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HOPE OF THE WORLD

BRITAIN REMAINS THE LAST BULWARK HERITAGE OF THE PAST "Britain to-day remains the ftisl hope of a broken world," writes Mr Hannen Swafler in the London Daily Herald. "On her and the peoples of the Commonwealth depend all the hopes of the i'utuer. If she surrendered civilisation would perish in Europe, and there would soon spread to the other four continents contempt for a demorcratic system that has proved unworthy, and belief in forms of government based on cruelty and force. All the simple, inary, common people of the earth would tehn be slaves, the beast would reign, and the gangsterdom mine will be able, when the plant has been installed, to sit in his office and control' all the chemical processes needed to extract gold from, the crushed ore. The plant measures out the quantity of chemicals required to deal with each batch of mud. When necessary it allows the proportions to be varied and it also con trols the specific gravity of the mixture. The complete installation is automatic and its control' of the process is correct to .2 of a degree. The object of the plant is to economise to the full the quantity of chemicals used and So to reduce, the costs of production and to the lowest possible point.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19401011.2.33

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 2, Issue 224, 11 October 1940, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
218

HOPE OF THE WORLD Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 2, Issue 224, 11 October 1940, Page 7

HOPE OF THE WORLD Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 2, Issue 224, 11 October 1940, Page 7

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