"CLEAR CUT ISSUE."
LAND SETTLEMENT. NEED OF CO-OPERATIOX. DEVELOPMENT OP STERILE AREAS. "Of all the questions of public interest," said Mr. W. J. Holdsworth, at the first quarterly meeting of the Mount Albert Terminus Ratepayers and Residents' Association last evening, "there is none more vitally interesting than that of land settlement. In the view of the members of the league, the term "L.S.D." stood for "Land Settlement and Development League," and since it was founded three years ago by Sir Andrew Russell, a prominent Hawke'e Bay fanner, it had made great strides."
Co-operation between the farmer, the business man and the professional man was the idea behind the League, for,
with these throe working together, the movement would be as strong as a movement could be in New Zealand. The aim of the league was to create an organisation outside the Government, with an advisory board composed of men who had had practical experience. In the Dominion it was a clear-cut issue, said Mr. Holdsworth, and tho need was the development of those areas at present sterile. Every man who wanted to go on the land should have full opportunity of doing so, and, further, with the prospect .of making not a pittance, but a reasonable living.
Mr. Holdsworth said that tho league [ had, with considerable diiliculty, inter- . viewed Mr. L. C. M. S. Am cry and Lord Lovett on their visits to New Zealand, . and although in the latter case the interview had been successful, nothing had been done. "These men were the ; accredited agents of the Government of Great Britain, and were willing, even eager to place millions in the hands of the New Zealand Government, yet ' nothing was done." The speaker cited the success that had accompanied the 1 institution of a scheme of land settlement in Canada and West Australia, and said that it was nothing short of ( I tragic that young men were brought out jto the Dominion, and then told that I there was no chance for them to go on the land. Other Dominions had something definite to offer the immigrant in •the way of land settlement, and the ; result was that the best of the immigrants were going not to New Zealand which ,ihad nothing to offer, but to these other places, where they did not merely swell the ranks of the unemployed, but could make a living. "There is no doubt about it at all," said Mr. Holds worth in conclusion, "the future prosperity of the Dominion lies along the highway of close land settlement." After Mr. Holdsworth's address a draft of regulations for the governance of the association was read, and a resolution was passed confirming the rules as read. Mr. P. Floyd, Wie president of the association, presided.
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Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 227, 25 September 1929, Page 10
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459"CLEAR CUT ISSUE." Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 227, 25 September 1929, Page 10
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