Pulp and paper magazine of Canada . very-where and very largely used. The Editor recently spentsome time going over the plants and the organization withMr. McGlashan, the president. The Head Office in Buffalois most interesting showing the result of phenomenal ex-pansion and rapid addition. Mill and office accommoda-tion hardly completed soon becomes inadequate for therapid expansion of their business. They have grown froma small local wall board company to an enormous concernnow manufacturing in three countries and exporting to manymore. A few points are striking and indicate somewhatthe basi


Pulp and paper magazine of Canada . very-where and very largely used. The Editor recently spentsome time going over the plants and the organization withMr. McGlashan, the president. The Head Office in Buffalois most interesting showing the result of phenomenal ex-pansion and rapid addition. Mill and office accommoda-tion hardly completed soon becomes inadequate for therapid expansion of their business. They have grown froma small local wall board company to an enormous concernnow manufacturing in three countries and exporting to manymore. A few points are striking and indicate somewhatthe basis for the rapid growth. First, the personel if theorganization is most carefully selected and watched inevery department. They employ a superintednent ofpersonel who was a student of Dr. Blackstone in Bostonand who scientifically sizes up every person employed bythe company and advises whether they are adapted to thespecial position under consideration. They rarely fail injudging accurately and have little difficulty with their em-. PAPER MILL UNION BEING ORGANIZED. (?.Special to Pulp and Paper Magazine.) Ottawa, Ont., Sept. 29th. There is to be a new writing on the page of the pulp andpaper industry in the Ottawa valley and it is the hand ofthe United States labor organizer which is to hold the Robert J. Dickson, international organizer of the unionto which laborers in pulp and paper mills in the UnitedStates belong, is in the city to form a union among the1,200 to 1,500 employes in the mills in Ottawa and your correspondent Mr. Dickson stated that with theprobability of a partial transfer of the American manufactureof pulp and paper to Canada as a result of the new UnitedStates tariff labor interests were commencing to interestthemselve in the unionization of the Canadian industry. The tariff has been removed from paper while a dutyhas been left on wood which will drive the pulp industryto Canada. If this happens you want to be sure to get theeight hour day he


Size: 1744px × 1433px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectpaperma, bookyear1903