BUTTER SURPLUS
OUTLET TO BRITAIN SOUGHT CANADA’S EXCESS STOCK. (Uniter] Press Association—By Electric Telegraph—Ofyright.) REGINA. Sop. 13. Regarding the butter surplus in Canada, according to Mr P. E. Reed, the provincial ' dairy commissioner and secretary of the Western Dairy Association, the Western Provinces have so far received no indication that any butter is to he shipped to the Old Country from the east of Canada. Mr Reed said that Sakatchewan province lias shipped slightly more than one million pounds of butter to the oversea market at a nett loss. The provinces of Alberta 'and Manitoba have also shipped similar quotas ■ Mr Reed states: “We have realised that, unless something were done quickly, the winter fould come y>n with the Canadian earning a ig butter surplus. That would mean a further decline in the p’-’-'Cs. We have believed, and wo still believe, that the only thing to do was for each province to agree to e.vpo-’t a certain quota, even if it were at a loss.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 15 September 1933, Page 5
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165BUTTER SURPLUS Hokitika Guardian, 15 September 1933, Page 5
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