Whitchurch-Stouffville Newspaper Index

Stouffville Tribune (Stouffville, ON), November 15, 1923, p. 7

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finish your hogs on schumacher feed the only thing a hog has to do is to grow and get fat the cost of his growth is the thing which determines whether he pays you or not schumacher feed builds hog flesh at a profit t is a combination of milled products of corn barley oats and wheat with linseed meal high in protein finish your hogs on schumacher 1 1 costs less than ground corn and produces a firm even flesh it is easily digested and keeps the herd healthy start with schumacher now test it out this year in finishing your hogs and you will make it a regular part of your hog feed schumacher feed is always the same it comes in new sacks each bearing the government guaranteed analysis the weeks markets write us regarding your hog and dairy v problems our live stock service de partment can help you its advice is free the quaker oats company peterborough and saskatoon for sale by stiver bros stouffviile and unionville morden and rorison electrical contractors v e moiden and alex rorison solicit your work in electric wiring we are prepared to wire houses business places or farms and all w ork guaranteed to pass hydro inspection estimates and advice cheerfully given power and light prices reasonable phone 2209 heat ijght roweb a stoves signs heaters and- numerous other appliances installed by us or perhaps its new wiring or extensions to the old you require let us give you an estimate all work guaranteed reg w gyatt electrical contractor stouffviile toronto manitoba wheat no 1 northern 105 manitoba oats no 3 cw 45 c no 1 feed 43c manitoba barley nominal all the above track bay ports american corn track toronto no 2 yellow 117 ontario barlev 58 to 60c buckwheat no 2 72 to 75c ontario rye no 2 73 to 75c peas sampie 150 to 155 millfced del montreal freights bags included bra per ton 27 shorts per ton 30 middlings 3g good feed flour 205 ontario wheat no 2 white 94 to 98c outside ont no 2 white oats 42 to 44c ontario corn nominal ontario flour ninety f cent p- in jute bass montreal prompt ship ment 475 toronto basis 475 bulk seaboard 425 manitoba flour 1st pats in jute sacks c30 per bbl rd pats 5s0 hay extra no 2 timothy per ton track toronto 1450 to 15 no 2 1450 no 3 1250 mixed 12 straw car lots per ton 9 cheese new large 23 to 21c twins 24 to 25c triplets 25 to 2cc stiltons 25 to 2ge old large 30 to 31c twins 31 to 32c butter finest creamery prints 40 to 42c ordinary creamery 37 to 38c xo 2 3g to 37c eggs extras in cartons 46 to 48c extras 42 to 43c firsts 37 to 38c seconds 30 to 32c live poultry spring chickens 4 lbs and over 25c chickens 3 to 4 lbs 22c hens over 5 lbs 22c do 4 to 5 lbs 15c do 3 to 4 lbs 15c roosters 15c ducklings over 5 lbs 20c do 4 to 5 lbs 18c turkeys young 10 lbs and up 30c dressed poultry spring chickens 4 lbs and over 33c chickens 3 to 4 lbs 30e hens over 5 lbs 28c do 4 to 5 lbs 24c do 3 to 4 lbs 18c roosters isc ducklings over 5 lbs 28c do 4 to 5 lbs 25c turkeys young 10 lbs and up 38c beans carmdian handpicked lb 7c primes gzc maple products svrup per irio gal 250 per 5gai tin 240 per gal maple sugar lb 25c honev 60lb tins 12 to 13c per lb 10ib tins 12 to 13c 5lb tins 2 to 14c 2lb tins 14 to 15c comb honey per do no 1 375 to 4 no 2 325 to 350 smoked meats hams mod 27 to 28c cooked hani3 39 to 41c smoked rolls 21 to 23c cottage rolls 22 to 24c breakfast bacon 30 to 34c spe cial brand breakfast bacon 34 to 38c backs boneless 30 to 35c cured moats long clear bacon 50 to 70 lbs 18 70 to 90 lbs 1750 90 lbs and up 1650 lightweight rolls in barrels 36 heavyweight rolls 33 lard pure tierces 17 to 18c tubs 18 to 18c pails 18 to 19c prints 20 to 21c shortening tierces 15 to 15c tubs 15 to 16c pails 16 to 16c prints 18 to 181 heavy steers choice g75 to 725 butcher steerschoice 6 to 650 do gd 5 to 575 do mod 4 to 5 do com 3 to 4 butcher heifers choice 575 to 625 do med 4 to 5 do com 3 to 350 butcher cows choice 4 to s450 do mod 3 to 4 can- ners and cutters 150 to 250 but- cher bulls good 350 to 450 do com 250 to 350 feeding steers good 5 to 550 do fair 450 to 5 stackers ood 4 to 5 do fair 350 to 1 milkers and springers 80 to 110 calves choice 10 to 11 do mod 8 to 9 do com 4 to 5 do grassers 350 to 450 lambs choice 1025 to 1075 do bucks 875 to 925 do com for good bread use a good flour to get uniformly good bread you must use uniformly good flour to get the best bread ahcais you must use quaker flour good results are assured every time with quaker flour- it is milled only from the fin est manitoba hard wheat it is rigidly test ed once every hour during the milling process- samples of each days product are baked by our own expert bakers at the mill to ensure that every sack measures up to the quaker standard use a sack of quaker flour if it does not prove absolutely satisfactory to you for every baking purpose your dealer will refund your money without question i a product of the quaker mills peterborough and s a urmjs the samealways the best 220 stiner bros stouffville distributors w shapp uxbridge m 1 tariff pre- i union products a despatch from london says the british government is prepared to widen the scope of its offer of im perial tarift preference at the economic conference sir philip lloyd- greame president of the board of trade intimated that in addition to the list already submitted the british government was prepared to give tariff preference on fresh apples can ned salmon fruit juices and honey in each case the british government pro- honey foreign imports to be duti able at ten shillings per hundred weight empire imports free f the offer also touches unmanufac tured tobacco the original british proposals on unmanufactured tobacco offered as alternatives either the stab ilization of the existing preference or an increase in preference from one- sixth to onefourth the various do minions aftected however prefer the increased instead of the stabilized preference and the british govern- poses to impose a new duty when these ment intimated its intention to bring products are imported from foreign down legislation increasing the pref- countries and admit them free whan imported from countries within the empire the proposals are fresh apples dutiable at five shil lings per hundredweight when import ed from foreign countries empire apples free lanned to be dutiable at ten shillings per hundredweight empire imports free fruit juices foreign imports to be dutiable at six pence per gallon em- l pire imports free erentia duty accordingly legislation is to be introduced also to give effect to the remainder of the british offer the preference to be given canned salmon and apples is particularly welcome by the canadian delegates j they feel it will be a great stimulus comes to canada sir robert home former chancel- 8 to lor of the british exchequer who is minion as well as encouragement to the salmon canneries on the pacific coast whose products are to enter the british market free while the foreign competitor is taxed rain or shine she makes her har vest twice a day keep more of them aud ship your cream to stoufpville creamery co phone 18g02 we close very day at 6 pm excepting saturdays ss50 sheep light ewes good g to 650 do fat heavv 54 to 5 do culls 2 to 250 hogs thick smooth fw 8850 to 875 do fob 8 to s825 do country points 775 to 8 do selects 925 to 950 montreal flour man spring wheat pats crew of nineteen lsts 630 do 2nds 580 do strong bakers 5g0 do winter pats choice 575 to 585 rolled oats bag 90 lbs 305 bran 2725 shorts 3025 middlings 3625 hay no 2 per ton car lots 15 to 16 cheese finest westerns 19 to 19c do finest easterns 18 to 18 po tatoes per bag car lots 95c to 1 canners and cutters 125 to 250 cows and heifers slightly better flesh ing 275 to 3 bulls 225 to 275 veal calves fairly good 9 to 10 lambs good 10150 to 1075 do com 9 up hogs thick smooth and but cher 875 to 9 do select bacon 950 en route to toronto to make arrange ments for putting a big steel plant owned by premier baldwin to work at capacity output rescued in lake erie canadian freighter of sand wich burned from un known cause port clinton ohio nov 12 news will inform dominions on aviation progress a despatch from london says empire air communication was dis cussed at the economic conference and it was decided that the british government should undertake to in form the dominonsand india of pres ent and iirospective air performances both of gas and heavierthanair craft the home government is to keep the dominions supplied with uptodate information on all aviation subjects as well as all the details of the pro gress of the burney airship scheme net results of imperial parley dominions right to make treaties chief constitu tional gain a despatch from london says another imperial conference has passed into history the economic conference meets again oil friday for the consideration of wireless com munications but its proceedings will probabiy be brief for all practical purposes both conferences have con- from london premier bruce of australia will visit canada a despatch from london says the times melbourne correspondent survivors of earthquake and fire seeking life mates a despatch from tokio says matrimonial agencies which survived of the burning of the lake steamer says premier bruce has telegraphed wesee owned by the border transit that he is leaving england at the mid- co of sandwich out and the rescue die of december he will stay eight of her crew of nineteen off middle sis- w in canada and the united ter island in lake erie near here early today reached here this after noon when the freighter conneaut landed two fishermen who had been marooned on the island the cause of the fire was not learned the crew of- the wesee which was bound from sandwich to cleveland to load coal succeeded in escaping in small life boat3 after battling with states ruary and reach australia fcb- fog often costs london 5000000 in damages a despatch from london says as the season of fog approaches people here are recalling what these visitors the earthquake and fire are being heavy seas for several hours they do to them and their city flooded with applications for husbands landed at middle sister island where they keep sunlight away from the and wives among the female apfhey found martin bosom and harley city dwellers deposil enormous qiinn- plicants are hundreds of widows nnxij bass fishermen who had ben without titles of coot broadcast over ere-y- ous to find life companions who will food for 101 hours attempts of thing and a single bad london fog care for them and their children hun- bosom and bass to attract attention j costs the capital 5000000 in extra dreds of girls hardly 15 years old by burning signal fires failed i who lost all their relatives in the disj the conneaut which was en j aster have applied most of the male i applicants are mechanics who niako good wages oil geyser two miles at sea makes small island a despatch from baku azcrbajan says caused probably by shifting j strata in the caspian sea an unusual i phenommonin oil wells was noticed m landed when the boat was washed outel from cleveland to alpcnn mich at tracted by the burning wesee landed i at tho island and picked up the twentyono men it took the wcscos crew to sandwich and then brought bosom and hrss hero bosom and bass said they left petit cote canada early thursday with ai power boat which they were to bring to port clinton the boat sprang a leak a few miles from shore and the the roysl canadian naval reserve llottctown halifax lunenburg of 500 officers and men is now being john quebec vancouver prince organized and il w expected that seinert and victoria naval training ut lection of officers will be completed the naal bases of haliftx or esquii early in nocmbi rcnr headj malt will be given to iicnr ratirv nurr v rtabishcd at char- during the winter months recertly near here a geyser suddenly began erupting i ficn the sea two miles off the coast and during two hours of activity spurtedat a height of seventy feet j throwing off stones ns well as oil th st eruption was accompanied by fhnes kuon the spot a small island formed after the gusher died down ashore by the waves thursday night the island is not inhabited but they found shelter in a deserted fishermens cabin the great vurwty it is estimate 1 that saskatchewans 1923 crop will yield 27s84g50 it i based on crop yield reports and 5 gauged at the average price which is source of pleasure is expected to prevail luring the selling will lie held on orcmber 5 to eiec season his successor in the federal hoxso which provides for an empire service eluded their labors it has been six weeks of constant consultations com mittees conferences and speeches what has been the result not until sunday will the official text of tho resolutions be issued but it may be forecast that they will not indicate any organic change in sonstitutional relations in fact no constitutional proposals of a sweeping nature ap pear to have been brought forward at all tn matters of foreign policy there is no change in the existing machinery as seen from the canadian pointof view the results of the conference are summed up by a member of the can- adian delegation as follows 1 a much clearer understanding of the canadian position as to imperial relations 2 recognition of equality and inde pendent initiative in matters peculiar to one part of the empire coupled with willingness to cooperate in mat ters of common concern 3 the clearing up of the present position of the dominions in respect to making treaties with the unani- rous understanding reached along tho lines adopted by the canadian govern ments from the treaty of versailles to the halibut treaty 1 recognition by the admiralty for the first time of the principles of do minion navies 5 emphasis on the responsibility of each part of the empire for its own defence g recognition that it is for the parliament and people of each part of the empire to decide on the measure of its own defence preparations these concern the main conference in the economic conference the chief gains to canada lie in increased pref erence in the probability that as a re sult of the conference discussions canadian ships jrading to great bri tain will be freed from british taxa tion on profits made here and further the probable concessions by tha laundering and injury to fabrics honakmaclean president of exchequer conn hon a k maclean dominion member for halifax lias been ap pointed president of the exchequer court of canada to succeed the late sir walter casselg the byeelection j british govcynmen in the ndministri- ion of regulations under which can- adian cattle are admitted

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