Wool
Sir, —If wool falls flat on its face at Napier why not try selling on easy terms? 1 mean the easiest terms available anywhere in the international fibres market. If we can afford to store huge quantities costing storage and insurance and losing interest, we can most assuredly sell on terms, saving storage and insurance and attracting low overseas currency interest to our great advantage. What more effective way of demonstrating faith in wool, and
the admirable people who want to use it round the world, than by leaving our money in it right to the stage of manufacture? Better than bankruptcy or devaluation, a doubtful virtue. Try it and the buyers might come running.—Yours, etc., GOLDEN FLEECE. October 10, 1967.
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume CVII, Issue 31498, 12 October 1967, Page 12
Word Count
122Wool Press, Volume CVII, Issue 31498, 12 October 1967, Page 12
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