 

9.12  10.88 

13.48  11.00 


54.0 
60.0 

52.1 
25.8 
24.0 


53.8 
58.3 

53.3 
35.8 
33.6 

16.5 
16.5 


40.0 
32.5 
37.5 

36.7 
20.8 
20.8 


cts.     cts. 


16.5 


18.1 
22.3 

$  c. 

6.00 

6.00 

6.00 

6.00 

5  95 

5.55 


$  c. 

5.50 

5.50 

5.50 

5.50 

5.50 

5.50 


37  5 
43.3 
43.0 

41.4 
20.9 
19.8 

.|18.5 
.118.5 
.118.5 
.  18  5 
.'18.5 
18.5 


cts. 


24  8    26.3 


i30  S 

127.8 
129.0 

29.0 
29.4 
35.8 


cts. 


25.4 
27.0 
28.0 

26.8 
27  8 
31.7 


S  c. 

8.00 

8.00 

5  50 

5.50 

5.50 

5.50 


36.8  j28.1 
36.8  34  5 
55.0    33.0 


43.8 
35.0 
20.6 

18.0 
IS.O 
18.0 
18.0 
18.0 
18.0 


132.0 
130.5 
22.7 

16.5 


18.5  118.0 
18.4  17.0 
20.4    20.4 


,17.0 
;17.0 
117.0 
117.0 

I 

16  9 

17.1 

20.0 


5.91,  5.50    6.20 
6.28    8.00  10.73 
8.88    7.7112.64 
I 


$  c. 
7.00 
6.631 
6.10 
6.50| 
6.131 
6.001 


S 


30.0 
30.0 
30.0 

30.0 
30.0 

118.2 

18.0 
118.0 
,18.0 

118.0 
|18  0 
18.0 

,18.0 
|18.0 
ll9.0 


S  0.  !  S  c. 


8.94  10.30 

8.44 
7.75 
7  13 
6.50 
6.50 


50 


6.37    7  51 
9.12  12.30  12 


6.50 

6.c,0 

1  6.50 

6.88 

6.50 

7.60 

7.00 

8.00 

7.00 

6.80 

7.37 

'7. 21 

12.88 

7.46 

12.02 

1 

9.66 

118 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


PRICES  —Concluded. 

of  Agricuctural  Products,  etc.— Concluded. 


Ct8. 

19.6 
18.9 
17.9 

18  7 
15.9 
24.3 

24.3 
25.0 
26.0 

25.2 
20.4 
33.0 


=         5 


27.0 
27.4 

|28.5 

27.7 
|47.0 
:55.0 


cts. 


cts. 


X 

« 

o 

4J 

.2 

02 



cts. 

cts. 

15  5 

16.0 

cts. 


25.0 

24.0  115.5  il6.7 

27  5    18.8  115.0 


cts. 


25.5 


.;2.5.0 


16.4 
19  5 
21.9 


50.0 
47.0 

47.5 
63.4 

68.9 


35.0  126.0 
35.0  '28.4 
28.0  ,29.7 

132.9  '28.2 
,31.0  28.6 
34.2    35.0 


95.0; 

95.0 

95.0 

I 

95.0 

107.1! 

107.7 


48  8    21  3    31.8     25.5  25.0 

51.3  32.5    30  0  I  25.0  26.7 

53.4  37.3  130.0     2.5.0  30.0 


51.3 
24.5 
17.3 


30.0 
30.0 
30.0 


58.8 
53.8 
55.6 

56  0 
47. S 
79.2 

50.0 
52.5 
60.0 


42. 


15.7 

:22.g 

17.4 

I 

30  0 

28.0 

28.0 

I 

28.5 

27.3 

,32.3 

50.0 
50  0 
50.0 

I 

50  0 

52.5 

,78.8 


cts. 


cts. 


33.5 
36.3 
36.0 

35.3 
36.2 
38  9 

85.6 
84.4 
82.3 

83  9 

80.0 

109.6 


37.5 
37.5 
37.5 

37.5 


cts. 


The  Province. 


cts. 


cts 


1897. 


1896.  1895. 


cts.  1  cts. 


cts. 


20.2  ;20.9    24.1 

19.4  il9.8    21.8 

19.5  117.9    20.1 


i9.7 


61.8  147.5  52.5  32.6  36.7  |50.0 
56.8  '52.5  ;53.3  !  34.3  36.8  l50.0 
61.0    55.0  ,52.6  i^40.8l36.6  |o0.0 


35.4 
29.0 
29.0 

31.0 
31.1 
35.0 


33.8 
30.0 
33.8 


30.0 

129.8 
:30  2 

'30.0 


19.6 


32.5 
.^1.4 
27.9 


22.6 

38.0 
36  9 
35.4 


50  0 
50  0 
50.0 


30.5  I 

1 36  8 

I  I 

67.7  72.3  96.0 
65  5  70.7  94.3 
63.0  ,62.6  ,93.3 


65.2 


68.4 


94.7 


38.1  27.8  121.9 
39.1  26  0  18.9 
42.1    24.5    19.0 


12.30 


119 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32). 


A.  189  8 


VALUES-FALL    WHEAT    AND    SPRING    WHEAT. 

Table  X.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  at  market  prices  of  the 
total  crops  of  Fall  Wheat  and  Spring  "Wheat  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly 
average  for  the  sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Counties. 


xiiSsex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk  .    . . 

Haldimand . 

Welland  .    . 

Totals.. 


Lambton . . 
Huron  . . . . 

Bruce 

Totals. 


Vrey   

Simcoe 
Totals 


Fall  wheat. 


1897. 


S 
579,819 

1,186,607 
841.936 
778,859 
678.767 
277,535 

4,343,523 

813,704 
1,311,902 

720,377 
2,845,983 


1896. 


1882-97. 


S 
337,387 
838,610 
409,821 
416,245 
141,642 
3,279 


513,236 
995,661 
714.229 
523,790 
452,498 
279,863 


2,241,9841    3,478,977 


704,406 

608,760 

253,383 

1,566,549 


614,119 
1,030,425 

673,836 
2,318.380 


.558.804  244,639  404,585 
1,240,006  799,980  949,207 
1.798,810     1,044,619,    1,353,792 


Middlesex 1.508,441 

Oxford    1,019,853 

Brant |  687,553 

Perth I  1.025,652 


Wellington 

Waterloo .    . 

Dufferin  . . . 

Totals . , 


Lincoln 

Wentworth  

Halton 

Peel 

York 

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds . . 

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont 

O-lengarry 

Prescott 

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark  

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough . 
Haliburton . . . 

Hastings 

Totals . . . . 


Muskoka 

Parry  Sound  . 

Nipissing 

Manitoulin    . . , 

Algoma 

Totals 


371,627 

828,526 

163.552 

5,605,204 

377.969 
636  737 
610.016 
687,792 
876.947 
306,478 
137,089 
147,235 
63,311 
3,843,574 

30.099 

11,355 

14,686 

493 

6,825 

3,886 

1,486 

2,958 

2,538 

1,583 

2,900 

11.007 

89,816 

28,661 

67,180 

2,832 

115,111 

213,784 

1,397 

610 

305 

12,687, 

2,9631 

17,9621 


1,044,713' 
537, 911  j 
317,7481 
547.556 
238,639, 
492,208 
115,641 

3,254,416' 


14.5. 
239, 
292, 
316, 
448, 
208, 
165. 
248, 
2. 
2.066", 


306 
129, 
102  i 

443: 

713 
6801 
354 
9G8 
140 
835 


20, 635 1 

2,353 

54,344  1 

4,926  / 

8,243, 

4,317 

1,718 

653 

888 

369 

4,371 

54.929 

157,746 


104, 

183, 

2, 

62, 

352; 


,493 
,120 
,463 
,6911 
770' 

i 
4401 
266! 
298 
279 1 
49l| 
,7741 


1.228,894 
690.276 
459,303 
724.043 
353,196 
668,465 
138.474 

4,262,651 

.308,240 
459,119 
363,346 
443,712 
635,991 
168,839 

81,234 
201,760 

47,017 
2,709,258 

37,900 
20,089 

61,997 

13,196 

6,970 

5,558 

818 

2,347 

13,292 

10,832 

42,353 

215,352 

101.862 
143,461 
1,825 
144,622 
391,770 

764 

701 

99 

9.647 

11,211 


The  Pro%-ince    18,758,656  10,705.693  14.741,391     3,826,327 

I  I 

120 


Spring  wheat. 


1897: 


10,331 
20,316 

1,484 
11,018 

2,  .538 
45,687 

7,414 

51,383 

61,337 

120,134 

142,908 
248,383 
391,291 

7,786 

13,113 

9,220 

44,228 

133,488 

12,174 

140,244 

360,253 

1,998 

12,266 

26,171 

100,753: 

260,1461 

290,522 

246,315 

248,159 

108,893] 

1,295,223 

67,440 

88,213 

56,881 

16,217 

23.249 

30;668 

61,729 

44,051 

27,763 

200,252 

312,749 

115,041 

1,044,253 

222,963 
154,075 
7,248 
126,818 
511.104 

6.846 

4,912 

6,510 

19,476 

20,638 

58,382 


1896. 


2,196 

9,243 

367 

418 

4,947 

1,264 

18,435 

6,656 
27,260 
35,330 
69,246 

101.486 
153,045 
254,531 

5,167i 

6,286 

3.  .388 

28,13C 

135,450 

9,011 

1.33,128 

320,560 

1,664 

3,836 

7,427 

61,196 

130,906 

195,400 

113,745 

120,640 

28,930 

663,744 

37,058 

56.055 

48,673 

18,216 

24,457 

22.431 

51,770 

48,860 

16.896 

148,430 

256,919 

84,820 

814,585 

133,004 

99,560 

6.805 

60.403 

299,772 

4.474 

2,824 

5,356 

19.1.57 

11,957 

43,768 


1882-97. 


16,060 
36,259 
14,060 
7,252 
28,710 
10,493 
112,834 

55,603 
147,471 
130,984 
334,058 

364,382 
372,179 
736,561 

84,310 

83,529 

11,396 

120,471 

245,716 

45,931 

229,730 

821,083 

18,681 

27,276 

42,537 

166,49.5 

315,448 

5.50,880 

390,929 

266,635 

62.672 

1,841,553 

60,956 
98,017 

[-    142,328 

58  892 

55,393 

92,896 

9.3,844 

46,316 

289,372 

326,616 

166,922 

1,431,552 

343  907 
245,8.55 
13,635 
151,497 
754,894 

13,633 

14.151 

2,277 

\      81.431 

111,492 


2,484,641     6,144,027 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUES-BARLEY    AND    OATS. 

Table  XI.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  at  market  prices  of  the 
total  crops  of  Barley  and  Oats  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years  1882-97. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin    

^Norfolk  . . . . 

Haldimand. 

Welland  .  . . 

Totals.. 


Lambton   . 
Huron  . . . . 

Bruce    

Totals . 


Grey    

Simcoe   . . . 
Totals. 


Middlesex  . 
Oxford   .... 

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington 

Waterloo. . . 

DuflE<»rin  .  . . 

Totals.. 


Lincoln  

Wentworth 

Halton    

Peel 

York     

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds   

Grenville 

Dundas 

Suormont 

Glengarry 

Prescotb 

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark  


Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough . 
Haliburton . . . 

Hastings 

Totals  . . . 


Muskoka  ... 
Parry  Sound 
Nipissing  . . . 
Manitoulin   . 

Algoma 

Totals . . . 


Barley. 


1897. 


43.332 

102.557 

47,975 

15,321 

26,419 

4,858 

240,462 

77,494 
155  108 

"^O.SSl 
313,483 

118,168 
203,621 
321,789 

132,888 

90,446 

49.804 

14:^,536 

179,815 

110,508 

69,021 

776.018 

7,545 

36,998 

39,652 

16.3,621 

264,655 

152,452 

162,477 

77,545 

60, 712 

971,657 

83,885 
27,022 
30,164 
17,469 
21,065 
16,028 
26,124 
21,831 
16.037 
51,716 
4,770 
18,113 
334,214 

119,813 

3.5,557 

1,414 

112,487 
269,271 

3,531 
5,318 
2,155 
2,71fi 
5,266 
18,986 


1896.    1882-97. 


42,548 

100,244 

49,192 

21,831 

34,818 

4,130 

252  763 


45,128 
97,436 
65,616 
60,915 

118,033 
34,082 

421,210 


Oats. 


117,570 
.315.717 
433,287 
I 
161,459 
119,145 

76,532 
183,892 
234,9821 
130,3441 

91,710' 
998,0641 

5,4301 

40,9411 

49,440 

214,484 

290,097 

208.053 

239.407 

86,177 

94,793 

1,229,428 

95,785 
28.291 
36,627 
26,183 
25,495 
19.205 
20.641 
22.520 
13,707 
70,951 
6,600 
23,979 
389,984 

149,301 

38,881 

1,662 

106,256 

296,100 

4,343 
5,156 
1,316 
2,091 
5,064 
17.970 


The  Province 3,245,880     4,003,639     8,190,849  19,507,897  16,595,998  20,745,906 



121 


1897. 


101,1751  165,288] 

193,579,  326,519 

91,289  205,270' 

386,043'  697,077: 


234,603 

.S88,995| 
623,598 

194,277' 
216.337 
20:^,066 
234,371 
434,159 
232,608 
140,977 
1,655,795 

40,749 
143,477 
141,836 
407,551 
074,136 
446,445 
503,728 
376,011 
316,723 
3,050,656 

319,980 
149,249 

[    114,206 

75,724' 
31,283 
25,633 
38,2971 
19,590 

110,221 1 
15,2451 
:35,296 

934,724! 

327,502 
120,0961 
2,779 
333, 764 1 
784,1411 

6,155 

7,615 
875 

9,003 

23,648 


379,205 
380,913 
322,749 
206,850 
219,023 
147,089 
1,656,435 

518,526 
1,137,401 

837.617 
2,493,544 

1.182,242 

788,937 

1,971,179 

829,000 
641,739 
172,270 
820,102 

1,094,549 
479,185 
562,955 

4,599,706 

151,628 
281,971 
203,005 
417,078 
885,069 
601,612 
378,739 
338,039 
139,291 
3,396,424 

2.31,442 
272,084 
3.50,304 
206,075; 
304,628 
212,276 
310,102 
302,961 
170,454 
614,162 
407,6.50 
348,799 
3,790,937 

511,952 

323,287 

37.140 

443,667 

1.316,046 

74,946 
92,911 
25,038 
32,073 
58,598 
283,566 


1896.    1882-97. 


320,131 
335,037 
283,395 
193,852 
207,593 
147,743 
1,487,751 

532,329 

896,553 

639,491 

2,068,373 


424,518 
464,344 
408,403 
276,606 
251,107 
199,649 
2,024,027 

558,933 
1,094,232 

771,841 
2,425,000 


827,0261  1,096,777 

723,4461   863,627 

1,550,4721  1,900,404 


728,642 
578,786 
185,650 
774,487 
854,068 
407,836 
464,188 
3,994,263 

124,773 
240,862 
185.289 
313,246 
701,667 
519,599 
372.330 
279,981 
122,407 
2,860,054 

175,895 
212,844 
339,859 
243,330 
245,795 
171,292 
234,032 
239.877 
163,518 
010,472 
341,229 
315,098 
3,299,241 

414,740 

323,222 

30.361 

332,848 

1,101,171 

67,697 
66,818 
25,242 
34,969 
39,947 
234,673 


963,218 
725,735 
2n,395 
885,526 

1,011,372 
499,105 
444,799 

4,751,1.50 

194,984 
342,823 
242,098 
416,129 
933,966 
683,138 
436,302 
327.450 
133,653 
3,710,543 

2»},237 
287,205 


I  -, 


09,826 

354,616 
274.431 
329,753 
288,866 
202,806 
737,043 
456,152 
421,706 
4,288,641 

■  507.185 

346,768 

46,183 

4.38,468 

1.338,604 

92,208 
69,345 
12,460 

j-   72,918 

246,931 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUES-RYE   AND    PEAS. 

Table  XII.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  at  market priceb  of 
the  total  crops  of  Rye  and  feas  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the 
bixteen  years  1882-9?. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk  . . . . 

Haldimand 

Welland  . . . 

Totals  , 


Lambton  . 
Huron  . . . . 
Bruce  .   . . . 

Totals . 


Grey   

Simcoe 
Totals. 


Middlesex . , 

Oxford    

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington 
Waterloo . . . 

DuflFerin 

Totals.. 


Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Halton   

Peel 

York 

Ontario . . 

Durham 

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward   . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac   

Leeds    

Grrenville 

Dundas 

Stormont  

Glengarry :.. 

Preocott   

Rassell 

Carleton  .    , 

Renfrew 

Lanark       

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough 
Haliburton 

Hastings    

Totals 


Muskoka  . . . 
Parry  Sound 
Nipissing  . . . 
Manitoulin   . 

Algoma 

Totals... 


The  Province 1,275,016        816,500 

I 

122 


Rye. 


1897. 


1896.    1882-97. 


13,3.^2 
15.097 
25,359 
72,272 
15,849 
26.237 
168,146 

9,341 
18,874 
24,143 
52,358 

24,874 
53  831 
78,705 

19,678 
24.933 
40,796 
7,281 
43,543 
31.170 
39.583 
206,984 

18,131 
34,507 
17.975 
55,739 
36,330 
73,101 
67,670 
75.981 
42,806 
422,240 

23,925 

17,971 

24,784 

20,902 

19.340 

9,937 

90 

269 

506 

13,189 

39,888 

16,198 

186,999 

35,236 1 
40,5341 

2, 858 1 

72.969 

151,597 

1,997 
1,364 
151 
2,820 
1,655 
7,987 


13,877 
16,233 
22,692 
53,723 
5,428 
13,263 
125,215 

7,673 

9,346 

9,608 

26,627 

10,812 
36,6.<7 
47,449 

19,071 
22,081 
33,818 
7,070 
27,632 
19,935 
27,974 
157.581 


8, 
17, 

7. 
12, 
12, 
53, 
47, 
61, 
22, 
242, 


1231 
435 
7001 
9051 
4831 
158 
040 
488 
1041 
4361 


13, 234 1 
12,9541 
13,010  1 
23,349,  / 
11,3821 
3,7061 
44 


677, 

14,945| 

27,0371 

13,8371 

134,1751 

10.911 
26,091! 
2,843' 
38,153 
77,998 

1,293 
834 
286 
1,394 
1,211 
5,018 


Pea?. 


10,505 
10,593 
16,264 
56,679 

7,572 

7,887 

109,500 

3,681 

4,807 

6,108 

14,596 

7,161 
25,458 
32,619 

8,459 
13,108 
13,689 

3,010 
12,9.52 

8,978 
11,396 
71,592 

5.377 
11,911 

6,4171 
15,300 
15.473 
30,114 
41,3551 
80.500 
58,859] 
265,306 

32,787 
29,324  j 

48,245 

14,625 

4,698 

502 

1.829 

2,793 

44,405 

64,269 

36,629 

280,106 

12,616 

29,936 

2,304 

95,738 

140,594 

3,167i 

3,274; 

353, 

2,385 

9,179 

923,492 


1897. 


15,711 
37,840 
57,824 
80.135 
88.144 
29.378 
309,032 

59,053 
351,543 
427,252 
837,848 


1896,   I  1882-97. 


20.769 
32.638 
60,252 
99,071 

120,478 
42,457 

375.665 

68,693 

437,889 

604,820 

1,111,402 


407,433  565,291 
386,876  642,560 
794,309,  1,207,851 


156,380 
1.33.449 
67,254 
211,247 
228,747 
139.9271 
10S,944 
1,043,948 

47,178 
93.1.58 
129.347| 
185,389, 
337.582 
201,4f4 
208,345 
237.2031 
144,778 
1,584,3841 

84,603 

71,360 

r   35, 797 1 

L   12,3441 

12,763: 

8.919, 

28,221 

22,6431 

19,156i 

69,288 

176,219 

68.631 

609,9441 

170,123 
156,844] 
15,0011 
165,725 
507,693 

24,2071 

32,206 

13,391 

f   46,536 

L   34,548 

150,888 

5,838,046 


138,903 
149,987 
109,085 
308,5.57 
370,197, 
174,6911 
188,5181 
1,439,938; 

45,848! 
116.020 
123,538 
184,8711 
370,876 
313,24£! 
347,299! 
292,292 
204,372, 
1,998,365 

91,480' 

81, 923 1 

35, 933  i  1 

14,604  / 

15,317 

13,9661 

26,3831 

25.2411 

17,928 

90,044 ! 

224,240 

104.6651 

741.724 


222.305 
206,171 
19,462 
196,051 
643,989! 


34,416 
37,330 
18,455' 
60.559  \ 
27,291  / 
178,051 


7,696,985 


S 

35.834 

83,941 
123,479 
166,071 
141,525 

43,584 
594,434 

94,295 

470,843 

547,489 

1,112,627 

590.534 

491.060 

1,081,594 

227.4.-S 
192.729 
112,340 
320.581 
469,268 
205,381 
167.200 
1,694,955 

54,519 
129,9.56 
134.052 
191,069 
401.435 
335,227 
292,579 
249,475 
172,840 
1,961,152 

100,365 
109,965 

65,510 

18,862 

25,367 

48,986 

64.002 

34,786 

143,850 

2.nO,352 

1.^6,541 

998,586 

211,234 
188,309 
19.081 
208,643 
627,267 

37.269 

28,252 

6,658 

77,242 

149,421 

8,220,036 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUES-CORN    AND    BUCKWHEAT. 
Table   XIII.     Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  of  market  prices 
of  the  total  crops  of  Corn  (for  husking  and  i^ilo)  and  Buckwheat  in  Ontario  in  the  years  ISOfi  and  1897 
with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years,  1^82-97. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk  . . . . 

Haldimand . 

Welland  . . . 

Totals  , 


Lambton   . 

Huron 

Bruce    . 

Totals 


Grey 

Simcoe 

Totals 


Middlesex  . 

Oxford 

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington . 

Waterloo. . . 

Dufferin  . . . 

Totals  , 


Lincoln  

Wentwcrth 

Halton 

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

Durham  

Northumberland . 
Prince  Edward  . . 
Totals 


Lennox  &  Addington, 

Frontenao   

Leeds   

Grenville 

Dundas 

Stormont 

Glengarry   

Preacott  

RosspU 

CIrleton 

Renfrew 

Lanaik 

Totals  


Corn. 


Total. 


Husking.        Silo. 


Victoria 

Peterborough . 
Haliburton  . . . 

Hastings 

Totals  ... 


Maakoka 

Parry  Sound 
Nipissing.  .. 
Manitoulin  . . 

Algoma 

Totals  .. 


The  Province. 


900,195 
703,280 
423,311 
274,551 
55.450 
123,403 
2,480,190 

260,755 

34,881 

12.268 

307,904 

17,312 
24,766 
42.078 

333,753 

184,786 

99,114 

13,135 

4,913 

28,.552 

1,891 

666,144 

140,581 
73,934 
23,496 
11,371 
27,100 
51,107 
.S3,3S9 
80.014 
125,989 
566,931 

61,640 
57,487 

141,552 
86.141 
91,286 
59,567 
27.036 
46.E85 
12,257 
30,078 
9,428 
20.340 

643,3971 

6, 925 1 

10.8851 

1,582 

126,830 

146,2221 

2,561  j 
l,129l 

562, 
1,300 

3901 
5,942 

4,858,808 


1897. 


25,546, 
47,424' 

75, 732 1 
76,190 
58,794 
38,744 
322, 430 1 

107,6061 
209,032 
187,034 
503,672 

260,460 
133,972! 
394,432 

I 

185,178' 

235,622, 

86, 122 1 

202,528, 

162,212; 

81,380, 

35.6801 

988,722 

57,992 
113,850 
101,052 
111,656 
237,222 
144,990 

9i,680 

139,560 

11?,2£6 

1,113,238 

I 
79,108 

161,592; 

198,866 

143,1381 

164,840 1 

141,578, 

192,4381 

48,236! 

45, 584  i 
198,644| 

70.7141 

164,890 

1,609,628! 

60, 684 1 

92,  .WJ 

6.614 

226,348 

386,002 

8,198 
4,148 
980 
4,550 
3,644 
21.520 

5,339,644 


1896. 


925,741 
750,704 
499,043 
350,741 
114,244 
162,147 
2,802,620 

368,361 
243,913 
199,302 
811,576 

277,772 
158,738 
436,510 

518,931 
420,408 
185,236 
215,663 
167,125 
109,932 
37,571 
1,654,866 

198,573 
187,784 
124,548 
123,027 
264,322 
196,097 
128,019 
219,574 
238,225 
1,680,169 

140,748 

219,079 

340,418 

229.279 

256,126 

201.145 

219,474 

94,821 

57,841 

228,722 

80,142 

185,230 

2,253,025 

67,609 

103  241 

8,196 

353,178 

532,224 

10,759 
5,277 
1,542 
5.850 
4,031 

27,462 

10,198,452 
T23 


1882-97. 


817,547 
741,624 
467,958 
391,490 
119,751 
186,519 
2,724,889 

416,846 
197,706 
149,769 
764,321| 
I 
208,779! 
113,926 
322,7051 

543,422 

382,179 

172,086 

168,229 

137. 90S 

90,986 

18,509 

1,513,314 

176,458 

181,805 

112,  .584 

71,922 

159,553 

131,879 

90,296 

186,430 

193,780 

1,304,707 

111,647 

164,705 

279,750 

167,829 

184,765 

104,040 

148,180 

73,358 

39,216 

150.648 

56.077 

137,619 

1,617,834 

36,905 

56  050 

3.723 

254,701 

351,379 

6,479 
4,074 

1,468 

2,578 

1,799 

16,398 


Buckwheat. 


736,656 
601,748 
353,493 
282,926 
49,314 
127,295 
2,151,432 

213,193, 
79,195, 

45,957 
338,345 

56,563, 

50,986 

107,549 

309,437 

218,922 

112,159 

59,736 

44,492 

41,527 

6,924 

793,197 

129,751 

119,251 

44,322 

33,007 

69,642 

74,009 

51,782 

103,961 

118,455 

744,180 

64,229 
66,487 

I  232,373 

82,925 
59,113 
58,142 
45,829 
23,722 
73,930 
23,601 
58,028 
788,379 

18,464 

23,162 

2,378 

1.53,320 

197,324 

3,631 

1,530 

418 

}   1,996 

7,575 


1897. 


1896.   1882-97. 


8,615,547  5,127,981 


S 

8,316 

7,093 

17,615 

37,673 

6,493 

16,976 

94,166 

7,526 
11,172 
11,045 
29,743 

28,007 
59,734 
87,741 

8,007 

7,095 

4,811 

4,219 

11,395 

1,< 

13,2£0 

50,445 

4,-566 

8,462 

2,171 

8.201 

22,729 

44,4871 

.53,408 

92,545 

79,705 

316,274 

44  607 
17,210 
30,178 
39,C99 
22,868 
25,575 
14,723 
10,824 
9,468 
49,756 
17,544 
40,458 
322,310 

48,389 

28,512 

3,794 

.50,769 

131,164 

2,458 
1.737 
789 
1 ,260 
1,169 
7,413 

1,039,256 


6,836 
5,103! 
13, 660 1 
43,132| 
4,4001 
13,7331 
86,864 

4,020, 
3,5321 
3,668| 
11,220 

10,935 
42,596 
53,531 

8,678 
8,694 
5,530 
3,972 
5,703 
891 
6,395 
39.863 

3,773 
4,004 
1,848 
3,010 

1 9,088 ; 
39, 007 1 
48,880, 
83,,S33| 
61,905 
264,848, 

34,208 

14,031 

21,753 

36,160 

l.'^,406 

13,954 

8,052 

12,124 

9,236 

43,073 

13,  .340 

27,212 

246,549 

26,133 

16,899 

4,027 

38, 437  i 
85,496 

1,836 
1,430 
603 
863 
1,016 
5,748 

794,119 


8,104 
8,755 
14,131 
39,581 
5,264 
15,444 
91,279 

4,976 

3,443 

3,733 

12,152 

6,213 
16,079 
22,592 

6,088 
5,.562 
5,222 
1,466 
2,773 
1.046 
2,516 
24,673 

5,691 

7,054 

1,5C9 

2,293 

7,  .350 

21,953 

39,664 

82,459 

72,247 

240,220 

.=.5,189 
16,742 

I  49,388 

17,139 
20,247 
10.884 
12  642 
9,331 
.34,142 
1.^,443 
41.810 
260.9.07 

17,751 

14,110 

2.626 

43,7.':0 

78,237 

3,077 

l.i56 

492 

}    1,-184 

6,?09 

736,119 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A. 1898 


VALUES  — BEANS    AND    POTATOES. 

Table  XIV.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  at  market  prices  of 
the  total  crops  of  Beans  and  Potatoes  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average 
for  the  tixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Beans . 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand   . 

Welland  . .  - . 

Totals. 


Lambton    . . . 

Huron 

Bruce    

Totals. 


Grey    

Simcoe    

Totals. 


Middlesex.. . 

Oxford    

Brant 

Perth 

Wellington    . 
Waterloo   . . . 

Dufiferin 

Totals . 


Lincoln  

Wentworth    

Halton   

Peel 

York.    

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward    . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds  

Grenville     

Dundas 

Stormont  , . . . 

Glengarry 

Prescott   

Russell   

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 


Victoria  

Peterborough 
Haliburton    . . 

Hastings' 

Totals . . 


Muskoka  , . . 
Parry  Sound 
Nipissing  . . . 
Manitoulin    . 

Algoma 

Totals. 


The  Province 


1897. 

S 

6,512 

370,188 

61,078 

10,847 

3,7i5 

11,655 

463,905 

24,727 
5.124 
2,828 

32,679 

4,327 
10,467 
14,794 

16,338 

4,752 

7,247 

535 

608 

795 

2,184 

32,459 

1,112 
2.726 
464 
3,664 
4,176 
3,776 
6,545 
7.4r2 
4.929 
34,844 


2,268 

1,800 

561 

6,522 

11,151 

575 
443 
310 
170 
251 
1,749 


1896. 


8,806 

463,838 

85,142 

13,532 

3,898 

l.^lll 

590,327 

34,831 
4,291 
3,406 

42,528 

6,910 

7,463 

14,373; 

i 

35,368' 
3,628 
5,418 
1,416 
985 
1,272 
1,185 

49,272 

1,921 
2,800 
790 
2..S39 
6,662 
4,715 
7,347 

1.5.978 
9,583 

52,135 


2,901 

3,269 

5,904 

5,929 

2,591 

2,766 

1,737 

1,638 

3.237 

3,543 

4,805 

2,380 

1,7.52 

2,777 

4,842 

4,920 

2,999 

2,465 

8,690 

12,067 

5,181 

8,231 

3,614 

2.804 

48,253 

52,792 

4,159 

1,425 

751 

10,116 

16,451 

265 
390 
205 

274' \ 
102  J 
1,236 


1882-97. 


Potatoes. 


14,068 
364,160 

47,592 

11,549 
3,983 

13,847 
455,199 

15,567 
3,259 
2,368 

21,194 

4,115 
4,631 
8,746 

14,580 

5,901 

6,065 

1,405 

747 

803 

722 

30,223 

3,235 
2,995 
758 
1,370 
4,590 
6,167 
8,122 

15,489 
9,359 

52,085 

4,830 
6,315 

7,925 

5,628 
4,-322 
3,855 

11,847 
4,316 

10,871 

10,830 
5,417 

76,156 

2,764 

2,476 

604 

8,113 

13,9571 

810; 

4341 
2291 


453 
1,926 


1897. 


139,790 
95,276 
77,131 
93,625 
32,418 
36,341 

474,581 


1896. 


86,153 

107,499 

108,562 

98,902 

37,911 

71,251 

510,278 


93,331'  105,239 

181,489  191,506 

180,6511  168,C41 

455,471  464,786 


5sl/ 


272,403] 
324,435; 
596,838 
I 
166,632 
101,711 
80,389 
124,693 
206,650 
112,123 
197,839 
990,037 

65,270 
125,363 

59,936 
174,583 
297,371 
201,541 
125,693 
173,862 

63,286 
1,286,905 

122,936 
149,944 
•  169,822 
160,431 
106,453 

72,089 
114.2.51 
107,055 

66,474 

269,924 

198,319 

191,781 

1,729,479 

155,603 
181,963 
30.790 
226,569 
594,925 

82,535 
79,898 
39,401 
40,625 
53,523 
295,982 


639,834    819,114'   659,486  6.424,218 

124 


288,4.55 
311,080 
599,535 

232,027 
111,710 
91,437 
171,458 
257,686 
108,956 
166,1.50 
1,139,424 

53,883 
172,423 

48,425 
1.31,917 
251,111 
172,662 

94,790 
134,215 

.56,147 
1,115,.573 

72,756 

107,121 

120,470 

101,075 

79,451 

52,760 

75,831 

100,530 

47.914 

212,963 

166,972 

121,899 

1,259,742 

80,989 

79,132 

25,559 

128,972 

314,652 

45,885 
53.317 
27,248 
26,724 
24.871 
178,045 

5,582,035 


61   Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUES  — MANGEL-WURZELS    AND   CARROTS. 

Table  XV.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Councies  the  estimated  value  of  the 
total  crops  of  Mangel-wurzels  and  Carrots  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly 
average  for  the  sixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Counties . 


Essex 

Kent  

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand  . 

Welland 

Totals 

Lambton    . . . 

Huron 

Bruce 

Totals . 


Grey   

Simcoe   

Totals. 


Middlesex. . . 

Oxford    

Brant  

Perfth 

Wellington   . 
Waterloo  . . . 

Dufferin 

Totals. 


Lincoln  

Wentworth  . .    . . 

Halton    

Peel 

York     

Ontario 

Durham    

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward    . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac  

Leeds  

Grdu^ille 

Dundas 

Stormont   

Glengarry   

Prescott 

Russell 

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark  

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough 

Haliburton    . . 

Hastings    . . . . 

Totals.. 


Muskoka  . . . 
Parry  Sound 
Nipissing  . . . 
Manitoulin    . 

Algoma 

Totals 


Mingel-wurzels. 


1897. 


17,5.58 

19,183 

34,296 

18,066 

7,933 

.5,194 

102.230 

34,165 
13.S,251 

47.6851 
215,101 

32.782 
30,669 
63,451 

99,658 
8.^582 
30,973 

124,1.55 

91,999 

38,554 

6,342 

477,263 

12,570 
45.801 
39, 522  i 
42,973 

101.291 

^3.680 

30,518 

28,860 

4,584 

359,799 

3,516 

11.470 

12,894 

10,331 

9.124 

7,296 

11,. 553 

3, 7781 

7,605 

33,  .=^68 

7,560 

11,891 

135,  .586 

46,5.^7 
21,094 
963 
19,725 
88,319 

1,901 
1,1891 
1,0801 
1,464 
8881 
6,522: 


1896.  1882-97. 


S 

16,380 

22,287 

36,178 

15,890 

9,275 

5,563 

105,573 

41,694 
134,772 

35,798 
212,264 

24,584 
22,580 
47,164 

116,245 

89,682 
28,.S20 

155,1871 

90,222 

27.998 

8.611 

516,265 

8,758 
35,179 
27,064 
96,262 
72,966 
43,261 
19,295 
19, 958  i 

6, 766 1 
2.59,509 

3,4.561 
9,646' 

10,982 
6,577 
8,398 
7,967 
5,610 
4,994 

14,271 

30,471 
7,395 

11,554 
121,321 

50,821 
ll,2fi5 
862 
16,676 
79,624 

1,510 
660 
464 
2,420 
1,178 
6,232 


Carrots. 


1897. 


The  Province   1,448,2711    1,347,952        833,802        554,204 

125 


10,414 

12,919 

15,751 
9,160 
5,130 
4,682 

58,056 

19,439 

77,502 

19,925 

116,866 

15,667 
21,416 
37,0831 

61,3651 
.55,251 
17,172| 
81,028 
47.158 
19,809, 
4,820 
286,603. 

8,183| 
21,598i 
19,505| 
18,648! 
66. 793  i 
30,8.50 
19, 368 1 
18,154 
4,144 
207,243 

3,560 
6,216 

10, 747 1 - 

4.867 
2,430 
.3, 644 1 
2,7491 

5,138; 

19, 81 9 1 

4. 379 1 

6,489, 

70,0381 

i 

29,162 

11,132 

352 

14,508 

55,154 

1,172 
439 
159 

989 

2,759 


8,092 

8,979 

12,319 

13,338 

5,810 

3,014 

51,552 

15,174 
17,192 
16,428 
48,794 

13,325 
20,088 
33,413 

44,240 
13.520 

7,054 
14,678, 
12,772 
14,910, 

5,139, 
112,313 

8,835 
16,808 

5,543 
22,491 
22,386 

6,284 
14,386 
14,293 

2,852 
113,878 

3,067 

9,757 

6,748 

12,049 

11.849| 

8,029 

16.090 

7,355 

11,8531 

18,9.571 

5,5841 

7,880, 

119,2181 

7,719, 

27, 028 1 

7421 

20,836 

56,325 

7,119 
4,043 
750 
3,413 
3.386 
18,711 


1896.    1882-97. 


12,541 
9,250 

18,040 

13,575 
5,129 
2,787 

61,322 

30,761 
18,769 
16,254 
65.784 

15,572 
20,737 
36,309 

54,102 
20,722 
10,934 
19,3941 
17,7061 
18,980, 

7,1241 

148,962| 

I 

7,4101 
14,143 

2,358 
12,090 
I9,018i 

4, 187 1 

9,586, 
12,2461 

3,049! 
84,C87 

2,9571 

8,829, 

8,010 

8,491 

11,480 

10,868 

10,894 

7,117 

14,388 

16,766 

6,205 

10,828 

116,833 

12,213 
15,280 
1,464 
18.596 
47,5.53 


5,  .346 
4,704 
619 
3,407n 
2,379  / 
16,455 

577,305 


4,256 
6,849 
9,382 
7,508 
3,211 
2,938 
34,144 

10,931 

22,052 
13,375 
46,358 

21.600 
25,128 
46,728 

26,243 

16,711 

9,652 

17,591 

13,786 

16,441 

5,837 

106,261 

5,198 
10,888 

5,115 
13,113 
29,472 
18,272 
19,10& 
12,145 

2,087 
115,398 

2,391 
6,132 

10,199 

6,439 
3,687 
4,656 
2,992 
7,744 

20,527 
5,317 
7,439 

77,523 

12,711 

16,642 

947 

9,420 

39,720 

3.780 

2,237 

240 

2,157 

8,414 

474,546 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUES-TURNIPS    AND    HAY    AND    CLOVER. 

Table  XVI.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  value  at  market  prices  of 
the  total  crops  of  Turnips  and  Hay  and  Clover  in  Ontario,  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  and  the  yearly 
average  for  the  sixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Counties. 


Essex    

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk  . . . . 
Haldimand 
Welland  . . . 
Totals . . 


Lambton  . . 

Huron 

Bruce  

Totals 


Grey   

Simcoe 

Totals. 


Middlesex   

Oxford   

Brant    

Perth 

Wellington    . . 

Waterloo   

Dufferin  

Totals 


Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Halton  . . . 

Peel 

York 

Ontario    

Durham  

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac 

Leeds    

Grenville . . 

Dundas 

Stormont 

Glengarry   

Prescott 

Russell 

Carlton . . 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough 
HaliburtoD    . . 

Hastings 

Totals.... 


Muskoka   . . . 
Parry  Sound. 

Nipissing 

Manitoulin . . 

Algoma    

Totals  . . 


Turnips. 


The  Province. 


1897. 


1896.  1882-97. 


8.641 

6,341 

17,263 

5;-^.874 

8,664 

7,306 

102,089 

1«,189 
377,212 
.^84,655 
780,056 

492,231 
382, 4«8 
874,699 

129,992 
375,488 
219,420 
251,552 
656,484 
258,675 
223,3231 
2,114,934 

18,858 
167,9231 
119,5011 
118,619 
349,736 
591,987 1 
360,488, 
276,953' 
5, 929 1 
2,009,994 

3,391 

24.138 

35,376 

7,346 

8,580 

3,6021 

13,773 

8,991 1 

39, 192 1 

91,4581 

44,1901 

55,188 

335,225 

212, 421 1 
148,356 
10,306 
121.347 
492,430 

27,191 
46,894 
5,895 
15,951 
24,357 
120,288! 


5,622 

9.703 

23.206 

70,300 

6,586 

7,673 

123,090 

19,314 
395,794 
377,472 
792,580 

537,453 
336,600 
874,053 

144,300 
44'?,  159 
256,542 
296,314 
749,696 
291,490 
248,14:h 
2,428,644 

14,227 
203,161 
104,600 
103,106 
277,357 
590,172 
332,902 
260,603 
8,054 
1,894,182 


4, 
22. 

26. 
8. 
6, 
4, 
8, 
10 
22, 

loi; 

51. 

5o: 
317: 


,417 

,388 

,600]  1 

278!) 

3031 

,750 

066 

,5411 

,5.50 

199; 

,414 

,629! 

135' 


211,9111 

121,262 

10,010 

99,876 1 

443,059 

26. 10-2 1 
46,9771 
4,  .388 
14,1.33 
17.1411 
108,741 


6,8)1 
12,175 
16,193 
49,904 
4,243 
6,677 
96,003 

14,330 
306,813 
282,424 
603,567 

420,842 
21^,021 
632,863 

81,632 
287, 9S1 
155,596 
213,022 
605,170 
224,190 
133,242 
1,700,843 

10,316 

135,667 

86,821 

69,023 

191,372 

55'>,996 

267,647 

168,276 

4,062 

1,486,180 

4,054 
13,988 

17,093 

3.690 

2,837 

4,793 

6,664 

19,310 

66,365 

26,282 

26,556 

191,632 

1.59,342 

75,732 

9,090 

48,242 

292,406 

29,408 

27,071 

2,844 

22,389 

81,712 


Hay  and  Clover. 


6,829,7151    6,981,484'    5,085,206 
126 


1897. 


597,455 
878,523 
869,  .383 
462,973 
720.377 
618,629 
4,147,340, 

1,020,544 
1,530,3451 
1,270,479 
3,821,368^ 

1,418, 423| 
1,038.508 
2,456,931 1 

1,416,643 

1,004,302, 

419,894 

1,144,6711 

1,187,005 

557,728 

436,-^94 

6,166,8371 

520,0691 
.509,536; 
367,501 
.^45, 573 1 
753,  .570 
730,8091 
430,9511 
411,113 
265.8-:*2 
4,334,954' 

446,136 
706, 6 13 1 
531,0181 
332,326 
350,147 
300,756 
339,643 
2.59,119 
161,744 
386,191 
455,557 
325,807 
4, 595,057  i 

271,957 
2.50,144 

97,504 

578,098 

1,197,703 

219,493 
171,078 
45,693 
86,404 
123,841 
646,509 

27,366,699 


1896. 


1882-97. 


.586,811 
798,716 
834,745 
352,972 
327,436 
394,508 
3,295,188 

798,997 

881,848 

726,464] 

2,407,o09 

806,664 

787,787 

1,594,451 

1.259,329 
760,499 
261,970 
665.713 
765,727 
277,148 
270,595 

4,260,981 

229,503 
239,357 
167,290 
190,076 
492,373 
563,328 
504,309 
442,086 
118,338 
2,946,660 


395, 
349, 
489, 
353, 
330, 
257, 
484, 
440, 
249, 
705, 
635, 
.501, 
5,193, 


631 
893 
382 
611 
195 
904 
3291 
5081 
667 
575 
163 
201 
059 


463,614 

346,786 

70,218 

466,218 

1,346,836 

226,406 
156,.506 
93,799 
188,  .547 
169,381 
834,639 

21,879,123 


590,137 
797,552 
756,-567 
510,505 
606,909 
618,539 
3,880,209 

8:35,698 
1,-347,133 
1,085,692 
3,268,523 

1,417,806 
1,048,124 
2,465,930 

1,368,3.36 
948,157 
428,992 

1,020,850 

1,216,560 
596,830 
441,842 

6,021.567 

522,459 
598,839 
421,601 
498,261 
990,109 
748,126 
576,261 
637,201 
363,117 
5,355,974 

600,419 
740,299 

1,340,692 

540,779 
482.465 
581,630 
526,852 
278,104 
853,672 
714,263 
796.730 
7,455,905 

464,160 
408,371 
106,863 
813,-562 
1,792,946 

252,510 

147,637 

33,153 

186,269 

619,569 

30,860,623 


U  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32), 


A,  1898 


V,A  LUES— ALL    FIELD    CROPS    AND    WO;OL 

Tablk  XVII.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  aggregate  value  at 
market  prices  of  all  Field  Crops  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  and  the  yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years,  1882-97  ;  also  the  values  at  niirket  prices  of  th=i  total  chp  of  wool  in  1896  and  1897,  with 
the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years,  18S2-97. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk    .    . 

Haldimaad 

Welland  ... 

Totals.. 


Lainbton    . 

Huron  .  . . . 

Bruce    . . . . 

Totals. 


Grey    

Simcoe   . . . 
Totals . 


Middlesex   , 

Oxford 

Brant .... . . 

Perth 

Wellington 
Waterloo  . . 
Dufferin  . . , 
Totals  . 


Lincoln . . . . 

Wentworth  

Halton    

Peel 

York  

Ontario 

Durham  ...    . . . . 

Northumberland . 
Prince  Edward  . . 
Totals  


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac    

Leeds 

Greaville 

Dundas  ....   

Stormoat . . 

Glengarry 

Preicott  

Russell 

Carleton 

Ranfraw 

Lanark     

Totals 


All  Field  Crops. 


1897. 


2,753,835 
3,879,617 
2,883,971 
2,196,064 
1,939,484 
1,348,797 
15,001,768 

3,0(57,549 

5,525,909 

4,264,680 

12,858, 138 

4,973,699 
4,946,761 
9,920,460 

5,054,614 
3,936,391 
1,981,927| 
4,132,172 
4,385,807 
2,695, 895  i 
2,004,521 
24,191,32 


1896. 


1,434  302 

827 

2,160,040 

1,511 

1,745,352 

1.130 

2,449,495 

1,643, 

4,476,310 

3,252, 

3,454.230 

3,017, 

2,350,643 

2,392, 

2,348,814 

2,244, 

1,231,133 

9ii 

21,630,319 

16,982, 

Victoria 

Peterbjrough. 
Halibui'tcn    . . 

Hastings 

Totals  ... 


Muskoka  . . 
Parry  Sound 
Nipisiing  . . . 
Manitoulin  . 
Algoma  . . . . 
Totals . . . 


I  The  Province. 


1,288,696 

1,632,120 

1,641,661 

1,126,098 

1,1.56  244 

905,011 

1,159,011 

891,498 

593,630 

2,042,456 

1,758.253 

1,399,638 

15,594,316 

1,901,251 
1,539,315 
219,349 
2,413,821 
6,073,736 

464,9.55 
447,880 
143,010 
271,445 
335,117 
1,662,437 

106,952,471 


2,277,604 
3.490,025 
2,413,210 
1,784,933 
1,029,292 
1,004,281 
11,999,345 

2,872,634 
4,001,605 
3,114,793 
9,989,032 

3,766,176 
4,314,154 
8,080,330 

4,451,426 
3,2.i3,469 
1,558,464 
3,331,375 
3,887,196 
2,051.746 
1,747,871 
20,261,547 


,083 
,095 
,455 
,867 
,770 
,950 
,580 
,395 
,368 
.563 


1882-97. 


2,530,365 
3,651,017 
2,672,141 
2,140,446 
1,734,765 
1,456,124 
14,184,858 

2,725,403 

5,166,057 

4,007,487 

11,898,947 

4,986,558 
4,842,9.57 
9,829,515 

4,817,916 
3,604,556 
1,856,463 
3,861,575 
4.762,489 
2,705,809 
1.921,529 
23,530,337 

1,381,507 
2,185,487 
1,581,336 
2,413,838 
4,667,640 
3, 889,802 1 
2,891,163 
2,739,191 
1,451,610 
23,201,574 


1,062, 

1.076, 

1,48S, 

1,014, 

968, 

68  J, 

1,078, 

991, 

613, 

2,213 

1,805, 

1.461 

14, 462, 


I 
428 
962, 
159, 
2671 
230 

540 ; 

327] 
2431 
321 
973 
196 
074 
720 


Wool. 


1,636, 
1,715, 

3,156, 

1,327, 
1,067, 
1,278, 
1,219, 
721, 
2,727, 
2, 156, 
1,983, 
18,989, 


527 
796 

445 

465 
534 
910 
012 
314 
068 
156 
485 
742 


1,921,499 
1,525,144 
180,210 
1.829,997 
5,456,850 

426, 492 1 
381.2861 
179,747 
372,395  \ 
307,828  J 
1,667,748 1 


88,900,135 
~T27 


2.372,416 
1,767,079 
246,339 
2.733,242 
7,119,076 

522.108 

363,887 

75,203 

532,874 

1,494,078 

110,248,127 


1897. 


16,974 
27,193 
25,596 
15,570 
15,389 
10,381 
111,103 

29,479 

46,904 

51,887 

128,270 

61.397 

60.873 

122,270| 

I 

39,2921 

12,001' 

9,479! 

24,2851 

49,108, 

13,8251 

20,865 

168,855' 

i 

9,334 

11,501 

12,462 

14,082 

29,49d 

29,633 

21,683 

18,887 

5,450 

152,528 


26,6291 
14,657 1 
4,800 
18,918, 
65,004! 

9,553 
9,242 
1,220 
9,088 
4,614 
33,717 

945,757 


1896, 


18, 109 
24,133 
25,450 
18,473 
17,279 
11,566 
115,010 

30,424 

52,095 

60,248 

142,767 

70,767 

63,582 

134,349 

40,047 
12,787 
11,088 
27,029 
54,769 
17,024 
21,532 
184,276 

10,503 
14,006 
13,896 
17,896 
32,855 
31,415 
21,941 
21.518 
7,936 
171,966 


1882-97. 


9,548 

11,169 

15,079 

14,117 

11,623 

13,297 

6,i83 

7,584 

6,300 

5,788 

6,729 

7,848 

10,367 

12,316 

8,425 

9,445 

6.658 

7,045 

22,209 

24,816 

30,927 

36,141 

29,562 

31,212 

64,010 

180,778 

24,108 
15.368 
4.791 
20,571 
64,838 

9,255 
9,301 
1,350 
9,030 
4,055 
32,991 

1,026,975 


15,959 
23,027 
26,358 
17,543 
19,218 
12,782 
114,887 

29,686 
54,127 
55,924 

139,737 

4 

75,896 

.52,101 

127,997 

43,417 
18,465 
13,542 
32,690 
51,899 
21,261 
20,072 
201,346 

10,488 
15,896 
13,747 
18,823 
31,239 
31,113 
23,510 
21,440 
8,405 
174,661 

13,640 
16,724 

29,189 

8,556 

8.871 

12,762 

9,935 

7,570 

25,638 

33,309 

30,955 

197,148 

24,212 

16,471 

3.685 

22.524 

66,892 

6,947 

4,892 
428 

7,341 

19,608 

1,042,276 


61    Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUE    PER    ACRE-FAL"L    WHEAT,    SPRING    WHEAT,    BARLEY 

Table  XVIII.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  market  value  of  crops, 
per  acre  of  Wheat  and  Barley  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the 
sixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Fall  wheat. 

Spring  wheat. 

Barley. 

Counties. 

1897. 

1896. 

1882-97. 

1897. 

$  c. 
12  18 
10  85 

"'9'83 
10  45 
10  53 

10  96 

11  08 

11  63 
10  27 

10  88 

9  59 

12  26 

11  13 

12  50 
14  07 

14  78 

12  50 
8  17 

13  91 

8  25 

9  03 

12  89 

11  16 

12  97 

11  87 

15  33 

13  13 
13  36 
13  36 

12  65 

13  43 

12  03 

11  48 

flO  85 

no  77 

11  16 

10  69 

12  03 
9  98 

12  81 

13  44 

11  87 
11  40 

11  86 

12  10 

11  24 
8  33 

12  10 
11  76 

10  22 

11  32 

13  20 
riO  22 
\  13  68 

11  65 

11  84 

1896. 

$  c. 
7  34 
y  46 
7  98 

5  65 

7  48 

8  96 
8  39 

6  92 
6  92 
6  57 

6  73 

7  62 
10  03 

8  91 

8  40 
7  41 

6  71 

7  98 

7  91 

8  90 

9  88 
8  64 

5  86 

6  43 

8  40 
10  31 
10  31 

9  18 

8  97 

9  39 
9  39 
9  44 

10  24 
9  81 

10  80 

11  01 

12  92 
12  07 

11  93 

12  50 

13  27 
13  56 
11  65 

9  60 
11  54 

10  03 
8  68 

8  97 

9  25 
9  36 

9  46 

8  33 
13  77 

9  46 

11  51 
10  26 

9  73 

1882-97. 

$  c. 
12  58 
12  79 
12  72 
11  75 

10  80 

11  42 

11  99 

12  08 
11  79 
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12  67 

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Brant 

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1  12  09 

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Haliburton  

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11  25 

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12  75 

12b 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUE  PER  ACR  E— O  ATS,  RYE  ANL»  PEAS. 

Tablb  XIX.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Countips  the  market  value  of  crops 
per  acre  of  Oats,  Rye  and  Peas  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the 
Bixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Counties. 


Oats. 


1897.        1896.      1882-97 


Rye. 


1897.        1896.       1882-97 


Peas. 


1897.        1896.      1882-97. 


Bssex 

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk  . . . . 
Haldimand 
Welland  . 
Totals  , 


Lambton    . 

Huron 

Brace 

Totals . 


Grey    

Simcoe   . . . 
Totals . 


Middlesex   . 

Oxford    .. 

Brant 

j   Perth    

I   Wellington 

Waterloo   ,  . 

Dufferin  .  . . 
Totals  . 


Lincoln        

Wentworth 

Haiton     

Peel 

York     

Ontario 

Durham   

Northumberland 

Prince  Edward    . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington . 

Fronteaao  

Leed.^ 

(Jrenville   

Danda«    

Stormont 

Glengarry    

Prescott 

Rupsell 

Carlwton     

Renfrew  

L»nark       

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough . 
Haliburton 

Hastintfs 

Totals   ... 


Muskoka    . . . 
Parry  Sound 
Nipissingr 
Manitoulin 
Aigoma 
Totils 


The  PMrvince 


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9  B.l.  (1-4) 


129 


61    Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VALUE    PER    ACRE  — CORN,     BUCKWHEAT    AND    BEA.NS. 

Tablk  XX.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  market  value  of  crops 
p-^r  acre  of  Corn  (for  huskiner  and  silo  and  the  average  for  the  two),  Buckwbeat  and  Beans  in  Ontario  m 
the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average  for  the  sixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Corn. 

Buckwheat. 

Beans. 

Counties. 

Husk- 
ing, 

Silo. 

Average. 

1897. 

1896. 

1882  97. 

1897. 

1896. 

?    c. 

10  40 

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13  68 

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10  26 
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11  29 

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8  89 

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11  56 
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12  52 

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10  94 
6  36 

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10  20 

9    81; 

n  98 

1882-97. 

1897. 

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1882-97. 

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Norfolk 

23  86 
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17  17 
14  42 

18  19 
16  62 

Haldimand    

Welland     

17  72 
15  82 

14  81 
12  75 

16  60 
14  26 

Totals 

17  48 

20  98 

25  88 

26  28 
24  78 

27  41 

26  30 

27  02 

15  49 

14  63 

22  58 
24  22 
18  36 

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21  00 

23  28 

17  06 
16  15 

20  37 

Bruce      . . 

Totals 

Grey 

Simcoe 

18  22 

16  90 

18  29 

17  54 

Totals 

17  89 

Middlesex    

Oxford 

Brant  

P^^rth 

24  20 

26  76 

25  42 
25  78 
25  90 
22  06 

27  68 

25  39 

21  90 
ii2  54 

26  22 
26  34 

17  16 
20  48 
IS  02 
24  m 
24  42 
IS  6S 

17  42 
22  10 
16  22 
21  62 

Wellington   

Waterloo    

16  98 

17  84 

Dufferin 

Totals . 

26  00    16  92 
19  70,  18  29 

18  51 
18  09 

Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Hilton 

Peel     

17  00 

18  92 
23  54 
23  65 

16  09 
18  42 
21  11 
16  69 

18  28 
20  10 
17  23 

19  30 

York 

13  40 

26  82 

24  32 

17  93 

20  40 

Ontario 

15  37  i  25  02 
11  23    24  00 

21  50    16  98 

18  52    14  88 

18  46 

Durham    

17  97 

Northumberland. . . 

Prince  Edward 

Totals 

Lennox  &  Add'gton 

Frontenac    

Leeds 

Grenville    

12  21 

13  00 
13  87 

12  61 

13  99 
15  37 

15  56 

16  15 
16  35 
13  59 
12  81 
10  05 
12  02 

24  00 
26  26 

25  04 

22  24 

28  28 

26  25 
26  82 

29  42 

17  70 
17  06 

19  69 

16  66 
22  30 

20  28 

21  09 

22  76 

16  84 

15  99 

17  08 

14  09 
20  20 

18  51 

18  95 

19  72 

17  54 
22  33 

16  84 
16  35 

20  82 
20  83 
22  15 
19  06 

16  94 

18  58 
12  66 

14  42 

15  18 

14  08 

15  03 
12  66 

15  72 

16  81 
14  67 

17  35 

17  99 

18  98 
18  66 

220s 
23  13 

}    19  96 

Dundas 

23  45. 

Stormont 

Glengarry    

Prescott 

Russell   

C  \rleton     

34  14 
33  88 

26  46 

27  46 
29  5t) 

25  S2 
28  62 
17  36 
20  08 
24  80 

24  84 
20  51 

25  81 
20  65 
22  23 

Renfrew 

9  46    2o  40    21  20 
q  46    28  40    23  28 

21  36 
24  51 

Totals 

Victoria     

14  13 

12  21 
14  97 

7  29 
11  62 
11  77 

8  08 
7  68 

9  86 
11  82 

7  09; 

8  66 

14  50 

28  54    22  10 

1 

21  82    22  45 

22  96 

16  36 

Peterborough    

Haliburton 

Hastings    .•... 

Totals 

Muskoka    .     

Parry  Sound 

Nipiasiog   ...      

Manitoulin    

Algeria 

Totals 

The  Province    

26  60 
29  14 
25  78 
25  86 

25  3S 
20  14 
20  00 

24  46 

27  20 
23  96 

25  55' 

24  59 
IX  46 
17  94 
19  46 

16  8t 
14  95 
14  55 
19  76 
21   34 

17  34 

18  75 

15  87 

17  26 

18  31 

17  38 

16  88 

18  OB 
20  88 

}    19  70 

18  17 

17  73 

130 


(jl  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A. 1898 


VALUE   PER    ACRE-POTATOES,    MANGEL-WURZKLS    AND    CARROTS. 
Tablk    XXI.      Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Countifis  the  market  value  per  acre  of 

Potatoes,  Mangel-wurzels  and  Canots  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly  average- 

for  the  aixteen  years,  1882-97. 


Potatoes. 


Mangei-wuizels. 


Counties. 


Essex 

Kent      

Elgin    

Norfolk  . . . , 

Haldimand 

Welland... 

Totals.. 


1897. 


Lambton  . 
Huron  .    . . 

Bruce  

Totals . 


Grey    

Simcoe  . . . . 
Totals 


Middlesex . 
Oxford    . . . 

Brant  

Perth 

Wellington 
Waterloo    . , 
Dufferin. . . . 
Totals.. 


Lincoln  

Wentworth 

Halton    

Peel 

York   

Ontario   

Durham 

Northumberland . 

Prince  Edward  .  . 

Totals 


Lennox  and  Addington 

Fron:enac    

Leeds  

Grenville   

Dundas 

Stormont     

Glengarry    ... 

Prescott  

Russell   

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals .'''■'" 


Victoria   

Petprb'>rough 
Haliburton    . . 

Hastings 

Totals..   . 


Mnskoka 
Parry  Sound . 
Nipis3ing. . .. 
Manitoulin    . 

Algoma 

Totels... 


The  Provinoe. 


39  10 
26  33 
25  94 

25  94 

21  15 
14  36 

26  60 

22  31 
35  91 
39  10 

32  88 

37  11 

38  30 
37  75 

25  93 

33  92 

30  82 
29  13 

31  92 

34  71 
44  29 

32  43 

28  33 

29  13 

35  11 

36  71 
31  )2 

37  91 
37  91 
35  51 

33  12 
33  81 

43  89 

39  90 
52  27 
50  67 
46  28 
39  50 
49  08 

46  28 

47  48 
49  C8 

47  88 
61  84 

48  20 

48  28 
67  46 

44  69 
42  29 
47  84 

61  05 

57  86 
63  04 
57  06  ' 
63  04  I 
60  17  ' 


1896. 


S  c. 
25  41 
28  82 

31  18 

25  94 
•^G  20 

24  10 
27  12 

26  46 
36  68 

34  32 

32  98 

38  78 

33  54 

35  87 

31  44 

32  75 

33  27 
40  87 

34  85 

32  23 

33  01 

33  97 

21  22 

25  63 
25  68 

27  77 

25  68 

28  30 

26  72 
26  46 

26  20 

27  44 

25  91 

28  56 

34  32 

29  61 

32  75 
28  03 

33  27 
42  71 

34  32 

35  37 
37  20 

37  73 
33  54 

25  15 
23  84 
35  11 

23  32 

24  59 

33  27 

38  78 
41  92 

39  30 
35  63 
37  23 


1882-97. 


$  c. 
S8  57 
47  31 

39  53 

40  95 
40  .'S7 

36  56 

40  86 

37  34 
50  32 

47  12 

45  94 

.50  68 

49  65 
.50  14 

42  11 
44  70 

43  72 

46  75 
.50  32 

48  28 

54  11 

47  18 

37  76 

46  00 

43  79 

41  34 

42  11 

47  57 

50  12 

44  26 
37  75 

43  82 

45  P5 
42  49 

48  18 

55  33 
47  94 
45  82 

50  57 

44  59 

51  87 


1897. 


1896.  ,  1882-97. 


$    c. 

35  76 
32  24 

36  72 

30  16 
18  32 
22  88 

31  18 


$  0. 
30  00 
36  96 
43  12 

34  32 
27  28 
30  40 

35  50 


28  88  39  62 

35  60  42  88 

38  80  35  20 

34  95  40  70 


.59  10 
.•8  27 
50  24 

52  20 
48  82 
54  70 

48  05 

49  66 

1 

.55  74 
60  19 
52  83 

1      ' 

66  64 
59  69 


37  94   31  19   47  22 


34  80 

37  04 

35  85 

33  60 

34  96 
39  76 
32  88 

38  72 
34  24 

28  96 
34  86 

32  48 
.S9  28 
42  00 
41  36 

36  24 

39  04 

40  80 
38  48 
30  16 
38  47 

23  60 

24  72 
/32  56 
I  39  28 

32  24 
32  00 
38  64 

25  36 

37  28 
37  12 
30  00 

29  36 

32  i-2 

33  36 

41  28 
22  40 

33  Ot 

34  69 

26  40 
33  03 

24  00 
f  24  00 
I  24  00 

25  98 

35  17 


34  48 
34  16 
34  33 

42  80 
44  64 
47  20 
44  80 

40  88 

34  48 

41  20 

42  96  I 

I 

28  16 
39  84 
SO  72 

31  68 

29  28 

35  20 

32  32 
34  00 
29  04 
32  27 

24  00 
27  56 

29  68 

30  88 
34  00 

34  64 

22  00 

36  72 

37  36 
.34  16 
HO  56 
39  84 
32  34 

35  44 

25  20 
19  .59 
27  84 

31  55 

23  59 
30  00 
16  00 
44  00 
34  65 
30  55 

37  34 


$  c. 
32  75 
34  27 
36  63 

32  83 
25  15 
31  85 

33  08 

33  57 

38  22 

34  83 

36  76 

33  91 
33  89 

33  90 

35  95 
38  42 
40  03 

37  46 

36  84 

34  81 

34  43 

37  10 

31  72 

38  99 
36  39 

33  42 

35  42 

36  60 
35  93 

34  98 

25  27 

35  38 

26  97 

28  25 

I  32  27 

34  03 

30  76 

31  15 

29  24 

32  73 

30  87 

30  41 

32  77 

31  00 

36  77 
31  11 
23  47 
29  02 

33  11 

22  54 
29  27 
22  71 

}27  47 

25  08 


1897. 


Canots. 


1896. 


35  26 


36  13 
41  00 

43  38 
39  00 
31  75 
34  25 
38  47 

38  13 
45  12 
55  50 
45  39 

41  00 

48  88 

45  40 

49  38 

42  25 
42  75 
48  12 
51  50 

44  38 

42  12 

46  95 

47  50 

51  88 

48  62 
55  13 

45  50 

49  87 
63  37 
48  12 

46  00 

50  93 

32  63 

30  88 

/36  87 

150  63 

41  OO 

43  87 
62  12 

39  12 
53  83 

47  75 

36  50 

40  00 
43  88 

40  63 
58  00 
32  26 

52  75 
52  44 

42  38 
38  50 

37  58 
/  41  12 
\  42  86 

41  12 

46  09 


$   c. 

49  37 

50  00 
48  63 

45  25 
35  37 

42  88 

46  46 

64  62 

48  75 

48  38 

54  96 

49  75 

43  75 
46  14 

53  25 
59  38 

55  50 

56  87 
49  88 

52  00 

51  62 

53  95 

35  63 
56  12 
30  62 
33  12 
39  37 
37  38 
43  38 
39  38 
33  88 

39  81 

35  63 

40  50 

40  25 

41  62 

41  00 

52  50 

43  75 

45  63 
61  75 

42  13 

36  50 
48  12 

44  56 

51  75 
40  00 
26  62 

40  25 

41  90 

37  13 

42  00 
28  14 
51  62 

43  25 
41  24 

46  81 


1882-97. 


36  6» 
39  5» 

44  46 

35  50 
32  4a 

36  73 

39  or 

42  20 
47  84 

43  43 

45  10 

44  91 

45  60 

45  28- 

44  3» 

50  03 

51  07 
47  80 
44  19 
50  74 
42  30 

47  OS 

39  08 

48  61 

47  36 
42  85 

49  37 

48  21 
48  01 
42  47 
30  69 

46  18 

35  16 
34  OT 

40  80 


46  66 

40  52 

42  33 

33  36 

45  02 

40  73 

38  25- 

42  75 

40  72 

46  05 

43  91 

33  82 

38  77 

42  89 

36  35 

36  67 

34  29 

36  56 
36  42 

44  14 


131 


6 1   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32) 


A.  1898 


VALUE    PER    ACRE  — TURNIPS,     HAY    AND    ALL    FIELD    CROPS. 

Table  XXII.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  and  groups  of  Counties  the  market  value  per  acre 
of  Turnips,  Hay  and  Clover  and  all  field  crop*!  in  Ontario  in  the  years  1896  and  1897,  with  the  yearly 
average  for  the  sixteen  years,  1882-97.  •  i 

,f 


Counties. 


Turnips. 


1897.        1896.       1882-97, 


Hay  and  Clover. 


1897.        1896.      1882-97. 


All  field  crops. 


1897.        1896.       1882-97. 


Essex 

Kent     

Elgin     

Norfolk  . . . . 
Haldimand 
Welland   . 
Totals.. 


Lambton  . . 
Huron  .    .  - 

Bruce  

Totals . 


$  c. 
28.90 
33  20 
41  20 
36  90 
30  40 
29  70 
35  20 

39  20 

47  70 
49  80 

48  46 


Grey    |     45  90 

Simcoe    !     47  30 

Totals i     46  50 


Middlesex 
Oxford    .  . . . 
Brant    .... 
Perth        . .  . 
Wellington 
Waterloo 
Dufferin 
Totals   . 


Lincoln 

Wentworth    

Halton    

Peel 

York.    

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland , 

Prince  Edward  . . 

Totals   


Lennox  and  Addington 

Frontenac    

Leeds      

Grenville   

Dundas 

Stormont , . . . 

Glengarry    

Prescott 

Russell 

Cirleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Totals 


Victoria 

Peterborough . 

Haliburton    . . 

Hastings  .    . . . 

Totah.... 


44  20 
47  90 

45  00 

41  80 
45  40 

44  40 

45  40 

45  11 

42  00 
49  00 

46  90 

47  60 

46  80 
44  80 
53  70 
49  50 

35  50 

47  77 

26  70 
30  40 
44  00 

52  10 
39  00 
41  40 

53  80 
38  IC 
55  20 
41  80 

36  40 

43  80 
41  71 

41  00 
52  00 
38  60 

43  40 

44  3S 


au^to  I'm 
Algoma     .... 
Totals .  .  . 

The  Frovince. 


Muskoka    |     32  80 

Parry  Sound i     35  10 

Nipissing i     23  30 


39  GO 
39  80 
34   98 


$  c. 

26  90 
38  20 
44  SO 
3(i  20 
29  40 
33  80 
36  48 


S  c. 

28  26 
34  59 
38  28 
38  39 

29  47 
33  39 
36  09 


37  00  34  87 

47  60  I  41  79 

4S  00  !  42  75 

47  46  I  42  03 


48  70 

45  00 
47  21 

52  00 
.54  50 
57  20 

52  80 
51  90 

49  70 
55  70 

53  09 

30  40 
53  10 
41  10 
44  10 
38  90 
44  00 

46  00 
46  10 
33  70 

44  21 

27  10 
38  80 

40  00 

43  80 
38  20 
38  00 
36  .50 

41  .50 

50  00 
46  70 

45  10 

51  40 

44  65 

41  10 

41  80 
30  SO 

42  00 
41  18 


31 

i 
60 

:^s 

10 

21 

30 

36 

90 

32 

10 

31 

17 

42  10 

44  47 

42  86 

40  02 

45  95 

46  68 

41  .58 
44  52 
41  83 

43  99 

43  90 

35  33 

47  OB 

44  05 

41  13 

42  03 

43  59 

45  99 

42  34 

29  65 

43  72 

25  02 

31  36 

38  67 

36  90 

30  18 

43  18 
38  52 

44  80 

38  27 
.36  40 

40  54 

37  80 

39  78 

41  23 
28  95 
.36  41 
39  08 

3-2  07 

32  .')0 
30  58 

\  35  88 

33  12 


13  57 
15  08 
15  01 
12  85 

14  21 

12  06 

13  91 

14  93 
14  43 

13  79 

14  31 

12  92 
12  64 

12  80 

15  29 
15  87 
15  15 
15  94 
14  86 

14  29 

13  50 

15  16 

13  71 
12  71 

12  56 
11  92 
11  92 

13  07 
10  34 

7  90 

10  20 

11  55 

H  83 

11  13 

9  12 

8  62 
10  63 

9  69 

8  n 

5  74 

6  89 
6  03 

6  25 
5  60 

7  i>2 

7   90 

7  18 

8  26 
8  83 

8  17 

9  76 

7  97 
5  82 

'  6  89 
10  63 

8  51 


45  73  I  47  10  !  42  54  i  11  69 


182 


$  p. 

14  71 

15  97 
15  88 
10  74 

6  68 

7  84 
12  00 

12  49  ! 

8  62  1 
7  74  I 

9  25 

6  87 
9  20 

7  85 


$  c 
15  33 
15  13 
14  63 
12  SI 

11  93 

12  77 

13  76 

13  99 
13  21 

11  92 

12  93 

11  76 

12  81 
12  19 


$  c. 

13  73 

14  13 
14  16 
12  29 

12  05 
fO  73 

13  11 

12  42 

13  80 

12  73 

13  09 

11  91 

12  43 
12  18 


14  33 

14  91 

14  38 

12  58 

15  15 

15  63 

9  39 

13  83 

14  99 

8  81 

14  50 

14  .55 

8  81 

14  17 

12  92 

7  26 

14  28 

14  06 

8  03 

12  69 

11  67 

10  40 

14  40 

14  04 

5  90 

12  84 

13  38 

6  20 

13  53 

14  40 

5  52 

12  74 

14  77 

5  61 

13  17 

13  28 

6  68 

13  16 

13  51 

9  39 

13  59 

12  96 

10  36 
7  74 

4  07 
7  18 

7  36 

5  52 

7  36 

8  52 

9  10 

7  27 

11  13 
9  39 

10  16 
9  68 

8  62 

7  65 

8  32 

10  55 

8  71 

6  10 

6  20 

7  90 

9  68 
7  55 

13  35 

14  oi 
16  94 

11  26 

9  02 


13  02 
11  63 

11  74 

12  87 

11  29 

11  53 

12  05 

14  92 
14  32 
14  SI 

13  72 
13  63 
13  37 

10  71 
12  53 
12  6> 

11  42 

10  39 

9  82 

11  28 
11  00 

11  66 

10  24 

11  28 

12  36 

11  46 

12  97 


11  30 
10  26 

9  31 

12  54 

9  14 

10  71 
f  10  80 
"I  10  95 

11  95 
11  30 
11  13 

8  59 

9  99 
10  16 

8  71 

9  30 
10  09 

10  09 

10  30 

8  46 

10  08 


S  c. 

11  84 

12  90 
12  05 
10  50 

7  15 

S  34 

10  93 


11  86 

10  41 

9  74 

10  56 

9  32 

11  10  I 

10  19 

12  65  i 

13  28  ; 
12  15  ! 

11  5-6  I 
11  41  I 
11  07  I 

10  63  1 

11  97  I 

I 

7  98  I 

10  44  I 

9  98  I 

9  28  1 

10  02  I 

11  48  I 
11  02 

9  57 
7  37  I 
9  95  j 

7  66  j 

7  58  I 
9  62  I 
9  80  i 

10  49  1 

8  73 
10  81  ' 

9  77 
10  76  i 
10  76  ! 

9  45  ' 
9  50  j 
9  52  I 
I 
9  93  I 
9  75  ! 
7  65 
7  91 


10  07 

9  02 

10  50 

9  79 

10  10 

9  24 

8  98 

12  71 

r  9  24 

12  77 

I  12  15 

13  42 

'  10  29 

11  04  ' 

12  29 

10  44 

$   c. 

15  83 

16  01 
15  Il- 
ls 4a 

11  94  > 

12  82 
14  43' 

UGH 
14  33. 

13  80 

14  29 

13  42 

14  48 

13  92 

15  27 

16  05 
15  19 
15  70 
15  51 
15  76 

14  01 

15  44 

13  48 
15  12 

14  47 

14  38 

15  12 
15  38 
14  00 
12  33 
11  11 

14  10 

11  70 

12  11 

12  95 

15  00 
14  17 

13  83 
13  26 

13  62 

14  29 

12  37 

13  16 
13  17 

13^1 
12  14 

11  33 

12  18 

13  # 
12  66 

12  9S 

14  63 

13  46 

14  10 


# 


PART   IV. 


CriATTEL    MORTGAGES. 


The  following  statement  gives  the  number  of  chattel  mortgages  on  record  and  undis- 
charged for  the  Province  of  Ontario  for  the  year  ending  December  31,  1897,  and  the  eight 
preceding  years  : 


Year  ending  Dec.  31. 


1897 
1896 
1895 
1894 
189.3 
1892 
1891 
1890 
1889 


To   Fecure   existing 

debt  or  present 

advance. 


No. 


21 '144 
21,402 
22,018 
21,276 
19  342 
18.927 
18,902 
17,271 
15,629 


Amount. 


i:5,004,.S42 

1.-},  180,205 

10,555,922 

10,60.3,393 

8,973,118 

9.215,7.53 

8,595.417 

8,121.316 

6,973,837 


To  secure  future 

indorsation  or 

advance. 


No. 


382 
387 
373 
483 
380 
455 
516 
632 
585 


Amount. 


377,853 
381,511 
4.56,398 
616,812 
360,2(i7 
829,724 
908,971 
857,542 
518,071 


Total. 


No. 


21,526 
21,789 
22,391 
21,759 
19,722 
19,  .382 
19,418 
17.903 
16,214 


Amount. 


13,382,195  i 

13,501,716 

11, 012,  .320  I 

11,220,205  i 

9,333,385  I 

10,04^,477  ■ 

9,504,388  I 

8.978,858 

7,491,908  '• 


The  following  statement  gives  the  numbers  and  amoants  of  chattel  mortgages  in  the 
difiFerent  districts  of  the  Province  for  1897  and  previous  three  years  : 


Districts 

1897. 

L896. 

] 

L895. 

1 

1894. 

No. 

Amount. 

No. 

Amount^ 

No. 

Amount  . 

No. 

Amount. 

$ 

S 

$ 

$ 

j  Lake  Erie   

2,999 

1,002,  .301 

2,644 

1,083.750 

2,934 

i,C(;(;,587 

2,781 

1,186,213 

1  Lake  Huron . . . 

2,031 

805,123 

2,079 

815.701 

2  247 

7d0,168 

2,288 

728.7.50 

1  Georgian  Bay . . 

2,193 

912,864 

2,218 

897,148 

2,235 

856,963 

2,271 

862,708 

West  Midland . 

2,935 

1,448,824 

3  113 

1,451.761 

3,209 

1,582,895 

2  999 

1  347.9.39 

Lake  Ontario  . 

5,281 

3,212,010 

5  .58  ■> 

3  151,.305 

5,724 

3  320,257 

5,692 

3,544,379 

St.  L.&  Ottawa 

.3,259 

1,952,957 

3  317 

1,698,551 

3,  .302 

1 ,578,788 

3,019 

1,456,741 

East   MidlaiKi. 

1,686 

1,960  830 

1,72S 

2, 473,  .5.33 

1  714 

768,675 

1,749 

756.766 

1  Northern  Dis'ts 

1,142 

2,026  686 

1,105 

1,989,961 

1.025 

1,077,987 

930 

1,330,709 

;     Thfi  Provinc3. 

21,526 

13,332,195 

21,789 

1.3,561,716 

22,. 391 

11,012,320 

21,759 

11,220,205 

More  than  one-half  the  number  of  the  chattel  mortgages  are  registered  agiinst 
farm<irs  The  following  statement  gives  the  numbers  and  anaounts  of  channel  mortgages 
on  re*;)rd  against  farmers  on  Dioena^sr  31  of  each  of  theyeirs  1894,  1895,  1896  and  1897. 


Districts. 

1897. 

] 

1896. 

1895. 

1894.     ■ 

No. 

Amount. 

No. 

Amount 

No. 

Amount. 

No 

Amount). 

.? 

« 

$ 

Lake  Erie 

2,015 

493,701 

1  601 

473  41 8 

1.9S0 

476,720 

1,783 

440,912 

I  Lake  Huron  . . 

1.376 

391,996 

1,455 

477.770 

1,.516 

401,273 

1,514 

394,445 

Georgian  Bay  . 

1,706 

473,941 

1,717 

492.840 

1,713 

474,. 511 

1,050 

414,992 

West  Midland . 

1.4.56 

092  329 

1.577 

686,272 

1,656 

671  827 

1,4S0 

f  70  303 

Lake  Ontario  . 

2,0.50 

935,082 

1.  987 

827.710 

1,983 

822  978 

2,005 

724..556 

St.  L  &  Ottawa 

1,678 

404,7.32 

1,614 

437,001 

1,679 

457,929 

1,513 

390.036 

Eapt  Midland . . 

1,220 

385,498 

1  281 

391.089 

1,206 

364,639 

1,259 

.391,644 

Northern  Dis'ts 

602 

90,321 

582 

91,898 

555 

97,719 

483 

86,996 

The  Province. 

12.103 

3,9.33,000 

11844 

3,877,998 

12,2^8 

3,767,596 

11,687 

3,446,834 

61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189^ 


CHATTEL    MORTGAGES-BY    COUNTY    DIVISIONS. 

Table  I.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  of  Ontario  the  total  number  and  amount  of  chattel  mortgagee 
and  renewals  on  record  and  undischarged  on  January  Ist  and  December  31pt,  1897. 


Ch 

attel  mortgages  on  record 
.January  Ist,  1897. 

Chattel  mortgages  on  record 
December  31«t,  1897. 

2 
0 
1 

Counties  or  districts. 

Tc  secure  exist- 
ing debt. 

For  future 
indorsation. 

To  secure  exist- 
ing debt. 

For  future 
indorsation. 

No. 

Amount. 

No. 

Amount. 

No. 

Amount. 

No. 

Amount 

Algoma 

Brant 

Bruce 

188 
421 
953 
727 
337 
499 
487 
544 
1,289 
197 

76 
157 
873 
547 
893 
466 
253 
453 
295 
328 

88 
850 
271 
211 
307 
801 
435 
402 
230 
228 
318 
361 
271 
233 

64 
2^3 
929 
412 

39 
356 
2-.2 
230 
505 
677 
2,666 

21,402 

$ 

538,316 
202.856 
395  388 
.583,174 
13.=.,636 
162,206 
249,387 
191.928 
365  319 

61.970 
667,87.i 

87,763 
2'43,417 
241,910 
337,336 
149,054 
100,829 
160,366 

87,916 
203,755 

61,459 
321.725 
1.37.334 
613,399 

73,5.50 
333  826 
193,682 
197.673 
516,252 
115.482 
164.888 
844..362 
219,5.-6 

y3,512 

48.882 
116,595 
531,829 
186,819 

26,175 
676,744 
157,1.58 

86,854 

251.902 

308.396 

1,735.720 

13,180.205 

1 
2 

3 
9 
2 

""30 

$ 

100 

.^17 

1,040 

18,786 
961 

'iib!o49 

212 
372 
911 
716 
351 
447 
.526 
528 

1,251 
183 
81 
147 
768 
501 

1262 
529 
248 
444 
296 
307 
95 
828 
266 
195 
272 
751 
435 
335 
244 
244 
289 
384 
243 
222 
79 
329 
942 
.367 
44 
388 
265 
262 
485 
661 

2,439 

21,144 

516,258 
215,949 
312.201 
1,049,157 
126,904 
175,734 
261,642 
178,918 
359,412 

61,256 
422,1.38 

74  880 
224,329 
215,890 
307,304 
234,426 

98,f34 
172,881 

87,C63 
169,520 

68.190 
3.39.076 
129,463 
579,363 

68,832 
292,617 
254  325 
172,847 
576,910 
137,772 
150,523 
681,504 

79,911 

75,532 

63.032 
104,314 
55.3,452 
127,271 

27,420 
611 ,334 
185,479 
107,352 
250.784 
298,487 
1,804,656 

13,004,342 

$ 

7 

2 

14 

2 

1 
42 

3 

1 
59 
10 

2 

78 

10 

31 

4 

8 

5,46 

5,70 

23,90 

DuflFerin  

Elgin    

1,300' 
1,154 

Elssex 

49,177" 

Grey    

Haldimand   

Haliburton    

Halton   

Hastings 

Hnron 

1 
47 
14 

3.000 

34,542 
6,710 

3,995 

.3,000 

11,225 

1,670. 

Kent 

21,5C0' 

96 

12 

19 

4 

7 

21,569 
2  829 
7.290 
1,700 

15,977 

.35,236. 

Lanark 

Leeds  and  Grenville 

1,404 
9,823 

863 

Lincoln 

16,99» 

Middlesex 

Mu*koka 

5 

5^072 

- 

Nipissing 

Norfolk 



""22 
1 
4 

Ontario 

Oxford    

Parry  Sound 

Peel                

8 
2 

2,615 

7. 5^3 

42  375 

1  801 

10,11 

50 

65,50 

3 
0 
0 

Perth 

1 

Peterborough 

3            4,750 

6 

Prince  Edward  .   

Rainy  River ...    . . 

Renfrew 

4 
••••   7 

1,811 

4,01 

0 

i 

4.038 

12 

3 

2 

"     15 
23 

382 

6,99 

Simcoe    

1 

Stormont,  Dundas  and  Glengarry 

Thunder  Bay     

Victoria   

28 

"l2 
13 

1 

16,725 

"l,843 

.  10,8.55 

2,398 

12,426 

550 

6,307 

Welland 

8,350 

Wentworth 

14 
25 

387 

12,3.32 
41,633 

381,511 

13,530' 

York 

Total  

57,16 

377,85 

0 

3 

134 


ol  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 >. 


A-  1898 


CHATTEL    MORTGAGES— FARMERS. 

Table  II.  Showing  by  County  Municipalities  of  Ontario  the  number  and  amount  of  chattel  morcgaRo 
and  renewals  registered  against  farmers,  on  record  and  undischarged  on  January  1st  and  December 
3l8t,  1897. 


Oounties  or  districts. 


Algoma 

6t  am 

Bruce    

Carleton 

Dufiferin  

Elgin 

Essex 

Frontenac   

Grey    

Haldimand    

Haliburcon   

Halt  ID    ._ 

Hastings" 

Huron 

Kent 

Lambton 

Lanark 

liseds  and  Grenville 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Lincoln 

Manitoulin 

Middlesex 

Muskoka   

Nipissin?- 

Norfolk 

Northumberland  and  Durham . . . 

Ontario 

Oxford         

Parry  Sound 

Peel  

Perth 

Peterborough   

Prescott  and  Russell 

Prince  Edward 

Rainy  River 

Renfrew 

Simcoe   

Stormont,  Dundas  and  Glengarry 

Thunder  Bay 

Victoria. 

Waterloo 

Welland 

Wellmgton    

Wentworth    

York 


Chattel  mortgages  on  record 
January  Ist,  1897. 


To  secure  exist- 
ing debt. 


No. 


Amouno. 


99 
215 
706 

14.T 

265 
275 
284 
282 
1,071 
148 

70 

73 
689 
337 
642 
325 
115 
286 
163 
12  > 

59. 
374! 
1871 

88 
162 
5911 
299' 
187 1 
1271 
158 1 
156 
195' 
197 : 
195 

11 
185 
646 
231 

11 
2S3 

89 

74 
281 
l'i7 
363 


Total  11,638 


14,805 

110.5.32 

222,801 

54,856 

70,121 

68,836 

89,197 

64,207 

219,9L»2 

34,669 

6,793 

58,105 

172,625 

127,912 

234,477 

109,722 

38,173 

64,575 

51,300 

45,358 

12,054 

138,448 

21,406 

19,310 

29,737 

246,177 

111,817 

78.185 

16,3tJ7 

69  555 

89,6^1 

78,352 

50,168 

71,841 

3,174 

42,053 

272,938 

59,  .330 

4,742 

124,708 

55,16  4 

14,720 

143,23^ 

59,82.S 

155,643 


For  future 
indorsation. 


No. 


Amount. 


16 


33 

4; 


16 


725 


1,882 


6,773 
1.403i 


15,2071 
360 

4,355 
875 

7,000 


1,201 


640 


157 
6,592 


1,778 
722 


1,7461 


Chattel  mortgages  on  record 
December  31  st,  1897. 


To  secure  exist- 
ing debt. 


No. 


Amount. 


99 
171 
672 
142 
272 
233 
324] 
249 
1,011 
119 

71 

81 
5<i6 
312 
1,022 
347 
131 
283 
184 
136 

65 
335 
189 
105 
183 
548 
379 
169 
122 
177 
145 
199 
198 
189 

10 
224 
695 
219 

11 
313 

93 
107 
265 
149 
355 


16, 

1S2, 

171. 

60 

74, 

71 

114, 

64. 

179, 

33, 

7, 

48, 

163 

124, 

208 

89 

44, 

70, 

55, 

54, 

14, 

137, 

21, 

^1, 

35, 

212, 

213, 

71. 

l:^ 

96, 

80. 

72 

61, 

58, 

1 

48, 

294, 

60. 

2 

136, 
51. 
31. 

141 
65, 

170, 


055 

826 
381 
228 
760 
276 
998 
720 
060 
240 
306 
641! 
246i 
0181 
307 
5531 
2491 
1.551 
4501 
644 
478 
493 
552 
301 
843 


For  future 
indorsation. 


No. 


Amount, 


36 


21 


3511 1 

507,  ...  ! 
032  i  7| 
.5081 


46 


480 
1,3C0 

954 
3,655 


5,79 
1,683 


5,720 

1,104 

4,984 

280 

466 


9,860 


1,310 

"262 

1,648 
60 


4,506 


3,825,582        206  61,416  11,902     3.889,190       20l|         44,410 


135 


1  NDEX. 


Acreage  :  Total  assessed.  5,  45— Cropb,  6,  7,  62. 
Apples,  ^,  63. 

Barley  :  Description,  10— Area  and  produce,  6,  10. 

21,  48— Values,  101,  121.  128. 
Beans:  Description,  16— Area  and  produce,  6,  16, 

21,  54— Values,  101,  124,  130. 
Bees  :  Review,  77— Colonies,  77,  93. 
Buckwheat :  Description,  16— Area  and  produce, 

G,  16,  21,  53 -Values,  101,  123,  130. 
Buildings:  Remarks,  28 -Values,  95,  97. 

Carrots  :  Description,  18— Area  and  produce,  6,  18, 
21,  57— Values,:i01,  125,  131. 

Cattle :  No.  on  hand,  70,  89— No.  sold,  72,  91— 
Values,  98,  111,  113,  114. 

Chattel  Mortgages,  133. 

Cheese  factories  :  85,  86. 

Cleared  lands  :  5,  45. 

Corn  :  Description,  14— Area  and  produce,  6,  12, 
21,  52 -Values,  101, 123,  130— Remarks  of  cor- 
respondents, 15— The  silo,  15. 

Correspondents,  remarks  of :  Fall  wheat,  9— Peas, 
13— Corn,  15— Silo,  15— Roots,  19— Hay  and 
clover,  21— Fruit,  25— Underdraimng,  26— 
Fences  and  buildings,  28— Flax,  30— Hops,  31 
—Live  stock,  73— Poultry,  74— Bees,  78— 
Dairy,  80— Labor  and  wages,  101— Domestic 
servants,  104— General  remarks,  31. 

Creameries :  86. 

Crops  :  Area,  6,  62  -Ratio  per  1,000  acres  cleared, 
7,  64— Yields,  21— Value,  101, 127, 132— Ratios 
of  yields  to  yearly  average,  22,  23,  60,  61. 

Dairy :  Review,  80 — Remarks  of  correspondents, 

80— Cheese  factories,  85,  94— Creameries,  86. 
Domestic  servants,  103,  104. 

Flax,  30. 

Fruit  and  Fruit  Trees  :  Rtview,  23 — Apples,  24, 
63— Remarks,  25. 

Hay  and  clover  :  Description,  20— Area  and  pro- 
duce, 6,  20,  21,  59— Values,  101,  126,  132— 
Remarks  of  correspondents,  20. 

Hogs :  No.  on  hand,  71,  88— No.  sold,  72,  91— 
Values,  9^,  112,  113,  115. 

Horses :  No.  on  hand,  70,  88— No.  sold.  72,  91- 
Values,  97,  111,  113,  114. 

Implements,  95,  97. 


Labor  and  wages  :  103. 

Lands':^Area,  5,  45^ Values,  95,  97. 

Live  Stock  :  Condition  of,  69 — Numbers  on  hand, 

70— Numbers   sold,    72— Values,   95,  99,  110, 

113. 

Mangel- Wurzels:   Description,  17 — Area  and  pro- 
duce, 6,  17,  21,  56— Values,  101,  125,  131. 
Market  Prices  :  100,  116. 

Oats :  Description,  11 — Area  and  produce,   6,  11,. 

21,  49-Values,  101,  121,  129. 
Orchard  and  Garden  :  25,  62. 

Pasture  lands  :  5,  62. 

Peas :  Description,  12 — Area  and  produce,  6.  12, 
21,  51— Values,  101,  122,  129— Remarks  t  f  cor- 
respondents, 13. 

Potatoes  :  Description,  17— Area  and  produce,  C, 
17,  21,  55— Values,  101,  124,  131. 

Poultry  :  No.  on  hand,  73,  90 -No.  sold,  72,  91— 
Values,  99.  112,  113,  115. 

Roots  :  17. 

Rye  :  Description,  11 — Area  and  produce,  0,  12» 
21,  50— Values,' 101,  122,  129. 

Sheep:  No.  on  hand,  71,  90— No.   sold,   72,   91— 

Values,  98,  112,  113,  115. 
Silo:  15. 
Swine  (see  Hogs). 

Turnips :  Deecription,  19 — Area  and  produce,  6, 
19,  21,  58- Values,  101,  126,  132. 

United  States  crops  :  65,  68. 

Values  :  Farm  property,  95,  97— Live  Stock,  95 — 

Crops,  101. 
Vineyard  ;  25,  62. 

Wabigoon  District :  36. 

Waste  lands  (swamp,  marsh,  etc.):  5,  45. 

Weather:  Temperature,  1,  38,  39 — Sunshine,' 3, 
40— Rain  and  Snow,  2,  40,  41 — Temiscamingue, 
3,  44— Rainy  River,  4— Toronto,  43. 

Wheat,  Fall :  Description,  7 — Area  and  produce, 
6,  8,  21,  46— Value,  101,  120,  128. 

Wheat,  Spring:  Description,  9 — Area  and  pro- 
duce, 6,  10,  21,  47— Value,  101,  120,  128. 

Wheat  crop  of  the  World  :  66,  67. 

Woodland  :  5,  45. 

Wool :   Clip,  72,  92— Values,  127. 


Yields:  21,  22. 


[1-6] 


.V& 


ANNUAL    REPORT 


BUREAU  OF  INDUSTRIES 


PROVINCE    OF   ONTARIO 


i8g7. 


PART  V.-MUNICIPAL  STATISTICS. 


[PUBLISHED  BY  THE  ONTARIO  DEPARTMENT  OF  AGRICULTURE.) 


PRINTED    BY    ORDER    OF 


THE  LEGISLATIVE  ASSEMBLY  OF  ONTARIO^ 


TORONTO: 
WARWICK  BRO'S  &  RUTTER,  Printers,  &c.,  &c.,  68  and  70  Front  Street  West, 

18  9  9. 


CONTENTS. 


PAGE. 

Letter  of  Transmission  :  iii. 

MuNiciPiL  Statistics  :  Comparative  tables.  v. 

Population,  Area,  Assessed  Values,  and  Taxation  for  1897  :  Showing  details  for  local 
municipalities  of  Ontario,  together  with  average  rate  of  taxes  per  head  of  popu- 
lation and  the  average  rate  on  the  dollar  : 

Townships,  towns  and  villages  grouped  in  counties 2 

Cities,  for  the  three  years  1895-7 21 

Counties  (being  totals  of  townships,  towns,   villages  and  cities  within  the  limits  of 

county)  for  five  years  1893-7 22 

Province,  for  twelve  years  1886-97 27 

Steam  Boilers,  as  per  assessment  rolls,  by  counties 29 

Financial  Statements  for  1896  :  Showing  an  abstract  statement  of  Receipts,  Disburse- 
ments, Assets  and  Liabilities  of  the  municipalities  of  Ontario,  grouped  by  counties  : 

Townships 30 

Towns  78 

Villages 94 

Cities 114 

Counties 1  Ifi 

Comparative  Financial  Statements  for  Ten  Years  : 

Townships 120 

Towns 122 

Villages 124 

Cities 126 

Counties ^  '■° 

Province  (total  for  all  municipalities) 1'^" 

Index  to  municipalities 1*^'* 


[3] 


SIXTEENTH   ANNUAL   REPORT 


ONTARIO  BUREAU  OF  INDUSTRIES. 


PART   V. 

1897. 


To  the  Honorable  the  Minister  of  Agriculture  : 

Sir, — I  have  the  honor  to  present  herewith  Part  V.  of  the  sixteenth  annual  report 
of  the  Bureau  of  Industries  for  1897,  containing  tabulated  statements  of  statistics  of  the 
municipalities  of  Ontario  up  to  December  31,  1897, 

The  statistics  of  assessment,  ratt.  of  taxation  and  population  are  compiled  from 
returns  made  by  municipal  clerks,  while  the  financial  statements  for  1896  are  tabulated 
from  schedules  furnished  by  municipal  treasurers,  after  being  checked  over  with  the 
detailed  reports  of  the  municipal  auditors,  A  large  amount  of  correspondence  was 
rendered  necessary  in  order  to  rectify  discrepancies. 

In  the  case  of  a  few  municipalities  no  reports  were  received  from  the  auditors, 
and  in  some  other  cases  the  [reports  received  were  incomplete  and  of  but  little  use, 
80  that  we  have  been  compelled,  in  these  cases,  to  accept  the  schedules  as  compiled 
by  the  treasurers  and  amended  by  correspondence. 

Several  financial  returns  for  1897  have  not  yet  been  received,  but  enough  progress 
has  been  made  with  the  tabulation  to  place  a  portion  of  the  next  report  in  the  hands  of 
the  printers  and  this  will  be  pushed  forward  with  as  little  delay  as  possible, 

I  have  the  honor  to  be.  Sir, 

Your  obedient  servant, 

C.  0.  JAMES, 

Secretary. 

TORNTO, 

April,  1899. 

[5] 


k 


^ 


PART    V. 


MUNICIPAL  STATISTICS. 


The  following  statement  is  compiled  from  the  summarized  tables  and  gives  popula- 
tion, total  assessments,  amount  of  taxes  imposed  for  1897,  the  amount  of  debenture  and 
floating  debt,  together  with  the  amount  paid  each  year  by  all  municipalities  of  the 
Province  for  interest  for  the  eleven  years  1886-96  : 


Year. 


1897 
1896 
1895 
1894 
1893 
1892 
1891 
1890 
1889 
1888 
1887 
1886 


Popula- 
tion. 


1,990,977 
1,972,286 
1,957,390 
1,936,219 
1,910,059 
1,909,527 
1,922,121 
1,917,544 
1,906,901 
1,880,145 
1,848,457 
1,828,495 


Total 
assessment. 


803,625,377 
814,917,633 
821,466,166 
826.179,370 
825,530,052 
825,211,127 
818,847,394 
798,616,271 
761,905,816 
748,654,570 
717,311,938 
694,380,659 


Taxes  imposed  for  all 
purposes. 


Total. 


12,206,325 

12.122,785 

12,316,429 

12,320,312 

12,512,660 

11,803,570 

11,767,748 

10,897,485 

10,248.198 

9,919,962 

9,300,113 

9,009,385 


Rate 

per 

head. 

$  c. 

6  13 

6  15 

6  29 

6  36 

6  56 

6  18 

6  12 

5  68 

5  37 

5  28 

5  03 

4  93 

Mills 
on  the 
dollar 


Debenture  debt. 


Total. 


15.19 
14.88 
14.99 
14.91 
15.17 
14.. SO 
14.37 
13.65 
13.45 
13.25 
12.97 
12.97 


52,948,275 
51,895,991 
49,724,587 
48,083,243 
47,166,962 
43,888,853 
40,720,985 
38,988,332 
34,729,527 
31,943,320 
29,924,863 


Rate 

per 

head. 


§  c. 


26  85 
26  51 
25  68 
25  17 
24  70 
22  83 
21  24 
20  44 
18  47 
17  28 
16  37 


Floating 
debt. 


6,261,394 
5,834,129 
6,669,567 
6,796,422 
6,469,899 
7,629,730 
8,387,186 
6,493,519 
6,437,363 
5,645,208 
4,841,717 


Interest 

paid 

on.  loans 

anddeben. 

tures. 


2,588,759 
2,578,220 
2,552,607 
2,508,621 
2,482,156 
2,498,294 
2,240,692 
2,057,938 
1,999,760 
1,820,590 
1,715,620 


^Statistics  of  debts  for  1897  are  not  yet  complete. 


The  following  table  shows  the  growth  of  population  by  municipalities  for  twelve 


years 


Year. 

Townships. 

1897 



1,113,530 
1,112,900 
1,109,631 
1,103,828 
1,096,984 
1,102,467 
1,116,347 

1,118,2.52 
1,130,060 
1,133,016 
1,140,138 
1,148,856 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

1892 

1891 

1890 

1889 

1888 

1887 

1886 

Towns. 


312,947 
306,001 
300,655 
297,194 
292,285 
291,706 
287,854 


Villages. 


133,560 
132,451 
130,889 
126,387 
123,125 
121.690 
122,691 


410,530 
400,890 
393,461 
377,389 
360,005 


Cities. 


430,940 
420,934 
416,215 
408,810 
397,665 
393,664 
395,229 

388,762 
375,951 
35.3,638 
330,930 
319,634 


Total. 


1,990,977 
1,972,286 
1,957,390 
1,936,219 
1,910,059 
1,909,527 
1,922,121 

1,917,544 
1,906,901 

1,880,145 
1,848,457 
1,828,495 


In  1897  there  were  496  organized  township  municipalities,  100  towns,  136  villages,  13  cities  and  38 
counties. 

[7] 


w 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Following  is  a  comparative  table  for  twelve  years  for  total  assessed  values  : 

Year. 

Townships. 

Towns. 

Villages. 

Cities. 

Total. 

1897 , 

8 

444,722,478 
447,117,383 
448,417,259 
451,476,103 
451,629,103 
452.065,658 
454,070,364 

452,467,088 
450,977,220 

460,615,822 
456,170,163 
452,097,645 

S 
91,438,546 
91,269,208 
93,646,835 
93,065,465 
94,213,304 
93,867,423 
92,555,035 

s 

30,497,707 
30,005,839 
29,711,010 
29,007,928 
28,453,366 
28,043,948 
27.820,773 

,s 

236,966,646 
246,525,203 
249,691,062 
252,629,874 
251,224,279 
251,234,098 
244,401,222 

230,746,950 
204,474,798 
187,625,719 
167,804,179 
154,204,921 

.3 

803,625,377 
814,917,633 
821,466,166 
826,179,370 
825,530,052 
825,211,127 
818,847,394 

798,616,271 
761,905,816 
748,654,570 
717,311,938 
694,380,659 

1896 

1895 

1894 ... 

1893  

1892 

1891 

1890  

115,402,233 

106,453,798 

100,413,029 

93,337,596 

88,078.093 

1889  

1888  .... 

1887 

1886 

The  amount  of  taxes  imposed  for  all  purposes  (general  and  local)  in   townships, 
towns,  villages  and  cities  is  shown  in  the  following,  for  twelve  years  : 


Year. 

Townships. 

Towns. 

Villages. 

Citie?. 

Total. 

1897 

S 

4,407,005 
4,292,741 
4,473,269 
4,579,044 
4,629,028 
4,599,442 
4,644,291 

4,473,108 
4,507,717 
4,494,780 
4,431,720 
4,388,401 

S 

2,069,444 
2,005,132 
2,021,455 
1,955,980 
1,944,221 
1,876,420 
1,811,517 

S 

569,884 
567,003 
544,111 
526,813 
505,231 
499,575 
493.508 

S 

5,160,592 
6,267,909 
5,277,594 
5,258,475 
5,444,180 
4,828,133 
4,918,432 

4,262,733 
3,746,858 
3,540,264 
3,109,145 
2,950,136 

.s 

12,206,925 
12,122,786 
12,316,429 
12,320,312 
12,522,660 
11,803,570 
11,767,748 

10,897,485 

10,248,198 

9,919,962 

9,300,113 

9,009,385 

1896 

1895            

1894      

1893  

1892 

1891  

1890 

2,161,644 
1,993,623 
1,884,918 
1,759,248 
1,670.848 

1889 

1888 

1887 

1886        

The  next  table  compares  the  debenture  debt  outstanding  in  the  various  municipali- 
ties on  December  31st,  for  each  of  eleven  years  : 


Year. 

Townships. 

Towns. 

Villages. 

Cities. 

Counties. 

Total. 

1896 

8 

2,866,904 
2,992,643 
2,942,267 
3,039,823 
3,089,430 
3,118,639 

3,366,617 
3,299,557 
3,409,744 
3,154,428 
3,153,646 

s 

9,598,063 
9,090,368 
8,611,052 
8,222,289 
7,491,878 
6,775,716 

S 

1,163,096 
1,175,803 
1,132,942 
1,082,476 
1,087,468 
99.3,946 

S 

37,471,230 
36,452,914 
34,778,154 
33,399,063 
32,966,371 
30,253,043 

27,110.712 
26,096,152 
21,769,261 
20,080,923 
18,469,893 

S 

1,848,982 
2,184,263 
2,260,172 
2,339,592 
2,631,816 
2,747,611 

3,144,008 
3,220,860 
3,403,961 
3,446,891 
3,506,744 

8 

52,948,275 
51,895,991 
49,724,587 
48,083,243 
47,166,962 
43,888,853 

40,720,985 
38,988,332 
34,729,527 
31,943.320 
29,924,863 

1895  

1894 

1893 

1892       

1891 

1890 

1889 

7,099,648 
6,  .371, 763 
6,146,561 
5,261.078 

1888 

1887 

1886 

4,79 

5,580 

The  amount  of  floating  liabilities  of  the  municipalities  on  December  31st,  1896,  was 
5,261,394,  of  which  $2,682,520  was  for  temporary  loans. 


STATISTICS     OF 

ONTARIO  MUNICIPALITIES. 

1896-7. 


1    B.I.  (? 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    TAXATION. 

Table  I.  Detailed  Statement  by  Local  Municipalities  (townships,  towns  and  villages)  in  the  Countiea 
of  Ontario  for  1897,  of  the  population,  the  area,  the  asse.ssed  values  and  amount  of  taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes  inclusive  of  schools,  as  shown  by  the  aseessment  and  collection  toUp,  together  with  the 
average  rate  per  head  of  the  resident  population  and  also  the  average  rate  on  the  dollar. 


No.  of 


Municipalities. 


Popula- 
t'°"-      assessed!      ^^^^ 


Assessed  values. 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purpose*. 


I     Per- 
I  s  o  n  a  1 
jjroperty.        pro- 

iperty.l 


Taxable 


Total. 


Esses  : 
Anderdoa  . .  . 
Colchester,  N' 
Co'chester,  S  . 
Gosfield,  N  . . 
Gosfield,  S  . . . 
Maidstone . . . 

Maiden 

Mersea 

Pelee  Island. . 
Rochester 
Sandwich,  E . . 
Sandwich,  S  . 
Sandwich,  W. 
Tilbury,  N  . . . 
Tilbury,  W... 


868 
279 
524 
671 
63 
978 
5il 
859 
657 
591 
565 
647 
339 
209 
281 


23,072: 
30,296. 
34.316, 
27,949 
29.907 
44.510 
20,911  • 
62,017^ 
9,672! 
32,451' 
18,582: 
23,5441 
24, 047  i 
26.7841 
22,955 


$ 

635, 
602, 
976, 
693, 
993. 
805, 
718, 
1,789 
275, 
624, 
588, 
596. 
686, 
708, 
634, 


817 
204 
775 
520 
525 
876 
950 
5^2 
965 
470 
338 
«49 
560 
068 
750 


24,635 

11,675 
1.200 

'  4,750 

2,500 
5,450 
2,600 

800 
300 

"  "1,256 





950 

■.■.:::::: 

$ 

635,817 
602,204 

1,002,210 
693,820 

1,005.200 
807,076 
720,200 

1,794,332 
275,965 
626,970 
59:^788 
599,049 
686,560 
709,018 
634,750 


Total  townships 32,142    431,013:11.330,849      53,760        2,350  11,386,959 


Amherstburg 

Essex    

Leamington  . . 
Sandwich 
*VValkerville  . 

Total  towns 

Belle  River.    . 
Kingsville 


2,159 
2,100 
2,409 
1,362 
1,110 


422 
700' 
700' 
2,000 
450, 


4 15. '-.05 
348,960 
379,015 
411.078 
1,037,519 


Total  villages 


Kent  : 

Camden  . . . 
Chatham  . 
Dover  .  . 
Harwich  . . 
Howard  . . . 
Orford  ... 
Raleigh  . . 
Romney-. . . 
Tilbury,  E 
Zone      


Total  townships 


Blenheim  . . . 

Bothwell 

Dresden 

Ridgetown  . 
Wallaceburg 


Total  towns 

Thamesville 
Tilbury 


Total  villages. 


9,140        4,272     2,622,177 


537 
1,335 

1,872 


2,534 
5,278 
4,0.32 
4,426! 
3,3S9: 
2,6ll| 
4,372' 
1,772| 
3,064 
1,278 

32,756 

1,534 
1,096 
1,746 
2,265 
2,891 

9,532 

SdO 
1,005 

1,895 


299 
452 


751 


40, 647 1 
84,138 
68,326' 
88,265! 
58,631 
49,819' 
71,086 
26,S95! 
53,373' 
2.5,449! 

566,129 

488 
2,250 
642 
661 
500 

4,541 

381 

577 

958 


25,000 
22,300 
31,260 

8.400, 
843,8831 


4,500 
3,200 
3,635 
1,090 
53,550 


930,843   65,975  3,618,995 


55,754    2,000 
367,0811   18,100 

4i2,835   20,100 


1,016,950 
1,961.261 
1,720,797 
3,728  480 
2,47.\020 
1,430,020 
2,453,6951 

763,680, 
1,462,995 

575,000 


369,194 
195,605 
390,115 
589,859 
462,705 


1,700 
500 
1,100 
5,000 
800 
5,800 
3,650 
4,320 
1,900 


475,105 
374,460 
413,910 
420.568 
1,934,952 


Total. 


$ 


Per 
head, 


5-,  754 
388,706 

446,460 


1,018,650 
1,961,761 
1,721,897 
3,733,480 
2,476  720 
1,436,970 
2,457,345 

768,000 
1,465,095 

575,240 


17,588,398   24,770   1,990  17,615,158 


2,007,478  150,075 


176,825 
180,260 

357,085 


28,090, 
30,050 
22,750 
44,685 
24,500l 


25,350 
8,600 

33,950 


7,200 
6,700 


401,384 
226,055 
413,165 
636,944 
487,205 

2,164,753 

208,875' 
188,860 


10,1951 
14,954| 
20,4981 

9,377 
11,492 
17,1421 

6,.344 
25,520 

7,079 
10,111 
11,155 
10,446 
10,707  j 
10,443! 
13,266' 


$  c. 

5  46 
11  69 
8  12 
5  61 
5  31 

5  76 
4  20 

6  61 
10  T7I25.7 

3  90  16.1 

4  35II8.8 
6  34'17.4 
4  58'l5.6 

4  73  14.7 

5  82  20.9 


16.0 
24. S 
20.6- 
13.5 
11.4 
21.2 
8  8 
14.2 


188,7291    5  87 


16.6 


10,829  5  02  22.8 

12.809  6  10  34.2 

6,751 1  2  80  16.3 

7.511  5  6l|l7.9 

24,286-  21  88  12  6 

I 

62,186  6  80  17.2 

1,151'  2  14  19.9 

10,106  7  57.26.0 

11,257  6  01  25.2 


14,833! 
41.821 
24,416 
38,9851 
18,3671 
14  470 
29,596 
12,4S3 
28,045 
5,149 


85'14.6 
9221.3 
06114.2 
81  10  4 
42i  7.4 
.54  10.1 

77I12  0 

04  16  3 
15  19.1 
03;  9.0 


228,165     6  97 1 13.0 


10.704 

4,705 

9,588 

13.056 

12,443 

50,496 

5.319 
4,915 


6  98  26.7 
4  29  20  8 
23.2 
20.5 
25.5 

23.3 

25.5 
26.0 


5  49 
5  76 
4  30 

5  30 

5  98 

4  89 

397,735,     10,234     5  40|35.7 


•Sep»r»ted  from  county  for  municipal  purposes. 
9 


»)1  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  No.  (3*2 


A.   1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  AX  ATI  O^!  .—Continued. 


Municipalities. 


EtGiN : 

Aldborough  

Bayham 

Dorchester,  S  

Dunwich 

Malahide   

Southwold 

Yarmouth 

Total  townships  . 

Aylmer  (town)  . . . . 

Dutton 

Port  Stanley 

Springfield 

Vienna 

Total  villages  . . 


"NOBFOLK  : 

Charlotteville  . . 

Houghton    

Middleton 

Townsend 

Walsinghann,  N 
Walfingham,  S 
Windham  .... 
Wocdhouse 


Total  townships 
Simcoe  (town) 


Delhi 

Port  Dover. . 
Port  Rowan. 
Water  ford.. . 


Total  villages. 


H.ALDIMANO  : 

Canborongh 
Cayuga,  N  . 
Cayuga,  S. . 

Dunn 

Moulton  . . . 
Oneida  .... 
Rainham  . . 
Seneca  .... 
Sherbrooke 
Walpole  . . . 


Popula- 
tion. 


4,35^ 
3,577 
1,526 
3,121 
■  3,672 
4,060 
4,846 

25,155 

2,198 

778^ 
629 
550 
349 

2,306 


3,416 
1,978 
2,620 
3,509 
2,243 
],9R9 
4.099 
2,050 


No.  of 


76,684 
56,  .557 
30,545 
69,39H 
62,335 
72,45S 
69,869 

437,841 

530 

500 

505 

406 

1,000 

2,411 


60,363 
33,940 
44.840 
64,970 
40,044 
53,PS7 
66,719 
34,567 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


21,884    399,130 


2,825, 

8061 
1,084- 

601 
1,031 

3,522 


975 
1,588 

821 

927 
1,925 
1,478 
1,662 
1,876 

408 
4,461 


807 

500 
413 
500 
465 

1,878 


21,479 
32,754 
13.711 
14,790 
27,000 
32,h01 
25,391 
41,745 
4,655 
66  669 


1,534,100 
1,053,725 
1,061,930 
1,717,800 
1,895,295 
2,488,760 
2,659,463 

12,411,073 

608,183 

1.57,220 

130,015 

73,185 

70,575 

430,995 


911,753 

462,400 

746,383 

2,355,250 

560.005 

682,155 

1,572,795 

1,111,584 


808,670 

148,090 
247,621 
109,905 
253,075 

758,691 


Per- 
sonal 

pro- 
perty, 


3,  .500 
4,450 
2,600 
3,000 
17,700 
10,250 
4,600 

46,100 

90,150 

18,050 
15,895 

2,760 

36,695 


21,250 
2.950 
7,2f0 
5.225 
1,300 
4,975 
8,750 
1,600 


Taxable 


1,050 
200 


8,402,325      53,250 


52,100 

8,400 

9,100 

9,100 

15,825 

42,425 


356,515 
72,5,406 
307,950 
384,690 
616,600 
958,300].. 
.547,975 
888,325 
153,947 
.931,915 


600 
9,050 
1,000 


Total  townships    !     16,121 


Caledonia  . . 
Cayuga 
Dnnnville  . . 
Hagersville 


Total  villages. 


942 
1,213 
1,971 
1,016 

5,142 


280,795     6,961,623 


547 

1,002 

933 

331 


160,579 
160,070 
543,047 
183,025 


2,816'    1,046,721 


3,100 
1,800 

'  9,300 

24,850 

10,46o' 

8,600; 

73,1501 

16,8601 


2,380 


4,170 


Total. 


1,538,650 
1,058,375 
1,064.630 
1,720,800 
1,915,375 
2,499,010 
2,668,233 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purpose.*-. 


Total. 


Per 
head. 


7,800  12,464,y73 
18,310|       716,643 


100, 
2,000; 
2,550 

950, 

5,600 


3.150 


850 
250 
250 
300 

4,800 

37,239 


2,830 
3..500 
1,600, 


175,370 

147,910 

75,735 

74,275 


23,838 
18,569 
9,464 
21,003 
21,157 
23.303; 
28,863 

146,197 

15,949 

3,3601 
1,985 
1,398 
1.696 


5  48  15.5 

5  19  17.5 

6  20    8.9 

6  73  12  2 
5  76  11.0 
5  741  9.3 
5  96  10.8 

5  8111.7 

7  2622. 3 

4  ,"219.2 

3  16il3.4 
2  54  18.5 

4  86  22  8 


473,2901       8,439,     3  66  17.8 


9.%,  1,53 1 

465,.S50 

753,583 

2,360,475 

562. 155  i 

687,380 

1,581,795 

1,113,484 

8,460,375; 

898,009 

1.56,490 
259,551, 
122,505' 
270,600 


10  825 
6,027 
8,516 

14,107i 
7, 938 1 
9,169! 

12,202 
9,972 


3  17  11.6 
3  05  13.0 

3  25  11.3 

4  02    6.0 

3  54  14.1 

4  66  13  3 
2  98;  7.7 
4  86    9.0 


78,7561  3  60  9.3 
18,017   6  38  20.1 


7,930   809,046 


1,100' 


2,050! 


400 

3,550 

2,800 

4,100 

3,300 

300 


.S58,215 
734,456 
401 ,000 
,^^84,690 
616,600 
958,300 
551,075 
890.125 
1.5.^,947 
1,941,615 


6,990,(^3      61,055 


3,614 
5,487 
2.643 
6,269 

18,013 


4,179 
5,377 
2,320 
3,420 
.5,788 
8.165 
.\.^33 
7,956 
1,353 
17,164 


48  23.1 
06|21.1 

40  21.6 
08  23.2 


5  11122.3 


173,829 
172,770 
619,497 
200,175 


109,0501     10,5001    1,166,271 


3,996 

3,?86 

10,956 

3,739 


4  29  11 
3  39    7 

2  83 

3  69 
3  01 

5  52 

3  21 

4  24 


7 
3 
5.8 
8.9 
9.4 
8.5 
9.7 
8.9 


3  321  8.8 
3 


3  79 


8.7 


24  23.0 
20  22.5 
5617.7 
68  18.7 


22,577l     4  39  19.4 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  A  X  AT  I  O  N  .- Coniini/crf. 


Municipalities. 


Wblland  : 

Bertie 

Crowland 

Humberatone     

Pelham 

Stamford 

Thorold 

Wainfleet 

Willoughby 

Total  townships  . . 

*Niagara  Falls 

Thorold 

Welland 

Total  towns 

Bridgeburg 

Ohippawa 

Fnit  Erie     

Niagara  Falls  South 
Port  Colborne 

Total  villages 

Lambton : 

Bosanquet 

Brooke   

Dawn 

Enniskillen 

Euphemia 

Moore 

Plympton 

Sarnia 

Sombra 

Warwick 

Total  townships    . 

Fore^it 

Petrolea 

Sarnia  

Total  towns 

Alvinston    

Arkona  

Oil  Springs         . .    . . 

Point  Edward 

Thedford   

Watford 

Wyoming 

Total  villages 

Huron  : 

Ashfield 

Colborne    

Goderich 

Grey   

Hay 

Howick 


Popula- 
tion. 


2,946 
1,03.3 
2,595 
2,330 
2,116 
1,897 
2,742 
964 

16,623 

4,288 
2,214 
1,835 

8,337 

1,342 

511 

975 

1,419 

1,098 

5,345 


2,518 
3,315 
3,586 
5,139 
2,194 
4.78?* 
3,565 
2,081 
3,550 
3,59C 

34,326 

1,522 
4,976 
6,439 

12,937 


1,000 
482 

1,088 

1,338 
597 

1,280 
817 

6,602 


3,449 
1,794 
2,480 
3,487 
3,391 
4,219 


No.  of 

acres 

assessed 


34,880 
19,1B8 
30,845 
28,841 
21,064 
22,683 
51,000 
18,803 

227,314 

1,082 
784 
700 

2,566 

490 
171 
867 
333 
212 

1,873 


70,982 
74,019 
65,525 
81,894 
.'?9,159 
73,280 
75,015 
38,562 
72,363 
69,100 

659,899 

950 
2,700 
1,450 


Assessed  values. 


Real 


I     Per- 
sonal 
property,  j     pro- 
perty. 


1,522,715 
400,115 

835,985 
970,781 
805,096 
632,315 
881.305 
417,2 

6,468,589 

2,085,090 
576.372 
546,870 

3,208,332 

452,945 
116,460 
306,658 
321,055 
274,325 

1,471,443 


53,800 
1,500 
22,575 
16.150 
23,(<75 
27,825 
45,000 
7.625 


Total. 


1,750 
600 


198,450        3,250     6,670,289      63,640,     3  83 


79,650 
26,950 
62.300 

168,900 

13,200 

6,  .550 

4,900 

10,400 

24,000l 

59,050 


1,576,515 
401,615 
860,310 

987,531 
829.071 
660,540 
929,805 
424,902 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


Total. 


Per 

head. 


11,226, 
M26 
7,929 
7,638 
8,931! 
7,.56l! 

11,2991 
3,930 


3  81|  7.1 

4  96  12.8- 
3  06    9.2 

3  2S   7.7 

4  2210,8 
3  99  11.4 


4  12 
4  08 


2,173,810 
608,272 
622,570; 


43,584 
14,485 
13,759 


12.2 
9.2 

9.6 


10  16  20.0 


6  54 

7  50 


3,404,682      71,828'     8  62 


1,000 

5,000 

13,800 

9,800 


450 

1,400 

4,620 

3,775 

1.5,870 

1,550 

1.900 

600 

3,000 

466,145 
124,010 
316,558 
345,255 
308,125 


14,478,663      31,015 


303,407 
1,101,8.00 
1,838,785 


18,750 

52,100 

136,050 


29,600     1,560,093 

1,514,168 
1,961,315 

860,706 
l,i51.S,295i 
1,0]6,]82| 
1,786,925 
2,049,7021 

753.960! 

1,019,820, 

}    2,035,755 

2,150  14,511,828 

I 
8,3001       3.^0,457 
70,300     1,224,250 
115,808     2,090,643 


5,100    3,244,042    206,900    194,408 


440 
500 
1,883 
728: 
460 
400; 
479, 


178.755 
77,800 
2.32,584 
195,335 
80,925 
214,630 
116,410 


4,890'    1,096,439 


63,914! 
34.282 
52,308: 
64  853 
.5.3.590 
67,506 


1,691,030 
1,083,465 
1,504,313 
1,716,900 
1,740,210 
2,129,729 


16,635 
.3,550 

15,350 
1,675 
8,800 

21,515 

12.450 


2,500 
1,600 


79,975;       4,100 


7,900 
1,600 


.5,600 
17,470 
11,250 


400 
200 


700 
300 


3,645,350 

195,390 
81,350 
247,934 
197,010 
89,725 
238,645 
130,460 


6,618 
1,654] 
•",444 1 
6,922 
4,702 

23,340 


13,432 
23,641 
20.320 
30,425 
9,672 
24,918 
20,634 
15,207 
21,. 318 
1.5,396 

194,963 

8,360 
39,763 
54,814 

102,937 

4,204 
1,177 
5,041 
.3,502 
1,564 
6,199 
2,753 


93 


23.8 
22.1 


21.1 
14.2 


3  24113.3 

3  ,53  10.9 

4  88  20.0 
4  2815.3 


4  37 


15.0 


33  8.9 
1312.1 
67  23  6 
92  20.1 
41'  9.5 
20  13.9 
79  10.1 
31  20.2 
0120.9 
29,  7.6 


5  68  13.4 

5  49  25.3 

7  99  32.5 

8  5126.2 

i 
7  96128.2 


20:21.5 
4414.5 
63120.3 
62  17.4 
62  17.4 
84  26.0 


3  37  21.1 


1,180,514      24,440     3  70  20.7 


1,698,930 
1,08.5,465 
1,504,513 
1,722,500 
1,758,380 
2,141,279 


13,011 

3  77 

8,436 

4  70 

10,060 

4  06 

13,818 

3  96 

13,920 

4  10 

14,405 

3  41 

7.7 
7.8 
6.7 
8.0 
7.fr 
6.7 


*Separated  from  county  for  municipal  purposes. 

4 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32). 


A  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  AX  AT  ION  .-Continued. 


Municipalities. 


Hv^oy.— Continued. 

HuUett 

McKillop 

Morris    

Stanley  

Stephen 

Tuckeromith 

Turnberry 

Usborne 

Wawanosh,  E  . . . . 
Wawanosh,  W 


Total  townships 


Clinton  . . 
Goderich 
Seaforth  . 
Wingham 


Total  towns 


Bavfield. . 
Blf  th  . . . 
Brussels . . 
Exeter  . . 
Hensall  . 
Wroxeter 


Total  villages 


BKrcE : 

Albemarle  

Amabel 

Arran 

Brant 

Bruce 

Carrick 

Culross  

Eaetnor 

Eldertlie    

Oreenock   

Huron 

Kincardine   

Kinloes 

Lindsay  &  St.  Edmunds. 
Saugeen  


Total  townships 


Kincardine 
Walkerton  . 
Wiarton . . , . 


Total  towns 


Chesley 

Lucknow   . . . , 

Paislev   

Port  Elgin..., 
Southampton 

Tara 

Teeswater 

Tiverton 


Total  villages 


Popula- 
tion. 


2,832 
2,842 
2,590 
2,221 
•  4,123 
2,588 
2,273 
2,411 
1,883 
2,094 

44,677 

2,472 
4,017 
2,419 
2,109; 


No.  of  i 
acres 
assessed 


•  53,081 
62,077 
55,700, 
43,319 
56,7421 
40,7381 
35,7091 
42,6691 
41,734 
41,7O0| 

800,522 

900 

1,000 

550 

650 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property 


1,993,800 
1,892,050 
1,720,735 
1,659,630 
1.789,310 
1.940,145 
1.037,760 
1.816,050 
1,080,180 
1.114,375 

25,909,672 

558,820 

1,03.5,550 

573,140 

460,110 


11,017;       3,100]    2,627,620 


724 
954 
1,136 
1,815 
774 
449 

5,852 


1,374 
2,904 
2,610 

3,917; 

2,967, 
4,985 
2,7471 
1,583 
2,559 
2.756 
3,475 
2,952 
2,498 
942j 
1.524' 


1,760 
428 
422 

1.046 
460 
485 

4,601 


53,779, 
64,000 
54,107 
69,558 
67,362 
59,344 
56,457 
47,406 
54,418 
64,712 
57,933 
59,041 
46,319 
78,718 
36.055 


86.427 
184,175 
264,630 
446,996 
179.260 

99,630 

1.261,018 


169,001 

646,  .500 
1,455,460 
1,982,900 
1,383,760 
a.060,740 
1,705,375 

186,222 
1,299,235 
1,353,4601 
1.492,4.% 
1,6 15,  .550 
1,120,030 
81,, 530 

869,980 


Per- 
sonal 

pro- 
per  t  y. 


4,350 

3,400 
2,100 
9,900 
5,300 
2,500 
5,500 
1,200 
8,150 

86,220 

15,900 
55, 875 
58,950 
58,430 

189,155 

3,040 
19,700 
34,090 
44,225 
12,670 
10,190 

123,915 


Taxable 
income. 


8C0 

1,000 

500 


Total. 


1,200 
"566 


200 
5,800 


1,998,950 
1  893,050 
1,724,635 
1,661.730 
1,799,210 
1,946,645 
1,040,250 
1,822,050 
1,081,380 
1,122,725 

26,001,692 


6,450  581,170 

31,570,  1,122,995 

10,800  642,890 

7,500'  526,040 

56,320  2,873,095 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


200 

1,300 

3,900 

3,600 

200 

100 

9,300 


89,667 
205,175 
302,620 
494,821 
192,130 
109,820 

1,394,233 


1 109,001 

3,f00, 649,500 

1,200 I  1,456,660 

9,250,          800  1,992,950 

3,200 1,386,960 

15,900 2,076,640 

3,100 1,708,475 

5,365' J  91,587 

1,2001 1,300,435 

35.300 1  1,388,760 

9,050!       4,025 
4,350  300 

.5,850  400 

7, 


,050! 
,350 
,850 
,170' 
900l 


39,793    869,209  17,428,178    101,835        5,525 


2,332 
2,944 
2,105 


1,900 

1,350 

753 


563,113 
580,795 
372,570 


40,000 
46,375 
23,850 


7,381    4,003  l,cl6,478 


1,756,' 


1,211 
1,093 
1,385 
1,550 

683 
1,023 

455 

9,156 


500 
500 

500; 

600l 
3,000 
500 
474 
500' 


13,550 

14,675 

3,300 


110,225   31,425 


313,400 
243,963 
260,1401 
264,494! 
224,5361 
181,2751 
220,810 
73,785' 


26,100 
40,550 
47,6001 
25.750 

9,075! 
41,100 
26,300' 

3,50O| 


8,850 


1,. 505,510 

1,620,200 

1,132,280 

88,700 

870,880 


700 
1,700! 

1,9501 
400 

500 


17,538,538 

616,663 
641,745 
399,720 

1,658,128 

348,3.50 
284,513 
308,440 
291,944 
233,611 
224,325 
247,510 
77,785 


6,574     1,782,403    219,975! 
5 


14,1001    2,016,478 


Total. 


12,872 
9,966 

11,648 
8,836 

14,696 
9,387 
6,429 

11,006 
6,482 
7,593 

172,505 

12,300 
28,075 
16,514 
12,072 

68,961 

1,.359 
4,088 
6,265 
8.578, 
3,019 
1,098 

24,437 


4,870 

11,849 

8,601 

13,824 

10,222 

13,074 

8,982 

4,796 

11,287 

8,862' 

13,3.51 

9,896 

6,115 

3,8551 

5,318 


Per 
head. 


6.4 
5.3 
6.8 
5.3 
8.2 
4.8 
6,2 
6.0 
6.0 
6.8 


3  86    6.6 

i 

4  98  21.2 
6  99  25.0 
6  83  25.7 

5  72  22.9 


6  26  24.0 


88  15.2 
29  19.9 
51  20.7 
73  17.3 
94  15.9 
45  10.0 


4  18  17.5 


3  .54  28.8 

4  08  18.2 
3  30    5.9 


3  53 
3  45' 

2  62 

3  27 1 


6.9 

7.4 
6.3 
5.3 


03  25.0 


8.7 
6.4 
8.9 
6.1 
5.4 
43  5 
6.1 


134,902,     3  391  7.7 


16,214 

12,684| 

9,612 


6  95  26.3 
4  .31  19.8 
4  57  24.0 


38,510     5  22  23.2 


7,765 
6,393 
5,129 
4,779; 
4,721 
2,804' 
4,455 
1,587 

37,633 


4222.3 
28  22.5 
6916.6 
45  16.4 
05  20.2 
III12.5 
35118. 0 
4920.4 


4  IIII8. 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  AX  AT  10 -i^  .-Continued. 


A   189^4 


Municipalities. 


Gret  : 

Artemesia . ,  . 
Bentinck  .  . 
Collingwood 

Derby 

Egremont  . . . 
Euphrasia  . . 
Glenelg    . . . . 

Holland 

Keppel     

Normanby  . . 

Osprey    

Proton    

St.  Vincent 
Sarawak  . 
Sullivan   . . . . 
Sydenham. . . 


Total  townships 

Durham 

Meaford 

Owen  Sound ... 
Thornbury  


Total  towns 


Dundalk 
Markdale 


Total  villages   . 

SiMCOE  : 

Adjala    

Essa 

Flos . . . 

frwillimbury,  W . 
Innisfil 

Matchedash 

Medonte 

Nottawasaga  .    . . 

Orillia   

Oro 

Sunnidale 

Tay 

Tecumseth 

Tiny    

Tossorontio   

Vespra 


Total  townships 

Alliston 

Barrie 

Collingwood 

Midland 

Orillia 

Penetanguishene . . 
Stayner  


Total  towns 


Beeton 
Bradford 


No.  of 

Popula- 

acres 

tion. 

assessed 

3,542 

68,387 

4,345 

75,261 

3,510 

68,000 

1,961 

40,163 

3,224 

72,513 

3,226 

71.966 

2,761 

67.547 

3,453 

68,333 

3,528 

89,940 

4,509 

68,139 

3,251 

70,802 

3.153 

81,266 

2,9:^0 

6:^.275 

1,230 

10,749 

Assessed  values. 


Real 
property . 


3, 707 1 
3  577| 


73,.S0l 
73,215 


$ 

1,011,345 

1,322,700 

1,242,846 

780.000 

1,536,220 

1,286,785 

655,027 

644,235 

67.3,891 

1.474,410 

774,070 

f  0.5, 850 

1,431,455 

248,841 

1,151.420 

1,150,750 


51,907  1,06?,857  16,189,845 


1,290 

1,865 

7,800 

745 

11,700 

641 
803 

1,444 


2,058 
4,018 
3,293 
2,413 
3,932 
460 
3,671 
5,082 
3,705 
4,075 
2.334 
3,870 
.3,561 
.3,810 
1,605 
2,845 


1.100 

1..500 

6.120 

900 


265,361 

.507,667 

2.409  .558 

217,211 


9,620     3,.399,797 


411 
950 


11. \  630 
151.455 


1,391 !       267,085 


45,812i 
67, 759 1 
63,443 
46,892 
68.7991 
17,9431 
65, 136 1 
91.288 
70,892 
73,845 
55,240 
46,414 
66,080 
78,205 
44,663 
62,060 


847.540 

1,296,754 

652,266 

1,043,067 

1,380,944 

54,615 

520,380 

2,068,388 

5.52,885 

1,046,798 

463,264 

.521,914 

1. 685.955 

6U,855 

730,209 

512,190 


Per- 
sonal 

pro- 
p  e  r  t  y. 


4,500 

12,100 

2,600 

7,250 
3,800 
300 
5,C50 
2,200 
10,1.50 
5,700 
1,750 


Taxable 
income. 


400 

1,200 

650 


1.^400, 
1,700, 


350 


70,500        2,600 


34,000 

.^2,450 

129, 9C0 

4,800 

201,150 

4.500 
14,150 


4,450 

2.950 

48,125 


Total. 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


1,015,845 

1,334,800 

1,245,446 

780,000 

1,543.470 

1,290,985 

656,527 

619,935 

676,091 

1,484,560 

779,770 

807,600 

1.431,455 

248,841 

1,164,820 

1.152,800 

16,262,945 

303,811 

543,067 

2,587,583 

222,011 

3,656,472 

120,130 
167.655 


7,950 
1,800 

700 

3,250 
■" '2^650 

"1.566 

2.000 
13,000 
2,450 
3,650 
2,000 
1,100 

"2,950 

Total. 


11,677 

15,5S6 

15,688 

6,427 

11,733 

10,897 

8,344 

7,.%5 

11,974 

16,612 

6,851 

8,535 

11.502 

4  044 

10,  .505 

11,777 

169,467 

6,958 
11,947 
76,088 

3,996 


Per 

head. 


18,6.50,       2,050        287,785 


3,700.  800!       852,040 

2,600' I    1,299,?54 

660,916 

1,044,867 

1,380,944 

54,615 

52.3,630 

2,068,388, 
557,035 

1,046.798 
465,264 
537.864 

1.688.405 
645.505 
732,209 
513,290' 


50,732;    964,470  14,019,024      46,150        5.950  14,071,124 


1.791 

500 

305,072 

6,549 

2,600 

1,451.425 

5, 34s 

4.400 

1,235.521 

2.  -to-. 

40 -i 

437,275 

4,898 

1,600 

1,172,290 

2,449 

1,717 

414,555 

1.2fc2 

1,146 

201,875 

24,725 

12,429 

5,218,013 

646 

475 

116,985 

932 

1,700 

225,903 

22,595 
72,900 
2«  350 

9,800 
76.200 
21.450 

9,950 


10,550 
19,075 


3.32,767 
1,578,125 
1,277.121 

447,075 
1,260,490 

437,155 

211,825 


1.825 
1,7521 


7.603 
13,863 
12.970 
10,065 
13,413 
887 1 
ll.lOll 
20,707 
10,842 
11,275 

9.046 

9,441 
1.5, 572 1 
12.8.561 

6,688; 

8,954 


$  c. 


3  30  1 1 .5 
3  58  11.6 
47112.6 
28  8.2 
641  7.6 

38  8.4 
0212.7 
13  11.3 

39  17.7 
68  11.2 
111  8.8 
7110.6 

3  93  8.0 
3  29  16. a 

2  83    9.0 

3  29  10.2 

3  26^10  4 

5  29  22.9 

6  41  22.0 
9  7529.4 
5  36h8.0 


98,989     8  46127.1 


2  85115.2 
2  I81IO.5 


3,577     2  48  12.4 


3  69,  8.9 
3  45  10.7 

3  94  19.6 

4  17!  9  6 
3  4ll  9.7 

1  93  16  2 

3  02  21.2 

4  07  10.1 

2  93  19.5 

2  77  10.8 

3  88  19.4 

2  44  17.6 

4  37    9.2 

3  37  19.9 

4  17i  9.1 
3  15  17.4 


175,283     3  46  12.5 


7,597 
45, 949  i 
36.718 

9,834l 
29,6951 
10,350 

3,885 


239,245   87,300  5,544,558  144,028 


127,535 
I   244,978 


2,65«l 
5,069 


23,22.8 
02|29.1 
87.28.8 
09  22.0 
06  23.6 
23  23.7 
03118  3 


5  83126.0 

4  11  20.8 

5  44*20.7 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  AX  ATI  O^. -Continued. 


Municipalities. 


SlMOOK. — Continued. 

Creemore  

Tottenham    

Total  villages  

Middlesex  : 

Adelaide 

Biddulph       

Caradoc   

Delaware  

Dorchester,  N 

Ekfrid 

Lobo 

London  

McGillivray 

Metcalfe 

Mesa  

Nissouri,  W 

Westmineter 

WUliams,  E   

WiUianas,  W    

Total  townships  . . . . 

Parkhill 

Strathroy 

Total  towns 

Ailsa  Craig  

Glencoe 

•L<ndon,  W 

Lucan 

Newbury   

Wardsville 

Total  villages   

Oxford  : 

Blandford 

Blenheim 

Dereham      

Nis-outi,  E   

Norwich,  N 

Norwich,  S       

Oxford,  E 

Oxford,  N 

Oxford,  W 

Zorra,    E  

Zorra,  W   

Total  townships  .  . . . 

Ingersoll 

Tilsonburg 

Woodstock 

Total  towns 

Embro 

Norwich 

Total  villages  


i  Popula- 
tion. 


671 
504 


2,753 


2,181 
2,200 
3,885 
1,526 
3,572 
2,729 
2,728 
8,6fll 
3.014 
1,578 
2,740 
2,541 
4,678 
1,448 
1,502 


No.  of 

acres 

asse.'sed 


504 
400 

3,079 


44,108 
39,257 
61,913 
23,387 
51,596 
53,437 
47,284 
99,896 
66,824 
36,188 
47, 173 
49,500 
61,592 
38,6il 
35,122 


AshesBed  values. 


Real 
property. 


Per- 
sonal 

pro- 
perty. 


Taxable 
income. 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


Total.     I  Total 


114,285 
109,830 


567,003      47,5751 


865,055 
1,214  305 
1.197,356 

588.375 
1,690,104 
1.98i5,680 
1,752,32;^ 
4,U6,610 
1,925,735 

999,170 

577,750 
1,400,000 
2,997.150 
1.262,297 

60;<,265 


45,013    756,888  23,203.074 


1,429] 
3,037 


550! 
2,200 


295,590 
866,447 


4,466        2,750     1,162,037 


131,750 
262,240 
338,496 
1.5.5,600 

58,682 
53,850 


717 

443 

1,035 

424 

1.885 

414 

802 

500 

402 

50O 

318 

426 

5,159 


1,679 
4,668 
3,322 
2,732 
2,137 
2,477 
1,974 
1,276 
2,061 
3,840 
2,614 


,707     1,000,617 


29,666 
66,880 
65,0.=  5 
46,473 
33,8fc8 
35,719 
34,758 
21,133 
25,805 
57,587 
55,121 


1,069,£60 
2,281,055 
2,359,(80 
2, 1 08, 8c  5 
1,517,450 

954,805 
1.482.455 

>'69,107 
1,063,735 
2,698,050 
2,588,415 


5,950  . , 
12,000  . , 


28,780    472,065  18,992,567 


4,568 
2,223 
9,010 


2,200  1,3'28,38.') 
1,900;  667,125 
1,525     2,566,6£0 


120,235 
121,830 

614,578 


865,055 
800           200     1215,305 
2,500 1,199,856 


2,150 


7C0 


29,200 
2,200 


1,250 
100 


lOOl 
3,000 


1,850        1,500 


40,050 

5,500 

28,445 
56,290 

2,600 
15,400 

8i,736 

18,000 

16,960 

3,800 

16,000 
2,650 
5,300 

ioo 

40,900 

3,900 

4,050 

'     12,075 

70,450 

7,850 

300 
1,450 

6C0 
1,900 

591,225 
1,690,104 
2,012,880 
1,754,622 
4,149,610 
1,925,735 
1,000,320 

577,850 
1,400,000 
2,997,160 
1,265,647 

603,266 


2,312 
2.141 

12,175 


10,340 
10,02U 
17,678 
7,793 
17,795 
17,157 
15,990 
36,873 
14,266 
10,202 
12,151 
14,417 
2;, 528 
9,568 
7,857 


I  tt^ 


3  45  19.2 

4  25J17.6 

4  42|19.8 


4  74  12.0 
4  55    8.2 

4  55  14. 7 

5  11  13.2 

4  98  10.5 

6  29j  8.5 

5  fc6|  9.1 
24|  8.9 
73'  7.4 
47  10.2 
43  21.0 
67,10.3 
60  7.2 
6l|  7.6 
23  13.0 


23,248,624    223,635     4  97 


326,635 
938,137 

1,264,772 

131,750 
282,990 
338.495 
171,600 
61,332 
59,250 


8,820 
20,528 

I 
29.348 

2,538' 
5,199 
8,625 
3,630 
1,351 
1,047, 


9.6 


6  17'27.0 
6  76  21,9 

I 
6  57  23.2 


3  54 
5  02 

4  58 


19.3 
18,4 
25.5 


4  63  21.2 
3  36  22.0 
3  29  17.7 

I 


1,045,417      22,390     4  34  21.4 


8,500 
35,4001 


1.000 

200 

8,000 

1,200 

148,726 

60.550 

55,800 

126,250 


800 
l,700l 
l.OOOi 


3,600 


1,073,910 
2,294,580j 
2,430,1.^0' 
2,118,605 
1,525,950! 

991,005! 
1,484,1551 

871, 107 1 
1,063,935 
2,709.650 
2,589,615 


11,360  19,152,642 


2.3,350 

2,300 

69,000 


1,412,286 

725,225 

2,761,900 


6,955 

21,000 

20,213 

10,284 

10,488 

9,265 

8,113 

0,643 

7,293 

20,477 

15,217 

135,948 

34,540; 
16,068 
62,746, 


14 
.50 
08 

7fi 
91 ' 

74: 

5  21] 
3  54 

6  33 
5  82, 


6.5 
9.2 
8.3 
4.9 
6.9 
9.3 
5.6 
7.6 
6.9 
7.6 
5.9 


4  72    7.1 

7  56  24.5 
6  78  20.8 
6  96  22.8 


15,801        5,625     4,  .562, 160    242,600      94,660     4,899,410     112,3541     7  11  22.9 


603 
1,207 

1,810 


1,334 
,555 


184,113 
278,195 


7,600: 
29,575 


3,000, 
4,600| 


194,713 
312,270 


1,889        462,308 


37,1751       7,500       606,983 


2,768; 
6,538 

9,306 


4  59  14.2 

5  42  20.9 


5  14  18.4r 


London  West,  village,  united  with  London  city  Dec.  25th,  1897. 

7 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND  TAXATION.— Continued. 


Municipalities. 


Brant : 

Brantford 

Bnrford 

Dumfries,  S 

Oakland 

Onondaga  

Total  townships 

Paris  (town) 

Pbbth  : 

Blanshard 

Downie 

Eastbope,  N 

Easthope.  S 

Ellice 

Elma 

FuUarton   

Hibbert 

Logan 

Mornington 

Wallace 

Total  townships 

Listowel 

Mitchell 

*St.  Marys   

Total  towns     . . . 

Milvertoa  (village). . 

Wbllington  : 

Arthur    

Eramosa    

Erin 

Garafraxa,  W  .  . . . 

Guelph   

Luther,  W 

Maryborough   

Minto 

Nichol 

Peel 

Pilkington 

Paslinch 

Total  townships 

Harriston 

Mount  Forest  ... 
Palmerston    

Total  towns  . . 

Arthur   

GlifiFord     

Drayton 

Elora 

Erin 

Fergus    

Total  villages   . 


Popula- 
tion. 


5,028 
4,494 
2,676 
759 
1,163 


Assessed  values. 


No.  of 

acre.s 

assessed 


72,030 
66,546 
46,628 
10.408 
20,566 


Real 
property. 


3.756,778 

2,176,2.57 

2,288,344 

388,532 

704,029 


Per- 
sonal 
pro- 
perty. 


75,332 
61,555 
28,950 
1-4790 


14,120    216,178     9,313,940 
3,010  685        926,548 


2,686 
2,809 
2,187 
1,910 
3,136 
3,703 
2,076 
2,168 
2,811 
2,874 
2,793 

29,153 


906 
527 
106 
826 
479 
115 
248 
431 
774 
066 
808 


Taxable 
income. 


2,102,200 
2,032,000 
1,922,775; 
1,132,241 
1,597,000 
1,601,480 
l,898,625i 
1,747,755 
1,871.880 
1,312,290 
1,293,562 


178,627 
93,949 

1,200 

9,666 
1,600 


8,000' 


1,700 


.M8,286  18,-511,808,     21,500 


2,512  1,500  677,470'  79,800 
2.2191  1,200  601,4481  64,600 
3,192        2,678'    1,056,490      83,450 


7,923 
612 


3,120 
2,646 
3,242 
2,763 
2,256 
2,147 
3,054 
3,096 
1,909 
3,945 
1,442 
3,420 


5,378 
461 


64,429; 
44,190 
70,360 1 
47,525 
36,719 
49,659 
56,480 
69,433 
26,676 
74,450 
29,153 
58,504 


2,335,408,  227,850 
122,270 


33,010  627,578 


l,75l| 
2,359 
1,997 

6.107 

1,379, 
630 
903] 

1,272 
5001 

1,526 


839 

1,414 

9191 


1,300,090 
1,805,620 
2,013,325 
1,088,250 
1,461,100 
629,220 
1,159,468 
1,677,650 
1,107,940 
1,881,345 
1,043,101 
1,403,160 

16,570,269 

391,370 
549,655 
384,020 


450 

45,2,50 

36,600 

2,650 

23,900 

1,450 

7,025 


21,175 


I 
3,172j  1,325,046 


994 
435 
422 
850 
463 
980 


6,210   4,144 


213,430 
114,380 
148,135 
306,604 
102,155 
385,778 

1,270,482 


38,335 

176,835 

27,060 
60,050 
32,700 

109,810 

26,125 
10,2301 
10,600 
23,000' 
8,800' 
25,600 

104,355 


Total. 


$ 

5,6001 

1,500 

3,100 

850 1 

4001 

11,450 

14,9501 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


800 
900 


1,700 


3,837,710 

2,239.312 

2,320,394 

402,172 

704,429 

9,504,017 

1,035,447 


2, 103,400 
2,032,800 
1,932,675 
1,133,841 
1,597,000 
1,601,480 
1,898,625 
1,755,755 
1,871,880 
1,312,290 
1,295,262 

18,535,008 


8,850        766,120 

6,390        672,438 

23,5E0l    1,163,490 


38,790 


Total. 


21,308 

17,529 

12,805 

3,089 

5,432 


Per 

head. 


$  c.t 
4  24 

3  90 

4  79 
4  07 
4  67 


60,163      4  26    6.3 
18,6181     6  19,18.0 


S 


5.6 

78 
5.5 

7.7 

7.7 


11,904 
11,829 
11,914 
7,383 
16,536 
18,3581 
12.601 
10,141 
12,161 
14,293 
11,294 


6.7 
5.8 
6.2 
6.5 


27IIO.4 


11.5 
66 
5.8 
6.5 

10.9 
8.7 


138,414'  4  75    7.5 

18,182  7  24  23.7 

13,623!  6  14  20.3 

23,003;  7  21119  8 


2,602,0481     54,808'     6  92 
122,270        2,080;     3  40 


600 

200 

9,500 


1,650 

11,950 

2,300 

10,900 

5,050 

18,250 

800 
150 


1,300,540, 
1,850,870, 
2,050,525 
1,091,100! 
1,494,500 
630,670 
1,166,493 
1,677,650 
1,129,116 
1,881,345 
1,043,101 
1,443,145 

16,759,054 

420,730 
610.605 
421,770 


10,250, 
10,091  i 
12,0151 
10,530 

9,207 

8,448 
12,709 
15,7871 

7,466 
15,995 

7,152 
11,483 

131.133 

8,420 

13,739 

9,777 


21.1 
17.0 


7.9 
5.5 
5.9 
9.7 
6.2 
93113.4 
16  10.9 
10,  9.4 
91  6.6 
05'  8.5 
96'  6.9 


3*6'  8.0 
3  971  7.8 


3,300 
2^200 
6,450 


1,453,105   31,936 


240,355 
124,760 
158,735 
332,904 
110,955 
413,678 

1.381,287 


5,241 
1,475 
3,892 
7,167 
1,262 
7,874 


8120.0 
82  22.5 
90  23.2 


5  23  22.0 


3  80  21.8 
2  34  11.8 


4  31 

5  63 
2  52 
5  16 


26,911      4  33 


24.5 
21.5 
11.4 
19.0 

19.5 


*  Separated  from  county  for  municipal  purposes. 

8 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    TAXATIO  N.— Continued. 


Municipalities. 


Waterloo  : 
Dumfries,  N. 
Waterloo   ,  . . 
Wellesley  . . . 

WLlmot 

Woolwich  .    . 


Total  townships 


Berlin.... 

■Gait 

Waterloo 


Total  towns 


Ayr 

Eiuiira    

Hespeler 

New  Hamburg. 
Preston 


Total   villages 


Ddfferin  : 
Amaranth  , .    . 
Garafraxft,    E 

Luther,  E 

Melancthon  . . 

Mono 

Mnlmur 


Orangeville  (town)  . 
Shelburne  (village). 


Lincoln  : 

C'aistor    

Clinton  

Gainsborough 
Grantham  . . . . 
Grimsby,  N  . . 
Grimsby,  S   . . 

T.outh    

Niagara 


Total  townships 
Niaerara  (town)  .. 


Beauisville 

Grimsby 

Merritton 

Port  Dalhousie 

Total  villages 


Popula- 
tion. 


No.  of 

acres 

assessed 


2,153 
7,020 
4,939 
5,401 
4,423 

23,936 

8,687 
7,418 
3,263 

19,368 

I 

9321 

1,088 

2,220 

1,283 

2,1901 

I 

7,713 


44,279 
81,855 
65  964 
60,706 
53,359 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


Per- 

sonal 

pro- 
p  e  r  t  y. 

Taxable 
income. 


1,876,736 
3,650,465 
2,249,140 
2.707,350 
2,609,525 


9,050, 


700 


Total. 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


21,850 
34,950, 


4,400 
1,010, 


1,886,486 
3,650,465 
2,249,140 
2,733,600 
2,645,485 


Total. 


8,774 
26,910 
17,321 
17,818 
17,4C0 


306,163  13,093,216      65,850        6,110  13,165,1761     88,223 


2,532 
2,061 
2.277 
3.66K 
3,350 
3,069 


2,885 
1,477 
2,800 

7,162 

500 
523 
560 
950 
1,067 

3,600 


63,440 
40,820 
.38,976 
74,643 
69,048 
68,864 


2,571,584 
2,613,120 
1,167,645 

6,352,349 

254,392 
283,730 
49.3,686 
.301,629 
576,350 

1,909,786 


1,062,760 

1,121,825 

660, 8o0 

813,287 

7.32,205 

1,385,010 


240,550 
187,.300 
137,275 


4.3,000  2,855, 134 1 
60, 250 1  2,860,6701 
22,000     1,326,9201 


565,125    125,250 


14,100 
22,800 
28,800 
43,075 
39,700 


Total  townships 16,955,   355,791     5,77.5,937      24,025 


900 

13,500 

7,050: 

2,575 


Wentworth  : 

Anoaster      

Barton    . .  . 

Beverlj'    

Binbrook     

Flamborough,  E 


3,600! 


1,179 


1,705 
1,927 
2,327 
1,908 
1,250 
1,.395 
1,720 
1,836 

14,068 

1,325 

785 

959 

1,660 

1,035 

4,439 


3,935 
3, 475 1 
4,204 
1,449| 
2,492 


1,5111       762,070      32,300 


500        326,385 


32,776 
24,739 
39,846 
19,268 
15,678 
18,136 
18,704 
22,324 

191,471 

591 

515 
495 
374 
400 

1,784 


45,906 
13,248 
70,039 
25,466 
33,767 


661,375 
986,891 
1,028,143 
726,0^0 
813,395 
565,312 
704,725 
885,710 

6,371,591 

480,735 

164,830 
201,680 
620,695 
206,415 

1,193,620 


2,229,470 
1,285,967 
1,987,102 
974,716 
1,676,330 


600 


48,950 

10^200 

20,720 

14,458 

7,400 


101,728 

16,100 

13,900, 
9,225 
32.050 


55,175 
14,160 


6,400 
2,425 
5,200 


2,600 
1,150 
3,800 
5,189 
8,050 


51,9.58 
52,797 
19,377 


7,042,724|  124,132 


4  08 
3  83 
3  51 
3.30 
3  931 


4.7 
7.4 
7.7 
6.5 
6.6 


3  69  6.7 


98  18.2 
12  18.5 
94  14.6 


6  4117.6 


271,092 
307,680 
521,2851 
349,893 
624,100 


143,475   20,7891  2,074,050 


14,600 
6,400 


700 

1,445 

' "4661 
1,300 
300 
1,100 
1,800 

7,046| 

200 

400 
1,300 
5,500 


7,200 


100 
3,106 


1,200 
4,360 


1,062.760 

1,122,725 

674.350 

820,337 

734,780 

1,385,010 

5,799,962 

808,970 

333,385 

662,076 
1,037,286 
1,028,143 
736,640 
835,415 
580,070 
713,225 
887,510 

6,480,364 

497,035 

179,130 
212.205 
668,245 
206,415 

1,255,995 


2,243,720 
1,289,073 
1,993,502 
978,340 
1,685,880 


4.626 
3,  .303! 

7,5071 
5.340 
9,303 


9617.1 
04  10.7 
38  14.4 
16  15.3 
2514.9 


30,079     3  9014.5 


13,242 
9,194 
9,577 
12,947 
11,217 
12,333 


23  12.5 
46  8.2 
21  14.2 
53  15.8 
36  15.3 
02  8.9 


68,610  4  04 


11,8 


20,2371  5  62  26.0 
6,115  5  19*18.3 


6,075, 
10,488 
8,754 
9, 009 1 
6,969, 
6,911 
8,  .326 
8,785 

65,317. 

9,679 

3,779 

6,143 

12,779 

4,748 


3  56  9.2 
5  44  10.1 

3  76  8.5 

4  72  12.2 
5.68  8.3 
4  95  11.9 
4  84  11.7 
4  78,  9.9 


4  64  10.1 
7  30  19.6 

4  8l'21.1 

5  36  24.2 
7  7019.4 
4  59  23.0 


26,449  5  96  21.1 


12.6551 
8,760 

13,224' 
6,380 
7,414 


3  22 

2  62 

3  15 
3  71 
2  98 


5.6 
6.8 
6.6 
5.5 
4.4 


9 


61  V^ictoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1^98 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT  AND    TAXATIO  N.—Continved. 


Municipalities. 


Wentworth. — Conft  n  ufd. 

Flamboro,  W   

Gianford  

Saltfleet 


Total  townships 

Dundas  (town)  . . : 

Waterdown  (village) 


Halton  : 

Epquesing    .  .. 
Nas-iagaweya 

NeLson    

Trafalgar   . .    . 


Total  townships 


Milton.  . 
Oakville. 


Total  towns 


Acton 

Burlington 
Georgetown 


Total  villages 

Peel  : 

Albion 

Caledon 

Chinguacousy  .. 

Toronto 

Toronto  Gore  . . 


Total  townships 
Brampton   (town) 


Bolton    

Streetsville 


Total  villages 

York  : 
Ecobicoka  ..... 

Georgina    

Gwillimbury,  E 
Gwilliinbury,  N 

King     

Markham 

Scarborough 

Vaughan    ...    . . 

Whitchurch 

York    


Total  townships 


Aurora   

Newma'-ket 

North  Toronto  . 


Popula- 

No. of 
acrea 

tion. 

assesged 

2,878 
1,596 
2,941 

31,102 
23,552 
28,336 

22,970 

272,405 

3,186 

550 

632 

359 

3,750 

1 
66,279 

Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


44.797 
46,309 
67,0201 


1,277,319 
1,047,440 

1,705,850 

12,184,193 
791,280 
174,025 


2,235,102 

971,530 

1,793,670 

2,459,7401 


2,4261 
2,955 
3,544 

12,675 

1,186 
1,773 
I 
2,959!       1,700        832,301 


Per- 
s  o  n  a  1 

pro- 
p  e  r  t  y. 


6,300 

15,200 

4,750 

53,425 

82,450 

7,400 


32,669 

11,865' 

3,000 

3,350; 


Taxable 
income. 


Total. 


Tax«8  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


Total. 


U  I      — 


S  c. 


1,800     1,284,419 

2,609     1,065,240 

830.    1,711,4301 

13,986,  12,251,604! 


10,803 

4,868 

10,569 


3  75  8  4 
3  06'  4.0 
3  59    6  2 


29,950 
400 


3.000 

3,805 

300 

900 


224,4051    7,460,042:     50,8841       8,005 


400 
1,300 


S77,724 
454,577 


2S,750! 
20,4001 


3,160 
2,900 


903,680 
181,825 


2,270,771 

987,200 

1,796,970 

2,463,990 


73,663:  3  21  6.0 

18,193  5  71  20.1 

I 

1,734  2  74  9  5 


11,161 

6,672 

10,342 

14,637 


7,518,931!  42,812 


2  98  4  9 

2  75  6.8 

3  50  5.8 

4  13!  5.9 

3  SsI  5  7 


409, 634 ! 

477,877. 


6.554:  5  53  16.0 
10,672 1  6  02  22  3 


49,150   6,060   887,511'  17,2261  5  82 


1,282 
1316 
1,489 


240 

489 
1,084 1 


258,530, 
354,525 
307,255 


19,900 

7,500 

32,100 


800 
1,100 
3  150; 


279,230, 
363. 126 
342,505 


19.4 
17  1 


4,087    1,813   920,310'  59,500 


4,766'  3  72 
4,3581  3  31|12.0 
7,050;  4  73120.6 


2,621 
4,282 
4,097 
5,000 
1.051 


55,984 
68,469 
80.029 
65,086 
19,000 


17.051  288,568 
I 
2,943   1,202 


632 
614 


1,246 


3,239! 
1,642 
3,3801 
1,332; 
5,169 
5,177 
3,769 
4,410 
3,724 
3,108 

39,950 

1,700 
2,127 
1,679 


475 
505 


9801 


1,152,100 
1,797. 0901 
2.916,530 
2,701, 150| 
73.5,785 

9,302,655 

I 

920,835 

138,725 
148,192 


5,050:       981,8601     16,174      3  96  16.4 


2,  .500 

8,900! 

3,150 

7,655' 

600 

I 

22,805' 

I 

45,800 

9.600 1 
11,900 


!  1,154,600 

I  1,805.990 

400,  2,920,080 
1,100  2,709,905 
736,385 


9.820; 
13,024 
17,437i 
19,9631 

4,891 


3  75 

3  041 

4  26| 

3  99| 

4  651 


8  5 
7.2 
6.0 
7.4 
6.6 


1,500     9,326,960      65,135     3  82    7.0 

I  I  ; 

18,100        984,735      24,376      8  28  24.8 


1,500 
350 


286,917      21,500        1,850,' 


28,497 
35,0061 
58,755 
31,564 
87,023! 
67,0311 
42.9851 
66  841 
60,005 
58,000 

535,707 

1,100 

700 

2,500 


1,861,220' 
648,490] 
1,283,395! 
743.300 
2.750,969 
3,206,690 
2,0J9,626| 
2,922,450 
1,600,905 
5,688,8221 

22,755,867 

436,174 
473,150 
999,378 


■  I 
6,600 
1,300 


2,400 
17.4001 
17,750 
4,100 
7,450 
3,600 


2,700 
300 
600 

2,166 
1,000 
2,100 

'260 


149,8251 
160,4421 

310,2671 


1,870,520 
650,090 
1,283,9951 
745,700 
2,770,469' 
3,225,440 
2,055,826] 
2,929,900 
1,604,705 
5,688,822 


60,600        9,000  22,825,467 


11.000 
29,650 


7,350 


447,174 
510,160 
999,378 


2,279 
2,139 

4.418 


19,744 
5,285, 
11,425 
5,603 
18,561 
20,345] 
14,687 
21,2651 
11,384! 
81,767 

210,066 


3  61115.2 
3  48!l3.3 


3  55  14.2 


6  lOjlO.6 
3  22!  8.1 


3  38  8 

4  21  7 
3  59,  6 
3  93]  6 

3  90  7 

4  82  7 
3  061  7 

10  08 1 14 


5  26    7.3 


8,2721  4  87(18.5 
12,375  5  62  24.3 
19,461,  12  32  19.5 


10 


HI  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  3*2). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  A  X  AT  10  N.-Continuecl. 


Mnnicipalities. 


York.  —  Continued. 
'Toronto  Junction 

Total  towns 


East  Toronto   .  . . . 
Holland  Landing 

Markham 

Richmond   Hill   . 

StoufFville 

Sutton 

Weston 

Woodbridge    


Total  vilbgea 


Ontabio  : 
Brock    ... 

Mara  ' 

Pickering  . 
Rama    . .    . 

Reach 

Scott  

Scugog  ... 
Thorah  . . 
Uxbridge  . 
Whitbv.  E 
Whitby  . . . 


Total  townships 


Oshawa  . . 

Uxbridge 
Whitby     . 


Total  towns 


Beavprton  . 
Cannineti  n 
Port  Perry  . 


Total  village-5 


Durham  : 
Cartwright 
Oavan       . . . 

Clarke  

Darlington 

Hope 

Manvera  .  . 


Total  townships 


Bowmanvi'le 
Port  Hope . . . 


Total  towns 


Millbrook 
Newcastle 


Total  villages. 


Popula-  I   No.  of 
tion.         acres 

asjeseed 

i 


4,776 
10,182 

1,363 

412 
1,025 

649 
1,247 

621 
1.0741 

665 


Assessed  valuej". 


Real       I     ^^^- 
s  o  n  a 

property.  I     pro- 

per  ty. 


1,608 

I 
5,908 

I 
500 
],96.S 
478 
466 
4021 
48.^^ 
2401 
500 


Taxable; 
income. 


Total. 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


1,638,685 

.3,547,387 

5.m025 
71,890 
218,765 
156,5001 
,^05,325 
128,221 1 
268,1701 
107,675 


70,100 

110,750 


7001 

12,7C0; 

3,600 

14,050 

3,700 

5,200 

650 


3,668.287  105,446 


4,050 
600, 
900 
1001 

3,000 


7,059]   5,032:  1,781,575 


3,692 
3,013 
5,442 
1,340 
3,760 
2,259 
529 
1,483 
2,799 
2,665 
2,234 


66,087 
60,669 
71.412 
33,208 
84,087 
49,200 
9,247 
32.078 
51,022 
31.175 
30,244 


070,  F65 
937,619 
443,087 
1.53,858 
996,915 
022,545 
287,590 
535,600 
991,835 
627,480 
523,403 


4.080 
1,863 
2,  .55  4 


530,025 
72,590 
23.5.515 
160,700' 
320,2751 
127,0251 
276,3701 
108,3251 


2,800  l,711,585i  65,338  13  68  38.2 


10,150 


11,040 
1,060 
4,883 
2,339 
3,571 
1,838 
4.681 
1,684 


1,830,825   31,099 


2,084,365: 
958,669; 

3,466,187' 
158.148 

1,996,915; 

1,022,545' 
287,5901 
535,600 
997,235 

1.664,080 

1,-561,850 


29,216    "498,429  14,590,294    133,140        9,750  14,733,181 


14,699 

10.522 

22,043 

3,667 

12.675 

7,391 

1,754 

5,191 

10,940 

8,872 

10,611 


10  20.8 
57J14  6 
77120  7 
6014  6 
8611.1 
95|I4.5 
3616.9 
53  15.5 


4  41 


98 

49 

05 

74 

37 

27 

3  32 

3  50 

3  91 

3  33 

4  75 


108,365,     3  71 


2  4C0     1,000,000      48,700 

.^0)        .500,  SOO      41,050 

3,800        808,542,     43,600| 


8,497        6,700 


20.450     1,069,150      24,.333|     5  96  22  8 

6,975        557,825^      10.601:     5  69  19.0 

16,560,       868,7021     20, 405  i     7  99  23.5 


17.0 


7.1 

11,0 

G,*4 

23.2 

6.3 

7.2 

6.1 

9.7 

11.0 

5.3 

6.8 


7.4 


2,318,342    133,350      43,985'    2,495,6771     55,339      6.5122.2 


786 
1.165 
1,495 

.3,446 


1,877 
2,663 
4,247 
4,297 
3.676 
2,903 

19,653 

2,971 
4,.547 

7,518 

1.007 
613: 


414 

4791 
500' 

1,393 


37.820 
62,724 
6-*,346 
68.392 
63,826 
69,620 


142.485] 
260,725 
336,810 

740,020 


695,685 
1..50.5.185 
1,820,715 
2,495,075 
2,301,800 

844,030 


370,728  9,662,490 


3,250 
14,000 
39,750 

57,000 


25,700 
1,600 
7,275 
2,850 
4,600 
4,800 

46,825 


3.0C0 


145,735 
274,725 
379,560' 


2,9451 
4,089: 
9,249 


3  75  20.2 
3  51  14.9 
6  19  24.4 


3,000   800,020,  16,283|  4  73  20.4 


800 


.3,400  976,777i  101.430 

1,0071  1,268.165  124,400 

I  i 

4  407  2,244,912  225.830 


436 
1,9491 


168,.582i 
186,701 


7,850 
4,650 


1,6201       2, 385 1       355,2831      12,500 


700 
7,050 


8,550 

22,130 
56,030 


722,185 
1,506,785 
1,827, 990 1 
2,498,625, 
2,313,450 

848.830 


5,8571 
12,0171 
14,9791 
19,0521 
10,177i 
10,345; 


9,717,865      72,427  i-   3  68 


1,100,337 
1,448,595 


78,160     2,548,932 


178,082 
192,676 


1,650! 
1,.325 


21,1711  7  13 

31,8691  7  01 

53,040  7  06 

3,6B4l  3  64 


8.1 
8.0 
8.2 
7.6. 
4.4 
12.2 

7.5 

19.2 
22.0 

20.8 

20.6 


2, 975 1       370,758 


3,716j     6  06  19.3 
7,380;     4  5fiil9.9 


*3eparated  from  county  for  municipal  purpose?. 
11 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT   AND    T  AX  AT  I  O  N.-Con(m«erf. 


Municipalities. 


Popula- 
tion. 


"NOBTHCJIBERLAND  : 

Alnwick  

Brighton    

Cramahe 

Haldimand  

Hamilton     

Monaghan  S  . . .    . 

.  Murray 

Percy    

Seymour    


Total  townships 
'Cobourg  (town)    . . 


Brighton    . . . . 
Campbellford 

Colborne 

Hastings 


Total  villages 


Prince  Edward 
Ameliasburg  . . 

Athol 

Hallowell 

Hillier 

Marys  burg  N.  . 
Marysburg  S.  . 
iSophiasburg    . . 


Total  townships 
Picton  (town)  


Wellington  (village)   . . 

Lennox  and  Addington 

Adolphuptown  

Amherst  Island 

Camden  E ! 

Denbigh,  etc 

Ernestown 

Fredericksburg  N   

Fredericksburg  S 

Kaladar,  Anglesea,  etc 

Richmond  . . ; 

Sheffield  


Total  townships 
Napanee  (town)  . . 


Bath    .   .    . 
Newburgh 


Total  villages 


Frontenac : 

Barrie 

Bedford .    .    . . 

Clarendon  and  Miller 
Hinchinbrooke 


No.  of 
acres 
as- 
sessed . 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property . 


1,078 
2,601 
?,572 
3,969 
4,206 
949 
2,953 
3,122 
2,972 


16,592 

48.663 
46,391 
76,252 
62,082 
18.398 
48,190 
51.343 
67,074 


24,422  434,985 


334.400 
1,188,960 
1,089,150 
1,735,575 
2,108,550 

538,320 
1.173.325 

952.050 
1,140,190 

10,260.520 


4,036,   2,414  1,258,225 


1,376 

2,359 

1,067, 

754 


2.729 

600 

1,090 

5571 


416,915 
717,819 
279,490 
167,555 


6,5561   4,976'  1,581,809 


2,609 
].157i 
3,107; 
1,719! 
1,1381 
1,277' 
1,991 

12,998 

3,504 

583 


521 
876 
4,2251 
941 1 
3, 359 1 
l,525i 
1,033' 
l,243j 
2,340! 
1,968 


4,%  61 7 
23,  .313 
43,385 
31.  ,506 
23,573 
23,469 
42,937 


1,125,185 
481,6fi0 

1,116,655 
736.440 
470,760 
350,915 

1,010,279 


231,800  5,291,894 
I 
552  1,155.800 


1.524 


11,593 
14,637 
86,048 
47,121 
61,598 
23,367 
20.368 
56,987 
49.794 
68,997 


18,0311  440,510 


3,011' 

429 
641 


372 

2,280 
3,200' 


186,400 

339,186 
,344,550 

1,375,763 
56,855 

1,471,580 
716,965 
575,750 
69,825 
864,560 
666,045 

6,481,079 

864,222 

109,042 
107,390 


1,070        5,480        216,432 


595 
1,320 

844| 
l,31l| 


26,5731  42,222 

63,149  175,500 

46,900'  80,323 

64,593  184,789 


Per- 
sonal 

pro- 
perty. 


1,100 

500 

1,400 

600 

11,600 

5,000 

22,450 

10.100 

1,550 

54,300 

79,400 

26,675 

38,8001 

9,150 

7,650 


Taxable 
income. 


1,400 
3,100 


Total. 


Taices  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


336,900 
1,192,560 
1,090,550 
1,736,475 
2,124,.550 
543,720 
1,150  1,196,925 
2,900  96.5,050 
I    1,141,740 


300 

4,400' 

40U, 


9,580 
2,200 

22,375 

1,590 

4,000 

i 

39,745 

68,700 


3,500 

.3.200 

30,720 


100 
19,075 


14,  ICO 


2,625 


1,500 


13,650  10,328,470 
28,000     1,365,625 


.300 

12,150 

2,720 


443,890 
768,799 
291,360 
175,205 


Total. 


3,1.30 

8,770 

8.446 
16,038 
12,742 

3.76l! 

9,420 
12,105 
12.426 

86,838 

36,536 

5,852 

13,050 

4,846 

3,855 


$  c. 


82,275   15,170  1,679,254   27,609   4  97  16.4 


300 
1,900 
730 
400 
950 
1,940 


1,12.5,185 
481,960 

1,128,1.35 
7.39.370 
493,535' 
.353,455 

1,016,219 


6,2201    5,337,8591 
21,500     1,246,000 


9,985 
,3,355 
9  6511 
6,4041 
4,083' 
4,023, 
7,259, 

44,760     3  44    8,4 

21,68l'     6  19  17.4 


600   1,850   188,850   1,J 


3  24  10.0 


500 

600 ! 

4,100 


4,500 

. . , . .  I 
3,500 


70,695   13,200 
25,500   26  510 


2,400 
2,050 


343,186 
348,350 

1,410,-583 
56,855 

1,476,180 
736,040 
579.250 
69,825 
864,560 
680,145 

6,564,974 

916,232 

114,067 
109,440 


2,6411 
.3,539 

20,179 
1.6041 

13,682 
6,568' 
5,463 
2,3311 

10,4771 

7,879 

I 

74,363' 

25,520 

1,8041 
3,455' 


07  7.7 
04  10,2 
78  14.3 
70  28.2 
07  9.3 
31  8.9 
29  9.4 
88  33.4 
48112.1 


2,625        4.450        223,5071       5,259     4  91 


4  oojii.e 

4  12111.3 

I 
8  48  27.9 

I 

4  2115.8 

5  39  31.6 

23.5 


42,222 
175,500l 

80.323 
186,289 


1,425 
5,309 
2,164 
4.790 


2  39 
4  02 

2  56 

3  65 


33.7 
30.3 
26.9 
25.7 


*I7nited  to  Durham  for  municipal  purposes. 

12 


01  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT   AND   T  AX  ATI  0  S. -Continued. 


Municipalities. 


VnoiiTEV  AC— Continued, 

Howe  Island ...  J 

Kennebec    

Kingston   

Loughborough   

Olden    

Oso    

Palmerston  and  Canonto 

Pittsburg ; . . . 

Portland    

Storrington     

Wolfe  Island    


Total  townships 


Garden  Island. 
Portsmouth  . . . 


Total  villages 


Lkeds : 

Bastard  and  Burgess 

Crosby  N , 

Cro-byS    

Elizabethtown   

Elirsley  S 

Kitley 

Leeds  and  Lansdowne  Fr 
Leeds  and  Lansdowne  Rr 
Yonge  and  Escott  Fr. 
YoQge  and  Escott  Rr 

Total  townships  .  . . 


*  Brock  ville. . . . 
Gananoque 

Total  towns 


Athens   . . 
Newboro' 


Total  villages 


+GBBNVILLE  : 

Augusta  

Edwardsburg   . . . . 

Gower  S 

Oxford-on-Rideau 
Wolford 


Total  townships 
*Pre8Cott  (town)    . . 


Cardinal  . . . 
Kemptville  . 
Merrickville. 


Total  villages 


Popula- 
tion. 


277, 
1,249! 
2,958: 

i,69.s: 

1,051' 
1,075 
1,018 
2,179 
2,058 1 
1,938 
1,470 


No.  of 
acres 


sessed. 


8,025 
39,410 
52,650 
51.691 
52,975 
42,127 
53,687 
48,126 
53,998 
54,965 
31,229 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


52,688 

95,519 

1,116,216 

379,655 

94,578 

77,927 

58,367 

809,601 

458,918 

424,430 

581,900 


Per- 
sonal 

pro- 
perty. 


Taxable 
income. 


Total. 


1,050 


300 


505 
2,825 

4,200 


1,652 


21,041    690,098,    4,632,632'     11,732 


3131 
695 


1,008, 


2,810 
1,720 
1,676 
3,850 
790 
1,973 
2,904 
2,194 
2,416 
1,186 


77  29,800 

lEO  112,125 

I 

227  141,925 


1,925 


52,688 

95,519 

1,116,215 

381,005 

94,578 

78,432 

61,192 

809,601 

465,043 

424,430 

583,552 


2, 225 1    4,646,589 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


Total. 


Per 
head. 


$    c. 


56,489 
41,8951 
36,733 
76,322 
22,1401 
49,1691 
58.724 
44,824 
54,986 
27,689 


746,320  . 

351,0711 

S88,090! 

1,369,332!. 
464.195 

1,069,315  . 
977,020: 
551,165 
705,089) 
408,915'. 


20,000 
4,380 

24,380 


4,550- 
1,2001 

1,700 

29,185 
7,400 
5,050 


6,000 
5,1501 


55,800 
121,655 


1,392 
3.050 

13,992,: 
7,2811 
3,603l 
2,835, 
2,595 

12,6061 
8,258 
8,113 
7,920 

85,333 

1,528 
2,516 


11,150        177,455        4,044 


03 


26. 4E 


31.9 
12.5 
19.1 
43  38.1 
64|36.1 
55142.4 
79115.6 
01  17.8 
19  19.1 
39  13.6 


4  06 


4  88 
3  62 


18.4 


27.4 
20.7 


4  01  22.8 


1,100 
1,200 


9,850 


300 
160 

5,925 
300 


21,519    468,971     7,030,512,     49,085|     18,835 


I 

8,959 
3, 565 1 


1,225 
1,183; 


3,147,445 
1,035,570 


12,524;       2,408     4,18,S,015 


9731 
442 


1,415 


4,057 
3,650 
757 
2,932 
1,836 

13,232 

2,874 

906, 

1,336; 

972. 


500 


165,045 

88,380 


250,346 
38,400 


747,420 

356,821 

389,290 

1,379,182 

465,895 

1,069,615 

1,006,365 

558,565 

716,064 

409,215 

7,098,432 


9.?  57 1 
6,944 
6, 201 1 

15,578 
3,0651 
7,315 

12, 631  i 
7,097; 
9,633' 
6,023 

84,244 


47113.1 
04il9.5 
70115.9 
05111.3 
88|  6.6 
71'  6.8 
.%lliJ.6 
23  12.7 
99113.5 
08  14.7 


3  9111.9 


.3,445,991      82,743,     9  24  24.0 
1,073,970      21,149,     5  9319. 7 


48,200 
288,746      48,200     4,519,9611   103,892     8  30  23-0 


4,9C0, 
],100l 


2,400, 
4001 


172,.345| 
89,880 


3,539 
1,781 


3  64  20.5 

4  03  19.8 

I 


1,388'       253,425        6,000        2,800        262,225'       5,320     3  76  20.3 


74,753 
69,066 
21,756 
59,110 
46,430 

271,115 

1,182 

400 
366 
745 


1,124  590 

1,1.55,880 

313,225 

783,620 

929,774 


500 


1.50 
5,900' 


2,900     1,127,490 

I    1,156,380, 

313,225 
785,270 
935,674' 


1,500 


3,214        1,511 


4,307,089  6,550 

826,420  31,350 

I  i 

257.690'  27,975i 

241,650  23,800 

264,078;  14,600 


4,400 

8,600 

6,762 

3,400 

12,175 


12,192 

11,905; 

2,7931 

9.2061 

5,436l 


01|10.8 
26  10.3 
69  8.9' 
Mill. 7 
96;  5.8 


763,418      66,375      22,337 


4,318,039 

866,370 

I 

292,427! 
268,850 
290,853, 


41,532.    3  14j  9,6 
18,22ol     6  34  21. C 


3,639 

7,702 
4,463 


852,1301     15,804 


4  02 

5  76 


12.4 
28.6 


4  59115.3 

4  92  18.6 


Separated  from  county  for  municipal  purposes. 


+  United  with  Leeds  for  Municipal  purposes. 


13 


6L  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT   AND    T  AX  AT  10 'S.- Continued. 


Municipalities. 


DoNDAS  : 

Matilda    

Mountain  . . . 
Williamsburg. 
Winchester   . . 


Total  townships 


Ohesterville 
Iroquois    .    . 
Morrisburg 
Winchester 


Total  villages 


*Stormont • 
Cornwall    ... 

Fined    

Osnabruck . . 
Roxborough 


Total  townships 
Cornwall  (town)  . . 


*Glengarry  : 
Charlottenburg    . . 

K-nyon  

Lancaster 

Lochiel     

Total  townships 


Alexandria 
Lancaster  . 
Matville  . . 


Total  villages 

Pbesoott : 

Alfred 

Caledonia 

Hawkesbury  E. 
Hawkesbury  W 

Longueuil 

Plantagenet  N . . 
Plantagenet  S  . . 


Totalltownships 


Hawkesbury  . . . 
tVankleek  Hill 

Total  towns  . 


L'Orignal  (village). 


;RU88ELL  : 

Cambridge  . . 
Clarence  . . . , 
Cumberland 


Popula- 
tion. 


3,751 
2,816 
3,811 
3,386 

13,764 

790 
1,069 
1,773 

933 


No.  of 
acres 
as- 
sessed. 


Assessed  values . 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


62,602 
58,257 
59,670 
57,159 


Real 
property. 


Taxable 


Per- 
sonal 

pro-     I  income, 
perty 


1,25.5,575 
1,407,500 
1,486,867 
1,331,800 


237,688  5,481,742 

I 

500,  115.090 

800  315,750 

1,0'?7!  64 ',000 

,500  192,605 


4,565   2,867 


4,971 
3.023 
4,738 
4,275 

17,007 

6,326 


1,266,505 


63,824|  1,046,4291 

51,157  6.57,000{ 

62,040  1,131,030 

71,137 1  753,160 

248,158,  3,587,619 

740  1,564,510 


4,909  82,090, 

3,860  77,3.50 

3,509  57,079 

4,352j  71,C6l| 


1,111.200 
760,315 
916,852 

1,000,145 


55,100 
7,400 
3,200 
4,000 

69,700 

1.5,450 
16,400 
37,016 
23,175 

92,041 


2,250 

14,200i 
3,000 

19,450 

50,400 


29,400 
1,950 
2.500 


2,500  1,313,175 

750  1,415,650 

300  1,490,  .867 

I  1,335,800 


Total. 


3,550  5,554,992 


400 

1.300 

29,500 

4,400 

35.600 


3,550 


130,940 
333,450 
709,516 
220,240 

1,394,146 


1,049,979 
659,250 
l,400i  1,146,630 
250   756,410 


5,200 


3,612,269 


21.050  1,635,960 


300 


16,630  287,580,  3,788,512  33.850 


300 


1,551 
488 
586 

2,625 


3,203 
1,744 
4,8S1 
1,286 
802 
3,571 
3,163 

18,600 

2,962 
1,176 


496 
126 

480 

I 


197,832: 
77,195! 
47,590; 


7,100 

SCO 

7,675 


1,102   322,6171  15,575' 


43,7411 
44.847  i 
56,390 

24,278' 
17,44ll 
50,924i 
48,479 

286,100 

5,400 
560 


32.3,100 
278,4iiO 
445,250 
227,776 
173,005 
408,960 
381,515 

2,238,056 

221,805; 
123,284; 


46o: 

2,565' 


5,3501 
5,230 

13,595 

10,900 
7.650 


4,138 

5,960 

1 

970 

3,714 

2,919 
4,767 
3,780 

69,716 
70,045 
73,  %4 

345,0891  18,550 
118.325 


423,987 
346.680 
437,079 


4,600 


300 

300 

4,400 
1,250 

5,650 

400 


1,140,900 
762,265 
919,352 

1,000,145 

3,822,662 

204,9.'?2 

77,995 
55,265 

338,192 


323,100 
278,900 
447,815 
227,776 
173,005 
414,610 
386,745 

2,251,951 

237,105: 
132,184 

I 
369,289 

I 
118,725! 


423,987 
351,180, 
437,079 


Per 
head. 


I    $    c. 


16,89ll  4  50  12.9 

13,913  4  94    9  8 

15,1981  S  99  10.2 

20,7161  6  12  15.5 


66,718]     4  85 


2,006 

6,032 

10,0611 

4,6451 


12.0 


54  15  3 
64  18.1 
67  14  2 
98  21.1 


22,744|    4  98  16.3 


14,228! 
30,1671 
13,4481 
10,638 

48,481 

33.688 


13.6 
15.4 
11  7 
14.1 


2  85  13.4 
5  64  21.8 


16,671'  3  40114.6 

9,909,  2  57  13  0 

10,.563  S  OllU  5 

10.312:  2  37  10.3 

!  I 

47,455 1  2  85  12.4 

7,036  4  54  34.3 

1,474  3  02  18.9 

1,096;  1  87  19.8 

I 

9,606  3  66  28.4 


6,330 
.5,275 
8,380 
4,761 
2,245 
9.572 
7,788 

44,351 

6,581 
5,P25 

12,106 

2,293 


1  98  19.6 
3  021 18  9 

1  73  18.7 

3  70  20.9 

2  8013  0 
2  68  23.1 
2  46  20.1 

2  38119.7 

2  22  27.8 

4  70  41.8 

I 
2  93  32.8 

I 
2  36  19  3 


7,651  2  63 
11,166  2  35 
10,845  2  87 


18.0 
31.8 
24.8 


Umted  to  Dundas  for  municipal  purposes.  t  Incorporated  in  1897. 

X  United  to  Prescott  for  municipal  purposes. 

14 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    TAXATIO  'i^.— Continued. 


Municipalities. 


Popula- 
tion. 


RuasELL.  —  Continued . 
Kussell 


Total  townships 


Cassf  Iman 
Rockland 


Total  villages. 


Oarlhton  : 

Fitzroy 

Gloucester  . . 
Goulbourn  . . 
Gow^T  N    ... 

Huntley   

March 

Marlborough 

Neppan 

Osgoode   

Torbolton  . . . 


'iotal  townships 


Hintonburg  . 
Ottawa  East 
Richmond. . . 


Total  villages. 


Renfrew  : 

Admaston 

Algona  S 

AU'e  acd  Fraser 

Bagot  and  Blithefield  . . . 

Bromley 

Brougham   . . 

Brudenell  andLynBdoch 

Grattan    

Griffith  &  Matawatchan. 

Hagarty,  Jones,  etc 

Head,  Clara  and  Maria  . 

Horton  

McNab        •. 

Pembroke 

Petewawa    

Radc  iffe  and  Raglan  . . . 
Ro'ph,  Buchanan,  Wylie 

Ross 

Seba^topol  

StaflFord    

Wes-tmeath 

Wilberforce  &  Algona  N 

Total  townships 


Amprior  . 
Pembroke 
Renfrew  . 


Total  towns 

Egr*Dville  (village) 


No.  of 

acres 

assessed 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


Per- 
sonal 

P'O- 

p  ert y. 


Taxable 
income. 


Total. 


2,941 
14,397 

702 

1,724 

2,426 


2,521 
6,091 
2,602 
1,982 
2,220 
1,1141 
1,582 
4,372 
4,6491 
926 

28,062 

1,8781 
893 
359 


47,400        625,985 
251,1241    1,833,731 


1,200 
500 

1.700 


60,213 
85,152 
65,180 
.S3,0M 
61,417 
28, 151 
55,882 
57,922 
91,081 
26,936 


51,155 
50,285 

101,440 


754,953 

1,414,036 

841,425 

885,325 

4*7,700 

364.046 

454,674 

2,166,423 

1,303,925 

147,050 


563,9681  8,779,557 


459 

235 

1,475 


3,130;   2,169 


378,4421 
174,638 

55,845 


2,202 

69,807 

848 

30,340 

1,847 

56  075 

1,409 

56,793 

1,893 

49,873 

575 

20,480 

1,299 

48,534 

1,919 

59,235 

650 

22,457 

2,402 

74,055 

460 

16,959 

1,467 

37,656 

3,501 

62,516 

683 

7,397 

921 

27,289 

855 

37,029 

914 

41,857 

2,730 

52,266 

720 

28,256 

1,043 

21,321 

3,265 

69,966 

2,269 

68,340 

33,892 

958,451 

3,746 

923 

4,976 

645 

3,058 

2,177 

11.780; 
9611 


3,745 
437 


834, 
25, 

117, 
78 

163, 
2fi, 
j^7, 
59, 
21, 
70, 
35, 

20 1, 

461. 
99, 
42, 
40, 
58, 

230, 
27, 
7-\ 

288. 

138, 


202 1 
7131 


3,156,930 
645,389 


6,000 
10,500 


8.=i5  . 

6651 

564 

8?5 

605 

180 

185 

070 

34.^ 

075 

257 

371 

040 

665 

449 

170 

876 

980 

348 

,690 


2,825 
2.825 


1,900 


.5,295 
1,300 


2,300 
6,075 


16,870 

1,500 
1,500 
3,000 


608,925   6,000 


1,100 


1,800 
3,000 

2,600 


350 


6,710 


1,6001 


3,825 
325 

21,310 

51.350 


995,3-0  125,375 
674,8801  54,450 


2,315.619 

83,416 


231,175 
11,600 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


Total. 


631,985   10,023 
1,844,231'  39,685 


51,155 
53,110 

104,265 


754,953 

1,415,936 

841.425 

890,620 

449,000 

364,046 

454,674 

2,168,723 

1,310,000 

147,050 

8,796,427 

379.942 

176,138 

58,845 


2,200 


835,302 
25.713 

117,f*.55 
8",4e5 

168,764 
26,625 
60,205 
59,180 
2^,.^35 
70,070 
35,345 

204,075 

4fi7,967 
99,371 
42,040 
40,665 
58,649 

231,770 
27,876 
75,980 

292.173 

139,015 


2,400     3,180,640 

6,600        703,339 

24, 350 1    1,145,075 

1,600        730,930 

82,560     2,579.344 

95,015 


200 


1,614 
3,346 

4,960 


8,.569 

19,267 

8,239 

7,282 

7,497 

.3,106 

4,724 

16,088 

14,494 

3,033 


head. 

1 

$  c. 

3  41 

15.9 

2  76 

21.5 

2  30  31  6 
1  94  63.0 

2  04  47.6 


3  40 
3  16 


17    9.8 

67  8.2 
38  16.7 
79  8  5 
9910.4 

68  7.4 
3  12  !l.l 
3  28  20.6 


92,299     3  29  10.5 


6,952 
2,408 
1,324 


614,925       10,684 


5,533 
831 
3,021 
3,091 
4,483 
772 
2,370 
2,951 
1,025 
2,800 
1,219 
3,845 
7,844 
1.640 
1,514 
],999 
2  103 
5,301 
929 
2,413 
9,585 
3,771 

69,040 

14,977 
26,101 
18,861 

59,939 

3,505 


3  70 

2  70 

3  70 


18.3 
13.7 
22  5 


3  4I1I7.4 


511  6.6 
9832.3 
62|2i.6 
19,38  4 
37|26.6 
34  29.0 
J^2,39.4 


1  5449.9 


58  47  6 
17J40  0 
65134.5 


18  8 
16  8 
16  5 
36.0 
49  2 
.35.9 
22.9 
29;.33.3 
3131.8 
94|.^2.8 
66  27.1 


2  04 

4  00 

5  25 

6  17 

5  09 

3  69 


21.7 

21.3 
22  8 
25,8 

23.2 

36.9 


15 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.    1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  A  X  AT  I  O 'N.—Continmd. 


Municipalitiee. 


Lanark : 

Bathurst 

Beckwith 

Burgess  N     

Dalhousie  &  Sherbr'ke  N 

Darling 

Urummond     

Elmele.y  N •.    . . 

Lanark  

Lavant 

Montague    

Pakenham 

Ramsay      

Sherbrooke  S .    


Total  townships 


Almonte 

C^rleton  Place 

*Perth 

Smith's  Falls    . 


Total  towns 


Lanark  (village) 


ViCTOKIA  : 

Bexley    

Garden 

Dalton 

Eldon. 

Emily  

Fenelon    

LaxtoD,  Digby,  Longford 

Mariposa  

Ops    

Somerville 

Verulam 


Total  townships  . . 
Lindsay  (town)  .    ... 


Bobcaygeon  . 
Fenelon  Falls 
Omemee  .  . . . 
Woodville 


Total  villages. 


Peterborough  : 

Asphodel. 

Belmont  and  Methuen  .  . 
Burleigh  and  Ansbruther 

Ohandos  

Douro  

Dummer 

Enmnmore 

Galway  and  Cavendish . . 

Harvey 

Monaghan  N 

Otonabee  


Popula-I 
tion.     I 


2,700 
1,694 

860 
1,860 

704 
1.960 
1,011 
1,726 

548 
2,062 
1,872 
2,164 

853 

20,014 

3,039 
4,312 
3,406 
4,292 

15,049 

899 


795 

758 

495 

3,132 

2,068 

2,405 

800 

3,846 

2,380 

1,873 

1,893 

20,445 

6,749 

904 

1,246 

560 

529 


No.  of 


Assessed  values. 


6.S,?00 
56,688 
34,971 
74,994 
43,8971 
57,796 
28,1461 
57,650! 
43,269 
62,418 
56,181 
62,991 
37,217 

679,418 

700 

550 

1,000 

900 

3,150 

2,708 


28,179 
39,541 
27,730 
60,501 
59,666 
51,771 
71,859 
75.S31 
56,310 
62,133 
55,728 

588,749 

1,550 

439 
457 
416 
469 


3,2391   1,781 


1.827, 
1,869 

674 

831  i 
2,040 
1,815 

809; 
1,046, 

993 
1.088 
3,327 


37, 
77 
35, 
41. 

38; 

66, 
17. 
46, 
67. 
13, 
64, 


780 
869 
083 
341 
562 
594 
293 
124 
932 
910 
583 


Real 
property. 


657, 
490 
182, 
251, 

65, 
692. 
332, 
432, 

52, 
580, 
377, 
641, 

87, 


400 
380 
545 
893 
764 
622 
065 
165 
933 
231 
735 
475 
998 


Per- 
sonal 

pro- 
perty. 


Tayable 

income. 


Total. 


24,275 
16,9851 

9, 350 1 

3,200|  200 

2K576 
14,940 
24,115 

2,700 

9,800; 
10,885| 
34,825 


4,845,206,   172,645 


200 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purpose*. 


681,675 
507,365 
191,895 
255,293 

6\764 
714,192 
347,005 
456,280 

55,633 
590,031 
388,620 
676,300 

87,998 

5,018,051 
813,625 


712,7251  93,100  7.800  , 

807,0H5  62.760|  10,4001  880,185 

1,057,835  106,925  40,850|  1,205,610 

1,003.385!  36,000'  3,500  1,042,885 

'  i  I 

3,580,980  298,775!  62,550  3,942,305 

156,580;  17,570  1,3501  175,500 


125,243 

62,870 

.34,770 

752,545 

968,453 

714,5.35 

73,729 

2,612,709 

1.559,825 

203,225 

529,005 

7,636,909 

1,742,175 


1          600] 

,       4,050  ....'.'.'.'. 

.'.'.'.. '.'..\ 900 

1 1 

1,900 
400 


6,950     900 
142,650   32,725 


135,355  12,150 

145.016  12,150 

97,54l|  3,375 

77,000  3,750 

454,912;  31,425 


846, 

196, 

56, 

57, 

778, 

618, 

359, 

49. 

171, 

637, 

2,012, 


380 
173 
134' 
427 
953 
365 
438 
675 
822 
900 
V75 


750 


8001 
5001 


8,2501       1,000 


125,>;43 

62.870 

34,770 

756,595 

96^453 

714,535 

73,729 

2.613.609 

1,5.59,825 

205,125 

529  405 

7,644,759 

1,917,550 

147,505 

157,166 

100,916 

80,750 

486.337 


847, 

196, 

56, 

57: 

778! 

619 

359, 

49, 

171, 

637, 

2,021, 


130 
173 
134 
427 
953 
165 
9S8 
675 
8221 
900 
525 


Per    ■'-§ 

head.     .~ 

g 

$ 

$  c; 

6,823 

2  53  10.0 

5,991 

3  54  11.8 

2,342 

2  72  12  2 

4,423 

2  38  17.3 

1,316 

1  87i20.0 

6,832 

3  49    9.6 

3,177 

3  14,  9.2 

4,960 

2  87  10.9 

1,650 

3  01  29.7 

7,099 

3  44  12.0 

5,971 

3  19  15.4 

8,312 

3  84  12  3 

1,527 

1  79  17.4 

60,423 

3  02|12  0 

15,222 

5  01118.7 

17,759 

4  12i20.2 

20,351 

5  98!] K. 9- 

22,402 

5  22,21.5 

75,734 

5  03119.2 

3,880 

4  32  22.1 

1 

3,333 

4  19  26  5- 

2,011 

2  65:32.0 

1,201 

2  43|.S4.5 

10,655 

3  40,14.1 

9.267 

4  48|  9.6 

9,076 

3  77  T2. 7 

2,703 

3  38  3*1.7 

18,37.^ 

4  78    7  0 

13,718 

5  76    8.8 

5,871 

■i  13  28.6 

7,872 

4  16114  \y 

84,082 

4  lllll.O 

46,239 

6  85i24.1 

2,746 

3  04  IS. 6 

4,286 

3  44  27.3 

1,915 

3  42  19  0 

1,035 

1  96]12.8 

9,982 

3  08|20.5 

7,311 

1 
4  00,  8.6 

5.765 

3  08  29.4 

2,516 

3  73  44  8 

2,280 

2  74139.7 

6,356 

3  121  8.2 

5,453 

3  OOl  8.8- 

2,843 

3  5ll  7.9- 

1,373 

1  31  27  6 

3,283 

3  31  19.1 

4,358 

4  01    6.» 

13,414 

4  03    6.6 

Separated  from  county  for  municipal  purposes. 

16 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32) 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    TAXATIO  1^.— Continued. 


Municipalities. 


Petkkborocgh. 
Smith 


'Con. 


Total  townships 

^Peterborough  (town). 


Ashburnham 
Havelock .... 

Lakefield 

Norwood .... 


Total  villages . 


Halibcrton  : 
Anson  and  Hindon 

Cardiff    

Oyaart 

Glamorgan j 

Lutterworth | 

M  inden I 

Monmouth 

fc-'uowdon I 

Stanhope  &  Sherbourne  .  1 

Total  townships 


and 


Hastings  : 
Bangor,    Wicklow 

McClure 

Carlow    

Dungannon 

Elzevir  and  Grimsthorpe 

Faraday  

Hungerford  . . 
Huntingdon . . 

Limerick    

Madoc 

Marmora  and  Lake 

Mayo  ...     

Moateagle  and  Herschel. 

Rawdon 

iSidney 

Thurlow 

Tudor  and  Cashel 

Tyendinaga . . . 

Wollaston 


Total  townships 


Deseronto . 
•Trenton 


Total  towns 


Madoc 

Stirling 

Tweed 


Total  villages 


Popula- 
tion, 

No,  of 

acres 

assessed 

2,780 

57,717 

19,099 

564,788 

10,951 

1,282 

1,700 

893 

1,167 

1,087 

947 
486 
491 
410 

4,847 

2,334 

292 
609 

12,565 
25.252: 

Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


Per- 
sonal 

pro- 
p  erty. 


1,426,375 


7,210,917      10,300 
3,926,975    229,550 


1,0171 
5711 
3901 

1,207 1 
fi33 
788 
752 

6,159 


360,3741 
21,3791 
21,575 
35,852 
22,6161 
34,646i 
26,113 

566,372 


839 

595 

791 
1,183 

971 
3,50f) 
2,392 

4821 
2,501 
2,076 

501 
1,813 
3,398 
3,938 
4,679 

847 
3,936 

681 


414,097 
119,735 
271,825 
201,595 

1,007,252 


33,435 
31,918 
128,625, 
21,322! 
38,493: 
83,105 
27.677 
71,037 
40,462 

479,074 


15,200 
2,500 

28,150 
7,350 


Taxable 


income. 


Total. 


1,426,375 


1,000     7,222,217 
129,3001    4,285,825 


1,575 


4,100 


1,900 


1,295 


27,274 
18,575 
33,241 
63,7.35 
45,78.^ 
92,782 
54,901 
44,068 
6.5,726 
105,620 
18,609 
63,235 
66,258 
69,201 
53,443 
61,347 
77,528 
49,912 


2.3,843 

47,330 

46,981 

104,682, 

62,9661 

738,2:«| 

431,110! 

54,8341 

495,218 

296.542 

28,000 

75,817 

1,180,555 

2,056,260 

2,052,^50 

67,810 

1,415,824 

60,917 


8,870 


900 


1,700 
1,150 


35,1291,011,268     9,239,472 


3,095 1 
4, 238 1 


533 
1,800 


3,150 


1,125 


610,000 
1,127,7561     33,300 


8,025 
23,600 


7,333i       2,333     1,737,756 


1,157 

792 1 
8661 

2,815 


423 

720 
389 

1,532 


254,100 
166,938 
188,910 

609,948 


56,900 

38,075 

2,900 

29,900 

70,875 


2,000 


1,500 


53,200|       3,500 


431,297 
122,2^5 
299,975 
210,445 


Taxes  imposed 
all  purposes 


7.3 

65,298|     3  42    9.0 
74,319!     6  79il7.3 


6,6631  3  92 

2,8481  3  19 

4, 501 1  3  86 

4,922  4  53 


1,063,952;  18,934 


300 


35,0101 
31,918 
132,725 
24,322 
38,493 
85,305 
27.677 
72,  .3,32 
40,462 


15.4 
23.3 
15.0 
23.4 


3  91  17.8 


897 
868 
022 
5841 
319| 
081 
431 
,681 
749 


07  25.6 
07  58.. 5 
9437.8 
77  65.1 
38134.3 
55  3(5.1 
68, .51. 7 
40  37,1 


33 


300        488,244 


24,7431 

47,330| 

46,9811 

104, 082 1 

64,6661 

739,3831 

431,1101 

54,834 

495,218 

299,692 

28,000 

75,817 

1.180,.555 

2,064,.360 

2,052,550 

67,810 

1,417,599 

60,917 


19,6321     3  19 


43.2 
40.2 


8,100 


650 


8,750,    9,256,247 


1,300. 
5,300 


634,900 
1,166,356 


6, 600 1    1,801,256 


10,135 
500 
700 

11,335 


302,310 
170,338 
219,510 


1,654 

1  97  66  8 

1,544 

2  59  32  6 

2,111 

2  67  44.9 

3,312 

2  8031.6 

3,20S 

3  30,49.5 

11,261 

3  2l!l5  2 

7,358 

3  OS  17.1 

1,119 

2  32  20.4 

11,.S90 

4  55  23.0 

7,061 

3  40  23.6 

1,798 

3  59  64.2 

.3,336 

1  84  44.0 

12,565 

3  73  10.6 

18,500 

4  70;  9.0 

18,960 

4  05    9.2 

2,457 

2  !'0  36.2 

15,221 

3  87  10.7 

2,172 

3  19135.7 

125,022  i     3  56  13.5 

17, 142 1     5  54  27.0 
23,741      5  60120.4 


40, 883 1     5  58 


6,546 
3,417 
3,514 


692,158      13,477 


22. 7 

21  7 


5  6fi 

4  31  2J.1 

4  06  16.0 

4  79  19.5 


*  Separated  from  county  for  municipal  purposes. 


2  B.  I.  (5) 


17 


61   Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  AX  AT  10  N.— Continued. 


Municipalities. 


MCSKOKA  ; 

Brunei      

Carriwell    

Chaffey 

Draper   

McLean  and  Ridout 

Macaulay 

Medora  and  Wood . . 

Monck    

Morrison    

Mu^fkoka 

Oakley    

Ryde 

Stephenson   

Stisted      

Watt   

Total  townships 

Bracebridge 

Gravenhurst 

Total  towns 

Huntsville 

Port  Catling 

Total  villages   . . . . 

Parry  Sound  : 

A.raQour 

*Garliug 

Chapman   

Chris^tie 

Foley 

Hagerman . . . . 

Hi  ma  worth,  N 

Himsworth,  S 

Humparey 

Joly 

Mc  Doiigall    

Mc  Kellar 

Mc  Murrich   

Machar 

Nipissing   

Perry 

Ryerson 

Strong 

Total  townships  . . 

Parry  Sound  (town) 

Burk'a  Falls 

Sundridge 

Total  villages  . . . . 

NiPissiNG : 

Honfield   

C*ldwell 

Calvin     


Assessed  values. 


4,376 

1,035 

1,789 
270 

500 
3,945 

2,059 

4,445 

926 
205 
643 

37,352 
25,745 
35,508 

407 
490 
500 
717 

1,59:^ 
550 
305 
447 
576 
739 
944 
573, 

1,412 
651 1 
816 


22,538 
27,882 
17,562 
13,626 
46,444 
27,573 
20.279 
25,946 
26,981 
38,410 
.35,935 
27,12t 
42,532 
40, 061 1 
39,360 


Real 


I     Per- 
sonal 
prof)erty.  )     pro- 

iper  t  y. 


72,218; 
62,322 

131,456 
91,832 
96,894 
97,095 

197,009 

167,388 
77,210 
93,545 
38,537 
45,»09 

121,555 
99,041 

118,706 


1,510,617 

279,310 
292,880 

572,190 

218,834 
42,912 

261,736 


174,561 

35,702 

119,896 

61,478 

68,490 

48,043 

57,490 

186,575 

111,811 

39,427 

63,422 

79,715 

115,197 

100,267 

99,120 

201,026 

128,  .575 

133,130 


12,4941  550,859,  1,823,925 
2,048!    805'   343,870 


727 
360 

1,087 


1,405 
846 
474 


619 

457 

1,076 


31,387 
29,144] 
27,162 


102,140 
72,350 

174,490 


71,908 
59,060 
60,713 


2,450 

5,i66 
1,720 


Taxable 
income. 


I 
38,140  . 

24,550 
I 
12, 200 1 , 
7,050 

19,250 


1,025 


1,5501 


Total. 


Taxes  impoeed  for 
all  purposes. 


72,218 

64,772 

131,456 

96,992 

98,614 

97,095 

197,009 

167,3881 

78,660 

93,545 

38,837 

46,559 

135,250 

100,691 

118,706 

1,537,792 

31 6,  .560 
293,180 

609,740 

247,724 
45,182 


1,4001       292,906 


175,961 

35,702 

126,316 

61,478 

69,290 

49,643| 

62, 540 1 

194,875 

115,661 1 

39,427 

63,422 

79,715 

115,197 

101,037 

100,545 

209,551 

128,575 

133,130 


1,862,065 


Total. 


"A  049 
1,264 
2,9.32 
2,547 
1,463 
.3,173 
.3,641' 
2,358 
1,6011 
1.925 
1,051 
1,031 
2,834 
1,845 
2,311 

32,025 

8,618 
10,655 


Per 

head. 


8,060 
576 

8,636 


2,382 
t460 
1,430 
1,910 
1,025 
1.449 
1,916 
3,313 
934 
821 
1,633 
1,725 
1,764 
1,913 
1,117 
3,490 
1,864 
1,790 

30,936 


369,970 

11,986 

114,340 
79,400 

2,854 
1,865 

193,740 

4,719 

72,933 
59,060 
60,713 

2,781 
1,067 
1,097 

8  c. 


74  28.4 

93  19.5 
07122..^ 
40  26.3 
96  14.8 

94  32.7 
13!l8.5 
8814.1 
81120.4 
78120.6 
61  27.1 
72I22.I 
55  21.0 
83  18.3 
63119.5 


2  79  20.8 

4  14:27.2 
4  64|36.3 


19,273     4  40131.6 


4  51 
2  13 


4  19 


32.5 
12.7 


29.5 


2  57,13.5 
2  24'l2.9 
2  22  11.3 
4  69,31.1 
2  09ll4.« 
2  90129.2 
2  67  30.6 
2  08J17.0 
70  8.1 
69120.8 


65 
99 
39 
03 
95 
47 
2  86 
2  19 


25.7 
21.6 
15.3 
18.9 
11.1 
16.7 
14.. 5 
13.4 


2  48,16.6 
5  85I32.4 


3  93  25.0 
5  18  23.5 


4  34  24.4 


1  98  38.1 

1  26  18.1 

2  3118.1 


Organized  in  1897. 


t  Exclusive  of  school  rates. 

18 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  AX  ATI  Ol:i- Continued. 


Municipalities. 


NiPissiNG. — Continued. 

Cameron    

*Dunnett  and  Rutter 

Ferris 

McKim 

Mattawan   

Papineau    

Springer , 

Widdifield 

Total  townships  . . . 

Mattavva    

North  Bay 

sturgeon  Falls 

Sudbury 

Total  towns 

Manitodlin  : 

Assiginack 

Billings 

Burpee    

Carnavon  

Cockburn  island 

Gordon   

Howland    , 

Sandfield  , 

Tehkummah , 

Total  townships 

Grore  Bay  

Little  Current 

Total  towns 

ALGOMA  : 

Balfour 

Drury,     Denison    and 

Graham 

Hallara  

Hilton 

Jocelyn 

Johnston,     Tarbutt    and 

Tarbutt  Additional 

Laird 

Macdonald  &  Meredith. 
Nairn,  Lome  and  Hyman 
Plummer  additional  . . 

*Prince 

Rayside 

St.  Joseph 

Salter,  May  and  116  . . 

Sault  St.  Marie  

Thessalon 

Total  townships 

Sault  St.  Marie   

Thessalon 

Total  towns 


Popula- 
tion. 


158 
689 
745 
798 
229 
585 
1,004 
559 

7,492 

1,750 

2,024 

960 

1,534 

6,268 


1,131 
393 
276 
435 
144 
558 

1,063 
269 
412 

4,681 

549 
514 

1,063 


430 


No.  of 
acres 


930 

367 
437 
340 
501 

1191 
626 
900 
703 1 
7431 
552 

8,306 

3,345 
720 

4,065 


10,943 
26,539 
35,592 
15,699 
10,936 
21,867 
29,783 
46,901 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


26,555 
59,053 
63,259 
40,883 
31,541 
60,597 
49,348 
47,122 


288,953        570,039 


5001 

500 

1,351 I 

2,560  i 

4,911 


35,137 
22,170 
12,620 
25,226 
13,439 
29,016 
44,942 
n,77i' 
18,046 

212,368 

1,102 
4O0 


Per 

8  o  n  a  1 

pro- 
per t  y . 


Taxable 
income. 


244,842 

420,440 

99,070 

265,479 

1,029,831 


137,295 
66,429 

20,7451 
68,997 
20  150 
112,522 
129,,s.S9 
31,765 
50,000 

637,742 

88,875 
96,385 


1,502,       185,260 


19,757 


263  39,218 

632  15,218 

368 1  26,820 

395  26,235 


36,109 

15,657 
14,181 
15,643 
15,821 
20,616 
19,641 
28,591 
42  036 
44.744 
17,671 


62,503 

9?,  690 
94,471 
42,935 
59,543 

108,606 
61.211 
48,449 
46,658 
87,895 
43,601 
47,948 
97,365! 
104,120] 
275,009] 
58,505 


397,9581    1,331,539 


2,100 

728 


969,350 
115,195 


2,8281    1,(84,545 


50,676 


400 


52,101 

52,025 

11,350 

8,275 

52,400 

124,050 


4,500 


1,350 
6,040 


1.000 


12,890 

12,599 
11,885 

24,4841 


37,720 

37,900 
19,618 

57,518 


375 
137 


512 


200 


700 
700 


n,boo 

1,400 

200 

8,000 

2,000 
14,820 



200 
18,800 


18,800 


Total. 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


26,555 
59,053 
63,634 
91,696 
31,541 
60,997 
49,348 
47,122 

622,652 


Total. 


629 
1,333 
1,848 
2,831 
445 
705 
1,881 
1,451 

16,068 


1,154,081 


141,795 

66,429 
20,745 
70,347 
26,190 
112,522 
130,839 
31,765 
50,000 

650,632 

101,474 
108,970 

210,444 


62,503 

92,690 

105,971 

42,965 

59,543 

110,206 
61,211 
48,449 
54,658 
87,895 
43,601 
47,948 
99,365 
118,940 
275,009 
58,505 

1,369,459 

1,026,050 
134,813 

1,160,863 


Per 

head. 


296,867  6,674 

.    .    !       431,7901  9,123 

200        107,545|  2,155 

317,879  10,941 


28,893 


2,168 
944, 

877 
1,322' 

7841 
1,7361 
2,128 

88l| 
1,0001 


2,825 
1,938 

4,763 


1,737 

1,691 

1,953 

967 

1,128 

1,389 

638 

1,065 

465 

1,353 

725 

1,661 

2,853 

2,519 

5,468 

1,282 

26,894 

26,430 
3,482 

29,912 


$  c. 


2  14 


23.7 
22.6 
29.0 
30.9 
14.1 
11.6 
38.1 
30.8 

25.8 


22.5 
21.1 
2420.0 
13.34.4 


4  6125.0 


15.3 
14.2 
42.3 

18.8 
44129.9 
ll|l5.4 
0016.3 
28127.7 
43.20.0 


11,8401     2  53118.2 


5  15127.8 

3  77117.8 

4  48  22.6 


4  04  27.8 

6  43118.2 
3  G9|l8.4 
2  63  22.5 
2  86  18.9 


49112. 6 

riio.i 

44,22.0 

371  8.5 

?0|15.4 

09116.6 

65134.6 

3  17128.7 

3  58|21.2 

7  36  19.9 

2  32I2I.9 

3  24I19.6 

7  90125.8 

4  84  25.8 

7  36125.8 


Organized  in  1897. 

19 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


POPULATION,    ASSESSMENT    AND    T  A  X  ATI  ON.— Conc^Mded. 


Municipalities. 


Thunder  Bat : 

Nepibing 

Oliver 

Shuniah 

Total  townships  . . . 

F^rt  William    

Port  Arthur 

Total  towns 

Raint  River  : 

Alberton    

Keewatin 

Total  townships  . . . 

Rat  Portage  (town)  . 


Popula- 
tion 


No.  of 
acres 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


Per- 
se n  a  1 

pro- 
p  er  ty. 


216!  117,1891 
376  .34,1'^2| 
94,857 


142 

734 

2,652 
3,008 


176,053 1 

96,645; 

162,453 


800 


246,168        435,1511 


800 


7,000 
12,500 


840,955      36,270 
994,1211     56,975 


Taxable 
income. 


3021 
875 

1,1771 

4,5151 


13, 62  i  I 

2,560| 

I 

16,1851 

5,763| 


78,4081 
233,210| 


7,119| 
5,9751 


311,618]     13,0941 
1,156,2121   106,8301 


14,750 
5,300 


5,660,     19,500|    1,835  0761     93,245|     20,050 


3,300 


Total. 


176,053 

97,445 

162,453 

435,951 

891,975 
1,056,396 

1,948,371 


85,527 
239,185 

324,712 

1,266,342 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


Total. 


8 


Per 

h  ad.  I  ?= 


2,9901 
1,067 1 

2,8451 


$  c. 


13  84117.0 

2  84110.9 

20  04117.5 


6,9021     9.4015.8 


23,316 
28,871 

52,187 


1,854 
3,397 

5,251 

25,040 


8  79126. 1 

9  60,27.3 

I 
9  22i2i>.8 


6  14  21.7 

3  88  14.2 

I 

4  46il6  2 

I 

5  55119.8 


Erratum.  —On  page  7,  Personal  property  in  Dereham  towns-hip,  in  the  County  of  Oxford,  should  read 
$9,850  instead  of  $70,450  which  was  princed  before  the  error  was  discovered.  The  alteration  has  been  made 
in  the  later  tables  (see  pages  23  and  27). 


20 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.^32). 


A.  1898 


ASSESSMENT    AND    TAXATION. 


T  A  B  L  B    II.     Detailed  stabement  of  the  cities  of  Ontario,  giving  htatistics  of  population,  asses'^ment  and 
taxation  for  the  three  years  1895-97. 


Cities. 


Popu- 
lation. 


No. 
of 
acres 
assess- 
ed. 


Windsor  : 

(Essax  Co.) 

Chatham  : 
(Kent  Co.) 


(1897  11,915 
<1896  11,392 
(.1895    11,549 


(1897 
<1896 
(1895 

(1897 
<1896 
(.1895 

London  :  ) iSQfi 

(Middlesex  Co. )   j  -j^goc 


St.  Thomas : 

(Elgin  Co  ) 


Brantford  : 
( Brant  Co. ) 


Stratford : 
(Perth  Co. 


8,788 
8,833 
9,019 

11,021 
10,682 
10,563 

36,224 
34,855 
34,429 


(1897  16,234 

<  1896  16,539 
(.1895  16,314 

(1897  10,531 

<  18961  10,504 
1 18951  10,365 


n     ,   u  (18971   10,741 

yfr^ir     .      n    ^S1896,    10,684 
(Wellington  Co. )^jS95'   ^^  ^^g 


St.  Catharines 
(Lincoln  Co.) 


(1897 
<1896 
(l895 


n897 
(WentworthCo,)|}^^^ 


Hamilton 


Toronto : 
(York  Co.) 


(1897 
<  1896 
(1895 

(1897 


10,144 
9,894 
9,652 

50,035 
49,427 
48,803 

183,172 
178,185 
176,858 


2,020 
2,020 
2,020 

1,650 
1,650 
1,650 

1,700 
1,600 
1,600 

4,085 
4,089 
4,089 

2,541 
2,541 
2,541 

2,835 
2,835 
2,835 

3,210 
3,210 
3,210 

3,000 
3,000 
3,000 


AsbBFsed  values. 


Real 
property. 


5,208,685 
5,313,450 
5,242,418 


Personal 
propej  ty. 


171,050 
170,100 
169,100 


3,328,560  149,600 
3,328,043  159,650 
3,281,090'      160,450 


3.919,980 
3.771,710 
3,771,579 


239,100 

238,150 
255,450 


13,552,648  1,483,600 
13,188,455  1,460,300 
12,922,194  1,414,900 


5,722,513 
5,660,888 
5,558,395 


616,325 
620,575 
619,730 


3,800,960  114,400 
3,808,9351  112,700 
3,756,070   115,200 


3,409,995 
3,373,495 
8,348,025 

3,641,485 
3,637,215 
3,667,775 


2,700  21,971,030 

2,700  22,258,750 

2,700  21,654,630 

9,638  117,652,422 

9,638  127,939,439 

9,638  133,547,442 


^.       .  I  LOifi     18,C09i    2,3001      6,519,580 

Kinggton  -J  1896!    18,040    2,300      6,506,715 
(UrontenacCo.)   ^^gg^    j^  gg-    2,300       6,.557,325 


Ottawa:  J}tll 

(Carleton  Co.)      |{°^° 


Belleville  : 
(Hastings  Co.) 


(1897 
<  1896, 
( 1895 


53,727 
51,640 
49,674 

10,399 
10,359 
10,318; 


3.365 
3,335 
3,365 

1,700 
1,G00, 
],6C0 


265,370 
260,020 
268,670 

544,750 
541,850 
518,350 

2,681,580 
2,667,190 
2,774,810 

8,468,328 
8,380,666 
8,177,666 

816,2.50 
854,100 
870,087 


20,282,585  1,379,450 
19,487,170  1,284,800 
18,085,5001  1,250,300 


3,611,268 
3,667,246 
3,687,096 


195,700 
213,550 
227,400 


Taxable 
income. 


57,  COO 
62,250 
56,350 

74,150 
76,000 
83,350 

240,250 
2i:9.300 
225,760 

800,980 
749,225 
845,825 

113,485 
117,825 
122,516 

76,900 
82,050 
77,450 


Total. 


5,436,735 
5,545,800 
5,467,868 

3,552,310 
3,563,693 
3.524,890 

4,399,330 
4,239,160 
4,252,779 

15,837,228 
15,397,980 
15,182,919 

6,452,353 
6,399,288 
6,300,641 

3,992,260 
4,003,685 
3,948,720 


97,450       3,772,815 

94,450       3,727,965 

100,150       3,716,845 


51,600 
53,750 
56,150 

763,630 
765,830 
708,780 

4,175,707 
4,680,331 
4,703,114 

257,900 
260,050 
269,750 

417,700 
349,750 
414, 525 1 

92,650 
99,200 
95,7001 


4,237,835 
4,232,815 
4,272,275 

25,416,240 
25,691,770 
25,138,220 

130,2f6,457 
141,000,436 
146,428,222 

7,593,730 
7,620,895 
7,697,162 

22,079,735 
21,121,720 
19,750,325 

3,899,618 
3,979,996 
4,010,196 


Taxes  imposed 
for  all  purposes. 


Total. 


Per 
head. 


154,938 
160,675 
153,804 

74,923 
77,533 
67,133 

95,504 

87,968 
88,376 

362,435 
353,001 
337,845 


$    c. 

13  00 

14  10 
13  32 

8  53 
8  78 

7  44 

8  67 
8  24 
8  37 


Mills 
on  $ 


28.5 
29.0 
28.1 

21.1 
21.8 
19.0 

21.7 
20.8 
20.8 


10  01    22.9 

10  13    22.9 

9  81    22.3 


128,244      7 

125,743 

122,591 


88,979 
87,394 
84,405 

97,122 
96,497 
92,987 

119,174 

104,267 

91,402 


90 
7  60 
7  51 


8  45 
8  32 

8  14 

9  04 
9  03 

8  68 

11  75 
10  54 

9  47 


526,359  10  52 

530,676'  10  74 

504,585  10  34 

2,802,660  15  30 

2,952,953  16  57 

3,063,770  17  32 


140,743 
140,189 
141,338 

482,064 
467,756 
443,600 

87,447 
83,257 
85,758 


19.9 
19.6 
19.5 

22.3 
21.8 
21.4 

25.7 
25.9 
25.0 

28.1 
24.6 
21.4 

20.7 
20.7 
20.1 

21.5 
20  9 
20.9 


7  82  18.5 
7  771  18.4 
7  88  18.4 


8  97 

9  08 
8  93 

8  41 
8  04 
8  31 


21.8 
22.1 
22.5 

22.4 
20.9 
21.4 


21 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


ASSESSMENT    AND    TAXATION. 

Table  ill.     Summary  statement  by  counties  (being  the  total  of  tcwnshipp,  cities,  towns  and  villages 
within  limits  of  county)  of  items  from  assessment  and  collection  rolls  as  given  in  Table  I. 


Counties. 


Popula- 
tion. 


No.  of 

acres 

assessed. 


Assessed  valves. 


Real 
property. 


Personal 
property. 


Taxable 
income. 


Total. 


Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 


Total. 


Per 

head. 


Essex  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894  

1893 

Kent  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893  . .   

Elgin: 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894  

1893  

NORKOLK  : 

1897 

1896     

1895 

1894 

1893  

Haldimand  : 

1897 

1896 

1895  

1894 

1893  

Welland  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893       

Lambton  : 

1897 

1896  . 

1895 

1894  

1893 

HcRON : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894  

1893 

Bruce: 

1897  

1896 

1895 

1894 ... 

1893 

Geey  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 


55,069 
53,092 
53,169 
52,968 
52,039 

52,971 
51,835 
51,505 
51,001 
50,346 

40,680 
40,323 
40,518 
40,245 
39,178 

28,231 

28,320 

28,4: 

27,529 

28,172 

21.263 
20,794 
20,787 
20.657 
20,510 

30,305 
29,914 
29,487i 
29,227! 
28,082 

53,865 
53,219 
52,533 
53,760 
53,751 

61,546 
61,039 
61.744 
61,404 
60,467 

56,330 
57,690, 
58,355' 
56, 982 1 
56,610, 


438,056 
437,095 
437,946 
436,950 
437,539 

I 
573.278 
571,066! 
572,835 
571,003 
572,9091 

I 
442,482 
442,174 
441,098 
441,116 
440,320 

401,815 
400,720 
698,693 
398,351 
399,0»6 

28i,611 
283,141 
283,329 
282,949 
283,282 

231,753 
232,380 
231,905 
232,756 
232,679 

669,889 
670,699 
670,023 
671,129 
670,749 

808,223 
806,715 
806,095 
807,069 
807,101 

879,786 
878,944 
863,292 
853,131 
848,071 


65,051  1,073  868' 
65.979'  1,070,114! 
66,094  1,073,4271 
6.5,508  1,072,360, 
64,339  1,073,476 


$    I 

19,584,546 
19,709,492 
19,261,386 
18,927,7761 
18, 958, 920 1 

23, 281,. 52 11 
23,189,5161 
23,125,231 
23,213,.515l 
23,301,499 

17,370,231 
17,352,193 
17,413,394 
17,352,239 
17.235,498 

9,969,686 

9,990,792 

10,076,751 

10,071,655 

10,052,822 

8,008,344 
8,021,592 
8,043,465 
8,0.55,924 
8,161,365 

11,148,364 
11,150,927 
10,976,398 
11,038,710 
10,524,888 

18,819,144 
18,796,770 
18,861,182 
19,138,389 
19,190,109 

29,798,310! 
29,826,3971 
30,005,258 
30,018,932 
30,198,007 

20,727,059 
20,902,2381 
20,808,825 
20,826,471 
20,903,023; 
i 
19,856,727 
19,908,799 
19.913,461 
19,871,037 
19,883,114 


1,175,753 
1,161,608' 
1,296,9181 
1,320,7491 
1,320,620' 

358,395 
358,255 
364,850 
358,260 
349,275 

412,045 
425,670 
435,440 
475,090 
437,650 

147,775 
159,084 
174,680 
180,955 
192, 265  j 

133,900, 
151,165 
151,915 
155,490 
159,800 

426,400 
46.5,295 
40.5,665 
393,497 
366,154 

317,890! 
329.730 
353,2271 
363,610| 
397,105 
I 
399,290 
403,6851 
426,3001 
417,720 
427,785 

435,035 
551,035 
464,530 
433,010 
443,185 

290,300 
299.725 
310,932 
297,200 
300,145 


128,8.50 

138,917 

144,366 

96,840 

87,000 

90,040 
96,980 
108,225 
97,120 
95,766 

271,960 
256,346 
256,396 
268,260 
263,941 

49  969 
51,280 
54,815 
57,620 
61,540 

14,050 
16,700 
16,0201 
14,750, 
]  6,4001 

60,300 
60,425' 
66,050 

77,266, 

81, 467  i 

I 

200,658' 
201,964 
182,310 
192,688 
211,584 

71, 420 ! 
■  74,170; 
73.3701 
81,970 
91,600 

51,050* 
51,975 
50,450 
53,750 
54,675 

60,175 
47,796 
67,690 
47.600 
42,565 


20,889,149 
21.010,017 
20,702,670 
20,345,365 
20,366,540 

23,729,956 
23,644,7811 
23,598,306 
23,6^8,8951 
23,746,540 

18,054,236 
18,034,209; 
18,105,230 
18,095,589, 
17,937,0891 

10,167,4301 
10,201,156 
10,306.246 
10,310,230 
10,306,627, 

8,156,294' 

8,189,457. 

8.211,400 

8,226,164 

8,337,565 

I 

11,635,064 

11,676,6471 

11,448,113 

11,509,473 

10,972,509 

19,337,692 
19,328,464 
19,396,719 
19,694,687 
19,798,798 

30,269,020 
30,304,252 
30,-504,928 
.S0,518,622 
30,717,392 

21,213,144 
21,505,248 
21,323,805 
21,313,231 
21,400,883! 

20,207,202 
20,256,320 
20,292,0831 
20,215,837 
20,225,8241 


417,110:  7  57  20.0 
416,472;  7  84  19.8 
426,0061  8  01  20.6 
411,2731  7  76  20.2 
413,957  7  95  20.3 


363,818 
352,954 
3£6,099 
379,345 
378,908 

266,089' 
246,345 
2.53,981 
267,470 
263,179 
I 
114,786! 
115,0071 
119,758 
120,804 
122,946 

83.632 

78,906 

83,871 

86,824 

83,286 

I 

158,808 

163,150 

14.3,680 

147,992 

143,476 

322,340 
313,876 
339,162 
341,371 
342,366 

265,9631 
252,695' 
272.884 
271,744 
270,686 

211,045 
206,646, 
214,665' 
229,943 
238,777 

272,033 
252,396 
260,659 
271,012 
254,871 


8715.3 
81  14.9 
91  15.1 
44  16.0 

53  16.0 
I 

54  14.7 
1113.7 
27  14.0 
65  14.8 
72  14.7 

I 
07  11.3 
06  11.3 
21  11.6 
39111. 7 
3611.9 


3  93  19.3 

3  79  9.6 

4  03  10.2 
4  20  10.6 
4  06110.0 


24  13.6 
45'14.6 
21113.4 
06,12.9 
11113.1 


9816.7 
9016.2 
2917.0 
35  17.3 
37  17.3 


4  32 
4  14 
4  42 
4  43 
4  48 

3  75 
3  58 
3  68 


8.3 
8.9 
8.9 


9.9 

9.6 

10.1 


4  04  10.8 
4  2211.2 


4  18 
3  88 
3  94 


13.5 
12.5 
12.8 


4  1413. 4 
3  96il2.6 


22 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32). 


A.  189  8 


ASSESSMENT    AND  T  A  X  ATI  O  N.-Conimweci. 


Counties. 


SiMOOE  : 

1897     

1896 

1895  

1894 

1893 

Middlesex  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893  

Oxford  : 

1897  

1896..... 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Bbant : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Perth  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894  

1893 j     48,159 

Wellington  : 
1897 

1896   

1895 

1894  

1893 

Waterloo  : 

1897 

1896 

1895  

1894 

1893 

DCFFKRIN  : 

1897 

1896  

1895 

1894 

1893  

LiNCXiLN  ; 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Wentworth  : 

1897 76,823, 

1896 76,213 

1895 76,302 

1894 75,04l| 

1893 74,25ll 


78,210 
77,143 
75,799 
75,110 
74,183 

90,862 
89,464 
89,426 
87,636 
88,032 

46,391 
46,463 
46,229 
46,341 
46,682 

33,364 
33,993 
34,119j 
33,354 
33,0431 
I 
48,219 
48,965 
49,054 
48,754 


56,098 
56,353 
56.078 
55,988 
55,609 

51,0171 
50, 2 19 1 
49,320 
48, 62 1 1 
47,9011 

21,7341 
21,371 
21,745 
21,424 
20,687 

29,976 
29,716 
29,329 
28,841 
28,507 


No.  of 

acres 

assessed. 


979,978 
979,582 
982,483 
978,467 
978,501 

765,430 
767,030 
767,075 
767,656 
766,911 

479,579 
479,851 
479,488 
479,692 
479,111 

219,404 
219,262 
219,101 
219,545 
219,080 

526,960 
527,647 
527,318 
527,063 
526,742 

638.104 
638,391 
638,736 
637,-588 
637,212 

316,925 
317,134 
316.741 
316,986 
319,732 

357,802 
358,618 
3.57,661 
358.772 
358,418j 

196,846 
196,545 
196,970 
197,319 
196,847 
I 

276,0141 
275,628 
275,869 
275,338 
275,337 


Assessed  values. 


Real 

property. 


19,804,040 
19,962,881 
19,839,282 
20.074,562 
18,451,170 

38,918,376 
38,814,119 
38,664,139 
38,487,988 
38,404,350 

24,017,035 
24,032,160 
23,994,615 
24,000,853 
23,989,630 

15,963,031 
15,945,343 
15,864,492 
15,886,939 
15,893,296 

24,770,446 
24,730,95S 
24,652,947 
24,479,824 
24,504,434 

22,575,791 
22,569,520 
22.437,046 
22.381,152 
22,265,184 

21,355,351 
21,499,684 
21,590,069 
21,912,494 
21,903.393 

6,864,392 
6,918,955 
6,901,556 
6,892,518 
6,911,173 

11,687.431 
11,565,076 
11,544,947 
11,567,733 
11,539.889 

35,120,528 
.35,428,275 
34.8.37,726 
34,391,506 
.34,461,421 


Personal 
property. 


332,970 
353,235 
350,450 
374,225 
428,185 

1,649,285 
1,610,666 
1,568,300 
1,639,895 
1,674,084 

367,900 
346,750 
361,765 
358,475 
356,000 

888,901 

913,729 

930,304 

1,062,910 

1,090,620 

363,750, 
.397, 300 1 
353,650, 
354,9701 
359,4751 

656, 370  i 
656,820 
698.165 
670,305 
682,955 

774,450 
707,105 
725,565 
745,725 
734,575 

£6,925 
50,450 
58,100 
58.260 
67,000 

717,753 

694,648 

702,998 

698,313 

702,108 

I 

2,824,8551 

2,816.440 

2,924,930 

2, 963, 5.30 1 

3,011,560 


Taxable 
income. 


93,2.50 

95,250 

103.200 

100,300 

96,600 

828,380 
778.185 
877,701 
805,260 
807,279 

11 3,  .500 
119,325 
117,330 
114,010 
119,955 

139,885 
148,045 
155,876 
163,540 
161,504 

117,390 
123, 150 
120,650 
130,885 
131,275j 

1.34,100 
133,040 
142,810 
139,460 

146,3051 

152,1491 
149,9891 
154,399 
156,554 
164,964 

21,000 
17,500 
19,500 
20,100 
19,600 

66,045 
70,1281 
68,276 
82,921, 
96,510 

807,966 
805, 996 1 
754,295 
771,175 
827,9101 


Taxes  impo.9ed  for 
all  purposes. 


Total. 


20,230,260 
20,411,366 
20,292,932 
20,549,087 
18,975,955 

41,396,041 
41,202,970 
4i, 110,140 
40,933,143 
40,885,713 

24,498,435 
24,498,235 
24,473,710 
24,473,338| 
24,465,585^ 

16,991,817 
17,007,117 
16,950,672 
17,113,.S89 
17,145,420 

2.5,251,586 
25,251,408 
25,127,247 
24,965,679 
24,995,184 

23,366,261 

23,359,380 

23, 278, 021  i 

23,190,917j 

23,094,444, 

I 

22,281,950, 

22,  .356, 778, 

22,470,033 

22,814,773 

22,802,932 

I 

6.942,317 

6,986.905 

6,979,1561 

6,970,878 

6,997,7731 

12,471,229 
12,329,852 
12,316,2211 
12,348,967i 
12,338,507 

38,7.53,349 
39,050,711 
38,516,9.51 
38,126,211 
38,300,891 


Total. 


Per 
head. 


332,486 
320,805 
313,293 
310,834 
313,679 

637,808 
630,070; 
628,504 
595,603 
607,305 

257,608; 
254,2621 
247,4311 
266,-536 
262,066 

207,025 
204,2231 
205,553 
212,567 
209,344 

284,281 
280,715 
281,874 
282,463 
285,709 

287,102 
288.045 
289,063 
279,784 
298,007 

242,434 
221,494 
228;  102 
224,553 
218,222 

94,862 
87,627 
92,193 
94,462 
96,790 

220,619 
201,079 
190,612 
179,034 
193,822 

619,949 
613,283 
599,983 
585,207 
606,949 


16.4 
15.7 
13.4 
1415.1 
23  16.5 


7  02  15.4 
7  03  15.3 


7  03 
6  80 
6  90 

5  55 
5  47 
5  35 
5  54 
5  61 


15.3 
14.6 
14.9 

10.5 
10.4 
10.1 
10.5 
10.7 


21  12.2 

01  12.0 

02  12.1 
37  12.4 
34  12.2 

I 

9011.3 


11.1 
11.2 
11.3 
11.4 


5  12  12.3 
5  1112.3 
5  15  12.4 
5  00  12.1 
5  36  12.9 


75il0.9 
41  9.9 
62110.2 
62    9.8 


7  36 
6  77 
o  50 
6  21 
6  80 


8  07 
8  05 


9.6 


13.8 

17.7 
16.3 
15.5 
14.5 
15.7 


16.0 
15.7 
7  97,15.6 

7  80  15.3 

8  17il5.8 


23 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


ASSESSMENT    AXD   T  A  K  AT  10  :^  .-Continued. 


Counties. 


Halton  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Peel  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

YoEK  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Ontario  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

DUBHAM : 

1897 

1893 

1895 

1894 

1893  

NOBTHOMBEKLAND  : 
1897 

1896 

1895  

1894  

1893  

Prince  Edward  : 

1897 

1896  

1895  

1894 

1893 

Lennox  &  Ad'gton 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894  

1893  

Frontenao : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893   

Leeds : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 


Popula- 
tion. 


No.  of 

acres 

assessed. 


Assessed  values. 


Real 
property. 


Personal    Taxable 
property,    income. 


Total. 


Taxes  imposed  fo 
all  purposes. 


19,721 
20,034 
19,922 
19,733 
20,091 

21,240 
21,538 
21,689 
21.779 
21,848 

240,363 
235,857 
234,208 
232,128 
224,816 

41,159 
41,097 
41,142 
40,781 
40,859 

28,801 
29  210 
29,685 
29,654 
30,158 

34,014 
33,800 
34,845 
34,734 
35,284 

17,085 
17,614 
17,6J3 
17,555 
16,961 

22,112 
21,607 
21,557 
21,281 
21,009 

40,058 
40,376 
40,114 
40,117 
39,221 

35,458 
35,671 
35,420 
35,397 
.34,814 


227,9181 
228,433] 
228,  .350 
228,5921 
227,8541 

29O,750| 
290,219 
290,505 
290,653 
290,420 


9,212,653 
9  224,898 
9,257,095 
9,279,072 
9,273,932 

16,510,407 
10,532,655 
10,541,345 
10,-562,660 
10,669,355 


556,285;  145,737,251, 
5.56,900  IE 6,567, 115 
565,013  16.5,518,434 
556,440  170,554,418 
555,650  172,245,014 


506,522 
506.308 
508,236 
308,547 
510,134 

377,520 
377,766 
376,6'-5 
377,05S| 
377,283j 

442,  .3751 
443,7141 
442,983; 
441,496; 
444, 147  j 

233,876] 
231,0761 
232,4:-'0 
233,074 
231,690 

446,362 
441,216 
430,542 
436,725 
433,958 
I 
692,625 
675,754 
683,370 
675,565 
675. 42  4 1 

472,767' 
474,873 
473,712 
473,465 
476,316 


17,648,656 
17,809,337 
17.914,528 
18,013,2271 
18,195,065 

12,262,715 
12.685,994 
12,808,287 
12,866,7.56 
12,954,554 

13,100,554 
13,120,003 
13,242,196 
13,237,108 
13,342,130 

6,63  >,  094 
6,631,579 
6,629,704 
6.636,154 
6,661,883 

7,561,733 
7,614,096 
7,710,070 
7,725,380 
7,537,371 

11,294,137 
11,302,224 
11,509,688 
11,502.659 
11,512,548 

11,466,952 
11,441,970 
11,411,714 
11,480,465 
11,600,123 


159,534 
160.61.^ 
16?,  605 
176,544 
194,035 

90,105 

97,975 

103,850 

105,675 

106,445 


19,1151 

28,750i 
41,460 
30,240 
33,012 

21,450, 
25, 700 1 
27,700 
32,150 
33,920 


9,391.302 
9,414,563 
9.461,160 

9,485,856 
9,500,979 

10,621,962 
10,656,330 
10,672,895 
10,700,385 
10,809,720 


» 

Total. 

a 
o 

§ 

$ 

$ 

76,212;  3  86;  8.1 
73,6671  3  68i  7.8 
77,468:  3  89;  8.2 
76,009  3  85  8.0 
78,677    3  92    8  3 


9.3,929 
89,241 
90,324 
92,025 
96,679 


323,490 
392,795! 
391,135 
433,3551 
433,425' 

285,155 
270,434 
283,205 
294,980 
300,325 

215,975 
221,955 
205,680 
279,880 
294,650 

109,045 
122,655 
164,232 
151,495 
158,920 

98,820 

102,640 

105,040 

93,725 

90,035 

852,362 

891,349 

911,142 

1,036,520 

1,043,505 

343,831 
302,385 
351,855 
415,565 
409,175 


56,735 
58,685 
65,125 
65,700 
76,550 

89,685 

90.745 

96,9,36 

107,040 

121,270 

56,820 
61,020 
62, 395  i 
59,670 
67,300 

29,570 
28,250 
20,865 
23, 130 1 
31,870 

44,160 
39,7851 
41,6001 
41,175 

47,875: 

271,275' 
274,6251 
283,050 
297,4251 
308,8751 

69,835 
83,760| 
77,9101 
45,810| 
40,1801 


4  42 
4  14 
4  16 
4  23 
4  43 

13  10 

14  02 


8.4 
8.5 
8.6 
8.9 

19  9 
19.5 


8,680,2781  4,203,507  158,621,0361  3,149,271 
8,599,816  4,716,731  169,883,6621  3,307,804 
8,.507,966;  4,734,7641  178,761,164  3,439,026  14  68  19.2 
8,540,581  4,755,8^0  183,8.50,819  3,496,34015  06  19.0 
8,684,290|  4,70.5,6181  185,634,922  3,688,811  16  4119.9 


18,028,881 
18,260,817 
18,370,788 
18,512,282 
18,70.5,040 

12,637,555 
13,047,173 

13,188,428 
13,268,776 
13,376,149 

13,573,349 
13,402,978 
13,510,271 
13,576,658 
13,704,080 

6,772,709 
6,782,484 
6,814,801 
6,810,779 
6,852,673 

7,704,713 
7, 756,  .521 
7,858,710 
7,860,280 
7,675,281 

12,417,774 
12,468,198 
12,703,880 
12,836,604 
12,864,928 

11,880,618 
11,828,115' 
11,841,479' 
11,941,840 
12.049,478! 


179,987 
186,182 
186,0611 
191  346 

187,236 

132,847 1 
132,928 
126,633 
126,670: 
130, 708 1 

150,983 
144,077 
152,137 
150,201 
145,441 


3710.0 

53I1O.2 
52  10  1 
69  10.3 
58I1O.O 


4  6110.5 
4  55  10  2 


4  27 
4  27 
4  33 


9.6 
9.5 
9.8 


4  44  11.3 
4  26  10.7 
4  37  11.3 
4  32  11.1 
4  12  10.6 


68,329  4  00  10.1 

70,366  3  99  10.4 

68,4411  3  88  10.0 

68,614  3  91  10.1 

71,131  4  19  10.4 


105,142 
101,511 
111,426 
109,825 
103,158; 

230,120 

226,599 
226,919 
230,llll 
232,6671 

193,456 
180,700 
208,235! 
183,605 
181,634 


4  75,13.6 

4  70  13.1 

5  17  14.2 
5  16  14.0 

4  9113.4 

5  74  18.5 
5  61  18.2 
5  66  17.9 
5  74  17.9 
5  93  18.1 

5  461I6.3 
5  07il5.3 
5  88  17.6 
5  19  15.4 
5  22116.1 


24 


Sessional  Papers  (Mo.  32). 


ASSESSMENT    AND    T  AK  XT  10^. -ConUnued. 

Assessed  values. 


Gebnville:  ^^320 

lUQR  l»,oii' 

1005 ..    .       19,032 

\lil .1     19.333 

1893 ^^•'**" 

DDNDA3  :  [to.  ooq 

1  oq7  .  .  1       10, o^i7 

1896 ^^'^^^ 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Stokmont : 

1897.... 

1896 

1895 

1894 

1  gog       

Glbngabby: 

1  Qq7                 I  i  J,  ■'•50 1 

{0% 1  19,1871 

S   1  20,1211 

Im"".'. 19'H 

^^''^  ■  19,894 


18,125 
18,127 
18,531 

23,333 

23,063 

23,137 

23,2431 

22,9051 


23,7081 
24,088 
22,951 
22,518 
22,325 


1893   

Prt  SCOTT  : 

1897   

1896 

1895 

1894  

1893  

tiUSSKLL  I  ;       1C  QOQ 

1QQ7  10,  OiO 

loqg  16,603 

1895.".;;' '.'.'.'.  •'••••       16,028, 

jg9j  15,o40 

1893  '.'.'•• 15,139 

C^g™--  .1     84,919' 

^"^' 82,6591 

80, 157  i 
77,9231 
75,678 


273,808 
271,<^34 
274,176 
273,786! 
275,9461 

240,555 
239,922! 
239,8111 
239,973 
239,3311 


248,898 
250,8751 
250.9761 
251,725 
251,658 

288,6821 
285,9051 
289,0041 
286,754 
290,985 

295,774 
296.263 
296,061 
295,040 
297,0.581 

252,824 
252,823 
252,9871 
253,8391 
255,1941 


1896 

1895 

1894 

1893 

Renfrew  : 

1897 

1896  

1895 

1894 

1893 

Lanabk : 

1897  

1896 

1894:::::::::::...   35,017 


569,502 
571,339 
570,5611 
571,586 
56y,197| 


5,896,927 
6,015,822 
5,964,048 
5,977,412 
6,008,747 

6,748,2471 
7,041,927] 
7,001,455 
7,070,050, 
7,025, 530 1 

5,152,129 
5.150,225 

5,088,2761 
4,907,6611 
4.734,280 

4,111,129 
4,112,417 
4,108,8681 
4,106,7431 
4,112,619 

2,701,470 
2,679,246 
2,765,4861 
2,794,4961 
I      2,789,136 

1,935.171 
1,965.7641 
1,921,4871 
1,933,054 
1,961,207 

29,671,067 
28,844,1041 
27,320,281 
26,716,206 
26,040,191 


46.623' 

45,928! 
44.8951 
43,630. 
41,884 

35,9621 
36,129' 
35,6591 


1893  .... 

ViCTOBIA : 

1897...    . 

1896 

1895     ... 

1894 

1893 


34.902 

I 
30,4331 
30,099 
29.893 
29,665 
29,473l 


962,633' 
954,448' 
940,479; 
939,0.^6 
930,371 

68.5,276 
678,265, 
676,476, 
679,513! 
676, 791 1 

592,080 
593,488 
588,6571 
588,908, 
588,003 


5,555,9641 
4,796,7731 
4,718,673 
4,632,443 
4.501,352 

8,582,766 
8.485,7541 
8,476,6601 
8,477,814 
8,227,061 


104,2751 
105,900 
105,550 
102,  .500 
105,3001 

161,741 

113,1251 

119,800. 

113,4501 

133,225 

69,850 
74,650 
85,750 
78,5351 
85,576 

49,425 
58,940 
43,875| 
43,4601 
50,550 

32,145 
34,708 
39.7451 
32,8051 
36,610 

13,325 
15,0101 
14,6751 
34,9001 
19,850| 

1,402,320' 
1,304,995 
1,275,700 
1,356,675 
1,403,545 

264.085 
269.885 
281,185 
272.1901 
266,276 

488,990 
508,6601 
505,2011 
520,528 
519,131 


35,3371 
35,625 
35,075 
36,055 
39,480 

39,1501 
41,650 
41,510 
45,375 
40,100 

26,25ol 
30,1001 
33,150 
28,2.50 
28,080 

300 

650 

2.520 

22,140 

6,920 


9,833,9961 
9,810,3081 
9,630,819 
9.604.898 
9,848,5461 


6,350 
6,500 
6.0001 
7,6901 
5.750 


200 
200 


815 

417,700 
349,750 
414,525 
366,575 
95,850 


6,036,5391 
6,157,347 
6,104,673 
6,115,967 
6,1.53,527 

6,949,1381 
7,196,7021 
7.162,765 
7,228,875 
7,198,855 

5,248,2291 
.5,254,9751 
5,207,176 
5,014,446 
4,907,935 

4, 160. 8541 
4,172,007 
4,155,263 
4,172,  .343 
4,170,089 

2,739,9651 
2,720,4541 
2,811,231 
2,834,991 
2,831,526 

1,948,496! 
1,980.9741 
1  933,362 
1,967,9541 
1,981,872 
I 
31,491,087 
30,498,849 
29,010,506 
28,439,456 
27,539,586 


75,556  3  91112.5 
71,960  3  69  11.7 
73,713  3  87  12.1 
72,8021  3  77 111. 9 
70,873;  3  66  11  5 


181,0251 
186,065! 
366,905! 
385,336 
220,3651 


34.950 
38,050 
35,900 
50,820l 
49,152] 

64,100| 
65,630 
65.480 
64,080 
71,830! 

33,625 
40,295 
41,.500 
40,725 

45,775: 


89,462; 
82,956 
78,889! 
77,3271 
76,094| 

84,169 
79,8751 
80, 41 7 1 
75,425 
77,495. 

57,06l! 
54,4311 
54,860 
54,216 
48,678, 

58, 750' 
54,9421 
57,351 
54,971 
53,242' 

44,645 
44,233 
39,885 
37,664 
37,182 

585,047 
566,511 
548,902 
538,962 
512,591 


1 
8812.9 
5311.5 
35111.0 
27  10.7 
1110.6 


5,854,999 
5,104,708 
5,035,758, 
4,955,4531 
4, 819, 780  i 

9,135,856 
9,060,044 
9,047,341 
9,062,422! 
8,818,0251 

10,048,646 
10,066.6681 
10,039,224 
10,090,959 
10,114,686 


3  61|16.0 
3  46115.2 
3  48,15.4 
3  25115.0 
3  38!  15. 8 

2  96  13.7 
2  84  13.0 
2  73|l3.2 
2  85|13.0 
2  4511.7 

2  48  21.4 
2  28  20.2 
2  50  20.4 
2  44  19.4 
2  38118.8 


65!22.9 
66  22.3 
49i20.6 
42119.1 
46  18.8 


6  8918.6 
6  85  18  6 
6  85  18.9 
6  92  19.0 
6  77  18.6 


132,484 
129,549 
130,773 
125,454 
117,008 

140,037 
135,589' 
141,114 
136,899 
129,393 


84122.6 
82,25.4 
91126.0 
88125.3 


140,303' 
139,6591 
148,045' 
148,571 
149,427 


2  79  24.3 

3  89ll5.3 
3  75  15.0 
3  96115.6 
3  91  15.1 

3  71  14.7 

4  61114.0 
4  6413.9 

4  95  14.7 

5  01114.7 
5  07il4.8 


25 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


ASSESSMENT  AND  T  AX  AT  I  01^  .—Concluded. 


Popula- 
tion. 

No.  of 
acres 

assessed. 

Assessed  values. 

Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 

Counties, 

Real 
property. 

Personal 
property. 

Taxable 
income. 

Total. 

Total. 

. 

C3 

« 

p- 

Sc 

4  54 
4  67 
4  52 
4  75 
4  78 

3  19 
3  05 
3  21 
3  85 

3  91 

4  79 
4  72 
4  76 

4  87 
4  97 

3  34 

3  19 
3  21 
3  12 
3  08 

3  05 
3  16 
3  01 

2  97 

3  26 

3  27 
3  63 

3  77 
3  19 
2  98 

2  89 
2  96 

2  93 

3  43 

3  44 

4  59 

5  07 

4  76 

5  21 

6  13 

9  24 
11  04 
11  69 
11  74 
11  91 

5  32 

6  04 
6  15 

4  71 

5  52 

«4 

a 
o 

Peterborough  : 
1897 

34,897 
34,604 
34,052 
33,764 
33,352 

6,159 
6,216 
5,975 
5,758 
5,718 

55,676 
55,225 
55,577 
55,779 
54,608 

17,934 
17,432 
16,663 
15,815 
15,373 

15,629 
13,778 
14,464 
12,620 
11,584 

13,760 
12,388 
11,319 
11,185 
10,449 

5,744 
5,924 
5,484 
5,486 
5,097 

12,371 

11,376 

9,661 

8,643 

8,654 

6,394 
5,722 
5,575 
5,548 
5,840 

5,692 
4,420 
3,836 
4,040 
3,704 

568,404 
565,181 
562,250 
555,443 
554,214 

566,372 
564,826 
562,504 
563,512 
565,918 

1,016,833 
1,009,492 
995,710 
1,002,741 
1,011,015 

539,433 
530,578 
532,268 
526,S86 
524,869 

552,740 
520,693 
509,775 
490,317 
479,489 

293,864 
247,623 
243,244 
217,770 
200,716 

213,870 
208,568 
222,704 
223,013 
213,141 

400,786 
365,518 
354,556 
342.948 
300,283 

265,668 
259,202 
257,199 
258,731 
258,735 

21,945 
21,345 
20,846 
20,846 
19,495 

$ 

12,145,144 
12,214,202 
12,252.392 
12,256,466 
12,185,401 

479,074 
475,015 
470,115 
472,586 
464,956 

15,198,444 
15.415.856 
15.641,813 
15,624,959 
15,828,883 

2,344,543 
2,244,711 
2,216,546 
2,090,931 
2,007,921 

2,342,285 
2,280,857 
2.147,364 
2,067,284 
1,990,728 

1,599,870 
1,527,017 
1,338,168 
1,140,534 
1,065,911 

823,002 
810,112 
763,573 
744,500 
721,104 

2,416,084 
2,257,981 
2,140,170 
2,086,9-16 
1,993,102 

2,270,227 
2,364,152 
2,494,350 
2,661.844 
2,917,062 

1,467,830 
1,281,272 
1,176,816 
1,084,634 
1,003,728 

S 

293,050 
304,275 
283,077 
299,460 
295,475 

8,870 

9,075 

8.675 

10,325 

13,850 

331,500 
328,545 
338,350 
351,600 
311,295 

88,345 
115,722 
98,109 
84,284 
91,490 

81,940 
123,220 
72,155 
79,260 
70,431 

176,151 
167,370 
186.982 
188,850 
162,518 

37,374 
45,045 
37,530 
59,210 
49,017 

95,238 
87,145 
86,974 
112,030 
52,040 

94,045 

99,300 

123,400 

140,900 

175,050 

119,924 
127,369 
143,636 
152,407 
185,693 

133,800 
140,225 
146.818 
160,375 
169,595 

300 
500 
500 
500 
500 

119,335 
118.925 
119.700 
124,742 
128,750 

7,550 
7,650 
12,245 
6,723 
6,850 

1,550 
1,650 
3,700 
3,500 
9,800 

712 

3,900 

4,500 

6,100 

15,650 

700 

700 

300 

1,100 

1,100 

19,000 

15,400 

13,400 

2,850 

3,500 

20,050 
25,200 
47,350 
48,450 
63,450 

3,300 
6,700 
1,000 
4,400 
23,900 

S 

12,571,994 
12,658,702 
12,682,287 
12,716,301 
12,650,471 

488,244 
484,590 
479,290 
48.3,411 
479,306 

15,649,279 
15,863,326 
16.099.863 
16.101.301 
16,268,928 

2,440,438 
2,368,083 
2,326,900 
2,181,938 
2,106,261 

2,425,775 
2,405,727 
2,223.219 
2,150,044 
2,070,959 

1,776,733 
1,698,287 
1,529,650 
1,335,484 
1,244,079 

861,076 
855,857 
801,403 
804,810 
771,221 

2,530,322 
2,360,526 
2,240,544 
2,201,826 
2,048,642 

2,384,-322 
2,488,652 
2,665,100 
2,851,194 
3,155,562 

1,591,054 
1,415,341 
1,321,452 
1,241,441 
1,213,321 

9 

158.551 
158,980 
153,960 
160,228 
159,371 

19,632 
18,964 
IS.  193 
22,183 
22,349 

266.829 
260,616 
265,727 
271,552 
271,498 

59,934 
55,584 
53,491 
49,273 
47,321 

47,641 
45,765 
41,528 
37,538 
37,781 

44.961 
44,945 
42,687 
35,709 
31,184 

16,603 
17,518 
16,065 
18,791 
17,541 

56.806 
57,713 
46,015 
45,926 
53,072 

59,089 
63,180 
65,194 
65,127 
69,572 

30,291 
26,690 
•23,577 
19,027 
20,441 

^?.  6 

1896 

1895 

12.6 

1894 

12  6 

1893 

12  6 

Haliburton  : 

1897 

40,2 

1896 

Ife95 

39.1 
40  0 

1894  

45  9 

1893   

46  6 

Hastings  : 

1897 

17.1 

1896 

16  4 

1895 

16  5 

1894 

1893 

16.9 
16  7 

MUSKOKA  : 

1897 

24  f> 

1896 

23  5 

1895 

23  0 

1894 

■?.?.  6 

1893     

Parry  Sound  : 

1897 

22.5 
19.6 

1896 , 

1895 

1894 

1893 

19.0 
18.7 
17.5 
18,2 

NiPissiNG  : 

1897  

25  3 

1896 

1895 

1894 

26.5 
27.9 

26.7 

1893 

Manitoulin  : 

1897  

25.1 
19.3 

1896 

1895 

20.4 
20.0 

1894 

23.3 

1893  

22.7 

Algo-MA  : 

1897 

1896 

1895 

22.5 
24.4 
20.5 

1894 

1893 

20.4 
25.9 

Thunder  Bay  : 
1897 

24  8 

1896 

1895 

25.4 

24.5 

1894 

22.8 

1893 

22.0 

Rainy  River: 

1897 

19.0 

1896  

1895 

1894 

18.9 
17.8 
15.3 

1893 

16.8 

26 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32/ 


A,  1898 


ASSESSMENT    AND    TAXATION 

Table  IV.  Summary  statenrent  for  the  Province  of  Ontario  of  the  Population  and  Area,  as  shown  by 
the  assessment  rolls,  and  of  the  assessed  Values  and  amount  of  Taxes  imposed,  as  shown  by  the  collec- 
tion rolls,  together  with  the  average  rate  of  taxes  per  head  of  population  assessed  as  resident,  and  rate 
in  mills  on  the  dollar  of  total  assessed  value  for  the  twelve  years,  1886  to  1897,  classified  as  rural  (town- 
ships), urban  (towns  and  incorporated  villages)  and  cities. 


Municipali- 

Popula- 
tion. 

Number  of 
acres 

assessed. 

Assessed  values. 

Taxes  imposed  for 
all  purposes. 

ties. 

Real 
property. 

Personal 
property. 

Taxable 
income. 

Total. 

Total. 

Per 

head. 

Mills 
on  $ 

1897. 

• 

$ 

$ 

$ 

* 

$ 

$  c. 

To%vn8hips . . 

Towns 

Villages  .  . . 
Cities 

1. 11.%  530 
312,947 
133,560 
430,940 

23,360,428 

156,338 

99,240 

40,744 

441,878,264 
83,529,999 
28,314,870 

212,621,741 

2,609,661 

6,343,065 

1,903,926 

17,125,503 

234,553 
1,565,482 

278,911 
7,219,402 

444,722,478 
91,438,546 
?0, 497, 707 

236,966,646 

4,407,005 

2,069,444 

569,884 

5,160,592 

3  96 

6  61 

4  27 
11  98 

9.9 
22.6 

18.7 
21.8 

Total .... 

1,990,977 

23,656,750 

766,344,874 

27,982,155 

9,298,348 

803,625,377 

12,206,925 

6  13 

15.2 

1896. 

Townships. . 

Towns 

Villages  .  . . 
Cities 

1,112,900 
306,001 
132,451 
420,934 

23,172,408 

154,520 

99,507 

40,548 

444,056,842 
8.3,194,842 
27,855,878 

221.941,541 

2,792,097 

6,456,560 

1,881,680 

16,963,651 

268,444 
1,617,776 

268,281 
7,620,011 

447,117,383 
91,269,208 
30,005,839 

246,525,203 

4,292,741 

2,005,132 

557,003 

5,267,909 

3  86 
6  55 

4  21 
12  51 

9.6 
22.0 
18.6 
21.4 

Total .... 

1,972,286 

23,466,983 

777,049,103 

28,094,018 

9,774,512 

814,917,633 

12,122,785 

6  15 

14.9 

1895. 

Townships. . 

Towns 

Villages  .  . . 
Cities    .... 

1,109,631 
300,655 
130,889 
416,215 

23,114,356 

152,685 

94,566 

40,548 

445,375,439 
84,965,120 
27,572,493 

225,079,539 

2,762,179 

6,999,896 

1,848,480 

16,852,113 

279,641 
1,681,819 

290,037 
7,759,410 

448,417,259 
93,646,835 
29,711,010 

249,691,062 

4,473,269 

2,021,455 

.544,111 

5,277,594 

4  03 

6  72 

4  16 

12  68 

10.0 
21.5 
15.5 
21.1 

Total .... 

1,957,390 

23,402,155 

782.992,591 

28,462,668 

10,010,907 

821,466,166 

12,316,429 

6  29 

15  0 

1894. 

Townships. . 

Towns  

Villages  .  . , 
Cities 

1,103,828 
297,194 
126,387 
408,810 

23,039,610 

153,164 

94,407 

40,560 

448,216,984 
84,363,681 
26,799,930 

227,578,882 

2,399,503 

7,115,395 

1,931,015 

17,32.3,301 

359,616 
1,586,389 

276,983 
7,727,691 

451,476,103 
93,065,465 
29,007,928 

252,629,874 

4,579,044 

1,955,980 

526,813 

5,258,475 

4  15 

6  58 

4  17 

12  86 

10.1 
21.0 
18.4 
20.8 

Total .... 

1,936,219 

23,327,741 

786,959,477 

29,269,214 

9,950,679 

826,179,370 

12,320,312 

6  36 

14.9 

1893. 

Rural 

Urban 

Cities 

1,096,984 
415,410 
397,665 

22,959,280 

246,780 

40,258 

448,311,-559 
111,724,2^8 
220,179,831 

2,957,944 

8,923,403 

17,581,320 

359,600 
2,029,029 
7,463,128 

451,629,103 
122,676,670 
251,224,279 

4,629,028 
2,449,452 
5,444,180 

4  22 

5  90 
13  69 

10.3 
20.0 
21.7 

Total.... 

1,910,059 

23,246,318 

786,215,628 

29,462,667 

9,851,757 

825,530,052 

12,522,660 

6  56 

16.2 

1892. 

Rural 

Urban 

Cities 

1,102,467 
413,396 
393,664 

22,885,464 

228,829 

40,258 

448,566,182 
110,989,898 
222,997,515 

3,089,202 

8,452,309 

18,928,105 

410,274 
2,469.164 
9,308,478 

452,065,658 
121,911,371 
251,234,098 

4,599,442 
2,375,995 
4,828,133 

4  17 

5  75 
12  26 

10.2 
19.5 
19.2 

Total  ... 

1,909,527 

23,154,551 

782,553,595 

30,469,616 

12,187,916 

825,211,127 

11,803,57C 

0  18 

14.3 

27 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  82  ). 


A,  1898 


ASSESSMENT    AND    T  AX  ATI  ON  .—Concluded. 


Aseessed  values. 

Taxes  im 

posed  for 

Municipali- 

Popula-   ^"""berof 

all  purposes. 

ties. 

tion. 

acres 
assessed. 

Real 

property. 

Personal 
property. 

Tsxable 
income. 

Total. 

Total. 

Per 

head. 

Mills 
on$ 

1891. 

$ 

s 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$  c. 

Rural 

Urban 

Cities 

1,116,347 
410,545 
395,229 

22,825,325 

227,075 

39,498 

450,559,809 
109.462,152 
216,091,585 

3,101,663 

8,570,172 

19,460,460 

408,892 
2,343,484 
8,849,177 

454,070,364 
120,375,808 
244,401.222 

4,544,291 
2,305,025 
4,918,432 

4  07 

5  61 
12  44 

10.0 
19.1 
20.1 

Total.... 

1,922,121 

23,091,898 

776,113,546 

31,1.32,295 

11,601,553 

818,&47,394 

11,767,748 

6  12 

14.4 

1890. 

Rural 

Urban  ...   . 
Cities 

1,118,252 
410,530 

388,762 

22,676,390 

223,434 

39,498 

448,916,986 
105,353,(91 
202,907,967 

3,178,614 

7,878,486 

19,800,295 

371,488 
2,170,656 
8,-538,688 

452,467,088 
115,402,2.S3 
230,746,950 

4,473,108 
2,161,644 
4,262,733 

4  00 

5  27 
10  96 

9.9 
18.7 
18.5 

Total.... 

1,917,544 

22,939,322 

757,178,044 

30,357,395 

11,080,832 

798,616,271 

10,897,485 

5  68 

13.7 

1889. 

Rural 

U  rban 

Cities 

1,130,060 
400,890 
375,951 

22,554,717 

215.5.32 

38,498 

447,114,443 

96,567,320 

177,634,932 

*3, 470, 224 

7,773,945 

18,826,684 

392,-553 
2,112,533 
8,013,182 

450,977,220 
106,453,798 
204,474,798 

4,507,717 
1,993,623 
3,746,858 

3  99 

4  97 
9  97 

10.0 
18.7 
18.3 

Total.... 

1,906,901 

22,808,747 

721,316,695 

30,070,853 

10,518,268 

761,905,816 

10,248,198 

5  37 

13.5 

1888. 

Rural 

Urban  

Cities 

1,133,046 
393,461 
353,638 

22,348,502 

211,707 

36,961 

433,596,047 

90,416,611 

160,239,217 

26,624,345 

7,956,694 

19,345,906 

395,430 
2.039,724 
8,040,596 

460,61.5,822 
100,413,029 
187,625,719 

4,494,780 
1,884.918 
3,510,264 

3  97 

4  79 
10  01 

9.8 
18.8 
18.9 

Total.... 

1,880,145 

22,597,170 

684,251,875 

53,926,945 

10,475,750 

748.654,570 

9,919,962 

5  28 

13.3 

1887. 

Rural 

Urban  

Cities 

1,140,138 
377,  .S89 
330,930 

22,145,295 

212,322 

36,163 

4-28,372,441 

83,497,910 

140,795,414 

27,381,683 

7,616,982 

18,226,775 

416,039 
2,222,704 
8,781,990 

456,170,163 

93,.337,.596 

167,804,179 

4,431,720 
1,759,248 
8,109,145 

3  89 

4  66 
9  40 

9-7 

18.8 
18.5 

Total.... 

1,848,457 

22,393,780 

652,665,765 

53,225,440 

11,420,733 

717,311,938 

9,300,113 

5  03 

13.0 

1886. 

Rural 

Urban 

Cities 

1,148,856 
360,005 
319,634 

21,990,134 

204,446 

35,373 

424,356,317 

78.521,775 

129,231,595 

27,289,098 

7,384,126 

16,925,710 

452,230 
2,172,192 
8,017,616 

452,097,645 

88,078,093 

154,204,921 

4,388,401 
1,670,848 
2,950,136 

3  82 

4  64 
9  23 

9.7 
19.0 
19.1 

Total.... 

1,828,495 

22,229,953 

632,109,687 

51,598,934 

10,672,038 

694,380,659 

9,009,385 

4  93 

13.0 

*This  larpre  decrease  in  personal  property  was  due  to  a  change  in  the  Assessment  Act,  which  exempted 
farm  Jive  stock,  etc. 


28 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


18£8 


AS;SESSMENT    ROLL— STEAM    BOILERS. 

Table    V,     Showing  the  number  of  Steam  Boilers  as  placed  on  the  Assessment  Rolls  in  Townships, 
Towns,  Villages  and  Cities  of  the  Province  for  the  seven  years  1891-1897. 


Municipalities. 


Counties  : 

Essex    

Kent 

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand    

Welland 

Lambton    

Huron • 

Bruce 

Grey 

Simcoe    

Middlesex   

Oxford    

Brant    

Perth 

Wellingttn   

Wa*'eiloo   

Dufferin  

Lioc>ln 

Wentworth   

Halcou   

Peel 

York 

Ontario 

Durham 

Northumberland   

Prince  Edward 

Lennox  and  Addington 
Frontenac   

Leeds  

Grenville  

Dundas    

Stormont  

Glengarry 

Prescott  

Russell   

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark 

Victoria 

Peterborough   

Haliburton    

Hastings 

Muskoka    

P  irry  Sound 

Ni  issing  

Manitoulia   

Algoma 

Cities  : 

Belleville 

Brantford 

Chatham 

Guelph 

Hamilton 

Kingston  

London  

Ottawa 

St.  Catharines 

St.  Thomas  . 

Stratford  

Toronto  

Windsor 


1897. 


Total 


173 

178  i 

134  i 

83 

80 

279 

211 

160 

176 

207 

2U0 

175 

47 

134 

111 

89 

51 

73j 

95! 

48 

.'-9 

145 

1?9 

51 

97 

67 

69 

81 

123 

49 

70 

54 

45 

68 

60 

65 

100 

63 

65 

57 

15 

143 

42 

60 

29 

9 

30 


82 

47 

34 

15 1 

29 1 

214' 

121 

102 

71 

12/ 

47 

79 

7 

37 
77 
174 
20 
32 
33 
40 
10 
95 
61 
31 
33 
27! 
14 
41 
59 
31 
17 
37 
14 
18 
26 
7 
58 
74 
37 
37 


54 
63 
24 

18 

9 

33 

34 
74 
31 
:-'3 

236 
54 

130 
69 
27 
21 
54 

122 
35 


1896. 


230: 

2601 

181 

1171 
95' 
85  j 

493 1 

332 

268 

247 

33 1 

217 

254) 
54 

171 

J  88 

263 
71 

105 

1281 
88 
691 

2401 

200 
82 

130 
94 
83 
85 

182 
80 
87 
91 
59 
86 
86 
72 

158 

1371 

102 

94 

151 

1971 

1051 

84 

47 

181 

63! 

341 
74 
311 
33 1 

236 
54 

130 
69 
27 
21 
54 

122 
35 


140 

172 

136 

81 

77 

52 

310 

212 

166 

177 

194 

189 

153 

49 

163 

103 

99 

58 

75 

1-22 

39 

57 

151 

122 

52 

91 

67 

70 

75 

104 

35 

71 

53 

71 

81 

50 

56 

107 

60 

60 

57 

15 

124 

39 

53 

17 

9 

21 


60 

77 

42 

38 

17 

24 
204 
103 

85 

61 
138 

48 

75; 
6 

38 
641 
155 
20 
34 
33 
39 
9 
92 
61 
32 
30 
26 
14 
4 

60 
32 
22 
31 
15 
11 
24 
8 
57 
68 
43 
35 

62 
54 
20 
19 
9 
68 

33 
79 
31 
34 

232 
55 
95 
65 
21 
37 
54 

219 
31 


Totals. 


1895. 


1894.  I  1893. 


200 

249 

178 

119 

94 

76 

514 

315 

2511 

238! 

332  j 

237 1 

228 

55 

191 

167 

254 

78 

109 

155 

78 

66 

243 

183 

84 

121 

93 

84 

79 

164 

67 

93 

84 

86 

92 

74 

64 

164 

128 

103 

92 

15 

180 

93 

'  73 

36 

18 

89 

33 
79 
31 
34 

232 
55 
95 
65 
21 
37 
54 

219 
31 


195 

233 

169 

119 

105 

86 

504 

314 

260 

240 

358 

267 

225 

66 

160 

171 

237 

77 

104 

120 

81 

76 

20K 

177 

91 

120 

79 

81 

73 

104 

67 

8:^ 

87 

64 

82 

65 

51 

149 

126 

98 

80 

13 

213 

95 

70 

32 

15 

70 

33 
69 
32 

35 
2251 
.56! 
931 
65 
29 
17 
52 
240 
13 


209 

270 

167 

114 

112 

83 

533 

299 

232 

208 

349 

236 

207 

62 

162 

174 

238 

79 

100 

122 

85 

85 

211 

106 

92 

110 

80 

76 

63 

135 

66 

76 

92 

58 

87 

52 

58 

147 

127 

101 

89 

13 

210 

91 

72 

25 

19 

85 

30 
78 
72 
30 

528 
60 
93 
00 
30 
53 
48 

184 
14 


190 
269 
160 
130 
106 
74 
548 
276 
254 
179 
337 
227 
207 
49 
103 
109 
217 
70 
83 
114 
79 
69 
189 
193, 
93i 
111! 
78 
68 
60 
1391 
59i 
71 1 
81 
441 
781 
52! 
52 
114 
105 
101 
90 
11 
232 
58 
68 
23 
15 

47; 

29 
73 
30 
31 

201 
65 

107 
54 
30 
53 
47 

184 
15 


204 

247 

156 

101 

101 

79 

471 

289 

237 

15s| 

312I 

2321 

227 1 

431 

1491 

102 1 

1871 

69 

95 

112 

86 

63 

177 

162 

103 

88 

79 

80 

53 

135 

60 

70 

76 

63 

69 

49 

39 

101 

115 

92 

82 

5 

214 

83 

60 

13 

16 

49 

20 
48 
29 
29 

202 
59 

107 
54 
22 
?7 
55 

1.35 
22 


165 
158 
140 
93 
83 
03 
421 
277 
207 
153 
221 
217 
220 
48 
136 
157 
195 
84 
73 
102 
87 
55 
164 
153 
78 
65 
84 
75. 
51 
133 
60' 
65 
78 
36 
59 
36 
40 
62 
89 
47 
80 
7 
143 
40 
45 
12 
12 
20 


39 
20 

28 

182 

54 

87 


25 


118 
20 


4,621  3,250  7.8771  4,525  3,263  7,778  7,583  7,807  7,127  6,722  5,662 
29  "       '~ 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 ). 


A.  1898 


FINANCIAL  statement- 
Table    VI.     Showing  an  abstract  statement  of  the  Receipts,  Disburbements,  Assets  and  Liabilities 


Township 
municipalities. 


Essex  •. 

1  Anderdon 

2  Colchester,  N  . 

3  Colchester-,  S. . 

4  (Josfield,  N 

5  G-osfield,  S  .    . . . 

6  Maidstone  

7  Maiden 

8  Mersea 

9  Pelee  Island 

10  Rochester 

11  Sandwich,  E  .. , 

12  Sandwich,  S 

13  Sandwich,  W... 

14  Tilbury,  N 

15  Tilbury,  W 


Receipts. 


Totals.. 


Kent  : 

1  Camden    . . 

2  Chatham . . 
Dover  .... 
Harwich  . . 
Howard  . . 
Orford  .. 
Raleigh  .  . 
Romney.    . 

9  Tdbary,  E 
10  Zone 


169 
2,564 
1,685 
1,197 

"455 
i58 
99 
978 
910 
456 

1,214 
799 

3,737 

3,887 

18,308 


97 

'320' 
l,913i 

3,189 


8.980 
17,427 
20,202 
11,684 
12,416 
16,411 

7,509 
21,411 

5,072 
14,148 

9,811 
10,339 
10,977 

9,264 
12,897 


58 


38 
12? 

22 

54 

24 

185 

445 

17 

534 

109 

323 


46,  899 

1,263, 

11,804! 

449 


21,002 
61,809 
22,5'32 
32,574 
14,809 
14.221 
24,022 
11,343 
24,143 
6,227 


Totals ,65,934    235,712 


Elgin  : 

1  Aldbarough 

2  Bayham 

3  Dorchester,  S.... 

4  Dunwich    

5  Malahide   

6  Southwoid  ..... 

7  Yarmouth 


Totals . 


Norfolk : 


Ctiarlotteville  . . 
Houghton    .    . , . 

Middleton 

'^ownsend    

'vValsingham,  N 
Walsingham,  S. 

Windham    

Wood  house  


197 

768 

1,026 

77 

1,437 

13,190 

1,165 


16,738 
17.921 
9,185 
19,114 
20,018 
22,4.55 
23,091 


52 

57 
185 
185 

76 
110 

89 


754 


435 
182 


17,860    128,522 


741 

684 
311 
2,012 
675 
708' 
727 
302 


Totals I  6,160 


10,192 
5,135 
8,650 

14.001 
6,429 

10,6fi0 

11,5.50 
8,775' 


66 
109 
203 
228 


75,392!   239 


-0:2 
a  > 
08  •- 


1  .. 


25 

161 

6 

200 

'  26 

7 

15 


S  > 


oi 


14 
126 


135 


O  t. 

h  U 
O  o 


18,500 
16,800 
2,489 
1,200 
1,023 
2,500 
3,200 
4,000 
3,150 


>  -J  « 


O  <D 


-05  g, 
&  s  ^< 

—  ^  © 

2-^ -a 


P3 


T3  O 


900 
3,625 


1,500 


188,550  1,936   466 


308 


17 


10 


1,181 

4 

159 

3 


63  1,364 


9  59 

8  19 

2  24 
1 

...I  62 

8  25 

311  17 


2,500 


1,500   59,887 


2,432 


1,223    59   206 


504 
'75 


111 
75 


622 


4,000 


6,432 


26.664 

12.9.30 

9,000 


825 


750 
500 


2,825 


4,500 


3.829 
4,077 
1,100 

62.100 


20,524 
2.000 
1,600 
1,755 
6.500 
4,000 
8,000 

44,379 


66S 
150 


2,535 


2,535 


3,000 
650 
963 

4,000 

9,431' 


1,271 


200 
1,613 

500 
1,632 


750        2,538' 


375 
3,757 

960 
6, 863 1 
9,047, 

28,756 


1,632 
;|599 

l',583 
1,371 
200 
7,996 
1,267 
6,067 


20,715 


708 
300 


5,413 

l,Onol 

365 

200 

7,986' 


2,521 


3,000 


2,521 


10 

401 

tl,320 

1,492 

46 

240 

45 

J827 


§293 

2,714 

425 


771 
1,596 

10,180 


197 

272 

45 

112,150 

80 

4,013 

369 

1,371 

17 

8,514 


67 

91 

61 

321 

1.56 

499 

20 

1,215 


52 

50 

370 


7 
.^85 
238 
528 


3,000        1,630 


+  Includes  $695  received  from  ex-treasurer.        +  Including  $668  grant  from  Government  to  Big  Creek 
drain.  §  Ir.cluding  S150   from   ex-treasurer  jl  Including   §462   baance   Sylvester   drain  debentures 

previously  omitted.        IF  Including  $940  guarantee  deposit  on  account  costs,  re  suit. 

30 


61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIES. 

of  the  Township  municipalities  in  the  Province  of  Ontario,  for  the  year  ending  December  Slst,  189(>. 


28,989 
37,217 
26,071 
17,213 
I4,22;s 
21,379 
11,080 
29,686 
9,239 
15,541 
\f>,526 
19,377 
14,032 
2'^)392 
27,751 

312,716 


22,9>^0 
92,401 
36,063 
47,422 
19,525 
19,046 
81,217 
18,076 
47.621 
7,80b 

395,156 


41,169 
23,824 
11,898 
26,747 
•V?,282 
40,74.' 
32,752 

210,417 


9i),070 


Disbursements. 


is^  a 


435 
778 

1,017 
499 

1,331 
360 

1,212 

1,113 
961 
784 
832 
617 

12,423 


660,        65 

967 

857]   2,383 

5 

8 

294 

108 

112 

13 

65 

261 

51 


rr: 

aa  b 

«     C3   *> 

S  5 

(C  3  a 

c.-  a 

"S  a 

X  2  c 

X>  cS 

-.a  J 

T3 

-S  o  ao 

c4 

^ 

P^ 

$ 

$ 

129 

2,187 

279 

1,913 

339 

l,-269 

.     213 

683 

193 

1,542 

248 

2,190 

117 
3,485 


705 
2,868  1,968 
1,219  589 
2,138  126 
1,120,  4 

809 
1,038 

916 

971 

732 


512 
263 

57 
9 


153 
229 
136 
255 

281 
179 
218 
444 
310 

3,606 


192 
465 
920 
677 
324 
261 
555 
172 
585 
167 


977 
937 
620 
1,432 
1,150 
1,023 
1,481 

7,620 


685 
460 
718 
884 
442 
f30 
677 
544 

4.940 


340 

2,875 
572 

3,962 


19 

19 
123 

11 

9 

290 

41 


12,516,   3,5271   4,318 


318 
209 
118 
292 
239 
284 
426 


260 
158 
«7 
219 
316 
244 
166 
122 


a  S 


1,481 
2,786 
384 
936 
1,524 
1..527 
1,799 
2,334 
1,431 


*834| 
'l7.5 


20 


15 


801 


33 


2.^,989  1,878 


1,.312 
2,518 

735 
3,425 
2,173 
1,839 
1,438 

690 
2,843 

765 

17,738 


3.745 
3,953 
1,281 
5,700 
4,260 
5,931 
7,971 

32,811 


568 


958 

892  .  . 
2,342  . . . 
2,461  ... 
1,778  ... 
1.301! . . . 
2.0.58;.., 
l,^86^.. 


88 


2  J3 


42 

180 
5 


511  2,465 


27 

29 

""48 

400 

223 

30 

i39 

30 

16 

24 

7 

405 


124 

26 
50 

248 
13 
70 

109 

640 


16 


40, 


191 
175 

66 
176 
335 
269 

38 
348 

96 

48 
110 

96 

98 
372 

45 


374 
686 
592 
291 
556 
511 
329 
7 
340 
90 

3,776 


119 


45 

51 

10 

123 

427 


181 
18 

128 

10 

5 

83 

165 

214 


512,  1,572;  13,375    88   130]   804 


O 


1,367 
1,277 
2,185 
1,384 
531 
2,294 
1,263 
2,975| 
100 
1,252 
1,498 
1,232 
1,513 
1,295 
1,177 

20,865 


3,031 
7,696 
4,969 
6,846 
4,365 
2,675 
5,049 
1,027 
2,418 
910 

38,986 


4,168 
3,025 
2,  .367 
2,751 
5,976 
5,959 
966 

25,212 


2,415 
1,589 
1,608 
4,265 
2,608 
1,604 
3,335 
3, 704 1 

21,128 


®<*-  o 


.11 


6,180 
3,106 
4,656 
3,318 
3,830 
4,226 
2,112 
6,215 
1,456 
3,234 
3,946 
2,574 
5,001 
3,993 
2,877 

57,024 


4,356 
7,669 
4.552 
11,378 
6,020 
.^701 
6,194 
5,335 
4,653 
1,357 


7,429 
8,790 
.^,230 
6.443 
6,263 
7,622 
7,506 

47,283 


4,.582! 
2, 128 1 
3  .3631 
7, 548 1. 
4,082] , 
3,810  . 
5,670' 
2,1301, 

33,3131 


^  a  ?bi 


1,371 
803 
930 

1,817 
688 

1,338 


4,494 

1,885 
88 

941  i 
3,640| 

201 1 
6, 407 1 
l,803i 


240 


26,406       240 


1,403| 
3,0481 

2, 473 1 

2,195 

1,324| 

583 

49,076| 


11,4101 
1401 


55,215,     71,652 


2, 400 1 

322 
1381 
4,1591 
1,7271 
243 
1971 


2,080 


9,186|   2,080 


2711 
6|. 
2,3591 


186| 
2,8221 


200 


3 
4 

5 
6 
7 
8 
9 
10 

n 

12 
13 

14 
15 


200 


Includiag  8515  for  dock. 


31 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Township 
municipalities. 


Essex  : 

1  Anderdon 

2  Colchester,  N 

3  Cjlchp3ter.  S. 

4  Gosfield,  N... 
.5  Gosheld,  S  . . . 

6  Maidstone  . . . 

7  Maiden 

8  Mereea 

9  Pelee  Island   . 

10  Rochester 

11  Sandwich,  E  . 

12  Sandwich,  S    . 

13  Sandwich,  W. 

14  Tilbury,  N  ... 

15  Tilbury,  W... 


Totals.. 

Kent  : 
1  Camden 

Chatham  . . . 

Dover    . 

Harwich  . . . 

Howard   . . . 

Orford 

Kaleigh 

Romney. . . . 
9  Tilbury,  E 
10  Zone 


Totals. 


Elgin  : 

1  Aldborough  . . 

2  Bayham 

3  Dorchester,  S. 

4  Dunwich 

5  Malahide 

6  Southwold  . . . 

7  Yarmouth . . . . 


Totals. 


Norfolk : 

1  Charlotteville... 

2  Houghton ... 

3  Middleton  

4  Townsend 

5  Walsingham,  N. 

6  Walsingham,  S. 

7  Windham 

8  Woodhouse 


FINANCIAL  statement- 
Table   VI.    Abstract 


Totals. 


Disbursements. — Continu  ed. 


£S 


100 

42-i 
555 
380 

114 

48 

260 

319 


136 
108 
522 

2,970 


-■  1 

c 

p. 

JJ 

(D 

ij 

V 

TSTJ 

u- 

<u 

.C 

cc 

*J 

o 

^ 

.42 

< 

s 

S  "  « 

°  u  <u 

=  te  X 

-a  o  * 

Ss  = 


670 


689 


793 

6,3?8|      379 

5, 39  4 1   1,683 

5,782 

1908 

3,519 

6-'0 

4,377 

1,022 

2,0581 

2,6^3 

1,224  , 

2,3201 , 

474I, 

10, 714| 

■     I 

49,2061   4,070 


363 


286 


627 
345 
364 


3*3 
390 
154 
259 


3,371 

15,888 

7,614 

6,645 

1,310 

1,275 

5,74?s 

1,393 

17, 984 

806 


780 


13,f00i 
15, 600  i 
1,5001 
1,200 
889 
3,5001 
3, 700 1 
3,0001 
1,8251 
3,6101 
1,200| 
2,859 

5.500 


57,883 


3,106 

41. 576 

8,096 

7,000 


_ 

c 

a 
It 

ri 

U' 

0 

u 

p 

a 

p 

« 

at 
> 

a.T! 

<v 

cst;  I 

1— ( 

s 

192 

166 

96 


2,522  62,031    1,234 


1,700 


248 
1,017 

.3,053 


200 
175 
150 
100 


621 
411 

053 
895! 
970 
156 


1,059 


524 

2,057 

3,284 

691 

1,129 

827: 

189 

2,525 

1,408 

504 

612 

461 

298 

245 

2,162 


671 
522. 
456' 
7361 
2,145i 
154  i 
346 
200 
37, 

1 1.094 
274 

J  2, 697  i 
496 
761 1 
688! 


16,916  10,673 


4,820 
4,96i 


2,000 
71, 499 


121 


982 

6,211 

2,713 

1,389 

384 

771 

3,812 

1,433 

5,1.34 

99 


762 

1,181 

917 

3,114 

1,376 

223 

564 

213 

647 

122 


22,9281   9,119 


5,106 


370 


625 i      370 


1,180 


132 
000 
325 
755 
500 
,000 
,000 


35, 712 


2,615 
1,972 
48 
499 
729 
433 
273 

6,569 


209 
320i 
55 
585 
4,192! 
477 
787 

6,625 


895|. 
186  . 


732   566 
155  §3,210 


1,788 
1^500 
4,369 


550 
1,500 

800 1 
2,2871 


252 
159 

71 
1,450 

15 
252 


294,610 


20, 
92 
35,' 
46, 
18, 
17. 
74, 
16, 
47, 
7, 


Assets. 


11.458 

20,157 

19,673 

7,417 

7,966 

15,577 

4,923 

21,14S 

5,223 

9.659 

11:288 

9,737 

517 

4,984 

9,403 

18,106  159,130 


401 
401 
811 
211 
986 
990 
924 
685 
621 
204 


2,579 


378,2.34 


40,597 
23,346 
10,292 
25,210 
32,456 
28,914 
28,567 


602 


16, 922 


572 

478 

1,606 

1,537! 

826 

11,831' 

4,185 


7,964 

27,]04i 

22.338 

9,965 1 

8,833 

8,912 

16,147 

8,113 

23,?25 

3,384 

135,985 


21,329 
7,714 
19 
7,063 
1,305 
1,284 
2,094 


189,382  21,035 


438 
82 

168  j 
64' 

2091 

123! 


5,1371   3,086    4,860 


11,649 

547 

9,044 

11,900 

76 

15,908 

119 

10,131 

38 

1?,385 

52 

13,571 

12,543 

1,107 

97,131 

1,939 

40,808 


4,732 
2,798 
3,524 
1,349 
6,571 
5,273 
1,844 
4971 

26,588: 


240 


240 


1,000 


1,000 






250 

250 

7,191 



7,191 


,764 


,764 


t  Including  8410  refund  to  drain  ratepayers. 

J  Including  l)ra'nage  account  to  Sandwich  Ea^t. 

§  Including  53,000  railway  bonus. 


32 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32). 


A.  189  8 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S,.— Continued. 
Statement.  —  Continued. 


Assets.  — Continued. 


•a  w 
a  to 
^  a 

HI'S 
or; 

2  ^ 

93 


A 


15,675 


6,000 


900 
1,950 
1,700 


700 
1,000 
3,000 
5,500    6,750 

I   1,400 

500 

7,200       810 


51 
873 
1,558 
9821 
20!)| 
495 

'l,695J 

52 

2501 

1:12,5351 

8,924l 


Liabilities. 


I    2,600| 

34,275,21,210 


7,200 
6,000 


415 
7,322 

35,352 


12,180 
25,298 
39,0.5.5 
10,472 

8,166 
24,140 

6,418 
25,984 
17,715 
12,074 
25,246 
27,741 

1,685 

9,006 
24,133 

269,313 


Pi 


000 

296 

.500 

§24.942 

200 

1,283 

600 

17,011 

500 

6.410 

139 

8,099 

000 

ir91,344 

000 

596 

2,242 

11, 

54, 
25, 
29. 
17, 
18, 
117, 
17 
33, 
3, 


1,157' 

1,886 
1,190 
1,593 
1,965 
1,135 
2,521 

100 
1,374 
1,246 
1,023 
1,193 
1,015 

937 


095 

2,130 

4,299 

264 

144 

4,413 

1,822 

916 

450 

2  373 

3,975 

2,728 

2,226 


18, 335  26, 435 


2,665 
7,141 
4,518 
2,493 
4,365 
1,000 

1^027 

2,418 

910 


2,009 

1.493 

1,239 

703 

187 

3,420 

595 

1,720 

2,830 


776 


37,144 


8,976 
9,526 
4,488 


10,314 


1,043 

784 

70 

2,724 
290 
400 
144 


100 

2,46fi 
563 
247 

""678 

286 

750 

1,058 

2,325 

614 

500 

5,476 

15, 063 


1,281 
1,447 

11382 


4,812 

2,760 

1,436 

131 


4.164 
19,431 
22,027) 

8,717 
12,  .576 
10,677 


5,666 
*2,746 


34,752 

23,1.53 

3,457 

14,095 

10,353 

2,857 

7,962 

29,093 

203,314 


14,605 
51,098 
40,157 
19,260 
6,242 
8,098 
73,074 
15,594 
88,822 
919 


789 


9,201 


270 


8,500 
6,000 
6,489 
1,200 
1,023 
2,500 
2,110 
4,000 
1,901 


904 
3,625 


38,252 


26,664 

12,930 

2,000 


31 

1,453 

1,359 

848 

1,392 

28 

336 

t3,322 

226 

98 

298 

377 


3,200 


14,647 
37,146 
53.118 
12.466 
26,725 
20,261 

5,689  7 
55,883  8 
26,888    9 

8,091 10 
22,843  11 
18,10612 


4,664 
14,903 
39,282 


12,968    360,712 


1,543' 

1,437 
4,077 
1,575 

50, 226 


959 
131 
1,070 
2,783 
1,184 
320 
3,548 


20,508 
87,808 
61,361 
27,621 
11,978 
19,193 
88,953 
30,740 
102,766 
3,723 

454,651 


61,799 
43,586 
567 
26,171 
12,462 
16,070 
9,161 


169,816 


17,336 
4,259 
5,345 
1,770 
5.697 

29,557 

290 

4,200 


•  Formerly  included  in  drainage  f  Balances  on  drainap'e  works,  etc.  J  Including  $9,531  omitted 
from  previous  returns  for  advances  to  local  drains.  ||  In  1896  school  debentures  amounting  to  $1,669 
were  issued  but  not  sold— the  towrnship  advanced  the  amount  pending  sale  of  debentures.  §  Including 
$23,342  advances  on  drains.  H  Including  .$87,061  advances  to  drains  and  schools.  o  Including  $1,352 
balance  judgment  against  ex-collector.  6  Including  $4,079  due  Sinking  Fund.  c  Including  $6  000 
in  Ft.  Burwell  harbor.        d  Including  $2,462  payable  by  Dutton  village  on  school  debentures.  ' 


S  B.I.  (5) 


33 


t51  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32  ^ 


A.  1898 


Table  VI.      FINANCIAL    STATEMENT  — 


Receipts. 

Township 
municipalities. 

00 

g 

o 
n 

8 

s 

,5 
'^ 
cq 

M 

'S 

a 

h3 

o 

<D 

no 
a> 

£(3 

c 

u 

<6 

m 

c 

-0:2 

i  E 

w 

£ 

fl 
1— 1 

>>T3 
g   2 

T5 

S 

i 

CQ 

B  "O  TT 
S  C  0 

>    ®    00 

pq 

•2  ^ 

§i| 

III 

0"^  0 

0 

CO 

C 

0 

Haldimand  ; 

$ 

27 
1,022 

92 
410 

3,120 
5,424 
2,333 
3,359 
6,229 
7,488 
5,049 
7,616 
1,119 
16,186 

57,923 

14,132 
4,728 
8,538 
8,331 
8,205 
7,685 

11,179 
4,370 

67,168 

14,23(> 
22,894 
23,652 
29,647 
10,337 
25,213 
17,044 
18,648 
21,491 
17,026 

200,188 

12,643 

6,747 

10,029 

11,622 

12,842 

16,538 

11,947 

9,588 

11,198 

9,789 

18,348 

•   9,096 

6,380 

9,496 

6,513 

6,589 

169,365 

$ 

15 
138 

""88 
14 

""i28 

209 

14 

164 

770 

431 

39 

346 

""66 
67 

""67 

1,016 

37 

75 

97 

86 

126 

386 

97 

63 

203 

27 

1,197 

184 
136 

""81 

165 

100 

58 

50 

33 

116 

345 

65 

17 

62 

34 

29 

1,475 

$ 

$ 

S 

S 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

2  Cayuga,  N 

3  Cayuga,  S  

15 

3 



""l8 
6 

h 

47 
33 

32 

12 

"  282 
""232 

'*i',796 

1,000 

35 

1,000 

22 

6  Oneida 

1,619 

410 

68 

27 

2,737 

6,412 

1,584 

41 

791 

580 

1,668 

3 

423 

5,090 

'  2,259 
1,638 
2,879 
545 
1,997 
1,079 

31 

32 

7i 

49 
666 

721 

721 

"'250 

10  Walpole  

Totals 

297 

4,122 

1,700 
700 



71 
168 

Welland  : 
1  Bertie  .     

3  Humberstons 

7 
5 

72 

""lO 
9 

136 

1 
9 

36 
4 

20 

""2 

10 

11 

2 

95 

127 

738 
99 

■  lisoo 

1,545 
500 

250 

504 

76 
600 

169 

6  ThoroM       

t266 

7  Wainfleet 

1,000 

300 

1 

8  Willoughby  .... 

Totals 

LiMBTON  : 
1  Hosanquet   

100 

3,426 

2,400 
4,000 

560 
9,000 

634 
1,000 
9,080 
7,475 

5 

2,337 
6 

2,295 

1,200 
1^950 

300 

386 
1,443 
1,401 
1,563 

806 

934 
t4,430 

3  Dawn    

2,500 

1,784 

4  Enniskillen  

5  Euphemia   

6  Moore 

7  Plympton 

1,245 
433 

45 

"351 
157 

26I695 
56 

5,165 
1,498 
877 
2,810 
1,540 

16,683 

1,045 
1,189 
1,074 

9  Sombra  . 

5,801 
521 

16,719 

3,265 

1,627 

2,800 
36,949 

800 
1,300 
1,350 
2,000 

400 

950 
1,000 
2,000 
3,000 

200 
1,700 

1,950 

868 

Totals 

Huron  -. 
1  Ashfleld  

559 

23,251 

II  14,629 
411 

2  Colborne 

10 
2 
28 
42 
12 
31 

4 
49 

""i2 
2 

142 

3  Goderich   , 

3,659 

475 

216 

1,427 

48 

442 

2,505 

275 

1,362 

133 

2,712 

4,406 

2,675 

1,740 

25, 340 

190 

344 
106 

5  Hay 

1 

6  Howick  . 

71 
32 

879 

660 

2,148 

476 

7  Hnllett 

8  McKillop 

9  Morris 



239 

253 
449 

1,405 

10  Stanley 

325 

11  Stephen    

12  Tuckersmith 

27 
1,380 

""io 

2,000 
2,815 

182 

188 

13  Turnberry  

14  Usborne     

600 

1 

111 

300 

::::::::  ::::;■ 

214 
146 

16  Wawanosb,  W 

600 
16,200 

262 
501 

147 

Totals       

192 

2,399 

7,623 

5,089 

*  From  School  Fund  for  Drainage  purposes,  t  Balance  of  Debentures  issued  1893,  but  not  reporter! 
nntil  1896  returns  came  in.  +  Including  81,478  rebate  on  Gov't.  Drainage  Assessment  due  to  change  of 
rate  of  interest  from  5  per  cent,  to  4  per  cent,  in  1886-7.    II  Including  87,240  county  grants. 


34 


61  \  ictoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIES. 


Disbursements.                            i 

4J 

a. 
£ 
o 

.c-g.2 

0)  "  ec 

ill 
III 

< 

00 

o 
a 

IS   S  u 

:n  0  60 

C 

CO 

« 

T! 

a 

ea 
IS 

0 

1 

"3 

4 

1 
w 

u 

It 

>. 

a 
a 
0 
0 

$ 

1,070 

1,759 

850 
1,013 

942 
1,861 
1,879 
2,310 

315 
4,863 

16,862 

4,167 
1,450 
2,625 
2,714 
2,534 
2,190 
2,261 
1,314 

19,255 

2,685 

2,420 
3.422 
1,928 
3,971 
5,964 
1,426 
2,478 
4,389 

28,683 

5,724 
1,231 
3,811 
449 
770 
4,587 
2,683 
2,541 
4,760 
2,882 
.S,832 
2,412 
2,334 
3,829 
2,501 
2,818 

47,164 

w 

ilg 

c«.c.2 

9  00  eS 

»  c  "" 
S  3"^ 

cS  "  «« 

00 

0 

a 

a.9  i 

-s   i 

> 

—  T3 

s  s  „• 

3,162 

$ 

244 
300 
128 
215 
411 
476 
364 
488 
83 
872 

3,581 

622 
225 
600 
547 
422 
513 
607 
278 

3,814 

794 
761 
588 

2,035 
489 

1,038 
704 
952 
956 
635 

8,952 

774 
460 
611 
726 
526 
937 
683 
754 
706 
564 
802 
570 
594 
516 
500 
521 

10,244 

5 
5 

10 

75 

"     12 

5 

17 

8 

17 

134 

100 
136 

38 

36 
417 
397 

20 
129 
630 

15 

1,918 

'7 
12 

■'"20 

'"74 
604 

7 

36 

2 

31 

793 

$ 

117 
89 
34 
69 

146 

166 
83 

146 
56 

233 

1,139 

306 
121 
165 
246 
243 
212 
267 
126 

1,686 

208 
413 
308 
1,097 
2J6 
338 
253 
212 
215 
213 

3,503 

215 
196 
183 
156 
150 
181 
118 
289 
129 
56 
175 
101 
66 
87 
104 
195 

2,401 

$ 

387 
546 
87 
221 
501 

2,858 

215 

966 

39 

1,586 

7,406 

1,457 

321 
"  702 

880 
1,679 

705 
1,120 

466 

7,330 

3,044 
4,742 
1,861 
3,723 
1,598 
3,799 
3,670 
3,965 
2,223 
3,647 

•  32,272 

2,216 
1,468 
1,919 
2,337 
2,051 
1,899 
3,560 
2,062 
3,661 
1,554 
3,294 
1,602 

656 
1,353 

911 
1,743 

32,286 

$ 

,$ 

$ 
36 
23 

9 

1,026 

2,601 

837 
1,500 
2,569 
3,164 
2,386 
3,259 

618 
8,073 

26,033 

6,128 
2,510 
3,770 
5,197 
5,015 
3,555 
6,307 
1,918 

34,400 

4,572 
6,050 
5,937 
10,751 
3,296 
6,380 
5,383 
3,183 
4,779 
5,321 

55,652 

5,712 
3,378 
3,806 
5,653 
6.606 
6,095 
4,482 
4,256 
3,975 
4,108 
5,142 
4,981 
3,443 
4,830 
3,302 
2,995 

71,764 

$ 

$ 

6,643 

13 

2,428 

3,857 

"250 

250 



3 
20 
24 
17 

2 

"23 

102 

46 
6 
25 
13 
40 

208 
44 
159 
102 
171 
32 
606 

1,381 

68 

6 

24 

19 
56 

220 

46 
133 
137 
592 

80 
378 
516 

24 
208 
218 

2,332 

67 
94 
65 
130 
92 
89 
10 
74 
31 

*"i49 

16 

47 

141 

....58 
17 

1,080 

8,337 
10,138 

356 

'  sc^ 

5,872 
8,931 

1,952 

808 

19,509 

70,829 

17,880 

356 

21 
47 
93 

844 

5,758 

9,809 

11,953 
10,855 

1,545 

8,555 

924 

14,413 

500 

"15 

'"'672 

687 

14 

144 

26 
51 
28 
19 
9 



"'"'26 
1 

255 

415 
23 

4,551 

83,774 
18,000 

1,085 

191 

6,404 
3,187 
2,761 

101 

3,609 

2,757 

21,789 

2,662 

152 

43,613 

1,545 

35,110 
31,668 
46,374 

560 

12,095 
34,851 

* 

29,989 

49,193 

32,156 
22,784 

312,220 

17,303 

560 

8,335 

38 

792 
49 

15,230 
14.550 



"14 

14 

25 
30 

168 
72 
25 
15 
15 
11 

166 
30 
30 
31 
6 
31 

678 

13,771 

20,234 
15,756 

1,160 

"""l',973 

13,408 

18,141 

10,709 

1 

907 

3,471 

24,013 

13,677 

9,832 

14,180 

614 
283 

1,097 

9,678 
9,367 

228,184 

1,776 

2,257 

6,351 

9 
10 


1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 
8 
9 
10 


35 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32). 


A.  1898 


Table    VI.      FINANCIAL    STATEMENT- 


Township 
municipalities. 


Haldimand  : 

1  Canboro'    . . 

2  Cayuga,  N  . 

3  Cayuga,  S  . 
Dunn  . 
Moulton  . . . 
Oneida  .  . . . 
Eainham  . . 
Seneca 
Sherbrooke 


10  Walpole 


Totals  

Wklland  : 

1  Bertie  

2  Crowland  . 

3  Humberstone . 

4  Pelhatn 

5  Stamford 

6  Thorold    

7  Wainfleet  . 


Disbursements.  — Continued. 


Assets. 


^^    OJ 


33    g 


200, 


100       300 


600 
900 


483 


^  s 


256 


300j 

233  i 
183 
569 


8  Willoughby 


Totals . . . 
Lambton  : 

1  Bosanqueb  . 

2  Brooke 

3  Dawn 

4  Enniskillen. 

5  Euphemia    . 

6  Moore 

7  Plympton'. . 

8  Sarnia 

9  Sombra  . . . . 
10  Warwick . . . 


Totals. 
Hitbon: 


Ashfield  ..... 
Colbcirne      .... 

Goderich 

Grey   

Bay 

Howick  .    . 
HuUett 

8  McKillop 

9  Morris    ... 

10  Stanley 

11  Stephen    

12  Tuckersmith   .. 

13  Turnberry 

14  Usbome 

15  Wawanosh,   E. 

16  Wawanosh,  W 


280' 
1001 


1,760 
100 


1.1191   2,845 


328 
745 
510. 


200 
288 
250 
615; 


2,936 
494 


Totals 1,810 


568 
544 


204 


1,899 
6,526 
8,124 
6.788 
262 
6,917 
2.699 
5,262 
8,081 
1,116 

47,674 


2,696 


642 
953 


700 


3,396 


498 


1,820 
"l77 


4,090 


!?S 


<*■    <B    ai   O    ®    3 
O    t*    irf"  I   ^    O  J^ 


5  o 
3i 


100 

2,655 

1.000 

35 

1,000 

"297 

.5,087 

1,700 
500 


185 

"eoo 
iss 

3,168 

2,701 
4,000 
4,400 
9,000 
300 
3,000 
.^200 
9,860 

3,4731 


12! 


202 
19 

"28 

248 

509 

502 
72 
91 


362 

30 

466 

8 


11 
46 
9 
48 
55 
87 
70 
91 

230 

647 

249 

20.^ 

73 

47 

221 

211 

545 

95 


O 


1,531;    1,644 


382 
1,822 
1,269 
2,2«8 

524 
2,028 

9.S4 
1,965 
3,229 

282 


41,934.14,703    8,181 


67 

373 

*2,211 

1 2,672 

149 

327 

1,601 

150 

519 

112 


2,000 


800 
343 
350 
000 
700 
610 
000 
000 
0001 
200 1 
,0001 

6001 


257 

48 

43 

551 

567 

841 

444 

28 

266 

25 

828 


37 


3001 
600 


2,000  17,503    3,954 


167 

72 

36 

521 

4891 

199| 

1481 

841 

46 

20 1 

1:1,0521 
62: 
19 

28, 

"461 


S  c"5 

S  1)  o 

f=.  £  a 
-Sag 


645 


589 
945 
382 
337 
814 
151 
461 
951 
631 


65,157 

16,057 
5,644 
9,255 

11,634 

10,855 
8,143 

14,344 
4,488 

80,420 

17,043 
32,156 
31,578 
45,164 
12,095 
32,.S97 
29,989 
49,193 
27,968 
19,828 

297,411 


266 

1,054| 

483            212 
475 

..I  234 

324 

7211 

470 

1 
1,8781 


5,672 

1,823 
114 
.554 
319 

'  412 
69 
63 

3,354 

957 

2,954 

90 

1,210 

2.454 


449 
297 
899 
086 
6651 
670' 
644 
103 
663 
22« 
890 
252 
322 
817 
718 
976 


4,188 
2,956 

14,809 

8.54 

38 

3,331 

464 
1,106 
2,564 

112 
1,305 
1,478 

481 

123 

425 
1,510 
3,363 
1,960 

391 


29 

108 

1511 

1,379 

1,548 
1,682 
1,539 
1,076 
3,310 
4,400 
4,357 
1,933 

19,845 

240 ! 

9,446 
15,140 
30,980! 

3,9781 
21,733 

6,956 1 

12,577! 

24,0631 

735 


125,8481.. 


2,514'    208, 679 1 19.  .505 


3,205 

55 

226 

2,878 

2,285 

2,171 

247 


2,156 i 

1,990 

13,494i 

194 1 

8i 

67! 

454 

2,457 

31.887 


2,530 


00  ^ 


is- 

h   B   H 


^11 


4,209 
4,693 


1,835 
10,737 


17,575 
1,000 


25,000 


4,3,575 


560 


344 


904 


J, 823 
14,582 


907 
18,455 


2,530l     35.767 


♦Including  -81,484  drainage  refunds,  etc. 
Grand  Bend  Cut  refund. 


•  Including  S418  refund  to  ex-treasurer.      %  Including  S471 


36 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.— Continued. 
Statement,  —  Continued. 


Asaeta.— Continued. 

Liabilities. 

p 

00   . 

tS.S 

orr 
2  ^ 

s 
s 

o 

i 
1 

i 

00 

>> 

> 

i" 

a 
a 
0 
0 

1 

"o 

0 

JS 

0 

to 

"eS 
0 
0 

a 

XI 
<D 

■D 

3 
-(= 

3 
1 

a 
a> 

.Q 
ID 

T3 

<D 

Q 

a 

1 

-a 

< 

.-•  a 

a  — 

t  a 
a   ^ 

i  S  S3 
1-^ 

a? 

3 
0 
(C 

J 

a 

i 

.2 

.2 

3 
0 
H 

$ 

s 

911 
1,054 
1,915 

705 
4,443 
■  7,824 
5,814 
1,699 
2,544 
2,371 

29,280 

15.542 
2,575 
10,769 
24,484 
26,225 
4,812 
39,636 

-S 

970 

B 

S 

S 

s 

s 

970 

1 

?, 

1,220 
230 

..'.'..'.'.. 

8 

4 

150     .300 

1,790 

2,240 

5 

6,500 

1,000 
400 

1,200 
600 
300 

4,950 

3,900 
725 
2,250 
4,250 
8,000 

"  2^170 
1,200 

22, 495 

""75 
1,000 
1,075 
400 
1,150 
1,300 

"  1,125 
500 



42 

42 

8,271 

54 

26 

1,264 

1,915 

"'8;640 

19,970 

5,908 

1,370 

13,960 

27,327 

253 

31,179 

1,134 

21,724 

*40,024 

34 

142,913 



....      . 

6 

7 

' 



a 

q 



361 

692 

1,341 

1,145 

2^198 
.3.508 

48 

1,018 

611 
1,121 

4,300 

' 

4,348 
7,558 
9,243 

10 

6.500 

4,450 
7,202 

300 

1,069 
833 
414 

1,790 

'"27 

1 

200 

2,873  2 

6,000 

272 

2,027 1  3 

256 
76 

527 
80 
34 

1,922   4 

12,  eoc 

4,628 
2,440 



6,957 

100 

1,000 

15,531 
345 

11,741 
4,772 

11,548 
1,642 

45,768 

5,845 
40.034 
27,366 
43,694 

8,219 
49,751 
22,120 
48,568 
62,913 
10,437 

318,947 

4,731 
500 

2,505 
12,722 
14,287 
17,595 

9,172 

5 

6 

7,040 

9,356 
5.500 

7 

3,196'   709 

933 
9,733 

:.:: 

8 

18,000 

127,239 

7,105 
27,795 

9,954 

2.684 

526 

668 

1 

13. 950 

2,940,  30.360 

""5J966 

4.050 
:560 

644 
1,023 
5,080 
7,475 

■"673 

259 

2,789 

956 

4,808 

348 

§1,639 

11,472 

186 

?. 

9,600 

14,400 

8,000 



"  9^000 
12, 000 

40,350  . . ; . . 
74,992;  2,496 
12,631 1  1,350 
56,516  3,006 

9,390 

34,301 

78,744  1,844 
16,225  1,213 

358,049  12,593 

16,2091  2,499 

93 1   500 

3,557i  2,505 

6,165 
2,768 

5,191 
'  4^365 



1,520 
1,950 

19,121 

35,807 

't36;642 

14,735 

35,235 

45,636 

6,035 

228,471 

3 

4 

5 

'  '8,'i55 

1,700 
1,349 
1,050 
2,565 

6 

7 
8 
9 

5,966 

i,550 
20,382 

10 

66,950  6,625 

1 
12,000   150 

18, 489 

8,155 

13, 419 

2,046 


1 

?, 

80 
255 

3 

1,000 
2,000 
2,130 

117,630 

11.972  2,435 

2,274 
2,133 

5,356 
9,532 

2,577 

4 

25,000 

30;39li  2,367 
9,395  2.895 

5 

14,  700 

6 

2,182 
15,887 

8,933 

239 

7 

4]4il 

""24 

11370 



370  8 

3,634 
3,276 

4,435'  9 

550 
1,500 



255 

:.::.::■ 

215 

215 1  10 

277 

16,024 
27,351 

2,431 

5,440 

10,075 

2,000 

700 

"153 

20,646'  11 

8,000 

153  12 

1.518 

3,855 

2.414 

10,948 

158,706 

1,389 
2,518 

360 

.  1,749  13 

425 

166 

8,262 

2,618'  14 

1,619 

::::::::  ::::: 

1,619  15 

7,666  i.ooo 

1,837 
27,406 

254 

5,718 

1 

100 
34,356 

262 
2,501 

3,277 

115 
1,159 

2,568 
95,785 

52,000 

8,755 

14,700 

6,668 

•Including  §39,684  advances  on  drains,  f  Omitting  S3, 830  previously  overstated.  J  Borrow'^d  drain 
fund  balance.  §  Including  81,459  on  drain  account.  ||  Including  $2,274  advances  to  schools,  and  §4,001 
advancpsto  drains.  ^Report  of  1894  gave  81,915  of  liability  to  Township  of  Grey  on  drainage  debentures 
but  as  debentures  therefor  have  not  yet  been  sold,  the  liability  is  omitted  here. 

37 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Table  VL    FINANCIAL    STATEMENT— 


Receipts. 

Township 
municipalities. 

33 

00 

I-( 

s 

p 

<D 

O 

i 

X 

Ss 
11 

"S 

s 

s 

4,532 

10,250 

10.902 

•  12,905 

8,483 

11,998 

8,660 

4,107 

10,614 

7,566 

14,412 

9,594 

6,908 

3,007 

4,670 

128,608 

10,678 

14,223 

15,023 

6,069 

12,310 

11,285 

7,495 

6,926 

13,221 

16,181 

6,509 

7,808 

10,642 

3,425 

9,761 

9,085 

160,641 

7,589 

14,553 

14,280 

10,204 

17,236 

642 

9,401 

20,886 

8.779 

11,196 

10j262 

10,350 

16,712 

9,898 

7,858 

8,484 

178,330 

i 

m 

s 

13 

a 

€ 

WC.3 

a 

%^ 
oT 

IS 

<o 

•0 

a 

2 

s 

0 

a 

i 

a 

S  a 

§11 
-a  3  0 

S    §   g 

eq 

IB 

III 
l  =  - 

ill 

si 

II 

'A 

§ 

S) 

a 
1 

Bruce : 

1  Albemarle 

108 
1,405 
2,144 
2,008 
1,723 

994 

1.071 

8 

870 
67 

731 

'  1,361 

50 

853 

13,393 

269 

1  605 

15 

630 

986 

63 

79 

s 

59 
122 

26 
216 

83 
345 
106 
270 

166 

225 

26 

87 

s 

S 

$ 
"34 

S 

2,100 
682 

s 

$ 

8 
227 

2  Amabel 

6 

7 
2 

"22 

'    "22 

7 

2 

12 

rr 

i 

181 

1,386 

913 

67 

11 

1,675 
36 
29 

742 

3  Arran   

829 

4  Brant  

13,300 
3^0 

;;:;." 

565 
2,611 

*245 

1,376 
366 

5  Bruce    

6  Carrick 

500 
225 

■  ' 

24 

7  Culross 

87 

8  Eastnor 

2,300 

888 

9  Elderslie 

10  Greenock 

1,0.59 

17 

1,000 

1,100 



'i;46o 

800 

1,918 
155 

11  Huron 

104 

12  Kincardine 

21 

13  Kinloss 

6 

229 

14  Lindsay,  etc .... 

1,020 

"812 
3,012 

225 

16  Saugeen 

29 

1,759 

226 

183 

55 

""'49 

28 

49 

137 

38 

253 

102 

73 

234 

Totals 

Orkt  : 

1  Artemesia 

87 

24 
27 

1 
9 

4,304 

49 

2,311 

152 

'  2ii37 

17, 790 

8,548 

2,300 

7,425 
340 

2  Bentinck     .... 

"  3,965 

5,608 

■'I8O 

1,915 
4  ,347 

502 
4,069 
1,500 

281 

3  CoUingwood .... 

393 

4  Derby 

155 

5  Egremont 

828 

6  Euphiasia 

'"266 

1,100 

4 

7  Glenelg 

8 
3 

"  "26 
5 

771 

1^272 
1,013 

677 

8  Holland 

239 

9  Keppel 

65 

2.304 

138 

1,390 

3,537 

804 

878 

629 

10  Normanby 

800 

626 

11  Osprey 

245 

12  Proton 

181 

1,100 

7 

500 
2,964 

11,823 

1,100 
2.705 
1,350 

t700 

713 

13  St.  Vincent 

249 

14  Sarawak 

50 

64 

16  Sullivan .    

55 
51 

1,299 

156 
190 
154 
33 
122 

"261 
294 
103 

40 
104 
133 
175 

32 
126 

17 

1,200 
700 

3,700 

569 

16  Sydenham 

240 

Totals  . 

12,763 
638 

114 

7 

7,755 

54,915 

6  252 

SiMCOK  : 

1  Adjala 

246 

2  Essa 

429 

3  Flos   

684 
1,146 
706 
252 
1,371 
2,148 
2,637 
1,392 
4,003 
1,325 
3,197 
J638 
3,491 
1,306 

24, 934 

7 

1 

33 

380 

4  Gwillimbury,  W. 

5  Innisfil 

270 

375 

6  Matchedash 

"'i4 

4 

""io 

16 
13 

30 

ios 

407 

7  Medonte 

200 
1,000 

76 

8  Nottawasaga  . . . 

9  Orillia 

791 

68 

256 

10  Oro 

609 

11  Sunnidale 

.... 

2,000 

518 

12  Tay 



157 

13  Tecumseth. . 

1,674 
8 

1,337 

14  Tiny.. 

571 

306 

16  Vespra ...   . 

2,000 
12,037 

650 
650 

22 

Totals 

1,929 

72 

131 

103 

6,750 

*  Note  for  road  graders,     f  Omitted  in  1895.     +  The  Tp.  Treas's.  and  the  Auditors'  reports  for  1896 
give  this  balance  as  .S291,  but  the  auditors  for  1895  gave  the  above  as  the  balance  on  Dec.  31st,  1895. 


38 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.   32). 


A.  18P8 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIES, 


Disbursements. 

.1 

o 

<v 

M 

Is 
o 

"2  a 

a>  "  03 

O  ID  7! 

ts  E  a 

^^  a 

< 

$ 
413 
593 
771 
773 
562 
672 
646 
377 
628 
658 
750 
628 
564 
613 
468 

9,116 

802 
742 
888 
629 
491 
686 
511 
555 
762 
761 
759 
726 
916 
437 
545 
907 

11,117 

690 
946 
880 
603 

1,135 
143 
726 

1,417 
794 
722 
744 
617 
804 
692 
382 
734 

12,028 

XL 
O 

a 

1 

X  S  H 
ai  0  t~i 

b  S  > 

0 

m 

'5 

a 
ca 
ti 

TS 
e8 

0 

$ 

569 
1,589 

397 
3,238 
1,956 
1,021 
1,352 

729 
2,489 
1,647 
3,ft90 
1,591 
1,139 

687 

663 

22,657 

2.162 
1,376 
2,250 
1,663 
450 
1,156 
449 
133 
1,077 
3,504 
1,122 
1,457 
1,667 
1,004 
1,296 
2,672 

23,438 

1,236 
2,755 
1,777 
1,158 
1,730 

442 
1,719 
3,037 
1,556 
2,141 
1,792 
1,515 
3,305 
1,504 

533 
1,441 

27,641 

IM 

0 

T3 

M 
<S 

0 

3 

67 
47 
85 

ID 
OSS 

m 

% 

64 

90 

119 

199 

319 

247 

35 

104 

58 

399 

301 

219 

280 

66 

75 

2,575 

198 
213 
190 

34 
220 

92 
204 

51 
284 
248 

81 

26 
398 

71 
165 
139 

2,614 

115 
SI  7 

42 
302 
303 

15 
198 

75 

58 
.^90 

S  » 

ii 

>> 

a 
•? 
0 
C 

$ 

502 

306 
1,780 
2,917 
2,017 
2,231 
2,028 

436 
1,819 
1,344 
2,134 
2,102 
1,343 

141 
1,060 

22,460 

1,835 
2,203 
1,690 
1,191 
2,165 
1,911 
1,485 
1,546 
2,230 
3,105 
1,568 
1,604 
2,343 
364 
2,409 
2,419 

30,068 

2.540 
5,479 
2,320 
3,130 
4,415 
73 
1,000 
6,846 

3,404 
3,153 
1.398 
8,480 
375 
3,783 
1,640 

48,036 

,  'o  u 

%^.% 
a  ""S 

1^842 
3,593 
3,905 
5,574 
4,267 
6,956 
4,727 
1,958 
4,029 
4,737 
6,436 
4,626 
3,491 
963 
3,060 

60,164 

5,354 
5,802 
6,323 
2,503 
4.427 
7,956 
3,487 
3,666 
4,490 
6,178 
3,138 
5,115 
5,500 
1,338 
7,359 
6,211 

78,837 

3,259 
3,688 
5,187 
4,863 
8,686 
427 
5,013 
8,234 
3,624 
4,808 
3,815 
6,183 
6,029 
4,546 
3,583 
5,135 

77,079 

m 
u 

% 

« 

a 

0 

S 

ago 

,5  a  2h 

al'° 

SI'S 

m 

% 

600 

*  2,315 

2,413 

3,524 

570 

304 

•9  a  . 

^al 

< 

3^466 

$ 

7,026 
14,322 
15,293 
30,965 
11,102 

6 
10 

4 
44 
14 

2 

33 

82 

""ii 

8 

3 

14 

261 

22 

""21 

'  "23 
52 

5 

222 

9 

15 

27 

""'21 
417 

""45 

15 

475 

'■"19 
353 

"266 
97 

167 
155 
197 
388 
187 
454 
175 
200 
171 
137 
331 
152 
120 
94 
146 

3,074 

238 
241 
446 
158 
136 
207 
84 
185 
290 
354 
192 
217 
212 
123 
170 
138 

3,391 

50 
314 
222 
215 
133 

48 
1,058 
369 
377 
264 
201 
229 

91 
246 

"490 

1 

2 
3 
4 

5 

13,883 
10,160 

"12 

67 
11 

6 
7 

8,160 

24 

1,018 
4,885 

8 

19,354 
9,409 

502 

"250 
"  "35 

'"■45 
330 

34 

52 

62 

8 

31 

9 

4 

480 

42 

46 

122 

27 

1 

154 

36 

37 

3.1 

36 

53 

21 

5 

28 

86 

51 

780 

""21 

25 

1 

47 

10 

'""'46 

72 
14 

9 
10 

17,313 
10,741 

11 
l'^ 

8,598 

103 



13 

4,302 

6,598 

20 



14 

15 

187,226 

11,586 
19,132 
23,673 
8,363 
21,818 
12,480 

127 

15,649 

280 
3,546 
4,402 

'  8^645 

3,400 
150 

1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 

9,459 
7,305 

878 

7 
8 

17,140 

64,544 

6,999 

4,581 
46,568 

9 
10 

n 

10,865 

15,528 

4 

181 

12 

13 

4,350 
12,980 

36 
50 

266 

14 
15 

13,040 

16 

^59,262 
9,736 

90 

69,347 

150 

1 

17,877 

? 

16.888 
11,654 

124 

294 

3 

4 

18,439 

5 

1,434 

6 

11,323 

7 

25,123 

8 

11,775 

q 

13,321 

in 

16,903 

32   115 
17   255 
20   332 
29]   177 
13    77 
30   101 

1,030 

11 

11,978 

19 

23,095 

ID 

11,147 

14 

11,781 

51   II5I 

15 

12,462 

172 
1,447 

333 
4,265 

16 

224,936 

371 

2,812 

1,154 

294 

Including  $682  in  Tp.  account. 


39 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A. 1898 


Table  VI.    FINANCIAL  STATEMENT  — 


Township 
municipality. 


Bruce ; 


Albemarle  . . 
Amabel  .    ... 

Arran   

Brant    

Bruce    

Carrick 

Culro8S 

8  EastDor    

9  Elderslie  .... 

10  Greenock 

11  Huron      ... 

12  Kincardine   . 

13  Kinloss 

14  Lindsay,  etc 

15  Saugeen   


Totals.... 
Gbky  : 

1  Artemesia  . . 

2  Bentinck 

3  CoUingwood 

4  Derby 

6  Egremont    . . 

6  Euphrasia   . . 

7  Glenelg 

8  Holland  .... 

9  Keppel   

10  Normanby  . . 

1 1  Osprey    

12  Proton    . .    . . 

13  St.  Vincent  . 

14  Sarawak  .  . . . 

15  Sullivan   

16  Sydenham  . . 


Totals , 

SiMCOE  : 

1  Adjala 

2  Essa . , 

3  FJos 

4  Gwillimbury.  W. 

5  Innisfil 

6  Matchedash    

7  Medoate 

8  Nottawasaga 

9  Orillia 

10  Oro 

11  Sunnidale , 

12  Tay  

13  Tecumseth  .... 

14  Tiny  

15  Tossorontio 

16  Vespra    


Totals. 


Disbursements. — Continued. 


a  2 


01 


<B 


?s5 


•■> 


689 

100 

100     100*8,000 


-5 


100 
554 


103 
1,646 


188 
100 


100 
352 
544 
477 


270 

187 
114 


726 


826 


60 


405 


599 


122 
2.454 


3571 
589 


o  S  a 


1,700 
175 


500 

225 

2,106 

1,550 


1,000 
1,132 


5  a 


S  CS  <D 

■e  eS'O 


759 

2.937 

2,706 

1,377 

96 

366 

2 

1.040 

2,794 

35 

145 

22 


500 


8,000 


1,064  .... 


229 


2031 
50 
318 
480 
792 
740 


600 
450 


310 

4,889 


53 


261 

'ioi 


129 


773 


225 
730 


181 


502 
6,090 
1,500 


200 
2 

800 


181 
1,100 


500 
312 


85 
27 

12,391 

239 

3,915 

714 

73 

,600 

18 

1,242 

167 

2.381 

1,762 


384 
52 

359 
12 
39 


11,187  14,957 


1,100 
3,007 
2,000 


511 
800 


2,447 


200 
1,000 


2,000 
1,674 


101 

207 

1,565 


1,200 
12,181 


69 

30 

196 

115 

341 

126 

119 

44 

85 

2,109 

186 

154 

5,447 


„  J2 
cS.2 


82 
347 
3501 
130 


3061 

83 1 

171 

"i76! 
921 
33 

891 
54 


6,707 

12,866 

12,789 

30,339 

10,076 

12,906 

9,552 

8,157 

19,354 

9,409 

16,520 

10,580 

7,104 

4,072 

5,674 


2,889  175,105 


39 

58 

297 

167 

10 

50 

7 

91 

81 

68 

5 

54 

82 

10 

55 

30 

1,104 

14 

121 

32 

17 

127 


79 
146 

43 
120 

67 
108 
139 
733 


363 
2,109 


11,361 
18,644 
23,621 

8.105 
20,145 
12,353 

8,987 

6,967 
17,098 
63,606 

6,927 
10.854 
12,489 

4,150 
12,668 

13,0:10 

251,015 

9,559 
17,212 
16,082 
10,304 
17,323 

1,291 
10,722 
21,759 

7,918 
12,688 
13,522 
10,966 
21,720 
11,147 

9,477 
11,613 

203,303 


D 


319 
1,456 
2,504 

626 
1,026 

977 

608 
3 


1,793 
161 

1,494 
230 
924 

2,121 

225 
488 

52 
258 
1,673 
127 
472 
338 

42 
938 

72 

11 

3,039 

200 

312 


177 

665 

806 

1,350 

1,116 

143 

601 

3,364 

3,857 

6.33 

t3,381 

1,012 

1,375 


2,304, 

849  i 

21,633 


Assets. 


S 

5,122 
8,669 
1,161 
4,267 


513 

4,488 

18 

4,555 

51 

999 

19 

4,350 

13 

34,225 

1,001 

8,516 

917 

111 

3,500 
1,074 
7,006 


"O  ^  ■" 

S  o's 
S  <c  o 

CO 


DO   +» 

*^  s  © 


s 

7,524 

11,577 

40,584 

10,700 

570 

2,087 


4,453 
40,762 


180 


4,270 
3,042 
558 
2,075 
55 
3,146 


8,2471     39,350 


118,437 

2,343 

56, 684 

4,402 

53, 298 

17,225 

29,448' 
25,947 

"756 

""'745 


189,748 


2,367 

491 

11,172 


3,117 

926 

5,451 

12,157 

5.300 

5,119 

1,714 

7. 706 

7 

10,521 

269 

4,243 

70,560 


1,477 


900 


2,377 


For  cancellation  of  debentures  falling  due  Oct.  1898.      t  Including  §1,351  drainage  funds 


40 


61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (JNo.  32). 


A   189  S 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIES.  —Continued. 


U 


Assets'. - 

-Continued.            | 

Liabilities. 

a 

C3 

S  be 

.2.9 

0.-3 
03 

>> 

•e 

E 

Li 

o 

i 

a 
1 

i 

1 
a 

H 

>> 

> 

"5 

0 
Q 

"o 
0 

JS 

0 

"08 

0 

a 

-2 

T3 

i 

a 

CD 

"3 
0 

J3 
0 
U2 

a 

1 
a 

<D 

Si 
m 

b 

< 

a  — 

0  ^ 

1-5 

IS 

3 
0 

w 

.£ 
IS 

"cS 

H 

.? 
13,767 

$ 

$ 

597 
460 
800 
490 
*700 
1,665 

s 

'H645 
12,766 

300 

§10,463 

li5 

178 

2i 

18,488 

30 
235 
608 

225 

349 

76i 

g 

14,762 

26,807 

47,815 

18,083 

2,296 

4,729 

1,421 

s 
ij'ii 

$ 

503 
'527 

•S 
10,000 
43,000 
45,000 
12,000 

$ 

900 
6,018 

s 

$ 

s 

2,151 

11682 

213 

10 

218 

616 

80 

1 

51,457,     2 

45,218     3 

11245 

13,388 

1.680 

7,200 

206 

19,327 

45, 109 

4,061 

3,180 

4 

1,600 
3,200 

5 

4,000 

6 

36 
1,567 



""169 
17 

170 

7 

275 
1,000 

ii400 
406 
600 

19,717 

41,780 

4,555 

726 



45,000 



2,750 

6,685 

7,600 

8 
9 

1.272 

772 

2,000 
3,180 

10 

i2,o66 

15,359  ..'... 

11 

1,566 

2,291 

4,760 

958 

200,899 

4,529 
64,823 

7,479 

1,194 
54,971 

4,431 
22,546 

1,427 
.37,197 

12 

1.*^ 

141 

53i 

200 
1,169 

21,007 

4,600 

2,600 

2,674 

300 

1,369 

1,004 

3,245 
1,159 

208,997 

4,660 
69,749 

14 

15 

12,000 

8,393 
780 

3,885 

3,936 

155,000 

6,685 

11,600 

4,573 

2,311 
160 

1 

2,149 
500 

65,000 

2 

1,566 
825 



486 

7,420 

153 

10,747      3 

780     4 

'  M84 
1,449 

'  925 

60,000 
20,666 



60,000     5 

1,300 

548 

2,  .^05 

85 

4,194      6 

1,000 
15 

21,9971     7 

2,505'    8 

2,556 

35,000 
29,000 

1,066 

6,465 

150 

44, 237 1     9 

1,000 

27,>'85 
4,342 
4,223 
3,846 

29,000 
3,079 
6,743 
3,003 
7,824 
1,200 
4,183 

27v>,901 

4,994 

10 

1,529 

1,050 

388 

500 

128 

310 

68 

1,554 

61,800 
100 
190 

11 

414 

249 

1 

2,812 

2,286 

1   2,355 

1      407 

7,500        249 

3,691 

11181 

12 

13 

48 

1,500 

300 

6,968 

3,069 

1,867 

18,446 

262,275 

2,544 

7 

14 

1,200 
1,219 

15 

15,000 



2,964 
3,152 

16 

15,000 

12,353 

2.8.37 

2,363 

216,500 

20,923 

1,649 
6,441 

9,636 
357 

7,420 

1 

1,156       888 
14,320     1.900 

2,637      2 

340 
250 

'  1^966 

525 

i99 

""a866 
250 

350 

"3;  436 



5,560 

3,299 

21,574 

1,350 

34,754     3 

1,600 
4,233 

4 

5 

9  831 

" '  512 
1,196 
1,652 
2,075 

' '  617 
1,491 

5,012 

74 

264 

16,192 

""3,100 

........ 

9J3 

200 

2,453 

915 

4,9.50 

1,359 

"250 



375 

3,774 

1,200 

3,043:       148 

1,235     6 

6,00C 

13,952 

16,321 

21,657 

6,902 

5,945 

8,793 

1,382 

13,957 

8,073 

6,092 

129,970 

2,503 
8,523 
2,200 
3,287 
3,351 
1,036 

3j66 

358 

1,124 

34,686 

819 

'  i^ooo 

IF  900 

85 

1,986 

200 

■■■71 
200 

7,056      7 
17,176     8 

11,250 

166 

1,150 

500 

75 

227 
2,899 

10,552 
4,646 
6,938 
2,977 

9 
10 
11 

n 

13 

46,999 
800 

72,473 

834 

3,436 

8 
1,688 
1,500 

6,446 

"ioo 

4,732 

59,989 

14 

5,500 

i^ooo 

5,315 

•  2,920    15 

23,  950 

1,785 
21,779 

....... 

7,294 

819 

4,773 
164,421 

16 

1 

*  Not  previously  reported.  +  Including  $4,426,  Wiarton's  share  R.R.  Deb.     J  Including  .$1,867  bal.  of 

Ry.  S.  F.,  payable  by  Tara.      §  Including  S9,435,   advances   for  drainage  and  schools.      ||  Note  for  road 

grader.     If  Due  Sinking  Fund,  a  Creemore's  share  of  Ry.  and  school  debentures,     h  Payable  to  county  re 
Railway  debentures. 


41 


61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  189  8 


Tablk    VI.     FINANCIAL    STATEMENT- 


Receipts. 

Township 
municipality. 

00 

!-• 

s 
s 

03 

a 

a 
<s 

P9 

•— >  a 
=«  o 

Co 

•3  " 

"3 

i 

■^3 

t3 

<D 
W 

-otc 

a 

U 

'§1 

■mTT 

2 
.2 

a 

OJ  « 

§i 
s| 

0 

a 
C4 

m 
ID 

a 

0   ^ 

0  S^" 

III 

9  »  fc. 

m 

a 
0 

33 

c 

1 

i 

Middlesex  : 

s 

6.680 
1  264 

s 

10,730 
in  199 

47 

4 

$ 

$ 

$ 

22 

2  Biddulph   

166 

3,660 

1,800 

129 

8  230      ^n  7^A 

62 

20 

115 

71 

7    ... 
28         98 

580 

165 

2,186 
4,783 
1,486 
2,243 

24,518 

1.020 

2,801 

222 

2,099 

16, 889 

1,023 

20 

75, 464 

3,199 
796 
2,559 
1,175 
3,093 
2,607 
2,289 
789 
1,984 
3,528 
3,633 

25,552 

7,468 
17,490 
15,929 
13,672 
36,079 
14.622 
10,340 
13,478 
16,247 
21,494 
9,968 
8,770 

227,217 

6,784 

18,853 

18,967 

10,524 

11,262 

9,366 

6,938 

6,250 

7,239 

19,459 

13,932 

129,574 

16,986 

18,030 

11,406 

2,893 

5,264 

54,579 

12,385 
11,767 
11,428 
7,541 
13,258 
15,559 
12,266 

99 

5  Dorchester.  N . . . 

6  Ekfrid 

"'i7 

340 

2,000 
103 

1,960 
1,423 

400 

228 

191 

8  London  

9  McGillivray    

10  Metcalfe  .   . 

444 
26 
20 

"48 

174 

68 

1,261 

49 

272 

9 

58 

"26 
165 

■'"77 
26 

676 

39 
' " " *55 

41 
15 

440 

2,466 
1,500 
2,500 

503 
122 

725 

■ 

18 

11  Mosa 

4 



;■.■..;■ 

660 


22 

12  Nissouri  W 

21.  .:.. 

...  1        241 

3,000 

122 

1,020 

14  Williams,  E '  . . . . 

15  Williams  W 

L554 
16,057 

37 

118 

"45! 

672 

1 

17 

38 

"*494 

293 

12 

1,978 

10 
41 
11 

1,119 
45 

"  iio 

31 

50 
40 
54 
16 
13 
61 
625 

1,075 

1,056 

390 

18 

270 

156 

Totals  

Oxford  : 
1  Blandford 

2,525 

4,623 

3,234 
187 

2,000 

802 

11,380 

2,934 

260 

467 

336 

6  Norwich,  S     .... 

*30 

200 

7  Oxford,  E 

8  Oxford,  N 

235 
439 

9  Oxford   W 

220 

10  Zorra,  E 

11  Zorra,  W 

Totals 

Brant : 

53 

2,418 
2,471 

tl4,501 

■"i35 

1,500 
2,000 

5,500 



30 

2,704 

4,876 

19,427 

361 
839 

6,813 
Jl,852 

2  Burford    

373 
1,526 

504 
1,164 

3,567 

5.615 
3,178 
2,140 
1,591 
2,397 
2,276 
42 
1,595 
5,549 
1,081 
713 

26,177 

1,000 
500 

32 

3  Uumfrie'5,    S. 

7 

8 

5  Onondaga  

Totals 

26 
120 

"io? 

154 
123 
213 
128 

1 
63 

6 

20 

1,734 
13 

14,636 

1,500 

775 
2,800 

.... 

1,919 

Perth  : 

448 

415 

3  Easthope,  N  .... 

4  Easthope,  S 

5  Ellice 

4 

1 

... 

2,862 
1,200 
8,961 

'  4,666 

610 

2 

71 
6 



233 

500 
4,115 
3,200 

200 
1,500 
1,750 

303 

15,143 

1,314 

6  Elma 

443 

7  Fullarton 

771            9. 

372 

8  Hibbert  . 

11,036'        7s\        24 

1,350 

379 

9  Logan  

10  Mornington 

11  Wallace 

12,699 
15.247 
10,107 

133,293 

49          12 

384 

64           3 

49 1 

855 

169 
56 

366 

4,628 
4.628 

1,834 

32,000 

3,058 
342 

Totals 

1,372 

53 

1,350 

14,847 

36,000 

8,469 

*  Balance  of  issue  of  1895  not  reported,      t  Withdrawn  by  late  treasurer, 
receipts  of  interest,  etc.,  held  by  late  treasurer. 


X  Including  $1,638  sundry 


42 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Ir'apers  (JNo.  32 


A.  IH^H 


TOWNSHIP    MUNIC'IPALITIE  S.-Continued. 


Disbursements 


^^  S 

O  OS  o 


s 

$ 

17.483 

678 

16,558 

599 

29,775 

996 

9,899 

456 

27,088 

8341 

19.?57 

734 

:(;,106 

667 

62,025 

1,793 

18,205 

733! 

15,404 

595' 

16,886 

680 

21,518 

894 

39,818 

1,174 

11,096 

461 

10,500 

587 

331,618 

11,881 

10,264 

556 

23,174 

1,128 

36,661 

1,210 

12,049 

451 

15,225 

716 

12,181 

475 

9,536 

469 

7,659 

432 

9,950 

571 

28,036 

752 

28,361 

627 

193,096 

7,387 

34,444 

2,395 

19,866 

1,122 

13,523 

831 

3,810 

282 

6,475 

426 

7«,118 

5,056 

19,242 

660 

18.267 

704 

17,198 

648 

10,689 

597 

26,635 

813 

26,593 

854 

15,965 

673 

14,657 

7241 

20,713 

903 

60,151 

891 

11.588 

676 

241.698 

8,U3 

8 


17 
739 

75 

7 

262 

52 
164 
223 


219 

1,813 


65 
92 

400 


38 


112 

258 


5241 

5! 


516 

118 

46 

80 

1,223 


224 
192 
196 
124 
257 
159 
231 
117 
231 
184 
144 

2,059 


ao 

© 

&0 

S  CS  -k^ 

TJ 

a  !^S 

&•-  s 

•n 

^  a  a 

a 

®  D  S 

fc.  a  > 

» 

^•"  9 

^ 

5  o  '»'' 

o 

O 

cd   1 

$ 

S 

151 
27 

2,095' 
3,389 

142 

2,759 

83 

1,038 

170 

3.1671 

.  322 

6,2441 

205 

4,501 

420 

15,209 

118 

4,125 

167 

2,612 

133 

1,603 

123 

4.392 

221 

5,515' 

63 

2,038  i 

60 

2,028 

2.405 

60,715 

65 

1,247 

215 

4,181 

140 

2,974 

68 

2,247 

181 

2,983 

290 

1,884 

66 

1.508 

109 

1,286 

100 

1,354 

188 

4,408 

264 

3,461' 

j 

1,686 

27,533 

463 

2,041 

2,697 

1,840 

167 

1,329 

8,074 


3,157 
2,951 
1,903 
1,508 
2,476 
3,313 
3,028 
1,906 
2,701 
3,535 
1,190 

27,668 


•73   ^ 


256 


256 


21 


72 


--a 
5  o 

O  g  (£ 
ST  O  p- 


183 

5 

52 


491 


26 
43 

26 
124 

28 

443 


27 

34 

102 

8 

10 

181 


54 

111 

25 

26 


35 
33 
25 
33 
36 
28 

406 


28 

212 

96 

487 


345 
3'i9 


26 
4 

153 
27 
22 

150 

1,879 


12 

268 


16 
14 
48 
38 

500 


728 
723 
356 
102 
180 

2,089 


109 
120 
232 

'290 

184 

62 

205 

113 

61 

6 


O 


4,091 
2,404 
.3,992 
2,351 
4,551 
4,814 
5,438 
12,088 
2,980 
4,931 
3,745 
6,595 
7,084 
3,926 
2,860 

71,850 


2,028 
5,256 
5,117 
3,811 
2,777 
2,064 
2,817 
1,661 
2,072 
4,716 
4,514 

36,863 


3,739 

2,917 

2,425 

479 

945 

10,505 


4,499 
3,811 
3,409 
2,256 
3,603 
4,380 
4,048 
3,716 
3,690 
3,695 
3,790 


1,382      40,897 


az. 


flT3 


4,204 
5,499 
5,719 
2,574 
6,384 
3,174 
4,328 
12,164 
5,960 
3,282 
3,427 
4,233 
8,515 
2,531 
2,768 

74,762 


2,160 
8.046 
7,470 
3,958 
4,206 
4,426 
3,378 
2,277 
3,044 
6,318 
4,316 

49,599 


3,997 
7,115 
5,511 
1,394 
1,994 

20,011 


4,193 
4,674 
3,337 
2,588 
4,007 
4,879 
3,295 
5,535 
3,666 
4,610 
3,303 

44,087 


fl  "  s 

"  ®  c 

•S  ?-o 
g.2  § 
cc 


118 
"2^287 
21294 


195 
383 


212 


5,489 


736 

397 

10,323 


694 


93 

848 

241 

433 

3,203 

16,968 


1,774 


5,854 

634 

44 

15 

927 

62 

178 

9,488 


S-£ 


o 


2,418 
2.418 


n5,557 


135 


15,692 


359 
359 


*  Compcised  of  $14,001  of  late  treasurer's  deficit  invested  in  his  estate  ;  and 
deposited  for  distribution  to  schools. 


L,556  surplus  interest 


43 


61  Victoria. 


iSessional  Papers  (No.  32, 


A  1898 


Table   VI.    FINANCIAL    STATEMENT- 


Township 
municipalities. 


Middlesex  : 

1  Adelaide 

2  Biddulph 

3  Caradoc     

4  Delaware 

5  Dorchester,  N 
6Ekfrid 

7  Lobo 

8  London  

9  McGillivray . . 

10  Metcalfe 

11  Mosa 

12  Nissouri,  W  . . 

13  Westminster, . 

14  Williams  E.. 

15  Williams,  W.. 


Totals. 


Oxford : 

1  Blandford.. 

2  Blenheim. . . 

3  Dereham  . . . 

4  Nissouri,  E. 

5  Norwich,  N. 

6  Norwich,  S. 

7  Oxford,  E  . . 

8  Oxford,  N.. 

9  Oxford,  W.. 

10  Zorra,  E .   . . 

11  Zorra,  W . . . 


Totals . 


Bbakt 


Brantford  . . . 

Burford 

Dumfries,  S. 

Oakland 

Onondaga . . . 


Totals. 


Perth  : 

1  Blanshard 

2  Downie. 

3  Easthope,  N 

4  Easthope,  S  .  . . . 

5  Ellice 

6  Elma 

7  FuUarton 

8  Hibbert 

9  Logan 

10  MorningtoD  . . . . 

11  Wallace 


Totals 1,596 


Di  sbursements. — Continued. 


269 
272 
714 
301 
321 
378 


242 
200 


1,092 


a 

03  " 


a  s> 

4j>  (U 


1,986 
758 

2,799 


fl  S  « 

O  u  (D 

O  O  x 

a*"  s 

<<-  D  a. 

O  te  X 

T3  O  » 

a  s-i  -is 

3  S  a 


2,095 

l,766i 

252 

859 


3,889  10,515 


529 


224 
591 


308 


1,652 


206 


206 

553 
'400 


290 


220 
133 


634 
i',646 
"967 

190 

1,891 
1,306 

6,034 


1,270 


1,270 


903 

375 

2,163 

785 


1,063 


2,800 


3,200 


2,400 


o  g  5 
"  §  S 

03  ^  ® 


3,800 
1,200 


1,673 
15.073 


2,000 
Jl,956 


400 

487 

887 


600 


1,072 
40,000 


1,500 
2,000 

7,456 


2,166 

1,000 

500 


3,666 


775 
2,800 


600 
4,500 
2,000 
3,200 

200 
1,500 
1,750 

700 


102 
676 
151 
189 
580 
109 
129 

75 
216 
316 

.30 
422 


65 
2,960 


197 
602 
369 

80 
62 
29 
19 


454 
462 

2,274 


277 
405 
"315 

77 

1,074 


97 

67 

296 

141 

1,056 

1,066 

205 

51 

532 

2,400 

1,165 


74 
127 
161 
122 
188 

22 

108 

%096 

161 

93 

575 

t468 

435 

128 

41 

4,799 


128 

244 

578 

99 

143 

141 

11206 

29 

23 

1:595 

al,516 

3,702 


63,331 

255 

39 

66 

61 

3,752 


138 
83 
60 
22 

337 

1,016 

10 

90 

689 

1,853 

13 


5,289  41,672  18,0251  7,066|  4,301 


s 
<s.2 


Assets. 


O 


11,436 
15,007 
19,972 

8,250 
22,217 
19,257 
16,074 
44,953 
16,780 
14,506 
16,6.57 
18,431 
25,405 

9,381 
10,451 


6.047 
1,551 
9,803 
1,649 
4,871 

32 

17,072 

1,425 

898 

229 

3,087 

14,413 

1,715 

49 


.2  ^-v 
J*  a  o 
a."  eS 

in 


268,777  62,841 


7,802 

22,945 

31,340 

10,664 

12,857 

9,707 

9, 253 1 

6,910 

7,464 

21,800 

24,245 

164,987 


34,444 

17,961 

12,343 

3,394 

5,589 


2,462 

229 

§5,321 

1,385 

2,368 

2,474 

283 

749 

2,486 

6,236 

4,116 

28,109 


1,905 

1,180 

416 

886 


73, 731 1   4,387 


14,542 
15,f58 
13,233 
8,260 
25,356 
20,719 
14,834 
12,804 
17,365 
59,335 
11,552 


213,558  28,140 


4,700 
2,709 
3,965 
2,429 
1,279 
5,874 
1,131 
1,853 
3,348 
816 
36 


5,258 

1,613 

5,785 

3,818 

7,298 

10,959 

10,456 

415 

5,648 

8,120 

4,426 

4,760 

4,371 

6,028 

78,955 


146 
64 

195 

15 

53 

2,776 

28 


490 
1,034 

4,801 


4,925 


19 
44 

4,988 


511 

200 

308 

9 

9,474 

10,060 


471 


5,470 
26,503 


6,400 


6,400 


5,000 
"i27 


45 
14,541 

19,713 


70,298 
8,600 


5,26» 
84,167 


2,788 
2,7881 


*  Including  $1,621  discount  for  prompt  payment  of  taxes,  t  Including  .S357  arrears  paid  on  Gov't' 
assessment  drains.  X  Omitted  from  report  of  liabilities  in  1895.  §  Unexpended  drainage  moneys.  Il  In' 
eluding  $173  drain  funds  refunded.  IT  Zorra  West,  a  Including  $1,263  adjustment  of  error  in  bal .  and 
school  funds  since  1892-93  reports,     b  Including  $3,001  sundry  deficits  of  late  treasurer. 

44 


61  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.~Continued. 


Assets. — Continued. 

Liabilities. 

T3 

a 

-a  aj 
a  &c 

on: 

C  3 

u 

m 

0 

0 

a 
J? 

§ 

$ 

13 

""l*669 
■" '2^307 

42 

38 

3 

0 

$ 

7,560 

7,609 

14,216 

8,634 

15,089 

23,767 

12,591 

31,835 

10,840 

15,988 

8,387 

7,513 

19,796 

6,086 

6,377 

196,288 

2,702 
1,872 

10,991 
1,589 
2,733 
4,954 
3,901 
1,199 

10,601 
8,181 

19,841 

68,564 

83,290 

11,005 

1,630 

5,704 

3,930 

105,559 

27,408 

4,059 

4,953 

2,538 

24,553 

16,503 

12,131 

2,603 

14,049 

816 

8,756 

118,369 

> 

.2 

3 
0 
U 

05 

"o 

0 
p 

1 

a 

eg  CD 

Is 

s 

4J 

0 

(S 
J2 
<D 

"o 

0 

a 

m 

a  £ 
2  2 
Q 

c 

to 

(0 
T3 
u 
<u     . 

3 

0 

C 
.2 

(J 
m 

100 

.2 
)*3 

.2 

1 

$ 

3,700 
8,106 

13,948 
3,807 
7,771 

14,968 
9,536 

12,305 

S 

1,500 

800 

2,800 

1,200 

'"760 
1,600 
2,000 
1,000 
1,400 

$ 
3,600 
1,790 
3,969 
1,911 
4,004 
3,938 
4,491 
9,688 

$ 

$ 

$ 

S 

$ 

1 

1,382 

1,866 

3,278 
1,228 
1,583 
1,8.56 
4,609 
2,307 

3,134 

? 

6,701 

668 

1,960 

8,956 

3 



/S 

224 

"115 

<i 

14,100 

103 

g 

436 
310 

7 

s 

8,000 

g 

8,000 

2,526 
3,019 
3,609 
6,232 
3,291 
2,330 

54,398 

483 

1,478 
4,772 

1,500 

68 
1,573 

6,045 
10,267 

6,697 
10  063 

10 

203 

700 

11 

3,088 

12 

623 

3,208 

623 

1^1 

"45 
1,891 

3,291 1  14 
5  094    If* 

13,000 
240 

300 
4,992 

1,129 
3,684 

1,590 
9,416 

30,100 

21,052 

25,158 
4,283 

115,598 

4,283 

9,692 

22,708 

55 

1,792 

1,016 

192 

1,190 

1 

1,100           .S97 

9,692 

2 

606 
9 



16,920 

*5,788 

55 

1,210 

3 

....    1 

.\ 

350 



149 

433 

5 

2,300 

800             42 

1,016 

6 



4 

188 
1,000 

7 

422 
115 

190 

% 

7,500 

500 

q 

775 
150 

6,215 

635 
2,226 

t8,067 

1,392 

9.504 
9.249 

40,579 

t4,455 

'  15,351 
9,249 

65,528 

14,712 
3,709 
7,733 
5,9C0 
1,049 

33,103 

5,408 
1,750 
9,689 
3,785 

9.i  (\R7 

10 

11 

7,500 

153 
4,214 

12,100 
8,437 

12,696 
2,061 

1 

500 

3,709 

0 

450 

7,733 

3 

5,900 

/[ 

3,000 
3,950 

780 

§1,150 

680 

100 

8,067 
417 

3,166 
569 

1,049 
1,049 

5 

21,000 

4,165 
1,400 

4,214 

5,900 

16,170 
1,148 

3,709 

2,061 

95 
350 

1 

2 

1,666 

8,689 
3,785 

3 

"  3^233 

3,880 

. 

4 

10,700 

800 

15.748 

11,100 
4,166 

3  186 

5 

37 

17,000 

420        9.327 

120      54'QRn 

g 

10,200 

800 

7 

750| 

450 1       1.780 

1,350 
116 

"229 

1,350 

8,881 

34,737 

U5,477 

160,094 

g 

8,000 

7,409 
1,834 

1,127 

Q 

903 
3,421 

17,002 

...    . 
678 

715 

32,666 

10 

400             62 

20,000 
69,000 

111,378 
16, 644 

3,9<^0 

11 

49,900 

5,110 

5,928 

5,434 

46,192 

1,127 

*  For  drainaere  moneys  collected  but  not  expended — due  on  drains  in  course  of  construction,  t  In- 
cluding unexpended  balance  of  drain  construction,  $2,557.  X  Including  $1,364  deficit  of  late  treasurer  in 
urreat   accaunt.     §  Town   hall,  etc.,  not  previously  reported.     II  Due  Sinking  Fund. 


45 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18S8 


Table    VI.     FINANCIAL   STATEMENT- 


Receipts. 

Township 
municipalities. 

OS 

00 

i 

01 

s 
22 

'S 

!3 

i 

a 

<D 

t-1 

0 

r** 

"S'D 

a 

"0 

s 

D 

S 
u   S 

g  c 

£^ 

.s 

1,000 
435 


444 

1,085 
1,229 

11 

-SI- 

;»  3  (• 
g  <D  5 

g-a  0 
P9 

0 

0) 

s 

i 

Wbllington  : 

658 

s 

10,616 
10,812 
12,613 
10,086 

8,882 

7,612 
15.332 
17,708 

6,085 
15,020 

6,206 
11,678 

132,650 

7,522 
26,779 
14,880 
16,972 
17,245 

83,398 

12,349 
7,451 
8,472 

12,905 
9,955 

10,422 

61,554 

5,480 
9,400 
7,613 
8,883 
6,500 
6,373 
9,577 
9,728 

63,554 

11,595 
6,631 

10,990 
5,298 
6,425 
8,649 
3,624 
9,050 

62,262 

s 

28 

267 

96 

■■"68 

24 

70 

27 

105 

212 

34 

171 

1,102 

105 
401 
464 
524 
281 

1,775 

"'"43 
18 
32 

93 

4 
1 
5 
2 

4 

4 
2 

S 
10 

s 

700 

$ 

8 
243 

29 

'""io !!!"' 

660,      538 
3         48 

379^ 

3  Erin      

129 
9 

203 

4   ftarnfra-xa    W 

245 

5  Guelph       

172 

6  Luther   W 

1,797 

3,808 

48 

655 
6,723 

438 
1,247 

15,512 

4 
3,382 
2,006 
4,158 
3,057 

12,607 

337 
.^74 
622 
526 
1,642 

319 

7  Maryborough 

8  Minto 

50 

393 

704 

4 

29 

576 

500 
371 
1,500 
520 
187 

7,271 

966 

'l',754 
2,625 

332 

101 

10  Peel 

110 

11  Pilkington 

12  Puslinch 

139 

32 
54 

3 
47 

2 
10 
19 

81 

15 

2 

5 
4 



26 

568 
2,067 

5 

1,370 
3,232 

258 

Totals 

2,894: 

Waterloo  : 

13 

2  Waterloo 

3  Wellesley 

4  Wilmot    . 

l,70ll   i,740 
664       10ft 

900 

400 

7 

'■'478 
2,848 

60 

457 

Totals 

DUFFERIN  : 

1,846 

5,345 

2,000 
1,200 
2,500 
3,4C0 
1,500 
700 

11,300 

250 
1,000 
1,300 

200 
1,500 

900 

*  1^200 
*600 

400 
182 

..;!'.'. 

537 
29 

3  Luther,  E 

107 
tl90 

■""28 
28 

5 
3 
6 
6 
3 

"'600 
600 

82 

Totals 

Lincoln  : 

3,501 

1,726 
341 

1,222 

68 

147 

305 

110 

1,800 

182 

408 

1  Clinton 

21 

3  Gainsborongh 

"  "ei 

'"i29 
59 
89 

338 

125 
154 
10() 
9 
193 
247 
44 
127 

999 

4 
2 

'"22 
5 

33 

2,498 

254 

10 

4 

1 

26 

2,793 

6 

6 

51 

6  Grimsby,  S 

7  Louth         

4,666 

5 

23 

18 

64 

1,572 
710 
737 

282 

5,553 
1,570 
1,342 

4,250 

4,000 

Totals 

3,919 

5,451 
3,685 

654 
1,295 
2,417 

232 
3,419 
5,844 

22,997 

371 

Wentworth  : 

J386 

2  Barton 

3 

3  Beverly 

672 

434 

89 

5  Flamborougb,  E. 

6  Flamborough,  W. 

7  Glanf ord 

g  Saltfleet , . , . 

■"521 
365 
370 

4,275 

"3,656 
100 
775 

12,996 



1^446 

"700 

228 
58 
12 

466 

Totals 

2,118 

700 

1.676 

Issued  1895,  bat  omitted,     f  Includes  $134  rebate  on  Drainage  Int.    :t^  Correction  per  special  audit. 


46 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32  . 


A.  189  8 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE S.— Continued. 


Disbursements. 


13,259 
11,923 
13,046 
10,796 
11,405 
11,036 
19,657 
19,897 

7,321 
23,594 

7,337 
15,611 

164,782 


8,618 
35,357 
19,876 
24,349 
21,537 

109,737 


14,912 
10,225 
12,303 
17,069 
13,119 
11,864 

79,492 


7,461 
10,765 
10,151 

9,226 

8,201 
10,834 
10,056 

9,835 

76,5291 


27, 180 ! 

13,0071 

14,939 
6,695 
9, 264 1 

15,535 1 
7,5641 

16,3321 


&  *a 


813 
63'? 
651 
640 
741 
617 
879 
926 
667 
935 
549 
785 

8,835 


680 
1,324 
1,182 
1,307 

986 

5,479 


499 
508 
398 
605 


877 
386 
607 
745 
426 
815 


20 


90 


:S  o  br 


60 


50 


730 

6 

733 

58 

3,473 

209 

317 

460 

17 

403 



625 

16 

366 

21 

463 

280 

12 

460 

3,374 

66 

1,021 

312 

1,059 

193 

110,816,   5,936 


91 

'il6 
30 

28 
190 

960 


152 
164 
147 
207 
230 
126 
189 
201 
186 
63 
122 
270 

2,057 


169 
353 
146 
161 
337 

1,166 


123 
109 
122 
175 
141 
239 

909 


124 
194 
149 
107 
107 
87 
212 
185 

1,166 


484 
299 
415 
208 
261 
367 
109 
418 

2,561 


« 


1,316 
1,943 
1,746 
1,960 
1,710 
1,012 
2,008 
2,258 
766 
2,202 
1.120 
1,619 

19,660 


502 
5,396 

2,787 
2,906 
1,706 

13,297 


1,959 
1,365 
1,805 
1,684 
1,713 
l,157j 

9,683 


452 
1,502 
1,233 
1,159 
1,775 
1,011 
1,935 
1,199 

10,266 


4,823 
2,026 
2,368 
1,.334 
1,644 
1,686 
575 
2,926 

17,382 


■•So 
1 

1 

W 

o 

CQ 

Support  of  the 
poor  and  other 
charities. 

$ 

$ 

$ 

34 

72 

91 

34 

48 

20 

10 

36 

13 

94 

50 

31 

2 

95 

41 

44 

111 

50 

2 

7 

23 

51 



59 

21 

91 

555 

393 

114 

10 

244 

45 

105 

10 

159 

130 

71 

91 

159 

664 
16 

156 

38 

10 

56 

50 

50 
68 
46 

30 

190 

174 

12 

10 

8 

25 

8 

15 

6 

29 

33 

26 

8 

99 

81 

73 

650 

39 

255 

18 

632 

39 

150 

5 

165 

64 

438 

21 

108 

175 

207 

434 

2,605 

1 

3,960 
4,195 
4,964 
I  3,078 
3,486 
1,951 
4,131 
3,746 
2,533 
6,274 
2,002 
6,579 

46,899 


3,058 
5,614 
6,134 
4,868 
3,695 

23,369 


2,152 
1,890 
985 
2,608 
3,842 
1,973 

13,450 


2,389 
2,835 
2,829 
3,493 
2,311 
1,373 
2,541 
4,784 

22,555 


1,491 
476 


314 

345 

189 

1,684 

4,499 


JS   o 
O  cS 

3J     O     rj 

§  S  "^ 

a  c-o 


4,944 
3,910 
5,283 
4,126 
4,324 
2,738 
6,850 
6,127 
3,100 
6,298 
2,889 
6,447 

56,036 


4,022 
15,152 
8,555 
7,414 
7,588 

42,731 


3,4581 
4,458, 
4,4391 
6,564l 
4,769 
4,651 

27,339 


2,360 
4.109 
3,597 
3,369 
1,750 
2,9901 
3,558 
2,729 

24,462 


7,392 
3,018 
7,747 
3,032 
4,124 
5,580 
2,858 
3,798 

37,549 


267 


5 
329 


104 
705 


400 


400 


661 


a  "  £ 
>S  a  ^ 


—  T3 

o 


76 


4,194 


4,269 


480 


666 
1,146 


1,740 
106 


661 


41 


41 


160 


194 
354 


I 
1,846 


95 


95 


1 
2 
3 
4 

5 
6 

7 
.1  8. 


6,281 
2, 455 1 
1,402 


3,656 
400 
108 

14,302 


47 


6).  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  1898 


Table    VI.— F  I  N  A  NCI  A  L    STATEMENT  — 


Township 
municipalities. 


Wellington  : 

1  Arthur    

2  Eramosa 

3  Erin 

\  4  _Garafraxa,  W 
;  5.Guelph 

6  Luther.  W  . . . 
i  7  M aryborouprh . 

^8  Minto   

}  9  Nichol 

10  Peel   

11  Pilkington  . . . 

12  Puslinch 


Totals. 


Waterloo  : 

1  '~>umfries,  N 

2  Waterloo    . . . 

3  Wellealey  . . . 

4  Wilmot 

5  Woolwich  . . . 


Totals. 


Ddfferin  : 

1  Amaranth    . . . 

2  Garafraxa,  E'. 

3  Luther,    E  . . . 

4  Melancthon  . . 

5  Mono 

6  Mulmur   


Totals... 

Lincoln  : 

1  Caistor 

2  Clinton 

3  Gainsboro    . 

4  Grantham   . 

5  Grimsby,  N 

6  Grimsby,  S. 

7  Louth  

8  Niagara    . . . 


Totals. 


Disbursements. — Continued. 


'200 


200 


570 


Wkntwobth  : 

1  Ancaster 

2  Barton    

3  Beverly 

4  Binbrook 

5  Flamborough,  E. 

6  Flamborough,  W, 

7  Glanford 

8  Saltfleet   


Totals . 


317 
640 

1,427 


200 


442 
524 


600 
1,766 


131 
380 


183 
416 


1,110 


200 


200 


.   T3 

fl  2 

D    fi 
4^    OP 


^2   . 

Of     U     OQ 

C   u.  <l> 


101 


137 
i',867 


c  >  X  _  __ 

c  ti -w    »  g  S 
•;  t.  fl    fc.  >  ^ 

^  o  S   ®  -a  » 

'"- J3  £1-"   rt-a 


la 
.2  i 


C  M  U 

o  ^  s 

t"  S  ? 

(t)  w  £ 


.1   1,000 
i      682 


2,105 


449 


449 


1,882 
253 
686 

2,695 


5,516 


282 


444 

58 

1,050 


500 


1,500 
100 


282    5,334 


1,272 


691 
2,625 


1,175 


2,447    3,316 


1,011 


141 


1,200 
2,352 


185 


94 
692 


185 


1,308 
1,200 
2,500 
2,000 
1,500 
710 

9,218 


250 
1,000 
1,300 

200 
1,500 


14 
4,264 


892 


786    1,200    3,992 


29 


1,132 


1,512 

4 

313 

42 


3,109 


1,116 

24 

398 

1,304 

2,842 


1,168 

115 

686 

898 

41 

95 

3,003 


16 

58 

97 

5 

51 

287 


610 


453 


18 


, I   1,100 

2,000 

1,200 24 


241 

'33 
34 
72 

102 
42 
65 
13 

110 

1 

65 

561 


63 
368 
136 
196 
123 

886 


346 
34 
26 
39 
57 

160 

652 


122 

229 
67 

143 

19 

t4,054 

256 

321 

5,211 


1,107 
210 
579 
107 
196 
190 
34 
378 


7301   2,801 


Assets. 


12,741 
11,923 
12,854 
10,717 
11,266 
11,032 
14,259 
19,696 

7  321 
18.027 

6,980 
15,511 

152,327 


8,618 
34,043 
19,876 
20,531 
17,616 

100,684 


518 


192 

79 

139 

4 

5,398 

201 


5,567 
367 


12,455 


1,314 

3,818 
3,921 

9,053 


14,8411 
10,053' 
12,300' 
16,987 
12,867 
11,642 


71 

172 

3 

82 
252 
222 


6,052 

10,584 

10,088 

9,132 

7.935 

10,6921 

9,306 

9,766 

73,555 


1,409 

181 

63 

94| 

266 

142 

750 

69 

2,974 


24.087    3,093 

10,030    2,977 

14,9391. 

5,256]   1,439 

7,536    1,728 


15.478 

6,748 

12,117 

96,191 


67 
816 

4,515 

14,625 


1.593 


1,388 
22 
17 

3,020 


4,630 
328 
983 
6,061 
2,236 
3,061 


78,690|      802      17,299 


975 

1,025 

1,404 

3.942 

271 

428 

904 

3,836 

12,7851 . 


2,365 1 
53  j 

3,724 
522' 

2,95li 

2,150 
549 
164 

12,468 


75 


7,252 
6,345 
5,836 
7,412 
1,521 
1,636 
6,652 
3,725 
318 
2,179 
2,527| 


45,403      19,624 


19,549 


1,569 


1,569 


<D    O 

,  S  o< 

■   m  T3 


14,480 


540 


10,387 
25,407 


36,366 
*12,276 


8,000 
56,641 


9,000 
9,000 


46,822 

14,976 

3£ 


15.256 
7,300 
6,108 

104,113 


•Including  $576  m  Tp.  account,     t  Including  S4,000  bonus  to  Toronto,  Hamilton  and  Bufifalo  Ry. 


48 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (f^l  o.  32 ). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIES.— CWtinued. 


Assets. - 

-Continued. 

Liabilities. 

t3 

s 

a  S? 
§•"5 

02 

u 

S 

1,000 
91 

3 
o 
<c 

1 

"S 
u 

3 

s 

41 
11 

S 
$ 
Si 

"oS 

o 

$ 

1,559 
7,354 
6,537 
.5,915 

22,031 
2,286 
7,444 

27,542 
3,725 
5,947 
2,675 

15,914 

108,929 

1,593 
.38,679 
14,372 

5,220 
11,938 

71,802 

5,701 
500 
1,592 
9,048 
2,488 
12,883 

32,212 

11,384 
1,406 
1,547 
4,036 
1,337 
570 
2,283 
3,905 

26,468 

57,490 
18,500 
20,575 
12,461 

6,179 
20,973 

9,179 
10,848 

156,205 

> 
s 

1 

1     1 

o 

h5 

IS 

i 

e 
« 

'o 
-o 

s 

2 
Q 

00 

£ 

n 

a 

alt 

m 

3 
0 

"33 

ii 

.2 

'.3 
.2 

$ 

761 
.5,522 
4,227 
3,795 
4,661 
11,726 

•s 

'  3^483 
4.227 
3,272 
3,376 
1,201 
4,001 
822 
2,453 
5,399 
1,527 

$ 



744 

"435 

17 

90 

1 

1,314 
""86 

200 

2 

3 

...   . 

214 

223 
200 
116 
147 

4 

"400 
400 
600 

""  286 
10 



1,085 
*179 

5 

10,230 

__    .... 

6 

.     .     ■   -- 

4,1-18      7 

2 

25,000 

25,824      8 

371 

171 
50 

""95 

1,109 

180 

10 
190 

421 
38 
46 

"205 
516 

1,226 

2,9951     9 

""" 
3,000 

5,491 

1  nofl 

62 
139 

549 
'708 



5,279 

10,728  i  10 

1,252 
187 

3,509 

966 
ti,533 

2,779 1  11 

2S2 
77,448 

1,146 
19,795 

1? 



29, 761 

1,402 

30,279 

200 

4^115 

5,813 
4,895 

14,823 

700 
1,200 
4,103 
4,503 



11,188 
"*  8,208 

7',  472 

1 

9 

' 

593 

2,126      3 

1,380 

2.0.5.5 

'20',866 
20,800 

8,640 

3,000 

7^806 

19,440 

7,868      4 

i 

25,705'     5 

2,380 

1,000 

242 
1,200 

600 

3,042 

1,000 

200 



800 

70S 

364 

136 


500 
80 

593 

1,914 

2^324 
1.492 
2,429 

8,159 

1,765 

385 

1,461 

3,271 

2,055 

357 
30 

1,024 

1 

1,412 
272 

8,208 

11,605 
1,470 
5,559 
4,521 

7,472 

2,499 
702 

56.640 

24,339 
2,738 

1 
9 

1,859 

1,440 

11.567,     3 

16,812;     4 

1,698      5 



10,745     6 

1 
67,899 

i 

2,0371     1 

8,000 

10,506 



23,155 

1,859 

2,142 

586 
621 

625* 
45 

1,600 
2,127 
3,631 
188 
5,404 
1,318 

9 

".360 



3 

4 

188 

3,815 

'  i;5.59 
1,318 



"30 

5 
6 

J629 

7 

1,958    1-010 

132 
132 

704 
1^415 

3,100      8 

8,000 

2,000 

5,000 
360 

3,200 
500 

1,500 

3,000 
514 

14,074 

709 

210 
134 

,516 

71 

925 

9,028 

1,642 
"83 

3,815 

4,084 

19,'«05 

7,050 

7,050      1 
1,498      2 



672 

672      3 

10,000 

'.'..'.'.     2^320 

1,100 

99 

2,076 

2,384 

186 
350 
220 

2,605 
5,910 

220      7 

.    ..       2..<123 

1       2,323i     S 

10,000 

4,726 

1,100 

2,175 

10, 106 

2,171 

20,278 

*  Including  $24  die  F5inking  Fund,    t  Including  $5  76  due  Municipal  L.  Fund.    +  Clinton  Tp  share  of 
School  Debentures.     §  Payable  to  Tp.  of  Louth  for  share  of  School  Debentures. 


4  B.L  (5) 


49 


61  Victoria. 


iSessionai  Papers  (No.  32] 


A  1898 


Table    VI.    FINANCIAL    STATEMENT 


Township 
municipalities. 


Halton  : 

1  Esquesing    . . , 

2  N'assagaweya . 

3  Nelson 

4  Trafalgar  . . . 


Totals. 


Peel  : 

1  Albion    

2  Caledon 

3  Chinguacousy 

4  Toronto 

5  Toronto  Gore. 


Receipts. 


«  * 


545 

I 

1,845 


10,716 
6,720 
9,994 

12,566 


2,390      39,996 


Totals. 


York: 

1  Etobicoke 

2  Georgina 

3  Gwillimbury,  E. 

4  Gwillimbury.  N. 

5  King 

fi  Markbam 

7  Scarborough . . . . 

8  Vaaghan  

9  Whitchurch  . . . . 
10  York 


Totals. 


Ontario 


Brcck  . .   . . 

Mara 

Pickering. . 

Rama 

Reach 

Scott 

Scugog  . . . . 

8  Thorah .... 

9  Uxb'idge  . 

10  Whitby,  E. 

11  Whitby  . . . 


464 

582 

1,023 

1,494 

133 

3,696 


8,597 

1,898 

1,453 

48 

870 

303 

635 

6,139 

4,066 

172 

24,181 


337 


Totals. 


Durham  : 

1  Cartwright 

2  Cavan  .... 

3  Clarke 

4  Darlington 

5  Hope 

6  Manvers  . . . 


293 
50 
33 

138 
328 

78 
407 

51 


9,451 
13,018 
16,795 
20,473 

4,805 


17,825 
5,709 
11,391 
5,681 
19,684 
20,480 
14,594 
21,407 
11,821 
72,890 

201,482 


14,062 

11,011 

20,269 

3,755 

12,554 

7,894 

1,949 

5,166 

11.253 

9,285 

11,063 


1,715    108,261 


883; 

262 
1,607 
2,990 


308! 


5;  39 1 
11,380 
13,920 
16,574 
10,560 

7,937 


Totals I  6,050]     65,762 


185 
23 
11 
37 

256 


155 
339 
222 
439 
28 


64,542  1,183 


210 

49 

77 

89 

525 

384 

420! 

598 1 

14i. 

902i 

3, 268 1 

I 


89 
237 


53 

113 

54 


9 
103 
129 
149 

936 


109 
174 
287 
123 
123 
244 

1,060 


a  > 


I  s  > 


I  ai 


3 

200 

12 

215 


1,876 
465 
526 

1,304 

4,171 


12,161 
11.582 


1,000 
1,'366 


O  u 


CO 


g  a>  OS 
O  i«   e 


S   C   " 


CQ 


23,743        2,300 


1,757 

1,2551 

130 


1,250 
1,000 

7,063 

5,802  3,000 
600 


50    3,142 


655 
727 


12,865 
7,111 


1.784 

"6i7 
1,597 
1,008 
1,989 

31    8,377 

23 

2 

37 

.1      159 

321 

71  1,521 
431  74 
161       160 


400 
'9,'26o 


5,850 
1,799 


800 
800 


"^  H  a 
&  5  ^ 

K  ^  <D 

2-2  •= 
S'o  o 


217 
96 


317| 

20.577' 

1,080        1,105 
6,4551     22,509 

45,140      30,305 


200    1,040 
964 I 

1,324 

2.404 


1,000; 


3,886 
3,000 
7  531 

900 
4,900 

281 
75 


4,000 
5,040 


22  . 
1,760] 


4 
164 


55 


11 


2,060 
2,000 
1,400 


2,238    2,783|     26,033 


5,000 
5,000 


281 
l,639i 


1,667 


7001   1,300 


638  . 

97l. 

500| 


5501 
1,9351   1,8501 


50 


61  Victoria. 

Sessional 

Pape 

rs  (No.   32 

)■ 

A.  18?8 

TOWNSHIP 

MUNICIPALITIES 

— Continued. 

Disbursements. 

"S. 

0 
<u 

u 

1 

19 

0  m  K 

c.2i"5 

c3  fc.  C 

»^  S 
0     i  0 

—    n     0 

< 

870 
506 
843 
926 

3,145 

693 
1,578 
1,133 
1,057 

417 

4,878 

1,310 

331 

651 

398 

1,190 

1,107 

1,072 

1,512 

849 

6,735 

15,155 

1,122 

883 
1,245 
404 
940 
629 
169 
586 
828 
739 
797 

8,342 

412 
867 
937 
878 
1,000 
650 

4,744 

06 

c 

IS.  a 

S  .IT  aj 
S   "  g 

C 

<c 
bo 

T5 

c 

ei 

i 

s 

1,512 

1,814 

1,607 

.     1,896 

6,829 

1,350 
1,346 
2,256 
6,733 
446 

12,131 

4,266 

778 

1,903 

555 

7,087 

2,832 

2,746 

6,473 

1,803 

15,160 

43,603 

2,316 
3,018 
3,408 

732 
2,054 
1,763 

347 
1,482 
1,500 
1,898 
1,597 

20,115 

<)04 
2,011 
2,186 
3,930 
1,674 
1,221 

11,926 

■0    M 

—    <D 

3   0 

pa 

J3 
SI 

0 

1^ 

03 

III 

•s 

333 

H 
^— 

a  u 

is 

1,630 

450 

1,231 

1,782 

5,093 

2,051 
2.493 
5,043 
4,080 
1,198 

14,865 

3,319 
1,457 
3,087 
1,6:^6 
5,550 
6,355 
3,981 
6,039 
7,503 
989 

39,916 

2,866 

1,101 

2,112 

205 

1^536 
367 
724 
1,098 
1,868 
1,831 

13,708 

1,310 

2,176 
2,890 
3,725 
2,535 
1,600 

14,236 

m 
"c 
.fl  c 

c  "=•;: 
°^  =s 

in 

s 

6,739 
3.495 
5,616 
7,118 

22,968 

5,015 
7,206 
8,630 
7,659 
1,734 

30,244 

6,502 
2,699 
5,709 

0 

CD 
tD 
ei 

a 
"S 

h 
0 

.2--  * 
la 

III 
III 

<■"  * 

$ 

1 

$ 

14,325 

7,251 

26,362 

26,367 

74,305 
11,351 

5 

"'466 

5 
476 

"ii 

33 
36 

82 

329 

"'"2O6 

5 

68 

29 

62 

111 

108 

4,524 

5,442 

3 
21 

30 
8 

"'"455 

517 

31 

427 

12 

S 

232 
147 
190 

268 

837 

164 
345 
326 
351 

88 

1,274 

520 

64 

233 

97 

314 

174 

282 

462 

163 

3,316 

5.625 

350 
155 
365 
140 
257 
211 
38 
98 
198 
190 
104 

2,106 

118 
188 
368 

$ 
40 

$ 

8 

337 

631 
11,323, 

11,6821 

22,9681 

'"75 
75 

"'*304 
304 

"""88 
88 

-8 
67 

115 

14 
55 
17 
133 
15 

234 

181 
1 

80 
29 
95 
22 
52 
8 
34 

377 

879 

73 
53 
89 
17 
11 
28 

647 
366 

1,683 

375 
301 
216 
455 

1,347 

195 

8 

56 

14 

182 

194 
75 
42 
12 

698 

1,476 

481 
176 
775 
76 
717 
286 

14,953 

26,956 

32,534 

5  838 

7,063 
5,997 

91,632 

86,204 

8,275 

14,085 

13,060 

7,117 
400 

293 

7,058 

3,902 

:::.":::: 

33,157 
22,551 
19,002 
50,331 

8,578 
9,055 
6,130 
7,475 
5.728 
20,491 

76,269 

5,835 
4,024 
7,744 
1,362 
6,655 
3,625 
985 
1,760 
4,615 
4,197 
4,190 

44,992 

.3,956 

....    . 



9,200 

257 

21,082 
1,274 
6,392  ] 

45,722 

19,160 

114,961 
324,784 

18,250 

1,974 
2,267 

14,614 

17 

29,025 

5,097 

17,886 

347 

8,459 

43 

2,244 

7,135 

55 
5 

i8 
217 
251 
445 

3,442 

213 

93 

400 

15,555 
12,000 
12,800 

143,065 
8,609 

2,694 

1 

89 
45 
24 

158 

38 
369 

16 

75 

180 

17 

3,041 

90] 
133 

11,862 

5,566 
7,516 
8,400 
5,667 
4,290 

35,394 

15,854 

21,194 

'       334 

53]      516 

70 1       458 

108       464 

5021    2144 

+1221 

12,470 
9,571 

79,560 

73 
543 

331 
246 

1,585 

122 

For  road  machine,  levellers  and  scrapers.     +Loan  to  S.S.  No.  7. 


51 


61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Table    VI.     FINANCIAL    STATEMENT  — 


Disbursements. — Continued. 


Durham 


Cartwright 

Cavan 

Clarke 

1  )arlington 

Hope 

Manvers 

Totals 


Township 
municipalities. 


Halton  : 

1  Esquesing 

2  Xassasraweya 

3  Nelson 

4  Trafalgar 

Totals 

Peel  : 

1  Albion 

2  Caledon 

3  Chins-uacousy. 

4  Toronto 

5  Toronto  Gore 

Totals 

York: 

1  Etobicoke 

2  Georgina'  .    . .    . 

3  Gwillimbury,  E^ 

4  Gwillimbury,  N 

5  Kins 

6  Markham 

7  Scarborough 

8  Vaugban 

9  Whitchurch 
10  York 

Totals 

Dntakio  : 

1  Brock 

2  Mara 

3  Pickering 

4  Rama  .    . 

5  Reach 

6  Scott 

7  Scugog 

8  Thorah 

9  Uxbridge 

10  Whitby,  E 

11  Whitby 


Totals 


Assets. 


O 


12,578 

7,126 

23,707 

25,399 

68,810 


10,961 
14,765 
25,841 
28,616 
5,423 

85,606 


28,042 

7,790 

12,599 

6.884 

33,1.57 

22,551 

17,613 

43.706 

17.785 

114,839 


1,747 
125 

2.655 
968 

5,495 


390 

188 

1,115 

3,918 

415 

6,026 


8,162 

485 

1,486 

174 


1,389 

6,625 

1,375 

122 


304,96619,818 


237      18,250 

14,217 

29,025 

4,901 

17,624 

8,459' 

1,9851 

6,835 

15,313 

11,829 

12,288| 

1,893    140,726 


397 

196 
262 


259 
300 
242 
171 
512 

2,339 


7,840  769 

11,774'  88 

14,7481  1,106 

19,042  2,152 

12,470  ... 

9,166  405 

I 

101       830 !     75,040  4,520 


S 

64 
2,724 

34 
5,557 

8,379 


6 

1,920 

145 

2,273 

4 

4,348 


11,919 


59 
322 
3,860 
659 
595 
406 
43,047 

60,867 


2,170 


P    <B    O 

5  5  a 


.5,208 
2,095 

11 

67 

244 

896 

229 

80 

13,880 


16 
4,735 
1,913 
997 
3,469 
3,050 

14,180 


989 


13,104 
14,093 


3,320 


2,696 


6,016 


fl    CO 

^  2  & 


38,988 

9,104 

26,554 

45,173 

119,819 


.'.2,513 

28,399 

3,500 

64,412 


13,212 


12,974 
t39,214 


13,529 
35,837 
14,237 
19,433 

148,436 


2,000 


4,804 
53,442 


3,200 
90 

63,536 


122 
34,368 


34,490 


*  Includes  $5,000  bonus  bo  Toronto  and  Suburban  St.  Ry.     fOmitting  $40  previously  overstated. 


52 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 ). 


A.  lyvg 


T  O  W,N  SHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.—Gonti7iued. 


Aseets.- 

—Continued. 

Liabilities. 

§ 

11 
11 

2 

u 

o 

as 

9 
O 

lU 

a 

iS 

"a! 
o 

3 

2 

ID 

OJ 

cs 

O 
EH 

>> 

> 

c 
p 
o 
O 

1 

o 
ja 
o 

% 
o 
o 

1^ 

on 

3 

a 

GO 

u 
c3  CD 

in 

4J  p 

Ill 

0 
<u 

S 

1 

'S 

$ 

89,000 

s 

$ 

S 

79,799 
24,153 
52,443 
75,424 

231,819 

896 
14,108 
63,933 
37,590 
11,699 

128,126 

34,982 

4.165 

14,510 

1,273 

39,536 

6,261 

27,577 

44,154 

16,298 

144,551 

333,  .307 

5,838 
2,597 

39.203 
6,316 
4,949 
5,615 
4,829 

54,936 
5,012 
5,104 
1,447 

135,846 

3,125 
10,486 

5,019 

4,035 
47,037 

3,455 

73,157 

'  '690 
690 

$ 

"l31 

2 

256 

389 

'? 

9 

$ 

s 

$ 

$ 

1 

10,700  1.500 

821 

754 

6,663 

8,238 

2 

23,200 
20,200 

752 
800 

1,552 

3 

1.075 

2,451 
2,451 

i.oeo 

1,060 

' ' '  530 
1^640 

4,821 
4,821 

786 
786 

4 

93,100  2,575 
500 

1 

10,000  2,000 

813 

i52 

*140 
4 

1,105 

2,809 

15,829 

1.872 

21,615 

42,465 
2.919 
1,982 
1,040 
1,818 
4,540 
1,876 
2,841 
1,572 
208,916 

269,969 

4,465 

4,007 

19,392 

6,051 

2,810 

1,066 

254 

20,222 

2C,400 

100 

9,081 

87,848 

1,300 
4,157 

405 

97 
2,523 

8,482 

?, 

28, 500   600 
1,500  1.500 
6,800   880 

2,805 
5,165 

1,872 

9,994 

19,874 
900 

8 



8,789 

1,664 

9,000 

4 

,5 

46,800 

5,480 

700 

150 

50 

813 
1,208 

2019 

1,664 
10,526 

9,000 

t2,068 
1^967 

144 
'"25 

1 
?, 

3 



1,040 

125 

2,381 

1,876 

4 

9,564 
9,564 

"663 

"55 

li,'492 

13,418 

165 

1,.393 
344 

300 
1,152 

5 

2,401 

397 

67,757 
72,125 

2,568 

i45 

67 

3 

i78 

4 

2,970 

"  2^663 
3i4 

6 

10, 850 

1.150 
700 
280 

1,088 

4,118 

1,100 
2,200 
1,850 

705 
1,740 

800 
1,500 

950 
1,000 
1,500 

760 

14, 105 

2,340 

3,000 

2,000 

450 

200 

7 

:2,786 

139 

6,613 

11,015 

""256 
331 
100 
100 

'"1.59 
(1 8,222 

8 

850 

8,789 

57"  609 
83,805 

1.698 

900 

3,556 

1,700 



2,019 

1,306 
2,851 

'164 
785 

'95^932 
106,458 

1,433 
§27,706 

34,901 
1,296 

9 
10 

1 

9. 

30,000 

2,000 
2,546 

1,278 
324 

12,196 
3,000 

31 
927 

3 

4 

5 



281 

6 

3,000 

95 

7 

12,000 
19,000 

31,000 

8 

1,400 

905 

10,159 

1,300 
161 

366 

9 

33,000 

4,546 

30 
20 

1,912 
2^176 

5,106 

'"  8^668 
23,204 

2,535 

70 
148 

9,386 

10 
11 

1 

"l,820 
"105 
"'"65 

1,990 

?, 

9,666 

97 

3 
4 
5 

1,908 
4,084 

550 
2,311 

6 

a  000 

7,990 

2,977 

97 

*  Payable  to  Chinguacousy  as  Caledou's  share  of  Schoil  Debs,  t  Includiner  S539  due  Sinkiug  Fund. 
§  Including  $5,470  due  Sinking  Fnnd.  X  Including  School  Deb.  debt  to  Woodbridge.  ||  Including  S7,790 
Beaverton's  share  of  G.  T.  R.  Stock  and  $432  of  School  Deb.  owing  to  Beaverton, 


53 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  189  8 


Table    VI.    FINANCIAL    STATEMENT— 


Township 
municipalities. 


Receipts. 


-o£ 


Northumberland 

1  Alnwick  

2  Brighton 

3  Cramahe      .... 

4  Haldimand 

6  Hamilton 

6  Monaghan,  S   . 

7  Murray  .    .... 

8  Percy 

9  Seymour 


Totals 

Prince  Edward  : 

1  Ameliasburg. . . 

2  Athol 

3  Hallowell 

4  Hillier 

5  Marysburg,  N. 

6  Marysburg,  S . . 

7  Sophiasburg  . . . 


Totals 


Lennox  and  Add.: 

1  Adolphustown. . . 

2  Amherst  Island. . 

3  Camden,  East  . . . 

4  Denbigh,  etc 

5  Ernestown. 

6  Fredericksburg  N 

7  Fredericksburg  S 

8  Kaladar,  etc 

9  Richmond 

10  Sheffield 


311 
3,072 

658 
1,269 

236 
1,089 

8,515 


279 
253 

1,812 
22 

],484 

"586 
4,436 


Totals   ...     . 

Frontenac : 

1  Barrie 

2  Bedford 

3  Clarendon,  etc.  . 

4  Hinchinbrooke. . 

5  Howe  Island  . . . 

6  Kennebec  ...... 

7  Kingston. 

8  Loughborough. . 

9  Olden 

10  Oso 

11  Palmerston,  etc. 

12  Pittsburg 

13  Portland 

14  Storringbon 

16  Wolfe  Island  . . . 


Totals  7,463 


2,895 

7,787 

9,780 

17,950 

12.591 

3,288 

7,463 

10,766 

10,920 

8:^,440 


10.486 
^.676' 

10,604 
6,665 
3,476 
4,266 
7,401 

46,574 


2,805 
'i,040i 

20,875 
1,493 

17,565' 
6,9S5l 
6,029 
1,768 
9,170 
8,209 

77,789 


921 
•1,537 
1,447 
4,764 
1,593 
2,954 

21,995 
6,319 
3,042 
3.055 
2,235 

13,546 
8,328 
7,621 
6,030 

88,387 


69, 


62 
42 

179 
76 
14 

168 
24 

634 


42 


20 


154 


40 


26 

20 

216 

640 


82 


30 

108 

48 


75 

261. 
132 
1.54 
4 

58 


53 

10 

25 

124 

1 


333 


40 

298  . . , 


15 


15 


781 

120 

2 


ft  s 


5£ 

>  o  o 
S  "J'  o 


pq 


700 


2,687 


2,000 
3,000 
15 
213 
1,600 
2,111 

9,639 


273! 


pa 


1,503 1 
350 
323    1,703  lOOi 

576       260 1 

250 


123 
1,925 

138 

"987 

8 

1,113 

175 

32 


54 


4,900, 


500 


600 
2,826 

135 


5,105 


695 
242 

3,390 


10 


200 
50 


3,008 
2,941 

11,554 


793       167 


18 
190 


459 


1,763 
1,400 
700 
1,485 
1,150 

6,633 


467 


900 


900 
300 


°  S  3 


»259 


259 


4691      300 


135 


1?5| 


*  Debentures  sold  November,  1895,  but  no  return  of  them  made  for  that  year,   f  Including  $439  refund 
from  ex-treasurer.        X  Including  3315  to  correct  error  from  incorrect  returns  re  balance  in  1895. 


54 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32^ 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.— Continued 


Eh 
6 

3,417 

9,988 

9,887 

20,446 

18,904 

4,276 

9,003 

13,106 

14,877 

103,904 


14,562 
4,054 

i4,o;ui 

7,059 
7,136 
5,324 
8,991 

61,157 


3,838 

3,095 

23,404 1 

2,1351 
24,394 


Disbursements. 


..So 


U    U  CO 

cs  b  a 

^^  S 

O    (8  O 


22,718 
6,525 
3,232 
3,202 
2,376 

18,032 
9,555 
7,766 
6,128 

98,953 


340 
564 
669 
1,453 
1,169 
263 
611 
557 
689 

6,315 


505 
153 
281 
310 
182 
203 
401 

2,035 


154 
179 
840 
212 
685 


8,969 

458 

7,509 

231 

2.631 

227 

14,403 

588' 

12,859 

463 

103,237 

4,037 

1 

1,545 

201 

5,704 

296 

2,183 

188 

5,028 

375 

1,726 

105 

3,233 

352 

24 

368 
20 
52 

538 


®  o  C 

®*.  o 

S  o  be 

O 


301 


152 
10 


463 


95 


39 
179' 


55 
107 


64 
229 
230 
231 
202 

55 

■  165 

333 

241 

1,750 


349 
120 
260 
146 
114 
93 
243 

1,325 


56 1 
104 
263 

41 
225 1 
1681 

66 1 
209 
159, 
293 


17 


TJ  S 


n 


571 
1,397 
1,248 
2,817 
1,848 

712 
1,184 
2,382 
1,220 

13,379 


230 
36 

833 
615 
159 
84 
408 

2,365 


254 
242 

2,886 
575 

1,671 

2,634 
600 
187 

1,670 
965 


480    15841     11,684 


61 


296 

113 

331 1 

188 

24 

66 

375 

i 

101 

580 

105 

25 

17 

352 

6 

101 

301 

548 

65 

88 

1,018 

306 

129 

726 

387 

102 

452 

314 

213 

270 

241 

, 

54 

65 

585 

125 

172 

1,390 

438 

76 

131 

971 

.352 

29 

455 

378 

74 

79 

5,0(!6 

273 

1,373 

6,782 

259 


259 


124 
44 


168 


17 
64 
22 
24 
107 
4 
48 
43 


329 


58 
5 
18 
24 
22 
27 
1 

155 


'«'0  00 

®  a  2 


'fto 


02 


29 


126 


22 


18 


871 
194i 
1871 
6081 

342 1 
16 

104| 
62 

560| 


1551 
396 1 
436 
263| 
1.31 
285 1 
1281 


109 

159 

438 

9 

141 

103 

72 

52 

446 

125 

1,654 


59 

315 

65 

58 

59 

10 

170 

154 

55 

73 

1,094 


g  4> 


650 
1,876 
1,304 
4,063 
5,176 

740 
1,380 
1,435 
1,981 


2, 220 1     18,595 


2,668 
1,139 
3.018 


2,288 
1,101 
2,621 


1.794      12,835 


5  3* 


1,135 

993 

5,370 

155 

5,873 

1,552 

2,536 

379 

1,817 

2,213 

22,023 


80 

2,206 

287 

2,160 

389 

367 

7,364 

2,788 

123 

652 

55 

9,237 

3,977 

3,666 

3,145 

36,496 


1,392 
4,094 
4,173 
7,984 
7,117 
1,897 
4,792 
5,753 
3,963 

41,165 


4,949 
1,981 
5,133 
3,614 
2,177 
2,541 
3,902 

24,297 


1,163 
1,303 
8,412 
1,124 
8,987 
2,886 
2,208 
1,457 
4,449 
2,397 

34,386 


820 
2,223 
1,568 
1,599 

922 
1,664 
4,809 
2,034 
1,518 
1,498 
1,082 
4,633 
3,366 
2,957 
2,259 

32,9521 


a  m 
a)  o 


•3  StS 


385 


•-  °  .„• 

■S  a  S 

^  2  » 

—  Stj 

< 


385' 


709 


709 


1,592 


2,316 
3,908 


203 
203 

2,687 


1,703 
260, 
175 

4,825 


550, 


8 
5,217 


32 


3,358] 


9, 165 1 


76 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 


76 


55 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 ). 


A.  1898 


Table   VI.— F  I  N  A  N  C  I  A  L    STATEMENT— 


Township 
municipalities. 


Northumberland  ; 

1  Alnwick  

2  Brighton . 

3  Cramahe 

4  Haldimand 

5  Hamilton 

6  Monaghan,  S... 

7  Murray 

8  Percy 

9  Seymour 


Totals 

Prince  Edward  : 

1  Ameliaeburp  . . 

2  Athol       

3  Hallowell 

4  Hillier    

5  Marysburg,  N. 

6  Marysburg,  S  . 

7  Sophiasburg   . . 


Disbursements.  —  Continued. 


-§S 


Totals . 


Lennox  and  Add.  : . 

1  Adolphustown . . . 

2  Amherst  Island. . 

3  Camden  East 

4  Denbigh,  etc 

5  Ernestown 

6  Fredericksburg,N 

7  Fredericksburg,  S 

8  Kaladar.  etc 

9  Richmond       

10  Sheffield 


Totals . 


Frontenac : 

1  Barrie. 

2  Bedford    

3  Clarendon,  etc  . 

4  Hinchinbrooke  . 

5  Howe  Island  . . . 

6  Kennebec 

7  Kingston 

8  Loughborough  . 

9  Olden    

10  Oso 

11  Palmerston,  etc. 

12  Pittsburg 

13  Portland 

14  Storrington  . . . . 

15  Wolfe  Island . . . 


Totals . 


400 
240 


87 
727 


■B  -o 


315 
100 


415 


102 

89 


50 


110 

200 


100 


651 


o  a 


423 
2,000 

2,423 


2  § 


"O  o 

<C  c 

OS 


700 
1,159 
2,580 
2,000 


817 


1,600 
525 

8,564 


995 


£3-0 


1,503 
350 
100 
311 
600 

3.859 


135 


12 
24 

49 

17 

90 

1 

132 

597 

922 


801 


150 


230 


100 


817 


480 


1,345 
30 

1,518 
2,488 

5,516 


41 

9 

24 

116 

34 

1,025 


3 

15 

1,800 


327 

38 
4 

10 
114 
975 

3,286 


12 


84 
94 

"32 
142 

18 

"ii 

32 

491 


S 


34 

45 
258 
178 
254 

37 
290 

59 
267 

1,422 


270 
14 
61 
41 
7 
16 

125 

534 


45 
t524 


830| 
101 
101 

44 
210  i 
143 

1,821 


20 


220 

9 

124 


99,196 


14,376 
3,844 

11,885 
5,372 
6,907 
5,189 
8,648 

56,221 


3,569 
3,040 

22,249 
2,124 

24,325 
8,164 
7,104 
2,595 

14,403 

12,512 

100,085 


1,424 
5,530 
2,133 
4,911 
1,460 
2,916 
14,511 
6,381 

3,202 
1,978 
17,229 
9,161 
7,723 
6,071 


O 


3,155 

9,186 

9,734 
20,220 
18,232 

4,223 

9,003  . . 
13,058 


262 
802 
153 
226 
672 
53 

48 


12,3851  2,4i;2 


4,708 


186 
210 
2,146 
1,687 
229 
135 
343 

4,936 


269 

55 

1,155 

11 

69 

805 

405 

36 


3471 
3,152 


121 

174 

50, 

1171 

2661 
3171 
8,207, 
144 
344 


398 

803 

394 

43 

57 


708      87,518111,485 


Assets. 


234 

724 
2,309 
5,443 
6,959 

826 
1,451 

117 
1,963 

20,026 


^  a  a 


672 
163 
1,072 
281 
438 
500 
627 

3,753 


61 
1,302 
2,350 
568 
6,357 
2,428 
3,296 
1,621 
5,164 
5,532 

28,679 


823 
1,353! 
1,240| 

5671 

iiol 

2,399j 
312 
3.2191 
1,582 
1,8131 
1.049' 
2, 794 1 
4,3181 
2.900| 
4,977! 

29,456 


755 


755 


4.688 


4,688 


800 


203 
1,003 


*26,887 
2,250 


6,899 

10,060 

3,416 

49,512 


3.050 


24,997 


6,521 
31,518 


45 

24.012 

3.500 

2,345 


17,382 


50,334 


1,650 


5,750 


7,476 


mitting  $100  overstated  in  1895.     flncluding  $195  cost  of  Government  audit. 


56 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.—Contiuued. 


Assets.- 

-Conthiued. 

Liabilities. 

1 

43.9 

O  p 

<D 

A 

o 
(1 

HI 

JS 

O 

o 
1 

<u 

(4 
"3 
"o 

$ 

3,556 

13,676 

7,177 

8,849 

> 

o 
O 

<D 

"o 
o 

o 

o 

o 

1^ 

« 

u 
"c3  U 

pel 

$ 

5 

a 

s 

u 

02 

i 

9-S 
"2-§ 
Q 

(D 
u 

IS 

<! 

073 
m   a 

"  ^^" 

h  m  s> 

ill 

^  X  a 

IS 

i 

a 
42 

u 

1 

.2 

1 

0 

S 
29 

2  200 

.«5 
730 
650 
4.715 
3,150 
2,000 

2^000 
7,759 

21, 004 

4,800 
1,000 

.«5 
130 



30 
290 

*ii642 
1,492 

73 

S 

s 

29 

$ 

$ 

$ 

S 

$ 

1 

11,500 



9, 

633 

3 

i.6.is 

918 

2,045 

3,000 

15 

213 

"l',594 

6,867 

273 

197 
149 

"89 

27 

t2,144 

2,606 
60 

5,446 
3,799 
2,015 
302 
1,304 
10,672 

23,567 
15,333 

4 

10,7211   650 

5 

1,634 
3,451 

7,924 

' 

2,0(M) 
171 

6 

..... 

947 

'"liioe 

6,750 

7,856 

7 

8 

10,000 
23,700 

15,700! 

184 

817 

q 

72,688 

37,306 
.S,623 
3,218 
4,118 
8,766 

11,545 
8,886 

77,462 
5,080 

•^303 

2,171 

15,000 

1 

9, 

,3,189 

3,189 
1,899 

525 
1,846 

825 

23,617 

3 

2,000 

1,200 

850 

4,500 

14, 350 

500 
250 
600 

150 

223 

349 

1,899 

4 

325 


200 

1,846 

625 

2,944 

""260 
200 

5 

6 



7 

5,088 

325 

15,000 

1,200 

1 

1,607 
29,451 

692 

'"""is 

12 
1,182 

30,m 

"900 

4 

696 

30,915 

12 

8,887 

4  218 

3.261 

2,05.n 

6,539 

21,363 

77,946 

1,214 
1,874 
1,284 
975 
212 
2,302 
7,532 
4,117 

2 
3 

624 

31,379  4,068 
7.1S3  2,031 
6,846  2.061 

4 

500 
450 
800 
375 
2,300 
2,000 

7,775 

420 
500 

441 

237 

772 

1,799 
229 

i,4i9 
400 

2,000 

1,787 

925 

700 

§3,701 

:t2,714 

11,827 

218 

"72 

2 

846 

1,142 

48 
195 

40 
138 

21 
216 
486 
467 
157 

25 

43 
100 

5 

6 

275 
1,076 

7 

2,032 
25,083 
15,172 

124,457 

1,440 
2,256 
1,290 
1,744 
376 
3,316 

11,243 
3,363 
3,050 
2,363 
5,531 
5,597 

11,462 

3,943 

■  7,534 

64,508 

207 
2,836 
1,633 

13,528 

306 
852 
821 
358 
91 
656 
7,046 

1,356 
512 
436 
1,333 
3,660 
1,874 
3,034 

22, 335 

8 

9 

1,170 
3,730 

485 

51 

423 

329 

15,000 
45,000 

10 

1,200 

2,719 

375 
591 

1 

185 

2 
3 

1,060 

150 
100 

4 



5 

600 
1,000 

74 

1,430 

6 

7 

2,007 
397 
411 
198 
129 

1,643 

9 

1,124 
500 
100 
2,000 
1,000 
1,000 
2,500 

11,804 

50 

34 

387 

1,910  9 

360 
500 

2 
■■48i 

1.310 
3.077 
2,043 
3,680 
1,924 
5,016 

38,449 

10 

3,950 

1,900 

11 
12 

13 

50 
1,391 

7,301 

14 

590 
2,526 

15 

3,950 

1,643 

2,076 



2,085 

483 

*  Campbellford's  share  of   G.T.R.  bonus,      f  lacludine  $1,840  due  to   Campbellford  on  school  deben- 
tures.    §  $215  overstated  in  1895.     J  Including  $907  due  sinking  fund. 


57 


61  N  ictoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Table   VL    FINANCIAL    STATEMENT— 


Township 
municipalities. 


Receipts. 


Lekus : 

1  Bastard,  etc  

2  Crosby,  N  

3  Crosby.  S 

4  Elizabfcthtown  . . 

5  Elmsley,  S 

6  Kitley 

7  Leeds,  etc.  Front 

8  Leed?,  etc.,  Rear, 
y  Yonge,  etc., Front 

10  Yonge,  etc..  Rear 


03 


s 

5,392 


fiz: 


a 


Totals. 
Grknville  : 


Augusta   

Edwardsburg. 

Gower,  S 

Oxford 

Wolford: 

Totals 


345 
5201 
1,017 
1,423 
1,823 
1,950 
1,439 
2,020 

1.5, 929 


1,369 


DUNDAS : 

1  Matilda .    ... 

2  Mountain  .  . . 

3  Williamsburg 

4  Winchester 

Totals 

Stormont : 

1  Cornwall 

2  Finch 

3  Osnabruck. 

4  Roxborough 

Totals 

Glkngabrt : 

1  Charlottenburg 

2  Kenyon 

3  Lancaster 

4  Lochiel 

Totals 

Prescott  : 

1  Alfred.    

2  Caledonia 

3  Hawkehbury,  E . . 

4  Hawkesbury,  W. 

5  Longueuil 

6  Plantagenet,  N. . 

7  Plantagenet,  S. . . 


S 

6,906 
6,412 
5,937 

15,810 
3,049 
6,825 

10,791 
6,113 
9,416 
7,013 

78,308 


12,979 
11,422 

2,449, 
10,.S63 

5, 051 1 


•s 


Totals 


15,448 
13,2.32 
12,799 
19,088 

60,567 


12,  .597 
8,120 

13,057 
8,684 

42,458 


49,043 


6,296 
4,367 
8,005 
8,039 
2,251 
P,771 
9,580 


199 

128 
44 
85 
61 

143 
82 

105 
57 
40 


64 


S 


IB-  — 


786 

31         27 

ll-    165 

1,123       172 

171 


109 


944    1,494 


42 

15 

15 

113 

28 


752 
35 


2,9951     42,264        213 


296 
49 


66 

83 

289 


2,133 

893 

1,500 


so 


9^ 


CQ 


2,581 
500 


pa 


750 
5,276 


635     1,800 
756 


U  02 

O  <u 

O 

*  ^  r5 

^  S  ^' 

5    3}  O) 

§  -o  o 

23 


1,750 


8001 
289 

5,920 


590 


5901 


795    1,.391 


345 


401 
174] 
551 
357 

1,483 


14,977  342 

12,240  243 

10,014  181 

11,812  436 


85 


219 


2,019 


7,156 
500 

2,500 
500 

10,656, 


22,356 

2,450 

627 

653 

I 

26,086 


832, 


832 
3,1171 


6,413 
9,530 


1,202 


174 
961 
223 
573 
32 
366 
191 


21 
106 


47.3091   1.6.55 


74 


3  000 
10',385l I   §11,262 


31,050 
1,520 

45,955 


1,229 
3,170 
1,000 


9| 


5,399 


225 
225 


9,240 
6,5121 

27,0141 


115 
184 
200 
115 


644 


1,000 


1,000 


372 


253 


6251 


2,710 


176 
10 
29 

84 
34 


6 

458 

3,506 


11 
34 
39 


84 


98 


108 
»1,490 

1,696 


2 

t3,54U 

151 

:2,258 

5,951 


153 
114 
111 

378 


70 


95 
173 


*  Including  $723  from  Township  of  Russell  re  Drainage,     t  Including  S600  deposit  on  drainage  con- 
tracts, $2,325  from  Cambridge  and  Russell  re  drainage  and  §483  premiums  on  debentures  sold .     t  From 
Cambridge  re  share  of  Drain  Debentures.     §  Including  -^4,425  issued  in  1895  but  not  reported  and  $17 
oremiuma  on  debentures  sold. 

58 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18S8 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIES.-  Continued. 


Disbursements. 

'S 
u 

£ 

"o 

Eh 

Zi  a:   ai 

^  cS  s 
=  ":«  3 

O 
O 

o.S'g 

S^g  S 

a>  ^  tri 

r,  a  <» 

■^  0  bD 
0 

m 

."2 

■D 

OS 
m 

■30 

(DJS 

■St 

oil 

|a-g 

<D 

hi 
S 

T. 

*  X 

2.2 
*^  > 

a  u 

3.5 

0 

on 

"o 

0  . 

C  r^  ^ 
^   0  Q 

00 

s 

1 

'3 

Li 

s 

108 

-^  a  = 

III 
=  25* 

< 
•S 

2,023 
"'ii5i7 

1 

$ 

18,190 

10,044 

8,668 

$ 

481 
328 
395 
914 
217 
553 
670 
686 
769 
266 

5,279 

766 
612 
174 
654 
429 

2,635 

413 
293 
431 
742 

1,879 

805 
500 
251 
634 

2,190 

953 
525 

687 
792 

2,957 

451 
341 
416 
378 
182 
443 
488 

2,699 

70 
17 

'""29 

■"48 

112 

8 

94 

378 

45 

9 

3 

151 

5 

213 

8 

""26 

48 

76 
181 

""ie 

197 

20 

7 

116 

143 

i 

85 
1 

37 
3 

127 

3015 
168 

83 
244 

82 

■  155 

287 

125 

222 

62 

1,734 

431 

327 

89 

214 

83 

1,144 

566 
135 
295 
223 

1,219 

278 
282 
461 
241 

1,262 

351 
124 

92 

179 

746 

117 
78 
103 
150 
32 
165 
171 

816 

$ 

663 
490 
669 

2,733 
453 
680 

2,635 
826 
738 
112 

9,999 

1,642 
1.159 

703 
1,035 

509 

5,048 

1,513 

*4,307 

1,370 

3,397 

10,587 

1,831 
2,847 
1,575 
1,445 

7,698 

1,532 
1.325 
2,022 
1,142 

6,021 

1,016 

763 

836 

414 

91 

1,509 

1,250 

5,879 

$ 

23 
31 

$ 

51 

33 

3 

67 

s 

3,031 

893 

1,006 

3,819 

809 

1,597 

2,606 

1,231 

2,126 

751 

17,919 

3,701 
3,448 
9.59 
2,766 
1,935 

12,809 

4,993 
3,255 
3,217 
2,704 

14,169 

2,187 
1,174 
2,723 
2,166 

8,250 

2,186 
1,481 
2,182 
1,925 

7,774 

1,137 
849 
2,155 
1,094 
646 
1,140 
1,187 

8,108 

s 

5,572 
3,602 
3,393 
7,697 
1,772 
3,992 
.5,516 
3,818 
4,742 
3,869 

43,973 

6,839 
6,495 
1,065 
4,596 

2,857 

21,852 

6,573 
6,256 
5,652 
6,959 

25,440 

6,814 
4,740 
7,697 
4,303 

23,554 

8,517 
4,763 
5,396 
6,743 

25,419 

2,905 
2,387 
5,778 
5  732 
1,366 
5,970 
5,241 

29,379 

3,953 

3.309 

182 

537 

1 
2 
3 

17,726 
4,327 

28 

4 

5 

8,475 

111 
260 

"43 
414 

"29 
111 

9 

233 

18 

73 

12 

499 

23 

118 

140 
590 

838 

296 

131 

71 

1,093 

6 

15,179 

7 

8,234 
11,802 
10,910 

113,555 

17.588 

19,637 

3,653 

218 
814 
289 

9,302 
113 

3,540 

2,098 
219 

8 
9 
10 

23 

2 

14,191 
6,180 

43 
21 

205 

475 

96 

580 

146 

1,297 

277 
36 

332 
84 

729 

117 
74 
61 
18 

270 

10 
10 

4 

""67 
35 

126 

267 

4 

61,249 

41,019 
16,649 

23 

17 

1,591 

3,727 

380 

2,317 

1 

14,215 

325 
600 

925 

'  766 
700 

""65 

65 

"'i5 

15 

16 
6 

39 

83 
31 
15 
23 

152 

62 

31 

308 

50 

451 

56 
12 
11 
32 

'90 
201 

927 
7,108 

11,762 

10 

13,730 

7,136 

1,851 

22,727 

8 

27,644 

4 

99,527 

16,168 

1 

34,752 

9, 

56,814 

8 

19,467 
127,201 

16,555 

6,931 
6.931 

4 
1 

15,812 

9, 

11,408 

85 
306 

391 

220 
40 

8 

12,631 

4 

56,406 
6,626 

1 

4,926 
9,303 

... 

2 

8 

11,151 

372 
71 

339 
47 

1,089 

4 

2,428 
10,675 
10,422 

55,531 

5 
6 
7 

*  Including  S2,450  for  Baldwin  Bridge — proceeds  of  temporary  loan. 


59 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.   32). 


A.  1898 


Table    VL— F  I  N  A  N  C  I A  L    STATEMENT— 


TowTiship 
municipalities. 


UisburBements. — Lonttnued. 


Leeds  : 

1  Bastard,  etc 

2  Crosby,  N 

3  Crosby,  S 

4  Elizabethtown . . . 
6  Elmsley,  S 

6  Kitley 

7  Leeds,  etc.,  Front 

8  Leeds,  ecc,  Rear. 

9  Yonge,etc.,  Front 
10  Yonge,  etc.,  Rear 


Totals. 


Ghknville  : 

1  Augusta 

2  Edwardsburg. 

3  Gower,  S 

4  Oxford 

5  Wolford 


Totals . 


Ddndas  : 

1  Matilda 

2  Mountain 

3  Williamsburg. 

4  Winchester. . . 

Totals 


Stobmont : 

1  Cornwall 

2  Finch         .    . , 

3  Genabruck. . . . 

4  Roxborough.. . 


Totals 

Glengarkt : 

1  Charlottenburg . 

2  Kenyon 

3  Lancaster 

4  Lochiel 


Totals. 


Prkscott 


Alfred 

Caledonia 

Hawkesbury,  E. , 
Hawkesbury,  W, 

Longueuil , 

Plantagenet,  N. , 
Plantagenet,  S . . 


Totals. 


277 
350 


a  04 

Is 


nd 

a 

S 

.o 

Oi 

(D 

"OTJ 

b 
* 

(.1 

JS 

to 

p 

B  ^'  S 

a  h-  i' 


ana 
5  c 


C  m  I. 


225 
852 


163 

205 
355 

723 


59 
100 

T 


236 
172 


172 
118 


195 


195 


1,582 

234 
1,632 

3,448 


1,640 
1,640 


276 
500 


1,750 


800 
2,750 

6,076 


6,816 
500 

2,500 
150 

9,966 


19,823 


205   247 
1,060 


1,265 


247 
420 


420 


....  141 
'259' ""'i45 
270 


647 


246 
532 


618 
'338 

956 


600 
470 

20,893 


3,075 

9,467 

33,050 

1,670 

47,262 


1,328 
4,971 


230 


200 
132 


1,130 
1,692 


1,150 
674 
269 
628 


100 
250 
466 
845 

4,282 


265 

168 

7 

33 

13 

486 


1,166 

"'l38 
1.254 

2,558 


224 

488 

1,406 

66 

2,183 


612 
14 

78 


6,299 1   704 


947 


223 
206 

1,509 


133 
30 
19 

87 


<s.2 


O 


104 

28 
8' 

7b| 

5 


17,456' 
9,751 
8,313 

17,241 
3,333 
7,389 

15,032 
7,188 

10,949 
9.229 


734 
293 
355 
485 
994 

1,086 
147 

1,046 
853 

1,681 


490  105,8811  7,674 


3 
112 

33 
190 

24 

362 


16,222  1,366 
19,637 


107 
205 
360 

672 


220 

600 

315 

15 

1,150 


285 
1,228 

117 
1,351 

2,981 


292 

6 

3 

31 

7 

36 
68 

443 


3,604 

13,542 

6,028 


49 
649 
154 


59,031  2,218 


41,019 
14,449  2,200 

14,215 

27,644! 


97, 327  j  2,200 


16, 044 1 
34,447] 
56,814 
19,428 

126,733 


16,555 
14,601 
11,035 
12,622 

54,813 


6,386 

4.926 

9,303 

10,476 

2,428 

10,627 

10,072 

54,218 


124 
305 


39 
468 


1,211 

373 

9 

1,593 


240' 


675' 


48 
350 


1.313 


2,129 
1,295 


5,133 

380 

37 

1,999 

6 

465 

1,552 

12,996 


5,071 
4,602 
924 
1,513 
2,435 

14,545 


5,985 


34 
1,225 

7,244 


8,683 
3,447 
3,850 
4,956 

20,936 


6,649 

2,566 

5,753 

10,879 

25,847 


3,729 
3,855 
1,812 
4,220 
1,187 
6,704 
3,307 

24,814 


c5.| 

P    (3    OQ 

Eti  a)  o 

in 


CO 

^  a  g 


10,655 

*5,635 

1,798 

5,122 


12,073 
'  4*6i7 


2,082 
2,716 

t5,844 

33,862 


113 


267 
380 


16,090 


19,058 
19,327 


.1 


38,386 


460 
460 


6,931 
6,931 

53 
"266 


253 


liicluai-^  S^.>oi  m  I'p.  ascount.    t  Including  $l,b44  in  'i'p.  accoune. 


60 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1?598 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.— Continued. 


Assets.- 

-Continued. 

Liabilities 

fl 

cS 
"> 

Is 

O  p 

o 

<v 

.a 

O 

IS 

s 

g 
a 

1 
1 

$ 
182 

1 
1 

>> 

> 

S 
>. 
a 

3 

6 

oo 
« 

1 
1 

1^ 

«  a) 
,—.   a) 

$ 

23,000 

11,000 

4,500 

7,000 

0) 

5 

n 

■© 
o 

00 
£ 

0,5 

be  a 

® 

£  a 

°  V 

a 
(CO 

Si 
§; . 

0  OD  ao 
«8  S  H 

0  ®— 

m 

3 

§ 

a 
1 

i 

192 

J 
1 

3 
0 

$ 

25,085 

15,096 

5,108 

15,195 

795 

2.328 

5,000 

10,290 

17,932 

96,829 

8,540 
6,475 
959 
2,914 
1,912 

20,800 

30,638 
2,450 
2,031 

23,839 

58,958 

8,84S 
15,666 
19,280 
17,883 

61,677 
16,419 

$ 

1,500 
526 

$ 

27,091 

7,748 

$ 

1,876 
740 

17 

775 

9 

*  2,581 

1 

2,100  1  400 

9,670 
12,922 

608 
200 

5,000 

s 

2,000 
500 

5,260 

2.765 

230 

4 

1,874   670 
.  1,123 
7,406  1.880 

125 

5 

ft 

^ 

395 

""8,788 

53 

7 

3,134 

4,034 

13,041 

88,043 

28,608 

30,422 

973 

8,460 

3,089 

71,552 
14,405 

'  1,502 

9,433 

2,705 
2,488 
710 
1,979 
1,412 

9,294 
4  693 

1,022 

5,000 

15,666 

65,500 

1,348 
2,156 

8 

1^400 
12, 585 

3,000 
r,,000 

6,000 
500 

14,  500 

2,564 
2,746 

i;493 
31 

1,524 

8,420 

*1,544 
4,125 

2,635 
2,656 

'■"40 
410 

+  1^331 
249 
103 

1,683 

2,489 

'  2,208 
4,697 

1,893 
1,249 
1,033 
§7,605 

11, 780 
343 

9 
10 

2,100 

14,183 
3,200 

1 

3 



832 

4 

500 
5,791 

10,094 

2,450 

27 

653 

13,224 

3,005 
1,368 

"678 

5,051 

130 
1,000 

P» 

173 

"249 
422 

132 

900 

1,081 

4,032 
13,189 

b^ooi 

9,594 

24,787 

987 

987 

1 

2,200 

2,273 

' '  573 

2,488 

5,334 

4,732 

1,764 
5,916 

12, 412 

1,866 
2,157 

2^095 

714 

2,883 

1,945 

11,660 

8,600 
8,600 

? 

"600 
600 

3,000 
500 

'700 

4,200 

1^500 
"  70 
1,570 

285 
2,085 

10,790 

"""i95 

Jl,511 

6,512 

8,218 

44 
50 

94 

319 
4,370 

21,294 

11,807 

12,847 

5,361 

19,1.S8 

49,153 

6,746 

5,277 

6,376 

10,958 

29,357 

3,969 
8,867 
1,812 
25,795 
1  187 

'  1,548 
6,241 

1,545 

1,092 

1,418 

600 

4,655 

1,128 
1,086 

2,214 

900 
679 
525 
860 

49?> 

3 
4 

1 

8,400 

11,057 

15,175 

6,512 

32,744 

10,436 

2 
3 
4 

S,400 



12i766 
12,700 

2,113 

778 

'225 
1,003 

944 

'  4,613 
"  1,728 

7,285 

1 

"  1^285 
1,628 

567 
150 
100 
100 

"678 
137 

1,732 

3,892 
8,512 

28,823 

4,277 
4,155 
809 
20,830 
1,281 
9,434 
3,770 

44,556 

S 

4 

10,436 

1,130 

1 

4,000 
18,900 

700 
2,000 

312 

21 

333 

706 
462 

253 

738 

2,159 

463 
184 

2 
3 

4 

2,939 

145 

5 

2,160 
1,000 

5,860 

8,912   963 
4  678   flfiO 

6 
7 

22.900 

55,220 

5,289 

2,939 

792 

*  Due  Sinkinpr  Funfl.     +  Inclurling  $1,114  of  school  debenture  debt  of  Cardinol.     t  Payable  by  Cornwall 
Tp.  re  Deb.    debt.     §  Including  S6,931  unexpended  drainage  funds — bal.  of  Deb.  issued  and  sold. 


61 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  1898 


Table    VI.— F  I  N  AN  C  I  AL    STATEMENT- 


Receipts. 

Township 
municipalities. 

1 

oo 

s 

o 
1^ 

(C 

o 

B 
M 

a  a, 

c 

13 

$ 

1 

CD 

u 

s 

a 

> 

a 
1§ 

as 

50 

a 

sg 

^  S  u 
?  ©  K 

m 

_  IS  tao 

g    (D    SB 
OX!    fc, 

pq 

=  t 
**"  0 

E  ^  h  1 

°  i:  P 
-vB  ^\ 
S  c  ^, 

^  a  s^ 

g-o  0 

1 

Rdssell  : 
1  Cambridge 

10 
79? 

56 

S 

6,574 
10,662 
11,200 
10,300 

38,736 

8,036 
19,859 
9,014 
7,287 
6,019 
3,162 
5,427 
15,620 

$ 

242 
267 
197 
161 

867 

70 

473 

2 
1 

S 

400 
109 

s 
"160 

S 

4,364 

s 

33 

105 

3  Cumberland    .... 

29 

15 
18 

500 
■ 
1,009 

100 

1,2-^8 
5,592 

7 

Totals 

859' 

832 
107 
513 
1,240 
170 
151 
535 
801 
380 
172 

4,901 

423 
66 

174 

Caeleton  : 

1  Fitzroy 

3  Gloucester  

7 
32 

90 

25 

374 
240 
400 
100 

1,500 

153 

3  Goulbourn 

611          2 

125           2 

61         24 

46           4 

48'   

3081         62 

238 



106 

5  Huntley   

6  M  arch 

6 

96 

'"763 
84 

10 

7  Marlborough 

8  Nepean 

""200 

231 

133 

2,000 

325 
1,141 

9  Osgoode  

10  Torbolton 

14,932        341 
2,579 

622 
6 

761 

3 

1 
4 
5 

425 

108 
lOO 

Totals 

Ebnfeew  : 
1  Admaston    

91,935 

5,295 

890 

3,241 

3,614 

4,850 

486 

1,971 

2,690 

602 

403 

867 

3,712 

8,191 

1,562 

1,162 

1,533 
31 

"iio 

365 

61 

115 

444 
116 

1,206 

200 

3,478 

1,925 

2,039 
.^80 

2  Algona,  S   

3  Alice,  etc  

2 
16 

480 

27 

4  Bagot  and  B  

6  Bromley  

6  Brougham   

"l^396 

60 

453 

247 

""58 

786 

1,565 

261 

62 

98 

352 

973 

98 

494 

561 

648 

8,591 

491 
983 
316 
820 
3 
286 
418 
337 
383 
315 
168 
1,884 
475 

6,879 

46    l-32.'i 

43 

40 

10 
2 

8  Grattan 

409 

12 

9  Griffith,  etc  .    . 

12 

10  Hagarty,  etc 

11  Head,   etc 

48 

162 

9 

12  Horton,  etc . . 

75 

13  McNab  

181 

15          34 

103 

14  Pembroke 

5 

15  Petawawa    

40 

175 



75 

16  Radcliffe&  Ragl'n 

17  RolpL,  B.  &  W  . . 

18  Ross    

l,83l|        87 
1 876         -"^0 

27 

5,381 

949 

2,141 

367 
15 

39 

19  Sebastopol  

20  Stafford 

1 

4 

21 

9 

41 

21  Westmeath    

8,892       197 
3,390         fil 

40 

22  Wilberforce,  etc. . 

Totals  . . . 

63,896 

6,493 
•5  851 
2,234 
4,154 
1,104 
6,359 
3,013 
4,826 
1,447 
7,263 
7,072 
8,458 
1,813 

60,087 

2,225 

' ' ' 'ei 

66 
2 

89 

39 
340 

1,325 

650 

480 

1,290 

Lanark : 

2  Beckwith 

66 

3  Burgess,  N 



17 

64 

""69 

'    "l8 
13 

'  '231 
133 

2 
3 

""  16  .'.'.'.'.'. 

60 

54 

27 

6  Drummond 

300 

3 

7  Elmsley,  N 

7 

6 

3 

6 

9  Lavant 

3 

10  Montague 

11  Pakenham  

6 

5 

36 

356 

227 

13  Sherbrooke  S 

3'           "Ml 

Totals 

1      592 

4C 

757 

360 

1 

1 

447 

62 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPA  hlT  lES— Continued. 


Disbursements. 

'5 
o 

o 
E-" 

u  to  go 

5:*  S 

$ 

516 

766 

851 

1,100 

3,233 

661 

1,601 

467 

516 

619 

304 

494 

1,176 

1,438 

312 

7,587 

428 
247 
329 
272 
366 
125 
345 
421 
60 
67 
113 
318 
583 
160 
186 
338 
199 
365 
143 
213 
667 
266 

6,211 

397 
636 
204 
343 
162 
4891 
276 
811 
275 
465 
482 
618 
213 

4,871 

X 

o 
a 

1^ 

erg 

S.-H  a 

X  S  a 

31    S    U 

•g  0  bo 
0 

i 

1 

K 

1     0 

03 

0 

oa 

06 

§ 

0 

2  0 
"•J 

S  o-r 

CO 

0 

1    "i 

_fl.5  c3 

a, 

Hi 
< 

$ 
11,625 

$ 

32 


' '  319 

351 

17 
150 
139 

10 

"■'25 
120 

""20 
481 

■'■"23 
5 

"12 
3 

$ 

77 
174 
184 
356 

791 

153 
398 

98 
107 
142 

96 

58 
472 
392 

55 

1,970 

133 
23 

197 
86 

210 
34 
92 
83 
29 
88 
29 

120 

183 
69 

S 

1,047 
2,415 

2,747 
1,871 

'l38 

82 

2 

712 
1,512 
l,fi03 

909 

4,736 

2,472 

5,042 

2,458 

1,830 

966 

889 

1,347 

3,  .347 

3,951 

783 

23,085 

1,313 
190 

865 

405 

1,227 

'4C)4 
682 
70 
i73 
135 
920 

1,561 
247 
260 
328 
267 

1,219 
150 
529 

1,846 
935 

13,726 

1,::27! 

1,147 
429 
471 
1411 

1,581 1 
7791 

1,0381 
118 

1,186 

1,011 

1,537 
186, 

11,151 

8 

3,753 
5,918 
5,581 
4.305 

19,557 

2,695 
11,267 
4,929 
3,901 
3,320 
1,401 
2,446 
7,327 
7,514 
1,029 

45,829 

2,449 

377 

1,994 

1,743 

3,242 

273 

1,350 

1,664 

274 

677 

2,048 

4,311 

768 

820 

1,165 

1,272 

2,900 

534 

I.-'^IS 

.3,867 

1,291 

34,324 

4,016 
3,065 
1,625 
2,843 

590 
3,208 
1,395 
2,971 

907 
4,4S.7 
3,718 
5,061 
1,235 

36,021 

630 
8 

s 

$ 

1 

12,037 

21    23 

51    26 

791   50 

? 

11,482 

3 

12,211 

636 
1,273 

4 

47.355 

1 
8,080   138 

1 
1,840 

168 

110 

116 

17 

4 

1 

101 

121 

"""57 
49 
25 
16 
33 
68 
13 

382 

'""'35 

229 

47 

40 

"""26 

■■"ii 

9,035 

1 

22,523 
10,174 

2.435 

1,148 

1,013 

662 

162 

354 

2,104 

'"200 

550 
441 
309 

80 

2 
3 

9,054 

4 

6,380 

5 

3,469 

448 
591 
221 
852 

R 

6,566 

'  2!948 

■""75 
16 
12 

351 

44 

64 

7 

18,828 

8 

19,092 

1,837,   250 
586 

9 

2,857 

10 

107,978 
6,332 

12,141 
1,602 

3,398 

3,412 

80 

1 

959 

31  

? 

3,768 

298 
142 
565 

i6 

3 

5,105 
6,654 

419 

"  "17 

120 

4 

637 

g 

2,549 

431  .... 
355  

24 



'"23 

7 

3,35K 

8 

516 

58 
160 

q 

1,057 
1,050 
4,573 

51 

""54 

10 
11 

252 
585 
136 

14 
185 

*""l4 
""".31 

5 
103 

"'"is 

'"'18 

10,089 

],828 

13 

14 

1,514 

10    48 

6 

79 

15 

2,043 

6 

20 

8 

87 

8 

""i4 
1 

3 

8 

34 

69 
84 

153 
71 
58 

139 
93 

2,091 

207 
86 
71 

1291 
13; 

I80; 

113. 

148  j 
681 

130 ; 

153; 
145 

79| 

1,521 

16 

2,258 

50 

691 

62 

•14 

17 

6.760 

18 

1,072 

19 

9,680 

209 

?n 

9.711 

1,282 
337 

6,943 

405 
1,469 
159 
800' 
1901 
786| 
253 
390' 
237 

"'97 
530 



15, 

12 

91 

4,099 

141    30 

445   570 

7    20 
23  ....  1 

99 

78,612 
7,026 

67 

174 

7,301 

2,567 

5 
30 
10 

""'56 

122 

120 

15 

378 

' 

% 

5.094 

25 

4 

1,213 

23 

......     1 

'.'.'.'.■.'.'.. 

f\ 

7,0171 
3,440 
5,194 
1,846 

13 

9 

11 

18 
9 

6 
7 
8 
9 

7,589 
7,507 

672  i 
1,020 

160 

10 

n 

r,058 
2,311 

1,87S 
240 

8,496 



30 

12 

13 

69,162 

1 
145 

183 

63 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  i'apers  (JNo.  32). 


A.  18S8 


Table   VI.— F  I  N  AN  C  I  A  L    STATEMENT— 


Disbursements. — Continued.                                           Assets. 

Township 
muoicipalitieB. 

3 
0     . 

<=  a 

si 

eS  3 

P 

,   73 

_§  S 

is- 

0   0   to 

®  &  K 

T3  0  ® 
||§ 

m 

a-. 

1— <    CO    w 
fl    OD     2i 

■S  S  a 

m    ^    <C 

(— 1 

00 

3 

a 
1 

m 

a 

m 

u 
3 

s 

11,621 
12.037 

3 

6_ 

4 

""367 
120 

431 

446 

'"1I6 
805 

09 

£ 

u 

a 

<B 

X 

S 

4,278 

7,557 

10,311 

4,754 

3  g  i 

m 

S 

!02 

a'm 

c  c 

III 
=.2i 

< 

Rdsskll  : 
1  Cambridge 

S 

30 

223 

100 

152 

505 

144 

84 
100 

400 

"127 
527 
300 

184 

4.072 

S 

2  Clarence  

102,      650 

3  Cumberland i 

35!        43      11.175 

4  Russell  

144 

557 
741 

142    ^.m\ 

12,091 

46,924 

8,589 

22,523 

10,058 

8,249 

6,115 

3,300 

5,726 

18,828 

19,057 

2,807 

Totals 

463 

127 

462 

3 

93 

55 

6,116 

93 
72 
61 

161 
55 
20 

124 
78 
63 
10 

26,900 

Carleton  : 
1  Fitzroy 

6,023 

19,213 

900 

2.122 

2  Gloucester 

200 

... 
70 

150 

803 

3  Goulbourn 

4  Gower,  N 

156 

240 
100 

7,791 

5  Huntley  .    



2651        1,397 
109        1.578 

6  March    

4,"  660 

400 

7  Marlborough 

8  Nepean  

9  Osgoode 

10  Torbolton 

"765 
106 

1,141 
111 

1^456 
110 
100 

126 
"  1,080 

1,512 

■  500 
500 

640 

"11 
20 

33 

248 

1,025 

20 

840 

"'"35 
50 

2,375 
13,580 

2',584 

49,722 

2.400 

g^soo 

*15,000 

Totals 

Renfrew  : 
1   Admaston 

2,066       737 
40         84 

1 
105,312    2,666 

1 

6,2041       128 

4,803 

32,691 

2  Algona,  S 

... 

27 

959 
3,768 
?,014 
5,846 

608 
2,271 
3,358 

516 
1,057 
1,044 
4,005 
7,971 
1,522 
1,482 
1,983 
1  968 

1.064 

3  Alice,  e^c 

631 

91        2,395 

808        2,000 

29            568 

278,       1,S51 

1       1,907 

792 

4  Bagot  and  B 

88 
22 
36 

40 
35 

"'"'is 

128 

S 

'"37 

3 

49 

8 

t 

5  Bromley 

' 

6  Brougham 

7  Brudenell,  etc 



8  Gratton 



9  Griffith,  etc 

"220 

370 

80 

91 

'so 

526 

20 
300 

""170 

75 
10 
38 

"     '16 
134 



10  Hagarty,  etc 

11  Head,  etc 

12  Horton,  etc 

"6 

568 

2,118 

306 

32 

60 

290 

691 

76 

337 

788 

727 

'    7  33.1 

2,500 
172 
1,711 
1,376 
1,291 

295 

2,000 

13  McXab 

14  Pembroke 

1 

15  Petawawa 

1 

16  Radclifife  &  Rasr'D 

17  Rolph,  B.  &W.. 

2,386 

2,214 

425 

792 

866 

18  Ross 

36        6,069 
18'          996 
13        2.^43 

19  Seba^topol 



20  Stafford 

664 
125 

3,927 

351 

"244 
22 

1,008 

21  Westmeath 

167 
154 

825 

'""36 

78 

20 

36 

1 

1 

3 

!          5 

34 

119 

12 

345 

1 

8,923 
3,372 

71,279 

22  Wilbprforce,  etc. 

2,763 

30,104 

664 
178 
202 
463 
806 
905 
201 
819 
220 
2  474 

Totals 

295 

2,000 

Lanark  : 

1  Bathurst 

2  Beckwith 

3  Burgess,  N 

.... 

6,687       438 
6,425 1      876 
2,424        143 
1       4,708       386 
1,146         67 
6,817       200 
2,889       551 
4,870       324 
1,627,      219 
7  299       290 

780 
3,600 

4  Dalhousie,  etc. . . 

5  Darling 

200 

6  Drummond 

170 

3O0 

44 
4C 

7  Elmsley.  N 

8  Lanark 

9  Lavant   1 

1 

10  Montague 

100 
276 

26 
200 

11  Pakenham 

7  724        483        1.656 

12  Ramsay 

9,505    1,553 
1 980'      s.^1 

621 
626 

10,23 

1 



7,660 

13  Sherbrooke,  S... 

1 

Totals 

376 

170 

300 

310 

63,301 

'   5,861 

1 

1 

12,240 

Omitted  in  1895. 


t  Omitting  $65  overstated  in  1895. 
64 


'61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A,  189,8 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.— Continued. 


Assets. - 

-  Continued. 

Liabilities. 

School  lands  and 
buildings, 

>> 

u 

D 

O 

§ 
1 
1 

i 

1 

a: 

OS 

"3 

2 

m 
cS 

>>          - 
S          « 

0               0 
0              h^ 

a> 

u 
S 

s  § 

so 

£ 

a 
% 

"3 
0 

0 

txa 
Q 

:S  ® 
< 

a 

1-% 

a  c8 

"  m     . 

0    (D    T 

=0  s  ^ 
a  c-fe 

e«  X  e 

8 

a 

1 

1 

.2 

3 

■S 

9.956 
7,902 
4.382 
7,563 

29,803 

5,158 

21,745 

1  461 

$ 

s 

250 
800 

220 

607 

$ 

4.7521 

8,964 

10,6  IS 

6,174 

30,508 

12.769 

23,666 

9,207 

5,927 

3,062 

3,087 

3,615 

30,299 

22,335 

2,634 

116,601 

2,928 

1,564 

702 

2,986 

S    1     s 

880 1    1,989 
1,2.56     4,104 
1,34.>     2.3691 

900 

1 

9001 

S 

472 

535 

400 

1,6051 

3,012 
4,266 

s 

4,364 
998 

S 
761 

1,138 
109 

8 
352 

"270 
220 

842 

50 
400 

460 

48 
97 

1 
2 
3 

5,500 

1,300 
2,360 

800 
3,650 

400 
3,000 
1.400 

1 

827 

'•3424 
3,124 

1,370 

4,849 

1,935 

1,840 

1,001 

638 

2,2041 

365 1 

473 

2,055 

10,517 

3,173 
10, 531 

1,228 

1 
6,590 

2,io6 

§5651 
1,326 

520 

1,767 

'2^674 

4 

1 
2 

"636 

1,717 

600 
100 

3.003      4 

3,037      5 

874      6 

1   1.000 

509 

400 
4,145 
3,300 

18, 095 
400 

710 

231 

133 

6,000 

307 

1 1,086 

125 

300 

2,873 

100 
17 

87 
385 

1,721      7 

1,801 

'"242 

1 

10,499 

1,270 
284 
345 

6,955 

222 

1,680 

4,080 
319 

14,055     8 

18,221      9 

2,222    10 

71,497| 

3,4^39      1 
866     2 

5,555 

6,000 

5,500 

23,070 
1,516 

... 

9,235 

553 

"480 

10,082 

6,000 

9,738 

500 

563 1 

2 
16 

71 

1 .. .. 

6 

i20 

93 

9281     3 

500 
1,000 

S8f)'     4 

3,808 

1,194 

330 

500 

1,524'     5 
805 1     6 

597 
4,479 
5,113 

792 
8,120 
1,573 
7,489 
4,087 
3,447 
32 
2,446 
2,554 
2,116 

868 

1,203 

16.338 

3,671 

76,913 

2,482 
5.254 
1.145 
6.749 
1,133 
1,10,5 
1,152 
1,443 
43! 

113 

285 
661 
250 

186 

6 

"56 
150 

'  260 
178 
510 

"476 
223 

1,700|      630 
2,800       400 

1,211 
156 
249 

1,496:     7 

1,2261     8 

555      9 

409 

3,500 

1,100' 

750 
181 
898 
714 

2,218 

2,000 

"600 
550 

1,310 

80 

620 

"  240 
800 

1,800 

398 

7,316    10 
7811  11 

3,850,   1.360 

...    1      500 

1  708!  12 

2,202    13 
970;  14 

1          795'  15 

1,600 

250 

241        139 

i75 

1991   1,531 

2,200;  16 

,       2,181'  17 

800    18 

50 
1,000 

3501   1  368 

1    

157 
511 

157    19 

171 

i 

4,104 
250 

1 
10,417 

117 

799'  20 

14,650 

900 
181 

7,191 

6O0 

§600 

80C 

50C 

6C 

"40c 
30C 



290 













'       4  104i  9A 

860    1,239 

8,069  11,741:       2,000 

1 
1 

352 
2,911 

2,701 
37,938 

92 

29,700 

1,800 

1,000 

1 

1 

1 

i 

33 

25 

58 

s 

6,400 

4 

'"57 

1 

230 

1        59 

"'239 
155 

405 

'     ^ 

550 

609      6 

700 

'          757      7 

2391     8 

155 
2.124 
3,910 

45a 

9 

1,00c 

1,000 

80C 

6,06C 









4.764 

2,539 

10,634 

957 

39,796 

i    1,824 

1        4.50 

300 
3,800 

1 

10 

lie 

10.^ 
158 

1,024 

n 

19 

60rfl  IS 

5,400 

1 

2,714 

4,100 

1 

650 



930 

1       9, 31 J 

*Includinsr  §2,325  payable  by  Hintonburgh  as  share  of  school  Deb.  debt, 
hall.    5^  Including  8200  omitted  in  1895.     §  Not  previously  reported. 
5  B.I.  (5)  65 


t  On  account  of  new  town 


61  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Table   VI.— FI  N  A  NCI  AL 

STATEMENT— 

Receipts. 

Township 
municipalities. 

i 

00 

£ 
E 

1 

ID 
X 

a-g 

'.§  " 

'3 

s 

i 

a 

<D 
u 

s 

51 

1 

g 

u 

i 

<D 

T3 

a 

08  "C 

Ol 
<D 

u 

a 
1— 1 

s 

P5 

<0 

a 

0  rr 

0  0 

§1 
III 

u 

«2 

"O  !?  bo 

^  S.2 

t  a?  !- 

"O  5  a. 
lis 

o'C  0 

S 

1 

c 
s 

i 

Victoria  : 
1  Bexley 

•S 

777 

50 

172 

" "  '431 

■■"177 

2,573 

6,510 

488 

590 

11,  768 

366 
15 

120 

135 
2,524 

555 
55 

3,003 
1,915 
1,174 

s 

5 

..." 

95 
43 

2 

6 

1 

162 

20 

12 

.S 

"800 

s 

S 
224 

3  Dalton          

"'1,022 

300 
13 

6 

4  Eldon 

5  Emily 

10.278!      207 
9,487    ... 

54'    1,150 
19,   3,400 

"322'    ""i65 
187'   3,000 

49 

102 

52 
2 

7,707 
2,883 
21,649 
16,174 
4,855 
8,228 

87,353 

7,692 

51 
30 

""ii7 

456 

61 

8  MaripMa 

9  Ops 

897 

1,266 
700 

100 



775 
t  1,430 

26 

Totals 

Petebborocgh  : 
1  Asphodel 

745 
64 

7,715 

3,235 

800 

100 

3,473 

4,509 

650 

2,200 

200 

600 

237 

3  Burleigh 

1,751 
2,053 
6,791 
5,640 
2«.5.^ 

187 

12 

2 

8  Oalway,  etc 

9  Harvey 

10  Monaghan,  N. . . . 

112        1.399 
195'        2  672 

::::;::: 

10 

24 
1,012 

::::     

2 

767 
2,834 
4,248 

11,926 

53 

71 

864 

169 

62 

65 

113 

104 

1,501 

47 

176 

287 

1,366 

'"""66 

""eis 

91 
445 

i.iio 

2,654 
11,447 
10,227 

59,688 

927 
1,092 
5,806 
1,270 
1,215 
3,334 
1,083 

42 

"  i62 

204 

19 

"    '43 
40 

"21 
16 

"    "53 

1 

76 

'  35 



100 

41 

12  Smith     

3 

Totals 

Halirurton  : 

99 

4,686 

592 
176 

2  Cardiff 

'""".9 

200 

"""400 

4 

3  Dysart,  etc   

4  Glamorgan 

223 

48 
6 

130 

79 

'45 

7  TVIonmouth  . 

375 

2,953 
1,310 

1   .... 

9  Stanhope,  etc 

Totals  

Hastings  : 

1  Bangor,  etc 

2  Carlow 

!          40 

13 

18,990       179 
825!          24 



9 

45 

254 

350 
110 

400 

1,000 
300 

1,667 

1,743 

3,585 

2,682 

9.471 

6,236 

1.026 

10,736 

7,584 

1,111 

2,803 

11,172 

1.5.615 



220 

3  DiiDgannon 

4 

57 

136 

460 

376 

25 
300 
231 

336 

5  Faraday       

6  Hungerford 

7  Huntingdon 

6 

213 

167 1          5 

315 

28 

275 

143 
49 

183 

227 

9  Madoc' 

'""38 

19 

2,800 

'""425 
250 

300 

1,398 
351 

200 

12  Monteagle,  etc. . . 

71 

70 

130 

TOO 



286 

1,022 
2,336 

,   2,150 

351 

14  Sidney  

15  Thurlow 

675 

35'      19,459 

15 

644 

16  Tudor  &  Cashel. . 

47        2,  .555'        71 
1,112       17.0,511       1.51 

300 

618 

17  Tyendiuaga 

18  Wollaston 

"  "io 

74 

23 

568 

36 
5,430 

l,655l 

271 

Totals 

116,976 

1 
1,383 

1 

42 

7,174 

3,585 

300 

♦  7,624 

*  Including  $5,817  in  County  grants. 


t  Including  S950,  County  grant. 

66 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189S 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.— Continued. 


Disbursements. 

t 

o 
m 

u 

'2  c 

CJ  00  00 

rt  C  a 
MS 

< 

329 
220 
172 
644 
672 
441 
247 
1,001 
804 
391 
542 

5,523 

453 
388 
297 
275 
390 
370 
248 
192 
322 
238 
498 
483 

4,152 

181 
210 
451 
174 
182 
346 
165 
261 
206 

2,176 

127 
234 
203 
480 
213 
664 
491 
264 
688 
504 
292 
332 
600 
8.88 
740 
222 
989 
272 

8,203 

ai 

to. 

s 

1 

s 

12 

"■"99 
8 
5 

18 
100 

21 
730 

32 

1,025 

"'"45 
90 

■ "  "37 

""71 

3 

246 

'"333 

10 



■■■'lo 

5 

358 

""28 

'4 

"100 

50 

270 

10 

8 

45 

515 

X  0  S 
a>  S  E 

:g  0  bL 

0 

is 

00 

11 

-J 

«  S 

s  = 
is 

'5 

PQ 

HI 
"o 

b 
e3 

0 

■St 

|a-g 

CO 

ao  ^^ 
a   h 
©  0 
u  «*.• 

>> 

a 
s 

6 

0 

0  . 

j=  a 

0  c 

c  '"•^ 

gc-g 
p  ?  *" 

0-1 

0 
& 

tc 
ca 

a 

Q 

a  a  S 

3  0/  <~ 

-«  >  'O 

a.S  05 
5o 

§1 

K  S  ® 

111 

s 

4,072 

2,775 

■S 

120 

39 

31 

125 

124 

197 

61 

209 

182 

102 

203 

1,393 

90 

71 

24 

125 

103 

34 

114 

40 

41 

73 

96 

94 

905 

76 

50 
256 
106 

4^^ 
116 

37 
118 

60 

867 

31 

45 

111 

127 

171 

205 

95 

72 

184 

35 

69 

54 

224 

299 

318 

158 

155 

55 

2,408 

640 

83 

258 

1,771 

747 

816 

256 

2,558 

3,624 

524 

963 

12,240 

931 

795 

116 

273 

1,072 

992 

307 

55 

557 

695 

2,940 

2,311 

11,044 

128 

24 

1,036 

1.S5 

108 

537 

66 

288 

266 

2,588 

177 
322 
240 
308 
221 
793 
284 
327 
592 
603 
231 
298 
370 
1,126 
1,464 
460 
1,046 
440 

9,302 

S 

30 
8 

63 

23 

$ 

506 

301 

257 

2,737 

3,304 

3,188 

482 

5,621 

5,061 

951 

2,488 

24,796 

2,440 

937 

218 

205 

4,475 

1,.332 

1,013 

313 

581 

1,445 

4,815 

4,057 

21,831 

84 
162 
1,244 
230 
370 
437 
571 
353 
76 

3.527 

155 

1.36 

220 

1,157 

117 

3,539 

3,376 

78 

3,413 

,366 

78 

175 

4,027 

9,440 

8,665 

8^297 
116 

45.355 

S 

993 
1,985 

444 
2,615 
4,208 
2,752 
1,110 
7,820 
4,273 
2,235 
2,005 

30,440 

2,991 

1,923 

624 

1,009 

2,430 

2,305 

950 

846 

1,123 

$ 

116 

1 
2^ 

1,352 

12,858 
13,()82 

11 

28 

192 

2 

" ' "i87 

223 

156 

15 

487 

' "  'i66 

""bisoo 

7,832 

::;;.:::  ::::: 

f, 

3,577 

""'2^300 

269 


3,056 

1,006 

T 

s 

28,308 

'270 
308 

60 

546 

24,808 
7,698 
8,845 

115,807 

8,142 

56 
61 
57 

530 

242 
162 

1,554 

56 

91 

9 

""il6 

160 

27 

8 

70 

14 

280 

506 

1,337 

""465 
146 

1,899 

171 

3,500 

9 
10 
11 

5,411 

'  i62 
50 

24 

6 

112 

2 

4,258 
2,388 



3 
4 

9,915 

f\ 

6,207 

a 

2,910 

7 

1,521 

s 

2,893 

"247 
6 

465 

92 

5 

39 

30 

308 

<> 

4,575 

1,285 
5,211 
4,475 

25,202 

491 
738 

2,370 
585 
667 

1,739 
478 

1,248 
587 

8,903 

915 
813 
1,580 
.3,036 
1,705 
4,  .^53 

10 

14,410 

11 

14,641 

12' 

77,271 
1,175 

171 

1 

1,367 

50 

0 

7,345 

50    44 
50     5 
70    17 

3 

1,488 
1,469 

4 

3,417 
1,584 

?0 
46 

61 

106 

52 

43 

328 

'94 
14 
148 
178 
2 
142 
208 

ft 

7 

3,0H6 

H 

1,467 

32 

318 
5 

9. 

22,378 

1,546 

1 

2,173 

i 

2,870 

""25 

15 
5 

•^ 

5,369 

3,337 

10.189 

8 

4. 
5 

6,599 
1,396 

:::■; 


'""50 
63 

1,817 

285 

4,120 

4,656 

949 

2,328 

8,720 

6,561 

7,086 

2,070 

6,.386 

916 

58,296 

7 

8 

15,302 
9,198 

9 
10 

1,652 
3,605 

11 

!*> 

14,765 

58 
34 

267 
940 
929 
20 
448 

3,390 

13 

19,866 
20,253 

14 

15 

3,291 

16 

19,205 

25 

14 
18 

262 

17 

1,972 

^f^ 

142,588 

8 

67 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A. 1898 


Table   VI.— FIN  AN  CI  AL    STATEMENT— 


Township 
municipalities. 


'Victoria  : 

1  Bexley    . . . . 

2  Garden 

3  Dalton    

4  Eldon    

^  Emily 

6  Fenelon 

7  Laxton,  etc 

8  Mariposa . . . 

9  Ops ... .    . . . 

10  Somerville. . 

11  Verulam  . . . 


Totals.. - 
Petebborough  ; 


Asphodel . 
Be'mont,  etc.. , 

Burleigh 

Chandos  

Douro 

Dummer 

Ennismore 

8  Gal  way,  etc. . , 

9  Harvey 

10  Monaghan,  N. 

11  Otonabee 

12  Smith   


Totals  

Haliburton  : 

1  Anfeon,  etc.   . . . 

2  Cardiff   

3  Dysart,  etc 

4  Glamorgan  . . . . 

5  L'ltterworth . . . 

6  Minden        - . . . 

7  Monmouth  . . . . 

8  Snowdon    

9  Stanhope,  etc.. 


Totals 

Hastings  : 

1  Bingor,  etc 

2  Carlow 

3  Uungannon 

4  Elzevir,  etc 

5  Faraday  

6  Hungerford. ..... 

7  Huntingdon 

8  Limerick 

9  Madoc 

10  Marmora  &  Lake 

11  Mayo         

12  Monteagle,  etc. . . 

13  Rawdon 

14  Sidney 

1.5  Thurlow 

16  Tudor  and  Cashel 

17  Tyendinaga 

18  VVoUaston 


Disbursements. — Continued, 


88 


100 


610, 
673 


201 
1,218 


1,271 


96 
171 


1,519 


249 
90 


20 
46, 


96 


®  u  aj  ^  S  , 


^    ^  1    fl    3D    fc- 

(E  a.'  g  (c  s 


I  a  ^  -^ 

s  5;  a 


2  5^ 


1.000 


500 


1,981 

300 

92 


1,200 
700 


420 

12 


883 


251 
308 
336 
521 


1,000    4,773 

I 


393 

..I  300 
97  2,150 
280 
600 


34 


768 
86 


34 


400 


2,831 

286 
134 
200 

"  72 
40 
8 
1 
33 
62 
49 


490 


160' 
32, 


321 


85' 
17 


412 


213 

ioo 

45 
153 


361 


100 


107 

600 

63 


Totals  j   1,742 


3,730 


885 
42 


591 


11 


50 


319 


425 1 


744 


30 

12 

138 

7 

71 
57 
30 
41' 
64 
•    •'  6| 

49  I 

1,785    2,4261 
1841 
I 


59 


58 


544 
237 


S 


111 
76 
42 
39 


183 
8 
1 
23 
363 
92    1,249 


2,101 

17 

584 

221 

158 

105 

285 

21 

11 

28 

6 

2 

43 

1,621 


17 
74 
80 

7 

69 

70 

248 

9 


196 
*302 

12 
107 

33 
115 

77 
348 
189 


s 


136 
500 


24 
1241 

5| 
86 

14 

33 1 

151. 


1' 
39 
23 

207- 

193 

67i 


3,933 

2,746 

1,215 

12,858 

13,286 

7,8.32 

3,451 

21,295 

17,888 

7,475 

7,777 


Assets. 


139 

29 

137 

396 

'123 
7,013 
6,920 
223 
1,068 


99,759  16,048 


7,968 
5,388 
4,217 
2,331 
9,724 
5,770 
2,775 
1,486 
2.893 
4,675 
14,060 
12,002 

73,189 

1,088 
1,251 
6,039 
1,488 
1,469 
3,368 
1,549 
2,688 
1,308 


174 

23 

41 

57 

191 

437 

135 

35 


350 
2,639 

4,082 

87 

116 

1,306 


49 

35 

378 

1591 


1,4171 

2,1081 

2,786- 

5,369;. 

3,l9l! 

10,189j 
6,362' 
1,154 

14,071' 
9,169 
1,619 
3,212 

14,7651. 

19,866  . 

20,190; 
3.2.54' 

18,043' 
1,940 


129 
65 
84 


146 

'  237 

242 

1,231 

29 

33 

393 


63 

37 

1,162 

32 


3  (E  O 

j^  e  — 


3,771 

796 

389 

5,200 

85 

5,088 

2,055 

3,245 

337 

7,331 

6,226 

34,623 

414 
3,928 
l,087l 
1,931 1 
5781 
645' 
2,948! 
1,687 
2,157 
2,316 
6,885 
3,620 


669 
2.038' 
3,750 
2,082' 
1,029 
3,780 
1,978 
3,079 
1,4461 


574]  20,248|  2,130,  19,851- 


3,186 
1,672 
1,971' 
1,353 
1,590 
7,542 
3,830i 
1,752 
9.2771 
3,480: 
2,608, 
3,2111 
9,1351 
11,496  i 
8,7Cl| 
3,295' 
3,539 
1,900] 


50; 


3,309J   3,187J   1,909|   138.705    .^  S83I     79.5381 


490 


3;  o 

s  a. 

S   ^-, 

®  s  a 


527 


4,505 


2,415 
410 

8,347 

1,782 


28,196,       1,782 


3,500 


3,500 


53 


53 


16 


195 


211 


*  Including  $287  ex-treasurer's  deficit. 


68 


1>1   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIES.— Continwcd. 


Assets. 

—Continued. 

Liabilities. 

T3 

a 

c3 

00      . 

T3  « 

C  tie 
_c8  g 

o  S 
02 

O 

s 
o 

3 

cs 
1 

a 
p 
0 
0 

a3 

1 

0 

s 
s 

U 

3 

•S 
7,000 

ai 
S> 

3 

a 

XI 

•a 
0 
m 

m 

0} 

3 

a  » 
Q 

m 

P 

<< 

§  ><  c 

0-- 

31 

a 
u 

10 

■5 

'.3 
■2 

"ca 

I 

$ 

10,324 

1,441 

325 

,     16,44i 

3,304 

4,263 

6,694 

15,341 

9,215 

12,584 

7,750 

87,687 

5,372 
4,f86 
4,093 
2  042 
883 
809 
2,708 
1,041 
2,294 
2,175 
6,748 
3,731 

35,782 

1,448 
1.577 
3,327 
1,388 
639 
4,387 
1.633 
3,434 
1,306 

19,139 

2,381 
2,426 
3.137 
1,307 
1,927 
7,710 
3,834 
9101 

48, 365 1 
5,501 
2,230 
3,143 
9,6f5 

11,585 

6,82V 

2,957 

783 

1,940 

116,628 

3,700 

S 

220 
30 

8 

255 
256 

s 

8,575 

1,111 

526 

5,727 

3,981 

5  088 

6,683 

•    14,653 

13,527 

13,369 

8,024 

81,264 

8,776 
5.936 
3,117 
1,988 
1,269 
1,242 
6,733 
1,722 
2,207 
5,923 
10,841 
6,259 

56,013 

1.144 
2,154 
5,097 
2.323 
1,304 
3,829 
2,066 
3,756 
1,656 

23,329 

3,315 
2,057 
2,477 
2,453 
1,7.52 

25,542 
4,567 
1.994 

15,876 
5,409 
2,641 
4,052 
9,135 

13,896 

10,764 
3,332 
5  556 

$ 
326 
301 
157 

3^304 
1,871 

4.35 
5,369 
3,307 

686 
1,880 

17, 630 

"'656 
119 
120 

'  m 

136 

449 

1,306 

4,725 

3,6.55 

12,052 

432 
874 
446 
118 

2,106 
748 

1,462 
81 

6,267 

147 
127 
132 
289 
110 
3,338 

s 

1,623 
311 
128 

1,789 

1^979 
1,259 
147 
48 
1.678 
3,361 

12,323 

1,445 

625 

1,104 

"  29 

1,000 

905 

958 

"473 
36 

6,575 

890 
912 

2,053 
508 
515 

1,674 
733 

1,379 
909 

9,573 

1,511 
678 

1,315 
693 

1,004 

2  9Q7 

1,100 
800 

275 

% 

"29 

40 
400 

'  '400 

"791 

1 
3 

1 

3 

13,000    1,235 

1 

22 
"13 

4 

5 

5,000 

1 

6 

41350 

1,000 

570 

320 

6,490 

1,700 

"450 

"500 
ifin 

45 

5,270 

5,826 

4,706 

*1,985 

1,539 

:::::::: 

1    2' 400 

6,634 
5,270 

7 

8 

'     '596 

» 

2,830 

10,000 

35,000 
666 

• 

220 
659 

2,539 

1,540 

175 
40 

818 

200 
GO 

822 

10 

1,850 

7,975 

3,166 

1,930 

799 

683 
720 

12,179 

11 

6,530 

35 

680 
700 

1 

2 

1,810 

3 
4 

ft 

6 

3  200       450 

7 

8 

1        50 

423 
'  'i69 

24 
620 

440 
91 

381 
40 

4,607 
"  "33 

9 

2,360    1,247 
1    3.606 

158 

10 

11 

12- 

5,560 

8,163 

8,230 

388 

41 

241 
275 

666 


7,890 
558 

158 

1,810 

2,024 
"200 

1 
2 

400 
338 

3 

48 
6 

48 

" ■ '488 
152 
173 
133 

1,027 

373 
336 
280 

"543 

400 

54 

113 

" "  '375 

464. 

700 

50 

4 

5 

r 

119 

""420 
183 

2,018 

.. 

6 

7 

299 
51 

1,295 

270 

t422 
300 

8 

!V 

254 

350 

110 

350 

25 

""50 

1 



875 
1,060 

300 

270 
1,514 

900 

300 

2 

800 

4 

5 

15,000 

3,6r!6 

500 

231 

6 

1,0431  1,8.37 
90       707 

2,904    3,971 

1,543 

73     1.303 

7 

8 

650 
1,900 

4,718 

37,200 

3,583 

390 

300 

2,050 

1,400 

1,089 

300 

2,901 

9 
10 

11 

'. . .' ...  1 

253 

165 
4,953 
8  349 

l,978j 

2,612 
1,836 

12 
13 

1,000 
2,000 

1,400 

1 

14 

4,9691      558 
451    2.365 

1,300 

15 

37,200 

121 
300 

187 

13.250 

26 

477 
201 

4,386 

16 

1,000 

1 

L0,900 

855 

8,218 

17 

2,290 
17,290:i 

5  222  1       lini    1  449I 

18 

120,040  : 

1 
?8,793S 

1,595 

2,389 

600 

8.415 

Including  •'§1,930,  Havelock's  share  of  school  deb's,     t  Including  $252  of  ex  treasurer's  securities. 

69 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A. 1898 


Table    VI.-F  I  N  A  NC  I  A  L    ST  A 

TEMENT- 

1 

Receipts. 

Township 
municipalities. 

in 

Oi 
CO 

1-1 

o 

U 

§ 
1 
CQ 

m 
S) 

y. 

S5 
SI 

2  " 
"3 

s 

$ 

1,562 
1,044 
3,663 
2,039 
1,553 
1,949 
3,180 
2,089 
1,461 
1,525 
604 
1,192 
2,484 
1,753 
2,244 

28,342 

1,953 

862 

1,227 

852 

881 

1,866 

2,862 

1,829 

472 

777 

1,321 

1,669 

2,056 

1,132 

2,661 

1,554 

1,613 

25,587 

2,009 
272 
869 
560 

1,319 

3,287 
515 
875 

1,317 
990 

12,013 

a 

s 

6 

a; 

£  a 

s 
1 

» > 

fc;T3 

C 
h-l 

^1 

11 
".S 

0 

13 

S 

S. 

"cS 

Borrowed  for 
current  expenses. 

Borrowed  on 
debentures 
for  schools. 

a  «  to 
Sa  2 

5    3)13 

ill 

Borrowed  on 
debentures  for 
other  purposes. 

CO 

§ 

IB 

MUSKOKA  : 
1  Brunei    

•S 

194 
276 

32 
714 
294 
501 
225 
280 
348 
209 

98 

167 

8 

414 

380 

4,140 

543 

653 

9 

530 

861 

146 

89 

25 

% 

2 


"    "37 
54 
27 
57 
34 
37 

S 

s 

,? 

S 

S 

S 

2  Cardwell 

2 
""24 

150 
650 

32 

241 

111 

42 

87 

313 

3  Chafifey. 

625 

4  Draper 

250       200 
1 



5  McLean  &  Ridcut 

6  Macaulay 

300 

7  Med  or  a  &  Wood. 

4 
10 

766 

8'Monck 

9  Morrison    ....    . . 

6 

6 

•  •    •  ■  • 

""ioo 

200 

150 

150 
631 

;::::;  :::::::; 

36 
64 
16 
62 
25 
56 
4 

1,089 

77 
12 
10 

8 

10  Muskoka 

' " '460 

11  Oakley 

12  Ryde 

13  Stephenson 

58 
4 
2 

312 

4 
213 

42 
141 

24 

97 
238 

44 

28 

44 

350 

14  Stisfed 

:;::.". 

15  Watt 

5 
73 

4 

56 

191 
641 

Totals 

2,306 

2,100 

P-AKRT  Sound  : 
1  Armour 

2  Chapman 

3  Christie 

14 
14 

4  Foley 

5  Hagerman 

6  Himsworth,  N..  , 

7  Himsworth,  S... 

18 

4 



30 

71 

77 

132 

8  Humphrey 

36 

800 

9  Joly 

50 
300 
300 

10  McDougall 

273 
270 

408 

127 

4 

593 

482 
288 

5,301 

■■■"66 

42 

104 

516 

666 

68 

83 

46 

29 

1,620 

'"23 

39 

23 

45 

147 

11  McKellar 

89 
209 

12  McMurrich 

"i 

. 

13  Machar 

100 
3:«) 
255 

70 

14  Nipissing 

15  Perry 

5 





4 

16  Ryerson 

17  Strong 

1,080 

229 
220 

17 
104 

9 



223 

Totals 

5 

1,339 
223 

800 

1,012 

Nipissing  : 
1  Bonfield 

2  Caldwell 

3  Calvin 

235 

15 

4  Cameron 

5 
"   "25 

5  Ferris 

4 

500 

63 

6  McKim 

7 

7  Mattawan 

108 

8  Papineau 

""'i32 

7 



*9  Springer 

Widdifield 

600 

Totals 

611 

23 

4 

1,666 

78 

Financial  year  began  20th  March,  date  of  Provincial  audit. 


70 


1   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32;>. 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.— Continued. 


Disbursements . 

4 

33 

V.  a 
.  a  o 

O  00  OT 

»S  S 

O  es  O 
< 

1 

Is-g 

»  =  S 

0 

T3 

a  X 

eS  <c 

So 
X 

389 
112 
489 
851 
390 
820 
601 
355 
284 
433 
295 
223 
626 
351 
225 

6,443 

157 
371 

38 
125 

86 
339 
183 
295 

43 

.   375 

751 

282 

171 

48 
119 
110 
342 

3,835 

319 

194 

48 

14 

13 

653 

11 

2 

454 

240 

1,948 

7! 

0 

c  0 
'3 

CQ 

a 

"o 

i 

u 

ID 

0  Q  (D 

0  >^  ^- 

Q,  0  ce 

I- 
>> 

fl 

u 

ft 

0 

0  . 
j=  a 
S  2 

S  §  ® 

s 

930 

588 
2,101 
1,339 

791 
1,315 
2,572 

958 
1,566 
1,101 

313 

in 

-2 

0 

a 
(3 

•? 

S  0  s 

S  (U  c 
CQ 

111 

< 

1,758 
1,504 
6,211 
3,351 
1,967 
2,864 

271 
177 
63.S 
252 
211 
359 
461 
285 
122 
281 
171 
214 
296 
356 
219 

4,308 

302 
240 
86 
207 
198 
202 
320 
376 
192 
228 
216 
256 
197 
1?6 
205 
223 
265 

3,897 

361 
97 
133 
117 
493 
344 
18 
166 
147 
312 

2,188 

$ 

5 

"12 
37 

6 

9 

8 

5 
82 

'  "64 

8 

95 
2 

■"■■9 

9 

5 

192 

12 
3 

■■■■4 

'"97 
32 

148 

55 
45 
190 
79 
63 
130 
177 
93 
40 
40 
38 
59 
93 
68 
94 

1,264 

103 

134 
38 
78 
87 
46 
89 

126 
50 
61 

104 
50 
45 
56 

108 
81 
52 

1,308 

122 
71 
48 
16 

192 

89 

26 

5 

152 
57 

7<8 

•S 

s 

S 

% 

1 

1 

51 

25 

2 
3 

4 

47 

63 

10 

190 

3 

5 

11 
15 

6 

4,479 
2,413 
2,088 

7 

8 

5 
27 
17 
5 
5 
21 
12 

118 

27 

7 

20 

9 

1,904 
868 

10 

11 
1^ 

1,571 
4,028 
2,227 
2,826 

39,059 

2,581 
1  740 

*"io5 

■'■■4 

707 
1,725 
1,145 
1,487 

18,6?8 

1,027 

575 

796 

626 

733 

1,015 

2,125 

1,552 

216 

80 

446 

1,226 

1,454 

806 

2,282 

1,008 

1,093 

17,060 

1,485 
128 
842 
355 
682 

1,350 
394 
778 
754 
300 

7,068 

43 

43 

375 

60 

252 

712 

13 

14 

152 

17 
3.39 

15 
1 

42 

299 

"42 
14 

8 

""34 

5 

n 

f, 

1,302 

3 

1,545 
1,766 
2,157 

!    41 1 

4 

80 
6 

77 
6 
1 
3 
9 

14 

28 

20 

3 

5 



6 

3,264 
2,811 



7 

8 

654 

20 

33 

3 

q 

1,350 
2,003 
2,325 
2,377 
1  516 

i« 

11 

13 

"383 

822 

40 
15 

14 
14 
23 

8 

265 

3 

5 
9 

14 

3,660 
2,036 
2,141 

35,228 

2,470 
558 

15 

16 

17 

202 

1 

f, 

1,161 
669 

8 

4 

2,402 

3,985 

691 

""35 
90 

72 
10 

124 
42 



5 

6 

7 

958 

8 

2,102 
1,019 

16,015 

19 

9 

10 

118 

166 





71 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  18V  8 


Tablh  VI.— financial  STATEMENT- 


Township 
municipalities. 


McSKOKA  : 

1  Brunei 

2  Oardwell 

3  Chaffey  

4  Draper 

5  McLean  &  Ridout 

6  Macaulay 

7  Medora  &  Wood. 

8  Monck    

9  Morrison 

10  Muskoka  

11  Oakley   

12  Ryde 

13  Stephenson 

14  Stisted    

15  "Watt 


Totals. 


Parrt  Sound  : 

1  Armour    

Cbapman  

Christie    

Foley    

Hagerman 

Himsworth,  N 
Himsworth,    S 

8  Humphrey 

9  Joly     

10  McDougalL... 

11  McKellar 

12  McMurrich  ... 

13  Macbar 

14  Nipissing   

15  Perry 

16  Ryerson  

17  Strong 


Totals . 

Nipissing  : 
1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 


Bonfield   . . 

Caldwell  . . 

Calvin 

Cameron 

Ferris 

McKim  . . . 

Mattawan 

8  Papineau.. 

9  Springer  . . 
10  Widdifield 


Totals. 


Disbursements.—  Conimued. 


143 
200 
100 


100 
30 


50 
350 


Sic 

a  £ 


T! 

c 

<D 

S3 

a 

TJ     1 

CD 

^     1 

.a 

00 

*> 

1) 

100 
1,073 

89 


66 
221 


100 

"52 

76 

90 

182 

876 


97 


250 


3471 


_   3 


50 


50 


100 
137 


S  5  b 


■S  H  a 


1,252 

ioo 


200 
200 


100 
200 


400 


700 


160 


237 


1501 


108 


418 


l,7.-)2       415 


11 


93 
149 

9 

10 
23 


148 


279 


41 

14 

141 


20 


2 
29 
22 
16 
24 

451 


244 
39 


60 

5 

29 
47 

4 

5 
551 

87 

2' 

68 
I3j 


5201      661 


12 

43  53 

66'  120 

2  15 


256 


_  Q 


1,686 
979 
5,079 
2,775 
1,915 
2,771 
4,185 
1,742 
2,C37 
1,891 
836 
1,506 
3,841 
2,047 
2,550 


1,960 
1,413 
1,281 
1,137 
1,281 
1,816 
3,264 
2,468 

641; 

79* 
1,9491 
1,915' 
2,017 
1,515 
3,256| 
1,647 
1,983 

30,338 


2,470 
535 

1,098 
614 

1,959 

2,771 
578 
951 

2,068 
997 


S 


72 

525 

132 

576 

52 

93  i 

294 

671 

51 

13 

32 

65 

187 

180 

276 


35,840  3,219 


621 

327 

21 

408 
485 
341 


343 

13 

555 

54 

410 

360 

1 

404 

389 

158 

4,890 


23 

63 

55 

443 

1,214 

113 

7 

34 

22 


14,041  1,974 

I     I 


Assets. 


3  S  aa 

Ca  2J  2 

.S  <".« 

.3  >  n 


3,289 

775 

2,637 

2,150 

1,466 

731 

3,950 

57 

1,414 

1,144 

648 

1,183 

1,517 

634 

809 

22,404 


2,690 
1,297 
1,408 
214' 
9671 
382 
2,714 
1,557. 
1,550 
1,423 
1,410 
2,075 
l,037i 
1,488' 
3,138 
2,386 
2,453 

28,189 


1,929 

.534 

1,433 

215 

2,716 

2,403 

755 

710 

3,818 

1,766 

16,279 


200 


IE  43  " 

o  >•« 

<: 


50 


472 
180 
252 

1,104 


50 


250 


250 


72 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITI  &.— Continued. 


Assets. 

—Continued. 

Liabilities. 

•3 

Q 

a  i« 

HI'S 

>> 

■g 
o 

c 

ID 

o 

m 
S 

o 

<c 

a 

87 

939 


OS 

"3 

Eh 

$ 

5.216 
1,587 
3,708 
■  2,726 
3,318 
2,593 
4,244 
728 
1,465 
1,207 
1,080 
1,748 
3,276 
1,207 
5,037 

39,140 

4,954 
1,922 
1,796 
774 
3,302 
3,223 
2,723 
4,156 
1,563 
2,013 
1,701 
2,715 
4,327 
1,597 
5,y20 
2,775 
2,803 

48,264 

1,940 

597 

J,  510 

675 

3,159 

5,117 

1,118 

717 

6,492 

2,148 

23,473 

> 

a 
o 
O 

1 

S.I 

"o 
o 

JS 

a 

o 

1^ 

3 

CL> 

3 

g 

<D 

"O 

"o 
o 

J3 
u 

< 

c 
§2.9 

s 
1 

■1 

"3 
0 
H 

$ 

966 
1,258 
2,296 
2,110 
1,057 

780 
5,182 

270 

$ 

1,255 

•$ 

600 

.$ 

966 
605 

' 

$ 

$ 

$ 

"'253 

■■■217 

60 

922 

'"  '46 

"142 

1 

400 
802 
500 
100 



?, 

1,491 
250 

"■'366 

3 

1,360 
440 
420 

2,510 
150 
840 
.504 
278 
ilO 
890 

4 

800 
1,250 

1,000 
500 

19 

300 

5 
B 

1,750 
120 

7 

8 



200 

1 040  9 

604 
428 
568 

?,319 
600 

1,595 

21,073 
2,996 

10 
11 

400 

150 

158 

*637 

500 

1?, 

i,i6o 

213 
200 

3,613 

114 
236 
363 
150 
50 
200 

"629 



1,045 

29 
62 

t 

9 

327 

650 

POO 

1,100 

6,022 
94 

18 

14 

3,500 

495 
9,928 

1,745 
702 

. . 

15 

7,705 
1,500 

300 

3,189 

l,63t 

1,157 
29 

238 
16 
55 
31 

268 

"l38 

7 

226 
110 
426 
171 
84 

1 

731'  2 
238'  3 



511 
722 
455 
1,210 
656 
271 
805 
784 

527 1  4 

1,800 

777,  5 

2,300 

1,472 

2,253 

800 

1,9581  6 

4 

3,735  7 

1,300 

1,456  8 

54 
300 
.315 

463 
1,105 
1,306 
1,396 
2,653 
1,353 

q 

35 

199 
230 
280 
35 
378 

38 

73 

200 
1,563 

10 

11 

1,170 

T?! 

2,650 

886 

697 

2,206 

1,296 

1,137 

15, 253 
1  484 

104 
230 
255 

18 

14 

2,000 

924 
554 
192 

8,042 

3,  .556  15 

1,934 1  16 

192 
736 

11 

1,329'  17 

11,550 

2,899 

1,262 
123 

2,956 

60 
115 

71 

240 

"362 
146 
466 

1 
27,5131 

1,667 
329 

1,157 
186 

1,719 

2.471 
555 
323 

7,584 

1 

40 
14 

...   1   214 

? 

851 
86 

651 
1,459 

253 

177 
1,473 



235 
"530 

3 

400 



100 
298 

4 

i 

1,500 

1,012 

B 

7 

8 

2,640 
2,651 

2,511 

3,134 

9 

360 
419 

10 

1,900 

6,648 

3,523 

398 

4,022 

1,400 



15,991 

Omitting  S41  overstated  in  1895. 


73 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (^o.  32). 


A  189  8 


Table   VI.— FIN  ANC  I  AL  ST  AT  E  ME  XT— 


Receipts. 

Townthip 
tnunicipalities. 

1 

o 

Em 

i> 

a 

C3 

Municipal  and 
school  taxes. 

a 

3 

m 

$ 

■O    4) 

> 

<s 

M 

a 

1— 1 

1-2 

-a 
s 

Si 

Borrowed  for 
current  e.\pecse8. 

Borrowed  on 
debentures 
for  schools. 

Borrrwed  on 
debentures 
for  drainage. 

Borrowed  on 
debentures  for 
other  purposes. 

0 

J 

1 
1 

Majiitoclin  : 

1  Assiginack 

2  Billings 

.s 

425 
335 

11 
135 
287 
110 
354 
153 

64 

1,874 

62 
22 

616 

•S 

2,357 
712 
445 

1,173 

823 
1,828 
2,550 

757 
778 

11,423 

1,447 
1,074 
1.867 

134 
22 

•S 
19 

a 

s 

.3 

$ 

8 

§ 

•^ 

200 

53 

o  Cockburn  Island . 

3 
35 

247 

148 

106 

432 

28 

7  Howland 

171 

S  Sandfield 

9  Tehkummah 

15 
34 

""I 

35 
"""1 

Totals 



200 
506 

171 

Algoma  : 
1  Balfour 

2  Drury, etc  

3  Hallam 

350 
500 

4,666 
1,000 

4  Hilton 

4571          915 

5 

2 

2 

102 

93 

204 

183 

1,186 
1,849 

765 
1,045 

341 
1,416 

994 

2,883 

1,.567 

*8,181 

1,086 

26,616 

2,790 
1,555 
1,855 

6,200 

1.627 
2.7.30 

6  Johnson,  etc  .    . . 

450 

5 

7  Laird    



8  Ma  cd  on  aid,  etc. . 

11 

9  Nairn    

20 
111 
24 
56 
20.S 
67 
25 

1,220 

10 
"39 



361 

9 

10  Plummer  Add'l. . 

547 
56 
322 
546 
4.58 
140 

3,808 

2S4 
117 
103 

.504 

113 
112 

11  Rayside  

12  St.  Joseph 

13  Salter,  May,  etc. 

14  Sault  Ste.  Marie. 

200 
400 
400 
500 

6 
1 

1,500 

10 

160 

15  Thessalon 

, 

250 
250 

Totals 

Thunder  Bat  : 

1  Neebing 

2  Oliver 

158 

7 
5 

3,667 

6,500 

274 
416 



58 

275 
160 

435 



54 

3  Shuniah  

56 
61 

227 

227 

1,193 
1,663 

Totals 

324 
426 

750 

58 

21 
4 

25 

.... 

Rainy  River  : 

1  Alberton 

2  Keewatin 



18 

Totals 

225'       4.357 

18 

Including  $2,764  from  tax  sale  c  f  'ands  bought  by  township. 


74 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MUNICIPALITIE  S.-Continued. 


Disbursements. 


2,935 

1.069 

65fi 

1.361 

1,110 

1,941 

3,110 

910 

857 

13,949 


2,163 
1,203 
7,407 
2,937 
1,293 
2.400 

9fi9 
1,239 

741 
2,074 
1,313 
3,661 
4,232 
9.367 
1,501 

42,500 


3,495 
2,059 
.3,594 

9,148 


2,103 
3,272 

5,375 


^.5  S 
o  ea  o 


■■? 


254 
177 
68 
138 
117 
259 
280 
103 
128 

1,524 


322 
255 
329 
294 
224 
189 
136 
132 
36 
199 
267 
268 
400 
855 
202 

4,108 


435 
220 
651 

l,30fr 


;^5 

3291 
714 


13 


20 

110 

5 


56 


9  c 


T3-? 


7 

184 

5 

196 
35 
35 


66 
76 
28 
59 
3 
38 
61 
26 
71 

428 


73 

89 

130 

55 

61 

61 

84 

891 

9 

33 

72 

28 

148 

590 

33 


256  1,555 


446: 
135' 
307 


119 


297 

64 

36 

57 

150 

175 

118 

25 

291 

9411 


338 
161 
912 
120 

88 
294 
125 
229 
9 
163 

94 

734 

398 

2,127 

358 

6,150 


506 
297 
780 


1,583    1,010 


699 

4821 

1,18) 


11 


*652 
252 


260 


10 
1,000 


1.. 
c3 


I  o  a  2 

t-   ,   .^ 
O    ^    f^ 

p    Co 
03 


1,164       105 


17 

as: 


15 


20 

5 

97 

102 

239 


55 


55 


25 
25 

Land. 


"  ®  S 

a  an 

4)   3    UJ 

>>o  a 

t«  CS  eS 


s 

1,626 
524 
292 
666 
405 
1,105 
1,577 
700 
582 

7,477 


S41 

172 

4,998 

1,644 

731 

1,248 

100 

560 

215 

950 

412 

1,079 

2,015 

1,194 

242 

16,401 


317 

828 


"O  J2  *" 

s  £  o 

"-   >  t3 

«  -  a 


1,145 


802 
1,750 

2,5.52 


32 


87 


90 


90 


33 


108 


231 


365 


365 


75 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  82). 


A.  1898 


Table   VI.— F  IN  A  N  C  I  AL    STATEMENT— 


Disbursements. 

— Continued. 

Assets.                              1 

Township 
municipalities. 

a> 
u 

S 

a   . 

11 
II 

02 

.12 
Q 

.  -v 
a  2 

< 

lis 

S  s  «- 

■g  S  c 
»  2  S 

u  >  Si 

a.  "D  <I> 

B   ^"^ 

l-l 

0 

1 

a 

i 

1' 

u 
ID 

es 
0 

0) 

a 

i 

•a  «  J 

111 

111 

<              ' 

Manitoclin  : 
1  Assiginack    

100 

$ 

$ 

$ 

12 

41 
23 

31 

87 

23 

11 

8 

336 

100 

2 

70 

222 

18 

42 

3 

22 

'"'"54 

42 

135 

128 

*2,896 

37 

3,771 

116 

'"'41 

157 

90 

90 

S 

2,438 
879 
6.55 

1,164 
707 

1,697 

2,311 
865 
827 

11,543 

2,152 

840 
7,144 
2,868 
1,206 
2.272 

633 
1,053 

741 
1,405 
1,288 
3,319 
3,961 
8,818 
1,371 

39,071 

3,040 
1,796 
3,336 

8,172 

2,060[ 
3,117 

5,177 

1 

% 

497 

190 

1 

197 

I      403 

244 

799 

45 

30 

2,406 

11 

363 
263 
69 
87 
128 
336 
186 

""669 
25 
342 
271 
549 
130 

3,429 

455 
263 
258 

976 

43 
155 

198 

1,501 

867 

982 

2,180 

1,067 

1,685 

738 

819 

1,093 

10,932 

1,640 

1,803 
190 

2.192 
883 

1,195 
200 
409 
775 
374 

% 

i 

2  Billings 

3  Burpee 

'""94 



100 

131 
32 

'""33 
39 

247 

69 
35 
214 
28 
42 
55 
10 

4  Carnarvon    . .    . . 

5  Cockburn  Island. 

6  Gordon 

7  Howland    

196 

8  Sandfield 

100 
400 

"350 

500 

9  Tehkummah 

390 

Totals 

90 

...  ^ 

Alooma  : 
1  Balfour 

2  Drury,  etc  

3  Hallam  

' '  112 

4  Hilton 

ii9 



5  Jocelyn 

6  Johnson,  etc  . . . 

100 

200 
175 

7  Laird 

■:::::i::::" 

8  Macdonald  . . . 

9  Nairn    

""45 

350 

"300 
300 
400 

1,050 

4,025 

200 
100 
160 

4601 

12 

9 

58 

49 

9 

4 

594 

593 

22 

392 

l,007i 

10  Plumner  Add'l  . . 

11  Raypide    

12  St.  Joseph    .. 

13  Salter,  May,  etc. 

14  Sault  Ste.  Marie 

911 

2,569 

1,145 

10,346 

828 

i68 

,  ^ 

15  Thessalon 

125 

125 

1 

Totals 

Thunder  Bay : 
1  Neebing  

257 

25,460 

4,628 
3,054 
3,859 

11,541 

1,563 
53 

1,616 

317 

365 

2  Oliver   

3  Shuuiah   

366 

Totals 

Rainy  River  : 
1  AJberton 

2  Keewatin 

260 
260 

151 
151 

Totals 

Including  $2,764  paid  for  lands  at  tax  sale. 


76 


51  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No   32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNSHIP    MLTNICIPALITIE  S— Continued. 


Assets. — Continued.            ' 

Liabilities. 

1 

Js 

■s 

s> 
g 

u 
IS 

JS 

O 

§ 

00 
1 

1 

>> 

> 

>> 

a 

s 
0 
0 

s 

OS 

u 

"0 
0 

■§ 

1-^ 

3 
■5 

i 

u 
S 

g 

0 
JB 

4)  S 

All  other 

debentures. 

Loans  for  current 
expenses  and 
interest. 

m 

0 

a 

.2 
1 

i 

s 

1,778 

316 

2,377 

1,622 

251 

680 

809 

374 

74 

8,281 

1,434 
947 

3,888 

1,680 
698 

1,114 
341 

iii 

580 

690 

2,090 

2,100 

3,949 

612 

20,194 

13,528 

585 

8,064 

22,177 

986 
2.320 

$ 

s 

650 

$ 

$ 

2,648 
1,057 

983 
2,377 
1.470 
.3,929 
4,055 

864 
1,123 

18,506 

2,288 

2,756 

453 

2,916 

1,461 

1,323 

961 

595 

1,075 

1,043 

1,286 

3,261 

4,824 

14,043 

2,026 

40,311 

6,173 
5,217 
9,667 

21,05  7 

2,406 
4,008 

6,414 

8 

1,377 
314 
131 
819 
251 
680 
425 
364 
17 

4,378 
928 

' "  525 

75 

"341 

$ 

100 

$ 

S 

S 

$ 

301 

2 

146 

368 

1 

2 

2,000 

100 

3 

435 

4 

• 

5 

2,000 
2,600 

'.'.'.'.'. 

"364 

6 

18 

20 
10 
57 

904 

7 

8 

9 

4,500 

650 

230 

"630 
308 

"  "45 

18 
407 

25 

64 

899 

"  500 

3,888 

1,000 

600 

600 

2,000 

100 

506 
447 

1 

Ron 

2 

3 

55 
23 
64 

4 

* 

5 

450 

6 

380 

7 

8 

300 

"580 
507 

11 

160 

"'83 
125 

"127 

9 

"350 
350 
300 

*  2,864 
268 

5,345 



1,100 
t5,550 

6,650 

100 

800 

900 

284 

780 
125 

125 

10 

.... 

100 
400 

"560 

11 

993 

3,322 

487 

572 
2,100 

12 

3,000 

13 
14 

125 
125 

10,600 

15 

4,980 
600 

7,758 
276 

9,260 

2,414 
1,300 

637 
1.452 

1 

800 

585  ... . 

2 

276 
693 

7,600 
18,000 

1,885 
250 

564 
2,016 

43 
50 

3 

1,400 
700 

1 

3,000 
3,700 

2,270 
2,270 

2 

693 

250 

1 
931   2.306 

f^S*  Including  §2,764  for  lands  bought  at  tax  sale,      t  Including 
$4,500,  value  of  dock. 


L,000,  land  purchased  at  tax  sale  and 


77 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


FINANCIAL  statement- 
Table    VII. — Showing  the  Receipts,  Disbursements,  Assets  and  Liabilities  of  the  town 


Town 
municipalities. 


Essex  : 

Amherstburg 

Essex 

Leamington  . . 
Sandwich  .... 
Walkerville  . 


Totals . . . 
Kent  : 

Blenheim  . . . 

Both  well 

Dresden 

Ridgetown  . . 
Wallaceburg . 


Totals.... 
Elgin  : 

Aylmer  , 

Norfolk  : 

Simcoe    

WELLand : 

Niagara  Falls 

Tborold 

Welland 


Totals. 
Lambton : 

Forest   

Petrolea  . . 
Sarnia 


Totals. 
Huron  : 
Clinton  . . . 
Goderich  . . 
Seaforth . . . 
Wingham  . 


Receipts. 


397 
585 
5C5 
563 
9,849 

11,959 


598 
598 


729 
554 


554 

619 

6,094 

133 

6,846 

4,058 
2,217 
2,022 
1,397 


Totals I  9,694 

Bruce  : 

Kincardine    919 

Walkerton |  1,282 

Wiarton |  678 


Totals.... 
Grey  : 

Durham 

Meaf  ord 

Owen  Sound . , 
Thornbury 


Totals. 


551 

626 

15, 876 

584 

17,637 


■S 

11,250 
12,732 
10,066 
6,877 
20,592 


s 


276; 
5091 
429 
457 
322 


61,517 1  1,993 


9,053; 

2,853' 
12,0851 
12,439' 
14,273; 

50,703] 

16,451 

17,162 

46,770 
16,094 
13,582 

I 
76,446 

I 

8.178' 

30,049 

51,853 

90,080 

10,516 
29,465 
15.411 
10,558 

66,950 

15,739 
12,895 
10,322 


561 

318 

711 

1,091 

871 


350 
76 

141 
39 
34 

640 

101 
413 
315 
319 
432 


3,583 

1.133 

9,131 

959 


14,806 


2,879      38,956 


10,433 

13,471 

67,409 

3,640 

94,953 


3,552 

1,580 

533 

238 

784 

256 

1,622 

1,033 

696 

245 

56 
236 

3,351 

537 

341 
1,859 
2,908 

120 

996 
291 

5,108 

1,407 

697 
725 
875 
668 

423 
123 
263 
220 

2,965 

1,029 

572 

1,466 

510 

116 

38  i 
22! 

2,548 

176 

300 

252 

193 
637 

315 


7,465 

125 

3,236 

10, 826 


125 

125 

6 

128 

382 

1,296 

1,678 


o  » 


15,000 
15,000 

737 
3,172 


1,067- 
79, 


10,551 
10, 551 


4,779 
729 
176 

5,684 

3,915 


6,932 


819 

2,213;   6,931 

27' 


1,698    3,070 


7,750 


2,728 
257 

2,985 

77 

1,136 

7C8 


1,921 

725 

1,608 

276 

2,609 

13 

1,928 


5,000 
9.704 

14, 704 


&  §  § 
£:  «  o 


6,000 
550 
680 


10,639 
4,100 

96.100 
3,000 

17,911 

131,750 

33,850 

125 

17,4231 

32,130 

2,000 

85,528 

2,.500 

14,000; 

119,700 

4,500 

12,500 

136,700 

5,600 

"86,942 

92,542 

4,500 
70,000 
20,187 
11,200 


•as 


7,529 
*4.000 


11,529 
6,000 


1,6001       6,416 
i     16,000 


1,6001     28,416 


6,680 
49,917 


7,230    105,887 


1,266 
686 


1,941 


1,952 


29,704 

§33,779 

8,474 

71,9.57 

2,500 

18,600 

3,138 

1,000 

25,238 


1,300 
51,217 


5,000 
5.000 


172,000 
5,000 


m 

28 

1,339 

826 

31 

t2,290 

t2,059 

32 

246 

1,147 

729 

i4,213 

42 

:955 

9,863 

440 

50 

no,  353 

202 
9,232 
1,171 


177,000    J10,605 


5,000 

32,000  i 

1,500 


38,500 
3,052 
2,861 
5,913 


.528 

1,100 

55 

207 

t  1,890 

978 
381 
394 

:i,75S 

105 

408 

1,137 

43 

1.693 


*  For  water  works  extension,  t  Including  SI, 300  County  grant  for  new  Town  Hall.  J  Including  pre- 
miums on  debentures  sold  :  Leamington,  $894 ;  Sandwich,  $564  ;  Blenheim,  $759  ;  Ridgetown,  $678  ;  Wal- 
laceburg, S506  :  Simcoe,  $589  ;  Niagara  Falls,  .?8,682  ;  Petrolea.  $8,263 ;  Sarnia,  $455  ;  Clinton,  $100  j 
Goderich,  $724  ;  Kincardine,  S141 ;  Wiarton,  $207.  §  Including  $3,159  in  general  account  reconsolidated 
debentures. 


78 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32 >. 


A.  189H 


TOWN    MUNICIPALITIES. 

municipalities  in  the  Province  of  Ontario,  for  the  year  ending  December  Slat,  1896. 


Disbursements. 


«  c 

"^  -n 
u  P 
a  eS 


£  c    . 

^  eS  c 

£  >>.2 


o   B   c 

a  *  c 


^  S 


c  p  « 

"Sis  "D 
13 


-S 

26  561 
19,163 
125,  SOO 
16,721 
48,785 

236,530 

51,624 
3.741 
.W.780 
.5.5,142 
50,028 

191.315 

20,822 

43,866 

23.5,964 
22.802 
32,896 

291,662 

15,060 
227,958 
168,810 

411,828 

25,799 

147.545 

42,300 

25,106 

240,750 

56  986 
53,514 
30,176 

140,675 


1,447 
.S45 
889 
567 

1,152 

4,400 

669 
520 
188 
479 
1,671 

3,527 

1,052 

673 


2,516 
1,984 
2,058 
1,613 
2,118 

10, 289 

883 

129 

874 

1,943 

1,995 

5,824 

1,964 

3,150 


18 
271 
153 

50 
1 

493 

92 


24 
59 
42 

217 


4,002  9,850 
645  1,660 
1.053  2,613 


160 


O    Qi    ^ 


5,700 

257 
2,994 
3,0V5 

6,326 

407 
2,025 
1,497 


638 
395 
452 
352 
862 

2,699 

523 
185 
255 
501 
1,106 

2,570 

414 

514 

2,216 
791   652 
165'   736 


14, 123 

486 

4,183 

13, 917 

18, 586 


1,378  . . . 
6,251  . . , 
2,446  . . . 


244 

10 
901 
412 

1,323 


7181  1,235 
4,647  11,310 


705  3,809   124 

971 1  2,2?8   157 

470  2,274 

2,146  8,321 


14,095 

i 
547 

.34,813 

1.380 

99,699 

3,250 

5.373 

283 

153,980 

5,460 

3,604 

227 
1,476 
1,017 

2,720 

635 
840 
397 
523 


1,655 
903 

20480' 
974 

8,C77 

32,089 

7,795 

619 

1,240| 

1,6121 
1,913 

13,179 

1,372! 

17,345 

3,508 
1,834 
1,867 

7,209 

400 

3,915 

12,3^9 

16, 674 

2,017 
2,123 
2,1.31 
5,489 


2,395jll,760 

762|  3,514 
1,1831  2,282 
1,156 

6,952 


317 

97 

11,193 

4,179 


'3  o 


52 


§2, 982 

15,786  3,034 
I 
5,805 


337 


t38,44l 

705 

39,146 


121,637 


5,805 
1,117 


79 
58 
52 
60 
206 

455 

296 
10 


t700. 


45 
176 

627 

16 

6 

26 

8 

23 

57 

37 

50 

150 


121, 637 1  .  700  237 
30 


13,389; 


13,389 

1,237 

175 

1,087 

2.499 


263 
263 


91 
1,259  114,100 


1,259  4,191 


30 

210 

73 

179 

462 

15 

50| 

182 


247 


o.s 


C  3  O 


148 

31 

234 

151 

80 

644 

57 

57 

388 

264 

421 

1,187 

85 

309 

742 

9 

120 

871 

124 
195 
889 

1,208 

106 

448 

147 

76 

777 

468 

267 

20 

755 

102 

228 

1,154 

17 


248 
47 

"122 
1,289 

1,706 

112 
52 
957 
569 
765 

2,445 

381 

523 

1,097 

498 

2 

1,597 

269 
1,560 
3,191 

5,010 

465 
437 


"^Sg- 


lu  5  5 

^o  H  _g.a  c« 


379 

1,281 

330 
537 
386 

1,253 

251 

56 

3,268 

66 


1,5011  3,405 


488 
404 

*372 


1,264 

944 

290 

2,074 

1,012 

963 

5,283 

650 

1,419 


1,078 
978 


5,798 
3,246 
4,971 
2,103 
I  3,010 

19,128 

3,003 
1,277 
3,174 
6,303 
4,502 

18, 259 

2,857 

6,391 

14, 415 
6,354 
4,650 


2,056  25,419 

i 

4201   .%100 

1,439  11.600 

2,263  33,611 


4,122 

948 

5,158 
641 
622 

7,369 

639  j 
1,442 

337 


28,311 

4,750 
7,403 
4,800 
4.062 

21,015 

5,717 
6,070 
8,300 


3,859 


2,618 
2,618 


2,418  20,087 


322 
1.519 
2,640 

258 

4,739 


671 

671 

803 
2.432 
2,110 
1,176 

6,621 

3,038 
3,241 


6,279 
13 


20,  OOO 

20, 000' 
4i,'465 


41, 465 


2,060 

4,197 

15,5651   8,119 

1,506|        76 

23,328    8,207 


*  Including  $19,942  for  silica  and  other  side-walks  (Frontage  Tax).  §  Including  $2,616  for  Police 
Station  and  Armory.  |  Including  $6,521  for  fJranohthic  walks— (Frontage  Tax),  f  Including  $35,941 
for  sewers.     X  Purchase  of  Park.      IT  Including  $3,150  on  River  and  Harbor. 


79 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


FINANCIAL  statement- 
Table   VI  I. — Showing  the  Receipts,  Disbursements,  Assets  and  Liabilities  ot  the 


Town 
municipalities. 


Essex  : 
Amherstburg 

Essex . . . . 

Leamington  .. 
Sandwich  . . . . 
Walkerville  . , 


Totals.   . 
Kent: 
Blenheim  . . . 
B-ithwell    ... 

Dresden 

Ridgetown  . 
Wallaceburg . 


Totals.... 
Ei GIN : 

Aylmer  ....  . 
Norfolk  : 

Simcoe   

Wklland  : 

Niagara  Falls 

Thorold 

Welland  ...   . 


Forest  . . 
Petrolea . 
Sarnia  . . 


Totals.. 
Huron  : 
Clinton  .... 
Goderich^. .. 

Spaforth 

SVingham  . 


Totals.. 

Bruce  : 

Kincardine 

Walkerton  . 

Wiarton 


Totals . . . 
Grey  ; 

Durham 

Meaford. . .. . 
Owen  Sound. 
Thornbury  . 


Totals 


Disbursements. — Continued. 


T3  a 


CO 
r     (D 

■9.  S 


no  i; 

°    >    X 

^  ^  a 
3^2 


a 


497 
6531 
118' 
667 

1.935 


$ 

1.502 

3,241 

945 

436 

5,4881 

11,612 

1,5.52, 
300 

'  2,005 
257  1,658 
768    1,583 

1,325    6,738 

873    2,338 


m   eS  (C 

a;  -c  a> 


288 
1,871 


3,109 

4,370 

1,167 

649 


7,500 
3600 

78,900 
3,000 

13,500 

106,500 

28,096 

85 

18,306 

t.W,766 

§15,856 

I 

99,109 

2,983 

I 

9,972 

1 

119,802 

4,500 

8,310i 


3,692 
3,329 
3,165 
915 
2,919 


1,156 
149 
1.292 
.3.446 
2,6351 

8,9781 

1,690 

4,854 

7,158 
2,222 
4,605 


Totals 1.871    6,186  132,612  13,985 

Lambton  : 

348'      955 1  6,300       745 

1,374'   8,419|  12,000    7,304 

2,149  12,698  86,835  14,280 


3.871  22,072 
5,000 


105,135  22,329 


6,67.5 
1,000 


5,000 


2.^8 
959 
618 


1,835 


7,675 

1,019 

1,160 

715 


4,  .500 
71,000 

22,6871 
5,9441 


1,7.^0 
7,067 
.3,1.52 
3,834 


104,1311.5,803 


28,0641  3, 
27,752'  5 
10,5001  2, 


977 
,242 
J54 


515 

504 

641 

39 

1,441 


14,020,   3,140 


341 

68 

3 

228 

15,506 

16,146 

286 

1,239 

•i2,692 

1,100 

319 

4,111 

I 

482 : 

147 1 

1,148: 


26,561 
19,004 
124,786 
15,051 
43,792 

229,194 

51,624 

3,741 

.30,780 

5.5,142 

49,892 

191,179 

18,414 

43,810 

230,190 
21,806 
29,413 

281,409 

14,860 
220,649 
168,665 


1,7771  404,174 


524 
1,215 

6821 
309 


2.3,313 

126,463 

41,690 

24,387 


2,7301  215,853 


390 

724 

1,296 


2,894!  66,316,11,9731   2,410 


1,477 
414 
851 
247 


4,000  1 
18,900  1 

,..:.. .121, 

1,000, 


759 
,.564 
666 
344 


2,989,  23,900  25,333 


343 

257 

1,153 

145 

1,898 


54,003 
53,614 
30,175 


Ass«ts. 


O 


159 

514 

1,670 

4,993 

7,336 


136 

136 

2,408 

56 

5,774 

996 

3,483 

10,253 

200| 
7,309, 

145 


2,486! 

?J,082| 

610| 

7191 


137,692    2,983 


12,174 

32,988 

76,870 

4,673 

126,705 


S  9  x> 

5>c-S-o 


.s 

7,944 
5,777 
3,881 
5,135 
530 

23,267 

4.580 
1,303 
4,006 
9,692 
18,646 

38,227 

1,499 

6,790 

8,698 
3,760 
5,491 

17,949 


1,395 
40,790 
33,367 


7,654j     75,552 


3.607 
6,499 
1,1.53 
3.071 


24,8971     14,330 
I 
2,983 


1,9211 

1,825 

*22,829 

7001 


27, 275 1     43,207 


■5  c  I 


3,859 


30,763 
30,763 


4,975 
4,975 

3,476 
14,481 
18,510 

5,314 


79 


79 

ri,378 


20,000 


20,000 


36.465 
30,512 

66,977 


15,093 


*  Including  .S3, 262  waterworks  balance.  +  Depreciation   i"    value  of   factory   mortgage  1896,  8885* 

X  Including  .§6,9.58  refund  local  improvement,  temporary  loan  of  1895.  §  Including  $15,000  stock  in  Syden" 
ham  glass  works,  surrendered  as  a  bonus  to  the  company.  IT  Including  part  of  expenditure  for  water  sup" 
ply,  which  returns  do  not  give  sufficient  details  to  separate. 


80 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWN    MUNICIPALITIES. 

town  municipalities  of  the  Province  of  Ontario,  for  the  year  ending  December  Slst,  1896. 


Assets. — Continued. 


Liabilities. 


CS   be 

be-.:: 


6,000 
lfi,000 
19,000 

H.OOO 
16,929 

63,929 

6,250 

6,000 

7,500 

26,800 

17,8001 

i 

64.350; 

31,8501 

32,500 

59,000' 
20,700! 
18,200; 

97,900 

18.200 
21,500 
70,500 

110,200 

17,000 
25,600 
21,000 
10,500 


43,50u 
29,995 
45,000 
19,000 


137,495 


17,000 


115,500 
12,000 
53,406 

180,906 


3 

17,440  487 
6,1771  2,458 
4,300  25,655 
4,950]  1,024 
4,185  41,584 

37,0.52  71,208 

18,5251   7,998 

8,0601   6,100 

*35,W5^ 

13,640 

15,625 


13,  914 


121,637 
95,500 

217,137 


92,745 
13,000 
10,400 


74,100  116,145 


25,0001 
25.000! 
15,500 


55,080 
30,000 
26,500 


65,5001  111.580 


4,  .500 
22,500l 
57,400i 

5,0001 


91,825|28,012 

13,7001      372 

24,380 

.10,550  38, 843 

19,0001 

13,6451   3,439 

I 
83,195  42,282 

I 

1,3, 400! 

48, 500 '10, 847 
48,000  27,526 

I 
109,900  38,373 


20,000 
104,710 


89,400'   124,710 


19,000 
29,260 
18,500 
18,600 

85,360 

.35,800 

17,000 

1,500 

54,300 

6,500 
26,500 
88,135 


121,135 


7,062 

164 

7,226 


1,168 
900 

2,068 


294 

1,668 


1,962 


75,371 
60,566 
98,  ,350 
37,779 
68,221 

340,287 

.37,353 
21,463 
47,481 
64,125 
52,207 

222,629 

68,207 

67,585 

298,-365 

56,456 

128,427! 

483,248 

33,195 

287,048, 

310,525' 

I 

630,768 

45,569 

196,979 

83,173 

63,518 

389,239 

141,146 

118.144 

54,295 

313,585 

16,360 

72,047 

369,508 

6,817 

464,732 


O 


487 
404 
364 
372 


1,627 

936 
293 


1,011 
1,023 

3,263 


994 
994 


419 
2,756 
3,233 

1,985 


8,393 
1,484 


.502, 
2,099 
2,500 

5,101 ' 


1,282 


1,282 
677 


444 
1,121 


337 
337 


11,600 


11,  600 
1,600 


100 

1,700 

4,750 
453 


5,203 
2,407 


1.^513 
1,110 

19,030 


St3 


tf 


4,675 
7^698 


12,373 

8,628 

'  8^668 

11,689 

4,236 


5,734 

7,218i     33,221 


10,000 


u 

u 

s 

u  ^ 

a 

|§ 

O   o 

2  » 

o-g 

-g-c 

ST! 

02 

< 

$ 

$ 

60,119 

6,216 

41,506 

15, 174 

39,602 

1,560 

22,175 

3,333 

47,794 

26,283 

211,196 

10,290 

700 

d  31ft 

9,291 

fll    19S 

5s  <3 


<a  ■ 


10,460,     35,323 


15,470 

9,841 

20, 988 

35, 417 


35,417 

7,146 
6,969 
9,320  40,753 

9,320  54,868 


2,000 

5,000 

11,500 


8,000 
8,000 


18,500 


12,600 
12,000 


15,500 
5,500  24,600 
18,000 


1,062 
112,455 
90,000  33,893 


108,000 


47,410 


106,032 

25,587 

45,310 

138,238 
15,963 
76,439 

230,640 

4,329 
230,623 
199,863 

434,815 

27,500 

135,693 

41,500 

56,500 

261,193 

84,059 
81,522 
31,687 

197,268 

7,982 

23.212 

316,940 

6,113 

354,247 


1^ 


6,639 
8,000 
31,  200 
3,022 
4,411 

53, 272 

8,9.50 
1,965 
6,423 
6,130 
7,300 

30, 768 


12 


1,120 
538 
830 

2,500 

2,949 


2,949i 


7,200 
6,000 
9,000 
15,000 
.500 
6^107 
6,607,46,784 


2,064 

'594 

594 


41, 786 
4,998 


17,  .500, 
4.100 
5,256 

26,856 

§  4,948 

^  14, 117 

3,474 

22, 539 


3,500 
1  10,223 


13, 723 


350 

3,913 

4,263 

2,063 

890 

J  5, 912 

8,865 

385 
822 
765 
144 

2,116 


72,351 
58,882 
98,391 
29,652 
56,368 

315,644 

31,753 
4,442 
24,382 
74,268 
64,076 

198,921 

35,428 

85,562 

180,157 
18,656 
88,933 

287,746 

11,975 
292,260 
261,041 

566,276 

31,777 

158,543 

57,100 

74,213 

321,633 

95,820 

109,582 

58,910 

264,312 

29,836 

39,989 

467,334 

7,367 

544,526 


*  Including  $18,000  for  bridge,  formerly  in  "miscellaneous."  f  S.  &  H.  R.  R.  dock  debentures, 
formerly  classified  as  "  all  other  flebentures."  X  Mostly  Railway  and  other  debs,  payable  to  Amobel  and 
Keppel.  §  Including  S2,720  due  sinking  fund.  1  Including  §3,159  due  sinking  fund.  ||  Including 
$7,085  due  sinking  fund. 


6  B.I.  (5) 


81 


61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (JNo.  32). 


A  189  8 


Table    VII.— F  I  N  AN  C  I  A  L    ST  AT  EM  E  NT- 


Town 
municipalities. 


SiMCOE  : 

AUiston 

*Barrie 

Collingwood   . . . . 

Midland 

Orillia 

Penetanguisb  ene . 
Stayner  


Totals . 

MiDDLKSKX  : 

Parkhill . . . 
Strathroy  . 


Totals 


Oxford  : 
Ingersoll  . . 
Tilsonburg 
Woodstock 


Totals. 


Bbant  : 
Paris 


Pebth  : 
Listowel 
Mitchell  .. 
St.  Marys 

Totals 


Wellington  : 
Harriston    . . . 
Mount  Forest 
Palmerston   . . 


Totals. 


Watebloo  : 

Berlin 

Gait 

Waterloo  . . 

Totals:. 

DCFFERIN  : 

Orangeville 

Lincoln  : 
Niagara.... 


Receipts. 


680 
403 
6,183 
4,672 
15,599 
1,240 
1,220 

29, 999 


9  « 


24,435 


51,106 


6.55 

27 


682 


823 
325 


1,148 

160 

285 

6,008 

6,453 

19, 080 

589 


Wbntwobth  : 
Dundas j   3,132 


7,004 
34,544 
35,404 
12,779 
30,647 
9,783 
5,056 

135,217 


2431   8,071 
1,050   25,511 

1,293   33,582 


I  33,623 

7, 755 1  17,220 
16,680   60,511 


111,354 


247 
2,225 
1,796 

830 
1,V14 

836 

228 

7,876 


539 
965 

1,504 


1,705 

850 

3,045 

.5,600 


18,6591   549 


17,672 
13,452 
23,474 

54,598 


33,453 


799 
633 
837 

2,269 


8,102  1,029 

15,4.571   740 

9,894   709 


2,478 


.50,0421  2,326 
47,344  2,182 


20,106 
117,492 

18,112 


710 
5,218 


9,166;   297 


19,815;   609 


139 


299 


8,630 


1,840 

51 

1,695  11,628 
2,034 


125 
362 
115 


^  S 


'^  fci  o 

-a  3  o 

^  a  o 

SQ 


11 
30 

4,S28 


158 
260 


418 


29 

187 

3,843 

4,059 


379 


217 
239 
104 


22,591 


296 
120, 


2,500 


8,405 
8,405 

5,578 
1,903 


560'  1,903 


302 
332 


634 


1,536| 

1,610  7,161 

399 

I 
3,545  7,161 

536   276 

468!  3,154 

280 1  1,037 


1,018 


136 
353 


489 


1,812 

794 

5,523 

8,129 


331 


262 


2,500 


262 


Ul,881 

127 

5,081 

17,089 


10,2541 

t45,076l 

11,000 

1.5,0(10 

5,500 

1,200 

88,030 


5,081 
17,700 

22,781 


20,655 


«,500 


453 


900 


453 


1,035 

2,929 

62 

4.026 


489 


667 


57,962 
78,617 


8,500 


3,700  . 


30,270 
25,250 

58,521 


■^  5  £ 


13,000 

29,536 

7,000 


25,700 
5,673 


80,909 

10^000 
10,000 


493 
2,602 
1,199 


2,689 

7 

67 

§7,057 


4 
1,136 

§1,H0 


154 
124 
767 


20,503 

I 

20,503  1,045 
176 


.3,001 41,000!    1,244 


10,250!.., 

20,000! . . , 

4,500, . 


900 

34,750 

'"i4,'492 

1.5,246 
13,797 
22,742 

14,492 

51,785 

1,100 

24,718 

1,600 

41,000 

1,272 
17,000 
18,272 


4.3,400 

11,600 

4,000 


200 

852 

§2,296 


194 

382 

1,442 

§2,018 


3.933 

1,470 

489 


58,900  §5,892 


236 


117 


2,405       505 


*Including  "  AUandale."    t  Including  .§24,276  for  Local  Improvements,      t  Including  82,156  rebate  on 
Industrial  mortgage.  §  Including  premium  on  debentures  sold  ;     Barrie,  82,373  ;  Collingwood.  S886  : 

Orillia,    81,913;     Strathroy,   §930;    Listowel,    8484;     Palmerston,  81,183;     Berlin,  8284  ;    Gait,    8364; 
Waterloo,  S164. 


82 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A. 1898 


TOWN    MU^fICIPALITIE ^.—Continued. 


21,987 

89,236 
107,243 

29,286 
104,968 

27,704 
7,801 

388,225 


14,232 
56,975 


Disbureements. 


11 

2  9  => 
a  cs  o 

^  35  "3 

O  4.  e 


731 
1,727, 
2,851 

644 
2,473 

570 

749 


""2 

■"  "5  -3 


«59,859 

27,057 

182,320 

279,236 


30,478 


64,195 
47,352 
50,544 

162,091 


21,670 

38,559 
33,877 

94,106 


117,678 

102,770 

54,516 

274,964 


65,230 


743 

6,887 
6,969 
2,569 
8,176 
1,315 
652 


9,745  27,311 


607 i   343 
950,  2,587 


71,207   1,6571  2,930 


1,560 

585 

2,817 

4,962 


1,030 


22,825 


5,885 


757 1  1.787 
587 1  3,326 
665,  2,470 


2,009 


629 
535 
644 

1,808 


2,939  i^B,  571 
3,3721  8,242 
1,465  4,209 

7,776  19,022 


949  2,348 


15,397    657 
28,450   1,380 


3,612 


S  a  S3 

X  S  o 

•D  S  t. 

.  a  oi 


78 
823 

431 
.-  I 

48 


992 


129 
426 


687 
1.594 
2,058 

296 
1,266 

259 

110 

6,270 


359 
851 


555  1.210 


102 


8,768 
1,299 
12,758   405 


507 


290 

1,152 

992 


7,583  2,434 


437 

465 

3,002 

3,904 


1,279] 
l,411i 

882 


26 

31 

110 


3,5721   167 


100 

675 
82 

857 


35 


27 


2,3691   101 


x>  g 


-S 

96 

22, 087 

16, 769 

991 

4,810 

868 

605 

46,226 


792 

870 


1,662 


6,959 
1,400 
6,551 

14, 910 


1,936 
8,357 


-o^ 


1,507 
384 


12,184 


786 


tl,264 

78 

6,912 

275 


8,529 


786 


1,049  3,007 


648  3,430 
390  2,275 


757 
1,795 


389 
456 
308 


3,069 
8,774 


1,628 

1,421 

370 


827 
6,934 

7,761 


225 


1,642 
2,085 

3,727 


1,153  3,419 


1,524 

1,520 

857 

3,901 


19,  n  1 

7,900 

10,  439 

37,450 


629  1,749 


776 


1,201 


989 1  5,928 


136 


136 


5,139 

16,123 

7,109 

28, 371 


16,660 


907 


141 


141 


153 
153 


« 


l.o  s_S 


5  u   C..a.«  5 


a  5  3 


3  s 
o  -5. 
< 


a.  =  ~  G  'a  o 


35 

163 

401 

4ll 

87 

"ii! 


4 

820' 
967 
237 
478 
153 
26 


899 
1,293 
176 
665 
425 
5 


377  2,685  3,463 


134 
634 


668 


94 

75 

365 

534 


109 

"si 

105 
136 

12 

"30 

42 


102 


500 
153 
428 

1,081 


778 


95 
150 
399 

644 


39 
87 
49 

175 


90  1,174 
7,584  130,   379 
25   546 


7,584 


300 


245  2,099 


150 


o   o 

2  rj  a, 

=  9,-0 


33 
576 


609 


870 

513 

2,623 

4,006 


706 


672 


1,000  1,655 

1,896  23,086 

3,704:  9,972 

7451  3,257 

1,107  11,715 

782|  2,964 

336  2,162 

9,570  54,811 


514  3,785 
1,373  6,700 


1,887 


10,485 


>'5 


2,238 
436 


2,674 
572 
572 


4,571  13, 697  14, 601 

1,215  4,835i  2,520 

4,643  15,376  24,465 

I 

10,429  33,908  41,586 


*10,000 
10, 000 


1,065    6,222 


1,168    4,096 
852]    3,323 


1,2201 4,662 

I 
1,892;   2,02012,081 


46 
368 
229 

643 


650 
860 


831    3,423 

1,107    4,554 

780    3,506 

2,718  11,483 


750 


3,785  14,863 

3,572  14,  450 

360j    1,701|   5,068 

I 


1,272 

2,262 

410 

3,944 


14,031 
113 


3,398 


1,870    9,058  34,38114,144!       3,398 


68       153       318 


434 
5661      907 


1,010 


,600 


2,284 


5,132 


2,089 


494 


+  Harbor  improvements.  *  Bonus  to  Furniture  Factory.  §  The  disparity  between  items  for  1895  and 
1896  is  due  to  there  being  the  cost  of  water  supply  for  three  half  years  in  the  former  and  only  for  one  half 
year  in  the  latter. 


83 


61    Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (i^o.  32). 


A.  1898 


Table    VII.— FIN  ANC  I  AL   STATEMENT— 


Town 
municipalities. 


SiMCOE  : 

AUiston 

Barrie   .    . .    

Collingwood 

Midland 

Orillia 

Penetanguishene . 
Stayner  


Totals . 

Middlesex  : 
Parkhill  .. 
Strathroy  . 


Totals 

OxPOKD  : 
Ingersoll.. 
Tilsonburg 
Woodstock 


Totals. 


Brant : 
Paris 


Perth  : 
Listowel  . . 
MitcheU... 
St.  Marys  . 

Totals. 


Wellington  : 
Harriston    . . . 
Mount  Forest 
Palmerston   . . 


Totals 

Waterloo  : 

Berlin 

Gait 

Waterloo 

Totals....   , 

DUFFERIN  : 

Orangeville  . . . 

Lincoln  : 
Niagara    , 


Wentworth 
Dundas  . . . 


Disbursements.  — Continued. 


12,271 
646 

277 
5,980 


19,174 


617 
617 


12,000 


12,000 


5,450 
328 

5,778 
122 


600 


_:  s 


68 
2,920 
6,779 

974 
6,198 
6,383 

200 


S.2 


Pi' 


o  S? 


Assets. 


««.2 


9,894 

2.729 

156 

6,136 

5,253 

734 

31,340 

11,504 

1,253 

13,5001  1,4^5 

96 

30,0001  7,673 

493 

2,500i  3,1.S5 

6,051 

1,200 

86 

174 

23,522      94,570  31,805 


8,957 


400 

2,885 

3,285 


1341 


4,500  1,004  268 

24,600  2,569  342 

29,10o'  3,573,  610 

I  i 

I  I 

4,575  9,1951.3,930 

4,0781  3(50 


8 

20,114 
89,232 
106,245 
25,306 
89,588 
26,064 
6,316 

362,865 


14,2.32 
55,976 

70,208' 


69,8.59 
18.600' 


D 


...       61,000  24,360:      3851    166,112 
134      65,575  37,633    4,675,   254,571 


1,533 


29,000| 

917! 
4,098i 

I 


3,700    2.776       551'     29,386 


3,355 
29,070 
23.100 


7.117 
2,504 
4,378 


452' 

209 

2,5441 


64,195  . 
47,2.')3i 
50,544  . 


34,015!  55,525113,999,  3,205  161,992 


48 

800 

12,3471 


9,050 

21,408 

7,754 


13,195   38,212 


I   7,216   4.3,108 


i   .3,691 
2,688   13,000 


9,904 


1,847 
3,631 
4,736 

10,  214 


7,677 
12, 147 


186 
240 
754 

1,180 


3,731 
2,644 


2,328   800 
59,799,22,152  7,175 


20,705 
38.447 
32,909 

92,061 


117,678 
102,770,. 
54,5161. 

274,964' , 


1.402 
530 


170!  2,553   257 
3,343'  1,154 


1,873 

4 

998! 

3,9801 

15,380 

1,640 

1,485 


999 
999 


8,457 
16,208 

24,665 


1,092 


99 


99 


965 
112 

968 

2,045 


1.0861  26,500  5,375   402   6,5,093     137 

I       i 


14,2801   1,117 
23,943   4,507 


-S 

4,354 
7,908 
1,408 
5,161 
12,087 
6,228 
491 


.S   gT3 


-11 


25,3601     37,637 


2,135 
1,995 

4,130 


8,984 

626 

12,651 

22,261 
794 


4,647 

182 

2,792 

7,621 


5,231 

446 

3,630 

9,307 


2,574 

3,273 

770 

6,617 


9,137 

2,862 

14,415 


3,338 
1,601 
2,433 


568 


7,940 


2,831 


tl7,260 
2,8311     17,260 


52,189 
n.050 
130,607 


193,846 
7.750 


.3.816  ... 
9,015 
606!... 


13,437  . 


60,749 
519 

61,268 
6,952 


13,345 


t  Omitting -$937  written  off  InduRtrial  mortgage.     *  Including -§2,156   rebate   on   industrial   mortgage 
and  $233  instalment  on  Market  [mortgage.     §  Omitting  §700  industrial  mortgage  written  off. 


84 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A. 1898 


TOWN    MUNICIPALITIES.— Conanwed. 


Assets. — Continued. 


0:3 


6,300 
48,916 
33,200 

9,000 
53,169 


6,000 
156,585 


13,500 
24,000 

37,500 


19,341 


104,808 


101,819 

36,000 

125 

262,093 


53,000 

22,500   33,500 

47,545 


8,802 
46,400 
90,700 

9,226 
41,151 
12,690 

3,100 


3,423 

5,184 

319 

3^383 


211,978   12,309 


11,2001 
13,000! 

24,200 


30,602l  33, 959 


123,045 


27,000 


23,000 
12,000 
21,500 


14,150 
58,820 


160,440 
193,940'  103,572 

50,000   34,000 


5,600 

24,000 

2,060 


56,500   31,650 


14,500 
24,000 
13,015 

51,515 


36,500 
75,000 
15,000 

126,500 

17,975 

5,000 

18,600 


14,800 
13,000 
36,400 

64,200 


11,600 
7,500 

7,528 

26,628 


49,910 
167,000   64,635 
31,000 


167,000 
47,329 
52,405 
46,476 


145,545 
18,200 
18,050 
14,638 


258 
10, 428 

44, 645 


385 

385 


109,565 

9,917 

22, 977 

142,459 


500 

3,412 

§1,756 


Liabilities. 


S 

47,431 
110,013 
233,866 

27,366 
226,989 

58,536 

11,201 

715,402 


1,029 

2,428 


1,242 

338 

5,037 


29,666   452 
57,254  1,207 

86,920  1,659 


195,770 

90,541 

448,042 

734,353 


120,636 


48,047 
49,666 
62,742 

160,455 


36,112 
41,073 
25,747 

102,932 


203,549 

380,574 

73,664 

657,787 


100,230 

82,846 

113,737 


1,170 

852 


2,022 


806 


1,040 
1,350 


10,475 

442 

1,000 

14,307 


725 


725 


400 
400 


60,000 
3,000 


3,720 
17,829 
7,228 
4,622 
8,100 


41, 499 


8,000 


"  a.  . 

§2.2 


,000 


51,229 

83,592 
189,282 

13,448 
139,939 

57,943 
7001 

536,133 


7,800 
44,567 

52,367 


9,654 

16,236 

5,500 


3,000 


95,680 
15,500  59,036 
60,525;  400,499 


7,962 

7,962;63, 000  76,025  555,215 


806 


4,600 
4,600 


1,148  3,300 

I 

I 

1,665 


6,000 


6,000 


20,000  3,000 
15,000  7,750 
30,000  10,000 


65,000  20,750 


1,598 


111,000 


46,049 


83,000 
36,099 
52,449 

171,548 


9,123 
39,800 
24,730 


34,390 


1,081 
4,000 

5,081 


20,655 
Vl9",4i2 
40,067  2,341 


1,226 
1,903 

*i6525 

1,472 

365 

15,491 


302 


302 


2,341 


3,001 
1,200 
3,350 

7,551 


4,200 
1,000 
2,500 


55 

55 

790 


73,653        7,700l      790 


131.013 
226,500 


1,598 
29, 50O 


2,919      41,524 
399,037 


13,919 
3,150 


5,400 


81,214 
.50,268 
56,492 


15,246 

13,7971  3,569 

9,742  5,979 

38,785'  9,548 


14,929 
4,992 


1,312 

740 

30 


57,018 
116,079 
214,649 

23,570 
170,281 

63.257 
2,403 

647,257 


18,360 
49,774 

68,134 


178,676 

77,536 

488,398 

744,610 


46,049 


93,171 
38,206 
55,799 

187,176 


37,919 
63,550 
67,230 

168,699 


147,857 

254,866 

64,764 

467,487 

124,553 

57,665 

61,922 


*  Payable  on  Park  $10,000.     +  Dur  sinking  funds.      J  Including  $711  due  sinking  ifund.     §  Roads 
$1,156  of  this  formerly  in  stock  in  public  works. 


85 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


Table    VII.— FIN  AN  CI  A  L    ST  ATE  ME  NT.- 


Town 
municipalities. 


Halton  : 
Milton  . . 
Oakville . 


Totals . 

Peel  : 
Brampton  . 


York  : 

Aurora     

Newmarket 

North  Toronto 

Toronto  Junction, 

Totals 


Ontario  : 
Oshawa 
Uxbridge. 
Whitby  . . 


Totals . 


Durham  : 
Bowmanville 
Port  Hope  . . 


Totals 


Northumberland ; 
Gobourg 


Prince  Edward 
Picton 


Lennox  and 

Addington 
Napanee 


Leeds : 
Brockville . 
Gananoque 


Totals. 


Grknvillk  : 
Prescott. . 


Stobmont : 
Cornwall 


Prescott  : 
Hawkeabury 


Renfrew  : 
Arnprior . . 
Pembroke 
Renfrew  . 


Totals 


Receipts. 


627 


627 

4,748 


4,840 
218 
704 

6,450 


a 

<c 

X 

T5j 

O 

'^■^ 

.£■1 

0> 

o  »= 

'3 

a 

p 

o 

g 

1-? 

$ 

$      1 

6,331 

215 

10,275 

342 

16,606 

557 

339 
46 

385 

864 
3,521 

4,385 

771 


3,756 

3,778 


247 

6,488 
'  '555 
7,043 


363 
301 


664 


19,073,      793 


£  "  s 


S 


1,210 

1,210       583    1,000 


252    1,000 
331 


9,122 
12,377 
20,323 
50,759 

92,581 


300 

479 

115 

1,525 

2,419 


22, 761 1  927 
13,083'  373 
22,426        644 


58:  2,665 


111 


13,   563'  

308  2,064|..... 

309  1,112   330 
67.  5,656  


»850 


200 

1,582 
31,296 


697 1  9,395 


79 
267 1 
433 


58,270  1,944   779 


14,168,      388       899      . 

33,646    l,961iJ4,16l'      945       540    2,905 


330  33,078 


332    1,000 

125 

467j '  1,890 

924!   2,890 


47,814    2,349    5,060 


31,138!   2,676  §4,409 


20,575 


3,458      23,715 


22      95,670 
20,542 


1,174       605 


945       540    2,905 

i 

6' 

12 


3,810 


116,212 


1,466 


4,676 
1,411 

6,087 


15,262;   1,672 


31,050 


5,229 


14,372 
26,520 
13,232 

.54,124 


3,069 


435 


796 

3,695 
280 

3,975 

1,121 

1,171 

42 


17.153 
17, 153 


1,330       565! 

1,7481      700    3,337 
1,279,      216,      258 


27 

3.423 
261 

3,684 

11 

676 

105 


3,760 
3,760 


4,975 


4,357'   1,481'   3,595 


105 


.2  X 


O  b 

u  u 

'-  S 

o  5 


'  '6',2i3 
6,213 

4,000 


a  oo  at 

"  S  ® 

•a  s  c 

k  S  " 

!  g  4)  K 

cq 


O    ^2 

g-c 


4,000 

3,911  .    .    . 
15,043 


22,954 


16,085 

9,797 

43, 9.50 

I 

69, 832  i 


26,200    

53,00010,000 

I 
79,200  10,  000 

23,500  .... 


107,643 
21,800 

129,443 


7,000 
3,300 

10,300 


5,.569    6,000 
17,629 


1,600 


750 
3,259 
2,000 

6,009 


4,117 


12,500 
870 


13,370 
3,000 


22,850j 
25,850 


3,500 


^1,159 
5,000;    •^1,356 
25,913 


*Rebate  on  Young  and  Co. 's  mortgage,  flncluding  $600  balance  of  sale  of  foundry,  tincluding 
S3,474  harbor  dues.  §Including  .$2,032  for  harbor  tolls.  ^  Including  premiums  on  debentures  sold  : 
Brampton,  S241  ;  Newmarket,  $179  ;  Oshawa,  174  ;  Whitby,  .$205  ;  Brockville,  .S167  ;  Prescott,  $1,266. 

86 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18S8 


TOWN    MUNICIPAL  ITIE  S.— Continued. 


Disbursement'. 


."SI 


^  Z  a 
^  c8  a 


10,028 
17,487 

27,515 


37,251 


14,888 
36,909 
40,074 
91,46l| 


519    1,606 
566,    1,234 


^  S 


S  2' 


187 
99 


404 
311 


tic 


00  •-    C 

5;  o  o 

O    «    p 
>5   08  o 


1,009 
l,4d7| 


1,085    2,840       286,      715'   2,506' 


1,078    2,372 


847 

790 

1,799 

2,829 


531       553.   2,0»5 


1,184 

1,973 

2,183; 

13, 344 


183,332      6,265  18,684 


44,394 
23,981 
93,697 

162,075 


43,161 
111,692 

154,853 


615 
930 


236 

378 

385 

2,266 


1,.575!   3,265 


925    3,153 

4671   1,018 

l,033r  1,818 

2,425    5,989' 


1,038    2,552, 
1,860    5,154 


110 
"50 

160 


2461 


820 
2,894 

400 
3,937 

8,051 


564    4,157 

450       880 

1,199    3,015 


101 


12,109 

i  J41 

13,850 


2,213 


8,052 


674    2,762  ... 
846    4,348|   9,037 


2,898    7,706       255    1,520    7,110    9,037 


68,114      2,615 


26,275 

29,635 

244,066 
51,485 

295,551 

35,991 

89,142 

7,553 


1,253 


1,535 


3,991 
729 


5,500 1   1,383    3,472 


5,283 


72       478    2,080 


4,275         62 


400 


2,665 


7,335    1,172;    5,.373 10,029 
1.930 736;   2,973 


4,72019,265    1,172    6,109  13,002 


1,155 
1,745 


2,685    1,127|   1,418    3,876 
4,343       4571  1,350    4,058 


330       ]06i        12       114 


23,623:  666 

35,637|  1,400 

17,549  719 

76,8091  2,785 


1,8661 

4,1251    36 
1,127]  


7,118    36 


571 
549 
393 

1,513 


803 


2,0.51 
3,223 
2,798 


3,069 
502 

8,204 
8,204 


3,598 


150 
200 


1^ 

P  o 


226 
165 
429 


820 


304 


45 
20' 


20 
245 


65   265 


57 1   679 


4 

9 

25 

275 


82 
1,168 

1,258 


313 


962 
383 
396 


90 
204 


294 


358 


215 

36 

542 

1,726 

2,518 


3  c 
o<*- 

O 


2S» 


252 
434 


686 


886 


^  to 


.St3 


1,415 1,033 

2,709  1,102 

I 
4,124  1,102  1,033 


6,800 


680  3,700 

776  3,130 

l,600l  3,900 

110, 85\ 


3,056  21,581 


640  1,177 
436  592 
1831   842 


304       140 
I 

10 

10 


*344 


1,741 1   1,259    2,611 


8,764 
3,000 
6,625 

18,389 


508 
4,403 


4,911 


125 


1,297 
7,762 

9.059 


824    1,513       901 1   4,800: 

209    1,420    1,250118,064    1,445 


1,033 


331 


170 


I 
2,933!   2,151 


619,   1,596    1,250 


440       875    1,173    7,033 


141,      527       547 
7,730 


I      545    1,315 

+2,500         42       """ 


2,500 


587 


5,1611      141 


260 
1,575 


22,8641   1,445 


7,903 


125 


662 
662 


1,342 
9.072 


2,450'   5,500 


27,155  13,915    2,840 

1,074  15,500    2,159: 


1,074  42,655 
11,886 


449 


489 

139       313 

I 

191 

2'        38       597i   l,427i   7,591 

67,        42;      380    2,443'   9,984 

95       .535 1   4,201 


822 

2,548    1,213'   9,528 

i 

2861      500    4,390 


16,074 


6,234 


8,072       350       449         69       175!   1,512    3,870  21,776 


514 
150 
664 


2,840 


*Harbor  repairs.     tStone  street  dock. 


87 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189.8 


Table  VII.— Fl  N  ANCI  AL    STATEMENT- 


Town 
municipalities . 


Halton  : 
Milton  . . 
Oakville 


Totals. 
i'KEL : 
Brampton 


York  : 

Aurora    

Newmarket  

North  Toronto . . . 
Toronto  Junction. 

Totals  


Ontario  : 
Oshawa  . . 
Uxbridge 
Whitby  .. 


Totals. 


DCRHAM  : 
Bowman  ville 
Port  Hope . . . 


Totals 

NORTHUMBKRLAND  : 

Cobourg 

Prince  Edward: 

Picton 

Len'nox  and 

Addtngton 

Napanee  . .   . .     . , 


Leeds  : 
Brockville   . 
Gananoque . 


Totals . 

Grenville  : 
Prescott   . . 

Stormont : 
Cornwall    . 


Prescott  : 
Hawkesbury 

Renfrew  : 
Arnprior  . . . 
Pembroke . . . 
Renfrew 


5'^ 

*    fl 


245 


245 

670 


737 
3,847 


4,584 
1,100 


1,100 


314 

858 


109 


Totals 


182 

1,068 

105 

1,355 


Disbursements. — Continued. 


492 


492 
4,643 


331 
2,461 


2,792 


4,615 


20,417 
25,032 


844 
1,099 

1,943 


2,723 


2,034 


340 
4,855 


S  §   . 

O     U     IT) 

COS 
fl<«   C 


a     5S2 


fl  ® 
Igfl 


552 
3,699 
1,020 


6,534 
6,534 
4,000 


4,000 

3,911 

17,010 

8,704 

33,625 


14,800 
10,998 
44,190 


2,229 
1,497 


479 
1,035 


3,726    1,514 
7,894    1,454 


1,641  24  14,645 

3,269  212  36,600 

4,356  2,287|  40,046 

26,878  760  75,409 


10,025 
17,487 

27,512 

34,121 


36, 144 


3,283    166,700 


5,891 

I 
69,988  11,122 


2,906  163 
2,325  *1, 815 
127 


16,600 
49,500 


3,375 
11,331 


66,100,14,706 

I 
20,90212,038 

266:   2,733 
4,250 


117,215 
14,920 


2,105 

1,045 
t3, 730 

4,775 

353 

162 


44,394 
23,773 
93,608 

161,775 


36,947 
110,201 

147,148 

61,375 

25.557 


16      25,260 


23,557|   3,643;   244,019 
48,404 


3,4731  766 

132,135  27, 03o!  4,409 

4,544       917 1  1,321 

I  I 

38,447;    6,243  1,845 


292,423 

35,991 
86,916 


200' 


710 
2,454 
3,000 


5,2711       6,204 


42'      364j       7,166 


1,725  44'  19,175 

5,9171  50  35,637 

1,842  1701  16,155 

9,484  264I  70,967 


Assets. 


O 


3 
3,130 


243 

309 

28 

16,052 

16,632 


211 
89 

300 

6,214 
1,491 

7,705 

4,739 

718 

4,375 


47 
3,081 

3,128 


2,226 


3,916 
3,547 

7,463 

940 


2,065 

506 

15,365 

116,338 

134,274 


o  a  s 

^  *  S. 
"  S  « 


fl.a  c8 


16,296 
10,242 

5,798 

14,389 


27,549 
4,905 

32,454 


9,502 
14,958 


3871       1,2931 


1,939 
'456 
5,842'     44,643,       2.389 


4,4481       5,897 

25,920 

1,394      12,826 


fl'S 

<D    O 

S  o- 


< 


9,i72 

3,500 

9,172 

3,500 

28,975 

508 

9,678 

200 
125 





10,186 


1,297 


7,522 

4,904 
20,257    .  19,225 

I 
32,683      20,522 


8,265 
8,031 


2,165 
2,165 


87,377 
9,685 

97,062 


13,512 


325 


2,500 
2,500 


14,412 
14,412 


2,840 
2,840 


30,000 
30,000 


*Including  Sl,600  for  purchase  of  building  and   land  for  agricultural  purposes,     flncluding  SI, 606  on 
harbor  and  81,600  bonus  to  canning  factory.     ^Including  S575  paid  to  county. 


88 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


TOWN    MUNICIPALITIES.— Con^mwcd. 


Assets. — Continued. 


O 
02 


00  &o 

o  o 


a. 

O' 


c; 


S 


10,000   23,530!  8,420 

7,000 tl9,575 

17,000'  23,53o!  27,995 

I       I 

29,000'  100,000  9,675 


23,300  §16.700  10,000 

29,000  40,750  •[18,401 

28,500  47, 500 :  10,097 

87,550i  174,000i  25,650 


168,350  278,950 


23,000 

12,000'  10,000 

30,000 


65,000,  10,000 


4.5,000 21,000 

31,652|  57,449  194,366 


64,148 


16,500 

9,600 

20,100 

46,200 


76,652   57,449 

20,000 

19,300   52,406 

41,500 


215,366 

e  155.000 

11,830 

21,773 


65,600  176,640   66,904 
60,000   30,000   26,000 

125,600  206,640   92,904 


14,397 
25,000 

12,000 


17,000 
22,500 
12,000 

51,500 


58,437 


55,300 
45,800 

200 


2«,470 

31,134 

8,740 


26 

26 

1,725 


49.369 
39,  .320 

88,689 

173,445 


10, 714 
1500,896 

511,840 


52,508 
230   89,829 


457 
457 

352 
1,350 

1,702 

4,761 


121,882 
920,486 

1184,705 


47,022 
40,512 
90,128 

177,662 


80,831 
310,916 

391,747 

194,742 


1,607 1  91,659 


257 


82,294 


c  95, 428  522,385 
2,64ll  136,312 

98,069;  658,697 


143 1  79,342 
32,250  133,746 


423 


58, 437 1  66, 344 1 


13,880 


86,177 

137,991 

35,410 


Liabilities. 


304 
304 


833 
1,615 


2,448 


1,424 
2,100 


s 


>'a 


2,139 
2,139 
3,500 

1,000 
1,000 

16,' 700 

12, 700 


9,000 


2,776 


2,776 

394 

4,000 

7,475 


2,370 
1,105 


,519 
558 


4,393 

10, 392 

1,418 


9,000 


4,490 
30,000 


52,000 
19, 000 

71,000 


1,815 


1,815 
1,454 


14,179 

15,531 

16,000 

103, 771 

149,481 


1,200 

15,000 

1,000 

17,200 


10,000 
10,000 


674 
16,975 


40,000 
26,536 

66,536 


19,313 
25,000 


30,000 


1,084 

15,448 

23,803   6,895 


423  259,578  4,359  16,203153,803'  23,427  105,819 


zi'O 


<*-  a  £ 

DO  2  © 

«*  S  o 


41,833 
25,500  *2,213 

67,333  2,213 

143,647 


12,577 

43,412 

63,012 

853,629 

972,630 


2,120 


319 
319 


100 


6,043 
28,120 

36,283 


39,435  8,585 
15,900  a2,994 
94,973  615,150 


150,308 

68,441 
224,601 

293,042 

209,091 

39,256 

25,587 


26,729 

10,600 
7,500 

18,100 

d6.000 


6,003 
47, 268 

53,371 


100 
591 


691 


393,022  38,270 
1121,000  9,500 


414,022 

15,508 
111.571 


8,248 

95,797 

1,774 


47,770 


1,569 


2,200 


200 
200 
835 
177 

44 


60 
218 

278 


43,648 
30,475 

74,123 

148,601 


29,976 

60,776 

92,673 

1,043,488 

1,226,913 


49,220 

42,994 

111,714 

203,928 


.  81,817 
242,301 

324,118 

216,320 

50,021 

82,181 


523,352 
76,254 

599,606 


2,626        39,016 
145,090 

2,758 


3,296 
2,000 

5,296 


715 
50 


45,.S24 

127,3.53 

36,995 


765    209,67 


flncluding  harbor,  810,000.  *Including  S212,  due  sinking  fund.  §Including  fire  hall  and  appliarcps 
•Ilncludine  82,891  for  iron  bridges.  ^Including  $350,000  for  bridge  and  subway,  and  850,000  for  sewers, 
a  Including  81,297  due  sinking  fund,  fclncluding  81,250  due  sinking  fund,  cincluding  890,000  for  harbor. 
dOmitting  8450  wrongly  reported  in  1895.     cincluding  Gardner  carriage- wcrks  security  $25,8C0. 


89 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


Table  \"II.— F  I  N  AN  C  I  A  L  STaTEMENT- 


Heceipts. 


Town 
Municipalities. 


Lanark : 

Almonte 

Carleton  Place 

Perth 

Smith's  Falls  . . 


Totals . 

Victoria  : 
Lindsay . . . 


PETERBOBOrCH  : 

Peterborough  , 


Hastings  : 
Deseronto 
Trenton  . . 


Totals. 


MnsKOKA : 
Brace  bridge  . 
Gravenhurst 

Totals... 


Parry  Sound  : 
Parry  Sound 


NiPISSING  : 

Mattaw-a 

Is  orth  Bay  , 

Sturgeon  Falls  . . 
Sudbury  


Totals . 


Manitol'lin  : 

Gore  Bay  

Little  Current... 

Totals  

Algoma  : 
Sault  Ste.  Marie . 
Thessalon  ..;.... 


Totals . 


Thunder  Bat : 
Fort  William. 
Port  Arthur . . 


Totals . 


Rainy  River  : 
Rat  Portage 


743 

27,793 

2,574 

153 

31,263 


3.367! 


24,475 


4 

4' 

1,692 1 
1,176 

2,868 
213 


77 
1,349 


1,134 
2,560 

8 
587 

595 


102 
1,610 


1,712 


92 
7,109 

7,201 


<*  be 

tn  l^ 
bt.2 


^ 


15,203  1,269  326 
16,H63  1,898  104 
20,720;   1,688       451 


22,843 
75,429 

50,002 

66,218 


1.5,286 
27,622 

42,908 


8,253 
8,212 

16,465 
7,260 


5,224 
10,380 


8,482 
24,086 


2,561 
2,160 

4,721 


26,366 
2,646 

29,012 


21,020 
26,408 

47,428 
5,872 


1,758 
6,613 


543 
1,424 


2,235    1,290 


6,408 

7,195 

792 
1,433 

35 

768 

2,225 

803 

362 

274 

249 
103 

636 

352 

102 

21 

1,093 
1,129 

30 

1 
9 

l,o36 
4,346 

273 
306 

105 

186 

""27 

291 

27 

663 
271 

471 
80 

934 

551 

1,666 
2,423 

616 
220 

4,089 

836 

2,057 

199 

■2  »• 


693 


o  a> 

2  > 
«5  c 


5,626 
5,626 
1,263 

2,369 
"360 
2,729 


693 

69111,874 

2,974'   3,866 


18 
806 


I 

c  -^ 
c  ^ 


t9,365 
9,365 


824' 


91 
140 


231 


23 


23 

20 

20 

896 
38 

934 
203 
203 


4,900 
4,900 


636 

636 

5,667 

5,667 

5 


7,00c 


9,500 
4,650 

21,150 
30,000 
10,296 


1,S45 
67,922 

69, 467 


5,510 
6,757 

12,267 


10,650 


1.500 
5,810 
1,202 
2,000 

10, 512 


1,237 


1,237 


6,211 
600 

6,811 


18,  294 
21, 158 

39, 452 

74,000 


1,900 
1,200 


3,100 


4,000 


38,000 
21,000 

59,000 


9,000 
10,000 

19,000 


8,000 


10,000 
18,000 


6,000      11,100 
I       2,000 


13,000 


2,667 


318 


196 
123 

t637 
786 
201 


414 

1,421 

+1,835 


694 
531 

+1,225 
294 
378 


1,578 
+1,956 


*2,331 
20 


6,000;     13,100'     T2,351 
2,667 


1.083 
2,567 

3,650 
r3,251 


*  Inc  uding  83,106  for  redemption  of  land  sold  for  taxes  J  Includes  receipts  from  electric  railway, 
t  Including  premiums  on  debentures  gold  :  Almonte,  8304  ;  Deseronto,  81^9  ;  Trenton,  81,017;  Brace- 
bridge,  8590  ;  Gravenhurst,  8481  ;  Mattawa,  269  ;  Sault  Ste.  Marie,  8210  ;  Thessalon,  820  ;   Rat  Portage 

.■==901. 

90 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWNMUNICIPALITIE  S.— Continued. 


Disbursements. 


Allowances 
salaries  a 
commissic 

§ 

26,759 
48,351 
35,129 
30,070 

ft 

764 

994 

793 

1,030 

140,309 

3,581 

100,245 

2,352 

125,633 

2,976 

56,090 
120,976 

385 
1,455 

177,066 

1,840 

31,477 
32,093 

2,345 
509 

63,570 

2,854 

19,803 

605 

16,334 

21,038 

1,792 

25,363 

565 
67C 
162 
922 

64,527 

2,319 

3,932 
2,960 

93 
284 

6,892 

377 

54,776 
7,265 

2,061 
199 

€2,041 

2,260 

51,308 
69,250 

1,617 
1,644 

120,558 

3,261 

98,384 

2,420 

«  («  a 

\  ^    t^    Q 
~    fl     I  «--;  +3 
•^    -    V     !.^    CO) 

O  s  -g 

bcoo   g 

.2  fe  o-l 
-£.|2| 


8,6961 


15, 312 


2,160 
3.293 

5,453 


1,806 
1,255 

3,061 


2,096 

1,002 
1,756 

161 

2,919 


312 
212 


524 


1,509 
205 

1,714 


1,095 
2,210 

3,305 
2,714 


■£  o  So 
O 


1,693 
1,473' 
2,975^ 
2,555: . 


56 


6,266;        92 


2,789 


192 

720 


912 


84 


125 

1,443 

50 


fa* 


o 


1,618 

11 

18 

99 

964 
100 

1,064 

312 
335 

647 
324 


951 

439 

1,227 

524 

3,141 


1,140 


2,217 


296 
612 


908 


391 
373 


764 


319 


564 
262 
130 
295 

1,251 


126 
75 


201 


705 
439 

1,144 


1,864 
1,568 

3,432 
*  2,241 


*  tS  o 


s 

2,198 
3,100 
3,201 
1,513 

10, 012 


4,262 


14, 831 


17,268 


l,60l'30,410 
1,019,   7,760 


2,620 

1,039 
1,580 

2,619 
723 


38, 170 
4,077 
4,077 
1,315 


1.991  

1,470    1,933 

445;   

1,301  16,364 


5,207 


166 
253 


419 


2,025 
516 

2,541 


18, 297 


3,444 
1,745 


848 


848 


1,286 
5,189  1,286 
8,367 


T3  4< 

be  1* 

a  h 


3  O 

PQ 


161 

17, 557 


17, 718 


66 


345       504 


400 


51 
405 


456 


475 
865 

1,340 


455 
278 


740 


123 
1,910 

2,033 


915 
915 
582 


1,000 
75 

1,075 
220 
220 
112 


41 

40 

123 

43 

247 


27 


241 

77 


318 
166 


al 
«  a 


382 

184 

280 

92, 


2     -2 


s  -5  .-     4= 


>->£ 


316 
516 
770 
530 


•  o  c 
o  o  o 

«  o  "S 

B    CO    cc 
O         u 

i-'i 

(Da 

si's 

>,  o  s 


1,415    6,198 

1,404    7,190 

7,083 

1,740    7,000 


•OS 

'^  S . 

S   "^   o 

n.S'o 


938    2,132 


607    2,421 


2,284 


156 
679 


835 


60 

189 


239 
106 


355 
20 


385 
760 


309 
17 

326 

470 
347 

817 
533 


6,117 


604 
1,329 

1,933 


400 
486 

366 


635 

501 

12 


1,148 


302' 
120 


422 


638 
395 

1,033 


962 
695 

1,657 
tl.OOO 


4,559 
3,536 


1,089 
1,089 


27,  471 
15,206 
27,250 


6,752 
7,300 

14,052 


3,115 
3,603 

6,718 


3,685 


5,602 


300 


105    1,500 
1,563 


2,434 
2,434,    1,563 

541 


9,100 


541!   y,ioo 


3,966       131 
2,844' 


2,618 
9,428 


1,169 
880 

2,049 


11,050 
1,360 

12, 410 


131 


250 


250, 


1,747 1 
338 

I 
2,085  . 


4,471    7,249 
2,873  §8, 158 

7,34415,407 

i 
16, 225 1 


'^No  further  classification  could  be  made  for  lack  of  details.    tEstimated.    §In  town  account. 


91 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No  32). 


A.  1898 


Table  VII.— FIN  AN  CI  AL  STATEMENT— 


Town 
Municipalities. 


Lanark : 

Almonte    

Carleton  Place. 

Perth 

Smith's  Falls . . 


Totals. 

Victoria  : 
Lindsay   . . 


Peterborough  : 
Peterborough 


Hastings  : 
Dpseronto 
Trenton    . 


Totals  .. 

MCSKOKA  : 
Bracebridge  . 
Gravenhurst . 

Totals... 


Parry  Sound  : 
Parry  Sound 


NiPissiNG  : 

Mattawa 

North  Bay 

Sturgeon  Falls. 
Sudbury  . 

Totals 


Manitoulin  : 

Gore  Bay 

Little  Current. 

Totals  .... 


Algoma  : 
Sault  Ste.  Marie . 
Thessalon 


Totals  ... 

Thunder  Bat  : 
Fort  "William. 
Port  Arthur . . 


Totals . . 

Rainy  River  : 

Eat  Portage 


3 

a   . 

<I>  fl 

_   ® 

©•a 


600 

1,100 

405 

2,105 


150 


486 


486 


200 
267 

467 


107 


205 


205 


3,000 


Uisbursements.—  C<.vtinued. 


^  s 


®  3    . 

fl  u  m 
O  fc-  <I> 


«5^ 


2,500, 
3,000i 
2,300 

688! 

8,488 
4,200 

5.000 


1,155 
630 

1,785 
1,116 


660 
796 


754 
2,210 


101 
101 

89 


89 


7,000 
9,566 


*>  p  fl 
I  i  § 


16,500 
36,000 


2,421 
2,800 
1,618 
1,307 

8,146 
10, 782 
!  14, 202 


1,210 
78, 686 

79,896 


6,960 
6,281 

13,241 

.3,800 


4,300 
2,770 


7,070 
818 
818 


671 
7,979 


2,.555 
1,012 

3,567 

3,551 

1,062 
3,275 

2,036 

6,373 


139 
184 


323 


7,043  18,872 
600       185 

7,64319,057 


15,500    7,048 
19, 484 '12, 745 


3,000 t     34,98419,793 

288        1,795'     57,468    3,733 


240 

315 

*1,140 

431 

2,126 
575 


a  " 


26,  303 
39,  626 
31. 987 
17,819 

115,735 


94, 340 


2,789  115,040  10,593 


456 

8,725 

3,142 

12,251 

24,  574 


1,177 
t6, 482 


49, 803 
120,228 


8,650   7,6591  170,031 


6,287 
748 


5  26, 069 

§5,606j  31,705 

5, 611 1  56,774 

157  18,057 


20 

111,829 

870' 

467 

3,186 


140 
376; 


15, 872 

20,092 

1,792 

25, 353 

63, 109 


3,  .526 
2,549 


6.408 
388 

6,796 

1,746 

462 
946 

"io 

1,418 


406 
411 


516   6,075 


a4,280   52,276 
6,341 


63 
4,343 


58,617 


1.629      51,103 
cl4,659|     66,540 


16,288 


817 


2,600 
924 

3,424 


A' sets. 


130 


1,021 
525 

1,676 


5,905      18,804 


24,431 


2.039 
25,600 


7,035      27,639 


3,751 
5,265 

9,016 
5,596 


7,887 

14,573 

2,240 

6,776 

31,476 


1,038 
826 

1,864 


18,551 
614 

19,165 


T3  ».2 

p  £  o 

a  oi  _. 

M  la 
p.S  rt 

CO 


1.5,810 
41,394 

19^907 
19,907 

4,384 


4,384 


695 


2051     16,502 
2,7101     32,274 


117,643]   2,9151     48,776 
97, 856       5281     21,937 


695 


1,021 


a  EC 

fees' 

s-9§ 


30O 


45,500 


2,662 


2,662 

5,000 
5.000 


1,021 


627,323 
1,300 

28,623 


17,991 
.53.909 

71,900 


260,000 


260,000 


*Including  S775  paid  county.  +  Including  S5,093  to  county,  t  Omitting  SI, 099  transferred  to  "  Other 
Investments."  §  Including  $5,168  paid  on  account  of  Sanitarium  bonus.  ||  Including  $1,580,  part  expenses 
of  selection  of  county  town,  a  Including  82,662  refund  of  moneys  received  for  land  for  taxes  and  redeemed. 
b  Omitting  S410  overstated  in  1895.     c  Including  §7,861  for  electric  railway. 


92 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TOWN  MUNIC  IP  A  LIT  IRS.— Conimwed. 


Assets.  -  Continued. 


Liabilities. 


.a  o 
CO 


30,000 
18,000 
36.000 
45,000 

129,000 


80,200 
52,000 


27,912 
15,500 

43,412 


11,000 
16,000 

27,000 


11,500 


®  ^  s 


8,000 
5,000 
4,500 

17,500 


3,200 
2,160 

5,360 


19,000 
2,210 

21,210 


31,000 
24,400 

55,400 

30,000 


S 

60,750 

38,700 

27,000 

*46,000 

172,450 


5,218 
5,218 


91,336 

65,425 

67,163 

108,994 

332,918 


40,853    477  161,849 


30,410 
12,000 

42,410 
37,000 


37,000 


408,800   1,874 


4.0751 
125,150 


129,225 


10,575 
11,300' 

21,875, 


171 


614,592 


73,385 
198,905 

272,290 


73,289 


95   38,048 
266  111,3.37 


36,409'   2,877:   1,2331  59,361 


. .  .  '  10.032 
47,000   2,500 


60,000   1,050 
107,000   lrf,582 


1,780 
2,957 

4,737 


16,700 
2,444 

19,144 


21,159 
124,886   8,797 

I 
124,886j  29,956 

M2,791 


611 


162 
6,436 

6,659 


19,137 

73,019 

7,402 

78,772 

178,330 


7,481 
6,381 


63   13,862 


625,488 
70 

25,558 


369,562 
7,662 

377,124 


17,329'  104,186 
tZ17,910  264,886 


35,  239 
482 


369,072 
65,738 


O 


2,646 


2,839 


2,839 


S 


8,200 
14,700 

22,900 


7,82910,000 

I 
7,829  10,000 


1.390 
3,169 


4,559 


2,182 
3,123 
1,022 
1,770 

8,097 


1,125 


1,125 


3,900 
524 

4,424 


20,000 


882  15,000 
26,000 


7,011 
7,893 
9,700 


40,000 


1,400 


13,451 
14,851 

46,466 


43,700 
4.3,000 
17,200 
39,191 

143,091 


149,800 


66,400    199,150 


9,046 
3,665 

12,711 


7,429 
11,190 

18,619 


6,192 


5,081 
'  746 
5,827 


1,860 

645 

2,495 


^    ri    O 


.38,000 
138,267 

176,267 


645,045 
14,491 

59,536 
c31,657 


20,337 
643,804 


5,114 
5,114 

14,000 

1 45, 620 


1,545 
6,500 

8,045 


20, 000      18,300 
1,400 


19,700 


e61,380 
115,521 

"2,283 
2,283 


349,050 
2,000 

351,050 


2,300 
2,300 

6,850 


111,500 
7,508 
1,292 
8,516 

18,816 


640 


640 


443 


443 
2,321 
9,534 


44,143 
44,400 
28,239 
72,456 

189,238 


216,233 
320,704 


...   48,591 
12,000  168,261 

2,000,  216,852 


...  1  53,864 
§5.574   36,724 


5,574 


72 


667 


a3,160, 
8,723, 


90,588 


44,771 


24,676 

59,516 

5,474 

71,135 


12,540  160,801 


172 

148 

320 


6,211  c4,513  401,974 
79   4,503 


500 
6,711 


28,000   76,919  e  24, 518 


3,787 
3,076 

6,863 


22,5001  193,250 


4,592 


135 


50,500 
19,673 


270,169 
32,927 


/■  68, 909  12,568 
93,427jl2,703 
29,000,  3,436 


406,477 

145,454 
329,238 

474,692 

94,736 


*  Including  SIO.OOO  for  iron  bridge,  f  Including  820,344  due  sinking  fund.  J  Payable  to  county* 
^  Including  84,832  balance  Sanitarium  bonus.  ||  Omittiug  -SI, 000  overstated  in  1895.  a  Including  §2,609 
payable  on  schoal  debt  to  "Springer  Tp.  6  Including  825,096  interest  to  be  refunded  by  Power  Company. 
<;  Including  82,451  notes  given  to  Douglas  and  Clerque,  of  Power  Co.  il  Including  813,070  lands  bo't.  at  tax 
sales  by  town,  and  hf>ld  in  trust,  e  Includinsr  $10,018  due  Sinking  Fund.  /  Including  853,909  due  Sinking 
I'und.     k  Omitting  811,661  overstated  in  1895. 

93 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A;  1898 


FINANCIAL  statement- 
Table    VIII. — Showing  the  Receipts,  Disbursements,  Assets  and  Liabilities  of  the  village 


Village 
municipalities. 


Essex  :' 
Belle  River 
Kingsville  . 


Totals. 


Kent  : 
Thamesviile 
Tilbury 


Totals 


Elgin  : 

IJutton 

Port  Stanley 
Springfield  . . 
Vienna 


Totals. 


NOBFOLK  : 

Delhi    

Port  Dover  . 
Port  Rowan. 
Waterf ord . . . 


Totals  . 

HaIDIMANU  : 
Caledonia  . . 

Cayuga  

Dunnville  . . 
HagersviUe 

Totals.. 


Welland  : 

Bridgeburg    .... 

Chippawa 

Fort  Erie  

Niagara  Falls  S 
Port  Colborne  . . 

Totals 


Lambton : 

Alvinston 

Arkona  

Oil  Springs  . . . 
Point  Edward. 

Thedford  

Watford 

Wyoming 


Totals . 


Receipts. 


698 
931 


1,629 


928 
55 


983 


66 

82 

333 

423 

904 


314 
1,120; 

37 1 

108 

I 

1,579 


1.492 
520 


2761 
2,288, 


270 
349 


586 
217 

1,422 


419  j 

80 
188 
277 

.SO 

1,006 

658 


1.252 

8,451 

9.703 


4,625 
5,065 

9,690 


2,474 
2,013 
1,186 
1,591 

7,264 


2,768 
5,220 
2,579 
6,844 

17,411 


8,854 
3,194 
8,160 
3,752 


'  t*  c  t« 


127 
171 


298 


168 
253 


421 


86 

295 

30 

48 

459 


58 
169 

75 
188 

490 


582 
372 
673 
351 


18,960  1,978 


5,905 
1,6721 
3,462 
6,899 
4,714 


288 
259 
15? 
110 
324 


22,652.  1,133 


4,044' 
1,179 
6,169, 
3, 554 1 
1,662 
6,275! 
2, 747 1 


2,6.58      25,6301    2,519 


31  I 

77 


108 


13 


78 

58 

27 

8 

171 


15 

80 

7 

2 

104 


16 
50 
53 
12 

131 


17 
100 
167 

14 

28 

326 


532 

28 

177 

28 

359 

197 

397 

22 

33 

28 

793 

74 

228 

15 

392 


415 
415 

iJ551 
1,551 


1,077 


1,077 


940  i 


940 


421 
421 


126 
126 


<£ 


o  u 


262 
262 


30 

211 


51 


fl  o:   CO 

o  £3 

^  e  S 

?  ®    00 

O  ^"- 

03 


.S 


1,522,       8,350 
1,522'       8,350 


-05  g. 


(2 


1,000 
1191 

1,119' 


*630 

1,150 

250 

91 

2,121 


300 


10,000 
10,000, 

1,000 


1,750 

878 

2,928 


+43 
43 


3,000 
4,000 


500 

5,756 

9001 

7,156 
100' 


1.280'. 

5,000|. 

400  . 

6,780  , 


1,700, 


2581 . . . 
516  . . . 
000' .. , 
1621... 
800  .. . 


345 


7,436 


345 


8 


187 


190 


132 
1984 

1,116 


246 


13 

267 

40 
"  & 


46 


66 
12 
60 
37 

175 


225 


12 
529 


766 


290 
35 

17& 
62 
38 

793 

109 

1.495 


♦Including  S430  temporary  loan  from  School  Board.     fBalance  debentures  omitted  in  1895.    JPrtmium 
on  debentures  sold. 


94 


61    Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32j. 


A.  1898 


VILLAGE    MUNICIPALITIES. 

municipalities  in  the  Province  of  Ontario  for  the  year  ending  December  olst,  1S96. 


Disbursements. 


>c  5 


cS   ^    C 

»^  a 

_2  cs  o 


-S  C  . 

S  *  a 

.S  S  a. 

•II  2 

3 


2,111 
20,525 

22,636 


6,856 
18,425 

25,281 


4,580 
3,60(5 
1.826 
5,174 

15,186 


3,495 
6,589 
4,497 
8,022 

22,603 


6,040| 

4  669 

15,779 

5,328 


154 
561 

715 


398 
260 


658 


186 
280 
110 
114 

690 


95! 
238 
103 
201' 

637 


780 
2,253 

3,033 


6,805i 
2,386 
5,073 
14,078 
5,683 


195 
134 
403 
336 
305 


3i,025  1,378 


7,013 
1,499 
7,694 
4,818 
2,791 
12,103 
4,557 

40,475 


343 
114 
656 
493 
92 
805 
299 


118 
27 
10 

155 


108 
266 
320 

258 

952 


276  296 

304  369 

460'  2,736 

192|  230 


31,816J   l,232j   3,631 


10 


1,041 

188 


228 
ll 

6  . 
18 
613 


15 


2^  5 


65 


11 


141 
5 

146 


69 

'315' 
10 
26 


1,2391      420 


206 
1 


67 
345 

412 


185 
476 


145 

177 
51 

84 


76       457 


2,802       8721       287 


106 
73 
79 
73 

331 


177 

152 

389 

93 

811 


274 
107 
235 
157 
150 

923 


165 
49 

200 

145 
61 

159 
50 

829 


370 
844 

1,214 


1,377 


709 
6611   2,086 


557 
497 
381 
223 

1,658 


291 
762 
458 
899 

2,410 


612 

406 

3,871 

1,087 

5,976 


755 

461 

745 

2,466 

1,228 

5,655 


555 
283 
1,125 
931 
304 
748 
566 

4,512 


S-SP 
»r-2  o 

CD  "3  n 

*    (S    O 


^ 


§ 


332 
332 


1,548 
1,548 


JS 

■73    « 

"cS 

c«  g 

M 

!^> 

a  u 

2j3 

-o 

■30 

c4 
0 

M 

M 

s 

S 

O    p    Ol  I  *J  4j 

-    fc.'S  ]  G.H  9 


384 


3841 


.54 


550 
560 


54 


55 


o5 


30        203 


....I        .58 
230l       170 


2601      431 


47 


11 


361 
19 
l.S 

2 

70  i 


15 

4 

15 

34 


86 


12 


100 

9 

15 

12 

13 

IfiV 


53 


62 
157 


219 


44 


54 


60 
139 
351 

54 

604 


14 
17 
18 
113 
20 

182 


137 
14 
14 


74 


124 
22 


146 


114 

50 

4 

28 

196 


47 

5 

339 

5 

396 


>>_5 


a  _ 


5>'^ 


O    <D    XT 


29        820  ,. . 
323'   2,875|... 


352    3,695 

I 

I 
258  1,271 
280|  1,412 

I 
538    2,683 


162 


131 
103 


609 
761 
457 
790 


3961   2,617 


235  1,069 

386  2,880 

188]  1,272 

5061  2,2841 

I 

1,315  7,505|. 

! 

3011  2,200 

187'  1,750 

....  3,000 

2211      813 

I 

709;  7,763 


.300,  470 
213 1  950 
250    1,200 


362 
478 


2,429 
1,869 


1041    1,603    6,918 


69 1   2,018 

97:      155 1      513 
395 


26i 

251 1 

15 I      145 

16 

9 


1,369  . 
2,295'. 
800 
3201    3,025  . 
2101   1,596  . 
Ill 
248'      483'   l,2''R'll,6!fil. 


339 

I 
339 


91 
91 


95 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18^8 


FINANCIAL  statement- 
Table   VIII.  —Showing  the  Receipts,  Disbursements,  Assets  and  Liabilities  of  the 


Village 
municipalities. 


Essex  : 

Belle  River. 
Kingsville . . 


Totals. 


Kent  : 

Thameaville , 
Tilbury 


Totals. 


Elgin  : 

Dutton 

Port!  Stanley. 
Springfield  .. 
Vienna 


Totals . 


Norfolk  : 

Delhi 

Port  Dover. . 
Port  Rowan. 
Water f ord . . . 


Totals . . 

Haldimand  : 
Caledonia  . . 

"  Cayuga 

Dunnville  . . 
Hagersville. 

Totals.. 


Disbursements. — Continued. 


■o  S 


Wklland  : 

Bridgeburg 

Chippawa 

Fort  Erie 

Niagara  Falls  S. . . 
Port  Colborne 

Totals 


Lambton  : 

Alvinston  .... 

Arkona 

Oil  Springs .    . 
Point  Edward 

Thedford 

Watford 

Wyoming  .... 


Totals. 


423 
423 


399 
201 


600 
100 


Z.  3 


3,392 
3,392 


198 
1,786 

1,984 


235 


100 


235 


131 
115 
655 

901 


452 
452 


255 
255 

268 


385 
"482 
1,135 


C  n-( 


St5 


6,675 
6,675 

600 
4,280 


200 
1,150 


1,350 


656 


460 

770 

1,230 


500 
412 
641 


1,553 


1,.S50 

878 

2,884 


500 
2,087 
1,100 

3.687 


1,100 


2,756 
2,756 


365 
1,384 

1,749 


133 
57 


•424 

97 
1,089 

1.610 


225 
239 
911 
533 


821 


350 
634 
158 

1,142 


424 

100 

1,562 


894 

4,000 

400 

6,394 


1,700 


467| 

790 

411 


452 
300 

2,838 


500 
1,000 
3,162 

800 

7,162 


325 

6 

1,056 

8 

25 

862 

93 

2,375 


77 
575 


652 


130 
122 


252 


1,601 
50 
50 

3,007 


150 

340    4,708 


402 
532 
404 

85 


1,423 


78 

40 

267 

175 


1,908;      560 


31 


91 
256 
158 


53 

3 

*800 

1801 

72i 

791 

60| 


53.22 


1,.527 
19,434 

20,961 


6,164 
15,238 

21,402 


4,271 
3,467 
1,226 
4,613 

13,577 


.^,096 
6,245 
4,  .393 
7,755 

21,489 


4,772 

4,558 

15,779 

4,960 

30,069 


3,575 
1,917 
5,073 
13,037 
5,304 


1,380       536      28,906 


6,503 
1,336 
7,694 
4,818 
2,628 
10,785 
4,028 


1,2471     37,792 


2,683 


Assets. 


*  Including  S488  due  treasurer  1896,  not  previously  reported. 


96 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  18V.  8 


VILLAGE    MUNICIPALITIES. 

village  municipalities  in  the  Province  of  Ontario,  for  the  year  ending  December  31st,  1896. 


Assets. — Continued. 


2  3 

-a  ^ 


300 
12,000 

12,300 


10,000 
7,550 

17,550 


8,000 
2,000 
4,000 
3,080 

17,080 


320 

7,000 

5,000 

17,740 


28,300 


11,650 
2,850 
2,142 

10,000 
5,000 

31,642 


5,750 
3,000 
3,500 
7,000 
1,000 
19,000 
6,000 


20,000 

I 

20,000 


1,000 
15,855 

16,855 


30,060'.. 


9,000 

.5,000 

8,0001  12,000 

6,300 


12,000 


10,400 


10,400 


dl,390 


2,000 


45,250   3,390 


700 
10,000 


1,306 


2,041 
59,009 


8,800|   6671  22,747 
2,197  2,863   33,693 

3,530   56,440 


10,997 


1,662 

1,590 

134 

1,550 

4,936 


406 

5,000 

35 

2,000 

7,441 


6,800 

5,  .500 

9,500 

175 

21,975 


450 
3,300 

9,777 
1,000] 
2,000' 


43 


31 


31 


692 

692 


260 


5,179 12,913 

1,180|    12    4,536 


2,800| 
2,200; 

70 

5,875 

.500 

17,804 


41 


10,221 
4,540 
4.885 
6,027 

25,673 


2,099 
12,786 

5,674 
20,162 

40,721 


17,417 

11,882 

35,236 

8,155 

72,690 


15,802 

7,282 
12,265 
23.213 

7,547 


16,527   260   66,109 


9,798 
13,028 

1,246 
26,218 

7,161 

74,900 


Liabilities. 


328 


10,700;   1,306!     61,050,       328 


258 
280 


538 


122 
124 


246 


209 
1,716 

1,925 


1,650 
],650 


680 
221 


901 


71 
135 


.581 
485 
105 


1,171 


1,829 
1,146 

2,975 


620    1,931 
21 


620 
203  . 
205 


1,952 

200 
805 


C<3 


■s 


6,875 
6.875 


5,579 
5,579 


29,971 
29,971 


2,8501       3,929 
22,385 


5cS 


3,075 


19 

505 


3,075       505 


3,999 
6,849 

2,478 


3,000 
3,000 


2,478 


26,314 


1,000 
246 


412 
*339 

751 


114 
711 


825 


430  t2,465 
139 
77 
208 


259 
*91 


1,246 


6,445 
825  ... 
1,010 

1,010      12,117|     11,309 
7,000 


7,000 


870 
7^090 


1,005 


7,960 


4,200 
11,956 


4,766 

4,766      16,156 


269 
269 

1,650 


876 


8,696 
13,939 


22,635 


986 


9,377 


12,462        2,640 
I  800 


14,988      13,803 


780 


400 

400 


4,701 
4,701 


480 
1,000 


2,889, 


2,6.55; 

345 1 
30 


3,030 


3 
106 

45 1 

I 

1541 

I 

J6,177 


1,480 


33 

§2,135 

54 

8,399 


. . . . I        62 
258  ... . 
16,      463 


274 


525 


*  Due  sinking  fund,  t  To  Dunwich  re  sahool  debentures,  omitted  from  previous  returns.  §  Including 
SI.  775,  share  of  High  School  debentures,  payable  to  Stamford  Tp.  +  Payable  to  Bertie  Tp.  for  schoo 
debentures,     d  Not  previously  reported. 


7  B.L  (5) 


97 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A. 1898 


Table    VIII.— FIN  A  N  CI  AL    STATEMENT— 


Village 
mumcipalities. 


Huron  : 
Bayfield . . 
Blyth  . . . . 
Brussels . . 
Exeter  . . 
Wroxeter . 


Totals 


Bbcce  : 

Chesley 

Lucknow 

Paisley 

Port  Elgin 

Southampton . 

Tara 

Teeswater 

Tiverton 


Totals 


Gkey  : 
Dundalk. . . 
Markdale. 


Totals . 


SiMCOE  : 

Beeton 

Bradford  . . 
Creemore . . 
Tottenham. 


Totals. 


Middlesex  : 
Ailsa  Craig . . . 

Glencoe 

London  West. 

Lucan 

Newbury 

Wardsville  . . . 


Totals. 


Oxford : 
Embro  . 
Norwich. 


Totals 

Perth  : 
Milverton  . 


PO 


468 

445 

3,138 

163 

4,222 


1,14? 

2,296 

39 

i2',948 

80 

1,333 


7,838 
51 
51 


536 

9 

339 

414 

1,298 


64 

94 

2,123 

1,710 


I      156 
4,147 


585 
540 

1,125 


490 


Receipts . 


1£ 


1,154 
4,176 
6,152 
7,064 
1,528 

20,074 


6,839 
6,031 
5,616 
5,449 
4,163 
2,912 
4,673 
1,521 

37,204 


2,995 

2,728 

5,723 


2,872 
4,382 
1,570 
1,710 

10,534 


2,547 
5,705 
8,849 
3,297 
1,331 
1,207 

22,936 


2,940 
6,121 

9,061 


2.037 


S 


78 
212 
267 
486 
113 


fe  u  S 


307 
527 
445 
610 
340 
234 
361 
121 


233 
240 

473 


233 
12l| 

177  i 

1371 

668 


228 
479 
253 
242 
101 
100 

1,403 


147 
370 

517 


184 


26 

12 

178 

23 

4 


1,156|      243 


15 

29 

294 

158 

53 

10 

130 

36 


2,945       725 


36 


100 

142 

11 

125 

378 


75 
17 
20 

64 

48 

211 

245 


180 
39 


219 
3 


*198 


198 


42 


42 


863 


863 


147 

161 

26 

150 

484 


14 

129 

2 


32 

239 

38 


454 


143 


179 
1,956 

1^016 

3,151 


250 


596 
1,650 


2,496 


a  cc  X 
'~  u  o 

^g        111 

t:  *  3 


28 
1,0001   5,5C0 


11 
o 

^    <C    b 

^  fc4  e 

>■  ^  i^ 
P  »  5 

©■a  o 
P3 


3,500 


4,528 


1,200 
1,495 
1,410 
1,957 


5,500 


200 
6,262 


237 


143.      237 


476 


184 


476 


58 
581 


750 
1,535 

300 
1,659 

4,244 


650 
1,200 
3,459 


1,500 


1,500 


1,000 
1,000 


5,309 

250 
1,700 

1,950 
5,683 


S 


58 
283 

27 

125 

7 

50O 


1 

62 
21 

tl,228 

530 

tl,270 


3,112 


49 

154 


203 


285 

67 

1,236 

174 

1,762 


3 
216 
164 


197 


580 


80 
147 

227 


48 


*  Special  rate  for  street  watering.         +  Including    81,085,    received   on    mortgage,    omitted    from 
previous  returns.     J  Proceeds  of  sale  of  real  estate. 


98 


fl      61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32j. 


A.  1898 


VILLAGE  MUNICIPALITIES.-ConfmMed. 

Disbursements. 

i 

.2* 
£ 

"2  a 
-Co 

Oj          fj: 

u  OO   a: 

a  £-5 
cs  >.  a 

?J5  S 

0  es  O 

3    00    u 

<: 

$ 

115 
306 
662 
584 

188 

1,855 

752 
289 
290 
556 
301 
141 
269 
124 

2,722 

376 

125 

501 

292 

525 
169 

y  ca  c 

311 

^|£ 

QC^C43 

o 

C3 

0 

CC 

¥ 

It 

<u  C 
s-  cs 

$ 

330 
397 
449 
],663 
311 

3,150 

835 
1,178 
537 
283 
743 
638 
1,313 
103 

5,630 

523 
501 

1,024 

867 

591 

1,501 

759 

3,718 

151 
1,096 
927 
771 
207 
105 

3,257 

445 
1,191 

1,636 
254 

III 

b           CO 
OT3   C 
■SCO 

$ 

Si 

.S  ° 

cs 

K 
"o 

w 

u 

®  s  «> 

to 

«5  M 
0  C 

Us 

.2.Sg 

111 

£•? 

d  fci 

m  0 

a 
0 
0 
0 

00 
"o 
0 

■C 

a  J^.- 
gag' 

s 

575 
7,212 
1,722 
2,770 

516 

12,795 

1,700 
1,572 
2,017 
2,050 
1,740 
1,200 
1,544 
750 

in 

a 

*   . 

>  c 

■g   c3 

0 

$ 

1,352 
11,977 

9,186 
14  560 

$ 

$ 

$ 

69 
143 

56 
326 

24 

618 

148 
86 
194 
287 
207 
1.S6 
206 
139 

1,403 

90 
150 

240 

114 
137 
253 
173 

677 

77 
198 
321 
82 
71 
70 

819 

199 
272 

471 
132 

$ 

15 
15 

9 

71 

55 

7 

70 

7 

210 

2 

3 

21 

125 

157 

14 

71 

$ 

7 
132 

'"295 

434 

12 
132 
12 
14 
83 
27 
133 
29 

442 

9 
4 

13 
"  197 

$ 

141 
312 

280 

'"166 

833 

286 
262 
319 
341 
213 
205 
242 
107 

1,975 

375 
223 

598 
"267 

S 

$ 

1,073 

123 

1,112 

9 
9 

493 
1,952 

1,266 

3,711 

"'i29 

75 

2,981 
40,056 

9,517 

10,758 

7,868 

2,308 

690 
1,043 
911 
426 
434 
13 
427 

18 

46 
585 

""'27 

28 

5 

104 



75 

39 

15 

2 

5 

143 

11 

10 

10 

""667 

250 
131 
414 

8,195 

8,764 

4,601 

11,197 

1,678 

62,578 
3,3.30 

203 
2,250 

254 

*1, 635 

3,944 

49 
10 

59 

182 
188 

'"i67 

537 

212 
496 
900 
137 
33 
14 

1,792 

'  iJ2ii 

],211 
33 

795 

"162 
102 

196 
3 

199 

4 

"902 
2 

908 

3 
70 

73 
5 

921 

2,430 

196 

11 
17 

28 

'""ii 
20 

31 

127 
110 

25 

15 

25 

3 

305 

393 

61 
55 

116 

30 
14 
12 

1 

57 

4 
20 
92 
18 
74 

2 

210 

12,673 

700 

797 

2,582 

4,171 



7,501 

5,876 
6,399 
3,633 

1,497 

432 
2,103 

806 
1,250 

4,591 

1,320 
1,726 
2,956 
1,123 
406 
885 

8,416 
1,141 

"'i43 

407 
100 

4  219       142 

16 
213 

26 
29 
174 
51 
15 
3 

298 

96 

78 

174 
4 



267 

217 
500 
326 
268 

1,311 

.S30 
479 

809 
182 

143 

20.127 

4,048 
7,711 
14,952 
5,408 
1,677 
1,484 

1,128 

159 
178 
452 
110 
122 
87 

1,108 

185 
216 

401 
143 

507 

474 

813 

1,061 
368 

35,280 

4,182 

813 
302 

1,429 

474 

8,975 
13,157 

8,445 

5 
5 

2 

1,619 
2,760 

3,737 

228 

302 

2 

228 

Being  SI,  600  for  land  for  park  and  $36  for  safe  for  clerk. 


99 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Table    VIII.— F  I  N  A  NC  I  AL    STATEMENT- 


ViJlage 
municipalities. 


Disbursements. — Contin  it  ed. 


Huron  : 
Bayfield.. 
Blyth    ... 

Brussels. . 
Exeter  . . . 
Wroxeter . 


Totals . 


Bruce : 

Chesley 

Lucknow 

Paisley 

Port  Elgin. . . . 
Southampton . 

Tara 

Teeswater  . . . . 
Tiverton 


Totals. 

Grey  : 

Dundalk  . . 
Markdale. . 


Totals . 


SiMcoE  : 

Beeton  

Bradford  . . , 
Creemore  . . 
Tottenham, 

Totalb. 


Middlesex  : 
Ailsa  Craig. . . 

Glencoe 

London  West. 

Lucan 

Newburv   

Wardsville  . . . 


Totals , 


Oxford  : 
Embro    . 
Norwich . 


Totals 

Perth  : 
Milverton  . 


94 


94 


192 


211 
337 
103 


843 


212 
212 


300 


77 
377 


194 
520 


300 
1,014 


319 
3191 


417 


417 


448 
806 
284 
500 


2,038 


220 
80 


300 


805 
212 


1,017 


!>.3 

2  «  M 

C  fci  a> 

O  O  CD 

«■*-  a 

<*;  0)  a, 

o  >  X 

-o  o  * 


O  g  3 

Hi 


100 
567 


123 
200 


45 


3,500 


3,545 


1,200 
1,495 
1,310 
1,257 
1,085 


200 
200 

6,747 


750 
1,010 

300 
1,367 

3,427 


161  650 
140  1,200 
166   3,000 


154 
5,004 

250 
1,700 


323,   1,950 


813 

2,497 

857 

240 

4,407 


41 
1,395 
238 
537 
460 
186 
469 
201 

3,527 


120 
279 


399 


971  i 

595 

7 

212 

1,785 


1291 
493' 
2,211 
570, 
168 
10 1 


29 

96 

164 

233 


530 


1,402 
278 
267 
208 
629 
835 
69 
16 

3,704 


510 
1,118 

1,628 


789 
17 

434 
35 

1,275 


33 
21 
27 
66 
100 


3,581^   247 


166 
813 1 


49 
115 


979   164 


Assets. 


1,352 
11,195 

7,996 
11,8.S6 

2,660 


7,321 
8,549 
7,030 
8,195 
6,892 
4,113 
9,196 
1,669 

52,965 


3,044 
3,704 

6,748 


5,8351 
6, 399 1 
3, 496 1 
4,2191 
I 
19,949 


3,938 
6,727 
14,3.53 
3,581 
1,621 
1,333 

31,553 


3,289 
8,516 

11,805 


|§2,052|   6,546 


O 


782 
1,190 
2,724 

321 


35,0391   5,017i 


2,196 

2,209 

838 


1,872: 
:::488 
2,001 

9! 

9,613 


286 
467 

753 

41 

137 


178 


110 
984 
599 
1,827 
56 
151 

3,727 


893 
459' 

1,352 
1,899 


339 


195 
123 


657 


2,000 
1,238 
4,874 
2,047 


s  S  o 


fl.5  cs 


22 
660 

10,841 


496 
331 


827 


3,758 
1,464 
1,164 

6,386 


108 

.595 
4,012 
342 
837 
360 

6,254 


105 

867 

972 


5,370 
4,415 


2,394 
12,179 


a'2 


3,740 


1,421 
1,500 
1,500 

8,161 


3,385 


3,385 


1,061 
2,182 


3,243 


1,992 
1,992 


1,399 


1,399 


t4,000 


1,000 


5,000 


900 


900 


583 


583 


*  Balance  of  conditional  mortgage,  -83,542  reported  in  1895  written  ofif.      +  Including  .i>463  balance 
cemetery  funds,     f  Clifif  &  Foster,  Industrial  mortgage.     §  Including  ■S2,049  paid  to  other  municipalities. 


^ 


100 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VILLAGE    MUNICIPALITIES.  —Continued. 


Assets. — Continued 


*  s 


73    be 

S  "  s 


2,000 
6,  .500 
9,000 
8,200 
1,000 

26,700 


1,500 

10,000 

8,000 

10,000 

10,000 

2,500 

5,700 

2,000 

49,700 


2,000 
6,000 

8,000 


6,000 
9,000 
3,500 
4,400 

22,900 


3,000 

14,000 

11,000 

13,000 

3,000 

5,000 

49,000 


4,000 
11,032 

15,032 


6,300 


500 


800 


1,300 


10,000 
9,900 


400 
8,873 


29,173 


15,500 


15,500 


225 


225 


600 
4,050 
6,000 
9,100 
1,400 

21,150 


6,375 
6,800 
8,000 
4,800 
2,700 
485 
6,923 
2,000 

38,083 


516 
1,719 

2,235 


7,223 

9,300 

361 

3,300 

20,184 


1,475 
1,000 


1,900 

1,800 

900 

7,075 


7,300 
6,800 

14,100 


30 


375 


375 


100 
100 


989 
111 


160 


1,260 


363 
100 


1792 
1,255 


2,600 
18,940 
20,980 
21,019 

5,238 


150,571 


3,298 
8,617 

11,915 


30,653 

25,554 

5,462 

9,024 

70,693 


5.276 

17,167 

16,772 

19,251 

6,485 

6,411 

71,362 


12,298 
22,360 


1,210 

1,210   34,658 


8,238 


Liabilities. 


O 


597 
421 


224 


68,7771  1,018 


10,071 
38,749 
27,976 
19,674 
17,019 

5,894 
25,019 

6,169 


2,553 


2,553 


1,958 


3,000 
1,700 


225 


226 
226 


290 
299 
349 
174 


6,658 


200 
130 


330 


426 
1,400 

774 


P5 


9,055 
4,000 

13,055 


1,112  2,600 


752 
916 
293 
285 
205 

2,451 


125 

128 


135 

388 

744 


744 


5,406 
7,500 


12.906 


222 
6,151 
2,612 


8,985 


4,369 
4,369 


8,300 

32,200 

7,337 


28 
^4,389 


47,837 


3,921 
19,5001 
3,202] 
7,964 
5,702 
2,600 
10,500 
3,000 

56,389 


1,872 
920 

2,792 


4,417 


2,166 


500 
717. 


457 


1 1,837 


1,155 
2,372 


7,714 


2,796 
10,510 


681 

7,970 

5,000 

10,800 

1,800 


26,251 


9,681 
9,681 


18,072 
1,986       525 


1,876 
21,934 


545 

855 

34,176 


292 
817 


§459 


400 


35,976 


3,043 
6,427 

9,470i 


459 

300 

300 

5,753 


4,490 


2,275 
191 

2,466 


150 

537 

820 

99 

1,606 


549 


12 

561 


28 

18,692 

39,700 

19,366 

4,000 

81,786 


6,087 
21,682 

3,924 
18,290 
10,014 

4,467 
10,500 

4,155 

79,119 


4,347 
5,836 

10,183 


18,938 

12,461 

1,943 

5,237 

38,579 


1,226 

9,702 

41,228 

11,093 

2,485 

352 

66,086 


4,087 
16,108 

20,195 


5,753 


*  Including  .$3,389  due  Sinking  Fund,      t  Township  Arran  Railway  debentures  and  sectional  bonus* 
Payable  by  Mosa  as  share  of  school  debentures.    §  Due  Sinking  Fund. 


101 


61  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Village 
municipalities. 


Wellington 
Arthur  . . . . 
Clifford. . . . 
Drayton . . . 

Elora 

Erin 

Fergus 


Totals . 


Waterloo  : 

Ayr    

Elmira 

Heapeler 

New  Hamburg. 
Preston.  - 


Totals . 


DUFFERIN  : 
Shelburne 


Lincoln  : 

Beamsville 

Grimsby. 

Merritton    

Port  Dalhousie. 


Totals . 


Wentworth  : 
Waterdown. 

Halton  : 

Acton 

Burlington. . 
Georgetown 

Totals.. 


Peel  : 

Bolton 

Streetsville . 


Totals . 


York  : 

East  Toronto 

Holland  Landing 

Markham 

Richmond  Hill. . . 

StouffvQle 

Sutton 

Weston 

Woodbridge 


Totals 


Table    VIIL— FI  \  AN  CI  A  L    STATEMENT— 


Receipts. 


S 

116 

419 

212 

1,869 

82 


2,698 


333 

318 

2,366 

796 

3,813 


90 


232 
30 


347 
609 

595 


965 
676 


1,641 


156 
156 


2,352 
205 
641 
327 
320 
325 
245 
558 

4,973 


fl~ 


6,115 
1,672 
3,072 
6,186 
1,427 
7,862 

26,334 


4,705 
3,190 
6,355 
3,401 
9,244 

26,895 


6,316 


434 
79 
323 
270 
124 
451 

1,681 


1,472 


177 


3,280       209 
3,673 
13,819 
5,364 


180 
329 
523 


26,136    1,241 


1,517 

134 

4,726 
4,554 
7,574 

384 
332 
308 

16.854 

1,024 

2,267 
2,045 

295 
170 

4,312 

465 

10,748 
718 
4,360 
2,166 
3,801 
2,224 
4,649 

162 
26 
132 
228 
227 
86 
227 

1,593|      177 
30,2591   1,265 


133 

127 
50 

458 
30 

196 

994 


16 


190 

203 

93 

440         65 
546  9 


90 


528 


12 

20 

204 

62 

298 


146 

62 

426 


205 


2,630 
2,8S5\ 


1,631 
6341   1,631 


102 

4' 


106 


165 

272 

11 


166 


615 


1,060 


329 


1,389 


104 
13 

"28 

734 

879 


717 

747 


309 


800 


610 
1,410 


6,000 
6,000 

1,600 


O    s-i 


a  "> 
§2 

fe    P    O 

S  S  o 


C  w 

«M  00 

tt  ^  t^ 

g  (c  S 


2,967 


4,500 


250 

♦500 

8,217 


292 


3,580 

500 

8,192 

12,564 
2,600 


2,205 

2,050 

877 

1,600 

6,732 


34 
111 


145 


58 


400 

1,000 

139 

1,539 


400 


4001 . 


480 


9,350 
250 
705 


15 

275' 

i 

3991 


480 


5001 


10,805 


161 

2,m 

2,161 
1,000 


1,000 


1,200 


1,200 


10,000 


3,000 


13,000 


2 

S 

103 
132 
152 
408 
130 
1,021 

tl,946 


132 
44 
89 


172 
437 


111 

419 

99 

10 

639 


64 


197 

13 

115 

325 


478 

150 

55 

270 

77 

23 

199 

194 

tl,446 


*  From  Trust  Fund.        t  Including  premiums  on  debentures  sold  :  Fergus,  $154;  East  Toronto,  $350. 


102 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VILLAGE    MUXICIPALITIE  ^.—Continued. 


Disbursements. 


£ 

Allowances, 
salaries  and 
coinmissions. 

S 

S 

9,972 
2,442 
9,109 
9,380 
2,043 
13,374 

604 
185 
385 
400 
124 
377 

46,320 

2,075 

6,319 
3,804 

10,447 
6,772 

25,676 

245 
243 

438 
240 
358 

53,018 

1,524 

11,624 

439 

6,260 

7,572 

17,95« 

7,906 

495 
149 
747 
244 

39,696 

1,635 

2,312 

131 

6,852 

6,748 

10,193 

556 
307 
279 

23,793 

1,142 

3,064 
2,379 

171 
359 

5,443 

530 

34,689 
1,349 
9,403 

589 
112 
200 

■S  C   . 

3i  e3  q 

=  sl 

Sis  2 


64,631 


2,368 


27 


431 

67 

717 

1,242 


95 

176 

779 

493 

1,563 

3,106 


793 


197 

429 

2,134 


2,760 


502 

365 

1,119 

1,986 


25 
100 


125 


799 


2,138 


y.  a  a 


*  <*-  c 


146 


6 
105 


256 


15 


191 


35 

1,157 

555 

130 

io 

52 

41 

832 


268  611 

150  671 

258  1,690 

279|  1,201 

50  482 

188  3,530 

1,193  8,185 


206 

62 

435 

349 


265 

365 

1,237 

338 


3501  1,123 
1,402  3,328 


229 

46 
168 
330 

60 

604 
72 


186 
171 
356 

713 


149 

84 


233 


495 
135 
272 
221 
100 
102 
147 
80 


626 


285 
1,091 
2,125 

772 

4,273 


464 


968 
1,835 
1,000 

3,803 


559 
319 


878 


279 
732 
270 
1,165 
395 
907 
599 


1,552  5,245 


<% 


S-M 


O  ®  =5    yn  i 

lis 


300 


300 


84 


364 


364 


40 


40 


59 


69 


1,011 


40 
1,05] ' 

30 


100 
100 


61 
415 


476 


12 


49 


199 


PcJ 


m 


99 


10 

291 

30 


25 


59 


14 
6 

40 
4 

148 


7 
46 

9 
27 
20 

109 


23 


23 


23 

211 

90 

324 


16 
17 

3 
62 

6 
116 


219 


2 

10 

23 

349 


404 

788 


36 

40 

6 

6 

172 

260 


195 


6 
1 

324 
271 

602 


26 


22 
202 
227 

451 


49 


503 
204 

287 


179 

838 

2,011 


425 
307 
525 
434 
775 

2,466 


419 


416 

488 

908 

1,000 

2,812 


150 
225 
217 

592 


121 
128 


249 


1,419 


374 
289 
417 
185 
527 


3,211 


H    M    C5 


a  0)  o 


Isllll 


2,620 
477 

1,472 

2,704 
504 

3,239 

11,016 


1,816 
1,316 
2,451 


3,034 
8,617 

1,578 


1,542 
1,743 
3,656 
1,817 

8,758  . 


1.219 


644 
1,863 

224 


1,087 
l,311j 


3}    QQ 


150 
13 


728 
"'500 
1,391 


614 


1,600 
1,593 

2,782 

5,975 


1,130 
912 

2,042 


3,009 
550 
1,580 
1,033 
1,604 
1,048 
1,637 
745 

11, 206 


419 


419 


5,951 


»132 


132 


5,951 


*  To  credit  of  water  commissioners. 


103 


61    V  ictoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Table    VIII.-F  I  N  ANC  I  AL   STATEMENT- 


Village 
municipalities. 


Wellington  : 

Arthur 

Clifford  . . . 
Drayton . . . 

Elora 

Erin 

Fergus  . . . . 


Totals. 


Waterloo  : 

Ayr 

Elmira 

Hespeler 

New  Hamburg. 
Preston 


Totals. 


DCFFEBIN  : 
Shelburne 

Lincoln  : 
Beamsville  .... 

Grimsby 

Merritton 

Port  Dalhousie 


Totals. 


Wentworth  : 
Waterdown. 


Halton  : 

Acton   

Burlington  . 
Georgetown 

Totals.. 


Peel  : 

Bolton 

Streetsville 


Totals. 


York  : 

East  Toronto 

Holland  Landing. 
Markham  ....... 

Richmond  Hill    . 

Stouffville 

Sutton 

Weston 

Woodbridge    


Disburssments.  — Continued . 


^S 


307 


307 


536 


SS 


4.9     <0 

O  J3 


<D    3 

r-    fe  <" 

S    O  05 

■^  a 

5  fe  a 

OJ   o  o 


400 
800 


549 
1,085 

242 


252 
100 
335 


687 


200 
200 


Totals. 


769 
1,969 

277 
300 
158 
472 
6,207 

7,414 
1,575 


2,400 


3,500 


450 
538 


5  S5 
■sea 


s 

1,152 


246 

936 

29 

1,278 


6, 888 1  3,641 


502 


781 

I  450 

3, 100 1  655 

],200;  410 

6,000  1,733 

10,802  4,029 

1 

3,900,  1,003 


210  1,812 

5001  2,050 

1,623  1,614 

309  1,600 


2,642 


340 
219 
550 

1,109 


116 


3051 


116 


500 
100 
7^5 


125 


298 
111 


839 


7,076 


921 

131 

3,450 

390 

4,892 


400       849 

1,000;       148 

234:    2,656 


1,634 

400 

400 

16,500 
""705 


1521 
'i96 


1,683 


500 


17,705 


3,653 
57 
57 


3,139 

25 

1.085 


124 

18 

654 

344 

5,389 


298 


93 


84 

46 

404 

634 


1771 
29 


494 
17 
27 

117 
10 

686 

271 
60 

1,682 


Assets. 


1,546 


6,099 

6,347 

10,193 

22,639 


2,992 
2,074 


O 


206        5,066 


34,049 
1,269 
7,864 
3,056 
4,055 
3,123 
5,200 
2,072 

60,688 


163 
56 

386 

229 
70 

291 

9,843 
1,815 
9,080 
8,174 
1,982 
13,372 

1291 

627 

29 

1,206 

61 

2 

1,195 

44,266 

2,054 

113 
96 
101 
142 
306 

6,319 
3,367 

10,421 
4,096 

23,397 

437 

26 
2,676 
2,279 

758 

47,600 

5,418 

234 

11,564 

60 

54 

34 

200 

10 

6,260 

6,908 

17,958 

6,496 

664 

""im 

37,622        2,074 


766 


753 
401 


1,154 


72 
305 

377 


640 

80 

1,539 

242 

381 

35 

301 

725 


S 

1,395 
508 
984 

5,117 
6 

3,556 

11,566 


S  a  s 

S  (C  o 

to 


672 

1,838 

177 

3,354 

2,293 

522 

57 

1,146 

1,387 

3,112 
711 


863 

122 
951 

1,936 


361 
361 


14.545 

567 

576 

33 

352 

18 

1,179 

338 


2,919 


14,156 
17,075 


3,943      17,608 


< 


6671       3,1271. 


1,212 


1,212 


11,026 


11,026 


150 
384 


728 
"566 
1,762 


500 


2,3241       8,000 
5,451        8,500 

90O 


132 
132 


2,000 
2,000 


860 


3,554 
4,414 


104 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No   32). 


A.  18£8 


VILLAGE    M  UN  ICIPALIT  I'ES.— Continued. 


Asaetd 

—  Contimicd. 

Liabilities. 

School  lands  and 
buildings. 

03    tj    *i 

s 

•s 

S. 

o 

St 

s 

O 

400 

900 

2,500 

12,400 

on 
3 
O 
<u 

a 
S 

1 

1 

3 

o 

>> 

> 

>> 

c 

3 

O 

O 

1 

u 

"o 
o 

o 

K 

346 

CO 
U 

.«; 
5,000 

0) 

c 

V 

■a 

"o 

o 

"o 

a: 
S 
5,000 

CD 

8,500 

Its 

o 
s> 

J  ■ 

"a! 
a 

i 

IS 
.5 

6,500 
2,000 

s 

34 

"  27i 

78 

s 

11,527 
4.419 
9,384 

25,529 
3,067 

45,614 

99,540 

18,119 
10,437 
26,090 
20,680 
37,501 

112,827 

31,616 

22,419 

4,833 

100,081 

8,697 

136,030 

7,877 

30,755 

487 

*567 

B 
263 

20,163 

5,600 

278 
588 



1,838 

8,697 

1,000 

100 
726 

3,216 
18,819 

6,000 

3,000 

10,500 

33,600 

8,000 
+9,500 

1,808 

7,000 

300 

16,300 
32,500 

6,025 

600 
'  983 

1,353 

2,194 
4,348 

184 

15,000 
27,000 

""s'jbo 

6,838 
10.200 

5,591 

22,788 

3,223 

500 
2,067 

292 

653 
1,742 

23,938 
66,136 

13,899 
8,700 

11,776 
8,957 

13,893 
8,300 

300 
12,438 
15,000 

"7i3^io6 

88,100 

""liiie 

40,000 
41,116 

11,499 
7,60) 
10,721 

35,845 
11,734 

765 

"266 
266 
191 
132 

6,320 

3,913 

6,194 

14,360 

27,690 
1.5,080 

12,600 
1,900 

58,127 
7,000 

79,627 

985 

500 

5,692 

7,469 

700 

1,417 

558 
163 

721 

105 

522 

477 

356 
416 

2,100 
1,962 

4,246 
1,600 

14,000 
53,693 

4,000 

6,000 

8,700 

8,098 
24,618 

256 

1,488 
9,043 

30,112 
73,444 

18,218 

16,383 
2,316 

2,000 

2,1001        la 

11,303       200 

900 



14,200 

577 
1,994 

522 

67,747 
9,770 

96,216 

5.000 

994 
1,766 

1,776 

1,776 

27,200 
5,500 

15,068 

900 

17,265 

7,140 

11,300 

35,705 

1,785 
1,465 

3,250 

5,109 

450 

4,750 

4,432 

344 

62 

1,023 

14 

1,099 

103 

103 

1,493 
12 

156 

10,531 

10,600 

5,500 

10,530 

1,873 

40,550 

52,953 
677 

16  030 

5,000 

16,802 
72,265 

119,822 
6.960 

50 

1  923 

20,000 

11,600 
17,100 

139 
139 

175 
175 

1,003 
"164 

52,289 
70,242 

919 

35,600 
5,000 

50 

242 
277 

519 
1,468 

"ioi 

6,000 





24,126 
"ujbO 

8,131  

15,091| 

1 

62,939 

3,1091   -  -  - 

452 

11,000 

677 

62,  .500 

400 

:     16,444 

.:6,925 
255 

1,371 
71  896 

6,000 

2,000 

655 

11,000 
4,500 

29,771 
10,067 
4,733 
4,085 
20,480 
15,476 

150,660 

5,382 

22,031 

4,000 

1,256 

683 
""l^672 

81,699 

1,939 
535 

4,000 

35,876 

25 

6,000 

450 

21,216 

7 

'  2J83 

4,451 

'"854 
8,034 

535 
30 

1,672 

13,000 
7,626 

204 
204 

678 

10,912 
6,784 

24,334 

13,292 

7,842 

118,190 

52,126 

2,247 

*  Omitting  $1,546  current  loan  overstated  in  189.5,  and  including  $567  due  sinking  fund.      +  Omitted 
from  previous  returns.     J  Including  86.915  due  sinking  fund. 


lo; 


61  Yictoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189  8 


Table    VI 1 1.— F  I  N  A  N  CI  A  L    STATEMENT— 


Receipts, 

Village  _ 
municipalities. 

1 

■   g 
3 

u 
<D 

o 

1 

'c3    O 

a 

s 

a 

o 

a 

CO 

£ 

IK    ^ 

be 

§ 

•a -a 
§> 

O 

c 

l-H 

>< 

s> 

a 
0 
g 

-SI 
§> 

?,  ^ 

0   IB 

c  fl 

0  >- 

■a 

ill 

(a 

"32  ft 
te  C  fc, 

0 

(D 

0 

u 

m 

Ontario  : 

s 

677 

'""i09 

786 

230 
1,023 

1,253 

1,196 

1,951 

1,061 

471 

4,679 
259 

3 

699 

702 

i 

1 
844 

S 

2,500 
3,968 
9,602 

16,070 

4,106 
3,602 

7,708 

5,566 

12,794 

4,262 

4,055 

26,677 
1,658 

1,737 

2,898 

4,635 

1,482 
3,197 

4,679 
3  fi4n 

,s 

185 
247 

548 

980 

792 
72 

864 

177 

782 

86 

260 

1,305 
151 

43 

28 

71 

18 

114 

66 

198 

4S 
109 

157 

133 
84 
12 
86 

315 
25 

49 
49 

s 

s 

239 
""59 

298 



*  2i679 

2,079 

.8 

550 
1,604 
3,070 

5,224 
4,098 

S 

$ 

8 
114 

Cannington  

Port  Perry    

Totals 

Durham  : 
Millbrook 

171 

39,000 
39,000 

25 
310 

267 

4 

Totals  ... 

4,098 
1,-581 

271 

Northumberland : 

Brighton      

Campbellford   

2 

1,975 
6 

202 

400 
1,419 

3,400 
485 

300 

211 

Hastings    

Totals 

3 

1,981 

418 

Prince  Edward: 
Wellington    

Lennox  and  Ad- 

DINGTON  : 

Bath    

70 
70 

'  i"636 
1,036 

7 

Newburgh 

Totals 

3C0 

Frontenac : 

72 

72 

84 
124 

208 

305 
491 
161 

957 

279 
325 
763 
332 

1,699 

Totals 

Leeds , 

17 
37 

54 

89 
87 
70 

246 

83 

289 

8 

13 

393 

8 

Wewboro' 

953        1-998 

166 
100 

600 
500 
800 

1,900 
810 

46 

Totals 

Grenville  : 

1,797 

279 

2,267 

351 

2,887 

84 

1,643 

666 

96 

2,489 

5,638 

2,980 
7,892 
4,732 

15.604 

1,893 

5,314 

10,152 

3,735 

21,094 

.... 

63 

93 

Kemptville    

Merrickville   .... 



2 

) 

Totals 

....   . 
1,360 

96 

Dundas  : 

"  13 

"506 

2 

Iroquois 

Morrisburg    

Winchester     

Totals 

28 

566 
275 

1,685 

13 

500 

1,900 
1,900 

1,500 
1.500 

*378 
408 

'  Including  $127  premium  on  debentures  sold. 


106 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No  32). 


A.  1898 


VILLAGE    MUNICIPA.LITIES.-  Continued. 


Disbursements. 


107 


61    Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189.8 


Table    VII I  — FI  N  AN  C  I  A  L    STATEMEVT- 


Village 
municipalities. 


Ontario  : 
Beaverton    . 
Cannington 
Port  Perry. 


Totals. 

Durham  : 
Millbrook  . 
Newcastle 

Totals. 


Northumberland  ; 

Brighton    

Campbellf ord . . . 

Colborne 

Hastings    


Totals 

Pbince  Edward 
Wellington    . . . 


Lennox  and  Adding- 

TON  : 

Bath    

Newburg 


Totals. 


Frontenac  : 
Garden  Island. 
Portsmouth     . . 


Totals. 


Leeds : 
Athens  .. 
Newboro' . 


Totals. 


Grenville  : 
Cardinal .  . . . 
Kemptville   . 
Merrickville 

Totals... 


DUNDAS  : 
Chesterville 
Iroquois .... 
Morrisburg 
Winchester . 


Totals . 


Disbursemaats. — Continued. 


<o  a 
,  as 

1-1 


275 


12,000 
12,275 

209 


209 


787 
750 


1,537 


110 
110 


140 
1,350 


<o  s 


Z^ 


200 

312 

31,000 

31,512 


1,224 
600 
562 

2,386 


125 


2,000 
2,C0O 


S3  o  a! 

O  **  '^ 

«*-  (P  D, 

®  >  X 

S  ^a 

•2  2  § 

P3 


f  !§ 


450 
1,441 
1,700 

3,591 


3,200 


3,200 


1,500 


400 
2,000 

3,900 
275 


300 
300 


1,490 


570 
446 

1,016 


150 


600 
600 


600 

500 

600        1,575 


750 


785 
785 


413 

255 

3,104 

3,772 


436 


652 
500 
500 

75 

1,727 


436 


73 

2,101 

118 

122 

2,414 


78 


11 
315 


326 


301 
301 


224 
425 
431 


2,675'   1,080 


2 

45 
1,739 

477 

2,263 


54 
105 
612 

771 


415 
76 


491 


180 

489 

62 

525 

1,256 


48 


48 


466 
22 

488 

132 

80 

117 

329 


186 
187 
209 

582 


^  o 


Assets. 


8 

3,676 

6,104 

54,558 

64,338 


9,541 
3,931 

13,472 


8,655 

13,223 

5,539 

6,294 

33,711 


1,817 


1,922 
4,491 

6,413 


1,482 
2,475 

3,957 


3,763 
2,919 

6,682 


4,274 
8,998 
5.769 

19,041 


3,052 

5,810 

12,938 

7,996 

29,796 


O 


607 


607 

879 
879 


4,565 
499 


SP*"§ 


5,064 


761 


287 
170 

457 


795 
795 


830 
338 

1,168 


72 

2,231 

345 

2,648 


99 

2,302 

511 

333 

3,245 


725 

297 

2,240 

3,262 


2,898 
10 

2,908 


100 

1,890 

38 

62 

2,090 


98 


540 

2,071 1 

I 

2,611 


1,436 
1,436 


133 
163 


296 


49 

896 

3,480 

4,425 


974 
93 

48 

1,115 


:=S2 


1,309 


1,309 


1,500 


1,500 


1,744 
1,744 


•2,000 


2,000 


20O 
200 


^Formerly  omitted,  being  reported  as  "Other  property." 


108 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  82). 


A.  1898 


VILLAGE    MUNICIPAL  IT  IE  S.— Continued. 


Assets.  —Continued.                     1 

Liabilities. 

-o  - 

s  ^ 

—  .9 

CO 

1 
n  be 

140 

27,100 

1,500 

■e 

o 
o< 

O 

750 

7,560 

13,560 

21,870 

6,830 
3,000 

9,830 

8,650 

1,975 

340 

6.800 

17,765 
1,000 

900 
200 

1,100 

1 

1 

00 

1 
i 

1 

$ 

18,113 
12,067 
27,860 

58,040 

16,618 

4,889 

21,507 

14,890 

62,919 

9,377 

6,862 

94,048 
5,859 

7,742 
6,441 

14,183 

> 

a 
§ 

00 
19 

"o 

o 

o 

o 

n 

U 

05 

00 

a> 

5 

d 

"o 
o 
J3 
o 

I 

|| 

<3 

$ 

3,500 

4,123 

39,000 

46,623 

42 

a 
S  a 

3  eg 

00  «  £ 

§s.s 

§ 
ID 

a 
o 

1 

'Si 
.5 

"3 
I 

5,000 

4,000 

12,000 

21,000 
5,750 

•i.ooo 

6,750 

6,000 

25,000 

7,000 

$ 

*  8,222 

210 

60 

8,492 
1,140 
1,140 

2,389 

2,389 

15 
15 

$ 

*  521 
521 

% 

849 

1,200 

$ 

1,650 

1 

tl,500 

166 

3,070 

4,736 
1,910 

$ 

118 

8,699 
4,289 

42,591 

849 

100 
500 

600 

1,200 

1,650 
4,391 

55,579 

6,519 
500 

4,391 

1,910 

81 

118 

7,019 
81 

13,140 

25,944 
1.900 

27,844 

1,539 

':719  '.".'.'.. 

40,323 
1,900 

757 
757 

375 

13,140 

1,476 

38,000 
4  000 

28,740 

234 

300 
319 

619 

415 
1,650 

2,065 

800 
1,160 

1,239 

43,780 
1,769 

715 

4  000 

4,000 
8,000 

5,000 
5,000 

6,969 
7,684 

2,500 
2,500 

3  500 

31,500 
31,50( 

3,000 
3,000 

483 
1,180 

1,663 

3,500 
9,100 
1,500 

14,  IOC 

92f 

5,50C 

»        3,58C 

1,55( 

)      11,55« 

30 
96 

126 

111,114 

1,114 

18 

> 

)    1,06C 
)    2,11-J 

)    3,19 

7,731 
7,731 

4,976 
7,221 

12,197 

11.735 
30,227 
10,325 

52,287 

3,046 

27.77€ 
68,74") 
17,04E 

!    116,61] 

575 
575 

811 
811 

128 
128 

§2,564 
16 

2,580 

1,514 
1,514 

2,  .564 

3,500 
7,000 

7,000 

18,000 

5,000 

30,  COO 

2,000 
19,000 
32,000 

4,000        1-693 

5,709 
8,273 

4,000 

6,200 
6,200 

1,693 

.3,479 
6,725 

10,204 

150 

186 
398 
356 

940 

50 

50 

27C 
95S 

3,865 

1 

33fi 
115 

451 
907 

7,459 
7.793 

19,117 

1,360 
10,326 

30C 
45C 

822 
»       822 

183 
» 





6,125 

6,732 

10,189 

23,046 

2,75C 

25.77^ 

1,50( 

30,02' 

)"63C 

r     81S 

30C 

885 

2,094 

►      32,809 

13,000 
66,000 



.... 

492 

13,206 

1,22£ 

...     . 

\      57,701 

^Including  S7,790,  share  of  G.T.R.  bonus  by  Township  ot  Thorah,  and  §432.  Thorah's  share  of 
school  debentures,  tlncludinp  S1,000  due  sinking  fund.  +  On  the  basis  of  including  .$1,000  liability 
omitted  from  returns  of  1895.  §  Share  of  debenture  debt  of  Young  and  Escott,frear.  !|  Edwardsburg'sfehare 
»f  school  debenture  debt. 


109 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (JNo.  32). 


A.  189  8 


Table  VI 1 1 .  —  F  I  N  ANCI  AL    STATEMENT 


Receipts. 

Village 
municipalities. 

00 

s 

o 

"i 

1^ 

DC 
0) 

i 
;5 

a 

a 
£ 

Water,  gas  and 
electric  light 
rates 

*  a 

42    til 
X.  IT} 

>5 

a 
o 
s 

O   <D 

Borrowed  on 
debentures  for 
schools. 

Borrowed  on 
debentures  for 
other  purposes. 

o 

1 
s 

Ol 

Gleng-akrt  : 
Alexandria    

s 

7,164 

66 

474 

7,704 

309 

92 
264 

356 

458 

1,439 

4 

1,901 

693 

1,452 
129 
143 
536 

2,260 

273 
118 
464 
360 

1,215 

638 

' '  928 

1,566 

1,008 

1,008 

1,830 
69 

1,899 

8 

4,103 

1,338 

948 

6,389 

2,622 

1,273 
3,528 

4,801 

6,743 
2,431 
1,185 

10,359 

•  3,237 

3,561 

2,813 
5,515 
1,749 
1,113 

11,190 

6,681 
2,004 
4,188 
3,234 

16,107 

4,679 

3,389 

•     3,892 

11,960 

5,923 
286 

6,209 

2,938 
1,211 

4,149 

267 

336 

8 

611 

96 

101 
226 

327 

111 
67 
42 

220 

459 

212 

245 
326 
216 
119 

906 
539 

S 
58 
23 

81 

$ 
615 

$ 

s 

s 

8,500 
250 
130 

8,880 

s 

5,000 


5,000 

s 

2,581 

Lancaster 

Maxville 

Totals 

615 

13 

2,600 

Peescott  : 

L'Orignal 

Russell  : 
Casselman  

227 

21 

210 
1,000 

1,210 
500 

• 
381 

Rockland 

28 
28 

90 
112 

8 

210 
27 

139 

49 
25 

Totals 

381 

Cableton  : 

Hintonburg 

Ottawa  East 

7 
96 
14 

117 

210 

549 

Richmond 

Totals 

210 

500 
600 

300 

549 

Renfrew  : 

Eganville 

219^ 

Lanark : 
Lanark      

Victoria  : 

Bobcaygeon  

8 

102 
21 

77 
1,186 

Fenelon  Falls 

Omemee  

600 

1,170 

100 

1,870 

4,500 

1,150 

1,700 

196 

7,546 

181 
605 

1,031 

17,700 
20 

17,720 

1,600 
107 

1,707 

453 
879 

Woodville 

11 

85 

242 

166 

Totals 

Peterborough  : 
Ashburnham 

123 

2,684 
12 

Havelock  

300-          1 

3 
106 
132 

241 

78 
26 

104 

5 



"'526 
526 
100 

Lakef  eld   

294 
565 

1,698 

385 

165 
17 

425 
40 

83 

Norwood    

Totals 

118 
213 

Hastings  : 
Madoc 

90 

Stirling 

236'         20 

177 

Tweed  . 

Totals 

245 
866 

497 
36 

533 

94 
55 

149 

38 
98 

39 

...... 

90 
357 

MUSKOKA  : 

Huntsville 

Port  Car  ling 

70 

Totals 

Parrt  b'ODND  : 

Burk's  Falls 

Sundridge   

Totals 

39 

3 

8 

11 

5 
15 

15 

100 
150 

150 

5',666 

5,000 

70 
248 

248- 

no 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VILLAGE    MUNICIPALITIES.—  Continued. 


Disbursements. 


I  od"0        I 
IS   03    g  ' 


28,288 
2,019 
1,573 

31,880 

3,275 


2,057 
6,046 

7,103 


8,668 
4,145 
1,253 

14,066 

4,542 

4,990 


5,847 
7,069 
4,157 
2,045 

19,118 


12,247 
3,576 
7,000 
4,622 

27,445 


6,091 
4,979 
5,438 

16,508 


25,272 
412 

25,684 

6,878 
6,450 

13,328 


230  2,668 

106   151 

99 


435 
201 


120 
153 

273 


866 
164 
178 


1,5 


182 


140 


124 

335 

183 

85 

727 


392 

99 
329 
201 

1,021 


340 
129 
288 

757 


788 
12 

800 

162 
114 

276 


2,819 


fii  '^  .  J   a* 


••is 

S  o 

s  s 


be 


m 


2 

419 

2 

419 

311 

4 

505 

168 
41 
73 
15 

""33 

297 

52 

740 
40 

498 
583 

'"793 
20 

1,861 

813 

97 

12 

475 

13 

584 

13 

215 

""45 

215 

45 

137 

42 
32 

137 

74 

$  $ 

149  906 

33  335 

39  93 

221  1,334 

24   418 

56   282 
47  1,403 

103 

379 

112 

58 

549 

137 

132 


125 

233 

329 

68 

755 


24  i 

81 

152 

93 

570 


252 


168 
261 


429 


119 
176 


295 


1,685 

1,722 
444 
419 

2,585 

359 

540 


508 
854 
182 

487 

2,031 


1,891 
190 
725 
947 

3,753 


541 
337 
342 

1,220 


1,134 
18 

1,152 

640 

78 

718 


S 
15,378 


53 
15,431 


21 


21 
9,596 


107 
107 


1,000 
1,000 


358 
180 


538 


145 
"42 
187 

20 


20 


72       < 


9,596 

122 

120 

122   128 


63 


63 


151 
33 

7 

191 


78 


68 


136 
19 

35 

35 


15 


259 
7 

67 
16 

349 


61 
138 


199 

126 


126 

16 


I 

57{    16 


204 
57 


261 
6 


146 
20 


166 


300 


314 

336 

50 

15 

715 


154 
25 

150 
16 

345 


104 

'ii9 

223 


181 


100 
200 


300 


266 
100 

366 

148 

281 


247 

340 
180 
138 

905 


886 
260 
502 


o  a 


°<« 


IK  Y 
>  r" 
a,  ■ 


1,648 


658 
549 
425 

1,632 


1,410 

878 
805 

3,093 

1,321 


805 
1,947 

2,752 


2,906 

1,100 

91 

4,097 

1,935 

1,558 


1,346 

2,120 

1,734 

185 

5,385 


2,027 
1,067 
1,619 
1,218 

5,931 


2,400 
1,736 
1,404 

5,540 


2,244 


2,244 

2,100 
671 

2,771 


239 


548 
"89 
637 


536 
221 


757 


386 
294 


680 


300 
126 


426 


217 


217 


»5,000 
*5, 000 


*  Bonus  to  Woollen  Mill  aecurad  by  mortgage. 
Ill 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Table  VI 1 1 .  —  F  I  N  AN  CI  A  L    STATEMENT  — 


Village 
uaunicipalities. 


Glengarry : 
Alexandria 
Lancaster  . , 
Maxville  . . 


Totals. 
Pbescott  : 

L'Orignal  . 
Russell  : 

Caaselman . 

Rockland  . 

Totals. 


Carleton  : 
Hintonburg  . 
Ottawa  East . 
Richmond . . . 


Totals . 

Renfrew  : 
Eganville  . 

Lanark  : 
Lanark  .   . 


Victoria  : 
Bobcaygeon  . . 
Fenelon  Falls 
Omemee 
Woodville .... 


Totals. 


Peterborocgh  ; 
Ashburnham 
Havelock  . . . 
Lakefield  . . . 
Norwood    . . . 


Totals. 


Hastings  : 
Madoc  . 
Stirling 
Tweed  . 


Totals . 


Mdskoka  : 
Huntsville  .  - 
Port  Carling 


Totals  ... 

Parry  Sound : 

Burk's  Falls. 

Sundridge   . . 


Totals . 


Disbursements.— ^Oonfinwed. 


^  p 


2,395 


o  >  X 

5  s  S 


pi 


^  u 


2,395 


100 


100 


161 


223 


110 
110 


340 
500 


840 


840 


840 
151 


151 


3461 


346 


80 


80 


220 


222 


97 


97 


233 
233 


?,500 
250 


i      S 

1,615 

9 


2,750 


446 


1,624 
372 
139 


446 


300 


1,.505 

1,170 

100 

2,775 


4,600 

550 

1,700 


6,850 


1,344 
245 

1,589 


1,700 


1,700 
2,3001 


139 

344 
203 
100 

647 

182 

227 

300 

305 

49 

3 


660 

301 

5581 

574| 


670 


4281 
7l 


S 


219 

"i56 

375 

58 


516 
"31 
547 

84 

61 


30 
425 

52 
119 


6571      626 


44 

227 

19 

86 


1,822|      376 


865  194 

33|  ... 

404  31 

1,3021  225 


537 
57 


161 

238 


2,300       4351      399 


28,163 
1,963 
1,452 

31,578 

2,657 

2,057 
4,785 

6,842 

8,004 
2,978 
1,253 

12,235 
3,723 
4,504 


3,766 
6,932 
4,023 
1,306 

16,027 


12,014 
3,381 
6,784 
4,153 

26,332 


6,091 
4,979 
4,054 

15,124 


18,027 
412 


6701      5941     18,439 


6,675 
6,450 

13,125 


O 


125 

56 

121 

302 

618 

261 
261 


664 
1,167 


1,831 
819 
486 


2,081 
137 
134 
739 

3,091 


233 
195 
216 
469 

1,113 


1,384 
1,384 

7,245 


7,245 
203 


203 


Assets. 


5,082 
80J^ 
144 

6,034 

473 

1,875 
483 

2,358 

9,730 
1,101 
1,351 

12,182 
1,676 


Q 
ei 

§1     . 

a.S'O 


280 


6,184 


3,000 

1,137 

200 

2,682 

7,019 


4,962 
1,556 
1,205 

7,723 


452 
250 

702 

302 
1,393 

1,695 


6,074 


429 
491 
920 


2,353        3,221 

3,492        2,684 

59 


5,905 


2,768 
3,582 

6,350 


5,542 


®    OD 


5,542 


320 
320 


112 


61  Victoria, 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


VILLAGE    MUNICIPALITIES.  —  Continued. 


Assets. — Continued. 


02 


T3 
O  « 

n    be 

Si 

t>  o  a 


32,000      33,000 


1,200 
33,200      33,000 


500 
12,000 

12,500 


9,000 
3,600 
2,750 

15,3501 


1,325' 


7,000 


6,000 
5,000 
3,600 
2,450 

17,050 


9,000 

2.200 

6,000 

16,000 

33,200 


15,500 
9,000  . 
3,900,, 

28,4001. 


5,000' 


5,000 

4,417 
1,100 

5,517 


510 
715 


1,225 


250 
1,000 

1,250 


4,650 

3,652 

975 

9,277 


3,140 


70 


70 


40 

40 

I 
100 


70,787 
1,579 
1,465 

73,831 

7,165 

2,625 

13,784 

16,409 


24,573 

10,020 

5,567 


100   40,160 
469    7,429 


6,500 1  13,986j 

I     1       I 


5,192i   630 
2,170   123 

7501 

1,025  .... 

9,137'   653 


19,  .^77 

13,606 

4,543 

4,494 

42,020' 


6,345    75  18,653 

161 3,548 

9,5001   200]  18,884 

3, 670  §1,952  28,355 


3,200 
3,300 
4,000' 

10,500 


1,077 


1,0771 
169 

169 


109 
109 


29,201 
13,856 
15,489 

58,549 


13,874 
359 

14,233 


1,122 

1,1221   14,026 


6,533 
7,493 


Liabilities. 


157 
"92 
249 

180 

100 
160 

260 


154 
109 
140 

403 


435 


247 
340 


2,284 
666 


2,950 

65 

741 


741 

3,113 

750 

1,307 

5,170 
986 


1,346 
1.699 


117 
704 

869 


493 
474 


19,631  2,227   69,440  1,836 


775 
3,820 


327 1 
457 1 

2,2961 

I 

3,080 


617  . 

508 

399] 

1,524' 


721 
721 


2,0001 
189 

2,189 

800 
480 

1,280 


3,755 


3,755 
6,200 


1,400 
2,000 


< 


a 

a  eS 

"  «  . 

O  tc  aa 

'H  a  2 

te  <E  H 

S  J<  a 


$ 


27,654  6,000 
130 


27,654 


639 


4,145 


3,000 
3,000 


6,000 


2,500 


10,335 
12,836 


13,190 
4,300 


17,490 


4,010 


4,010 
4,849 


400 
103 


6,130 


2,000   664 
I  1,065 


503 

56 


2,000  1,729 


3,500  6,200 
2,420; 


3,400   5,920  6,200 


1,312       600 


3,000 


1,082 
224 
3,000    1,306 


5,088j   3,400 

!      635 

10,000 

I      196 


40,250 
769 
222 

41,241 

6,601 

3,505 
1,225 

4,730 


t6,513      19,480 


135 


140 
55 


497, 

I 

692 


15,088    4,231 


IT 

6,828 
6,828 


o4,621 
606 


5,226 


1,095 

Jl,  975 

177 

35 

3,282 


5,062 
240 
508 

5.810 


17,913 23,923 

20       143'  352 


17,933 


2,000;      400 
5,000    1,049 


4,849,       7,0001   1,449 


143 


138 

252 


390 


4,814 
3,447 


6,64Sj     27,741 
I       3,972 


4,145 

7,7.S3 
6,176 

'  1,613 

15,522 


13,279 

3,067 

10,670 

13,336 

40,352 


23,490 
.5,653 
8,456 

37,599 


24,275 

8,187 
6,781 

14,968 


tlncluding  .S2,925 — share  in  Nepean  township  school  debenture  debt.  Jlncluding  $1,930 — debenture 
debt  of  Havelock  Hchoo',  previously  omitted.  §InclndinK  $1,540 — Asphodel's  share  of  school  debentures. 
If  Omitting  $1,014,  overstated  in  1895.     a  Including  $4,440  due  Sinking  Fund. 


8  B.I.(5^ 


113 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A. 1898 


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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


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^«5 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  1898 


FINANCIAL  statement- 
Table  X.    Showing  abstract  statement  of  Receipts,  Disbursements,  Assets  and  Liabilities 


Counties. 


Essex  . . 

Kent... 

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand 

Welland... 

Lambton 

Huron . 

Bruce  . 

Orey    . 

Siracoe 

Middlesex 

Oxford 

Rrant 

Perth 

Wellington 

Waterloo 

Dufferin 

Lincoln 

Wentworth 

Halton 

Peel  .., 

York 

Oatario 

Northumberland 

and  Durham . . 
Prince  Ed  ward.. 
Lennox  and 

Addington  .    . 
''^'rontenac 
Leeds   and 

Grenville 
Storm  ont,   Dundas 

and  Glengarry . 
Prpscott  and 

RusseU 
Carleton 
Renfrew 
Lanark 
Victoria 
Peterborough . 
Haliburton 
Hastings 


Receipts. 


"S  a 


j^; 

u 

0! 

a 

bo 

to 

P3 

m 

a 

m 

<D 

a 

0) 

a 

w 

Q. 

<D 

Im 

J" 

3 

pR 

m 

s 

IflQ 

%     1 
<j  in"? 

Received  from  Gov- 
ernment for— 


4A       • 

a,  to 

;s.| 

S    3 


go. 


252 

4^0001 

478 


4.543 

6,773 

4,496*1,000 
1,652 
2,412 
3,166 
2.374 
2,421 
2,331 
4.231 
2,273 
6,993 
2,  .556 
3,585 
4,  .5.^4 
4,016 
2,860 
1,135 
1.955 
7,104 
1,549 
1,642 
28,477 
2,120 


21,500 

100,000 

43,5001 

11,517 


201,930 

26,000 

3,435 

'  25,519 


10,000 


185 


5,942    4,966 
20    1,714'    1,797 

411    2,702    1,231 
120    3,214i   4,544 

2,910 

2,312 

1,780 

218!      893!   3,507  6,301 

122,       131 1   5,379 1  4,334; 

16'   3,2471  758 

253    3,281    3,325  3,207| 

159       4101   2.809  2,663j 

2,2441  150 

2,7351   4,685  6,745 


35 


4,052 


2,000 


128 
33 


7,565 

7,000    *]  6,000 
34,7161     73,000 


41,17S| 
140,000' 


47,0001 

10,000 

28,500 

5,000 

2,000' 


11,000 
44,011' 
54,000j 

5,000 
2, 971 1 


15,000 


4,785j     20,000 

4,000J   tl3,559 

13,795 ' 


81,582 
11,082 


47,800 


8,000 

45,500  . . 
9,000      10,000 
5,900! 

35,021,     20,000 


*  For  House  of  Refuge. 


t  Present  Worth  of  sundry  issues  of  debentures,  payable  by  deferred  annuities' 


116 


61  Victoria 


Sessional  Papers  (JNo.  32). 


A.  189  8 


COUNTY    MUNICIPALITIES. 

of  the  county  municipalities  of  Ontario  for  the  year  ending  31,  IS'iS.  — Continued. 


Receipts — Continued. 


"O  IS 
a,  3 

■§.2 


g-s 


8,433 

4,786 

478 

892 

126 

589 

13,673 

473 

2,803 

2.052 

4.716 

2,282! 

480 

141 

430 

573 

26 

1,569 

1,030 

428 

39 

62 

7,638 


.3,2«8 
6,209 


Disbursements. 


Expenses  of  municipal  government. 


1,700 


5,653 

I 
3,259 

I 

2,962, 


$ 

1,.S57 

844' 

691 1 

196 

781 

906' 

1,8281 

5.063 

605 

2281 

1,645 

2.474 

6>5ll 

""41' 
422 


.2  c;  "  fl 


.? 


2,949 
23, 114 


349 

457 

35, 236 

79 

I       142 

31,620     2,2951 
!      144 


88,147 

16S,343 

95.287 

39,298 

26,077 

41,029 

91,314 

413,149 

77,764 

92.736 

218,802 

202,619 

71,144 

32,766 

102,733 

81,123 

69,928 

26,704 

40,596 

91,429 

23.571 

.33,711 

188,469 

95,151 


423 
110 

26 
1,490 


81      61,690 
1      19,279 


I        50 

3,254  120248 


209    2,640    2,278 


570 

4,673 

1,670 

591 

341 

1,530 

1,013 

J564 

3,559 


41,826 
75,931 

76,827 


9,750 
i 

2,0?5 

i 

9,139 


196 

721 1 
1,339 
278 
1571 
513 
2,416' 
.530' 
6171 


40,808 
71.404 
32,. 576 1 
.33,344! 

170.3^0 
66,174' 
13,2171 

177,153 


2,691 
2,353 
1,142 

811 
1,558 
1,496 
1842 
2,685 
2,403 
3,468 
5.448 
2,126 
2,477 

347 
1,852 
1,918 
1,.334 

731 
1,299 
2,108 

315 

731 
4,877 
1,425 

4,550 
391 

1,223 
1,090 

2,197 


61,205        1,237 


1,808 
3,120 
1,676 
1,337 
1,499 
1,490 
170 
3,547 


.2  o 

e8'S 

ss 

c  ° 
is  " 

&T3 


2,847 
2,100 
2,430 
1,318 
1,050 
1,420 
2,935 
2,711 
2,232 
1,980 
3,110 
2,639 
2,872 
1,280 
2,180 
2,390 
1,609 
1,625 
2,965 
2,300 
1,028 
1,1.30 
4,097 
1,711 

2,476 
650 

1,037 
1,810 


r 

bca 

G  0 

>'T3 

TJ  a 

e8  <S 

.  D 

bo  be 

fl  ccl 

*o    cc    >, 

•g  0.  u 

Ph 

$ 

1,302 

347 

533 

565 

363 

249 

892 

930 

971 

514 

1,298 

604 

765 

S    be  3 


423^ 

385 
6351 
958 1 
2311 


1,191 

1,486 

1,251 

282 

377 

487 

1,067 

881 

1,406 

1,644 

577 

584 

1,081 

1,054 

683 

930 

1,801 

978 


^  « 


370 

8901 

885 

345 

590 

1,199 

66S 

565 

1,148 

9,727 

805 

1,291 

1,096 

880 

410 

679 

646 

281 


.595 
1,257 


2,290       952j   1,788 
1,800       5271   1,199 


675 

448 

2,150 

569 

1,515 

454 

1,200 

504 

2,680 

.981 

1,727 

1,689 

690 

234 

3,010 

428 

1,016 
775 

1,035 

1,433 
107 

2,794 


915 
331 


22s 
526 
210 


324 


21 

192 

96 

1,050 

16 

130 


5 

10,345 

9' 


143 


1,980 


876 
692 


962 


333 


164 
1,101 
532 
52 
561 
185 
680 
154 


51 
113 
153 
323 


80 


1,523 


1,766 
184 

69 
102 

798 

311 

225 

1,647 

118 


Construction. 


459 

'7 
225 


1,282 

752 
2.675 


4J   -U     ^- 

2  o  « 


1,200 

264 

1.589 

4,139 

3,642 

8 

8,182 

4,738 

5,157 

12 

1,259 

11,686 

846 

4S 

4,768 

3,463 

1,493 

1,725 

16,989 

847 

904 


1,963 
250 


2,881 

1,008 

218 

26 

1.713 

3,161 

300 

18,433 


223 
155 

'  672 
100 
7.610 
4,099 
1,898 
3,695 

"166 
3,042 


4,223 

4,070 

25 

143 

i',029 


150 
1,043 

1,047 
215 

201 


350 
110 

133 
480 

4,742 


■5^ 


25,159 


914 


133 

»21,133 

302 

1,814 

842 

769 


230 

207 

tl8,167 


134 
815 


1,687 


351 


3,251 


643 
316 
196 


*  House  of  Refugre  and  land.         f  House  of  Refuere.  +  Including  : 

balances  found  by  special  auditors  and  sums  reported  by  former  auditors. 


3,832,  being  difference  between 


117 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


FINANCIAL    STATEMENT 


Counties . 


Essex 

Keut  

Elgin 

Norfolk 

Haldimand   . . 

WeUand 

Lambton    

Huron 

Bruce  

Grey    

Simcoe    

Middlesex   . . . 

Oxford 

Brant  

Perth 

Wellington    . . 

Waterloo   .... 

Dufferin 

Lincoln 

Wentworth  . . 

Halton 

Peel 

York ,.. 

Ontario 

Northumber- 
land and 
Durham 

Prince  Edward 

Lennox  and 
Addington  . 

FroDtenac    . . . 

Leeds  and 
Grenville   . . 

Stormont, 
Dundas  and 
Glengarry . . 

Prescott  and 
Russell   

Carleton 

Renfrew 

Lanark  

Victoria 

Peterborough. 

Haliburton    . . 

Hastings 


Disbursements. — Continued. 


400 

10 

3,992 

4,628 

143 

6,959 

1,711 

7,509 

221 

250 

563 

10,911 

5,022 

204 

971 

7,874 

8,702 

140 

3.016 

860 


182 

5,985 

60 


.2  S 


200 


16,701 

16,001 

12,468 

8,114 

7,300 

11,464 

12,274 

10,709 

11,060 

17,800 

20,648 

19.895 

13,027 

9,253 

9,844 

12,674 

8,687 

5,871 

8,920 

20,069 

6,059 

8,067 

56,913 

10,920 


•A  d 


T3    sS 


-,  s 


•a  .2  • 


.9  «  §. 
s.        n.S-a 


50  18,591 
521     4,649 


341 

700! 

4,826 


202 


1,994 

653 

801 

334 

20 


8,455 
9,077 

8,494 


7,762 

6,128 
15,532 

6,482 

6,513 
10,60Si 

9,1471 

344 

15,114 


12,553 

8,656 

11,885 

10.250 

9,879i 

7,236; 

19,928: 

18,807, 

11,3421 

14,289 

17,032 

19,824 1 

11,3361 

6,069 

11,119 

9,838 

14,207 

7,828l 

8,494| 

7,8811 

5,910 

7,250' 

11,646' 

10,941 


15,893 
5,850 

11,394 

8,755 

15,266 


17,519 

6,134 
5,037 
9,119 
8,404 

10,579 
6,656 
3,199 

12,244 


49,166 

»30,000 

800 


33,212 


589 


9001 

17,966 

1.193 


45 

3,977 
750 


1,599 

537 

262,800 


344 

640 

17,916 


15,400 

52,000 

5,630 

291 

20,000 

' 1,075 
8,100 
4,139 
5,000 


5,903 
1,072 


1,100 

2,730 

25,544 

5,775 

141 
9,600 

600 
1,132 
1,428 
1,289 
1,170 


-§1 
2  X 


.HS 


p^ 


9  ^ 
o  a 


S   B 


8,000 

100,076 

50,500' 

11.500! 

1,0001 

7,262 

'  25^0661 


864 
1,228 
1,425 

377 

439 

476 
6113, 

407 


•^a 


S  o 


254  3,261 

907i  3,425 

479,  538 

939;  350 


41,173[ 
130,000 


2 
2,306 


146 


12,000 

14,000, 

26,944; 

1.230 


896 
111! 
879| 
87    2. 
527 


1,672 
949 


4,000        1,320 


I       4,600 
8,500 


3,362 


15,000 
731 


4,575 


1,769 


6,240 
10,875 


11,000 
'52,061 
48,000 


5,000 


1,6501     33,138 


1,441 


3,150 
2,070 


399 

2,241 

598 


1,082 
190 


16,500 


13,296 


2,001 


24,354 


85,000 
10,851 


30,000 


3,000 
8,000 


650 
1,220 

406 
1,032 


143 


5,100, 

2,179 

196, 

5,400 


44,0001   1,493 

al8,320|       340 

6,308i      107 


270 
220 
1,680 
2,350 
2,340 
1,988 
1,736 
282 
401 
...i+6,484 
399 I  509 
439  3,544 
26 1  122 
4611  362 
780;  171 
495  Jl, 856 
690,  604 
621  559 
381  124 
832 1      783 


423 
110 

62 
963 

17 


510 

5,560 
1,670 
740 
341 
1,029 
950 
564 


469 
228 

301 
§3,304 

510 


86,365- 

165,171 

92,330 

39,298 

25,523 

40,838 

87,850 

411,832 

72,527 

92,735 

215,190 

175,810 

57,191 

25,765 

94,330 

70,918 

69,550 

26,325 

38,573 

47,461 

17,968 

32,343 

188,469 

81,286- 


54,370 
19,27» 

35,164 
49,328 

76.758 


•17,0671     61,056 


1,375 

1,885 

184 

2,184 

1,887 
682 
380 


39,562 
58,343 
29,855 
30,228 
169,949 
62,134 
12,802 


648,435!    1,519!   3,6261   l,483i   176,515 


*Other  investments.     +Including  86,034  due  by  late  Treasurer.     Ijllncluding  §1,460  -  grants  to  agricultural 
societies,  and  SlOO  grant  to  volunteers.  ':  Including -sg,  136  omitted  from  statementof  liabilities  in  1895. 

§  Including  .$2,234  to  adjust  accounts — owing  to  default  of  ex-treasurer.  '[  Including  S6,993  for  drain- 

age,    aincluding  §10,000  refunded  to  Sinking  Fund.        6Including  -S20,000  refunded  to  Sinking  Fund. 


118 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  82). 


A.  189.8 


COUNTY    MUNICIPALITIE  S— Continued . 


Assets. 


13:3 


19,673 

30,833 

23,024 

4,205 

1,843 

1?,407 

16,430 

30,805 

4,229 

10,890 

39,479 

62,572 

4,519 

1,305 

21,512 

41,607 

593 

10,768 

13,453 


°  o  a  o 

a   a,  ao.S 
be  fl  5>0  " 

e-St   : 

s  >  a  « 


all,616 
?)12,000 
16,521 
c  18, 600 
(741,012 


7,614 


a  3 


2,442 


13,988 
6,851 


11,184 
9,413 

16,246 
23,094 

23,317 


13,264 

11,219 
12,308 
18,049 


84,000 

168,073 

125,576 

50,000 

28,000 

108,370 

63,133 

77,000 

54,300 

87,638 

150,100 

100,180 

190,000 

104,000 

125.000 

80,000 

85,000 

40,000 

101,500 

110,000 

50,400 

66,286 

100,000 

50,000 


62,000 
33,500 


S 


4,710 

11,925 

2 

270 


249 
1,591! 

787 
3,012 


8,000 

10,931 

1,491 

j76,034 

483 

2,995 

740 

1,108 

230 

11,727 


41,723 
60 


55,000 
*2,000'  125,000 

12,740  130,000 


110,165 

214,003 

151,559 

54,475 

30,397 

121,217 

84,618 

121,525 

78,778 

115,050 

219,791 

241,604 

209,963 

118,840 

156,398 

134,807 

86,711 

69,869 

117,206 

165,695 

58,445 

57,654 

155,711 

69.776 


70,504 
42,913 


Liabilities. 


P3 


18,665 


125 
70 


712 

408 

2,011 

3,642 

5 

1,300 


190 


77,908 
5,8661  182,563 


23,035 

14.114 

6,308 

33,569 


25,000 
4,172 


H765 
67,i73 


61,000 

20,000 
190,000 
50,000 
53,900 
66,755 
93,366 


A  34,293 


60,000 


648 

3,170 

1,873 

37 


1,016 


35 


166,126 


108,706 

32,465 

240,369 

75,590 

67,016 

93,341 

lis  147 

6,760 

161,370 


395 


95 
936 

1,700 


37,800 


fl.s 

"O  bo 

u  a 


16,000 
44,782 
13,807 


t  -^ 

fc;  JO 

S  33 

"  ii. 

o  a 

*  S  s? 

Q  TO    QQ 


5,291 
15,463 
73,000 


26,000 


e499,260 
138,752 
14,628 
120,0001  70  000 
10,000 
27,219 
21,700 
13,450 
18,000 


28,500 

30,000 

24,000 

17 

2,000 

7,565 

7,000 

a22716 


/■40000 


35,000 

10,000 

6,000 

5,000 

6,600 


30,230144,011 
17,908  18,0C0 


20,000 
Vl58,666 


101,700 
20,000 

45,000 


45,011 


60,000 
39,317 


44,231 
3  268 

6o,'ooo,  "  3oi666 


20,000 
2,971 


13,000 

4,785 

4,000 
17,544 


26,500 

?12177 

1,400 

36,697 


3,278 
872 

"l62 
1 


635 


866 
360 
165 
375 
141 
123 
784 

228 
395 


1,105 
300 


78 

557 
3,600 
8,350 
3,623 
3,512 


4,030 

2,243 

100 

3,243 


2,185 
,393  12,228 
222 


3 

994 


233 


60 


863 

A; 

664 


1,363 
390 


60 


47,778 

96,424 

38,107 

179 

2,001 

12,866 

22.641 

96,351 

3,091 

27,493 

81,650 

507,765 

143,462 

18,689 

227,134 

28,456 

33,224 

30,471 

20,445 

21,483 


2,185 
95,877 
36,130 


20,000 
23,024 


I   101,703 

1,028|   193,667 


500 


1,385 


1,500 
449 


760 
4,964 
1,246 

240 


50,518 


50,466 

18,407 
61,500 
40,825 


28,708 

62,698 

5,914 

118,637 


aincludinpr  $6,216  in  general  account  due  Sinkingr  Fund.  feOther  investments.  c  Northern  Railway 
stock,  $18,0C0 ;  stock  in  agricultural  companies,  §600.  e  Including  $3,000,  debentures  matured  in  1874, 
but  not  presented  for  payment.  d  Including  §7,800,  other  investments.  /Including  $5,000  previously 
omitted.        g  Due  by  estate  of  late  Treasurer.       h  Mostly  for   drainage.  i  Including  $11,200  omitted 

by  ex-treasurer  from  returns  for  1895.        *Stock  in  public  works.        ^Including  S4.177  due  sinking  fund 
from  county.        ^Omitting  $4,429  overstated  in  1895.        ISee  note  under  Assets  re  Sinking  Funds. 


119 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


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6 1   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32 


A.  1898 


■^  1— I     «0        CC     iH 


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B   O  2 

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61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32 


A.  18V.  8 


FINANCIAL    STATEMEN  T-T  OWN    MUNICIPALITIES. 

Table  XII.     Summary  showing  the  totals  for  all  towns  in  Ontario  of  the  several  items  of  receipts, 
disbursements,  assets  and  liabilities  for  the  six  years  ending  December  31st,  1891-1896. 


Schedule. 


Receipts. 

Balance  from  previous  year 

Municipal  and  school  taxes 

Licenses  (liquor  and  other) 

Fees,  rents,  fines,  etc 

Water  rates,  electric  light  rates,  etc 

Kefunds  of  loans  and  special  deposits. . 

Interest  and  dividends 

Loans  for  current  expenses 

Money    borrowed    on /Schools 

debentures  for  —        \  Other  purposes. 

Premium  on  debentures  sold 

County  grants 

Miscellaneous  

Totals 

Disbursements. 
Expenses  of  municipal  government ;    - 

Allowance?,  salaries,  commissions.. 

Lighting  of   streets,  water   supply 
and  fire  protection 

Law  costs  (including  salaries)   .... 

Other  expenses  of  government 

Construction  works  : 

Streets,  bridges  and  parks 

Buildings  and  other  works 

Waterworks  and  electric  light  p  ant 
Support  of  the  poor  and  other  charities. 
Administration  of  justice,  police  service. 

County  treasurer  for  levy 

Payments  for  schools  and  education  . . 
Sinking  fund  investments  and  deposits. 
Other  investments  and  special  deposits. 

Debentures  redeemed —    I  '.^j,  ° f  u '  ' " ' ' 

Interest  on  loans  and  debentures  , 

Money  borrowed  for  current  expenses. . 

Board  of  Health 

Miscellaneous 


Totals. 


Assets. 

Cash  in  treasury 

Taxes  in  arrears 

Sinking  Fund  investments  and  deposits. 
Other  investments  and  special  deposits. 
School  lands,  buildings  and  equipment. 
Waterworks  and  electric  light  plant  . . . 

Other  buildings  and  property 

Miscellaneous 


Totals 


Liabilities, 

County  levy 

Local  school  rates 

Debentures  outstand- r|;j^^*°/^*^^^y' • 
ing   or     (^ Other  purposes. . 

Due  Sinking  Funds 

Loans  for  current  expenses  and  interest. 
Miscellaneous 


1896. 


244,963 

1,964,716 

108,549 

58,202 

164,725 

155,291 

40,911 

1,682,395 

60,400 

747,861 

39,933 

6,307 

37,683 

5,311,936 


1895. 


165,782 

1,971,028 

111,522 

57,380 

152,224 

190.884 

37,591 

1,407,460 

62,236 

771,320 

31,784 

7,289 

53,872 

5,020,372 


1894. 


120,5381       121,207 


316,256 
22,142 
79,622 

351,668 
65,524 

384,868 
31,234 
75,784 
97,181 

667,449 

160,452 
91,986 
71,378 

229,187 

486,894 

1,664,174 

10,626 

127,018 

5,053,98] 


257, 

885, 

793, 

618. 

2,417, 

t2,890, 

2,950, 

1,127, 


955 
956 
170 
862 
830 
983 
183 
298 


315.437 
40,561 
81,338 

304,857 
45,262 

316,920 
33.908 
67,279 
93,719 

633,938 

146,393 
82,345 
44,082 

314,543 

502,885 

1,481,901 

12,863 

137,376 

4,775,814 


244,558 

864,006 

693,494 

625,479 

2,408,520 

2,644,937 

2,986,528 

458,153 


S 
149,398 
1,932,387 

[  176,600 

119,172 

\    242,012 

1,789,250 

69.700 

679,314 

I  73,522 


1893. 


S 
158,867 
1,840,603 

183,645 

99,670 

268,126 

1,562,564 

131,000 

1,049,259 

69,181 


5,231,355  5,362,915 


11,942'237  10.925,675 


34,242 

193  869 

607,105 

1,023,429 

7.967,529 

*120,617 

575,526 

213,585 


Totals..  10,735,902  10,119,1051  9,731,5051  9,371,229 


40,176 

185,911 

652,143 

1,034,407 

7,403,818, 

87, 791 1 

572,1871 

142,672 


119,792 

298,594 
f  108,788 

333,226 

\    292,537 

30,664 

66,251 

89,660 

656,246 

!•  246,378 

[  358,691 

456,964 
1,810,483 

[  197,299 
5,065,673 


165,782 

856,825 

1 1,266,082 

17.320,058 

573,210 

10,181,957 

36,742 

176,931 

722,628 

1,025,020 

6,863,404 

}  735.877 

170,903 


127,903 

278,379 
122,665 

376,989 

366,317 

32,747 

62,418 

89,240 

689,271 

272,987 

453,632 

451,258 
1,745,922 

143,789 
5,213,517 


149,398 
792,949 

1,263,985 

7,099,496 

426,879 

9,732,707 

44,261 

165,324 

854,866 

974,874 

6,392,549 

765,267 

174,088 


1892. 


197,3.38 
1,877,361 

173,854 

84,207 

175,210 

2,255,191 

45,750 

928,768 

85,093 
5,822,772 


122,790 

267,913 
89,761 

392,318 
679,559 

31,421 

60,018 

105,611 

618,537 

275,745 

316,247 

424,319 
2,077,473 

202,193 
5,663,905 


1891. 


162,109 
1,708,632 

169,213 

61,654 

198,470 

1,854,068 
104,800 
950,707 

95,176- 
5,304,829 


123,318 

246,896 
92,359 

461,51* 

573,140 

31,918 

58.334 

91,164 

636,847 

198,524 

402,168 

392,393 
1,625,051 

173, 86& 
5,107,491 


158,8671       197,338 
698,649        741,036 

1,062,593 


1,220,071 

6,702,886 

383,683 

9,164,156 

34,924 

157,434 

875,920 

879,706 

5,736,252 

944,023 

188,898 

8,817,157 


6,074,136 

230,994 

8,306,097 


46,809 

175,028 

893,090 

870,445 

5,012,180 

765,184 

240,962 

8,003,698 


*  Including  Port  Arthur  S53,909,  Fort  William  810,018,  Woodstock  .$19,412,  Owen  Sound  S7,085 
Peterborough  $20,344  ;  the  balance  being  made  up  by  Kincardine,  Walkerton,  Orangeville,  Oakville, 
TJxbridge  and  Whitby,     t  See  note  on  page  130. 

122 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


FINANCIAL    STATEMENT-VILLAGE    MUNICIPALITIES. 

Table    XIII.     Sumnaary  showinpr  the  totals  for  all  villages  in  Ontario  of  the  several  items  of  receipts, 
disbursements,  a'=sets  and  liabilities  for  the  six  years  ending  December  Slst,  1891-96. 


Schedule. 

1896. 

1895. 

1894. 

1893. 

1892. 

-891. 

Rkokipts. 
Balance  from  previous  year 

78,973 

541,849 

34,487 

8,941 

14,897 

22,235 

5,650 

165,279 

7,443 

84,7C6 
1,876 
4,148 

18,309 

988,793 

36,604 

47,832 

6,119 

22,134 

98,290 
11,891 
80,385 

5,842 

8,477 

36,116 

223, 9f- 3 

21,461 

7,197 

31,542 

72,300 

68,207 

137,119 

2,740 
31,366 

899,605 

89,188 
161,795 

92,526 

47,278 

922,325 

*381,913 

493,148 

38,798 

2,226,971 

20,845 
65, 178 

92.132 
320,872 
750,092 
17.900 
83,127 
54,540 

1,404,986 

67,269 

545,809 

34,872 

8,738 

15,344 

25,905 

6,223 

176,428 

29,100 

67,797 

5,099 

2,887 

16,340 

1,000,811 

37,793 

46.161 

5,983 

23,054 

99,662 

20,570 

39,024 

6,552 

7,952 

42,424 

242,466 

14,606 

12,276 

18,851 

35,135 

68,612 

176,133 

2,962 

21,217 

921,4.33 

79,378 
147,273 

86,181 

48,742 
905,522 
368,262 
495,053 

61,606 

2,192,017 

16,692 
55,432 

115,017 

344,971 

715,815 

1.^,569 

60,004 

55,008 

1,376,508 

S 
72,950 

526.672 

[      42,746 

12,989 

1      17,266 

135,745 

23,050 
79,577 

I     32,731 
943,726 

37,139 

41,590 
}     28,392 

93,572 

1     65,191 

5,858 

7,064 

44,628 

232,204 

J      35,679 

}      52,120 

62,352 
134,5.36 

1     36,132 
876,457 

67,269 
139,336 

}    132,914 

il,6l0,732 

57,178 

2,007,428 

15,041 

60,089 

119,280 
334,004 
679,658 

1     68,755 

46,851 

1,313,678 

8 
74,284 

499,040 
45,274 
10,426 
13,495 

119,191 

20,300 
35,325 

14,053 
831,388 

39,336 

32,251 
29,794 

94,408 

27,263 

5,064 

4,255 

39,541 

214,447 

14,560 

60,624 

6.3,902 
107,713 

25,280 
758,438 

72,950 
134,463 

136,838 

1,498,254 
48,309 

1,890,814 

19,880 
47,6d4 

122,315 
328,444 
631,717 

66,157 

43,644 

1,269,851 

•S 
51,976 

516,683 

42,733 

8,080 

30,144 

151,779 

50,437 
99,160 

23,829 
974,821 

37,042 

30,065 
26,563 

82,039 

85,293 

5,363 

4,594 

41,369 

257,652 

26,129 

56,066 

62,652 
157,596 

28,114 
900,537 

74,284 
113,336 

112,414 

1,469,220 
51,021 

1,820,275 

16,845 
35,601 

128,109 
321 ,997 
637,362 

63,920 

43,265 

1,236,999 

58,407 

Ordinarii  municipal  revenue  : 

Municipal  and  school  taxes   

Licenses  (liquor  and  other) 

Fees,  rents,  fines,  etc 

Water  rates,  etc 

491,  £60 

43,764 

7,506 

Refund  of  loars  and  special  deposits 

Interest  and  dividends 

25,231 
124,087 

Money  borrowed  on  debentures  for — 

Schools 

Other  purposes  

Premiums  on  debenture  s  sold 

18,600 
45,559 

County  grants 

17,184 

Miscellaneous 

Totals 

831,598 

Disbursements. 
Expenses  of  municipal  government : 

Allowances,  salaries,  commissions. . 
Lighting  of  street?,    water  supply 

and  fire  protection             

Law  costs  (including  salaries) 

Other  expenses  of  government 

Construction  works : 

Streets,  bridges  and  parka 

34,787 

29,106 
23,336 

99,137 

Buildings  and  other  works 

Water  and  electric  light  works 

Support  of  the  poor  and  other  charities. 
Administration  of  justice,  police  service. 

County  treasurer  for  levy 

Payments  for  schools  and  education.  , . . 
Sinking  Fund  investments  and  deposits. 
Other  investments  and  special  deposits. 

Debentures  redeemed-    {  Jj^'^" ^ ; ; ; 

Interest  on  loans  and  debentures 

Money  borrowed  for  current  expenses  . 
Board  of  Health   

24,921 

6,196 

4,174 

38,221 

207,100 

37,734 

54,477 

60,811 
128,370 

31,252 

Miscellaneous 

Totals 

779,622 

AasKTS. 
Cash  in  treasury 

51,976 

Taxes  in  arrears   .    

123,783 

Sinking  Fund  investments  and  deposits. 
Other  investments  and  special  deposits. 
School  lands,  buildings  and  equipment. 

Waterworks  and  electric  light  plant 

Other  buildings  and  property  

111,945 
1,330,919 

Miscellaneous 

48,130 

Totals 

Liabilities. 

1,666,753 
15,647 

Local  rates     

42,891 

Debentures  (principal)  outstanding  for- 

Aid  to  railways 

Schools     

136,059 

286,181 
571,705 

Due  Sinking  Funds   

59,768 
42,788 

Loan  for  current  expenses  and  interest. 

Totals 

1,156,039 

See  note  to  page  130. 

123 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32}. 


A.  1898 


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Sessional  Papers  (No   32). 


A. 1898 


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5 


ELECTRIO  LIGHT  PLANTS  IN  TOWNS  AND  VILLAGES. 

The  electric  and  other  light  plants  in  towns  in  1896  aggregated  $389,280,  as  follows  :  Amherstburg, 
S3,500  ;  Leamington,  §25,000  (natural  gas) ;  Thorold,  $12,000  ;  Goderich,  816,272  ;  Kincardine,  812,949  ; 
Collingwood,  829,979  (including  fire-halls) ;  Orillia,  830,363  ;  Mitchell,  $9,000  ;  St.  Marys,  82,050 ;  Niagara, 
817,947  ;  Dundas,  81,022  ;  Newmarket,  812,000  ;  North  Toronto,  810,000  (estimated  exclusive  of  water- 
works);  Toronto  Junction.  824,000 ;  Picton,  818,212  :  Trenton,  812,000;  Bracebridge,  812,000;  Sudbury, 
817,400;  Port  Arthur,  8123.586  (including  street  railway);  and  in  villages,  89.950,  as  follows:  Tilbury, 
82,000;    Southampton,  8400;  Markham,  81,750;  Campbellford,  $4,300;  Colborne,  $1,500. 


[130] 


INDEX. 


Township. 

PAGE. 

Abinger  (Denbigh) 

Adelaide 7,  42 

Adjala 6,38 

Admaston 15,  62 

Adolphustown 12,  54 

Albemarle 5,  38 

Alberton 20,  74 

Albion 10.  50 

Aldborough  3,  30 

Alfred 14,58 

Algona,  N.  ( Wilberforce) 

Algona,  S 15,  62 

Alice  and  Fraser 15,  62 

Alnwick  12,  54 

Amabel 5,  38 

Amaranth 9,  46 

Ameliasburg 12.  54 

Amherst  Island 12,  54 

Ancaster 9,  46 

Anderdon 2,  30 

Anglesea    (Kaladar) 

Anson  and  Hindon 17,  66 

Anstruther  (Burleigh) 

Armour 18,  70 

Arran 5,  38 

Artemesia 6,  38 

Arthur 8,  46 

Ashby  (Denbigh) 

Ashfield 4,  34 

Asphodel   16,  66 

Aesiginack 19,  74 

Athol 12,  54 

Augusta 13,  58 

Awenge  (Sault  Ste.  Marie) 

Bagot  and  Blithefield 15,  62 

Balfour 19,74 

Bangor,  Wicklow  and  McClure 17,  66 

Barrie 12,  54 

Barton 9,  46 

Bastard  and  Burgess,  S 13,  58 

Bathurst 16,  62 

Bayliam . .  3,  30 

Beckwith 16,  62 

Bedford 12,54 

Belmont  and  Methuen 16,  66 

Bentinck 6,  38 

Bertie 4,  34 

Beverly 9,  46 

Bexley 16,  66 

Biddulph    7,  42 

Bidwell  (Howland) 

Billings 19,  74 

Binbrook    9,  46 

Blandford 7,  42 

Blanshard 8,  42 

Blenheim   7,  42 

Blithefield  (Bagot) 

Bonfield    18,70 

Bosanquet 4,  34 

Brant 5,  38 

Brantford •     8,  42 

Brighton 12,  54 

Brock 11,  50 

Bromley 15,  62 


Townships.— Con. 

Page. 

Brooke    4,  34 

Brougham   15,  62 

Bruce    5,  38 

Brudenell  and  Lynedoch 15,  62 

Brunei 18,  70 

Bruton  (Dysart) 

Buchanan  (Rolph) 

Burford 8,  42 

Burgess,  N 16,  62 

Burgess,    S.    (Bastard) 

Burleigh  and  Anstruther 16,  66 

Burns  (Hagarty) 

Burpee    19,  74 

Caistor 9,  46 

Caldwell 18,  70 

Caledon 10,  50 

Caledonia 14,  58 

Calvin : 18,  70 

Cambridge 14,  62 

Oamden 2,  30 

Camden,  East 12,  54 

Cameron 19,  70 

Canborough " 3,  34 

Canonto  (Palmerston) 

Caradoc 7,  42 

Carden   16,  66 

Cardiff 17,  66 

Cardwell    18,  70 

*Carlmg 18    •  • 

Carlow    17,  66 

Carnarvon  19,  74 

Carrick 5,  38 

Cartwright 11,  50 

Cashel  (Tu<?or) ...... 

Cavan H,  50 

Cavendish  (Galway) 

Cayuga,N 3,  34 

Cayuga,  S 3,  34 

ChafTey     18,70 

Chandos 16,  66 

Chapman     18,  70 

Charlottenburg 14,  58 

Charlotteville 3,  30 

Chatham 2,  30 

Chinguacousy 10,  50 

Christie 18,  70 

Clara    (Head) 

Clarence 14,  62 

Clarendon  and  Miller 12,  54 

Clarke H,  50 

Clinton 9,  46 

I      Clyde  (Dysart) 

Cockburn  Island •  19,  74 

Colborne 4,  34 

Colchester,  N 2,  30 

Colchester,  S 2.  30 

Collingwood    6,  38 

Cornwall 14,  58 

Cramahe 12,  54 

Crosby,  N 13,  58 

Crosby.  S 13,  58 

Orowland 4,34 

♦Organ  zed  in  1897. 


[131] 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  32). 


A.  1898 


Townships. — Con. 

Page. 

Culross   5,  38 

Cumberland 14,  62 

Dalhousie  and  Sherbrooke  N 16,  62 

Dalton 16,  66 

Darling 16,  62 

Darlington 11,  50 

Dawn 4,  34 

Delaware    7,  42 

Denbigh  12,  54 

Denison  ( Drury) 

Derby 6,  38 

Dereham 7,  42 

Digby  ( Laxton)  

Dorchester,  N 7,42 

Dorchester,  S 3,  30 

Douro 16,  66  " 

Dover    2,  30 

Downie     8,  42 

Draper    18,70 

Drummond   16,  62 

Drury,  Denison  and  Graham 19,  74 

Dudley  (Dysart) 

Dumfries,  N 9,  46 

Dumfries,  S 8,  42 

Dummer 16,  66 

Dungannon 17,  66 

Dunn    3,  34 

*Dunnett  and  Ratter 6,  19 

Dunwich 3,  30 

Dysart  (9  townships) 17,  66 

Easthope,  N 8,  42 

Easthope,  S 8,  42 

Eastnor     5,38 

Edwardaburg    13,  58 

Egremont 6,  38 

Ekf rid 7,  42 

Elderslie 5,  38 

Eldon 16,  66 

Elizabethtown   13,  58 

Ellice 8,  42 

Elma  8,  42 

Elmsley,  N  16,  62 

Elmsley,  S 13,  58 

Elzevir  and  Grimsthorpe    17,  66 

Emily 16,  66 

Enniskillen 4,34 

Ennismore 16,  66 

Eramosa 8,  46 

Erin 8,  46 

Ernestown  , 12,  64 

Escott,  F.  (Yonge  F.) , . 

Escott,  R.  (Yonge  R.) 

Esquesing 10,  50 

Essa 6,  38 

Etobicoke 10,  50 

Euphemia 4,  34 

Euphrasia ; 6.  38 

Eyre  ( Dysart)   

Faraday 17,  66 

Fenelcn 16,  66 

Ferris .    19,  70 

Finch 14,  58 

Fitzroy 15,  62 

Flamboro',  E 9,  46 

Flamboro',  W 10,  46 

Flos 6,38 

Foley 18,  70 

Eraser  (Alice) 

Fredericksburg,  N 12,  54 

Fredericksburg,  S  12,  .^4 

FuUarton   8,  42 

*Organized  in  1897. 


Townships. — Con. 

Page. 

Gainsborough   9,  46 

Galway  and  Cavendish 16,  46 

Garafraxa,   E 9,  46 

Garaf raxa,  W 8,  46 

Georgina 10,  50    " 

Glamorgan 17,  66 

Glanford 10,  46 

Glenelg 6,  38 

Gloucester 15,  62 

Goderich    4,  34 

Gordon 19,  74 

Gosfield,    N 2,  30 

Gosfield,  S   2,  30 

Goulbourn 15,  62 

Gower,  N  l■^  62 

Gower,  S 13,  58 

Graham  (Drury)  

Grantham 9,  46 

Grattan  .  .• 15,  62 

Greenock   5,  38 

Grey 4,  34 

Griffith  and  Mata'watchan  ,     15,  62 

Grimsby,  N 9,  46 

Grimsby,  S 9,  46 

Grimsthorpe  (Elzevir) 

Guelph     8,  46 

Guilford  ( Dysart) 

Gwillimbury,  E 10,  50 

Gwillimbury,  N 10,  50 

Gwillimbury,  W 6,  38- 

Hagarty,  J  ones,  etc  15,  62 

Hagerman 18,  70 

Haldimand    12,  54 

Hallam 19,  7& 

Hallowell 12,  54 

Hamilton  12,  54 

Harburn  (Dysart)  

Harcourt  (Dysart) 

Harwich 2,  32 

Harvey  16,  66 

Havelock  (Dysart) 

Hawke.sbury,  E 14,  58 

Hawkesbury,  W 14,  58 

Hay 4,34: 

Head,  Clara  and  Maria 15,  62 

Herschel  (Monteagle) 

Hibbert 8.  42 

Hillier 12,  54 

Hilton 19,  74 

Himsworth,  N 18.  70 

Himsworth,  S 18,  70 

Hinchinbrooke  12.  54 

Hindon  (Anson) 

Holland 6,  3& 

Hope  11,  50 

Horton    15,  62 

Houghton 3,  30- 

Howard 2,  Sfr 

Howelsland 13,54 

Howick 4,  3+ 

Howland,  Bidwell  and  Sheg 19,  74 

Hullett 5,  3i 

Humberstone   4,  34 

Humphrey 18,  70 

Hungerf ord  17,  66 

Huntingdon 17,  66 

Huntley 15,  62 

Huron 5,  38 

Hyman  (Nairn) 

Innisfil    6,  38 

Jocelyn 19,  74 

■Tohnson  and  Tarbutt 19,  74 

Joly . .  -. 18,  70 

Jones  (Hagarty    


182 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No   32). 


A.  18SS 


Townships. — Con. 

Page. 

Kaladar  and  Anglesea     12,  54 

Keewatin  20,  74 

Kennebec 13,  64 

Kenyon 14,  58 

Keppel    6,  38 

Kincardine 5,  28 

King    10,  50 

Kingston    13,  54 

Kinloss  5,  38 

Kitley 13,  58 

Korah  (Sault  Ste.  Marie) 

Laird 19,74 

Lake  (Marmora) 

Lanark 16,  62 

Lancaster 14,  58 

Lansdowne,  F.  (Leeds) 

Lansdowne,  R.  (Leeds) . 

Lavant   16,  62 

Lawrence  (Stanhope) 

Laxton,  Digby  and  Longford 16,  66 

Leeds  and  Lansdowne  F. •. 13,  58 

Leeds  and  Lansdowne  R 13,  58 

Limerick .     17,  66 

Lindsay  and  St.  Edmunds 5,  38 

Livingston  (Stanhope) 

Lobo 7,  42 

Lochiel 14,  58 

Logan  3,  42 

London 7,  42 

Longford  (Laxton) 

Longueuil 14,  58 

Lome  (Nairn) 

Loughborough 13,  54 

Louth 9,  46 

Luther,  East 9,  46 

Luther,  West 8,46 

Lutterworth 17,  66 

Lynedoch  (Brudenell)  

McClintock  (Stanhope) 

McClure  (Bangor) 

McDougall 18,  70 

McGillivray 7,  42 

McKellar  .     18,  70 

McKillop 5,  34 

McKim 19,  70 

McLean  and  Ridout 18,70 

McMurrich 18,  70 

McNab 15,  62 

Macaulay  18,  70 

Macdonald  and  Meredith 19,  74 

Machar  18,  70 

Madoc 17,  66 

Maidstone    2,  30 

Malahide   3,  30 

Maiden  2,  30 

Manvers 11,  50 

Mara  11,  50 

Maria  (Head) 

March 15,  62 

Mariposa   16,  66 

Markham 10,  50 

Marlborough 15,62 

^Marmora  and  Lake 1 7,  66 

Maryborough   8,  46 

Marysburg  N    12,  54 

Marysburg  S 12,  54 

Matawatchan  (Griffith)    

Mattawan    1 9,  70 

Matchedash 6,  38 

Matilda    14,  58 

Mayo    17,  66 

Medonte 6,  38 

Medora  and  Wood 18    70 

Melancthon  9,  46 


Townships.— Con. 

Page. 

Meredith  (Macdonald) .... 

ivlersea    2,  30 

Metcalfe 7,42 

Methuen  (Belmont) 

Middleton 3,  30 

Miller  (Clarendon) 

Minden 17,  66 

Minto 8,  46 

Monaghan,  N 16,  66 

Monaghan,  S 12,  54 

Monck 18,  70 

Monmouth 17,  66 

Mono 9,  46 

Montague 16,  62 

Monteagle  and  Herschel 17,  66 

Moore . .    4,  34 

Mornington 8,  42 

Morris •" 5,  34 

Morrison    18,  70 

Mosa 7,  42 

Moulton 3,  34 

Mountain 14,  58 

Mulmur 9,  46 

Murray 12,  54 

Muskoka    18,  70 

Nairn,  Hyman  and  Lome 19,  76 

Nassagaweya    , 10,  50 

Neebing 20,  74 

Nelson 10,  50 

Nepean     15,  62 

Niagara 9,  46 

Nichol 8,  46 

Nightingale  (Stanhope) 

Nipiesing   18,  70 

Nissouri,  East 7,  42 

Nissouri,  West 7,  42 

Normanby  6,  38 

Norwich,  N 7,  42 

Norwich,    S 7,  42 

Nottawasaga 6,  38 

Oakland 8,  42 

Oakley    18,  70 

Olden 13,  54 

Oliver   20,  78 

Oneida 3,  34 

Onondaga 8,  42 

Ops 16,  66 

Orf ord 2,  30 

Orillia 6,  38 

Oro 6,  38 

Osgoode 15,  62 

Osnabruck 14,  58 

Oso 13,46 

Osprey 6,  38 

Otonabee 16,  66 

Oxford  on  Rideau 13,  58 

Oxford,  East 7,  42 

Oxford,  North 7,  42 

Oxford,  West  7,  42 

Pakenham 16,  62 

Palmerston  and  Canonto 13,  54 

Papineau   19,  70 

Parke  (Sault  Ste.  Marie) 

Peel 8,  46 

Pelee  Island '. .  2,  30 

Pelham   4,  34 

Pembroke 15,  62 

Percy 12,  54 

Perry 18,  70 

Petewawa 18,  62 

Pickering  11,  .50 

Pilkington   8,  46 

Pittsburg 1.^  54 


133 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18P8 


Townships.— Con. 


Page. 


Plantapfenet,  N It'll 

Plantagenet,  S ]l'  tI^a 

Plummer  Additional l».   '* 

Plympton 4.  f* 

Portland 13,  54 

*Prince 1^    •• 

Proton 6,  38 

Puslinch 8,  46 

Radcliffe  and  Raglan 1%  o^ 

Raglan  (Radcliflfe) •••• 

Rainham ^'  %* 

Raleigh 2,  ^- 

Rama J'  50 

Ram«ay ]6,  G2 

Rawdon   17,  66 

Rayside If  '* 

lieach 11,  50 

Richards  (Hagarty) ••■• 

Richmond   12,  5* 

Ridout  (McLean) •  •  •  •  • 

Rochester 2,  •'" 

Rolph,  Wylie  and  Buchanan ^^'  on 

Romney   •••  2,  30 

Ross.    15,  62 

Roxborough 1J>  ^° 

Russall 15,  62 

Ryde • 18,70 

Eyerson   i»,  '" 

St.  Edmunds   (Lindsay) 

St.  .Joseph  Island 19,  74 

St.  Vincent  6,  38 

Salter,  May  and  116 19,  74 

Saltfleet 10,46 

Sandfield     19,  74 

Sandwich,  E 2,  30 

Sandwich,  S 2,30 

Sandwich,  W  2,  30 

Sarawak 6,  38 

Sarnia 4,  34 

Saugeen   5,  38 

Sault  Ste.  Marie,  etc 19.  74 

Scarborough 10,  50 

Scott 11,50 

Scugog 11,50 

Sebastopol 15,  62 

Seneca    3,  34 

Seymour 12,  54 

Sheffield 12,  54 

Sheguiandah  (Rowland) 

Sherbourne  (Stanhope) 

Sherbrooke    3,  3t 

Sherbrooke,  N.  (Dalhcusie) 

Sherbrooke,  S 16,  62 

Sherwood  (Hagarty) 

Shuniah    20,  74 

Sidney 17,  66 

Smith    17,66 

Snowdon    '  17,  66 

Sombra 4,  .34 

Somerville  ...   , 16,  66 

Sophiasburg 12,  54 

Southwold  3,  30 

Springer 19,  70 

Stafford 16,  62 

Stamford      ■ . .  4,  34 

Stanhope,  etc  17,  66 

Stanley   5,  34 

Stephen 5,  34 

Stephenson    18,  70 

Stisted 18,  70 

Storrington 13,54 

*Organized  in  1897. 


TdwNSHtPS. —Con. 


Pagk. 


Strong 18,  70 

Sullivan 6,  38 

Sunnidale    too 

Sydenham 6,  38 

Tarbutt  (.Johnson) 

Tarentorus  (Sault  Ste.  Marie) • . 

Tay 6,  38 

Tecumseth 6,  38 

Tehkummah 19,  74 

Thessalon 19,  74 

Thorah H,  50 

Thorold 4,  34 

Thurlow 17,  66 

Tilbury,  East 2,  30 

Tilbury,  North 2,  30 

Tilbury,  West 2,  30 

Tiny 6,  38 

Torbolton 15,  62 

Toronto    10,  oO 

Toronto  Gore 10,  50 

Tossorontio ^'  an 

Townsend 3,  30 

Trafalgar 10,  50 

Tuckersmith 5,  o4 

Tudor  and  Cashel 17,66 

Turnberry    5,  ^4 

Tyendinaga  ^I'  ^ 

Usborne 5,  34 

Uxbridge H.  fO 

Vaughan 10,50 

Verulam  •^^'  oo 

Vespra 6,  38 

Wainfleet 4,  34 

Wallace 8,  42 

Walpole 3,  34 

Walsingham,  N  3,  30 

Walsingham,  S  .   3,  30 

Warwick 4,  34 

Waterloo 9.  46 

Watt   18,  70 

Wawanosh,  E 5,  34 

Wawanosh,  W 5,  84 

Wellesley 9,  46 

Westmeath 15,  62 

Westminster  7,  42 

Whitby,  E 11,50 

Whitby 11,  50 

Whitchurch 10,  50 

Wicklow  (Bangor) 

Widdifield 19,70 

Wilberforce  and  Algona,  N l-'),  62 

Williams,  East 7,  42 

Williams,  West  7,  42 

Williamsburg  14,  58 

Willoughby  4,  34 

Wilmot 9,  46 

Winchester  14,  58 

Windham 3,  30 

Wolfe  Island 13,  54 

Wolford  13,  58 

Wollaston 17,  66 

Weed  (Medora)  

Woodhouse   3,  30 

Woolwich 9,  46 

Wylie  (Rolph) 

Yarmouth    3,  34 

Yonge  and  Escott,  Front 13,  58 

Yonge  and  Escott,  Rear 13,  58 

York  10,  50 

Zone 2,  30 

Zorra,  East 7,  42 

Zorra,  West 7,  42 


1S4 


01  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32;. 


A.  1898 


Towns.  Page. 

Alliston 6,  82 

Almonte 16,  90 

Amherstburg    2,  78 

Arnprior      15,  86 

Aurora    10,  86 

Aylmer 3,  78 

Barrie  6,  82 

Berlin  9,  82 

Blenheim  2,  78 

Bothwell    2,  78 

Bowmanville 11,  86 

Bracebridge 18,  90 

Brampton 10,  8fi 

Brockville    13,  86 

Carleton  Place 16,  90 

Clinton  5,  78 

Cobourg 12,  86 

CoUingwood    6,  82 

Cornwall    14,  86 

Deseronto 17,  90 

Dresflen   2,  78 

Dundas 10,  82 

Durham    6,  78 

Essex 2,  78 

Forest 4,  78 

Fort  William    20,  90 

Gait 9,  82 

Gananoques 13,  86 

Gravenhurt  18,  90 

Goderich 5,  78 

Gore  Bay  19,  90 

Harriston 8,  82 

Hawkesbury 14,  86 

TngersoU 7,  82 

Kincardine    5,  78 

Leamington 2,  78 

Lindsay    16,  90 

Li=towel 8,  82 

Little  Current 19,  90 

Mattawa    19,  90 

Meaford 6,  78 

Midland .    6,  82 

Milton 10,  86 

Mitchell 8,  82 

Mount  Forest 8,  82 

Napanee. 12,  86 

Newmarket 10,  86 

Niagara    9,  82 

Niagara  Falls  4,  78 

North  Toronto 10,  89 

North  Bay 19,  90 

Oakville. 10,86 

Orangeville 9.82 

Orillia fi,  82 

Oshawa 11,  86 

Owen  Sound 6,78 

Palmerston   8,  82 

Paris 8,  82 

Parkhill 7,82 

Parrv  Sound 18,  90 

Pembroke 15,  86 

I  enetanguishene 6,  82 

Perth       16,  90 

Peterborough    .  17,  90 

Petrolea 4,78 

Picton 12,  86 

Port  Arthur     20,  90 

Port  Hope H,  8B 

Prescott    13,  86 

Hat  Portage 20,  90 

Renfrew 15,  86 

Ridgetown 2,  78 

St.  Marys 8.  82 

Sandwich 2,  78 

Sarnia 4,  78 


Towns.— Con.  Pack. 

Sault  Ste.  Marie 19,  90 

Seaf orth 5,  78 

Simcoe 3'  78 

Smith's  Falls    '.  16,  90 

StayuRr 6^  82 

Strathroy 7^  82 

Sturgeon  Falls 19,  90 

Sudbury 19]  9Q 

Thessalon 19,'  90 

Thornbury 6,  78 

Thorold 4,  78 

Tilsonburg 7    82 

Toronto  Junction    n'  86 

Trenton 17^  90 

Uxbridge  .        11*86 

♦Vankleek  Hill    IJ, 

Walkerton 5,  78 

Walkerville 2^  78 

Wallaceburg 2,'  78 

Waterloo    9'  82 

Welland 4,78 

Whitby ....V.  .  11',  ^6 

Wiarton 5^  73 

Wingham 5,'  78 

Woodstock 7]  82 

Villages. 

Acton 10,  102 

Ailsa  Craig   7^     98 

Alexandria 14,  HO 

Alvineton 4,'    94 

Arkona 4'     94 

Arthi-r .'......*.".'!!..'    8,'  102 

Ashburnham 17,  no 

Athens i.s,  106 

Ayr  9,  102 

Bath 12,106 

Bayfield 5.     98 

Beamsville 9,  102 

Beaverton n '  106 

Beeton $,     98 

I'elle  River 2,'    94 

Blyth    []    5I    98 

Bobcaygeon 16,  110 

Bolton    10,  102 

Bradford    6,     98 

Bridgeburg   '_     4',     94 

Bright'^n 12,  ]06 

Brussels .      ii,     98 

Burk's  Falls 18,'  1 10 

Burlington 10,  102 

Caledonia 3,     9 1 

Campbellford    12'  106 

Cannington 11,   106 

Cardinal 13^  1O6 

Cas?elman 1.5'  i,i  0 

Cayuga  3,     94 

Chesley 5,     98 

Chesterville 14,  106 

Chippawa  . . , . ' 4,     94 

Clifford  8,  102 

Colborne 12,  106 

Creemore 7,     98 

Delhi 3'     94 

Drayton  8,  102 

Dundalk      6,  •    98 

Dunnville    ...     3,     94 

Dutton   3,     94 

East  Toronto    11,'  102 

Eganville ]5,  110 

Elinira 9,  102 

E'ora     8,  102 

Embro    .,     7,'     98 

Erin    g'  10" 

*Organized  in  1897. 


L 


135 


61   Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No,  82). 


A.  1898 


Villages.— C7ow.  Page. 

Exeter    5,     98 

Fenelon  FaUs 16,  110 

Fergus    8,  102 

Fort  Erie   4,     94 

Garden  Island 13,106 

Georgetown lOi  102 

Glencoe    7,     98 

Grimsby 9,  102 

Hagersville  3,     94 

Hastings 12,  106 

Havelofk  17,  110 

*Henf.aU     5,     ., 

Hespeler 9,  102 

Hintonburg    15,   110 

Holland  Landing 11,  102 

Huntsville 18,  HO 

Iroquois 14,  106 

Kemptville    13,  106 

Kingsville 2,     94 

Lakefield 17,  110 

Lanark 16,  110 

Lancaster 14,  HO 

London  West   7,    98 

L'Orignal 14,  110 

Lucan   7,     98 

Lucknow    5,     98 

Madoc      17,  110 

Markdale 6,     98 

Markham 11,  102 

Maxville 14,  110 

MerrickviUe    13,  106 

Merritton 9,  102 

MUlbrook 11,  106 

Milverton 8,     98 

Morrisburg 14,  106 

Newboro'   13,  106 

Newburg 12,  106 

Newbury 7,     98 

Newcastle 11,  106 

New  Hamburg rf,  102 

Niagara  Falls  South 4,     94 

Norwich 7,     98 

Norwood 17,  110 

Oil  Springs    4,     94 

Omemee   16,  110 

Ottawa  East 15,  110 

Paisley   5,     98 

Point  Edward 4,     94 

PortOarling  18,  110 

^ort  Colborne 4,     94 

Port  Dalhnusie    9,  102 

Port  T)over 3,     94 

Port  Elgin 5,    98 

Port  Perry    11,106 

Port  Rowan 3,     94 

Port  Stanley 3,     94 

Portsmouth 13,  106 

Preston  .    9,  102 

Richmond    15,  UO 

Richmond   Hill 11,  102 

Rockland 15,  110 

Shelburne ; 9,  102 

Southampton    5,     98 

Springfield 3,     94 

Stirling 17,  110 

Stouffville 11,  102 

Streetsville    10,  102 

Sundridge 18,  110 

Sutton 11,  102 

Tara 5,     98 

Teeswater 5,     98 

Tharoesville    2,     94 

Thedford    4,     94 

Tilbury 2,     94 

Tiverton .5,     98 

^Organized  in  1897. 


ViLLAGBS. — Con.  Page. 

'Tottenham    7,     98 

Tweed 17.  110 

Vienna 3,     94 

Wardsville 7,     98 

Waterdown     10,  102 

Waterford 8,     94 

Watford 4,     94 

Wellington    12,  106 

Weston     11,  102 

Winchester    14,  106 

Woodbridge 11,  102 

Woodville 16,  110 

Wrox-eter 5,    98 

Wyoming 4,     94 

Cities. 

Belleville 21,  114,  124 

Brantford    

Chatham 

•  iuelph 

Hamilton 

Kingston 

London 

Ottawa  

St.  Catharines   ....    

St.  Thomas 

Stratford 

Toronto   

Windsor 

Counties. 

Algoma  District 19,  26,    ... 

Brant  8,  23,  116 

Bruce 5,22,116 

Carleton   15,  25,  120 

Dufferin    9,  23,  116 

Elgin 3,  22,  116 

Essex 2,  22,  116 

Frontenac    12,  24,  120 

Grey 6,  22,  116 

Haldimand 3,  22,  116 

Haliburton 17,  26,  120 

Halton    10,  24,  120 

Hastings 17,26,120 

Huron  5,  22.  116 

Kent    2,  22,  116 

Lambton 4,  22,  llfi 

Lanark 16,  25,  120 

Leeds  and  Grenville 13,  24,  120 

Lennox  and  Addington   12,  24,  120 

Lincoln 9,  23,  116 

Middlesex 7,  23,  116 

Manitoulin  District 19,  26,   ... 

Muskoka  "        18,  26,   ... 

Nipissing 18,  26,   ... 

Norfolk 3,  22,  116 

Northumberland  and  Durham 12,  24,  120 

Ontario 11,  24,  120 

Oxford 7,  23,  116 

Parry  Sound  District  18,  26,   ... 

Peel    10,  24,  120 

Perth 8,  23,  116 

Peterborough    16,  26,  120 

Prescott  and  Russell 14,  25,  120 

Prince  Edward 12,  24,  120 

Rainy  River  District  20,  26,    ... 

Renfrew    l^  25,  120 

Rimcoe 7,  23,  116 

Stormont,  Dundas  and  Glengarry 14,  25,  120 

Thunder  Bay  District 20,  26,   ... 

Victoria 16,  26,  120 

Waterloo 9,  23,   116 

Welland    4,  22,  116 

Wellington 8,  23,  116 

Wentworth 9,  23,  120 

York 10,  24,  120 


136 


APPENDIX  TO  THE   REPORT 


OF   THE 


'ONTARIO  BUREAU  OF  INDUSTRIES 

1897. 


EARLY  MUNICIPAL  RECORDS  OF  THE  MIDLAND  DISTRICT. 

A  DISPERSION  SALE  OF  1829. 

AN  EARLY  DEPARTMENTAL  STORE  (1797). 

BRITISH  IMMIGRATION  INTO  UPPER  CANADA. 
By  A.  F.  Hunter,  B.A.,  Barrie. 

POLITICAL  ECONOMY  AT  CANADIAN  UNIVERSITIES. 
By  S.  MoRLEY  WiCKETT,  Ph.D.,  Toronto. 

AGRICULTURAL  AND  MUNICIPAL  STATISTICS  OF  ONTARIO. 

THE  PEOPLING  OF  THE  PROVINCE. 
By  C.  C.  James,  M.A. 


PRINTED     BY     ORDER     OF 

THE    LEGISLATIVE    ASSEMBLY    OF    ONTARIO. 


(PUBLISHED  BY  THE  ONTARIO  DEPARTMENT  OF  AGRICULTURE,   TORONTO.) 


TO  RO  N  T  0: 
WARWICK  BRO'S  &  RUTTER,  PRINTERS,  &o.,  &c.,  68  and  70  FRONT  STREET  WEST. 

1899. 


CONTENTS. 


PAGE. 

Introduction v. 

Record  of  Town  Meetings  of  Adolphustown      1 

The  People  of  Adolphustown 27 

Record  of  Live  Stock  Marks 51 

Personal  Notes 55 

Disbanded  Troops  and  Loyalists  of  1784 70 

Pioneer  Owners  of  Land 71 

The  Adolphustown  Court  House 73 

Town  Meetings  in  Sophiasl-urg 74 

Municipal  Records  of  Hallowell 76 

The  Municipal  Act  of  1793 78 

Prof.  W.  J.  Ashley  on  Town  Meetings 82 

A  Dispersion  Sale  of  1829    85 

An  Early  Departmental  Store  (1797) 92 

British  Immigration  into  Upper  Canada,  1825-37.      By  A.  F.  Hunter,  B.  A.  97 

The  Study  of  Political  Economy  at  Canadian  Universities.      By  Dr.  S.  Mor 

ley  Wickett 101 

Agricultural  Statistics  of  Ontario.     By  C.  C  James 106 

Municipal  Statistics  of  Ontario.     By  C.  C.  James 113 

The  Peopling  of  the  Province.      By  C.  C.  James 121 


[iii] 


APPENDIX   TO   THE    REPORT 


OF    THE 


ONTARIO  BUREAU  OF.  INDUSTRIES. 


INTRODUCTION. 

The  Record  of  Town  Meetings  held  in  Adolphustown  which 
occupies  the  first  place  in  this  Report  is  considered  of  special  value 
and  worthy  of  a  place  herein  for  two  reasons  ;  first,  because  for  the 
first  time  it  will  give  students  of  economics  and  readers  of  Ontario 
history  a  year  by  year  statement  of  the  proceedings  of  town-meetings; 
and,  second,  because  it  is  believed  that  this  is  the  earliest  municipal 
organization  in  Ontario.  It  will  be  seen  that  there  are  three  parts  to 
the  records -the  minutes  of  town  meetings  from  1792  to  1848;  the 
yearly  return  of  the  inhabitants  by  families  from  1794  to  1822  :  and 
the  record  of  live- stock  marks,  the  beginning  of  stock  registration  in 
the  Province.  All  three  were  kept  in  one  book  which  was  "discovered" 
during  the  past  year  by  Mr.  T.  W.  Casey,  of  Napanee,  among  some  old 
relics  and  books  in  the  possession  of  the  Allison  family  of  Adolphus- 
town. The  chest  containing  them  had  been  closed  for  many  years  and 
the  existence  of  this  record  book  was  quite  unknown  or  had  been 
forgotten.  A  reference  to  it  will  be  found  in  Dr.  Wm.  Canniff"s 
"Settlement  of  Upper  Canada"  page  454,  where  the  date  is  incorrectly 
given  as  1793  instead  of  1792.  It  is  printed  htre  through  the  courtesy 
of  David  W.  Allison,  Esq.,  former  M.P.  for  Lennox  and  Warden  of  the 
County  (see  p.  55). 

Material  such  as  we  have  printed  here  is  eagerly  sought  after  by 
students  of  political  economy.  In  1889  there  was  published  a  43  page 
brochure  cti  "  The  Ontario  Township  "  by  J.  M.  McEvoy  (No.  1  first 
series  of  Toronto  University  Studies  in  Political  Science).  This  has 
been  out  of  print  for  several  years.  It  was  a  study  based  on  the 
records  of  the  township  of  Westminster,  Middlesex  County,  beginning 
with  1817.     The  introduction  to  this  study,  written  by  Prof.  W.  J. 

2*B.I.6 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 

Ashley,  will  be  found  on  pp.  82-84  of  this  Report  reprinted  in  part. 
A  desire  has  been  expressed  by  many  persons  for  the  reprinting  of  the 
entire  pamphlet.  If  to  that  pamphlet  be  added  the  paper  on  "The  growth 
of  Municipal  Institutions  in  Ontario"'  by  C.  K  W.  Biggar,  Q.C.,  printed 
in  the  Appendix  to  the  Report  of  the  Ontario  Bureau  of  Industries  for 
1896  (Toronto,  1898)*,  and  the  material  contained  in  this  Report, 
the  student  of  the  early  municipalinstitutionsof  Ontario  will  find  him- 
self fairly  well  equipped.  It  has  been  thought  advisable  to  reproduce 
the  Adolphustown  record  in  full,  even  though  some  of  it  may 
seem  dry  and  commonplace  to  many  readers.  The  original  record  has 
been  followed  verbal  lin. 

The  second  reason  given  was  the  early  date  of  the  records.  The 
first  settlers  arrived  in  Adolphustown  June  16th,  1784,  and  up  to  1792 
were  included  in  the  Province  of  Quebec,  By  the  Constitutional 
Act  of  1791,  passed  by  the  Imperial  Parliament,  provision  was  made 
for  the  formation  of  the  Province  of  Upper  Canada.  Governor  Simcoe 
arrived  in  the  summer  of  1792  and  summoned  his  first  Legislature  to 
meet  at  Newark  (Niagara),  on  Monday,  September  17tli.  It  was  to 
this  House  that  the  clerk  of  the  first  town-meeting,  Philip  Dorland  (page 
1)  was  elected,  but  in  which  he  was  not  allowed  to  take  his  seat  because 
of  his  refusal  to  take  the  oath  of  office  (page  60).  The  House  met  on 
Sept.  17th,  elected  a  Speaker  and  received  the  Speech  of  His  Excellency. 
A  reply  was  presented  on  the  18th.  On  the  19th  Mr.  Borland's 
petition  was  read  and  the  House  ordered  the  Speaker  to  issue  his  writ 
for  a  new  election.  Immediately  thereafter  Mr.  Jones  moved  for  leave 
to  bring  in  A  Bill  to  authorize  Town  Meetings  for  the  purpose  of 
apj)ointing  divers  Parish  officers.  Leave  was  given  and  the  House 
adjourned.  This  Bill  was  read  the  first  time  on  Monday,  25th  Septem- 
ber, and  the  second  time  on  the  27th.  Further  consideration  was 
postponed  for  three  months.  The  House  was  prorogued  on  Oct.  15th. 
It  will  be  seen,  therefore,  that  the  first  legislation  proposed  in  the  first 
Legislature  of  Upper  Canada  was  a  Bill  to  authorize  Municipal  Gov- 
ernment, but  such  legislation  was  not  finally  enacted  until  Juh^  9th, 
1793.  The  second  session  began  Friday,  31st  May,  1793.  A  new  Bill 
to  authorize  Town  Meetings  was  read  for  the  fir.st  time  on  June  8th. 
It  was  read  a  second  time  on  June  11th,  and,  after  being;  en^jrossed,  it 
was   ordered   that   the  Bill  pass  and  be  sent  up  for  concurrence.     On 

*This  article  revised  and  enlarged  forms  the  "Prefatory  Note"  to  Part  I.  c.f 
*'The  Municipal  Manual,"'  edited  by  C.  R.  W.  Biggar,  M.A.,  Q.C.,   now  in  the 

press,  to  be  issued  September  1st,  1899. 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 

the  20th  June,  one  week  later,  there  was  read  the  first  time  A  Bill  to 
provide  for  the  nommation  and  appointinent  of  Parish  and  Town 
oncers  throughout  this  Province.  *  This  came  up  for  a  second  reading 
on  June  21st,  stood  committed,  and  passed  second  reading  on  June 
23rd.  On  June  27th  it  was  read  a  third  time  and  ordered  to  be  sent 
for  concurrence.  The  Upper  House  appear  to  have  required  some 
changes,  for  on  the  2nd  of  July  the  Bill  was  read  as  amended  by 
Council,  and  the  House  concurred  in  the  amendments.  Tlie  former 
Bill  to  authorize  town  meetings  had  disappeared  or  had  been  incorpor- 
ated in  this  Bill.  It  would  appear  therefore  that  three  Bills  had  to  be 
introduced  into  the  House  before  the  Council  and  House  were  satisfied 
or  came  to  an  agreement,  and  even  the  third  was  amended  by  the 
Council  before  being  finally  accepted.  The  House  was  prorogued  on 
July  9th,  1793.  The  Act  as  then  passed  will  be  found  on  pages  78-81. 
The  peculiar  historical  value  of  these  Adolphustown  records  will  now 
be  apparent.  By  turning  to  page  1  it  will  be  seen  that  meetings  were 
held  on  March  6th,  1792,  and  March  .5th,  1793,  whereas  the  Act 
authorizing  the  holding  of  such  meetings  became  law  July  9th,  1793. 
Another  point  of  some  moment  is  that  the  Adolphustown  residents 
began  holding  their  meetings  the  first  Monday  in  March  and  this  is 
the  day  fixed  by  the  Statute  (section  1,  p.  78).  It  will  be  noted  (page 
2)  that  a  meeting  was  held  on  28th  of  August  to  bring  their  organiza- 
tion into  line  with  the  Statute.  The  new  member  for  Prince  Edward 
anl  Adolphustown,  Major  Vanalstine  (p.  68)  was  present  at  the 
second  session  of  the  Legislature  and  this  third  meeting  was  held  six 
weeks  after  the  Act  received  the  approval  of  the  Governor.  The 
change  of  date  for  meeting,  from  March  to  January,  was  made  in  1817 
(see  pp.  11  and  82).  It  will  be  interesting  to  compare  the  appoint- 
ments at  the  self- constituted  meetings  of  March  1792  and  1793  and 
those  made  at  the  August  meeting.  At  the  former  they  appointed 
Overseers  of  the  poor  and  Constables  :  at  the  latter  Assessors  and 
Collector.  They  return  to  the  election  of  Constables  in  1794  although 
the  Act  did  not  give  them  power  to  elect  such,  the  appointment  of 
Constables  being  one  of  the  prerogatives  of  the  Court  of  Quarter 
Sessions  which  consisted  of  the  local  Magistrates,  (see  Biggar). 

The  scope  of  power  of  the  town  meetings  as  at  first  authorized  by 
the  Legislature  is  thus  referred  to  by  Mr.  McEvoy  (page  20) : 

"  '  What  shall  be  a  lawful  fence  1 '  and  '  what  animals  shall  be  free  commoners 
in  the  township  for  the  year  ? '  were  the  only  questions  concerning  which  town 
meetings  might  really  legislate  ;  but  they  might  and  did  discuss  far  weightier  mat- 
ters.    Public  sentiment  on  the  largest  public  questions  was  here  fostered.     This^ 

vii 


€1  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


however,  was  not  so  important  or  valuoble  as  the  quality  of  mind  which  was 
developed.  Little  as  was  their  law  making  power,  it  was  enough  to  show  every 
man  present,  the  real  necessity  for  laws,  how  laws  were  made,  that  laws  were  sim- 
ply rules  which  ought  to  be  the  mofct  advantageous  that  could  be  devised  for  the 
community,  and  that  the  community  had  an  undoubted  right  to  change  these  laws 
if  they  saw  that  a  change  would  be  an  improvement.  If  teas  the  conception  cf  law 
that  was  fostered  in  the  men  of  Ontario  by  their  toicn  meeting,  which  led  in  a  large 
measure  to  the  estoMishment  of  Besponsihle  Government  in  this  Province." 

Looking  at  the  question  of  popular  rights  in  this  light  it  must  be 
admitted  that  the  simple  record  of  the  pioneer  meeting  held  at  Adol- 
phustown  on  6th  March,  1792,  becomes  exceedingly  interesting  and 
valuable  and  worthy  of  being  placed  on  permanent  record. 

Some  may  conclude  that  this  pioneer  town  meeting  of  Adolphus- 
town  formed  the  immediate  basis  or  suggestion  of  the  Act  passed  in 
1793.  But  whence  came  the  suggestion  for  the  Adolphustown  meet- 
ing ?  A  reading  of  Prof.  Ashley's  introduction  given  on  pp.  82-84 
will  be  helpful  at  this  point.  Several  references  to  early  town  meet- 
ings held  in  the  various  northern  states  might  be  given  here  if  space 
permitted.  We  shall  content  ourselves  with  one  extract  from  the 
History  of  Duchess  County  by  Philip  H.  Smith  (1877).  This  is  sug- 
gestive here,  since  many  of  the  Adolphustown  settlers  came  from 
Duchess  Count}-,  New  York  State,  in  the  years  1784-94.  Among 
others  it  maj^  be  mentioned  that  Philip  Borland,  the  clerk  of  the  first 
meeting,  was  born  at  Beekman  in  1755  (see  p.  59),  and  the  Samuel 
Dorland  mentioned  in  the  following  was  probably  a  relative. 

The  following  are  from  the  old  records  in  the  Town  Clerk's  Office  : 

At  a  town  meeting  held  April  7th,  1772,  for  Beekman's  Precinct  chosen  for 
-officers  as  follows,  viz.  : — Maurice  Pleas,  'J'own  Clerk  ;  Joshua  Carman,  Super- 
visor ;  Samuel  Dorland,  James  Yanderburg,  Assessors  ;  Simeon  Xoxon,  Constable 
and  Collector  ;  Thomas  Clemens,  Maurice  Pleas,  Inspectors  of  Intestate  Estates. 

Memorandum  at  this  meeting. — The  parties  living  on  the  Clove  Road  agree  to 
work  it  as  follows,  viz.  :  That  half  of  the  inhabitants  that  live  below  to  work  to 
Andreas  Buck's  lane,  and  the  other  half  to  work  from  thence  to  Lieut.  John  Uhls. 

At  a  meeting  held  April  2nd,  1776,  James  Vanderburg,  Esq.,  Samuel  Dorland, 
John  Hall,  Ebenezer  Cary  and  Eliab  Youmans  were  chosen  a  committee  to  retire 
and  draw  up  some  '  prudential  laws  '  relative  to  height  and  sufficiency  of  fences 
within  this  precinct,  upon  which  they  drew  up  the  following  and  read  them  pub- 
licly to  the  meeting  for  their  approbation,  to  Avhich  the  said  meeting  unanimously 
agreed,  and  ordered  that  the  same  be  recorded  [then  follow  the  laws]. 

April  3,  1787. — Yoted  the  sum  of  seventy  pounds  to  be  raised  for  the  use  of 
the  poor  in  this  precinct. 

April  1,  1788. —It  is  hereby  enacted  that  the  majority  of  the  justices  and  a 
majority  of  the  overseers  of  the  poor,  for  the  tnne  being,  shall  be  and  are  hereby 
empowered  to  bind  out  the  children  of  all  such  poor  persons  (as  are  not  able  to  get 
livelihood)  as  apprentices  ;  and  they  are  also  empowered  to  bind  oiit  the  parents 
for  such  time  and  times  as  tliey  may  think  fit  and  convenient.  Passed  in  open 
town  meeting. 

J.   Oakley,  Clerk. 

viii 


^1  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


The  tracing  back  of  the  New  York  town  meetings  through  the  older 
New  England  settlements  to  England  and  through  the  Manhattan 
settlement  to  Holland  is  an  interesting  line  of  study,  but  we  hav-e  not 
space  to  give  further  reference  or  make  further  extracts  in  this  report. 

In  connection  with  the  recording  of  stock  marks  the  following- 
extracts  from  Smith's  Duchess  County  History  may  be  of  interest. 
It  shows  that  the  keeping  of  a  record  of  marks  of  live  stock  was  bi;t 
the  continuance  of  a  custom  with  which  the  early  settlers  were 
familiar  in  New  York  State. 

Recorded  the  25th  day  of  May,  1772,  the  ear  mark  of  Uriah  Davis,  "  which  is 
a  crop  off  the  right  ear,  and  a  slit  in  it,  a  half  crop  under  the  side  of  the  left  ear." 

Ear  mark  of  Joseph  Peck,  a  space  cut  out  on  the  under  side  of  the  left  ear. 

Ear  mark  of  Morris  Graham,  "  a  crop  and  slit  in  the  right  ear,  and  a  hole  in 
the  left." 

Taken  up  July  6th,  1774,  by  Hentice  Woolsey,  "a  black  yearling  colt,  the 
near  hind  foot  white  to  the  fet-lock — no  mark  or  brand  perceptible." 

Chas,  Graham,  Clerk. 

Nov.  25th,  3  777. — Came  into  the  pasture  of  Jas.  Young,  some  time  in  the 
month  of  April  last,  a  sorrel  mare,  two  years  old  past,  marked  with  the  letter  B  on 
the  near  hind  thigh,  a  blaze  in  the  forehead,  with  four  white  feet. 

The  following  is  taken  from  "Home  Life  in  Colonial  Days," 
(pp.  400-2),  by  Alice  Morse  Earle  (New  York,  1899) : 

"On  Long  Island  and  m  Connecticut  there  were  cow-herds,  calf-herds  and 
pound-keepers.  The  calf  keepers'  duties  were  to  keep  the  calves  away  from  the 
cows,  water  them,  protect  them,  etc  In  Virginia  and  Maryland  there  were  cow- 
pens  in  early  days,  and  cow-herds  ;  but  in  the  South  the  cattle  generally  roamed 
wild  through  the  forest,  and  were  known  to  their  owners  by  ear-marks.  In  all 
communities  ear-marks  and  other  marks  of  ownership  on  cattle,  horses,  sheep  and 
swine  were  verj'  important,  and  rigidly  regarded  where  so  much  value  was  kept  in 
domestic  cattle.  These  ear-marks  were  registered  by  the  town  clerk  in  the  town 
records,  and  were  usually  described  both  in  words  and  rude  drawings.  One  of  my 
great-great-grandfather's  earmarks  for  his  cows  was  a  '  swallow-fork  slit  in  both 
ears  '  ;  another  was  a  slit  under  the  ear  and  a  '  half-penny  mark  on  the  foreside  of 
the  near  ear.'  This  custom  of  herding  cattle  in  common  lasted  in  some  out-of-the- 
way  places  to  this  century,  and  even  lingered  long  in  some  large  cities  such  as 
Boston,  where  cows  were  allowed  to  feed  on  Boston  Common  till  about  1840.  In 
Philadelphia  until  the  year  1795  a  cowherd  stood  every  morning  at  the  corner  of 
Dock  and  Second  Streets,  blew  his  horn,  tramped  off  to  a  distant  pasture  followed 
by  all  the  cows  of  his  neighborhood,  who  had  run  out  to  him  as  soon  as  they  heard 
the  familiar  sound.  He  led  them  back  to  the  same  place  at  night,  when  each 
returned  a^one  to  her  own  home. 

"  Fence  Viewers  were  men  who  were  appointed  by  the  town  for  common 
benefit  to  take  charge  of  building  and  keeping  in  repair  the  fences  that  surround 
the  '  great  lotts  '  or  commons  ;  that  is,  the  enclosed  fields  which  are  the  common 
property  of  each  town,  in  which  all  farmers  living  near  could  place  their  cattle. 
The  fence-viewers  saw  that  each  man  worked  a  certain  amount  each  year  en  the 
'  pales,'  as  the  fences  were  called,  or  paid  his  share  for  the  work  of  others.  Each 
farmer  or  cow-owner  usually  built  about  twenty  feet  of  fence  for  each  cow  which  he 

ix 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


pastured  in  the  '  great  lotts.'  The  fence- viewers  also  examined  the  condition  of 
fences  around  private  lands  ;  noted  breaks  and  ordered  repairs.  For  if  cattle 
broke  through  a  poorly  made  fence,  and  did  damage  to  crops,  the  '^ence-owner  had 
to  stand  the  loss,  while  if  the  fences  were  good  and  strong,  proving  the  cattle 
unruly  and  destructive,  the  owner  of  the  cattle  had  to  pay.  All  the  colonies  were 
watchful  over  the  safe-keeping  of  fences.  In  1659  the  Dutch  rulers  of  New 
Amsterdam  (now  New  York)  ordered  that  for  '  stripping  fences  of  rails  or  posts  ' 
the  offender  should  be  whipped  and  branded,  and  for  a  second  offence  he  could  be 
punished  by  death.  This  seems  cruell}'  severe,  but  that  year  there  was  a  great 
scarcity  of  grain  and  other  food,  and  if  the  fences  were  pulled  down,  cattle  could 
get  into  fields  and  eat  up  the  growing  crops,  and  famine  and  death  might  result." 

Adolphustown,  the  original  '  4th  Town,"  was  surveyed  in  1783 
and  first  settled  in  1784  by  Major  Yanalstine's  band  of  United  Empire 
Loyalists.  It  is  one  of  the  smallest  townships  in  the  Province  (about 
11,000  acres),  but  has  been  the  starting  point  of  many  families  whose 
descendants  are  widely  scattered  over  the  Province.  In  the  early 
days  it  was  a  distributing  point,  settlers  from  the  United  States 
remaining  there  a  year  or  two  before  taking  up  land  further  west  or 
north.  In  addition  to  its  early  municipal  history,  it  is  interesting 
from  its  early  judicial  and  religious  history,  reference  to  which  will  be 
found  among  the  "  Personal  Notes,"  pp.  55  to  59.  These  latter  will 
also  serve  as  notes  to  the  last  article  in  this  Eeport  on  "  The  Peopling 
of  the  Province." 

It  has  been  thought  advisable  to  reprint  on  pp.  74-76  the  extracts 
from  township  records  of  Sophiasburg  and  Hallowell  taken  from  Dr. 
Wm.  CannifFs  "  Settlement  of  Upper  Canada,"  owing  to  their  close 
relationship  with  Adolphustown.  The  Sophiasburg  records  give 
interesting  regulations  as  to  impounding  stock  and  the  disposal  of 
fines.  It  will  be  found  interesting  to  note  that  these  early  town  meet- 
ings did  not  always  limit  their  enactments  to  the  rather  narrow 
privileges  conferred  upon  them  by  Act  of  Parliament.  In  connection 
with  the  Hallowell  records  there  is  printed  here  for  the  first  time  the 
tax  list  of  that  township  for  the  year  1798.  The  financial  administra- 
tion of  the  townships  was  at  first  placed  in  the  hands  of  the  various 
Courts  of  Quarter  Sessions.*  The  Court  for  the  Midland  district  met 
alternately  at  Kingston  and  Adolphustown.  Biggar  has  summarized 
the  powers  of  these  Courts  as  follows : 

"  The  powers  of  Justices  of  the  Peace  at  these  sessions  assembled  included 
(inter  alia)  the  erection  and  management  of  court  houses,  gaols  and  asj^lums';  lay- 
ing out  and  improving  the  highways  ;  making  assessments  for  these  puiposes,  and 

*  Queen's  Quarterly,  Kingston,  July,  1899,  contains  the  fii'st  of  a  valuable  series 
of  papers  on  Early  Records  of  Ontario.  '*  Extracts  from  the  Record  of  the  Court 
of  Quarter  Sessions  for  the  District  of  Mecklenburg,  (afterward  the  Midland  Dis- 
trict) with  introduction  and  notes  by  Professor  Adam  Shortt."    See  note,  p.  58,  Q.Q^ 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


also  '  to  pay  the  wagres  of  members  of  the  House  of  Assembly '  ;  making  regulations 
to  prevent  accidental  fires  ;  the  appointment  of  district  and  township  constables  ; 
fixing  the  fees  of  gaolers,  of  town  or  parish  clerks,  and  of  pound-keepers  ;  the 
appointment  of  street  and  highway  surveyors,  and  inspectors  of  weights  and 
measures  ;  the  regulation  of  ferries  ;  the  establishment  and  regulation  of  markets 
in  various  towns  ;  also  the  granting  of  certificates  to  app*licants  for  licenses  to  sell 
liquor,  and  to  ministers  or  clergymen  of  '  dissenting  '  congregations,  authorizing 
them  to  solemnize  marriages." 

(See  .Appendix  to  Report  of  Bureau  of  Industries  for  1896,  p.  11,  and  Prefatory 
Note  to  Municipal  Manual,  1899,  p.  3.) 

The  Assessment  Act  passed  in  1793  provided  for  eight  classes  of 
property,  as  given  on  page  108  of  this  Report,  with  taxes  of  2  J  shillings, 
5  shillings,  7|  shillings,  and  so  on  up  to  20  shillings  for  the  8th  class. 
In  1794  8th  and  9th  classes  were  added  and  provision  made  for  plac- 
ing all  assessments  under  £50  in  a  class  by  themselves,  "  Under  list 
rated,"  with  a  tax  of  two  shillings.  In  accordance  with  the  Act  of 
1794  the  assessment  of  Hallowell  was  made  in  1798  as  given  on  page 
77.*  It  will  be  seen  that  the  powers  of  the  Court  of  Quarter  Sessions, 
composed  of  Justices  of  the  Peace  appointed  by  the  Crown,  greatly 
exceeded  the  powers  of  the  Town  Meetings,  composed  of  the  male 
residents  of  the  Township. 

The  two  papers  in  this  Report  on  "A  Dispersion  Sale  of  1829" 
and  "  An  Early  Departmental  Store  "  throw  some  light  on  the  condi- 
tions of  life  in  the  Midland  District  in  the  pioneer  days.  Mr.  Hunter's 
paper  on  "  British  Immigration  into  Upper  Canada — 1825  to  1837" 
(pp.  97-101),  takes  up  the  question  of  the  second  great  movement  of 
population  into  this  Province,  and  will  be  found  to  be  a  most  valuable 
supplement  to  the  concluding  paper  on  "  The  Peopling  of  the  Province.'' 
Dr.  Wickett's  paper  on  "  The  Study  of  Political  Economy  at  Canadian 
Universities "  (pp.  101-106),  while  originally  intended  for  Economic 
Students,  will  doubtless  be  appreciated  by  all  readers  of  this  Report. 
The  two  papers  on  "Agricultural  Statistics"  and  "Municipal  Statistics  " 
call  for  no  further  comment. 

In  conclusion,  it  may  be  stated  that  the  early  municipal  records 
of  Niagara  township,  beginning  with  1793,  and  also  some  records  of 
the  old  Home  District  are  on  hand,  but  must  be  held  over  for  a  further 
report.  We  shall  be  pleased  to  be  informed  of  other  early  records 
similar  to  those  printed  in  this  Report  and  to  be  permitted  to  make 
copies  for  future  publications. 

C.  C.  JAMES, 
Ontario  Btjeeau  of  Industries,  Secretarj*. 

Toronto,  July  3rd,  1899. 

*"  Fifth   class  rated"   on  page  77  should  read  *' 12.6  "   instead  of  10,6  as 
mis-printed.        On  page  108,  ninth  line  "5|"  should  read  "  5." 

xi 


I 


RECORD  OF  TOWN  MEETINGS 


HELD   IN    ADOLPHUSTOWN 


I  792- I  849. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  Cth  of  March,  1792,  the  following  persons 
were  chosen  to  officiate  in  their  respective  offices  the  ensuing  year,  and 
also  the  regulation  for  the  same  : 

Ruben  Bedell,  Town  Clerk  ;  Joseph  Allison,  Garrot  Benson,  Con- 
stables ;  Paul  Huff,  Philip  Borland,  Overseers  of  the  Poor  ;  Willet 
Casey,  Paul  Huti',  John  Huyck,  Pound  Masters. 

Dimentions  of  Hogs  Yoaks,  18  inches  by  24.  Height  of  Fence,  4 
ft.  8  in.  Fence  Viewers,  Abraham  Maybe  and  Peter  Puttan.  Water 
voted  to  be  no  fence.  No  pigs  to  run  till  three  months  old.  No  stallion 
to  run.  Any  person  putting  lire  to  any  brush  or  stubble  that  does 
not  his  endeavor  to  hinder  it  from  doing  damage,  shall  forfeit  the 
sum  of  Forty  Shillings. 

Phillip  Borland  T.  C. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  at  Adolphustowm  5  day  of  March,  1793.  The 
undermentioned  persons  were  chosen  to  Officiate  in  their  respective 
offices,  and  also  the  regulations  made  for  the  ensuing  year. 

Ruben  Bedell,  Town  Clerk ;  John  Robling  and  William  Casey, 
Constables;  Philip  Borland  and  Paul  Huff,  Overseers  of  the  Poor; 
Willet  Casey,  Paul  Huff  and  John  Huyck,  pound  masters  ;  Thomas 
Borland,  Benjamin  Clapp,  Reuben  Bedell  and  John  Huyck,  Overseers 
of  the  Highway. 

Fence  Viewers 

Peter  Vallau,  Philip  Borland  and  Benjamin  Clapp ;  Committee 
appointed  to  lay  out  the  third  Concession  Road,  Nicholas  Hagerman, 
Paul  Trumpour  and  John  Canniff. 

Water  voted  no  fence.  Pigs  not  to  run  till  three  months  old. 
Fences  4  feet  8  inches  high.  Hogs  yoaks  18  inches  by  24.  No  per- 
son to  set  fire  to  brush  or  stubble  without  taking  two  Freeholders 
w^ith  him  under  the  penalty  of  Forty  shillings. 

Ruben  Bedell  T.  C. 

[1] 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  82).  A.  1898 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  in  Adolphustown  the  iSth  of  August, 
1793,  The  undermentioned  persons  were  chosen  to  officiate  in  there 
respective  offices :  Ruben  Bedell,  Town  Clerk ;  William  More  and 
Willet  Casey,  Assessors;  Conrad  Vanduzer,  Collector.  Daniel  Cole, 
Benjamin  Clapp,  Ruben  Bedell  and  William  Casey,  Overseers  of  the 
hio-hway  and  Fence  Viewers ;  Willet  Casey,  Nathaniel  Somes  and 
Alexander  Campbell,  Pound  Masters. 

Abraham  Maybe,  Paul  Huff,  Town  wardens.  The  regulations  made 
last  March  to  continue  in  full  force. 

Ruben  Bedell  T.  C. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  in  Adolphustown  the  8rd  of  March,  1794, 
The  following  persons  were  chosen  to  officiate  in  their  respective 
offices. 

Ruben  Bedell,  Town  Clerk  ;  Willet  Casey  and  William  More, 
Assessors;  Michael  Slote,  Collector;  William  More  and  John  Caniff, 
Town  Wardens ;  Nathaniel  Somes,  Peter  Swade  and  Albert  Benson, 
Pound  Masters ;  Ruben  Bedell,  Benjamin  Clapp,  Solomon  Huff,  Alex- 
ander Campble  and  Willet  Casey,  Overseers  of  the  High\vay  and  Fence 
Viewers  ;  Michael  Slote  and  Barrent  Lewis,  Constables. 

Water  deemed  no  fence.  Pigs  not  to  run  till  three  months  old,  and 
from  that  time  until  they  are  one  year  old  to  wear  a  yoak  18  inches 
by  12.  and  after  that  age  to  wear  a  yoke  24  inches  by  18.  Fences  are 
to  be  four  foot  eight  inches  high  upon  the  level  or  nearly  level.  Fence 
Viewers  are  to  be  sole  judges  of  the  sufficiency  of  a  fence.  All  Hogs 
to  be  Conimoners  from  the  first  of  November  until  the  first  of  April, 
exceptincr  only  Boars,  who  are  at  no  time  to  be  commoners,  and  any 
person  finding  a  Boar  within  his  enclosure  may  cut  him  upon  his 
owners  risk.  Any  ramsheep  being  found  in  any  persons  enclosure  he 
may  cut  him  on  the  risk  of  the  owner,  that  is  between  the  twentieth 
of  August  and  the  first  of  November. 


Towm  Meeting  held  in  Adolphustown,  2nd  day  of  March,  1795. 

The  following  persons  were  chosen  to  officiate  in  their  respective 
offices,  and  also  the  regulations  made  for  the  ensuing  year ;  Archibalt 
Campbell,  To\vn  Clerk  ;  Willet  Case}^  and  Paul  Trumpour,  Assessors; 
James  Huff,  Collector ;  John  Cannifi  and  Cornelius  Vanhorn,  Town 
Wardens  ;  Nathaniel  Somes,  Peter  Swade  and  William  Clark,  Pound 
Masters  ;  Coonrad  Vanduser,  William  Griffis,  Nicholas  Peterson,  Corne- 
lius Vanhorn  and  Alexander  Campble,  Over.-^eers  of  the  Highway  and 
Fence  Viewers  ;  James  Huff  and  Jonas  Smith,  Constables. 

Water  deemed  no  fence.  Pigs  not  to  run  till  three  months  old, 
and  from  that  time  till  one  year  old  to  wear  a  yoak  18  inches  by  12, 
and  after  that  to  wear  a  yoak  24  inches  by  18.  Fences  are  to  be  four 
feet  8  inches  high  upon  the  level  or  nearly  level.     Fence    Viewers 

2 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


are  to  be  sole  judges  of  the  sufficiency  of  a  fence.  All  hogs  to  be  com- 
moners from  the  tirst  of  December  until  the  first  of  April.  But  any 
person  finding  Boar  within  his  enclosure  between  the  first  of  April 
and  the  first  of  December,  may  cut  him  upon  the  owners  risk.  Sheep 
not  to  be  commoners,  and  any  person  finding  a  ramsheep  within  his 
enclosure  between  the  20th  of  August  and  the  first  of  November,  may 
cut  him  upon  the  owners  risk.  No  stallion  to  run  at  large.  No  per- 
son to  set  fire  to  any  brush  or  stubble  without  taking  two  freeholders 
with  him,  under  the  penalty  of  Forty  Shillings.  It  is  agreed  by  the 
Township  that  the  weed  called  Thistle  should  be  crushed  in  its  growth, 
and  to  this  purpose  that  the  pathniasters  do  direct  the  people  to  assist 
any  persons  on  whose  land  the  same  may  grow  in  subduing  it.  Pro- 
vided it  be  found  necessary,  and  of  this  the  pathmasters  are  to  be  the 
judges.  

At  a  town  meeting  held  in  Adolphustown  the  7th  of  March,  1796, 
The  following  persons  were  chosen  to  officiate  in  their  respective 
offices,  and  also  the  regulations  made  for  the  ensuing  year  :  Archibalt 
Campbell,  Town  Clerk ;  John  Huych  and  John  CannifF,  Assessors  ; 
Garrot  Benson,  Collector  ;  John  Cannifi"  and  Cornelius  Vanhorn,  Town 
wardens ;  Nathaniel  Somes,  Peter  Swade  and  Abram  Bogart,  Pound 
Masters  ;  William  Ruttan,  Henry  Davis,  Paul  Hufi",  Nathaniel  Somes 
and  Alexander  Campbell,  path  Master  and  Fence  Viewers ;  Garrot 
Benson  and  Samuel  Brock,  Constables. 

Regulations  the  same  as  last  year. 

Thomas  Dorland,  William  More  and  Michael  Slote,  by  vote  of  the 
whole  township,  are  appointed  to  be  a  Committee  to  conduct,  regulate 
and  oversee  the  business  of  erecting  a  Court  House  in  this  town 
according  to  the  subscription  made  for  that  purpose. 


At  a  townmeeting  held  in  Adolphustown,  6th  da,y  of  March,  1797, 
The  following  persons  were  chosen  to  officiate  in  their  Respective 
Offices  and  Likewise  the  regulations  for  the  ensuing  year — 

Archibalt  Campble,  Town  Clerk  ;  Paul  Huff"  and  Ruben  Bedell, 
Assessors;  James  Cannitf,  Collector;  Ruben  Bedell,  Cornelius  Vanhorn, 
Town  Wardens  ;  Peter  Swade,  Benjamin  Clapp,  Christopher  German, 
Poundmasters ;  Phillip  Dorland,  Casper  Vandusen,  James  Noxon, 
Michael  Slote  and  John  German,  Pathmasters  and  Fence  Viewers  ; 
James  Cannifi  and  Samuel  Brock,  Constables  ;  Thomas  Dorland  and 
Willet  Casey,  Surities. 

Regulations  the  same  as  in  the  year  1795  excepting  Hogs  to  be 
Commoners  only  to  the  15th  of  March. 


At  Townmeeting  held  in  Adolphustown  on  the  5th  day  of  March, 
1798 — The  following  persons  were  chosen  to  officiate  in  their  respec- 
tive Offices — and  likewise  the  regulations  made  for  the  ensuing  year — 

3 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Archibalt  Campbel,  Town  Clerk  ;  Cornelius  Vanhorn  and  Benja- 
min Clapp,  Assessors  ;  Charles  Huff,  Collector,  Willet  Casey,  Surity  ; 
Philip  Borland  and  William  Moor,  Tovvnwardens  ;  Peter  Swade, 
Christopher  German  and  John  Borland,  Poundmasters  ;  Philip  Dor- 
land,  Solomon  HufF,  James  Noxon,  Benjamin  Clapp  and  Christopher 
German,  Pathmasters  and  Fence  Viewers  ;  Charles  Hutf,  Henry  Davis, 
Constables,  Willet  Casey,  Surity. 

It  is  agreed  by  the  Township  that  in  order  to  subdue  ihe  growth 
of  Thistles,  Thomas  Dorland,  Willet  Casey,  Daniel  Cole,  Henry  Davis, 
Casper  Vandusen,  James  McMaster,  John  Dorland,  Paul  Trumpour, 
Albert  Benson,  Arch.  Campbell  and  William  Casey  are  appointed  to 
oversee  where  those  weeds  are  necessary  to  be  subdued  and  determine 
whether  a  fine  of  Forty  Shillings  shall  not  be  laid  on  any  person  or 
persons  who  shall  be  found  negligent  in  stoping  the  growth  of  thistles 
on  their  premises,  wliich  fine  if  so  laid  by  the  afFormentioned  persons 
or  an}'  three  of  them  shall  be  laid  out  in  subduing  the  thistles  in  this 
Township.     The  regulations  the  same  as  in  last  yeaf. 


At  a  Townmeeting  held  in  Adolphustown,  4th  day  of  March,  1799, 
The  following  persons  were  chosen  to  officiate  in  their  respective 
Offices  ;  and  likewise  the  regulations  for  the  ensuing  year  ;  James 
Nuxon  Town  Clerk  ;  Phillip  Dorland  and  William  Moor  Assessors  ; 
Joshua  Hicks  Collector;  John  Huych  and  William  Moor  Town- 
wardens  ;  Peter  Swad,  Christopher  German,  John  Dorland  and  Henry 
Davis  Poundmasters ;  Alexander  Vanatstine,  Solomon  Huft',  John 
Dorland  and  William  Clark,  Pathmasters  and  Fence  Viewers  ;  William 
Griffis  and  Joshua  Hicks,  Constables  ;  Willet  Casey  and  Thomas  Dor- 
land, surities. 

By  virtue  of  an  act  of  the  Legislature  of  the  Province  of  Upper 
Canada,  past — whereby  the  inhabitants  of  each  township,  Reputed 
township  or  Place,  are  authorised  to  make  and  ordain  prudential  laws 
for  their  own  internal  polce  ;  and  whereas  the  regulations  heretofore 
made  in  this  township  have  been  found  insufficient  in  part ;  Therefore 
this  Meeting  doth  agree  to  the  followino:  Rules  for  the  ensuinsf  year, 
that  is,  That  fence  be  four  feet  four  inches  high  upon  the  level  or 
nearl}^  level ;.  The  fence  viewers  to  be  sole  judges  of  the  sufficiency  of 
the  fence.  Wharas  it  shall  be  made  appear  that  Creatures  pass  over  a 
lawful  fence,  their  owners  shall  be  made  liable  to  pay  for  all  damages, 
under  such  circumstances,  done  by  them.     Water  deemed  no  fence. 

All  Horses,  stallions  excepted,  Neat  Cattle  and  Hogs,  excepting 
boars,  be  and  are  hereby  liberated  or  considered  as  commoners  under 
the  following  restrictions,  that  is,  no  pigs  to  run  on  commons  until 
three  months  old.  and  from  that  time  until  one  year  old  to  wear  a 
yoak  eighteen  inches  by  twelve — Aft-^r  that  time  its  Dementions  shall 
be  twenty-four  by  eighteeen  inches.  All  Hogs  to  be  commoners  from 
the  first  day  of  December  till  the  fifteenth  of  March,  but  any  person 
finding  a  boar  in  his  possession  between  the  first  of  April  and  of  De- 

4 


^ 


I 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  Ih98 


cember  may  cut  him  at  the  owner'.s  risk  ;  any  person  findino-  a  ram 
within  his  enclosure  between  the  first  of  August  and  November  may 
cut  him  at  the  owner'.s  risk. 

Whereas  the  intention  of  the  Legislature  has  not  been  sufficiently 
explained  with  respect  to  the  manners  of  proceeding  with  creatures 
taken  by  distraint  in  trespassing  and  impounded,  its  therefore  this  day 
agreed  to  adopt  the  following  rules,  that  is,  if  any  person  find  a  crea- 
ture trespassing  on  him  or  her  which  may  Lawfully  be  impounded, 
that  he,  within  four  days  after  delivering  such  creature  to  the  care  of 
a  pound  master,  bring  lorward  a  legal  apprisal  of  such  damages  to  sd. 
pound  master,  else  he  may  turn  out  such  creature,  and  the  person  that 
brought  the  creature  to  pound  shall  be  holden  for  pound  fees,  together 
with  all  reasonable  charges.  It  is  also  agreed  that  in  order  to  subdue 
the  growth  of  the  thistles,  that  the  following  men  be  appointed,  to 
wit:  Thomas  Dorland,  Willet  Casey,  Daniel  Cole,  Henry  Davis,  Joel 
Haight,  James  McMaster,  Benjamin  Clapp,  Paul  Trumpour,  Albert 
Benson,  Archd.  Campbl  and  William  Casey,  to  oversee  where  these 
weeds  are  necessary  to  be  subdued  and  determine  whether  a  fine  of 
forty  shillings  shall  not  be  laid  on  any  person  or  persons  who  shall  be 
found  remiss  or  negligent  in  stoping  the  growth  of  thistles  on  their 
premises,  which  fine,  if  so  laid  by  the  aforementioned  persons,  or  any 
three  of  them,  shall  be  laid  out  in  subduing  sd.  thistles  in  this  town- 
ship ;  it  is  also  agreed  that  whar  any  person  has  so  many  growing  on 
his  lands  that  it  may  by  the  pathmasters,  or  any  one  of  them,  thought 
to  be  burthensom  for  him  to  cut,  that  the  pathmaster  do  order  out  all 
the  persons,  liable  to  do  statute  dut}^  on  the  Highways,  to  his  assist- 
ance. No  person  to  set  fire  to  any  brush  or  stubble  without  taking  two 
freeholders  with  him  to  observe  his  precaution,  advise  and  assist  him, 
under  the  penalty  of  forty  shillings,  to  be  sued  for  by  the  person 
injured. 

At  a  town  meeting  held  in  Adolphus,  3rd  day  of  3  mo.,  1800, 
March,  The  following  persons  was  chosen  as  town  officers  for  the 
ensuing  year — 

(To  wit) :  Daniel  Haight,  for  Town  Clerk ;  Phillip  Dorland  and 
William  Moore,  Assessors  ;  William  GrifEs,  Collector ;  James  CannifF, 
William  Casey,  Town  Wardens ;  Peter  Swade,  Daniel  Haight,  John 
Dorland  and  Christopher  Germond,  Pound  Masters;  1st  concession, 
Phillip  Dorland  ;  2nd  concession,  Daniel  Haight ;  3rd  concession,  Ed- 
ward Barker ;  4th  concession,  John  Hyke,  Overseers  of  the  High- 
roads ;  William  Griffis  and  Joshua  Hicks,  Constables :  Thomas  Dor- 
land and  Willet  Casey,  Suretys,  including  Collectorship  of  said 
Griffis. 

Prudential  laws  same  as  in  last  year,  accept  as  hereinafter  ac- 
cepted (to  witt) :  Ram  sheep  found  by  any  person  in  his  inclosure  after 
the  15th  day  of  8th  mo.,  (August),  and  before  the  first  of  11th 
mo.  (November),  ma}^  casterate  him  at  his  owner's  risk.  The  regula- 
tions respecting  thistles  discontinued. 

5 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  town  meeting  held  at  Adolphus  Town  this  2nd  da.y  of  Third 
mo.,  1801,  the  following  persons  was  chosen  town  officers  for  the 
Insuing  year  (To  witt) :  William  Robins,  Town  Clerk  ;  Daniel  Haight 
&  John  Roblin,  Assessors  ;  Henrj^  Davise,  Collector  ;  Willet  Case}^  and 
Eeuben  Begal  [Bedell  ?],  Town  Wardens ;  Peter  Swade,  William  Moor, 
William  Griffis  and  Abraham  Bogeart,  Pound  Masters  ;  Philip  Borland. 
William  Griffis,  .John  Canniff  &  Cornelious  Valoe,  Overseerors  of  the 
Road  ;  William  Griffis  and  Isaac  Brown,  Constables ;  Benj'n.  Clapp 
and  Widiam  Moore,  Sureties. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  in  last  year  except  that  no  horses  be 
commoners  and  with  respect  to  Thissles  the  same  as  recorded  in  1799. 
Willet  Casey,  Daniel  Cole,  Solmon  Huff,  Benjamin  Clapp,  William 
Moore  &  William  Casey  are  appointed  for  the  several  concessions  in 
which  they  live,  together  with  the  path  masters  in  each  concession,  to 
see  who  is  remis  in  stopping  there  groth  and  whether  the  fine  of  forty 
shillings  shall  not  be  lade  on  such  as  may  be  neglectfull  in  indeavor- 
ing  to  subdue  this  pernicious  weed. 


I 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  this  first  day  of  March.  1802,  at  Adol- 
phustown,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town  Officers,  viz  : 

William  Robins,  Town  Clerk  ;  Coonrad  Van  Duzen,  Peter  Rattan, 
Sen.,  Assessors ;  William  Rattan,  Collector ;  Willet  Case3^  Ruben 
Bedell,  Town  Wardens  :  Peter  Swade,  James  Caniff,  William  Griffis, 
John  Huyck,  Pound  Keepers  ;  Philip  Dorland,  Joel  Haight,  William 
Moore,  Abraham  Bogart,  Overseer's  of  Highways ;  William  Rattan, 
John  Roblin,  Constables. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  the  7th  day  of  March,  1803,  at  Adol- 
phustown,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town  Officers,  viz. : 

William  Robins,  Town  Clerk  ;  Mich'l.  Sloote,  John  Dorland,  As- 
sessors ;  Jon'n.  Allen,  Collector ;  John  Huyck,  Reuben  Bedell,  Town 
Wardens  ;  Peter  Swade,  James  CanifiFe,  Jacob  Dulmage,  Barnard  Cole, 
Pound  Keepers  ;  Willet  Casey,  Joel  Haight,  Paul  Trumpour,  Will'm. 
Casey,  John  Van  Scy ver  ;  Overseer's  of  Highways;  David  Brown, 
John  Reed  (Mich'l.  Sloote,  surety).  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  this  5th  day  of  March,  1804,  at  Adol- 
phustown  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town  Officers,  viz. : 

Reuben  Bedell,  Town  Clerk;  Edward  Barker,  Gilb't  D.  Clapp, 
Assessors .  Cornelius  Van  Horn,  Collector  (Reuben  Bedell,  Seurity) ; 
Reuben  Bedell,  Benjamin  Clapp,  Town  Wardens  ;  Barrent  Cole,  Peter 
Swaid,  James  Canniflf,  Henrey  Davis,  Pound  Keepers  ;  Joseph  Ellason, 
William  Griffis,  Paul  Trumpour,  Christopher  German,  John  Snyder, 
Overseers  of  Highways  ;  David  Brown,  Nicholas  Peterson,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  as  last  year. 

6 


61  Victoiia.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  town  meeting  held  4tli  of  March,  1805,  at  Adolphustown, 
the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town  officers  : 

Brj^an  Crawford,  Town  Clerk ;  William  Casy,  James  Caniff,  As- 
sessors ;  Nicholas  Peterson,  Jun.,  Collector  :  Reuben  Bedell,  Benjamin 
Clapp,  Town  Wardens  ;  BarAet  Cole,  Peter  Swade,  John  Roblin,  Henry 
Davis,  Pound  Keepers  ;  William  Rattan,  Henry  Davis,  Edward  Barker, 
Christopher  German,  John  Snj^der,  Overseers  of  Hiohways  ;  Nicholas 
Peterson,  Jun  ,  Jonathan  Allan,  Constables. 

Prudential  laws  as  last  year. 

At  a  town  meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  this  3rd  day  of  ^^rd 
month,  1806,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  town  officers  (To  Witt): 

Daniel  Haight,  Clerk  ;  James  Noxon  &  Christopher  Germon,  As- 
sessors ;  for  the  1st  concession,  William  Ratan,  2nd  concession,  Henry 
Davis,  3rd  concession,  Benjamin  Clapp,  4th  concession,  Cornelious 
Valoe,  5th  concession,  John  Van  Schiver,  Overseers  of  the  Highways  ; 
John  CannifF,  Paul  Trumpower,  Town  Wardens ;  Peter  Swade,  Henry 
Davise,  William  More,  Albert  Benson,  Pound  Keepers;  W^ilham  Griffis, 
Collector ;  John  M^illiams,  William  Griths,  Constoples. 
•     Prudential  Laws  to  continue  as  last  year. 

At  a  town  meeting  held  at  Adolphus  Town  this  2nd  day  of  3rd 
month,  1807,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Towm  Officers: 

Daniel  Haight,  attested.  Town  Clerk :  Philip  Dorland  and  John 
Huyck,  attested,  Assessors;  Thomas  Dorland  for  the  1st  concession, 
Henry  Davice,  2nd  concession,  sworn,  James  Canniff,  3rd  concession, 
sworn,  William  Casey,  4th  concession,  sworn,  John  Van  Schiver,  5th 
concession,  sworn.  Overseers  of  the  Highways  ;  Reuben  Bedell,  sworn, 
and  Willet  Casey,  sworn.  Town  Wardens .  Peter  Swade,  sw^orn,  Henry 
Davice,  sworn,  John  Dorland,  attested,  Christopher  Germon,  sworn, 
Pound  Keepers  ;  William  Griffis,  Collector ;  Henry  Vandozen  (Solomon 
Huff  &  Conrad  Vandozen,  surety  for  Henry  Vandozen),  William  Griffis, 
Constoples. 

Prudential  laAvs  same  as  last  year. 

At  a  town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphus  Town  7th  dsij  of  3rd  mo. 
(March)  1808,  the  iollowing  persons  were  chosen  town  officers  (To  Witt): 

Daniel  Haight,  Towai  Clerk  (attested);  Daniel  Haight  (attested), 
William  More  (sworn)  Assessors  ;  Thomas  Dorland,  Esq'r.,  for  the  first 
concession,  Henry  Davice  for  the  second  (sworn),  Reuben  Bedell  for 
the  third  (sworn),  William  Casey  for  the  fourth  (sw^orn)  &  John  Van- 
shiver  for  the  fifth,  Overseers  of  the  high  ways  ;  Reuben  Bedell,  sworn, 
&  John  Roblin,  sworn.  Town  Wardens ;  Peter  Swade  for  the  first  con- 
cession, sworn,  Henry  Davice,  for  the  second  concession,  sworn,  William 
More  for  the  third  concession,  sworn,  Christopher  Germon  for  the 
fourth  concession,  sworn,  John  Vanschiver,  for  the  fifth  concession, 
Pound  Keepers  ;  Henry  Davice,  Collector  (sworn),  Sollomon  Huff  and 
Peter  Swade,  sureties  ;  Jacob  Haver  &  William  Griffis,  Constoples. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year. 

7 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  town  meeting  held  at  Adolphus  Town,  the  6th  day  of  3rd 
month  (March),  lcSO.9,  the  following  persons  Were  chosen  town  officers 
(To  Wit) : 

Daniel  Haight,  Town  Clerk,  attested  ;  Daniel  Haight,  attested, 
&  William  Moore,  Sworn,  Assessors  ;*  Philip  Dorland,  for  the 
first  Concession,  attested,  Daniel  Haight,  for  the  Second  Concession, 
attested,  William  Moore,  for  the  Third  Concession,  Sworn,  Archabald 
Campbel,  for  the  Fourth  Concession,  Sworn,  Hezekiah  Clark,  for  the 
Fifth  Concession,  Overseers  of  the  highways  ;.  William  Moore,  sworn, 
&  Willet  Casey,  Town  Wardens  ;  Abraham  Maybee,  For  the  first  Con- 
cession, sworn,  Philip  Dorland,  Jun.,  For  the  Second  Concession,  Wil- 
liam Moore,  For  the  Third  Concession,  sworn,  Barnard  Cole,  For  the 
Fourth  Concession,  John  Snyder,  For  the  Fifth  Concession,  Pound 
Keepers  ;  John  Dorland,  Collector,  attested,  Alexander  Fisher,  Esqr., 
and  William  Moore,  sureties  ;  William  Griffis  &  Jacob  Haver,  Con- 
stoples. 

Prudential  laws  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  on  the  5th  day  of 
March,  1810,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town  Officers  : 

John  Stickney,  Town  Clerk,  sworn ;  Willet  Casey,  sworn,  Joel 
Haight,  affirmed.  Assessors ;  Henry  Hoover,  for  the  1st  Concession, 
Samuel  Dorland,  2nd  Concession,  sworn,  Cornelius  Van  Horn,  8rd 
Concession,  sworn,  Archabald  Campbel,  4th  Concession,  sworn,  John 
Huyck,  5th  Concession,  sworn.  Overseers  of  the  Highway ;  William 
Moore,  sworn,  Willet  Casey,  Town  Wardens  ;  Daniel  Outwater,  Jr.,  1st 
Concession,  Philip  Dorland,  Jr.,  2nd  Concession,  sworn,  Wm.  Moore, 
3rd  Concession,  Barnard  Cole,  4th  Concession,  sworn,  John  Van  Skiver, 
5th  Concession,  sworn,  Pound  Keepers ;  John  Dorland,  Collector, 
affirmed,  Paul  Trumpour,  Abraham  Maybee,  sureties;  Henry  Davis, 
James  Canniff,  Constables. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year,  except  that  Hogs  and  Pigs 
are  not  to  be  commoners  unless  lawfully  yoaked  the  whole  year. 


At  a  Town  meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  on  Monday,  the  4th 
March,  1811,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  town  officers  : 

John  Stickney,  Town  Clerk,  sworn  ;  Philip  Dorland,  Jr.,  sworn, 
Archabald  Campbel,  Assessors  ;  Philip  Dorland,  attested,  Joel  Haight, 
sworn,  Cornelius  Van  Home,  sworn,  Albert  Benson,  sworn,  John 
Huyck,  sworn.  Overseers  of  Highways  ;  William  Moore,  sworn,  Daniel 
Haight,  attested,  Town  Wardens  ;  Arran  Ranny,  Samuel  Casey,  Peter 
Van  Skiver,  sworn,  Barnard  Cole,  John  Van  Skiver,  sworn.  Pound 
Keepers ;  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  sworn,  Collector,  and  John  Dorland, 
Benjamin  Clapp,  Sureties ;  Samuel  Casey,  John  Williams,  Constables. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  on  Monday,  the  2nd 
day  of  March,  1812,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  town  officers  : 

John  Stiekney  (sworn).  Town  Clerk  ;  Win.  Moore  (sworn),  Daniel 
Haight  (aftii-med).  Assessors  ;  Philip  Borland  (affirmed),  Philip  Dor- 
land,  Jun.  (sworn),  Benjamin  Clapf)  (sworn),  Albert  Benson  (sworn), 
John  Van  Skiver,  Overseers  of  highways ;  William  Moore,  sworn, 
Daniel  Haight,  Town  Wardens ;  Noxon  Harris,  Solomon  Huft',  Peter 
Van  Skiver,  Barnard  Cole,  John  Huyck,  Pound  Keepers ;  Thomas  I. 
Dorland,  Collector ;  Daniel  Haight  &  Paul  Huff,  Sureties  ;  Benjamin 
B.  Ranny  &  Burger  Huyck,  Constables. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year,  except  that  Hogs  to  be 
commoners  from  the  first  of  December  to  the  first  of  March  without 
yoaks. 

At  a  Townmeeting  held  at  Adolphus  town  the  first  day  of  third 
month,  1813,  the  loUowing  persons  were  elected  Town  officers  (Viz.): 

Daniel  Haight,  Town  Clerk  ;  John  Trumpour,  sworn,  &  Daniel 
Haight,  affirmed.  Assessors  ;  Philip  Dorland,  affirmed,  Heniy  Davice, 
John  Dorland,  affirmed,  Christopher  Germond,  sworn,  and  John  Van- 
skiver,  sworn,  Overseers  of  the  highways ;  Willet  Casey,  sworn,  & 
Daniel  Haight,  affirmed.  Town  Wardens  ;  John  Van  Cott,  Solomon 
Huff,  Peter  Van  Skiver,  sworn,  Barnet  Cole,  sworn,  John  Hyke,  Pound 
Keepers ;  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  Collector,  Philip  Dorland  ^  Daniel 
Haight,  Sureties  ;  Noxon  Harris  &  Jacob  Peterson,  Constoples. 

Prudential  Laws  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphus  town  the  7th  day,  3rd 
Monch,  1814,  the  following  persons  were  elected  town  Officers  for  the 
ensuing  year.  That  is  : 

Daniel  Haight  (attested),  Town  Clerk  ;  Willet  Casey  &  Daniel 
Haight  (attested).  Assessors  ;  Philip  Dorland,  for  the  first  concession, 
Henry  Davice,  for  the  second  concession,  John  Dofland,  for  the  third 
concession,  Christopher  Gernlond,  for  the  fourth  concession,  and  John 
Vanskiver,  fof  the  fifth  concession.  Overseers  of  the  Highways  ;  Wil- 
let Casey  and  Daniel  Haight  (attested).  Town  Wardens  ;  Jonothan 
Allen,  Solomon  Huff  (sworn),  Peter  Vanskiver,  Albert  Benson  (.^worn) 
and  John  Hyke  (sworn).  Pound  Keepers;  Peter  Dorland,  Collector, 
Philip  Dorland  &  Thomas  Dorland,  Sureties  ;  Orrent  Eeynea,  [Orrin 
E,anuey]  and  Peter  Huff,  Constoples. 

Prudential  laws  same  as  last  year,  except  that  no  pigs  to  run  on 
commons  until  three  months  old,  and  from  that  age  until  one  year 
old,  to  have  any  right  to  run  at  large,  they  shall  ware  a  sufficient 
yoke  at  least  twelve  inches  by  eighteen  until  they  shall  be  one  year 
old,  and  from  that  time  forward  or  after  they  are  one  year  old  they 
shall  ware  a  yoke  at  least  eighteen  by  twenty  four  inches,  else  have 
no  priviledge  on  our  Commons,  and  their  owners  shall  be  accountable 
for  all  damages  by  them  done. 

"       ^  9 


Gl  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  town  meeting  held  at  Adolphustown,  the  7th  day  of  March 
1815,  the  follo'.ving  persons  were  elected  town  officers  for  the  insuing 
year,  (that  is) : 

Reuben  Bedell,  Town  Clerk  ;  Samuel  Borland  and  Samuel 
Case}',  Sworn  Assessors  ;  David  Brown,  1st  Concession,  Henrey  Davis, 
2nd  Concession.  Peter  Van  Skiver,  3rd  Concession,  Christopher  German, 
4th  and  5th  concessions,  Overseers  of  the  roads  or  path  Masters  ;  John 
Trumpour,  William  More,  Sworn  Town  Wardens  ;  Xicholas  Hageiman, 
1st  Concession,  Soloman  Huff,  (sworn)  2nd  concession,  Peter  Van 
Skiver,  (sworn)  3rd  concession,  Barnet  Cole,  (sworn)  4th  concession, 
John  Van  Skiver,  5th  concession.  Pound  Keepers ;  Burger  Huyck, 
Collector ;  James  Ockerman,  Junr.,  William  M.  Roblin,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  town  meeting  held  at  Adolphustown,  the  4  day  of  March. 
181G,  the  following  persons  were  elected  town  officers  for  the  ensuing 
year,  that  is  : 

Peter  Van  Skiver,  Town  Clerk  ;  Samuel  Dor'and,  Joseph  Trumpo, 
Assessors,  sworn;  David  Brown  for  1st  concession,  Peter  Dorland  for 
2nd  concession,  sworn,  Joseph  Trumpo  for  3rd  concession,  Cornelius 
Valeau  for  4th  concession,  sworn.  Path  Masters  or  Overseers  of  high- 
ways ;  Jonathan  Alien  for  1st  concession,  Jacob  Hover  for  2nd  conces- 
sion, sworn,  John  Dorland,  affirmed,  for  3rd  concession,  affirm.,  Barnard 
Cole  for  4th  concession,  sworn,  Elias  Clark  for  5th  concession,  sworn. 
Pound  Keepers  ;  Willm.  Moor,  James  Cannitf,  Town  Wardens,  sworn  ; 
Daniel  Haight,  Collector,  affirmed;  Samuel  Dorland,  Willm.  Moor, 
Sureties  ;  James  Clark,  Henry  Cole,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown,  on  Monday  3rd  March, 
1817,  the  following  persons  were  elected  town  officers  for  the  ensuing 
year  : 

Orrin  Ranney,  sworn.  Town  Clerk ;  Jonathan  Allen,  sworn, 
Christopher  Jerman,  sworn,  Assessors  ;  David  Brown,  sworn,  1st  con., 
Samuel  Case}',  sworn,  2nd  con.,  Benjamin  Clapp,  sworn,  3rd  con.. 
Burger  Huyck,  sworn,  4th  con.,  Elias  Clark,  oth  con..  Path  Masters  ; 
Orrin  Ranuey,  sworn,  1st  con ,  Joseph  Rattan.  2nd  con.,  Thomas  I. 
Dorland,  3rd  con.,  Barnard  Cole,  sworn,  4th  con.,  John  Huyck,  sworn, 
5th  con.,  Pound  Keepers  ;  John  Dorland,  attesd.,  William  Moore,  sworn, 
Town  Wardens ;  Thomas  I.  Dorland.  Collector;  Solomon  Huff,  Junr., 
Joseph  Trumpour,  Constables ;  Samuel  Dorland,  Surety  for  S. 
HufJ,  Junr. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year. 

10    "  I 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown,  oth  Jany.,  1818,  the 
following  persons  were  elected  Town  Officers  for  the  ensuing  year  : 

Orrin  Ranney,  sworn,  Town  Clerk ;  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  affirmed, 
George  Deltor,  Assessors;  Jonathan  Allen,  Sworn,  1st  con.,  Daniel 
Height,  Affirmed,  2nd  con.,  Edward  Barker,  Affirmed,  3rd  con.,  William 
Casey,  4th  con.,  Elias  Clark,  Sworn,  5th  con.,  Path  Masters;  Orrin 
Ranney,  Sworn,  1st  con.,  Joseph  Rettan,  Sworn,  2nd  con.,  Thomas  I. 
Dorland,  Affirmed,  3rd  con.,  Barnard  Cole,  4th  con.,  John  Huyck, 
Sworn,  5th  con..  Pound  Keepers  ;  William  Moor,  Sworn,  Willet  Casey, 
Sworn,  Town  Wardens;  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  Affirmed,  Collector;  David 
Peterson,  Jos.  Cutwater,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  Court  House,  4th  Jany., 
1819,  the  following  persons  were  elected  for  Town  Officers  for  the 
ensuing  year : 

Orrin  Ranney,  Sworn,  Town  Clerk  ;  Archibald  Camel,  sworn, 
Samuel  Case}^  sworn.  Assessors ;  Noxon  Harris,  1st  con.,  Sworn, 
Daniel  Height,  2nd  con.,  attes'd,  Edward  Barker,  3rd  con.,  Wm.  Casey, 
4th  con.,  attes'd,  John  Huycke,  5th  con.,  sworn,  Path  Masters;  Orrin 
Ranney,  Sworn,  1st  con.,  Jos.  Ratten,  Sworn,  2nd  con.,  Thos.  I.  Dor- 
land, Att'd,  3rd  con.,  Barnard  Cole,  Sworn,  4th  con.,  John  Huycke, 
Sworn,  5th  con ,  Pound  Keepers ;  Willet  Casey,  Sworn,  Wm.  Moor, 
Sworn,  Town  Wardens  ;  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  attes'd.  Collector ;  Jesse 
Pease,  Edward  Huyck,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  Court  House,  on  Mon- 
day 3rd  Jany.,  1820,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town  Officers 
for  the  ensuing  year  : 

Thomas  Cook,  sworn.  Town  Clerk  ;  Peter  Dorland,  sworn.  Corn's 
Vellow,  sworn.  Assessors ;  Noxon  Harris,  Sworn,  Jos.  Ruttan,  Sworn, 
Owen  Roblin,  Sworn,  Ab'm  Bogart,  John  Huyke,  Sworn,  Path  Masters  ; 
Jon.  Allen,  Sworn,  Samuel  Dorland,  Sworn,  William  Roblin,  Barnard 
Cole,  Sworn,  Elias  Clark,  Pound  Keepers  ;  Willet  Casey,  Sworn,  Wil- 
liam More,  Town  Wardens  ;  Gilbert  Clapp,  Sworn,  Collector ;  William 
Griffith,  Sworn,  Arch'd  Campbell,  Constt^.bles. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  holden  at  Adolphustown  Court  House,  on 
the  1st  January,  1821,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town  Officers 
for  the  ensuing  year,  viz.  : 

Thomas  Cook,  Town  Clerk,  Sworn ;  William  M.  Roblin,  Daniel 
Haight,  Assessors ;  Gilbert  Clapp,    Collector,  Sworn ;  Peter  Dorland, 

11 


61  Victoria.  Sessijiial  Papers  (No.  32),  A.  1898 


Moses  Carnahan,  John  Trumpour,  Arch'd  Campbell,  Elias  Clark,  Path 
Masters ;  Gibbs  Ranny,  Solomon  Hutf,  Sr.,  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  Barnard 
Cole,  Elias  Clark,  Pound  Keepers  ;  AYillet  Casey,  James  Canniff,  Town 
Wardens  ;  James  Watson,  Paul  Clapp,  Constables. 
Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 

At  a  Meeting  holden  at  Adolphustown  Court  House,  on  the  7th 
day  of  January,  1822,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  as  Town 
Officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  viz. : 

James  Watson,  sworn,  Town  Clerk ;  Jon'n  Allen,  sworn,  Edward 
Hayke,  sworn.  Assessors  ;  Peter  V.  Dorland,  1st  coneess'n,  sworn,  Joel 
Haight,  2nd  concession,  Afi'd,  Jas.  Caniff,  3rd  concession.  Sworn,  Albert 
Benson,  4th  concession,  Sworn,  Alias  Clark,  5th  concession.  Sworn,  Path 
Mas':ers;  Orrine  Ranney,  1st  Concession,  sworn,  Henry  Davis,  2nd 
Concession,  sworn,  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  3rd  Concession,  affirmed,  Bar- 
nard Cole,  4th  Concession,  sworn,  Alias  Clark,  5th  Concession,  sworn. 
Pound  Keepers  ;  Willet  Casey,  sworn,  Chris'r  German,  sworn.  Town 
Wardens  ;  Edw'd  Howard,  Wm.  Casey,  Jun.,  Constables,  Noxon  Hai-ris 
and  Peter  V.  Dorland,  surety  for  Edw'd  Howard. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year. 

At  a  meeting  holden  at  Adolphustown  Court  House  on  the  6th 
day  of  January-,  1823.  The  following  persons  were  chosen  as  town 
officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  Viz. : — 

James  Watson,  Town  Clerk  (sworn) ;  Jonathan  Allen,  Assessor 
(sworn) ;  Jas.  Caniff,  Assessor  (sworn) ;  Peter  V.  Dorland,  Collector ; 
William  Rattan,  Path  Master  for  1st  Concession  (sworn);  Sol.  Huff, 
Sen'r.,  Path  Master  for  2nd  Concession ;  Thos.  I.  Dorland,  Path 
Master  for  3rd  Concession  (affd.) ;  Edward  Huj^ke,  Path  Master  for 
4th  Concession  (sworn)  ;  Robinson  Casey,  Path  Master  for  5th  Con- 
cession (sworn)  ;  Orrine  Ranney,  Pound  Keeper  1st  Concession  (sworn); 
Joseph  Rattan,  Pound  Keeper  2nd  Concession  (sworn) ;  William 
Roblin,  Pound  Keeper  3rd  Concession  (sworn) ;  Barnard  Cole,  Pound 
Keeper  4th  Concession  (sworn) ;  Alias  Clark,  Pound  Keeper  5th  Con- 
cession (sworn) ;  Thomas  Williams,  Esq.,  Church  Warden,  appointed 
by  the  Clergy,  (sworn)  ;  Lazeras  Gilbert,  Church  Warden,  appointed 
by  Town  (sworn) ;  Daniel  Davrene,  Moses  Carnahan,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  meeting  holden  at  Adolphustown  on  the  5th  day  of  January> 
1824,  the  following  persons  where  chosen  as  town  officers  for  the 
ensuing  year,  Viz. : — 

James  Watson,  Town  Clerk,  sworn  ;  James  Canniff,  sworn,  Jona- 
than Allen,  sworn.  Assessors ;  Peter  V.  Dorland,  Collector ;  Willett 
Casey,  Path  Master  for  the  IsL  Concession,  sworn  :  Daniel  Haight, 
Path  Master  for  the  2nd  Concession,  Aff'd. ;  Larry  Lewis,  Path  Master 
for  the  3rd  Concession,  sworn  :  Edward  Huyck,  Path  Master  for  the 
4th  Concession,  sworn ;  Samuel  Robinson  Casey,  Path  Master  for  the 

12 


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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


5th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Owen  Ranney,  Pound  Keeper  for  the  1st  Con- 
cession, sworn  ;  Joseph  Rattan,  Pound  Keeper  for  the  2nd  Concession, 
sworn  :  William  Roblin,  Pound  Keeper  for  the  3rd  Concession,  sworn; 
Barnard  Cole,  Pound  Keeper  for  the  4th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Alias 
Clark,  Pound  Keeper  for  the  5th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Thos.  Williams, 
Esq.,  elected  by  the  Clergy,  Town  and  Church  Warden,  sworn; 
Lazarus  Gilbert,  elected  by  the  People,  Town  and  Chuich  Warden, 
sworn;  Peter  Maybe,  George  German, Constables;  Solomon  Huff,  Surety. 
Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year,  except  ordered  that  a  lawful 
fence  shall  be  4  ft.  4  inches  high,  staked  and  riderd,  or  locked,  and 
that  the  Path  Master  of  each  Concession  to  be  the  sole  Judo-e. 


Adolphustown,  19th  day  of  January,  1824.  Special  sessions  held 
this  day  : 

Magistrates  Present :  Thos.  Dorland,  Esq.  ;  Chrr.  German,  Esq. ; 
Sam'l.  Dorland,  Esq.;  Thos.  Williams.  Esq.;  Wm.  Rattan,  Path  Master, 
1st  Concession,  reLurn  received  for  last  year,  1823,  complete ;  Sol. 
Huff,  Sen'r.,  2nd  Concession,  return  received  for  1823.  N.B. — refered 
until  the  28th  inst. ;  Thos.  I.  Dorland,  3rd  Concession,  return  complete; 
Edward  Huyck,  4th  Concession,  return  complete  ;  Robinson  Casey, 
5th  Concession,  return  complete.  List  of  Names  and  Teams  received 
liable  to  joerform  Statute  Labor,  1824  :  Willet  Casey,  Daniel  Haight, 
Larry  Lewis,  Edward  Hayek,  Robinson  Casey. 

Ordered  that  the  Second  Concession  do  perform  25  days  Statute 
Labor  on  the  New  Road  in  the  1  Concession,  3  Concession  do  50  days, 
and  the  4  concession  15  days  :  and  is  further  ordered  that  the  above 
labor  be  performed  in  the  month  of  May.  Agreed  that  all  the  young 
men  in  each  concession  do  work  2  days  each,  except  Jaines  McGunion, 
none  ;  John  Clegg,  1  day  ;  Alias  Carnihan,  1  day.  The  Second  Con- 
cession to  work  on  the  bridge  on  the  south  side  of  Battle  hill ;  3  Con- 
cession to  work  to  the  cross  roads  of  2  Concession.  By  order  of  the 
Magistrates  in  special  session  assembled.  Jas.  Watson, 

Clerk. 

At  a  Town  Meeting  holden  at  the  Court  House  at  Adolphustown, 
on  the  3rd  daj^  of  January,  1825.  The  following  persons  were  chosen 
as  town  officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  Viz. : — 

Moses  Carnahan,  Town  Clerk,  sworn  ;  Joseph  B,  Allison,  sworn 
and  Gilbert  Clapp,  sworn,  Assessors  ;  Larry  Lewis,  sworn.  Collector  ; 
Willet  Casey,  for  the  1  Concession,  sworn ;  Henry  Davis,  for  the  2 
Concession,  sworn  ;  Joseph  Cutwater,  for  the  3  Concession,  sworn ; 
Cornelious  Velio w,  for  the  4  Concession,  sworn  ;  Joseph  Clark,  for  the 
5  Concession,  sworn,  Path  Masters ;  Orrine  Ranney,  1  Concession ; 
J  oseph  Rattan,  2  Concession,  sworn  ;  W'^m.  Roblin,  3  Concession,  sworn ; 
Barnard  Cole,  4  Concession,  sworn ;  James  Bogart,  5  Concession, 
Pound  Keepers ;  Thomas  R.  Cartwright,  Church  Warden  by  the 
Clergy ;  William  Rattan,  Town  and  ^'hurch  Warden  by  the  People  ; 
Andrew  Davise,  Larry  Lewis,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 

13 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown,  this  second  day  of 
January,  1826.  The  following  persons  were  chosen  as  town  officers 
for  the  ensuing  year,  Viz.  : — 

Moses  Camahan,Town  Clerk,  sworn  ;  Joseph  B.  Alison  and  Gilbert 
Clapp,  Assessors,  both  sworn  on  the  spot;  Larry  Lewis,  Col'ector, 
sworn;  Joseph  B.  Alison,  1st  Con.,  sworn;  Joseph  Ruttan,  2  Con. 
sworn  ;  David  Peterson,  3  Con.,  sworn ;  James  Clark,  4  Con.,  sworn ; 
James  Bogart,  5  Con.,  sworn,  Path  Masters  ;  Orine  Ranny,  1st  Con.; 
Andrew  Davis,  2nd  Con.,  sworn  ;  James  CannifF,  3rd  Con.;  Barnard 
Cole,  4th  Con.,  sworn ;  Joseph  Clark,  oth  Con.,  sworn,  Pound  Keepers  ; 
George  Wright,  Town  and  Church  Warden ;  Thos.  Pi.  Cartw right, 
Town  and  Church  Warden  ;  Robt.  Hampt,  Nicholas  Bogart,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  the  Court  House  at  Adolphustown, 
Jan'y.  1st,  1827,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  as  Town  officers  for 
the  present  year,  Viz.  : — 

Moses  Carnahan,  Town  Clerk,  sworn  ;  Gilbert  Clapp  and  Joseph 
B.  Alison,  Assessors,  sworn ;  Larry  Lewis,  Collector,  sworn  ;  Lazarus 
Gilbert,  Path  Master,  1st  Con.,  sworn  :  Andrew  Davis,  Path  Master, 
2nd  Con.,  sworn  ;  Gilbert  Clapp,  Path  Master,  3  Con.,  sworn :  Barnard 
Cole,  Path  Master,  4  Con.,  sworn ;  Mathew  German,  Path  Muster, 
5  Con.,  Not  present,  sworn  special  session,  J^m.  15th;  Orrin  Ranny, 
Pound  Keeper,  1st  Con.,  sworn  ;  Solomon  Huff,  Jun'r.,  Pound  Keeper, 
2  Con.,  Not  present :  Joseph  Cutwater,  Pound  Keeper,  3  Con.,  sworn ; 
Burger  Huyck,  Pound  Keeper,  4  Con.,  sworn ;  Robinson  Casey,  Pound 
Keeper,  5  Con.,  Not  present :  Hugh  McDonald,  Town  and  Church 
"Warden,  but  not  present;  Jonathan  Allen,   Church  Warden,    swom 

special  session  ;  Gilbert   Clapp  and ,  Constables.     The 

other  Constable  was  not  chosen  although  there  was  much  said  relative 
to  it. 

Special  Session,  this  day  two  weeks  at  .same  place. 

N.B. — For  the  last  regulations  respecting  Hogs,  see  at  1814 ;  for 
horses,  see  at  1800. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  the  Court  House  at  Adolphustown, 
January  7th,  1828,  the  following  persons  was  chosen  Town  Officers  for 
the  ensuing  year,  viz. : — 

Henry  Davis,  Jr.,  Town  Clerk,  sworn  :  Joseph  B.  Allison,  sworn; 
William  Valleau,  sworn,  Assessors:  Larry  Lewis,  sworn,  Collector; 
Noxon  Harris,  Road  Master  for  the  first  Concession,  sworn;  Thomas 
Casey,  Road  Master  for  the  2nd  Concession,  sworn ;  Reuben  Clapp, 
Road  Master  for  the  3rd  Concession,  sworn ;  Bernard  Cole,  Road 
Master  for  the  4th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Matthew  German,  Road  Master 
for  the  5th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Orrin  Ranney,  Pound  Keeper,  1st  Con- 
cession, sworn;  Solomon   Huff,  Jr.,   Pound  Keeper,  2nd   Concession,, 

14 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


sworn ;  Joseph  Cutwater,  Pound  Keeper,  3rd  Concession,  sworn  ; 
Archibald  Campbell,  Pound  Keeper,  4th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Samuel 
R.  Casey,  Pound  Keeper,  5th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Robert  Hampton, 
Town  and  Church  Warden,  sworn  ;  Jonathan  Allen,  Church  Warden, 
sworn  ;  Stephen  Griffis,  Constable. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  meeting  held  at  Robert  Hampton's,  in  Adolphustown,  on  the 
5th  day  of  Januarj^,  1829,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town 
Officers  for  the  ensuing  year.  Viz.  : — 

Henry  Davis,  Jr ,  Town  Clerk,  sworn  ;  Matthew  Ruttan,  John 
Bogart,  Assessors,  sworn ;  Thomas  I.  Borland,  Collector,  attested ; 
Stephen  Griffis,  1st  Concession,  sworn  ;  Thomas  Casey,  2nd  Conces- 
sion, sworn  ;  David  Peterson,  3rd  Concession,  sworn  ;  Edward  Huyck, 
4th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Joseph  Clark,  5th  Concession,  sworn.  Road 
Masters;  Orrin  Rarmy,  1st  Concession,  sworn;  Joseph  Ruttan,  2nd 
Concession,  sworn ;  Reuben  Clapp,  3rd  Concession,  sworn ;  Abm. 
Bogart,  4th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Elias  Clark,  5th  Concession,  sworn. 
Pound  Keepers ;  Robert  Hampton,  Town  and  Church  Warden,  sworn ; 
Jonathen  Allen,  Esq.,  Church  Warden,  sworn  ;  Robert  Peterson,  James 
Watson,  Constables. 

In  addition  to  the  law  respecting  Hogs,  it  is  ordered  that  all  hogs 
found  doing  damage  without  yokes  on  the  owner  shall  be  held  liable 
to  pay  all  Damages  done. 

H.  Davis  Jr., 
T.  Clerk. 

At  a  Town  Meeting  holden  at  Adolphustown  on  the  4th  day  of 
January,  1830,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  as  town  officers  for 
the  ensuing  year.  Viz. : — 

Henry  Davis,  Jr.,  Town  Clerk,  sworn ;  Matthew  Ruttan,  sworn, 
John  Bogart,  sworn,  Assessors  ;  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  Attested,  Collector; 
Peter  V.  Dorland,  1st  Con.,  sworn  ;  Ricketson  Haight,  2nd  Con., sworn; 
Wm.  M.  Roblin,  3rd  Con.,  sworn  ;  Alex.  Campbell,  4th  Con.,  sworn  ; 
Samuel  R.  Casey,  5th  Con.,  sworn.  Road  Masters ;  Orrin  Ranny,  1st 
Con.,  sworn;  Joseph  Ruttan,  liind  Con.,  sworn;  Reuben  Clapp,  3rd 
Con.,  sworn  ;  Abm.  Bogart,  5th  Con.,  sworn  .  Elias  Clark,  5th  Con., 
sworn,  Pound  Keepers ;  Robert  Hampton.  Town  &  Church  Warden, 
Jonathen  Allen,  Church  Warden,  sworn  ;  Stephen  Griffis,  Hugh  Benn, 
Constables. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year,  except  ordered  that  Oxen, 
Stags  and  Steers  of  three  years  old  and  upwards,  shall  not  be  com- 
moners, and  that  all  cattle  are  prohibited  from  running  at  large  from 
the  15th  day  of  November,  until  the  first  day  of  May. 

H.  Davis,  Jr., 

T.  Clerk. 
15 


01  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  on  the  3rd  day  of  Jan- 
uary, 1831,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  town  officers  for  the 
ensuing  year,  Viz. : — 

Henry  Davis,  Jr.,  Town  Clerk;  Mathew  Ruttan,  Arch'd  Campbell, 
Jr.,  Assessors  ;  Thomas  I.  Borland,  Collector.  Andrew  Davis,  for  1st 
Con. ;  Solomon  Huff,  2nd  Con. ;  John  Trumpour,  3rd  Con.  ;  Nicholas 
Boo-art,  4th  Con.;  James  Clark,  5th  Con.,  Road  Masters.  Orrin  Ranny, 
1st  Con. :  Joseph  Ruttan,  2nd  Con. ;  Reuben  Clapp,  3rd  Con. ;  Abni. 
Bogart,  4th  Con. ;  Samuel  R.  Casey,  oth  Con.,  Pound  Keepers.  Peter 
V.  Dorland,  Town  and  Church  Warden  ;  Mathew  Ruttan,  Church 
Warden  ;  Stephen  Griffis.  Edward  Curlett,  Constables. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 

Henry  Davis, 

Town  Clerk. 

At  a  town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  on  the  2nd  day  of  Jan- 
uarj',  1832,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  town  Officers  for  the 
ensuing  year,  viz.  : — 

Henry  Davis,  Town  Clerk,  sworn  ;  Peter  V.  Dorland,  sworn, 
Mathew  German,  sworn,  Assessors  ;  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  Collector, 
Affirmed.  Orrin  Ranny,  Road  Master,  Isc  concession,  sworn  ;  Robt. 
Thompson,  Road  Master,  2nd  Concession,  sworn;  Joel  Thompson,  Road 
Master,  3rd  Concession,  west  ward,  sworn  ;  James  Macafee,  Road 
Master,  3rd  Concession,  east  ward,  sworn ;  Nicholas  Bogart,  Road 
Master,  4th  Concession,  sworn  ;  John  Bogart,  Road  Master,  5th  Con- 
cession, sworn.  Orrin  Ranny,  Pound  Keeper,  1st  Concession,  sworn  ; 
Henry  Davis,  Pound  Keeper,  2nd  Concession,  sworn  ;  Owen  Roblin, 
Pound  Keeper,  3rd  Concession,  West  Ward,  sworn ;  David  Peterson, 
Pound  Keeper,  3rd  Concession,  East  Ward,  sworn;  Abm.  Bogart, Pound 
Keeper,  4th  Concession,  sworn  ;  Samuel  R.  Case}^  Pound  Keeper,  5th 
Concession.  Peter  V.  Dorland,  Town  and  Church  Warden  ;  Mathew 
Rutan,  Church  Warden  ;  Stephen  Giiffis,  Conrad  B  Cole,  Constables. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  vear. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  on  Monday,  7th  Jan- 
uary, 1833,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  town  Officers  for  the 
ensuing  year,  Viz.  : — 

Ricketson  Haight,  Town  Clerk  ;  Samuel  D.  Haight,  sworn,  Willet 
W.  Casey,  sworn,  Assessors  ;  Henry  Davis,  sworn.  Collector  ;  John 
Gilberts,  sworn,  Henry  Davis,  sworn,  Reuben  B.  Clapp,  sworn,  -lames 
Macafee,  Nicholas  Bogart,  Joseph  Clark,  Path  Masters ;  Oren  Raney, 
Solomon  Huff,  Andrew  Davis,  sworn,  Abraham  Bogart,  John  Bogart, 
Pound  Keepers ;  Peter  V.  Dorland,  Town  and  Church  Warden : 
Mathew  Ruttan,  Church  Warden ;  Stephen  Griffis,  Lewis  Bogard, 
Constables. 

Prudential  laws  the  same  as  last  year. 

16 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  82).  A.  1898 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  on  Monday,  6tli  of 
January,  1834,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  Town  Officers  for 
the  ensuing  year,  Viz. : — 

Ricketson  Haight,  Town  Clerk,  affirmed  ;  Joseph  B.  Allison, sworn, 
Archabald  Campbell,  Assessors.  Peter  V.  Borland,  Isc  Con. ;  Samuel 
D.  Haight,  2nd  Con.  ;  Thomas  I.  Borland,  3rd  Con. ;  iSicholas  Bogart, 
4th  Con. ;  Samuel  R.  Casey,  5th  Con.,  Path  Masters,  sworn.  Noxon 
Harris,  1st  Con.  ;  Henry  Davis,  sworn,  2nd  Con.  ;  Samuel  Halewa}', 
3rd  Con. ;  Albert  Benson,  sworn,  4th  Con  :  John  Bogart,  sworn,  5th 
Con.,  Pound  Keepers.  Peter  V.  Borland,  Town  and  Church  Warden  ; 
Stephen  Griffis,  VVillet  W.  Casej^  Constables  ;  Sworn,  Henrj"  Bavis, 
Collector. 

Prudential  Laws  the  same  as  last  year. 

1834.        R.  Haight, 

Town  Clerk. 


At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  Monday,  5th  of  Jan- 
uary, 1835,  the  folowing  persons  were  chosen  into  office  for  the  ensuing- 
year.  Viz. : — 

Sworn,  Ricketson  Haight,  Town  Clerk  ;  Sworn,  Peter  V.  Borland, 
Affirmed,  Thomas  I.  Borland,  Assessors  ;  Sworn,  Reuben  B.  Clapp, 
Collector.  1st  Con  ,  Mathew  Ruttan,  sworn;  2nd  Con.,  Royal  C.  Hicks, 
sworn  ;  3rd  Con.,  Thomas  I.  Borland,  aff'd;  4th  Con.,  Chris'r  German, 
sworn  ;  5th  Con.,  Mathew  Gei-man,  sworn.  Path  Masters.  1st  Con.; 
James  Bradshaw  ;  2nd  Con.,  Solomon  Huff,  sworn  ;  3rd  Con.,  Samuel 
Haleway,  sworn ;  4th  Con.,  Nicholas  Bogart,  sworn  ;  5th  Con.,  John 
Bogart,  sworn.  Pound  Keepers.  1st  Con.,  Peter  V.  Borland,  sworn, 
Joseph  B.  Allison,  sworn,  Mathew  Ruttan,  sworn  ;  2nd  Con.,  Sam'l  B, 
Haight,  aff'd,  Henry  Bavis,  sworn,  Thomas  Casey,  sworn  ;  3rd  Con.. 
John  P.  Trumpour,  Ruben  B.  Clapp,  sworn,  Thomas  I.  Borland,  aff'd  , 
4th  Con.,  Burger  Huyke,  Nicholas  Bogart,  sworn  ;  Willet  W.  Casey, 
sworn ;  5th  Con.,  Mathew  German,  sworn,  Joseph  Clark,  John  Bogart; 
sworn,  Fence  Viewers.  Peter  V.  Borland,  Town  and  Church  Warden, 
Mathew  Ruttan,  Church  Warden ;  Stephen  Griffis  and  Edward  Cur- 
lett,  Constables. 

Prudential  laws  same  as  last  year  except  that  buls  and  bores  are 
not  to  run  at  large. 

Ricketson  Haight, 

Town  Clerk. 

At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  the  Court  House  in  Adolphustown  on 
Monday,  4th  January,  1836,  Archabald  Campbell  in  the  chair,  when 
the  following  persons  were  chosen  officers  for  the  present  year,  viz.  :— 

Ricketson  Haight,  Town  Clerk  :  John  Bogart,  Thomas  Casey, 
Henry  Bavis,  Board  of  Comrssioners  ;  Peter  V.  Borland,  Assessor ; 
Thomas  I.  Borland,  Collector.  Stephen  Griffis,  1st ;  Robert  Hampton, 
2nd  ;  Samuel  Halleway,  3rd  ;  Burger  Huvke,  4th  ;  John  Huyke,  Jr. 
5th,  Overseers  of  Highways ;    Thomas  S.  Wood,  1st ;    Solomon  Hviff, 

2  B.I.  6  17 


CI  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


2nd;  Stephon  Roblin,  3rd ;  Nicholas  Bogart,  4th  ;  John  Huyke,  Jr., 
5th,  Pound  Keepers.  Peter  V.  Borland,  Joseph  B.  Allison,  Mathew 
Ruttan,  1st;  Samuel  D,  Haight,  Henry  Davis,  Thomas  Casey,  2nd; 
John  P.  Trumpor,  Ruben  B.  Clapp,  Thomas  I.  Borland,  3rd;  Burger 
Huyke,  Nicholas  Boijart,  Willet  W.  Casey,  4th  ;  Samuel  R.  Casey, 
Joseph  Clark,  John  Bogart,  5th,  Fence  Viewers.  [All  sworn  except 
Thos.  I.  Borland  and  Sam'l  B.  liaight,  who  affirmed.] 

Pkudential  Laws,  1836. 

l.st — Lawful  fence  to  be  four  feet  four  inches  high,  of  good  mater- 
ials, staked  and  Ridered  or  corners  locked  ;  water  deamed  no  fence. 

2nd. — Horses,  Oxen,  Bulls,  Boars,  Sheep,  no  Coumioners.  Stags 
and  Stears  three  years  old  and  upwards,  ar  not  commoners,  and  all 
cattle  are  prohibited  after  the  loth  da}^  of  November  till  the  first  day 
of  May. 

3rd. — Stone  Horses  if  found  running  at  large  after  they  are  one 
year  old  the  oner  may  be  fined  not  more  than  40/. 

4th. — Bulls  running  at  large  may  be  impounded  and  the  owner 
subject  to  a  fine  not  less  than  5/  and  not  more  than  25/. 

5th. — Rames  found  runing  at  large  between  the  first  day  of  Sep- 
tember and  the  tenth  day  of  Becember  may  be  impounded  and  the 
owner  liable  to  a  fine  not  less  than  10/  nor  more  than  20/. 

fith. — Boar.s  three  months  old  and  upwards  running  at  large  shall 
be  subject  to  a  fine  not  more  than  15/  nor  less  than  5/  shillings — and 
all  Hogs  found  duing  damage  with  out  Yokes  at  least  18  by  20  inches 
the  owner  is  liable  to  pa}^  all  damage  they  may  do.  Pigs  not  to  be 
alowed  on  the  commons  at  all. 

7th. —  Cattle  found  trespasing  over  that  part  of  the  fence  belong- 
ing to  the  oner  of  said  Cattle,  altho  not  lawful  the  owner  of  the  Cattle 
shall  be  subject  to  pay  damage. 

RiCKETSON  Haight, 

.  Town  Clerk. 

At  a  Town  Meeting  held  at  the  Court  House  in  Adolphustown  on 
Monday,  2nd  day  of  Januar}',  1837,  Christopher  Jerman  in  the  chair, 
when  the  following  persons  were  chosen  officers  for  the  present  year. 
Viz. : 

Reuben  B.  Clapp,  Town  Clerk ;  Peter  V.  Borland,  Henry  Bavis, 
Thomas  I.  Borland,  Board  of  Commissioners  ;  Archibald  Camel,  Asses- 
sor ;  Thomas  Borland,  Collector  Henry  Hoover,  Jr.,  1  ;  Samuel  Bor- 
land, 2  :  John  Rutter,  3  ;  Willet  W.  Casey,  4  :  John  M.  Clark,  5,  Over- 
seers of  Highways.  Parker  Allin,  1;  Solomon  Huff,  2;  Stephen 
Roblin,  3  ;  Nicholas  Bogart,  4 :  Samuel  R.  Casey,  5,  Pound  Keepers. 
1st,  Peter  V.  Borland,  Joseph  B.  Allison,  Mathew  Rattan ;  2nd,  Samuel 
B.  Haight,  Henry  Bavis,  Thomas  Case}- ;  3rd,  John  P.  Trumpour, 
Thomas  I.   Borland,  Samuel  Hawly ;  4th,   Burger    Huyck,   Nicholas 

18 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Bogart,  Willet  W.  Casey;  5th,  Sairuel  R.  Casey,  James  M.  Clark,  John 
Huyek,  Jr.,  Fence  Viewers.  James  Hamilton,  Constable.  All  sworn 
ex3ept  Thos.  I.  Borland  who  affirmed. 

Prudential  laws  same  as  last  year  except 

1st  That  pound  Keepers  be  allowed  two  pence  per  head  For 
feeding  Swine. 

2nd  Ordered,  That  the  pound  keepers  be  allowed  2/6  For  notify- 
ing three  freeholders  to  apprise  Damages. 

,Srd  That  the  apprisers  be  allowed  2/6  for  every  apprisal  adjourned, 
to  meet  at  Robert  Hampton's  Inn  on  the  15th  of  April,  1837,  at  ten 
o'clock. 

Reuben  B.  Clapp, 

Town  Clerk. 


At  Township  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  Court  House  on 
Monday,  — th  January,  1838,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  into 
office  for  the  Insuing  year  : 

Parker  Allen,  Town  Clerk  ;  Joseph  B.  Allison,  Reuben  B.  Clapp, 
Burger  Huyck,  Board  of  Commissioners;  Mathew  Ruttan,  Assessor; 
Thomas  Casey,  Collector.  1  st,  Lazai  ons  Gilbert ;  2nd,  Samuel  Dor- 
land  ;  3rd,  John  Rutter;  4th,  Willet  W.  Casey;  5th,  John  Bogart, 
Overseers  of  Highways.  Ist,  James  Hamilton ;  2nd,  Rickerson  Haio-ht ; 
2rd,  Stephen  Roblin  ;  4th,  Nicholus  Bogard  ;  5th,  John  Bogard,  Pound 
Keepers.  1st  Con.,  Lazarous  Gilbert,  Stephen  Griffis,  Henry  Palcn  ; 
2nd  Con.,  Thomas  (^asey,  Samuel  Dorland,  Rickerson  Haight ;  3,  John 
P.  Trumpore,  Thomas  I.  Dorland,  Samuel  Hawley  ;  4,  Burger  Huyck, 
Nicholus  Bogard,  Willet  W.  Casey  ;  5,  Saml  R.  Casey,  John  Huj^k, 
Joseph  W.  Claik,  Fence  Viewers.  James  Hamilton,  Constable  1st 
Concession.     All  sworn. 

Prudential  Laws  1838  same  as  last  excepting,  viz, : 

Ordered  1st  That  stone  horses  one  year  and  9  months  old  first 
offence  10/.     Second  Ditto  £1:0:0. 

2nd  Bulls  at  one  year  old  and  upwards,  First  Offence  live  shillings, 
second  Ditto  fifteen  shillings  and  no  more. 

3rd  Rams  running  at  large  fine  twenty  shillings. 

4th  Boars  three  months  old  and  upwards  running  at  large  Fine 
five  shillings. 

At  a  Township  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  Court  house  on 
Monday,  the  ....  day  of  January,  1839,  The  following  persons  were 
chosen  and  put  into  office  for  the  ensuing  year  : 

Stephen  Griffis,  Town  Clerk:  Joseph  B.  Allison,  Assessor;  Thomas 
Casey,  Collector.  Lazarus  Gilbert,  1  Concession :  Samuel  Dorland,  2 
Concession  ;  Paul  Trumpour,  3  Concession;  Willet  W.  Casey,  4  Con- 
cession ;  John  Bogart,  5  Concession,  Path  Masters.     Stephen  Griffis,  1 

19 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Concession  ;  Eicketson  Haight,  2  Concession  ;  John  Cutwater,  3  Con- 
cession ;  Nicholas  Bogart,  4  Concession  ;  John  Bogart,  5  Concession, 
Pound  Keepers.  Noxon  Harris,  Lazerus  Gilbert,  Jacob  Hoover,  1 
Concession;  Thomas  Casey,  Samuel  Borland,  Ricketson  Haight,  2 
Concession  ;  John  P.  Trumpour,  Thomas  I.  Borland,  Samuel  Hawley, 
3  Concession;  Burger  Huyck,  Nicholas  Bogart,  Willet  W.  Casey,  4 
Concession ;  Samuel  B.  Casey,  John  Huyck,  Joseph  Clerk,  5  Conces- 
sion, Fence  Viewers.  James  Hamilton,  Constable. 
Prudential  Laws  same  as  last  year. 


At  a  Township  Meeting  held  at  Adolphustown  Court  House  on 
Monday,  the  3rd  day  of  January,  1840,  The  following  persons  were 
chosen  as  Town  officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  viz.  : 

Stephen  Griffis,  Town  Clerk;  Richard  Daverne,  Assessor;  Nicholas 
Boo-art,  Collector.  Noxon  Harris,  Path  Master,  1st  Concession  ;  Samuel 
Borland,  do.,  2nd  ;  John  Cutwater,  do.,  3rd  ;  Willet  W.  Casey,  do.,  4th  ; 
John  Bogart,  do.,  5th.  Stephen  Griffis,  Pound  Keeper,  1st  Concession; 
Solomon^HufF,  do.,  2nd  ;  Samuel  Hawley,  do.,  3rd  ;  Nicholas  Bogart, 
do.,  4th;  John  Bogart,  do.,  5th.  Noxon  Harris,  Lazarus  Gilbert,  Jacob 
Hoover,  Fence  Viewers,  1st  Concession;  Samuel  Borland, Henry  Bavis, 
Solomon  Huff,  do.,  2nd;  John  P.  Trumpour,  Thomas  I.  Borland,  Samuel 
Hawley,  do.,  3rd  ;  Burger  Huyck,  Nicholas  Bogart,  Willet  W.  Casey, 
do.,  4th;'  Samuel  R.  Casey,  John  Huyck,  Joseph  Clerk,  do.,  5th.  Lazarus 
Gilbert,  Henry  Bavis,  Reuben  B.  Clapp,  Town  Wardens.  John  Wise- 
man, Constable. 

Prudential  laws  same  as  last  year. 

No  money  received  or  expended. 

The  required  declaration  signed. 

Stephb^t  Griffis, 

Township  Clerk. 

Wharf  Committee  appointed  1841  at  Town  Meeting  : 

Saml  Borland,  Esq.,  L.  Gilbert,  J.  B.  Allison,  S.   Griffis,  S.  Casey, 

Esq.,  James  CannifF. 

[per  John  J.  Watsox.] 


At  a  Township  Meeting  held  in  the  Town  Hall  at  Adolphustown 
on  Monday,  the  3rd  day  of  January,  1841,  The  following  persons  were 
elected  Town  officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  viz.  : 

Stephen  Griffis,  Town  Clerk  ;  John  P.  Borland,  Assessor  ;  Nicholas 
Boo-art,  Collector.  Path  Masters :  Peter  V.  Borland,  1st  Con. ;  Henry 
Bavis,  '2nd  Con.  ;  Saml  Casey,  Esq.,  3rd  Con. ;  Gordon  B.  German,  4th 
Con.  ;' John  Huyck,  Jun.,  5th  Con.  Pound  Keepers:  Stephen  Griffis. 
1st  Con.;  Gilbert  Casey,  2nd  Con.;  Samuel  Hawley,  3rd  Con.;  Nicholas 
Boffart  '4th  Con.  :  John  Bogart,  5th  Con.  Fence  Viewers :  Noxon 
^      '  '  20 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32),  A.  1898 


Harris,  Lazarus  Gilbert,  Jacob  Hoover,  1st  Con.  ;  Solomon  Huff,  Saml 
Dorland,  Henry  Davis,  2nd  Con. ;  John  P.  Trumpour,  Thos.  I.  Borland, 
Saml.  Haveley,  3rd  Con.  ;  Burger  Huyck,  Nicholas  Bogert,  W. W.  Casey, 
4th  Con.  ;  Saml  R.  Casey,  J.  Huyck  &  J.  Clark,  5th  Con.  Lazarus 
Gilbert,  Henry  Davis,  Reuben  B.  Clapp,  Town  Wardens.  Jacob 
Hoover,  Constable, 

Prudential  Laws  same  as  usual, 

Stephen  Griffis, 
[per  John  J.  Watson.]  Town  Clerk. 


At  a  Township  Meeting  held  in  the  Town  Hall  at  AdoJphustown 
on  Monday,  the  3rd  day  of  January,  184'2,  The  following  persons  were 
elected  Town  Officers  for  the  ensuing  year;  viz. : 

Archibald  Campbell,  Junr.,  Councillor  ;  Joseph  B.  Allison  (Chair- 
man), Revd.  Job  Deacon,  Henry  Davis,  Nicholas  Bogert,  Willet  W, 
Casey,  School  Commissioners ;  John  J.  Watson,  Township  Clerk ; 
Thomas  Dorland,  Assessor ;  Edward  H,  Curlett,  Collector.  Path 
Masters  :  Thos.  Casey  and  Henry  Hoover,  1st  Con. ;  Samuel  Dorland, 
Esq  ,  2nd  Con. ;  Silas  Thompson  and  James  McAfiee,  3rd  Con.  ;  Lewis 
Bogert,  4th  Con.  ;  John  Huyck,  Jun.,  5th  Con.  Found  Keepers : 
Stephen  Griffis,  Esq.,  1st  Con.  ;  Gilbert  Casey,  2nd  Con.  ;  Saml  Hawley, 
3rd  Con. ;  Nichs  Bogert,  4th  Con  ;  John  Huyck,  Jun.,  5th  Con.  Fence 
Vieiuers:  John  J.  Watson,  Stephen  Griffis,  Thomas  Casey.  1st  Con. ; 
Saml  Dorland,  Henry  Davis,  Solomon  Huff,  2nd  Con.  ;  John  Trumpour, 
Thos.  I.  Dorland,  Saml  Hawley,  3rd  Con. ;  Burger  Huyck,  Nichs 
Bogert,  Willet  W.  Casey,  4th  Con. ;  Saml  R.  Casey,  John  Huyck, 
Joseph  Clarke,  5th  Con.  Lazarus  Gilbert,  Henry  Davis,  Reuben  B, 
Clapp,  Town  Wardens.     John  Wiseman,  Constable. 

John  J.  Watson, 

Township  Clerk. 


Prudential  Law's  Laws  :  Revised  and  brot  forward  : 

1st  Lawful  fence  to  be  four  feet  four  inches  high,  of  good  mate- 
rials staked  and  ridered  or  corners  locked.    Water  deemed  no  fence. 

2nd  Horses,  Oxon,  Bulls,  Boars,  and  Sheep  are  not  to  be  com- 
moners. 

3rd  Stags  and  Steers  of  3  years  old  and  upwards  are  no  com- 
moners. 

4th  All  Cattle  whatsoever  are  prohibited  after  the  15th  clay  of 
November  till  the  1st  day  of  May. 

5th  Stone  Horses  if  found  running  at  large  1  year  and  9  months 
old  and  upwards  are  subject  to  fine,  for  the  first  offence  10/  second 
Ditto  One  Pound. 

21 


til  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


6th  Bulls  also  liable  to  a  fine  first  offence  5/  for  the  second  Ditto 
15/  and  no  more. 

7th  Rami  running  at  large  fine  20/. 

8th  Boars  running  at  large  fine  5/  for  all  three  months  old  and 
upwards. 

9th  Hof;s  shall  be  yoked  and  ringed  in  the  nose  with  wire  other- 
wise not  commoners. 

10th  Pigs  no  commoners. 

11th  Cattle  Found  trespassing  over  that  part  of  the  fence,  belong- 
ing to  the  owner  of  the  said  Cattle  although  not  lawfull,  the  owner  of 
the  Cattle  shall  be  subject  to  pay  damage. 

John  J.  Watson,  Clerk. 


At  a  Township  Meeting  held  in  the  Town  Hall  at  Adolphustown, 
on  Monday,  the  2nd  day  of  January,  1843,  The  following  persons  were 
elected  Township  Officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  viz  : — 

John  J.  \A'atson,  Town  Clerk;  Paul  T. Borland,  Assessor;  Edward  H". 
Curlett,  Collector;  Joseph  B.Allison,  Lazarus  Gilbert,  Sam'l  Casey,  Samuel 
Dorland, Esq., Nicholas  Bogeit, School  Comissioners.  Overseeisof  High- 
ways, R.  B.  Clapp,  Philip  Dorland,  David  Ruttan,  1st  Con.;  Sam'l  Dor- 
land,  2nd  Con.;  William  Peters;on,  3rd  Con.;  Burger  Huyck,  4th  Con.; 
John  Huj'ck,  Jun.,  5th  Con.  Found  Keepers,  Thomas  Dorland,  1st  Con.; 
Rich'd  Ruttan,  2nd  Con.;  Sam'l  Hawley,  3rd  Con.;  Nicholas  Bogert, 
4th  Con.;  John  Bogert.  oth  Con.  Fence  Viewers,  John  J.  Watson, 
Stephen  Grifiis,  Thomas  Casey,  1st  Con.:  Sam'l  Dorland,  Esq,  Henry 
Davis,  Solomon  Huff,  2nd  Con.;  John  Trumpour,  Thos.  I.  Dorland, 
Sam'l  Hawley,  3rd  Con.;  Burger  Huyck,  Nicholas  Bogert,  Willet  W. 
Casey,  4th  Con.;  Sam'l  R.  Casey,  John  Huyck  and  Jos.  Clarke,  5th 
Con.     To  be  Constable,  John  Wiseman. 

In  the  Prudential  "Laws"  is  the  following  alteration  or  addition, 
viz.: — 

1st.  That  no  Cattle  whatsoever  shall  be  liable  to  be  impounded 
when  they  are  found  trespassing  unless  the  fence  be  lawfull ;  but  this 
is  not  to  affect  or  interfere  with  line  fences. 

2nd.  That  Hogs  shall  hereafter  be  Yoked,  and  either  rung  in  the 
nose  with  wire  or  the  gristle  at  the  end  of  the  nose  cut  |  of  an  inch. 

3i  d.  That  all  stray  cattle  shall  be  reported  to  the  Town  Clerk  and 
shall  receive  payment  for  keeping  only  from  the  time  such  information 
be  given  to  said  Town  Clerk. 

Reported  as  astray  by  Peter  V.  Dorland,  Esq.,  a  Roan  Horse  (small 
size)  and  now  in  his  possession  this  12th  day  of  June,  1843. 

John  J.  Watson, 

Town  Clerk. 

No  money  reed,  or  expended,  also  the  required  declarations  signed. 

J.  J.  W. 
22 


61  Victoria.  Sei>sional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  Township  Meeting  Held  in  the  Town  Hall  at  Adolphus- 
town  on  Monday,  the  day  of  Januarj^  IH-ii,  The  following  per- 
sons were  elected  township  officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  viz.: — 

John  J.  Watson,  Town  Clerk  ;  Thomas  Borland.  Assessor  ;  Willet 
W.  Casey,  Collector.  Overseers  of  Highwaj^s,  Jacob  Hoover  and  Wm. 
Murduff,  1st  Con.;  Samuel  Johnson,  2nd;  David  Peterson  and  T.  I. 
Borland,  3rd;  Nicholas  Rogers,  4th;  Joseph  Clark,  5th.  Pound  Keep- 
ers, Jacob  Hoover,  1st ;  Solomon  Hutf",  2nd;  Thomas  I.  Borland.  3rd; 
Nicholas  Bogert,  4th  ;  John  Bogert,  5th.  Fence  Viewers,  Thos.  Casej'-, 
John  J.  Watson,  Jacob  Hoover,  1st ;  Sam'l  Borland,  Henry  Bavis, 
Solomon  Huff,  2nd ;  John  P.  Trumpour,  Thos.  I.  Borland,  S;<m'l  Haw- 
ley,  3rd  ;  Burger  Huyck,  Nicholas  Bogert,  Willet  W.  Casey,  4th  ;  John 
Bogert,  J.  Huyck  and  Joseph  Clark,  ."Jth.  To  be  Constable,  John 
Wiseman. 

Prudential  Laws. 

No.  1.- Ordered,  that  the  Law  relative  to  Cattle,  passed  in  the 
year  1843  be  rescinded,  and  that  all  Cattle  whatsoever  shall  be  com- 
moners from  the  1st  of  May  to  15th  Nov.  in  each  and  every  year. 

John  J.  Watson, 

Town  Clerk. 

The  above  is  repealed  in  1846. 

J.  J.  Watson, 

Town  Clerk. 


At  a  Township  Meeting  held  at  the  Town  Hall  in  Adolphustown, 
on  Monday  the  5th  day  of  January,  1845,  The  following  persons  were 
elected  Township  Officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  viz.: — 

Willet  W.  Casey,  Councillor ;  John  J.  Watson,  Town  Clerk ; 
Arch'd  Campbell,  Jun.,  Assessor ;  John  Cutwater,  Collector.  Over- 
seers of  Highways,  Thos.  Casey  and  Wm.  Murduff,  1st  Biv.;  Gilbert 
Casey,  2nd  Con.;  E.  H.  Curlett  &  Joseph  Piatt,  3rd  ;  Conrad  B.  Cole, 
4th  Con.;  Joseph  Clark,  5th  Con.  Pound  Keepers,  Jacob  Hoover,  1st; 
Arch'd  Davis,  2nd ;  Sam'l  Hawley,  3rd ;  Nich.  Bogert,  4th ;  John 
Bogert,  5th  Concession.  Fence  Viewers,  Thomas  Casey,  John  J.  Wat- 
son, Jacob  Hoover,  Sam'l  Borland,  H.  Bavis,  Sol.  Hutf,  Paul  T.  Bor- 
land, Silas  Thompson,  Sam'l  Hawley,  Lewis  Bogert,  Nich.  Bogert,  W. 
W  Casey,  John  Bogert,  John  Huyck,  Jos.  Clark.  John  Wiseman, 
Constable. 

Prudential  Laws  same  as  last  year. 

John  J.  Watson, 

Town  Clerk. 
23 


61  Victoria.  Session:»l  Papers  (^No.  32).  A.  1898 


At  a  Meeting  held  in  the  Town  Hall  at  Adolphustown,  on  Monday, 
the  5th  day  of  January,  18-i(j,  The  following  persons  were  chosen 
Towmship  Officers  for  the  Current  Year,  viz.: — 

R.  B.  Clapp,  Township  Clerk  ;  Philip  Borland,  Assessor ;  Sam'l 
Hawle}^  Collector.  "  Overseers  of  Highways,"  Thos.  Casey  and  Sam'l 
C.  Hoover,  1st  Concession  ;  Rich'd  Ruttan,  2nd  ;  Stephen  Roblin  and 
Joseph  Piatt,  3rd  ;  Jacob  A.  Hermance,  4th ;  Joseph  Clarke,  5th  Con. 
"  Pound  Keepers,"  Jacob  Hoover,  1  st ;  Arch'd  Davis,  2nd  :  Sam'l 
Hawley,  8rd ;  Lewis  Bogert,  4th ;  John  Bogert,  5th  Concession. 
"  Fence  Viewers,"  Thos.  Casey,  John  J.  Watson,  Jacob  Hoover,  Sam'l 
Borland,  H.  Davis,  Sol.  Huff,  Paul  T.  Dorland,  Silas  Thompson,  Sam'l 
Hawley,  Lewis  Bogert,  Nich.  Bogert,  Conrad  B.  Cole,  John  Bogert  and 
Joseph  Clark. 

Prudential  Law^. 

Ordered,  That  the  law  passed  in  1844  respecting  Cattle  be  repealed 
and  that  all  Cattle  whatsoever,  except  Milch  Cows  and  young  Cattle 
under  2  years  old,  be  prohibited  from  running  at  large  from  the  1st 
day  of  May  to  the  15th  day  of  November,  it  being  understood,  as  per 
prudential  No.  4  of  1842,  that  every  kind  of  Cattle  is  prohibited  the 
rest  of  the  year. 

At  the  AnnusJ  Township  Meeting  held  in  the  Town  Hall  at 
Adolphustown,  on  Monday,  the  4th  January,  1847,  The  following  per- 
sons were  elected  Township  Officers  for  the  Current  Year  : — 

Sam'l  Casey,  Esq.,  Town  Clerk ;  Wm.  M.  Roblin,  Assessor ;  John 
Bogert,  Collector.  Overseers  of  Highways,  Giles  Membry,  Wm.  Mur- 
duff,  1st  Con.  ;  Henry  Davis,  2nd  Con. ;  Peterson  David,  3rd  Con. ; 
Robert  Way,  3rd  ;  Jacob  A.  Hermance,  4th  ;  John  Bogert,  5th.  Pound 
Keeper,  Jacob  Hoover,  1st  Con.  ;  John  P.  Dorland,  2nd  Con. ;  Sam'l 
Hawley,  3rd  Con. ;  Lewis  Bogert,  4th ;.  John  Bogert,  5th.  Fence 
Viewers,  Thos.  Casey,  John  J.  Watson,  Jac.  Hoover,  1st  Con.;  Sam'l 
Henry  Davis,  Solomon  Huff,  2nd  Con. ;  Simeon  Trumpour,  Silas 
Thompson,  S.  Hawley,  3  ;  Lewis  Bogert,  Nich.  Bogert,  C.  B.  Cole,  4; 
John  Bogert,  Joseph  Clarke,  Jno.  Huyck,  5.  John  Wiseman,  Con- 
stable. 

Ordered,  That  prudential  Law^s  remain  as  last  year. 


At  a  Township  Meeting  held  at  A.  Gerow's  Inn,  Adolphustown, 
on  Monday,  the  3rd  daj'  of  January,  1848,  the  following  persons  were 
elected  Township  Officers  for  ensuing  year  : — 

Peter  Vanalstine  Dorland,  Councillor:  John  Joseph  Watson,  Town 
Clerk ;  Arch'd  C.  Davis,  Assessor ;  Conrad  B.  Cole,  Collector.  Over- 
seers of  Highways, Parker  Allen  and  Matthew  Ruttan,  1st  Concession; 
James  Hart,  2nd ;  Cyrus  Roblin,  3rd  Concession ;  Robert  Leitch, 
Jacob  A.  Hermance,  4th  Concession  :  John  Huyck,  Jun.,  5th  Conces- 

24 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


sion.  Pound  Keepers,  Parker  Allen,  1st  Div.;  J  .  P.  Borland  2nd; 
Sam'l  Hawlej^  3rd ;  Lewis  Bogert,  4th  Div. ;  John  Bogert,  5th  Div. 
Fence  Viewers,  Thos.  Casey,  John  J.  Watson,  Jacob  Hoover,  Sam'l 
Borland,  Henry  Davis,  Solomon  Huff,  Simeon  Trumpour,  Silas  Thomp- 
son, Sam'l  Hawley,  Lewis  Bogert,  Nich.  Bogert,  C.  B.  Cole,  Jno.  Bogert, 
J.  Clark,  Jno.  Huyck.  Henry  Brooker,  Constable.  Town  Wardens, 
Parker  Allen,  1  ;  Henry  Davis,  2  ;  Wm.  Peterson,  3. 

John  J.  Watson, 

Town  Clerk. 

Prudential  Laws  for  1848. 

Ordered,  That  prudential  laws  from  No.  1  to  No.  8,  of  1842, 
inclusive  are  still  in  force. 

Ordered,  That  No.  9,  with  reference  to  Hogs,  the  Law  is  the  same 
as  it  was  in  1843. 

Ordered,  That  No.  10  and  11,  Laws  of  1842,  remain  in  force. 

Ordered,  That  No.  3  of  1843,  relating  to  stray  animals,  and  the 
Cattle  law  of  1846  is  still  in  force. 

Ordered,  That  no  claim  can  be  legally  made,  or  damages  obtained, 
for  any  Horned  Cattle,  Horses  or  Hogs  Trespassing  on  any  field^of 
Grain,  Pasture  or  Meadow  Land  when  that  part  of  the  fence  through 
which  they  pass  is  not  lawfull ;  Unless  it  is  found  that  such  Cattle, 
Horses  or  Hogs  break  through  or  over  such  part  of  a  line  or  fence^as 
may  belong  to  the  owner  of  the  said  Cattle,  &c.,  &c. 

John  J.  Watson, 

Town  Clerk. 


[Added  on  sheet  of  paper.] 

At  a  Special  Sessions  held  at  the  Town  Hall  on  Saturday,  15th 
April,  1848. 

P.  V.  DORLAND,  Councillor. 
Presant : 

Ordered,  that  Division  No.  1  concession  shal  extend  further  east 
on  the  main  road,  viz.,  to  the  parallel  line  between  David  Ruttan  and 
P.  Allen.  Ordered,  That  other  Divisions  in  Township  as  they  were  in 
1842. 


At  a  Township  Meeting  held  at  the  Town  Hall,  Adolphustown, 
on  Monday,  the  1st  day  of  January,  1849,  the  following  persons  were 
elected  Township  Officers  for  the  ensuing  year,  viz. : — 

Paul  T.  Dorland,  Town  Clerk;  Samuel  D.  Haight,  Assessor;  David 
McWhiter,  Collector.  Overseers  of  Highways,  Parker  Allen  and  Wm. 
Murduff,    1st   concession ;    Sam'l   Johnson,    2nd ;    Wm.    Briggs,   Wm. 

25 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Peterson,  3rd  ;  Wm.  Valloe,  4th  ;  Wm.  H.  Casey,  5th.  Pound  Keepers, 
John  J.  Watson,  John  P.  Borland,  Sam'l  Hawley,  Auoustus  Huycke 
and  John  Bogert.  Fence  Viewers,  Thos.  Casey,  John  P.  Borland,  Wm. 
Griflis,  Samuel  Borland,  Henry  Bavis,  Solomon  Huff,  Silas  Thompson, 
Simeon  W.  Trumpour,  Cyris  Roblin,  Lewis  Bogart,  Nicholas  Bogart, 
C.  B.  Cole,  John  Bogart,  Joseph  Clark  and  John  Huycke.  Town 
Wardens,  Aich'd  Campbell,  E.  H.  Curlett,  Wm.  Surtman.  Constable, 
Wm.  Newberry. 

Ordered,  That  everything  is  prohibited  from  running  at  large. 

Paul  T.  Borland,  Town  Clerk. 

At  a  special  Sessions  held  at  the  Town  Hall  on  Saturday,  21st  of 
April,  1849. 

P.  V.  Borland,  councillor. 

Ordered,  that  Bi vision  No.  1,  first  Concession,  ,  .  .  but  shall 
extend  further  east  on  the  main  road,  namely,  to  the  parallel  line 
between  Bavid  Puttan  k  P.  Allen,  &  ordered  that  it  shall  extend 
.     .     .     same  line  on  the  Bay  road. 

Ordered  that  the  others  Bivision  in  the  Township  remain  as  they 
were  in  1842. 

P.  T.  Borland,  Town  Clerk. 


COPIES  OF  BECLARATIONS  OF  OFFICE,  1848. 

promise  and  declare  that  w^e  will  faithfully diligently 

discharge  the  duties  of  Pound  Keeper  for  the  Township  of  Adolphus- 
town  for  this  year. 

Samuel  Hawley, 
Lewis  Bogart, 
John  Bogert, 
Parker  Allen, 
John  P.  Borland. 

We,  Thos.  Casey,  J.  J.  Watson,  Jacob  Hoover,  Saml.  Borland, 
Henry  Bavis,  Sol.  Huff,  Paul  P.  Borland,  Silas  Thompson,  Samuel 
Hawley,  Lewis  Bogert,  N.  Bogert,  C.  B.  Cole,  Jno.  Bogert,  Jos.  Clark, 
Bo  sincerely  promise  and  declare  that  we  will  faithfully  and  diligently 
perform  the  duties  of  Fence  Viewers  for  the  Township  of  Adolphus- 
town  for  the  current  year. 

John  Watson,  Henry  Bavis, 

Samuel  Hawley.  Silas  Thompson, 

John  Bogert, 
Conrad  B.  Cole, 
John  J.  Watson,  Le^vis  Bogert, 

Town  Clerk  for  1848.  Joseph  Clark. 

(Beclarations  of  other  officials  follow  in  similar  form.) 

26 


THE  PEOPLE  OF  ADOLPHL'STOWN. 


A  return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown,  March  28th,  1794. 


Names. 

S 

s 

0 

OS 

3 

3 

Names. 

S 

O 

02 

03 

3 

o 

H 

Ruben  Bedell 

1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
3 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
3 
1 
1 
2 
4 
1 
2 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 

i 

1 

] 
1 
1 
1 

2 
2 
3 
3 
1 
1 
5 

1 
1 

3 
.3 
i 

5 
6 

10 
5 
6 
3 
8 
1 
4 

10 
8 
1 
7 
4 
6 
3 
3 
4 
5 
6 
1 
8 
4 
6 
2 
5 
4 
2 
3 
5! 
61 
3! 
4' 
8' 

13 

10 
4 
1 
4 

1 

Jolin  Wood 

2 
2 
2 
3 
1 
1 
1 
2 
3 
1 
2 
1 
1 
I 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 

I 

2 
2 

i 

2 

2 
2 
2 
2 
2 
1 
3 

3 
2 
2 
2 

3 
1 

i 

2 

2 

2 

3 

1 

1 

6 

1 

1 

4 
3 
2 
1 
1 
3 

i 

3 

] 
4 
2 

2 

2 

1 
2 

•  • 
3 
2 

4 
2 
2 
2 

2 

Paul  Huflf 

Solomon  Huff , 

Peter  Ruttan,  Junr 

Owen  R'iblin,  Junr 

Owen  Roblin,  Senr 

Benjamin  Clapp 

3 

2 

William  Griffis 

1 

Caspar  Vanduser 

Nicholas  Peterson,  Sen 

8 

George  Rutter 

7 

Nicholas  Peterson,  Jnr. 

Jacob  Ruttan 

fi 

Isaac  Ben 

1 

Cornelius  Vanhorn   

Robert  Jones 

6 

Thomas  Jones 

3 

2 

2 

3 
2 
2 

1 
1 

2 
2 
3 

3 

1 
3 

i 

1 
1 

3 

2 

2 
1 

5 

Alexander  Fisher 

James  McMasters   

Paul  Trumpour 

William  Hannah   

Michael  Slote 

8 
4 
4 

Russel  Pitman 

Peter  Ruttan,  Sen  . 

Dennis  Oreilegh 

5 

Joseph  Clapp 

1 

Georsje  Brooks 

Joseph  Carnahan 

Thomas  Doiland    

Philip  Dorland 

8 

John  Holcomb 

Martin  Shewman 

6 
9 

Joseph  Cornell  .... 

Willet  Casey 

8 

Peter  Valku 

Peter  Vanalstine 

John  Vancot 

3 

William  Clark        .      .  . 

7 

Joseph  Clark 

David  Brown 

3 

Albert  Cornell 

Peter  Swade 

9. 

Peter  Delyea 

William  Brock 

Nicholas  Hagerman 

Cornelius  Slouter 

Abraham  Maybe 

o 

John  Huyck 

8 

Burger  Huyck    

3 

Alexander  Campbell 

Albert  Benson 

7 

Henry  Tice 

3 

Gilbert  Bogart   

Abraham  Bo^art 

Thomas  Wanamaker 

William  Ruttan 

1 

Christopher  German 

William  Casey   

3 

Joseph  Allison 

?, 

4 
1 
1 

1 
2 
2 
1 

i 

1 

1 

1 
5 
7 
5 
1 

1 

1 

John  Fitzgerald 

2 

Matthew  Steel 

5 

David  Kellv   

Conrad  Vanduser 

Henrv  Hoover 

7 

3 

John  Canniff 

Area  Ferguson 

2 

Henry  Rednor 

7 

Peter  Wanamaker 

Garrot  Benson 

Andrew  Huffnail 

Daniel  Cole 

4 
11 

William  More 

Henry  Davis , 

James  Noxon 

5 

John  Roblin 

1 

John  Elms 

113  men,  78  women,  101  males,  110  females  ;  total,  402. 
27 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown,  1795. 


Names. 

£ 

1 

JS 

s 

4 

2 
2 

2 
5 

i 

2 
3 
1 
1 

i 

1 

1 
3 

3 
3 
4 

1 
1 
3 
2 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
4 
6 
5 
1 

i 
1 
1 

3 

o 
H 

8 

7; 
5 
5 
6 
2 
3 
8 
5 
5 
5 
2 
6 
8 
7 
6 
1 
5 
2 
4 
4 
5 

10 
7 
7 
7 
5 
6 
3 
5 
4 

11 
7 
7 
6 
4 
8 

15 

10 
5 
1 
1 
4 
4 
3 
5 

Names. 

a 

s 

o 

03 

— 

ce 
% 

3 

'2 

3 
2 
1 
3 
1 

'2 
2 
3 
1 
3 
1 

2 

'2 
2 
4 

'2 

'2 

4 
3 
3 

i 

i 
4 

'3 

1 
2 
2 

09 

i 
2 
1 
4 
1 

2 
1 

1 
1 
2 
1 
3 

3 

'3 

i 
3 
2 

i 

'2 

'2 
1 

i 
1 
1 
1 
2 
3 
1 

3 

William  Casey   

1 

2 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
4 
1 
2 
2 
1 
9. 

1 

1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
3 

i 
1 

2 
2 
1 

3 

1 

i 
1 

2 

2 

2 
9. 

Peter  Ruttan,  Senr 

Owen  Roblin 

2 
2 

"■ 

1 

2 
2 
3 
1 

2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 

1 
3 
1 
3 
1 
1 
1 

2 

2 

1 
1 
1 
1 
1 

'2 
1 
2 
1 
2 
2 
2 
1 

7 

David  Kelly   

4 

John  Van  Sciver 

Christopher  German 

John  German 

Jacob  Ruttan 

Peter  Ruttan,  Junr 

Benjamin  Clapp 

6 
3 

q 

Gilbert  Bocrart   

Cornelius  Vanhorn 

John  Roblin     

6 

Abraham  Bogart 

3 

Isaac  Demell 

George  Rutter  

Amos  Beach  

Thomas  Giles 

7 

Peter  Dulyea 

4 

Albert  Benson 

3 

AJexr.  Campbell    

Burger  Huyck 

James  Canniff 

Joseph  Carnahan 

Solomon  Huff 

5 

8 

John  Huyck 

8 

Albert  Cornell   

Henry  Davis 

7 

William  Clark    

3    1 

William  Griffis 

5 

Peter  Vallau 

3    2.. 

Casper  Vandusen 

Henry  Hoover   

6 

David  Demore   

1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 

i 

i 
1 

1 

3 

i 

2 

2 
2 
2 
2 

1 

i 

\\ 
'i 

3 

2 
2 

] 

3 
2 

1 

1 

2 

3 

Obediah  Simson 

Coonrad  Vandusen   

Andrew  Evans 

8 

Barrant  Lewis   

1 

Joseph  Cornell 

Sylvenus  Keeler    

Henry  Rednor 

5 

William  Fox 

10 

Robert  Jones 

Daniel  Cole     

10 

Paul  Trumpour 

3   2 
1    1 

Andrew  Huffnail   

Area  Ferguson 

4 

James  McMasters 

3 

Russel  Pitman 

1 
1 

1 
1 

David  Brown 

4 

George  Brooks 

John  Fitzgerald 

William  Green   

9, 

John  Babcock    

2  3 

3  1 
1    1 

I  3 

II  1 

1 

Alexr.  Fisher 

Abram  Maybe    

9 

Abram  Bonter 

Abram  Steel 

1 

Andrew  Wanamaker 

Thomas  Jones 

William  Ruttan     

Cornelius  Turner 

Nicholas  Hagerman 

Cornelius  Slouter 

Samuel  Brock    

7 

Nicholas  Peterson 

Abram  Cronk 

1 
1 

3 
1 

2 
1 
4 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 

2 
2 
1 
1 
1 
2 
2 
1 
1 

1 
1 
I 
1 

8 
3 

Paul  Huff 

8 

Ruben  Bedell 

1  Peter  Swade 

9 

David  Jones 

1  Arthur  McCormac 

!  Peter  Vanvalkenburg  .... 

John  Vancot 

Peter  Vanalstine   

William  Babcock 

William  Wannamaker  .... 

Willet  Casey 

1 

Baltus  Harris 

5 

John  Cannift 

7 

Nathaniel  Somes 

Peter.  Wanamaker 

Garrot  Benson 

7 
3 

7 

Jacob  Benson  

7 

Michael  Slote 

Philip  Dorland 

9 

William  More 

Thomas  Dorland    

Isaac  Benn 

7 

John  Elms 

1 

Henry  Smith 

115  men,  108  women,  127  males,  119  females  ;  total,  489. 
28 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown,  April  6,  1796. 


Names. 

o 

*    3 

3 

Names. 

s 
g 
3 

02 

2 

Paul  Huff           .    . 

3 

2 
1 
2 
2 
2 

2 

1 

1 
4 

7 

4 

1 
3 
2 
2 
1 
1 

'3 

1 

2 

2 
1 

1 
2 
2 

i 
2 
9, 

1 
3 

1 
3 
2 
3 

1 
3 
3 
2 
5 
2 
2 
3 

i 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
2 
1 
2 
4 
5 
2 
2 
I 

4 
1 
2 

'2 
1 
3 
4 

1 

7 

6 

6 

11 

5 
8 

10 
6 
8 
7 
7 
9 
5 
4 
8 
3 
1 
5 
5 
5 
4 
6 
5 
5 
5 
6 
9 

10 
5 
7 
5 
8 
7 
5 
3 
5 
8 

10 
8 
9 
4 

Sylvenus  Keler 

1 
1 
2 

3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
3 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
4 
3 
1 
2 
2 

1 

1 
I 
1 
1 
1 
4 
1 
2 
2 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 

1 
1 
3 
2 
1 
1 
2 

i 

1 
3 
2 
2 
2 

2 
2 
3 
2 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 

i 

1 
1 
1 
1 

2 
3 
2 
4 

i 
'2 

4 
4 
3 
1 
1 

2 

4 

i 

2 
2 
2 
4 
1 
1 
2 

"2 
] 
2 

"2 
3 
3 

"i 

3 

"i 
2 
1 

'5 

*i 

3 

2 
1 

1 
1 

i 

"2 
1 

1 
3 
4 
1 
3 

'2 
1 

i 

1 

'3 

2 

i 
1 

7 

Casper  Vandusen 

William  Griffis 

David  Brown 

5 

Henry  Rednor 

8 

Nicho's    Peterson 

Daniel  Cole    

11 

Andrew  Wanamaker.  .  . 

Area  Ferguson 

3 

John  Fitzgerald 

2 

Phillip  Redick 

Alex'r.  Fisher    

Isaac  Ostrander 

Joseph  Ellison   

9 

1 

James  McMaster 

Russel  Pitman 

Benjamin  Ellison 

William  Ruttan 

5 
6 

Ruben  Bedell     

John  Dorland 

Nicholas  Hagerman 

Abram  Maybe    

James  Waters    

Cornelius  Sl:)uter 

Peter  Swade 

Daniel  Picket 

Samuel  Brock    

11 

Baltus  Harris 

9 

Thomas  Jones    

Thomas  '  xiles 

7 
6 

Nathaniel  Somes 

J  ames  Noxon 

3 
2 

Garrot  Benson 

3 

2 

Henry  Smith . 

Daniel  Haight    

7 

William  Moor    

John  Vancot 

7 

John  Roblin , 

Peter  Vanalstine  

Willet  Casey 

6 

Peter  W^anamaker 

9 

Philip  Dorland 

9 

Peter  Ruttan,  Jun    

Owen  Roblin 

Thomas  Dorland    

William  Casey    

Christopher  German     

John  Gei'man 

8 
9 

Jacob  Ruttan 

Benjamin  Clapp     

John  Canniff                  , . . 

7 
5 

1    9. 

John  Vansciver 

4 

Eliiha  Alger   

1 
3 
2 

2 
3 

1 
1 
3 

Jacob  German 

Gilbert  Bogart   

Abraham  Bogart    

Peter  Dulyea 

Albert  Benson    

Alex'n.  Campbell , 

Burger  Huyck    

Albert  Cornell   

John  Huyck 

Obediah  Sitnson    

Barrent  Lewis    

Joseph  Cornell 

4 

George  Rutter   

2 

Cornelius  Vanhom    

Paul  Trumpour 

4 
6 

David  Barker 

5 

Rnbert  Jones 

5 

Michael  Slote 

2 

Peter  Ruttan 

8 

Joseph  Carnahan 

Solomon  Huff    

2    2 
4    4 

7 
5 

Henry  Davis 

2 
2 

3 

Coonrad  Vandusen   

Henry  Hoover   

4 

119  men,  107  women,  139  males,  128  females  ;  total,  493. 


29 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  189S 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown,  April  14th,  1791 


Names. 

4 

a 

§ 

E 

SI 

1^ 

1 

Names. 

I 

2 

2 
4 
4 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
2 
2 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 

c 

o 

2 

o 

1 

1 

1 
1 
1 

1 
1 
1 

1 

3 
1 

2 
1 

3 
2 
1 
1 

1 

1 
1 

1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
i 
1 
1 

3 

2 
2 

.    o 
Qj    :; 

1  1 

1  2 

1 .. 

2  2 
1    1 
1 

1 

William  Casey    

2 
1 

1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
3 

i 

1 

1 

2    4 
2  .. 
4  .. 

11  2 
2    1 

..!.. 

i  2 
1 .. 

3 

9 
4 
6 
5 
5 
2 
6 
6 
5 
4 
1 
2 
7 
8 
6 
] 
6 
4 
5 

4 

o 
2 
6 
8 
8 
4 
4 
3 
6 
6 
11 
7 
3 
1 
6 
5 
9 
4 

Daniel  Picket 

4 

Jacob  German    

Thomas  Jones    

0 

Christopher  German     .... 
John  Vansciver 

James  Noxon 

Ruben  Bedell   

faulHuflf  

Solomon  HuflF,  Jun 

Nicholas  Peterson 

Alexr   Fisher    

James  McMas'er 

Philip  Redick     

David  Jones   

John  Vannatto 

3 

6 

Abrani.  Bogart 

n 

Gilbert  Bo"art '. 

3 

John  Snidar   

8 
1 
3 

1 

4 

i 

2 
3 

1 
2 

1 

2 
1 
2 
1 
1 

i 

*3 
3 

4 
5 
1 

\9, 

Ptter  Dulyea 

4 

Obidah  Simson 

r 

Alex'r.  Campbell 

Arch.  Campbell 

.. 

6 

3 

Bura;ar  Huvck    

1 

John  Huyck  

32 

2   3 
2    1 

2|'2 
1    1 

Solomon  HuflF 

Jacob  Dulmage 

Baltus  Harris     

H  enry  Davis 

William  Griffis 

Casper  Vandusen 

Coonrad  Vandusen   

Henry  fJoover 

8 

Albert  Cornell    

9, 

William  Clark    

2    1 

1    1 
li  1 

8 

Joseph  Clark 

9 

Albert  Benson   

5 

Barrent  Lewis    

7 

Joseph  Cornell 

12    1 

1    2! 

10 

Peter  Youngs 

3 

John  CannifF    

9.    9. 

5 
1 

2 
3 
4 
1 

i 

3 
2 

] 

i 

3 
2 
1 
1 

I 

1 

Jerimiah  Ellison    

David  Brown 

3 

Norris  Carr     

^'  1  9 

3 

5 

Jacob  Tice 

1.. 
1    2 
1    3 
1    1 
1    1 
1    1 
1  .. 
1    1 

Henry  Rednor 

2 
3 

1 

2 
3 
1 

3 

2 

2 

"2 

2 
3 
2 
3 

J 
2 
1 

i 
"2 
'2 
2 

"3 

"3 

"2 
3 

1 
2 

7 

Robert  Jones 

Daniel  Cole    

10 

Georsre  Rutter   

Albert  Campbell    

John  Fitzcerald 

7 

Paul  Trumpour 

9. 

Benjamin  Owen 

Benjamin  Ellison 

William  Ruttan 

5 

Michael  Slote 

5 

Isaac  Benn 

William  Wannamaker  .... 
William  Stuart 

5 

John  German 

1 

Cornelius  Y«nhorn    

Reynolds  Alexander 

David  Barker 

4 

2 

2 
1 

i 

3 
3 

i 

1 
1 

1 

2 
3 

Nicholas  Hagerman 

Jesse  Waters 

9 
1 

Joseph  Camahan 

Samuel  Brock     

7 

Edward  Barker 

3 

John  Nix 

Eli j  ha  Alger 

2 

3 
1 

2 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 

i 

Cornelius  Slouter 

Daniel  Lightheart 

Peter  Swade 

2 

7 

Peter  Ruttan 

9, 

Benjamin  Clapp    

Peter  Ruttan,  .Jun    

Willet  Casey 

8 

C.  Waters   

1 

Owen  Rublin . . 

5' 

Daniel  Haight    

7 

William  Moor    

5 
5 
4 
5 
1 
9 

John  Dorland     

11 

John  Roblin 

Richard  Sharp   

f) 

Peter  Wanamaker 

.John  Van  cot 

7 

James  Canniff    

Peter  Vanalstine    

Philip  Dorland 

4 

Garrot  Benson   

3'  3 

8 

Nathaniel  Somes   

Thomas  Giles 

Thomps  Dorland    

Peter  Maybe 

2 

1 

0 

9 

118  men,  108  women,  136  males,  118  females  ;  total,  480. 
30 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown,  April  2nd,  1799. 


Names. 


James  McMasters.  . 

Philip  Ridick 

Alexander  Fisher.. 
Nichol-is  Peterson .  . 
Robert  Wilkins.  .  .  . 

Paul  Huff 

Henry  Crumly  .  .  .  . 

Ruben  Bedell 

James  Noxon 

John  Vansciver .... 

John  Snidar   

Stephen  Lewis 

Barrent  Lewis  .... 
Josejih  Cornell  .... 
John  Herington  .  . . 
William  Clark    .... 

Albert  Cornell 

John  Huyck 

Burger  Huyck 

Alexander  Campbell 
Albert  Benson  .  .  .  . 
Peter  Dulyea  .  .  .  . 
Gi'bert  Bogart  .  .  .  . 
Abram  Bogart  .  .  .  . 
Christopher  German 
Jacob  (xerman  .... 
William  Casey    .... 

William  Moor    

John  Roblin 

Ichabod  Squares  .  . 
Francis  Prindle .... 

Ely  Dibble 

James  Canniff.  .... 
Peter  Ruttan,  Jun 

John  Baker  

Owen  Roblin 

Peter  Ruttan 

Michael  Slote 

Benjamin  Clapp  .  .  . 
John  Ryckmau .... 
George  Rutter   .  .  .  . 

Peter  Brown 

Paul  Trumpour.  .  .  . 
John  Dorland  .... 

John  Ca'iniff 

David  Barker  .    .  .  . 


Names. 


6 
9 
10 
6il2 

2|  e! 


Edward  Barker 

Joseph  Leivens 

Elijha  Alger 

C«  melius  Vanhorn   . 

Daniel  Haight    

Joel  Haight 

William  Griff 

Jacob  Dulmage 

Henry  Davis 

Solomon  Huff 

Baltus  Harris 

John  Vannato 

Daniel  Cole 

John  Vanavader.  .  .  . 

Hugh  Waker 

Duvid  Brown 

Coonrad  Yandusen   . 
Garret  De  Clute  .... 

John  Fitzgerald 

Joseph  Ellison 

William  Ruttan    .... 

Abram  Maybe    

William  Dugal 

Jonothan  Allen 

Peter  Vanalstine  .  .  . 
Alexr.  Vanalstine.  .  . 

William  Robins 

Nicholas  Hagerman . 
Thomas  Douglass  . . . 

Moses  Jacobs 

Isaac  Brown 

Joseph  Carnahan  .  .  . 

Peter  Swade 

Jonothan  Clark 

Resolved  Cleaveland 

Willet  Casey 

Thomas  Lyons 

Benjamin  Smith    . .  . 

Philip  Dorland 

Thomas  Dorland    .  .  . 

Joshua  Hicks 

John  Vancot 

Nazareth  Hill 

James  Johnson 

Henry  Hoover  .  . 


S    * 


o 
Pm  Eh 


1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 

1    4 


11  4 
11  3 
1 
1 


310 
1   8 


3 
9 
3 
4 
6 
9 
5 
2 
2 
6 
7 

10 
2 
4 
2 
4 
210 
1 


32  men,  92  women,  156  males,  138  females  ;  total,  518, 
31 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphus  To'rni,  26th  3  mo,  1800. 


Name. 


Reuben   Begal 2 

James  Canniif 1 

Gilbert  Clapp 3 

Peter  Brown 1 

James  N'oxen 2 

John  I  *ay 2 

John  \\^hite 1 

John  Cornell 1 

John  Vancott 1 

Resoh^ed  Cleaveiand 

Moses  Jacobs 

Thomas  Duglas 

Smiten  Simmons   .  .  . 

John  Borland 

William  Moore 

John  Roblin 

Benjamin  Clapp  .... 

Garret  Benson 

John  Canniff 

Paul  Trumpower <  3 

Owen  Roblin j  1 

Peter  Ratan,  Jun |  1 

Cornelious  Van  Horn 

George  Ruter 

Peter  Ratan    

J  ohn  Heveland 

David  Barker 

Joseph  Leavens 

Michel  Slote 

Benjamin  Owen 

Edward  Barker 

Robert  Wilkins 

Henry  Crumley 1 

Paul  HuflF   1 

ISicholas  Peterson 3 

Russel  Pitman 1 

Alexr.  Fisher,  Esqr 

James  Mc.  Masters    :  2 

William  Ratan !   1 

William  Robins '  3 

iSricholas  Hagerman ..;...'  2 

Jonathan  Allen 1 

Abraham  Maybe   j  2 

Thomas  Borland,  Esq  ....  I  2 


Name. 


Philip  Borland 3 

Peter  Swade 1 

William  Snyder 1 

Joshua  Conklin 1 

William  Ritchards 1 

Stephen  Lewis 1 

John  Vanskiver 1 

John  Snyder 1 

Isaac  Brown 1 

James  Persom 1 

Jonothan  Cleark    2 

Baniel  Haight    I  2 

Joel  Haight    2 

William  Gnffis ,  2 

Jacob  Bulmage '  1 

Henry  Bavise 2 

Solomon  Huff 2 

Baithus  Harris 1 

John  Vanatter 1  2 

Joseph  Carnahan 

Sarah  Carnahan 

Joseph  Alison    

Coonrad  A'^andusen  .  .  . 
Hush  Walker 


1 
1 
1 
1 
1 

Henry  Hover 1 

1 
5 
2 
1 
3 


Bavid  Brown. 

Baniel  Cole 

Peter  Vanalstine,  Esq . 
John  Fader  

Willet  Casey 


^  S  &4  r 


William  Casey    |  3 


Christopher  Germond  .  . 
Abraham  Bogart    .... 

Gilbert  Bogart 

Thomas  Cleaj-k 

Albert  Benson    

Alexander  Campbell .  . 

Burger  Hyke 

John  Hyke 

Albert  Cornell    

William  Clark    

Cornelius  Valoe 

Jeremiah  Harrington . 
Barnet  Lewis 


135  men,  113  women,  156  males,  120  females  ;  total,  524. 


32 


til  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  o2). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown  Taken  this  27th  day  of  April, 

1801. 


Name. 

53 

3 

S 

o 

OS 

Is 

2 

Name. 

c 

s 

o 

] 

2 

i 
1 
1 

4 
1 
3 

1 

03 

i 

1 
2 

"cS 

0 
H 

Paul  Trumpour 

5 

2 

1 

1 
1 
2 
2 
1 
1 
2 
3 
2 
1 
3 
2 
1 
2 
2 
4 
3 
2 
2 
3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
3 
1 

I 

1 

I 

2 

1 

1 
2 
1 
1 

4 
2 
5 

1 

6 
2 

i 

3 
2 

3 

i 

3 

4 

i 

3 
4 
3 

2 
1 

i 

5 
3 
1 
4 
2 
6 
3 
3 

5 

12 
9 

5 
7 
4 

10 
8 
8 
4 
8 
6 
6 
3 
9 
9 
7 
3 
6 

12 

12 
9 
7 
9 
6 
7 
2 
() 
3 
5 
6 
2 

11 
9 
9 

10 
6 

12 
7 
9 
3 
8 

Peter  Brown 

Paul  Huff   

1 

2 

7 

Daniel  Haicfht    

5 

Joel  Haight 

Rtuben  Bedell 

7 

William  Grifhs 

James  Huff' 

2    4 

Jacob  Duhnage 

J(jhn  Vanatto 

3 

Henry  Daves 

9.\  3 

William  Pitman 

Solomon  Huff,  Sen   

Daniel  Bedell 

1 
1 
1 

3 
6 

9. 

Henry  Crumley 

Peter  Ruttan,  Jun 

Alexander  Fisher 

James  McMasters 

Benjamin  Owens 

Ell  Dibble 

3 

1 

1 

2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 

1 
1 
2 
2 
1 

3 
1 
1 

1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
4 
1 

1 
1 
1 
3 
2 
2 
5 
3 
3 

i 

'2 
3 

3 

2 

3 

i 

3 

4 

1 
i) 

2 
3 

2 
3 

11  3 
3    G 

John  J  ackson 

1    7 

John  Roblin 

9,     1 

3    8 

Wibiam  Moor 

2 
2 

1 
3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
2 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 

1 
1 
1 
3 
3 
1 

2 
3 
4 
3 
3 
2 
3 
5 

3 

1 
3 
3 

3 
4 

'/ 
4 
2 
3 
2 
2 
1 

1 

2'  « 

Abi  aham  Maybee 

Jonothan  Allan 

1 

i 
1 

2 

0 

James  Noxon 

7 

William  Robns 

Nicholas  Hagerman 

Isaac  Brown 

Cornelius  Vanhorn 

James  Benedick 

Nicholas  Brunk 

Stsphen  Lewis 

6 
6 

A 

Abner  Silver     

3'  5 

Thomas  Doi'land    

George  Myers 

Cornelius  Valleau 

Oliver  Cornall    

..1  3 
2  ^ 

Willet  Casey 

Elias  Cornall 

'2 
3 

4 
2 

9 

Philip  Dorland 

John  Scott 

William  Clark 

7 

John  Huycke 

q 

Daniel  Cole     

Burger  Huycke 

John  Vansciver 

7 

Charles  Haight 

7 

David  Brown 

John  Snider 

2    7 

Henry  Hoover 

Alexander  Campbell 

Oliver  Benson    

Ashbv  Roy  ley    

3 

William  Ruttan 

3   8 

Joseph  Allison 

1 

Michael  Sloote 

Barnard  Cole 

2   7 
1    6 

Peter  Ruttan 

Abi'aham  Bogart    

Gilbert  Bogart 

John  Haveland 

9 

Conrade  Van  Duzen 

George  Huter 

Cliristopher  German 

Elias  Clark 

1 

3 
5 

1 

i 

2 
2 

7 
6 

Edward  Barker 

William  Casey    

q 

Benjamin  Clapp    

XDwen  Roblin 

Mathew  Wjdlie 

Moses  Jacobs 

6 

John  Canniff 

Isaac  Cole 

9 

James  Canniff 

Samuel  Miles 

.5 

John  Dorland 

John  Dunham 

P? 

Gilbert  Clapp 

John  Day    

John  Willi.i,ms 

^ 

121  men,  101  women,  160  males,  131  females  ;  total,  513. 


3  B.I.  6 


83 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  ]898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  the  Township  of  Adolphustown  taken  this 

1st  day  of  March,  1802. 


Names. 


John  Huyck 

Henry  H  oover  . .  . . 
Albert  Benson   . . . . 

Barnard  Cole   

William  Casey 

Nath'n  Wiley 

Cornelius  Yallow  .  . 
Cornelius  Greenlief 
Nicholas  Bronk.  .  .  . 
William  C  ark  .  .  .  .  , 
Albert  Cornell  .  .  .  . 
Alex'r.  Campbell  . . 

Ashby  Royley 

Gilbert  Bogart  .  . .  . 
Abraham  Bogart  .  . 
Christ.  German.  .  . . 

Elias  Clark 

Jno.  Van  Sciver    .  . 

Jno.  Snyder   

Jno.  Uorland 

Ruben  Bedell 

Alex'r.  Fisher 

Smiton  Simmons  .  . 
Jno.  McMasters  .  .  . 

Jas.  Benedick 

Benj'n.  Bradley  . . . 
Jno.  Van  Atter.  .  .  . 

Paul  Huflf 

James  Noxin 

Esek'l.  Clark 

William  Grifhs  .... 

Henry  Davis 

Solomon  Huff 

James  Caniff 

John  Dunham 


^[^ 


§  P^  H 


Names. 


1 

2 

1 

2 

1 

2, 

3 

1 

1 

1 

2 

3 

1 

3 

1 

2 

1 

1 

3 

2! 

1 

5 

1 

3 

1 

5i 

2 

4i 

2 

4 

1 
1. 

2. 

2 

2 

41 
1 

2 
1 
3 
2 
3 
3  7 
2  6 
Ij  7, 

410 

2  7 

■•I  4' 

\i 

■■I  7' 

3  8' 
ll  8 
311 
ll  8 

4  8 
210 


Benj'n.  Owens 

Peter  Rattan,   Jun .  . 
Peter  Rattan,  Sen  .  . 

David  Barger 

Cornelius  Van  Horn. 

Gf  orge  Butter   

INIichael  Sloot 

Paul  Trumpour 

John  Jackson 

John  Roblin 

Owen  Roblin 

William  Moore 

John  Williams   

John  Smyth   

John  Haveland 

Joseph  Carnehan  .  .  . 

Peter  Swade 

Gilbert  Clapp 

Benj'n.  Clapp 

Thomas  D<  rland.  .  .  . 

Philip  Dorland 

Willet  Casey 

John  Van  Cott 

Isaac  Brnwn   

William  R'^'bins 

Jonathan  Allen 

Abrahnm  May  bee.  .  . 

William  Rattan 

Nicholas  Hagerman  . 

.lo?eph  Allison   

Daniel  Cole 

Peter  Brown 

Conrad  Van  Duzen  . 

Daniel  Bedell 

Edw'd.  Barker 


g^  Sfe 


1 
1 
1 

4 
1    1 
1'  1 


1 

2 
2i  ] 
2  1 
2  1 
1    1 


1 
3 
2 
1 
1 
2 
2 
1 
1 
1 

1'  1 
3   3 


1 

1 

1 

1 

3 

1 

3 

3 

1 

2 

2 

4 

1 

4 

1 

6 

2 

1 

6 
6 
5 
11 
G 
9 
5 
11 
3 
7 
7 
5 
S 
5 
2 
1 
1 
3 
310 
1  6 
310 
11 
5 
7 
9 
5 
4 
6 
10- 
5 
8 
7 
7 
8 
9 


98  men,  87  women,  152  males,  112  females  ;  total,  449. 


34 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  tlie  Inhabitants  of  Adolnliustown  taken  the  14th  March,  1803. 


Names. 


Daniel  Cole 

Henry  Hoover  .  .  .  . 
Coon'd.  Vn  Douzen 
Joseph  Allison  .  .  , . 
William  Rattan  ,  . .  . 
Abr'm.  Maybee. .  .  . 

Jon'n.  Allen 

David  Brown 

Tunis  Acker    

Nich's.  Hagerman . . 
William  Robins. . .  . 

Philip  Flagler 

Isaac  Brown 

Thus.  Douglass  . . . . 

Sani'l.  How 

John  Vn  Cott 

Corn's  Vn  Alstene .  . 

Willet  Casey 

Philip  Dor]  and  .  .  .  . 
Thos.  Dorland    .  .  .  . 

Peter  Swade 

David  Lapham   .  .  .  . 

Dan'l.  Haight 

Joel  Haight 

Will   Griffis    

Jacob  Dulmage .  . . . 

Henry  Davis 

Sol'm.  Huff 

Elijah  Burges 

John  Williams 

Dan'l.  Ontwater  .  .  . 
James  McMasters.  . 

Alex'r.  Fisher 

Paul  Huff   

Benj'n.  Bradley.  . . 
James  Benedick  .  .  . 
Reuben  Bedell  .  .  .  . 

James  Noxin 

Esek'l.  Clark 

Alex'r.  Campbell  .  . 


4  r^  irS 

5  ft^   H 


Names. 


Peter  C.  Brown 

John  Vn.  Scyver  . ,  . , 

Jn'n.   Snyder 

Abr'm.  Bogart   

Gilbert  Bogart 

Chr'r.  Germain 

Will.  Casey 

Ellas  Clark 

Barn'd.  Cole 

Albert  Benson 

Burger  Huyck 

Jno.   Huyck 

Albert  Kernel 

WiU'm.  Clark 

Corn's.   Velleau 

James  McNutt 

Nath'n.  Wyley 

Henry  Vn  Tasel 

Edw'd.   Barker 

Cornelius  Vn  Horn  . . 

Paul  Trumpour 

Geo.   Rutter 

Jno.   Jackson 

Jno.  Canifte    

Mich'l.  Sloote 

Feter  Rattan,  Sen  .  .  . 

Benj'n.  Clapp 

Peter  Rattan,  Jun  .  .  . 

Benj'n.  Owens 

Owtn  Roblin 

Jno.  Roblin 

Jno.  Hevelen 

Will.  Moore    

Jas.   Canniffe 

Gilbert  Clap 

Jno.  Dorland 

Jiio.  Smith 

Peter  "Young  . 

Jno.  Thompson 

Jerem'h.  iJeGarrette 


S,^ 


fe  Eh 


7 
8 
7 
6 
3 
9 

10 
6 
4 
8 
7 
7 
6 
7 
5 
5 
5 
4 
9 
(> 

12 
8 
6 


o 
1    6 

41  0 
3    6 

31  7 


l!  6 


114  men,  89  women,  165  males,  144  females  ;  total,  512. 


35 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown,  taken  the  12th  March,  1804. 


Names. 


Daniel  Haight 

Joel  Haight 

Benj.   Holly. ...... 

William  Griffis 

Jacob  Dulmage  .... 

Henry  Davis 

Solomon  Huflf,  Sen . 
Elijah  Birdsley  .... 
Peter  C.  Brown.  ... 
Daniel  Cutwaters.  .  , 

John  William 

Joseph  r'arnahan. .  .  , 
Moses  Carnahan .  .  .  . 

Robert  Pelin 

Nicholas  Peterson. .  . 

Alex.  Fisher 

Smiten  Simmons .  .  . . 

James  Benedict 

Daniel  Van  Clief  .  . . 

Pau'   Huff 

David  McGregor . . . . 

William  Grant 

Gilbert  D.  Clapp.    .. 

Ruben  Bedell 

James  Noxen 

Hezekiah  Clark 

Phineas  Tyler 

John  Dorland 

James  Caniff. 

Thomas  Dorland .  .  .  . 

Philip  Dorland 

Willet  Casey 

Ursula  Yanalstine.  .  . 

Elisha  Ames 

John  Van  Cott 

James  Falkner 

Jacob  Fraleigh 

Samuel  Howe. 

Peter  Swade     

Thomas  Douglass  .  . . 

Isaac  Browni 

Philip  Flagler 

Nicholas  Hagerman  . 

Simon  McNabb 

Jonathan  Allan 


^ 


^   r- 


1   7 
5 


Names. 


11 

8 

2! 

8! 
4 

6' 

1 
4 
2 
14 
14 
6 
71 


7 

11 

3 

3|  7 
4    8 

•  4: 

412 
4  11 
]  6 
3 

2 
4 
4 
1 
4 
1  5 
Sj  7 
2i  6 
2 
2 
1 


Abraham  Maybee . .  . . 

William  Moore 

John  Roblin . 

John  Thompson 

Philip  Freightinburg 

John  Haverland 

Owen  Roblin 

Peter  Rattan,  Jun.  .  . 
Benjamin  Owens  .  . . . 

John  Smith 

Peter  Rattan,  Sen.  .  . 

Michael  Sloot 

Benjamin  Clapp 

•John  Canniff 

Jeremiah  P'renchman 

George  Rutter   

Paul  Trumpour 

John  Jackson 

Cornelius  Van  Horn. . 

David  Barker   

William  Rattan 

Joseph  Ellison   

Coonrad  Van  Dusen.  . 

John  Van  Neer 

Joseph  Pope 

Henry  Hoover   

David  Brown 

Daniel  Cole 

William  Casey 

Elias  Clark 

Christopher  German.. 

Gilbert  Bogart 

James  Denison 

Barnard  Cole 

Cornelius  Bedford .... 

Albert  Benson   

Alexder  Campbell .... 

Burger  Huyck 

Albert  Kernell 

Willinm  Clark 

Cornelius  Vallow 

Cornelius  Greenlief. . . 
Abraham  Bogart  .... 
.John  Van  Scriver.  .  .  . 
John  Snider 


S    aj  I  2 


4 
11 
6 
3 
6 
9 
7 
9 
7 
11 
3 
8 
5 
7 
9 
7 
1 

10 
7 
5 
4 
7 
8 
7 


139  men,  111  women,  179  males,  156  females  ;  total,  585. 


36 


61  Victoria 
Annual  Retur 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  :r2). 


A.  1»98 


n   of  the  lnhabit.ntsc>£jhe  To_ 


wmhipofAdolphustown,  taken  4th 


Names. 


Names. 


2    ^  I'ssirs 


Alex.  Fisher 

Thomas  Dorland   I  ^1 

Philip  Dorland  ......••••  j  ^    | 

Willet  Casy I  ^' 

Joseph  Pope 

Ursula  Van  Alstine 

Elijah  Berdsly    

John  Van  Cott 

Richard  Daverne 1  ||  ^ 

Jacob  Fraleigh  '  ^* 

Peter  bwade 


Nicholas  Hagerman. 

Philip  Flagler   

Simon  McNabb 

Jonathan  Allan 


William  Rittan 
Joseph  Ellison. 
Benjamin  Pope 


Thomas  Douglass 2 

Isaac  Brown  


Abraham  Maybe    |  ^ 


1    2  14   J«^^"  Snyder \  \^  1      i  4 

I  6    John  Williams   ^j  ^    ^|  ^ 

21  4  10    Peter  Brown |   g 

II  4    9  '  Joseph  Carnehan i   ^ 

11    4  i  Benjamin    Hawley   

2i   16    Solomon  tlun    g 

2  Henry  Davis ^ 

3  Jacob  Dulmage ^ 

4M  Abner  Silver ^ 

4'  William  Griffiis ^ 

,3    Joel  Haight ^    ^ 

i  '  i    5',  Daniel  Haight .    ^ 

1  4    8    Nicholas  Peterson J  ^ 

2  1    8    >initon  Simmons j     \  ^ 

2    1    6   John  Day   .  .  • ,  J 

1    2    6    Phmeas  Tyler |   A  ^ 

2I  1|  7!!  Michael  S'oote - |  A  g 

3l  ll  8  1  Jeremiah  ue  «jari—  •  •  •  -     ■ 
4  I  Benjamin  Maville ..  - 

3    6  1  Samuel  MUler ' 

ll  7',  Peter  Rattan,  Sen 


ll  2'. 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2' 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 


John  Van  Meer ^  1   J^j  1  paniel  Van  Clief   

Conrad  Van  Duzen 1  1    2    3'  7,  P^ul  Huff * 

Henry  Hoover   g!  gl  9'  James  Noxon.  '     ' 

David  Brown J  A  -^1   jl  7. j  John  Dorland 


Daniel  Cole ,     ,  „ 

Cornelius   Bedford A  ^    | 

Cornelius  Greenhef |    \ 


3 10,  James  Canifl ^    ^    ^ 

2J  4    John  Roblin J  j^;  j^ 


2 
3 
1 
1 

7 
1 
1 

3'  21 

I'l  4i 
21 
12 
1    1 


3  . . 


5    William  Moore 


1    1 


Cornelius  Vallow ^  1  •  "     gM  Qwen  Roblin ■ , 

,,-:n.„„,  ni..vl.      '   1 U    1  i   1    6'  Peter  Rattan,  Jun ^    ^. 


William  Clark 

Elias  Cornell    1  qI  li 

John  Huyck  ^1  ^ 

Burgar  Huyck   .  .  .  • J 

Alexander  Campbell ^ 

Albert  Benson   | 

Barnet  Cole   |  \ 

Gilbert  Bogart   

Christopher   German 

Elias  Clark 

William  Casy 

Abraham  Bogart   . . . 

John  Van  Scriver... 


21  2    7 1  Reuben  Bedle 
3    5    John  Smith 


21  7    Daniel  Cutwaters |  ^ 


41  3'  9    Benjamin  Clapp. 
2I  4    George  Butter. 


11     I  3    Paul  Trumpour...-  , 

'  2  10    Cornelius  Van  Horn ^| 


8 
6 

7 
3 

I  5 
ll  7 
3,11 

1!  6 
i  6 

II  6 
1  7 
414 
1  5 
6   8 

1 
1  5 
2IO 
1  4 
1  5 
313 
1  6 
58 
9 
■3I  9 

2 

5 

4 

2 

4 
I  3 

2 


7 
9 
7 
5 
8 
6 
6 
21  6 
2   4 
ll  8 
3111 
5I6 
2   7 


1    1    1    41  7    Edward  Barker ^ 


2    1 


6 
2 

ii  2I  2I  i'lO'JjohnStickney I  ^1  -3I;   I  5 

1    1    4    1    7    James  Falkner     J      ,     1     |  i 

1    1    3    1    6    John  Haverland I     \--'-\     1 


136  men,  119  women 


TlSs'^^^^d^O^ females  ;  total,  563. 

37 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


The  Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolpliustown,  taken  this  3id  of  3rd 

month,   1806. 


Name. 


Thomas  Dorland  ,  . 
Philip  Dorland  .  . .  . 

Willet  Casey 

Charles  Stuart   .  .  .  . 

John  Yancott 

James  Falkener.  .  .  . 
Ritchard  Davern   .  . 

Peter  Swade 

ThomasDu»lass.  .  .  . 
Nicholas  Hagerman 
Jonathan  Allen .... 
David  McWhister.  . 

Tunis  Eckert 

Joseph  Allison  .  .  .  . 
Conrad  Vandozen  .  . 

David  Brown 

Daniel  Cole 

John  Van  Meer.  .  .  . 
John  Paulmeteer  .  . 
Benjamin  Holley  .  . 
Alijah  Birdsley.... 
Moses  Carnaham .  .  . 
Joseph  Carnaham .  . 

Samuel  How 

Peter  Brown 

Solomon  Hull  ..... 

Henry  Davice 

Jacob  Dulmage.  .  .  . 

Abner  Silver 

William  Griffis  .... 

Joel  Haight    

Daniel  Haight  .... 
Edward  Barker.  .  .  . 
Cornelius  Vanhorn 
Henry  Crumley .... 
Paul  Trumpower  .  . 
Benjamin  Clapp  . . . 
George  Rutter   .... 

Michael  Slote 

Peter  Ratan   

Peter  Ratan,  Jun  .  . 
Thomas  Morgen  .  .  . 

Owen  Roblin 

Isaac  Brown   


G 

03 

a) 

s 

c 

05 

s 

cS 

o 

1 

•  I 

1 

3 

1 

■  ■ 

2 

4 

7 

2 

3 

4 

10 

2 

1 

1 

7ii 

1 

2 

3| 

1 

3 

1 

6 

2 

1 

4 

1 

1 

3 

1 

1 

2 

3 

Vi 

2 

3 

2 

91 

1 

3 

2 

7 

1 

2 

1 

6 

1 

1 

2 

o[ 

2 

^ 

1 

] 

o 

1 

<i 

5 

13 

1 

5 

2 

9 

2 

2 

1 

7 

1 

3 

3 

8i 

2 

2 

3 

8; 

1 

3 

5i 

I 

i 

3|j 

2 

i 

1 

5 

1 

1 

1 

i 

2 

1 

4 

1 

7 

2 

3 

1 

7 

2 

4 

3 

11 

1 

2 

2 

6 

1 

3 

1 

♦3 

1 

4 

1 

7 

2 

3 

1 

7 

1 

5 

2 

9 

2 

2 

61 

1 

3 

2 

7! 

1 

2 

7 

2 

i 

7 

17 

2 

3 

2 

1 

8 

2 

2 

3 

3 

10 

2 

2 

2 

2 

8 

2 

1 

I 

1 

5 

1 

1 

1 

3 

6 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

3 

4 

9 

1 

2 

1 

3 

7 

Name. 


John  Heaveland    .  .  .  . 

John  Ockerman 

John  Stickney   

William  More 

Garret  Benson   

John  Dorland 

Daniel  (  utwater    .  . .  . 

Peter  La  Vee 

Jeremiah  De  Garitte 
Nicholas  Peterson  . .  . 

William  Ratan 

William  Casey   

John  Canniff 

James  Canniff 

John  Snyder 

Joseph  Ratan 

Henry  Hover 

Albert  Benson    

AJexander  Fisher.  .  .  . 
J  ohn  Van  Schiver .  . .  . 
Abraham  Maybee  .  .  .  . 

Noson  Harris 

Abraham  Bogart   .... 

John  Hyke 

William  Clark    

(rilbert  Bogart 

Barnet  Cole    

Christopher  Germond 

Thomas  Clark 

Elias  Clark 

Cornelinus  Valoe  .  .  .  . 
CorneliousGreenlief .  . 

Samuel  Millor    

Elias  Cornwall   

Reuben  Bedell 

Philip  Flagu^ar 

Paul  Huff 

Alexander  Robertson 
Daniel  Van  Cleef  .  .  .  . 
Benjamin  Bradley  .  .  . 
Jeremiah  Tomkins    .  . 

James  Noxon 

John  Williams 


S 
o 

oi 

09 

c 
3 

i 

1 

1 

1 

1 

,  . 

2 

2 

2 

2 

1 

1 

] 

7 

4 

6 

1 

3 

6 

3 

3 

2 

5 

4 

2 

1 

2 

3 

5 

2 

1 

2 

4 

2 

2 

7 

1 

4 

2 

2 

2 

i 

2 

5 

2 

4 

2 

1 

4 

3 

1 

2 

2 

2 

1 

2 

2 

1 

1 

2 

2 

2 

1 

1 

3 

4 

1 

2 

1 

2 

5 

1 

2 

1 

1 

1 

2 

Q 

2 

1 

1 

4 

129  men,  102  women,  182  males,  151  females  ,  total,  562. 


38 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


TheAnnualReta.noft.eIn^b^-s^^Ad.i^u^ 


Adolphustowu,  taken  the   2na  and  :kd 


Alexander  Fisher ^ 

Philip  Borland |     \  ^. 


g  ^  N  f^  ^ 

Si^I^Kh 

1    4  111  Owen  Roblin g 


4    2 


Albert  Benson   ,        ^ 

William  Casey  ' 

Ellas  Clark  .  .  . 
Barnet  Cole    . 

Daniel  Outwater    1  ^1  ^ 

Cornel  ous  Valoe  '   -^l 

William  Clark 


1'  11 

2   11 


11  3'i  711  Peter  Ratan    g 

5    2    9    George  Rutter    

2    5'll    CorneliousVanhurn......     ^|   ^ 

1    5!  8    William  Brown I  g,  ^ 

1    21  51  Edward  Barker j  ^^j  ^ 

1    1    51  Joseph  Ratan 
3.1  5i|  John  Stickney 


31  41  9 
1  1  5 
3   3  10 


3    2 
3    2I 


.    i    (i|  Benjamin   Bradley ^1 


6    4  151  John  Huyk 


II  2 

1  31 

2  . 


Nicholas  Peterson I  "j  "I  "I    "I  gll  Garret  Benson   1  ^ 

Mary  Grant,  Wd A  -A"\\'\  2I  John  Van  Cott ^ 

Monn  Creef J  1  'l  12    5i  Moses  Carnaham   ll  ll     |  1 

Paul  Peterson    U 1  j^i^^  HoUowday    •  • 

.  1,  n..,.„..l-inm ••■■••••: Li'    -r       _.-u    \n;r,.->.-i  •^ M    -^  •  • 


1  11 

1 


Joseph  Carniham 1  ^ 

William  Rat-"  -  -  ■' 

Daniel  Cole 

Joh 

Wiilet  Casey 

Conr 

James  Canmff 

1  3I  3I  2I     1  Sll  Thomas  Dorland   1  "I  -p  ^ 

Solomon  Hufl 3    13    3  lo'  Jmkms    J   j 

Henry  Davies J  ^\  ^U^j  Charles  Stuart \     \  ^ 

Paul  Trumpoar 11      I  2    4    Ritchard  Davern   ^i 

John  Trumpour 1    1    31     1  5H  Jo^"^  Canniff  '     '  ' 


I  7 

II  5 
.  7 
1  3 

1  4 

I  6 

II  5 
1 
3 
3 
3 
5 


.,.h  Carniham 2  'l  16  1  10    Toseph  Allison   J  J  ^\  J  7 

liam  Ratan   4    3  l'  8:  William  Griffis J    A  ^j  A  g 

,niel  Cole J   3  '  5  2I13'   Joel  Haight    \   ^\     I 

hu  Paulmeteer \  ^\  J  ^Uq  1  pptgr  Van  Cott ^ ,  ^|   ^ 

•'■"et  Casey ,     A  g  13I  Abner  Sih^er J    A  g 

.-ad  Vandozen 1    1    2  6    0    Daniel  Haight    ^^         3 

„„..-es  Canmff    J  -A  g    7    Elijah  Birdsley A--\  ^ 

John  Dorland -j    "i    9         8    Thomas  Dorland          


James  Falkener ^ 

Benjainin  Clapp ,^ 

Peter  Swade   „ 

Thomas  Duglas 

William  Ritchards ^ 

Philip  Flagular )   ^ 

Samuel  Hows 

John  Frees.  ..  ,  -  • 

John  Vanschiver 

Widow  Marvee  .  . 

John  Huyke,  Jun 

John  Williams '   ^ 


3 
1 
2 
1 
31 
1 

l|  1 

1    1 


7    Samuel  Millor    

3I   Abraham  Maybe   ^ 

ll  21  7!  Nicholas  Hagerman J-    J 

1    3    7    Henry  Hover A  J 

1    1    el  David  Brown A 


2 
5 

11  1 


1    Jonathan  Allen 

5    John  Snyder ... 

9    Peter  C.  Brown 

^,  ^    41   Samul  Dorland 

1         3I  Reul)en  Bedell 

ll' 4    71  Daniel  Vancleef 


8 
1 
7 
9 
5 
4 
5 
5 
4 
lllO 
5 
4 
llll 
3   7 


11  2 
21  1 


Isaac  Cole 

Elias  Cornwall    I  ^ 

Burger  Huyke    ..  •• 

Alexander  Campbei 
William  More's  family 

Henry  Rhyon 

John  Roblin    

John  Haveland 

Isaac  Brown 1  * 

Thomas  Morgan  ' 


4    Paul  Hutf     21  2'  3 

16    Jamea  Noxon • A  -. 

1  7    Daniel  Cutwater,  Jun. . . .    ^    ^' 
ll'l  ''I   .1    Peter  Van  Schiver    1    21  4| 

1' '  i  I  1    3    Thomas  Clark ^^j  J 

2  4    Gilbert  Bogert  1  A 

4    7    Abraham  Bogert    1 

3    Christopher  Germon \  ^\  ^\ 

7  1  JacobJPost  .^ I   J   ^ 


11. 

I  1! 

II  11 
ll.. 


9 
5 
8 
7 
4 
G 
9 
5 
9 
6 
3 
7 
3 
ll 
311 
2    4 


2    4    JohnVanMeer, 


149  men,  128  women 


If  9  males,  146  females  ;  total,  592. 
39 


Gl  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  18.^8 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphus  Town,  March,  1808. 


Names. 


Daniel  Haight 

Thomas  Dorland .  ,  . . 

David  Brown 

Paul  Trumpour 

Anthony  Samater.  .  , 
John  Trumpour  .  .  . 

John  Emery 

Josejih  Ratan 

Peter  Ratan 

William  Casey 

George  Rutter 

John  JSticney 

John  Dorland 

Peter  Yauschiver.  . 

Peter  Swade 

John  Van  Cott  .... 

Charles  Stuart 

Willet  Casey 

Joseph  Pope 

Philip  Dorland  .... 
Joseph  Carnaham.  . 
Samuel  Dorland  .  .  . 

H  enrj'  Davice 

Solomon  Hull' 

Philip  Flagler 

Barnard  Cole 

All)ert  Benson  .  .    . 

John  Williams 

Elias  Clark 

Isaac  Brown 

John  Haveland.  .  .  . 

Owen  Roblin 

Belyattee  Outwater. 
Benjamin  Clapp  .  .  . 
James  Faulkner  .  .  . 
Reuben  Bedell  . . . . 
Thomas  Dorland .  .  . 

Paul  Huff 

Daniel  Van  Clief  . . 
Alexander  Fisher . . 
Benjamin  Bradley  . 

Widow  Grant 

Nicholas  Peterson. . 
Daniel  Outwater . . . 


S^ 


1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 

iL. 

1 

1 


11 

41 
1| 
ll 
4.  5 
ll  2 


Names. 


10, 

3' 
10 
11 

4 

3 

2 

4 

3 
11 
11 

4! 

7 

4 

3 

4 

6 
12 

6| 
8 

1 

3; 
10 


o 

4 

6 

10 

8 

9| 
7 

10 

5 

e! 

6! 

^i 
12 

7I 

2 

16 

2I  7 


John  CannifF 2 

Isaac  Cole 1 

Daniel  Cole 2 

Henry  Hover 1 

Conrnd  Vandozen |  2 

Batese  Sulore 

Joseph  Allison 

William  Rat  m 

Jeremiah  Allison 

Abraham  Maybe 

Jonathan  Allen 

Peter  Ratan 

Nicholas  Hagerman.  .  . 

Thomas  Duglas 

Edwar  Barker 

James  Noxon 

Cornelious  Van  Horn  . 
Thomas  I.  Dorland .... 

Willliam  Griffis 

Noxon  Harris 

Garret  Benson 

James  Canniff 

Gilbert  Bogert 

Abraham  Bogert 

Samuel  Hays 

Samuel  Manning 

Archabald  Campbell  .  , 

John  Roblin 

William  Moore 

Elias  Cornwall 

Burger  Hnyke I  2 

Widow  Huyke 1 

William  Clark \  1 

Corneliou?*  Valoe.  ... 

Samuel  Miller 

Hezekiah  Clark 

Chri^'topher  Germon  . 

Jacob  Post 

John  Vanschiver  ..... 

John  Snyder  

John  Huyke 

Peter  Moncreef ...... 

Paul  Peterson 

Peter  Vancott 


fe 


1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

li 

1] 

2i 

1^ 

1!  1 


8 
3 

7 

8 

11 

2 

5 

10 

9 

4 

2   7 

1  3 
110 
3,  7 
li  7 

2  8 

2  7 
..    3 

1  7 
..  3 
..    1 

611 

.:  2 

110 
1    3 

3  6 


8 
7 
4 
5 
8 
4 
6 
6 
5 
14 
310 

2  4 
3j  9 
3|10 
1    4 

■•    2 

3  6 
..    4 


122  men,  117  women,  176  males,  153  females  ;  total,  668. 


40 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphus  Township  for  1809. 


Names. 


G 
5 
4 
9 

11 
2 
5 

12 
6 

15 

i;  3 

6|  8 
1  4 
4  8 
2'  5 
3  10 


Daniel  Haight .     7    4  11 

Joel   LI  aight 5    2    7 

Philip  Dovland,  Jun .     4 

Solomon  Huff .  [  4 

Joseph  Ratan j  2 

Daniel  *  lutwater 1  5 

Nicholas Hagerman,  Esq. .-...!  6 

Pei^er  Swade .  j   1 

John  VanCott 4 

Conrad  Van  Dozen "  '  •  •     ^ 

Thomas  Dorland,  Esq .      3 

Moses  Carnahan .  'll 

George  Blume .  [  2 

John  Williams .      2 

Abraham  Maybe .      3 

David  McWhister .      4 

Joseph  Allison 3 

David  Brown .      7 

Daniel  Cole 3 

Charles  Stuart 3 

Edward  Barker .      4 

Christopher  German .      6 

Isaac  Brown .      3 

Peter  Van  Schiver 4 

John  Ha  velon .      1 

Elias  Clark .      3 

Hezekiah  Clark .     9 

John  Vanschiver 5 

John  Huyke 2 

Albert  Benson .     6 

Cornelious  Valoe 4 

Sarah  Huyke .     2 

Elias  Cornwall 

Alexander  Fisher,  Esq .     o 

Danifl  Vanclieaf .     3 

Peter  Mon  Creef .  i  1 

Paul  Hutf I  3 

James  Noxon .  I  6 

Owen  Roblin 

Abraham  Bogert .... 

John  Sticney 

Benjamin   Clapp.... 

John  Embre 

Cornelious  Vanhorn . 


3 

2 

3 

5 

5 

4 

3 

6 

6 

2 

2 

3 

2 

'J 

3 

813 

5    8 

ll  2 

3    6 

3'  9 

610 

210 

2    5 


Names. 


Thomas  I.  Dorland  .  . 

William  Griffis 

Henry  Davice 

Samuel  Dorland 

Joseph  Carnahan  .... 

Noxon  Harris 

Widow  Duglas 

William  Benson  Sole. 

Willet  Casey 

Philip  Dorland 

Joseph  Pope 

Jeremiah  Allison  .... 

Philip   t-  lagler 

John  Trumpour 

Jonathan  Allen 

William  Ratan 

Henry  Hover 

Isaa  Cole 

Peter  Ratan,  Sen'r.  .  . 

Caleb  Woodward 

Peter  Ratan,  2nd 

John  Thomson 

James  Canniff 

John  Dorlond  . 

Garret  Benson 

William  Casey 

Jacob  Post 

John  Snyder  ......... 

Barnard  Cole 

Archabald  Campbell.  . 

Burger  Huyke 

William  Clark 

Samuel  Millor 

William  Grant 

Nicholas  Peterson  .  .  . 
Benjamin  Bradly  . . .  . 
Reuben  Bedell,  Esq,  . 

John  Roblin 

Samuel  Hays 

Gilbert  Bogert 

Thomas  Priestman .  .  . 

I  George  Rutter 

Paul  Trumpour,  Esq. 
William  Moore 


~i  :>:   c^ 


1 

^i 
21 

3' 

6' 

2 
3 
8 
3 
2 
1 
2 
1 
3 
3 
4 
1 
4 

6 
3 
5 
1 
4 
3 
1 
10 
5 
2 

1 
1 

2 
3 
4 


2  4 
2  7 
410 
2  4 
1 
5 
4 
3 


12 
6 
6 
9 
5 
5 
6 

11 
8 
4 
2 
4 
5 
7 
9 
7 
1 

11 
4 
9 
6 
9 
1 
6 
5 
2 

16 
7 
5 
7 
4 
2 
3 
7 
9 
5 


316  males,  270  females  ;  total,  592. 


41 


61  Victoi'ia. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown  taken  March  1810 


Names. 


John  Williams 

Philip  Fl  igler 

Stephen  Niles 

George  Bloom 

David  Brown 

Abraham  Maybee.  .  . 
Conrad  V.  Dusen  ... 

Jacob  Hoover 

Daniel  Cole 

Henry  Hoover    

Joseph  Ellison    ..... 

William  Rattan 

David  McWhister  .  .  . 

Jonathan  Allen 

Nicholas  Hagermau  . 
Thomas  Dorland.  .  .  . 

Philip  D(.rland 

Willet  Casey 

Caleb  Woodard 

John  Van  Cott 

John  B.  Sales      

Caroline  Douglass.  .  . 

John  Goslin 

NoX'  )n  Harris 

Dan'l  O  lit  water,  Jun 
Jose[)h  Rattan  .... 
Samuel  Dorland  .... 

Solomon  Huft" 

Henry  Van  Dusen  .  . 

Henry  Davis 

Philip  Dorland,  Jun. 

Samuel  C^sey 

Joel  Haight 

Daniel  Haight     

William  Casey    

EJias  Clark 

Christopher  German . 
Abraham  Bogert .... 

Barnard  Cole 

A'bert  Benson 

Arch'd  Campbell  .  . . 
Sarah  Huyck 


c 

o 

93 

5 

5 

'3 

1 

1 

2 

5 

9 

2 

3 

o 

1 

1 

i 

3 

•> 

1 

1 

4 

2    1 

6 

2 

11 

2    1 

] 

4 

1'  2 

5 

3 

11 

1 

1 

1 

3 

2 

3 

1 

6 

1 

2 

5 

9 

2 

1 

1 

n 

3 

4 

1 

0 

2 

3 

3 

9 

3 

3 

2 

9 

3 

5 

2 

1 

11 

3 

1 

2 

6 

2 

3 

1 

1 

7 

4 

2 

1 

3 

10 

2 

2 

5 

9 

2 

2 

5 

1 

3 

3 

S 

2 

4 

1 

1 

4 

2 

2 

6 

1 

2 

5 

1 

1 

4 

1 

r> 

1 

1 

3 

3 

1 

10 

2 

3 

4 

2 

4 

1 

7 

3 

1 

8 

4 

4 

13 

3 

4 

9 

3 

3 

10 

7 

1 

10 

2 

3 

7 

3 

3 

2 

9 

2 

4 

2 

9 

2 

1 

1 

5 

Names. 


Elias  Cornell 

William  Clark 

Cornelius  Valow 

Dorland  L  ^sey   

Hezekiah  Clark 

Jacob  Post 

John  Van  Skiver  .  . .  , 

Larrj'  Lewis   

John  Huyck 

I'eter  V.  Skiver 

Nicholas  Peterson .  .  .  . 

Moses  Carnaham 

Robert  Peling 

Benj'n.  Loop 

Peter  Rat  an 

Edw'd.  Bfrker   

Cornelius  Van  Home. 

Paul  Trumpour 

John  Trumpour 

George  Rutter    

John  Rattan  

Titos.  Priestman 

Benj'n    CUpp 

Owen  Roblin 

John  Havlin 

Isaac  Brown   , 

John  Roblin 

Wm.   Moore 

James  Cannilf 

Johu  Dorland , 

Thomas  Dorland,  2nd 

James  Noxon 

Reuben  Beedle 

Paul  Huff   

John  Embre 

Benj'n.  Bradley 

Dan'l.  V.  Cleef 

Peter  Moii  Creef .... 

Alex'r.  Fisher 

Betteast    

John  Stickney    


.1  6 

1  5 
2!  7 

2  5 
5|14 
1    4 


316 

I  4 

.  ,1  5 

II  5 

1  3 
110 
L'  8 
310 
2]  4 
311 
11  3 

4 

7 

410 

2  4 
2 
4 
1 
6 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 


148  men,  123  women,  146  males,  145  females  ;  total,  572. 


42 


-/* 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown  taken  the  4th  March,  1811. 


Names. 


John  Williams   

Philip  Flagler 

Stephen  Niles 

George  Blume 

David  Brown 

Abr'm.  Maybee 

Conrad  Van  Dusen.  .  . 

Jacob  Hoover 

Daniel  Cole 

Henry  Hoover    

Joseph  Ellison   

William  Rattan 

David  McWhister  .  .  .  . 

Jonathan  Allen  ...... 

Nicholas  Hagerman  .  . 

Thos.  Dorland    

Philip  Dorland 

Willet  Casey 

John  Van  Cott 

John  B.  Soles 

Orran  Ranny 

John  Goslin 

Noxon  Harris 

Daniel  Outwater,  .Jun 

Joseph  Rattan    

Samuel  Dorland 

Solomon  HufF  . , 

Henry  Davis 

Philip  Dorland,  Jun .  . 

Samuel  Casey 

Joel  Haight 

Daniel  Haight    

William  Casy 

Eliaa  Clark 

Christopher  German .  . 
Abraham  Bogert    .... 

Barnard  Cole 

Albert  Benson    

Arch'd.  Campbel 

Burger  Huyck,  Sen  . . 

Burger  Huyck 

Elias  Cornel    

William  Clark 

Cornelius  Verlow  .... 
Dorland  Losey   


a 

Oi 

S 

o 

09 

S 

S 

o 
H 

1 

2 

5 

9 

3 

5 

1 

1 

3 

1 

1 

3 

1 

5 

3 

11 

1 

1 

4 

2 

6 

2 

11 

] 

1 

3 

5 

7 

2 

3 

4 

10 

1 

1 

..is 

1 

5 

1    9 

1 

4 

2    9 

2 

4 

l'  9 

4 

2 

213 

2 

1 

ll  0 

2 

1 

2'  6 

3 

1 

2 

8 

2 

4 

2 

1 

1 

6 

2 

3 

8 

2 

1 

5 

'l 

1 

6 

4 

2 

8 

1 

2 

o 

2 

1 

5 

2 

4 

3 

1 

10 

3 

1 

6 

2 

4 

4 

1 

7 

5 

1 

9 

4 

3 

13 

3 

4 

10 

3 

3 

10 

6 

1 

9 

2 

2 

6 

4 

1 

9 

3 

4 

10 

3 

4 

10 

1 

2 

6 

3 

8 

1 

1 

5 

2 

3 

7 

2 

2 

6 

Names. 


Hezek'b.  Clark  ... 
Daniel  Outwater.  . , 
John  Van  Skiver  .  . 

Larry  Lewis    

•John  Huyck    

Peter  Van  Skiver.  , 
Nicholas  Peterson.  . 
Moses  Carnahan  .  . , 
Benj'n.  Loop  ...... 

Peter  Rattan 

Edw'd.  Barker 

Corn's.  V.  Horn  .  . , 
Paul  Trumpour .  .  . , 
John  Trumpour .  .  .  , 

Geo.  Rutter 

Thomas  Priestman  . 

Geo.  Robinson 

Benj.  Clapp 

Owen  Roblin 

Isaac  Brown   

John  Roblin 

Wm.  Moore 

James  Canniff 

John  Dorland 

Thomas  I.  Dorland. 

James  Noxon 

Reuben  Beedle  . . . . 

Paul  Huflf 

John  Embre 

Dan'l.  V.  Cleef  .  . . . 
Peter  Moncreef  .  .  .  . 

Alex'r.  Fisher 

Gilbert  Bogert 

Alex'r.  Cameron  . . . 

Wm.  Brown 

Alex'r.  Cole    

Sam'l.  Henderson.. 

Ebenz'r.  Foot 

Otis  Abbot 

John  Moore    

Robt.  Bush 

Joseph  Peek 

John  V.  Ornam .  .  . . 
John  Stickney 


s 

ID 

c 
S 

03 

Is 

3 

2 

5 

1 

1 

2 

1 

2 

3 

2 

1 

1 

1 

3 

1 

1 

1 

5 

3 

3 

2 

1 

1 

li  1 

3 

2 

1 

4 

2 

2 

2 

2 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 

1 

2 

3 

3 

] 

2 

1 

1 

1 

2 

2 

3 

2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

2 

1 

3 

3 

1 

2 

2 

5 

3 

2 

2 

1 

1 

1 

3 

1 

4 

1 

i 

2 

2 

1 

3 

1 

1 

1 

1 

2 

2 

1 

2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

2 

1 

1 

1 

1 

4 

f5      o3 


313 

1|  5 
1;  7 
..  3 
,.|  5 
1  4 
314 
1    5 

1  6 
,.j  3 

.1  8 

2  7 

2  8 

3  6 
311 

4 
3 
5 
612 
1    5 

4  8 

1  5 

5  9 
.1  7 

2  6 
210 
ll  7 

•  6 

•  I  3 
410 

.1  2 
817 

.1  3 

2  7 

3  8 


149  men,  141  women,  176  males,  145  females  ;  total,  611. 


43 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  82). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adulphustown  taken  4th  March,  1812. 


Name. 


John   Williams 

Philip  Flac;ler 

Stephen  Niles    

David  Brown 

Abrm.  Maybe 

Conrad  Van  Dusen  .  .  . 

Daniel  Cole    

Henry  Hoover 

Jos.  Ellison    

Wm.  Rattan 

David  McWhister   

Jonathan  Allen 

Nicholas  Hagerman .  .  . 

Thos.   Dorland 

Philip  Dorland 

Willet  Casey 

Abbot     

John  Van  Cott 

John  B.  Soles    

Orran  Ranny 

Noxon  Harris    

Daniel  Outwater,  Jun. 

Joseph  Rattan 

Saml  Dorland    

Solomon  Huff 

Henry  Davis 

Philip  Dorland,  Jun .  .  , 

Saml  Casey 

Joel  Haight    

Daniel  Haight    

William  Casey 

Elias  Clark 

Christopher  German.  .  . 

Abrm  Bogert 

Barnard  Cole  ...,...., 

Albert  Benson   

Archabald  Campbel    . , 

Sarah  Huyck 

Elias  Cornell , 

Wm.  Clark 

Cornelius  Verio  w .... 


1 

2 
1 
2 
2 
1 
3 
1 
1 
1 
3 
2 
4 
2 
1 
2 
2 
2 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
3 
4 
1 
1 
1 
2 
2 
2 
3 
2 
1 
3 
1 
2 
2 
2 
1 


9 

o 

2    4 

311 

4 

10 

9 

9 

3 

7 

10 

10 

12 

6 


Name. 


9 
3;13 


1 

7 

1 

11= 

1 

2 

2 

6i 

2 

2 

1 

8 

1 

3 

4 

9 

2 

1 

2 

7 

2 

1 

1 

6 

2 

1 

1 

6 

1 

3 

2 

7i 
1 

Dorland  Losey 

Hezek'h  Clark 

Danl  Outwater     . . .  . 

Jno.  Van  Skiver   .  .  . 

John  Huyck 

Peter  Van  Skiver .  .  . 

Nicholas  Peterson .  . . 

Moses  Carnahan    .  .  . 

Peter  Rattan 

Ed  wd  Barker 

Cornelius  Van  Horn . 

Paul  Trumpour 

John  Trumpour 

Jos.  Trumpour 

i  Geo.   Rutter 

;  Benj.  Clapp    

Owen  Roblin 

Isaac  Brown 

Jno.  Roblin    

Wm.  Moore    

Jas.  Canniff   

Jno.  Dprlance    

Thos.  I.  Dorland  .  .  . 

Jas.   Noxon    

Reuben  Beedle 

Paul  Huff 

John  Embree 

Danl  Van  Cleef .  . . .  , 

Peter  Mon  Creef  .  . 

Alexr.  Fisher 

Peter  Wood    

Danl.  Beedle 

Peter  Dorland 

Peck 

Saml  Henderson  .  . 

John  Toby 

Gilbert  Bogart   .... 

Pet-r  Moore 

Enoch  Tsman 

John  Stickney  .  .  .  . 


1 

3 

1 

2 

1 

1 

3 

1 

1 

2|  2 

31  1 

2 


7 

16 

5 

8 

5 

4 

14 

5 

3 

10 

7 

5 

3   8 

l!  6 

411 

4 


11 
6 

8 


9 

7 
7 

10 

7 

6 

3 

410 

,.|  2 

817 

li  5 

,.    2 

..    2 

1    4 


1  4 

1  3 

.  3 

3  7 

4'  9 

0  7 


146  men,  133  women,  160  males,  137  females  ;  total,  575. 


44 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown  taken  in  third  month  1813. 


Name. 

3 
1 

1 
1 
4 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 

a 
S 

3 
1 
1 
1 
2 
2 
1 
1 

3 
1 
1 

2 
1 
4 
2 
1 
1 
2 
2 

i 

2 
3 
1 
1 
2 
1 
2 
1 
3 
1 
2 
1 
3 

2 
2 
1 

'^ 

5 
5 

1 
3 
2 
1 
2 
1 

2 
1 
1 
1 
3 
1 

2 
5 
2 

5 
2 
7 
1 
4 
3 
1 
4 
4 
4 
2 
1 
1 
1 

i 

1 

3 

s 

1 
1 

2 
2 
1 

1 
3 

'4 

1 
4 

1 

2 

2 

3 
2 
1 

4 
5 

1 
1 

1 

2 
2 
2 
3 
1 
1 

.3 

2 
2 



'a 
0 
H 

12 

8 
5 

7 
9 

5| 
5 
6 
1 
4 
7 
5 

10 
4 

15 
7 
2 
7 

10 
9 
2 

13 

10 

11 
3 
7 
6 
4 
8 
8 

11 
6 
7 
4 
6 
1 
7 
7 
7 

Name. 

c 

(U     0 

CO 

(11 

s 

7 

Daniel  Haight    

Joel  Haight    

1 
1 

1 
1 

1 
2 
3 
1 
1 
3 
1 
1 
2 
3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
3 
3 
2 
2 
3 
2 
1 
1 
3 
1 
1 
1 
2 
2 
2 
1 
1 
2 

1 

1 
2 
2 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
3 
1 
1 
1 
4 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
4 
1 
1 
4 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
3 
3 
1 
3 
1 
2 
1 
3 

5    1 
0 

1  1 
"4  '3 

ll  3 
3    4 
9    1 

2  '.'. 

3  6 

'.'.  "3 
3    1 

..    1 
2(  3 
3    3 

2  3 
1    1 

3  1 

8 

Joel  Haight    ... 

Stephen  Niles 

4 

Samuel  Casey 

Thomas  Dorland    

John  Sparrow      

5 

Philip  Borland,  Jun 

3 

Henry  Davice 

Daniel  Uutwater    

•lohn  Trumpour 

q 

Solomon  HufF 

7 

Samuel  Dorland    

Christopher  Germon 

Abraham  Boo-art 

12 

Joseph  Ruttan 

!"> 

Samuel  Henderson   

Gilbert  Bogart 

9, 

Anna  Flagler 

Albert  Benson 

8 

Hannah  Williams 

Archabald  Campbell 

Sarah  Huyck 

11 

Peter  Von  Skiver 

2 
3 
1 
6 
2 
1 
1 
1 
4 
2 
3 
1 
1 

1 

?, 

Alexander  Fisher 

Burger  Huyck    

6 

William  Moore 

Elias  Cornwall 

T1 

Nicholas  Peterson 

James  Clark   

8 

Paul  Huflf 

Dorland  Losee      

7 

Peter  Moncrief 

Cornelious  Valaeu 

Barnet  Cole      .... 

8 

Peter  Moore 

7 

James  Noxon 

Joseph  Cutwater 

.John  Hyke 

(i 

Henry  Davice 

6 

Daniel  Cole    

John  Vanskiver 

3 

3 
1 

2 

1 

8 

David  Brown   

William  Casey    

T-? 

Henry  Hover 

Peter  Ruttan 

6 

Conrade  \  andozen    

Edward  Barker 

3   2 

2  3 

..1  1 

3  5 

3  4 

4  4 

1  6 
3    3 

2  .. 
5.. 
1    1 
li  1 

3  4 
..'  1 
..i  1 

2 

8 

Joseph  Allison 

George  Rutter 

n 

William  Ruttan 

Benjamin  Clapp    

Owen  Roblin 

5 

Margerit  Brown    

11 

Abraham  Maybee 

Jonathan  Allen 

2 
1 
1 

I 

1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 

Enoch  Esmond 

q 

Mary  Roblin 

10 

David  McWhister    .  . 

James  Cannif     

11 

Nicholas  Hagerman 

Noxon  Harris 

Thomas  I.   Dorland 

John  Dorland 

8 
6 

Orrent  Reaney 

John  Stickney   

q 

Peter  Formiliar 

Joseph  Trumpour 

Cornelious  VanHorn    .... 

Daniel  Van  Clief 

Reuben  Bedell 

5 

Peter  Vancott    

Cornelious  Vancott 

\Vil!et  Casey 

Philip  Dorland 

7 

10 
1 

Daniel  Bedell 

3 

Philip  Dorland,  Jun 

Samuel  Abbot 

7 

124  men,  124  women,  165  males,  140  females  ;  total,  551. 


45 


Gl  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual   Return   of  the  Inhabitants   of   Adolphus   Town,    taken  in    March    1814, 

3rd  month. 


Kames. 


Daniel  Cole 

David  Brown 

Henry  Hover 

Ci>nrad  Van  Dozen   . 

William  Griffis 

Joseph  Allison 

William  Ruttan 

Jacob  Hover  ....... 

Abraham  Maybee  .  .  . 

Enos  McMuUen 

Jon- than  Allen.  . ,  . 
Nicholas  Hagerman  . 

Noxen  Harris     

Orren  Reaney    

Peter  Vermilion  .  .  . 
Jessee  Uptogrove  .  . . 
Daniel  Outwater,  Jr. 
Rachel  Henderson.  . 
Margerit  Brown.    .  .  . 

Joseph  Ruttan 

Peter  Ruttan 

Samuel  Dnrland.  .  .  . 

Solomon  Hufl'.    

Peter  Huff 

Henry  Davice 

Zenas  Dafoe   . 

Thomas  Dorland    .  .  . 

Peter  Dorland    

Daniel  Haight    

Samuel  Casey 

Ursley  McWhister    . 

Charles  Stuart 

Joel  Haight    

Peter  Moore 

Alexarider  Fisher  . . . 
Nicholas  Peterson.  .  . 
Peter  Moncrief  .  .  .  .  , 

Daniel  Vancleaf 

Paul  Huff 

Reuben  Bedell 

Daniel  Bedell 


^;  ^  §  fe  H 


110 
411 

6  10 
212 
1    6 

..I  3 


Names. 


1  7 

2  4 
..I  3 
1^  6 
211 

2  9 
1   5 

3  7 
..I  3 
..I  2 

3  9 
. .  3 
1  5 
7 
1 
5 
7 
3 
9 
2 
4 
5 

11 
6 
9 
9 

10 
7 

I3i 

15 
2 
7 
4 
3 
3 


James  Noxon 

Peter  Vanskiver    . . .  . 
Hannah  Williams  .  .  .  . 

Anna  Flagler 

Stephen  Niles    

Widow  Blume    

John  Trumpour   

Philip  Dorland 

Willet  Casey 

Dorland  Losee   

Comelidus  Valoe  .... 

James  Clark    

Elias  Cornwall   , 

John  Corn«  all   

Sarah  H  uyke 

Burger  Huyke   

John  Huyke 

Archabald  Campbell .  . 

Albert  Benson   

AbrHham  Bogert    .  .  .  . 

Gilbert  Bogart 

Barnet  Cole    

Christopher  Germon. 
William  Germond.  .  .  . 
Daniel  Outwater,  Sen 

William  Casey    

John  Ruttan 

John  Vanskiver 

Edward  Barker 

Comelious  Vanhorn.  . 

George  Rutter    

Benjamin  Clapp 

John  Stickney    

Owen  Roblin 

James  Can  n  iff    

Jonas  Canniff 

Joseph  Trumpour.  . .  . 

Mary  Roblin 

William  Moore 

John  Dorland 

Thomas  I.  Dorland   .  . 


Sb=§fe 


1 
1 
1 

2 

3; 

3 

6- 


11 
5 
& 
3 

6 

2 
6 
6 


7 
» 
4 
111 
3 

5 

3'  li  8 

3  5ia 

2'.. I  6 
7  ..11 
2 


7 

12 
4 
5 
14 
4 
8 
7 
7 

12 

4 

8 

10 

10 

3 

10 

9 

4 

& 


46 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual   Return   of   the    Inhabitants   of   the    Township   of   Atlolphustown,    taken 

27th  March,  1816. 


Names. 


Reuben  Beedel 

Paul  Hufr    .  .      

Mary  Moor,  "Widow  . 
Daniel  Van  Clief 
Peter  Mon  Crief    .  .  . 
Alexr   Fisher,  Esq    . 
Nicholas  Peterson .  .  . 

Thomas  Lewis    

Cornelius  Valeau  .  .  . 

James  Clark   

Elias  Cornell 

Burger  Huyck   .  .    .  . 
Archibald  Campbe'l. 

Albert  Benson   

Barnet  Cole    

Abrm.  Bogert    

Gilbert  Bogert 

Christopher  Germin. 

Willm.  Casey 

Daniel  Out  water    .  .  . 

Elias  Clark 

Willm.  Germin 

John  Huyck 

Mary  Roblin,  Widw. 

John  Dorian  d    

Thomas  Dorland    .  .  . 
Peter  Van  Skiver .  . . 

Danial  Beedel    

James  Canniff    

Willm    Mooi  e    

Owen  Roblin 

Benjamin  Clapp.    .  .  . 

John  Emmory    

Lawrence  Lewis.  ... 
Samuel  Henderson    . 

George  Rutter 

Joseph  Trumpo   .... 


^ 


a 

M 

(b 

X 

"^ 

^ 

0 

■3 

c 

1 

2 

1 

i 

] 

3 

2 

2 

2 

2 

3 

i'l 

1 

2 
1 
3 
1 
3 
3 
1 
1 
2 
4 
2 
3 
2 

1 
2 
] 
3 

4.!   o 

i'.: 

2,  3 
1    2 


II  3 
.1  4 
5 
7 
2 
II 
IC 
6 


..I  o 
211 

2  8 
4  12 

..!  0 

3  7 
112 

..\  2 
311 
211 
..I  5 
1  7 
1  5 
1  8 
311 
6 


3   5 

1  .. 

2,   1 


Nai 


John  Trumpo     

Cornelius  Van  Horn 

Edward  Barker 

Daniel  Height    

Joel  Height 

Samuel  Casey 

Peter  Dorland    

Henry  Davis 

Solomon  Huff.    

J'  seph  Ruttan 

David  Scoot   

Gf  orge  Douglass 

Thomas  Porland    

Thomas  Phillips    

Arent  Renny 

Thomas  C<  ok 

Nicholas  Hagerman,  Esq. 

Noxon  Harris 

Rachel  Henderson    

Ahm.  Maby    

John  Sterret 

Ossee  McWherter 

Jonathan  Allen 

John  Polmatier 

Willm.  Ruttan 

Richd.  Davern 

Henry  Hover 

David  Brown 

Daniel  Cole 

Henry  Cole 

Irani  Murry    

Jacob  Hovf  r 

Moses  Carnahan    

John  Ruttan 

Thomas  Flagler 

Hannah   Williams 


10 
10 

6 

r> 

9 
4 

8 
8 
2 
5 
7 
8 
6 
10 
7 


3 

6 
10 

..  3 
..  7 
..  5 
511 
411 
7 
4 
5 
6 
5 
7 
5 
4 


1:33  men,  124  women,  129  ixiales,  110  females  ;  total,  496. 


47 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Pa}>ers  (No.  32) 


A.  189s 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustowu,  taken  between  the  28th  March 

and  4th  April,  1820. 


Families. 


Capt.  Thos.  Borland 2 

Peter  Dorland    3 

Michal  Rutter 

Geo.  Douglas 

Wilh  t  Casey     3 

Stephen  Gillet   1 

Laz.  Gilbert   2 

Dan'l  Gilbert 1 

Gibbs  Ranny 1 

M  rs.  Ranny    1 

Noxen  Harris 2 

Ab'm  Mabey 3 

Frenchman 1 

John  Thompson 1 

Peter  B.  Conger 1 

Mrs.  Hagerman 2 

Mrs.  McWister 

Jonothan  Alltn 5 

James  Watson   1 

James  Bradshaw    1 

John  Egbert 1 

William  Ruttan 3 

Henry  Hover 2 

Daniel  Cole 3 

Caleb  Briggs 1 

David  Brown 3 

Joseph  Ellison   '  2 

Rich'd  Daverne 2 

—  Hoskins 1 

Sam'l  Casey    2 

Thomas  Cook i  1 

John  Nixon    1 

Widow  Pease 2 

John  Trumpour 2 

Moses  Carnahan    3, 

Sen3ca  Ryder l| 

Robert  Patters  -n 1 

Capt.  Peter  Ruttan 1 

Joseph  Ruttan 1 

Sam'l  Dorland 1 

Sol'n  Huff j  2 

Henry  Davis i  6 

Wi  I  let  Potter 1 

Joel  Haight    2 

Dan'l  Haight 4 


7 

9 

lOJ 

% 

510 
5 
4 
4 
1 


Families. 


Corn's  Jones 1 

Gilbert  Clapp 2 

Will'm  Moore 1 

W.  M.  Roblin    1 

Benj.  Clapp    

Paul  Clapp 

Arch'd  Campbell   .  . 

Edw'd  Huyke 

Burger  Huyke 

John  Huyke 

Mrs.  Sarah  Huyke 

Elias  Cornell 

James  Clarke 

Corn's  Vulleau 

Thomas  Lewis  .... 
Albert  Benson  .... 
Matthew  Benson  .  . . 

Barnard  Co!e 

Albert  Bogert 

Ab'm  Bogert 

Benana  Clarke  .... 

Elias  Clark 

Christopher  German 
William  Casey  .... 
Joseph  Cutwater  .  . 
John  Dorland  .... 
Joseph  Pangran  .  .  . 
David  Peterson .... 

Alex'r  Fisher 

Peter  Moncrief  .... 

James  Cobert 

John  Van  Clief .  .  .  . 

Eliz.  Huff 

Irish  Family 

Andrew  Rattan j  2 

James  Can  ffe I  1 

Owen  Roblin 

Edw'd  Barker .j  3 

George  Rutten 3 

Larry  Lewis  .... 
Joseph  Trumpour 
Corn's  Vanhorn  . 
Joel  Thompson  .  . 
4  Schoolmasters  . 


2,  7 

2|  6 
l!  4 
14 

•i  2 
l'  5 
3  10 


2    11 


111 

..|5 
310 

l|  3 


311 

2 
3 

7 
4 
3 
8 
7 
7 
7 
9 

2  7 
31o 
1    5 

3  9 
,.'  4 


48 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Adolphustown  for  the  year  1822,  taken  in 

March. 


Names. 

3 

3 

CD 

4) 

g 
3 

3 

Names. 

S 

r2 
1 

CO 

g 
3 

Is 
"0 

Peter  V.  Borland 

Thomas  Borland    

3 

2 
1 
2 

7 
4 
2 
2 

2 

2 
4 
2 
2 
2 
1 
9, 

2 
1 
1 
1 
4 
2 
1 
1 
2 
2 
4 
1 
2 
1 
2 
1 

1 

'3 

5 

4 

1 
3 
2 

"1 
4 
3 

4 

"4 
2 

1 

i 

1 
3 

1 

1 

2 
1 

i 
2 

2 
4 
4 
1 
1 
3 

'2 

1 

1 

i 

'3 
2 
2 

9 

7 
5 

6 

8 

11 

7 
9 
6, 

111 

'^; 

5 
11 

6' 

9j 

i 

7 
6 
3 
2 
4 
4 
2 
8 

11 
7 
6 

11 
3 
7 
5 
2 
8 

10 
3 
5 
2 
9 
8 
3 
3 

11' 

1 

Arch'd.  Campbell 

Edward  Hyke    

2 
1 
2 
1 
2 
3 
2 
1 
2 
1 
1 
9 

3 

2 
1 
2 
3 
2 
1 

'2 

1 

'2 
1 
2 
3 
1 
2 
2 
3 
1 
1 

i 

3 
1 
3 
3 

1 
4 

4 

10 
4 

Michel  Rutter    

Burgor  Hyke 

8 

George  Douglass    

John  Hyke 

8 

Willet  Casey 

Thomas  Williams 

Eli^s  Cornell 

Corn's.  Valleau 

8 
9 

Laz.  Gilbert      

James  Clark   

3 

Gibbs  Rannev    

Thomas  Lewis    

8 

Orrine  Ranney 

Albert  Benson 

5 

Noxon  Harris 

Mathew  Benson 

9 

Edward  Robbins   

Barnard  Cole 

3    '7 

Thomas  Howard    

Albert  Bogart 

i 

4 

Jonathen  Allen 

Benona  Clark 

1  3 

2  2 

3  1 

4  4 

1  2 

2  2 
1    1 

3  3 
1    1 

7 

Jas.  ^^'^alton    

Elias  Clark 

7 

Jas.  Bradshaw 

Christopher  German 

Will'm.  Casey    

7 

Abr'm.  Maybee 

11 

John  Elgberte 

3!  1 

Jos.   Outwater 

li  6 

Jas.  McGumon 

1 
2 

1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
2 
3 

1 

2 
] 
1 
1 
2 
1 
2 
3 

Thomas  I.  i  ^orland 

David  Peterson 

310 

William  Rattan 

11  4 

Abr'm.  Rattan 

Alx.  Fisher , 

Peter  Moncreiff 

310 

Joseph  B.  Allison 

Jos.  Allison,  Jun 

'2 

i 

3 
3 
3 

'2 
1 
2 

1 
5 
1 

1 
5 

? 

James  Cobwin 

2 

1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
3 

1 
1 

6 

Rich'd.  Daverne 

John  Van  Cleif 

9 

Daniel  Daverne 

Daniel  Van  Cleif 

Eliz.  Huff 

2    1 

2  .. 

1|  1 
1    1 

4 

Henry  Hoover 

4 

David  Brown 

.  Conoly 

3 

Jacob  Hughnail 

21  2 
3|  1 
3    3 

.  Powers 

3 

Daniel  Cole    

James  Caniffe 

2 
3 
1 

2 
1 
2 
2 
2 

4 
3 
1 
1 

1 

1 
3 

4 
2 

fi 

Moses  Carnahan    

3  9. 

Owen  Roblin 

7 

Peter  Vanskwer 

1 
2 
1 

1 
1 
I 
1 
2 
2 
1 
2 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 
1 

3 

2 

"3 
3 

i 

'3 

i 
1 

6 

1 

1 
1 
1 
1 

3 

1 

'2 
1 

'9, 

Widow  Barker 

3 

Jno.  Thompson 

George  Rutter   

3 

4 

q 

Jno.  Nixon    

Larry  Lewis    

2 
5 
2 

1 
3 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
3 
2 
4 

1 
3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
1 

8 

Widow  Williams   

Jos.  Trumpour 

15 

Samuel  Casey     

2 

2 
1 
2 
1 
2 
6 
1 
1 

Joel  Thompson 

q 

Joj.  Rattan    

Peter  B.  Conger    

Gilbert  Clapp 

3 

John  Clegg 

7 

Solomon  Huff 

Benj.  Clapp    

3 

Pari  Huff 

Will.  Roblin 

5 

Samuel  Dorland 

Will.  Moore  

4 

Henry  Davis 

Will.  Mullett 

1^ 

Isaac  Mintz    

Thomas  Winner 

Abr'm.  Bogert 

John  Trumpour 

3 

Willet  Hotter 

9 

10 

Daniel  Hai^'lit          .        ... 

4    1 

i 

2   2 

School  Masters 

4 

4  B.I. 


174  men,  137  women,  142  males,  118  females  ;  total,  571. 
6  49 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Annual  Beturn, 

taken  May  1817. 

Men. 

Women. 

Under   16. 

Boys. 

Girls. 

147 

132 

141 

120 

Annual  Return,  taken  April  1818. 


Women. 

Under  16. 

Bojs. 

Girls. 

110 

107 

117 

105 

Total. 


439 


Annual  Return  of  the  Inhabitants  of  the  township  of  Adolphustown,  taken  March, 

1819. 


Males 

Females 
over  21. 

Male   Children. 

Female   Children. 

Total. 

over  21. 

16-21. 

Under  16. 

16-21. 

Under  16. 

139 

123 

31 

141 

25 

132 

591 

Annual  Return  for  the  year  1821.     Taken  in  March. 


Heads  of  Families. 

Children. 

Servants. 

Total. 

Men. 

VVomen. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

97 

96 

152 

151 

42 

10 

552 

Annual  Return  for  year  1823. 


Women. 

Under  16  yr. 

Men. 

Males. 

Fem'ls. 

Servt's. 

Total. 

185 

157 

126 

126 

30 

624 

50 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


REGISTER  OF  LIVE  STOCK. 

The  following  i.s  taken  from  the  record  book  of  Adolphustown,  in 
which  the  minutes  and  population  statistics  report  appear,  and  all 
of  which  were  kept  by  the  Town  Clerk : 

Record  of  Marks  for  the  inhabitants  of  Adolphustown  Dec  16th 
1793. 

Record  of  Marks. 

Ruben  Bedell — A  crop  off  the  left  ear ;  a  halfpenny  above  and 
below  the  right  ear.     1. 

John  Day — A  crop  off  the  left  ear.     2. 

May  1st,  1794.  John  Roblin — A  halfpenny  on  the  underside  of 
the  right  ear,  and  half  crop  off  the  under  side  of  left  ear.     17. 

George  Rutter — A  hole  in  the  right  ear.     11. 

Garret  Benson — A  crop  off  the  right  ear,  and  a  slit  in  the  same.    3. 

Jno.  Canniff— Half  crop  off  the  upper  side  of  the  left  ear,  half- 
penny on  the  under  side  of  the  right  ear.     Left  the  'place. 

March  4th,  1795.  Peter  Vanalstine— A  slit  in  the  end  of  the  left 
ear,  and  a  slit  in  the  under  side  of  both  ears.     4. 

Alexander  Fisher — A  half  penny  under  the  right  ear.  Robert 
McAfee. 

Cornelius  Vanhorn — A  swallow-fork  in  the  left  ear,  and  a  half 
penny  above  the  right  ear.     5. 

Michael  Slote — A  half  penny  under  the  left  ear.  Taken  up  by 
S.  Dorland.     6. 

David  Brown — A  swallow-fork  in  the  left  ear,  and  halfpenny 
under  both  ears. 

Alex.  Campbell — Two  slits  under  the  right  ear,  and  one  under  the 
left.     8. 

Jno.  German — A  crop  off  the  left,  and  a  hole  in  the  right  ear.     7. 

Arch'd.  Campbell — A  slit  in  the  end  of  the  right  ear. 

Jno.  Huyck — A  slit  in  the  end  of  the  left  ear. 

Coonrad  Vandusen — A  hole  in  both  ears.  Taken  by  Mrs.  Banton.  9. 

David  Barker — A  swallow-fork  in  the  right  ear. 

Wm.  Casey — A  half  crop  off  the  upper  side  of  the  right  ear. 

Barent  Lewis — A  half  crop  off  the  upper  side  of  the  left  ear. 

Christopher  German — Half  crop  off  the  under  side  of  the  left  ear. 

6th  Month,  1st,  1799.  James  Noxon — Swallow-fork  in  the  left 
ear.     11. 

Peter  Brown — Swallows-fork  in  both  ears.     12. 

Daniel  Height — A  crop  off  the  left  ear,  slit  in  the  same,  3  mo. 
1800 — 1806,  4  month,  only  a  crop  in  the  left  ear.  (Taken  up  by  I. 
Shockincy  (in  pencil). 

51 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Paul  Trumpour — A  crop  off  the  right  ear  with  a  slit  on  each  side 
of  the  same.     13. 

Joel  Haight — A  hole  in  the  left  ear,  halfpenny  in  the  under  side 
of  the  right  ear. 

Peter  Van  Cott — A  hole  in  each  ear,  small  crop  off"  the  end  of  the 
right  ear.     4  Mo.,  1807.     14. 

4  Mo.,  1807.  Henry  Davis — A  crop  off  the  right  ear,  and  a  half 
penny  of  the  under  side  of  the  left. 

Aug.  24th,  1808.  Samuel  Borland — Halfpenny  on  the  underside 
of  the  left  ear. 

Jas.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Sol.  Huff" — A  crop  off  the  left  ear,  a  slit  in  the  end  of  the  right 
ear.     Taken  B.  H.  A.  &  S.  D.  Huff. 

Benj.  Clapp — Slit  in  the  right  ear,  and  a  slip  off  the  upper  side  of 
the  left. 

Jno.  Stickney — A  crop  off  the  right  ear,  and  a  halfpenny  in  the 
same.     16. 

Feb.  26th,  1816.  Thos.  I.  Dorland — A  crop  of  the  right  ear  and 
a  hole  in  the  same. 

Jan.  26th,  1817.     Taken  up  by  James  McAfee. 

Moses  Carnahan — A  slit  under  the  right  ear,  and  a  crop  off  the 
left,  May  13th,  1826.  But  this  alteration  applies  to  the  sheep  only, 
at  present.     M.  C. 

Samuel  Casey — A  crop  of  the  right  ear,  and  a  swallow-fork  in 
the  left.     Registered  Jany.  1818  (pencil), 

Willet  Casey — A  swallow-fork  in  both  ears. 

January  1st,  1820.  Noxon  Harris — A  square  crop  off  the  right 
ear,  and  a  slit  in  the  same. 

Orrine  Ranney — A  crop  and  slit  in  each  ear. 

Nicholas  Peterson — A  crop  off  the  right  ear,  and  a  slit  in  the  left. 

James  Canniff. — Halfpenny  under  each  ear. 

7th  Jan.,  1823.  Jas.  Watsox,  T.  C. 

James  Watson. — A  hole  in  the  left  ear. 

Jan.  7th,  1822.  J.  W.,  T.  C      Deceased. 

Lazarus  Gilbert's  mark. — A  crop  of  the  right  ear,  a  slit  in  the  left 
and  a  nick  under  the  same.      24th  May,  1824.      J.  Watson,  T.  C. 

William  Braughton's  mark  is  a  hole  in  each  ear. 

May  13th,  1826.  M,  Cn.,  T.  Ck. 

1827,  May  23rd.  Job  Deacon's  mark  is  a  swallowfork  in  the  left 
ear  and  a  halfpenny  in  the  upper  edge  of  the  right  ear. 

M.  Carnahan,  T.  C. 
June  21st.     John  Mogg's  mark  is,  a  crop  off  the  right  ear  and  a 
halfpenny  under  same  ear.  M.  C,  T.  C. 

52 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Noxon  Williams'  mark  is  two  slits  in  the  right  ear  and  one  in  the 
left.     June,  1827.  M.  C,  T.  C. 

Wm.  More  Roblin's  mark  is  a  slit  in  the  end  of  both  ears. 
Jan.  19th,  1820.  H.  Davis,  T.  C. 

Thomas  Casey's  mark  is  a  swallow  fork  in   both  ears  and  a  half 
penny  under  the  left  ear.     Jan.  21st,  1828.  H.  Davis,  T.  C. 

Robert  Hampton's  mark  is  a  crop  off  the  right   ear  a  halfpenny 
under  the  left  ear  and  a  hole  in  the  same. 

Feb.  21st,  1828.     Deceased.  Henry  Davis,  Jr.,  T.  C. 

Feb  21st,  1828.     Henry  Davis,  Jr.,  Mark  is   a  slit  in   the  end  of 
the  right  ear  and  a  halfpenny  from  under  the  left  ear. 

H.  Davis,  Jr.,  T.  C. 

May  30th,  1828.     Isaiah  Thompson's  Mark  is  a  crop  off  the  end 
of  the  right  ear. 

Jan.  5th,  1829.     Gideon  Dayton's  mark  is  a  slanting  crop  off"  the 
top  of  the  right  ear  and  a  halfpenny  from  under  the  left  ear. 

H.  Davis,  T.  C. 

Jan.  4th,  1830.     Joseph  Cutwater's  mark  is  a  crop  off  the  left  ear 
and  a  hole  in  the  same.     Taken  up  by  Paul  T.  Dorland. 

Deceased.  Henry  Davis,  Jr.,  T.  C. 

Jan.  4th,  1830.     Augustus  Short's  mark  is  a  crop  of  the  right  ear 
and  two  slits  in  the  end  of  the  same  ear.  H.  Davis,  T.  C. 

Jan.  4th,  1830.     James  Mc  Afee's  Mark  is  slit  under  the  right  ear 
and  a  crop  off  the  left  ear.  H.  Davis,  T.  C. 

Jan.  3rd,  1831.     Joel  and  Silas  Thompson  mark  is  a  half  crop  off 
the  top  of  the  right  ear  and  a  half  penny  from  under  the  left  ear. 

H.  Davis,  T.  Clerk. 

January  3rd,  1835.     Ricketson  Haight's  Mark  is  a  crop  off"  the 
left  ear.  Ricketson  Haioht,  T.  Clerk. 

Robert  McAfee's  Mark — A  hapeny  under  the  right  ear  registered 
November  21st,  1836.  R.  Haight,  T.  C. 

Richard  Daverne     A  crop  on  the  top  of  the  left  ear  cut  square 
off,  and  a  slit  in  each  ear.  Stephen  Griffjs, 

21st  October,  1839.  Tow^n  Clerk. 

Stephen  Gillett — Half  crop  under  side  right  ear. 

4th  Jan.,  1841.  S.  Griffis,  T.  C. 

Samuel  Hawley — A  hole  in  left  ear  and  a  slit  in  right  ear  with 
the  under  side  taken  half  off  and  a  square  tip  taken  off  the  upper  side. 
This  4th  January,  1841.  S.  Griffis,  T.  C. 

Gilbert  Casey's  Mark— A  crop  off  the  left  ear  and  a  hole  in  the 
right  ear.     Recorded  this  15th  July,  1841.  S.  Griffis,  T.  C. 

53 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


David  Ruttan,  Jiin.,  mark — A  slit  under  each  ear. 

Recorded  this  4th  October,  1841.  S.  Gkiffis,  T.  C. 

Richard  N.  Ruttan's  mark — A  slit  in  the   end   of  each   ear  and 
Tinder  each  ear.     This  11th  October,  1841.  S.  Griffis,  T.  C. 

Paul  T.  Borland's  Mark — A  Crop  off  the  left  ear  and  a  hole  in  the 
same.  John  J.  Watson, 

15th  May,  1843.  Town  Clerk. 

John  G.  Griffis  Mark — A  square  crop  off  each  ear  and  a  hole  in 
the  right.     8th  June,  1843.  John  J.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Robert  Way's  Mark — A  notch  unler  the  right  ear  and  a  notch 
over  the  left.     Registered  this  10th  day  of  June,  1843. 

Reuben  B.  Clapp's  Mark — A  slit  in  the  left  ear  and  a  slight  of  the 
right.     Registered  this  14th  August,  1843.     John  J.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Samuel  D.  ETaight's  mark — A  crop  of  the  left  ear  and  a  slit  in  the 
right  and  a  notch  under  the  right.  John  J.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Registered  the  19th  day  of  January,  1844. 

Richard  Rooks'  Mark — A  C'rop  oft  the  left  ear  and  nick  on  the  top 
of  it  and  also  a  slit  in  th6  right.  John  J.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Registered  26th  April,  1844. 

James  Shaughnessy's — A  crop   off  the  left  ear  and  a  slit  in  the 
same.     Registered  this  19th  August,  1844.      John  J.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Parker  Allen's  Mark — A  crop  ofi  the  left  ear  and  a  slight  in  the 
right.     Registered  this  29th  April,  1845     John  J.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Archd.  C.  Davis  Mark — A  crop  off  the  left  ear  and  a  nick  in  the 
end  of  the  right.  John  0.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Registered  this  23rd  day  of  January,  1848. 

John  P.  Dotland  Mark — A  halfpenny  cut  out  of  the  under  side  of 
the  left  ear.     Registered  7th  July,  1848.      John  J.  Watson,  T.  C. 

Jany.  22nd,  1849.     Thos.  I.  Borland  mark — A  crop  off  the  right 
ear  and  a  hole  in  the  same.  Paul  T.  Dorland, 

Town  Clerk. 

Henry  Y.  and  Samuel  D.  Huff — A  crop  off  the  left  ear  and  a  slit 
in  the  end  of  the  right  ear.  P.  T.  Dorland, 

Oct.  27th,  1849.  Town  Clerk. 

Henry  Huffs  mark — A  swallow  form  in  each  ear  and  a  half  penny 
under  the  right.  Samuel  D.  Haight, 

Rechorded  20th  March,  1854.  Township  Clerk. 

Henry  Huff's  mark  is  a  slit  in  the  end  of  the  left  ear. 

Samuel  D.  Haight, 
Rechorded  the  21st  of  March,  1854.  Town  Clerk. 

54 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


PERSONAL  NOTES. 

Most  of  the  following  personal  notes  have  been  prepared  by  Mr. 
T.  W.  Casey  of  Napanee,  Ont.  They  will  doubtless  be  of  much  interest 
to  the  many  descendants  of  the  pioneer  law-makers  in  the  preceding 
pages,  these  descendants  being  widely  scattered  over  this  Province ; 
and  they  will  also  be  of  some  value  to  students  of  the  early  history  of 
Ontario,  since  they  give  some  information  as  to  the  origin  of  an  im- 
portant part  of  the  first  settlers  of  this  Province  : 

The  Aliens. — Joseph  Allen,  whose  name  appears  frequently  in  the 
early  records,  was  a  native  of  New  Jersey,  Monmouth  County.  He 
was  a  Quaker  and  a  large  mill-owmer  and  dealer  wdien  the  American 
Revolution  began.  He  had  a  contract  to  supply  flour  and  provisions 
to  the  British  Army.  This  incensed  the  Americans,  and  they  one  day 
looted  his  premise.^.  This  so  moved  his  spirit  that  he  laid  aside  his 
Quaker  peace  principles,  got  a  commission  and  raised  a  company  of 
volunteers  for  the  British  service.  In  the  end  his  propert}^  was  all  confis- 
cated, and  he  had  to  come  to  Canada  with  the  Refugees.  He  settled 
in  Adolphustown  and  was  granted  large  tracts  of  land,  in  consideration 
of  his  losses.  He  lived  and  died  in  the  township.  His  sons,  John  and 
Jonathan,  were  boys  of  12  and  14  when  they  came.  Jonathan  married 
a  Miss  Dougall  of  Picton,  and  was  long  a  prominent  resident,  building 
the  first  brick  house  in  the  township.  He  died  there.  His  son  Parker 
Allen  still  lives  there,  and  is  now  the  oldest  native  resident.  He  several 
times  represented  the  township  in  the  Town  and  County  Councils. 
One  of  the  fourth  gcTieration  is  now  in  the  Council.  Five  generations 
have  lived  in  the  same  locality.  There  are  numerous  descendants. 
Parker  Allen  was  Township  Clerk  sixty  years  ago. 

The  Allisons.— JoseY>h  Allison,  the  tirst  town  constable  nanied  at 
the  first  town  meeting,  w^as  of  Scottish  descent,  but  was  a  native  of 
New  York  State  and  one  of  the  Pioneer  Refugees.  He  settled  on  the 
Bay  Shore  in  the  first  concession.  His  wife  was  Mary  Richmond. 
They  had  no  children.  He  adopted  his  nephew  Joseph  B.  Allison,  and 
made  him  his  heir.  He  was  a  farmer  and  died  on  his  farm  in  1840, 
aged  86  years  ;  his  wife  died  at  95  years.  They  were  both  buried  in 
the  U.  E.  L.  burying  ground  at  Adolphustown.  Joseph  B.  Allison,  his 
nephew  and  adopted  son,  lived  and  died  on  the  same  farm,  which  is  now 
owned  and  occupied  by  his  son  Henry  and  grandson.  There  are  to- 
day three  generations  living  in  the  same  house.  He  was  an  active  and 
influential  man  in  Church  and  State.  He  became  a  Methodist  local 
preacher  in  1835,  receiving  his  certificate  from  Rev.  Wm.  Ryerson, 
who  wa<?  then  the  presiding  elder.  He  was  for  years  a  township 
officer,  elected  at  the  Town  meetings,  and  later  on  Reeve  of  the  town- 
ship and  a  member  of  the  Counties  Council  for  Frontenac,  Lennox  and 

55 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Addington.  He  was  also  for  years  Superintendent  of  Schools  for  the 
township— in  the  sixties — and  held  other  positions.  His  brother  Cyrus 
became  a  leading  Methodist  minister,  and  died  at  Picton  years  ago. 
Joseph  died  and  was  buried  in  Adolphustown  over  thirty  years  ago. 
One  son,  J  >avid  Wright  Allison,  has  twice  represented  Lennox  in  the 
House  of  Commons,  and  was  Warden  of  the  County,  and  for  years  a 
member  of  the  County  and  Township  Councils.  Another  son,  Cyrus 
Allison,  is  now  a  County  Commissioner  for  the  U.  E.  L.  division  in  the 
County  Council,  and  was  Reeve  of  South  Fredericksburg.  Another, 
Joseph,  is  Clerk  of  the  Court  and  a  leading  man  in  the  church.  There 
are  a  large  number  of  descendants. 

The  Barkers  were  also  of  the  well  known  early  Quaker  families, 
but  moved  from  the  Township  into  Prince  Edward.  They  at  one 
time  owned  the  farm  where  John  Stickney  lived,  but  whether  before 
or  after  is  not  now  easy  to  ascertain.  They  also  lived  at  the  Point  of 
third  concession  between  Hay  Bay  and  Bay  of  Quinte,  and  had  a  ferry 
there  to  Prince  Edward.  The  place  was  long  known  as  Barker's  Point 
among  the  old  settlers.  Some  of  the  descendants  are  now  leading 
business  men  in  Picton,  and  have  been  for  many  years. 

Reuben  Bedell,  who  was  elected  township  clerk  for  the  ensuing 
year  at  the  first  town  meeting,  was  one  of  the  pioneer  Loyalists.  He 
lived  on  Hay  Bay  shore,  3rd  concession,  near  where  the  first  Methodist 
church  erected  in  Upper  Canada  stood  (and  the  remains  still  stand). 
He  was  a  farmer  and  opened  a  store  in  1797,  the  first  in  the  Township. 
This  store  was  largely  replenished  from  the  stock  of  Benjamin  Seymour, 
who  kept  a  large  store  on  the  Bay  near  the  present  site  of  Sandhurst. 
He  was  several  times  Township  Clerk  ;  had  a  family  but  none  of  the 
descendants  now  remain  in  the  township.  Some  are  said  to  be  living 
in  Prince  Edward.  His  sister  Elizabeth  married  Philip  Borland.  Not 
much  can  now  be  traced  of  the  family. 

Garret  Benson,  another  constable,  was  also  a  U.  E.  L.,  a  farmer 
living  north  of  Haj^  Bay,  in  the  fourth  concession.  There  was  quite 
a  large  family  of  sons,  well-to-do  farmers,  but  not  one  of  the  descen- 
dants now  remain  in  the  township  or  county  so  far  as  can  be  ascer- 
tained.    Several  of  them  reside  in  Prince  Edward. 

The  Bogarts. — Two  families  of  the  Bogarts  came  with  the  pioneers, 
Gilbert  and  Abraham  his  son.  They  were  from  Tapaan  on  the  Hud- 
son River,  and  were  of  the  Knickerbockers.  They  settled  in  the  fourth 
concession  north  of  Hay  Bay.  Gilbert  must  have  been  an  old  man  at 
the  time,  and  is  said  to  have  lived  to  be  over  a  hundred  years  old. 
His  son  Abraham  married  a  Lazier  and  she  lived  to  be  102  years. 
They  reared  a  large  and  respectable  family,  but  none  of  the  name  now 
reside  in  the  township.  Lewis  L.  Bogart  was  chairman  of  the  Cen- 
tenial  Celebration  Committee  in  Adolphuston  in  188*.  Three  sons, 
David,  Abraham  and  Gilbert,  became  large  lumbermen  and  important 
business  men  in  Belleville.  Gilbert  Bogart,  for  forty  years  postmaster 
at  Napanee,  is  a  great  grandson  of  Gilbert  first.     So  is  Dr.  David  P. 

56 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Bogart,  ex-Mayor  of  Whitby.  So  is  the  Rev.  Dr.  G.  M.  Meacham,  now 
a  well  known  Canadian  Missionary  in  Japan.  The  sons  of  Abraham 
were  all  successful  business  men  and  the  descendants  are  widely 
scattered  over  the  Province.  They  were  Methodists.  One  of  the  sons 
of  Abraham  was  among  the  nine  young  people  drowned  near  the  old 
Methodist  church  in  1819, 

The  Cainphells. — Archibald  Campbell  was  one  of  the  early  town- 
ship clerks  and  was  elected  to  that  office   several  years.     He  was  of 

Scotch  origin.     One  daughter  married Ridout,  the  elder,  for 

years  a  leading  citizen  of  Toronto  and  Upper  Canada,  and  was  the 
mother  of  Thomas  Gibbs  Ridout,  an  active  officer  during  the  war  of 
1812-14  and  President  of  the  Upper  Canada  Bank.  He  in  turn  was 
father  of  Lady  Edgar,  of  Toronto,  wife  of  Sir  James  Edgar,  Speaker 
of  the  House  of  Commons.  His  son  Alexander  was  also  a  prominent 
man  in  Adolphustown,  and  lived  and  died  there.  He  had  a  large 
family.  His  son  Archibald  was  the  first  elected  representative  of  the 
Township  in  the  District  Council,  over  forty  years  ago,  and  lived  and 
died  in  the  township.  Another  son,  Alexander,  was  for  years  a  lead- 
ing merchant  in  Napanee,  and  its  second  postmaster.  He  built  the 
"  Campbell  House  "  yet  a  leading  hostelry  in  the  county.  Two  of  the 
grandsons  of  Alexander  Campbell  the  tirst,  Archiba'd  and  Peter  Davis, 
represented  the  township  in  the  County  Council  at  various  times,  and 
a  great  grandson,  Nelson  Davis,  is  now-  the  Reeve  of  the  Township, 
elected  this  year  by  acclamation.  Not  one  of  the  Campbell  name  now 
resides  in  the  Township. 

The  Cannifs. — James  CannifF  was  for  years  a  leading  resident  of 
Adolphustown  ;  he  owned  a  farm  in  the  third  concession  on  the  Hay 
Bay  Shore.  He  died  there  in  1851,  aged  86  years.  He  was  a  native 
of  Duchess  County,  N.Y.  He  reared  a  large  family,  and  there  are 
many  of  his  descendants  yet,  occupying  leading  and  respectable 
positions  here  and  there,  but  not  one  of  the  name  now  resides  in  the 
township.  He  had  two  sons,  Jonas  an^i  John.  The  former  became  a 
large  mill-owner  a  few  miles  up  the  river  from  Belleville.  Dr.  William 
Canniff,  author  of  the  "  History  of  the  U.  E.  Loyalists  in  U.  C,"  and 
later  on  City  Physician  of  Toronto,  was  a  son  of  Jonas.  John  also 
became  a  mill-owner  and  the  founder  of  Cannifton,  on  the  Moira 
River,  Hastings  Count}^  The  daughters  married  well  known  citizens, 
viz.,  Thomas  Casey,  Ricketson  Haight,  and  Samuel  Hawley,  all  of 
Adolphustown  ;  Samuel  Miller  o£  Fredericksburgh,  John  Singleton  (for 
many  years  postmaster  at  Brighton),  Cornelius  Van  Horn  of  Hillier, 
—  Chamberlain,  and  Reuben  Clapp,  of  Adolphustown. 

Moses  Carnahan  was  twice  town  clerk  at  an  early  day.  The 
family  then  lived  in  the  2nd  concession  on  the  bay  shore  of  what  has 
ever  since  been  known  as  "  Carnahan's  Bay."  They  moved  from  there, 
Moses  going  to  Picton,  where  he  died  years  ago,  an  eccentric  old  man. 
Several  of  the  relatives  are  living  about  Picton  and  Prince  Edward 
County,  but  little  is  known  about  them  in  Adolphustown. 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


The  Caseys. — Willet  Casey,  one  of  the  first  officers  elected,  was  a 
U.  E,  L,  a  native  of  Providence,  Rhode  Island.  He  and  his  brother 
William  were  both  active  in  the  Ameiican  war,  and  left  for  Canada  at 
its  close.  He  first  moved  to  the  western  border  of  Lake  Champlain, 
supposing  that  he  was  in  British  territory,  but  finding  he  was  not  so 
when  the  international  boundary  was  finally  fixed,  he  left  all  there 
and  moved  on  to  Upper  Canada,  living  and  dying  in  Adolphustown. 
He  died  in  1848,  aged  86  years.  His  brother  William  died  in  184'2, 
aged  81  years.  They  were  strong  and  active  men,  and  were  officers  of 
the  township  in  some  capacity  for  many  years.  Willet  erected  the 
first  iron  foundry  in  the  district  probably,  near  "  Carnahan  Bay,"  2nd 
concession,  and  is  said  to  have  cast  the  first  iron  mould-board  ploughs 
known  to  be  made  in  the  Province.  William  erected  the  first  wool- 
carding  mill,  located  at  first  at  Lake-on-the-Mountain,  now  Glenora, 
early  in  the  century.  Willet  was  elected  to  Parliament  in  about  1811, 
and  sat  for  a  few  years.  Later  on,  in  about  1836,  his  son  Snmuel  was 
elected  to  that  position.  In  late  years  his  grandson,  Dr.  Willet  Casey 
Dorland,  was  elected  for  Prince  Edward  County.  Willet  Casey  was 
a  Quaker;  his  brother  William  a  Methodist,  a  member  of  the  first  class 
formed  and  a  trustee  of  the  first  church  built.  They  both  reared  large 
families,  and  there  are  yet  numerous  descendants,  but  not  one  of  the 
name  now  resides  in  the  township. 

The  Clapps. — There  were,quite  a  number  of  members  of  the  Clapp 
family,  who,  tirst  and  last,  held  public  offices  in  the  township.  They 
came  from  Duchess  County  and  were  Quakers  originally.  One  or  two 
families  lived  in  Fredericksburg,  near  the  Adolphustown  boundary. 
They  have  been  more  or  less  intermarried  with  the  Dorlands,  both  in 
the  States  and  here.  Benjamin  Clapp  was  one  of  the  principal  ones 
in  Adolphustown.  One  son,  Paul  Clapp,  J.P.,  became  a  learling  farmer 
and  J. P.  in  Hillier,  Prince  Edward.  Two  of  the  daughters,  Jemima  and 
Phebe,  married  respectively  John  and  Burger  Huyck,  living  north  of 
Hay  Bay.  The  Huycks  and  their  sons  mostly  lived  and  died  there, 
and  were  elected  to  a  number  of  township  offices,  first  and  last.  But 
one  of  the  name  now  resides  in  the  township.  Two  others  of  Benjamin's 

daughters.  Tabitha  and  Deborah  married Hagerman  and  Rudulph 

Purdy,  leading  farmers  in  Sydney,  Hastings  County.  Several  of  the 
relatives  have  been  prominent  men  in  Prince  Edward  ;  one,  Robert, 
was  warden  and  a  candidate  for  the  Legislature  in  the  Conservative 
interest.  Another,  James,  is  now  the  Mayor  of  the  Town  of  Picton. 
The  family  were  characterized  for  energy  and  business  shrewdness. 
John  Clapp  was  a  soldier  in  Burgoyne's  army  during  the  war.  Reuben 
B.  Clapp,  one  of  the  last  of  the  town  clerks,  was  a  son  of  Joseph  Clapp, 
an  1  lived  in  the  3rd  concession  on  the  Hay  Bay  shore.  He  died  in  the 
township.  He  married  a  daughter  of  James  Canniff"  and  reared  several 
children,  but  none  live  in  the  township  now,  or  any  of  their  children. 

Daniel  Cole  was  one  of  the  pioneers  and  settled  on  the  first  lot 
(east  side)  in  the  township,  on  the  Front.  It  is  said  that  while 
the  company  were  waiting  in  their  canvas  tents,  in  1784,  for  the  sur- 

58 


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^1  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


veyors  to  finish  their  work,  so  the  farms  could  be  drawn  by  lot,  that 
all  agreed  as  Daniel  Cole  had  the  largest  family  he  should  be  allowed 
at  once  to  settle  on  the  first  lot.  This  was  his  wish,  and  all  turned  in 
and  helped  him  chop  away  a  small  clearing  and  build  a  log  house, 
which  was  covered  with  marsh  hay  or  rushes.  He  also  managed  to 
raise  a  few  potatoes  that  year  from  some  seed  he  had  with  him.  He 
and  some  of  his  descendants  lived  to  a  great  age,  from  ninety  to  over 
a  hundred  years.  There  were  large  families  but  none  of  them,  or  of 
the  name,  are  now  resident  in  the  township.  Some  of  them,  to  con- 
siderable numbers,  are  scattered  elsewhere  in  the  country.  It  was  from 
the  home  of  one  of  these  sons,  Barnard  Cole, and  from  his  boat  that  the 
great  drowning  took  place  in  front  of  the  Methodist  Church,  at  Hay 
Bay  in  June,  1819.  Four  of  the  family  were  of  the  party  at  the  time, 
and  oue  was  drowned. 

Joseph  Cornell,  whose  name  appears  among  the  early  residents, 
lived  in  fourth  concession,  north  of  Hay  Bay  It  is  said  he  was  a 
mulatto,  and  his  wife  was  suspected  of  witchery  by  some  of  the  early 
Dutch  settlers.  It  is  said  on  one  occasion  a  neighbor's  child  was  sick 
and  was  supposed  to  be  "  bewitched  "  by  Mrs.  Cornell.  The  friends 
^ot  her  and  threatened  to  burn  her  alive  unless  she  would  put  her 
hands  on  the  sick  one  and  say  "  God  bless  the  child"  so  as  to  break  the 
spell.  This  she  did,  but  was  thought  to  have  done  so  very  reluctantly. 
The  child  is  said  to  have  got  well.  The  Cornells  long  ago  left  the 
township,  or  dwindled  out,  and  none  of  that  name  now  remains. 

The  Davis  Family. — Henry  Davis  was  one  of  the  early  town 
clerks  and  occupied  that  office  several  years.  He  was  of  English 
origin.  He  was  a  sergeant  of  29th  regiment  during  the  war.  He 
settled  on  a  farm  in  the  second  concession,  where  he  lived  and  died. 
His  son  Henry  lived  and  died  on  the  same  farm,  and  was  for  years  an 
officer  elected  by  the  town  meeting.  Archibald  Campbell  Davis,  a  son 
of  Henry,  was  for  years  a  member  of  the  town  and  county  councils  ; 
so  was  Peter,  another  son.  Now,  Nelson  Davis,  a  son  of  Archibald  C, 
is  the  Peeve  of  the  Township  and  has  been  its  representative  in  the 
County  Council.  Other  members  of  the  family  have  also  taken  an 
iictive  part  in  municipal  and  political  affairs,  both  in  Adolphustown 
and  Fredericksburg.  The  descendants  are  now  quite  numerous  in  the 
county.  The  family  have  been  all  Methodists  and  strongly  Conserva- 
tive in  politics,  and  have  been  noted  for  activity  and  intelligence. 

The  Dorlands. — Philip  Dorland,  clerk  of  the  first  town  meeting, 
was  one  of  the  pioneers  who  landed  in  1784  at  Adolphustown,  and  was 
one  of  the  commissioners  for  supplying  the  inhabitants  with  the  food 
furnished  by  the  British  Government.  He  located  on  a  farm  on  the 
Bay  of  Quinte  a  mile  or  two  west  of  where  the  village  of  Aholphus- 
town  now  stands,  Later  on  he  moved  to  Wellington,  Prince  Edward 
Co.,  where  he  died.  He  was  born  at  Beekman,  N.Y.,  in  1755,  and  died 
at  Wellinoton  in  1814.  There  are  a  large  number  of  descendants  in 
Piince  Edward  and  elsewhere.     He  was  elected,  as  member  of  Legis- 

59 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


lature  for  Lennox  and  Prince  Edward,  to  the  first  Upper  Canada 
Parliament  in  1792  ;  being  a  Quaker  he  would  not  take  an  oath  of  any 
kind,  such  a.s  was  required  then.  His  seat  was  declared  vacant  and 
Major  Vanalstine  elected  in  his  stead.  His  property  in  New  York 
State  was  confiscated  because  of  his  loyalty  to  the  British  Crown.  He 
was  a  farmer.  The  first  Quaker  Society  formed  in  Upper  Canada  was 
regularly  organized  at  his  house  in  Adolphustown  in  1798,  a  committee 
of  the  New  York  yearly  meeting  and  Nine  Partners  (N.Y.)  quarterly 
meeting  being  present  for  that  purpose.  Thomas  Borland,  whose  name 
appears  in  some  capacity  in  nearly  every  yearly  town  meeting  for 
years,  was  a  younger  brother  of  Philip.  He  also  was  born  in  Beek- 
man,  Duchess  Co.,  N.Y.,  in  1759,  and  appears  to  have  taken  an  active 
part  in  the  British  ranks,  came  to  Upper  Canada  with  Philip  m  1784, 
settled  in  Adolphustown,  on  a  farm  nearly  opposite  Glenora,  on  the 
Bay  Shore,  where  he  lived  and  died  in  1882.  He  was  for  years  a 
captain  of  the  Lennox  Battalion  of  Militia,  and  took  an  active  part 
near  Kingston  during  the  war  of  1812-14.  He  was  elected  to  Parlia- 
ment at  an  early  time,  and  the  original  copy  of  the  Upper  Canada 
statutes  he  had,  printed  in  1802,  is  still  kept  by  his  descendants.  He 
was  a  Justice  of  the  Peace,  and  held  Magistrate's  Court  at  an  early 
time  in  Adolphustown.  He  was  one  of  the  few  pioneers  who  brought 
negro  slaves  with  him,  some  of  whom  were  in  the  family  as  late  as 
1818,  if  not  later.  It  is  said  he  brought  twenty.  It  is  a  tradition  that 
some  of  his  slaves  refused  to  reveal  his  hiding  place  during  the  closing 
times  of  the  Rebellion  even  when  threatened  with  hanging.  Col.  Samuel 
Dorland  was  a  son  of  his,  and  was  colonel  of  the  Lennox  Regiment  of 
Militia  till  the  time  of  his  death  in  the  fifties.  He  too  took  an  active 
part  in  the  war  of  ]  812-14,  having  charge  of  a  company  near  Kingston. 
Samuel  thought  he  was  the  first  white  male  child  born  in  the  town- 
ship. Major  Peter  Borland  was  another  son.  Both  lived  and  died  in 
the  township.  Capt.  Thos.  Borland  was  a  Quaker,  but  joined  the 
Church  of  England  later  in  life,  about  1826.  There  are  a  large  num- 
ber of  descendants  yet  in  the  county.  A  great-grandson,  Redford 
Borland,  is  now  township  clerk  (1899)  and  has  been  for  years.  A 
grandson,  the  late  John  P.  Borland,  was  Reeve  for  years.  Two  others 
of  the  grandsons  were  medical  doctors  at  Belleville  (Brs.  Enoch  G.  and 
Peter  V.).  Paul  Trumpour  Borland,  the  last  of  the  town  clerks  in  the 
old  township  record,  was  a  son  of  Thomas  I.  Borland  and  a  grandson 
of  John  Borland,  the  pioneer  settler  His  mother  was  a  daughter  of 
Joseph  Trumpour,  and  his  first  wife  a  grand  daughter  of  Thomas  Bor- 
land, a  daughter  of  Peter  V.  Boiland.  His  second  wife  was  also  a 
granddaughter  of  Thomas  Borland,a  daughter  of  Col.  Samuel  Borland. 
He  lived  and  died  in  the  township.  Some  of  his  children  are  resident 
there  yet. 

Thomas  Douglass  was  for  a  time  a  well-known  citizen.  He  was 
married  to  Miss  Caroline  Sharp,  of  Ernesto wn,  Sept.  6th,  1802,  and 
lived  in  Adolphustown  village.  He  built  a  house  for  a  tavern,  just 
west  of  where  the  town  hall  now  stands,' but  took  sick  and  died  shortly 

60 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


after.     He  left  tliree  daughters  but  no  sons.     They  maried  David  M. 

Lake  of  Stone  Mills, Nichols  of  Richmond,  and  

Burdett.     His  widow  married  Orrin  Ranney. 

Jacob  Dulmage  was  for  a  short  time  a  resident  of  Adolphustown 
but  moved  at  an  early  time  in  life  to  Marysburg,  where  he  lived  and 
died.  He  was  a  prominent  member  of  the  Methodist  Church,  and 
probably  a  local  preacher  for  years.  He  married  Sarah  Huff,  a 
daughter  of  Solomon  Huff",  one  of  the  Adolphustown  pioneers.  Another 
of  the  sisters  married  Henry  Hoover,  the  father  of  Mrs.  Joseph  B, 
Allison.  Another  married  Henry  Vanduzen.  Another  married  Capt. 
Abraham  Maybee  of  Adolphustown.  It  is  said  that  Mrs.  Wright, 
mother  of  the  Rev.  David  Wright,  one  of  the  early  Methodist  preach- 
ers, was  a  sister  of  Jacob  Dulmage.  Rev.  D.  Wright  was  the  father  of 
Dr.  H.  H.  Wright  of  Toronto.  Dr.  I.  H.  Cameron  of  Toronto,  is  a  son- 
in-law  of  Dr.  Wright.  Mrs.  Henry  Hoover,  sister  of  Mrs.  Dulmage, 
was  11  3^ears  old  when  the  family  came  to  this  Province.  She  was 
married  by  a  Justice  of  the  Peace,  in  absence  of  a  minister ;  lived  to 
be  nearly  90  years  of  age,  and  was  buried  in  the  U.  E.  L.  burying 
ground.  It  is  thought  the  Dulmages  and  Hoovers  were  of  Palatine 
stock,  relatives  of  Barbara  Heck.  Mrs.  Gunsalos,  nee  Amy  Allison, 
says  when  she  was  a  child  her  grandmother  Hoover,  nee  Huff*,  wanted 
to  name  her  Barbara  Heck,  after  their  relative. 

Area  Fergusson  whose  name  seldom  appears,  is  said  to  have  had 
a  farm  in  Fredericksburg  Additional,  or  the  half  of  the  very  first  lot 
in  Adolphustown,  first  concession.  He  is  said  to  have  been  a  well 
educated  and  able  man.  It  is  supposed  he  drew  up  the  deed  for  the 
first  Methodist  Church,  which  is  certainly  a  very  able  bit  of  conveyanc- 
ing, both  as  regards  its  composition  and  penmanship.  Little  else  is 
known  of  him  now.  None  of  his  name,  or  none  connected  with  him, 
are  known  to  reside  in  the  township  now.     See  page  76. 

Alexander  Fisher  was  one  of  the  prominent  early  settlers  of 
Adolphustown,  and  the  first  Judge  of  the  Midland  District,  which  then 
comprised  all  the  territory  now  in  the  cities  of  Kingston  and  Belleville, 
and  the  counties  of  Frontenac,  Lennox  and  Addington,  Prince  Edward 
and  Hastings.  The  Courts  were  then  held  quarterly,  alternately  at 
Adolphustown  and  Kingston.  He  was  also  a  Jarmer,  having  600  acres 
of  fine  farming  land  in  the  3rd  Concession,  on  Hay  Bay,  a  mile  or  two 
east  of  the  Methodist  Cfiurch,  now  known  as  the  Piatt  farm.  He 
lived  and  died  and  was  buried  on  that  farm,  where  there  is  now  a 
monument  to  his  memory.  He  married  Miss  Henrietta  McDowell,  a 
daughter  of  Col.  McDowell,  a  leading  resident  of  Marysburg,  Prince 
Edward,  March  15th,  1802.  They  had  two  daughters,  Helen,  born 
May  31st,  1807,  and  Henrietta,  born  March  27th,  1^811.  The  marriage 
and  baptismal  records  are  in  Rev.  Robert  McDowell's  record.  There 
were  no  sons.  Both  daughters  married  the  Kirkpatricks,  lawyers  in 
Kingston.  One  of  them,  Stafford,  was  County  Judge  of  Lennox  and 
Addington,  forty  years  ago.  The  other,  Thomas,  was  the  father  of 
Sir.  George  E.  Kirkpatrick,  ex-Lieut.  Governor  of  Ontario. 

61 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  ISQa 


John  Fitzgerald  was  of  Irish  origin,  and  is  said  to  have  been  the 
only  Roman  Catholic  among  the  Adolphustown  pioneers.  He  was 
unmarried.  He  drew  a  lot  next  east  of  Joseph  Allison,  and  in  1801 
gave  Allison  power  of  attorney  to  secure  his  necessary  titles,  but  it  is 
said  he  died  before  they  were  properly  made  out.  The  old  paper  still 
exists  but  is  much  mice  eaten.  That  is  about  all  that  is  known  of 
him. 

The  Germans. — Christopher  German  was  next  neighbor  west  of 
the  Bogarts  in  the  fourth  concession,  north  of  Hay  Bay.  He  was  a 
soldier  of  the  Loyal  Rangers  during  the  war.  He  reared  a  large 
family,  all  of  whom  did  well.  He  was  a  Methodist  local  preacher,  and 
a  trustee  of  the  first  Methodist  church.  Two  of  his  sons,  Mathew  and 
Peter,  were  prominent  and  popular  local  preachers  sixty  years  ago. 
The  Rev.  John  W.  German,  of  Berlin,  now  a  superannuated  Methodist 
minister,  is  a  grandson.  Rev.  J.  F.  German,  D.D.,  now  of  Elm  St. 
Church,  Toronto,  is  one  of  his  descendants.  Others  of  them  are  num- 
erous in  Prince  Edward  County  and  elsewhere,  but  none  of  the  name 
now  remain  in  Adolphustown.  He  died  and  was  buried  where  he  first 
settled.  He  never  took  an  active  part  in  municipal  or  political  affairs, 
but  was  the  most  prominent  man  in  his  locality  in  church  matters. 
The  old  homestead  remained  in  the  hands  of  some  member  of  the 
family  until  quite  recently,  and  the  farm  was  one  of  the  best  and  most 
valuable  in  the  township. 

Lazarus  Gilbert  was  a  carpenter  by  trade.  He  was  the  builder 
of  the  Church  of  England  in  1822-23,  and,  though  a  Methodist,  was 
elected  churchwarden  at  the  town  meeting  held  Jan.  6th,  lb23. 

Stephen  Griffins  was  for  three  years  township  clerk.  He  lived  at 
the  village  and  kept  a  tavern  there  at  an  early  time,  when  the  District 
Courts  were  held.  He  was  a  son  of  William  Griffith.  They  were 
New  Jersey  Loyalists,  and  he  joined  the  New  York  party  in  1783. 
There  were  several  sons,  Stephen,  William,  Gilbert,  Philip,  most  of 
whom  once  lived  in  the  township.  There  are  now  none  of  the  name, 
but  several  descendants  in  Fredericksburg. 

The  Hogermans. — Nicholas  Hagerman  was  one  of  the  most 
prominent  of  the  early  pioneer  settlers.  He  settled  in  the  Bay  Shore 
on  the  lot  where  the  Refugee  party  first  landed  and  on  which  the 
U.  E.  L.  burying  ground  is  located.  The  house  in  which  he  lived  was 
burned  a  few  years  ago.  He  is  represented  as  being  a  man  of  not 
much  education,  but  of  much  energy  and  shrewdness.  He  was  specially 
authorized  to  act  as  a  lawyer,  and  was  said  to  have  been  the  first  to  jg 

legally  practise  in  Upper  Canada.  He  had  one  daughter  and  three 
sons ;  Christopher  was  a  practising  lawyer  in  Kingston,  and  once  Col- 
lector of  Customs.  He  was  elected  to  represent  Kingston,  and  was 
Solicitor  General  of  Upper  Canada  during  the  Mackenzie  stirring 
times  of  the  thirties,  and  was  then  appointed  Chief  Justice,  which  he 
held  till  his  death.  Daniel,  another  son,  was  elected  M.  P.  for  the 
County,  but  died  before  taking  his  seat.     He  studied  law^  and  lived  in 

62 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1808 


Bath.  Probably  was  not  married.  Joseph  was  also  a  law  student  at 
Bath,  but  died  early  and  probably  was  never  called  to  the  bar  or  mar- 
ried. Jane  the  daughter  was  probably  not  married.  Mrs.  Robinson, 
wife  of  the  late  Hon.  J.  Beverly  Robinson,  Lieut.-Gov.  of  Ontario,  was 
a  daughter  of  Chief  Justice  Hagerman.  Nicholas  lies  buried  in  the 
U.  E.  L  ground,  in  a  grave  now  unmarked  and  unknown. 

The  Flaights. — Simon  Hoyt  came  from  England  and  settled  in 
Salem,  Mass.,  in  162S,  The  great-great-great-grandson  of  this  Simon 
Hoyt  was  Joseph  Hoyt  or  Haight,  who  lived  at  Washington,  Duchess 
Co.,  N.Y.  Joseph  and  Margaret  Haight  had  eight  children — Joseph, 
Jonathan,  Obadiah,  Rachel,  Reuben,  Amos,  David  and  Daniel.  1  he 
youngest  child,  Daniel,  was  born  Jan.  14th,  1764,  and  died  at  Adolphus- 
town  Aug.  19th,  1830.  He  came  to  Canada  at  the  end  of  the  last 
century.  The  children  of  Daniel  and  Mary  Haight  numbered  eleven. 
The  eldest  son,  Philip,  married  Anna,  daughter  of  Philip  Dorland. 
The  third  child,  John,  married  as  his  second  wife  Betsey,  the  daughter 
of  Philip  Dorland.  The  fourth  child,  Rhoda,  married  Daniel  Ruttan, 
son  of  Wm.  Ruttan.  The  sixth  child,  Ricketson,  married  Mary,  fifth 
daughter  of  James  Cannifi.  The  seventh  child,  Reuben  Amos,  married 
Jane  West,  grand-daughter  of  Wm.  Casey.  The  eleventh  child,  Samuel 
Dorland  Haight,  married  the  daughter  of  Samuel  Dorland,  son  of 
Thomas  Dorland.  The  eldest  son  of  Ricketson  Haight  is  Canniff 
Haight,  who  married  Jane  Casey  Ingersoll,  daughter  of  Isaac  Ingersoll 
and  grand-daughter  of  Willet  Casey.  Joel  Haight,  a  nephew  of  I)ai:iiel 
Haio;ht,  married  Bathsheba  Dorland,  second  daug-hter  of  John  Dorland. 

Jacob  Hoover,  in  addition  to  being  a  farmer,  carried  on  the  trade 
of  waggon  making. 

The  Bufs. — Solomon  Huff  first  drew  a  lot  on  Hay  Bay  shore,  near 
No.  1,  but  when  that  was  made  a  part  of  Fredericksburg  Additional 
he  gave  it  up  and  accepted  a  lot  in  second  concession  distant  from  the 
Bay,  which  was  then  of  much  value,  so  as  to  be  in  the  same  township 
as  the  other  Fourth  Town  Residents.  Paul  Huff,  son  of  Solomon, 
was  a  leading  and  well  known  farmer  on  Hay  Bay.  It  was 
in  his  house  that  the  first  Methodist  Class  was  formed  in  the 
Province,  by  William  Losee  in  1791.  It  was  on  his  farm  that  the  first 
Methodist  Church  in  Upper  Canada  was  built.  It  was  in  his  barn  that 
the  first  Quarter  Sessions  in  the  Midland  District  was  held,  in  the 
summer  of  1794,  the  next  being  held  at  Kingston,  and  then  in  the 
Methodist  Church  until  a  Court  House  was  erected.  There  was  a  large 
family  of  well-to-do  and  quiet  farmers,  taking  a  prominent  part  in 
Methodist  Church  affairs,  but  not  much  in  political  concerns.  None  of 
the  name  now  reside  in  the  Township.     Several  are  in  Prince  Edward.' 

A  sister  married Allison,  the  father  of  Joseph  B.,  and  another 

Jacob  Dulmage,  who  moved  to  Marysburg,  Prince  Edward  County.     A 
number  of  the  descendants  still  remain  but  are  scattered.     See  p.  61. 

Andreiv  Haffnail  drew  No.  11  in  Fredericksburg  Additional 
and  built  a  saw -mill  thereon,  but  after  that  took  No.  14  so  as  to  be  in 
Adolphustown.     Later  on  he  returned  to  his  first  lut. 

63 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


George  Hughes,  a  well  educated  Englisliman,  was  one  of  the  early 
teachers  in  the  old  school.  Pupils  were  attracted  to  this  school  from  a 
considerable  distance.  iSir  John  A.  Macdonald  was  in  early  days  a 
pupil  in  the  old  Adolphustown  school. 

John  Buyck,  the  last  on  the  list  of  the  officers  of  the  first  town 
meeting,  resided  north  of  Hay  Bay,  where  he  lived  and  died,  and  where 
some  of  his  descendants  are  still  living.  The  family  are  active  and 
well-to-do.  Their  father,  Edward  Huyck,  was  an  officer  in  the  Militia, 
and  one  of  the  early  timber  men  who  took  rafts  to  Quebec  in  those 
early  days.  There  were  several  members  of  the  original  family — sons 
and  daughters — and  the  family  has  always  been  represented  in  the 
township,  but  only  one  or  two  of  the  family  name  are  now  there.  His 
father,  Edward  Huyck,  probably  built  the  first  stone  house  in  Adol- 
phustown, which  is  still  standing,  and  is  occupied. 

Abraham  Mayhee  was  one  of  the  pioneers  and  settled  on  a  farm 
just  east  of  the  Aliens,  where  Adolphustown  village  now  stands.  He 
was  a  Captain  in  the  Militia  and  was  popularly  known  as  "  Captain 
May  bee."  He  had  a  blacksmith  shop  and  a  sawmill  just  adjoining 
the  village,  but  no  vestiges  of  them  are  now  left.  He  is  mentioned 
in  the  original  Government  record  as  "  Captain  of  Associated  Loyal- 
ists." He  lived  and  died  on  that  farm,  dying  June  17th,  1832,  at  the 
advanced  age  of  96  years.  Parker  Allen  now  remembers  helping  his 
father  carry  the  old  man  on  a  bed  out  of  the  house  when  it  was  on 
fire.  He  came  from  Duchess  County,  New  York.  He  had  two  sons, 
Robert  and  Isaac.  Isaac  was  in  the  war  of  1812,  and  died  while  thus 
in  the  services.  Robert  was  drowned  off  a  raft  in  the  St.  Lawrence 
when  on  the  way  to  Quebec.  Both  were  unmarried.  He  had  two 
daughters.  Elizabeth  married  Noxon  Harris,  a  former  prominent  resi- 
dent. One  of  his  daughters,  Mrs.  Garner,  still  lives  in  the  township, 
and  is  now  the  oldest  woman  in  it.  Jane  married  Dr.  Samuel  Neilson, 
at  Ernesttown,  and  was  the  mother  of  Judge  Joseph  Neilson,  who  pre- 
sided at  the  celebrated  Henrj^  Ward  Beechtr  trial  in  New  York,  some 
years  ago.  He  lies  buried  beside  his  father  and  mother  in  the  Morven 
Methodist  Church  burying  ground  in  Ernesttown. 

William  Moore  was  one  of  the  pioneers,  and  is  put  down  in  the 
Government  list  as  a  "  foreman  or  overseer  of  Works,  Engineer's 
Department."  He  had  lived  in  the  third  concession.  He  was  a  car- 
penter, and  is  said  to  have  finished  the  old  Adolphustown  Methodist 
Church  and  to  have  built  the  Methodist  Church  at  Congers,  near  Pic- 
ton,  which  is  now  the  oldest  of  its  kind  in  use  in  Ontario.  It  was  built 
in  1809.  He  was  class  leader  of  the  first  class  organized  in  Adolphus- 
town in  1791,  and  was  referred  to  by  the  old  members  as  a  "  Father  in 
Israel."  A  daughter  married  John  Roblin,  so  much  noted  among  the 
early  residents — the  father  of  David  Roblin,  M.P.,  Rev.  Philip  Roblin, 
Mrs.  George  H.  Detlor,  of  Napanee,  and  others.  Wm.  Moore  does  not 
appear  to  have  had  any  sons,  but  there  are  numerous  descendants 
through  the  daughter.     He  died  at  his  farm,  and   was  buried  in  the 

64 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  82).  A.  1898 


burying  ground  at  the  old  Methodist  Church  on  Hay  Bay.  He  never 
appears  to  have  taken  much  part  in  municipal  or  political  affairs. 

The  Petersons. — There  were  two  large  families  of  the  Petersons 
among  the  first  settlers,  Nicholas  and  Abraham,  both  of  whom  had 
done  active  service  in  the  British  cause.  There  was  a  large  family  of 
them,  some  of  whom  settled  in  the  Eastern  District  and  some  in  Prince 
Edw^ard,  besides  those  in  Adolphustown.  The  latter  were  in  the  third 
concession,  on  Hay  Bay  shore,  next  to  Judge  Fisher,  where  .some  of  the 
descendants  yet  live.  They  were  good  farmers,  but  never  took  a  pro- 
minent part  in  public  affairs.  One  of  the  descendants,  Paul  Peterson, 
represented  Prince  Edward  County  in  Parliament  sixty  years  ago. 
They  were  of  the  Loyalists  of  New  York,  and  all  had  land  grants. 
One  of  the  descendants,  Jacob  Peterson,  married  a  daughter  of  Rev. 
Darius  Dunham  and  lived  in  Fredericksburg.  Some  of  the  children 
are  still  living.  William  Peterson,  a  son,  lived  on  the  homestead,  and 
his  son  Nicholas  now  resides  there.  One  daughter,  Leah,  married 
Nicholas  Bogart.  north  of  Hay  Bay,  and  several  o^  that  family  are 
living.  The  families  of  descendants  are  now  in  Prince  Edward,  Hast- 
ings and  elsewhere.  They  never  took  a  prominent  position  in  town- 
ship affairs.  They  were  Methodists.  Two  or  three  leading  families 
lived  in  Ameliasburg. 

Orrin  Ramify  was  several  times  township  clerk.  He  does  not 
appear  to  be  of  the  U.  E.  L's.  He  lived  in  Adolphustown  village  and 
had  an  iron  foundry  there,  the  first  in  the  locality,  but  not  the  first  in 
the  township.  He  married  the  widow  of  Thoma>i  Douglas  in  1810. 
They  had  two  sons,  Thomas  and  James,  but  we  have  no  record  of 
them,  and  two  daughters :  Caroline  who  married  John  Gibbard,  of 
Napanee,  now  the  oldest  business  man  in  the  town,  and  the  mother  of 
Thomas  Gibbard,  Esq.,  Manager  of  the  Gibbard  Mfg.  Co.  ;  Cynthia, 
the  other,  married  Samuel  Blackley  now  of  near  Belleville.  None  of 
the  family  name  now  reside  in  the  township  or  county. 

Willian  Robins  was  town  clerk  at  onetime,  and  his  records  are 
among  the  most  systematic  and  best  written  of  any  of  the  township. 
The  Robins  family,  according  to  the  Government  record,  appear  to 
have  been  quite  numerous,  but  none  located  at  Adolphustown  at  first ; 
some  in  Kingston,  Ernesttown  and  the  P]astern  District.  Thej^  were 
of  the  loyal  Rangers  during  the  war.  He  is  said  to  have  kept  the 
first  store  in  the  township,  on  the  bay  shore  front  of  the  village,  where 
the  wharf  is  now  located,  and  one  lot  east  of  Hagerman's.  He  does 
n')t  appenr  to  have  remained  long  in  the  township,  and  none  of  the 
name  have  resided  there  for  fifty  y*  ars  or  more.  Few  remember  the 
name  at  all  now. 

The  Rohlins. —  John  Robliu,  whose  name  appears  often  in  the 
town  meeting  record,  lived  in  the  third  concession,  near  Hay  Bay, 
where  a  nvimber  of  the  descendents  still  reside.  He  was  a  Methodist 
local  preacher,  one  of  the  first  converts  of  the  labors  of  the  Rev_ 
Darius  Dunham.  He  was  elected  to  the  Upper  Canada  Parliament^ 
5  B.I.  «  65 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  :32).  A.  1898 


but  was  declared  iuelio-ible  and  the  seat  declared  vacant  because  he 
was  a  lay  preacher.  He  was  elected  aorain,  but  died  before  the  next 
session  was  held.  His  descendants  have  been  numerous  and  influential. 
John  P.  E-oblin,  who  represented  Prince  Edward  County  for  many 
years  in  Parliament,  was  a  grandson  ;  he  was  appointed  Registrar  of 
that  county  by  the  Baldwin  government,  and  died  holding  the  office. 
David  Roblin,  who  represented  Lennox  and  Addington  for  years,  was 
also  a  grandson.  Marshal  Bidwell  Roblin,  who  was  Registrar  of 
Lennox  and  Addington  for  years,  was  a  son  of  David.  Mr.  R.  P. 
R,oblin,  of  Winnipeg,  who  has  for  years  been  a  prominent  member  of 
the  Manitoba  Legislature  and  was  leader  of  one  of  the  political  parties, 
is  a  descendant — son  of  James,  of  Sophiasburg.  Owen  Roblin,  the 
founder  of  the  Roblin  Mills  in  Ameliasburg,  and  for  fifty  years  post- 
master there,  is  a  grand-on — now  over  90  years  of  age.  John  Roblin 
first  married  a  daughter  ol  Wm.  Moore,  the  first  Methodist  class 
leader. 

The  Ruttavs- — William  Ruttan,  the  original  of  the  Adolphustown 
families,  came  from  New  York  State  with  the  Loyalists  and  settled  on 
a  farm  on  the  Front,  on  Bay  of  Quinte  shore.  He  was  one  of  the 
early  Methodists  of  the  Township  and  a  trustee  of  the  first  Methodist 
church.  There  was  a  numerous  family  and  a  number  of  the  descend- 
ants are  ^^  ell-known  residents  now.  Henry  Ruttan,  who  represented 
Northumberland  Count}^  in  Parliament  back  in  the  thirties  and  was 
once  Speaker  of  the  House,  was  a  son.  He  was  till  his  death  Sheriff 
of  Northumberland  and  Durham.  Rev.  Mr.  Thompson  of  Carlton 
West,  President  of  the  York  Pioneers,  is  a  grandson.  The  late  Dr. 
Allan  Ruttan,  of  Napanee,  who  became  a  man  of  considerable  local 
note,  was  also  a  grandson.  William  Ruttan  was  spoken  of  as  a  man 
of  great  piety.  His  wife  was  a  sister  of  Matthew  Steel,  who  lived  a 
short  time  in  Adolphustown  and  then  moved  to  Fifth  Town  (Marys- 
burg)  where  he  lived  and  died.  Steel  and  his  sister,  Mrs.  Ruttan,  had, 
very  powerful  voices,  and  it  is  said  they  used  to  talk  with  each  other 
across  the  Bay,  there  a  mile  and  a  quarter  wide.  She  \\  as  a  woman 
of  much  strength,  and  could  rake  and  bind  wheat  and  keep  up  to  a 
cradler,  which  not  many  men  could  do.  John  C.  Ruttan,  who  was 
born  in  Ad(jlphustown,  a  schoolmate  of  Sir  John  A.  Macdonald,  died 
in  Pittsburg  township  January  30,  1899,  at  the  age  of  84  years. 

George  RvMer  was  a  hatter  by  trade  and  doubtless  found  some 
of  his  work  in  making  "  beavers  "  for  the  Quakers  who  were  among 
the  early  settlers.     His  son  John  succeeded  him  at  this  occupation. 

Nathaniel  Solmes  was  one  of  the  early  residents,  but  did  not  re- 
main long  in  the  township.  He  moved  to  Sophiasburg,  Prince  Edward. 
County,  and  there  is  but  little  remembrance  of  him  in  Adolphustown. 
Two  of  his  sons  became  prominent  and  wealthy  men  in  Sophiasburg, 
and  there  are  a  number  of  the  descendants  residing  there  now,  among 
the  leading  citizens.  David  Barker  Solmes,  a  grandson,  is  now  one  of 
the  oldest  residents  of  the  township.     He   was,  some   years  ago,  Con- 

Q6 


i 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


serv^ative  candidate  for  the  Ontario  Legislature  for  that  county,  but 
was  defeated  by  the  late  Gideon  Striker.  Another  brother,  Reuben, 
was  a  wealthy  citizen  there,  and  died  in  Belleville  about  ten  years  ago. 
Gilbert  Solmes,  one  of  the  early  settlers  of  Richmond  township,  in 
Lennox  county,  was  a  son  of  Nathaniel,  and  lived  to  be  an  old  man. 
A  number  of  his  descendants  are  3'et  resident  in  the  township.  They 
appear  to  have  been  all  energetic  and  successful  business  men,  but 
were  not  long  enough  in  Adolphustown  to  take  a  prominent  part  there. 
Capt.  Solmes,  of  one  of  the  Toronto  and  Niagara  steamers,  is  one  of 
the  descendants 

John  Sfickney  was  for  three  years  township  clerk.  He  lived  in 
the  third  concession  and  was  a  doctor.  He  married  Rebecca  Barker,  a 
daughter  -^f  a  U.  E.  L.,  in  1804,  and  some  years  later  moved  to  Sixth 
town  (Sophiasburg)  where  he  lived  and  died.  They  reared  a  large 
family,  most  of  whom  were  prosperous  and  influential  men.  They 
were  Quakers.  He  does  not  appear  to  have  been  on  the  Government 
list  as  a  L".  E.  L.,  nor  does  his  name  appear  among  the  families  wh) 
first  landed  in  the  township. 

Peter  Sivade,  whose  name  appears  early  in  the  records,  lived  in 
the  tirst  concession  at  the  west  of  the  village  on  one  of  the  lots  of  1  he 
'•  town  plot."  Some  stories  now  are  told  of  his  eccentricities,  but  be- 
yond that  nothing  seems  now  known  of  him.  The  family  appears  to 
have  left  the  township  at  an  early  time,  and  their  names  are  now  for- 
gotten. 

TJie  Trumpours. — Paul  Trumponr,  the  original  of  the  family  of 
that  name,  was  one  of  the  pioneers  and  settled  in  third  conces>ion  on  a 
farm  now  owned  by  a  great  grandson,  and  which  has  been  always  in 
the  family.  It  is  now  the  most  numerous  family  in  the  township. 
He  was  an  officer  in  Lieut.  Delany's  Brigade  during  the  American  Re- 
bellion. His  two  sons  John  and  Joseph,  married  daugliters  of 
John  Borland,  and  raised  large  families.  John  had  13  children  and 
Joseph  11.  Several  of  both  families  are  still  living  in  the  township. 
There  were  several  daughters  of  Paul  Trumpour  One  married  McCuaio-, 
of  Halliwell,  and  was  mother  of  the  late  James  McCuaig  who  represented 
Prince  Edward  County  in  Parliament  for  years.  Another  married 
Simeon  Washburn,  who  became  a  member  of  the  old  Legislative  Council, 
and  was.  seventy  years  ago,  one  of  the  wealthiest  and  most  prominent 
citizens  of  that  county ;  and  one  married  James  Cummings,  also  a 
prominent  business  man  in  Prince  Edward.  There  are  numerous 
descendants  of  all  these  families  not  only  in  Lennox  and  Prince  Edwai'd 
but  throughout  the  Province.     The  Trumpours  were  Quakers. 

The  Valleaus. — Peter  Valleau  and  his  sons  Hildebrand  and  Cor- 
nelius, aged  9  and  7  years,  were  among  the  tirst  pioneer  company. 
Peter  appears  to  have  settled  somewhere  south  of  Hay  Bay,  but  no 
one  now  can  tell  just  where  He  and  his  son  Hildebrand  moved  to 
Sixth  Town  (Sophiasburg)  before  1 800,  and  settled  on  the  High  Shoi'e, 
a  few  miles  east  of  Picton,  where  both  lived  and  died.     They  lie  buried 

t)7 


Gl  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


in  the  old  Conger  church  burying  ground.  Mr.  A.  S.  Valleau,  now 
Collector  of  Customs  at  Deseronto,  is  a  descendant  of  Hildebrand,  and 
there  are  a  large  number  of  the  family  in  Prince  Edward.  Peter  was 
township  treasurer  of  Sophiasburg  in  1800.  Cornelius  Valleau, 
the  other  son,  drew  land  nortli  of  Hay  Bay,  second  lot  to  the 
eastern  boundary,  where  he  lived  and  died.  He  reared  a  large 
family  and  there  are  now  a  large  number  of  descendants,  but 
none  of  the  name  are  now  in  the  township.  Judge  Cornelius 
Valleau  Price,  now  of  Kingston,  is  a  grandson.  A  number  of  the 
family  name  reside  in  Richmond  township  and  also  a  number  in 
Ameliasburg,  Prince  Edward  County,  and  in  other  sections  of  the  Pro- 
\dnce.     They  were  Methodists. 

Major  Vanalsti'ne. — Peter  Vanalstine  was  the  Captain  of  the 
Fourth  Town  Company  and  the  Commissary  for  years.  He  does  not 
appear  to  have  hg.d  any  militar}'  experience  or  position.  He  was  a 
Knickerbocker  and  native  of  New  York.  His  title  of  Major  appears 
to  have  been  honorary.  He  lived  on  the  Bay  Shore  on  the  1^'ront, 
next  east  of  Philip  and  Thomas  Dorland.  He  was  elected  to  represent 
Lennox  and  Prince  Edward  in  the  first  Parliament,  after  Philip  Dor- 
land's  seat  was  declared  vacant  because  of  his  refusal  to  take  an  oath. 
He  is  said  to  have  built  the  first  grist  mill  at  Glenora — then  Lake  ou- 
the-Mountain,  and  probably  it  was  the  first  in  Prince  Edward  County. 
That  was  as  early  as  1791.  He  had  a  son  Allan  who  lived  for  years 
at  the  Stone  Mills, — Glenora— and  died  there.  Allan  married  a  daugh- 
ter of  Jonathan  Allen  and  there  are  a  number  of  his  descendants  yet 
living  in  Prince  Edward  County.  Major  Vanalstine  had  no  daughters. 
He  had  a  brother,  Cornelius  Vanalstine,  who  was  probably  the  first 
magistrate  appointed  in  the  township.  Peter  was  born  in  1747  and 
was  therefore  37  years  of  age  when  he  landed  in  Adolphustown.  He 
died  in  1811,  aged  64  years,  and  was  buried  in  the  U.  E.  L.  ground, 
but  there  is  nothing  now  to  distinguish  his  grave. 

The  Vanduzens. — There  were  two  of  the  Vanduzen  brothers 
among  the  first  settlers,  Conrad  and  Casper,  both  of  whom  appear  to 
have  taken  a  prominent  part  in  the  early  affairs  of  the  township. 
Conrad  was  most  spoken  of.  He  lived  on  the  "front,"  on  Bay  of 
Quinte  shore,  east  next  farm  to  the  Allisons.  He  first  kept  a  tavern 
there,  and  it  was  in  his  house,  it  is  said,  that  Rev.  Wm.  Losee,  the  first 
Metho  ist  preacher,  preached  his  first  sermon  in  the  township,  in  1790. 
He  was  converted  and  at  once  went  and  chopped  down  his  sign  post. 
Playter  in  his  history  of  Methodism,  speaks  of  him  as  unlearned,  and 
at  his  first  attempt  at  family  prayer  could  only  think  of  "  Now  I  lay 
me  down  to  sleep."  Casper  married  the  widow  of  Jacob  Hoover,  the 
first  of  the  pioneer  part}^  who  died,  having  been  killed  by  the  falling 
of  a  limb  of  a  tree,  not  many  months  after  the  landing.  The  brothers 
were  put  down  in  the  original  Government  list  as  "  Loyalists  from 
New  York."  Rev.  Conrad  V^induzen.  one  of  tlie  early  Methodist  Min- 
isters, was  a  descendant  of  one  of  these  families.     He  died  at  Whitby 

68 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  82).  A.  1898 


a  quarter  of  a  century  ago.  They  intermarried  with  the  Huffs,  and 
the  descendants  are  numerous,  but  none  of  the  name  reside  in  Adol- 
phustown. 

Peter  Van  Skyver  was  town  clerk  for  two  or  three  terms. 
His  name  appears  among  those  who  landed  first,  and  he  appears  to 
have  been  located  on  the  "  Back  Bay,"  fifth  concession,  but  the  oldest 
inhabitant  now  has  no  recollection  about  him,  or  any  of  that  fnuiily. 
None  of  the  name  have  resided  in  the  township  for  the  past  seventy 
years  or  more. 

The  Watsons. — James  Watson  and  his  son,  John  Joseph,  were  town 
clerks.  James  was  not  one  of  the  U.  E.  Loyalists.  He  was  a  native 
of  Scotland,  and  held  some  position  in  the  military  service.  He 
located  in  Adolphustown  and  married  a  daughter  of  Joseph  Allen. 
Both  lived  and  died  there.  It  is  said  he  kept  one  of  the  early  taverns 
in  the  Township.  John  Joseph  Watson  was  his  only  son.  He  lived 
and  spent  all  his  days  in  the  Township,  and  died  about  ten  years  ago, 
one  of  its  wealthiest  and  most  prominent  residents.  He  was  several 
times  Reeve  of  the  township,  and  was  Warden  of  Lennox  and  Adding- 
ton  He  was  also  President  of  the  Lennox  Conservative  Association. 
He  was  two  or  three  times  Township  Clerk,  in  the  old  Town  meeting 
days.  He  married  a  daughter  of  Jonathan  Allen,  his  cousin.  But  one 
of  their  children  is  now  living,  Mrs.  Minnie  Watson  Duffett,  of  Adol- 
phustown, now  the  sole  survivor  of  the  family.  She  has  children,  but 
none  of  the  Watson  name  are  now  resident  in  the  township.  Mr.  J.  J. 
Watson  donated  the  land  on  which  the  U.  E.  L.  Memorial  Church  (St. 
Albans)  now  stands.     The  family  are  all  buried  there. 

The  Quakers. — On  the  seventh  day  of  ninth  month,  1798,  a  "pre- 
parative "  meeting  was  held  in  Philip  Borland's  house,  for  the  purpose 
of  organizing  a  society.  A  committee  was  present  from  the  Nine 
Partners  (N.  Y.)  meeting,  consisting  of  Fry  Willes,  Enoch  Dorland, 
Gideon  Lamore,  Harvey  Hill  and  Reuben  Haight.  A  meeting  house 
was  erected  in  1799,  and  its  ruin  still  stands.  See  Country  Life  in  Can- 
ada Fifty  Years  Ago,  by  Canniff  Haight.  From  this  as  a  centre  the 
Quakers  spread  into  Prince  Edward  County,  Frontenac  and  Leeds. 
Among  the  early  Quakers  of  Adolphustown  were  the  Dorlands,  Ti'um- 
pours,  Haights  and  Clapps. 


69 


DISBANDED  TROOPS  AND  LOYALISTS  OF  1784. 

Return  of  disbanded  Troops  and  Loyalists  settled  in  Township 
No.  4,  Cataraqui,  Mustered  this  5  October,  1784.  (Canadian  Archives 
for  1891,  page  11.) 

Allen,  Joseph. 

Baker,  John ;  Baker,  John,  Jr.  ;  Bangor,  Conrand ;  Benson, 
Albert ;  Benson,  Garret ;  Benson,  Matthew ;  Bogart,  Abraham ; 
Bogai  t,  Gilbert ;   Bremner,  Peter. 

Cammell,  Alex.  ;  Cammell,  John  Law  ;  Carnahan,  Joseph  ;  Clark, 
Wm. ;  Clonch,  Benj.  N.  ;  Cole,  Barrent ;  Cole,  Daniel ;  Cole,  Simon  ; 
Cornell,  Albert ;  Crysdales,  John. 

Deane,  Moses ;  Deane,  Samuel ;  Dear,  John ;  Demorest,  David ; 
Dorland,  Philip  ;  Dorland,  Thomas  ;  Driskle,  Cornelius  ;  Duser,  Cas- 
per Y. ;  Dusev,  Conrad  Y.  ;  Dulyea,  A.  Peter  :  Dulyea,  A.  Peter,  Jr. ; 
Dyer,  John. 

Ellison,  Joseph. 

Feron,  Andrew  ;  Fitzgerald,  John  ;  Flister,  Andrew. 

German,  Christ.  ;  German,  Christ.,  Jr. ;  German,  Jacob  ;  German, 
John,  Sr. ;  German,  John,  Jr. 

Hagernian,  Nicholas ;  Hartman,  John  ;  Hesper,  Fred  ;  Hofnagle, 
Andrew  :  Hofnagle,  Joseph  ;  Horn,  Corns.  V. ;  Hover,  Casper  ;  Hover, 
Henry  ;  Hover,  Jacob  ;  HufF,  Paul ;  Huych,  John. 

Jones,  William.     Lewis,  Barrent. 

McMasters,  James  ;  Marbird,  Michael ;  Maybe,  Abraham  ;  More,  W. 

Parsall,  John  ;  Patterson,  Abraham ;  Patterson,  Christ. ;  Patter- 
son, Nicholas  ;  Patterson,  Paul. 

Roblin,  Owen  ;  Roblin,  Philip  ;  Rush,  John  ;  Rutter,  George  ; 
Ruttan,  Pettit ;  Ruttan,  Peter,  Jr.  ;  Ruttan,  W. ;  Ryckman,  Edward  ; 
Ryckman,  John  ;  Ryckman,  John,  Jr.  ;  Ryckman,  Tobias. 

Sharp,  John  ;  Smith,  Richard ;  Staples,  Ebenezer  ;  Steel,  Matthew. 

Trumpour,  Paul ;  TufFey,  Samuel. 

Yallou,  Peter ;  Yanalstine,  Major ;  V^andermodt,  Michael ;  Yan- 
derwort,  Peter  ;  Yan  Skiver,  John  ;  Yan  Skiver,  Peter. 

Whitley,  John.     Yeurex,  Isaac ;  Yeurex,  William. 

The  number  of  souls,  men,  91 ;  women,  44  ;  children,  97  ;  ser- 
vants, 8  ;  total,  240.     Acres  cleared,  66. 


I 


General  abstract  of  men,  women  and  children  settled  on  the  new 
townships  on  the  R.  St.  Lawrence  : 

Major   Yan    Alstine's  party  of  Loyalists   settled    on   Tp.    No.   4, 
Cataraqui :  Men,  92  ;   women,  46  :  children,  103  ;  servants,  17  :  total, 
8.      P.  5.  (70) 


PIONEER  OWNERS  OF  LAND. 


The  following  record  of  Adolphustown  lots  has  been  taken  from  the  books  of  tlie 
Crown  Lands  Department,  Toronto. 


13 
"4 
14 
14 
15 
16 
17 
,18 
19 
20 


13 


14 


Name. 


Daniel  Cole 

Joseph  Hofnai;le  .  . 
Andrew  Hufnail  .  . 
Courand  VanDusen 

Henry  Hover 

Conrad  Vandusen .  . 
Joseph  Allison    .  .  .  . 

William  Hattan 

Jacob  Hover 

Joseph  Allan 


Capt.  Abraham  Maybee 


Town  plot,  Adolphustown 

Ft.  Rev.  Job.  Deacon  .  . . . 
Rectory  of  Adolphustown 

Peter  Van  Alstine 


W  i 
E  i. 
E  i. 
W  i. 
All." . 
All.  . 
All.  . 
All.  . 
All.  . 
All.  . 

All    . 


PhiliiJ  Dorland 


Lieut.   Michael    Vandervoort  I 
and  Thomas  Doland | 

Gasper  Vandusor 

Daniel  Cole 

Capt.  Abr'm.  Maybee   

Capt.  Abr'm.  Maybee   

Gasper  Van  Duser 

Jacob  Dulmage 

Paul  Troinpour 

Henry  Davis 

Thomas  Dorland    \ 

Andrew  Eerrow ( 


Capt.  Peter  Rattan 
Joseph  Allen 


Part. 
All.  . 

All.  . 


All. 


Willet  Casey 

Peter  Eattan 

Michael  Sloot 

Hog  Island,  Peter  V. 

Jos3ph  Clapp 

James  McMaster   .  .  . 

Alex'r.  Fisher 

Peter  Vanalstine   .  .  . 
Nicholas  Patterson    . 


Dorland. 


All 

With  small 
quantity  of 
bro.    front. 

W  I 

Pt.  of  W  ^ 

E  i : 

W  J 

E    i 

Wl 

E    -i   

All." 

All 


All. 


N.P. 
E.P  . 
W.P. 

All.   . 

All.  . 


100 
100 
100 
KO 
2'0 
200 
200 
'/OO 
200 
200 

200 


All. 
Wi 
AU. 
All. 
All. 
All. 


14 


200 
200 


100 

25 

100 

100 

100 

100 

100 

197 

282 


200 

172 

172 

150 

100 

12 

80 

200 

200 


200 


Date  of  Patent. 


April 
April 
June 
April 
Dec. 


29th, 
5th, 

21st, 
5th, 

31st, 


August  10th, 

Dec.  31st, 

Feb.  22nd, 

May  17th, 

Juue  10th, 

Feb.  19th, 

April  5th, 


1808 
1797 
1837 
1797 
1802 
1801 
1802 
1805 
1802 
1801 
1803 
1797 


March  13th,  1848 
Jan.      22nd,  1836 

June        4th,  1796 


August  10th,  1801 


April      5th,  1797 


August 

April 

April 

Feb. 

July 

Oct. 

March 

Dec. 


31st,  1801 
29th,  1808 

5th,  1797 
19th,  1803 
23rd,  1804 
10th,  1803 

1st,  1809 
31st,  1798 


April  6th,  1797 

April  7th,  1804 

Feb.  27th,  1804 

Ffb.  27th,  1804 

May  17th,  1802 
August  10th,  1801 

Feb.  26th,  1855 

Dec.  31st,  1802 

Dec.  31st,  1798 

Dec.  31st,  1798 

June  4th,  1796 

May  17th,  1802 


(71) 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


PIONEER   OWNERS   OF  LAUD— Concluded. 


20 


21 


Name. 


Lieut.  Paul  Huff  .  . 

James  Noxon 

Reuben  Beedel  .  .  .  . 

John  Caniff 

Willet  Casey 

Philip  Dorland  .  .•.  . 
James  Caniff  .... 
Garret  Benson  .  .  .  . 
William  Moore  .  .  . 
William  Moore  .  .  . 
William  Moore  .  .  .  . 

Owen  Roblin 

Peter  Rattan 

Benjamin  Clapp . . .  . 

John  Canniff 

John  Roblin  ...... 

Capt.  Peter  Rattan 
George  Rutter    .  .  .  . 

George  Rutter    . . .  . 


Paul  Trumpour 

Gilbert  Bogart    

Cornelius  Van  Horn . 

Paul  Trumpour 


Barnet  Lewis 

John  B.  Lewis   

Peter  Vanalstine    

Lieut.  Peter  Vallow 

William  Clark 

Lewis  Lazier  Bogart 

Lieut.  John  Huyck ... 

Alex'r.  Campbell   I 

John  Law  Campbell \ 

Albert  Benson   

Peter  Dulyea 

Abraham  Bougart 

Gilbert  Boyart   

Christopher  German 

James  McMasters 


William  Casey    .... 

Willet  Casey 

Archibald  Campbell 


Cornelius  Vanalstine 

Nicholas  Hagertran  . 
Lieut.  John  Huyck    . 

John  Vanskiver 

Gilbert  Bogert 

Cornelius  Vanhorn    . 
Guysbert  Bogert    . . . 


All. 
W  ^. 
E  i. 
W  i. 

E  i. 

AIL". 
W  *. 

E  i: 

E  1. 

E  i. 
Wi. 
E  i. 
W4. 
E  i. 
W|. 
E  A. 
W  *. 

E  |. 
W  J^. 
All.". 


All. 

All. 
All. 


All.  . 
All.  . 
All  . 
E  1. 

wi. 

All.  . 
All.  . 


All.  . 

E  *. 
Wi. 
All.  . 
All.  . 

All.  . 


All. 

All. 

All. 
All. 


All. 
All. 


200 
100 
100 
100 
100 
200 
100 
100 
100 
100 
100 
100 
100 
100 
107 
107 
100 
100 
]00 


133 


200 
200 


200 
100 
1(0 


200 

200 

100 
100 
200 
180 

200 

26 

1 

V. 

190 

247 
138 


198 

75 


Date  of  Patent. 


May 

i7th, 

1802 

Dec. 

31st. 

1802 

Dec. 

31st, 

1802 

May 

17th, 

1802 

May 

17th, 

1802 

Dec. 

31st. 

1798 

May 

17th, 

1802 

Nov. 

25th, 

1802 

August  10th, 

1801 

Dec. 

5th 

1807 

March 

1st, 

1803 

Nov. 

4th, 

1803 

April 

10th, 

1804 

Nov. 

25th, 

1802 

April 

9th, 

1804 

Jan. 

5th, 

1811 

Sept. 

19th, 

1805 

Sept. 

19th, 

1805 

May 

11th, 

1844 

|Dec. 

31, 

1798 

Sept. 

19th, 

1805 

Dec. 

31st, 

1798 

July 

10th, 

1801 

Sept. 

23rd, 

1831 

June 

4th, 

1796 

July 

10th, 

1807 

Dec. 

22nd, 

1807 

Nov. 

12th, 

1834 

Dec. 

31st, 

1802 

Dec. 

1st, 

1897 

Sept. 

26th, 

1805 

March 

7th, 

1804 

Dec. 

1st, 

1886 

Dec. 

31st, 

1798 

Nov. 

5th, 

1811 

August  10th, 

1801 

May 

17th, 

1802 

Dec. 

31st, 

1798 

August  10th, 

1801 

May 

20th, 

1797 

Dec. 

31st, 

1802 

Nov. 

20th, 

1809 

May 

17th 

1802 

72 


THE  ADOLPHUSTOWN  COURT  HOUSE. 

Readers  of  the  records  of  the  Adolphustown  town  meetings  will 
have  noticed  that  some  of  the  meetinos  were  held  in  "  the  Court 
House."  The  existence  of  such  a  building  in  this  township  deserves 
particular  mention.  The  following  extracts  from  U.  C.  statutes  are 
worth  re-producing  here.  See  also  in  "  Personal  Notes  "  under  Fisher, 
Hagerman  and  Theff. 

32nd  Geo.  III.,  15th  Oct.,  1792. 

XI.  And  be  it  further  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaid  that  a 
Jail  and  Court  House  for  the  Midland  District  shall  be  built  in  the 
manner  aforesaid,  in  the  town  of  Kingston, 

41st  Geo.  Ill,  9th  July,  1801. 

II.  And  be  it  further  enacted and  that  the  said 

Courts  of  General  Quarter  Sessions  of  the  Peace  in  and  for  the  Midland 
District,  shall  be  holden  in  the  town  of  Adolphus  Town  on  the  fourth 
Tuesday  in  the  month  of  January,  and  on  the  second  Tuesday  in  the 
month  of  July,  and  in  the  town  of  Kingston  on  the  fourth  Tuesday  in 
the  month  of  April,  and  on  the  second  Tuesday  in  the  month  of 
October. 


"  The  time  came  when  Adolphustown  was  almost  the   centre  of 

Canada Adolphustown  was  really  the  centre  of  the 

settlements  in  the  central  part  of  Canada.     So  it  came  that  the  Court 
was  ultimately  held  at  the  Fourth  Town,  and  Kingston,  being  twice  a 
■year  in  each  place.     The  first  court  in  this  township  was  held  in  the' 
barn  of  Paul  Hutf,  which  served  the  purpose  very  well  in  summer. 

"  The  next  occasion  was  in  winter,  and  some  building  had  to  be 
procured.  Application  was  made  for  the  Methodist  chapel.  Some 
objection  was  made  on  the  ground  that  a  "  house  of  prayer  "  should 
not  be  made  a  "  den  of  thieves,"  referring  to  the  criminals,  not  the 
lawyers.  But  the  chapel  was  reatlily  granted  for  the  second  court 
held  in  Adolphustown.  It  is  said  that  a  j^roposition  was  made,  in  due 
form,  that  if  the  inhabitants  of  the  fourth  town  would  build  a  Court 
House,  the  Court  should  he  held  there  twice  a  year.  The  ofi:er  was 
accepted,  and  a  subscription  set  on  foot,  which  resulted  in  the  erection 
of  a  Court  House.  When  the  Court  ceased  to  be  held,  in  accordance 
with  the  agreement,  the  Court  House  reverted  to  the  township." 

(Ganniff's  Settlement  oj  U.G.,  p.  456)- 
(73)' 


TOWN  MEETINGS  IN  SOPHIASBURG 

(Sixth  township,  Prince  Edward  County). 

"Passed  at  Sophiasburg,  at  a  regular  town  meeting,  held  on  the  3 
day  of  March  1800. 

"  For  the  better  ascertaining  astrays,  and  knowing  and  describing- 
horses  and  neat  cattle,  sheep  or  swine.  Be  it  understood  by  this  town 
meeting,  that  every  inhabitant  and  householder  shall  within  six  weeks 
from  the  passing  of  this  Act,  have  their  mark  and  brands  recorded, 
according  to  law*  by  the  town  clerk. 

"And  be  it  further  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  that  any 
astrays,  horses,  neat  cattle,  sheep  or  swine,  that  shall  be  found  upon 
any  open  or  improved  lands  from  the  twentieth  of  November  to  the 
first  of  April  yearly,  and  every  year  the  owner  or  owners  of  such  im- 
provement or  cleaied  land  shall  give  in  their  natural  mark,  or  artificial 
marks,  and  describe  their  age,  as  near  as  possible,  to  the  Town  Clark, 
who  is  hereby  ordered  to  record  the  same  in  a  book,  to  be  kept  for 
that  purpose :  for  which  such  informer  shall  receive  one  shilling  for 
each  hoise  or  neat  cattle ;  and  sixpence  for  each  sheep  or  swine.  Pro- 
vided always,  and  be  it  so  understood,  that  such  astray.s  above  men- 
tioned, is  not  one  of  his  near  neighbors,  which  shall  be  left  to  the  Town 
Clark  to  decide.  And  the  Clark  .shall  send  word  to  the  owner  or  owners, 
if  he  knows  them,  by  the  mark  or  brands;  and,  if  unknown  to  the 
Town  Clerk,  he  is  hereby  authorized  to  advertise  them  in  three  different 
places  in  this  Township  ;  for  which  he  shall  be  entitled  to  receive 
from  the  ovvner,  or  owners  as  followeth,  viz. : — For  sending  word  or 
writing,  or  recording  or  informing  any  way,  one  shilling  and  three- 
pence ;  if  advertised  one  shilling  and  six  pence,  for  each  horse  or  neat 
cattle;  and  for  each  sheep  or  swine  sii  pence  per  head.  And  be  it 
further  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  that  if  any  inhabitant  or 
householder  who  shall  leave  any  astrays,  as  above  mentioned,  on  his 
or  her  cleared  lands  for  eight  days,  from  the  20th  day  of  November  to  . 
the  first  day  of  April,  and  neglect  to  give  notice  thereof,  as  by  the 
above  Act  mentioned,  shall  loose  the  award  for  finding,  or  feeding  such 
as' rays,  and  pay  the  owner  one  shilling  for  each  horse  or  neat  cattle ; 
and  sixpence  for  each  sheep  or  swine.  And  be  it  further  enacted,  by 
the  authority,  that  if  no  owner  or  owners  shall  appear  by  the  first 
Monday  in  April,  to  prove  their  property,  then,  and  in  that  case,  the 
Town  Clark  shall  advertise  for  sale,  all  such  astrays,  in  three  town- 
ships, viz. : — Ameliasburg,  Sophiasburg  and  Hallowell,  for  the  space 
of  twenty  days,  describing  the  marks  and  brands,  color  and  age,  as 
near  as  possible ;  and  if  no  owner  or  owners  shall  appear  and  prove 
their  property,  then  the  Town  Clark  shall  proceed  to  the  sale  of  such 
astrays,  by  appointing  the  day  of  sale,  to  the  highest  bidder  ;  and 
after  deducting  the  expenses,  to  be  adjudged  by  persons  hereafter 
appointed  by  each  parish,  in  this  town,  and  the  overplus  shall  be 
delivered  into  the  hands  of  a  Treasurer,  hereafter  to  be  appointed. 

(74) 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


"And  be  it  observed — That  all  well  regulated  townships  is  divided 
into  parishes.  Be  it  enacted,  by  the  majority  of  votes,  that  this  town 
shall  be  divided  into  parishes,  and  described  as  follows,  that  is  to  say  : 
That  from  Lot  No.  45  west  of  Green  Point  to  Lot  No.  19,  shall  be  a 
parish  by  the  name  of  St.  Johns,  and  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  that 
including  No.  19  to  No  6  in  the  Crown  Lands,  west  of  Green  Point, 
shall  be  a  parish  by  the  name  of  St.  Matthew.  And  be  it  further 
enacted,  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  that  including  the  tenants  on  the 
Crown  Lands,  and  including  Lot  No.  28,  shall  be  a  parish  by  the  name 
of  St.  Giles  :  and  from  Nicholas  Wessel's  to  Hallowell,  shall  be  a  parish 
by  the  name  of  Mount  Pleasant. 

"  Whereas,  all  the  fines  and  forfeitures  that  may  incur  within  our 
limits,  shall  be  appropriated  to  charitable  iise-^ ;  we,  the  inhabitants  of 
Sophiasburg,  in  our  town-meetings,  on  the  3rd  day  of  March,  1800,  do 
think  it  necessary  to  appoint  our  Trensurer,  in  this  town,  out  of  the 
most  respectable  of  its  inhabitants,  to  be  Treasurer  to  this  Town,  to 
receive  all  forfeitures  and  other  sums  of  money  that  is,  or  shall  be 
ordered  to  be  appropriated  to  charitable  uses  ;  which  Treasurer  is 
hereby  ordered  to  serve  in  that  connection  during  iiood  behaviour,  or 
till  he  shall  wish  a  successor.  And  be  it  enacted  by  the  authority 
aforesaid,  that  we  do  appoint  and  nominate  Peter  Valleu,  who  is 
appointed  treasurer,  who  is  to  keep  a  book  and  receive  all  the  moneys 
coming  into  his  hands,  and  enter  by  who  received,  and  for  what 
•fined  ;  and  when  a  successor  is  appointed,  he  shall  give  up  all  the 
monies  he  has  belonging  to  said  town,  with  the  book  and  receipts,  to 
the  successor,  and  deliver  the  same  on  oath,  if  required  ;  and  that  each 
parish  shall  nominate  one  good  and  respectable  inhabitant,  who  to- 
gether with  the  Overseer  of  the  Poor  shall  be  inspectors  to  inquire 
and  see  that  all  the  fines  and  forfeitures  of  this  town  is  regularly 
received  and  delivered  to  said  Treasurer.  And  if  any  person  who 
comes  and  proves  of  any  astray s  that  had  been  within  one  year  and 
a  day,  then  the  Treasurer  and  those  Parish  Inspectors  and  the  Over- 
seers of  the  Poor  shall  refund  such  moneys  as  was  delivered  to  the 
Treasurer,  deducting  two  shillings  on  the  pound  for  its  fees  of  said 
treasurer. 

"  And  be  it  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  that  when  there  is 
any  aioney  in  the  hands  of  the  Treasurer,  and  a  necessity  to  lay  it 
out  on  the  same  charitable  use,  this  body  corporate  shall  have  the  sole 
management  and  disposing  of,  who  is  to  receipt  to  the  treasurer  for 
the  same  end,  have  recorded  in  his  book,  and  the  use  they  had  applied 
the  same  and  the  Treasurer,  Overseers  of  the  Poor,  and  the  Parish 
Lispector  may  hold  meetings  and  adjourn  the  same,  when  and  as  often 
as  they  or  the  major  part  of  them  shall  choose  so  to  do,  and  shall  be  a 
body  corporate  to  sue  and  be  sued  on  anything  that  may  appertain  to 
their  several  offices." 

We  find  no  further  record  until  the  year  1820.  (From  Cannifs 
Settlement  of  U.  Canada,  p.  471.) 

75 


MUNICIPAL  RECOKDS  OF  HALLOWELL  TOWNSHII\ 

This  township  in  Prince  Edward  County  was  named  after  Ben- 
jamin Hallowell,  who  die  1  at  York  in  1799,  aged  75  years. 

The  first  record  of  this  township  is  as  follows  : 

"  The  annual  meeting  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  township  of  Hal- 
lowell, held  on  Monday,  the  fifth  day  of  March  1798,  held  b}^  virtue  of 
an  act  of  the  Legislature  of  the  Province  of  Upper  Canada,  before 
Augustus  Spencer  and  John  Stiuson  Jun.  two  of  his  Majesty's  Justices 
of  the  Peace,  the  following  persons  were  chosen  town  officers  for  the 
ensuing  3'ear : — Rozel  Ferguson,  Town  Clerk  ;  Caleb  Elsworth  and 
Peter  D.  Conger,  Assessors  ;  James  Blakely,  and  Thomas  Goldsmith, 
Town  or  Church  Wardens ;  Benjamin  Wait,  John  Miller,  Owen 
Richards,  Henry  Zufelt,  Ichabod  Bowermau,  Aaron  White,  Carey 
Spencer  and  George  Baker,  Overseers  of  Highways  and  Fence  Viewers  ; 
Daniel  Young  and  Isaac  Bedal,  Pound  Keepers ;  Samson  Striker, 
Henry  Johnson,  Samuel  Williams  and  Isaac  Garrett,  Constables. — Also 
At  the  first  township  meeting  it  was  enacted  that  no  fence  is  to  be 
lawful  in  the  township  under  the  height  of  four  feet  eight  inches  high, 
sufficiently  made."  Horses,  horned  cattle,  hogs,  sheep  were  to  be  per- 
mitted to  run  at  large  with  certain  exceptions.  "  It  is  enacted  that  if 
any  freeholder  shall  suffer  any  Canadian  Thistle  to  go  to  seed  on  his 
farm,  he  shall  forfeit  and  pay  the  sum  of  twenty  shillings."  A  law 
was  also  passed,  that  if  anyone  set  fire,  to  any  rubbish  or  brush, 
whereby  his  neighbor's  property  was  endangered,  without  previously 
making  two  of  his  neighbors  acquainted,  he  shall  pay  a  fine  of  forty 
shillings,  to  be  expended  for  the  benefit  of  the  highways.  Rozel 
Ferguson,  who  seems  to  have  discharged  his  duty  as  Town  Clerk, 
recording  the  proceedings  in  a  neat  legible  hand,  was  successfully 
elected  to  that  office  for  ten  years.  In  1810  James  R.  Armstrong  was 
appointed  and  again  the  following  year.  The  next  following,  Arra 
Feiguson  was  elected,  who  continued  in  office  three  years,  when  Simeon 
Washburn  received  the  appointment,  and  remained  in  office  two  years, 
when  Arra  Ferguson  was  again  selected  and  continued  for  three  years. 
Robert  Scott  was  Town  Clerk  two  years,  and  then  again  followed 
Arra  Ferguson  for  eight  years.  William  Barker  then  was  appointed. 
The  three  Justices  of  the  Peace  before  whom  the  annual  meeting  con- 
tinued for  many  years  to  be  held  were  John  Peters,  Augustus  Spencer 
and  John  Stinson,  doubtless  the  first  magistrates  in  the  township.  In 
the  year  1815  we  notice  as  present  at  the  Annual  Meeting  Stephen 
Conger,  Barrett  Dyer,  Ebenezer  Washburn,  Justices  of  the  Peace. 
The  town-meeting  was  held  in  the  year  1801  "  at  the  house  of  Rich- 
ardson and  Elsworth,  near  Hallowell  Bridge  ;"  likewise  the  following 
year.  In  1803  the  meeting  was  held  "  at  the  house  of  Thomas  Rich- 
ardson." The  following  year,  lb05,  it  is  "  the  house  of  the  late  Thos. 
Richardson."  In  1806  the  meeting  was  "  at  the  dwelling  house  of 
Thomas  Eyre."  In  1807  it  is  "  the  Inn  of  Thomas  Eyre."  Here  the 
annual  meeting  was  successively  held  for  many  years. 

(Cannitf's  Settlement  of  U.C.,  p.  480-2.) 
(76) 


An  Assessment  for  the  Township  of  Hollowell 
THIS  Eighteenth  of  July,  1798. 


First  Class  Bate/ 1. 

Daniel   Pettet £0. 

John  Piatt 

Joseph  McCartney    

C.  Huyck 

Jonatli-in  Farguson,  .Ir 

Daniel  Tubs 

Jt)hn  Miller    

Solomon  Spaflibrd 

John  Hichards 

Owen  Eichards 

John  Elles 

William  Dyi'e 

Jacob  Rattan 

Arthur  Youmans 

David  Youmans 

James  Rogers 

David  McGr.  Rogers 

John  Peters  

Corey  Spencer 

David  Conger  .    

Jonathan  Bowerman 

Joseph  Turwiliger    

William  Cunningham 

Curnelous  Blunt 

Aaron  White 

Jacob  Cronk 

Isaac  Garratt 

Joseph  Jinks 

Ebenezer  Palmer 

Henery  Zeufelt 

Second  Class  Eat-  d. 

Peter  Designea  Conger 

Ichabodt^  Bowerman 

Daniel  Y''oung 

Joseph  Winn 

Caleb  Piatt 

Jonathan  Fargnson,  Sr 

Caranton  Farguson 

Samson  Striker 

ftiles  Hill 

John  Ogden   

Rozel  Farguson   

Elisha  Miller 

Henry  Young,  Jr 

Benjamin  Weight   

Augustos  Spencer 

Thos.  Goldsmith 

Andrew  Johnson 


2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
26 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2  6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 
2.6 


5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 
5.0 


Secoiul  Class  Rated. — Con. 

Penery  Johnson £0.5.0 

Thomas  Bowerman 5.0 

Daniel  Rossell 5.0 

Third  Class  Rated 

Henery  Young,  Sr 7.6 

Samuel  Williams 7-6 

Stephen  Hare 7.6 

Thos.  Richardson 76 

Stephen  Conger 7.6 

Fourth  Class  Bated. 

John  Stinson 10.0 

James  Blakeley 10.0 

Abraham  Peterson 10.0 

Fifth  Class  Rated. 

Barret  Dyre 10. 6 

Tenth  Class  Rated. 
Caleb  Elsworth ..    1    5.0 

Under  List  Bated. 

Peter  Mabee 2.0 

John  Zeufelt 2.0 

Abram  Winn 2.0 

Wilkesou  Ferguson 2.0 

JohnSikels 2.0 

John  Spencer 2.0 

Joseph  Lane 2.0 

Barnabas  Wemp 2.0 

John  Frear 2.0 

David  Frear 2.0 

Doctor  Prindel 2.0 

Henery  Bartley 2.0 

Gideon  Bowerman 2.0 

Stephen  Bowerman 2.0 

Jas.  Walters 2.0 

Jasey  Walters    2.0 

George  Baker 2  0 

Isaac  Bedell 2.0 

Samuel  Walters 2  0 

Ruben   Walters 2.0 

Amos  Bull 2.0 

Charles  Cunningham 2.0 

John  Striker 2.0 

Nathaniel  White 2.0 

Samuel  McCoy 2.0 

Anthony  Badgsley 2.0 

William  Dorns 2.0 


Approved  bv  us 

JNO.  PETERS 


C  F. 


J-' 


Assesf^ors. 


Assessed  by  us 

CALEB  ELSWORTH 
AUGTS  SPENCER  /^  ^  '    PETER  DESIGNEA  CONGER^ 

[Copied  May  12,  1899,  from  the  original  list  now  in  the  possession  of  Mrs.  W. 
H.  Allison,  Picton,  a  grand -daughter  of  Stephen  Conger,  and  danght^>r  of  John  P. 
Roblin,  for  years  M.P.P.  and  County  Registrar  of  Prince  Edward. — T.  W.  Casey.] 

(77) 


AX  ACT    TO    PROVIDE    FOR    THE    NOMINATION  AND  AP- 
POINTMENT OF  PARISH  AND  TOWN  OFFICERS 
WITHIN  THIS  PROVINCE. 

[9  July,  17i)3.] 

Whereas  it  is  requisite  for  the  maintenance  of  good  order  and  the 
regular  execution  of  the  Laws,  that  proper  officers  should  be  appointed 
to  superintend  the  observance  thereof  ;  Be  it  enacted  by  the  Kino's 
Most  Excellent  Mfijesty,  by  and  with  the  advice  and  consent  of  the 
Legislative  Council  and  Assembly  of  the  Province  of  Upper  Canada, 
constituted  and  assembled  by  virtue  of  and  under  the  authority  of  an 
Act  passed  in  the  Parliament  of  Great  Britain,  intituled,  "  An  Act  for 
making  more  effectual  provision  for  the  Government  of  the  Province 
of  Quebec,  in  North  America,  and  to  make  further  provision  for  the 
Government  of  the  said  Province,"  and  by  the  authority  of  the  same, 
That  it  shall  and  may  be  lawful,  as  soon  as  conveniently  may  be, alter 
the  passing  of  this  Act,  for  any  two  of  His  Majesty's  Justices  of  'he 
Peace,  acting  within  the  division  in  which  any  parish,  township, 
reputed  township,  or  place  may  be,  to  issue  their  warrent,  giving  eight 
da3's  previous  notice  to  the  Constable  of  such  parish,  township,  reputed 
township  or  place,  authorizing  him  on  a  day  to  he  fixed  by  the  said 
Justices  in  the  present  year,  and  on  the  first  Monday  in  the  month  of 
March  in  every  ensuing  year,  to  assemble  the  Inhabitant  Household- 
ers, paying  or  liable  to  pay  to  any  public  assessment  or  rate  of  such 
par  sh,  toAvnship,  reputed  township,  or  place,  in  the  parish  church  or 
chapel,  or  in  some  convenient  place  within  the  said  parish,  township, 
reputed  township  or  place,  for  the  purpose  of  choosing  and  nominating 
the  parish  or  town  officers  hereinafter  mentioned,  to  serve  in  their 
respective  offices  for  the  year  next  ensuing,  at  which  meeting  the  said 
constable  shall  preside. 

And  be  it  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  That  it  shall  and 
may  be  lawful  for  the  said  Inhabitant  Householders,  or  the  greater 
part  of  them  so  assembled,  to  choose  one  fit  and  proper  person  from 
among  the  Inhabitants  to  be  clerk  of  the  said  Parish,  town  or  town- 
ship who  shall  and  is  hereby  required  to  make  a  true  and  coD'plete 
List  of  every  Male  and  Female  Inhabitant  within  the  limits  of  his 
parish,  town  or  township,  and  return  the  same  to  the  Justices  acting 
as  aforesaid,  so  as  they  may  produce  the  said  Li.st  at  the  General 
Quarter  Sessions  in  the  month  of  April  to  beholden, and  the  said  clerk 
shall  and  isjieicby  required,  to  enter  and  record  all  such  matters,  as 
shall  relate  to  the  said  parish,  town  or  township,  and  shall  appertain  to 
his  office,  which  records  shall  be  faithfully  and  carefully  kept  and 
preserved  by  such  clerk,  and  by  him  delivered  to  his  successor  duly 
nominated  and  appointed. 

III.  And  be  it  further  enacted  by  the  authority  afoivsaid,  That  it 
shall   and    may  be   lawful   for  the  said  Inhabitant   Housfhulders,  in 

(78) 


k-^ 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


manner  aforesaid,  to  clioose  two  tit  and  proper  persons,  from  amongst 
the  said  inhabitants,  to  serve  the  oiBce  of  Assessors  for  the  said  parish, 
township,  reputed  township  or  pki3e,  who  shall  assess  all  such  rates  and 
taxes,  as  shall  be  imposed  by  any  Act  or  Acts  of  the  Legislature  of  this 
Province,  and  be  payable  by  the  Inhabitants  thereof. 

IV.  And  also  to  choose  and  nominate  in  manner  aforesaid,  one  tit 
and  proper  person  to  serve  the  office  of  Collector  for  such  parish,  tovyn- 
ship,  reputed  township,  or  place,  who  shall  and  may,  and  is  hereby 
authorized,  from  time  to  time,  to  demand  and  lective  irom  the 
Inhabitant  Householders,  under  the  said  assessment,  such  monies  as 
may  be  dne  and  payable  from  the  said  Inhabitants,  in  nspect  of  the 
mattei's  aforesaid,  which  Collector  shall  account  for  and  pay  over  the 
monies  so  received  by  him,  in  such  manner  as  shall  I'C  directed  by  any 
Act  or  Acts  of  the  said  Legislature,  that  may  authorize  the  imposing 
and  levying  such  rates  and  taxes  re-pectively. 

V.  And  also  to  choose  and  nominate  in  manner  aforesaid,  not  less 
than  two  or  more  than  six  persons,  as  shall  be  specified  in  the  Warrent 
to  be  issued  by  the  said  Justices,  to  serve  the,  office  of  Overseers  of 
highways  and  roads,  to  oversee  and  perform  such  things  as  shall  be 
directed  by  any  Act  to  be  passed,  touching  or  concerning  theiiighways 
and  roads  in  this  Province,  which  said  overseers  shall  also  serve  the 
office  of  Fence  Viewers,  and  are  hereby  authorized  and  required,  upon 
receiving  proper  notice,  to  view  and  determine  upon  the  height  and 
sufficiency  of  any  Fence  or  Fences  within  their  respective  parish,  town- 
ship reputed  township,  or  place,  conformably  to  any  resolutions,  that 
may  be  agreed  upon  by  the  said  inhabitants  of  such  meeting  to  be 
holden,  under  and  by  virtue  of  such  Warrant  as  aforesaid. 

VI.  And  also  to  choose  and  nominate  in  manner  aforesaid,  a  per- 
son or  per-ons  to  serve  the  office  of  pound-keeper,  who  is  hereby 
authorized  to  Impound  all  Cattle,  and  each  and  every  horse,  sheep  and 
hog  that  sha'l  trespass  on  the  lands  of  any  person,  having  inclosed  the 
same  by  such  high  and  sufficient  Fence,  as  shall  have  been  agreed  on  in 
manner  aforesaid,  and  also  to  impound  any  stoned  Horse,  more  than 
one  year  old,  that  shall  be  running  at  large  upon  the  highways  or 
commons,  and  to  detain  such  Horse,  until  the  owner  thereof  shall  have 
paid  the  sum  of  Twenty  Shillings,  one  half  to  be  paid  to  the  per.son 
taking  such  horse,  the  other  half  thereof  to  the  Collector,  towards  the 
public  stock  of  the  Uistrict. 

VII.  .And  also  to  choose  and  nominate  in  manner  aforesaid,  two 
fit  and  discreet  persons  lo  serve  the  office  of  Town  Wardens  for  such 
parish,  township,  reputed  township  or  place;  but  as  soon  as  there  shall 
be  any  church  built  for  the  performance  of  divine  service,  according  to 
the  use  of  the  Church  of  England,  wnth  a  Parson  or  Minister  duly' 
appointed  thereto,  then  the  said  Inhabitant  Householders  shall  choose 
and  nominate  one  person,  and  the  said  Parson  or  Minister  shall 
nominate  one  other  person,  which  persons  shall  jointly  serve  the  office 
of  Church  Warden,  and  that  such  Town  Warden  or  Church  Wardens, 

79 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


and  their  successors  duly  appointed,  shall  be  as  a  Corporation  to  repre- 
sent the  whole  inhabitants  of  the  township  or  parish,  and  as  such  may 
have  a  property  in  goods  or  chattels  of  or  belonging  to  the  said  parish, 
and  shall  and  may  sue,  prosecute  or  defend  in  all  presentments,  indict- 
ments or  actions,  for,  and  on  behalf  of  the  Inhabitants  of  the  said 
Parish. 

VIII.  And  be  it  further  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaiil.  That 
the  Consta^'le  presiding  at  such  meeting,  shall  and  is  hereby  required, 
to  cause  a  List  to  be  made  out,  containing  the  names  of  the  persons 
chosen  and  nominated  to  serve  and  execute  the  several  Offices  herein- 
before mentioned  in  manner  aforesaid,  which  list  shall  be  signed  by 
the  said  Constable,  who  shall  f(jrthwith  communicate  the  same  to  either 
of  the  Justices,  having  signed  the  Warrent  by  virtue  of  which  such 
meeting  was  holden,  and  it  shall  and  may  be  lawful  for  either  of  the 
said  Justices,  or  for  any  Justice  of  the  Peace,  acting  within  the  division, 
and  he  is  hereby  authorized  and  empowered  to  administer  an  oath  ot 
Office,  to  each  and  every  person  or  persons  so  chosen  and  nominated 
as  afo)-esaid,  within  seven  days. after  such  meeting  as  aforesaid,  in  the 
following  form  : 

You,  A.B.,  do  promise  and  swear,  that  you  will  faithfully,  dilig- 
ently and  justly  serve  and  perform  the  office  and  duties  of  for 

according  to  the  best  of  your  abilities. So  Help  Your 

God.  And  that  every  person  havinj^  taken  such  oath,  shall  be  held  to 
be  lawfully  appointe  1  to  .such  office,  for  which  he  shall  have  been 
chosen  and  nominated  as  aforesaid. 

IX.  Provided  bIwhj^s,  that  any  ])erson  so  cho.sen  and  nominated  to 
serve  any  of  the  offices  hereinbefore  mentioned  in  manner  aforesaid, 
who  shall  refuse  or  neglect  to  signify  his  consent  to  enter  upon  such 
service,  and  to  take  the  oath  hereinbefore  set  forth  by  the  space  of 
seven  days  after  such  nomination  as  aforesaid,  .^hall  lorfeit  and  pa}^ 
the  sum  of  forty  shillings  for  every  such  neglect  or  refusal,  to  be 
recovered  on  pi-oof  thereof  on  confession,  or  by  the  oath  of  one  credible 
witness,  before  any  one  Justice  of  the  Peace  acting  within  the  siid 
Division,  to  be  levied  by  warrant  of  distress  and  sale  of  the  goods  and 
chattels  of  the  partv  so  neglecting  or  refusing,  and  t)  be  paid  into  the 
hands  of  the  treasurer  towards  the  public  stock  of  the  district,  except 
in  the  case  of  forfeiture  of  any  peison  or  persons  nominat'd  to  be 
overseers  of  the  highways  and  roads,  and  refusing  to  act,  whose  penal- 
ties shall  be  paid  into  the  hands  of  the  commissioners  of  the  highways 
and  roads,  and  that  it  shall  and  may  be  lawful,  in  case  of  refusal  as 
aforesaid,  for  any  two  of  His  Majesty's  Justices,  acting  within  the  .said 
Division,  to  hold  a  special  session  for  the  purpose  of  naming  one  or 
more  per\son  or  persons  to  serve  the  office  that  may  have  been  refu^ed 
by  the  party  chosen  to  s(  rve  the  same,  and  fined  in  manner  aforesaid, 
and  if  the  person  or  persons  so  named  by  the  said  Justices,  upon  benig 
served  with  due  notice  thereof,  which  notice  the  constable  is  hereliy 
required  to  serve  upon  the  person,  or  leave  the  same  at  his  usual  place 

80 


61  Victotia.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


of  abode,  shall  neglect  or  refuse  by  the  space  of  seven  days  after  the 
service  of  such  notice,  to  accept  the  said  office,  and  take  the  oath  here- 
inbefore described,  he  shall  for  every  such  neglect  or  refusal,  forfeit 
the  sum  of  forty  shillings,  to  be  levied  by  distress  and  sale,  and  paid 
over  in  manner  herein  before  metioned. 

X.  And  be  it  further  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  That  it 
shall  and  may  be  lawful  for  the  Justices  of  the  Peace,  within  the 
respective  limits  of  their  commissions  at  their  General  Quarter  Sessions 
in  the  month  of  April  assembled,  or  the  greater  part  of  them,  to  nomi- 
nate and  appoint  yearly  and  every  year,  a  sufficiently  discreet  and 
proper  per>on  to  serve  the  office  of  High  Constable  in  each  and  ever}^ 
district,  and  also  to  nominate  and  appoint  such  a  sufficient  number  of 
persons  as  in  their  discretion  will  be  necessary  to  serve  the  office  of 
constable  in  each  and  every  parish,  township,  reputed  township  or 
place,  and  the  said  constable  or  constables,  before  they  enter  into  their 
office,  shall  severally  take  the  following  oath,  W'hich  it  shall  and  may 
be  lawful  for  any  Justice  of  the  Peace  to  administer. 

You  shall  well  and  truly  serve  our  Sovereign  Lord  the  King,  in 
the  office  of  for  the  of  for 

the  year  ensuing,  according  to  the  best  of  your  skill  and  knowledge. 

So  Help  your  God. 

XI.  Provided  always,  and  be  it  further  enacted  by  the  authority 
aforesaid.  That  no  person  having  been  appointed  and  served  any  of 
the  offices  mentioned  in  this  Act,  shall  be  liable  to  be  appointed  or 
serve  the  same  office  within  three  years  from  such  appointment  or  ser- 
vice, unless  he  shall  consent  thereto. 

XII.  Provided  also,  that  when  any  township  or  reputed  township 
shall  not  contain  thirty  inhabitant  householders,  it  shall  not  be  lawful 
for  the  said  Justices  to  issue  their  warrent  for  calling  a  meeting  there- 
in, but  the  said  inhabitant  householders  shall  be  joined  to,  and  be 
reputed  and  taken  as  Inhabitants  of  the  township  adjacent  thereto; 
which  shall  contain  the  smallest  number  of  inhabitants. 

XIII.  And  be  it  enacted,  That  it  shall  and  may  be  lawful  for  the 
Justices  of  the  Peace  within  the  respective  limits  of  their  commissions, 
at  the  General  Quarter  Sessions  in  the  month  of  April  to  be  holden, 
assembled,  or  the  greater  part  of  them,  to  limit  and  appoint  such  fees 
and  perquisites  as  to  them  shpll  appear  reasonable  to  be  demanded  and 
taken  by  every  Town  Clerk  and  Pound  Keeper  of  the  several  parishes 
or  townships  within  their  respective  Districts. 


AMENDMENTS  TO  THE  FOREGOING  ACT. 

45th  year,  Geo.  III.  (1805)  Chap.  VI. 

II.  And  be  it  further  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  That  it 
shall  and  may  be  lawful  for  the  inhabitant  householders,  assembled 
under  and  by  virtue  of  the  authority  of  the  said  Act,  in  their  Annual 

6  B.I.  6  81 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Town  Meetings,  to  choose  and  nominate,  under  and  agreeably  to  the 
provisions  of  the  said  Act,  not  less  than  two  nor  n)ore  than  tivelve 
persons  to  serve  the  said  office  of  Overseers  of  the  Highways,  for  such 
Parish,  Town  or  Township. 


57th  year,  Geo.  III.  (1817)  Chap.  Yll. 

II.  And  be  it  further  enacted  by  the  authority  aforesaid,  That 
from  and  after  the  passing  of  this  Act,  it  shall  and  may  be  lawful  for 
inhabitant  householders  of  each  and  every  township,  reputed  township 
or  place,  to  assemble  on  the  first  Monday  in  the  month  of  January  in 
every  subsequent  year,  tor  the  purpose  of  choosing  and  nominating 
Parish  and  Town  Officers,  agreeable  to  the  said  Act  passed  in  the  33rd 
year  of  His  Majesty's  Reign,  entitled  "  An  Act  to  provide  for  the 
nomination  and  appointment  of  Parish  &  Town  Officers  within  the 
Province,"  except  so  much  of  the  said  Act  as  is  hereby  repealed. 


PROF.  W.  J.  ASHLEY  ON  TOWN   MEETINGS. 

The  following  is  an  extract  from  the  introduction  to  Mr.  McEvoy's 
study  "  The  Ontario  Township,"  by  Prof.  Ashley : 

Mr.  McEvoy,  wnth  a  w^ise  limitation  of  his  field,  begins  with  the 
Act  of  1793,  empowering  the  inhabitants  of  townships  to  elect  certain 
officers.  Of  late  j^ears  a  considerable  literature  has  grown  up  concern- 
ing the  New  England  Townships,  of  which  the  Ontarian  township  is 
indirectly  the  descendant.  It  has  been  traced  back  to  the  primitive 
German  self-governing  "  mark-community  "  which  is  supposed  to  have 
suffered  the  degradation  of  subjection  to  manorial  lords,  but  in  the 
freer  air  of  the  new  world  to  have  re-appeared  again  in  all  its  old 
democratic  liberty.  Unfortunately, the  very  existence  of  the  free  mark- 
community  has  recently  been  disputed,  and  with  much  show  of  reason. 
It  is  safer  to  say  that  the  early  colonists  of  New  England  took  with 
them  the  local  institutions  with  which  they  are  familiar  at  home  ;  but 
that  a  more  democratic  spirit  was  infused  into  them  by  the  circum- 
stances of  their  new^  life,  and  by  the  character  of  their  religion. 
Whatever  its  origin,  the  towm-meeting  of  New  England  pla/ed  a  most 
important  part  in  the  education  of  the  people  in  self-government. 
There  all  the  qualified  male  inhabitants  met  together  and  discussed 
and  decided  a  wide  range  of  matters  of  local  concern.  Why  w^as  this 
system  not  introduced  in  its  entirety  into  Canada  ?  It  is  frequently 
supposed  that  the  reason  was  that  the  British  Government,  taught  by 
the  experience  of  the  revolted  colonies,  feared  the  town-meeting  as  a 
school  of  independence.  It  is  true  that  town  meetings  were  suppressed 
in  Nova  Scotia  in  1770,  the  verj^  year  that  Boston  town-meeting, 
under  the  guidance  of  Samuel  Adams,  was  leading  all  the  other 
"  towns "  of  Massachusetts  in  opposition  to  the  government  of  King 

82 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  189S 


George.  This  may,  accordingly,  have  beeil  one  of  the  reasons  why  the 
local  government  established  in  Upper  Canada  took  the  shape  it  did. 
But  there  is  another  and  still  more  important  reason  that  has  hitherto 
been  overlooked.  It  it  that  it  was  not  the  example  of  New  England 
that  was  directly  before  the  eyes  of  the  first  settlers  in  Upper  Canada, 
but  the  example  of  the  neighboring  state  of  New  York.  It  was  from 
thence  that  most  of  the  U.  E.  Loyalists  came.* 

Indeed,  an  old  settler  writing  in  1816  expressly  describes  the 
system  of  government  established  in  1791  and  the  years  immediately 
following,  as  "  a  constitution  similar  to  that  they  (the  old  settlers)  had 
lost  during  the  rebellion  in  the  Province  of  New  York."-f- 

Now,  the  township  has  never  occupied  the  same  position  in  New 
York  and  the  middle  states  of  the  Union  as  in  the  more  northern 
states.  It  was  not  there  the  original  basis  of  local  government ;  the 
county  was  that ;  but  it  had  been  introduced  by  New  England 
influence,  so  that  the  middle  states  presented  a  compromise  between 
the  township  system  of  the  north  and  the  county  system  of  the  south.j 

The  legislative  powers  of  the  town  meeting,  for  instance,  seem  to 
have  been  very  limited,  and  practically  its  chief  work  was  the  election 
of  township  officers.^  From  1703,  indeed,  there  was  a  county-board 
composed  of  the  Supervisors  (the  chief  officers  of  the  townships,  like 
the  Ontarian  Reeves)  which  had  the  power  of  levying  taxes,  and  I 
shall  return  to  this  very  shortly ;  but  the  justices,  nominated  by  the 
Governor,  still  possessed  considerable  power  of  control.  Mr.  McEvoy 
tells  us  of  the  friction  occasioned  in  Ontario  by  the  justices'  authority 
over  the  repair  of  roads  ;  but  they  had  somewhat  the  same  power  in 
New  York ;  thus,  "  in  several  counties  a  single  justice  of  the  peace 
might,  whenever  he  though  fit,  order  the  overseers  to  repair  any  road 
within  his  district."|| 

This  last  example  suggests  a  further  remark.  Even  the  authority 
of  the  justices  in  Quarter  Sessions  in  Ontario  is  probably  to  be  explained, 
at  least  as  much  by  American  tradition  as  by  imitation  of  England.lT 
Thus,  in  Massachusetts  itself,  where  the  town-meeting  was  strongest, 
the  Justices  in  General  or  Quarter  Sessions  continued  to  levy  a  county 
rate  to  the  end  of  the  colonial  period,*  and  even  to  exercise  the  right 
of  disallowing  town  by-laws.i" 

*Dr.  Canniff— Settlement  of  U.  C,  Chap.  9-11,  Cap.  49. 
tlbid.,  159 

J  See  this  idea  clearly  worked  out  by  Bryce,  Am.  Commonwealth,  Cha}).  48. 
§  Howard — Local  Constitutional  History  of  the  United  States. 
II  Ibid.,  392-3, 

TTDr.  Bourinot  seems  to  ascribe  it  entirely  to  the  latter  cause.     Local  (Jovt.  in 
Can.,  37,  in  Johns  Hopkins'  Studies,  5th  Series. 
*  Howard,  340-1. 
t  Ibid.,  334. 

83 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


The  position  of  the  township  and  town-meeting  in  Ontario  is  still 
further  illustrated  by  the  analogy  presented  to  us  in  the  history  of  the 
American  North-west  (now  forming  the  states  of  Michigan,  Ohio, 
Illinois,  Indiana  and  Wisconsin.) 

In  both  cases,  the  township  was  at  first  a  mere  territorial  division 
for  the  purpose  of  surveying  the  land,  and  partitioning  it  among 
settlers  ;  in  Upper  Canada  this  work  was  began  in  1781,  and  was 
carried  on  more  vigorously  from  1783  by  a  Surveyor-General  who  had 
actually  been  doing  precisely  similar  work  in  the  colonies  north  of 
Virginia.^  In  the  American  North-West  the  work  was  set  on  foot  by 
the  Ordinance  of  1785  But  while  in  Upper  Canada  this  merely 
geographical  division  became  the  unit  for  local  administration,  with 
its  meeting  for  the  election  of  officers,  as  early  as  1793,  the  North- 
west Territory  waited  till  1802  for  an  institution  of  precisely  the  same 
limited  powers.§  And  in  the  Northwest,  at  first,  as  in  Upper  Canada, 
a  wide  administrative  authority  was  exercised  by  the  Justices  in 
Quarter  Sessions.]] 

Of  the  more  recent  period  treated  by  Mr.  McEvoy,  it  is  not  neces- 
sary here  to  say  much.  The  system  established  in  184.9  seems  to  be 
similar  in  all  essentials  to  the  so-called  "  compromise  "  plan  or  "  town- 
ship county  system"  of  New  York  and  some  of  the  Northwestern 
States,  with  its  county  board  composed  of  township  supervisors.  How 
far  the  one  was  consciously  borrowed  from  the  other,  or  how  far  both 
were  the  independent  outcome  of  the  same  needs,  would  require  some 
little  research  to  determine.  The  name  Reeve  for  the  presiding  officer 
of  the  township  council  is  pecular,  as  far  as  1  know,  to  Canada,  and 
was  possibly  the  result  of  the  revived  interest  in  early  English  insti- 
tutions that  marked  the  period.  It  may  be  noticed  that  Kemble's 
'  Saxons  in  England,'  with  its  chapter  on  the  '  Gerefa,'  had  appeared  in 
the  preceding  year.  The  most  important  diflference  between  the 
Ontarian  and  the  American  "  compromise  "  seems  to  lie  in  the  circum- 
stance that  in  Ontario  all  the  powers  of  the  town-meeting,  except  the 
election  of  certain  officers,  have  been  transferred  by  law  to  the  town- 
ship council.  But  this  contrast  is  diminished  by  two  facts  in  the  prac- 
tical workings  of  the  two  systems :  first,  that  in  several  of  the  American 
states  the  legislative  activity  of  the  town-meeting  is  in  reality  but 
small,  owing  to  the  withdrawal,  as  in  Ontario,  of  incorporated  villages 
from  the  township  ;1I  and  secondly,  the  very  remarkable  survival  of 
tli£  town-meeting  in  Ontario,  in  spite  of  statutes,  and  its  real  influence 
over  the  actions  of  the  council.  Mr.  McEvoy 's  essay  is  particularly 
useful  in  calling  our  attention  to  this  striking  instance  of  the  strength 
of  custom. 

+  Canniff,  Chap.  15. 

§  Howard,  144. 

II  ibid.,  423  4.  They  soon  lost,  however,  in  the  Northwest  the  power  of  levy- 
ing taxes. 

IT  Howard,  166  ;  Bemis  Local  Govt,  in  Mich,  and  the  Northwest,  15,  in  Johns 
Hopkins  Univ.  Studies,  1st  Series. 

84 


A  DISPERSION  SALE  OF  1829. 

The  following  statement  of  an  auction  sale  or  vendue  has  been 
fui'nished  by  Mr.  Canniff  Haight,  grandson  of  Daniel  Haight,  a  pioneer 
Quaker,  a  short  sketch  of  whose  family  aj)pears  before  in  this  volume 
under  the  "  Personal  Notes."  It  is  worth  printing  for  two  reasons,  first 
because  it  gives   a  record  of  the  possessions  of  a  well-to-do  farmer 

seventy  years  ago,  and  second  because  it  is  a  statement  of  values  of 
the  same.  The  notes  as  to  the  uses  of  various  farm  implements  and 
utensils  will  be  of  interest  to  many  readers  and  students  of  our 
history — they  are  by  Mr.  C  Haight. 

A  List  of  property  sold  at  vendue  this  26th  day  of  January,  1829,  belonging  to 
Daniel  Haight  of  Adolphustown. 

Article.  Sold  to.  Surety. 

£    s.    d. 

4  Hogs Ricketson  Haight.  .  .  .  Consider  Haight 2     0     0 

4  Hogs Consider  Haight Ricketson  Haight. ...  1196 

5  Hogs '•             "        ....          "             "        ....  2     8     0 

6  Sheep,  first  choice.  .  .  .  Ricketson  Haight..  .  .  15/3  per  head., 4  11     6 

6       "         "         "     ....  Samuel  Borland 14/3"       "       456 

6       "         "         "     Ricketson  Haight....  10/  John  D  EJaight..  3     0     0 

17  do,  6/9  per  head Phillip  Haight 5  14     9 

1  Bull Ricketson  Haight 1     1     0 

1  do     '•             "         1     1     9 

2  Calves Daniel  Rutan (Son-in-law) 1  13     6 

2     do       Consider  Haight 2     8     6 

1  do       "             "      12     6 

2  Steers Ricketson  Haight 6  10     0 

1  Heiffer Consider  Haight 2  15     0 

1     do        Ricketson  Haight 2  19     0 

1  Cow Noxon  Harris Marvil  Garrison 4     0     0 

1  do     Job  Dunham Juhn  Dunham 3  12     0 

1  do      Ricketson  Haight 4  10     6 

1  do     Reuben  Haight 3  19     0 

1  Heiffer Ricketson  Haight 1  15     0 

1  Yoke  oxen Consider  Haight 23     0     0 

1  Horse Phillip  Haight '. 25  12     0 

1  Mare Consider  Haight 12     1     0 

1  Gray  colt Samuel  Haight 3  7  14     0 

1  Horse John  Mullett (Son  in-law) 1117     0 

1  Mare Rowland  Haight 19  17     0 

1  Cutter Consider  Haight.    2     9     6 

1  Fanning  mill Ricketson  Haight 1     8     0 

1  Sow  and  pigs Consider  Haight 1     0     0 

1  Potash  kettle  (1) Daniel  Ruttan 3  12     6 

1  Set  harness Consider  Haight 3  16     0 

1  Leach  tub  (2) Ricketson  Haight 6     0 

1  Sleigh   Marvel  Garrison • 5  10     0  ' 

1  Sauspan  (3) Ricketson  Haight 11     0 

IPot "             " 14     6 

1  Pot  (4) Andrew  Quackinbush.  Ricketson  Haight. ...  83 

1  Pan Consider  Haight 6     3 

1  Axe Ricketson  Haight 10     3 

(85) 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


A  DISPERSION  SALE.— Continued. 


Article. 


1  Cake  pan  and  2  tin  do 
1  Chair  and  sundries. . .. 

3  Pails 

1  Fork   

1  Hand  saw 

1  Waggon  chair  (5) 

1  Pruning  knife 

1  Hand  sleigh  (6) 

6  Chairs 

6     do     7/9 

1  Set  Dutch  harness  (7) . 

2  Collars  &  4  trace  chains 

1  Neck  yoke 

1  Pocket  compass 

1  Set  harness 

1  Ox  carte 

1  Chair 

1  Cutter 

1  Two-horse  waggon. . . . 

1  Saw  (8) 

1  String  of  bells 

1  Wood  pt.  of  waggon  . . 
1       do 

1  Cheese  hoop  (9) 

1  Copper  kettle 

1  Griddle  (10) 

1  Toasting  iron 

1  Flesh  fork  (11) 

1  Pair  steelyards  (12).  .  . 
1  Lantern  and  basin .... 
1  Pestle  and  Mortar  (13) 
1  Apple  peeler  (14)   .... 

1  Iron  mortar 

1  Heckle  (15) 

1  Tin  horn  (16) 

1  Cradle 

1  Basket  and  shears  .... 

1  Pan 

1  Spider 

1  T  ea  kettle    

1  Kettle 

1  Churn  

2  Tubs 

1  Keeler  and  bowl  (17). . 

3  Trays  (18)    

2  Trays  and  bowls 

2  Trays    

2     do 

1  Cheese  knife   

1  Keg 

1  Cheese  rack 

1  Tub 

1  Bowl   

1  Pail 

1  Bread  tray 

1  Tub 


Sold  to. 
Consider  Haight. 


Surety. 


John  Haight 

Consider  Haight. , 
Ricketson  Haight. 


Consider  Haight 4/1 

George  Bedle Edwin  Mallory .  . . 

Ricketson  Haight 

Marvil  Garrison 

James  Ackerman,  Sr .  Ricketson  Haight. 

John  Clapp Paid 

Daniel  Ruttan 

Consider  Haight 


Jas.  Ackerman,  Sr. 


Adam  Ackerman  . 
Ricketson  Haight. 

Phillip  Garrison Marvil  Garrison . 

Phillip  Haight.  , 

Daniel  Ruttan 

Samuel  Dorland 

Job  Dunham 

John  Clapp Paid 

Ricketson  Haight , 

John  Clapp Paid 

George  Bedle.. ......  Paid  in  work . . . , 

Reuben  Haight , 

Reuben  Clapp 

Ricketson  Haight     


Paid 


Daniel  Ruttan  . . . 
James  Ackerman. 
George  Bedle  : .  . . 
Marvil  Garrison  . 
Reuben  Haight  . 
Phillip  Haight.  .  . 
Reuben  Haight  . 
Ricketson  Haight 
Phillip  Haight.  . . 
Phillip  Garrison    . 

Ricketson  Haight    

Lewis  Lazier 

Ricketson    Haight 

George  Bedle    

Edwin  Mallory 

John  Haight 

Daniel  Ruttan 

John  Haight 

Daniel  Ruttan 

Reuben  Haight     

Jonn  Clapp    Paid 

Phillip  Garrison   ....  Paid 

Reuben  Haight    

John  Haight   

86 


6  9 

5  3 

7  6 

8  6 

3  9 

4  3 

5  6 

5  0 

1 

4  6 

2 

6  6 

4 

10  6 

1 

8  6 

3  6 

8  0 

17 

16  0 

6 

1  0 

13  2 

1 

4  2 

18 

2  0 

1 

6  11 

10  8 

5 

3  6 

4 

5  0 

3  0 

6  1 

1  4 

2  9 

2  2 

14  3 

8  1 

6  3 

4  0 

3  8 

1  6 

12  0 

17  1 

2  8 

2  1 

5  4 

12  0 

10  0 

4  8 

2  7 

3  8 

3  0 

2  1 

1  3 

1  5 

1  7 

3  0 

1  3 

1  0 

3  9 

4  1 

1  6 

4  6 

61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  82).  A.  1898 


A  DISPERSION  SALE.— Gov  eluded. 
Article.                            Sold  to.                           Surety. 
1  Five-pail  kettle  (19)  .  .  John  Frederick John  Dafoe    


1  Whip John  Clapp   Paid 

1  Pail Lewis  Lazier 

1  Whip    "         "      

1  vVaggon  chair George  Bedle   

1  Bedstead  and  cord  (20)  Consider  Haight 

1  Table    William  Hopson   

1     do        Lewis  Lazier 

1  do       John  Clapp   Paid 

2  Half  rounds  (21) "         "        .  .  Paid 

1  Pail Lewis  Lazier Paid 

1  Half-bushel  measure.  .  Edwin  Mallory 

1  Saddle    Daniel  Ruttan 

1  Flour  chest Ricketson  Haight     

1  Pair  sieves "  *•  

1  Patent  plough  (22) Phillip  Garrison   Paid 

1  Plough Reuben  Haight    

1  Harrow     Daniel  Ruttan 

1      do  Consider  Haight 

1  Cradle  (23) Ricketson  Haight     

1  Set     of      blacksmith's 

tools  (24)    Consider  Haight 10 

1  Pitch  fork    Samuel  Dorland   ....  Paid    

1  Cradle  and  scythe  ....  Lewis  Lazier Andrew  Quack enbush 

1  Scythe "         "       

1     do       and  snath    "         "       "  " 

1  Scythe Ricketson    Haight   

2  d)        Consider  Haight 

1  Hat'  het    Ricketson   Haight   

1  Scythe  and  snath    ....  Reuben  Haii/ht 

1  Plough Ricketson    Haight   

1  Bedstead    Rowland  Haight 

1  Axe Ricketson  Haight 

1  Combus  table  (25) "  "        

A  lot  of  things  in  the 

shop Consider  Haight 

A  box  of  bucks   "  "        

Sundries Ricketson  Haight     

1  Cradle "  "  

1  Grind   stone    Isaiah  Thomson    

1  Punchon  and  cider  .  .  .  Daniel  Ruttan 

1  Empty  pipe Ricketson  Haight     

1  Spade  and  shovel   ....  George  Bedle    

1  Tub Ricketson  Haight    

1  Hoe  and  clevis    "  "  

1  Hand  irons  and  tongs .  Consider  Haight 

1  Ton  of  hay "  "        

2  Tons  of  hay John  Mullette 2 

1  Broad  axe Ricketson   Haight 

1  Beetle  and  wedge  ....  Consider  Haight  . 

2  Trowels    Daniel  Ruttan  .  .  . 

1  Ox  yoke Consider  Haight  . 

Iron Ricketson    Haight 

1  Grind  stone Consider  Haight  . 

1  Chair Ricketson    Haight 


87 


1 

7 

3 

1 

1 

1 

10 

1 

0 

7 

9 

19 

0 

12 

6 

3 

9 

1 

12 

0 

2 

5 

0 

1 

9 

1 

2 

1 

1 

H 

1 

1 

3 

5 

6 

2 

6 

9 

2 

9 

3 

2 

5 

0 

18 

6 

7 

6 

10 

1 

0 

4 

11 

8 

3 

1 

3 

9 

0 

8 

5 

1 

0 

1 

11 

4 

2 

1 

5 

3 

13 

9 

3 

9 

3 

7 

1 

9 

9 

3 

9 

8 

3 

2 

9 

1 

16 

6 

2 

1 

0 

4 

3 

10 

1 

4 

6 

2 

2 

1 

4 

6 

1 

18 

6 

2  17 

0 

8 

3 

9 

3 

7 

9 

1 

3 

2 

7 

6 

2 

3 

£326 

6 

8 

61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1S98 


Notes. 

1.  Potash  kettle. — This  was  a  very  large  iron  cauldron  which 
would  hold  three  or  four  barrels  of  water,  sometimes  more.  It  was 
called  so  because  it  was  used  for  boiling  down  the  lye  obtained  from 
hardwood  ashes.  Nearly  every  farmer  who  could  afford  it  had  one. 
It  was  enclosed  by  a  stone  plastered  wall  having  at  one  side  an  opening 
to  receive  wood  and  on  the  other  side  a  flue  to  produce  a  draught  and 
permit  the  smoke  to  escape.  Its  rim  rested  on  the  top  of  the  enclosure, 
and  at  an  elevation  sufficient  to  allow  a  fire  to  be  made  under  it.  By 
this  means  the  water  was  evaporated  more  speedily  from  the  alkali,  or 
impure  carbonate  of  potassa,  a  white  metallic  substance,  used  for  many 
purposes.  It  was  one  of  the  few  things  in  demand  and  which  brought 
money  in  those  days,  and  hence  the  ashes  from  the  wood  heaps  and 
the  house  were  carefully  preserved. 

2.  Leach  tub. — This  was  usually  made  of  boards,  of  oblong  shape, 
and  in  the  form  of  a  "  V  " — barrels  were  often  used — and  secured  on  a 
thick  plank,  with  a  slight  incline  to  carry  off  the  lye.  Before  filling 
the  tub  coarse  straw  was  put  in  the  bottom  over  which  some  lime  was 
scattered,  and  then  it  was  filled  with  ashes,  after  which  water  was 
applied  day  after  day  until  the  alkali  had  been  all  washed  out,  when 
it  was  conveyed  to  the  kettle  and  treated  as  above. 

3.  A  flat  bottomed  pot  with  a  cover,  otherwise  called  a  baking 
pot.  They  are  still  in  use,  but  of  less  consequence  now.  The  good 
housewife  in  those  days  had  not  dreamed  of  cook  stoves.  If  she 
wanted  to  make  a  stew,  she  raked  a  few  live  coals  out  in  the  hearth 
and  set  this  contrivance  upon  them. 

4.  Note  refers  to  payments. 

5.  Waggon  chair. — This  was  a  strong  splint-bottomed  seat  capable 
of  holding  two  persons  comfortably,  and  three  at  a  pinch,  and  made  to 
sit  on  the  inside  of  the  box  of  a  lumber  waggon — the  farmer's  carriage 
then — as  the  waggon  had  to  be  used  on  the  farm  the  box  was  move- 
able and  usually  painted.  If  a  visit  was  contsmplated  or  a  meeting 
attended  on  Sunday,  the  box  was  put  on,  the  chairs  placed  and  covered 
with  Buffalo  skins  or  quilts. 

6.  Hand  sleighs  were  about  as  useful  in  those  days  when  the 
ground  was  covered  with  snow  as  a  wheel-barrow  is  in  summer  now. 

7.  Dutch  harness. — In  contradistinction  to  harness  in  which  a 
collar  and  hames  are  used,  quite  common  now,  but  not  so  then. 

8.  This  is  a  long  saw  with  a  handle  at  both  ends,  a  crosscut  saw 
used  for  sawing  timber  and  an  important  implement  at  that  time 

9.  A  wooden  hoop  eight  or  nine  inches  deep  and  fourteen  or  six- 
teen inches  in  diameter  in  which  the  cheese  curd  is  put  and  pressed. 

10.  Griddles  have  not  gone  out  of  date,  but  the  griddles  of  that 
time  had  hoop  handles  with  an  eye  in  the  top  which  enabled  the  cook 
to  turn  it  around.  When  in  use  it  was  suspended  over  the  fire  by  an 
iron  hook  fastened  to  the  crane. 

88 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 

11.  Flesh  fork. — Used  to  turn  meat  in  the  pot. 

12.  Steel-yards. — Every  farmer  had  them.  As  there  was  a  great 
deal  of  barter  going  on  then  they  were  a  necessity. 

13.  Pestle  and  mortar.  -  -Very  common  in  farm  houses  then  and 
useful.  •  There  were  numbers  of  thing3  required  for  culinary  and 
other  purposes  that  could  not  be  reduced  to  powder  by  any  other 
means. 

14.  Apple  peeler. — A  little  machine  for  peeling  apples.  A  great 
improvement  on  the  knife  and  a  prominent  feature  at  apple-bees. 

15.  Heckle. — A  wooden  instrument  used  to  free  the  fibre  from 
the  stalk  of  the  flax. 

16.  Tin  horn. — Used  to  call  the  men  to  their  meals.  Many  a  time 
in  my  young  days  have  I  awaited  its  pleasant  call. 

17.  Keeler  and  bowl. — The  first  a  shallow  wooden  vessel  of  two 
or  three  gallons  capacity  used  for  holding  milk  in  the  place  of  tin 
pans  which  were  not  easily  to  be  had,  and  were  expensive.  The  bowl 
was  a  wooden  dish  usually  made  out  of  ash  knots  by  the  Indians,  who 
wereexpeits  in  making  these  dishes  and  numbers  of  other  useful 
things  for  the  house,  such  as  splint  brooms,  spoons,  ladels,  trays, 
baskets,  etc.,  which  they  exchanged  for  provisions. 

18.  Trays. — An  oblong  wooden  dish  made  by  the  Indians,  and 
used  principally  by  the  housewife  for  manipulating  butter, 

19.  Five  pail  kettle. — A  pot  that  would  contain  five  pails  of  water. 

20.  Bedstead  and  cord. — The  old  post  bedstead  has  disappeared 
with  its  straw  and  feather  ticks.  The  posts  were  morticed  to  receive 
the  beams.  The  latter  were  pierced  with  holes  about  nine  inches 
apart,  through  which  the  cord  was  passed  lengthwise  and  crosswise 
and  then  drawn  as  tight  as  possible  with  a  wrench  made  for  the  pur- 
pose.    This  held  the  frame  together  and  supported  the  bed. 

21.  Half  rounds. — The  half  of  a  circular  table  which  could  be 
drawn  out  and  pieces  put  in  to  extend  its  length  or  placed  at  the  ends 
of  another  table.     They  were  usually  made  of  cherry. 

22.  Patent  plough. — This  was  a  cast  iron  plough  with  a  wood 
beam  and  tail.  It  was  first  made,  I  believe,  by  Willet  Casey,  and  a 
great  advance  on  the  old  ones  which  were  made  altogether  of  wood, 
except  the  share  which  was  wrought  iron.  My  father  had  one  and 
sometimes  used  it,  but  it  was  a  clumsy  implement  and  discarded  as 
soon  as  possible. 

23.  Cradle. — At  that  time  the  only  inplement  in  use  for  cutting 
grain. 

24.  Blacksmith's  tools. — Farmers  and  their  sons  were  their  own 
carpenters,  blacksmiths,  and,  to  a  large  extent,  also  harnessmakers, 
shoemakers,  coopers  and  waggonmakers. 

25.  Combus  table. — Pi-obably  some  kind  of  extension  or  folding 
table. 

89 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Conditions  of  the  Vendue. 

The  conditions  of  the  sale  of  Daniel  Haight's  property  to  be  sold 
at  public  vendue  are  as  follows,  viz.: — Any  person  purchasing,  and  not 
to  the  amount  of  twenty  shillings,  must  make  immediate  payment, 
and  those  purchasing  to  that  amount  or  upwards  must  give  satisfactory 
security  or  the  property  will  be  exposed  to  a  second  sale.  If  it  sells 
for  more  he  is  to  reap  no  benefit,  but  if  for  less  he  is  to  make  good  the 
first  sale.  All  that  comply  with  these  conditions  shall  have  one  year, 
without  interest,  to  make  payment  in,  and  if  at  the  expiration  of  that 
time  they  come  forward  and  pay  one-half  they  shall  have  one  year 
more  for  to  pay  the  other  half  by  paying  interest. 

Daniel  Haight. 


N.B. — The  security  first  entered  in  the  list  is  to  stand  for  the 
purchase  by  that  individual  for  which  his  name  is  first  entered.  True 
copy  of  conditions  of  sale  made  public  at  the  day  of  sale. 

R.  Haight. 


Copy  of  an  Inventc^ry  of  Household  Effects  belonging  to  Daniel  Haight,  headed 

"A  memorandum  of  the  Household  Furniture,  4th  Month,  1829." 

£    s.  d. 

A  desk,  black  walnut    3  10  0 

1  clock  and  case 5     0  0 

1  stove  and  pipes   7     0  0 

1  looking  glass    3     0  0 

1  cherry  stand    3  10  0 

1  strong  box,  "iro'   "    ....  6     0  0 

6  Windsor  chairs,  45 ' . .  .  )  o     o  ^ 

6  chairs,  18 (  "^     "^  " 

1  cherry  bedstead  and  cord, 

24/ 1     4  0 

1  set  dark  curtains,  25/  ...  150 

4  window  curtains,  1  stand 
cover,  2/ 12  0 

14  white  flannel  blankets, 

good 12  12  0 

8  check  blankets,  20/ 8     0  0 

3  striped    do         18/ 2  14  0 

5  Indian     do           5 ' 1     5  0 

7  quilts,  22/;  1  cradle  do  5/  7  19  0 

2  bedsteads  and  cords....  2     0  0 
1 -■  bedstead  curtains 

and  mattrass .  2  10  0 

5  straw  bed  ticks,  5 1     5  0 

3  cotton  sheets,  7/  ;  3  linen 
do,  7/ 2     2  0 

1  set  light  calico  curtains, 
Teaster  sheet  and  cloth  .  13  9 

2  willo?f  baskets 4  0 

3  sets  of  upper  valance, head 
cloths  and  Teaster  sheets  115  0 


2  ink  bottles,  ]/;  sugar  box, 
1/  ;  bread  dish,  1/ 

1  pair  spoon  moulds,  7/  6d. ; 
1  pitcher,  1/ ;  pepper 
box,  1/ 

Butter  ladle,  1/  ;  fat  bottle, 
1   9d 

1  pair  gold  scales  and 
weights 

1  pair  pipjye  tongs,  3/  9d. ; 
copper  tea  kettle,  10/  . . . 

1  knot  dish,  "  chopping 
bowl" 

1  iron  pot,  5/  ;  10  gal.  cask, 
4/  ;  meat  tub,  5/ 

Wash  tub,  3/ ;  dye  tub,  3/  : 
pickle  do,  4/  ;  soap  do,  3/ 

1  plaid  blanket  

1  map  of  the  Holland  pur- 
chase   

1  do  United  States,  5/ ;  1  do 
England,  Ireland,  etc. . . 

1  large  bible,  15/  ;  3  vols., 
Clarkson's  Penetrations, 
20/ 

1  Buchan's  Domestic  Medi- 
cine   

2  vols.  Brooks',  6/  3d.;  1 
vol.  Pownal,  3/  9d 

1  Lewis'  Dispensatory  .... 


£    s. 

d. 

..     3 

0 

..     9 

6 

..     2 

9 

..     7 

6 

..   13 

9 

..     2 

0 

..   14 

0 

.  .   13 

0 

. .   12 

0 

..     5 

0 

. .   11 

0 

1  15 

0 

..     6 

3 

..   10 

0 

..     5 

0 

90 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Copy  of  an  Inventory  of  Household  Effects,  etc. — Continued. 


3pair  under  vallance,  2/  6d. 
and  7/  6d.  ;  4  window 
curtains,  10/ 

I  set  muslin  vallance,  2/  6d. ; 

4  table  cloths,  3/ 

II  pillows,  4/ 

2 caps,  3/ 

3  brass  candle  sticks,  5/  . .  . 
1    iron    basin,    3/    9d. ;    1 

smoothing  iron,  3/  6d . . . 

1  iron  candle  stick 

14  pair  pillow  cases,  2/  6d. ; 

2  bolster  do,  2/ 

4  feather  beds,  60/ 

6  towels,  1/ ;  2  tin  pots,  5/. 
3  milk  pans,  2/  6d. ;  9  metal 

spoons,  1/     

9  silver  spoons,  5/ 

10  case  knives  and  7  forks. 
3  tea  cannisters,  1/  3d  .... 

1  tin  tea  pot,  2/  ;  4  tin 
basins,  1/  8d    

2  decanters,  3/  9d. ;  2  wine 
glasses,  9d   

1^  gal.  glass  jar 

1  blue  edged  platter 

1  green  edged  plate,  1/  • .  1 

1  oval  dish,  9d J 

1    pewter     platter,    4/  ;    9 

earthen  plates,  6d 

1  bowl,  (M. ;  6  cups  and 
saucers,  4/  6d. ;  2  sugar 
bowls,  1/  3d 

11  saucers  and  cups,  4/  ;  2 
gal.  jugs,  1/  2d 


£    s.    d. 


19     6 


..   14 

6 

2     4 

0 

..     6 

0 

..   15 

0 

..     7 

3 

..     1 

6 

1  19 

0 

12    0 

0 

..   16 

0 

..   16 

6 

2     5 

0 

..   10 

0 

..     3 

9 

..     3 

8 

..     9 

0 

..     7 

6 

..     3 

9 

..     1 

9 

8     6 

7     6 
6     6 


1   Elliot's   Medical   Pocket 

Book 

1  Franklin's  Sermons 

1  Stackhouse's  History  of 
the  Bible 

2  vols.  Brown's  Union 
Gazeteer 

1  vol  16th  Report  British 
and  Foreign  Bible  Soc.  . 

1  vol.  History  of  the  United 
States  of  America 

1  vol.  Elias  Hicks'  Sermons 

2  vols.  Newton's  Letters  .  . 
1  vol.  Ricketson  on  Health 
1   ' '     Jersey  Kurgy  ...... 

1    "     Memorials   Deceased 

Friends 

1  vol.  Harvey's  Meditation 

1   ' ' Reply  to  Hibard 

1  "  John  Scott's  Journal 
1    "     Barclay    on    Church 

Government 

1     vol.     Abridgement     of 

Morses'  Geography 

]  vol.  on  Shaker  ism 

1    "    Works  of  the  late  Dr. 

Franklin 

1  vol.   Journal  of  Richard 

Davis 

1   vol.    Lessons    from    the 

Scriptures    

1  vol.  Lessons  by  Pickard. 
1  "  Sequel  to  the  Eng- 
lish Reader 


£    s.    d. 


0 
9 

6 

6 

6 

6 
3 
6 
0 
6 

6 
6 
3 
5     0 

2     6 


3     6 

114  18     8 


91 


Prices  in  1797. 

The  first  large  "  general  store  "  in  the  Midland,  or  Bay  of  Quinte, 
District  west  of  Kingston  was  kept  by  Benjamin  Seymour.  It  was 
located  on  the  front  of  "  Thirdtown/'  or  Fredericksburg,  on  the  Bay 
of  Quinte  shore,  about  six  miles  west  of  Bath.  Mr.  Seymour  opened 
this  store  about  1792,  and  carried  on  an  extensive  business  for  many 
years.  His  customers  came  from  about  ten  miles  east  and  the  same 
distance  west,  including  all  the  then  settled  parts  of  Lennox  and 
Prince  Edward. 

He  was  married  April  3,  1801,  to  Miss  Elizabeth  Clark,  a  native 
of  the  township,  who  survived  him.  Mr.  Seymour  died  at  his  resi- 
dence in  1810,  and  a  notice  of  his  burial  is  in  the  Langhorn  Burial 
Register,  February  18,  1810.  He  left  a  son  and  several  daughters. 
The  son,  Benjamin,  was  baptised  May  5th,  1805.  He  moved  to  Bath 
when  a  young  man,  and  married  there  a  daughter  of  Colin  Mc- 
Kenzie,  a  leading  resident.  He  became  a  merchant  and  an  extensive 
land-owner,  and  one  of  the  wealthiest  men  in  the  county.  For  years 
he  represented  Lennox  and  Addington  in  the  old  Parliament  of 
Canada,  in  the  Conservative  interest,  succeeding  John  Solomon  Cart- 
wright.  He  was  elected  to  several  parliaments,  and  in  the  end  was 
defeatedby  David  Roblin  (Reformer).  He  was  then  appointed  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Legislative  Council  and  became  a  member  of  the  Dominion 
Senate  at  Confederation.  He  moved  from  Bath  to  Port  Hope,  where 
he  died  some  years  ago.  One  of  his  daughters  was  the  wife  of  Lieut  - 
Col.  Williams,  M.P.,  of  Port  Hope,  who  served  in  the  second  Riel  rebellion 
and  died  on  his  way  home,  and  was  buried  with  military  honors  at 
Port  Hope.  Another  daughter  married  Mr.  S.  J.  VanKoughnet,  of 
Toronto.  His  only  son,  Charles,  entered  the  British  army,  but  retired 
after  a  time.  The  store  was  located  on  the  Bay  shore  on  the  lot  next 
adjoining  the  old  St.  Paul's  church,  and  was  closed  at  the  tiiiie  of  Mr. 
Seymour's  death.  Another  store  followed,  not  long  after,  kept  by  Mr. 
John  Clute,  a  few  lots  west,  who  also  had  a  distillery  and  a  brew  house 
on  the  same  lot.  Several  of  Mr.  Clute's  descendants  are  still  living  in 
the  town  ship. 

The  accounts  for  one  year  (1797)  have  been  carefully  examined, 
and  the  prices  classified.  It  should  be  remembered  that  the  pound 
represents  $4.00  and  the  shilling  20  cents.  The  book  also  contains 
extensive  sales  made  to  Reuben  Bedell,  who  carried  on  a  store  in 
Adolphustown.  The  payments  being  made  principally  in  farm  pro- 
duce, the  values  at  which  this  produce  was  credited  have  been  given. 
Mr.  Seymour  received  in  payment  large  quantities  of  flour,  which  were 
delivered  to  his  credit  at  the  "  King's  Stores,"  Kingston. 

[92] 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32), 


A.  1898 


The  following  are  the  totals  of  the  various  classes  of  articles 
charged  in  the  book  for  the  year  1797.  It  is  followed  by  a  statement 
of  goods  sold  to  Reuben  Bedell  for  sale  at  Adolphustown.  It  will  be 
seen  that  the  total  sales,  wholesale  and  retail  amounted  to  nearly  two 
thousand  pounds  as  charged  on  the  books. 


Sales  Retail. 


Dry  goods 346 

Groceries   47 

Spirits    109 

Tobacco 59 

Crockery    14 

Hardware 16 

Clothing    108 

Hats  and  caps 45 

Boots  and  shoes 27 

Nails,  etc 26 

Books  and  stationery . .  5 

Gun  powder 4 

Pots  and  pans 10 

Medicine,  etc 1 

Miscellaneous   203 

Total 1026 


Groceries. 
Sugar,  maple per  lb. 

"       muscovado 

"       loaf 

Tea,  Bohea 

"   Souchong  

' '   green 

Salt per 

' '   rock     

"    Onondaga 

Flour,  fine per 

Soap 

Starch  

Lard ,  hoc;s 

Hams,  prime 

Molasses per 

Mustard 

Pepper,  black 

Alspice 

Nutmegs per  oz. 

Ginger per  lb. 

Cinnamon per  oz. 

Liquors. 

Rum per  quart. 

Whiskey per  gal. 

Spirits,  W.  I " 

Wine,  port per  qt. 

"       white per  gal. 

"       Teneriffe " 


s. 

d. 

14 
1 

2i 

ll 

16 

6 

13 

8^ 

12 

w 

13 

H 

0 

4 

18 

10 

8 

8 

3 

11 

0 

8^ 

8 

8 

15 

6f 

0 

3 

7 

H 

15 

n 

bush. 


lb. 


0 
1 
2/3  to  2 
4 
6 
7 
15 
13 
12 
0 
1 
1 
0 
1 
7 
5 
4 
4 
3 
5 
0 


d. 

10 
6 
6 
0 
0 
6 
0 
6 

10 
3 
0 
0 

10 
0 
6 
0 
0 
0 
9 
0 
6 

d. 
9 


Sales  Wholesale  to  Reuben  Bedell. 


Dry  goods   443 

Groceries 69 

Spirits 96 

Tobacco    3.3 

Clothing 65 

Hats,  etc 18 

Shoes 17 

Tins  and  pots 17 

Crockery 19 

Hardware    48 

Books  and  stationery  ...  5 

Miscellaneous     31 

Total «66 


16 

7 

12 

4 

10 

0 

6 

0 

13 

0 

1 

2 

4 

6 

7 

6 

15 

4 

6 

4 

9 

2 

11 

3 

13 


0 
0 
93 


Tobacco. 

s. 

Snuflf    per  lb.  1/8  to  2 

Tobacco   per  lb.         1 

"        carrot "  1 

Pipes,  tobacco,  long  ....  each  0 

Tobacco,  box,  small 2 

Drugs. 

s. 

Balsam,  Turlington's,  small  bottle  3 

Balsam  of  Life   per  bottle  3 

Salts per  lb.  2 

"  Epsoms   "  2 

Lavender,  oil per  bottle  2 

Elixir,  paregoric    "  2 

Soap     per  lb.  1 

Indigo "  12 

Bergamot,  essence     ....  per  bottle  2 

Brimstone  per  lb  2 

"          rock "  2 

Oil ,  linseed per  gal.     12 

Electuary,  purging    ....  per  pot  2 

Fever  powders   0 

Paregoric  elexir 0 

Pomatum,  stick 0 

Ink  powder     . .    per  paper  1 

Hair  powder per  lb.  1 

Bluing per  cake  0 

Perfume per  bo 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Dry  Goods. 

Baize,  green per  yard 

"       blue    " 

Buckram    " 

Breeches  stuff " 

Bed  ticking   " 

Calico " 


Cambric 

Cotton,  blue  striped    . . 

Coating,  brown 

Check 

Chintz     

Callimance,  black 

Curtain  check    

Corduroy    

Dowlas  (1) 

Durant,  (-)  green 

"  pink   

Flannel,  white 

"         green. 

Fustian 

"      olive 

Gauze,  green 

Gurrot,  white    

Holland,  brown    

Jean    

Kersey,  blue 

Linen,  fine 

"       Irish   

"       coarse 

Mode,  black 

Muslin    

"         sprigged 

"  book 

' '         coarse 

Muslinet     

*0snaburg3    

Satinett 

Sheeting,  Russia 

"  "  imitation 

"         Scots  

flax    

Shirting 

Thickset     

Cloth 

"    fine  olive 

"     drab 

"     fine   


gray.. 
"  blue  .  . 
' '  scarlet 
"     smock  . 


"  2/1  to  2 


15    0 

4  6 

5  6 
0 
6 
6 
6 
0 


4 

5 

2 

2 

3 

2  10 

2     4 


2 

6 

1 

8 

3 

0 

3 

4 

3 

0 

1 

6 

3 

0 

5 

6 

5 

0 

3 

4 

2 

3 

7 

0 

4 

6 

10 

6 

10 

0 

3 

0 

6 

0 

1 

0 

5 

6 

3 

3 

2 

6 

)  2 

3 

2 

4 

2 

3 

8 

6 

15 

0 

20 

0 

16 

0 

22 

6 

10 

0 

5 

6 

20 

0 

22 

6 

Dry  Goods.  —  Continued. 


Ribbon per  yard 

' '      satin " 

"      straw-colored   ..       " 

"      wide  blue " 

"      black    " 

"      white " 

"     china " 

' '      pink " 

Tape,  narrow " 

Silk  ferreting .       " 

Table  cloth    each 

small " 

Blanket,  3  point per  pair 

"         small  wove  ...       " 

Vest  pattern 

Silk per  skein 

Twist per  stick 

"     blue 

Thread,  colored    per  lb. 

"  per  skein 

Coat   buttons per  doz. 

Vest         "     

Plated      "     

Small       "     

Gilt  "     "  1/3  to 

Shirt        "     

Thread,  white,  No.  20.  .per  oz. 

Sleeve  buttons per  pair 

Shoe  binding per  yard 


s.     d. 


1  10 

1  0 

0  9 

1  5 
0  1 
0  6 

16  0 

8  6 

28  0 

25  0 

10  6 

0  6 

0  6 

0  7i 

5  0 
0  1 

3  0 

0  10 

1  3 
1  5 

4  0 

0  6 

1  0 

6  0 
0  1 


Weakixg  Apparel. 

s.  d. 

Buckles    per  pair  1  3 

Cravat each  5  6 

Gloves per  pair  2  6 

women's  worsted..      "  2  0 

white  leather "  8  0 

green  worsted   ....      "  18 

yellow,  small "  18 

Hair  ribbon per  yard  0  10 

Hdkfs. ,  pocket each  2  0 

silk "  5  0 

cotton "  2  6 

silk,  black "  8  0 

neck "  3  6 

"    blue "  4  6 

red  cotton "  3  6 

Hose,  cotton     per  pair  3  9 

silk   per  pair,  15/  to  16  6 

worsted per  pair  3  0 

children's   "  1  8 


(^)  Dowlas,  a  strong  coarse  linen  cloth 

(2)  Durant,  or  durance,.  "  Am-  verj'  durable  material  for  garments,  as  buff  leather^ 
or  an  imitation  of  it." — {Standard  Dictionary.) 


t 


*  Osnaburg,  a  coarse  linen  made  of  flax  and  tow. 

94 


Also  called  ' '  osenbrigs. " 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  32). 


A.  1898 


Wearing  Apparel. — Concluded. 

s.  d. 

Cap,  cotton  3  0 

"      night 1  3 

Overalls,  sheeting (j  0 

Shawls  3  6  to     8  0 

Shirts   8  6 

Trousers    6  0 

Vest,  swan's  down 10  0 

Waistcoat,  ready  made   12  6 

Hats  and  Caps. 


Hat,  man's,  fine  beaver    .... 

23 

4 

"         "        castor 

15 

0 

"         "        wool 

9 

0 

"         "        coarse 

3 

9 

"      boy's 

i  6/3  to 

11 

fi 

"       cfirl's 

12 

7 
13 

f) 

"      child's 

6 

"       ladies'    .... 

12/(5  to 

6 

"          "        fine    . 

25 

0 

Boots 

AND  Shoes. 

s. 

d. 

Shoes,  men's,  heavy,  per  pair  .  .  . 

7 

6 

"       fine, 

11 

8 

"      women's, 

6 

G 

"      youths', 

7 

0 

"      small, 

3 

9 

Pumps,  men's. 

8 

0 

'  ■         women's. 

6 

t) 

"         children's 

4 

6 

Slippers,  women's. 

leather, per  pai 

[•       6 

6 

U                         l> 

satinette,    " 

8 

4 

((                  a 

morocco      " 

10 

0 

Shoe  buckles,  per  r»air 

i 

6 

Moccasins,  Indian 

per  pair   .... 

6 

0 

Household  Utensils. 

s. 

Cups  and  saucers,  per  doz 2 

Knives  and  forks,  per  doz   8 

10 

Teaspoons,  per  doz 2 

Tablespoons,  each 

Plates,  soup,                  "       6 

small  flat,           " 4 

"        pewter,  per  lb 2 

' '        dessert,  per  doz 4 

Pitchers,  each 2 

Tumblers,   plain,  each 1 

Dish,  sugar,  white 1 

Decanter,  pint 7 

Wine  glass,  each 8d.  to  1 

Basins,  pewter,  each 3 

Dish,  earthen   1 

Teapot,  colored 3 


Household  Utensils. — Cuntmued. 

s.  d. 

Teapot,  Japan 7  0 

"       8  6 

Oish,  soup 2  6 

Jug,  cream 2  6 

Mu!t;s,  earthen    2  0 

"      black,   each 2  6 

Stand,  cruet 12  6 

Bowls,  wash 2  6 

Water- jug,  flowered    2  6 

Mustard  cup 6 

Mustard  pot 9 

Nutmeg  grater 1  3 

Pepper  box 6 

Saucepan   2  0 

Tin  kettles 5s.  Od.  to  8  6 

Teapot,  tin 3  9 

Frying  pan 4  0 

Tea  kettle,  copper 27  6 

Mugs,  quart 1  8 

"       pint 1  0 

"      enamelled    2  0 

Bowls,  enamelled,  quart 1  6 

"       white,  pint 10 

Measures,  half-gallon    3  9 

"            quart,  tin 2  0 

Hinges,  per  pair    2s.  6d.  to  3  6 

Corkscrew    , 1  6 

Colander,  tin 6  0 

Pot,  milk 1  0 

Sugar  dish   1  8 

Sugar  nippers,  each  pair 6  0 

Knife,  mincing 3  6 

Stove,  English,  single 8  10  0 

Jack,  1  quart 2  6 

Milk  strainer,  tin 2  6 

Milk  ewer 1  0 

Bread  basket,  japanned    4  6 

Oven,  Dutch  (26  lbs,; 17  4 

Cooler,  iron  (68  lbs. ),  per  lb 6 

Pot,  iron 14  0 

Pan,  baking  (30|  lbs.)  per  lb  ...  .  6 

Salt  cellar,  blue 3  0 

Tea  canister 1  8 

Hardware. 

s.  d. 

Nails per  lb.  1  0 

' '      shingle "  1  0 

"      plank "  0  10 

' '       case "  1  0 

Screws per  doz.  0  7i 

Tacks    per  lb.  2  0 

Saw,  small  steel  plate 7  6 

"     8  6 

Hammer,  claw    1  6 

Gimlet 1  3| 


96 


61  Victoria. 


Sessional  Papers  (No.  82). 


A.  1898 


Hardware. — Continued. 

s.  d. 

File,  flat 2  0 

-       '      1  6 

"      half  round 2  0 

1  3 

"          0  9 

Knife,  Jack 2  0 

"          "     small 2  6 

"       pocket lOd  to    1  8 

Awl  blades  .    each  0  1 

Awls,  shoemakers "  0  \h 

Glass,  window,  7^  x  8^ "  0  6 

Putty  per  lb.  1  2 

Locks,  chest   1  8 

"      2  0 

"         door 3  9 

Rope,  trace per  lb.  1  8 

Iron,  bar "  0  6 

"       "    per  cwt.  45  0 

' '     sheet per  sheet  4  6 

Fish  hooks,  large per  doz.  1  3 

"             small    "  10 

Cod  line 4  6 

Hambro  line 6  0 

Lead,  sheet per  lb.  (I  5| 

Paint,  Spanish  brown. .  .  .per  keg  17  6 

Powder,  gun per  lb.  5  0 

Shot,  Duck "  1  0 

Gunflints ...each  3  0 

Metal  box,  small    2  6 

Books  and  Statiokery, 

8.  d. 

Almanac 0  6 

1  0 

Spelling  book 2  0 

Testament  3  0 

Bible      7  6 

Account  book 11  0 

Primer  0  10 

Paper  per  quire  1  0 

"       foolscap "  1  6 

Sealing  wax per  stick,  Is  to  1  3 

Quills each  0  1 

Inkstand 2  0 

Ink  powder    per  paper  1  3 

Lead  pencil,  black 0  7| 

Miscellaneous. 

s.  d. 

Trunk,  leather,  black 15s  to  17  6 

Watch  key 1  6 

Razor,  tine 3  6 

Razor  strop 4  6 

"•      case,  tine 4  6 

Brush,  clothes    2  0 

Oxhide    per  lb.  0  3 

Fox  skins    each  5  0 

Lamp,  small   1  4 

96 


Miscellaneous  — C<'ittinved. 

s.  d. 

Lan^  p   1  8 

Jewsharp,  brass 0  3 

Rug 10s  to  12  6 

Pocketbook,  black 4  6 

Toilenette,  best  shape 6  0 

Umbrella 20  0 

Spectacles    2  0 

Brush,  sweeping '2  6 

'         scrubbing   3  0 

Comb,  horn 0  6 

Pajjer,  wrapping    per  quire  0  10 

Currycomb 2  6 

Wool  cards    per  pair  3  6 

Looking  glass,  large 15  0 

Cottonwool    per  lb.  4  0 

Knitting  wires   per  set  0  6 

Tallow per  lb.  1  6 

Measure,  half  bushel 14  0 

Plank,  tongued  and  grooved .  . 

per  100  ft.  8  6 

Saddle 45  0 

Bridle 6  0 

Candlesticks,  brass    each  7  6 

Mold  candles per  lb.  1  4 

Candle  wick    '"  6  0 

Cotton  wick    "  6  0 

Needles per  doz.  0  8 

Pins     per  paper  1  3J 

Scissors      1  6 

Thimble 0  4 

Comb,  fine 1  8 

' '       coarse 0  6 

Barrels,  tight ea-h  2  6 

Lantern,  horn  door 7  6 

Image,  small 1  3 


Goods  taken  in  payment. 


Ash,  pearl . .  .per  cwt. 

Barley per  bush. 

Beef per  lb. 

Butter per  lb. ,  9d  to 

Cheese per  lb. 

Flour per  cwt.,  17s.  Cd.  to  20 

Hogs per  lb.     0 

Mutton     " 

Oat3 per  bush. 

Pease 

Pork per  lb. 

Potatoes per  bush. 

Rye 

SKins,  fisher   each 

"      muskrat    " 

Timothy  seed per  cwt. 

Turnips per  bush. 

Veal per  lb. 

Wheat per  bush. 


d. 
0 
0 
3 


0  10 
0  9 
0 
4 
4 
6 
0 
5 
0 
0 
6 


0 
2 
0 
0 
2 
4 
4 

0  10 
46    0 


Oxen 3  at  830.00  eac 


I 


BRITISH  IMMIGRATION  INTO   UPPER  CANADA— 1825-1837 

During  the  past  three  years  it  has  been  a  part  of  the  writer's  work- 
to  make  some  investigations  in  connection  with  the  history  of  the 
County  of  Simcoe,  and  while  thus  engaged  he  necessarily  met  with 
references  in  the  literature  of  its  early  settlement  that  throw  some 
light  on  the  wider  subject  of  the  settlement  of  the  whole  Province. 
These  references,  whenever  met  with,  were  noted,  and  have  been 
brought  together  to  make  this  paper. 

It  is  scarcely  necessary  at  the  outset  to  recall  the  fact  that  the 
settlement  of  this  continent  has  taken  place  chiefly  in  this  century. 
This  is  especially  true  of  the  parts  beyond  the  Mississippi  and  Ohio 
rivers,  and  North  of  lakes  Ontario  and  Erie. 

The  fact  appears  more  clearly  from  the  smallness  of  the  popula- 
tion of  the  United  States  at  the  close  of  the  war  of  1812-15,  which  was 
then  but  seven  millions,  as  compared  with  sixty-five  millions,  the  rapid 
increase  having  been  largely  due  to  immigration.  Upper  Canada,  like- 
wise, at  the  close  of  the  war  had  less  than  100,000  inhabitants,  which 
had  increased  to  400,000  when  the  Rebellion  of  1837  broke  out.  This 
date  will  be  the  end  of  the  period  comprised  in  our  present  remarks, 
as  an  interruption  in  the  tide  of  immigration  lasted  for  two  or  three 
years  after  the  outbreak,  sufficiently  marked  to  be  a  dividing  line 
between  the  two  epochs.  It  will  be  observed  that  this  rapid  increase 
of  population  in  the  pre-rebellion  years  was  fourfold  in  twenty  years  ; 
the  usual  rate  of  increase  on  this  continent  being  that  population  is 
only  doubled  in  that  length  of  time. 

The  numerical  increase  of  the  Province's  population  at  different 
stages  of  this  period,  so  far  as  correct  figures  can  be  found,  seems  to  be 
indicated  by  the  following  table  : 

1821 122,716 

1825 157,781 

1830 210,437 

1834 320,693 

It  will  be  seen  that  in  the  nine  years  from  1825  till  1834,  the  popu- 
lation was  more  than  doubled.  The  year  1832  far  exceeds  the  others 
in  increase,  some  of  the  reasons  for  which  will  shortly  appear.  Upper 
Canada's  increase,  in  three  years  almost  equals  the  recorded  immigra- 
tion into  the  whole  of  the  United  States  for  the  same  years,  though 
perhaps  the  records  of  the  latter  in  this  respect  may  be  incomplete  ;  at 
anyrate  our  increase  bore  a  very  considerable  ratio  of  that  of  the 
Republic  through  immigration. 

The  order  of  settlement  within  the  Province  is  interesting. 

The  following  table  (copied  from  Fothergill's  Almanac  for  1826) 
will  show  the  geographical  distribution  of  the  population  in  Upper 
Canada,  as  far  as  actual  returns  have  been  made  for  the  year  1825. 

[97] 

7  B.I.  6 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  82).  A.  1898 


Year  1825 : 

District  Population 

Eastern 16,524 

Ottawa 2,580 

Bathurst 10,309 

Johnstown 15,266 

Midland 27,316 

Newcastle 9,966 

Home 17,942 

Gore 14,225 

Niagara 19,090 

London 17,351 

Western 7,162 

Total 157,731 

The  map  in  Brymner's  Report  on  Canadian  Archives  for  1891 
may  be  examined  to  show  the  original  districts  and  the  distribution 
of  population  as  indicated  in  the  foregoing  table. 

The  U.  E.  Loyalists,  the  first  band  of  settlers  to  come  to  the  Pro- 
vince, had  poured  around  the  ends  of  Lake  Ontario,  and  along  the  St. 
Lawrence  and  the  North  shore  of  Lake  Erie.  Their  settlement  has 
been  considerably  disscu,?sed  of  late  years.  This  immigration  from  the 
States  continued  after  the  war  of  1812-15,  and  even  slightly  during 
the  period  covered  by  this  paper.  But  our  remarks  will  attempt  to 
deal  in  a  systematic  manner  with  the  settlements  formed  in  the  rear 
of  these  U.  E.  Loyalists,  and  at  a  later  period. 

The  British  immigrants  mostly  settled  in  groups  according  to  their 
respective  nationalities.  In  the  course  of  a  journey  through  the  Pro- 
vince one  comes  upon  groups  of  English,  Lowland  Scotch,  Highland 
Scotch  Protestants,  Highland  Scotch  Catholics,  Ulster  Protestants, 
Irish  Catholics,  and  other  classes — all  of  whom  appear  to  have  settled 
in  sniall  colonies  by  themselves,  giving  to  each  neighborhood  its  dis- 
tinctive features,  which  it  will  retain  for  several  generations  yet  to 
come.  It  is  interesting  to  compare  the  material  progress  made  by  these 
different  small  national  groups  or  settlements,  for  they  are  often  favor- 
ably situated  for  purposes  of  comparison.  The  thrifty  Saxon  can  be 
found  side  by  side  with  the  less  practical  Celt  from  the  South  or  West 
of  Ireland,  or  ftom  some  parts  of  the  Highlands  of  Scotland.  By  thus 
living  near  each  other  the  Celt  and  Saxon  are  sometimes  mutually 
benefited,  religiously,  morally  and  socially  ;  on  the  other  hand  in  some 
cases  the  contact  is  a  constant  source  of  local  disputes,  political  and 
otherwise.  Where  some  of  the  different  kinds  of  immigrants  settled 
will  afterwards  appear. 

The  proximity  of  Upper  Canada  to  the  then  existing  centres  of 
population  in  the  Eastern  States,  caused  it  to  be  settled,  roughly  speak- 
ing, at  the  same  time  with  Ohio  and  Indiana,  the  states  just  across  the 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Ohio  Eiver,  which  was  for  so  long  the  boundary  in  dispute  with  the 
Indians.  The  geographical  position  of  Upper  Canada,  however,  was 
only  one  in  a  number  of  causes,  political  and  otherwise,  which  induced 
our  fathers  and  grand-fathers  to  remove  hither,  and  some  of  which 
we  now  undertake  to  enumerate. 

1.  The  war  of  1812-15  had  recalled  attention  in  Britain  to  North 
American  affairs.  The  era  of  peace  succeeding  the  war,  during  which 
there  was  also  peace  in  Europe,  was  a  time  when  many  travellers 
visited  the  United  States  and  Canada.  Among  those  who  passed 
through  or  resided  for  a  shoi  t  time  in  Canada  at  this  period  may  be 
mentioned  :  Sir  Geo.  Head,  Lieut.  Francis  Hall,  John  Gait,  Dr.  Dunlop, 
Capt.  Basil  Hall,  Rev.  Isaac  Fidler,  Murray,  McTaggart,  Stuart,  Howi- 
son,  Bouchette,  ShirrefF,  and  many  others. 

On  returning  to  Britain,  they  published  volumes  of  their  travels, 
and  thus  public  attention  there  was  directed  extensively  to  Canada. 
In  fact  there  is  no  period  so  rich,  so  far  as  quantity  is  concerned,  in 
literature  relating  to  the  country  and  its  resouices.  The  late  Samuel 
Thompson,  in  his  Reminiscences  of  a  Canadian  Pioneer,  sa,y8  :  "'Mar- 
tin Doyle '  was  the  text-book  which  first  awakened,  amongst  tens  of 
thousands  of  British  readers  a  keen  interest  in  the  backwoods  of  what 
is  now  the  Province  of  Ontario." 

2.  The  free  grant  land  policy,  which  seems  to  have  been  adopted 
here  earlier  than  in  some  of  the  states,  was  another  great  inducement. 
Sir  John  Colborne,  the  Lieut. -Governor,  actively  exerted  himself  to 
induce  retired  British  army  officers  and  discharged  soldiers  to  take  up 
lands  in  the  Province.  The  free  grants  to  these  persons  brought  them 
here  in  large  numbers. 

This  class  ettled  in  almost  every  county  of  the  Province,  but  in 
the  greatest  numbers  in  Hastings,  Northumberland,  Peterborough, 
Victoria  and  Simcoe  counties,  besides  some  in  the  extreme  west  in 
Kent.  In  addition  to  this  free  grant  system,  it  was  very  easy  to  pur- 
chase U.  E.  Loyalists'  location  tickets  after  the  change  in  the  land 
policy  in  1818.  At  that  date  settlement  duties  were  imposed  by  an 
order- in-council,  thus  stimulating  sales  and  preventing  subsequent 
patentees  from  holding  lands.  These  patent  rights  appear  to  have 
been  made  transferable  from  one  person  to  another.  This  change  in 
the  land  policy  was  a  step  in  favor  of  the  British  immigrant  and 
operated  against  the  speculator,  afterwards  becoming  an  important 
factor  in  the  Rebellion  of  1837,  as  every  student  of  Canadian  history 
Know  s. 

3.  The  Irish  troubles  of  1798  had  caused  the  immigration  of  many 
people  from  Ireland.  D.  B.  Read,  in  his  Life  of  Governor  Simcoe  (page 
272),  refers  to  the  exodus  in  the  following  terms  : — 

"  The  tide  of  immigration  after  the  Irish  trouble  in  1798  set  in  in 
great  volume,  giving  to  the  country  just  the  kind  of  settlers  she  Wanted, 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32;.  A.  1898 


to  clear  her  forests,  build  her  roads  and  till  her  soil.  The  immigrants 
crenerally  brought  some  means  with  them,  which  speedily  found  its 
way  into  the  pockets  of  the  thrifty  Canadian." 

Also  whea  Catholic  Emancipation  was  carried  in  April,  1829. 
manv  immigrated  from  Ireland,  especially  the  Protestant  peasantry 
of  Ulster.  Samuel  Thompson,  who  has  already  been  quoted,  says  in 
reference  to  this  immigration  :  "  The  despondency  that  fell  upon  Irish 
Protestant  Loyalists  when  the  Emancipation  Bill  became  law  induced 
many  to  immigrate  to  America."  He  is  speaking  of  Alderman  Dixon, 
once  a  member  of  Toronto  City  Council,  whom  he  mentions  as  a  type 
of  this  immigration.  To  this  cause  are  chiefly  due  the  large  settle- 
ments of  ITlsler  Protestants  in  the  counties  of  Hastings,  Peterborough, 
Victoria,  Northumberland,  Durham,  Simcoe,  Dufferin  and  Grey,  all  of 
which  were  originally  settled  about  that  time.  In  fact,  it  may  be 
almost  said  that  "the  largest  portion  of  the  Ulster  settlers  in  the  older 
part  of  the  Province  came  here  at  the  time,  and  under  the  operation  of 
the  cause  just  mentioned. 

4.  Great  excitement  prevailed  in  Britain  in  1832  on  the  subject  of 
colonial  slavery,  the  West  Indies  being  most  implicated.  This  agita- 
tion forced  the  British  Government  to  legislate  in  favor  of  Emancipa- 
tion in  1833.  According  to  Dr.  Thos.  Rolph,  in  His  Statistical  Account 
of  Upper  Canada,  the  agitation  produced  in  Britain  feelings  hostile  to 
the  West  Indies  and  more  favorable  to  Upper  Canada,  where  slavery 
had  been  aboHshed  by  an  Act  of  the  Legislature  in  1793. 

It  may  be  mentioned  in  this  connection  that  the  question  had  such 
a  firm  hold  on  public  opinion  in  this  Province  at  the  time  that  it  was 
commemorated  by  the  setting  apart  of  two  or  more  settlements  for 
emancipated  slaves— one  in  the  township  of  Raleigh  on  Lake  Erie, 
another  in  the  township  of  Oro  on  Lake  Simcoe— these  being  the  parts 
of  the  Province  under  rapid  settlement  at  the  time. 

5.  From  1818  till  1834  was  a  period  of  great  industrial  agitation 
and  reform  in  Britain.  The  industrial  centres  of  Glasgow  and  Man- 
chester were  particularly  disturbed.  The  agitation  took  shape  chiefly 
in  Chartist  demonstrations,  which  have  been  graphically  described  in 
various  writings  of  the  period.  Radical  anti-Radical  risings  occurred 
in  a  number  of  places,  resulting  in  the  throwing  oflf  or  immigrating  of 
larcre  numbers  who  despaired  of  accomplishing  any  reform.  As  an 
example  of  settlement  from  this  cause,  the  county  of  Lanark,  as  the 
name  implies,  was  largely  settled  at  this  period  by  fugitives  from 
Glaso-ow  and  Paisley  w-eavers.  While,  as  a  rule,  Irish  are  more  num- 
erous in  the  eastern  half  of  the  Province,  the  western  counties  of 
Oxford  Wellington,  Waterloo,  etc.,  contain  large  settlements  formed 
bv  Scoi:ch  and  English  emigrants  who  removed  thither  chieriy  owing 
to  these  industrial  agitations.  It  is  possible  to  trace  in  the  lists  of  the 
public  men  ot  this  county  the  names  of  many  descendants  of  these 
radicals.  The  Reform  Bill  riots  of  the  same  period  likewise  caused 
some  to  immigrate. 

100 


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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


6.  The  cholera  in  1832  had  considerable  effect  on  immigation. 
One  authority  says  :  "  The  year  1832,  the  first  dread  year  of  Asiatic 
Cholera,  contributed  by  its  terrors  to  the  exodus  of  alarmed  fugitives 
from  the  crowded  cities  of  the  old  country." 

Most  of  the  foregoing  social  and  political  causes  appl}'  to  the 
states  of  Ohio  and  Indiana,  as  well  as  to  Upper  Canada,  the  senti- 
ment of  patriotism,  however,  influencing  many  of  those  who  remained 
on  British  soil.  These  and  many  more  were  the  causes  that  formed 
throughout  Upper  Canada  prior  to  1837  the  "  national  "  settlements 
which  made  up  the  greater  part  of  its  population.  The  conditions  of 
life  in  later  years,  including  faster  communication  and  travel  by  rail- 
ways, and  other  improvements,  became  such  that  distinctive  national 
traits  of  character  are  giving  way  to  more  uniform  customs  and  habits, 
and  even  speech,  and  fusing  the  race  groups  to  form  a  distinct  Cana- 
dian nation. 

A.  F.  HUNTER. 

Barrie,  Ont. 

THE  STUDY  OF  POLITICAL  ECONOMY  AT  CANADIAN 
UNIVERSITIES. 

(From  a  lecture  before  the  2nd  Year  Economic  Students  at  Toronto  University.) 


In  proportion  to  its  population  there  are  probably  few  countries 
whose  history  has  been  more  frequentlj'  written  than  the  Canadian 
Dominion.  The  dramatic  features  of  its  earlier  period  have  been 
familiarized,  notably  by  the  interesting  volumes  of  Mr.  Parkman  ;  its 
earlier  political  struggles  have  been  described  by  Mr.  Dent  and  many 
other  writers  ;  its  constitutional  evolution  by  Mr.  Todd,  Mr.  (now  Sir) 
John  Bourinot  and  Mr.  Clement,  while  the  well-known  writings  of 
Goldwin  Smith,  particularly  his  "  Canada  and  the  Canadian  Question  " 
and,  of  somewhat  more  recent  date,  the  two  volumes  of  Mr.  Parkin, 
"  Our  Great  Dominion,"  and  the  comprehensive  "  Cyclopaedia  of  Canada," 
in  five  large  volumes,  now  appearing  (edited  by  Mr.  Castell  Hopkins) 
bring  its  career  down  into  the  present.  These  are  but  some  of  the  more 
important  names.  Yet,  with  few  exceptions,  stress  has  been  laid  on  other 
aspects  than  those  of  a  predominantly  economic  coloring.  Goldwin 
Smith  and  Mr.  Parkin's  works  direct  attention,  it  is  true,  to  various 
highly  important  economic  considerations,  while  individual  topics,  such 
as  banking,  transportation  and  the  tariff,  have  been  made  the  subjects 
of  several  useful  and  valuable  studies.  But  speaking  generally  there 
has  been  as  yet  comparatively  little  systematic  research  work  of  an 
economic  nature  carried  on  or  published  in  Canada. 

The  history  of  academic  foundations  in  Canada  will  go  some  way 
towards  explaining  this  condition  of  afiairs.  For  in  their  earlier  years 
Canadian  colleges  were  mostly  of  a  denominational  character,  and  the 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


sparse  settlement  of  the  country,  and  their  naturally  meagre  endow- 
ments, forced  them  to  confine  their  attention  to  comparatively  few 
branches  of  instruction.  Theology  and  Philosophy  were  thus 
the  two  higher  branches  mainly  taught,  and  comparatively  little 
attention  was  paid  to  the  Sciences.  Political  economy  where  it  was  at 
all  mentioned  in  college  lectures,  or  as  was  frequently  the  case,  where 
it  was  a  subject  for  examination  without  lectures,  was  accordingly, 
until  quite  recently,  generally  attached,  in  loyal  adherence  to  Scottish 
tradition,  to  the  chair  of  moral  philosophy  or  to  the  department  of 
"  civil  polity."  This  was  the  quaint  name  formerly  in  vogue  at  Toronto 
University. 

Under  these  circumstances  the  prime  requirement  was  for  some 
system  of  co-operation  between  the  various  colleges.  The  plan  uni- 
versally, and  with  one  exception  successfully  followed,  is  drawn  in  its 
general  features  from  the  organisation  of  the  then  recently  established 
University  of  London.  According  to  the  arrangements  adopted,  the 
several  colleges  joining  the  federation  carry  on  the  actual  teaching, 
while  the  examining  and  the  awarding  of  degrees  is  allotted  to  the 
University.  Canadian  University  federations,  however,  are  made  still 
more  complete  than  their  prototype  by  the  Universit}^  itself  maintain  • 
ing  certain  chairs,  and  thus  allowing  between  itself  and  the  several 
federating  colleges  of  a  more  perfect  division  of  work. 

This  organization  was  first  attempted  in  Toronto  in  1853,  but  was 
not  finally  realized  until  '  887.  In  that  year  University  College,  Victoria 
University,  Knox,  St.  Michael's  and  Wycliffe  Colleges,  all  situate  in 
he  one  city,  were  finally  federated  under  the  headship  of  the  Provincial 
University  of  Toronto.  Victoria  and  St.  Michael's,  however,  still  carry 
on  under  their  own  auspices  certain  departments  of  arts  instruction. 
In  1876  a  somewhat  similar  attempt  was  made  in  Nova  Scotia  to  unite 
King's,  Dalhousie,  Acadia  and  some  three  other  Colleges  under  the 
University  of  Halifax.  In  a  few  years  the  University  unfortunately 
became  dormant,  though  the  statute  creating  it  has  never  been  repealed. 
The  next  year,  1877,  saw  a  more  successful  effort  at  co-operation  in 
Manitoba,  the  then  six-year-old  Province  of  the  West,  when  Wesley, 
St.  Johns,  St  Boniface  and  Manitoba  Colleges  united  to  found  the 
Provincial  University  of  Manitoba.  Efforts  are  now  being  made,  it  is 
reported,  in  the  same  direction  in  British  Columbia. 

The  students  in  arts  attending  these  federated  colleges  in  Manitoba, 
Ontario  and  Nova  Scotia,  number  about  1,900,  two-thirds  of  whom  are 
at  Toronto. 

But  outside  the  University  federations  there  are  a  number  of 
other  important  colleges.  In  Fredericton,  N.B.,  there  is  the  Provincial 
University  of  New  Brunswick,  with  a  staff  of  seven  Professors  in  Arts 
and  about  seventy-five  undergraduates.  At  Sackville,  in  the  same 
Province,  the  Methodist  University  of  Mount  Alison  College,  has  some 
120  students.  In  Quebec  Province  there  are,  besides  the  well  known 
McGill   University  at  Montreal,  with  its  justly  merited  scientific  repu- 

102 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (So.  32).  A.  1898 


tation,  the  Roman  Catholic  Laval  University,  dating  as  a  University 
from  1852,  in  Quebec  City,  and  the  Anglican  University  of  Bishop's 
College  in  Lennoxville,  incorporated  in  1853.  For  Ontario  is  to  be 
mentioned  the  important  Queen's  University  at  Kingsion,  with  an  able 
arts  staff  of  fifteen  professors,  and  some  foar  hundred  undergraduates. 
At  Toronto  the  Anglican  University  of  Trinitj^  College,  with  about  sixty 
undergraduates  in  arts,  and  at  the  Dominion  Capital  the  small  Roman 
Catholic  University  of  Ottawa.  This  summary  mention  may  also 
serve  to  indicate  the  chief  centres  of  Canadian  educational  activity, 
and  in  a  general  way  the  extent  to  which  university  instruction  in  arts 
is  being  given  at  the  present  moment. 

In  connection  with  the  study  of  Political  Economy,  our  attention 
is  drawn  in  particular  to  the  five  Universities  respectivel}'  at  Toronto, 
Kingston,  Fredericton,  Winnipeg  and  Halifax. 

At  the  federation  of  the  University  of  Toronto  in  1887,  among 
others  the  department  of  Political  Science  was  established,  and  Pro- 
fessor Ashley,  then  Fellow  of  Lincoln  College,  Oxford,  was  appointed 
in  the  year  following  to  the  chair  of  Political  Economy  and  Constitu- 
tional History.  This  piofessorship,  recent  as  it  is,  is  the  first  of  its 
kind  in  Canada.  In  1892  a  lectureship  was  added,  but  only  temporar- 
ily. On  Professor  Ashley's  leaving  for  Harvard  in  1893,  Professor 
James  Mavor  of  St.  Mungo's  College,  Glasgow,  succeeded  him.  Pro- 
fessor Mavor's  contributions  to  the  theory  of  Railroad  Rates  may  be 
referred  to  as  sufficiently  indicating  the  high  qualit}'  of  his  scientific 
work.  In  economic  theory  Professor  Mavor  adheres  to  the  Austrian 
school.  The  department  is  supported  by  one  teaching  fellow^ship,  and 
has  attached  to  it  two  economic  post-graduate  scholarships  of  S375 
each,  and  one  of  $60,  besides  five  undergraduate  scholarships  of  from 
$50  to  $75.  The  course  covers  three  years,  beginning  with  the  second 
year  in  arts,  and  embraces  a  study  of  economic  theory,  the  history  of 
economic  theories,  the  history  of  economic  conditions  and  public 
finance.  These  studies  are  carried  on  in  conjunction  mainly  with 
history,  a  course  in  mathematics  and  languages,  and  certain  departments 
of  jurisprudence. 

At  Queen's  University  there  is  now  a  chair  of  Political  Economy, 
whose  peruianent  endow  raent  as  the  Sir  John  A.  Macdonald  Chair  in 
Political  Science  has  just  been  completed.  It  is  filled  by  an  able 
Canadian,  a  graduate  in  Philosophy  and  Science  of  Queen's  and 
of  Edinburgh,  Mr.  Adam  Shortt.  Professor  Shortt  was  appointed 
a  lecturer  really  one  year  before  Professor  Ashley  came  to  Tor- 
onto, though  not  definitely  with  a  lectureship  on  economics  which 
his  chair  soon  developed  into.  Professor  Shortt  approaches  the 
study  of  Political  Economy  from  the  point  of  view  of  political  phil- 
osophy and  history.  He  is  devoting  considerable  energy  to  the  study 
of  Canadian  economic  conditions,  and  has  already  gathered  together 
some  extremely  valuable  material.  His  articles  on  the  Early  History 
of  Canadian  Banking  and  on  Early  Canadian  Currency,  now^  appearing 

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in  the  Journal  of  the  Canadian  Bankers'  Association,  are  the  first  and 
promising  fruits  of  his  studies.  Further  writings  from  his  pen  will  be 
looked  forward  to  with  considerable  interest. 

At  the  University  of  New  Brunswick  is  Mr.  John  Davidson,  Pro- 
fessor of  Mental  and  Moral  Philosophy  and  Political  Economy,  appointed 
in  1892,  likewise  a  Canadian  graduate  of  Edinburgh,  and  author  of  an 
interesting  critical  work,  which  has  just  appeared,  on  wage-theories 
entitled  "The  Bargain  Theory  of  Wages"  (Putnam,  1898).  In  this 
work  Professor  Davidson  makes  several  instructive  references  to  Can- 
adian conditions.  As  at  Toronto  and  Queen's  the  economic  course 
covers  three  years,  but  differs  from  Toronto,  where  the  system  of 
definite  departmental  courses  prevails,  in  being  an  optional  subject. 
Systematic  lectures  on  economics,  it  appears,  were  given  at  this  Uni- 
versity one  year  before  Professor  Davidson's  appointment. 

At  Manitoba  and  Dalhousie  Universities  some  lectures  on  economic 
subjects  have  been  giv^en  for  a  number  of  years.  At  Manitoba,  where 
the  University  itself  is  as  yet  merely  an  examining  body,  the  course 
covers  but  one  year,  though  at  the  forthcoming  revision  of  the  curri- 
culum, we  are  informed,  that  it  will  be  considerably  extended.  At 
present  Manitoba,  St.  Johns  and  St.  Boniface  Colleges  alone  give 
lectures  on  political  economy.  Through  some  extensive  land  grants 
made  recently  to  the  University  by  the  Provincial  Government  the 
University  is  being  placed  on  a  favorable  footing.  We  may  accord- 
ingly expect  ere  long  to  see  the  University  pursuing  academic  work 
somewhat  similar  to  that  carried  on  by  the  University  of  Toronto. 
At  Dalhousie  the  subject  of  economics  was  in  1881  associated  with  the 
chair  of  History,  and  made  an  optional  study.  The  President  of  the 
University,  Mr.  John  Forrest,  M.A.,  who  is  also  Professor  of  History, 
delivers  the  lectures  consisting  of  a  junior  and  an  advanced  series. 

In  Quebec,  with  the  exception  of  a  few  lectures  on  economic 
theory  at  the  University  of  Bishop's  College,  political  economy  is 
not  taught.  At  Laval,  as  far  back  as  the  fall  of  1871-72-73,  economic 
subjects,  especially  questions  of  trade,  commerce  and  finance,  were 
treated  of  by  Professor  F.  Langelier.  His  lectures,  which  were  also 
attended  by  many  of  the  public,  were  discontinued,  we  are  informed, 
because  of  fear  on  the  part  of  the  academic  authorities,  of  public 
opinion  then  moving  strongly  in  the  direction  of  protection.  Since 
that  time  no  economic  lectures  have  been  given  at  Laval.  At  McGill 
it  is  reported  that  a  chair  on  economics  is  contemplated  in  connection 
with  the  law  faculty.  There  has  been  as  yet  no  formal  instruction 
attempted  in  that  department. 

Regarding  attendance  there  are  at  present  in  Canada  about  330 
students  hearing  regular  lectures  on  political  economy.  The  University 
of  Toronto  occupies  the  foremost  place,  with  about  150,  two-thirds  of 
whom  are  studying  for  honors  ;  Queen's  has  between  75  and  80,  and 
New  Brunswick  about  half  this  number.  At  Manitoba  University 
there  are  said  to  be  some  thirty  students  taking  political  economy, 
and   about  the   same   number  at  Halifax. 

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At  all  these  Universities  essay  writing  on  economic  subjects  is  a 
feature  of  the  course,  at  times  in  conjunction  with  some  form  of  a 
seminary  class  At  Toronto  the  honor  economic  students  are  obliged 
to  write  as  many  as  four  "  term  essays  "  on  specified  subjects.  The 
first  of  these  essays  regularly  treats  of  the  "  Social  Conditions  and 
Resources  "  of  the  district  whence  the  student  comes,  and  at  times  fur- 
nishes some  valuable  sociological  material,  such  as  typical  household 
budgets,  etc.  Economic  studies  have  also  appeared  in  print.  These 
are,  however,  almost  invariabl}?^  the  work  of  graduates.  There  is  for 
instance,  at  Toronto  a  series  numbering  up  to  the  present  five  called 
"  University  of  Toronto  Studies  in  Political  Science,"  embracing  two 
particularly  useful  essays  on  the  development  of  the  Ontario  Township 
by  J.  M.  McEvoy,  B.A.,  and  the  Taritf  History  of  Canada  by  S.  J. 
McLean,  now  Professor  at  Arkansas  University.  The  other  studies 
treat  respectively  of  municipal  monopolies  and  their  management ;  the 
conditions'  of  female  labor  in  Ontario ;  and  public  debts  in  Canada. 
In  the  Queen's  University  "  Quarterly  "  have  also  been  published  two 
papers  bearing  in  the  one  case  on  the  civil  service  of  Canada  and  in  the 
other  on  trusts  and  monopolies.  Professor  Wrong's  "  Review  of  His- 
torical Publications  relatinof  to  Canada,"  which  forms  one  series  of 
"  University  of  Toronto  Studies  in  History  "  and  I  includes  reviews  of 
economic  and  statistical  writings,  may  also  be  mentioned  here. 

That  our  economic  departments  have  not  more  to  show  in  the 
form  of  economic  publications  is  due  to  various  causes.  One  of  these 
is  the  tardy  development  of  government  statistical  work.  This  again 
is  in  part  explained  by  the  hopes  entertained  for  a  time  by  some  of  the 
provinces  of  casting  the  burden  and  expense  of  statistical  compilation 
upon  the  Dominion  Treasury.  There  is  moreover  little  direct  connec- 
tion between  statistical  bureaus  and  the  economic  departments  of  the 
Universities  ;  though  the  recently  issued  appendix  to  the  Bureau  of 
Industries  Report  (Toronto),  may,  it  is  hoped,  lead  at  least  in  Ontario 
to  a  growing  intimacy.  The  present  issue  contains  four  papers :  The 
Growth  of  Municipal  Institutions  in  Ontario  by  C.  R.  W.  Biggar,  Q.C.; 
Municipal  Development  in  Ontario,  and  the  Development  of  Agricul- 
ture in  Ontario,  by  Mr.  James,  and  Political  and  Social  Arithmetic  (1) 
by  the  present  writer.  In  the  second  place  we  have  to  notice  the  con- 
tinuous expatriation  to  the  United  States  of  the  majority  of  those 
devoting  their  special  attention  to  economics  and  history,  and  the  pub- 
lication under  other  auspices  of  any  studies  they  may  have  entered 
upon  at  home. 

But  published  writings  can  hardly  serve  as  sole  criterion  of  the 
%vork  accomplished.  As  part  of  the  Arts  course  political  economy  is 
regarded  in  Canada  rather  as  an  instrument  of  intellectual  training 
than  of  active  research  work.  The  majority  of  Canadian  economic 
students    enter  the  profession   of  law,    though   the  number  devoting 

(1)  This  article  gives  a  brief  review  of  statistical  work  in  Canada. 

105 


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themselves  to  journalism  is  already  large  in  some  centres,  and  is  rapidly 
increasing.  The  instruction  imparted  to  economic  students  has  indeed 
been  steadily  gaining  the  respect  of  the  educated  public  :  and,  judging 
from  the  growing  number  of  Canadian  graduates  who  have  obtained 
honorable  positions  at  the  Colleges  and  Universities  of  the  United 
States,  commendations  from  other  quarters  as  well. 

At  the  present  moment  increasing  attention  on  the  part  of  the 
public  is  being  devoted  to  economic  questions.  This  is  due  in  part  to 
the  stimulus  imparted  by  the  currency  discussions  in  the  United 
States;  in  certain  quarters  to  the  influence  of  the  writings  of  Marx, 
Henry  George,  and  also  of  E.  Bellamy  ;  and  finally  to  events  in  the 
Canadian  industrial  and  political  world  which  have  lent  a  renewed 
buoyancy  to  public  sentiment  and  a  heightened  interest  in  national 
and  social  affairs. 

MORLEY    WiCKETT. 

University  College,  Toronto. 


AGRICULTURAL  STATISTICS  OF  ONTARIO, 

(This  paper  was  prepared  for  the  1898  meetine  of  the  Airerican  Association  for  the  Advance- 
ment of  Science.) 

First  a  word  or  two  as  to  the  settlement  and  government  of  what 
we  now  know  as  the  Province  of  Ontario. 

Quebec  fell  in  1759,  and  New  France  passed  into  the  hands  of  the 
British.  The  Province  of  Quebec  was  created  by  Royal  Proclamation 
on  October  7th,  1763.  In  1774  the  lands  lying  to  the  west,  including 
what  is  the  Province  of  Ontario,  were  added  to  Quebec  as  part  and 
parcel  of  that  Province.  In  1791  Quebec  was  divided  into  two  pro- 
vinces, Lower  Canada  and  Upper  Canada,  each  being  provided  with  a 
separate  Legislative  Council  and  Assembly.  From  1841  to  1867  these 
two  were  again  united  under  one  Common  Parliament  of  Canada,  and 
in  1867  the  confederation  of  the  various  Provinces  into  the  Dominion 
of  Canada  w^as  effected. 

We  shall  first  take  a  brief  survey  of  the  various  censuses  of  New 
France  that  were  taken,  b  ginning  with  that  of  1665-6,  referring  parti- 
cularly to  their  agricultural  aspect,  and  showing  how  from  a  very 
simple  enumeration  they  developed  into  the  census  as  we  have  it  taken 
now  every  ten  years, — the  latest  being  that  of  1891  which  in  reality 
contained  much  information  that  properly  belongs  to  the  year  1890. 

The  first  census  of  any  part  of  what  is  now  the  Dominion  of 
Canada  was  taken  in  the  months  of  February  and  March,  1666.  It 
was  a  census  of  New  France,  and  comprehended  what  is  now  the  Pro- 
vince of  Quebec.  The  total  population  was  8,215.  The  details  were 
limited  to  an  enumeration  according  to  sex,  age,  and  relation  to  mar- 
riage, condition,  and  professions  and  trades.     The  compilation  does  not 

106 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


include  the  royal  troops,  the  clergy,  the  nobility,  public  oflScials  and 
farmers.  Nor  is  there  any  statement  as  to  agricultural  operations,  or 
the  number  of  cattle,  sheep,  or  other  live  stock, 

Tn  September  and  October  of  the  following  year,  1667,  another 
census  was  taken  and  in  this  appears  the  extent  of  land  under  culti- 
vation (ll,4l!S  arpents)  and  the  number  of  cattle  (8,107)  ami  sheep  (85). 
In  1668  the  amount  of   grain  harvested    was  added  (130,978  minots). 

In  the  census  of  1671  we  find  goats  added  to  the  live  stock  taken, 
and  in  1679  a  further  addition  of  horses,  and  asses.  Swine  appear 
for  the  first  time  in  1688,  though  they  were  also  enumerated  in  the 
census  of  Acadia  (Nova  Scotia)  in  1686.  In  168S  mills  appear  along 
with  houses,  and  churches  under  "  Buildings "  ;  and  the  crops  har- 
vested are  divided  into  "  Wheat  "  and  other  grains. 

In  1692  the  lands  occupied  are  for  the  first  time  subdivided  into 
"  Area  under  Cultivation  "  and  "  In  Pasture."  In  addition  to  wheat, 
corn  and  oats  also  are  given  separately.  The  1695  census  of  Acadia 
divides  the  crops  under  the  following:  Wheat,  corn,  oats,  peas,  and 
beans.  The  1698  census  of  New  France  gives  only  wheat,  corn,  oats, 
and  other  grains.  That  of  1719  adds  peas,  flax  and  hemp.  In  this 
latter  census  mills  are  given  under  two  divisions — saw  mills  and  grist 
mills. 

In  1721  barley  and  tobacco  appear  for  the  first  time. 

In  1754  rye,  buckwheat,  potatoes  and  maple  sugar  are  enumerated. 
In  the  same  year  also  other  items  appear,  such  as  beehives,  wool  pro- 
duced, and  country  cloth.  Mills  are  further  subdivided  into  mills  for  pro- 
ducing flour,  lumber,  linseed  oil ;  also  mills  for  fulling,  for  carding, 
for  threshing,  for  paper  making  etc.  Potash  works  are  also  enumer- 
ated. 

In  1759  New  France  passed  into  possession  of  the  British. 

In  1765  horn  cattle  are  sub  divided  into  three  classes,  oxen,  cows 
and  young  cattle,  and  three  entries  appear  under  agricultural  viz  : 
"  Houses"  '■  Arpents  under  cultivation "  and  "  Bushels  of  Grain." 
In  1784,  it  may  be  interesting  to  note  in  passing,  'Slaves"  are 
given  a  separate  entry  distinguished  from  servants;  and  l^ie  "  Infirm  " 
are  also  noted. 

This  brings  us  down  to  the  beginning  of  the  settlement  of  Ontario 
then  known  as  Upper  Canada. 

From  177 1  to  1792  it  was  attached  to  Quebec.  In  1792  a 
separate  Government  was  established,  known  as  the  Legislative  Council 
and  Assembly  of  Upper  Canada.  In  1793,  the  Leg^islature  for  the  first 
time  made  provision  for  the  assessment  of  property  and  the  collecting 
of  rates.     The  assessment  was  very  simple,  there  were  8  classes  : 

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A.  1898 


1st. 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 


Householders  worth £  50  to  £100 

100  to     150 


150  to 

200 

200  to 

250 

250  to 

300 

300  to 

350 

350  to 

400 

400  and 

over. 

The  taxes  were  fixed  at  2|  shillings  for  the  first  class,  oj  for  the 
second,  7|  for  the  third,  and  so  on  up  to  20  shillings  for  the  8th. 

It  was  only  in  1811  that  agricultural  property  as  distinct  from 
other  property'  was  made  liable  to  assessment  and  taxation.  In  that 
year  the  following  were  added  to  the  property  assessable,  and  the 
assessed  values  were  fixed  at  the  same  time.  Every  acre  of  arable 
pasture  or  meadow  land  20  shillings.  Every  acre  of  uncultivated  land 
4  shillings.  Every  stallion  for  hire  or  gain  at  the  rate  of  £199;  every 
horse  of  the  age  3  years  and  upwards  £4 ;  milch  cows  £3. 

Under  the  same  Act  the  clerk  of  the  Peace  was  required  to  send 
an  account  of  the  assessment  to  the  Lieutenant-Governor,  who,  of 
course  transmitted  the  report  to  the  Legislature. 

Beginning,  therefore,  with  1811  there  were  available  the  assessment 
rolls  of  the  Province  in  which  were  given  the  acreage  of  farming  lands 
under  two  heads,  uncultivated  and  arable,  also  the  live  stock  upon  the 
farms.  In  1826  for  the  first  time  these  records  were  printed  in  the 
Journals  of  the  House,  and  from  that  year  to  1841  inclusive  we  have 
available  these  reports.  It  is  to  them  principally  we  must  look  for 
the  story  of  the  increase  of  farmed  lands  in  Ontario,  and  also  the 
growth  of  the  live  stock  industry.  It  must  be  carefully  noted  that 
the  statistics  for  these  17  years  which  are  given  in  Vol.  4  of  the 
Census  of  Canada  for  1870-1  are  all  taken  from  these  assessment 
statistics.  One  can  easily  believe  that  in  those  days,  when  the  country 
was  sparsely  settled,  and  when  the  enumeration  of  live  stock  was  for 
the  purpose  of  levying  taxes  upon  the  same,  the  assessors  would 
not  find  out  all  the  stock — doubtless  some  of  it  was  lost  in  the  bush 
when  the  assessor  came  around.  It  is  worth  noting  here  that  at 
present  live  stock  on  the  farms  of  Ontario  is  exempt  from  taxation. 
In  1888  this  exemption  was  provided  for,  and  it  came  into  operation 
in  the  following  year.  In  1842,  however,  a  census  was  taken,  and 
what  a  recovery  of  lost  animals  there  was,  what  a  return  home  of  the 
strayed  cattle  and  horses!  The  number  of  horses  increased  from 
75,316  on  the  assessment  rolls  of  1841  to  113,647  on  the  census  rolls 
of  1842.  Cattle  jumped  from  264,107  in  1841  to  504,963.  Some  of 
this  increase  of  90  per  cent,  may  be  accountable  for  the  fact  that  cattle 
only  2  years  and  upwards  were  assessed,  whereas  the  census  in  all 
probability  included  cattle  of  all  ages.  The  horses  assessed  also  were 
only  those  of  three  years  and  upwards ;  those  of  the  census  were  of 

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all  ages.  The  land  occupied  dropped  from  6,868,504  acres  to  6,212,726. 
In  the  census  of  184<2  sheep  and  swine  were  for  the  first  time 
enumerated.  Under  field  products  were  given  wheat,  barley,  oats,  rye, 
peas,  buckwheat,  corn  and  potatoes  Home-made  cloth,  home-made 
linen,  home-made  flannel,  wool,  bee  hives  and  maple  sugar  product 
were  also  given. 

In  1848  the  second  census  was  taken.  At  this  time  the  improved 
land  was  divided  into  lands  under  crop  and  lands  in  pasture.  To  the 
enumerated  product^  of  the  farm  were  now  added  flax,  tobacco,  butter, 
cheese,  and  beef  and  pork. 

Three  years  later  in  1851  came  the  first  of  the  decennial  census, 
followed  b}-^  those  of  1861,  71,  '81  and  '91. 

Agricultural  societies  were  first  recognized  by  ."statute  in  Ontario 
in  1830.  The  scope  of  these  societies  and  their  duties  were  laid  down 
in  various  acts  passed  from  time  to  time.  In  the  Act  of  1845  for  the 
first  time  provision  was  made  for  the  transmission  to  the  Legislature 
of  an  Annual  Report  containing  such  information  as  might  be  deemed 
likely  to  tend  to  the  improvement  of  agriculture.  In  1847  the  Agri- 
cultural Association  of  Upper  Canada  was  incorporated.  It  had  been 
organized  in  the  previous  year  as  a  common  meeting  ground  of  the 
various  local  associations,  and  for  the  purpose  of  carrying  on  a  Provin- 
cial Fair.  The  present  Agricultural  Department  of  Ontario  may  be 
said  to  be  the  outgrowth  of  the  movement  then  inaugurated.  This 
Association  was  changed  to  a  Board  of  Agriculture  in  1850,  and  to 
it  the  annual  reports  of  the  local  associations  were  to  be  sent,  the 
Board  having  the  putting  of  them  together  in  an  Annual  Report  to 
the  Legislature. 

This  Board  of  Agriculture  collected  and  published  a  large  amount 
of  agricultural  information  as  to  the  history,  the  growth,  and  the  pos- 
sibilities of  the  various  sections.  Yearly  reports  of  the  crops  were 
collected,  and,  in  order  to  get  this  information  in  good  time  before  the 
public,  arrangements  were  made  for  the  publication  of  a  monthly 
journal  ot  which  the  Secretary  of  the  Board  was  one  of  the  editors. 
This  journal  known  as  The  Canadian  AgricvMurist  existed  from  1849 
to  1863.  This  monthly,  which  contained  the  Journal  of  the  Board 
had  been  preceded  by  The  British  American  Cultivator,  1842-1847, 
and  it  was  followed  by  The  Canada  Farmer,  both  of  which  were  con- 
ducted entirely  as  private  ventures.  The  Board  collected  and  pub- 
lished information  in  regard  to  crops,  but  we  look  in  vain  for  complete 
or  extensive  statistics  of  the  agricultural  products  of  Ontario.  Down 
to  1882  the  only  available  statistics  of  much  account  are  to  be  found 
in  the  various  decennial  census  reports. 

From  the  yearly  reports  of  the  Agricultural  Societies  we  can 
obtain  the  average  yield  of  the  various  crops  in  the  district  covered 
by  each  society  reporting. 

In  1880  a  Royal  Agricultural  Commission  was  appointed,  consist- 
ing of  a  laro-e  number  of  the  leading  agriculturists  and  and  scientific 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


experts  of  the  Province.  Their  report  was  published  in  five  large 
volumes  and  ran  through  three  editions.  This  report  is  yet  in 
demand  though  long  out  of  print,  and  is  still  referred  to  as  the  most 
complete  and  satisfactory  report  upon  the  agricultural  resources  of  the 
Province  ever  published.  It  is  a  mine  of  information,  thoioughly  pre- 
pared, well  arranged,  one  of  the  most  important  documents  ever  issued 
in  the  Dominion  of  Canada.  The  cost  of  collecting  the  information 
and  publishing  the  report  was  over  $88,000,  but  the  Government  of 
Ontario  never  invested  money  for  a  better  purpose  or  with  better 
results.  This  rt-port  urged  the  collection  of  agricultural  statistics  and 
their  regular  publication  for  the  benefit  of  the  farming  classes.  The 
Commissioner  of  Agriculture,  who  was  also  Provincial  Treasurer, 
thougli  not  a  farmer  himself,  saw  the  wis<lom  of  their  suggestion  and 
requested  IMr.  Aichibald  Blue  in  the  fall  of  1881  to  prepare  a  report 
on  the  subject,  and  to  outline  a  scheme.  This  was  done  and  the  report 
was  ready  in  January,  1882.  The  Legislature  met  and  on  March 
10th,  1882,  there  c^me  into  operation  An  Act  to  Establish  a  Bureau 
of  In(lustrie.s.  The  name  was  given  to  avoid  confusion  with  the 
statistical  branch  connected  with  the  Department  of  Agriculture  at 
Ottawa.  As  already  stated,  the  agricultural  interests  were  in  charge 
of  a  member  of  the  Cabinet  who  was  known  as  Commissioner  of  Agri- 
culture in  addition  to  his  other  ofiicial  title.  Thus  the  Department 
was  at  one  time  attached  to  the  Public  Works  portfolio  ;  at  another 
time  to  the  office  of  Provincial  Treasurer.  When  a  Minister  of  Agri- 
culture was  added  to  the  Cabinet  in  1886  the  Bureau  became  the  main 
part  or  nucleus  of  the  Department  and  has  ever  since  so  remained. 
The  chief  of  the  Bureau  is  known  as  Secretary  of  the  Bureau  ;  he  is 
also  Deputy  Minister  of  the  whole  department. 

It  was  laid  down  as  the  duty  of  the  Commissioner  through  the 
Bureau  "  to  institute  enquiries  and  collect  useful  facts  relating  to  the 
agricultural,  mechanical,  and  manufacturing  interests  of  the  Province, 
and  to  adopt  measures  for  disseminating  or  publishing  the  same  in 
such  names  and  forms  as  he  finds  best  adapted  to  promote  improve- 
ment within  the  Province  and  to  encourage  immigration  from  other 
countries ;  and  (amongst  other  things)  to  procure  and  publish  early 
informaticm  relating  to  the  supply  of  grain,  breadstuff's  and  live  .stock 
in  the  other  Piovinces  of  the  Dominion,  in  Great  Britain,  and  in  the 
United  States,  and  other  foreign  countries  in  which  the  Province  finds 
a  market  for  its  surplus  products  ;  and  as  to  the  demand  therefor  ; 
and  he  shall  submit  to  the  Legislature,  within  thirty  days  of  the  open- 
ing of  each  sessi  n,  a  detailed  and  succinct  report  of  his  proceedings. 

The  officers  of  all  agricultural  societies,  all  municipal  councils, 
school  boards,  and  public  institutions,  ^nd  all  public  officers,  were 
requireti  to  supply  such  information  as  miuht  be  asked  of  them  under 
penalty  of  fine  for  refusal  or  neglect  or  falsiiication  of  returns. 

Some  difficulty  was  met  with  m  the  early  years  of  this  new  work 
as  many  ratepayers   had  a  suspicion  that   in   some  way  the  returns 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  o2).  A.  1898 


might  be  used  for  imposing  increased  taxes,  and  still  more  did  not 
appreciate  the  value  of  collecting  and  publishing  statistics  of  crops, 
live  stock  and  dairy  products. 

There  are  about  160,000  farmers  in  Ontario,  and  it  would  be  a 
most  remarkable  state  of  affairs  if  even  after  seventeen  years  of  work 
there  were  not  found  here  and  there  individuals  who  would  refuse  to 
give  information  through  indifference,  strong  political  bias  against  the 
party  that  might  be  in  power,  or  through  unalterable  and  uncompro- 
mising stubbornness.  On  the  whole,  however,  we  are  able  to  say  that 
the  replies  are  satisfactory,  we  have  had  many  oppoitunities  of  putting 
the  figures  to  test,  and  we  can  publish  our  returns  from  year  to  yeaf 
feelinij  that  the  public  can  accept  them  as  reliable,  as  reliable  indeed 
as  such  statistics  are  in  other  countries  where  a  systematic  compilation 
of  agricultural  statistics  is  carried  on. 

Mr.  Archibald  Blue,  who  is  one  of  the  Vice-Presidents  of  this 
Association,  and  also  Secretary  of  this  section,  was  appointed  the  first 
Secretary  and  to  him  is  due  the  credit  of  successfully  inaugurating 
the  Bureau  in  1882  and  conducting  it  until  1891,  when  the  author  of 
this  paper  succeeded  him.  So  marked  an  impression  did  Mr.  Blue 
make  that  even  now,  seven  years  after  he  has  given  up  the  work  for 
another  Department  under  our  Government,  returns  occasionally  come 
to  our  Bureau  addressed  to  him. 

As  the  Bureau  is  attached  to  the  Department  of  Agriculture,  the 
collection  of  agricultural  statistics  has  formed  the  first  charge  upon 
our  time  and  attention,  though  we  have  also  undertaken  and  are  now 
publishing  annual  reports  upon  the  municipal  Avork  of  our  Province, 
including  population,  area,  assessment,  taxation,  receipts  and  expendi- 
tures, assets  and  liabilities  of  all  the  municipalities  of  Ontario.  We 
also  compile  chattel  mortgage  returns,  and  have  issued  several  labor 
reports. 

Now,  as  to  our  mode  of  collecting  agricultural  statistics. 

First  of  all  we  have  a  list  of  correspondents,  about  850  in  num 
ber,  varying  from  year  to  year,  made  up  of  the  most  reliable  farmers 
in  all  parts  of  the  Province.  To  these  we  send  three  or  four  times  a 
year  schedules  containing  questions  on  the  condition  of  crops,  live 
stock  supply  of  food,  etc.  Each  is  accompanied  by  an  addressed  return 
envelope  which  the  Dominion  Postal  Department  carries  free  when 
left  unsealed.  These  returns  give  us  reports  as  to  general  conditions 
in  all  parts,  and  form  the  basis  of  our  bulletins  in  May,  August,  and 
November.  The  first  drafts  of  these  bulletins  are  sent  to  the  daily 
and  weekly  papers,  and  we  get  a  wide  circulation  before  the  bulletins 
themselves  are  princed  off  and  distributed.  The  bulletins  contain 
fuller  information  as  to  the  crops  and  the  weather,  and  also  "  remarks 
by  correspondents." 

To  arrive  at  exact  statistics  of  crops  we  try  to  reach  the  producers 
themselves.     In  the  first  place  we  get  returns  of  the  assessment  of  the 

111 


Gl  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Province  from  the  municipal  clerks  and  from  these  returns  we  can  also 
derive  the  area  of  fall  wheat  sown,  as  that  is  to  be  found  on  the 
assessors'  rolls. 

The  next  thing  is  to  get  the  names  and  addresses  of  the  farmers. 
For  a  few  years  the  voters'  lists  were  used  and  in  one  year  (1885)  we 
sent  out  175,599  schedules  to  persons  on  those  lists.  In  that  year 
replies  from  21,053  persons  were  received.  It  was  felt,  however,  that 
these  lists,  for  many  reasons  that  need  not  be  given  here,  were  not 
altogether  suitable  to  the  purposes  of  the  Bureau,  and  it  was  resolved 
to  prepare  lists  that  would  better  serve  the  purpose.  By  special 
arrangements  with  the  Department  of  Education  we  are  enabled  to 
address  every  public  school  inspector,  and  request  a  list  of  the  rural 
school  teachers.  To  every  teacher  we  then  send  a  form  to  be  filed  up 
with  a  list  of  the  resident  farmers  of  the  school  section.  This  list  of 
farmers  is  revised  at  least  every  other  year,  and  we  thereby  kee]^  it  up 
to  date.  This  in  itself  is  a  very  heavy  task,  but  we  believe  it  tends  to- 
ward the  accuracy  of  our  results. 

To  every  farmer  of  the  Province  we  then  send  out  in  June  a  large 
card  asking  for  the  details  of  his  farm  operation,  total  acreage,  acres 
of  field  crops,  pasture,  woodland  and  waste  land,  acres  of  wheat,  oats, 
barley,  corn  and  all  other  field  crops,  numbers  of  various  orchard  trees, 
numbers  of  various  classes  of  live  stock  on  hand,  and  numbers  sold 
during  year  preceding  July  1st,  also  values  of  farm  lands,  buildings, 
live  stock,  and  implements.  These  returns  are  made  out  on  July  1st, 
and  are  returnable  during  first  week  of  July.  The  number  of  returns 
received  of  course  varies  -  the  highest  received  in  any  one  year  being 
48,635.  From  these  returns  we  make  up  our  annual  estimate  as  to 
the  extent  of  farm  operations. 

Then  as  to  the  results  of  the  farming,  we  first  get  an  estimate 
about  the  first  week  of  August  of  the  probable  yield,  and  another  after 
harvest  from  the  actual  threshing  returns.  We  send  out  schedules 
and  post  cards  to  our  regular  correspondents  and  a  large  number  of 
others,  asking  for  the  average  yield  of  the  section  in  which  the  corres- 
pondent lives.  Our  bulletin  publications  in  August  and  November 
give  the  results  covering  simply  the  whole  Province.  Subsequently 
we  work  over  this  material  by  townships  and  publish  the  details  by 
county  in  our  Annual  Report  which  is  given  in  book  form  in  the  year 
following. 

Our  market  prices  are  compiled  from  the  weekly  market  reports 
in  the  weekly  papers  of  the  Province,  and  are  for  the  six  months  July 
to  December  inclusive. 

Our  dairy  statistics  are  compiled  from  returns  got  direct  from  the 
oflBcers  of  our  cheese  factories  and  creameries.  In  all  of  our  returns 
our  aim  is  to  get  all  information  at  first  hand,  that  is  from  the  men 
themselves  who  produce  the  grain,  fatten  and  sell  the  stock,  and  make 
the  cheese  and  butter,  and  we  endeavor  to  get  the  returns  from  as 
large  a  number  as  possible  so  as  to  reduce  the  possibility  of  error  to 
the  minimum.  C.  C.  James. 

112 


THE   MUNICIPAL   STATISTICS   OF   ONTARIO. 

(Repriated  from  The  Municipal  World  for  January.  February  and  April,  1899,  by  permission 
of  the  Editor,  Mi.  K.  W.  McKay,  St.  Thomas,  Ont.) 

Value  and  Use  of  Municipal  Statistics. 

Every  age  has  some  striking  peculiarity.  In  this  age,  near  the  clos- 
ing year  of  the  19th  century,  we  are  living  so  fast,  reaching  out  rapidly 
into  the  remote  corners  of  the  earth,  developing  the  world's  resources 
and  discovering  secrets  of  nature,  one  is  at  a  loss  to  designate  its  special 
characteristic.  There  are  indeed  many  things  that  distinguish  us 
from  the  generations  that  preceded  us.  However  there  is  one  line  of 
work,  one  peculiarity  of  this  age,  one  characteristic  of  our  life  and  of 
our  work,  that  stands  out  prominent,  and  that  is  the  tendency  or  desire 
to  count,  reckon,  sum  up,  tabulate,  reduce  our  knowledge  to  a  mathe- 
matical basis.  We  are  inclined  to  introduce  statistical  methods  into 
all  of  our  investigations,  to  put  our  facts  into  definite  figures  and  then 
draw  conclusions.  Or  perhaps  it  would  be  better  to  say  that  we  are 
fond  of  having  our  information  put  into  the  form  of  tables  of  figures, 
allowing  those  who  are  interested  to  draw  their  own  conclusions. 
This  is  as  characteristic  of  municipal  matters  as  of  other  fields  of 
work.  For  instance  a  statement  of  voters  on  the  roll  and  of  votes 
polled  for  the  various  candidates  is  in  itself  of  no  small  interest  to  us, 
even  where  we  do  not  know  the  voters  and  the  candidates  and  the 
many  questions  that  were  discussed  in  connection  with  an  election. 
Figures  have  an  attraction  to  most  citizens,  but  when  we  know 
what  is  back  of  those  figures — what  they  represent — they  have  a 
peculiar  charm  to  some  of  us. 

I  have  recently  been  looking  over  the  minutes  of  an  old  town 
meeting,  probably  the  oldest  in  Ontario,  and  I  find  that  it  records  the 
election  of  the  various  township  officers  and  the  "  prudential  laws " 
passed  from  year  to  year.  The  principal  matters  of  concern  were  the 
heights  of  fences  and  the  restraint  of  animals  from  running  at  large. 
These  are  of  some  interest,  but  when  we  turn  to  the  other  part  of  the 
record  and  see  the  tables  of  figures  giving  the  families  of  all  the 
residents,  how  our  interest  increases !  We  can  see  the  yearly  growth 
due  to  the  new -coming  settlers  and  the  birth  of  children.  The  material 
is  so  well  arranged,  and  is  so  complete,  that  it  is  to  these  statistical 
tables  quite  as  much  as  to  the  bare  statement  of  so-and-so  being 
appointed  pound-keeper,  and  the  laws  "  no  hogs  to  run  at  large,"  and 
"  water  voted  no  fence,"  we  turn  to  see  the  growth  and  history 
of  that  township.  Our  municipal  work  has  broadened  and  increased 
so  much  during  the  present  century  that  we  feel  that  merely  as  a 
matter  of  history,  as  a  record  of  our  growth,  we  .should  keep  available 
for  future  citizens,  ,as  well  as  for  ourselves,  a  definite  statement  of  our 
work.  As  a  contribution  to  the  historical  record  of  our  Province, 
therefore,  we  should  try  and  preserve  and  publish  accurate  statistics 
of  our  municipalities.     I  have  said  our  work  has  broaden-  d.     In  the 

[1131 

8  B.L  6 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


early  days  dollars  and  cents,  or  money,  played  but  a  minor  part  to-day, 
the  records  of  our  municipal  councils  are  largely  records  of  receipts 
and  payments,  assets  and  liabilitie-;.  If  you  give  a  London  financier  an 
accurate  record  of  the  financial  transactions  of  any  municipalit}^  for 
say  ten  j^ears,  he  will  be  able  to  form  a  conclusion  as  to  whether  it  is 
safe  to  bu}'  the  debentures  of  that  municipality,  that  is,  to  lend  it 
money.  He  does  not  need  to  make  diligent  enquiries  as  to  geographi- 
cal situation,  the  moral  habits  of  the  people,  their  nationality  and  their 
church  record.  Our  municipalities  are  under  constant  examination  by 
such  men  here  and  abroad,  and  the  work  of  councils  is  so  largely 
financial  that  it  is  becoming  imperative  to  have  available  published 
■financial  records.  Our  councils  are  required  by  statute  to  keep  their 
accounts  in  proper  form  ;  these  are  regularly  published.  It  is  but  one 
step  further  to  saj'  that  it  is  important  to  have  these  records  put  in 
permanent  form,  and  in  such  books  or  reports  as  are  readily  available 
to  all  concerned  or  interested. 

Again,  the  municipal  records  of  all  municipalities  should  be  pub- 
lished together,  so  that  the  ratepayers  ma}'  not  only  study  the  j^ear  by 
year  growth  of  their  own  municipality,  but  should  also  be  able  to  com- 
pare their  work  with  that  of  other  municipalities.  We  are  largely 
imitators ;  one  good,  well-behaved  citizen  is  an  example  to  others,  so 
one  well-managed  municipality  should  be  a  help  to  others  less  fortun- 
ate or  less  ably  managed.  Apart  then  from  the  fact  that  this  is  an 
age  of  statistical  records,  and  that  municipalities  must  follow  the  fashion 
of  the  age,  especially  when  it  is  a  good  fashion,  there  are  three  good 
reasons  wh}'  our  municipal  statistics  should  be  put  in  permanent  pub- 
lished form :  first,  because  statistical  facts  are  part  of  the  material  out 
of  which  history  is  made  ;  second,  because  municipalities  are  dealing 
more  or  less  with  outsiders  and  must  be  properly  accredited  with  ail 
such ;  and  third,  because  individual  citizens  are  becoming  students  of 
their  own  aftairs,  and  de>iire  to  know  the  3'ear-by-year  changes  and 
results,  and  desire  to  have  the  records  of  other  municipalities  for  com- 
parison and  assistance. 

These  three  reasons  that  I  have  given  are  well  established  by  the 
increasing^  demand  made  at  home  and  from  abroad  for  the  annual 
report  of  the  Bureau  of  Industries,  in  which  the  municipal  statistics  of 
Ontario  are  published.  The  fact  that  they  are  published  in  a  govern- 
ment report  gives  them  a  standing  that  they  could  not  otherwise  have, 
and  therefore  puts  upon  municipal  officers  the  responsibilit}'  of  having 
them  prepared  in  as  complete,  trustworthy  and  prompt  a  manner  as 
possible,  and  also  puts  upon  this  Bureau  the  duty  of  having  them 
published  in  as  convenient  and  accurate  form  as  can  be  attained. 

The  Ontario  Bureau   of  Industrie^. 

Many  persons  have  asked  why  the  branch  of  government  to  which 
the  municipal  statistics  are  sent  and  by  which  these  are  published  is 
known  as  "  The  Ontario  Bureau  of  Industries."     Occasionally  it  has 

114 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


been  mistaken  for  an  employment  bureau  or  agency  by  persons  who 
have  known  of  its  work  only  by  name.  Perhaps  a  word  or  two  of 
explanation  will  be  in  place.  The  Royal  Agricultural  Commission  of 
1880  was  a  pronounced  success.  Even  to  this  day  applications  are 
received  for  the  set  of  valuable  reports  that  resulted  from  its  labors, 
and  to  many  farmers  it  is  still  a  cyclopaedia  of  Ontario  agriculture,  a 
valuable  work  of  reference  though  nearly  twenty  years  have  passed 
since  it  was  compiled,  and  it  has  been  out  of  print  for  seven  years. 
Following  up  its  work  and  in  direct  continuance  of  the  spirit  of  its 
findings,  the  Commissioner  of  Agriculture  recjuested  Mr.  Archibald 
Blue  to  prepare  a  report,  which  is  to  be  found  in  Vol.  VI.  of  the  Ontario 
Sessional  Papers,  under  the  title  "  Agricultural  Statistics,  their  Value, 
History,  Scope  and  System."  This  report  is  dated  10th  January,  1882. 
Speedy  action  was  taken.  On  March  10th,  of  same  year,  the  Lieuten- 
ant-Governor assented  to  An  Act  to  establish  a  Bureau  of  Industries. 
This  Bureau  was  to  collect,  tabulate  and  publish  industrial  information 
for  public  purposes.  The  scope  was  not  to  be  limited  to  agriculture. 
One  reason  for  the  name  originally  selected  will  now  be  apparent. 
The  main  reason  for  not  calling  it  a  Bureau  of  Statistics  was  that  it 
was  desired  not  to  confuse  it  with  the  Domion  Department  of  Statistics. 
In  clause  5  of  this  Act  the  secretary  was  required  to  compile  annually 
"  a  tabular  extract  of  facts  relating  to  land,  trade,  government,  popula- 
tion and  other  subjects."  Clause  6  required  the  officers  of  all  societies 
institutes  and  agricultural  associations,  the  officers  of  all  municipal 
councils,  school  boards  and  public  institutions,  to  answer  any  question, 
or  to  fill  up,  tabulate  and  return  official  schedules  according  to  instruc- 
tions and  within  the  prescril^ed  times.  The  penalty  for  refusal  Or 
wilful  neglect  was  a  fine  of  $40,  recoverable  by  any  person  suing  fo^. 
for  the  same.  It  might  be  stated  right  here  that  this  original  Act 
with  the  clauses  above  referred  to,  will  be  found  unchanged  in  chapter 
42  of  the  Revised  Statutes  of  Ontario,  1897. 

The  powers  and  duties  of  the  Bureau  as  originally  con- 
stituted, it  will  be  seen,  clearly  included  municipal  statistics,  and 
gave  the  Bureau  full  power  to  demand  these  returns.  But  in 
order  to  make  the  matter  more  definite  or  explicit  the  Legislature 
decided  to  place  upon  municipal  officers  the  duty  of  sending  in 
certain  specific  returns.  In  1887  the  Municipal  Act  was  amended 
(50  Vic.  chap.  29).  Section  12  of  the  new  Act  requires  every 
municipal  treasurer  to  furnish  to  the  secretary  of  the  Bureau,  before 
the  first  day  of  May,  a  financial  statement  on  such  schedules  as  might 
be  furnished  by  the  secretary.  Section  13  required  every  clerk  to 
furnish,  within  one  week  after  the  final  revision  of  the  assessment  roll, 
such  information  as  the  assessment  roll  or  other  records  of  his  office 
affijrd  on  such  schedules  as  might  be  provided.  Section  14  required 
the  Secretary  of  the  Bureau  to  make  a  report  to  the  Legislative  Board 
on  the  information  thus  obtained.  The  penalty  against  the  treasurer 
or  clerk  for  non-compliance  was  fixed  at  $20,  and  the  penalty  against 

115 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


the  municipality  was  the  witholding  of*  all  moneys  paj^able  to  the 
municipality  until  the  returns  were  made.  There  was  no  penalties 
against  the  Secretary'  of  the  Bureau,  as,  it  is  presumed,  he  could  not 
be  expected  to  make  tables  without  figures,  and  there  is  always  an 
effective  way  of  holding  a  civil  servant  to  his  duties. 

These  regulations  have  undergone  various  changes,  principally, 
however,  in  the  way  of  making  them  more  definite  and  explicit,  and  it 
may  be  as  well  to  state  the  requirements  of  the  law  as  they  stand  to- 
day in  the  Revised  Statutes  of  1897.  It  is,  however,  much  to  be  desired 
by  all  interested  that  work  of  this  nature  be  done  because  it  is  felt  to 
be  important  and  not  because  the  law  requires  it  to  be  done.  Where 
legal  procedure  has  to  be  resorted  to  the  work  is  done  in  a  perfunctory 
manner,  and  is  not  at  all  likely  to  be  satisfactory. 

Auditors'  Reports. 

The  general  practice  is  for  the  municipal  council  at  its  first  meeting 
in  the  new  year  to  appoint  two  auditors  to  examine  and  report  upon 
the  accounts  of  the  previous  year  ending  December  31st.  The  auditors 
are  required  to  make  in  duplicate  an  abstract  and  a  detailed  statement 
of  the  accounts,  receipts  and  expenditures,  and  of  the  assets  and  liabili- 
ties of  the  municipality.  One  abstract  and  one  detailed  statement  are 
to  be  sent  to  the  Bureau  of  Industries.  The  Act  requires  this  to  be 
done  within  one  month  of  their  appointment,  (R.  S.  0.  Chap.  223.  Sec. 
304.)  In  most  cases  these  statements  are  printed,  and  it  is  very  impor- 
tant that  they  should  be  printed  in  all  cases.  The  Bureau  prefers  to 
receive  printed  copies,  certified  to  by  t*lie  auditors,  and  the  practice  has 
been  to  allow  auditors  such  extra  time  as  may  be  necessary  bej'ond 
the  month  rather  than  put  them  to  the  trouble  of  making  copies  by 
hand.  The  printed  copies  are  much  more  convenient  for  examination 
and  comparison.  The  Bureau  continues  to  receive  every  year  many 
copies  of  municipal  accounts  closed  on  the  15th  of  December  and  pub- 
lished in  the  local  papers  for  the  information  of  the  electors.  The 
auditors  may  think  that  they  are  responsible  for  this  statement  l)ecause, 
for  .some  reason  or  other,  it  is  dealt  with  under  Division  Y  of  the  Act 
headed  "  Auditors  and  Audit  "  and  is  a  sub-section  of  the  clause  defining 
the  duties  of  auditors— R.  S.  0.,  1897,  chap.  223,  sec.  304  (6).  In  refer- 
ring to  the  section  it  will  be  seen  that  the  auditors  have  nothing  what- 
ever to  do  with  ihese  statements  made  out  up  to  Dec.  loth.  They 
must,  in  most  cases,  have  been  carefully  compiled  before  the  auditors 
were  appointed,  and  such  returns,  whatever  may  be  their  use  to  the 
auditors  in  the  new  year,  are  not  to  be  sent  to  the  Bureau.  The  exper- 
ience acquired  at  this  Bureau  leads  to  the  following  observations. 

1.  Auditors  are  required  to  audit  all  the  accounts  of  the  munici- 
pality, not  simply  the  accounts  that  may  be  prepared  for  them  by  the 
treasurei".  There  have  been  serious  defalcations  in  past  years  in 
Ontario,  though  the  accounts  have  been  audited  year  by  year,  and 

116 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


people  have  wondered.  In  such  cases  the  auditors,  as  a  rule,  have 
audited  only  the  accounts  prepared  for  them  by  the  dishonest  treas- 
urer. 

2.  Auditors  should  carefully  examine  the  bank  deposit-book,  and 
the  cheque-book  (for  outstanding  cheques,)  and  then  should  go  to  the 
bank  and  examine  the  bank  account  itself. 

3.  Auditors  should  carefully  investigate  all  special  deposit  accounts, 
sinking  funds,  and  securities,  and  see  that  neither  the  officials  nor  the 
council  have  improperly  interfered  with  the.'ie  dui  ing  the  year.  All 
sinking  funds  required  by  law  should  be  carefully  guarded,  should  have 
an  actual  existence.  It  has  frequently  happened  that  when  the  crash 
has  taken  place,  it  was  because  some  sinking  fund  or  special  deposit 
has  had  an  existence  only  on  the  books  of  the  treasurer. 

4.  Auditors  should  see  to  it  that  all  vouchers  examined  by  them 
.and  checked  off  are  so  stamped  and  initialed  that  they  cannot  by  any 
manipulation  be  introduced  again  in  the  succeeding  year. 

5.  Auditors  should  carefully  read  over  pages  4  and  5  in  the  Jan- 
uary number  of  The  Municipal  World,  1899,  and  also  pages  2457-2460 
of  Vol.  II  of  the  Revised  Statutes  of  Ontario  for  1897,  and  the  Muni- 
cipal Amendment  Act  of  1898. 

6  Having  done  their  duty  thoroughly  they  should  see  that  a  copy 
of  their  abstract  report  and  also  a  copy  of  their  detailed  audit  are  sent 
to  the  Bureau  of  Industries  as  promptly  as  possible. 

These  suggestions  are  observed  of  course  by  auditors  who  are  alive 
to  their  duties  and  earnest  in  their  work.  Some  auditors  may  think 
that  they  are  casting  retlections  upon  the  ability  and  integrity  of  the 
treasurer,  if  they  are  too  careful  in  following  out  such  practice,  but  a 
thorough  and  honest  audit  should  be  welcomed  by  every  honorable 
treasurer,  and  it  may  be  the  means  of  saving  some  person  from  unfor- 
tunate errors,  unintended,  but  nevertheless  of  a  most  serious  nature. 
Many  a  treasurer  in  this  Province  would  have  been  saved  from  humilia- 
tion if  year  by  year  the  auditors  had  been  true  enough  to  their  sense 
of  duty  and  true  also  to  his  best  interests  to  insist  on  thoroughly 
examining  every  transaction,  and  every  deposit,  and  every  security. 
The  honest  treasurer  should  demand  such  an  audit,  the  dishonest 
treasurer  requires  such  an  audit,  and  the  honest  but  not  always  care- 
ful treasurer  will  be  helped  by  such  an  audit. 

Why  send  these  audits  to  the  Bureau  ?  Further  on  I  wall  refer 
to  the  returns  required  to  be  made  out  by  the  treasurer.  These  are 
made  out  on  forms  furnished  by  this  Bureau,  and  we  compare  every 
such  return  with  the  auditors'  report  previously  received.  Many  trea- 
surers, of  course,  send  in  statements  that  are  models  of  accuracy  and 
of  good  arrangement,  but  in  other  cases  it  is  necessary  to  re-arrange 
entries  that  have  been  improperly  classified,  and  to  set  these  right  we 
require  to  have  the  auditors'  report. 

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One  more  point  in  reference  to  the  auditors'  report  is  that  in  many- 
cases  the  printed  statement  consists  simply  of  lists  of  names  and 
amounts,  there  being  a  woeful  lack  of  information  desired.  For  in- 
stance, "  John  Jones,  85,"  is  not  enough,  but  "  John  Jones,  for  labor, 
$5,"  would  be  a  great  deal  more  satisfactory.  Every  entry  should  give 
the  amount  of  the  payment,  the  name  of  the  person  to  whom  the 
amount  is  paid,  and  also  the  explanation  or  statement  showing  what 
the  payment  is  for.  Then  the  auditors  should  see  that  every  payment 
is  entered  under  the  proper  service  or  account. 

If  these  instructions  were  observed  by  all  officials  the  work  of  the 
Bureau  of  Industries  would  be  very  much  lightened,  the  citizens  who 
look  at  the  auditors'  reports  for  information  would  be  better  satisfied, 
and  auditors  would  be  even  more  appreciated  than  they  are  at  present. 

The  Clerk's  Returns. 

The  clerk  is  the  secretary  of  the  municipal  council,  including  in 
his  work  the  duties  of  both  recorder  and  correspondent.  In  his  office 
should  be  kept  all  records,  and  to  him  reference  should  be  made  for 
information  upon  almost  every  phase  of  municipal  work.  He  is  the 
official,  therefore,  to  whom  most  of  the  requests  of  this  Bureau  are 
directed,  and  he  not  infrequently  thinks  that  the  requests  are  too 
numerous  and  too  exacting.  This  opinion  is  emphasized  by  the  fact 
that  these  requests  are  not  accompanied  by  any  promise  to  pay.  He 
sometimes  exoresses  himself  pretty  freely  and  unreservedly  in  regard 
to  the  matter,  thinking  that  the  government  that  exacts  work  should 
pay  for  it.  The  Legislature,  however,  requires  certain  information  to 
be  given,  and  the  Bureau  of  Industries  is  simply  carrying  out  the 
orders  of  the  Legislature  in  asking  for  these  returns.  It  is  to  be  pre- 
sumed that  the  reason  why  no  provision  is  made  for  paying  for  such 
information  being  given  is  that  it  is  considered  that  the  collecting  and 
publication  of  such  information  is  in  the  interest  of  the  municipalities 
rather  than  of  the  Legislature,  and  that  the  officials  should  be  paid  by 
the  municipalities  that  receive  the  benefit.  Proper  recompense  for 
making  these  and  other  returns,  therefore,  should  be  provided  for  by 
the  municipal  councils.  In  fixing  salaries  and  allowances  mvmicipal 
councils  should  consider  these  duties,  and  here,  as  elsewhere,  adequate 
payment  should  be  aimed  at.  No  one  appreciates  the  value  of  the 
services  of  municipal  officers  more  than  do  the  officials  of  this  Bureau, 
and  we  would  be  very  pleased  to  see  councils  making  proper  provision 
for  payment  of  salaries.  Sometimes  officials  apply  for  position  at  very 
low  salaries  without  fully  informing  themselves  as  to  the  many  duties 
laid  upon  them  by  legislative  enactments. 

The  returns  required  to  be  made  by  clerks  to  this  Bureau,  are  the 
following  : 

(1)  A  list  of  the  council  and  the  officials  for  the  current  year. 
This  is  to  be  sent  in,  on  forms  provided,  immediately  after  the  opening 
session  in  January. 

118 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


(2)  Certain  statistics  taken  from  the  assessment  rolls  and  collec- 
tion rolls.  One  ditiiculty  that  is  frequently  met  with  is  that  clerks 
state  that  at  the  time  information  as  to  taxes  is  asked,  the  collector's 
roll  is  in  the  hands  of  the  collector,  the  collection  is  not  yet  complete, 
or  the  time  has  been  extended.  This  would  be  obviated  if  the  clerk 
would  make  an  entry  in  his  books  of  the  totals  of  the  taxes  imposed 
before  handing  out  the  rolls.  It  seems  to  us  that  even  if  a  return  to 
this  Bureau  were  not  requested  that  such  a  statement  should  be  found 
on  the  record  books  of  the  clerk. 

(3)  Copies  of  all  money  by-laws  passed.  If  these  were  all  on 
record  in  this  Bureau,  for  references  in  checking  over  auditors'  and 
treasurers'  returns,  much  correspondence  would  be  avoided  and  the 
work  material  1}'  lightened. 

Section  285  of  the  E.  S.  O.  reads  as  follows  :  "  The  clerk  of  every 
municipality  shall,  in  each  year,  within  one  week  after  the  final  revi- 
sion of  the  assesfuient  roll,  under  a  penalty  of  S20,  in  case  of  default, 
make  a  return  to  the  Secretary  of  the  Bureau  of  Industries,  Toionto, 
on  schedules  or  forms  furnished  by  the  said  secretary,  and  approved 
by  the  Lieutenant-Governorin-Council,  of  such  statistics  or  informa- 
tion as  the  assessment  roll  or  other  records  of  his  office  afford,  and  as 
such  schedules  or  forms  call  for ;  and  every  such  return  shall  be  trans- 
mitted by  mail  in  a  registered  package." 

(4)  Copies  of  the  printed  Voters'  Lists.  It  should  be  noted  here 
that  the  Voters'  Lists  of  townships,  towns  and  villages  must  now  con- 
tain a  column  specifying  the  occupation  of  the  voter.  This  gives 
increased  value  to  Voters'  Lists,  and  the  many  uses  that  they  serve  in 
this  improved  form  need  not  be  referred  to  here. 

(5)  Section  427  requires  every  council  to  transmit  to  the  Depart- 
ment of  Agriculture  on  or  before  31st  day  of  January,  an  account  of 
the  several  debts  of  the  corporation  as  tbey  stood  on  the  31st  day  of 
December  preceding."  Then  follows  the  items  to  be  specified.  The 
clerk,  being  the  secretary  of  the  Council,  is  the  officer  to  transmit  this 
statement.  The  council  should  instruct  the  proper  officers  to  prepare 
a  statement. 

Treasurer's  Returns. 

Section  293  of  the  Municipal  Act  requires  every  municipal  treas- 
urer to  send  to  the  Bureau  "  such  information  or  statistics  regarding 
the  finances  or  accounts  of  the  municipality  as  such  schedules  or  forms 
call  for,  and  every  such  return  shall  be  transmitted  by  mail  in  a  regis- 
tered package.  The  schedule  sent  out  provides  for  a  statement  of 
receipts  and  expenditures  and  also  of  assets  and  liabilities.  These 
statements  are  arranged  under  heads  or  classes,  as  near  as  possible  in 
the  form  in  which  they  are  afterwards  published,  hence  it  is  very 
important  that  treasurers  be  careful  that  all  items  are  arranged  under 
their  proper  heads.     Duplicate  forms  are  furn'shed,  so  that  the  treas- 

119 


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urer  may  retain  a  cipy  for  reference.  These  returns  are  compared 
with  the  auditors'  statements  sent  in  earlier  in  the  year,  and  there 
should  be,  of  course,  no  discrepancies.  The  liabilities  statement  should 
include  the  total  liabilities  and  not  simply  those  falling  due  during 
the  ensuing  year. 

It  will  be  seen  that  the  Bureau  has  some  half-dozen  statistical 
returns  upon  which  to  base  a  report,  and  all  are  required.  Delay  in 
sending  in  one  ma}^  retard  the  compilation,  and  non -agreement  of  one 
with  another  causes  increasing  labor  and  vexatious  delay.  When  the 
fact  is  appreciated  that  several  thousand  returns  have  to  be  obtained 
and  examined,  and  the  figures  taken  off  and  checked,  it  will  be  under- 
stood why  there  is  some  delay  in  presenting  to  the  public  the  printed 
municipal  reports  of  this  Bureau. 

The  report  of  municipal  statistics  for  the  year  1897,  is  still  in 
preparation.  Some  may  wonder  why  it  has  not  yet  gone  to  press 
although  we  are  now  at  the  end  of  the  third  month  of  1899.  The 
main  reason  why  this  report  has  not  yet  appeared  is  because  all  the 
material  has  not  been  available.  Some,  in  fact  many,  officials  are 
prompt  and  courteous ;  others,  however,  are  very  dilatory,  and  form 
after  form,  and  circular  after  circular,  and  letter  after  letter  must  be 
sent  by  mail,  and  even  the  telegraph  service  called  to  our  assistance — 
still  there  are  some  lacking,  and  despite  all  our  tffurts  the  following 
returns  are  still  in  default : 

Debenture  statements  for  1897 3 

Treasurers'         "  "       '•         8 

Auditors'  "  "       "         11 

The  work  of  the  Bureau  of  Industries,  it  will  be  seen,  is  not 
exactly  a  sinecure.  We  are  doing  our  best  to  i)ublish  promptly,  accu- 
rate and  serviceable  reports.  We  appeal  to  municipal  officers  to  help 
us. 

C.  C.  James. 


120 


THE  ROMANCE   OF  ONTARIO, 

OR  THE  PEOPLING  OF  THE  PROVINCE. 

This  paper  wao  read  at  the  Ontario  Historical  Exhibition,  Toronto,  June  20th,  1899,  and  is 
printed  by  request. 

I  do  not  think  I  am  making  too  strong  or  definite  a  statement  in 
saying  that,  for  the  most  part,  the  people  of  Ontario  consider  them- 
selves a  prosaic  matter-of-fact  people,  having  a  history  short  and 
simple,  with  little  or  no  romance  to  relieve  its  pages  of  plain  mono- 
tony. The  impression  seems  to  be  that  we  must  look  elsewhere,  to 
other  provinces  and  to  other  times,  for  the  materials  to  weave  into  the 
attractive  fabric  of  romance,  or  for  deeds  of  heroism  with  which  to 
evoke  the  strains  of  poesy  and  song. 

Our  poets  have  sung  of  the  sea  and  the  tides,  the  dykes  and  the 
marshes ;  they  have  roamed  the  fields  and  listened  to  the  birds  ;  they 
have  learned  the  music  of  the  breeze  and  caught  the  inspiration  of  the 
rivers  and  lakes — they  are  poets  of  nature  rather  than  of  men.  In 
them  for  the  most  part  the  men  and  women  of  Ontario  have  aroused 
no  poetic  interest  and  apparently  our  deeds  are  dull  and  commonplace. 
The  students  of  Canadian  poetry  will  be  attracted  by  the  melody  of 
the  song  and  be  charmed  by  the  interpretation  of  nature  but  will 
find  little  that  will  attract  them  to  a  closer  study  of  our  English- 
speaking  people.  When  we  turn  to  the  writers  of  fiction  we  find  the 
same — our  writers  of  fiction  and  our  poets  appear  to  be  inseparable. 
Let  us  record  briefly  the  recent  works  of  Canadian  fiction.  Roberts 
has  taken  the  Acadian  troubles  for  the  themes  of  his  "  Forge  in  the 
Forest  "  and  "  A  Sister  to  Evangeline."  Gilbert  Parker  has  gained 
aa  enviable  reputation  with  "The  Seats  of  the  Mighty"  and  other 
French  Canadian  novels.  McLennan  gave  us  first  his  "  Spanish  John  " 
and  later,  in  collaboration  with  Miss  Mcllwraith,  his  "  Span  o'  Life." 
Lighthall  in  "  The  False  Chevalier,"  and  Marquis  in  "  Marguerite  de 
Roberval,"  have  gone  to  old  Quebec  fortheir  heroes  and  their  heroines. 
Mrs.  Harrison  has  written  "The  Forest  of  Bourg  Marie"  and  Henry  Cecil 
Walsh  "  Bonhomme  and  other  stories  "  Miss  Macdonnell,  Miss  Sanford, 
Duncan  Campbell  Scott  and  E.  W.  Thompson  have  also  been  attracted 
to  the  French  Canadian  for  some  of  their  stories.  W.  A.  Eraser  has  gone 
to  far  off  India  or  the  remote  corners  of  the  Northwest  and  Ralph 
Connor  has  told  his  tales  of  the  Selkirks.  Robert  Barr,  it  is  true,  has 
found  a  plot  for  one  of  his  stories  in  Ontario  "In  the  midst  of  Alarms,", 
and  is  now  working  out  the  details  of  a  story  into  which  he  is  intro- 
ducing Col.  Talbot.  If  to  this  we  add  the  names  of  Miss  Murray,  Miss 
Machar,  and  Miss  Joanna  Wood,  we  shall  have  about  exhausted  the 
references  to  story  writers  who  have  found  themes  for  their  writings 
in  this  prosy  old  Province  of  Ontario. 

[121J 
9  B.I.  6 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Some  years  ago  a  veteran  Ontario  writer,  Wm.  Kirby,  opened 
up  a  well  nigh  inexhaustible  mine  of  fiction  and  romance  in  his  remark- 
able story  of  old  Quebec,  "  The  Golden  Dog,"  and  it  would  seem  as 
though  all  the  writers  and  poets  had  ever  since  forgotten  or  overlooked 
our  own  fair  province  as  unworthy  of  their  pens  or  as  insufficient  to 
supply  the  romantic  material  for  their  work.  Here  and  there  we  find 
a  stray  bit  of  Ontario  narrative,  but  for  the  most  part  the  eyes  of  the 
story  writers  are  turned  towards  New  France.  Do  the  Acadians  of 
the  east,  the  French  Canadians  of  Quebec  and  the  mixed  French  and 
Scottish  furtraders  of  the  Northwest  monopolize  the  romance 
of  Canada  ?  Does  this  Province  in  which  we  live,  of  which  we  are 
citizens,  and  of  which  we  are,  I  trust,  honestly  proud,  yield  no  romance 
to  the  student  ?  Are  we  now  and  have  our  forefathers  been  merely  a 
mercenary  crowd  of  uninteresting  people  without  a  history  to  attract 
attention  or  arouse  interest,  or  develop  feelings  of  patriotic  pride  ? 
Sometimes  I  think  we  are  apt  to  conclude  that  the  story  of  Ontario  is 
simply  that  of  the  heavy  labor  of  clearing  away  the  forest,  sowing  the 
wheat  and  the  barley,  fattening  the  cattle  and  sheep,  making  butter 
and  cheese,  and  building  railroads  and  canals  to  send  these  to  the 
great  European  market.  We  have  made  business  and  politics  a  very 
large  portion  of  our  provincial  life,  but  I  desire  to  call  attention  to  the 
fact  that  back  of  that  and  before  all  that  there  has  been  some  romance 
in  our  history,  and  I  would  like  to  suggest  some  lines  of  study  and 
research  that  will  open  up  these  hidden  treasures— for  it  is  a  treasure 
to  any  people  to  feel  and  to  know  that  there  is  a  romantic  element  in 
its  growth.  The  pages  of  our  history  are  not  as  dull  as  some  would 
have  us  believe,  and  though  we  may  be  lacking  in  some  of  the  attract- 
ive elements  of  our  fellow  Canadians  of  French  ancestry,  yet  we  have 
a  history  of  our  own  that  is  full  of  interest,  that  is  varied  in  its 
nature,  one  in  which  we  can  take  laudable  pride  if  only  we  understand 
it  aright. 

Why  have  our  poets  and  our  story  writers  and  our  students 
of  economic  questions  gone  to  Acadia,  Quebec,  and  the  far-  off  parts  "of 
the  Northwest,  for  their  inspiration  and  their  themes  ?  Some  may  say 
because  they  did  not  find  their  inspiration  and  their  theme  at  home, 
others  may  say  because  Parkman  has  entranced  them  with  his  inter- 
weaving of  romance  and  narrative,  that  delightful  mingling  of  story 
and  history  that  may  be  described  as  intoxicating  or  at  least  as  ir.es- 
meric,  and  because  Kirby  told  a  tale  in  his  Golden  Dog  that  has  never 
been  surpassed  by  his  successors,  if  it  has  been  equalled.  Others  may 
say  that  we  are  always  most  attracted  by  the  distant  and  the 
foreign,  we  can  see  more  romance  in  a  people  that  have  other  ways  and 
other  speech  than  we  have  ourselves,  and  we  can  readily  find  a  story 
that  will  interest  others  like  ourselves  if  only  we  seek  it  in  a  foreign 
situation,  and  with  others  who  do  not  think  as  we  do  or  speak  our 
language.  This  must  be  remembered,  however,  that  there  is  always 
awaiting  such  stories  the  native  critic  who  is  ready  to  lay  bare  the 
inaccuracies  and  the  mistakes  of  the  foreigner,  who  is  inaccurate  and 

122 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


makes  mistakes  because  he  is  a  foreigner.  When,  however,  the  writer 
is  able  to  tell  us  the  story  of  his  own  people  with  tidelity  and  fervor, 
though  it  may  be  with  simplicity  approaching  crudeness,  to  tell  the 
story  so  that  it  takes  hold  of  us  and  becomes  a  part  of  our  very  nat- 
ure, then  we  call  it  great,  we  know  that  it  will  last,  for  it  has  the 
essence  of  life — it  is  true  and  unassailable.  I  need  refer  you  only  to 
Ian  Maclaren's  stoi'ies  of  his  Scottish  folk  and  Langwill's  revelations  of 
the  Ghetto,  and,  T  think  I  may  add,  the  author  of  David  Harum. 
It  would  be  more  difficult  for  an  English  Canadian  writer  to  give  us 
living  stories  of  the  folk  of  Ontario  than  of  the  habitants  of  Quebec,  but 
that  is  not  a  sufficient  excuse  for  passing  by  this  province.  I  conclude 
that  the  main  reason  is  that  our  poets  and  story  writers  have  con- 
sidered that  the  people  of  Ontario  have  had  a  less  interesting  history 
than  the  people  of  Quebec,  of  Acadia,  and  the  wilds  of  the  Northwest. 
My  present  purpose  is  to  try  to  show  that  we  are  not  the  product  of 
dull  monotony,  but  that  in  the  making  of  this  province  there  is  some- 
thing interesting  and  attractive.  I  do  not  pretend  to  be  able  to  give 
you  more  than  a  brief  and  partial  sketch — my  purpose  is  to  suggest 
rather  than  to  finish. 

I  hope  to  be  able  to  put  forth  a  plea  for  the  study  of  the  people 
that  have  come  into  this  province  which  may  be  called  the  Promised 
Land  of  the  Western  Continent.  I  say  "  Promised  Land ' '  advisedly,  for 
if  you  will  look  back  over  the  century  gone  by  you  will  see  that  it  has 
really  been  a  Promised  Land  to  many  people — it  was  the  Promised 
Land  to  the  United  Empire  Loyalists  ;  it  was  the  Promised  Land  to  the 
thousands  of  home-seeking  Emigrants  from  England,  Scotland  and 
Ireland ;  it  was  the  Promised  Land  to  the  Negro  who  knelt  and  kissed 
the  soil  that  made  him  first  a  oian,  after  following  the  north  star  across 
the  Northern  States  that  poured  forth  their  blood  to  set  him  free  ;  it 
was  the  Promised  Land  to  the  German  ;  and  it  may  soon  become  the 
Promised  Land  to  some  of  the  Doukhobors  who  lift  up  their  voices  in 
Psalms  of  Praise  as  their  boat  touches  Canadian  shores. 

I  have  not  time  to  direct  your  attention  to  the  unique  position 
that  this  Province  occupies  geographically  on  this  continent.  Open 
your  atlas  and  observe  that  Ontario  is  almost  literally  an  island  lying 
in  the  interior  of  the  continent,  thrust  down  into  the  very  heart  of  the 
great  producing  states,  a  block  of  land  across  which  pass  the  great 
natural  and  national  highways.  Then  to  our  great  water  courses  add 
the  fertihty  of  the  soil  formed  in  the  ages  gone  by  out  of  the  Archean 
rocks  of  the  Laurentians,  the  oldest  of  the  continent,  and  you  have  the 
reasons  which  nature  gives  for  calling  this  a  Promised  Land. 

What  is  the  nationality  of  our  people  ?  Are  we  English,  or 
Scottish,  or  Irish  ?  or  are  we  Anglo-Saxons  ?  It  is  best  to  call  our- 
selves Canadian.  But  of  what  blood  is  a  Canadian  ?  Let  me  take  an 
example,  and  I  do  not  think  it  is  an  extreme  case.  I  had  occasion 
lately  to  look  up  the  nationality  of  a  Canadian  who  « as  born  in 
Toronto.     His   father  and  mother  were  both    born   in  this  province 

123 


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His  mother's  father  was  born  in  Ireland,  his  mother's  mother  was  born 
in  England,  her  father  being  English  and  her  mother  Scottish.  His 
father's  father  also  was  born  in  Ontario,  of  Irish  and  Welsh  ancestry. 
His  father's  mother  was  the  daughter  of  a  man  born  in  the  United 
States  of  French  Huguenot  ancestry,  and  on  his  mother's  side  she  was 
of  U.  E.  Loyalist  origin,  in  part  German  Palatine.  Here  we  find  a 
mingling  of  English,  Irish,  Scottish,  Welsh,  French  and  German  blood — 
and  yet  a  Canadian.  This  fusion  of  blood  is  going  on  and  you  have 
only  to  make  careful  enquiry  into  the  ancestry  of  the  rising  genera- 
tion of  this  province  to  be  convinced  that  the  future  citizens  of  Ontario 
will  be  of  a  composite  character.  Let  us  hope  that  the  best  elements 
of  all  the  contributing  nationalities  will  produce  a  Canadian  type  that 
will  be  worthy  of  the  land  in  which  we  live. 

I  shall  not  take  time  to  repeat  the  story  of  the  aborigines  of  this 
province  and  the  wonderful  records  of  the  Jesuit  Fathers  who  lived 
and  labored  and  suffered  and  died  for  the  conversion  of  the  Indians. 
You  have  in  this  exhibition  an  opportunity  that  may  never  come  to 
you  again,  to  see  the  original  letters  and  records  of  some  of  these 
early  heroes  and  to  hear  from  Father  Jones  the  story  of  their  lives. 
Then  comes  the  story  of  the  voyageurs  and  the  fur  traders.  Last 
summer  I  had  the  pleasure  of  taking  a  boat  at  the  old  departing  place 
for  the  great  northwest,  Lachine.  We  turned  the  western  end  of  Mont- 
real Island  and  headed  up  the  rapids  of  Ste  Anne.  I  had  by  good  for- 
tune picked  up  a  da}^  or  two  before  a  copy  of  Harmon's  Journal  begin- 
ning thus  "  April  LSOO,  Tuesday  20,  Lachine."  We  were  followiog 
Harmon's  canoes  laden  with  goods  for  the  great  prairies  of  the  west. 
We  were  in  the  great  highway  of  the  early  Jesuit  Missionaries  and  the 
Voyageurs.  That  alone  made  the  trip  to  Carillon  on  the  Ottawa  of 
great  interest  to  onewho  knew  even  a  littleof  the  early  history  of  Canada. 
As  we  moved  through  the  canal  the  captain,  at  our  request,  pointed  out 
Tom  Moore's  cottage,  where  he  lived  and  where  he  wrote  The  Canadian 
Boat  Song. 

Faintly  as  tolls  the  evening  chime 

Our  voices  keep  tune  and  our  oars  keep  time  ; 
Soon  as  the  woods  on  the  shore  look  dim 
We'll  sing  at  St.  Anne's  our  parting  hymn, 

Row  brothers,  roAv,  the  stream  runs  fast. 

The  rapids  are  near  and  the  daylight's  past. 

Why  should  we  yet  our  sail  unfurl  ? 

There  is  not  a  breath  the  blue  waves  to  curl  ; 

But,  when  the  wind  blows  otf  the  shore, 

Oh  I  sweetly  we'll  rest  our  weary  oar, 
Blow,  breezes,  blow,  the  stream  runs  fast, 
The  rapids  are  near,  and  the  daylight's  past. 

Utawa's  tide  !  this  trembling  moon 
Shall  see  us  float  over  thy  surges  soon. 

Saint  of  this  green  isle  1  hear  our  prayers  ; 

Oh,  grant  us  cool  heavens  and  favouring  airs, 
Blow,  breezes,  blow,  the  stream  runs  fast. 
The  rapids  are  near,  and  the  daylight's  past. 
124 


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Every  school  boy  knows  the  words,  and  the  little  excursion  had  an 
increased  interest  because  of  that  song.  I  thought  then  and  I  am  more 
convinced  to-night  that  if  we  could  produce  a  Canadian  Tom  Moore  to 
sing  the  songs  and  tell  the  deeds  of  the  hundreds  of  places  in  Ontario 
that  are  quite  as  interesting  and  quite  as  memorable  as  the  Ste.  Anne's 
Rapids  we  would  develop  a  sentiment  of  love  and  patriotism  in  the 
people  of  this  province  that  would  be  worth  more  than  the  construc- 
tion of  a  transcontinental  railway  or  the  deepening  of  our  much 
boasted  canals.  Sentiment !  What  is  it  ?  Of  what  is  it  composed  ? 
Is  it  worth  having  ?  It  has  made  nations  weak  in  numbers,  great  in 
power.  It  may  not  make  millionaires,  but  it  has  made  martyrs  ;  it 
may  not  make  champions  of  the  prize  ring  but  it  has  made  heroes  and 
patriots.  If  a  song,  a  poem,  or  a  story  will  arouse  high  and  worthy  sen- 
timent in  our  people  let  us  have  it,  and  may  our  writers  and  our  poets 
search  out  the  stories  of  our  province  and  do  for  the  hills  and  lakes 
and  fields  and  landing  places  of  Ontario  what  Moore  did  for  the  Rapids 
of  Ste.  Anne,  what  Mrs.  Sigourney  did  for  the  bell  of  St.  Regis,  and 
what  Whittier  did  for  the  bells  of  St.  Boniface.* 

We  begin  with  1784-  and  the  coming  of  the  U.  E.  Loyalists. 
There  has  been  no  little  quiet  questioning  of  the  U.  E.  Loyalists,  as  to 
why  they  came  and  what  their  motives  ?  I  do  not  propose  to  enter 
into  that  discussion.  The  U.  E.  Loyalists  played  an  important  part  in 
laving  the  foundation  of  this  province — all  admit  that.  At  the  same 
time  we  do  not  intend  to  give  them  all  the  credit  for  building  up  this 
people,  and  we  shall  be  doing  justice  only  when  we  give  a  place  to 
all  who  have  come  from  distant  lands  to  take  up  their  permanent 
abode  in  this  promised  land. 

I  do  not  think  that  the  composite  nature  of  the  U.  E.  Loyalists 
is  fully  understood  by  the  younger  people  of  this  province.  At 
the  close  of  the  war  and  the  declaration  of  Peace  in  1783,  large 
numbers  of  the  Loyalists  had  sought  shelter  under  the  protection  of 
Fort  Niagara  and  in  New  York  and  other  seaport  towns  in  the  East. 
As  a  very  large  part  of  the  Loyalists  came  from  New  York  State,  we 
musttherefore  look  into  the  composition  of  the  people  of  that  State. 

1st.  There  were  large  numbers  of  Dutch  or  Knickerbockers  from 
Mannhatten  Island,  descendents  of  the  founders  of  New  Am.sterdam. 
In  the  irst  Vol.  of  Papers  and  Records  just  published  by  the  Ontario 
historical  Society  you  will  find  Van  Alstine,  Van  Horn,  Bogart,  Van 
deVouart.  Asselstine,  Van  Cleef,  Van  Blaricom,  Vanevery,  Van  Tassil 
Wanamaker,  Huycke,  Hough,  Snider,  Schmitt,  Van  Skiver,  Scher- 
merhorn,  HofFnagle,  Vanderheyden,  Von  Kochnet,  Sleuter,  and  many 
similar  names.     These  tell  of  Dutch  ancestry,  some  of  German. 

*  See  "  The  Bell  of  St.  Regis  "  by  Mrs.  Sigourney,  and  "  The  Red  River  Voyageur  " 
by  John  G,  Whittier  : 

"  The  vovaseur  smiles  and  listens  "  The  bells  of  the  Roman  mission 

For  the  sound  that  grows  apace  That  call  from  the  turrets  twain, 

Well  he  knows  the  vesper  rinsring  To  the  boatman  on  the  river 

Of  the  bells  of  St.  Boniface."  To  the  hunter  on  the  plain.' 

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2nd.  In  addition  to  the  Dutch  we  find  some  Germans  among  the 
U.  E.  Loyalists,  in  addition  to  the  disbanded  Hessians.  Perhaps  you 
know  the  story  of  the  Palatines.  The  people  of  the  German  Palatin- 
ate indeed  had  suffered  for  years — their  country  had  been  a  fighting 
ground  for  the  French  on  the  West  and  the  German  States  on  the  East. 
They  had  suffered  terrible  persecution,  and  had  fled,  some  to  Holland, 
some  to  London.  It  was  in  the  days  of  Queen  Anne.  Public 
sympathy  being  aroused  they  were  housed,  fed  and  clothed.  At  first 
it  was  proposed  to  settle  them  in  Ireland  and  in  the  manufacturing 
towns  of  the  north.  Then  it  was  decided  to  send  them  to  America  to 
settle  in  the  pine  forests  that  they  might  produce  naval  stores.  Some 
Mohawk  Chiefs  who  were  at  the  time  in  London  on  a  mission  were 
taken  to  see  them  and  they  offered  them  a  home  in  their  country  across 
the  sea,  the  great  Mohawk  country.  This  was  gladly  accepted  and 
they  came  out  in  1710  to  New  York  State.  A  large  number  also  came 
and  settled  in  Pennsylvania.  For  three  years  they  suffered  persecu- 
tion and  privation  before  it  was  discovered  that  the  pine  o*  the  north 
was  not  pitch  pine — the  British  Government  and  the  New  York 
Governor  were  disappointed — on  up  the  Hudson  and  Mohawk  they 
gradually  moved  until  they  came  into  the  promised  land  of  the 
Mohawks.  *  It  is  a  remarkable  fact  that  the  descendants  of  some  of 
the  German  Palatines  cared  for  in  London  and  the  descendants  of  the 
Mohawk  Chiefs  who  in  London  offered  them  a  home  in  their  country 
beyond  the  sea,  settled  down  in  1784*  side  by  side  on  the  banks  of  the 
Bay  of  Quinte. 

3rd.  The  next  element  amongst  the  U.  E.  Loj^alists  was  composed  of 
Huguenots.  There  were  Frenchmen  among  the  Pilgrim  Fathers.  We 
have  not  time  to  tell  their  story — perhaps  you  know  it  better  than  I 
do.  There  is  more  French  blood  in  New  England  than  is  generally 
supposed.  Many  of  the  names  suffered  peculiar  changes  in  England, 
Ireland  and  Holland.  Longfellow's  Priscilla  was  a  Huguenot  and 
some  have  explained  her  readines  in  love-making  by  that  fact.  Alex- 
ander Hamilton,  John  Jay  and  Garfield  had  Huguenot  ancestors. 
Paul  Revere,  the  soldier,  Freneau,  the  pioneer  poet,  Thoreau.the  natur- 
alist, Lanier,  the  poet,  Tourgee.  the  novelist,  were  all  of  French 
Huguenot  descent.  Their  principal  settlement  was  at  New  Rochelle,  a 
few  miles  above  New  York.  It  is  in  West  Chester  County,  and  we 
know  that  many  of  the  U.  E  Loyalists  came  from  West  Chester 
County,  and  by  examining  the  original  names  we  see  their  French 
origin.  It  may  be  worth  noting  here  that  Tom  Paine  succeeded  to 
the  home  of  a  French  Huguenot  family  that  had  escaped  from  New 
Rochelle  to  Nova  Scotia.  He  was  buried  there  but  his  remains  were 
afterwards  taken  back  to  England,  and  where  they  lie  to-day  no  one 
knows. 

*  An  interesting  account  of  the  German  Refugees  in  the  U.  S.  will  be  found  in 
"  The  Story  of  The  Palatines  "  by  Sanford  H.  Cobb,  G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons,  New 
York,  1897. 

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A  hasty  glance  through  the  pages  of  the  "  Records  "  of  the  mid- 
land district  already  referred  to  will  show  many  names  that  reveal  a 
French  ancestry — Gilliam  de  Merest,  Pierre  Le  Rouge,  James  Forshee, 
Marie  des  Anges  du  Charme,  Louis  Latour,  Marie  de  Guarrie,  Le  Beau, 
Jean  Beaussele,  James  CannifF  Perhaps  you  will  permit  a  word  as 
to  the  last  name,  since  it  is  that  of  the  grandfather  of  Dr.  Wm.  Canniff, 
whose  paper  on  the  U.  E.  Loyalists  was  read  at  this  exhibition  on 
Saturday  last,  June  17th,  the  anniversary  of  the  landing  of  the  Loyal- 
ists at  Adolphustown.  The  ancestors  of  the  Cannifls  were  expelled 
from  France  in  1685  and  found  a  refuge  in  Ireland.  (The  Irish 
Parliament  had  passed  various  Acts  granting  special  privileges  to  the 
Huguenot  refugees,  and  the  Duke  of  Ormond,  the  Viceroy,  had  encour- 
aged the  coming  thither  of  French  weavers  and  other  artisans.)  They 
became  British  subjects  and  subsequently  were  among  the  early 
settlers  of  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y.  State.  James  Canniff married  an  Irish 
McBride  and  came  to  Ontario  a  century  ago.  Their  son  Jonas  married 
a  Flagler,  a  Knickerbocker.  Dr.  Canniff  therefore  is  a  fair  sample  of 
mixture  of  blood  that  is  more  common  than  you  may  have  thought. 

4th.  Among  the  U.  E.  Loyalists  were  many  decendants  of  the 
Puritans  and  Pilgrims  who  had  moved  West  generation  by  generation, 
seeking  new  homes  on  the  frontier.  There  were  several  flourishing 
settlements  of  these  in  central  New  York  State.  Amonof  these  were 
many  Quakers  who  had  formed  comfortable  settlements,  and  who 
suffered  some  persecution  because  of  their  refusal  to  fight  against  the 
mother  land. 

5th.  Sir  Wm.  Johnson  had  a  few  years  prior  to  1784  persuaded 
some  Highland  Scotsmen  to  settle  in  New  York  State,  and  many  of 
these  formed  part  of  the  King's  Royal  Regiment  under  Sir  John  John- 
son, and  came  over  as  U.  E.  Loyalists. 

You  know  the  story  of  how  the  refugees  at  Niagara  crossed  the 
river  and  settled  about  old  Niagara  on  the  lake.  Some  of  their  rela- 
tives were  among  the  refugees  in  New  York  City,  where  Gen.  Guy 
Carleton  was  arranging  |for  their  embarkation.  In  September,  1788, 
the}'  spread  their  sails  for  the  St.  Lawrence,  many  sailing  away  leaving 
members  of  their  families  to  be  sent  on  later — some  families  to  be  re- 
united only  after  j^ears,  some  never.  You  know  how  they  stopped  at 
Sorel  and  waited  through  the  long  winter  till  their  location  had  been 
settled.  Governor  Haldimand  sent  his  surveyor*  with  some  representa- 
tives of  the  U.  E.  Loyalists  to  spy  out  the  land.  Among  them  was  a  man 
named  Grass,  who  had  been  a  prisoner  of  the  French  at  Cataraqui.  Up 
the  St.  Lawrence  they  went  in  batteaux,  poling  and  pullingup  the  rapids, 
examining  the  shores  as  they  went.   Finally  they  selected  Cataraqui  Bay, 

*In  the  report  of  the  Ontario  Land  Surveyors'  Association  for  1897. will  he  found, 
pp.  196  to  230,a  very  valuable  compilation  of  letters  and  reports  dealing  with  the  selec- 
tion and  first  surveys  of  the  townships  from  Kingston  west,  "  Documentary  History 
of  the  First  Surveys  in  the  Province  of  Ontario  '  by  J.  J.  Murphy,  Dept.  of  Crown 
Lands  of  Ontario. 

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and  the  Bay  of  Quinte  as  their  future  home.  The  surveys  were  made  in 
the  Fall  of  1783,  and  on  June  16th,  1784,  the  landing  at  Adolphustown 
took  place.  Did  time  permit  we  might  refer  at  length  to  the  interesting 
story  of  their  home-making,  their  organization  of  a  simple  system  of 
municipal  Government*  before  Simcoe  landed  at  Quebec,  their  early 
courts  and  churches.  The  student  of  those  early  days  will  find  con- 
vincing proof  that  these  U.E.  Loyalists,  made  up  of  descendantsof  people 
that  had  been  driven  out  of  Germany,  France  and  England,  and  we 
may  also  say  out  of  Ireland  and  Scotland,  to  seek  a  home  in  America, 
and  that  had  just  been  compelled  to  make  one  more  move  to  find  a 
home  of  safety,  have  a  history  that  is  full  of  interest  and  full  of 
romance,  and  one  that  should  be  familiar  to  all  our  people.  The  descen- 
dants of  those  who  settled  along  the  St.  Lawrence,  around  the  Bay  of 
Quinte,  here  and  there  along  the  front  of  Lake  Ontario,  around  the 
Niagara  peninsula,  and  as  far  west  as  Longue  Point,  have  played  an 
important  part  in  the  building  of  this  Province  ;  many  who  have 
taken  an  active  interest  in  the  gathering  together  of  this  exhibition 
can  trace  their  ancestry  back  to  those  pioneers,  and  there  is  little  wonder 
that  their  interest  is  so  keen  in  the  memorials  of  a  hundred  years  ago. 

In  the  train  of  the  V.  E.  Loyalists  came  many  others,  friends  and 
relatives  left  behind, separated  by  the  necessities  of  the  time;  sympath- 
isers at  first  with  the  Revolutionists,  but  who  hearing  of  the  produc- 
tiveness of  the  new  country  came  to  Upper  Canada  to  take  up  land  for 
themselves.  They  crossed  at  Niagara  or  below  Kingston.  Among 
these  may  be  mentioned  in  particular  the  Germans — Pennsjdvania 
Dutch  as  they  are  usually  called — who,  desiring  new  lands,  had  formed 
a  sort  of  colonization  company.  They  drove  their  heavy  ox-carts 
north,  crossing  at  Niagara,  a  few  at  Toronto.  Many  of  these  were 
descendants  of  the  Palatine  Germans  who  came  out,  as  we  mentioned 
before,  aljout  1710.  They  settled  portions  of  the  County  of  York  and 
also  of  the  County  of  Waterloo. 

I  mentioned  the  coming  of  the  Quakers  a  few  moments  ago—  those 
quiet,  industrious,  peace-loving  Friends.  Surely,  you  say,  there  is  no 
romance  in  their  history.  I  cannot  speak  with  knowledge  of  the  Qua- 
kers of  western  Ontario,  but  this  I  know  that  there  are  very  few 
families  in  the  Bay  of  Quinte  District  that  do  not  carry  some  Quaker 
blood  and  the  development  of  that  section  is  due  in  no  small  degree  to 
the  industry  of  these  lovers  of  peace.  Sonie  of  them  were  fighting 
Quakers  and  came  as  U.  E.  Loyalists,  man^^of  them  came  over  after  the 
U.  E.  Loyalists  had  .settled.  Jn  1798  the  first  meeting  was  organ- 
ized in  the  house  of  Philip  Dorland,  who  had  been  elected  as  member 
of  the  First  Legislature  of  Upper  Canada  for  Prince  Edward  and 
Adolphustown  and  had  been  denied  his  seat  because  of  his  refusal  to 
take  the  oath.  They  erected  a  meeting  house  in  1799  which  is  still 
standing.     From  Lennox  they  spread  into  Prince  Edward,  Hastings, 

*  See  introduction  to  this  volume. 
128 


ai  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Frontenac,  and  Leeds.  These  Quakers  of  the  Bay  of  Quinte  were 
principally   of  British  origin.     Let  me  giv^e  you  two  examples. 

First,  a  Lennox  family — The  forefather  came  from  England  and 
settled  in  Salem,  Mass.,  in  1628.  The  descendants  gradually  spread 
towards  the  west  until  the  fifth  generation  had  found  a  home  in  cen- 
tral New  York.  Here  is  a  list  of  his  eight  children — Joseph,  Jonathan 
Obadiah,  Rachel,  Reuben,  Amos,  David,  and  Daniel.  The  youngest 
came  to  Adolphustown  and  when  the  first  Quaker  meeting  was  formed 
there  in  1798  his  brother  Reuben  came  over  as  one  of  the  accredited 
delegates  from  the  parent  New  York  meeting  to  assist  in  the  organiza- 
tion. The  second  example  is  of  an  old  Prince  Edward  County  family. 
The  forefather  came  from  England  to  Boston  in  1635,  soon  after  mov- 
ing to  Rhode  Island,  wdiere  he  became  Governor.  Between  1784  and 
1815  several  descendants  came  to  Prince  Edward  County.  I  gave  you 
in  my  first  example  a  family  of  sons.  This  was  a  family  of  daughters. 
Here  are  the  names — Matura,  Matilda,  Ruth,  Phosbe,  Mehitabel, 
Abigail,  Patience  and  Content.  There  must  have  been  some  humor  in 
the  old  Quaker  to  name  his  seventh  daughter  Patience,  and  the  eighth 
and  last  Content.  These  two,  with  their  elder  sister  Abigail,  came 
with  their  husbands,  not  in  parlor  cars,  but  in  lumber  wagons,  bring- 
ing with  them  their  bedding,  flax- spinning  wheels  and  solid  silverware. 
Their  descendants  are  numerous  in  Prince  Edward  Count}'. 

The  old  Quakers  had  large  families,  many  of  their  children,  how- 
ever, joined  the  Anglican,  Methodist  and  Presbyterian  churches.  The 
early  Quakers  would  be  a  fruitful  and  interesting  field  of  study.  I 
have  given  you  some  Dutch,  German  and  French  names.  Here  are  a 
few  taken  from  the  same  "  Records  "  that  suggest  descent  from  Puritan 
-and  Pilgrim  stock  and  are  fair  samples  of  the  old  Quaker  names, 
though  such  were  by  no  means  restricted  to  Quakers: — Content 
Castle,  Charity  Hill,  Patience  Pomeroy,  Ruth  Williams,  Prudence 
Barret,  Mercy  Hawley,  Temperance  Rombough. 

Most  of  the  U.  E.  Loyalists  who  settled  around  Niagara  and  on 
the  Bay  of  Quinte  were  protestants.  In  Sir  John  Johnson's  Royal 
New  York  Regiment  were  a  large  number  of  Scottish  soldiers,  most  of 
them  protestant  but  some  catholics.  The  former  settled  on  the  St. 
Lawrence  in  the  counties  of  Stormont  and  Dundas  ;  the  catholics  made 
a  small  settlement  in  Glengarry.  Soon  after  came  a  large  accession  to 
their  numbers,  the  Glengarry  Fencibles  with  their  gallant  and  devoted 
leader.  Father  Macdonell,  afterwards  the  first  Roman  Catholic  Bishop 
of  Upper  Canada.  The  story  of  Bishop  Macdonell  and  his  Highlanders 
is  full  of  interest.  Born  in  1762,  in  Invernesshire,  he  was  educated 
for  the  priesthood.  He  went  back  to  minister  to  his  own  people  and 
found  them  in  dire  distress  because  of  their  small  holdings  being 
turned  into  sheep  walks.  He  arranged  with  Glasgow  manufac- 
turers for  their  employment  and  came  down  from  the  Highlands  with 
700  or  800  stalwart  laborers.     Soon  after  occurred  the  French  revolu- 

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tionary  troubles,  and  a  stagnation  followed  in  the  great  work  centres 
of  England  and  Scotland.  Father  Macdonell  then  formed  his  followers- 
into  a  catholic  regiment,  of  which  he  became  chaplain,  and  their  ser- 
vices were  offered  to  their  country.  They  saw  service  in  the  Channel 
Islands  and  in  Ireland.  When  peace  came  the  Glengarry  Fencibles 
were  disbanded.  Previous  to  this  bands  of  Highlanders  had  left  for 
America  at  various  times,  one  settlement  being  made  in  South  Carolina,, 
another  in  Prince  Edward  Island,  and  in  1773  another  band  had  gone, 
as  already  stated,  to  the  Mohawk  Valley  at  the  request  of  Sir  \Vm. 
Johnson,  and  at  the  close  of  the  revolutionary  war  had  been  settled 
along  the  St.  Lawrence.  Father  Macdonell  naturally  looked  across- 
the  sea  for  a  future  home  for  his  flock,  and,  after  many  difficulties  that 
we  have  not  time  to  mention  here,  we  find  these  fighting  Highlanders 
located  on  grants  of  land  in  Glengarry  County.  Canada  ow^es  a  great 
debt  to  the  Highlanders  of  the  St.  Lawrence,  both  protestant  and 
catholic.  They  were  born  fighters,  and  in  the  war  of  1812  they  all 
stood  true  to  their  old  reputation  of  fighting  to  the  last  for  the  honor 
of  the  mother  land.  One  has  only  to  go  over  the  catalogue  of  this 
Historical  Exhibition  to  see  what  her  Scottish  pioneers  did  to  preserve 
and  to  build  up  our  country.  If,  then,  you  look  over  the  historj'  of  our 
early  lumbering  industry  and  the  construction  of  our  railroads  and 
canals,  3'ou  will  find  that  they  were  also  great  in  peace  and  commerce 
as  they  were  great  in  war  and  conquest.  There  is  plenty  of  romance 
still  to  be  written,  and  "  Spanish  John  "  is  not  the  only  book  that 
could  tell  a  story  that  would  interest  Canadians  and  give  us  an  increas- 
ing love  of  our  Dominion. 

The  descendants  of  the  Lowlanders  and  of  the  Highlanders  in 
Ontario  are  in  comfortable  circumstances,  and  it  is  difficult  for  us  to 
realize  with  what  sorrow  and  Tegi-et  they  took  a  tearful  farewell  of 
hill  and  dale  and  watched  the  last  line  of  old  Scotland  fade  away, 
even  though  they  may  have  felt  that  they  were  being  driven  from 
home — driven  it  may  have  been,  but  it  was  from  home.  We  can  per- 
haps catch  some  of  their  spirit  and  their  feeling  if  we  recall  the  old 
Canadian  boat  song  that  they  sang  in  Gaelic  on  the  St.  Lawrence. 


CANADIAN  BOAT  SONG.' 

Listen  to  me,  as  when  you  heard  our  father, 
Sing  long  ago,  the  song  of  other  shores  ; 

Listen  to  nie,  and  then  in  chorus  gather, 
All  your  deep  voices  as  \e  pull  your  oars  ; 

Fair  these  broad  meads — those  hoary  woods  are  grand  ; 

But  we  are  exiles  from  our  fathers'  land. 

From  the  lone  shelling  of  the  misty  island 
Mountains  divide  us,  and  a  waste  of  seas  ; 

Yet  still  the  blood  is  strong,  the  heart  is  Highland 
And  we,  in  dreams,  behold  the  Hebrides. 

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We  ne'er  shall  tread  the  fancy-haunted  valley, 

Where,  'twixt  the  dark  hills,  creeps  the  small  clear  stream, 

In  arms  around  the  patriarch  banner  rally, 
Nor  s9e  the  moon  on  royal  tombstones  f»leam. 

When  the  bold  kindred,  in  the  time  long  vanished, 

Conquered  the  soil  and  fortitied  the  keep, 
No  seer  foretold  the  children  should  be  banished, 

That  a  degenerate  lord  might  boasi  his  sheep. 

Come,  foreign  raid  !  let  discord  burst  in  slaughter. 
Oh,  then,  for  clansmen  true,  and  keen  claymore  I 

The  hearts  that  would  have  given  their  blood  like  water. 
Beat  heavilj'  beyond  the  Atlantic's  roar. 

Fair  these  broad  meads — those  hoary  woods  arc  grand  ; 

But  we  are  exiles  from  our  fathers'  land. 

The}'  loved  their  fathers'  land  and  they  sang  in  their  sorrow ; 
their  grandchildren  love  this  province  but  their  love  has  not  yet 
blossomed  into  song. 

In  recalling  the  heroes  of  early  days  in  Upper  Canada  let  us  give 
full  praise  to  men  like  Stewart  and  Langhorn,  Losee  and  Dunham, 
McDowall  and  Macdonell,  who  traversed  the  scattered  settlements  of 
this  province  afoot  or  on  horseback,  in  dugout  or  in  the  birch  bark,  and 
who  carried  peace  and  happiness  into  the  homes  of  the  early  settlers. 
Surely  in  the  lives  of  such  men  were  the  highest  and  truest  elements 
of  romance,  and  I  can  well  believe  that,  actuated  as  they  were  by  the 
same  fidelity  to  their  work  as  were  their  predecessors  the  Jesuit 
Fathers,  they  labored  and  lived  free  from  the  cares  and  worries  of 
theological  disputations  It  is  said  that  when  Bishop  Macdonell 
received  visitors  of  state  at  Kingston  the  wife  of  one  of  the  Protestant 
ministers  did  the  honors  of  his  house  on  more  than  one  occasion. 

Let  me  give  you  just  one  glimpse  of  early  religious  conditions 
in  1845.  There  were  many  vacancies  in  Upper  Canada,  men  were 
asked  for.  The  Church  of  Scotland,  among  other  churches  was  trying 
to  meet  the  demand.  A  deputation  was  sent  out  to  visit  the  parishes. 
On  their  return  Rev.  Norman  McLeod  gave  this  picture  of  the  con- 
ditions among  the  Scottish  Presbyterians  : 

'•  If  I  could  just  form  a  proper  picture  of  one  of  these  churches,  it  would  be 
more  eloquent  than  ten  thousand  speeches  about  vacancies.  Suppose  that,  after  a 
long  journey,  you  come  to  a  house  built  in  some  green  nook,  singled  out  from  the 
surrounding  wilderness  ;  the  people   gradually  collect  before  the  dor>r,  some  from 

'This  translation  of  the  Gaelic  Canadian  Boat  Song  was  made  by  the  Earl  of 
Eglinton  and  appeared  in  Taifs  Magazine,  June,  1849.  It  was  copied  from  that 
magazine  into  "  The  Raid  of  Albyn  "  by  W  D.  Campbell,  pub.  Edinburgh  in  1854. 
I  have  been  enabled  to  reproduce  it  here  through  the  kindness  of  Mr.  Angus  Mc- 
Murchy,  Toronto  When  the  deputation  from  the  Church  of  Scotland  returned  in 
1845  and  made  a  report  on  their  visit  to  Canada,  Rev.  Norman  McLeod  quoted  the 
second  verse  as  follows  : 

"  From  the  dim  sheiling  on  the  misty  island. 

Mountains  divide  us,  and  a  world  of  seas, 
But  still  our  hearts  are  true,  our  hearts  are  Highland, 
And  we  in  dreams  behold  the  Hebiides." 

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the  neighboring  woods,  some  from  the  distant  hamlets,  and  some  have,  from  an 
early  hour,  been  in  their  waggons,  trudging  along  through  heavy  swamps.  They 
.are  all  assembled,  you  enter,  and  at  a  single  glance  from  the  pulpit  you  are  sensible 
that  you  are  addressing  fellow  couutiymen  ;  the  psalm  is  given  out,  you  hear 
Bangor  or  old  Dundee  sung,  you  feel  a  thrill  as  each  joins  his  homely  voice  to  the 
plaintive  measure,  and  then  you  think  yourself  in  a  Highland  glen.  You  preach, 
you  rebuke,  you  exhort,  you  admonish,  you  comfort,  and  then  quickly  comes  the 
hour  that  you  must  part,  the  time  when  is  heard  the  solemn  amen  ;  andlthe  thought 
strikes  you  that  the  church  door  Avill  not  be  opened  again  for  many  a  Sabbath — that 
the  autumn  leaves  may  fall  and  rustle  at  its  threshold — that  the  snow  of  winter 
may  wreathe  itself  there— but  no  passing  foot  will  clear  it  away.  When  you  see 
that,  oh,  it  is  then  that  you  fully  know  what  a  vacancy  is."* 

I  have  not  time  to  go  fully  into  the  story  of"  the  coming  of  the 
Six  Nation  Indians.  They  hai  offered  the  German  refugees  in  Lon- 
don a  home  in  their  Mohawk  country.  They  in  turn  now  needed  a 
-•home  for  themselves.  When  Governor  Haldimand  sent  the  little 
band  of  surveyors  and  loyalists  up  the  St.  Lawrence  to  spy  out  the 
land,  Brant  and  some  companions  came  with  them.  Upon  the  report 
of  these  prospectors  the  loyal  Indians  followed.  They  divided,  part 
remaining  on  the  Bay  of  Quinte  and  part  going  to  the  Grand  River, 
where  their  descendants  live  to-day.  Is  there  not  some  suggestion  of 
romance  in  seeing  the  chiefs  of  these  two  sections  meeting,  at  this 
exhibition  115  years  ^ater,  with  the  descendants  of  their  fellow-refugees 
and  bringing  together  for  the  first  time  in  a  century  the  divided  Queen 
Anne  communion  plate  th;it  represents  so  much  to  them,  doubly  dear 
because  it  was  the  gift  of  one  of  Britain's  Queens,  the  great  mother  of 
the  red  man  as  well  as  of  the  white  ? 

The  next  settlement  that  I  come  to  in  order  of  time  is  that  which 
we  call  the  Talbot  Settlement.  Two  Irish  lads  had  been  aides  to  the 
Lord  Lieutenant  of  Ireland  at  Dublin.  The}-  were  boys  together,  Tom 
Talbot  and  Arthur  Wellesley  by  name.  We  can  picture  to  ourselves 
how  in  years  long  after  (1851)  Lord  Wellington  and  Colonel  Talbot 
shook  hands  and  sat  down  to  talk  of  olden  times.  I  wonder  whether 
the  story  of  Waterloo, or  of  Lundy's  Lane,  or  the  backM^oods  tales  of  Up- 
per Canada,  or  the  youthful  pranks  in  which  they  were  associated  came 
most  frequently  to  the  fore.  The  reproduction  of  an  evening  with 
Wellington  and  Talbot  tift}'  years  ago  would  be  rare  reading  for  Can- 
adians and  Britishers  to-day.  There  was  no  phonograph — perhaps 
some  Canadian  writer  gifted  with  a  vivid  imagination  will  some  day 
meet  our  desires.  Would  there  not  be  some  romance  in  it  ?  Talbot 
had  been  Private  Secretary  to  Governor  Simcoe  in  Upper  Canada  from 
1792  to  1794.  In  1803,  nearly  10  years  after  his  return,  he  aj)plied  for  a 
grant  of  land.  Simcoe  supported  the  application.  5,000  acres  were 
given  him,  with  an  additional  150  for  every  50  acres  located.  Some 
say  he  had  been  disappointed  in  love  and  came  back  to  Canada  as  a 
consequence.  To  those  who  have  once  felt  the  allurement  of  the  wild 
woods  no  such  reason  seems  necessary.     Fort  Talbot  overlooking  Lake 

*Report  of  the  proceedings  of  a  public  meeting  held  at  Edinburgh,  10th 
November,  1845. 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Erie  in  Dunwich  Township  became  his  seat  of"  government,  and  such  a 
government  it  was  !  His  manner  was  brusque  and  even  irritating  but 
his  word  was  as  good  as  his  bond.  He  had  his  townships  surveyed  and 
his  roads  laid  out,  the  principal  one,  Talbot  Road,  or  Street,  still  bear- 
ing his  name.  His  mode  of  registration  was  simple  in  the  extreme 
— he  w^rote  the  name  of  the  holder  of  each  lot  upon  his  plan  :  when  a 
transfer  was  made  the  old  name  w^as  erased  and  that  of  the  new 
owner  inscribed.  He  was  a  dictator  in  his  settlement,  which  extended 
over  Dunwich,  Yarmouth,  Aldborough,  Malahide  and  Bajdiam,  and  even 
as  far  as  Amherstburg.  In  1831  he  reported  to  the  Government  "  My 
population  amounts  to  nearly  40,000  souls."  After  visiting  his  native 
land  he  died  in  1853.  Let  us  hope  that  Robert  Barr  will  do  full  justice 
to  this  unique  character — this  old  Irish  Bachelor  who  was  a  father  to 
his  thousands  of  old  country  settlers,  and  who  served  his  country 
faithfully  during  the  troublous  times  of  1812-14.  1  have  not  time  or 
space  to  deal  at  greater  length  with  this  interesting  man,  but  must 
refer  you  to  the  sketch  of  his  life  by  Ermatinger  and  also  to  Mrs. 
Jameson's  very  entertaining  account  of  her  six  days'  visit  to  his  home 
in  July  1837.  You  will  find  it  in  vol.  II  of  her  "  Winter  Studies  and 
Summer  Rambles  in  Canada  "  published  in  London  in  1838. 

The  growth  of  the  population  may  be  seen  from  the  following:. 


1784.. 

. .about. 

..10,000 

1848.. 

..about   ..726,000 

1812.. 

" 

..75,000 

1851. . 

..     "        ..952,000 

1824.. 

. . 

.157,000 

18fil . . 

..      "     ..l,400,00a 

1841.. 

" 

..500,000 

From  1825  to  1850  was  "  the  growing  time  "  in  Upper  Canada — 
it  was  then  that  the  great  streams  of  people  poured  in  from  England, 
Scotland  and  Ireland.  I  shall  not  discuss  the  causes* — the  stagnation 
of  British  manufacturing  industries,  the  failure  of  crops,  the  cholera 
scourge,  the  great  social  unrest,  the  desire  for  the  possession  of  homes, 
and  the  free  grant  land  policy  of  the  Government.  The  front  town- 
ships along  the  St.  Lawrence  and  along  Lakes  Ontario  and  Erie  were 
already  settled  but  the  rear  townships  were  now  open — the  Queen's 
Bush  was  ready  and  thousands  of  English,  Irish  and  Scottish  settlers 
came  in  a  steady  stream  up  the  St.  Lawrence  to  Quebec  and  Montreal 
and  found  their  way  to  the  upper  province  by  way  of  the  upper  St. 
Lawrence  or  the  lately  constructed  Rideau  Canal.  These  settlers  filled 
up  the  toAvnships  to  the  north  and  west  of  the  frontier  townships, 
occupied  by  the  earlier  pioneers.  Another  series  of  stories  is  now  to 
be  told  and  the  stories  are  not  dry  and  uninteresting. 

Have  you  not  read  of  how  the  last  chief  of  the  McNabs  fled  from 
his  creditors  and  escaped  to  America  in  1823  and  set  up  his  feudal 
system  in  his  own  township  near  Ottawa  ?  Here  is  an  extract  from 
a  paper  lately  read  before  the  Ottawa  Women's  Historical  Society : 

*See  paper  by  A.  F.  Hunter,   M.  A.,   on   "British  Immigration  into    Upper 
Canada,  1825-18:^7,"  pp.  97-101  of  this  report. 

13:3 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


"  An  order-in-eouncil  gave  him  control  of  the  township  next  to 
Fitzroy  for  the  purpose  of  forming  a  settlement,  and  granted  to  him- 
self 1,200  acres,  to  be  increased  on  completion  of  settlement  and  on 
arrival  of  settlers.  They  were  summoned  before  the  Chief  and 
informed  of  the  nature  of  his  titles  and  his  position  as  their  Chief,  and 
Head  and  Lord  of  the  township.  They  were  required  to  sign  a  very 
remarkable  document  called  a  location  ticket  which  ran  thus  : 

"  I,  Archibald  Macnab,  of  Macnab,  do  hereby  locate  you,  J 

C ,  upon  the  rear  half  of  the  sixteenth  lot  of  the  eleventh  conces- 
sion of  Macnab,  upon  the  following  terms  and  conditions,  that  is  to 
say  :  I  hereby  bind  myself,  my  heirs  and  successors  to  give  you  the 
said  land  free  of  any  quit  rent  for  three  years  from  this  date,  as  also 
to  procure  you  a  patent  for  the  same  at  your  expense,  upon  your  hav- 
ing done  the  settlement  duties  and  your  granting  me  as  a  mortgage 
upon  said  land,  that  you  will  yearly  thereafter  pay  to  me,  my  heirs 
and  successors  for  ever,  one  bushel  of  wheat  or  Indian  corn  or  oats  of 
like  value  for  every  cleared  acre  upon  the  said  land  in  name  of  Quit 
Rent  for  the  same  in  the  month  of  January  in  each  year.  Your  sub- 
scribing to  these  conditions  being  binding  upon  you  to  fulfil  the  terms 
thereof. 

Signed  and  sealed  by  us  at  Kennell  Lodge  this     day  of         ,18 

Signed    Archibald  Macnab. 
Signed     J C . 

"  Here  we  have  feudalism  in  the  nineteenth  century,  in  the  shape 
of  a  perpetual  Quit  Rent. 

"  In  1830,  after  years  of  extortion  on  the  part  of  the  chief  and 
intolerable  burdens  on  the  part  ot  the  settlers,  a  struggle  for  freedom 
began  which  lasted  for  sixteen  years,  and  eventually  ended  in  the 
defeat  of  the  chief  and  in  the  establishment  of  the  rights  of  the  set- 
tlers. '  The  Macnab  '  left  the  scene  of  his  despotism,  and  after  various 
wanderings  settled  in  France,  living  in  obscurity  and  poverty  until  he 
died,  a  very  old  man  "* 

Is  there  not  some  material  for  romance  in  this  brief  tale  ? 

Have  you  not  read  of  Peter  Robinson  bringing  out  the  Irish 
emmigrants,  landing  them  on  the  lakeshore  at  Cobourg  and  taking 
them  overland  around  the  end  of  Rice  Lake  to  form  a  settlement  in 
Peterboro  county  and  to  found  a  tow^n  that  still  preserves  his  memory 
in  its  name  ?  The  original  record  of  this  pilgrimage  from  the  Emerald 
fsle  has  lately  passed  into  the  possession  of  the  Peterboro  Historical 
Society,  and  if  its  pages  could  speak  there  would  be  some  romance,  for 
those  settlers  would  belie  their  native  land  if  they  did  not  afford  some 
material  for  romance. 


Tn  The  Montreal  Daily  Witness,  April  17th  and  April  24th,  1897,  will  be  found 
a  fnll  rep  "  t  of  a  very  interesting  address  by  Mr.  James  Craig,  of  Renfrew,  Ont., 
delivered  before  the  Caledonian  Society  of  Montreal,  entitled  "  The  Last  of  His 
Line,"  a  graphic  sketch  of  The  McNab. 

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The  stream  of  Irish  immigration  was  broad  and  deep — it  was  fed 
from  the  Protestant  Counties  of  the  North  and  the  Roman  Catholic 
Counties  of  the  South,  and,  though  the  two  classes  settled  at  tirst  in 
separate  groups  in  various  parts  of  the  Province,  there  has  been  a 
mingling  of  Irish  blood  with  that  from  other  sources  until  now  it  is 
disseminated  through  all  parts  of  Ontario.  The  son  of  Erin  loved  the 
old  land  and  Thomas  D'arcy  McGee  voiced  his  feeling  : 

"  Where'er  I  turned,  some  emblem  still 

Roused  consciousness  upon  my  track. 
Some  hill  was  like  an  Irish  hill 

Some  wild  bird's  whistle  called  me  back  ; 
A  sea-bound  ship  bore  off  my  peace 

Between  its  white,  co'd  wings  of  woe  ; 
Oh.  if  I  had  but  wings  like  these. 

Where  my  peace  went,  I  too  would  go." 

Perhaps  some  Canadian  of  Celtic  stock  will  set  us  all  a  singing 
songs  of  our  own  land  that  will  never  die. 

Going  further  west  we  come  to  Guelph,  and  Stratford,  and 
Goderich.  the  three  towns  of  the  Canada  Company.  You  have  read 
^'  In  the  Days  of  the  Canada  Company."  If  not,  you  should  read  it 
and  you  will  find  in  the  story  of  John  Gait,  and  Dr.  Dunlop,  and 
Major  Strickland,  and  many  others,  and  in  the  Paisley  weavers 
turned  farmers,  no  little  humor  and  romance  that  will  appeal  to  all, 
especially  to  those  in  whom  some  Scottish  blood  moves  and  thrills. 
"Tiger  Dunlop  "  is  a  character  as  unique  as  Talbot  and  his  old  friends 
still  live  to  recall  his  oddity  and  his  humor. 

Will  you  allow  me  time  briefly  to  repeat  a  story  within  this 
story,  and  I  give  it  as  lately  narrated  by  one  oi  the  survivors,  the  well 
known  postmaster  of  Guelph,  Mr.  David  Stirton.* 

The  emigration  from  Scotland  was  principally  from  the  ports  on 
the  west  coast  A  colonization  scheme  was  advertised  throughout  the 
Eastern  shires  and  in  the  year  1825  a  boat  set  sail  from  the  Bay  of 
Cromarty  with  a  band  of  emigrants  for  America,  how.  d  for  the 
wonderful  States  of  Colombia  (now  Venezuela.)  The  good  people 
d'mbtless  thought  they  were  going  to  the  United  States.  Their 
geography  was  faulty  or  limited.  They  were  landed  however  in  South 
America  in  the  Laguayi'a  district  or  state,  a  country  devoted  largely 
to  coffee  plantations.  The}^  soon  saw  the  deception  that  had  been 
practised  upon  them — some  found  work  on  the  plantations  but  such 
work  was  suitable  only  to  natives  of  a  warm  climate.  They  wept  over 
their  fate  and  longed  for  Auld  Scotia,  but  for  a  time  no  help  came. 
They  were  in  sore  distress  when  at  last  an  English  Quaker  arrived, 
Joseph  Lancaster,  who  is  well  known  as  the  author  of  the  Lancast^rian 
system  of  Education.     He  became  interested  in  their  fate  and  laid  the 

*  See  "Pioneer  Days  in  Wellington  "-^the  reminiscences  of  Mr.  David  Stirton, 
which  appeared  in  The  Guelph.  Mercnry.  The  account  of  the  La  Guayrians  is  to  be 
found  in  the  weekly  issue  of  March  9th,  1899. 

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matter  before  the  Home  Government.  Some  time  later  a  British  frigate 
arrived,  commanded  by  the  brother  of  Sir  Peregrine  Maitland,  Governor 
of  Upper  Canada.  The  rejoicing  people  went  aboard  and  the  boat  set 
sail  for  the  North.  At  New  York  the  British  Consul  met  them  and 
persuaded  22  families  to  seek  a  home  in  Upper  Canada  under  the 
direction  of  the  Canada  Company.  Here  they  found  a  home  in  Wel- 
lington County  and  settled  down  to  life  once  more  among  their  fellow 
countrymen.  Their  subsequent  troubles,  the  dispute  between  Gait  and 
the  Canada  Company,  and  the  removal  irom  their  first  location  to 
others — their  dispersion — would  make  another  story,  that  cannot  be 
told  here. 

What  a  fertile  field  for  story  and  romance  does  the  Ottawa  valley 
present !  It  was  the  route  of  the  old  furtraders  and  the  voyageurs ; 
there  are  stories  yet  to  be  written  of  the  old  Hudson  Bay  Traders  who 
came  in  from  the  north,  and  the  Bourgeois  of  the  Northwest  Company 
who  w^ent  up  from  the  South  to  make  their  homes  amongst  the  trap- 
pers of  the  Great  Ontario  Northland — a  country  about  which  we  know 
so  little,  a  country  yet  to  be  explored  by  others  than  the  Indians  and 
the  traders.  Then  who  will  give  us  the  telling  picture  of  the  lumber 
camp  and  the  lafts,  where  life  is  an  unbroken  series  of  adventure, 
where  rollicking  sport  and  reckless  daring  go  hand  in  hand  ?  '1  he 
story  of  the  German  settlement  about  Golden  Lake  in  Renfrew 
county  that  lias  pushed  in  by  the  back  roads,  until  now  it  has 
almost  formed  a  link  between  the  Ottawa  and  the  front  of  the  pro- 
vince, this  has  yet  to  be  told.  The  story  of  McNab  I  have  referred  to. 
The  military  settlement  near  Perth  and  the  opening  up  of  the  Rideau 
also  belong  to  this  Section.  And  further  South  in  Leeds  you  can  still 
hear  tales  of  fights  of  former  years,  reviving  memories  of  the  faction 
fiorhts  of  the  Emerald  Isle. 

The  Detroit  and  St.  Clair  river  regions  are  full  of  interest.  There 
were  located  early  Jesuit  Missions  and  fur-trading  posts.  There  are 
to  be  found  the  descendants  of  the  early  French  settleis  and  also 
some  of  the  French  Canadians  wdio  left  Quebec  at  the  time  of  trouble 
in  1837.  There  are  the  remains  of  Selkirk's  first  unsuccessful  attempt 
at  colonization — the  Baldoon  Settlement.  There  are  the  negro  refugees. 
Some  of  the  original  stock  are  still  left  to  tell  their  tale  of  hardship 
and  of  adventure. 

If  3'ou  sail  along  the  shores  of  the  Bay  of  Quinte  and  into  King- 
ston harbor,  you  cannot  fail  to  admit  that  nature  at  least  has  provided 
her  full  share  of  material  for  romance  and  story  ;  but  we  have  said 
enough  of  the  Midland  pioneers. 

I|you  go  to  the  Lake  Simcoe  region,  the  old  Huron  country,  and 

visit  i-he  sites   of  the  old  French  forts  and  the  Jesuit  Missions  and  the 

Indian  Tillages  and  then  turn  to  the    pages    of   the    Jesuit  Relations, 

ji  fn^u  wnll  find  that  Quebec  and   Acadia  do   not  monopolize  the  field  of 

delurly  romance,  for  here  we  are  on  the  battle  grounds  of  the  old  Huron 

Linid  Iroquois  tribes,  on  ground    made   sacred  by   the  sufierings  of  the 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


early  martyrs,  and  on  the  trails  of  the  first  French  Explorers. 
Examine  the  Morter  in  the  hall  below,  it  is  a  beantiful  piece  of  work 
but  see  its  inscription  "  Made  in  the  year  1636  "  ("  Faict  Van  10-J6") 
But  look  up  its  history  and  let  your  imagination  have  free  plaj^  and 
you  will  come  back  to  it  with  increasing  interest. 

Push  your  way  back  over  one  of  the  lonely  colonization  roads  of 
the  back  townships,  in  the  border  land  of  the  old  lumbering  regions, 
and  make  your  way  to  the  settler's  little  clearing.  The  surroundings 
are  very  plain,  but  there  are  a  few  indications  of  a  higher  civilization 
than  you  expected.  It  is,  perhaps,  the  home  of  an  English  pensioner, 
a  retired  military  officer,  or  an  old  sea-going  man.  He  brought  out 
his  family  to  make  a  home  on  free  grant  lands.  He  has  been  disap- 
pointed in  not  realizing  his  high  expectations.  You  can  see  unmis- 
takable marks  of  refinement  in  face  and  dress  and  manner,  and,  if  you 
can  gain  the  confidence  of  the  man  or  his  faithful  wife,  you  will  hear 
a  story  that  will  reach  far  into  the  night. 

Some  day  we  shall  recognize  the  romance  of  the  old  log  house. 
Can  you  look  at  that  well  arranged  living-room  on  the  ground  floor  oi 
this  exhibition  without  thinking  that  if  those  old  pieces  of  furniture 
could  talk  they  would  tell  a  story  that  would  interest  ?  Take  a  hur- 
ried glance  at  a  settler's  home  of  75  or  100  years  ago. 

The  cooking  was  done  at  the  big  open  fire  place  with  the  Dutch 
oven,  and  the  pots  hung  on  the  crane,  all  of  which  you  can  see  in  the 
room  below.  Th^  food  of  his  table  was  entirely  of  his  own  raising, 
and  was  therefore  limited  in  its  variety.  For  many  years  his  clothes 
were  of  deerskin  or  of  homespun,  and  his  winter's  cap  was  of  the 
same  material,  his  summer  hat  was  of  straw,  plaited  by  his  own  fam- 
ily. His  logging  and  hauling  were  done  by  oxen.  He  cut  the  grain 
with  sickle,  scythe  or  cradle,  and  his  wife  and  children  followed  with 
rakes,  binding  and  shocking  the  grain.  He  threshed  on  the  barn  floor 
with  the  cumbersome  flail  or  by  the  tramping  of  his  horse's  feet,  and 
he  winnowed  after  the  manner  of  bye-gone  centuries.  He  flung  a  bag 
of  wheat  over  the  back  of  his  only  horse,  or  he  placed  it  in  his  canoe, 
or  perchance  he  swung  it  over  his  own  sturd}^  shoulder  and  strode  ofl" 
by  the  trail  to  the  little  mill  miles  away  where  it  was  ground  into 
flour  between  stones.  The  social  life  of  the  community  was  largely 
maintained  in  the  old  fashioned  "  bees,"  when  the  neighbors  gathered 
for  a  logging  or-  clparing,  a  barn-raising,  a  road-making,  a  corn  shock- 
ing or  even  a  pig-killing.  The  women  had  their  "bees"  for  carpet  mak- 
ing or  quilling.  Traces  of  these  old  customs  are  still  to  be  seen  in  the 
well  worn  rag  carpet  of  some  old  farm  house  or  the  log  cabin  quilt 
that  still  appears  at  country  fairs.  Some  student  of  early  life  has 
told  us  that  the  rag  carpet  was  the  invention  of  the  thrifty  French 
Huguenot.  Many  of  our  grandfathers  and  grandmothers  made  love 
to  one  another  at  an  apple-paring  bee,  when  the  young  men  pared  the 
fruit  and  the  young  women  quartered,  cored  and  strung  them  on 
strings  to  hang  up  on  the  crossbeams  to  dry  for  winter's  use.     The 

10  B.I.  6  137 


61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


school  teacher,  generally  a  full  grown  man  who  has  seen  service  in  the 
old  land,  "  boarded  round "  and  was  eagerly  looked  for  in  many 
homes.  The  cobbler  or  shoemaker  went  from  house  to  house  with  his 
tools  and  roll  of  leather,  staying  at  the  house  till  the  whole  family 
were  rebooted  or  reshod.  The  peripatetic  tailor  dropped  in  from  time 
to  time  to  make  up  a  suit  or  two  for  Sunday  wear.  The  clockmaker 
came  on  his  rounds  and  cleaned  up  the  old  clock,  the  grandfather's 
clock,  that  stood  in  the  corner  of  the  living-room,  and  started  it 
aright,  though  the  older  members  of  the  family  never  forgot  to  make 
their  reckoning  by  the  sun.  From  time  to  time  the  dusty  pedlar 
turned  in  and  laid  down  his  capacious  pack,  and  became  for  the  time 
being  the  most  important  personage  in  the  world  to  the  younger  mem- 
bers of  the  family.  There  was  many  a  Doctor  Maclure  in  the  early 
days,  and  the  Ministers  of  all  denominations  were  itinerants. 

The  railroad  and  the  telegraph  and  the  telephone  and  the  electric 
light  have  changed  all  this, — they  have  given  us  a  different  social  life, 
but  not  one  that  is  more  interesting. 

The  British  Association,  at  its  meeting  in  Toronto  in  August, 
1897,  appointed  a  committee  to  make  an  ethnographic  survey  of 
Ontario.  That  report*  has  just  gone  forward.  It  has  been  prepared 
mainly  by  Mr.  A.  F.  Huntei-,  of  Barrie.  Here  is  an  extract  dealing 
with  York  and  Simcoe  that  will  show  how  complex  we  are.  I  give 
York  and  Simcoe  because  they  are  fairly  complete  and  represent  the 
two  eras  of  settlement. 


York  County. 

No.  Immigrants.  Date.  Where  settled. 

1  Germans  (Berccy's  60  families) ....    1794  Markham. 

2  French  Royalists  (20  families) 1798  Yonge  St.  (King  &  Whitchurch). 

3  Davidites  (?)  (from'  New  York) 1800  East  Gwillimbury. 

4  Eskdale  (Dumfriesshire  (Scots)  .  .  .    1800  Scarboro'. 

5  Quakers  (from  Pennsylvania) 1805  King  &  Whitchurch. 

6  English  (West  of  England)    1820  Richmond  Hill  (Vaughan&  Markham). 

7  Pennsylvania  Dutch    York  &  Vaughan. 

8  Mennonists  or  Tunkers Yonge  St.  (Whitchurch). 

9  Highland  Scots Vaughan,  King. 

10  Anuandaie  (Dumfriesshire)  Scots Vaughan. 

11  Negroes Vaughan  <t  King. 

12  Indians  (Chippewas)  (pop'n.,  118) Georgina  &  Snake  Islands. 

*  The  full  report  will  not  be  available  for  publication  until  September  of  the 
present  year.  If  procurable  at  the  time,  it  will  appear  in  the  next  issue  of  this 
Appendix. 

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61  Victoria.  Sessional  Papers  (No.  32).  A.  1898 


Simcoe  Comdy. 

1  Sutherlandshire  Scots 1820  West  Gwillimbury. 

2  North  of  England  (small) 1820  Penetang.  Road  &  W.  (Jwillimbury. 

3  French-Canadians    1828  Tiny. 

4  Negroes  (now  chiefly  gone) 1828  Oro  (20  families),  Sunnid  de 

5  Ulster  Protestant  (extensive) 1830  Tecumseth,  Essa,  Innistil. 

6  Irish  Catholic  (smaller) 1830  Adjala,  Vespra,  Flos  &  Medonte. 

7  Argyleshire  Scots 1832  Nottawasaga,  Oro. 

8  Lanarkshire  &  Renfrewshire  Scots.  1832  IiinisBl,  Essa. 

9  Germans  (small) 1832  Nottawasaga. 

10  Londonderry 1850  Innisfil. 

11  Border  District  Scots  (small) 1 850  Innisfil. 

12  Indians  (Chippewas)  (pop'u.,  397) Beausoliel  &  Christian  Islands. 

This  leads  to  another  very  interesting  question — what  do  we,  as 
a  province,  owe  to  these  various  contributing  elements  ?  What  did 
the  U.  E.  Loyalists  bring  into  our  blood  ?  What  do  we  owe  to  the 
old  JJutch  of  New  Amsterdam  ?  What  to  the  Huguenot  of  New 
Rochelle  ?  What  to  the  German  from  the  Palatinate  on  the  Rhine  ? 
What  to  the  New  England  Puritan  ?  What  to  the  Quaker  ?  What 
to  the  so-called  Pennsylvania  Dutch  ?  What  to  the  French- Canadian  ? 
and  what  to  the  English,  Scottish  and  Irish  settlers  ? 

It  was  a  Parkman  who  discovered  the  romance  of  the  old  Regime; 
it  was  a  Longfellow  who  first  sent  travelers  to  the  Land  of  Evangeline — 
must  we  wait  for  some  foreigner  to  discover  us,  and  to  find  in  our 
ancestors  and  in  us  something  to  attract  and  to  interest  ? 

Some  years  ago  an  Art  Loan  Exhibition  was  held  in  San  Fran- 
cisco. Among  the  paintings  was  one  by  Millet.  Among  the  visitors 
was  a  school  teacher.  The  picture  drew  the  man.  He  sat  down 
before  it  and  became  entranced  by  it.  It  took  hold  of  his  brain,  and 
to-day  from  one  side  of  the  continent  to  the  other  Mark  ham  the  poet 
and  Millet  the  painter  are  known  as  the  authors  of  "  The  Man  with 
the  Hoe."  So  may  something  similar  result  from  this  Exhibition. 
May  some  of  these  old  pictures,  some  of  these  old  maps,  some  of  these 
old  relics  of  peace  and  of  war,  stained  with  the  blood  of  Canadians  or 
hallowed  by  the  touch  of  heroes  or  of  martyrs,  humble  and  obscure 
though  they  may  have  been,  set  some  hearts  aflame  and  brains  aglow 
to  sing  to  us  the  deeds  of  our  forefathers  and  to  make  sacred  the 
places  trodden  by  our  ancestors,  that  the  annals  of  this  people  may  be 
known  and  prized  and  revered,  and  that  we  may  be  inspired  to  be  the 
worthy  sons  of  worthy  sires. 

C.  C.  James. 


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