WELLINGTON TOPICS.
THE HOLIDAYS
IDEAL WEATHER
(Our Special Correspondent). WELLINGTON, Dec. 31. Wellington province hag enjoyed ideal weather for the holidays, the rain on Tuesday morning having been insufficient to interfere seriously even with outdoor gatherings, and it has let itself “ loose,” as the saying goes, as it has not done for many years past. Business has been practically suspended, so far as the city is concerned, for though the banks and shops have been open three days this week they have had few customers, and no one would have grumbled had they been closed altogether. The rough winter and late spring have been succeeded by a bright, sunny summer, and the crowds at race meetings and holiday resorts have constituted records everywhere. THE CROAKERS. The gloomy souls in the community
do not of course, view this effervescence of gaiety with approval. They particularly deplore the big attendances at the race meetings and the enormous amounts passed through the totalisntor. They regard these as indications of the careless, reckless spirit abroad that, takes no thought for the to-morrow, and eats and drinks, and is merry, in face of impending disaster. lint even for racing and the to’ta lisa tor it may be said that they make very substantial contributions to the public exchequer and take the people out of doors where they come to less harm thcan they might in the city. For the packing of the holiday resorts there is much to he said, and it is being said emphatically. POLITICS ON HOLIDAY. Two tilings particularly noticeable in Wellington at this season of the year is the absence of politicians and the consequent cessation of political discussions. The Prime Minister was in town for the early part of the holidays, but no one took any notice of his movements and the poor man was freed even from the infliction of deputations. The other .Ministers early found business in their own constituencies, and at their own homes, and for a week or so the local newspapers have had nothing to say of their doings, thus giving Wellington a brief taste of the unruffled atmosphere of a provincial* centre. It is an experience for which the denizens of the capi-
tal are unfeigncdly thankful. BUSINESS'PATRIOTISM. A passing visitor to Wellington, Mr T. L. Elliott, the head of a big Birmingham hardware, firm, is reminding New Zealanders not inopportunely of the need for business patriotism. 11 People out here,” he said this morning, “ do not seem to realise that by purchasing from the United States they are helping to appreciate the dollar and depreciate the sovereign, yet such is the case. If ever there was a time when the overseas Dominions should buy British goods it is the present. By buying goods from the United States they are helping to maintain the adverse rate of exchange so that their action is not only unpatriotic, hut also uneconomical.” Mr Elliott may not be unbiassed witness, hut the truth he proclaims cannot he too insistently reiterated.
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Hokitika Guardian, 3 January 1921, Page 2
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502WELLINGTON TOPICS. Hokitika Guardian, 3 January 1921, Page 2
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