EMIGRANTS FROM BRITAIN.
MUST BE RIGHT MEN. By Telegraph.—Frew Assn.—Copyright London, Jan. 28. tt- , ,! he res ult of interviews with the High Commissioners of Australia, Canada and New Zealand, The Timins draws the conclusion that the Dominions’ labor troubles do not in themselves constitute a bar to emigration, despite the disquieting reports from the Dominions named. Interviews on the whole tend to reassure intending emigrants, who are perturbed by the recent news. Nevertheless it is impossible to ignore certain facts. The three great Dominions are unanimous on one point, that they wantmen, but they insist that these must be the right men. The Times, in pointing out that any scheme of assisted immigration is -not a charitable enterprise for the relief of English unemployment, urges the Dominions not to ask too much, remembering that the Empire’s pioneering work was • not done by ready-made farmers with credentials and money, but by plucky settlers, not afraid to take chances.—Times Service.
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Taranaki Daily News, 31 January 1922, Page 5
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158EMIGRANTS FROM BRITAIN. Taranaki Daily News, 31 January 1922, Page 5
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