THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES.
A(; It K I : MI IN TS BR 0 K F.X. The people of this country realise ; thill, if this hold-up of our shipping is prolonged, ahsolutelv ruin.ills losses must he inlliclcd ti|ion the whole Dominion; anil they realise, dso, that the strike has arisen out of a dispute which lies entirely outside the range of our political and economic activities. Because of till this the people of New Zealand have very strong and justifiable reasons for resenting any attempt, by any of our political parlies, to identify itself with this movement or to afford “aid and comfort” to those engaged in the strike. And this widespread public conviction is naturally strengthened hv the knowledge that the strikers are repudiating a definite agreement entered into on their I .-halt hy their uliicial representatives, and are thus helping to discredit and destroy the only satisfactory means .vet devised tor the peaceful negotiation of industrial disputes. Auckland “Star.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 29 October 1925, Page 2
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160THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES. Hokitika Guardian, 29 October 1925, Page 2
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