WOOL SEASON.
PRESENTATION OF CLIPS. MR. H. G. DAWSON'S ADVICE. (By Telegraph.—Press Association.) WELLINGTON, Friday. Commenting 011 the position of the wool inarkot in the Dominion, Mr. H. G. Dawson, director of the firm o£ H. Dawson, Sons and Company, Limited, the well-known English woolbrokers, expressed the hope that farmers would not forget altogether the importance of good breeding and classification in wool simply because of the present prices for fat lambs and stock being c^erienced. 1 On many previous visits to the Dominion he had never seen so many unskirted clips, and lie felt sure that if farmers realised the importance of presenting clips in a better way to market, their efforts in this direction would be I amply justified. New Zealand had, in the old days, always supplied well-classed clips, and as a result her wool nearly always obtained a premium over clips from other chief crossbred woolgrowing countries. It would be a pity if this advantage were [ thrown away becausd of a few years of low prices for wool.
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXVII, Issue 57, 7 March 1936, Page 4
Word Count
172WOOL SEASON. Auckland Star, Volume LXVII, Issue 57, 7 March 1936, Page 4
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