FARMERS' UNION TRADING GO. AbL RECORDS IIROKF.N, BIG'INCREASES IN SALES OF SHARKS AND GOODS. Juno which is usually regarded as a quiet month, proved to he one of the busiest in the history o I the the ttffcrtaers' Unidn Trading Company. Particularly, noto- > the enormous demand for Shares- a recoul both in the total shares sold and in number of applicants. .<V■ *,i,l Increased Soles ty Warehouse anil Branches. Even more impressive than the great activity in the, Share Department was the larger volume of trade in all the Merchandise Departments. Instead of being the slackest month of the year, June set up a new record in Sales, the total being 170,223, which is equal to an Annual Turnover of £2,042,685. » ifhjs j.H easily the largest "merchandise turnover ever registered by a 1 Co-operative Company in New Zealand, and proves conclusively that the vast majority of shareholders'' in the Farmers' Union Trading Company are showing' their loyalty to th* principles of co-operation by ordering all their requirements from their own ware'v ' house and distributing depots. ) ' • ■/ Substantial Rebates. ■ 3 Further evidence of this loyalty—also of the benefits co-operation—is furnished by the amounts paid as r<>bntes on .shareholders' purchase for the year ending last March. Recently, the 1 rebate cheques were posted-and ' one shareholder was paid U27 ss, another £47 lis 2r, a S third'Ml 0s 4d, while others, received rsbates ranging from a ftfw pounds to t:if> 8s Bd. How many purchasers - from private concerns cftn savings like these at the Igvrt of twelve months? It should, be remembered that ' the Rebates paid by this Co-operative Company are determjnecl solely by the amount of goods bought, not by the number of shares held by the purchaser. '•¥ i " The dividend of 8 per cent, paid last year is certainy a satisfactory return on the capital invested, but after all, in a Co-operative Company it is the rebates .that matter, and these depend entirely on the support ,*• given to the Company by its shareholders. The greater support, the larger the rebates. The figures given above : tV-Jnow that the shareholders of the Farmers' Union Trading Company realise that it pays to support .their own Company, it pays them in dividends and rebates—in .protection from exploitation- -in the satisfaction of knowing that they belongN to a movement that seeks to promote their interests in every way. As it has paid the old members, so it will pay the new, and everybody who has been thinking of taking Shares in this Company will be well advised 'to decide at. once to post their 'application. THE FARMERS' UNION TRADING COMPANY, LIMITED. PUKEKOHS BRANCH. PUKEKOHE.
YOU WILL GET BETTER RESULTS WITH FEAR'S Klenso Cow Drench l/U Pkt. 15s l)oz. THEY PREVENT LOSS And Produce HIGH-TEST MILK. Let Your Motto be: Safety first. And Use FEAR'S THE scientific CGW DRENCHES . * BOOK YOUR ORDER RIGHT AWAY At FEAR'S PHARMACY PHARMACEUTICAL A\ T D VETERINARY CHEMISTS, P U K E K 0 II E. THE BUSY GASH P. A. ROWE, GENERAL STOREK EEPKR TUAKAU, Box No. 9, Telephone, No 10. \M Box No. 9, Telephone, No Telegraphic Address, "Busy" Tuakiu Phone 128. Telegraphic Address—"Karmohi'e, Puknkohf." Pukekohe Motor Garage Opp. •■site Doll's <)c:rmr K NG STREET PUkEKOBK Agents for the "MAXWELL" I Cylinder and the COLUMBIA" 11 Cylinder. Cars,fitted with Maputo Jyiifi.n, Kkctric ard Starter. Arrange for a Demonsira?i. jt. Immediate Delivery. Accessories and Spare Paits Mocked. Karews &, Ryan MOTOR ENGINEERS.
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Pukekohe & Waiuku Times, Volume 9, Issue 550, 20 July 1920, Page 4
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569Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Pukekohe & Waiuku Times, Volume 9, Issue 550, 20 July 1920, Page 4
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