SLOW BUT STEADY
TRADE IMPROVEMENT IN BRITAIN MR CHAMBERLAIN HOPEFUL p-ess Association—By Telegraph—Copyright LONDON, October 22. The Chancellor of the Exchequer (Mr Neville Chamberlain), speaking at Birmingham, said that the signs of solid progress towards recovery were plainer than at any time since the Government took office. The rising tide of unemployment had apparently been stemmed and might soon set in the opposite direction. The Government and the local authorities had been spending much in relation to the reserves of the only people from whom money was obtainable. Private individuals should consider their personal circumstances, and spend if they could afford to do so. It was a mistake to suppose that keeping money back was a public service. BUSINESS BETTER AT BRADFORD LONDON, October 22. Mr Henry Hudson, a prominent Bradford business man, says that visits to the mills impressed him. Trade was slowly and steadily improving. There was no boom, but a heartening increase of business.
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Evening Star, Issue 21241, 24 October 1932, Page 7
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157SLOW BUT STEADY Evening Star, Issue 21241, 24 October 1932, Page 7
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