CANADIAN PROTEST
AT NEW ZEALAND BUTTED. (United Press Association.—By Electric Telegraph.—Copyright.) TORONTO, dan. 29. Following the arrival of the sUam,er Port Curtis with one hundred and /p toil thousand cases of New Zealand hutter bringing the total for the season 10 ten and a half million ooiuids. Joseph Caulder (President of Saskatchewan Co-operative Creameries) attacked the Commercial Treaty. lie said there was urgent need for adc- . (piate tarilf reform for the proleeiion of Canada's dairying industry. Canada was brought from the position of exporter of twenty-live million pounds of butter annually to an importer of almost a similar amount. He attributed this, among other causes, to the treaty with Australia and New Zealand. The treaty was negotiited with the bed intentions in an effort to better the pulp paper industry. Canada had progressed greatly /since the treaty, the dairying imlusJ try and subsidiary bodies bad suffered.
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Hokitika Guardian, 30 January 1929, Page 5
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146CANADIAN PROTEST Hokitika Guardian, 30 January 1929, Page 5
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