OUR LABOR LAWS
SENSE OF SECURITY LACKING. By Telegsapk.—Press Association. Wellington, Wedneslay. In the course of the annual address to the Chamber of Commerce, t*i3 president, Mr. H. C. Tewsley, made further reference to the subject of restrictive legislation. He said that' it had been felt for a long time that too much legislation had been indulged in and that the country was deluged with illdigested laws leading to confusion and misunderstandings. Under existing circumstances it was almost impossible to persuade capitalists to invest in large labor-saving concerns. In political life it appeared to many thinking people that the country is at the parting of the ways. The altered conditions led one to think that the time had come lor moderate men in Parliament to join together to form a solid party which would command the support of a large majority and make a far more stable Government and give a greater sci .se of security, thus inducing the investment of capital and bringing about a period of prosperity unheard of previously in Neiv Zealand.
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Taranaki Daily News, Volume LIII, Issue 277, 13 April 1911, Page 2
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175OUR LABOR LAWS Taranaki Daily News, Volume LIII, Issue 277, 13 April 1911, Page 2
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