CONTRARY TOWS
A BRIDGING PSOLICY ') (By Telegraph.—Press Association.) AUCKLAND, \This Day. Commenting oa the suggested moratorium, Mr. Robinson, secretary of the Auckland Farmers' Union, siaid he believed it necessary, merely a^ a bridging policy to give the farmers a fair deal and prevent the Dominion from losing a great many expert fjsrmers, that there should be a short moratorium until Parliament could deal \jvith the question more thoroughly. \lt seemed that something much more dra\stic might be necessary if the presen\t prices continued. \ A financial authority opposed the\ proposal, saying that the cure was worse than the disease. He did not see what good the moratorium did before, nor what good it could do now. The institution of which he was head always helped the trier, and the nontrier deserved no consideration.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 134, 4 December 1930, Page 10
Word Count
132CONTRARY TOWS Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 134, 4 December 1930, Page 10
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