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Volume 23 - Section XII - ElectricCanadian.com

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Kulavy, Father. Establishes church for Catholic Poles of Winnipeg, 11 185.Kullyspell House. Built by David Thompson,4 667, 8 850.Kuska-Nook. Kootenay Lake steamboat, 10570.Kwakwiutl, Indian tribe. Their territory, 11116.Kyle, Fergus. Black-and-white artist, 12 631.La Banque des Marchands, Montreal. Projected bank, 5 270.La Banque Jacques Cartier. Chartered (1860),10 638-9.La Banque Nationale. Established (1859), 5283, 10 639.La Barre, Lefebvre de, governor of New France(1682-85). Leads expedition against Iroquo is,2 351 ; instructed to restrict licences forwestern trade, 352.Labelle, Edouard (1799-1877). Founds secondary school at L Assomption, 16 4<strong>23</strong>.Labernade, Francois. A seventeenth-centuryschoolmaster, 16 336.Labonte, J. E. Member of teachers association of Montreal (1845), 16 426.Labouchere, Henry, first Baron Taunton (1798-1869), president of Board of Trade (1847-52),secretary for Colonies (1855-58). Repealsthe Navigation Acts, 5 227 ;and land purchase in Prince Edward Island, 13 366 ;and expenses of administration of Indiandepartment, 5 356 ;and expenses of government in British Columbia, 21 141.Labouchere. Steamer built in British Columbia, 10 570.Labour. Special Article : Labour Movementin Canada, 9 277-355. Diversity of conditions, 278 ;four main geographical divisions,278 ; climate and employment, 279 ; geographical proximity of United States and,279 less ; highly organized in Quebec thanin other provinces, 279 ; ascending scalefrom East to West in wages, prices, and costof living, 280 ; eight-hour day in Torontoand British Columbia, 280 ;increase inpopulation and industrial development sinceConfederation, 281 ;effect of immigrationon, 281 ; economic development and itsinfluence on available employment, 281 ;alternative employment, 281-2 ; centralization of industry and rise of class feeling, 282 ;the great industries agriculture, 282-3 ;fishing, 283-4 ; lumbering, 285-6 ; mining,286 ; manufacturing, 286-7 transportation, 288-9 ; construction, 289 ; legislativeideals derived from Great Britain, 290, 293,339, 353-5 ; machinery taken from UnitedStates, 290, 293.Trade unions, 290-318 : lead taken byprinters, 292 ; early labour organizations,292-3 ;their rise in ports due to influence ofEnglish workmen, 293 ;movement for closerrelations with United States, 293 ; abolitionof British conspiracy laws, 294-5 ; firstcampaign for shorter hours, 295 ; Torontoprinters strike of 1872 and its legislativesequel, 295-6 ;centralized organizations,GENERAL INDEX 105296-311 ; craft unions, 311-17 ; recent expansion and consolidation, 317-18; unit oforganization, 319 ;number and distributionin provinces and cities (1911), 319-20;relative membership of international andCanadian organizations, 321 ;total membership and proportion relatively to wageearningpopulation and as <strong>com</strong>pared withGreat Britain, 322 ; federation of alliedtrades, 3<strong>23</strong> ;trades and labour councils,3<strong>23</strong>-5 ; number, policy, and strength ofrailway unions, 328-9 ; foreign labourboss, 333-4 ; proposal to prohibit any onenot a British subject from inciting workmento strike, 334-5 ; advantages of internationalaffiliations, 335-6 ;and amalgamation withinBritish Isles, 336 ; <strong>com</strong>parison betweenCanada and United States, 336-7 ;futureplace of internationalism, 337-8.Strikes and lock-outs :printers of Toronto(1854, 1872), 293, 294-5 ; lo<strong>com</strong>otive engineers, 300 ;Nova Scotia colliery, 312 ;steelworkers, 313 ;Montreal longshoremen,333.Legislation division between : provincialand federal jurisdiction, 338-9 ;variation inlegislation in recurring sections, 279 ;differences in laws in the several provinces, 339 ;Taff Vale judgment and its effect in Canada,340-1 ;Labour Day instituted, 341 ;Dominion Labour department and itslegislative record, 6 160-1, 9 341-3 ;Bureau ofLabour of Ontario established (1900), 17<strong>23</strong>1-2 ; board of conciliation established inQuebec (1901), 15 212; recent immigrationenactments, 9 343-4 ; Health Act of 1900,344 ; House of Commons Fair Wages Resolution, 344 ;Dominion protection for employees on railroads and ships, 345-6 ;provincial duplication of Dominion enactments, 345 ; scope of provincial legislation,346 ;relations of master and servant, 347-8 ;factories, shops, and mines acts, 348-9, 17<strong>23</strong>4-5, 22 372-3 ;educational enactments,9 349 ; English employers liability andworkmen s <strong>com</strong>pensation acts, 349-53 ;provincial acts on employers liability andworkmen s <strong>com</strong>pensation, 354-5.La Bouteillerie, Jean Francois Deschamps,Sieur de. Seigniory granted to, 15 39.Labrador. Gaspar Corte Real near, 1 24 ;Jacques Cartier on coast of, 29.Labrador, Dominion Line steamship. Herrecord run, 10 609 ; wrecked, 609.Labrador-Canada Boundary. Under Proclamation of 1763, 8 908-9 ;under Quebec Act,909-12 ; imperial legislation subsequent to1774, 912-14 ;settlement and occupation inUngava Peninsula, 914-15 ; summary andconclusions, 9 1C- 17.Labrador Salmon Club. Lessees of NatashkwanRiver salmon fishings, 16 5G3.Labrador s Land. Name given to east coastof Greenland by Cabot, 1 22.Labrecque, Michel Thomas (b. 1849). RomanCatholic bishop of Chicoutimi, 11 109.Labrie, Jacques (1783-1831). His services toeducation, 18 418, 420, 422 ; 12 443.

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