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WELLINGTON TOPICS.

THE WOOL SALES

AN IMPROVED TONE.

(Our Special Correspondent!

WELLINGTON, May 27

The wool sales.'held, here yesterday, though not marked by the eager competition that was general before the ‘commandeer, were on the whole satisfacfactory. Buyers commissioned from England, the Continent, America and Japan were present, and, while, of course, they devoted most of their attention to the finer class of wools, they were not altogether indifferent to the offerings of other descriptions. It cannot be said that all anxiety concerning the future of the industry lias been removed by the less depressing tone of the market but it is certain that both growers and shippers are much less pessimistic than they were a few months ago. Mr A. E. MabTn, who returned from his mission to Australia while the sales were in progress, has to make his report to

the Goverment before lie can discuss the position for publication, hut it was fairly obvious from wlfat he felt at liberty to say last night that shell words of oluer as he has in store will he chiefly for the growers of the finer wools.

UNEMPLOYMENT. It seems, after all, that Mr James McCombs, when speaking in Christchurch the other day, did commit himself to the ridiculous statement that the Government was “engineering the present unemployment for political purposes.” The personal friends of the Member for Lyttelton, who respect the man without accepting his politics, had hoped it would be shown he had been misreported. He might have said legitimately, and perhaps with some measure of truth, that the Government was largely responsible for the extent of the existing unemployment. Had it utilised a greater area of Crown and Native land for soldier settlement under a cooperative system of preparation, as was suggested at the time, and abstained from paying highly inflated prices for occupied land, the majority of the ultimate settlers would have been better off than they are now and the Public Woiks Fund need not have been so sadly depleted. But to accuse Mr Massey and his colleagues of “engineering” unemployment is simply malicious nonsense. HOME MARKETS.

While meetings of branches, executives and conferences of the Farmers’ Union all over the country are demanding the hotter marketing of the farmers’ products, it may not he amiss to quote a paragraph from a letter received here yesterday from a New Zealander, of wide agricultural and commercial experience, now on a. visit to London. “It lias astounded me,” he writes, “to see how little live attention is given by anyone in authority to the distribution of our meat in this country. 1 visited • dozen butchers’ shops this morning and in threo of them found what the shopmen told me was New Zealand meat—and ‘Canterbury’ at that—and what I was sure was the poorest Argentine. We don’t grow sheep in New Zealand that would cut up as these carcases did.” Most people had hoped this sort of tiling finally disappeared during Sir Thomas Mackenzie’s reign at the High Commissioner’s Office, hut apparently it still persists.

FARMERS’ SHIPPING. The same farmers’ organisations are foudlv Loping for the establishment of a shipping company for which the Government will supply most of the money and the producers all the brains and the management. The East Coast farmers have struck out for themselves in this respect and have achieved a measure of success which has sharpened the zeal of their neighbours. But the Acting Prime Minister, when scon shout the matter to-day, was not disposed to encourage any hope of the scheme being realised in the near future. The Government, lie said, was considering the proposals which had been submitted to the Prime Minister by the Producers’ Committee some weeks ago, and there was just the suspicion of an inflection in his voice which suggested that the Government might be considering them six months hence. In any case, as Sir Francis Bell called to mind, the freezing companies have made arrangements for the carriage of their meat to London during this year and next, so there is no need for haste about the matter unless the producers, instead of buying ships, are intent upon building vessels for themselves.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19210530.2.28

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 30 May 1921, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
696

WELLINGTON TOPICS. Hokitika Guardian, 30 May 1921, Page 4

WELLINGTON TOPICS. Hokitika Guardian, 30 May 1921, Page 4

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