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GROUP EMIGRATION

MR. KIPLING'S ADVOCACY

INDIVIDUALS BEWILDERED IN

NEW CONDITIONS.

(UNITED PRESS ASSOCIATION.—COPIRIOHT.)

(AUSTRALIAN-NEW ZEALAND CABLE ASSOCIATION.)

LONDON, 12th October

Mr. Rudyard Kipling has written to tho Salvation Army in favour o£ a scheme .for emigrating big parties who would settle together. He says that average English emigrants are more easily planted by the hundred than "by the head, . The Salvation/ Army's beat plan now may be to press forward settlement by townships or villages. The trouble is that when an able-bodied man has been planted in a new country the very strangeness of the climate, tools, and _ methods, often" throws him into a bewildered daze, which lasts some time. There never was an Empire which offered such opportunities as ours. .

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19231013.2.23

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 90, 13 October 1923, Page 7

Word Count
121

GROUP EMIGRATION Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 90, 13 October 1923, Page 7

GROUP EMIGRATION Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 90, 13 October 1923, Page 7