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EMPIRE’S POLICY.

IMPERIAL TRADE. TAKING SOMETHING OFF THE L)<>LE. BY CABLE-PRESS ASSOCIATION—COPYRIGHT Received Jan. 7, 11.15 a.m. LONDON, Jan. (3. Sir P. Cunliffe Lister, in an address to Nottingham business men, declared that Imperial trade, by common consent, had become the Empire’s policy. If an Empire vote could be taken there would be an overwhelming majority for preference, and not the least in tlie Mother Country. We needed to seek complementary rather than competitive markets, and the Dominions were best in that sense. By buying British goods they could take something off the dole. —A.us.-N.Z. Cable Assn.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19260107.2.31

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 7 January 1926, Page 5

Word Count
97

EMPIRE’S POLICY. Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 7 January 1926, Page 5

EMPIRE’S POLICY. Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 7 January 1926, Page 5

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