Pulp and paper magazine of Canada . ctors are not due toconsider the next dividend until February. That dividendwould be payable in April. The prospects are, however,that no dividend action will be taken at that time. Ifearnings pick up during the first half of 1914, there is apossibility that stockholders may get something in October,1914, as the disposition of directors is to pay out as muchto shareholders as can be done with reasonable conserva-tism. It was just about a year ago at this time that AmericanWriting Paper advanced prices 10 per cent. A furtheradvance at this time would be justi


Pulp and paper magazine of Canada . ctors are not due toconsider the next dividend until February. That dividendwould be payable in April. The prospects are, however,that no dividend action will be taken at that time. Ifearnings pick up during the first half of 1914, there is apossibility that stockholders may get something in October,1914, as the disposition of directors is to pay out as muchto shareholders as can be done with reasonable conserva-tism. It was just about a year ago at this time that AmericanWriting Paper advanced prices 10 per cent. A furtheradvance at this time would be justifiable, it is said, basedon cost of production, but unfortunately trade conditionsdo not make such a step feasible at this juncture. IMPORTS OF WOOD PULP INTO GREAT BRITAINFOR WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 27th. 1913. Quantity Bleached Chemical Dry 680 tons Unbleached Chemical Dry tons Chemical Wet 170 tons Mechanical Wet 7,742 tons Mechanical Wet— Canada 1,611 tons Newfoundland 750 tons November 1, 1913 PULP AND PAPER MAGAZINE 723. the PULP & PAPER MAGAZINE. Those ofWashington. Full particulars withdrlissioner of Patents. Washington. , enclosing five ceimay be obtained from the Patent Office. Ottawa. Inirry brief descriptions of important English, French and Ge ts per patent. DEVICE FOR SHIPPING ROLLS OF PAPER. JOHN C. MARTIN, of Wyncote, Pennsylvania.(Patentee) U. S. Pat. No. 1,068,066. Paper is usually shipped from the paper mills to thepublishers in large rolls and these are usually covered with apaper wrapper. This practice entails waste and loss both intransit and in handling at destination and is therefore ex-pensive and wasteful. The paper with which the rolls are


Size: 3349px × 746px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectpaperma, bookyear1903