Page 6 Advertisements Column 1
Maoriland Worker, Volume 10, Issue 680, 29 March 1919, Page 6
nan wbism * im •>>n-w-M-«gn-w__HKMn-_--_Mna_ißi DESERT GOLD The Queen of Teas Obtainable from all Grocers ONE QUALITY TliE ONE PRICE BEST — 2s. 4d. per lb.™ —- kmmm BOHR tmmM ' '. iiiiini ~ OTiosFsiuum^^ 'Idle Industry; laborious trifling.) AMERICA. CANADA. AUSTRALIA, AND JAPAN Buoming Their Wheat .Production. tout New Zealand, with its matured wisdom and infinitesimal population iojnpared with the above countries, is strangling it. and if we don't, get a hustle. m New Zealand will be a deserted village, and, as the. Canadians say -'Nothing o burn, or pawn." ''. y to VANCOUVER ••'UAfLV WOHLD," September -1 ■ 1018 i WHEAT YIELD. " .' ■ " 'ON -ESTIMATED ACREAGE OF J.s,ti_G,loU. CROP WILL AVERAGE 10?' BUSHELS TO THE ACRE. (State Guarantee. !)/_ per» bushel.! WINNIPEG, Sept. -1.--JL is prcifcy '.veil established that the wheat vjold of he prairies will oe it>:>.o_F>,'dOO bushels, an average of 10. bushels' on the .crease of 15,526,:! on. This is the estimate just made public by the Northrest Grain Dealers' Association, an organisation with many eievafors-scattered ver the West and available information for accuracy. Tin- 'total wheat crop f 1917 was ■l-.t,G5a,0u0. so this moans a slight decrease in production; though ae-acreage.increase was in LOIS. But. the oats average is. much etter, showing ou this estimate. _3.5 bushel, per acre, or a total .of .214,625 500 n an acreage of ft,i;>-,<'<Jo. Tho barley average if in. on an acreage of :i..3_-,500. a total yield of 7,1_-i,boo. W>tb an acreage of I.OOO.S'jn of flax, the average is seven bushels, nth a total of :.u» 5 .e00. U - KST V - MX m . PI . O gp GROL . S- Ihosc figures give relatively au nh-a as to just how prosperous the West ill lie this tail, in spite of the dreary predictions of a few pessimists. The y.st will literally have money to bum. and that, means the Vietorv Loan will eceivo substantia! a.-si.-uuar.-co in the rural di-incis ihis fall as last. The tarkei for auioiuubiies v. a:, m.oi' bci-n- in the farming districts, and it is stimated that more than fifty millions have been })aid for new farm machinery n the prairie? this year, with reports very' .-eneral of okl debts being leaned up. THE MENACE OF FOKEIGN FLOUR. LETTER RECEIVED BY MR. VHITT.'E FROM MR. TV. DUNBAR, PL-OCR BROKER. HONGKONG. . ' (Though ancient, instructive.) "10th November, 1916. ' "1 have just returned from a trip to Japan, where we spent a month ' leasamly. ami during that tine 1 visi'cd one of the large flour mills, which ' ims out .150 tons per day. and is now being increased to 200 tons. Tt was a ( todern plant, with one American miller in charge, all the work being done by ' atives—and it is well done Tho mill had Jy,uoo tons of wheat piled up; this J as urawu from Japan, Corea, and North China. While the wheat from Japan ' small and dirty, that from "Manchuria. North China, is very fair, -md I think, '• i time, will in a !«'*■_• Knelt felt in the world's markets. They export now about ' 00o,0K< tons of beans every year: no 'iutibi (hey wJR increase their wheat in.!' ie time. Japan is now sdLug dour in London made from China wheat, and - Jtting £18 per ton v.40, - per ton below the American price) for it —not bad c >r a start." ■ i P.S.-—The. frcishf to London from Japan is between £6 and £7 per ton.; a Cter tlie v.ar. with 'low rates of" froi-bi. this will be another danger', unless the I omim-'-. ;:• ato p'.y pre: •. • -*vri.- i-"'.V. P. VIRTUE. .Manager. t 2SH-'- -icrtfcsra Boiler, Milling Co, Lid. I