FARMER MUST STILL BE RESTRICTED
WELLINGTON, Sept. 5.. To preserve order in the dairy industry and keep it united, some restriction as to whether a farmer should supply a cheese or butter factory was necessary, said the chairman of the New Zealand Dairy Board, Mr. W. E. Hale, when discussing the Dairy Supply Order, in .an address to.f he.. Dairy Con.to4kiy..". Tf ?j^ynii9s]en .^jvere to. •tef. %o che)|s"e-T.t^|'aa. posifion wbuld' 'Te'yV time. In addition, Bvbjain had sSfd-lhe -did not want cheese at the expense of butter or in any greater proportion to the amount of butter than was supplied in the 1944-45 season. From information received in Englahd it was clear there was no real shortage of cheese in the United Ivingdom and when ample quantities of other food were available, large sections of the British people would refrain from buying cheese. As the result of his observa ti ons in England he considered it desirable that some regulation shopld continue in order to regulate the quantity of butter and cheese produeed.
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Chronicle (Levin), 6 September 1946, Page 4
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172FARMER MUST STILL BE RESTRICTED Chronicle (Levin), 6 September 1946, Page 4
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