THE MANUFACTURE OF PHORMIUM.
Mr C. J. Powuall writes as follows on this subject to the New Zealand Times Sir,— “ Sufferer’s” letter, published to-day, truly pourtrays the unhappy position of those who have speculated in this industry, and which I can corroborate from letters received from all parts of the colony. Amongst them the Hon Secretary to the Christchurch Flax Association writes me to this effect : —"I am in receipt of your favour of the 16th instant, covering samples of phormium dressed by your machine, with which I am very much pleased lam glad to hear that you appreciate the few remarks I made in the Lyttelton Times respecting your fibre. I should be very glad indeed if something could bo done to make a fresh start, but there has been so much money and time lost .already, that I fear it is quite hopeless to attempt to induce people here to think favourably of the industry again. Its importance to this colony is in my opinion one that should command the attention of the Government, and a few thousands spent in its further development would be money well laid out. A large population is being created in New Zealand, and something beyond the mere growing of cereals and wool must be found for their profitable employment. The present low price of phormium is very discouraging, and unless steps are taken at once to revive the industry, it will die a natural death and be consigned to the limbo of oblivion. The Government must be blind to their own interests if they fail to foster it to the utmost extent of their power, and the apathy they display quite astounds me.” “ Sufferer,” appeals to the head of the Government for assistance, and is fairly, in these prosperous times, entitled to do so. He should have included the members of both Houses of the Assembly, who, in the interests of the country and their constituents, may justly be called upon to aid the cause. There are no difficulties or expensive trials to be contended with ; the matter lies in a nutshell. I choose to assert it is verified by the best judges in the London market, and, moreover, endorsed by an official letter to me from the Agent-General, that the phormium cleaned by my scraping machinery, is, from its superior gloss, color, and strength, more valuable than Manilla hemp, and is valued accordingly £2 per ton in advance of that fibre. The practical proof of this I am prepared to submit to the most rigid investigation. It follows that if lam not an impostor, this industry can be at once resuscitated, and I have a right to expect after my long labor, that proof should be given either placing me under that category, or accepting the truth of my assertions. The flax industry is paralysed. Capitalists, in the face of past events, refuse to have anything more to do with it. How, then, is confidence to be restored without special aid ? India offers a premium of £SOOO and a Royalty of 5 per cent on the cost of machines for machinery to clean her rhea grass ; why does New Zealand desert her phormium ? It remains only for the Government to give it the coup de yracc—hy their neglect to consign it irrecoverably to that limbo of oblivion so graphically described by the hon secretary. It is a matter that admits of no procrastination The phormium will be destroyed as useless through the country, and men’s minds turned to other pursuits. I, for one, will certainly trouble myself no further in the matter, for if New Zealand thus refuses to take advantage of the brains of her artisans, elsewhere spero meliora. —l am, &c.
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Bibliographic details
Globe, Volume I, Issue 69, 20 August 1874, Page 3
Word Count
622THE MANUFACTURE OF PHORMIUM. Globe, Volume I, Issue 69, 20 August 1874, Page 3
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