WELLINGTON TOPICS
WHAT ABOUT WOOL ?
(Special Correspondent.)
WELLINGTON, -Dec. 19. Notwithstanding the festive season with its gaieties and good-fellowship, the question uppermost in t’he minds of farmers is the trend of values of farm produce. The value of wool is no longer a matter of speculation. We know now that the wool market is depressed and that prices are down to the pre-war level. A casual query put to a woolbroker elicited some information when asked, “What about wool?” he replied with simulated seriousness, “Wool is something that grows on the sheep’s back which the farmers have clipped this season to give away.” This is an exaggerated way of stating the position, but it shows how the situation is viewed by the brokers and tlieir clients. It is an admission that the market is depressed, and yet there was a time when we were pleased to accept the present prices which are regarded as veiy low. Wool prices are back to the prewar level. The situation is not be-
ing accepted calmly and some way
of improving values is under consideration. Some growers, it is said,
contemplate shipping their clips to London for sale there', in the hope that there may be some improvement. It is difficult to seje how this can be achieved. The price of great fleece wool is governed by the price of tops and it makes no difference whether the wool is marketed in London, Wellington, Napier or elsewhere. There is obviously nothing to be gained by, going past the local sales and shipping wool to London. It is stated that the Wool Committee is considering the desirability and advisability of further limiting the offerings. Curtailment of the limits is very probable, but mere curtailment will not bring about enhanced prices. If the catalogues are reduced it will mean a win for Bradford whose representatives are likely to adopt a waiting game, and come 'in when growers are forced to realise. It was reported recently that there was evidence of “bear” operations at work, but that may be a rumour only. The point that emerges from the general decline in produce values is that readjustments must be made at the producing end to meet the changed economic conditions. There must be a revaluation of farm lands, and the idea that two-sheep country is worth £25 per acre must be abandoned. We have not deflated as they have been obliged to do in Eurcjpe, and the deflation must begin now. The values of shares have declined because they have been overvalued and land values must be readjusted for the same reason.
Were the feminine section of the world wearing as much wool as' they did years ago the sheep’s 9taple would be in a better selling position than it is to-day. France would be especially busy turning out women’s dress goods, and all the mills engaged in producing women’s fabrics would be busily employed. Hosiery manufacturers would be busily employed on the Cashmere products made from wool which were in vogue in the past. Silk and artificial silk, however, captured feminine fancy to the detriment of wool. Some hope for the revival of wool-made goods by women is ’raised by the remarks of Lady Victor Paget, reported in the “Textile Argus,” Bradford.
She started: “Winter woollens are being worn in the course of fashion, while silks of traditional grandeur take back-stage place beneath artistic tweeds and worsteds. Even those much-ridiculed warm petticoats of red worn by our great aunts are brought to the surface in the guise of loose-ly-woven materials as soft and supple as velvet. Woollens are luxuriating in an era of autocracy. They have usurped to so-called snobbery of silk and are on equality with the finest fabrics in the, eye 9of the world. Tweeds, worsteds, homespuns and cheviots are made to the slim ruling and finished so superficially that they do not irritate the arms or nec-k.” iSuch remarks from fashion authority are encouraging. If the “classes” set fashion’s standard of wearing woollen fabrics it is probably only a matter of time until the masses follow suit. It is no doubt the wide general use of silk and its cheaper, but quite presentable substitute, aa*tificial silk, which has swung select fashionable favour again towards wool. The same result has latterly been seen with the fur coat in America and elsewhere. The rabbit skin coat made up to represent a variety of more expensive furs lias proved the undoing of that fashion.
-Fur became too popular and tlie swing towards the woollen coat set in. There are many who believe that wool will come into its own again and it looks very much like it.
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Hokitika Guardian, 23 December 1929, Page 2
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780WELLINGTON TOPICS Hokitika Guardian, 23 December 1929, Page 2
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